This story is from July 31, 2018

TRS Suryapet cadre get car symbol ‘cemented’

TRS workers in Suryapet created a cement car of pink colour, which was unveiled by energy minister G Jagadish Reddy on Monday. This car is the election symbol of TRS.
TRS Suryapet cadre get car symbol ‘cemented’
TRS' pink cement car was unveiled in Suryapet
HYDERABAD: TRS workers in Suryapet created a cement car of pink colour, which was unveiled by energy minister G Jagadish Reddy on Monday. This car is the election symbol of TRS.
A brainwave of TRS workers in Tekumetla village, the cement car was constructed in 20 days. Nearly Rs one lakh was said to have been spent on it. Jagadish Reddy appreciated the party workers for their creativity.
With elections round the corner, TRS is demonstrating a positive outlook and expressing confidence that it would win the polls.
In Hyderabad, TRS MLC and party spokesman Karne Prabhakar while addressing a press conference said that both TDP and Congress were trying to prevent construction of Kaleshwaram project.
Prabhakar described the Congress as being a ‘covert’ of the TDP in Telangana. He said that TPCC president Uttam Kumar Reddy was unable to digest the fact that the Kaleshwaram project had become a tourist destination. “Why is he unable to appreciate it?” he questioned.
In Tandur, transport minister Mahendar Reddy felicitated all sarpanches, irrespective of their party affiliation. The term of the sarpanches ends this month. “The TRS government has not discriminated against villages where sarpanches are from a different party,” he said, adding that development of the villages was accorded top priority by the government.
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About the Author
Ch Sushil Rao

Sushil Rao is Editor-Special Reports, at The Times of India, Hyderabad. He began his journalism career at the age of 20 in 1988. He is a gold medalist in journalism from the Department of Communication and Journalism, Arts College, Osmania University, Hyderabad from where he did his post-graduation from. He has been with The Times of India’s Hyderabad edition since its launch in 2000. He has also done an introductory course in film studies from the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, and also from the Central University of Kerala equipping himself with the knowledge of filmmaking for film criticism. He has authored four books. In his career spanning 34 years, he has worked for five newspapers and has also done television reporting. He was also a web journalist during internet’s infancy in the mid 1990s in India. He covers defence, politics, diaspora, innovation, administration, the film industry, Hyderabad city and Telangana state, and human interest stories. He is also a podcaster, blogger, does video reporting and makes documentaries.

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