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Stain - short story by Vanna Nilavan

Persistence of Memory - by Salvador Dali Last time when I went home, there was nobody there, except for him sitting in his cot as was his wont. There must be something about the cot which tied our Annan ( big brother ) to it, seemingly for ever. Through the window behind the cot, you could see the mango tree with its tender leaves and fresh flowers standing in dignified silence under the scorching sun. Two women underneath, in contrast, were in constant chatter moving about a clothesline wringing and hanging clothes to dry. As the women tied one end of a brown saree to a post to stretch it free of wrinkles, the sun shining thru it produced light of a different hue, our Annan was sitting there with an expression of contentment on his face, as if laughter had just prevailed and subsided. Our big brother was in the same state of stupor, till I asked him, “Where are the others?”.as I was keeping the bag down. “Welcome home Kittu” , he replied, “They have all ...

Policy Paralysis Ahoy !

An artist depiction of sleep paralysis 13 lakh crores, that is the NPAs the public sector banks have accumulated. They are not showing no signs of turning good. 4-6 lakh crores is what that the PSBs require for recapitalization and to meet with Base III norms over next few years and it is a moving target, moving up that is. Bank after bank is reporting abysmal earnings. IOB takes the cake. It reported 1500 cross loss last financial year. At the end of First quarter of 2015, it has reported that its NPAs have risen to 16%.of its gross assets from the earlier 10%. RBI feels the asset quality norms are still too lax and are actually encouraging loan default! The Bank staff have long stopped considering themselves as employees of a commercial organization. They are outstanding specimens of what is called as 'rentier class' in leftist parlance. Right from comparing themselves to Central Government employees and seeking jobs for dependents on 'compassionate groun...

The Greek Tragedy

These days the happenings in the Financial Markets are more thrilling than any Hollywood or Bollywood block buster and more tear-jerking than the art films of Bengali cinema of yesteryear. Greece is teetering on the precipice of sovereign default of repayment of loan to IMF. Greece has been struggling for some time with its External debt standing at 177% of its GDP. As an economy it has not been growing and with the dollar strengthening against the Euro the debt has grown larger in the recent months in dollar terms. Greece has been living beyond its means, a small country which has about half the population of Mumbai had accumulated debt to the extent of 3 5 0 billion dollars. An aging population, more than liberal social benefits, retirement pension starting from 48 years, no manufacturing and high-cost tourism denominated in Euro characterized the economy of Greece. More shockingly, the country admitted that it has been falsifying its annual budgetary deficit...

The Elephant Story - by S. Ponnudurai

A word smith from Srilanka I have seen from experience that best writing comes from the lands riven by contradictions and strife. You can see that in sub-continental literature, whether from India, Pakistan or Sri Lanka. One of my favourite Srilankan Tamil writers is S. Ponnudurai, generally known by the abbreviated name 'S.Po'. S.Po was born in 1932 in the Jaffna peninsula in a small village called Nallur. He studied in Madras Christian College, Madras and graduated in English literature. He went to work in Nigeria in 1962 as an English teacher and left that country when sectarian clashes convulsed the African state. He migrated to Australia thereafter. Frequently, he spent years in India where from he wrote and published novels and short stories. I have a special liking for his short stories. Often the stories will be entwined in strands of both hope and angst which will make you reflect on the irony of the situation. His 'The Elephant Story...

Turbulence in the Indian IT Sector

. ......................But its strange; As oftentimes to win us to our harm. The Instruments of Darkness tell us truth; Win us with honest trifles, to betray's In deepest consequence.-- --Banquo in 'Macbeth'. There is some turbulence in India's IT sector. The management of all the giant IT companies are in an unenviable position of having to make their employees face the facts. If you are discerning, you can read the tea leaves. One big IT Company did announce to the media that it is targeting about 25000 associates and that it will be less than 10% of its overall strength. Since there is no advantage in removing juniors who , as new entrants into the work force, still provide the edge in labour arbitrage, this 25000 will have to come from middle to senior levels. If seen in this light, the reduction is not 10%; it may as well be 25% to 30%! However, it is another matter that the management has now retracted much of what it said ...

Engish Vinglish - II

Parallelism We are coming with more checks, more fines, more often                 __ Tagline of Yarra Trams’ (Melbourne) drive against ticket-less travel. Is this catchy l tag line is grammatically wrong ?  Hard to believe.  Grammarians say  it is parallelism ;  you should not mix adjectives and nouns  in a sequence.  Faulty parallelism is when the different elements, though grammatically correct by themselves, do not mesh properly in one sentence. While some parallelism is barely noticeable, others can be quite jarring.  Examples of fault parallelism could be:           Including gerunds and infinitives in a list           Adjectives and nouns in a list           Changing from passive voice to active voice or vice versa .           Changing from second pers...