The Economic Times Weekend Platter

To ensure delivery directly to your inbox, Please add etonlineeditor@indiatimesservices.com to your address book today.
If you are having trouble viewing this newsletter, please click here.
The ET Weekend Platter offers the round up of the news that you missed during the week. We bring to you the most-read news, investment corner, stock wrap-up, issue that hogged headlines, editor's picks and the most happening trend stories from across sectors, for you to savour at your conveniance. Happy reading.
Experts' take on where the markets are headed
ET NOW picks on great brains to get an insight into where markets are headed. Here's what M Stanley's Roach, First Global's Sharma, BoA-Merrill Lynch's Blanch said.
TCS, Infy, Wipro, IBM bid for Rs 2K cr online FIR project
12 firms, including TCS, Infosys, Wipro, IBM and Accenture, would be participating to devise the system, slugged Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems.
Chinese gold rush to overtake India's this year: GFMS

High gold prices are putting a larger damper on appetite for gold in India than in China,especially in investment area. Tips to buy gold I Time to go for gold?


Story of the Week

Citigroup soon to be last Wall St bank held by US
Citigroup's fortunes have slipped as rising consumer losses overshadow gains from its trading activity.

Stock Round up

Face Dubai storm with lessons from Crash of '08
Dubai crisis has once again trapped investors between greed & fear. But you should apply the lessons from 2008 turmoil.

ET Features

It's high time to go for gold
Gold prices have been on an uptrend in the last few months. Is it the beginning of a golden era?

Effects of the recession on executive careers
The effects of the recession on executive careers will be long lasting, says Monika Hamori of Madrid's IE Business School.

Personal Finance

HDFC takes on SBI with dual-rate home loan
HDFC announced dual-rate loan where borrower will be charged fixed rate up to Mar '12 floating thereafter.

Save early for your child's education
When it comes to financial planning for a child's education, the most affordable way is to start saving early.

Corporate Trends

Kotak emerges as a leading player in pvt banking space
The bank identifies its private banking clients, as individuals with an investible surplus of over Rs 5 crore. This is a trend followed by all other large banks as well.

Check out India Inc's best marketed companies
Vodafone, HUL, Bharti Airtel, Nokia & PepsiCo are India's 'Most Admired Marketers', best in the marketing class of India Inc 2009.

Visual Treat
Virender Sehwag demonstrated that batsmen other than Donald Bradman could score 300 runs in less than a day's play. Well, almost.
Editor's Pick
Most Read Stories
Offbeat

I've let my family down, says Tiger Woods
Golf superstar Tiger Woods admitted "transgressions" and said he had let his family down, in a statement posted on his website that appeared to confirm rumors of an extramarital affair.

Letter to the editor

Climate change: Poor the worst-hit
India must make it clear that it will take binding curbs on emissions subsequent to developed nations.

News by Industry

Composers Datebook for December 5, 2009

Composers Datebook
SPONSOR
Produced in association with the American Composers Forum

Saturday, December 5

Play today's show | How to listen

Berlioz gets snuffed?

"Snuff" is a finely pulverized tobacco that can be, well, "snuffed" through the nose (and kids -- don't you dare try this at home!).

In the 19th century taking snuff was a common practice, and on today's date in 1837 the most notorious example of snuff-taking in musical history occurred -- or didn't occur, depending on who you believe -- during the premiere in Paris of the massive "Requiem Mass" of the French composer Hector Berlioz.

As Berlioz tells it in his Memoirs, the conductor of the performance, Francois-Antoine Habeneck, decided to take a pinch of snuff during an especially tricky passage of the score, just when a cue from the conductor was of particular importance. To avert disaster, Berlioz stepped in front of Habeneck, gave the cue, and afterwards all but accused the conductor of deliberately trying to sabotage his music. Some eye-witnesses are on record saying, "Yes, that's just how it happened," while others, equally emphatic, state: "Preposterous! Nothing of the sort occurred."

Who to believe?

Well, it is known that once the basic tempo was set, M. Habeneck was in the habit of putting down his baton to let the orchestra play on by themselves. He would then calmly take a pinch of snuff. Sometimes, it's said, he even offered snuff to his neighbors, so perhaps those performances, at least, if not the premiere of Berlioz's Requiem, were indeed sabotaged -- by an especially loud sneeze!

Music Played on Today's Program:

Hector Berlioz
(1803 � 1869):
Requiem, Op 5
French Radio Philharmonic
Chorus and Orchestra;
Leonard Bernstein, cond.
Sony 47526

Additional Information:

On Berlioz

About the Program
Composers Datebook is a daily program about composers of the past and present, hosted by John Zech.

Support Composers Datebook
Purchase music from Composers Datebook from Amazon. Or shop Public Radio Market. Your purchases help support the American Composers Forum and public radio.

Your support makes our online services possible. Contribute Now.


Fostering artistic and professional development



You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2009 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

Political News Alert: Aide: Baucus nominated girlfriend for fed post

News Alert
01:47 AM EST Saturday, December 5, 2009

Political News Alert: Aide: Baucus nominated girlfriend for fed post

A spokesman for U.S. Sen. Max Baucus says the Montana Democrat was in a romantic relationship with the woman he nominated for U.S. attorney.


For more information, visit washingtonpost.com - http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/r/F490YD/VR2PD/5MXYIX/LUGE59/XOAYO/50/t

--------------------

Sign Up for more alerts - http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/r/F490YD/VR2PD/5MXYIX/LUGE59/UGCX8/50/t

To unsubscribe, click here - http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/r/F490YD/VR2PD/5MXYIX/LUGE59/BD9LI/50/t?a=P05&b=bXlibG9naGF5dGhhbUBnbWFpbC5jb20=

--------------------
Copyright 2009 The Washington Post Company
Washington Post Digital
c/o E-mail Customer Care
1515 N. Courthouse Road
Arlington, VA 22201

[[F490YD-DIJHY-VR2PD-5MXYIX-LUGE59-T-M2-20091205-af60c932d09556519]]

The Writer's Almanac for December 5, 2009

View this message on the Web

Saturday

Dec. 5, 2009

The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor

 LISTEN

A Marriage

by Barry Spacks

Clear now
of our long struggle
I can hear your voice, its strength
the sweet coldness
of river water.

And I can see you
as in the photograph
with your father and sister,
tall pretty girl,
pigtailed and freckled,

led, misled,
until you doubted
your beauty, body,
that you were one among us,
a person, like any other.

And, given distance,
I think of you
becoming smaller,
but cheerful, the way
the old are

with short white hair
and an easiness
you'd never know before,
and me, incredibly,
not there.

"A Marriage" by Barry Spacks, from Spacks Street: New and Selected Poems. © The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982. Reprinted with permission. (buy now)

It's the birthday of Pre-Raphaelite poet Christina Rossetti, (books by this author) born in London in 1830. She grew up in a large, boisterous household. She had three brothers and sisters, and her parents were Italian, so all the children grew up speaking Italian and English. Her father was a political refugee and a Dante scholar and poet.

Christina started writing poetry as a young girl. In September of 1848, when Christina was 17, her brothers Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Michael Rossetti helped form the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, considered by many to be the first avant-garde movement, although it might not look particularly radical to us now. Christina was never officially a member of the group, but she published poetry in their magazine, and she was a frequent model for her brother Dante's paintings.

And she was a successful and much-admired poet in her own right. She published her most famous collection, Goblin Market and Other Poems (1862), when she was 31 years old. And most people today would probably recognize one of her poems as a well-known Christmas carol.

It begins:
In the bleak mid-winter
Frosty wind made moan,
Earth stood hard as iron,
Water like a stone;
Snow had fallen, snow on snow,
Snow on snow,
In the bleak mid-winter
Long ago.

It's the birthday of travel writer Kate Simon, (books by this author) born Kaila Grobsmith in Warsaw in 1912. She loved New York and she decided that she wanted to write a city guidebook that would be different from all the other books on the market, so she wrote New York Places and Pleasures: An Uncommon Guidebook (1959), which is still in print and has gone through four revisions since then. It was so successful that she started getting commissions to write travel books, and wrote about cities and countries all around the world.

And she also wrote memoirs, Bronx Primitive: Portraits of a Childhood (1982), A Wider World: Portraits of an Adolescence (1986), and Etchings in an Hourglass (1990), which she completed just before she died from cancer in 1990.

It's the birthday of novelist and essayist Joan Didion (books by this author) born on this day in Sacramento in 1934. She grew up in the Sacramento Valley, the same place her family, early settlers to California, had lived for five generations. When she was a teenager, she typed out pages from Ernest Hemingway, and she said that typing out passages from A Farewell to Arms "taught me the importance of absolute precision, of how every word and every comma and every absence of a word or comma can change the meaning, make the rhythm, make the difference." She went to Berkeley, and in her senior year she won a writing competition sponsored by Vogue. The prize was either a trip to Paris or money and a job at the magazine. She chose the job, which turned out to be her first and only job. She worked there for a few years, then took some time off to work on her first novel and never went back to the office. Her novel had been turned down by 12 publishers, but then the next publisher accepted it and gave her $1,000 to finish it. So she did, and it was published as Run River(1963). She went on to write reviews, essays, journalism, novels, and screenplays, seven of them co-written with her husband, John Gregory Dunne. She wrote the essay collection Slouching Towards Bethlehem (1968), the novel A Book of Common Prayer (1977), and many more books. In 2004, her beloved husband died of a heart attack while their only daughter was in the hospital with a dangerous illness, which she died from a year later. Joan Didion wrote her memoir The Year of Magical Thinking (2005) about her year of grief. It was a huge best-seller and won the National Book Award.

It's the birthday of nonfiction writer John Berendt, (books by this author) born in Syracuse, New York (1939). He went to Harvard, wrote for the Harvard Lampoon, and after college he got a job at Esquire. He worked on and off at the magazine for more than 30 years. One day in 1982, he was feeling overwhelmed by life in the big city and he found cheap a weekend flight to Savannah, Georgia, so he went on a vacation. And he loved it. He especially liked the people who lived there and the stories they told. So he started listening to stories, taking notes, and he finally decided to just go ahead and move to Savannah. He lived there for five years, and then he went back to New York and he wrote a book. That book was Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (1994), and it was a huge best-seller, on the New York Times best-seller list for more than four years, something that Berendt was not expecting. He said, "First, I wanted people to say —or critics to say, 'Yeah, it's a book. This man, who writes columns and magazine articles, has written a book.' Then I hoped they would say, 'It's a good book,' and possibly, 'It's a very good book.' But I wasn't really thinking of sales. ... It didn't occur to me to even hope for that."

Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®

sponsor
The Poetry Foundation
National broadcasts of The Writer's Almanac are supported by The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine for over 90 years.

sponsor
Sponsor Link: The Poetry Foundation
Make a Contribution

Contribute $75 or more today and we'll thank you with the official Writer's Almanac mug.

Professional Organization of English Majors

POEM apparel

T-shirts and sweatshirt available now.

 Visit The Writer's Almanac Bookshelf

Read highlighted interviews of poets heard on the show.

Visit the bookshelf now

Be Well, Do Good Work, and Keep in Touch


You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2009 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

Marketplace Money Newsletter for Weekend of December 5-6, 2009


Marketplace Money weekly update
DECEMBER 5-6, 2009
This Week

Government takeover of student loans?
If you've received a student loan lately, chances are you have the government to thank. Private lending has been in short supply. Now, Congress is considering eliminating the middleman completely. Bob Moon reports.


Job hunting basics for a tough market
China Gorman, an executive with the Society for Human Resource Management, talks with Tess Vigeland about the advice job placement counselors are giving recently laid-off workers.


Investment lessons culled from Madoff
David McPherson, president of financial planning firm Four Ponds Financial, talks with Tess Vigeland about how investors can avoid another Bernie Madoff scenario.


The new digital pyramid scheme
The latest pyramid scheme comes to us in a new format: personalized videos. Rico Gagliano reports on what some people are referring to as "cash gifting."


Don't let debt cancellation fool you
Bob Sullivan, who covers Internet scams and consumer fraud for MSNBC.com, talks with Tess Vigeland about why debt cancellation services are not as good as they sound.


Raising the bar on mortgages
The Federal Housing Authority has revealed new requirements for mortgage qualification, while the pressure is on to modify mortgages that already exist. Tess Vigeland explains.


How to get equal pay for equal work
Women still get paid less than men for the same work, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Ashley Milne-Tyte reports on how women can begin to chip away at the disparity.


I'm going to make some investing noise
Lauren Silverman is only a senior in college, but she's already focused on becoming a financially independent woman. She explains why she's made learning the ins and outs of investing a priority in her life.


ALL MARKETPLACE MONEY STORIES

 
 
Money Clip

Spenders and savers frequently marry each other. That's the news from a recent academic study. Chris Farrell has some ideas about how to turn financial discord into marital harmony.

Getting Personal
Personal finance columnist Liz Pulliam Weston helps Tess Vigeland answer listeners' questions about the risks of having a credit limit higher than you'll ever use, and whether to take an offer for a "hardship plan" to pay off debt.
Close quote
Submit your financial questions to GETTING PERSONAL.

SPONSOR



You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2009 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

Help support our online services

View this message on the Web
 

Make your year-end contribution today

You and thousands of others use The Writer's Almanac online services each month.

We want to keep offering these services for free, but the fact is, these services cost a lot of money. The Internet bandwidth alone costs American Public Media nearly $150,000 per year, and that cost does not include the production work that is done to make the service available.

As a person who enjoys our extensive show archive, podcasts and newsletters, please support these services with a financial contribution this year. Between now and December 31, our goal is to raise $100,000 from you and others to help pay for online services for The Writer's Almanac and other American Public Media programs.

Because we're non-profit and listener supported, we need your help. We're asking you to consider a small donation—just a few dollars.

Please make your tax-wise gift today.

Thank you for your support.



You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2009 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

 

©2009 Misc | by TNB