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Showing posts from April 14, 2018

👀DAILY HINDU EDITORIAL WORD BYTES -1 --> 14 APRIL👀

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💥 Daily word bytes - 1  from editorial  - Divided we Fall  ðŸ’¥ terms of reference (phrase)  – scope, limits, range/purview. Hindu Editorial usage :  Prime Minister Narendra Modi thinks vested interests are behind the “baseless” allegation that the terms of reference of the 15th Finance Commission are biased against certain States or a region vested interest (noun)  – a personal interest in something to get benefit. Hindu Editorial usage :  Prime Minister Narendra Modi thinks vested interests are behind the “baseless” allegation that the terms of reference of the 15th Finance Commission are biased against certain States or a region bias (against) (phrase) - prejudice against someone; influence, sway. Hindu Editorial usage :  Prime Minister Narendra Modi thinks vested interests are behind the “baseless” allegation that the terms of reference of the 15th Finance Commission are biased against certain States or a region clamour (noun)  – protest, complaints, outcry/c

Commonwealth Games 2018: India’s medals tally

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👉Gold (17) M.C. Mary Kom won 45-48 kg category boxing event, claiming gold in her debut Commonwealth Games. Bajrang Punia won the gold medal in freestyle 65kg wrestling. Tejaswini Sawant won the 50m rifle position event 15-year-old Anish Bhanwala bagged gold in men's 25m rapid fire pistol. In men's freestyle 74kg wrestling, double Olympic-medallist Sushil Kumar won gold. Rahul Aware added another gold medal to India's tally, winning in the Men's Freestyle 57kg wrestling event. In the double trap women shooting, India's Shreyasi Singh won gold. Shooter Heena Sidhu won gold in 25m pistol event to give India its 11th gold medal in the Games. The Indian mixed team badminton claimed gold for the first time in the Games' history. In the 10m men's air pistol event, India's Jitu Rai won gold. This is his second Commonwealth gold.  In the women's table tennis event, the Indian team won its first ever Commonwealth gold

Ambedkar’s Dhamma, Gandhi’s Swaraj

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💥Perhaps we need to turn to art to understand the inner conflict of the Indian political tradition💥 Recent work by the Mumbai-based artist and curator, one of the founders of the Kochi Biennale, Riyas Komu interrogates our relationship with both the symbols of the state and the values that they are meant to enshrine and invoke. “Holy Shiver”, a series of works including sculptures in metal, wood and terracotta, videos, oil portraits, woodcuts, installations and archival prints, refers to the instinctive response of the body, whether animal or human, when it senses danger and enters a ‘fight or flight’ mode. Horripilation (the hair on the back of the neck standing on end), the trembling of the extremities, the tensing of muscles — these primordial physical reactions to a perceived external threat Komu uses as an allegory for how the body politic responds when confronted with the ‘other’, whoever is identified as an enemy of the ‘self’. The instinctual biological ‘shiver’ o

Divided we fall: on the 15th Finance Commission

💥The debate on the Finance Commission’s terms of reference needs reshaping💥 Prime Minister Narendra Modi thinks vested interests are behind the “baseless” allegation that the terms of reference of the 15th Finance Commission are biased against certain States or a region. He did not name the region, but he was clearly responding to growing clamour from the southern States for a rethink on the parameters for the Commission to determine revenue-sharing between the Centre and the States. The southern States are concerned that the Commission is switching from the 1971 Census to the 2011 Census. This means States that have done relatively better to control population growth could see their allocations, as a fraction of the total resources, reduced. However, speaking in Chennai Mr. Modi said a State like Tamil Nadu would actually benefit from the Commission’s mandate as the Centre has mooted incentives for those who have done well on population control. That the Prime Minister has had t

Preventing accidents

💥Fixing road design and enforcing safety protocols should be priorities💥 Bald data on Indians killed or injured in road accidents put out annually by the Centre obscure the human impact of the carnage on national and State highways, as well as urban and rural roads. Given the level of official indifference, it would be unsurprising if the deaths this week of at least 23 children and many others in a school bus crash in Kangra, Himachal Pradesh, or of the 18 labourers in a lorry accident in Maharashtra, or of nine people in a truck mishap in Uttar Pradesh are mere blips on the radar of administrators. Bringing sanity to the roads of a fast-motorising country seems to be nobody’s responsibility. India as a whole is inured to the ghastly toll every year, although the Supreme Court has been trying to shake governments out of their apathy through the Committee on Road Safety it constituted in 2014 and several specific and time-bound directions. The response of the Centre and the State

The enigma of arrival

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💥 Filling in the gaps in B.R Ambedkar’s educational journey 💥 B.R. Ambedkar’s educational journey began in impossibly challenging conditions. With the help of a modest scholarship granted by the Maharaja of Baroda, he joined Columbia University, New York, in July 1913. After completing his M.A., he went on to write a thesis that ultimately led to the conferment of a PhD degree. In mid-1916, he was admitted to Grays’ Inn in London to appear for the bar. When his scholarship ended in 1917, he was forced to return to India. 👉Some answers All this has been well documented by his biographer Dhananjay Keer. But several details remain incomplete. What was the exact date on which he left India? When did he arrive in America? How did he travel to London? Based on documents newly accessed in the British Library, we can now fill in the gaps. The First World War which was raging at the time forms the backdrop for the paper trail. On May 17, 1916, Ambedkar addressed two letters