Joe Shearer
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- Apr 19, 2009
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Sir Ramesh Bhasin even I know. His daughter's name was Niharika as i recall .....
There was that classic evening when we were suddenly yanked out of our desks in Tata Centre, and without any warning shipped out to J. We reached the station not very sure of what was going on, and were scooped up into a jeep and swept away to an open air venue, where four sets of four chairs were laid out on a circular dias. We found we were taking part in a quiz, and we were the Tube Co. team; TELCO had a team, and TISCO had two teams, Works and non-Works, non-Works including the Aviation Section (the reason for this we learnt soon enough). I was sitting next to the non-Works team, next to a gent with a, shall we say, fleshy build? As the quiz started, we were pretty much creaming the other teams (I was member of the IIMC team, and had a lot of 'exposure', and this was a bit of a doddle). The guy next door was doing well, and I couldn't help leaning over and slapping him between the shoulder blades. Someone called him Doc, so I encouraged him every time he gave a good answer (rare enough), but there was a curious absence of bonhomie in that team. When the final two rounds came around, we were sitting in the catbird seat, and then it began. One question after another, on peculiarly arcane bits of aeronautical fare. I came to aeronautics some twenty years after that horrible evening; on the evening, we just sat as the rug was pulled out from under our feet. On the final question, Non-works pipped us at the post, there was a great roar of applause, and the QM announced that Doc Irani would host all the teams to dinner. It was the terrifying Dr. Irani I'd been slapping on his (ample) thighs!
The aftermath was weirder.
Ramesh and Sarosh obviously didn't think very much of Doc, and they swiftly took their teams away to Sarosh' home for a wing-ding of a time, but far away from the celebrating Doc and the TISCO teams. That was how deep rivalries ran at the time; it was a bit of a shocker in more ways than one.