Guest guest Posted May 7, 2011 Report Share Posted May 7, 2011 Hi Friends, I hope many us do remember Dr Kailash Narain, who taught us Microbiology between 1983 -1986. He was a short man at 4'11 " , had bushy moustaches, wore a tweed coat with big checks and stammered .This was enough fodder for second MBBS students who had just their teen age label.So there was shorr, cat calls and his class was no less than a primary school. During exams students forced him to give good marks. Some girls even used to grasp his hand and make him write full marks. He was an intelligent man but his overall personality betrayed him. He left our college few years later. I joined Maulana Azad Medical College after my PG as a Sr Resident and our deptt organised a regional meet of the IAPM in 1990-91. I was surprised to spot him there.I wished him and asked if he could recognize me. How could he forget the team leader of the urchins who made his life miserable at Sewagram, he answered. I apologized for the batch's unruly behavior and assured him that now we all were grown up and responsible. He was a bachelor and ran a clinical lab in Laxmi Nagar, East Delhi. After that we rang up each other quite often. Once he wanted to buy a scooter and requested me to arrange a test ride of Priya scooter which was the shortest in height in those days. I borrowed a scooter from my friend and reached his lab which was on a second floor and the steps were so steep that it even left a young person panting for his breath. I suggested that he shift his sample collection to the ground floor. We then left for the huge open ground opposite Surya Hospital. There I handed over the scooter to him and warned about a big trench in one corner. Though we removed the extra cushion pad from the seat , his feet hardly touched the ground. He was still confident that he could handle it. He started the scooter and lost the control and headed directly to the big trench. I closed my eyes. He lay there with multiple bruises. Luckily there was no fracture or serious injury. I advised him to drop the idea. Few days later he rang me up to inform that he had purchased the scooter and also hired an assistant who could drive it. I then shifted to Rewari and lost contact with him. I again spotted him in early 2000 in a crowded NOIDA market. This time he was being carried away by two gun totting policemen. My heart sank. I even guessed that some heart patient must have died while climbing his stairs. So I rushed and caught his arm and asked " Sir , what have you done ? Why have they arrested you ? " " They are my body guards and I have not been arrested " he told me. I could then feel the two steel nozzles pushing into my ribs. Thank God, I did not catch him by the neck, otherwise they would have pulled the trigger too. " Aren't you Dr Kailash Narain ? " I asked. " No, I am Prem Narain and I happen to be the Chief secretary of this state (UP).Kailash is my younger brother and he has now relocated to Tripoli. " He told me. He was a little puzzled as he was at least six inches taller,but still people got confused. Well, now with so much of trouble going on in Libya, we can only hope and pray for Dr Kailash Narain's safety and well being. Hope he has come back to India. If any one is in touch with him and has any information about him, kindly share. Gajendra Yadav, 81 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2011 Report Share Posted May 7, 2011 That surely brought a smile to my face, recollecting his classes, thanks to you :-) He was quite aware of the fun we used to make of him and yet, he would take it all so sportingly and he was so gentle with his words. I wonder if anyone remembers that one day when he was teaching us (1982 batch) he had lost his cool? I had almost forgotten him, but for this nice write up by you, Gajendra... thanks :-) Ravin '82 > > > > Hi Friends, > I hope many us do remember Dr Kailash Narain, who taught us Microbiology > between 1983 -1986. He was a short man at 4'11 " , had bushy moustaches, wore > a tweed coat with big checks and stammered .This was enough fodder for > second MBBS students who had just their teen age label.So there was shorr, > cat calls and his class was no less than a primary school. During exams > students forced him to give good marks. Some girls even used to grasp his > hand and make him write full marks. He was an intelligent man but his > overall personality betrayed him. He left our college few years later. > I joined Maulana Azad Medical College after my PG as a Sr Resident and our > deptt organised a regional meet of the IAPM in 1990-91. I was surprised to > spot him there.I wished him and asked if he could recognize me. How could > he forget the team leader of the urchins who made his life miserable at > Sewagram, he answered. I apologized for the batch's unruly behavior and > assured him that now we all were grown up and responsible. He was a bachelor > and ran a clinical lab in Laxmi Nagar, East Delhi. After that we rang up > each other quite often. Once he wanted to buy a scooter and requested me to > arrange a test ride of Priya scooter which was the shortest in height in > those days. I borrowed a scooter from my friend and reached his lab which > was on a second floor and the steps were so steep that it even left a young > person panting for his breath. I suggested that he shift his sample > collection to the ground floor. We then left for the huge open ground > opposite Surya Hospital. There I handed over the scooter to him and warned > about a big trench in one corner. Though we removed the extra cushion pad > from the seat , his feet hardly touched the ground. He was still confident > that he could handle it. He started the scooter and lost the control and > headed directly to the big trench. I closed my eyes. He lay there with > multiple bruises. Luckily there was no fracture or serious injury. I advised > him to drop the idea. Few days later he rang me up to inform that he had > purchased the scooter and also hired an assistant who could drive it. I then > shifted to Rewari and lost contact with him. I again spotted him in early > 2000 in a crowded NOIDA market. This time he was being carried away by two > gun totting policemen. My heart sank. I even guessed that some heart patient > must have died while climbing his stairs. So I rushed and caught his arm and > asked " Sir , what have you done ? Why have they arrested you ? " > " They are my body guards and I have not been arrested " he told me. I > could then feel the two steel nozzles pushing into my ribs. Thank God, I did > not catch him by the neck, otherwise they would have pulled the trigger too. > " Aren't you Dr Kailash Narain ? " I asked. " No, I am Prem Narain and I > happen to be the Chief secretary of this state (UP).Kailash is my younger > brother and he has now relocated to Tripoli. " He told me. He was a little > puzzled as he was at least six inches taller,but still people got confused. > > Well, now with so much of trouble going on in Libya, we can only hope and > pray for Dr Kailash Narain's safety and well being. Hope he has come back to > India. If any one is in touch with him and has any information about him, > kindly share. > Gajendra Yadav, 81 > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2011 Report Share Posted May 7, 2011 Dear Gajju, Dr. Kailash Narayan is now working in SGPGI. I will let you know his number. I have called him as examiner at Sevagram this summer and will let him know about your wish to meet him. Nitin On Sat, 07 May 2011 10:49:43 +0530 wrote > Hi Friends, I hope many us do remember Dr Kailash Narain, who taught us Microbiology between 1983 -1986. He was a short man at 4'11 " , had bushy moustaches, wore a tweed coat with big checks and stammered .This was enough fodder for second MBBS students who had just their teen age label.So there was shorr, cat calls and his class was no less than a primary school. During exams students forced him to give good marks. Some girls even used to grasp his hand and make him write full marks. He was an intelligent man but his overall personality betrayed him. He left our college few years later.  I joined Maulana Azad Medical College after my PG as a Sr Resident and our deptt organised a regional meet of the IAPM in 1990-91. I was surprised to spot him there.I wished him and asked if he could recognize me.  How could he forget the team leader of the urchins who made his life miserable at Sewagram, he answered. I apologized for the batch's unruly behavior and assured him that now we all were grown up and responsible. He was a bachelor and ran a clinical lab in Laxmi Nagar, East Delhi. After that we rang up each other quite often. Once he wanted to buy a scooter and requested me to arrange a test ride of Priya scooter which was the shortest in height in those days. I borrowed a scooter from my friend and reached his lab which was on a second floor and the steps were so steep that it even left a young person panting for his breath. I suggested that he shift his sample collection to the ground floor. We then left for the huge open ground opposite Surya Hospital. There I handed over the scooter to him and warned about a big trench in one corner. Though we removed the extra cushion pad from the seat , his feet hardly touched the ground. He was still confident that he could handle it. He started the scooter and lost the control and headed directly to the big trench. I closed my eyes. He lay there with multiple bruises. Luckily there was no fracture or serious injury. I advised him to drop the idea. Few days later he rang me up to inform that he had purchased the scooter and also hired an assistant who could drive it. I then shifted to Rewari and lost contact with him.  I again spotted him in early 2000 in a crowded NOIDA market. This time he was being carried away by two gun totting policemen. My heart sank. I even guessed that some heart patient must have died while climbing his stairs. So I rushed and caught his arm and asked " Sir , what have you done ? Why have they arrested you ? "  " They are my body guards and I have not been arrested " he told me. I could then feel the two steel nozzles pushing into my ribs. Thank God, I did not catch him by the neck, otherwise they would have pulled the trigger too. " Aren't you Dr Kailash Narain ? " I asked. " No, I am Prem Narain and I happen to be the Chief secretary of this state (UP).Kailash is my younger brother and he has now relocated to Tripoli. " He told me.  He was a little puzzled as he was at least six inches taller,but still people got confused. Well, now with so much of trouble going on in Libya, we can only hope and pray for Dr Kailash Narain's safety and well being. Hope he has come back to India. If any one is in touch with him and has any information about him, kindly share. Gajendra Yadav, 81 Dr. Nitin Gangane. Professor and Head, Department of Pathology, Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, Sevagram. Dist. Wardha. Maharashtra 442102, INDIA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2011 Report Share Posted May 7, 2011 Gajju Dear  U have a knack of adding thrill and spice and suspense to the events; Both the pieces i enjoyed and laughed!!  Diwakar Mittal'76 Subject: Dr Kailash Narain- the micro man To: mgims Date: Saturday, 7 May, 2011, 10:50 AM  Hi Friends, I hope many us do remember Dr Kailash Narain, who taught us Microbiology between 1983 -1986. He was a short man at 4'11 " , had bushy moustaches, wore a tweed coat with big checks and stammered .This was enough fodder for second MBBS students who had just their teen age label.So there was shorr, cat calls and his class was no less than a primary school. During exams students forced him to give good marks. Some girls even used to grasp his hand and make him write full marks. He was an intelligent man but his overall personality betrayed him. He left our college few years later.  I joined Maulana Azad Medical College after my PG as a Sr Resident and our deptt organised a regional meet of the IAPM in 1990-91. I was surprised to spot him there.I wished him and asked if he could recognize me.  How could he forget the team leader of the urchins who made his life miserable at Sewagram, he answered. I apologized for the batch's unruly behavior and assured him that now we all were grown up and responsible. He was a bachelor and ran a clinical lab in Laxmi Nagar, East Delhi. After that we rang up each other quite often. Once he wanted to buy a scooter and requested me to arrange a test ride of Priya scooter which was the shortest in height in those days. I borrowed a scooter from my friend and reached his lab which was on a second floor and the steps were so steep that it even left a young person panting for his breath. I suggested that he shift his sample collection to the ground floor. We then left for the huge open ground opposite Surya Hospital. There I handed over the scooter to him and warned about a big trench in one corner. Though we removed the extra cushion pad from the seat , his feet hardly touched the ground. He was still confident that he could handle it. He started the scooter and lost the control and headed directly to the big trench. I closed my eyes. He lay there with multiple bruises. Luckily there was no fracture or serious injury. I advised him to drop the idea. Few days later he rang me up to inform that he had purchased the scooter and also hired an assistant who could drive it. I then shifted to Rewari and lost contact with him.  I again spotted him in early 2000 in a crowded NOIDA market. This time he was being carried away by two gun totting policemen. My heart sank. I even guessed that some heart patient must have died while climbing his stairs. So I rushed and caught his arm and asked " Sir , what have you done ? Why have they arrested you ? "  " They are my body guards and I have not been arrested " he told me. I could then feel the two steel nozzles pushing into my ribs. Thank God, I did not catch him by the neck, otherwise they would have pulled the trigger too. " Aren't you Dr Kailash Narain ? " I asked. " No, I am Prem Narain and I happen to be the Chief secretary of this state (UP).Kailash is my younger brother and he has now relocated to Tripoli. " He told me.  He was a little puzzled as he was at least six inches taller,but still people got confused. Well, now with so much of trouble going on in Libya, we can only hope and pray for Dr Kailash Narain's safety and well being. Hope he has come back to India. If any one is in touch with him and has any information about him, kindly share. Gajendra Yadav, 81 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2011 Report Share Posted May 8, 2011 Thank you DDM Sir, Nitin Sir, Sanjay and Ravin. Nitin Sir, please connect him to me , when he visits Sewagram. It will be a pleasure to talk to him after a long gap. Gajendra 81 ________________________________ To: mgims Sent: Saturday, 7 May 2011 10:26 PM Subject: Re: Dr Kailash Narain- the micro man Gajju Dear U have a knack of adding thrill and spice and suspense to the events; Both the pieces i enjoyed and laughed!! Diwakar Mittal'76 Subject: Dr Kailash Narain- the micro man To: mgims Date: Saturday, 7 May, 2011, 10:50 AM Hi Friends, I hope many us do remember Dr Kailash Narain, who taught us Microbiology between 1983 -1986. He was a short man at 4'11 " , had bushy moustaches, wore a tweed coat with big checks and stammered .This was enough fodder for second MBBS students who had just their teen age label.So there was shorr, cat calls and his class was no less than a primary school. During exams students forced him to give good marks. Some girls even used to grasp his hand and make him write full marks. He was an intelligent man but his overall personality betrayed him. He left our college few years later.  I joined Maulana Azad Medical College after my PG as a Sr Resident and our deptt organised a regional meet of the IAPM in 1990-91. I was surprised to spot him there.I wished him and asked if he could recognize me.  How could he forget the team leader of the urchins who made his life miserable at Sewagram, he answered. I apologized for the batch's unruly behavior and assured him that now we all were grown up and responsible. He was a bachelor and ran a clinical lab in Laxmi Nagar, East Delhi. After that we rang up each other quite often. Once he wanted to buy a scooter and requested me to arrange a test ride of Priya scooter which was the shortest in height in those days. I borrowed a scooter from my friend and reached his lab which was on a second floor and the steps were so steep that it even left a young person panting for his breath. I suggested that he shift his sample collection to the ground floor. We then left for the huge open ground opposite Surya Hospital. There I handed over the scooter to him and warned about a big trench in one corner. Though we removed the extra cushion pad from the seat , his feet hardly touched the ground. He was still confident that he could handle it. He started the scooter and lost the control and headed directly to the big trench. I closed my eyes. He lay there with multiple bruises. Luckily there was no fracture or serious injury. I advised him to drop the idea. Few days later he rang me up to inform that he had purchased the scooter and also hired an assistant who could drive it. I then shifted to Rewari and lost contact with him.  I again spotted him in early 2000 in a crowded NOIDA market. This time he was being carried away by two gun totting policemen. My heart sank. I even guessed that some heart patient must have died while climbing his stairs. So I rushed and caught his arm and asked " Sir , what have you done ? Why have they arrested you ? "  " They are my body guards and I have not been arrested " he told me. I could then feel the two steel nozzles pushing into my ribs. Thank God, I did not catch him by the neck, otherwise they would have pulled the trigger too. " Aren't you Dr Kailash Narain ? " I asked. " No, I am Prem Narain and I happen to be the Chief secretary of this state (UP).Kailash is my younger brother and he has now relocated to Tripoli. " He told me.  He was a little puzzled as he was at least six inches taller,but still people got confused. Well, now with so much of trouble going on in Libya, we can only hope and pray for Dr Kailash Narain's safety and well being. Hope he has come back to India. If any one is in touch with him and has any information about him, kindly share. Gajendra Yadav, 81 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2011 Report Share Posted May 8, 2011 gajendra yadav alais gy....the new story weaver.....welcome aboard with more regular inputs On Sun, 08 May 2011 09:58:25 +0530 wrote > Thank you DDM Sir, Nitin Sir, Sanjay and Ravin. Nitin Sir, please connect him to me , when he visits Sewagram. It will be a pleasure to talk to him after a long gap. Gajendra 81 ________________________________ From: diwakar mittal To: mgims Sent: Saturday, 7 May 2011 10:26 PM Subject: Re: Dr Kailash Narain- the micro man Gajju Dear U have a knack of adding thrill and spice and suspense to the events; Both the pieces i enjoyed and laughed!! Diwakar Mittal'76 From: gy Subject: Dr Kailash Narain- the micro man To: mgims Date: Saturday, 7 May, 2011, 10:50 AM Hi Friends, I hope many us do remember Dr Kailash Narain, who taught us Microbiology between 1983 -1986. He was a short man at 4'11 " , had bushy moustaches, wore a tweed coat with big checks and stammered .This was enough fodder for second MBBS students who had just their teen age label.So there was shorr, cat calls and his class was no less than a primary school. During exams students forced him to give good marks. Some girls even used to grasp his hand and make him write full marks. He was an intelligent man but his overall personality betrayed him. He left our college few years later.  I joined Maulana Azad Medical College after my PG as a Sr Resident and our deptt organised a regional meet of the IAPM in 1990-91. I was surprised to spot him there.I wished him and asked if he could recognize me.  How could he forget the team leader of the urchins who made his life miserable at Sewagram, he answered. I apologized for the batch's unruly behavior and assured him that now we all were grown up and responsible. He was a bachelor and ran a clinical lab in Laxmi Nagar, East Delhi. After that we rang up each other quite often. Once he wanted to buy a scooter and requested me to arrange a test ride of Priya scooter which was the shortest in height in those days. I borrowed a scooter from my friend and reached his lab which was on a second floor and the steps were so steep that it even left a young person panting for his breath. I suggested that he shift his sample collection to the ground floor. We then left for the huge open ground opposite Surya Hospital. There I handed over the scooter to him and warned about a big trench in one corner. Though we removed the extra cushion pad from the seat , his feet hardly touched the ground. He was still confident that he could handle it. He started the scooter and lost the control and headed directly to the big trench. I closed my eyes. He lay there with multiple bruises. Luckily there was no fracture or serious injury. I advised him to drop the idea. Few days later he rang me up to inform that he had purchased the scooter and also hired an assistant who could drive it. I then shifted to Rewari and lost contact with him.  I again spotted him in early 2000 in a crowded NOIDA market. This time he was being carried away by two gun totting policemen. My heart sank. I even guessed that some heart patient must have died while climbing his stairs. So I rushed and caught his arm and asked " Sir , what have you done ? Why have they arrested you ? "  " They are my body guards and I have not been arrested " he told me. I could then feel the two steel nozzles pushing into my ribs. Thank God, I did not catch him by the neck, otherwise they would have pulled the trigger too. " Aren't you Dr Kailash Narain ? " I asked. " No, I am Prem Narain and I happen to be the Chief secretary of this state (UP).Kailash is my younger brother and he has now relocated to Tripoli. " He told me.  He was a little puzzled as he was at least six inches taller,but still people got confused. Well, now with so much of trouble going on in Libya, we can only hope and pray for Dr Kailash Narain's safety and well being. Hope he has come back to India. If any one is in touch with him and has any information about him, kindly share. Gajendra Yadav, 81 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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