SET 158 :biggrin:(eu21)
1. 1. The inheritors of an ocean-removed bicultural legacy, the Generation Next of the diaspora finally appears to be coming to terms with its jumbled self.
(A) And it's time to repay where India is concerned.
(B) As confidence levels of NRIs soar, so have their incomes.
(C) It is like a pleasant hand-me-down, to be assumed or to be extolled, and India is like a comfortable notion, a homeland that once was but will never be again.
(D) Indianness is no longer a burden or badge they have to carry, nostalgically saluting every time they go out into the adopted world, like their parents had to.
6. This year, as exports took a beating, remittances from global Indians catapulted the forex reserves past $50 billion.
(1) ADCB (2) DCBA (3) DACB (4) CDBA
2. (A) Several NRIs have made India proud by their remarkable achievements as doctors, physicists, academicians,entrepreneurs, lawyers and leaders of global organisations.
(B) about 3,00,000 Indian Americans work in technology firms in California is Silicon Valley.
(C) I started by talking about Indian Americans because I am one of them, but I am not discounting the large numbers of Indians in Canada, Europe, UK, Singapore, Malaysia and other countries, who are equally successful,talented and influential.
(D) More than 5000 Indian Americans are faculty members in leading academic institutions in the US.
(1) DCBA (2) ADCB (3) ACBD (4) DBAC
3. (A) And then the controversy over Deepa Mehta's film 'Fire' erupted.
(B) Anand Kurian, 44, has a ready answer.
(C) Why would an ad filmmaker who has tasted the bounty of such multinationals as Coke and Frito Lay give up all that and spend two years writing a book ?
(D) Apprehensive that his dream project might meet the same fate, Kurian moulded his script to a novel about love in the time of communal riots.
(E) But the film script he began writing "took on a life of its own, becoming more and more political."
(1) CBEAD (2) ADCBE (3) CBADE (4) CEBAD