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PURETICS...

PURETICS...


Interesting Findings And World Unfolding Through My Eyes.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Life and Letters

One of the oldest of Indian Journalism ,Sham lal died,Inder Malhotra says about him:
"Sham Lal, whose death on Friday at age 94 is widely mourned, was unquestionably among the greatest of the greats of Indian journalism, his distinguished, often dazzling, career spanning nearly seven decades beginning in the early Thirties. Only on his 90th birthday did he stop writing his scintillating columns. "
Also he was one of the few journalist who wrote on virtually everything:
"As both a writer — his column "Life and Letters" had become famous long before he occupied the editorial — and editor, Sham Lal was a perfectionist. No flawed article would go past him. To the dismay of those in charge of the paper’s production, he would go on sending down corrections and changes in his exquisite column until late in the night. But nobody minded. For working with him was a joy, if only because the high standards he insisted on, he first imposed on himself. Gifted with an enviable style of writing, the Grand Old Man was doubtless the best wordsmith of our times. However, it was not the style alone that made him so distinctive. He was a man of ideas that he marshalled forcefully, a voracious reader, indeed bibliophiles’ bibliophile and arguably one of the best-read individuals. Nobel Laureate Octavio Paz who, during his years as Mexican ambassador to India knew him well, later wrote, "The brilliant Sham Lal, as deeply read in western thought as he was in the philosophical traditions of India, especially Buddhism."More..(Op-Ed)

Posted by Ajay :: 1:55 PM :: 0 comments

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Ordinary but Extraordinary

NY Times Report: One normally wouldn’t go to a New York bail bondsman for help in searching for the ancient treasure of the Knights Templar, but George Stobbart is no ordinary bail bondsman.

As the protagonist of the Broken Sword adventure game series, George has spent a lot of time on the trail of the Templars. So it’s unsurprising that in Secrets of the Ark: Broken Sword IV, developed by Revolution Software and Sumo Digital for the PC, a beautiful woman asks for his help with an ancient manuscript. As goons set on killing the woman bang on the door, George does what any hero would: he grabs his golf club and sneaks out the window.
special invention, a portable, extensible golf club, to overcome every obstacle. At one point, he escapes from a prison using only a handful of children’s toys.
The previous game in the series, Broken Sword: The Sleeping Dragon, released in 2003, tried to reinvent the adventure genre. It threw out the mouse-driven point-and-click interface common to such games, tossed in stealth sequences and some mild actioon.More

Posted by Ajay :: 1:29 PM :: 0 comments

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