2. 1
• The Breguet No. 160 grand complication, is a case watch designed
by Swiss watchmaker Abraham-Louis Breguet. Work on the watch
was begun in 1782 and completed in 1827.
• The watch was commissioned in 1783 for an extravagant and aptly,
a complicated customer from a neighboring country. The watch was
to contain every watch function known at that time, including the
following: Clock ,Perpetual calendar ,Minute repeater ,Thermometer
,Chronograph ,Power reserve and Pare-Chute.
• The customer never lived to see the watch, as she was caught up
with bigger issues in 1793. Who was this distinguished patron,
after whom the watch itself was named?
4. 2
• A renowned Czech architect by the name of
Jan Letzel won the contract for building the
administrative building of the Japanese
Chamber of Commerce and Industry in
1915. It also acted as space for industrial and
product exhibits by 1933.
• It gained further notoriety a few years later,
even gaining a UNESCO World Heritage
Site status in 1996 and thus remains his best
known work till date.
• By what name do we know it today?
7. Answer
• Various hand signals used in Bombay stock Exchanging during
trading hours amidst the noise. (1946)
• They are no longer in use now.
8. 4
• Why did this group’s joint venture with the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation attract media attention and
cause controversy with The Economist labeling it as "a
refreshing ignorance of politically incorrect language“?
9. Answer
• The JV was called Nigaz, a portmanteau of "Nigeria" and
"Gazprom", attracted media attention because of its
similarity to the potentially offensive word "nigga" and
slang derivative "niggaz" in African American Vernacular
English
10. 5
• At the end of its regime, the Vijayanagara Empire was
disintegrated into small parts administered by local governors.
• One such governor, Damarla Venkatadri Nayakudu was in
charge of a region called Chandragiri, which is still in
existence today at a distance of 12 kms from the temple town
of Tirupati. He is known to have lent a helping hand that was
to signal the doom of the Mughal empire subsequently.
• What did he do and how is this significant in the historical
context of Indian business?
11. Answer
• On August 22, 1639, Francis Day and Andrew Cogan secured a
grant from the Nayak thus obtaining the East India Company, a
three-mile long strip of land, a fishing village for a period of 2 years,
which empowered them to build a fort and castle on an approximate
5 sq. km sand strip.
• Around this were laid the modern day foundations of Madras, the
commercial point of trade for the English to commence business
operations with the east.
12. 6
• April 5 marks the National Maritime Day of India. On this day
in 1919 navigation history was made when SS Loyalty, the
first ship of The Scindia Steam Navigation Company, Ltd.,
journeyed to the United Kingdom.
• This was a crucial step for Indian shipping history as sea
routes were controlled by the British.
• Who jointly founded it with Narottam Morarjee and what
did it eventually turn out to become?
14. 7
• These concept designs were released on the internet in 2007 purely as collectibles
inspired by a case study published by a professor of economics in Vancouver a few years
before.
• The idea generated by this paper has garnered support and criticism alike from various
sides. Certain positive points show that it would save up to $3 billion in currency
transactions while promoting greater integration between the USA, Canada and Mexico.
The flipside includes decrease of dominance by the US, differing economies and
political mandates.
• What economic proposal is being described here?
15. Answer
• The introduction of “The Amero”, a theoretical economic and monetary
union of three North American countries: Canada, the United States and
Mexico.
• The concept is modeled on the common European Union currency (the
euro), and it is argued to be a natural extension of the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Security and Prosperity Partnership of
North America (SPP).
16. 8
• In 1876, Samuel Thrall Cooper founded S.T. Cooper & Sons.
Samuel Cooper started his hosiery business in St. Joseph,
Michigan to help lumberjacks who were suffering from their
poor quality socks thus laying the foundation for “Satisfying
the Human Need for Comfort.”
• Cooper‟s most sought after item was invented in 1930 and
called the Y-Front, which can still be seen in their product lines
today. How do we better know this company?
18. 9
• During the 1960s Boeing 707 aircrafts were acquired by
Air India as they saw the tourism potential of the country
from Europe and America.
• What key change was made during those years by the
management to give a more “Indian” feel to their
services?
19. Answer
• The official dress code of the Air Hostesses switched over from the
classic European style to the quintessential Indian sari.
21. Answer
• Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Salmon P.
Chase and John Marshall - persons who were not
presidents but managed to get their faces on US dollar
bills.
22. 11
• This company‟s journal from 1942 narrates a certain story from
its WW I origins.
– “…an engineer was testing the company‟s first 320 bhp engine. He
admired the reflection of the shining disc of the rotating propeller that
radiated like an aura of two silver cones. In between the two cones, the
blue from the sky shined that made the „rotating propeller into four
areas of color – silver and blue.”
• This was accompanied by some advertisements made by the
company to just to give a logical explanation to the public about
something that was actually inspired from a regional state flag.
What are we talking about?
24. 12
• She will be making a come back to her native country during
the inaugural Indian F1 Grand Prix. Who is she and what‟s her
claim to fame?
25. Answer
• Dehra Dun-born Monisha Narang (now Monisha
Kaltenborn) became the first woman boss of an F1 team
when she took charge of the Swiss-based Sauber.