Year: 2013

  • Your Handbag Is Full Of Germs

    Your Handbag Is Full Of Germs

    Your handbag not only stores your essential items, but also loads of germs. Thought your handbag only stored your most essential items? Well, researchers say most women don’t realise the impact of their handbags on their health. Remember that your handbag travels with you wherever you go, gets placed in different places and pick up germs on the way. You’ll be surprised to know the health hazards that are lurking in the recesses of your precious bag.

    Hazard 1: Water bottles
    Carrying a water bottle may seem to be sensible, but constantly drinking from a plastic bottle is not good for your health. Experts say unsafe chemicals like phthalates, present in the plastic, can mix with the water over time. And this can lead to hormone imbalances and fertility problems. The longer you use a plastic bottle, the more the concentration of harmful chemicals that gets seeped into the water. Solution: Use a metal or glass bottle instead. While stainless steel or aluminium bottles will minimise the possibility of breakage, you can wrap glass bottles in a protective plastic or silicone bag.

    Hazard 2: Your makeup
    An average woman carries at least three to eight pieces of makeup in her handbag. And if one glance at your handbag reveals tons of lipgloss, mascaras, blushers, foundations, etc – it is time you sat down and discarded all the expired products. Makeup that is past its expiry date harbours bacteria. Mascaras, especially, should be used very carefully because they can harbour bacteria. The bacteria multiply in the dark, warm and moist environment of the mascara tube. Using this mascara can then lead to eye infections. Solution: Throw out your mascara every six months and other products once they are past their expiry date. Keep your makeup brushes clean by washing them regularly and avoid sharing makeup.

    Hazard 3: Used tissues and handkerchiefs
    How many times have you kept a used tissue or a hanky in your handbag, only to tell yourself that you will soon discard it? Studies say the viruses that cause the common cold and cough can survive for a long time on these tissues. And each time you put your hand inside your bag, you inadvertantly spread germs. Solution: After using a tissue, throw it out. If you keep a packet of tissues or wet wipes in your handbag, make sure it is sealed. As an added measure, wash your hands often and use a hand sanitiser.

    Hazard 4: Cellphone
    Studies say that our cellphones carry a host of bacteria. One study found that one out of every six phones were contaminated with faecal matter. Cellphones, unfortunately, travel with us wherever we go – all the while collecting harmful bacteria. Solution: Keep your cellphone in a cover or a pouch and clean it with a soft cloth once a week.

    Hazard 5: Heavy handbag
    Women are facing neck, back and shoulder problems due to the heavy handbags they lug around daily. While a big handbag may be fashionable, it also invites you to dump things in it. Solution: Either switch to a smaller bag or make it a habit to empty it out weekly.

  • Alba’s On Screen Antics Confuses Daughter

    Alba’s On Screen Antics Confuses Daughter

    Jessica Alba has revealed that her oldest daughter gets confused when she sees her mother on screen and thinks of her Hollywood career as a game of dressing-up.

    The 31-year-old actress said that her 4-year-old daughter, Honor, had seen only one of her films and that was weird for her, the Daily Express reported. Alba asserted that when she played a mum in ‘Spy Kids’, her daughter asked if her onscreen child was her real baby.

    “I was a mum in Spy Kids and she asked, ‘Is that your real baby?’ So I said, ‘Do you really think that?’ And she replied, ‘Were you playing dress-up again?’” Alba said. Explaining the innocence of her child, the actress further added that when she voiced a character in an animated film ‘Escape From Planet Earth’, Honor asked if the mask was hot when it was put on.

  • Heidi Klum Saved Son Henry From Drowning

    Heidi Klum Saved Son Henry From Drowning

    Heidi Klum has revealed that she saved her son Henry and two nannies from being swept away by a large riptide, during their Easter vacation in Oahu, Hawaii. The 39-year-old actress told Entertainment Tonight that her family got pulled into the ocean by a big wave and she as a mother was very scared for her 7-year-old child and everyone else in the water. Klum said that Henry is a strong swimmer and was able to swim back to land. Klum added that she and her boyfriend Martin Kirsten, who also sprang to action, were able to save everyone. In photos posted on the ET Web site, the supermodel can be seen tugging her son and a nanny to shore as large waves crash down. Kirsten is also seen on his hands and knees, catching his breath after surfacing from the water.

  • MOVIE REVIEW-G. I. Joe: Retaliation

    MOVIE REVIEW-G. I. Joe: Retaliation

    Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Bruce Willis, Adrianne Palicki, Channing Tatum, Byung-hun Lee, Jonathan Pryce, Arnold Vosloo, Ray Stevenson
    Direction: Jon M. Chu
    Genre: Action
    Duration: 1 hour 55 minutes

    STORY: When elite US fighting force, G.I . Joes, get picked off and eliminated with extreme prejudice by their own government (specifically, the President), you have to ask: who’s really calling the shots?

    REVIEW: The Joes get sent to Pakistan to retrieve nuclear warheads but it all goes horribly wrong with the ‘enemy’ possibly being their own President. But why would he do that, right? Anyway, the survivors return, with Roadblock (Johnson) taking charge of the severely depopulated unit comprising Lady Jaye (Palicki) and Flint (D J Cotrona). Gen Joe Colton (Willis) reluctantly pitches in along with G.I Joe Snake Eyes and new recruit Jynx, bringing them closer to their enemy Cobra Commander and his minions Firefly (Stevenson) and Zartan (Vosloo). Director Jon Chu takes over from Stephen Sommers in the second installment of this toy-line-inspired franchise and that’s surprising. Chu is best known for his dance films (Step Up 2, Step Up 3D) while Sommers is an all-action man, having former experience in helming a franchise exceedingly well (The Mummy series).

    To his credit, Chu doesn’t disappoint, keeping your interest in the film unwavering at a sharp 115 minutes. For those unfamiliar with the characters, there’s a visual introduction at the start. The action sequences impress and the banter is at par with the standard fare dished out these days. Dwayne Johnson aka The Rock is always a safe bet. Almost-Wonder Woman Adrianne Palicki is easy on the eyes and her brief chemistry with Bruce Willis is crackling indeed. Worth noting is one of the climax scenes that seems thought-provoking yet has been executed quite frivolously.

    That being said, this one’s worth the price of the ticket and the 3D’s actually not unnecessarily painful. Give it a shot. After all, revenge flicks are such guilty pleasures, no?

  • Deepika To Be Cynosure Of All Eyes This Cricket Season

    Deepika To Be Cynosure Of All Eyes This Cricket Season

    Deepika Padukone, who was once a hot favourite with Yuvraj Singh and MS Dhoni, will be the cynosure of all eyes this cricket season. She is likely to be seen with Shah Rukh Khan, when he makes an appearance with his IPL team at the beginning of the tournament. DP is expected to be with Ranbir Kapoor at the closing ceremony because her Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani releases on May 31 and high visibility at that point will be a good thing for her and the film.

  • Sunny Deol Got Parathas For Homesick Neha Sharma

    Sunny Deol Got Parathas For Homesick Neha Sharma

    Sunny Deol got parathas for homesick Neha SharmaSunny Deol seems to know the mantra – sharing is caring. The actor ensured that his co-star Neha Sharma, who apparently had been feeling very home sick in London, while shooting for their upcoming film, YPD 2, was served garma-garam parathas to warm the cockles of her heart.

    The actors had been shooting in UK over three months and Neha was left craving for home-cooked food. A source says, “The Deols are known for their hospitality. Both Dharmji and Sunny have a special chef on the sets who cooked Punjabi specialties for the father and son. The actors made sure that even Neha got a taste of the chef’s culinary expertise. The actress dug into some tasty methi ke parathe that is also her utmost favourite.” And not just Neha, apparently the rest of the film’s crew too were left licking their fingers after the Punjabi feasts!

  • Movie Review-Himmatwala

    Movie Review-Himmatwala

    Cast: Ajay Devgn, Tamannah, Paresh Rawal, Mahesh Manjrekar,
    Direction: Sajid Khan
    Genre: Action
    Duration: 2 hours 20 minutes

    STORY: Himmatwala returns to his gaon to avenge his baap’s death. Here he meets sher, sherni, maa, behen and other assorted creatures.

    MOVIE REVIEW: Hark back to taaki taaki and tap dance to tathaiyya as the (r)awful 80s are re-awakened from their garish grave and served re-heated; as old wine in an old bottle. Vintage? Not truly. Just as we thought Jeetendra’s white shoes and coloured wigs were laid to rest in filmi museums, Sajid Khan dips into his cookie jar of movies, masti and ‘naus-talgia’ for yet another peek into the petty-past. Got himmat? Read on: After years, Ravi aka Himmatwala, a big-city streetfighter, (Ajay) moves back to his village that’s suffering the ruthless reign of Sher Singh (Mahesh). Singh terrifies the gaonwallahs by day, and sleeps with a sherni at night (a stuffed toy-tiger, before you Tiger Savers wake up). His bro-in-law Narayandas (Rawal, sporting a Goldilocks wig in grey) with a Kader Khan hangover (nicely done) is his partner-in-paap. While Himmatwala is on a revenge mission (maa kasam!), he falls in love with sher-ki-beti, Rekha, (Tamannah); who’s a chori with most guts and the sexiest ghaaghra-cholis. Well, there’s more melodrama: A weepy maa in white, a bechari behen (yes, she gets molested too); a gaon-kamandir (crucial to the climax. Hail 80s!) plus tons of dialogue-baazi (maa-ka-doodh, maa-behen ki kasam, et al).

    Lastly, Himmatwala also braves it with a Sher (thankfully not Singh, the real thing). Ajay bends iron rods, fights tiger claws and takes the laws into his singham paws. Too much, huh? Well, that’s our Himmatwala – 100% filmi! With bone-crushing action, power-packed dialogues and perfected herogiri – Ajay stays true to the title and does well. In her Bollywood debut, Tamannah makes a decent impression. She’s superhot (her midriff demands a separate acting credit) and shows conviction, but later gets lost in transgression. Paresh Rawal entertains in parts, but often goes OTT. Thankfully, Mahesh Manjrekar’s acting doesn’t time travel and he evokes a few laughs.

    In this remake, Sajid Khan’s passion for the 80s kitsch is entertaining to begin with, but gets suffocating after a point. While few scenes (grand and outlandish) win ceetees, the rest try too hard to get any reaction. He also attempts ‘Nazi’jokes, gay-gags and revisits Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Psycho'(we braved this too!).

    This one might impress the wannabe Himmatwalas out there. But it’ll take more than himmat to go back to the gawdiest era of all. Rest, as they say, is history. Repeated!

  • Get Set For A Seaplane Ride in Kerala

    Get Set For A Seaplane Ride in Kerala

    Kerala will soon start a seaplane service for tourists, the first of its kind in the country. Houseboat cruises are passe. Take a trip on a seaplane instead! By the end of this month, tourists visiting Kerala can take a flight cruise, which will have landing points at water dromes in Bakel, Bolghatty, Punnamada, Ashtamudi and Kumarakom, besides the three airports in the state. More landing points are in the pipeline, say officials. “It was after an extensive research that the state government concluded that the water bodies here are ideal for seaplanes. It is very popular in foreign countries where there is water connectivity. And of course, there is no other state in India which is so well connected through water,” says Umesh Kammath, GM of a private company with which the government has tied up. Two planes, a six-seater and a 10-seater, will be introduced in the first stage, after which they plan to introduce an 18-seater as well. The authorities are planning to set up floating jetties at the landing points for a safe landing. “Tourists will have to take houseboats and speedboats to reach the land,” says Umesh and adds that foreign pilots will be helming the planes initially, after which the company plans to train and recruit Indian pilots. If all goes well, the service will be functional by the end of April, after a trial run and other safety and security checks. However, the trip will be a bit expensive. The charges are expected to be around `5000 per person for an hour. “Tourists can avail themselves of extra facilities, like landing near the resort they stay in or take a customised trip to their preferred destination,” says Umesh.

    The officials say they are particularly targeting cruise ship passengers. “Usually, cruise ships dock in Kochi for just about a day, and hence the passengers are not able to do much sight-seeing. But with the seaplane, they can take a trip around the whole of Kerala in a day,” says Umesh. Apparently, Goa and other tourist destinations in the country are eyeing the seaplane, and are watching out its viability in Kerala.

  • Travelling alone? Keep these in mind

    Travelling alone? Keep these in mind

    Get yourself a good guide
    Start with buying yourself a guidebook of the place you might be visiting. It is wise to do your home work if you are hitting an unknown destination. These guide books usually give you an in-depth knowledge about places to visit, accommodation, travel routes and weather details.

    Book your bed
    To find yourself accommodation at an unknown destination can be risky. So better book your accommodation before hand, unless you want to be left stranded.

    Word of caution
    Where ever you might be, a and no matter what, a woman always draws attention. And if you are not from that place, you will stand out if not appropriately dressed. So never be dressed to be noticed while going to a new place. If you are being followed or are facing any such thing, it is better to move into a crowded public place or get into a hotel or restaurant where you can tell the people about your problem. It always helps!

    Talk and smile
    A warm gesture like a smile has never done any harm to anyone. When at a new place you have no one, you can join in with a family and start a conversation. Such spontaneous interactions are always memorable. If language is a barrier, you can try and communicate with signs. In return you might just get to know their lexicon.

    Romantic destination? NO!
    Since you are travelling alone and do not have your boyfriend or husband or for that matter your girl gang, popular romantic destinations should be a big no. You will always feel put of place seeing couple holding hands or getting cosy. You have come to have a good time, not to sulk!

    Food
    Since you have come on a holiday, you cannot miss a chance to taste the local cuisine and try out something new. It is always exciting to eat and drink something never tried before. And yes, don’t get drunk! And just in case you do not want to take a chance with your stomach, you can stick on to your regular diet and have a blast!

  • Boeing conducts final 787 battery test flight

    Boeing conducts final 787 battery test flight

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Boeing has announced to have completed certification testing for new battery on its 787 plane. “Today’s flight marks the final certification test for the new battery system, completing the testing required by the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)”, Boeing said in a statement yesterday.

    The airplane took off and landed at Paine Field in Everett, Washington, home to the company’s largest plane-building factory, the statement said. The Boeing 787 flight, departed at 10:39 am local time with a crew of 11 onboard, including two representatives from FAA. The airplane flew for one hours and 49 minutes, landing back at Paine Field at 12:28 pm. The crew reported that the certification demonstration plan was straightforward and the flight was uneventful. The purpose of the flight was to demonstrate that the new battery system performs as intended during normal and non-normal flight conditions, the statement said. Boeing will now gather and analyse the data and submit the required materials to the FAA. “We expect to deliver all of the materials to the FAA in the coming days. Once we deliver the materials we stand ready to reply to additional requests and continue in dialogue with the FAA to ensure we have met all of their expectations,” Boeing added.

  • Us Could Launch Pre-Emptive Strike On North Korea: Congressman

    Us Could Launch Pre-Emptive Strike On North Korea: Congressman

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The United States has right to launch a pre-emptive military strike against North Korea if there was “solid evidence” that Pyongyang planned to attack the US or South Korea, an influential lawmaker said on Friday. “If we have good reason to believe there’s going to be an attack, I believe we have the right to take pre-emptive action,” Peter King, the Republican Congressman from New York, told the CNN. “I don’t think we have to wait until Americans are killed or wounded or injured in any way,” King said. “I’m not saying we should be rushing into war, don’t get me wrong, but if we have solid evidence that North Korea’s going to take action, then I think we have a moral obligation and an absolute right to defend ourselves,” he said. North Korea has warned that US bases in Hawaii and Guam would be targeted in what could turn into “an all-out war, a nuclear war”.

    The communist regime has already declared a “state of war” with South Korea. According to a latest Gallup poll, if North Korea were to attack South Korea, the majority of Americans (55 per cent) say the US should use its military forces to help defend the South, while 34 per cent say the US should not do so. Relatively few Americans – 28 per cent – think it is likely that North Korea will attack the US in the next six months. It is not clear whether North Korea is capable of hitting the US mainland with missiles, but there is an increasing focus on the possibility of attacks on US military forces stationed in the Pacific. As a result, the US is rapidly moving a missile defense system to the US possession of Guam in the Pacific Ocean, Gallup said.

  • Obama Branded Sexist for Remark on Indian-American Kamala Harris

    Obama Branded Sexist for Remark on Indian-American Kamala Harris

    She is brilliant and she is dedicated and she is tough, and she is exactly what you’d want in anybody who is administering the law, and making sure that everybody is getting a fair shake,” Obama said praising Harris, who is the first woman and the first Indian-American to be elected to the office of Attorney- General of California. “She also happens to be by far the best-looking attorney general in the country – Kamala Harris is here,” Obama said amidst applause. “It’s true. Come on,” he said amidst laughter. “She is a great friend and has just been a great supporter for many, many years,” Obama said at a fund raising event in California, yesterday.

    Daughter of an Indian mother, Shyamala Gopalan, a breast cancer specialist who emigrated from Chennai to the United States in 1960 and a Jamaican-American father, Harris, 48, is the first female African- American and Asian-American attorney general in California, as well as the first ethnic Indian-American attorney general in the United States. But Obama’s playful remarks set of a little storm. “Obama calls Kamala Harris ‘bestlooking:’ Accurate, but sexist?” wondered the Los Angeles Times. “Does merely stating the obvious make the president sexist? More wolfish than sexist, I’d say.

    And this may be a little problem he needs to work on,” said columnist Robin Abcarian. Obama had rekindled “talk about boys club” suggested The Washington Post noting his remarks “buzzed through Twitter and other social media, where reaction ranged from appalled to leave-the-guy-alone.” “Obama in Need of Gender- Sensitivity Training,” said the New York Magazine. “It’s not a compliment. And for a president who has become a cultural model for many of his supporters in so many other ways, the example he’s setting here is disgraceful,” wrote columnist Jonathan Chait. Obama was thus left feeling “the heat Thursday after calling a powerful female official smoking hot” as the New York Daily News put it. Obama’s comment on Harris soon became a buzz word on social media. On Twitter #KamalaHarris became very popular with people commenting on the comment. Harris, is often described as the “female Barack Obama” and is seen as a potential gubernatorial candidate for California

  • To share pay cut pain, US president trims own salary

    To share pay cut pain, US president trims own salary

    WASHINGTON (TIP): At a time when US is facing economic strain and automatic budgetary cuts is in place, US President Barack Obama will return 5% of his salary amounting to $20,000 to the department of treasury.

    The salary of the US President is $400,000 per annum (over Rs 2 crore) and in a show of solidarity he will return $20,000 (over Rs 10 lakh). “Obama instructed his staff he wanted to do this when the sequester took effect,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said on Wednesday. “The salary for the President, as with members of Congress, is set by law and cannot be changed. However, the President has decided that to share in the sacrifice being made by public servants across the federal government that are affected by the sequester, he will contribute a portion of his salary back to the treasury,” Carney said. Obama plans to write checks to treasury on a monthly basis, effective March 1, but will cut the first check in April.A day earlier, US defense secretary Chuck Hagel had announced a similar move. Senator Mark Begich also announced that he would voluntarily give back part of his salary and that more than half of his staff members would have their pay cut this year.

  • RUTH PRAWER JHABVALA: Award winning author, Oscar winning Screenwriter dies at 85

    RUTH PRAWER JHABVALA: Award winning author, Oscar winning Screenwriter dies at 85

    Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, author of 19 novels and short-story collections who wrote the screenplays for “Howards End,” “Mr. and Mrs. Bridge” and “The Remains of the Day,” died Wednesday, April 3 at her home in Manhattan. She was 85. She is survived by her husband and three children, Renana, Ava and Firoza, and six grandchildren. For years, people who read Ruth Prawer Jhabvala’s novels assumed she was born in India. She wrote about swamis, social climbers, duplicitous landlords and other characters from the Indian bourgeoisie who inevitably found themselves colliding with curious visitors from the West. But Jhabvala was a Westerner herself: a German Jew displaced by war to England, who married an Indian man and settled in his country. She absorbed enough of subcontinental culture to portray it with clarity and comic sensibility in books that earned her comparisons to Jane Austen. During an unusually long and fruitful four-decade partnership with Mumbai-born producer Ismail Merchant and his American partner and collaborator, James Ivory, Jhabvala wrote more than 20 screenplays and won Academy Awards for two of them: “A Room With a View” (1986) and “Howards End” (1992). Although better known for her skillful screen adaptations of works by authors such as E.M. Forster, Henry James and Kazuo Ishiguro, Jhabvala was the author of 19 novels and short-story collections set on the three continents where she spent her life. Her 1975 novel “Heat and Dust,” about a young Englishwoman’s journey to India to uncover the truth about a family scandal, won the Booker Prize, Britain’s top literary award. Ivory directed the 1983 film version, which critic Vincent Canby called a “haunting, beautiful high-comedy.” Jhabvala often said that her gifts as a writer came from her chronic rootlessness. “I’m a born outsider,” she told the Los Angeles Times in 1993. She was born May 7, 1927, in Cologne, Germany. Her father, Marcus Prawer, had immigrated there from Poland, where he had been a lawyer; in Germany he ran a clothing business. Her mother, Eleonora, came from one of Cologne’s most prominent Jewish families. Both of her parents were briefly jailed during the Nazis’ rise to power. Ruth was forced to attend a segregated school for Jews and witnessed the destruction of Jewish temples and businesses on Kristallnacht in 1938. In 1939 she and her family were among the last Jews allowed to leave the country and arrived in England just ahead of the German blitzkrieg. She read “War and Peace” in a bomb shelter and started writing her own stories. In 1948, her father, unable to bear the grief of having lost his entire extended family in the Holocaust, took his own life. “All my stories have a melancholy undertone. That’s probably why,” Jhabvala, who was 21 when he committed suicide, told the Guardian of London in 2005.

    She studied English literature at Queen Mary College in London, graduating in 1951. That year she also married Persian Indian architect Cyrus S.H. Jhabvala and moved to Delhi. She spent the next 24 years in India. Her first novel, a comedy of manners called “Amrita,” was published in 1955 and a few years later her short stories began appearing in the New Yorker. She wrote so authoritatively about the manners and habits of the Indian middle class that readers “might reasonably suppose … that Ruth Jhabvala is Indian,” critic Anuradha Vittachi wrote in the New Internationalist. Critics in the West reacted more favorably to her work than those in India, who, according to Jhabvala, dismissed her after learning of her Western roots. “In India,” she told the London Independent in 1995, “people don’t like foreigners writing about them .… I wrote these books; no one read them; no one cared.” She wrote “Heat and Dust” (1975), her eighth novel, amid dust storms and asthma attacks during what would be her last summer in India. After two decades she found her passion for India had worn thin, largely because she could no longer ignore the dire conditions all around her. “It’s terribly easy to get used to someone else’s poverty if you’re living a middle-class life in it. But after a while,” she told the Guardian, “I saw it wasn’t possible to accept it, and I also didn’t want to.” With the money from the Booker Prize she bought an apartment in Manhattan and moved there. Her husband supported her decision and divided his time between India and the U.S. for several years before joining her full time in New York.

    New York based Indo-American Arts Council paying tribute to Jhabvala said, “The IAAC toasts the contribution of award-winning author & Oscar-winning screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala who combined the sensibilities of East and West in her work with Director James Ivory and late Producer Ismail Merchant. Merchant Ivory Productions lost Ismail in 2005 and today, we lost Ruth. Two of the three intrinsic partners, collaborators and lifelong friends of this trio are no more. I believe it is the end of a golden era of exquisite, elite, sophisticated films of a certain sensibility. I used to call Ismail the grand-daddy of diaspora filmmakers……it was the Merchant-Ivory Productions with Ruth, Ismail and James – all three of whom were the forerunners of this genre. “In 2001 the First IAAC Film Festival opened its doors with a screening of Merchant-Ivory Production’s Shakespearewallah – the first film that had commenced a life-time bond between this extremely talented, sensitive trio. Ruth’s deeply nuanced portrayals of character were perhaps a combination of the cultural backgrounds of American James Ivory, Indian Ismail Merchant and Ruth’s own English heritage combined with her marriage to Indian architect Cyrus Jhabvala. “We will miss you Ruth, as well as the richness of Merchant-Ivory films anchored by your exquisite writing.”

  • First flight over Everest retraced 80 years later

    First flight over Everest retraced 80 years later

    KATHMANDU (TIP): Charles Douglas-Hamilton could feel the goosebumps as the Jetstream 41 aircraft approached the world’s tallest mountain. Exactly 80 years ago, his grandfather, Douglas Douglas- Hamilton had created history when he flew over Mt Everest along with fellow Scotsman David McIntyre in two open cockpit bi-planes fitted with a wooden propeller. They became the first people to fly over the iconic mountain. On Wednesday, Charles, a London-based geologist, relived what his grandfather and his companion might have felt like when he took a ride on the Jetstream 41 aircraft made by the same Scottish aviation company the two pioneers subsequently set up.

    Recalling the epic journey made on April 3, 1933, Charles, who has come to Nepal for the first time, says that the risks faced by the duo back then were great since there were high winds blowing and lack of oxygen “On top of that, theirs was a single engine aircraft. Plus, they had to have the right kind of fuel that would not freeze at such heights.” The flight over Everest, made 30 years after the Wright Brothers took to the skies, was the last frontier in aviation since planes had flown over the north and the south poles and across the Atlantic. All these records had been set by the Americans. Now, the British wanted to claim a piece of aviation history.

    Their chance came in 1933 when Douglas-Hamilton and McIntyre set up a scientific expedition to photograph the southern slopes of Everest. These pictures were later used by Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay who became the first persons to climb Everest in 1953. Today tens of thousands take the commercial flights from Kathmandu to view Everest and back. But the tourists still do not do what the two Scotsmen achieved — flying over Everest since that would mean entering Chinese airspace.

  • US military to return some Okinawa land to Japan: Reports

    US military to return some Okinawa land to Japan: Reports

    TOKYO (TIP): Japan and the United States have agreed on a plan that will see some land occupied by the US military returned to the islands in a bid to break the deadlock in a long-stalled deal, reports said on Friday. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and US ambassador John Roos were expected to sign off on the pact later on Friday, in a deal that involves five US military facilities and other areas on Okinawa’s main island, Kyodo News said. Tokyo and Washington have also agreed they will return land currently occupied by the controversial Futenma airbase in 2022 or later, Jiji Press said. The reported deals come after years in which a plan to move the US Marine Corps’ Futenma base from a crowded residential area have been stuck in stasis because of vocal opposition from islanders.

    Locals want the base moved off Okinawa altogether, arguing that the island bears an unequal burden hosting the lion’s share of the 47,000 US service personnel stationed in Japan. The central government says the US military presence in the strategic island is a key for maintaining security at a time of increasing selfassertiveness from China and an unpredictable North Korea. Tokyo and Washington originally agreed to move the base in 2006. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who took office late December, met US President Barack Obama in February and confirmed the two countries would go ahead with the planned relocation of Futenma, despite local opposition.

  • Bomb attached to donkey kills Afghan policeman

    Bomb attached to donkey kills Afghan policeman

    KABUL, AFGHANISTAN (TIP): An official says a bomb attached to a donkey has exploded, killing a policeman and wounded three civilians. Local government spokesman Sarhadi Zwak says the donkey blew up in front a police security post in the Alingar district of Laghman province. He says Taliban militants carried out Friday’s attack. Insurgents are finding new ways to thwart stepped up security measures in their bid to undermine confidence in the Afghan government, as US and other foreign combat forces prepare to withdraw by the end of 2014.

  • Attack on Tamil paper office in Sri Lanka

    Attack on Tamil paper office in Sri Lanka

    COLOMBO (TIP): A group of unidentified men attacked the office of a Tamil newspaper in Sri Lanka’s former war zone on Wednesday, injuring several staffers and damaging equipment at the publication known for its government criticism. The attack is the latest in a series of assaults and threats on the staff of the Uthayan newspaper in recent years. The newspaper is published in the Tamil language spoken by the ethnic minority Tamils and is widely circulated in the island’s northern region, which was the stronghold of the Tamil Tiger rebels who fought the government during the nation’s 25-year civil war.

    Publisher E Saravanapavan said the masked attackers entered the office in Kilinochchi around 4:30 am. Using poles, they assaulted the manager and staff. Three workers were hospitalized and two had minor injuries, he said.

  • NATO helicopter kills four Afghan police officers, police say

    NATO helicopter kills four Afghan police officers, police say

    GHAZNI, AFGHANISTAN (TIP): Gunfire from a helicopter operated by NATO forces killed four Afghan police officers in the eastern province of Ghazni, a district police chief said on Thursday. Civilian casualties are a source of friction between President Hamid Karzai and his international allies, and the mistaken killing of members of the Afghan security forces is likely to compound Afghan government anger. The four Afghan Local Police (ALP) officers were in a village in Deyak district when the helicopter fired on them on Wednesday, said district police chief Faiz Mohammad. “The gunship must have mistaken the policemen for insurgents,” police chief Faiz Mohammad told Reuters, adding that the four were not wearing uniforms. Two civilians who were nearby were wounded, he said. A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said it was “assessing” the report. “We’re aware of local reports of an alleged air strike in Ghazni province yesterday in which several people were reportedly killed,” the spokesman said.

    In recent years, Deyak district has largely been under the control of the Taliban but the ALP, who are often recruited from militias, have pushed the militants out of the area. Last week, an air strike by NATO helicopter supporting Afghan security forces killed two children and nine suspected Taliban in a different area of Ghazni province.

  • Taliban kill 44 in attack on Afghan court: Officials

    Taliban kill 44 in attack on Afghan court: Officials

    HERAT (TIP): Taliban militants stormed an Afghan court on Wednesday, killing at least 44 people in a bid to free insurgents standing trial, officials said, in the deadliest attack for more than a year. It was not immediately clear whether the accused men had escaped the court complex in the western town of Farah, although a hospital doctor said one prisoner was among those being treated for injuries.

    The multiple bomb and gun assault will raise further questions about the Afghans’ ability to secure the country as Nato winds down its combat mission in the war-torn country by the end of next year. “I can confirm that 34 civilians, six army and four policemen have been killed and 91 people, the majority of them civilians, have been injured,” Najib Danish, interior ministry deputy spokesman, told AFP. “Nine attackers have also been killed.” The death toll was the highest in Afghanistan from a single attack since a Shiite Muslim shrine was bombed in Kabul in December 2011, killing 80 people. “The attack is over, but the casualties have unfortunately risen,” Farah provincial governor Mohammad Akram Khpalwak told AFP, putting the final death toll as high as 46. “In total, 34 civilians and 12 (Afghan) security forces have been killed in the attack.

    We have also discovered the bodies of eight attackers, more than 100 people have also been injured.” The governor added a group of Taliban had been brought for trial today, without giving further details. Taliban militants fighting the US-backed central government claimed responsibility. “Our fighters attacked several government buildings in Farah according to their planned tactic. They conducted the attack with small arms and grenades,” the group said on its website. “The fighting happened after information that (President Hamid) Karzai’s administration wanted to try several fighters in a cruel way in this court.”

  • IAF Honors Four Indian American Women

    IAF Honors Four Indian American Women

    LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK (TIP): The Indian American Forum gave away Outstanding Women’s Achievements Award to four women in celebration of Women’s History Month. The IAF Second Annual gala to honor the four was held on Thursday March 28 at Stuart Thomas Manor, a prestigious venue, in Farmingdale, Long Island. Kate Murray, Supervisor of Town of Hempstead and a great friend of the Indian American community was the Chief Guest. Outstanding Women’s Achievement Awards were given to Dr Dina Pahlajani, Founder, President of Children’s Hope (Medical and Social Award); Bharti Desai, Past President of Gujarat Samaj NY (Cultural Award); Shammi Singh, Member Board of Directors Nargis Dutt Foundation (Community Services Award); and Deborah Misir, President of the India American Bar Association of LI and Queens (Professional Award). Supervisor Kate Murray’s love of the Indian American community earned her an award.

    Honorees were presented with award from IAF, Citations from Town of Hempstead, Nassau County, Office of Nassau County Comptroller, Indian American Bar Association & Certificates of merit from Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy. Supervisor Kate Murray praised the efforts of the Indian American Forum, Indian American Community and reaffirmed that Town of Hempstead will continue with celebrations of India’s Republic Day and other such events. Among the attendees were Town of Hempstead Senior Councilman Anthony Santino, Judge Joy Watson, Judge Eileen Fisher, Nassau County Legislator Wayne Wink, Bobby K Kalotee, National Chairman of All America Political Party, Zahid Syed, Chairman , Nassau County Human Rights Commission, Mohinder Singh Taneja, Deputy Commissioner, Town of North Hempstead, Nassau County Attorney John Ciampoli & Steve Labriola from Nassau County Comptroller’s office. Indu Jaiswal, Chairperson of IAF in her remarks congratulated all the honorees and praised their efforts in achieving such successes.

  • Meet The Acting Consul General Of India In New York

    Meet The Acting Consul General Of India In New York

    Dr. Devyani Khobragade is the current acting Consul General at the Indian Consulate in New York. Between the Finance Minister’s impending visit, the arrival of the next Consul General and many other obligations, she graciously took some time out to introduce herself to The Indian Panorama readers. She candidly answered questions on her personal life and on a number of issues, including the OCI cards issue that has been upsetting the Indian American community.

    Here are a few excerpts from the interview she gave to The Indian Panorama team comprising Chief Editor Prof. Indrajit S Saluja and Principal Reporter Pooja Premchandran in the ornate office of the Consul General of India, April 3.

    Q. Can you tell us a little bit about your childhood?
    I was born in Tarapore near Mumbai. I have had my education all over India because my father was in IAS. But I studied medicine in Mumbai. While medicine was very interesting I wanted to travel and wanted to experience different cultures. Medicine did not offer that. So I decided while doing MS in Ophthalmology to shift and take up the Civil Service. My father was a bureaucrat and my uncle, Dr. Gondane, is the High Commissioner of Papua New Guinea and he was also posted here in New York as Deputy Consul General. So I knew that I would be good at Civil Service. I am a people’s person; I like to be with people. So I thought it would be a good opportunity to be connected with my country and work for my country abroad at the same time. My first posting was in Germany. I also did a posting in Pakistan, which was the most challenging one in my career. After that, I came back to Delhi for a few years and now I am posted in New York.

    Q. Can you tell us a few significant highs and lows of your career?
    Well, lows are the same that is there everywhere. There is a hierarchical bureaucracy that exists where your ideas are disregarded and ignored. There have been instances where there have been a few issues with colleagues. Also there is a problem with moving to a new country and settling in a new country, especially for a woman with young children. The highs have been a quite a few too. The most significant one was where I could be a part of the foreign policy that commenced the Srinagar- Muzaffarabad bus service. It is wonderful to see your ideas and efforts finally coming to light. There have been many highs like this especially when such ideas are considered into foreign policy making. I also had a very good relation with the political class of Pakistan. Even today when he meets our Ambassador, Gilani asks about me. It feels nice to be remembered.

    Q. What are your ambitions and future goals?
    The highest point in our careers is the Ambassador’s post. But besides that my ambition is to make some changes within our Civil Services. For example, we lack a crèche, spousal support and many other facilities that women who are in foreign services of other countries are entitled to. My other ambition is to have direct impact on a foreign policy for the underprivileged women. I would like to work as an advisory capacity in an NGO or be a Trustee or a Board Member to communicate directly with the community.

    Q. Can you tell us a bit about your family?
    I have two young daughters. They are six and three years old. My husband is a professor of Philosophy. It is difficult for him to follow wherever my career takes me. But we work something out. I come from a family where our parents always encouraged that women must be economically independent. So they always stressed on education. I have another sister. My father would say ‘You are my sons and daughters’ and that is exactly what made me take up the Civil Service when everyone dissuaded me from leaving a financially beneficial medical field. They also told me that a woman couldn’t manage a family and children with a job like mine. But I always thought if a man can do it, so could I.

    Q. The tourism industry has suffered massively due to the recent attacks on women. A recent statistics published in a newspaper in the UK has provided evidence to this. What is the government’s plan to address this issue?
    Because of a few unwanted incidents, there has been an impression that the entire country is unsafe. Such incidents cannot reflect the situation of an entire country. I am not condoning the attacks on women. As you see, the government has taken extremely stringent actions to combat violence against women. I feel the whole consciousness of Indian society has awakened with one incident. It will not be relegated to the background. There will be a concerted action. Other than this, there are no reasons for tourism to drop in India. We remain a safe and secure country. And certainly we will do our bit to make sure it remains so. At the Consulate, we have been putting out information about the steps taken and ordinances issued by the Indian government since the incident. Our ambassador, Nirupama Rao wrote an article in the Wall Street Journal. So we have been making small efforts and will continue to make them in future too. We even intended to ask the Finance Minister to address the international media during his visit to the US and help clear the image we have now.

    Q. There has been a continual demand on the government to persuade the US government to extend more leniencies or provide quotas for Indians applying for work visa. Will we see more leniencies from the government’s side for H1B visa applicants?
    We are talking to the government about the upcoming immigration laws. We are trying to safeguard the interests of Indians who are highly specialized and skilled by increasing the number of H1B applications that can be accepted from Indian applicants. We also want to streamline a few procedures that are to be taken while applying for the H1B visa. The embassy is taking up these issues but as you know it’s a continual process.

    Q. The recent surrogacy issue has led to an uproar as well. Recently the home ministry introduced a rule stating that foreign nationals who come for surrogacy to India must come on a medical visa. Do you think it will have an adverse effect on tourism?
    I think this decision has been taken by the Home Ministry to protect the child that has been born through surrogacy in India from becoming stateless. It also ensures that the financial, property and such rights of the woman who opts to be a surrogate of foreign nationals are protected. Earlier, people were coming on tourist visa, and leaving so we had no record of any thing here. It has also been that when the child goes to any other country, he or she is not accepted in that country as a citizen. This letter from anybody going to India for surrogate child that we demand now, will ensure that the child has a proven record of citizenship intact with the ministry. The letter is a simple and easily obtainable letter. The tourism industry should not have any issue with this. That is just the usual obfuscation of the issue. But we give medical visas easily as long as the documents provided are strong.

    Q. There have been growing complaints from the OCI cards holders who travel to India and face problems before entering the country. What is the reason for that?
    This is due to the regulation of MHA that states that if a person has an OCI card and he or she is below 12 or above 50, at that point and in these particular instances, they have to get their US passport information endorsed on their OCI cards. The rationale behind this is that a child after 12 and a man after 50 begin to change appearances. But this rule is not very well known. That is why there is such confusion about the OCI cards. So if you are above 50 and your passport details do not match with the OCI cards you will face problems at the immigration. We do have the information displayed on the website where people go to apply for the OCI card. Travisa website too has the information. There is such a rule and we have to follow it. I will be happy to clarify the rule through media.

    Q. What is your take on the Indian community in New York?
    Perhaps the Indian community in New York is the most successful one anywhere in the world. We are happy to engage with them and work together towards common goals. I always say that our position in this country is bolstered by a very powerful and enigmatic voice and Diaspora of our community. Now that the Indian community has proven that we are professionally well equipped. I suppose the next logical step is for them to be directly involved in the political system of this country.

  • Hotelier Vikram Chatwal arrested in US for drug possession; Released on Bond

    Hotelier Vikram Chatwal arrested in US for drug possession; Released on Bond

    NEW YORK (TIP): Indian-American hotelier Vikram Chatwal was arrested earlier this week at an airport in Florida for allegedly carrying a large stash of drugs, including cocaine and heroine, a celebrity website reported. A spokeswoman at the Broward Sheriff’s Office in Florida stated that Chatwal was released on April 3 on a bond of about USD 56,000. According to the TMZ website, the multi-millionaire hotel owner was arrested on April 2 at the Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport after Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officials found an “arsenal of drugs”, including cocaine, weed, heroin and various prescription pills hidden on his person and in his bag.

    He was arrested by the Broward County Sheriff’s Office after he tried to get on a plane with the drugs. The press office of the Sant Chatwal-led Hampshire Hotels and Resorts said they have “no comment on the issue at this time.” The office would also not comment on whether Chatwal is still in Florida. According to the police report obtained by TMZ, Chatwal was booked on one count of trafficking (six grams of heroin) and seven counts of possession for cocaine, heroin, marijuana and various other drugs. According to the report, Chatwal, 41, admitted to the police that he illegally purchased and possessed the drugs. People magazine reported on its website that a search of Chatwal’s carry-on bag revealed several different types of loose white pills that appeared to be controlled substances. The TSA also allegedly found a small piece of white plastic wrap in the hotel owner’s jacket pocket that tested positive for cocaine. “The arrestee provided a statement to narcotics detectives admitting possessing and purchasing the controlled substances illegally,” Officer Carmen Hunsinger said in his police report. Chatwal, who has acted in a few Indian movies, owns the Dream Hotel here

  • TCS employee from Andhra Pradesh missing in United States

    TCS employee from Andhra Pradesh missing in United States

    GUNTUR (TIP): An NRI software engineer from Guntur, P Sarath Kumar, who settled down in the United States, went missing since Sunday after his visit to the Niagara Falls. The 33-year-old went to the Niagara Falls along with his wife and the family of his cousin Srinivas. After it was noticed that he was not on the tourist bus in which they were travelling back, the family searched for him but couldn’t locate him. Sarath’s wife Manjula later lodged a complaint with the US police. Sarath had been working with software giant TCS for the past seven years and was residing in Chicago. He married Manjula, a divorcee from Srikakulam. Sources said that Sarath and Manjula were allegedly in a relationship even before the marriage of the latter ever since they met in US.

    While Manjula was working with Motorola, Sarath was with TCS. Sources said Manjula divorced her first husband and married Sarath about two years ago. Upon information about Sarath going missing in the US, his father Pothuraju Krishna Murthy, a retired employee of the commercial taxes department, went to the urban SP’s office here on Wednesday. As SP Ravikrishna was away, Krishna Murthy met other officials in the SP’s office and sought their assistance.

    According to him, Sarath had gone to Niagara Falls along with his cousin’s family on Sunday. He said that his brother’s son Srinivas was sent to the US on an assignment by a Bangalore-based software firm. “My son along with his wife went to Washington DC and took Srinivas and other family members to Niagara Falls,” Murthy told TOI. He said they had all taken a tourist bus to return home from the Niagara Falls on Sunday evening. However, after a while, Manjula and Srinivas noticed that Sarath had not boarded the bus. They then got down and took another cab to reach the waterfalls and started searching for Sarath. However, they could not track him, said Krishna Murthy.

  • Approval rating of Bobby Jindal drops to 38%: US poll

    Approval rating of Bobby Jindal drops to 38%: US poll

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Amid speculation over a 2016 presidential bid by Louisiana’s Indian-American Governor Bobby Jindal, his approval rating has dropped to a low 38 per cent. According to a latest poll released on Tuesday, Jindal is even running behind US President Barack Obama, in his own state, where in recent weeks he has come up with some innovative measures like elimination of income tax and increasing sales tax.

    Into the second term of his governorship, 41-year-old Jindal, who is receiving great attention at the national level, has an approval rating of 38 per cent. There has been quite a substantial drop from his 51 per cent approval rating in October, the poll said. Surprisingly, according to the poll conducted by Southern Media and Opinion Research, both Lieutenant Governor Jay Dardenne and US Senator David Vitter – both possible candidates for Jindal’s job in 2015 – had approval ratings near 60 per cent. “A number of issues contributed to Jindal’s low performance (in the poll), including state cuts to higher education and health care, plans to privatise the charity hospital system and the governor’s proposed state tax overhaul,” Southern Media and Opinion Research said in a statement.

    Jindal’s spokesman said that the governor is focused on creating more jobs and improving the states’ economy. “We care more about the unemployment numbers than approval numbers, and right now, we still have too many Louisianans unemployed and underemployed,” Jindal’s spokesman Kyle Plotkin said. “That’s why our number one focus is growing the economy and creating jobs so that we can make Louisiana the best place in the world to raise a family and find a good paying job,” he said.