The Economic Times Weekend Platter

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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.
Eight-year cycle: Sensex may hit 21,000 jackpot in 2011

Stock market is in the midst of a consolidation phase that will set the tone for next bull run. Gainers: BSE ( A, B ), NSE | Losers: BSE ( A, B ), NSE


Volkswagen-Suzuki to roll out Rs 2.5-lakh car in India

The new car that will be priced at $4000-5000 in European mkt will be the cheapest car from Volkswagen stable below the Up. New VW Beetle car


KCR achieved in 11 days what he could not in 8 years

K Chandrasekhar Rao has achieved what other Telangana leaders could not in five decades. In Pics: Andhra Turmoil | 1 state but 2 regions worlds apart


Story of the Week

Climate talks seek calm after storm at draft text
The summit encountered turbulence when a split emerged among developing countries on the key area of emissions controls.

Stock Round up

Cheaper US funds keep the D-St show going, for now
Indian equities remain largely insulated from Dubai impact. Experts rule out hike in Fed rates.

ET Features

The Samurais of Indian marketing and advertising world
Call it a revival of interest in India. Japanese warriors are busy plotting strategies to rule the Indian advertising and marketing world.

How FedEx delivers goods at your doorstep
It's been 12 years since FedEx first set up shop in India, and in that time it has amassed some 3,000 local employees and built a sterling reputation.

Personal Finance

Home loan: Which is the best, cheapest offer?
The home loan rate war got hotter with ICICI joining the bandwagon. With plethora of offers on cards, here's how to identify the best option.

MCD slaps tax on professionals earning over Rs 30,000 a month
MCD proposes to raise Rs 100 cr annually from the proposed professional tax, for everyone working in Delhi & earning more than Rs 30K per month.

Corporate Trends

New top guns emerge from slowdown ashes
As India Inc emerges from the economic slowdown, changes in the pecking order are underway across sectors.

In India, a developing case of innovation envy
While the rest of the world envies India's outsourcing business, many Indians are disappointed that the country has not moved up to more ambitious work.

Visual Treat
Nobel Peace Prize laureate President Obama poses with his medal and certificate as Norwegian Nobel Committee Chairman Thorbjoern Jagland stands with him in Oslo Hall, on December 10, 2009. (REUTERS)
Editor's Pick
Most Read Stories
Offbeat

Ancestors of Chinese came from India: Study
Ancestors of most Asian populations, including the Chinese and southeast Asians, came from India, a new genetic study across 10 countries has revealed.

Letter to the editor

Telangana, but why?
We had elections just a year ago in all regions of Andhra Pradesh. The TRS fought the elections on the separatist slogan and lost badly in Telangana to the Congress. In fact, all parties with separatist slogans lost badly in Telangana.

News by Industry

The Writer's Almanac for December 12, 2009

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Saturday

Dec. 12, 2009

The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor

 LISTEN

Nights Our House Comes to Life

by Matthew Brennan

Some nights in midwinter when the creek clogs
With ice and the spines of fir trees stiffen
Under a blank, frozen sky,
On these nights our house comes to life.
It happens when you're half asleep:
A sudden crack, a fractured dream, you bolting
Upright � but all you can hear is the clock
Your great-grandfather found in 1860
And smuggled here from Dublin for his future bride,
A being as unknown to him then as she is now
To you, a being as distant as the strangers
Who built this house, and died in this room
Some cold, still night, like tonight,
When all that was heard were the rhythmic clicks
Of a pendulum, and something, barely audible,
Moving on the dark landing of the attic stairs.

"Nights Our House Comes to Life" by Matthew Brennan, from The House with the Mansard Roof. © The Backwaters Press, 2009. Reprinted with permission. (buy now)

It's the birthday of playwright John Osborne, (books by this author) born in London (1929). He said, "I never deliberately set out to shock, but when people don't walk out of my plays I think there is something wrong."

It's the birthday of painter Edvard Munch, born in the village of Ådalsbruk, Norway (1863). In 1892, he wrote in his journal: "I was walking along the road with two friends. The sun set. I felt a tinge of melancholy. Suddenly the sky became a bloody red. I stopped, leaned against the railing, dead tired, and I looked at the flaming clouds that hung like blood and a sword over the blue-black fjord and the city. My friends walked on. I stood there, trembling with fright. And I felt a loud, unending scream piercing nature." The next year, he painted the first of several versions of his most famous painting, The Scream.

It's the birthday of Gustave Flaubert, (books by this author) born in Rouen, France (1821). His father was a surgeon, and the family was one of the most respected in Rouen. He was nonplussed about the prospect of leaving Rouen for to Paris to go to law school. He wrote to a friend: "I'll go study law, which, instead of opening all doors, leads nowhere. I'll spend three years in Paris contracting venereal diseases. And then? All I want is to live out all my days in an old ruined castle near the sea."

Although he enjoyed Paris for its brothels, he didn't like much else. He failed his law exams and ended up collapsing, dizzy and then unconscious. It was the first of many such episodes throughout his life, probably epilepsy, and Flaubert gave up on law, left Paris, and moved to a house in Croisset, near Rouen.
He worked hard on his first novel, The Temptation of St. Anthony, and he thought it was a masterpiece. He spent four days reading it aloud to two friends, and he wouldn't let them comment until the end, at which point they suggested that he burn it. So he stopped working on it although it was eventually published in its finished form more than 25 years later, and even then, he considered it his best novel.

Flaubert traveled for a while, and then he started a new project, a novel about a doctor's wife named Emma who tries to fill her empty life by having affairs. He wrote carefully, working long hours, agonizing over each word. He wrote to his mistress, the poet Louise Colet: "Happy are they who don't doubt themselves and whose pens fly across the page. I myself hesitate, I falter, I become angry and fearful, my drive diminishes as my taste improves, and I brood more over an ill-suited word than I rejoice over a well-proportioned paragraph." But after five years of work, he finished his novel, which he published in installments in 1856, and it was Madame Bovary.

In 1911, The New York Times reported that Madame Bovary had been voted by the French as the "best French novel." In 2007, editor J. Peder Zane published a book called The Top Ten, in which he asked 125 contemporary writers to name what they consider "the ten greatest works of fiction of all time," and Madame Bovary was number two, after Anna Karenina.

Gustave Flaubert, who said, "I can imagine nothing in the world preferable to a nice, well-heated room, with the books one loves and the leisure one wants."

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

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Good Poems for Hard Times
selected by Garrison Keillor

Good Poems for Hard Times

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Read highlighted interviews of poets heard on the show.

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Be Well, Do Good Work, and Keep in Touch


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Marketplace Money Newsletter for Weekend of December 12-13, 2009


Marketplace Money weekly update
December 12-13, 2009
This Week

The perils of buying a foreclosed home
After David Reeves bought a foreclosed home, he found it took a surprising amount of work just to make it livable. He talks with reporter Julie Rose about his experience.


How to get a good foreclosure deal
How can you make sure buying a foreclosed home is a good deal? Realtor John Anderson explains to Tess Vigeland.


Japan's solar energy shines a light
In Japan, solar energy is a green technology that even the middle class can afford. Rob Schmitz of KQED visits the country and reports on the lessons the Land of the Rising Sun has to teach us.


Getting a laugh out of Madoff
When you're a New York cabaret singer who loses your life savings to Bernie Madoff, what do you do next? Why, put on a show, of course. Cynthia Crane offers a taste of her one-woman performance called "John Denver, Bernie Madoff and Me."


The mag I love to hate: SkyMall
Los Angeles Times columnist Meghan Daum talks about her fascination with the magazine found in just about every plane seat pocket: SkyMall.


How to be smart about philanthropy
Whether you have millions or just a few dollars, how do you know which causes to support? Charles Bronfman and Jeffrey Solomon, co-authors of "The Art of Giving," talk with Tess Vigeland about how to make every charitable dollar count.


What converting to a Roth IRA means
The rules governing Roth IRAs are changing. Financial planner Stuart Ritter talks with Tess Vigeland about how to make sense of the new guidelines.


Our listeners respond to Money
Listeners chime in on Marketplace Money coverage, including who should back student loans, who really needs financial education, and our series on kids and money.


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
Los Angeles Times consumer columnist David Lazarus and Tess Vigeland answer listener questions, from why Starbucks stores don't all carry the same items, to what to do if your company doesn't let you contribute to its retirement plan.
Close quote
Submit your financial questions to GETTING PERSONAL.

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Breaking News: Tiger Woods to take 'indefinite' leave from golf

News Alert
07:02 PM EST Friday, December 11, 2009

Tiger Woods to take 'indefinite' leave from golf

Golfer will take an indefinite leave from professional golf to work on saving his family, using the word "infidelity" for the first time in a statement posted on his Web site.

For more information, visit washingtonpost.com - http://link.email.washingtonpost.com/r/C7I8XW/EAU86/FQR3PR/RG5SRR/DI1YG/GX/t

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[[C7I8XW-3ZQ2Q-EAU86-FQR3PR-RG5SRR-T-M2-20091211-117594791c489d413]]

Superfund and Brownfields News Release (Region 4): U. S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY ANNOUNCES INFORMATION MEETINGS FOR THE JACKSONVILLE ASH AND BROWN'S DUMP SITE

 

U. S. Environmental Protection Agency Announces Information Meetings for the Jacksonville Ash and Brown’s Dump Site

 

Remediation set to begin at Ash Sites in January 2010

 

Contact Information: Dawn Harris-Young, (404) 562-8421, harris-young.dawn@epa.gov

 

(ATLANTA – December 11, 2009) — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will hold two information meetings, in conjunction with Project New Ground (PNG), to discuss the remedial cleanup for the Jacksonville Ash and Brown’s Dump Sites in Jacksonville, Florida.  The meetings also will provide an opportunity for surrounding community members to sign an Access Agreement.

 

On Tuesday, December 15, 2009, a meeting will be held at the Emmett Reed Center on 1093 West 6th Street in Jacksonville.  On Wednesday, December 16, 2009, a meeting will be held at the A. Philip Randolph Academies on 1157 Golfair Boulevard in Jacksonville.  Each meeting will begin with an Availability Sessions from 4:00 PM until 6:00 PM.  At 5:00 PM, there will be an opportunity for media to ask questions and conduct interviews.  The information meeting will be held from 6:00 PM until 7:00 PM.  Following this meeting, community members have another opportunity for additional questions and answers. 

 

For more information, or to view any site-related documents, please visit the site information repositories at the following locations or visit the links below. As new documents are generated, they will be placed in the following information repositories for public information:


 

(Brown’s Dump Site)

Clanzel T. Brown Center
4415 Moncrief Rd.
Jacksonville, Florida

 

(Jacksonville Ash Site)

Jacksonville Urban League
903 West Union Street
Jacksonville, FL 32205

 

(Jacksonville Ash Site)

Bradham Brooks Public Library
1755 West Edgewood Avenue
Jacksonville, FL 32208

 

(All Sites)

Project New Ground Community Information Center

1605-8 North Myrtle Avenue

Jacksonville, FL  32209


 

http://www.epa.gov/region4/waste/npl/nplfln/brndmppr.htm

 

http://www.epa.gov/region4/waste/npl/nplfln/jaxashfl.htm

 

http://www.coj.net/Departments/Environmental+and+Compliance/Project+New+Ground/Documents.htm

 

Persons interested in obtaining additional information are encouraged to contact L’Tonya Spencer at 404-562-8463 or 1-800-435- 9234, extension 28463.  For more information on the Superfund program, please visit: http://www.epa.gov/superfund/

 

Note: If a link above doesn't work, please copy and paste the URL into a browser.

 

 

View all Region 4 News Releases

 

 


EPA Seal

You can view or update your subscriptions or e-mail address at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page. All you will need is your e-mail address. If you have any questions or problems e-mail support@govdelivery.com for assistance.

 

This service is provided to you at no charge by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency


 


Fight Flu with Facts! Visit flu.gov. Call 800-232-4636. Text FLU to 87000.

Sent by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency · 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW · Washington DC 20460 · 202-564-4355

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