2012 SCAN Special Issue
2012 SCAN Special Issue
2012 SCAN Special Issue
Editorial
Much water has flown down the Ganges (the river itself has moved away from the school boundary wall, alas, but thats another story altogether) since we last roamed the premises of St. Michaels High School; but in the run-up to this 25th year Alumni meet, it became obvious that time hasnt dulled any of the sheen on our schools crest. We left the school as young men and now firmly in the middle years of our life come back to reconnect and celebrate what we acknowledge, from a safe distance of 20+ years, to have been some of our best years. Grade inflation may have eroded the awe at the marks we including class toppers got in our graduating years, but we dont have to yield to anyone on the specialness of just having been there. God has been kind to us, and it is heartening to see that this crew has acquitted itself very well in the years since St. Michaels. May the run continue, and as the school prayer asked, may we continue to seek truth. The group will also mourn the passing, and celebrate the lives of three dear friends: Gokulanand Pandey, Manu Ved Vardhan Tripathi, and Pawas Prabhakar Sanjay. Taken from this world at different times, and leaving a void not just in the hearts of their families, but also among many friends across their school, college and professional lives. Finally, a vote of thanks to all classmates who were generous with their time and thought in the planning and hosting of this event. Without detracting anything from everyone else who pitched in, special thanks go to 3 individuals: Amitabh Maheshwari, Rajeev Kumar Singh and Satyarth Mishra, whose time and unflagging enthusiasm sustained this idea to fruition. And, for the production of this special issue, to Madhukar Bhagat, for his awesome archives of SCAN. Nikhil Prasad Ojha
Har
Ek
F r i e n d
good cricket, wore branded shirts and once looked like Alan Border. He had a good female following in Rajendra Nagar and some of them had exotic names (I still remember their names, not out of any good memory but out of pure jealousy!). Dhruv listened to Beetles, had a good vocabulary and was focused on clearing Management after Graduation in Delhi. I have some very memorable experiences while we shared the same flat in Delhi in 1989-90. Manish Prasad A simple and fun loving guy. He was meticulous in his studies, took copious notes and could maintain his almost calligraphic handwriting even at great speed. He had a beautiful house in Pataliputra Colony and we enjoyed good food at his house that was always followed by Maths lesson by his father. To quote Amit 2- Ekar Baabu (father) sab khanwa wasul kar leta hai. So a lunch at his place was preceded by a must revision of Maths lesson the previous day. I still remember his sensuous nagin dance in Mukerjee Nagar, Delhi during Saraswati Pooja. Hisssss Manishhhhh! Om Prakash We affectionately called him chhena, not because of his complexion but the fact he managed his sweetmeat business after school. We looked forward to his tiffin everyday as it contained the delicacies from his shop. He had his business contacts with Roodal also, which meant the best samosas for us in the canteen when we bunked classes. He was good in Maths and harassed P.L. Jose and Lallan Singh, our two hapless Maths teachers. He was a master in the art of bunking classes and gave us the first thrill of such sin in class 6. Thank you Om Prakash, for such delightful samosas. Prashant He was called Brillanto due to his prowess in Maths. Otherwise also, he was brilliant in all the adventures he strayed into and like the ISI, had his hand in all the disruptive activities in the school. When he spoke, all listened intently, because it was impossible to make out anything given his speed of speech. He also occasionally spewed moisture when he spoke. Safe distance was the key! I remember writing hilarious love letters on his behalf to his girl and I confess that I had a tough time translating all his weird fantasies in ink. His father caught hold of one of these letters and he immediately implicated me- sab Tiwariya sikhaata hai. The rest was History. Credit goes to Brillanto for introducing us to Rum, Gin and Vodka during the legendary picnic to Kakolat. What followed was pukes and rebukes and the reluctant cleaning of the Blue Bus. During this drug trial, he also managed to intoxicate Mr. Mazumdar (our Chemisrty teacher) who coined the now famous formulationChuium Sulphate. Vishal Bhardwaj owes a big thanks to Brillanto! Rajiv Singh Affectionately called Rocky (he fancied himself after the Stallion starrer), who was always found playing football with
I have tried to recollect the dominant traits and hilarious episodes related to some of my friends at school during the formative years. Sincere apologies for any misrepresentation, use of hyperbole and past tense. Amit (II) Singh He was the original (H) Ussain Bolt from Bakerganj (behind Mona Cinema, for a more respectable address) who sweated in one of the biggest track field in the world in his backyard - Gandhi Maidan. A brilliant footballer, Amit 2 (Amit 1, a brilliant cricketer!) liked good things in life. He wore Farmani shirts and Guppi shoes. Amit 2 won laurels for the school in various athletic meets and was famed for employing a servant to ferry his medals from such meets. His two Mamus were handy for morning shows in Mona and Elphinston. We all remember his fond tales of the summer vacations spent in Europe, while we all knew that he had only touched Gaya on the globe. Amit 2 became Amit Singh when he grew up (just like Kallu to Kalia) and went to DPS where, I heard, he used his athletic skills for other purposes! Anubhav Ranjan (aka Romi) He came to St. Michaels from Apeejay, Delhi. Thus, the initial disdain for all things Bihari. He wore imported Nike shoes (courtesy his father visiting phoren countries) and rode his TVS moped with great pride. Anubhav was a simple, fun loving and affable boy. He was a sports lover, subscribed to Sports Star, played almost all the games and courted some beautiful girls in the neighborhood. He unwittingly drew all of us in some mohalla level brawls due to his escapades with the girls. I have some beautiful memories of the time spent with him and the gang in Kankarbagh and would cherish those forever. He engineered his life and graduated from Delhi to Sweden and then finally to the US. Chetan Kapoor A suitable boy and a darling of all teachers. He was intelligent, had pedigree (not the dog food) and scanned all of us efficiently. When he smiled, we could count all his pearlies. I remember getting down at his bus stop at Frazer Road after school (we shared the same bus, #4) and helping ourselves to a sumptuous lunch prepared by his graceful mother. The word spread and after some time the number of boys getting down for a free lunch kept swelling. This motley crew included Romi, Shakeb Nabi (Tappu) and other chhokras (juniors) who covered the distance from Frazer Road to Kankar Bagh on foot after each feast. An exotic variant of the modern Midday Meal Scheme! I never had such good home cooked lunch after that. Thank you, Chetan, and your Mom, for such good times. Dhruv Bhagat He was a well-fed Punjabi munda, coming from a reputed family of doctors and sports enthusiasts. We all grew up hearing about Dr Ajay Bhagat (his uncle) and his passion for cricket despite his size. Dhruv was an intelligent boy, played
Z a r o o r i
balls of all sizes. He was a good footballer who made it to the famed tournament at Jamshedpur (called Tata those days). Also remember his US Army shirts in all colours, which we envied. I spent time with him at Delhi also where he treated us to some fine Darjeeling tea at his house in Mukherjee Nagar which was sourced from the Sansad Bhavan canteen, courtesy his MP uncle. He was fond of good music and had a collection of Kishore Kumar cassettes that came in handy during bouts of drinking cheap rum at his place in Delhi. Thank you Rajiv, for the good times at your expense. Samyak Das I remember his ribald jokes, thick handle bar moustache on his fair, well fed frame and the school tie hanging loosely on his belt. Once he smuggled a football in the classroom in 7th and we had a gala time kicking the football and all the other balls that came our way. This was followed by a clean whack from Mr. Philips who was especially summoned to teach us a hard lesson. Credit goes to Samyak for getting our entire generation hooked to the MR series. While the others fancied on Superman and Commando comics, Samyak and his gang (me included) marveled at the MR characters and the ease with which they had their way. Das Auto! Satyarth Mishra Everything was deadly for Satyarth. Sattu was omnipresent like the proverbial Bihari staple fare by the same name. He was one of the victims of the MR mania cultivated by Samyak and was once caught in the act in his study, built on his terrace near BahadurPur Gumti. After that, his study room was demolished and he had no room to study, literally. He resembled Mr Yogi, a crusader immortalized in the eponymous television serial. He had friends from all shadessome seamier and others not so seamy. Satyarth spent many afternoons in my house, eating parauntha, bhujia and then asking for Rs. 5 to refuel his antique Vespa XT and a little change for Willis Filter. He was a swashbuckling batsman who scared bowlers on his day just like Veeru. He had tremendous grit and despite all adversities, pulled along and made a name for himself. I have many happy and exciting memories with him in Patna and Delhi. I met him at Melbourne in 2009 and we had a good time remembering the times gone by. Deadly, Satyarth. Shakeb Nabi (aka Tappu) None dared to visit Shakebs house when his father was around. For, he would immediately summon you and enquire your percentage in the last exam. If you were above 75 percent, you were allowed past the gate. We found a way out. We appropriated the rather high percentages, learnt these figures and belted them immediately after calling Shakebs name. Many times even without his father asking. His father uncovered the plot and started noting down the percentages and would immediately take out his notebook and compare the last visit figures. Oops! I remember watching those almost porn morning shows in Uma Cinema with Shakeb, Anubhav, Varun and Amit II. Someone informed Shakebs
Hota
Hai
father. He bluffed telling him that we went to see Basic Insect, a movie for animal lovers. I saw his father smiling for the first time. The movie was Basic Instinct. Shakeb was a good spin bowler; regularly beat up the guys in his mohalla and later in St Columbus, Hazaribagh. I still remember the finger licking nonvegetarian spread at his home on Eid. Vishal Kumar (now Vishal Anand) Vishal had many names, which changed every season. Sometimes, he was Boris (Becker), Chunky Pandey and at all other times, the Big B. He actually cultivated the left hand flourish after much toil and toilet training! He was a skilled raconteur and I still recount his Tikiya Basai tales with which he bored us, class after class. Vishal Mega Fart was the name of the session! He was very good in Maths and Science, and his parents wanted to see him as an engineer. He was the proud owner of a TVS moped, on which he rode with great flair, matched by his broad flared pants (bail battams). He actually fell in love with many girls from Notre Dame without even talking to them. It happened that way, in those times. Even before you could eye any pretty face, the guy next to you would reprimand you for the sin and you could atone by giving respect to her as your Bhabhi. All this happened while the pretty face was blissfully unaware of the new family that she had been drawn into. Vishal made us pay respect to many such Bhabhis. Varun Deo He was the original Pehalwan from Piro in Arrah who arrived with his two brothers in St. Michaels. Life in school was not the same again. The laughter in class became uproarious; bunking became a way of life while bluffing the teachers became our new religion. He wore his trademark tight trousers and chest hugging shirts to school and mostly cycled from Bailey Road to Digha Ghat. He took to pace bowling given his muscular physique and concentrated more on the vital parts of the batsmen than on the wickets. He was brilliant with all kinds of automobiles and drove skillfully through the crowded lanes that would give us a severe cardiac arrest now. His father was a very honest police officer, and his name came in handy more often with the traffic cops. Size mattered for Varun. Thus, the obsession with Sridevi! He had a thick album in which he skillfully pasted pictures of Sridevi and her ilk that were cut out from Mayapuri, Madhuri, Debonair and Fantasy. That album stood him in good stead and was his main companion during those long nights of studies. Oh la la! I also vividly remember events and episodes related to other friends lives and not to miss the dear teachers. The list is longManish Sinha, Madhukar Bhagat, Manish Madhukar, Ratan Shankar, Aditya Sinha, Ashok Manoranjan, Ajit Charan, Manish Ranjan, Biresh, Sanjeev, Rahul Seth, Bhuvan Saurav, Praveen, Shamim, Shahzad, Ashit (Deluxe)Next issue, perhaps.
Purushottam Tiwari
Confidence
Then I woke up one morning thinking what am I doing? I was becoming average at life and that was an alarm. I quit and left for Mumbai to pursue my Bollywood dreams. There were issues, which brought me back to financial security of a job. But I needed that security not for myself but for others around me. One fateful morning I was late to work. I was late to work as I did not like working in an investment bank. I worked at World Trade Center and the date was September 11, 2001. If I had reached work a few minutes earlier I would not be writing this. This event got millions of people thinking and not just me. I quit two days later and left for Mumbai to pursue my unfinished dream. This time the roadblocks were much bigger and I came back to New York. This time again these blocks were not of my own but people around me. I was angry at destiny, but instead of sulking, I converted the destructive force of anger to positive energy of motivation and applied it to my job. I worked closely with Sales and Trading at a large investment bank. The derivative Traders nicknamed me a Hitman. That title was bestowed upon me as I executed complex projects in a timely and effective manner. I was motivated to succeed. I also realized how analytical I was, as working in a bank requires you to be analytical and detailed oriented. I quickly rose to the ranks of executive management running large global projects and teams. I took to photography as a creative outlet. I studied film nights and weekends. I became good at both and things were moving fast in a positive direction. Motivation is the key. This is the same job I did not like but I became very successful in a matter of short time. Stay motivated! I live in a permanent beta mode. Google always has beta next to it. It makes sense. Realize your true potential. Dont follow others. Everybody is different; find a profession of your liking. India is a growing nation and now offers the freedom to choose career paths that were unheard of when I was at school. Listen to your heart, watch your mind, take a step back and figure out who you are and what you want to do in life. Go for it! Rishi Kumar
The deep dark well Very little confidence Ricocheting through your heart A shiver A tiny shiver Swimming wickedly through your body Smiling And saying mean words to you Your heart feels lonely Then suddenly You hear a voice Again and again, Spreading across your mind Be confident Be confident Then you become confident Your heart stands up And finally A smile spreads across your face.
Maheeka Sabharwal, Grade 3 American International School, Dhaka
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Chakraverti Rajanish
Ashish Kumar
Anubhav Ranjan
Sanjeev Jha
Manish Rastogi
Manish Prasad
Pratul Shahdeo
Ashok Manoranjan
Amitabh Maheshwari
Rajesh Goyal
Ranendranath Ojha
Kumar Vishal
Amit Singh
Sumit Saran
Aniruddha Brahamchari
Ashish Prasad
Rajnish Sinha
Rishi Kumar
Satyarth Mishra
Amit Sinha
Pushkar Kumar
Asim Hussain
Shashank Ranjan
Dhruv Bhagat
Rohit Varma
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Ved Vardhan
August 15th 1971 Feb 25th 2012
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Gokulanand Pandey
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It is not every class that gets itself a two-page spread in a national magazine. Yes, the write-up couldve been about some other aspect of our fun-filled years but alas, notoriety preceded other feature-worthy achievements by many among us. I wont name the magazine that carried this story but thats an easy Quiz question if there was one. Identities have been redacted to protect well-established corporate and entrepreneurial reputations, but a page from a copy of our days is on the right for you to fill in your guesses. Ed
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For those who are not attending the reunion, a page from our school diary