Year: 2014

  • Indian-Americans save most for children’s college education

    Indian-Americans save most for children’s college education

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Indian- Americans, who have the highest income among America’s multicultural groups, save much of their higher household income for their children’s college education, according to a new study. This heavy emphasis on higher education, however, leads to times when Indian Americans prioritise saving for their children over saving for themselves, according to the third biennial 2013 State of the American Family Study. The study from Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (MassMutual),offering a broad snapshot of Americans’ financial viewsindicated that Indian-Americans are savers. One third of them indicating that they have six months or more of their monthly living expenses set aside as savings.

    The top two financial priorities of Indian-American for their savings are for their children’s college education and keeping the family financially shielded. As a result, one quarter of Indian- Americans struggle between saving to pay for their children’s college education and saving for their own retirement, the study notes. “Being an Asian Indian myself, I know and understand the importance that the community places on putting family first,” said Nimesh Trivedi, director of multicultural market support, US Insurance Group at MassMutual. “With the current cost of a college education, it can be challenging for parents to provide for several children’s education and still be left with a surplus for their own future.”

    Indian Americans’ savings rate is not coincidental; as a group they are handson, when it comes to their finances. An overwhelming 70 percent of Indian-American respondents want to be actively involved in all decisions regarding their finances, while just over half indicated that they tend to do their own research and make their own decisions about insurance and investments. Indian-Americans are more likely to own mutual funds, individual securities and college savings plans than any other group, according to the study Despite such solid financial planning, only about a third are satisfied with their current financial situation and one third are worried about being able to meet their long-term financial goal.

    Other key findings from the survey further illustrate Indian- Americans’ strong tendency to put family first:
    ● Sixty-seven percent of Asian Indians think about what is best for the family when making financial decisions.
    ● Three quarters of Asian Indians believe that it is important to educate their children about finances to ensure a strong economy in the future.
    ● Seventy percent feel it is important not to burden their own children with the cost of caring for them when they get older.

  • Dr. Ajay Lodha takes over as President of AAPI-QLI

    Dr. Ajay Lodha takes over as President of AAPI-QLI

    LONG ISLAND, NY (TIP): A well known physician and a senior member of AAPI, Dr. Ajay Lodha was inaugurated as President of AAPI-QLI (Queens-Long Island chapter of the American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin).

    The inaugural ceremony which took place at the Akbar Restaurant in Garden City on February 5 was a well attended event. Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Lodha, who is also the Regional Director (New York division) of National AAPI, complimented Dr. Tarun Wasil, from whom he took over, for the great work done during his presidency.

    2A Citation on behalf of Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano was presented to Dr. Lodha. Seen in the picture in the front, with mike in hand, is the Nassau County official who presented the citation on behalf of Mangano who could not come being busy with emergency.

    He said he would take the organization forward and always look up to his predecessor for his valuable inputs to implement his agenda, which he described as follows.
    ● Increasing AAPI-QLI membership
    ● Promoting the younger generation, developing the youth wing, and to bring them into leadership roles. Also helping young doctors get jobs, develop their practice, as well as render help in matrimonial alliances.
    ● To make AAPI-QLI stronger in legislative matters.
    ● To hold educational seminars on the changes in healthcare laws/Obamacare as well as in the new billing codes, and so on.

    Earlier, Dr Sunil Mehra, Nomination Committee Chairperson, announced the new slate of executive committee which included, besides President Dr. Ajay Lodha, President elect – Dr Madhu Korrapati; Vice President – Dr Vaijinath Chakote; Secretary – Dr Rakesh Dua; and Treasurer – Dr Jagdish Gupta. Dr. Shashi Shah is the Chairman, Board of Trustees.

  • Empowering South Asian Community- The SAPAC Way

    Empowering South Asian Community- The SAPAC Way

    NEW YORK (TIP): The South Asian American Political Action Committee (SAPAC) organized its First Annual Breakfast at Garden City’s Mint Restaurant & Lounge, February 2.

    Despite the fact the breakfast took place on a cold and foggy Sunday morning, the turn out of the event was astounding. South Asians are known to be reluctant to go out early on a Sunday morning. But, it came as a pleasant surprise that more than the expected number of people arrived, compelling many to be satisfied with the standing space.

    Over 200 members of the community and officials gathered to savor the taste of a special breakfast and listen to the SAPAC Chairman Zahid Syed and invited officials, numbering 12, to be exact.

    The officials present included Nassau County Comptroller George Maragos, Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Judi Bosworth, New York State Senator Jack Martins, New York State Assemblyman Phil Ramos, New York State Assemblyman David McDonough, New York State Assemblyman Charles Lavine, New York State Assemblyman Thomas McKevitt, and Nassau County Legislator Kevan Abrahams, Nassau County Legislator Richard Nicolello, Nassau County legislator David Denenberg, Freeport Mayor Robert Kennedy, and Hempstead Mayor Wayne Hall Sr.

    5SAPAC Chairman Zahid Syed called upon the brown community to involve in America’s politics, assert themselves and make their presence felt.
    Along with the numerous elected officials, stood various community and civic organization leaders, representing Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. And who could forget the appearance made by the large no of Latino and African American community. In his welcome address, Zahid Syed, the chairman of SAPAC said, “Three years ago, we started this organization.

    I worked with labor union. My vision was to bring together South Asians on a model of Latinos and Afro American communities. So, in 2011, I decided to do something for the South Asian Community. In 3 years, we have grown into a strong and vibrant organization, with more 500 members and growing. We have many life time members.

    I am happy to announce that some officials are SAPAC members too. And I invite all officials present here and those who are not, to join SAPAC and express their support for the South Asian Community.” Zahid stated that the South Asian community in New York is “increasing rapidly” and its legitimate concerns should be taken note of. He said South Asian kids in schools have a problem which needs to be solved.

    6Judi Bosworth, David Denenberg, Robert Kennedy with Satnam Parhar, Zahid Syed, Rizwan Qureshi, Dilip Chauhan, Ajay Batra and other community leaders
    Diwali and Eid are important events for the community and, as such, kids should be free to celebrate the days with the family rather than be under compulsion to go to school. He was lustily applauded when he appealed to the officials to have the two days declared as school holidays all over in New York State like New York City. The agenda of the morning was set by New York State Assemblyman Phil Ramos who, in his impassioned speech, said, “You, South Asian community, have the power to make a change”.

    7SAPAC Volunteers who made all comfortable with SAPAC Chairman Zahid Syed. (From L to R): Sara Pervez, Shariq Hussain, Zahid Syed, Khalid Hussain, Parvinder Kaur, Jasmine Chandi

    Complimenting Zahid Syed and his team for creating a great organization of the South Asians, Ramos called upon the gathering to give a round of applause to Zahid, “who has put your community on the map”. Visibly delighted Ramos said, “I see here a rainbow of people whom you have brought together. We have the power. Only we do not realize we have it. Only when a group realizes they have the power that they can change.”

    Ramos gave the example of great men like Gandhi, Martin Luther King and Jesus Christ who, he said, had no material possessions and yet they could change the lives of people, the destiny of people and the course of history. The program got off to a start with the pledge led by Nassau County Comptroller George Maragos, who was the also the speaker of the morning. He acknowledged the strength of the South Asian community when he said, “You have a voice in power politics here”.

    Maragos then spoke of the marvelous economic recovery of the County. In the last four years, Nassau County has recovered”. He said no new taxes were imposed. He also spoke of infrastructure development, job creation and accelerated economic activity in Nassau County. The Supervisor of Town of North Hempstead Judi Bosworth acknowledge the acumen of the community when she said, “there are many leaders right here in this room. They can as well be part of local governance”.

    She said, “I look forward to developing and furthering our relationship”. New York State Senator Jack Martins said there was a better awareness of the South Asian community amongst the officials and the government, “thanks to the efforts of Zahid Syed”. “We will continue the dialogue and work together”.

    10The gathering
    Nassau County Legislator Kevan Abrahams gave the mantra for making a mark in America: “Work hard. Play by the rule”. He made a passionate plea to work together and ensure no one is left behind. Others who spoke on the occasion included Nassau County Legislator Richard Nicolello, Freeport Mayor Robert Kennedy and New York State Assemblyman Charles Lavine. Special thanks went out to Ajay Batra and Sharanjt Thind for all their efforts in taking care of the strong media presence.

    SAPAC Volunteers and supporters who made all arrangements to ensure that all guests were comfortable were also recognized by the SAPAC Chairman Zahid Syed. They included Sara Pervez, Shariq Hussain, Khalid Hussain, Parvinder Kaur and Jasmine Chandi. Dr. Anila Midha who emceed the program, was at her best. Earlier in the program, Kawaljit Chandi welcomed the gathering and Dr. Kamal Zafar gave the closing remarks. Sara Pervez requested guests to join the SAPAC team by filling out an application form that was conveniently available at the reception table.

  • Snow leaves North Texas roads an icy mess

    Snow leaves North Texas roads an icy mess

    The light, powdery snow that began falling across North Texas early Thursday morning turned slickly dangerous by rush hour and beyond, leading to hundreds of accidents across the Dallas region, early school closings and an extremely cautious commute home. Temperatures hovered in the teens and low 20s most of the day, with wind-chill readings in the single digits.

    That left a couple of big questions for Friday: Would the roads be dry or icy, and would electric utilities be able to meet the expected demand? If the snow and slush on area roads refreeze overnight rather than evaporating, morning commuters could face problems. Officials at the Rockwall Independent School District canceled classes for Friday because of ice concerns.

    And state utility officials said cold temperatures, coupled with limits on electric generating capacity, could overtax the power grid. “With the cold weather that began [Wednesday night], we already saw electric demand close to our winter record,” said Dan Woodfin, director of systems operations for the Electric Reliability Council of Texas. “We are expecting cold weather to continue through [Friday] morning’s high demand period, and some generation capacity has become unavailable due to limitations on natural gas supplies.” ERCOT asked consumers to lower thermostats to a maximum of 68 degrees and avoid using large appliances during peak demand periods.

    Swirling snow When snow began falling Thursday morning, each gust of wind sent it swirling. But commuter traffic led to melting and freezing. And as the bands of snow slid farther south through the day, so did the accident reports, with overpasses and bridges icing along Interstates 20 and 35E, the LBJ Freeway and U.S. Highway 75 through the afternoon, according to the Texas Department of Transportation.

    “Please only go out if you absolutely have to,” said Ryan LaFontaine, a TxDOT spokesman. Though road conditions were improving Thursday night, TxDOT crews were set to work 12-hour shifts through the night to tackle icy patches. Municipal crews worked steadily throughout the day to keep busy intersections ice-free. Dallas went to “Ice Force Level 1” about 9 a.m. and later bumped that to Level 2, with 70 sand trucks patrolling the city.

    State highway crews spread sand and de-icing materials on bridges and overpasses, but extremely cold temperatures that peaked in the mid-20s made the work a challenge. Even roads and highways that appeared clear of ice and snow could have icy patches, said Tony Hartzel of TxDOT, who watched a truck spin out in his rearview mirror on a seemingly ice-free Interstate 30. And if one vehicle lost traction, others quickly followed. When the driver of a blue sedan lost control on Interstate 35E west of downtown Dallas, slicing across four lanes of traffic before slamming into a guardrail, other vehicles that came upon the crash skidded as they veered around the damaged car.

    Police departments reported hundreds of accidents, and damaged cars and trucks littered highway shoulders across the region. By 7 p.m., Dallas police said they had responded to 406 minor wrecks, 146 injury wrecks and 125 injury wrecks on freeways. DART going By midday, with snow still falling, road conditions were bad enough that dozens of area schools decided to close early so children could return home long before the evening commute began. “The Dallas schools have no afternoon or evening activities, and more are closing early, and that will help,” Hartzel said Thursday. “It spreads out the anticipated load on the roads.”

    The snow had little effect on Dallas Area Rapid Transit’s light rail service, far different than the complete shutdown it experienced during an ice storm in early December. On Thursday morning, DART officials were at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, where an inch of snow fell, giving a Federal Transit Authority official a tour of a train station that will open in Terminal A later this year. DART president and executive director Gary Thomas said he didn’t expect the snow to interrupt service.

    “Snow does not,” he said. “Ice is a little problem.” But the snow did affect the airport. Hundreds of flights were canceled, and others were delayed as planes waited to be de-iced at the gates. “The stuff that should be leaving isn’t leaving quite as quickly because of the de-icing,” airport spokesman David Magana said. By early evening, more than 400 flights had been canceled and about 750 had been delayed, according to data from flightaware.com.

  • East Dallas young professionals groups give back, invest in community

    East Dallas young professionals groups give back, invest in community

    For some young professionals in East Dallas, networking is not just about the people they can meet, it’s about the people they help. Over the past couple of years, the area has seen several new groups formed that are geared toward young professionals. While some, such as the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center’s Alliance group or Vogel Alcove’s Flight, are under the umbrellas of local nonprofits, others, such as East Dallas Young Professionals, which is affiliated with the Greater East Dallas Chamber of Commerce, are business-oriented. All have a component of service.

    “This young professionals group is going to play a key role,” said Greg Brinkley, 36, director of corporate relations with Vogel Alcove. “If you can imagine, as we start building this membership out and all the connections these people have … this group can really affect what our mission is and our future as an organization.” On Jan. 20, a group of 40 volunteers worked to beautify the playground at Vogel Alcove’s new location at old City Park Elementary.

    In two-and-a-half hours, the group covered the space in tons of mulch. “They’re very much go-getters,” said Sammy Gonzalez, 33, director of marketing for Vogel Alcove. Flight, which is open to young professionals of all ages, is still spreading its wings it held its first event in November but discussions for a group go back at least a year, when a couple of people reached out to Karen Hughes, Vogel Alcove’s president and CEO. “When I reached out to Karen, it was to get something that actually had my heart and not just my wallet,” said Chrystal Morgan, who is co-president of Flight with Mary Lyons.

    “Something that I was completely interested in being a part of.” Lyons, 32, said the group’s focus on helping kids was a draw for her, too. “I’ve lived in Dallas for seven years, and I’ve been looking for something to get really involved with,” Lyons said. The group includes members from diverse backgrounds, all united around helping the children that Vogel Alcove serves. “We’re bonding over doing something that’s good for the community,” Lyons said. “What this group really seems to attract, to me, are people that have very, very good hearts and they all care about someone other than themselves we all have that commonality of being altruistic.” So far, they have a governing board of 23 people, and a membership list of about 30 more.

    “I am so excited and I’m so fortunate to be associated with this group of people,” Morgan, 28, said. While Flight members have gotten their hands dirty helping Vogel Alcove prepare its new home, the Alliance group has worked in other ways to serve the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center. “We have several members who do ongoing volunteering at the center and we’re trying to build up the program to have more volunteer projects,” said Mallory Bassham, 27, a development associate with DCAC who helps oversee Alliance.

    “Every event we’ve held, we’ve done a call to action.” The group, which is also for professionals of all ages, held a toy drive for the center as part of its holiday party, helps with fundraising events and, like Flight, seeks to raise awareness about the center’s mission to help abused children in Dallas County. “[I] felt that it was a good cause,” said Lauren Soulis, 30, who has been involved with Alliance from its beginning. “I’m involved because I genuinely care.”

    Alliance was started in the fall of 2012, and has grown to about 100 members from the initial group of about 40, Bassham said. “The response has been really positive, and we’re excited about the number of people who’ve gotten involved,” Soulis said. While East Dallas Young Professionals isn’t a tied to a specific nonprofit, serving the community is a goal for it, too, said Ross Williams, its president.

    “One of our commitments is community service we did three service days in our first year,” he said. “One of the things we’re going to do on a yearly basis is the National Day of Service.” The East Dallas group, like Alliance, is a little over a year old. It was started as a way to give East Dallas businessmen and women under 40 a way to connect with the community and one another. Williams, 31, said they try to hold two happy hour events and a luncheon each quarter to bring people together. “One of the things that is important for us is to create future leaders,” said Karla Lott, 33, who serves as the group’s treasurer.

    “We are the future of East Dallas and we want to get people involved and let them know.” Williams said people moving into Dallas and North Texas for the opportunities it offers, along with a push from chambers and other professional development organizations, are two of the reasons more groups are popping up for young business people. He said it’s also a way for people to become part of where they live. “People want to be involved in the community,” he said. White Rock/East Dallas editor Ananda Boardman can be reached at 214-977-8503.

    AREA GROUPS

    This is a partial list of groups in the area that offer something for young professionals, and the organizations with which they are affiliated. Alliance, Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center Alliance is a group for those who wish to be young advocates for the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center and its work helping abused children in Dallas County. Dues: $125/year single; $225/year couple Online: dcac.org/Get_Involved/ join_a_group/alliance.aspx or facebook.com/DCACAlliance Contact: Mallory Bassham, alliance@dcac.org. East Dallas Young Professionals, Greater East Dallas Chamber of Commerce This group offers young East Dallas professionals a chance to network and get involved in the community. Members participate in the National Day of Service. Dues: $5/event; $75/year.

    Yearly membership includes a listing in the chamber directory, and participation in all 12 events. Chamber membership not a requirement to join the group.

  • Christie Texas trip highlights damage of bridge scandal

    Christie Texas trip highlights damage of bridge scandal

    For the first time in two decades, Texas is electing itself a new governor, making the contest — featuring liberal heroine Wendy Davis — one of the marquee races of this election year. That alone would be good reason for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, head of the GOP’s gubernatorial campaign arm, to drop by the Lone Star State. There’s also this: Texas is a deeply red bastion bursting with fat cats slinging fat wallets who could serve Christie well in a prospective 2016 bid for president.

    Indeed, Christie’s chairmanship of the Republican Governors Association, with its network-building, chit-gathering capacity, was one of the reasons some installed him as an early favorite for the GOP nomination, following his smashing reelection victory last November. But that, of course, was before the George Washington Bridge scandal drove Christie’s White House ambitions into a ditch.

    The governor was in Texas on Thursday, raising money for the RGA, and the nature of his visit demonstrated everything that need be said about the current state of his political disunion. The events in Dallas and Fort Worth were held behind closed doors, with no press coverage allowed. The state’s presumptive GOP gubernatorial nominee, Atty. Gen. Greg Abbott, chose to be elsewhere during Christie’s visit, as did outgoing Republican Gov. Rick Perry.

    The Texas jaunt follows a Christie trip last month to Florida, where Republican Gov. Rick Scott, locked in a tough reelection fight, sneaked into a similar fundraiser through a back entrance rather than having his picture taken alongside New Jersey’s scandal-stricken governor. Out of sight, as it were, if not out of mind. The facts surrounding the bridge scandal are in dispute and subject to multiple investigations.

    It is clear that Christie’s aides manufactured several epic traffic jams leading to the bridge after the Democratic mayor of nearby Fort Lee, N.J., refused to endorse the governor for a second term. Christie has adamantly insisted he had nothing whatever to do with the perceived payback and said he fired two aides aware of the plan as soon as he learned of their actions. Steadily, however, new revelations have kept the scandal very much alive, feeding the cravings of a ravenous New York-New Jersey press corps. (Would there be half as much coverage if Christie was governor of, say, Nebraska?)

  • Texas executes female murderer Suzanne Basso

    Texas executes female murderer Suzanne Basso

    Awoman convicted of murder in Texas has been put to death, only the 14th time a female has been executed in the US in nearly four decades. Suzanne Basso, 59, was pronounced dead from lethal injection at 18:26 local time Wednesday (00:26 GMT Thursday). She was found guilty of the 1998 torture and killing of a mentally impaired man she had promised to marry.

    Hours earlier, the Supreme Court rejected her lawyer’s appeal that she was not mentally competent. Basso reportedly did not make a final statement, and smiled at two friends attending the execution. An Associated Press journalist said the condemned woman appeared to be about to cry. ‘Heinous killer’ the lethal dose of pentobarbital was administered, she began snoring, then her breathing stopped. She was declared dead within 11 minutes of the injection.

    Basso was sentenced to death for luring Louis Musso, 59, from the state of New Jersey and killing him in an effort to collect his insurance and benefits. His battered body, washed with bleach, was found in a ditch outside Houston, Texas. Musso was burned with cigarettes and viciously beaten by Basso and five accomplices. But Basso was the only one of the six defendants who received the death penalty. In a Supreme Court brief, Basso’s lawyer Winston Cochran said his client had been unfairly singled out.

    “She was grossly obese, a sour personality, unattractive,” he was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying. “Right from the beginning, they said we’re going to go with the theory that she’s the ring leader.” But Basso’s own daughter was among witnesses who testified against her at trial, telling of physical and sexual abuse at the hands of her mother.

    “Suzanne ran the show for sure,” Colleen Barnett, the former assistant district attorney who prosecuted Basso, told the Associated Press. “She was the one in charge. She directed them. She wanted the money. She’s a heinous killer.” Women make up about 2% of condemned US inmates, with only 60 out of 3,100 on death row. Nearly 1,400 men have been put to death since the US Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.

  • Texas ready to get rolling on 2015 class

    Texas ready to get rolling on 2015 class

    AUSTIN, TEXAS (TIP) — National signing day wasn’t yet over, but that didn’t stop Texas defensive coordinator Vance Bedford from calling his shot. “Next year, 2015, we’re coming and we’re coming to get everybody,” Bedford told Longhorn Network. Texas has a lot of catching up to do for that boast to prove true. Strong, Bedford and the rest of the staff inherited a tricky situation when they arrived in Austin.

    The staff was completed just one day before the dead period ended. They hit the recruiting trail hard, but their focus had to be on keeping Texas’ committed recruits on board. On that front, they survived and succeeded. Texas held onto 17 of its prior pledges and inked six more.

    The last-second scramble is finally finished, and Strong likes how the Longhorns fared when it was all over. “It’s been a very intense couple of weeks,” Strong said Wednesday, “and what we were able to do as a staff was, we wanted to keep this class together. And it was an outstanding class.” The next challenge begins immediately: Get rolling with the Class of 2015. To appreciate what they’re up against, keep this in mind: Has recruiting the state of Texas ever been more challenging than it is right now? Texas A&M and Baylor are thriving. Texas Tech and TCU are on the way back up. Those four programs are already ahead of the game in 2015, with a combined 18 early pledges. While Texas was still finishing its official visits, A&M, Baylor and TCU all held junior days on Jan. 26. And those are just the local threats. Five of Texas’ top-eight rated recruits of 2014 signed with out-of-state programs.

    A total of 19 of the state’s top 50 left the state. “It’s hard to try to keep guys in,” Strong said, “but you have to go recruit them and not be afraid to go battle those Southeastern Conference teams, whomever they may be.” Texas has six commitments on board for the 2015 class. The previous coaching staff was at one point so far ahead on this class that it held its first-ever sophomore day last spring. The Longhorns had become the front-runners for more than a dozen of the state’s best recruits.

    Most of those leads have evaporated with the staff change, and understandably so. Both the recruits and the Texas coaches have a lot to learn about each other in the next few months. Strong, his coaches and his recruiting staffers have 16 days to prepare for their first junior day event. There’s plenty of work to be done, and after living on the road for weeks they finally have a reprieve to meet as a staff, identify targets and make progress. Texas will have a chance to sign more than 25 in next year’s class, and perhaps as many as 30.

    The way Strong sees it, he’d like to stick to his ideals when it comes to filling out the next group. “You have 25 scholarships to give out. Who are the top 10 players? Let’s go get the top 10,” he said. “Who are that next 10, or the guys that just fit your needs where you can build around? Because when you get the second 10, you are going to build around those. You take the other five and see if there is a late bloomer out there. There is going to be someone out there that isn’t going to make an early decision.

    Let’s make sure we save a scholarship there.” Remember, Texas has a chance to capitalize off a common recruiting phenomenon in the next 12 months: The first-year bump. Tennessee finished with the nation’s No. 5 class on Wednesday following Butch Jones’ first season in Knoxville. Ole Miss did the exact same thing last year under Hugh Freeze. Texas A&M and Ohio State locked up top-10 classes under new coaches in 2013. Heck, Kentucky lost 10 games and still inked a top-20 class. These are relatively subjective standards, of course, but the ranking isn’t the point.

    These first-year boons happen because a new coach and his staff can sell the future. Kids want to play for programs on the rise. They buy into the hype and hope. And Strong is ready to start selling. “I love recruiting,” Strong said. “You know the reason why? You have a chance to not only sell your program and sell your university, but you get a chance to build a relationship. And you go out and meet more people. That’s the fun part about recruiting, because the players are going to be who they are and then you just try to figure out what they are all about and what their goals are.” Strong has already revealed his goals. He wants the Longhorns to own this state again. His quest to change the game starts now.

  • Judge orders Texas teen Ethan Couch to rehab for driving drunk, killing 4

    Judge orders Texas teen Ethan Couch to rehab for driving drunk, killing 4

    Ajudge on February 5 ordered that Ethan Couch – – who drove drunk and caused a crash, killing four people and injuring two — go to a lockdown residential treatment facility. State District Judge Jean Boyd had already decided the Texas teenager would serve no jail time. He was sentenced last year to 10 years’ probation.

    His story made national headlines after a witness claimed Couch was a victim of “affluenza” – – the product of wealthy, privileged parents who never set limits for the boy. That particular defense, however, played no part in the judge’s decision, Couch’s lawyer told reporters on February 5. Court proceedings were closed to the public. “She (Boyd) said it (affluenza), and specifically mentioned that that was not a basis for her decision,” said attorney Reagan Wynn. “She heard all the evidence and she made what she thought was the appropriate disposition.” ‘Affluenza’ defense psychologist: ‘I wish I hadn’t used that term’ The judge ordered that Couch’s parents pay for the treatment facility, which was not identified.

    It was also unclear how long Couch might stay there. As part of his probation, the teen must refrain from using drugs or alcohol. He will also not be allowed to drive. If Couch violates the terms of his probation, he could face up to 10 years behind bars. “I think he can be rehabilitated given intensive therapy and I hope that he gets it,” Wynn said about the teen. “The juvenile system is about rehabilitation and if it’s going to be about rehabilitation, she (Boyd) absolutely made the right decision.” Eric Boyles, who lost his wife and daughter in the crash, disagrees.

    He told reporters he has no doubt that money played a role in the case. Steering teen drivers out of harm’s way “Had he (Couch) not had money to have the defense there, to also have the experts testify, and also offer to pay for the treatment, I think the results would have been different,” he said Wednesday after the proceedings. Last June, his wife, Hollie Boyles, and daughter, Shelby, left their home to help Breanna Mitchell, whose SUV had broken down.

    Brian Jennings, a youth pastor, was driving past and also stopped to help. All four were killed when the teen’s pickup plowed into the pedestrians on a road in Burleson, south of Fort Worth. Couch’s vehicle also struck a parked car, which then slid into another vehicle headed in the opposite direction. Opinion: ‘Affluenza’ isn’t as crazy as it sounds Two people riding in the bed of the teen’s pickup were tossed in the crash and severely injured.

    One is no longer able to move or talk because of a brain injury, while the other suffered internal injuries and broken bones. According to prosecutors, three hours after the crash, tests showed Couch had a blood alcohol content of 0.24, three times the legal limit. “There has been nothing from Ethan from these proceedings with regards to remorse on his part at all — that I do think would have helped. It would have helped the victims. No doubt about it, it would have helped,” said Boyles.

  • Missing Detroit Girl Found in Texas

    Missing Detroit Girl Found in Texas

    DETROIT (TIP) — Police say a 5-year-old girl who was taken from a Detroit school by a parent who didn’t have legal custody has been found safe in Texas. Police say the girl and her 37-year-old mother were found Thursday night in Dickens, Texas, during a traffic stop. The mother was detained without incident. The girl is being cared for by child protective services workers until family can travel to Texas to pick her up. She’s reported in good health. The girl was missing since being picked up from school earlier this week in Detroit. Police at the time said it was believed the mother was heading out of state.

  • More Republican Snow Disrupts Life in Dallas Hispanics in Texas than elsewhere in US: Poll

    More Republican Snow Disrupts Life in Dallas Hispanics in Texas than elsewhere in US: Poll

    AUSTIN, TX (TIP): Hispanic and Anglo residents in Texas identify with the Republican Party far more than the national average, according to new polling data released Friday, February 7 that calls into question how soon demographic changes in Texas could benefit Democrats seeking statewide office. Gallup tracking polls show that 27 percent of Hispanics in Texas identify with the GOP, the highest percentage since 2008 and 6 percent higher than elsewhere in the country.

    Democrats nationally rely on Hispanic voters, but their level of conservatism in Texas could damper the party’s hope to soon end its 20-year losing streak for statewide office. “Hispanics in Texas are more likely to identify as Republican than are Hispanics elsewhere, and the Republican Party in Texas has seen more growth in Hispanic support over the past five years than the Democratic Party,” Gallup’s Andrew Duggan said in his analysis of the results. “While this has not changed the overall equation – Democrats still lead big among Texas Hispanics – it does suggest the GOP may be more competitive with this bloc than many assume,” he said.

    The percentage of Hispanics who lean or identify themselves as Democrats dropped from 53 percent in 2008 to 46 percent in 2013, which is 5 percent below Hispanics nationally. Among the Anglo residents polled, 61 percent identified as Republicans. Nationally, Republicans make up 48 percent of the population. The poll was based on 1,000 phone interviews conducted daily in all 50 states throughout 2013. Democrats have stepped up efforts in Texas after 20 years of crushing defeats in statewide and presidential elections. Many note that Anglos, or non-Hispanic whites, make up 46 percent of the Texas population and that Hispanics are expected to become the majority by 2020, according to U.S.

    Census Bureau projections. Texas Democrats joined Jeremy Bird, President Barrack Obama’s national field organizer, in creating a political action committee called Battleground Texas to take advantage of the demographic shift. Gilberto Hinojosa, the party chairman in Texas, has said that if Democrats can build a coalition of liberal Anglos, Hispanics and black voters, they could win elections.

    But Gallup noted that voter registration and turnout continue to present the biggest challenges for Democrats. Only 43 percent of Texas Hispanics said they were registered to vote, while 82 percent of Anglos and 77 percent of blacks said they were eligible to vote. That gives Republicans a distinct advantage: 64 percent of Texas residents who say they are eligible to vote are Anglo, 19 percent are Hispanic and 13 percent are black. “Texas remains a Republican-leaning state because its white residents are becoming increasingly Republican and its large Hispanic population, though solidly Democratic, is less so than Hispanics nationally,” Duggan said.

  • Snow Disrupts Life in Dallas

    Snow Disrupts Life in Dallas

    DALLAS (TIP) As snow fell across North Texas on Thursday, February 6 the bitter cold caused some driving headaches and prompted some school districts to dismiss early. Several school districts will be closed Friday, while many others will operate on a delay In Jacksboro, problems with a gas line forced a company to cut service to the entire city, and it might not be restored until Friday or Saturday.

    POWER ERCOT,

    the electricity grid operator in Texas, is asking people to conserve power through noon on Friday due to increased demand on the grid because of the cold weather. ERCOT said peak demand on Thursday morning exceeded 57,000 megawatts. “We already saw electric demand close to our winter record this morning,” said Dan Woodfin, ERCOT director of System Operations in a statement on Thursday. “We are expecting cold weather to continue through tomorrow morning’s high demand period, and some generation capacity has become unavailable due to limitations to natural gas supplies.”

    SCHOOLS

    Several schools and school districts announced Thursday night that they’ll be closed Friday, including Azle ISD, Boles ISD, Garner ISD and more. Dallas ISD said Thursday that school will be held at the regular time Friday, but if that changes, officials will announce it no later than 6 a.m. Friday. Fort Worth ISD students are already off Friday, but officials will evaluate weather conditions and will make a decision early Friday morning about whether or not staff will be required to go in. Many other schools will operate on a delayed schedule Friday.

    ROAD CONDITIONS Drivers had a tough time getting around in the snow Thursday. In Dallas, 406 wrecks were reported. About 146 were injury accidents, and a majority of those happened on freeways. Sheriff’s deputies were on patrol along the I-35 corridor in Dallas looking for accidents, which is where one woman lost control, spun sideways, then hit a wall. No one was hurt. Just after noon Thursday, the city of Dallas activated a condition it calls “Ice Force Level 2,” with about 70 sanding trucks and 145 personnel on the roadways. Other municipalities had crews out working as well.

    AIRPORTS

    The snow caused hundreds of delays and cancellations at DFW Airport on Thursday. About 200 departures were canceled, and crews worked hard in the cold to de-ice planes. At times, they shut down runways to clear the snow. DFW officials urge travelers set to fly Friday to keep an eye on the status of their flights. Dallas Love Field reported no major issues.

  • SONAKSHI SINHA TO WORK WITH REMO D’SOUZA

    SONAKSHI SINHA TO WORK WITH REMO D’SOUZA

    Actress Sonakshi Sinha is teaming up with choreographer Remo D’Souza for the first time in Amit Sharma’s ‘Tevar’. The 26-year-old actress, who shook her leg with Prabhudeva in her previous films, said the new song is “killer and crazy”.

    “On my way to rehearse for a song in Tevar. Killer crazy song!! My first time working with Remo… Looking forward!,” tweeted Sonakshi. Remake of 2003 Telugu film ‘Okkadu’, the film also stars Arjun Kapoor in the lead. The film is producing by Arjun’s father Boney Kapoor.

  • I’M A DRAMA QUEEN IN REAL LIFE TOO: PARINEETI CHOPRA

    I’M A DRAMA QUEEN IN REAL LIFE TOO: PARINEETI CHOPRA

    Parineeti Chopra, who is playing the role of a quirky scientist opposite Sidharth Malhotra in her upcoming film ‘Hasee To Phasee’, says she is a drama queen in her real life too.

    The song ‘Drama Queen’ in the film is dedicated to Parineeti’s character of Meeta, a nerdy and unpredictable girl. “I am a drama queen in real life too but I don’t take this terms in a negative way. It is a positive term for me. I stay happy don’t take life seriously,” Parineeti told reporters.

    Parineeti says she said yes to the movie as a part like this is rarely written for a Bollywood actress. “It was quite difficult to play the role of a scientist in ‘Hasee To Phasee’. There was no reference point for me. No actress in the industry has ever attempted to do a role like this because in our industry either the female characters are normal or mentally challenged.

    My role is a cross between the two,” she said. Parineeti shot to fame with her debut film ‘Ladies vs Ricky Bahl’ and garnered critical acclaim for her effortless performances in subsequent movies ‘Ishaqzaade’ and ‘Shuddh Desi Romance’. The actress says she and director Vinil Matthew practiced a lot to make her scenes appear effortless on the screen.

    “It was physically exhausting for me. I and my director we used to practice my expressions and Sidharth (Malhotra) used to be our litmus test. He used to finalise the expressions for a particular scene. “I try and make things on my own, I just practice a lot. I make the dialogues easy on my tongue before shooting,” she said. Asked whether she would like to share the screen with her cousin Priyanka Chopra, Parineeti said, “I would love to work with Priyanka provided the script is a strong one.” ‘Hasee Toh Phasee’ to hit theatres on February 7.

  • ONE BY TWO

    ONE BY TWO

    STORY: Amit and Samara are two lost souls in the city with different dreams and desires. Until destiny designs a new road for them. REVIEW: Wait to be seated, in the meanwhile take a look at the menu tonight.

    The portions are large, so everything is served one by two. In the ‘Specials’ we have a daringly different product of Bollywood, Abhay Deol. With a storyline that wants to leap out of mundane romcoms. Some spark of comedy, some feathery feelgood scenes. And some good music (Shankar-Ehsaan- Loy) for the hungry soul.

    We’ll come back to what’s ‘not hot’ on the menu, for now let’s dig in. Everything in Amit Sharma’s (Abhay) life is unbearably boring. Starting with his name, of course. He’s in a permanently pakaoed (like deep fried French fries) and purposeless state of mind – with a nagging mom (Rati) who buys him stretchable underwear and emotionally blackmails him to opt for a quick-fix boredom solution called shaadi.

    His college sweetheart dumps him for being as mundane as manchow soup on a date. And to top it, thanks to his ‘gas’tronomical indulgences (blame it on ‘pakaoed paneer’) he’s a good ol’ fart too. He believes, when life throws shit at you, you need a lot of toilet paper. Phrrr! On the other side, Samara (Preeti – pretty, super confident and shows promise) raised by single-mom (Lillete-good act!) is aspiring to be famous dancer by winning a dance reality show.

    She’s exasperated with her mom who has a date with the daru bottle every night, and an ex-boyfriend who can bed anything for benefit. Her mantra is ‘clean up the shit’. Amit and Samara’s paths almost cross, but they miss each other each time by a split second. Eventually, after all the ‘shit happens’ and is flushed out; fate has fresh plans for them.

    Debutante Devika’s concept might look good on paper, but onscreen it dissipates like diarrhoea. Strung with a few laughable scenes, it scrambles around with too many plots crafted like episodic sitcoms. It intends to reflect the psyche of the ‘wuzdat’ generation but quickly crumbles like an out-of-love, casual sex relationship. Abhay is good in his part, but after his super performance in ‘Raanjhanaa’ he’s not at his peak here.

  • VALENTINE’S DAY

    VALENTINE’S DAY

    Every February 14, across the United States and in other places around the world, candy, flowers and gifts are exchanged between loved ones, all in the name of St. Valentine.

    The Legend of St. Valentine
    The history of Valentine’s Day–and the story of its patron saint–is shrouded in mystery. We do know that February has long been celebrated as a month of romance, and that St. Valentine’s Day, as we know it today, contains vestiges of both Christian and ancient Roman tradition. But who was Saint Valentine, and how did he become associated with this ancient rite?

    The Catholic Church recognizes at least three different saints named Valentine or Valentinus, all of whom were martyred. One legend contends that Valentine was a priest who served during the third century in Rome. When Emperor Claudius II decided that single men made better soldiers than those with wives and families, he outlawed marriage for young men.

    Valentine, realizing the injustice of the decree, defied Claudius and continued to perform marriages for young lovers in secret. When Valentine’s actions were discovered, Claudius ordered that he be put to death. Other stories suggest that Valentine may have been killed for attempting to help Christians escape harsh Roman prisons, where they were often beaten and tortured.

    According to one legend, an imprisoned Valentine actually sent the first “valentine” greeting himself after he fell in love with a young girl–possibly his jailor’s daughter–who visited him during his confinement. Before his death, it is alleged that he wrote her a letter signed “From your Valentine,” an expression that is still in use today.

    Although the truth behind the Valentine legends is murky, the stories all emphasize his appeal as a sympathetic, heroic and–most importantly– romantic figure. By the Middle Ages, perhaps thanks to this reputation, Valentine would become one of the most popular saints in England and France.


    23

    Origins of Valentine’s Day: Pagan Festival in February
    While some believe that Valentine’s Day is celebrated in the middle of February to commemorate the anniversary of Valentine’s death or burial–which probably occurred around A.D. 270– others claim that the Christian church may have decided to place St. Valentine’s feast day in the middle of February in an effort to “Christianize” the pagan celebration of Lupercalia.

    Celebrated at the ides of February, or February 15, Lupercalia was a fertility festival dedicated to Faunus, the Roman god of agriculture, as well as to the Roman founders Romulus and Remus. To begin the festival, members of the Luperci, an order of Roman priests, would gather at a sacred cave where the infants Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome, were believed to have been cared for by a she-wolf or lupa.

    The priests would sacrifice a goat, for fertility, and a dog, for purification. They would then strip the goat’s hide into strips, dip them into the sacrificial blood and take to the streets, gently slapping both women and crop fields with the goat hide. Far from being fearful, Roman women welcomed the touch of the hides because it was believed to make them more fertile in the coming year. Later in the day, according to legend, all the young women in the city would place their names in a big urn. The city’s bachelors would each choose a name and become paired for the year with his chosen woman. These matches often ended in marriage.

    24

    Valentine’s Day: A Day of Romance
    Lupercalia survived the initial rise of Christianity and but was outlawed—as it was deemed “un- Christian”–at the end of the 5th century, when Pope Gelasius declared February 14 St. Valentine’s Day. It was not until much later, however, that the day became definitively associated with love. During the Middle Ages, it was commonly believed in France and England that February 14 was the beginning of birds’ mating season, which added to the idea that the middle of Valentine’s Day should be a day for romance.

    Valentine greetings were popular as far back as the Middle Ages, though written Valentine’s didn’t begin to appear until after 1400. The oldest known valentine still in existence today was a poem written in 1415 by Charles, Duke of Orleans, to his wife while he was imprisoned in the Tower of London following his capture at the Battle of Agincourt. (The greeting is now part of the manuscript collection of the British Library in London, England.) Several years later, it is believed that King Henry V hired a writer named John Lydgate to compose a valentine note to Catherine of Valois.

    Typical Valentine’s Day Greetings
    In addition to the United States, Valentine’s Day is celebrated in Canada, Mexico, the United Kingdom, France and Australia. In Great Britain, Valentine’s Day began to be popularly celebrated around the 17th century. By the middle of the 18th, it was common for friends and lovers of all social classes to exchange small tokens of affection or handwritten notes, and by 1900 printed cards began to replace written letters due to improvements in printing technology.

    Ready-made cards were an easy way for people to express their emotions in a time when direct expression of one’s feelings was discouraged. Cheaper postage rates also contributed to an increase in the popularity of sending Valentine’s Day greetings. Americans probably began exchanging hand-made valentines in the early 1700s. In the 1840s, Esther A.

    Howland began selling the first mass-produced valentines in America. Howland, known as the “Mother of the Valentine,” made elaborate creations with real lace, ribbons and colorful pictures known as “scrap.” Today, according to the Greeting Card Association, an estimated 1 billion Valentine’s Day cards are sent each year, making Valentine’s Day the second largest card-sending holiday of the year. (An estimated 2.6 billion cards are sent for Christmas.) Women purchase approximately 85 percent of all valentines.

  • LINDSAY LOHAN REFUSED ENTRY IN CLUBS

    LINDSAY LOHAN REFUSED ENTRY IN CLUBS

    Actress Lindsay Lohan has reportedly been refused entry in a number of nightclubs. The 27-year-old is said to have been recently banned from New York clubs after a series of incidents including one where she claimed that her fur coat has been stolen, reports contactmusic.com.

    “She stared the doorman down and was surprised that they wouldn’t let her in. She was definitely shaken up,” a source told Bang Showbiz.

  • KIM KARDASHIAN WANTS NORTH WEST TO APPEAR ON FAMILY REALITY SHOW

    KIM KARDASHIAN WANTS NORTH WEST TO APPEAR ON FAMILY REALITY SHOW

    Kim Kardashian has revealed that she wants her daughter North West to appear on ‘Keeping Up with the Kardashians’. The 33-year-old fiance of Kanye West is keen that her sevenmonth- old daughter joins the series, but the rapper has “shut down” the topic of conversation whenever it’s brought up and refuses to compromise, Contactmusic reported.

    Sources revealed that Ryan Seacrest, who executive produces the show had reached out to Kardashian and asked her to consider allowing North on the show as her fans want to see her interact with her daughter, and how she is as a mother. Sources added that Kanye isn’t keen on the idea and doesn’t want his daughter ever to appear on the

  • 12 Years a Slave

    12 Years a Slave

    STORY: Solomon Northup is kidnapped into savage slavery – can Solomon ever be free again?

    REVIEW: Straight away, 12 Years A Slave is not a film for the faint-hearted. It is one of the most haunting, daunting movies made. But despite its unrelenting, tense brutality, you’re unable to tear your eyes away. This is what makes 12 Years A Slave a work of disturbing genius. Solomon Northup (Ejiofor) is a free musician in 1841, kidnapped into the slave trade. Taken to Washington, Solomon is savagely beaten when he screams that he’s free. His howls fly into Washington’s skies, unheard by the White House impassively behind. Solomon is shipped down south where slave trader Theophilus Freeman (Giammati, stunning) sells naked, shivering black slaves, placed like exhibits amidst delicate china tea cups and cream cakes.

    Northup, beaten into answering to ‘Platt’, is bought by timber farmer William Ford (Cumberbatch). Platt impresses Ford with his skills but resentful overseer Tibeats (Dano, chilling) has Platt lynched. Shots of Platt strung up, gasping, his toes scrabbling desperately in squelching mud below, shock. Ford rescues Platt but sells him to savage plantation owner Edwin Epps (Fassbender). Any slave who picks less than 200 pounds of cotton a day is lashed while Patsy (Nyong’o), who picks 500, gets worse, Epps raping, then whipping her as his jealous wife (Paulson) demands. One day, Epps makes Platt whip Patsy too.

    Slavery’s crushing Platt when a Canadian carpenter Bass (Pitt) hears his tale. Will Bass help Platt be Solomon Northup again? The film is deeply powerful with brilliant acting. Ejiofor is its evocative heart while Fassbender is frighteningly perfect as soulless Epps, supported by Paulson as his sour, shrewish wife. Nyong’o makes Patsy’s misery come alive. Alongside, the sound design’s superb, capturing the relentless march of the waves powering slave boats, winds moaning through plantation trees.

    Deep focus shots showcase how the American South’s gracious life, its mansions and masquerades, its tea parties and gowns, was based on breaking the backs of captured blacks. Alongside, some scenes – Platt making ink from watery beetroot stew, burning a letter as darkness overwhelms – are of tremendously moving simplicity. Bass’s reaction, “Your story is amazing – and in no good way” rings true for the film. This is not a movie to be enjoyed but endured. But there lies its disturbing genius.

    Cast: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong’o, Sarah
    Paulson, Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Dano, Paul Giamatti, Brad Pitt
    Direction: Steve McQueen
    Genre: Biopic
    Duration: 2 hours 14 minutes

  • JOHANSSON STEPPING DOWN AS OXFAM AMBASSADOR

    JOHANSSON STEPPING DOWN AS OXFAM AMBASSADOR

    Scarlett Johansson is ending her relationship with a humanitarian group after being criticized over her support for an Israeli company that operates in the West Bank. A statement released by Johansson’s spokesman said the 29- year-old actress has “a fundamental difference of opinion” with Oxfam International because the humanitarian group opposes all trade from Israeli settlements, saying they are illegal and deny Palestinian rights.

    “Scarlett Johansson has respectfully decided to end her ambassador role with Oxfam after eight years,” the statement said. “She and Oxfam have a fundamental difference of opinion in regards to the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement. She is very proud of her accomplishments and fundraising efforts during her tenure with Oxfam.” Earlier this month, “The Avengers” and “Her” actress signed on as the first global brand ambassador of SodaStream International Ltd., and she’s set to appear in an ad for the athome soda maker during the Super Bowl on Feb. 2. SodaStream has come under fire from pro-Palestinian activists for maintaining a large factory in an Israeli settlement in the West Bank, a territory captured by Israel in 1967 and claimed by the Palestinians.

    In response to the criticism, Johansson said last week she was a “supporter of economic cooperation and social interaction between a democratic Israel and Palestine.” Oxfam took issue with Johansson, noting it was “considering the implications of her new statement and what it means for Ms. Johansson’s role as an Oxfam global ambassador.”

  • Renowned Japanese composer Mamoru Samuragochi admits fraud

    Renowned Japanese composer Mamoru Samuragochi admits fraud

    TOKYO (TIP): He was celebrated as a prolific musical genius whose compositions appeared in popular video games and the competition routine of a top figure skater in the coming Sochi Olympics. His deafness won him praise as Japan’s modern-day Beethoven.

    It turns out that his magnum opus was his own masquerade. On Feb 6 , Japan learned that one of its most popular musical figures, Mamoru Samuragochi, 50, had staged an elaborate hoax in which someone else had secretly written his most famous compositions, and he had perhaps even faked his hearing disability.

    Across a nation long captivated by Western classical music, people reacted with remorse, outrage, and even the rare threat of a lawsuit after Samuragochi’s revelations that he had hired a ghostwriter since the 1990s to compose most of his music. The anger turned to disbelief when the ghostwriter himself came forward to accuse Samuragochi of faking his deafness, apparently to win public sympathy and shape the Beethoven persona.

    The scandal began Wednesday, when Samuragochi confessed that someone else had written his most famous works. These include Symphony No. 1 “Hiroshima,” about the 1945 atomic bombing of his home city, which became a classical music hit in Japan; the theme music for the video games “Resident Evil” and “Onimusha”; and Sonatina for Violin, which Japanese Olympic figure skater Daisuke Takahashi is scheduled to use in his performance in Sochi.

    The timing could hardly have been worse for Takahashi, a potential medalist who won the bronze in the Vancouver Olympics four years ago. He said in a statement that he would continue to skate to the musical piece – he had little choice given all the time and work needed to prepare an Olympic routine – and hoped the revelations would not overshadow his performance. “Takahashi and the people involved with him did not know about this incident,” the statement said.

    “This is a crucial time just before the Olympics.” On Wednesday, Samuragochi expressed remorse for the deception, though he did not reveal why he had chosen to come forward at that particular moment. “Samuragochi is deeply sorry as he has betrayed fans and disappointed others,” said a statement released by Samuragochi’s lawyer.

    “He knows he could not possibly make any excuse for what he has done.” The reason for this sudden repentance became clear Thursday when the ghostwriter revealed himself to be Takashi Niigaki, 43, a largely unknown part-time lecturer at a prestigious music college in Tokyo. Niigaki said he had written more than 20 songs for Samuragochi since 1996, for which he received the equivalent of about $70,000.

    He said he felt so guilty about the deception that he had threatened to go public in the past, but Samuragochi begged him not to. He said he finally could not take it anymore when he learned one of his songs would be used by the Olympic skater. He told his story to a weekly tabloid, which went on sale Thursday. “He told me that if I didn’t write songs for him, he’d commit suicide,” Niigaki told a crowded news conference.

    “But I could not bear the thought of skater Takahashi being seen by the world as a co-conspirator in our crime.” Perhaps just as shocking was Niigaki’s assertion that Samuragochi was never deaf. Niigaki said he had regular conversations with Samuragochi, who listened to and commented on his compositions. Niigaki said the deafness was just “an act that he was performing to the outside world.” Repeated calls and faxes to Samuragochi’s lawyers after Niigaki’s news conference were not answered.

    It was unclear exactly how Samuragochi duped the world since asserting that he had gone deaf in the late 1990s. No one, it seemed, suspected that the one-time child music prodigy had not composed his own work. But in past interviews with the news media, Samuragochi gave an explanation that might explain why no one ever doubted his hearing loss: He said he was completely deaf in one ear but had some hearing in the other that was assisted by a hearing aid.

    The scandal has brought an abrupt fall from grace for Samuragochi, a man who looked the part of a modern-day composer with his long hair, stylish dark suits and ever-present sunglasses. Much of Samuragochi’s appeal seemed to lie in his inspiring life story, especially for a country so fascinated by classical music. Japan is the birthplace of the Suzuki method, and international superstars like conductor Seiji Ozawa and pianist Mitsuko Uchida are the source of great pride.

    Tokyo alone has about 10 professional orchestras, and the Japanese in the past have been among the biggest buyers of recorded classical music. The public adored Samuragochi, who appeared to have overcome a serious physical disability, the loss of almost all of his hearing at age 35 because of a degenerative condition, to achieve musical greatness.

    In a 2007 autobiography titled “Symphony No. 1,” Samuragochi described himself as the son of an atomic bomb survivor and able to play Beethoven and Bach on the piano by age 10. Samuragochi seemed to reach the height of his popularity last year, when Japan’s public broadcaster, NHK, aired a documentary titled “Melody of the Soul: The Composer Who Lost His Hearing” that followed him as he met survivors of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in northern Japan.

    He regularly appeared in many major news media, including Time magazine, which quoted him in a 2001 interview as saying that the loss of hearing had turned out to be “a gift from God.” “I listen to myself,” he told the magazine. “If you trust your inner sense of sound, you create something that is truer. It is like communicating from the heart.” The disclosure of his deception brought a wave of apologies by major Japanese news media, which expressed regret about having failed to uncover Samuragochi’s deceit.

    “We want him to explain his behavior,” the Japanese daily newspaper Asahi Shimbun said in a mea culpa published Thursday, “but the media must also consider our own tendency to fall for tear-jerking stories.” The episode also shook Japan’s struggling music industry, for whom Samuragochi had offered a rare respite from declining sales of classical CDs.

    The Hiroshima symphony sold 180,000 copies in a classical music market where sales of 10,000 constitute a hit. The music company Nippon Columbia said in a statement that it was “appalled and deeply indignant,” and would stop selling his CDs. Orchestras across Japan said they were canceling concerts that featured Samuragochi’s music.

    One, the Kyushu Symphony Orchestra, said it was considering a lawsuit to retrieve lost ticket sales, an extreme expression of anger in nonlitigious Japan. The mayor of Hiroshima also threatened to strip Samuragochi of a “citizen’s award” that the city had given him for promoting the city’s message of opposing nuclear weapons. “We never imagined this,” the mayor, Kazumi Matsui, was quoted as telling the daily newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun. “We are aghast.”

  • DSK HYOSUNG BETS ON MID-SIZE SUPER BIKE SEGMENT

    DSK HYOSUNG BETS ON MID-SIZE SUPER BIKE SEGMENT

    NEW DELHI (TIP):
    Premium bike brand DSK Hyosung. on February 6, indicated that it would stick to the mid-size category of the motorcycle market (above 250 cc to 650 cc) owning to cost and operating economics. The Pune-headquartered firm is preparing to widen its offerings with three more launches by the end of the current year and is looking at a sales growth of 50 per cent next fiscal on the back of rising volumes. It hopes to end the current fiscal with sales of about 2,000 units.

    “Our focus will be in the range of 250 cc-650 cc, which we expect to be the key growth segments in the coming years. We will stick to this segment and launches will also happen targeting this category. From the operating and cost economics point of view, this is an important area,” Shirish Kulkarni, Chairman, DSK Motowheels said. DSK’s models are priced between Rs. 2.69 lakh and Rs.5.50 lakh. It has just launched a cruiser bike Aquila 250, which is expected to be a key volume driver along with the company’s GT 250 bike.

  • DESI CARAVANS FROM PCP MOTORS TO HIT ROAD SOON

    DESI CARAVANS FROM PCP MOTORS TO HIT ROAD SOON

    NEW DELHI (TIP):
    PCP Motors, a division of Kolkata-based Paracoat Products, is gearing up for a plunge into the fledgling caravan or motor home market in the country with the launch of its Terra Home Car, the first ever locally-made recreation vehicle (RV), which typically includes bathroom, kitchen and sleeping facilities. The first set of vehicles is expected to be rolled out in Rajasthan or Gujarat in the next few months. RVs are defined as either motor vehicles or tow-able trailers, and are primarily intended for a group of people or a family while holidaying.

    “With changing preferences of people, we decided to develop a compact vehicle for a family of 5-6, and the vehicle is a result of our tie-ups with Japan-based Vantech, a popular name for camping cars, and Siam Motohome Ltd. (for customisation),” Rajesh Poddar, Director- Business Development, PCP Motors, told The Hindu at the Auto Expo 2014. The company showcased a prototype from Thailand at the Auto Expo 2012, and last year, the company showcased it to travel agents and tour operators. In 2013, it started working with ARAI (Automotive Research Association of India) to create a category of motor home for vehicle registration.

    Last month, ARAI created the same. Terra Home Car, which will be manufactured at the company’s Bhiwadi unit in Rajasthan, will hit the road after the clearance from ICAT (International Centre for Automotive Technology). PCP intends to focus on tourism industry, and will initially concentrate on states such as Rajasthan and Gujarat. It has commenced the process of setting up dealerships in these states. . “Considering the immense land area and the multitude of landscapes in India, Caravans and Caravan Parks are sure to add an exciting new facet to tourism. The initial demand in this niche segment is expected to come from domestic tourists and then from inbound tourists,” said a document of Indian Tourism Department.

  • Top US diplomat for Europe says sorry for cursing the EU

    Top US diplomat for Europe says sorry for cursing the EU

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Washington’s new top diplomat for Europe, Victoria Nuland, apologized on February 6 to EU counterparts after she was caught cursing about the European response to the crisis in Ukraine in a bugged phone call.

    *** the EU,” Nuland allegedly says in what appeared to be a recent phone call with US ambassador to Kiev, Geoff Pyatt, which was somehow intercepted and uploaded onto YouTube accompanied by Russian captions. US officials, while not denying such a conversation took place, refused to go into details, and pointed the finger at Russia for allegedly bugging the diplomats’ phones.

    “Let me convey that she has been in contact with her EU counterparts, and of course has apologized,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. While Psaki said she had no independent details of how the conversation was captured and uploaded onto the social networking site, she added: “Certainly we think this is a new low in Russian tradecraft.”

    White House spokesman Jay Carney alleged that the fact that it had been “tweeted out by the Russian government, it says something about Russia’s role.” Nuland, who took over late last year as assistant secretary for European affairs, and Pyatt appear to discuss President Viktor Yanukovych’s offer last month to make opposition leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk the new prime minister and Vitaly Klitschko, deputy prime minister. Both men turned the offer down.

    Nuland, who in December went down to Independence Square in Kiev in a show of support for the demonstrators, adds she has also been told that the UN chief Ban Ki-moon is about to appoint a former Dutch ambassador to Kiev, Robert Serry, as his representative to Ukraine. “That would be great I think to help glue this thing and have the UN glue it and you know, f*** the EU,” she says, in apparent frustration at policy differences.

    “We’ve got to do something to make it stick together, because you can be pretty sure that if it does start to gain altitude the Russians will be working behind the scenes to try to torpedo it,” Pyatt replies. Psaki sought to downplay any tensions with the European Union over Ukraine, which has been rocked by weeks of protests by pro-democracy protestors.

    Demonstrators were angered by Yanukovych’s sudden decision last year to abandon moves to sign an association accord with the EU, and instead solicit a financial aid package from former Soviet master, Russia. Psaki said the United States, which is mulling possible sanctions on Ukraine if it cracks down on the protests, has “been working closely” with the EU.

  • HCL CORP MAKES FORAY INTO HEALTHCARE

    HCL CORP MAKES FORAY INTO HEALTHCARE

    NEW DELHI (TIP):
    HCL Corporation, on February 6, announced its foray into the healthcare sector with the launch of HCL Healthcare that seeks to address the entire spectrum of healthcare needs, providing healthcare delivery, innovative medical services, and training to meet the growing need for quality healthcare.

    Multi-speciality clinics

    To begin with, Shiv Nadar, founder and chairperson of HCL, Shiv Nadar Foundation, launched HCL Avitas — multi-speciality clinics — in affiliation with Johns Hopkins Medicine International. The two HCL Avitas clinics in the national capital, which will become functional from Friday, will provide “unmatched patient experience and outcomes by adopting global best practices for medical quality and training, using evidence-based systems and integrating advanced technology”.

    HCL Avitas will offer the best of patient-centric care aimed at providing long-term care needs. The clinics will be networked, giving patients access to their medical history and to the best specialists available in the systems. “Education, healthcare and technology will be the key enablers of our country’s future progress and growth. Today is a day of immense joy for me as we announce our entry into healthcare,” Mr. Nadar told reporters at the launch of HCL Avitas. HCL Corporation had decided to invest “as much money as needed” for the project with an initial equity investment of Rs.1,000 crore.

    Open to acquisition

    “We will start new clinics and are also open to acquiring the existing ones. The two clinics in Delhi have been taken over. “The target is to reach out to 20 million people by 2020,” Shikhar Malhotra, Vice-Chairperson of HCL Healthcare, said. HCL Healthcare Chairperson Surya Mohapatra said the project was committed to provide innovative medical services, products, trainings and information to meet the needs of the patients, physicians and organisation”.