I had fun in going through the back and forth of
@Kuru and
@Areesh .
@Areesh Kuru's point was that if religious festivals are allowed in PU, then why isn't Holi allowed. You came with the counter that the Eid that is celebrated is more of a local thing than a global thing and that most Muslims in the world don't celebrate it. However, I would say that even if local, it's still a religious festival. If you take India's example, there are some local religious festivals in certain states which aren't celebrated in other states. We still classify them as religious festivals. Some religious festivals are also celebrated by only certain tribes and communities.
Regardless, I also found one link where a prayer is being offered on the Punjab University campus on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr.
This isn't celebration but this still means that religious prayers are offered on university campus and that there's also a special mosque for students from Punjab University.
Next was the debate about Pakjeet in which there were multiple viewpoints of what it really means. It was followed by the dissection of the word 'Pa' and another argument over the misunderstanding of whether Pa was mentioned as part of Urdu or just English.
This is of course a useless debate but it wouldn't even have started if
@Areesh hadn't used the word 'Pajeet'.
@Kuru in his comeback certainly tried to be innovative by adding the extra 'k' as the 3rd alphabet but then it was always going to spiral out of control. The result was an ugly slugfest.