Parties
Rains couldn’t dampen Nagpur’s spirit to celebrate Diwali at Gondwana Club

Anurag and Pallavi Pashine at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Vidhi and Saket Daga at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Aniruddh and Meghna Joshi at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Rakhee, Ved and Ashish Khemuka at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Jatin Kale at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Jatin Tarkunde at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Prerna and Sundeep Rai at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Saurabh and Megha Goyal at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Sourav Mukerji at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Vikrant Shandilya (Editor-in-Chief, Nation Next) and Preeti Buty Shandilya at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Shraddha and Abhinav Thakur at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Pradnya and Mandar Chitaley at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Piyush and Shefali Daga at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Pallavi and Saurabh Daga at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Raakesh Awachat at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Radhika and Nanki Seth at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Dr Monisha and Ritesh Rahate at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Sanjeev, Sahirah, Shreyan and Supriya Jarangal at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Sanket and Shailja Jaiswal at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Pranav and Chetna Singhal at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Murtuza and Deepali Hussain at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Navin and Ruchika Varma at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Lavish and Mannat Deosinghani at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Manvi and Kunal Bhiwapurkar with their kids at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur


Dr Arjun, Dr Purva, Dr Abhishek and Dr Awani Deshmukh at the Diwali party held at Gondwana Club in Nagpur

Despite heavy rains on Sunday and the day before, Nagpurians at Gondwana Club were seen dressed in their festive best for Diwali last night.
The decoration was kept minimal yet elegant owing to intermittent rains. With mouth-watering chaat to Rajasthani food to delicious North Indian cuisine also including housie game, members and guests relished every bit of the evening.
Also see: Pictures from Diwali party 2018 at Gondwana Club in Nagpur
Legal
Anil Deshmukh granted permission to travel outside Mumbai

Ex-Home Ministe Anil Deshmukh on Monday was granted permission to travel outside Mumbai for four weeks by a special court on Monday.
Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) leader and former Home Minister of Maharashtra Anil Deshmukh on Monday was granted permission to travel outside Mumbai for four weeks by a special court on Monday. Deshmukh had sought permission to visit his constituency, which is also his hometown, Nagpur.
The application was filed by Deshmukh through his lawyer, Inderpal Singh, stating that he is a native of Nagpur with deep family roots in the city apart from being an elected representative of his constituency.
“The applicant craves a benevolent indulgence of this court to permit him to travel outside Greater Mumbai, including District Nagpur, for a limited duration of about four weeks so as to maintain continuity in his social and family ties and also visit his original and permanent home/constituency,” the plea stated.
The plea further added that “the applicant needs to have due legal consultation with his lawyers in New Delhi for further course of strategy in the present and connected cases.”
Also read: All 31 days in January 2023 in Nagpur observed to be polluted, reveals study
Governance
Interesting facts you didn’t know about Union Budget | Must Read
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented her fifth straight Union Budget when she presented financial statements and tax proposals for fiscal year 2023-24.
Here are some lesser known facts about Union Budget…
The British government presented India’s first ever Union Budget on April 7, 1860.
The first budget of independent India was presented by country’s first Finance Minister RK Shanmukham Chetty on November 26, 1947.
Even though traditionally, the finance ministers present the budget, Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi are the only Prime Ministers to have presented the Union Budget instead of Finance Ministers.
Until 1955, the Union Budget was presented in English. However, the Congress government then decided to print the Budget papers in both Hindi and English.
In 2019, Sitharaman became the second woman to table the budget after Indira Gandhi who presented the budget for the year 1970-71.
Earlier, the government tabled the rail budget separately for 92 years but since 2017, the rail budget was merged with the Union Budget.
Until 1999, the government tabled the Union Budget at 5 pm on the last working day of February as per British era practice but
former Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha changed the timing to 11 am. Years after, late Finance Minister Arun Jaitely changed the budget presentation to February 1.
There’s a customary event called the ‘halwa ceremony’ that is held every year ahead of the Union Budget. It is considered as a gesture of appreciation for all people who have worked on the Union Budget.
To ensure the secrecy of the budget document, a lock-in process is followed – in which all the officials involved
in preparing the Budget come out of Parliament’s North Block only after the Finance Minister has presented the budget.
In 2021, Sitharaman became the first to table paperless Union Budget.
Former Prime Minister Moraraji Desai holds the record of presenting 10 budgets as finance minister, which is the maximum so far.
Also read: Not a populist but a fiscal consolidation budget: CAMIT Chief Dr Dipen Agrawal
Watch the full video here:
Nagpur News
DPS Kamptee tops in ‘Public Vegetable Garden,’ clinches 2nd spot in ‘Big Institutional Garden’

