Year: 2013

  • Panchgani The Switzerland Of India

    Panchgani The Switzerland Of India

    Panchgani, literally mean the place of five hills, is a renowned hill station in Maharashtra. This majestic hill resort is located at 1,334 mt altitude. Panchgani is a vibrant scenic destination and its beauty multiplies with the backdrop of hilly terrains at one side and coastal plains at the other side. This place had been used by the British officials as their summer resort. The Panchgani hill station is known for its unpolluted air and it is believed that the oxygen content in atmosphere is more here compared to other regions. Due to this many people select this for convalescing from diseases. The ambience is very cool and calm and the exquisite environment is a perfect background for rejuvenation.

    Panchgani is spotted with many attractive colonial period cottages with all luxurious facilities for the tourists to spend their vacation in perfect seclusion and enjoyment. This place is bestowed with buildings of British architecture, Parsi houses and the boarding schools. The town, a natural relaxation spot, adds its comforts with the soothing effect of cool breeze rustling through the thick woody regions. Panchgani has many western plant species including poinsettia and silver oaks, which are originally planted by British people. Fresh air, unspoiled natural beauty, breathtaking panoramic views and lush greeneries make this place one of the most sought hill station in Maharashtra. This place is renowned for international quality education and there are at least three dozen schools offering high standard facilities for the children. The Mahabaleshwar Hill Station and Venna Lake are some attractions nearby.

    ATTRACTIONS
    Devil’s Kitchen

    The Devil’s Kitchen is situated to the south of Table Land with a bit of mythological interest attached to it. It is believed that the Pandavas stayed here for a while and used this place to cook their food. There are some legends regarding this, though most of them appear to be mere tall tales. Some people claim that Pandavgad Caves (near Wai) are also built by them and bear their name.

    Rajapuri Caves
    Rajapuri Caves is situated at a distance of 7 km from Panchgani. The cave is a virtual delight for adventure lovers and is famous for the beautiful Lord Karthikeya Temple. The temple itself is constructed out of the sand taken from the caves. The journeys to the Rajapuri caves from Panchgani through serene, greenish villages will rejuvenate the mind of the visitors. The several water kunds in the premises resemble the Tiveni Sangam Temple at Prayag. It is said that the water kunds have curative powers.

    Table Land
    Privilege of being Asia s second longest mountain Plateau, the Table Land has a mythological story attached to it. It is believed that the Pandavas halted here and used it as a cooking place for themselves.

    Lord Karthikeya Temple
    The Lord Karthikeya temple is located at Rajapuri Caves in Panchgani. The temple is dedicated to Lord Karthikeya (Lord Muruga, Son of Lord Shiva). The temple premise is a calm and cool place and is best suited for people looking for serene environment for relaxation and meditation. The spiritual atmosphere adds impetus to relaxing moments. Rajapuri caves got the religious importance due to this famous temple. Thaipooyam festival during January- February month is celebrated here with lots of enthusiasm. Thousands of devotees visit this temple during this period.

    Bhilar Water Falls
    The Bhilar Waterfalls are named after the village where it is located. It descends from a height of 4500 feet with mist. During the monsoons, you can enjoy the full force of the water gushing down.

    Dhom Dam
    Dhom Dam near Panchgani is an amazing tourist spot for water sport lovers. The elegant Krishna River along with its green environs augments the pleasure of adventure water sports. A beautiful boating spot where one can enjoy with Scooter and Speed boats. Sporting in Krishna river stream with the beautiful natural surrounding is a wonderful experience in itself.

    Sherbaug
    Sherbaug is a panoramic destination in Panchgani with well laid out gardens, mini zoo that showcases small animals for children s amusement. Children s Park and a landscaped Rose Garden add elegance to the place. One can also visit the Parsi Point and Table Land that are close by.

    View Points At Panchgani
    Panchgani has quite a few renowned view spots that offer panoramic views of the picturesque lush green mountains and valley.

    How To Reach
    By Air- Pune is the nearest airport which is 100 km away from Panchgani. Pune is connected to Mumbai, Goa and Bangalore by air. Tourist taxis cost about Rs. 2000 from Pune to Panchgani. Railway route- The nearest railway station is Wathar, 45 km from Panchgani on the Miraj-Kolhapur section of South Central Railway. However, convenient railhead is Pune from where you hire tourist taxis and buses to reach Panchgani. Bus route- Panchgani is well connected by state road transport public bus services. Regular bus services are available from Pune to Panchgani. Super fast and Deluxe A/C buses are also available on this route. Road route- Panchgani is very well connected with Pune and Mumbai. NH4 and NH17 are popular routes to reach the place.

  • Historic Day For Women In The Military-Pentagon opens combat roles to women

    Historic Day For Women In The Military-Pentagon opens combat roles to women

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The Pentagon has lifted its ban on women serving in combat, opening hundreds of thousands of front-line positions and potentially elite commando jobs after generations of limits on their service. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta signed an order Thursday, January 24, striking down the two-decade-old rule excluding women from combat positions in the military. The new policy recognizes that in modern warfare, everyone in a combat zone is on the front lines, Mr. Panetta said. “There is no distinction that’s made between the sacrifices of men and women in uniform,” Mr. Panetta said. “They serve, they’re wounded and they die right next to each other.

    The time has come to recognize that reality.” Mr. Panetta’s efforts to integrate women and gays into the U.S. military are likely to go down as his lasting contributions as Pentagon chief. One of his first acts was to formally allow gays to serve openly, and one of his final acts is rescinding the blanket ban on women in combat.

    Still, the full effect of Thursday’s announcement won’t be known for years. Military services must wrangle over which combat specialties will continue to exclude women.

    There are now 184,000 combat-arms positions from which women are barred, and 53,000 specialty positions in combat units-like front-line supply specialists or combat medics-that women may not hold. Military officers expressed doubts about the usefulness of the integration in units with stringent physical standards that only a handful of women are able to meet. “If the only women that can qualify are Olympic-class athletes, then maybe that will be a specialty that remains closed to women,” said a defense official. The military services have until May 15 to devise plans for integrating women into jobs that exclude them. The plans must be completed by January 2016. Military officers predicted artillery units and combat engineering units likely will be the first to admit women. But other combat arms specialties could remain closed to women for longer periods, officials said.

    In the wake of the announcement, some defense and military officials expressed doubt that women would ever be able to serve in great numbers in infantry units, and said elite specialoperations units likely would remain closed. Although other officials said that Air Force special-operations positions-like controllers who call in airstrikes-may more quickly open to women. To make the integration successful, women first would be placed in leadership roles, officials said. Then, lower-ranking enlisted women could be brought in. One military officer said that integrating women into many combat arms specialties likely will take more than four years.

    Under current standards, even women in top physical condition have difficulty with the physical requirements of Army and Marine infantry training courses. The biggest obstacle for many women is the weight that trainees must carry while hiking long distances. Even if a woman has sufficient strength, the weight of large infantry loads can cause stress fractures and torn ligaments for someone who is physically lighter than the average male. To work around that, military service officials are trying to lighten the load that soldiers and Marines must carry by making body armor, radios and weaponry lighter. Officials emphasized that standards wouldn’t be lowered.

    But if the military over time can reduce the weight of infantry equipment, more women will be able to join the ranks of maledominated combat arms units, officers said. Mr. Panetta said opening new opportunities to women would improve the military. “By opening up more opportunities for people to serve in uniform, we are making our military stronger, and we are making America stronger,” he said.

  • Creating A Compassionate Society

    Creating A Compassionate Society

    When something grossly violent happens around us, each one of us gets brutalised. Take the recent gangrape for instance. Even the most peace-loving people are asking for the culprits to be hanged. We must understand that kneejerk reactions are inherently retaliatory and vindictive. Yet there is no denying the fact that sometimes the situation is so revolting that it demands extremely stringent response. That is when one looks up to the judicial system, as law and punishment is an authoritative tool that deters people from committing vicious acts. But in a country where justice is delayed and hence denied in a majority of cases, it gives rise to uncontrollable outrage. Public venting of anger might not be for just a particular incident but the expression of resentment and intimidation caused by the prolonged abusive use of power, and the helplessness felt by the people in bringing about any change.

    Hence one incident can stir up exasperated and tremendous anger in not only individuals but entire society. A vile act like murder committed in rage – would it be justifiable to find retribution with another murder sanctioned by law as punitive measure? More than retaliation, what is required is to create an environment of understanding, to create a bridge for those in darkness so that they can be helped out of their selfcreated hell, which demands a highly persevering, wise and mature approach. When the rudimentary principles of ethics and morality are complemented with compassion and knowledge, then the person will never betray his own conscience. But if conscience is absent, then the person has no humanity in him.

    What is humanity, what makes one humane, all this needs to be taught and learnt in a conducive environment. Only then it is possible to respond and not react and for this a person needs to cultivate introspection, heighten awareness so as to rise above the shortcomings of mind, eradicate weaknesses, and work on expanding consciousness. So there aren’t easy solutions, for the problems are complex. The complexities of life cannot be addressed with one line resolutions. If we wish to make a better society then let us first become better parents, better teachers, better human beings. Then we share, spread and disseminate this knowledge by example so that others, too, get a chance to evolve, to live compassionately and cordially.

    If you hate yourself you can only give hatred to others, whereas if you love yourself and see your true Self reflected in all, then there is no way you would cause hurt to another. I would like to reiterate that this is only for human beings and not for those who are still demonic, as for demons even Krishna did not find it efficacious to preach the asuras or the likes of Duryodhana and he just slew them. It can be said that being Lord, an incarnation, Krishna had the power to slay the demons, but we being humans cannot resort to beheading someone because that person is a demon in our perception. So, certain limitations do come upon us.

    We as a society need to understand that there are going to be all kinds of people with different mindsets, inclinations and dispositions, and it would be an utopian idea to believe that everybody will become enlightened one day miraculously. Yet a harmonious environment of love, friendship, and respect has to be created and every individual needs to endeavour towards making it possible. If we all set an example of our evolved and responsible behaviour, inspire those around us by instilling peace, love and mutual respect, it would certainly make a difference.

  • The Ultimate Worship Of God

    The Ultimate Worship Of God

    Everything that has been created shall be destroyed one day and everything that has been destroyed shall be recreated. This creation and destruction are like two sides of a coin and one cannot exist without the other, as in the case of all other dualities. This process of creation and destruction is a continuous process which follows a set pattern or definite set of rules. The human mind is capable of predicting or foreseeing this change or pattern and calculate the speed or rate at which this change will take place. ‘Time’ is this speed or rate at which this change takes place. It is relative and differs according to the person, object or situation. For example, a billion years for you may be just a moment for somebody, and vice-versa.

    Also, you may experience a life of a 100 years in a dream that lasts just a few hours or a 100 years of your real life may appear to you just like a dream of a few hours. Time is the greatest creator and destroyer. Without time, this whole universe will collapse into non-duality, i.e. it will become neither alive nor dead, neither light nor darkness, neither good nor evil, and so on. It is the force/dimension or space that keeps two sides of the dualities which are equal to each other – away. Without it, both will collide and annihilate or destroy each other and become non-dual. Time has fascinated mankind since time immemorial. Such is the importance of time that Lord Krishna has, at several places, including the Bhagavad Gita, stated that, “I am Time”.

    Another name of Lord Shiva is Mahakaal or ‘Great Time’, a fact known to everybody. Now the question arises in our mind: If ‘Time’ is ‘God’ himself, then what is the best form of devotion or worship that we can offer? One answer is that all living beings are already worshipping Time or God relentlessly through their work or actions. No living being can remain without work even for a moment. Even when you are sleeping, you are converting oxygen into carbon dioxide through breathing, which is food for plants and trees in the same way as oxygen is food for you. In similar manner, all other plants and animals are also working relentlessly all the time and offering their prayers to ‘Time’ or ‘God’. Every living being starts working relentlessly from the day it is born to the day it dies and even its dead body becomes an offering or food for some other organism.

    There is no need for any other form of worship physically, apart from what you are already doing and neither is it expected by ‘God’ or ‘Time’. But the said worship is not a true worship because it has not been offered to God or Time out of your own sweet will. You offer this worship only out of fear of death or punishment. True worship or devotion to God is when you offer the same worship selflessly, that is, without any fear or expectation and not under compulsion of nature. A person can become selfless and fearless only when he realizes that there is nothing to achieve or lose in this world. Such a realization can only be attained when you understand that all the dualities, including creation and destruction, are equal to each other like two sides of a coin.

    In other words, whatever has been created shall be destroyed and whatever has been destroyed shall be recreated. Similar is the case of all other dualities, like life-death, happiness-sorrow, good-evil, light-darkness, and so on, as one side of duality cannot exist without an equal amount of the other. A person who does not understand the above Truth, keeps moving restlessly like waves between the dualities of life-death, good-evil, happiness-sorrow, light-darkness, and so on, while the person who understands the above Truth, becomes peaceful and calm like an ocean, as he understands that there is nothing to achieve or lose in this world. Such a person makes all his offerings to ‘God’ or ‘Time’ without any expectation or fear, and in turn, is given the ultimate reward by God, in the form of ultimate peace.

  • ING Exits Life Insurance In India

    ING Exits Life Insurance In India

    MUMBAI (TIP): Dutch financial services group ING has exited its insurance business in India selling its 26% stake in ING Vysya Life Insurance to its joint venture partner Exide Industries in a deal that valued the company at Rs 1,100 crore. Exide is now looking for a foreign insurer who will buy the 26% stake. Although a minority shareholder, holding the maximum permissible 26% stake, ING group controlled the life insurance operations for over a decade even as Indian shareholding changed several hands. A statement issued from Amsterdam said that ING’s exit from the Indian life insurance joint venture is part of the previously announced intended divestment of ING’s Asian Insurance and Investment Management businesses.

    “The process for the remaining businesses is ongoing. Any further announcements will be made if and when appropriate. Subject to regulatory approvals, the transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2013,” said the statement. The valuation of the deal has surprised industry insiders. “Prima facie a valuation of Rs 1,100 crore seems to be less considering that this is a 10-year old company where the promoters have invested more than Rs 1,000 crore,” said an industry official. Industry officials also feel that the coordinated exit of financial investors gives an impression that these were structured investments where returns are not entirely market linked. However, industry persons also point out that in an exit deal the Indian partner is on a strong footing as partners have the right of first refusal.

    In a statement to the stock exchanges, Exide Industries said: “The company, currently owner of 50% of the equity capital of ING Vysya Life Insurance (IVL), has in-principle decided to acquire the remaining 50% of the equity capital of IVL (26% from ING group, 16.32% from the Hemendra Kothari group and 7.68% from the Enam group) for an aggregate consideration of Rs. 550 crore approximately, subject to regulatory approvals.” Hemendra Kothari and Enam had picked up stakes in the company as financial investors in recent years. ING is the third insurer to exit India after the opening up of the sector. Australian insurer AMP in a joint venture with Sanmar was the first to sell out to Reliance Life Insurance.

    Some years later American insurer Chubb exited its joint venture with HDFC following disagreement with its partner who later tied up with Ergo. Last year US insurer New York Life sold its stake in Max New York Life to Max which later sold its stake to Japan’s Mitsui. Following the global financial crisis, several insurers have tempered their expansion plans. At present, North American insurer Manulife and Samsung Life of Canada are actively pursuing a presence in India. ING, which has a presence in banking, will continue to retain its presence. “Today’s agreement does not impact ING Vysya Bank, a publiclylisted Indian bank in which ING has a 44% stake, nor ING’s fund management business in the country,” the statement added.

    Automotive battery manufacturer Exide is a Rajan Raheja group company and has a market capitalisation of over Rs 10,000 crore. The company got into the life insurance business by buying out GMR group. GMR group, which along with Vysya Bank, was the original partner of ING had acquired a majority stake after ING acquired controlling stake in Vysya Bank. Vysya Bank had gradually diluted stake in favour of GMR to avoid falling foul of regulation which did not permit foreign partners holding 26% to invest in their joint venture partners. Of the 24 life insurance players in the country, two companies— Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) and Sahara India Life Insurance Co—are running the business without foreign partners.

  • Unstable Govt In 2014 Biggest Threat To Reforms: FM

    Unstable Govt In 2014 Biggest Threat To Reforms: FM

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The biggest threat to economic reforms is an unstable government in 2014, finance minister P Chidambaram told investors in Singapore on Wednesday as he vowed to push ahead with the reform agenda and fiscal consolidation. The finance minister is on whistle-stop tour of Hong Kong and Singapore as part of his move to meet foreign investors and convince them about the reforms being undertaken in India and the strength of the India growth story. “This is in line with our view that politics will be focus for markets from late 2013,” a report from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, which hosted the finance minister’s meeting with investors, said. Chidambaram hoped to get the insurance and the pension bill approved in the Budget Session of Parliament.

    “He mentioned that behind the noise, there were quiet negotiations with the opposition parties for support from them,” the report said. The finance minister expects the economy to grow by 5.7% in the current fiscal year and around 6% to 7% in FY14. “By FY15, he is hoping to go back to the 8% GDP growth rate of the past,” the report said. The FM said GST is unlikely to be implemented by April 13 although he hopes to introduce the bill in the Monsoon Session and get it approved in the Winter Session (December 2013).

    “This assumes a consensus with the states post the reports by the two committees (one on the design of GST and the other on compensation).” Chidambaram was confident of keeping the fiscal deficit in the current financial year within the revised target of 5.3% of GDP. “This would be done mostly through reducing expenditure and austerity measures. Over the longer term fiscal deficit would be cut by 0.6% every year to bring it to 3% of GDP by FY17 through cost cuts as well as enhanced revenue (but without tax increases),” the report said. The FM said he expects government revenues to rise by 20% every year though not by raising taxes but having a stable tax regime, non-adversarial tax compliance and a fair dispute settlement mechanism.

    Chidambaram’s promise of not to raise taxes have come as a relief for jittery investors and companies, who were expecting imposition of a higher tax burden in the 2013- 14 Budget against the backdrop of a tight fiscal situation. The FM reiterated that the cabinet committee on investments would speed up project approvals. “Moreover public sector undertakings have been asked to spend on projects as per targets or return the surplus cash by way of special dividends,” the report said.

  • Developing Nations On Top For First Time In 2012 FDI Index: UN

    Developing Nations On Top For First Time In 2012 FDI Index: UN

    GENEVA (TIP): Developing countries overtook their traditionally wealthier counterparts in attracting foreign direct investment for the first time last year, as industrialised nations bore the brunt of an 18 per cent plunge in FDI flows, the UN’s trade and investment think tank UNCTAD said on Wednesday. Last year, global foreign direct investments — when a company in one country invests for instance in production facilities or buys a business in another country — came in at USD 1.3 trillion, down from USD 1.6 trillion in 2011, UNCTAD’s Global Investment Trend Monitor showed. In a dramatic shift on the global investment scale, developing countries reaped USD 680 billion of that, or 52 per cent of the total. “For the first time in history, developing countries have attracted more investment than developed countries,” James Zhan, who head’s UNCTAD’s investment and enterprise division, told reporters in Geneva.

  • United States Condemns Attack on Worshippers in Iraq

    United States Condemns Attack on Worshippers in Iraq

    WASHINGTON (TIP): “The United States strongly condemns the terrorist attack on innocent worshipers today (January 23) in northern Iraq. The United States stands with the Iraqi people and will continue to support the Government of Iraq, both against terrorist groups and to promote a religiously tolerant and diverse country”, says a pres statement issued by Victoria Nuland, Department Spokesperson of the US Department of State .

    The statement further says, “As demonstrated over the past month, these terrorists are willing to target all Iraqis, regardless of their religion or ethnicity, and expressly undermine the will of the Iraqi people who overwhelmingly support stability and security. We express our deepest sympathies to the families of the victims and will do our utmost to help the Government of Iraq as it works to bring to justice those behind these horrific and heinous acts.”

  • John Kerry vows to strengthen ‘critical’ China ties

    John Kerry vows to strengthen ‘critical’ China ties

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Senator John Kerry, on track to be America’s next secretary of state, told US lawmakers on Thursday that he would work to boost ties with China, but warned of a “long slog” ahead. Kerry told his Senate confirmation hearing that he wanted to “grow the rebalance” towards Beijing “because it is critical to us to strengthen our relationship in China.” Washington would continue the so-called pivot — begun during the first term of President Barack Obama — towards Asia and in particular China, Kerry told the Senate Foreign Relations committee, though he added that America was not “turning away from anywhere else.” Kerry said that while the United States and China would remain economic “competitors,” the two nations “shouldn’t be viewed as adversaries in some way that diminishes our ability to cooperate on a number of things.” “China is, you know, the other sort of significant economy in the world and obviously has a voracious appetite for resources around the world, and we need to establish rules of the road that work for everybody,” Kerry said.

    He acknowledged the difficulty of issues such as intellectual property rights, and China’s propping up of its currency, the yuan. But he stressed there were areas where the two economic superpowers could work together. “China is cooperating with us now on Iran.

    I think there might be more we could perhaps do with respect to North Korea,” the veteran senator said. It could be more we could do in other parts of the Far East. And hopefully we can build those relationships that will further that transformation.

    We make progress. It’s incremental… It’s a tough slog.” Another area where the two nations could perhaps come together might be on climate change, Kerry added. Earlier in the hearing he had vowed to be “a passionate advocate” on the subject of working to battle global warming. “China is soon going to have double the emissions of the United States of America.

    So we’ve got to get these folks as part of this unified effort, and I intend to work very, very hard at trying to do that,” Kerry said.

    But he appeared to rule out any move towards increasing again the US military force in the Asia-Pacific region. “I’m not convinced that increased military rampup is critical yet,” Kerry said, adding that if confirmed he wanted to “dig into this a little deeper” and try a thoughtful approach. “We have a lot more bases out there than any other nation in the world, including China today,” he argued, saying the Chinese must be wondering “What’s the United States doing? They trying to circle us? What’s going on?”

  • Rupee Down 11 Paise vs Dollar In Early Trade

    Rupee Down 11 Paise vs Dollar In Early Trade

    MUMBAI (TIP): The rupee today fell by 11 paise to 53.78 against the dollar in early trade at the Interbank Foreign Exchange due to fresh demand for the US currency from importers and some banks. Forex dealers said euro’s weakness against the dollar overseas also put pressure on the rupee. The rupee had gained 14 paise to end at 53.67 yesterday on consistent foreign fund inflows in local stocks amid fresh dollar selling by exporters and sustained weakness in the American currency overseas.

  • Flight Tickets To Get Cheaper, SC Stops Transaction Fee

    Flight Tickets To Get Cheaper, SC Stops Transaction Fee

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Flight tickets booked online or through agents will soon get cheaper as the Supreme Court on Wednesday restrained them from charging transaction fee ranging between Rs 200 and Rs 350 per passengers. A bench comprising Justices D K Jain and Madan B Lokur ordered implementation of a circular issued by the Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on December 17, 2012, abolishing collection of transaction fee. The order came on a petition filed by one T G N Kumar who had challenged the levying of user development fee by airlines from passengers. The bench said henceforth, no airline would charge transaction fee in any form. The bench also found it strange that the base fare for airlines for flights having identical origin and destination points varied considerably and directed the DGCA to examine the issue.

    It also asked the government to investigate whether the airlines had adopted an unfair practice. DGCA had informed the Court that under Section 135 of the Aircraft Rules, airlines were allowed to make reasonable profits. This meant that the variation in ticket price could only be with regard to profit component with other components such as base fare, taxes, passenger service fare, airport development fare, and user development fare, etc remaining constant. In case the airlines altered with the above contents, it was open to the DGCA to carry out prosecution under Schedule VI of the Rules.

  • Us Stands With You, Clinton Assures India

    Us Stands With You, Clinton Assures India

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Greeting the people of India on its Republic Day, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said the US-India strategic partnership is making the world more united, prosperous, and secure. “Together we are strengthening our ties and working to address some of the most difficult global challenges,” she said in a Republic day message holding out an assurance “that the United States stands with you.” Noting that the United States and India share an unwavering commitment to democratic government, Clinton said: “Our shared values are the foundation for the innovative, entrepreneurial drive that is allowing more and more of our 1.5 billion people to realize their potential.” “My three trips to India as Secretary of State reinforced my unyielding belief that the US-India strategic partnership is making the world more united, prosperous, and secure,” said America’s top diplomat considered a prime mover of stronger India-US ties. “Together we are strengthening our ties and working to address some of the most difficult global challenges,” she said.

    Here is the full text of the message:
    “On behalf of President Obama and the people of the United States, I am delighted to send my best wishes to the people and government of India as you celebrate your 64th Republic Day this January 26th. ‘The United States and India share an unwavering commitment to democratic government. Our shared values are the foundation for the innovative, entrepreneurial drive that is allowing more and more of our 1.5 billion people to realize their potential. ‘My three trips to India as Secretary of State reinforced my unyielding belief that the US-India strategic partnership is making the world more united, prosperous, and secure. Together we are strengthening our ties and working to address some of the most difficult global challenges. ‘As you celebrate this special day, know that the United States stands with you. Best wishes for a year filled with peace and prosperity.’

  • Cooling Down Of Universe Follows Big Bang Theory

    Cooling Down Of Universe Follows Big Bang Theory

    MELBOURNE (TIP): Astronomers have made the most precise measurement ever of how the universe has cooled down during its 13.77 billion year history just as predicted in Big Bang theory. They studied molecules in clouds of gas in a galaxy 7.2 billion light years away — so far that its light has taken half the age of the universe to reach us. Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array, a team from Sweden, France, Germany and Australia has measured how warm the Universe was when it was half its current age. “This is the most precise measurement ever made of how the Universe has cooled down during its 13.77 billion year history,” said Robert Braun, chief scientist at CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science in a statement.

    Because light takes time to travel, when we look out into space we see the Universe as it was in the past — as it was when light left the galaxies we are looking at. So to look back half-way into the Universe’s history, we need to look halfway across the Universe. The astronomers studied gas in an unnamed galaxy 7.2 billion light-years away. The only thing keeping this gas warm is the cosmic background radiation — the glow left over from the Big Bang. By chance, there is another powerful galaxy, a quasar called PKS 1830-211 , lying behind the unnamed galaxy

  • North Korea says plans nuclear test aimed at US

    North Korea says plans nuclear test aimed at US

    SEOUL (TIP): North Korea said Thursday it planned to carry out a nuclear test and more rocket launches aimed at its “arch-enemy” the United States in response to tightened UN sanctions, but offered no timeframe. “We do not hide that the various satellites and long-range rockets we will continue to launch, as well as the high-level nuclear test we will proceed with, are aimed at our arch-enemy the United States,” the National Defence Commission said.The mention of the test, which would mark the North’s third detonation of a nuclear device, came towards the end of a commission statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

    The statement was entitled: “Enter all-out confrontation to safeguard the sovereignty of the nation and people.” It gave no indication of when the test might be carried out, or explain the meaning of “high-level”. The North’s two previous nuclear tests were held in 2006 and 2009.

    Much of the statement was devoted to condemning Tuesday’s announcement by the UN Security Council of expanded sanctions against Pyongyang in response to its long-range rocket launch last month. “We absolutely refute all the illegal and outlawed resolutions adopted by the Security Council,” the commission said.

    Tuesday’s resolution, proposed by the United States, was adopted unanimously by the 15-nation council, including the North’s sole major ally China. North Korea’s foreign ministry had denounced the move on Wednesday, when it also gave the first hint that Pyongyang would react with a nuclear test, saying the country would take “physical actions” to boost its nuclear deterrent.

    South Korea’s Yonhap news agency, citing a South Korean intelligence source, reported that Pyongyang had finished technical preparations and could conduct an atomic test within days of a decision by leader Kim Jong-Un. Last month, a US think-tank reached a similar conclusion based on satellite photos, suggesting the North had repaired rain damage at its nuclear test site and could conduct a detonation at two weeks’ notice.

    China, which had sought to shield North Korea from harsher sanctions sought by the United States and its allies, appealed on Wednesday for restraint and diplomatic efforts to avoid a dangerous escalation of tensions. “The DPRK’s (North Korea’s) satellite launch as well as speculation of a nuclear test highlight the urgency and importance of settling relevant issues on the Korean peninsula,” foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters.

  • Minerals From Asteroids To Fuel Future Spacecraft?

    Minerals From Asteroids To Fuel Future Spacecraft?

    WASHINGTON (TIP): A US company plans to mine asteroids for metals, useful ores and minerals as they hurtle past the Earth using the first rockprospecting spacecraft by 2015. Deep Space Industries says it wants to start sending miniature scout probes, dubbed “Fireflies” , on one-way missions to near-Earth asteroids as soon as 2015. Company CEO David Gump said larger probes , “Dragonflies” , that will bring back 50- to 100-pound samples from prospective targets could be on their way by 2016, CNN reported. The goal is to extract metals, water and compounds that can be used to make spacecraft fuel from the chunks of rock that float within about 50 million kilometres of Earth.

    Gump said the ability to produce fuel in space would be a boon for Nasa, as the space agency shifts its focus toward exploring deeper into the solar system. As much as 90% of the weight of a prospective months-long Mars mission could be fuel — and it costs between $5,000 and $10,000 per pound to put anything into space. “If Nasa can launch just the hardware and tank up in orbit, where the fuel is cheap, that means we could get to the Red Planet a lot sooner than we currently expect,” Gump said. It could also allow commercial satellite companies to extend the life of hardware that’s now written off when fuel for manoeuvring thrusters runs out. The announcement comes nine months after the unveiling of a similar project by Planetary Resources , a company backed by investors such as filmmaker James Cameron and Google executives Larry Page and Eric Schmidt.

    Meteorite may hold evidence of ‘alien life’
    Alump of rock which crash-landed on Earth in a meteorite shower may hold evidence of ‘alien life’ within it, a UK scientist has claimed. The twoinch wide lump of space rock, that fell in Sri Lanka in December, is pitted with microscopic seaweed fossils similar to those found on Earth, said Chandra Wickramasinghe, a former head of Cardiff University’s Centre for Astrobiology who is also known for his controversial theories that life on Earth ‘seeded’ from the outer space. “Our provisional assessment is that it was part of a comet. The stones look extremely unusual, and have a porous structure, with a lower density than anything we have on Earth,” he said.

  • Hindu religious leader jailed in US for visa fraud

    Hindu religious leader jailed in US for visa fraud

    WASHINGTON (TIP): A Hindu leader from India, who had established a temple in Milwaukee city of the US state of Wisconsin, has been jailed for 37 months for religious visa fraud and would be deported to his native country after serving his sentence. A Milwaukee court gave its sentencing order after it found Sagarsen Haldar, aka Gopal Hari Das, who is the founder, president, CEO and spiritual leader of Gaudiya Vaisnava Society (GVS), guilty of fraudulently obtaining religious worker visas – known as ‘R-1’ visas – for Indian nationals in exchange for substantial cash payments. 32-year-old Haldar would be deported to India after serving his sentence.

    According to evidence at trial, Haldar conspired to sponsor more than two dozen Indian nationals to enter the US under R-1 visas. Typically, the R-1 applications falsely stated that the individuals were religious workers from India who planned to be priests and perform religious work at the GVS temple in Milwaukee, the court was told.

    In fact, the Indian nationals had no religious training or experience, and they had no intention of being priests or performing religious work once they arrived in the United States, it was told. Haldar was charged in June 2010 after Homeland Security Investigation (HSI) special agents arrested him at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago as he arrived in the United States from India.

    A search of Haldar’s luggage revealed that he was transporting identification documents – including passports and other Indian identification documents – bearing the names and photographs of other Indian nationals. The investigation into Haldar was initiated in June 2008 after HSI received information from US Citizenship and Immigration Service’s (USCIS) Benefit Fraud Unit that GVS had filed numerous petitions for R-1 religious workers from India.

  • Digital Storage: Shakespeare’s Sonnets Encoded In Dna

    Digital Storage: Shakespeare’s Sonnets Encoded In Dna

    LONDON (TIP): A genetic storage device has been used to ‘download’ all 154 of Shakespeare’s sonnets on to strands of synthetic DNA, in a breakthrough which could solve the problem of storing the ever-growing mountain of data. Scientists were able to decode the information and reproduce the words of the Bard with complete accuracy. The new method by researchers at the EMBLEuropean Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI ), published in the journal Nature, makes it possible to store at least 100 million hours of high-definition video in about a cup of DNA.

    The technique made it possible to store a 26 second excerpt from Martin Luther King’s ‘I Have A Dream’ speech and a photo of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory where the work took place. Researchers were also able to turn a copy of Watson and Crick’s paper describing the nature of DNA into genetic code. There is a lot of digital information in the world — about three zettabytes’ worth (3000 billion billion bytes) — and the constant influx of new digital content poses a real challenge for archivists. Hard disks are expensive and require a constant supply of electricity, while even the best “no-power” archiving materials such as magnetic tape degrade within a decade.

    This is a growing problem in the life sciences, where massive volumes of data — including DNA sequences — make up the fabric of the scientific record. “We already know that DNA is a robust way to store information because we can extract it from bones of woolly mammoths , which date back tens of thousands of years, and make sense of it,” said Nick Goldman of EMBL-EBI . “It’s also incredibly small, dense and does not need any power for storage, so shipping and keeping it is easy,” Goldman said in a statement. Reading DNA is fairly straightforward, but writing it has until now been a major hurdle to making DNA storage a reality . The new method required synthesising DNA from the encoded information which was done by a California-based company.

  • Stress Makes Women Look Oldest At 3.30pm Every Wednesday

    Stress Makes Women Look Oldest At 3.30pm Every Wednesday

    LONDON (TIP): Women look their oldest at 3.30pm every Wednesday because it’s the day when energy levels plummet, work stress is at a peak and the effects of any weekend late nights finally kick in, according to a new study. The research, carried out by the tanning brand, St Tropez, revealed that one in ten women find Wednesday the most stressful day in a typical week. Two thirds experience a “slump in energy levels” midafternoon every Wednesday, the Telegraph reported. This forces a quarter of women to reach for a sugary snack on a bid to boost their mood and energy.

    But the next day, Thursday, is the day they are most likely to have sex, according to the study. Sex gives them a youthful rosy glow, which could explain why women feel so happy on a Friday — the day named as the happiest day by 60% of women. Another reason why women look their eldest mid-week could be a boozy treat at the weekend. Nichola Joss, St Tropez skin expert explained that it can take up to 72 hours for the visible effects of alcohol to show, so the effects of drinking on the weekend may not present themselves until Wednesday afternoon.

  • US researchers tracking flu through Twitter

    US researchers tracking flu through Twitter

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Researchers and computer scientists at Johns Hopkins University have devised a way to track cases of influenza across the United States using the microblogging site Twitter. Twitter is full of tweets about the flu, which has been severe and reached epidemic proportions this year, but it has been difficult to separate tweets about the flu from actual cases. “We wanted to separate hype about the flu from messages from people who truly become ill,” said Mark Dredze, an assistant research professor in Johns Hopkins’ department of computer science, who monitors public health trends by looking at tweets.

    To solve the problem, Dredze and his colleagues developed a screening method based on human languageprocessing technologies that only delivers real-time information on actual flu cases and filters out the rest of the chatter on the public tweets in the United States.

    The researchers at the Baltimore university tested the system by comparing their results with data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “In late December,” Dredze said on Thursday, “the news media picked up on the flu epidemic, causing a somewhat spurious rise in the rate produced by our Twitter system.

    But our new algorithm handles this effect much better than other systems, ignoring the spurious spike in tweets.” The scientists, whose research was funded partly by the National Institutes of Health’s Models of Infectious Disease Agent Study, have also produced maps of the United States that show the impact of the flu on each state. Dredze said he hoped the system could be used to track the other illnesses.

  • Raina, Rohit Lead India To Series Triumph

    Raina, Rohit Lead India To Series Triumph

    MOHALI (TIP): As Virat Kohli had promised before the match, the Indian team didn’t leave anything to chance and sealed the one-day series right here with a comprehensive five-wicket win over England. With this win, India have taken an unassailable 3-1 lead in the series, with one match still to play. It was apt that Ravindra Jadeja hit the winning runs on Wednesday, since his allround show throughout the series has helped the team at crucial junctures. India’s 258-run chase was powered by an unbeaten 89 (79 balls; 9×4, 1×6) from Suresh Raina, who was given the Man of the Match award.

    Raina was involved in two fifty-run partnerships, one each with Rohit Sharma (83; 93b, 11×4, 1×6) – playing a new role as opener – and skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni. The series win will come as some relief for India in home conditions after they lost the Test series to England and an ODI series to Pakistan. India’s chase, though, was far from ideal. In the second erroneous decision of the day, umpire Steve Davis gave Gautam Gambhir out caught behind even though there was a clear gap between bat and ball. England could have had Rohit Sharma too, but Kevin Pietersen couldn’t latch on to a difficult chance at mid-off in the eighth over.

    Virat Kohli (26), after a 52-run partnership with Rohit Sharma, got out tamely, offering a return catch to James Tredwell. The English off-spinner made it four out of four against Yuvraj Singh, having accounted for him in the previous three games too, by trapping the southpaw leg before. At the other end, Rohit Sharma not only completed 2000 one-day runs but went on to score his 13th half-century. Sharma (83) was unlucky to miss out on a century, courtesy a second contentious decision by umpire Steve Davis, who adjudged him LBW though the ball appeared to be missing leg stump. Earlier, Dhoni made sure that his fast bowlers got the best use of a fresh wicket by winning the toss and electing to field. Cook hit Shami Ahmed for three boundaries in the sixth over to break the shackles, but the mounting pressure soon resulted in the wicket of Ian Bell (10), who tried to give Ishant Sharma the charge but only managed to give a skier to Bhuvneshwar Kumar at third man.

    After that Kevin Pietersen and Cook resurrected the England innings, adding 95 runs for the second wicket. Cook brought up his fifty in the 22nd over and went on to score 76 (106 balls; 13×4) but umpire Sudhir Asnani’s error of judgment ended the English skipper’s promising innings. Cook was wrapped on the pads by a quicker delivery from R Ashwin, but the ball had clearly pitched outside leg stump. England slumped to 142/4 by the 37th over but Joe Root, along with Kevin Pietersen, forged a partnership of 78 runs off 56 balls. KP, who had been unusually quiet, suddenly broke loose, hitting Ishant Sharma for 4, 4, and 6 in the 46th over before Ishant uprooted his stumps with a yorker. Root’s unbeaten 57 (45 balls; 8×4, 1×6) gave England the final impetus, but it was not enough.

    ICC ODI Championship
    Team Rating
    India 120
    England 117
    Australia 113
    South Africa 111
    Sri Lanka 110
    Pakistan 107
    West Indies 88
    New Zealand 80
    Bangladesh 78
    Zimbabwe 50
    Ireland 35
    Netherlands 16
    Kenya 11

  • Andhra Pradesh is Leader in IT in India and USA, says Ponnala Lakshmaiah

    Andhra Pradesh is Leader in IT in India and USA, says Ponnala Lakshmaiah

    EDISON, NJ (TIP): The Indian National Overseas Congress (I) along with New Jersey Telugu Community organized and hosted a reception in honor of visiting Information and Technology Minister of Andhra Pradesh Ponnala Lakshmaiah on Jan 19th 2013 from 3:00 PM to 6:00 PM at Royal Albert’s Palace, Edison, New Jersey. The event, attended by about 150 guests, and focused mainly on discussion around IT partnership between US and India. The minister was received by INOC (I) and NJ Community leaders and several others at the venue.

    A moment of silence was observed in honor of Indian soldiers killed on LOC and the recent rape victim in India. The highlight of the event was a speech by Mr. Ponnala who started off praising, lauding and thanking the NRI’s for their contribution to the Indian economy both directly by investment and for acting as ambassadors of the country by spreading good word about the investment opportunities in India.

    Mr. Ponnala stated that the state of Andhra Pradesh continued to be a favorite destination for Industrial investment and the state is consistently growing and received investments to the tune of Rs 29,995 crores (approx.Rs 30 billion) during 2010-2011 fiscal year recording a growth of 67% compared to previous years. Andhra Pradesh is the fourth largest exporter contributing over 15% of the Nation’s IT exports.

    The IT has generated more than 3 lakhs (300,000) jobs through direct employment and another 12 lakhs (1.2 million) jobs supporting the IT industry. As a result, the government gives prime importance to the growth of IT sector and has been the key segment for employment generation in the state. Some of the initiatives taken by the government to promote IT sector include: ITIR in an area of 202 sq. km in and around Hyderabad.

    Electronic Manufacturing Cluster (eCity) in 900 acres, first ever dedicated gaming, animation and Media & Entertainment city in 30 acres (first of its kind in the country), Optical fiber broadband connectivity to rural gram panchayats and providing services thru several egovernance tools/utilities to citizens. The guests had an opportunity to ask questions after the minister’s speech. A question was raised that due to the Telangana issue the state has been losing investments gradually.

    Mr. Ponnala disagreed with the observation and on the contrary, indicated that several new companies have been setup and existing companies have been expanding and this speaks for the 67% growth the state recorded. Another question was raised about the state deficit caused due to the government giving away many subsidies via various programs.

    The minister stated that the state government budget deficit is within allowable FRBM limits during the entire period of congress rule since 2004.

    The event, attended by several prominent IT company owners, community leaders, among them, many Telugu people and was organized by Ram Gadula, Raj Dichpally and sponsored by Global Nest, Inc and Symbioun Technologies, Inc. Mr.Ponnala Lakshmaiah is a senior Congress Minister in the Andhra Pradesh cabinet. He did his education at Oklahoma State University and returned to India in early 80’s to serve in the Public domain. He earlier worked as Irrigation Minister in the Dr.YSR cabinet and helped pave way for irrigating hundreds of thousands of acres of under-cultivated land into today’s bountiful crop-yeilding lands.

    He has been in public life for over 3 decades and is the recipient of “Indira Gandhi Priyadarshini Award’ for outstanding contributions as Minister for Irrigation. He was also recently inducted into the hall of fame at his alumni Oklahoma State University. Mr. Lakshmaiah was visiting the US to attend President Obama’s Inaugural reception.

  • Bank of India CMD to meet US Clients

    Bank of India CMD to meet US Clients

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): Bank of India Chairperson & Managing Director Mrs. V.R. Iyer, Executive Director Mr. N. Seshadri and General Manager (International) Mr. S.K. Datta, are scheduled to visit New York on January 30th and 31st to meet US clients and attend an Investors’ Meet.

    It will be Mrs. Iyer’s first visit to New York after she took over as CMD of Bank of India on November 5, 2012. Mrs. V. R. Iyer took over as Chairperson & Managing Director of the Bank of India on 5th November, 2012.

    Prior to this assignment, Mrs. Iyer was Executive Director of Central Bank of India from September 01, 2010 till she joined Bank of India. Mrs. Iyer, born on June 1, 1955 is a post-graduate in Commerce with CAIIB. She started her career in Union Bank of India in 1975. In her long career spanning 33 years, has had good stint in branch banking having worked in very large and extra large branches.

    She has extensive exposure in Credit Department, Credit Monitoring Department and has contributed significantly in setting up of Risk Management Department, rolling out CBS, alternate channels and various other e-initiatives. Mrs. Iyer served as Deputy General Manager (Information Technology) during 2006-07 before getting elevated as General Manager in January, 2008 and was holding the portfolios of Information Technology and Risk Management.

    Mrs. Iyer was elevated as Executive Director of Central Bank of India with effect from 1st September, 2010 where she looked after Credit, Treasury, Forex, IT, CBS, Risk Management and Inspection & Audit portfolios. Mr. N. Seshadri took over as Executive Director of Bank of India on 1st November, 2010. Earlier, he was General Manager at the Canara Bank. Born on 30th April, 1953, Mr. Seshadri joined Canara Bank as an officer in 1975. He has held several distinguished positions in the Bank’s hierarchy in a career spanning 35 years. MBA and a certified Associate of the Indian Institute of Bankers, Mr. Seshadri has worked extensively throughout the country and abroad

    About Bank of India in USA

    Bank of India, US Center is having three offices. New York Branch and San Francisco Agency are in operation since December 1978 and December 1977 respectively, whereas Cayman Island branch has been functional since September 1980. In U.S., Bank of India’s activities cover businesses related to Letter of Credit, issuing guarantee and offering advisory services, ECB loans, acquisition finance, trade finance Certificate of Deposit and effecting remittances. New York Branch is the main contributor for the business of the Center.

    The Branch is FDIC insured and offers various services as mentioned earlier. San Francisco Agency pursues trade finance and Wire Transfer as its main line of business. The US Center’s contribution was 6.45% in the total business mix of bank’s global operations. The Business mix increased by 32% in 2011-12, from USD 5.6 bn to USD 7.4 bn. The center contributed to 26% in the total business mix of bank’s foreign operations in the financial year 2011-12.

    FACTORS FOR SUCCESS
    Leveraging the India Advantage
    As is estimated, by 2025, India’s economy is projected to be the third largest in the world. This provides a huge potential for business growth.
    NRI Services The Bank has state of the art technology platform for NRI service and convenience. Funds from USA to India are remitted within one working day. Bank also provides free of cost remittances of funds to any of its branches for making various NRI deposits in India.
    Trade Finance/Credit
    This is the Bank’s major thrust area and contributes substantially to both revenue and profit growth. The bank facilitates trade finance and funds credit needs of India -based businesses both in and outside India.
    Technology
    With implementation of Straight Through Processing software in 2008 at US Center, Bank of India is offering hassle-free state of the art money transfer facilities with competitive charges.
    Strong parental support and strong local management
    Bank of India has a strong customer base in India. Over 106 years old, the Bank has a network of over 4000 branches in India and 50 Offices abroad across all the continents.

    All the branches of the Bank are fully computerized and domestic branches are under Core Banking network.
    Future Plan
    US Center has achieved a business growth of 24% in Customer Deposits and 23% in Advances during the three quarters of December 2012 over March 2012, and this robust growth is expected to continue in the coming years. In fact, American Continent is one of the priority areas for Bank of India. As part of the growth strategy in the Continent, Bank plans to open offices in Canada and Brazil and a Rep Office in New Jersey.
    Leading from the Front
    Bank Of India’s global operations are headed by the Chairperson-cum- Managing Director Smt. V.R. Iyer along with three Executive Directors Mr. N. Seshadri, Mr. M. S. Raghavan and Mr. B. P. Sharma. The US Center is making impressive strides under the able leadership of its Chief Executive Mr. Bhuwanchandra B. Joshi, who has been at the helm of US Center since June, 2012. An amiable person, he is always welcome in business, professional and social circles.

  • Obama Vows To Take America Forward

    Obama Vows To Take America Forward

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The second inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States took place in a private swearing-in ceremony on Sunday, January 20, 2013 in the Blue Room of the White House.

    A public ceremony marking the occasion took place the following day, on Monday, January 21, 2013 at the United States Capitol building. The inauguration marked the beginning of the second term of Barack Obama as President and Joe Biden as Vice President. The inauguration theme was “Faith in America’s Future”, a phrase that draws upon the 150th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and the completion of the Capitol dome in 1863. The theme also stresses the “perseverance and unity” of the United States, and echoes the “Forward” theme used in the closing months of Obama’s reelection campaign.

    The inaugural events held in Washington, D.C. from January 19 to 21, 2013 included concerts, a national day of community service on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, the swearing-in ceremony, luncheon and parade, inaugural balls, and the interfaith inaugural prayer service. The presidential oath was administered to Obama during his swearing-in ceremony on January 20 and 21, 2013 by Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts.

    While Beyonce sang the National Anthem at the ceremonial swearing-in for President Barack Obama at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration, it was Richard Blanco, the 44-year-old Madrid-born Cuban-American poet who read his poem “One Today” at the swearing-in ceremony for President Obama. Blanco is only the fifth poet – Robert Frost (1961), Maya Angelou (1993), William Miller (1997) and Elizabeth Alexander (2009) were the previous ones – reading at a presidential inauguration. He is also the first Hispanic as well as the first openly gay one. In his 18 minute speech, Obama tied current issues to founding principles.

    He sought to link the past and future, tying the nation’s founding principles to the challenges confronting his second term in a call for Americans to fulfill the responsibility of citizenship.

    Eschewing poetic language for rhetorical power, Obama cited the accomplishments of the past four years while laying out a progressive agenda for the next four that would tackle thorny issues like gun control, climate change and immigration reform. “We have always understood that when times change, so must we; that fidelity to our founding principles requires new responses to new challenges; that preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires collective action,” he said. “My fellow Americans, we are made for this moment and we will seize it so long as we seize it together,” he added later.

    Analysts called the speech politically astute and an important expression of new forcefulness by the president as he enters his second term following re-election last November. “It’s a real declaration of conscience, about principles, about what he believes in,” said CNN Senior Political Analyst David Gergen. “He basically said, ‘When I came in the first term, we had all these emergencies, we had these wars. We’ve now started to clear the decks.

    Let’s talk about what’s essential.’” The foundation of the address, and Obama’s vision for the future, were the tenets he quoted from the Declaration of Independence — “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” “Today, we continue a neverending journey, to bridge the meaning of those words with the realities of our time,” Obama said to gathered dignitaries and flag-waving throngs on the National Mall. “For history tells us that while these truths may be self-evident, they have never been self-executing; that while freedom is a gift from God, it must be secured by His people here on Earth.” In particularly pointed references, the president made a forceful call for gay rights that equated the issue with the struggle for women’s rights in the 19th century and civil rights in the 1960s. “We, the people, declare today that the most evident of truths — that all of us are created equal — is the star that guides us still; just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall,” Obama said, mentioning landmarks of the women’s, black and gay rights movements. “It is now our generation’s task to carry on what those pioneers began,” he continued, prompting the loudest applause and cheers of his address when he said “our journey is not complete until our wives, our mothers, and daughters can earn a living equal to their efforts.” More cheers came when Obama called for “our gay brothers and sisters” to be treated “like anyone else under the law — for if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.” According to observers, it was the first time a president championed gay marriage in an inaugural address. With further mention of topical issues such as immigration reform and gun control, Obama came to his key point — that adhering to America’s bedrock principles requires taking action on today’s challenges. “Being true to our founding documents does not require us to agree on every contour of life; it does not mean we will all define liberty in exactly the same way, or follow the same precise path to happiness,” he said. “Progress does not compel us to settle centuries-long debates about the role of government for all time — but it does require us to act in our time.” A deep partisan divide in Washington and the country characterized Obama’s first term, with Congress seemingly paralyzed at times and repeated episodes of brinksmanship over debt and spending issues bringing the first-ever downgrade of the U.S. credit rating.

    Acknowledging the political rift, Obama called for leaders and citizens to work for the greater good of the country. “We cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle for politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate,” he said. “We must act, knowing that our work will be imperfect.” At the same time, he made clear he would fight for the central themes of his election campaign. “For we, the people, understand that our country cannot succeed when a shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it,” he said.

    While “we must make the hard choices to reduce the cost of health care and the size of our deficit,” he said, “we reject the belief that America must choose between caring for the generation that built this country and investing in the generation that will build its future.” In particular, he defended the need for popular entitlement programs that provide government benefits to senior citizens, the poor and the disabled, saying they were part of the American fabric. “The commitments we make to each other — through Medicare, and Medicaid, and Social Security — these things do not sap our initiative; they strengthen us,” Obama said. “They do not make us a nation of takers; they free us to take the risks that make this country great.” On Monday, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, one of Obama’s harshest critics, called the president’s second term “a fresh start when it comes to dealing with the great challenges of our day; particularly, the transcendent challenge of unsustainable federal spending and debt.” Other issues also appear difficult, if not intractable.

    Obama made a reference to gun control, saying that the nation needed to ensure that “all our children, from the streets of Detroit to the hills of Appalachia to the quiet lanes of Newtown, know that they are cared for, and cherished, and always safe from harm.” However, congressional Republicans and some Democrats, as well as the powerful gun lobby, have rejected proposals Obama recently announced in response to the Connecticut school shootings that killed 20 Newtown first-graders last month.

    In citing climate change as a priority, Obama raised the profile of the issue on the national agenda after a presidential campaign in which it was almost never mentioned. “We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations,” he said, warning of a “long and sometimes difficult” path to sustainable energy sources in a nation dominated by its fossil fuel industries such as oil and coal. “America cannot resist this transition; we must lead it,” Obama said. “We cannot cede to other nations the technology that will power new jobs and new industries — we must claim its promise.” Obama infused his speech with references to two assassinated American icons — President Abraham Lincoln and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. In one passage, Obama cited “blood drawn by lash and blood drawn by sword” in mentioning the Civil War and slavery.

    It mimicked Lincoln’s second inaugural address in 1865, when he spoke of the possibility that “every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn the sword.” Of King, Obama referred to those who came to Washington almost 50 years ago “to hear a preacher say that we cannot walk alone; to hear a King proclaim that our individual freedom is inextricably bound to the freedom of every soul on Earth.” The inauguration coincided with the national holiday honoring King.

    The president concluded by urging Americans to fulfill their responsibility as citizens by meeting “the obligation to shape the debates of our time — not only with the votes we cast, but with the voices we lift in defense of our most ancient values and enduring ideals.” At a little more than 2,100 words, Obama’s speech was about 300 shorter than his first inaugural address four years earlier.

    In 2009, he was fresh off his historic election as the nation’s first African- American president, facing an economic recession, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the ongoing terrorist threat.

    David Maraniss, author of the book “Barack Obama: The Story,” said the difference from four years ago was palpable, adding: “I could feel his heart beating this time.” The inauguration was attended by approximately a million people.

    Obama Inauguration:
    The Inaugural Poem WASHINGTON (TIP): Inaugural poet Richard Blanco read his poem “One Today” at the swearing-in ceremony for President Obama. Blanco, the 44-year-old Madrid-born Cuban-American poet, is only the fifth poet – Robert Frost (1961), Maya Angelou (1993), William Miller (1997) and Elizabeth Alexander (2009) were the previous ones – reading at a presidential inauguration. He is also the first Hispanic as well as the first openly gay one.
    Here is the Poem
    One sun rose on us today, kindled over our shores,
    peeking over the Smokies, greeting the faces
    of the Great Lakes, spreading a simple truth
    across the Great Plains, then charging across the Rockies.
    One light, waking up rooftops, under each one, a story
    told by our silent gestures moving behind windows.

    My face, your face, millions of faces in morning’s mirrors,
    each one yawning to life, crescendoing into our day:
    pencil-yellow school buses, the rhythm of traffic lights,
    fruit stands: apples, limes, and oranges arrayed like rainbows
    begging our praise. Silver trucks heavy with oil or paperbricks
    or milk, teeming over highways alongside us,
    on our way to clean tables, read ledgers, or save livesto
    teach geometry, or ring-up groceries as my mother did
    for twenty years, so I could write this poem.

    All of us as vital as the one light we move through,
    the same light on blackboards with lessons for the day:
    equations to solve, history to question, or atoms imagined,
    the “I have a dream” we keep dreaming,
    or the impossible vocabulary of sorrow that won’t explain
    the empty desks of twenty children marked absent
    today, and forever. Many prayers, but one light
    breathing color into stained glass windows,
    life into the faces of bronze statues, warmth
    onto the steps of our museums and park benches
    as mothers watch children slide into the day.

    One ground. Our ground, rooting us to every stalk
    of corn, every head of wheat sown by sweat
    and hands, hands gleaning coal or planting windmills
    in deserts and hilltops that keep us warm, hands
    digging trenches, routing pipes and cables, hands
    as worn as my father’s cutting sugarcane
    so my brother and I could have books and shoes.

    The dust of farms and deserts, cities and plains
    mingled by one wind-our breath. Breathe. Hear it
    through the day’s gorgeous din of honking cabs,
    buses launching down avenues, the symphony
    of footsteps, guitars, and screeching subways,
    the unexpected song bird on your clothes line.

    Hear: squeaky playground swings, trains whistling,
    or whispers across café tables, Hear: the doors we open
    for each other all day, saying: hello, shalom,
    buon giorno, howdy, namaste, or buenos días
    in the language my mother taught me-in every language
    spoken into one wind carrying our lives
    without prejudice, as these words break from my lips.

    One sky: since the Appalachians and Sierras claimed
    their majesty, and the Mississippi and Colorado worked
    their way to the sea. Thank the work of our hands:
    weaving steel into bridges, finishing one more report
    for the boss on time, stitching another wound
    or uniform, the first brush stroke on a portrait,
    or the last floor on the Freedom Tower
    jutting into a sky that yields to our resilience.

    One sky, toward which we sometimes lift our eyes
    tired from work: some days guessing at the weather
    of our lives, some days giving thanks for a love
    that loves you back, sometimes praising a mother
    who knew how to give, or forgiving a father
    who couldn’t give what you wanted.

    We head home: through the gloss of rain or weight
    of snow, or the plum blush of dusk, but always-home,
    always under one sky, our sky. And always one moon
    like a silent drum tapping on every rooftop
    and every window, of one country-all of usfacing
    the stars
    hope-a new constellation
    waiting for us to map it,
    waiting for us to name it-together.

  • 26/11 Mumbai Terror Attacks-US Court Sentences David Headley to 35 Years in Jail

    26/11 Mumbai Terror Attacks-US Court Sentences David Headley to 35 Years in Jail

    CHICAGO (TIP): Exactly seven days after his accomplice Tahawwur Rana was sentenced to 14 years in jail, Pakistani- American LeT terrorist David Headley was on Thursday, January 24, sentenced to 35 years in jail by a US court for helping plot the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks but escaped death penalty under a deal with the U.S. investigators over which the judge had serious reservations.

    “The sentence I impose, I’m hopeful it will keep Mr. Headley under lock and key for the rest of his natural life,” US District Judge Harry Leinenweber said. The Judge said it would have been much easier to impose the death penalty. “That’s what you deserve”. 52-year-old Headley had entered into a plea bargain with the US investigators under which he escaped death sentence. But many were left surprised when the US prosecutors did not seek life sentence for Headley. Headley was ordered to serve 35 years, followed by five years of supervised release by Leinenweber. There is no federal parole and defendants must serve at least 85 percent of their sentence. “Mr. Headley is a terrorist,” the Judge said while imposing the sentence on 12 counts in a packed court. Leinenweber also said, “He commits crime, cooperates and then gets rewarded for the cooperation. “No matter what I do, it is not going to deter terrorists. Unfortunately, terrorists do not care for it.

    I do not have any faith in Mr. Headley when he says that he is a changed person now. “I do believe that it is my duty to protect the public from Mr. Headley and ensure that he does not get into any further terrorist activities. Recommending 35 years is not a right sentence”. Asked if he wanted to make a statement, Headley, said, “No your honor”… In pleading guilty and later testifying for the government at the trial of co-defendant and school time friend Tahawwur Rana, Headley admitted that he attended training camps in Pakistan operated by Lashkar-e-Taiba, on five separate occasions between 2002 and 2005.

    In late 2005, Headley received instructions from three members of Lashkar to travel to India to conduct surveillance, which he did five times leading up to the Mumbai attacks in 2008 that killed approximately 166 people, including six Americans, and wounded hundreds more. A week back, Leinenweber had sentenced Rana for 14 years of imprisonment followed by three years of supervised release for providing material support to LeT and planning terrorist attack against a Danish newspaper in Copenhagen. Both Headley and Rana were arrested in 2009. Headley was small-time narcotics dealer turned US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) informer who went rogue.

    In their closing arguments, US attorneys Daniel J Collins and Sarah E Streicker had sought between 30 and 35 years of imprisonment for Headley. His attorneys Robert David Seeder and John Thomas had sought a lighter sentence arguing he had given huge amount of information to the US government against terrorist organizations like LeT and several of its leaders. Headley has confessed that he had undertaken numerous scouting missions for his handlers in Pakistan.

    He had videographed a number of targets in India including the iconic Taj hotel in Mumbai which was attacked by 10 LeT terrorists. According to security agencies, the detailed videos made by Headley was the foundation on which the Mumbai attacks was planned and carried out. Headley, born to a Pakistani father and American mother, had even changed his name from Daood Gilani in 2006 to easily move in and out of India without raising suspicion.

    The US attorneys argued that while there is no question that Headley’s criminal conduct was deplorable, his decision to cooperate, provided uniquely significant value to the US government’s efforts to combat terrorism. “We are seeking less than life time sentencing, because of the significant intelligence value information provided by Headley. Crime is deplorable, shocking and horrific. “We have to recognize the significant value of the information.We believe that 30-35 years of imprisonment would be justified and balance and thus be downgraded from life sentence,” Collins said. Former US attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, who appeared in court, urged leniency saying that Headley’s decision to become an informant “saved lives.”

  • Celebration of India’s 64th Republic Day Ambassador Prabhu Dayal rings the Opening Bell at NASDAQ

    Celebration of India’s 64th Republic Day Ambassador Prabhu Dayal rings the Opening Bell at NASDAQ

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): Ambassador Prabhu Dayal, Consul General of India, rang the Opening Bell at NASDAQ in celebration of India’s 64th Republic Day January 23. Present on the occasion were a number of Indian Americans, including State Bank of India County Head Mr. Chandramouli, Bank of India CE for North America, Mr. B.B. Joshi,and SBI New York CE Mr. Verma. The NASDAQ Stock Market, also known as simply the NASDAQ, is an American stock exchange. “NASDAQ” originally stood for National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations.

    It is the second-largest stock exchange by market capitalization in the world, after the New York Stock Exchange. The exchange is owned by NASDAQ OMX Group, which also owns the OMX stock exchange network. NASDAQ has been celebrating India’s national days- Independence Day and Republic Day- for years now when the Consul General of India in New York is invited to ring the opening bell, signifying celebrations in honor of the event.