Month: April 2015

  • Four Indian Origin Students named Morehead Scholars for Class of 2019

    Four Indian Origin Students named Morehead Scholars for Class of 2019

    morehead scholarsNEW YORK (TIP): The Morehead-Cain Foundation is home of the first merit scholarship program in the United States recently announced the names of the 59 new Morehead-Cain scholars who will attend the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    The class of 2019 has 3 Indian Americans & 1 Indian British among other Scholars from across North Carolina, the United States, and the world.

    The 3 Indian American scholars are from North Carolina and 1 from United Kingdom.

    Rohun Shah from Terry Sanford Senior High School in Fayetteville, North Carolina is considering a career in medicine. He is the son of Sanjay and Liza Shah.

    Meghana Ganapathiraju from Green Hope High School in Cary, North Carolina, hopes to study the biological and computational sciences and is considering a career in medicine. Meghana is the daughter of Saraswati Kumar and Kowsayla.

    Pooja Joshi from Raleigh Charter School in Raleigh, North Carolina, enjoys studying biology, political science, and government. Pooja is the daughter of Dhanesh and Shivangi Joshi.

    Anamay Viswanathan is from Dulwich College in London. He is interested in studying political philosophy and economics and may pursue a career in journalism or in non-governmental organizations. Anamay is the son of Sanjay and Anamika Viswanathan.

    Founded in 1945, the Morehead-Cain has been a model for countless merit awards throughout the United States. These include the University of Virginia’s Jefferson Scholars Program, Duke University’s Benjamin N. Duke Scholars Program, and Emory University’s Woodruff Scholars Program.

  • Indian Americans Richest Community in US with Average Income of $100,547

    Indian Americans Richest Community in US with Average Income of $100,547

    WASHINGTON (TIP):  The median income of Indian-Americans, which is the richest ethnic community in the US, in the year 2013 was $100,547 (about Rs. 60 lakhs), Census Bureau said in its latest report.

    In its latest report, the US Census Bureau said Indian Americans are the third largest Asian community in the United States after Chinese and Filipinos.

    The Chinese (except Taiwanese) population was the largest Asian group, followed by Filipinos (3.6 million), Indian American (3.5 million), Vietnamese (1.9 million), Koreans (1.8 million) and Japanese (1.4 million).
    The median income in 2013 for Indian Americans was $100,547; while for Bangladeshis, it was $51,331. The estimated number of US residents in 2013 who were Asian, either one race or in combination with one or more additional races was 19.4 million.

    California has the largest population of Asian Americans (6.1 million).

    The Asian population alone represented 37.7 per cent of the total population in Hawaii.

  • Government Proposes to give Voting Right to Non Resident Indians

    Government Proposes to give Voting Right to Non Resident Indians

    NEW DELHI (TIP):  The government agreed to convene an all-party meeting to discuss its proposal to give NRIs the right to exercise their franchise by e-postal ballots or through proxy voting.

    Law Minister DV Sadananda Gowda accepted the demand of opposition parties in the Rajya Sabha that their views should be taken into consideration while enacting legislation to grant voting rights to NRIs and domestic migrant labor.

    Replying to a calling attention motion moved by Leader of Opposition Ghulam Nabi Azad, the Law Minister made it clear that the government was acting on the Election Commission report regarding voting rights of over one crore NRIs and not as directed by the Supreme Court.
    During the debate, Opposition members charged the government with taking up the matter against the backdrop of the Supreme Court’s directions, with Leader of Opposition Ghulam Nabi Azad saying they were not opposed to voting rights for NRIs but the way the Government has moved the proposal without discussing it with the political parties.

    The Minister said the report had recommended the options of the e-postal ballot system and proxy voting and the government had submitted before the Supreme Court accepting the recommendations.

    To ensure that secrecy and methodology is maintained, Gowda said “e-postal and postal ballot voting methodologies are being worked out for the voting rights of the NRIs”.

    However, he agreed for an all-party meeting as demanded by several opposition parties including AIADMK, DMK, BJD, CPI, SP and JD-U.

  • Satnam first India-born Indian American to enter NBA draft

    Satnam first India-born Indian American to enter NBA draft

    NEW YORK (TIP): Satnam Singh Bhamra might become the first India born and only second Indian origin basketball player after Sim Bhullar to feature in the NBA following his inclusion in the NBA Draft for the year 2015.

    The 7 feet 1 inches tall hoopster from the IMG Academy is one of the 91 players – 48 players from colleges and post-graduate institutions and 43 international players – who were nominated as early entry candidates for the 2015 NBA Draft presented by State Farm.

    At less than 16 years of age, Satnam, hailing from Barnala in Punjab, became the youngest player to represent India at the 26th Asian Basketball Championship at Wuhan in China in 2011.

    A towering Satnam has been training in Florida, US for the last five years along with youths of 39 countries on an initiative of USA-based IMG Reliance Academy.

    (Source : PTI)

  • Indian American Tejal K Gandhi among top 25 women in US healthcare

    Indian American Tejal K Gandhi among top 25 women in US healthcare

    BOSTON (TIP): An Indian-American Harvard Professor has been named as one of the Top 25 Women in Healthcare in the US by Modern Healthcare magazine.

    Tejal K Gandhi, president and chief executive officer of the National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF) has been named as one of the country’s Top 25 Women in Healthcare in the sixth biennial list of women leaders compiled by the magazine.

    “I’m honored to be recognized by Modern Healthcare,” said Gandhi in a statement.

    “Women certainly make up a large part of the health care workforce, and having that perspective represented at leadership levels is a trend that I hope will continue to gain traction,” she said.

    Gandhi was one of 200 women nominated for the list through an open call for nominations last December. The list was published in the April issue of the magazine.

    A review board composed of senior editors of Modern Healthcare selected the finalists by judging the candidates on a broad range of criteria, including their willingness to share their expertise with others in the field, to serve as role models or mentors to others, and their ability and power to effect change.

    Gandhi also holds an appointment as associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
    This is the first time she has appeared on the Top 25 Women in Healthcare list.

    Earlier this year, she was included in Modern Healthcare’s list of 50 Most Influential Physician Executives and Leaders.

    In August 2014, she was included in the magazine’s list of 100 Most Influential People in Healthcare.

     

  • Series of Yoga Events in US – 100 Cities to have Yogathon powered by OVBI

    Series of Yoga Events in US – 100 Cities to have Yogathon powered by OVBI

    NEW YORK (TIP): Ahead of the first International Day of Yoga on June 21, Indian Consulates and Embassy in Washington in the United States started a series of curtain-raiser events to raise awareness about the ancient Indian practice of Yoga.

    In New York, Overseas Volunteer for a Better India in association with the Indian Consulate General of New York launched, April 28, the Yogathon Website and started a movement to create a platform where hundreds of partner organizations, including those representing diverse ethnic organizations in the US will come together to become part of the Yoga movement. OVBI along with partner organizations plans to have an event celebration of the International Day of Yoga in more than 100 cities in the US.

    Ambassador Dnyaneshwar Mulay, Consul General of India in New York said at the event that Yoga signifies much more than what we conceive of it and it is not just about aasanas. He further stated that Yoga is not just an Indian heritage; though, it originated in India. However, it has become a world heritage and that is why we need to celebrate it.

    In Washington, Indian spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, at a talk on ‘Nurturing Peace through Yoga and Meditation’, emphasized the relevance of Yoga in today’s world, saying it’s not only about flexibility in body but also flexibility in mind and thinking.

    Indian Embassy will collaborate with Yoga organizations, practitioners, and community organizations for a day-long event at the Mall in Washington on June 21.

    “Yoga is an invaluable gift of India’s ancient tradition. It embodies unity of mind and body, thought and action, restraint and fulfillment, harmony between man and nature, a holistic approach to health and well-being,” Charge d’Affaires Taranjit Singh Sandhu quoted Prime Minister Narendra Modi as saying at the UN last year.

    “It is not about exercise but to discover the sense of oneness with yourself, the world and Nature. By changing our lifestyle and creating consciousness, it can help us deal with climate change,” he added.

    The United Nations General Assembly had on December 11 adopted an India-led resolution declaring June 21 as the ‘International Day of Yoga’. It was passed within a record time of 75 days with 177 countries becoming co-sponsors.

     

  • Indian American Coal Scientist Dr. Hardarshan Singh Valia Honored With Three Awards

    Indian American Coal Scientist Dr. Hardarshan Singh Valia Honored With Three Awards

    INDIANAPOLIS (TIP): Dr. Hardarshan Singh Valia, has the distinction to be the only Coal Scientist in the world to be honored with all three prestigious awards bestowed upon him by the American Steel Industry.

    He is the First ever Indian and Second ever Asian person to receive Iron & Steel Society’s Joseph Becker Award (for distinguished achievement in Coal Technology) for his work on Coal Usage in Steel Industry. Dr. Valia was awarded Joseph Kapitan Award (best paper) from the Association for Iron and Steel Technology on his work regarding unique properties of Indiana coals. He is also a recipient of the American Iron and Institute Medal. These honors have brought him the distinction of being the only Coal Scientist in the world to have received all the three awards offered by American Steel Industry related organizations.

    “It is like a Hollywood actor winning all three, the Academy Award, Grammy Award and the Amy Award,” said Rajinder Singh Mago, a friend.

    “One needs to recover “value added” products from coal rather than just burning it in the power plants,” said Dr. Valia, “thereby reducing our dependence on foreign liquid fuels,” he added. Purdue research Foundation under the leadership of Dr. Robert Kramer and Dr. Valia, is leading such an effort.

    Dr. Valia’s emphasis on production of diesel fuels from coal was also presented in a series of his lectures in India, as India has large resources of coal but has shortage of oil.

    Dr. Valia has published 85 articles, contributed to 5 books (including Making, Shaping, and Treating of Steel), chaired 30 National/International conferences, taught 20 courses worldwide, authored two patents, and is consultant to many industries around the world.

    Dr. Valia, after retiring as a Staff Scientist from Arcelor Mittal (formerly Inland Steel Company), started his own consulting firm Coal Science Inc. and also jointly owns Coal science Laboratory in Gary, Indiana.

    Dr. Valia received his Masters in Applied Geology from Nagpur University and Masters in Geology from Bryn Mawr College.

     

  • Socialist Sanders throws reddish hat into US Presidential ring

    Socialist Sanders throws reddish hat into US Presidential ring

    WASHINGTON (TIP): In a country where the term socialism is almost taboo, a Senator who comfortably describes himself as a ”Democratic Socialist” has thrown his hat in the 2016 Presidential election ring, much to the delight of the liberal-leftist fringe in the United States.

    Bernie Sanders, the Independent Senator from Vermont, a state known as much for its progressive politics as its marginal separatist tendency, declared on Thursday that he would run for president as a Democrat, providing the first official challenge to Hillary Clinton for the party nomination. He is having to take on the Democratic affiliation to avoid problems with getting on state ballots and participating in debates that independents face.

    Few pundits give the grandfatherly 73-year-old Sanders any realistic chance to win the nomination. But he is expected to perform the important role of forcing Hillary Clinton to address left-liberal issues that he has passionately espoused, such as reducing income inequality and scaling back the influence of money in politics, a platform on which his rival is particularly vulnerable at this moment.

    Sanders’s run in the 2016 election cycle was in the works for some time now and his website had announced ”A political revolution is coming” while seeking donations and snarkily remarking that the campaign is ”Paid for by Bernie 2016 (not the billionaires),” a swipe at rest of the field backed by money bags. On Thursday, as Clinton was fighting to ward off attacks from the right about alleged quid pro quo in which foreign governments and business entities funneled money into the Clinton Foundation for favors, Sanders, looking positively pristine, made his move.

    If elected, Sanders would be the oldest person and the first Jewish individual to be US President, not to speak of the first person to win with an overtly socialist label. A civil rights’ activist, whose father lost his family in the Holocaust, he has spent time in Israel on a kibbutz in course of championing a socialist way of life.

    Even President Barack Obama jocularly endorsed his quirky politics in a light-hearted moment at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner last week, gagging, ”I like Bernie. Bernie is an interesting guy. Apparently some folks really want to see a pot-smoking socialist in the White House. We could get a third Obama term after all.”

    The odds are formidable, not only because of Sanders’s age and what some see as the socialist stigma around him, but also on account of his modest resources in what is arguably the world’s most expensive election marketplace where billions of dollars are poured in by big business lobbies and vested interests.

    Sanders though has indicated he is not fazed by the odds or his modest means, while indicating that he will bank on small contributions from ordinary people, much the same way candidate Obama amassed a campaign war chest. ”People should not underestimate me,” he told The Associated Press. ”I’ve run outside of the two-party system, defeating Democrats and Republicans, taking on big-money candidates, and I think the message that has resonated in Vermont is a message that can resonate all over this country.”

  • Hillary Clinton dismisses claims Indian cash swayed her n-deal stance

    Hillary Clinton dismisses claims Indian cash swayed her n-deal stance

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign has dismissed as conspiracy theory claims made by a new book that cash donations from India swayed her stance as a senator on the landmark India-US nuclear deal.

    “Clinton Cash is attempting to rewrite history to fit a pre-determined partisan narrative,” Clinton campaign spokesman Josh Schwerin told Politico, an influential Washington political news site.

    “It only takes a quick look at Hillary’s actual voting record and statements to see that this conspiracy theory doesn’t even come close to passing the smell test,” he was quoted as saying on Wednesday.

    Politico said it has obtained a chapter relating to India from the book, “Clinton Cash: The Untold Story of How and Why Foreign Governments and Businesses Help Make Bill and Hillary Rich” by author Peter Schweizer, due for release on May 5.

    The chapter, titled, “Indian Nukes: How to Win a Medal by Changing Hillary’s Mind,” details a series of donations and overtures from Indians who supported the nuclear deal to the Clintons, Politico said.

    “While Clinton’s stance toward India evolved over the years, a review of then-Senator Clinton’s statements and votes while the Indian nuclear deal was under debate shows that two key facts in Schweizer’s argument on the topic are false,” it acknowledged, Clinton actually publicly stated her support for the deal in 2006 and in fact voted against a “killer amendment” that the book reports she supported, Politico noted, Schweizer writes in the chapter that in 2006, “Hillary was still a reluctant and questionable supporter of the bill.”

    But in June of that year Clinton, a founding member of the Senate India caucus, issued a press release announcing her intention to vote for the legislation, and praising Senators Richard Lugar and Joe Biden, who she said improved upon the Bush administration’s initial proposal.

    “As India continues to grow stronger and to shoulder more of the responsibilities that come with being a leading nation in the world, we must continue to work towards greater cooperation with our Indian friends to deal with our common challenges in security, energy, economics and health,” she was quoted as writing.

    “I hope that this agreement is just the first step on that journey that our countries, and our people, will take together.”

    Implying that a group of influential Indians directed money and attention to the Clintons in order to get them to support the nuclear deal, the book, according to Politico details the activities of Indian-American hotelier Sant Chatwal.

    Chatwal allegedly helped arrange one of former President Bill Clinton’s most lucrative public speeches – a $450,000 affair in London

    He is also reported to have once said, “Even my close friend Hillary Clinton was not in favour of the deal [in 2006] … But when I put the whole package together, she also came on board. … In politics nothing comes free. You have to write cheques in the American political system.”

  • US successfully tests bullets that can change course midair

    WASHINGTON: Now you don’t have to be a good shooter to hit the mark. The US military has successfully tested self-steering “smart” bullets that have a real-time guidance system to track targets and can change their course if needed.

    In February, the “smart bullets” — .50-caliber projectiles equipped with optical sensors — passed their most successful round of live-fire tests to date, according to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

    In the tests, an experienced marksman “repeatedly hit moving and evading targets,” a DARPA statement said.

    “Additionally, a novice shooter using the system for the first time hit a moving target. In other words, now you do not even have to be a good shot to hit the mark,” the statement said. The system has been developed by DARPA’s Extreme Accuracy Tasked Ordnance programme, known as EXACTO. “True to DARPA’s mission, EXACTO has demonstrated what was once thought impossible: the continuous guidance of a small-caliber bullet to target,” Jerome Dunn, DARPA programme manager said in a statement. “This live-fire demonstration from a standard rifle showed that EXACTO is able to hit moving and evading targets with extreme accuracy at sniper ranges unachievable with traditional rounds. Fitting EXACTO’s guidance capabilities into a small .50-caliber size is a major breakthrough and opens the door to what could be possible in future guided projectiles across all calibers,” Dunn said.

    Videos supplied by DARPA showed the bullets making sharp turns in midair as they pursue their targets. DARPA says the smart bullets will also help shooters who are trying, for example, to hit targets in high winds. The goals of the EXACTO program are giving shooters accuracy at greater distances, engaging targets sooner and enhancing the safety of American troops, DARPA said.

    The EXACTO program has developed new approaches and advanced capabilities to improve the range and accuracy of sniper systems beyond the current state of the art. The programme sought to improve sniper effectiveness and enhance troop safety by allowing greater shooter standoff range and reduction in target engagement timelines.

  • Indian, American Scientists Chosen for Environmental Prize

    Indian, American Scientists Chosen for Environmental Prize

    LOS ANGELES (TIP): This year’s Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement is being awarded to two scientists who have worked for conservation on the land and in the ocean.

    Madhav Gadgil of India and Jane Lubchenco of the United States are being honored for working with communities to preserve the environment while protecting people’s livelihoods.

    Bamboo crops in the Western Ghats, a mountain range in western India, have been depleted by the paper industry. Gadgil said that has hurt local villagers who rely on the plants to make baskets and other products.

    Earlier, the crops “were exploited through the state machinery and largely they were auctioned off to traders, to industries,” said Gadgil, a visiting professor at India’s Goa University who works with villagers to keep the ecosystem balanced and let the bamboo groves flourish. “Now the communities have rights to manage these.”

    He said that for generations, villagers have preserved parts of the forest as sacred, something that also happens in other parts of Asia.

    Gadgil said he serves as a bridge between local people and government, which wants to promote modern management techniques. He has focused on documenting the sacred forests and the kind of biodiversity resources that have been conserved, and finding out “what is now in the current context possible.”

    Gadgil traveled to Los Angeles to receive the Tyler Prize and to meet this year’s other winner, Lubchenco. A marine ecologist, she teaches at Oregon State University and served four years as the head of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Last year, President Barack Obama named her U.S. science envoy for the ocean.

    Lubchenco has worked with American fishermen to restore depleted fisheries through “catch shares,” strategies that grant fishing rights to fishermen but put limits on their catch in affected areas.

    “Our basic idea of oceans is that they are so immense, so bountiful that we can take anything out and put anything in and it would not make much of a difference. And we have discovered that is simply not the case,” she said.

    The system of catch shares gives fishermen a share of the ocean harvest, and those rights can be bought, sold and traded. The system has its critics, but Lubchenco and other supporters point to its success in restoring depleted stocks.

    She said that limiting fishing on the high seas is difficult. “There are a lot of efforts under way to rein in overfishing, but it remains a huge challenge and it has global ramifications,” she said.

    Lubchenco said governments must lead, and local communities must be part of the solution.

    Gadgil said the same is true of the Indian villagers with whom he works.

    “Of course they have a substantial amount of understanding, local understanding, of that resource base and what is impacting it, what might be good sustainable-use practices,” he said.

    The prize winners said the balance of life in the ocean and on land is essential for a healthy planet and healthy communities.

  • Website Launch Of Yoga Movement in USA by Overseas Volunteer for a Better India in association with Consulate General of India, New York

    Website Launch Of Yoga Movement in USA by Overseas Volunteer for a Better India in association with Consulate General of India, New York

    image-2Overseas Volunteers for Better India (OVBI) is spearheading a Yoga movement in USA. The movement, named OVBI Yogathon, is part of the first historic International Day of Yoga celebrations. 177 nations recently came together to approve the United Nations resolution, declaring 21st June as the International Day of Yoga.

    image-4

    The movement is being launched in association with the Consulate General of India, New York and aims to create a platform where 100s of partner organizations, including those representing diverse ethnic organizations in the US will come together to become part of the Yoga movement. OVBI along with partner organizations plans to have an event celebration of the International Day of Yoga in more than 100 cities in the US. The event in each of these cities will be spearheaded by Yoga Ambassadors. A global social media poster campaign headed by a tech-savvy, creative and dynamic team of volunteers will take the message of the Yoga and its benefits nationwide.

    OVBI or Overseas Volunteers for a Better India was formed in June 2013 to create a platform where non resident Indias can contribute to make India of their dreams. In a short time OVBI has more than 10,000 members all across USA. Recently OVBI was launched in Canada, Australia and some European countries as well. OVBI volunteers include doctors, engineers, scientists, students, business owners etc., who are willing to work as brand ambassadors for India and also help the communities they live in.

    image-2Keeping the wellness of the society in mind and also based on the fact that Yoga is a cultural heritage of India, OVBI has taken upon itself and along with partner organizations to promote Yoga on a massive scale . Yoga was first introduced in the US by Swami Vivekananda in 1893 and became popular in 1960s. In the last decade, there has been an exponential growth in Yoga practitioners. The Yoga Journal marketing research in 2012 estimated that 20.4 million Americans practice yoga whereas, as many as 44.4% of Americans call themselves as “Aspirational Yogis”. OVBI plans to build up on this momentum and take Yoga to every home in US. Through Yoga it plans to bring down social barriers and promote peace and harmony in the society.

    The OVBI Yogathon website is http://intyogaday.com

    Home

    Those willing to become Yoga ambassadors or be partner organizations may contact: yogathon@overseasvbi.org

  • New Jersey girl, Aratrika Dey wins ZEE TV SRGMP Little Champs North America

    New Jersey girl, Aratrika Dey wins ZEE TV SRGMP Little Champs North America

    (April, 2015—New York, NY): Bollywood star Ali Zafar, model and actress Lauren Gottlieb and actor Jackky Bhagnani showed up as celebrity guests at North America Sa Re Ga Ma Pa L’il Champs finale.

    The episode was shot recently at Famous Studio in Mumbai. Hosts Aditya Narayan will be seen giving company to Ali and Monali.

    From over 20,000 audition entries, top 14 finalists of SRGMP Lil champs North America were selected and competed on the SRGMP sets specially crafted for them! Artarika Dey from NJ takes home the winner trophy; Niranjanaa Kannan from WA and Preetish Chakroborty from IL becomes the 1st and 2nd runner-up of ZEE TV SRGMP Lil Champs North America held in Mumbai, India.

    Sameer Targe, General Manager of ZEE TV Americas says, “I am very surprised to see the level of talent that exists amongst the 2nd generation South Asian kids. Ironically all the top 14 finalists are born and raised in America and seldom get to visit India to understand the language. Yet singing fluently and soulfully without understanding the lyrics is commendable. For me the real winners are the parents who despite living so far away from India have encouraged their children to explore Indian music and culture.


    ZEE Americas

    A pioneer in South Asian entertainment, ZEE TV has become synonymous with unparalleled quality in broadcasting for more than 20 years.  As a global brand, ZEE is committed to delivering top-notch international content.


    ZEE in the Americas has established itself as a mainstay in American households, reaching more than 2 million viewers.  As a market leader in the South Asian entertainment space since its entry into America in 1998, ZEE is continuously evolving its content to meet the changing needs of the market across genres and languages.  As the exclusive distributor of the ZEE channels in the Americas, Asia TV USA Ltd. caters to a wide audience with a growing number of channels, including ZEE TV, ZEE Cinema, ZEE Khana Khazana, Zing, ZEE Business, ZEE Smile, TEN Cricket, ZEE Aflam, ZEE Alwan, ZEE Russia, ZEE Marathi, ZEE Kannada, ZEE Telugu, ZEE Tamizh, Alpha ETC Punjabi, ZEE Bangla, ZEE Salaam, ZEE 24 Taas, ZEE 24 Ghanta and ZEE 24 Ghantalu. In August 2012, ZEE TV became the first South Asian channel to launch in High Definition in the US!


    About ZEE TV SRGMP Lil Champs North America

    ZEE TV America has opened the doors for millions of talented children in North America to become the next singing superstars. After successfully launching Dance India Dance North America and completing three seasons – Dance India Dance North America (for Adults), Dance India Dance North America Little Master (Kids) and DID Super Moms North America (for Moms). ZEE TV Americas, received more than 20,000 entries per season, garnered highest viewership, reach, and impressions leaving competition behind and has successfully built and created a platform for millions of talented first and second generation South Asians across North America.

    More than 20,000 audition entries were received and more than 125,000 video views per week during the voting phase where in North American audience got a chance to vote for their favorite contestant and select the top 14 (www.zeedilse.com).

  • Obama amnesty greater threat to blacks than police brutality: experts

    Obama amnesty greater threat to blacks than police brutality: experts

    Economic and civil rights experts say increased immigration spurred by President Obama’s executive orders poses a bigger threat to the black community than police brutality or racial profiling, which have sparked protests in black communities across the country.

    “It’s a bigger threat to black livelihood,” Peter Kirsanow, a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, said, adding that illegal immigration “dwarfs” the more inflammatory issues of police brutality, saying, “When you look at the hundreds of thousands of blacks thrown out of work over the years as a result of the competitive pressure the downstream effects are profound.”

    The number of unemployed black workers in the U.S. is soaring, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Over 12.2 million black people of working age were not in the labor force in March, meaning they had neither been employed nor actively sought a job for at least four weeks.

    The labor force participation rate for black men ages 20 and older is more than 5 percentage points lower than it is for white men, and for those in the labor force, the black unemployment rate is more than double the white unemployment rate, at 10.1 percent versus 4.7 percent.

    Loosened immigration policy will only compound the problem.

    As more illegal immigrants enter the U.S., encouraged by the president’s sweeping executive actions, they flood low-skilled labor markets once dominated by blacks, which ultimately decreases wages and increases job competition for low-skilled black workers, said Mr. Kirsanow.


    “The long-term, large-scale flow of immigration into the United States has worked to erode both the wages and employment prospects of African-American workers,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions, Alabama Republican and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interests, in a statement to The Times.

    “Yet the Senate’s ‘Gang of Eight’ plan would have doubled future immigration from its existing record levels. As a nation, our first duty is always to our own citizens, especially those who have sacrificed so much for this country. Any responsible immigration plan must promote higher wages, rising employment and improved working conditions for people already living here,” he said.

    Increasing unemployment rates in the black community can lead to numerous other negative social consequences, Mr. Kirsanow said.

    “When unemployment rates increase, black institutionalization rates also increase. Individuals who don’t have jobs are less likely to be married or to get married, which means you are more likely to have kids out of wedlock. It’s a self-perpetuating negative cycle,” Mr. Kirsanow said. “These are the things that the Congressional Black Caucus and the president have refused to address and are things that are tremendously harmful to the prospects of black Americans economically, socially and culturally.”

    A spokeswoman for the Congressional Black Caucus did not reply to a request by The Times for comment.

    While Mr. Kirsanow opposed the president’s immigration policies, his colleagues on the Civil Rights Commission came out in support of President Obama’s executive orders issued in November, jumping on the political bandwagon at the time.

    However, a 2008 briefing report to the Civil Rights Commission on the effects of immigration on wages and employment opportunities for black workers clearly stated that more illegal immigration hurts low-skilled black workers.

    “About six in 10 adult black males have a high school diploma or less, and black men are disproportionately employed in the low-skilled labor market, where they are more likely to be in labor competition with immigrants,” the report reads. “Illegal immigration to the United States in recent decades has tended to depress both wages and employment rates for low-skilled American citizens, a disproportionate number of whom are black men.”

    Commission Chair Martin Castro, who was not a member of the commission when the 2008 study was conducted, has said that the report was missing key data that contradicted the overall findings and plans to call for a review of the study.

    Some economists say that increased immigration doesn’t hurt low-skilled American workers because the two groups don’t typically do the same jobs.

    Low-skilled Americans, nearly all of whom speak English, tend to work in jobs that require communication skills, while low-skilled immigrants, who mostly don’t, tend to do jobs that require manual labor, Alex Nowrasteh, immigration policy analyst at the Cato Institute, explained.

    He cited research from economists Gianmarco Ottaviano and Giovanni Peri, who found in their studies in 2008 and 2010 that more immigration tends to raise overall wages for U.S.-born workers.

    But while economists agree that immigration improves living standards and wages on average, studies are divided on whether immigration reduces wages for certain groups of workers. Some studies suggest that immigration has reduced wages for low-skilled workers without a high school diploma and college graduates.

    A 2007 study by economists George Borjas and Lawrence Katz found that increases in immigrant workers from 1990 to 2006 reduced the wages of low-skilled workers by 4.7 percent and college graduates by 1.7 percent.

    In 2009 Mr. Borjas, a Harvard professor, specifically studied the effects of immigration on the economic status of black men and found that a 10 percent immigrant-induced increase in the supply of a particular skill group reduced black wages by 2.5 percent, lowered the employment rate of black men by 5.9 percentage points and increased the incarceration rate of blacks by 1.3 percentage points.

    “It is evident that there is a negative correlation between changes in employment propensities and the immigrant share, and that the correlation is stronger for black men,” Mr. Borjas wrote.

    But Mr. Nowrasteh explained that more people coming in to the country is good for the U.S. economy, and said that the bigger threat to wages for low-skilled workers is technological change.

    “Studies on skilled-bias technological change find a lot of the new machines, computers [and] ways to automate manufacturing increase the wages of high-skilled people a lot more and potentially decrease the wages of lower-skilled people,” Mr. Nowrasteh said, adding that the same economic effects have been observed in countries that don’t accept many immigrants.

    Multiple polls show that Americans across the board, regardless of race or political alignment, want less immigration.

    In a nationwide survey conducted between August and October of 2014, The Polling Company, Inc. asked over 1,000 adults: “If U.S. businesses have trouble finding workers, what should happen?”

    In total, 75 percent said businesses should raise wages and improve working conditions to attract American workers, while only 8 percent said more immigrants workers should be allowed in to the country to fill those jobs.

    Eighty-six percent of blacks surveyed said businesses should increase wages rather than hire more immigrants, and 71 percent of Hispanics said the same thing.

    Seventy-four percent of Republican responders and 79 percent of Democratic responders also said businesses should increase wages to attract American employees.

    In a January 2015 Gallup poll, 39 percent of Americans said they were dissatisfied with current immigration levels and wanted less immigration rather than more.

    Factors other than illegal immigration do contribute to black unemployment, and halting illegal immigration is not a panacea for the issues with decreased wages for low-skilled black workers, Mr. Kirsanow explained. But the effect on low-skilled minority workers must be considered by lawmakers in forming comprehensive immigration reform policies, he said, adding that it must start with following the laws already in place.

    “We are not serious about securing the border; we are not serious about enforcement; we are not serious about e-verify. All of these things would be extremely helpful to low-skilled workers and, particularly, black Americans,” Mr. Kirsanow said.

  • Barack Obama gets ‘anger translator’ at WH Correspondents Dinner

    Barack Obama gets ‘anger translator’ at WH Correspondents Dinner

    President Barack Obama boasts comic timing commensurate with his position, and in his jokey routine at this year’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner, he gleefully skewered news channels from CNN to Fox News, Vice Presidents current and former, not to mention the entire Republican presidential field. “A few weeks ago, Dick Cheney says he thinks I’m the worst president of his lifetime,” Mr Obama said. “Which is interesting because I think Dick Cheney is the worst president of my lifetime.”

    Speaking at the dinner on 25 April, held at the Washington DC Hilton, Mr Obama also mocked his own Vice President, who has a habit of giving unprompted back rubs to the unsuspecting. “I feel more loose and relaxed than ever,” Mr Obama said. “Those Joe Biden shoulder massages are like magic. You should try one… Oh, you have?” Despite the teasing, the President said, he and Mr Biden are great friends. “We’ve gotten so close in some places in Indiana, they won’t serve us pizza anymore,” he added.

    On the theme of gay marriage, Mr Obama noted that prospective GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum recently told an interviewer he would decline an invitation to a same-sex wedding of a friend or loved one, “To which gays and lesbians across the country responded: ‘That’s not going to be a problem. Don’t sweat that one.’”

    The President also introduced “Luther”, his “anger translator” – played by Keegan-Michael Key of the comedy duo Key and Peele. While Mr Obama made his characteristically relaxed pronouncements, “Luther” offered a less mellow translation. “In our fast changing world, traditions like the White House Correspondents’ Dinner are important,” said Mr Obama, translated by an irate Luther as: “I mean really what is this dinner? And why am I required to go to it?”

    United States President Barack Obama, right, uses actor Keegan-Michael Key from Key & Peele to play the part of 'Luther, President Obama's anger translator'
    United States President Barack Obama, right, uses actor Keegan-Michael Key from Key & Peele to play the part of ‘Luther, President Obama’s anger translator’

    The annual event – which brings together politicians, the Washington press corps, and a smattering of Hollywood celebrities – is known to many as “nerd prom”. Guest host Cecily Strong acknowledged as much when she joked, “Some of the cast of the epic fantasy series Game of Thrones is here, and they told me that even they have never seen this many nerds before.”

    Ms Strong, who has a day-job as a cast member on Saturday Night Live, made light of recent controversies concerning the relationship between law enforcement and the black community, saying, “President Obama, your hair is so white now it can talk back to the police.” She also suggested that the Secret Service, which makes up Mr Obama’s security detail, is “the only law enforcement agency that will get in trouble if a black man gets shot.”

    If Hillary Clinton wins the race to the White House in 2016, she will have to address the Correspondents’ Dinner herself the following year. Of Ms Clinton, Ms Strong said, “I think she feels the same way Meryl Streep feels when she’s asked to audition for something: ‘Are you kidding me? You’re making me go through this? You know I’m going to win.’ ”

    Mr Obama, too, joked about his former Secretary of State’s road tripping campaign, saying the US economy had become so dire, “I had a friend, just a few weeks ago, she was making millions of dollars a year – and now she’s living out of a van in Iowa.”

  • First home HIV test goes on sale

    First home HIV test goes on sale

    The first HIV home testing kit to be approved for use in the UK has gone on sale today.

    The kit, made by the company BioSure UK, can provide results within 15 minutes and does not require a laboratory to check results.

    Available online for £29.95, the package includes a syringe and other equipment and requires a single drop of blood to operate.

    The test administrated by the kit is 99.7% accurate and is the first to bear the European ‘CE’ mark of regulatory approval.

    Although sexual health has become less of a taboo subject, ensuring that people get tested for STDs remains a big issue. The NHS now offers DIY kits for those worried they might have caught something from a partner and don’t want to get tested by a doctor, but home HIV screening has not been possible — at least until today.

    Britain’s first legally-approved HIV test is now on sale, promising 99.7 percent accuracy from three months after a person suspects they may have been exposed to the infection. It requires a drop of blood and can provide a clear result in around 15 minutes.

    It’s hoped that by offering the DIY test, Britons will help lower the risk of passing on the disease to other people. According to the National Aids Trust, almost half of the people living with HIV find out late, meaning they’ve carried the virus for at least four years.

    If the disease is diagnosed earlier, sufferers can receive treatment that makes it more manageable. Right now, the test is only available online for £29.95. Should a test show a positive result, it must then be confirmed with a professional health worker.

    The product is not available in Northern Ireland, where such home kits are outlawed.

    Free HIV tests can be obtained on the NHS across the UK.

  • Vijay Mallya: Faces Exit – From bad to worse for ‘King of Good Times’

    Vijay Mallya: Faces Exit – From bad to worse for ‘King of Good Times’

    NEW DELHI: Things appear to be going from bad to worse for Vijay Mallya, once known as ‘King of Good Times’, with the board of a company he nurtured into India’s largest liquor maker asking him to quit.

    Mallya, already fighting on a number of other fronts including the ‘wilful defaulter’ charges, recently also saw one of the Kingfisher BSE ­4.32 % aircraft being sold to a scrap dealer in Mumbai, who sold it after tearning it apart into pieces.

    This followed lenders taking possession of Kingfisher House near airport in Mumbai, on which tax department has also staked its claim to recover its own dues.

    Mallya, however, continues to strike a defiant note and has refused to step down while taking refuse in “certain contractual obligations” that require United Spirits’ current owner Diageo to back his position as Chairman.

    While Diageo is yet to make its position public, sources have said that the UK­based liquor giant, which spent USD three billion (about Rs 20,000 crore) to buy 55 per cent stake in USL, may invoke “certain defaults” on the part of Mallya and his UB Group to support the board resolution of his ouster if shareholders are required to vote on the same.

    The board is already dominated by Diageo representatives with Mallya being the only one from his UB Group, which now owns just about 3 per cent stake in USL including a fractional 0.01 per cent in his name.

    Mallya has been in the dock ever since his ambitious airline venture Kingfisher landed in financial troubles and got eventually grounded in October 2012.

    Thereafter, Mallya had to sell some of his assets, including controlling stake in USL to Diageo.

    The UB Group, where Mallya became chairman at the age of 28 after death of his father in 1983, was considered one of India’s largest conglomerates till a few years ago with turnover of over USD 4 billion and market value of USD 12 billion.

     

     

  • Indian American Coal Scientist Dr. Hardarshan Singh Valia Honored with Three Awards

    Indian American Coal Scientist Dr. Hardarshan Singh Valia Honored with Three Awards

    New York (TIP): Dr. Hardarshan Singh Valia, has the distinction to be the only Coal Scientist in the world who is honored with all three prestigious awards bestowed upon him by the American Steel Industry.

    He is the first-ever Indian American to receive the Iron & Steel Society’s Joseph Becker Award (for distinguished achievement in coal technology) for his work on coal usage in the steel industry.

    He is the First ever Indian and Second ever Asian person to receive Iron & Steel Society’s Joseph Becker Award (for distinguished achievement in Coal Technology) for his work on Coal Usage in Steel Industry. Dr. Valia was awarded Joseph Kapitan Award (best paper) from the Association for Iron and Steel Technology on his work regarding unique properties of Indiana coals. He is also a recipient of the American Iron and Institute Medal. These honors have brought him the distinction of the only Coal Scientist in the world to have received all the three awards offered by American Steel Industry related organizations.

    “It is like a Hollywood actor winning all three, the Academy Award, Grammy Award and the Amy Award,” said Rajinder Singh Mago, a friend.

    Dr. Valia recently presented his book entitled “Indiana Coals and the Steel Industry” to Senator Dan Coats of Indiana who is tirelessly working to improve economy and create jobs in Southern Indiana by unlocking affordable energy while protecting the environment. The book is collaborated with Dr. M. Mastalerz, the State Coal Geologist of Indiana Geological Survey.

    Utilizing certain unique properties of Indiana coals, Dr. Valia, in collaboration with Allen Ellis and other scientists from Purdue University, earned a patent entitled “Multipurpose Coke Plant for Synthetic Fuel Production.” Such a process would result in not only production of coke for the steel industry but can also produce diesel oil, methane gas, hydrogen, fertilizer, and power. Such an approach would usher in totally new industry to coal belt of southern Indiana where coal production is declining as it is mainly utilized to power industrial sector. This would help in revitalizing the industry, bringing jobs and improving the economy of the region. This also has implications for the nation as a whole. America has the largest global share of recoverable coal reserves that will last for more than 200 years.

    “One needs to recover “value added” products from coal rather than just burning it in the power plants,” said Dr. Valia, “thereby reducing our dependence on foreign liquid fuels,” he added. Purdue research Foundation under the leadership of Dr. Robert Kramer and Dr. Valia, is leading such an effort.

    Dr. Valia’s emphasis on production of diesel fuels from coal was also presented in a series of his lectures in India, as India has large resources of coal but has shortage of oil.

    Dr. Valia has published 85 articles, contributed to 5 books (including Making, Shaping, and Treating of Steel), chaired 30 National/International conferences, taught 20 courses worldwide, authored two patents, consulted to many industries around the world.

    Dr. Valia, after retiring as a Staff Scientist from Arcelor Mittal (formerly Inland Steel Company), started his own consulting firm Coal Science Inc. and also jointly owns Coal science Laboratory in Gary, Indiana.

    Dr. Valia received his Masters in Applied Geology from Nagpur University and Masters in Geology from Bryn Mawr College.

     

  • Bombay Velvet  Movie Review – Trailer

    Bombay Velvet Movie Review – Trailer

    Actor Ranbir Kapoor rises to be an influential name in Bombay of the Sixties in the second trailer of Bombay Velvet.

    Watch Ranbir Kapoor’s journey from being a cage-fighter to becoming ‘bigshot’ Johnny Balraj with the help of Karan Johar, who plays a Parsi businessman named Kaizad Khambatta in the film.

    Kaizad, the antagonist of Bombay Velvet, helps Johnny rise to power by devising money minting techniques, even if they are unlawful in nature. But their eventual fallout is chronicled in the second trailer of the film.

    Film’s leads Ranbir Kapoor, Anushka Sharma and Karan Johar were candidly caught with Kay Kay Menon, Anurag Kashyap and other crew members at the event. The BV team knows how to have fun and we witnessed them, taking digs at each other in a fun way, every now and then.

    “My character, Khambatta is humorous and intrigued in the movie. Ranbir co-directed the movie. I used to get one direction from Anurag & three others from him”, said Karan Johar and also added, “I’ve done Bombay Velvet for Rs.11. I’m not only inspired but also cheap. *laughs*”

    Our bigshot Ranbir Kapoor is quite a hugger and revealed that “Anurag was like a teddy bear on the set.” “After a long time I took a role only based on the amazing script of the movie”, said RK. The film’s leading lady, Anushka had Geeta Dutt as her point of reference for her role in the film.

    Bombay Velvet is based on Prof Gyan Prakash’s book Bombay Fables. Actress Anushka Sharma plays a jazz singer and Ranbir’s love interest in the film. The second trailer shows how Johnny and Kaizad’s partnership turns bitter towards the end, paving way for rivalry among the former allies.

  • Nepal Earthquake: Rescuers Struggle to Reach Villages as Toll Tops 3,800

    Nepal Earthquake: Rescuers Struggle to Reach Villages as Toll Tops 3,800

    BHAKTAPUR, Nepal — Rescuers struggled to reach Nepal’s more rural communities on Monday to assess the damage from a devastating earthquake that has left more than 3,800 people dead.

    [quote_box_right]Hit by severe shortage of food, water, electricity and medicines and buffeted by fear, tens of thousands of people are out in the open here as quake-hit Nepal today desperately sought international help to tide over a looming crisis with death toll soaring.[/quote_box_right]

    The 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Saturday, killing thousands and flattening centuries-old buildings in the capital city of Kathmandu. The temblor also sparked a deadly avalanche on Mount Everest.

    Kathmandu residents were continuing to sleep outside following two days of powerful aftershocks. The official death toll jumped above 3,800 on Monday, with more than 7,100 others injured, according to Nepal’s National Emergency Operation Center. Aid agencies warned that figure could leap higher once rescuers make it to isolated rural communities.

    “Villages in the areas affected near the epicenter are literally perched on the sides of large mountain faces and are made from simple stone and rock construction,” Matt Darvas, a Nepal-based worker with the Christian charity World Vision, said in a statement from the group.

    More than 48 hours after the 7.9 magnitude temblor shook the Himalayan nation, injuring more than 8,000 people and leaving thousands more homeless, multi-nation rescue teams, including from India, carried out relief works.

    Armed with modern equipment, dumpers and earth removers and aided by sniffer dogs, disaster relief workers were trying to locate possible survivors against fading hopes.
    The quake that flattened homes and buildings and the subsequent powerful aftershocks forced people out to live in the open under plastic tents barely shielding them from cold and rains that pounded the city last night.

    Fuel and medicines were also in short supply. The picture was the same in suburbs of Kathmandu and in other rural areas.

    Nepal’s top bureaucrat Leela Mani Paudel said the immediate and big challenge was relief. “We urge foreign countries to give us special relief materials and medical teams. We are really desperate for more foreign expertise to pull through this crisis,” he said.

    “We are appealing for tents, dry goods, blankets, mattresses, and 80 different medicines that we desperately need now,” he told a press conference.

    Nepal does not have helicopters or the expertise to rescue survivors. It needs help in the form of orthopaedic doctors, nerve specialists, anaesthetists, surgeons and paramedics, Paudel said.

    Hundreds of people are still trapped under tonnes of rubble in capital Kathmandu and some of the worst-affected remote mountainous areas amid concerns that toll could cross 5,000 mark, authorities said.

    “The death toll in Nepal from the earthquake that struck two days ago has risen to 3,726,” Nepalese police spokesman Kamal Singh Bam said today.

    Home ministry’s disaster management division said nearly 7,000 people were injured. 1,053 people are reported killed in the Kathmandu Valley alone and 875 in Sindhupalchowk.

    Officials and aid agencies have warned that the casualties could rise as rescue teams reach remote mountainous areas of western Nepal.

    “Villages are routinely affected by landslides, and it’s not uncommon for entire villages of 200, 300, up to 1,000 people to be completely buried by rock falls,” aid agency World Vision spokesman Matt Darvas said.

    The blocked roads, downed power lines and overcrowded hospitals along with fresh tremors are hampering rescue efforts to locate survivors of the quake.

    More than 700 disaster relief experts drawn from the National Disaster Relief Force have been deployed by India.

    India has mounted a major rescue and rehabilitation effort, deploying 13 military aircraft which carried field hospitals, medicines, blankets, 50 tonnes of water and other materials.

    A senior-level inter-ministerial team from India has arrived here to assess how India can assist in the relief operations. Teams of health experts from AIIMS and Safdarjung hospital Delhi have also been deployed.

    Mass cremations are being held here continuously. As the death toll rises, the authorities are working on disposing of the bodies as quickly as possible to prevent a health hazard.
    Nepal has declared a state of emergency in the wake of the disaster, the worst in over 80 years.

    Aid flights are coming in continuously due to which Kathmandu airport is running out of parking bays. Many planes are having to wait before getting permission to land.
    Chaos prevailed in the country’s only international airport here with hundreds waiting to be evacuated.

    While 2,500 Indians have been evacuated so far, scores of people were still waiting outside the Tribhuvan International Airport to board commercial and defence aircraft to head for home.

    UN agencies say Nepal is running out of water and food and nearly one million children urgently need humanitarian assistance as they were particularly vulnerable.

  • Pakistan Buys 110 JF-17 fighter jets from China

    Pakistan Buys 110 JF-17 fighter jets from China

    ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will acquire 110 latest JF-17 Thunder fighter jets from China as the two countries forge closer economic and defence cooperation following President Xi Jinping’s visit to Islamabad earlier this week, a media report said on Saturday.

    Radio Pakistan reported that China will deliver the first batch of 50 jets over a period of three years. The head of Chinese aircraft industry told a Chinese daily that under the contract signed between the two countries, Pakistan will receive a total of 110 JF-17 Thunder fighter aircraft from China.

    It is not clear when the delivery of the remaining 60 jets will be completed.

    The JF-17 Thunder is also built in Pakistan as China has already transferred its technology. But Pakistan needs more of these jets at faster pace due to its fight against Taliban militants.

    Xi also launched a $46 billion economic corridor to link China’s western region to Pakistan’s Gwadar port on the Arabian Sea.

    During Xi’s visit, a fleet of eight JF-17 jets escorted the Chinese president’s plane when it entered Pakistan’s airspace. The two countries signed 51 agreements to boost economic cooperation during Xi’s trip. Earlier, reports said China would provide eight latest submarines to Pakistan, more than doubling its fleet, in a deal worth $4-5 billion.

     

  • ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi dead: Claims Radio Iran

    ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi dead: Claims Radio Iran

    NEW DELHI: The enigmatic chief of Islamic State jihadist group Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is dead, Radio Iran has reported on Monday.

    Earlier, a Guardian report quoting sources with inside knowledge of the group reported that al-Baghdadi was severely injured in a US-led coalition air strike in March.

    According to that report, al-Baghdadi was inujred at al-Baaj district of Nineveh, close to the Syrian border. It also said he was making a slow recovery and was out of his day-to-day control of the jihadist group.

    Al-Baghdadi, believed to be in his 40s, had a $10 million US bounty on his head. Since taking the reins of the Islamic State in 2010, he had transformed it from a local branch of al-Qaida into an independent transnational military force, positioning himself as perhaps the pre-eminent figure in the global jihadist community.

    ISIS suffered a series of major setbacks in the recent months with many of its top commanders being killed or severely injured.

    Recently, a top Iraqi military commander Lieutenant General Abdul Amir al Shammari told Sky News that his forces had killed “more than 250 terrorists in the past few days”.

    He said this had been achieved with assistance from the Iraqi air force, military helicopters and coalition air strikes. “The coalition strikes provided cover for our troops to push forward.”

    Under the leadership of al-Baghdadi, the Islamic State, which called itself as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) earlier, had gained ground across northern and western Iraq in a lightning advance in June and July last year, causing several of Iraq’s army and police divisions to fall into disarray.

    It had carried out thousands of public executions using brutal methods and implemented strict Islamic law in areas they captured, which sent shockwave across the global community.

     

  • TRAI Website hacked by Anonymous India

    TRAI Website hacked by Anonymous India

    The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s (TRAI) website has been allegedly taken down after they released all the email IDs of those who responded to their consultation paper on Net neutrality. Anonymous India, group of hackers, has claimed credit for taking down the website with a DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attack.

    TRAI had released over one million names, email IDs and the contents of their responses in a downloadable PDF format on the TRAI website for public viewing.

    TRAI had earlier asked for responses from service providers, their associations and general public for their views on regulating OTT or over-the-top applications and services which are accessible over the internet. Their draft consultation paper also addressed issues about security concerns and net neutrality. They received more than a million responses.

    The responses have been categorised into “Comments from Service Providers,” “Comments from Service Provider Associations” and “Comments from other stakeholders.” The responses from “other stakeholders”, namely the general public has been sorted datewise for “easy access.” One can search for a name or an Email ID with as simple a search command as Ctrl+F.

    Comments in the third category is being updated as and when the comments for a particular date has been complied.

    While this seems to be a standard procedure for all of TRAI’s consultation papers in the name of transparency, it has not gone down well with the general public, with some calling it “a blatant violation of privacy”. Several have also expressed their concerns over marketeers and spammers for whom the million plus emails are a goldmine.

  • Indian American Scientist Sangeeta Bhatia at MIT Wins 250,000 Dollars Heinz Award

    Indian American Scientist Sangeeta Bhatia at MIT Wins 250,000 Dollars Heinz Award

    WASHINGTON:  An Indian-American scientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who has developed artificial human microlivers for drug testing, has won a prestigious 250,000 dollars Heinz award for her work in tissue engineering and disease detection.

    Sangeeta Bhatia at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has been named the recipient of the 2015 Heinz Award for Technology, the Economy, and Employment.

    The award includes an unrestricted prize of 250,000 dollars. The Heinz Awards annually recognise individuals for their extraordinary contributions to arts and humanities; environment; human condition; public policy; and technology, the economy, and employment.

    “This type of recognition helps to bring science into the public eye so that everyone can appreciate the dedication and innovation that is happening in laboratories all over the country,” said Ms Bhatia, the John J and Dorothy Wilson Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

    Ms Bhatia’s team has pioneered the fabrication of artificial human microlivers, which are being used by many biopharmaceutical companies to test the toxicity of drug candidates.

    Ms Bhatia is also using microlivers in the lab to model malaria infection and test drugs that can eradicate malaria parasites completely – even the parasite reservoirs that remain in the liver after a patient’s symptoms subside.

    She hopes to eventually develop implantable liver tissue as a complement or substitute for whole-organ transplant.

    In her study of cancer and the tumour microenvironment, Ms Bhatia’s team has developed synthetic biomarkers that are paving the way for simple, low-cost cancer diagnostics.

    Their engineered nanoparticles interact with tumour proteins in the body and release hundreds of these biomarkers, which can be detected in urine.

    One application relies on a paper-strip urine test that can reveal the presence of cancer within minutes in mouse models.

    Ms Bhatia is also recognised for her passion in promoting the advancement of women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.

    While a graduate student at MIT, Ms Bhatia helped start Keys to Empowering Youth (KEYs), a programme that engages middle school girls with science and engineering through hands-on activities and mentorship from MIT students.

    “I’m hopeful that the visibility associated with this award can inspire young girls by showing them what a rewarding profession – and life – STEM can yield,” Ms Bhatia said.

    Ms Bhatia will receive her award on May 13 at a ceremony in Pittsburgh. She will be honoured along with the Heinz Award recipients in the four other categories.

    The recipients include Roz Chast, a best-selling illustrator and cartoonist (arts and humanities); Frederica Perera, an environmental health researcher at Columbia University (environment); William McNulty and Jacob Wood, founders of Team Rubicon (human condition); and Aaron Wolf, a geoscientist and professor at Oregon State University (public policy).

  • Air India operates additional flights, and carries relief material free of cost to Kathmandu

    Air India operates additional flights, and carries relief material free of cost to Kathmandu

    Air Indians along with the people of India grieve for the families in Nepal, India, Tibet and Bangladesh affected by the earthquake in Nepal past Saturday.

    Air Indians join everyone’s prayers for the departed souls and the grieving families.

    After Yemen, Libya, Tunisia, Lebanon and several other evacuations and national emergencies, national carrier Air India has, yet again, risen to the occasion in times of crisis, announcing the operation of two additional flights to and from Kathmandu on 26th April, to fly Nepali people wishing to reach home to their families, and for people stranded in Nepal to fly out.

    India’s National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) team was sent to Katmandu from Kolkata by AIR INDIA special flight AI-1247 on emergency duty.

    Air India is carrying relief material free of charge on priority basis, on its flights to Kathmandu, both from Delhi and Kolkata.

    The regular scheduled operations from Delhi and Kolkata have also resumed since yesterday after opening up of the Kathmandu airport.

    Air India operates two daily flights out of Delhi.  From Kolkata, there is a flight every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.