Month: October 2016

  • Indian American UCLA Professor Neil Garg Launches Online Tutorials in Organic Chemistry

    Indian American UCLA Professor Neil Garg Launches Online Tutorials in Organic Chemistry

    UCLA’s Professor of the Year, Indian American, Neil Garg has revolutionized the way students view and study organic chemistry in California.

    Garg has been extremely successful in getting UCLA students to love his new way of fun tutorials.

    Garg’s new system termed ‘BACON’ (Biology And Chemistry Online Notes) is a set of fun and engaging online tutorials that make connections between organic chemistry and topics as sports, health, genetics and even popular television shows.

    “The field of organic chemistry has made a tremendous mistake,” Garg said, “in not showing students and the general public its importance and why they should love it — or at the very least, appreciate it.”

    “BACON makes organic chemistry less intimidating and really helps students learn chemical reactions and retain the knowledge … while keeping the stress level down, said Michael Bailey, Jr., a UCLA senior and pre-medicine major. “The BACON tutorials completely changed my view of organic chemistry. I laughed, I cried, I learned.”

    “BACON makes organic chemistry relevant and important to students,” said Vandan Kasar, a recent UCLA graduate who formerly served as an undergraduate assistant to Garg. “BACON actually makes the material stick long-term because students have associated it with a process or product that they use in their everyday lives.”

    Garg developed BACON with the assistance of graduate student Tejas Shah and several other UCLA students over the course of two years, and he continues to add new content.

    The labor-intensive project has received more than $20,000 in financial support donated by individuals and pharmaceutical companies.

    “I enjoy thinking about how to teach students the relevance of organic chemistry in an engaging way,” Garg said. “So many students don’t appreciate organic chemistry and the important impact it makes on our lives. It’s a teaching challenge to help change students’ perceptions about organic chemistry, and I welcome the challenge.

    “Our students deserve the best education,” he said, adding, “Other students deserve that, too,” among them the more than 8,000 students who have used or are currently using BACON at more than 30 colleges and universities, including Duke University, UC Irvine, Cal State Long Beach, Emory University, University of Vermont, and universities in Italy, Japan and Switzerland.

    College-level educators who are interested in the tutorials, which are designed for use as a supplement to undergraduate organic chemistry courses, are invited to visit the BACON website.
    AP and honors high school chemistry teachers are also welcome to sign up, but BACON might be too advanced for their students, said Garg, who added that he’s considering adding tutorials for them.

    BACON is just one of Garg’s many innovative approaches to teaching. Especially popular among his students is an extra-credit project in which they produce music videos about organic chemistry and an assignment in which honors students produce videos about careers that incorporate organic chemistry. Currently, Garg is working with colleagues Lucas Morrill and Jacquelin Kammeyer to revamp UCLA’s organic chemistry laboratories for chemistry majors and develop a new curriculum that is challenging, relevant and fun.

    Garg is the recipient of many honors, including a 2016 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2015 Gold Shield Faculty Prize, UCLA’s prestigious 2014 Eby Award for the Art of Teaching and UCLA’s 2012-2013 BruinWalk.com’s Professor of the Year.

  • New Jersey Boy Battling Cancer Dies Days After Being Honored by Police with Surprise Hero-Themed Parade

    New Jersey Boy Battling Cancer Dies Days After Being Honored by Police with Surprise Hero-Themed Parade

    JERSEY CITY, New Jersey – A 9-year-old boy battling cancer succumbed to his illness Oct. 22., days after first responders in Jersey City threw him a surprise hero-themed parade, the police officer who organized the event confirmed.

    Fourth grader Parth Patel was diagnosed in 2014 with Ewing Sarcoma, a form of cancer that typically occurs in areas around the bones in children and young adults.

    Jersey City Police Officer Adrien Murrell had heard about Parth’s battle with cancer, and having lost her brother to a terminal illness, wanted to do something special for the 9-year-old.

    So, more than 100 police officers, firefighters, and EMTs surprised 9-year-old Parth Patel, who is diagnosed with cancer, with a hero-themed parade from his house on Nelson Avenue to School 27 on North Street in Jersey City on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2016, followed by a pizza party in the auditorium.

    New Jersey Boy Battling Cancer Dies Days After Being Honored by Police with Surprise Hero-Themed Parade
    New Jersey Boy Battling Cancer Dies Days After Being Honored by Police with Surprise Hero-Themed Parade

    Parth’s classmates cheered him on during the event. The Marty Lyons Foundation held a pizza party in the school’s auditorium after the parade, where Parth was presented a key to Jersey City by Mayor Steve Fulop.

    But Parth, who suffered from Ewing Sarcoma, died three days later, leaving his family and the first responder community heartbroken.

    Funeral services were held Oct. 25 morning for Parth Patel, as family and friends gathered for the viewing and funeral today, local first responders once again turned out in full force to pay their respects. Officers from the Jersey City and Newark police departments, as well as the Hudson County Sheriff’s Office and EMTs lined up outside Riotto Funeral Home on Kennedy Boulevard, some on motorcycles, others on horseback.

    Jersey City police officers even carried the boy’s casket out of the funeral home and placed it into a hearse following the service.

    On the day of the parade, Parth got a special ride in a Batmobile-themed Chevrolet Camaro, which made another appearance outside the funeral home today. A note signed by Batman and Batgirl was placed inside the vehicle, accompanied by photos of the smiling boy.

    “To our hero, Parth, rest in peace,” the note read.

    “A beautiful life that came to an end, he died as he lived, everyone’s friend,” the boy’s sister Hileri Patel wrote on her Facebook page. “In our hearts a memory will always be kept, of one who loved and never forget. We all love this little superhero but we lost him when we weren’t ready.”

    With Inputs from NJ.com

  • Barack Obama’s Best Takedowns Of Donald Trump

    Barack Obama’s Best Takedowns Of Donald Trump

    Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has no shortage of critics. But the most outspoken – and funniest – is arguably none other than President Barack Obama, who has mastered the art of taking jabs at The Donald with barbed jokes. Here are his best takedowns of Trump so far.

    1. Conspiracy-Theoriest-in-Chief

    Obama had a lot of pep during the 2011 White House Correspondents Dinner. Earlier that week, the state of Hawaii had released his long-form birth certificate, putting an end the arguably racist ‘birther movement’ led by Donald Trump. The birthers argued that Obama wasn’t born in America, so he was ineligible to be president. But only someone who sleeps in a tinfoil bed could cling to that conspiracy after Obama’s records were released.

    And Obama wanted to share that moment with Trump.

    “No one is happier to put this birth certificate matter to rest than The Donald. And that’s because he can get back to focusing on the issues that matter. Like did we fake the moon landing? What really happened in Roswell? And where are Biggie and Tupac?”

    2. Backing Trump’s Leadership

    At that same 2011 dinner, Obama backed Trump’s leadership credentials.

    “All kidding aside, we all know about [Trump’s] credentials and breadth of experience. For example…on an episode of The Celebrity Apprentice, at the steak house, the men’s cooking team did not impress the judges…and there was a lot of blame to go around. But you, Mr. Trump, recognized that the real problem was a lack of leadership. So ultimately you didn’t blame Lil Jon or Meatloaf. You fired Gary Busey. And these are the kind of decisions that would keep me up at night.”

    3. Weighing in on the Wall

    Trump hasn’t served a day in the Oval Office, but the White House is already having to clean up his messes. Last April, President Obama revealed that he has to spend time discussing the implications of The Donald’s foreign policy with world leaders who are worried about a possible Trump presidency.

    “I am getting questions constantly from foreign leaders about some of the wackier suggestions that are being made,” Obama told the White House press corps last April.

    Those suggestions of course include building building a giant wall along the Mexican-American border wall and to preventing cross-border remittances – i.e. blocking people living in the United States from sending money to Mexico.

    “Good luck with that,” Obama quipped.

    4. The Millennial President

    When endorsing Hillary Clinton last July, Obama suggested that every millennial you know has basically the same presidential qualifications as Trump, who has mastered riling up supporters with his outrageous posts on Twitter.

    “Everybody can tweet, but nobody actually knows what it takes to do the job until you’ve sat behind the desk,” Obama told supporters at a rally in Wisconsin. “I mean, Sasha [Obama’s younger daughter] tweets, but she doesn’t thereby think that she thereby should be sitting behind the desk.”

    He also hammered Trump’s foreign policy credentials while praising Clinton’s work as secretary of state.

    “America is really great,” he told the crowd, countering Trump’s campaign slogan. “Part of the reason for that is because we had an outstanding secretary of state. Part of the reason is that Hillary understood and continues to understand that a bunch of tough talk doesn’t replace the hard work of diplomacy. A bunch of phoney bluster doesn’t keep us safe. And she understands that we can’t retreat from a world that needs American leadership.”

    5. Vetting Trump’s Business Record

    Obama has spent years criticizing Trump’s credibility. But he doesn’t expect Trump will change his ways and start taking things like foreign policy seriously.

    “The Donald is not really a plans guy,” he said at the Democratic National Convention last July. “He’s not really a facts guy either. He calls himself a business guy, which is true. But I have to say, I know plenty of businessmen and women who have achieved remarkable success without leaving a trail of lawsuits, and unpaid workers and people feeling like they got cheated. Does anyone really believe that a guy who’s spent his 70 years on this earth showing no regard for working people is suddenly going to become your champion?”

  • Indian American Family Robbed at Gunpoint in their Home

    Indian American Family Robbed at Gunpoint in their Home

    CHESTER SPRINGS, PA (TIP) — An Indian American family was robbed at gunpoint in their own home in broad daylight by two masked men in Pennsylvania.

    Men with guns broke into Mahendra Patel’s home in Chester Springs Tuesday, Oct 25, morning.

    “They came inside and showed the gun,” Patel said. Patel says they barged in through an unlocked backdoor.

    As one gunman kept an eye on family members in the living room, the other forced Patel’s teenage grandson to fill a bag with cash and jewelry.

    When he was done, the second gunman bound the grandson’s hands together.

    “My grandson was very scared. They tied up his hands. They closed the door,” Patel said.

    Patel says there was also a third person who was inside a getaway car parked nearby.

    But the gunmen had one more order before they left.

    “They said, ‘Get up. Go into the bathroom.’ He told us to ‘count to 1000. If you come out before that, I will shoot you,’” Patel said.

    The thieves ended up getting away with an unspecified amount of cash and jewelry.

    Mahendra Patel says the monetary loss means a lot less to him then the effect this has had on his family, especially his grandson.

    “I dislike this whole thing because my grandson was very scared,” Patel said.

  • Living in America with the dream of providing ‘Roti, Kapda and Makan’ for every Indian

    Living in America with the dream of providing ‘Roti, Kapda and Makan’ for every Indian

    dr-vaijnath-m-chakote-mdFrom an unknown, remote village of Karnataka to New York. The journey was not only difficult but also full of challenges. He overcame all challenges, achieved extraordinary success, but at heart, he is the same village boy who still dreams of bringing changes around. In a nutshell, that is how one can define Dr. Vaijinath Chakote – a global citizen but Indian at core.

    Born in Konmelkunda village in Bidar district, Karnataka, Vaijinath Chakote came from a very humble background. His farmer father and housewife mother could not provide him with any luxury but gave the most important gift of life – moral values. Education, honesty, serving the community, and helping the poor – those were the values his parents emphasized on. And those moral principles made him what he is today – a man who always keeps his head high with feet on ground.

    Today, Dr. Vaijinath Chakote, a renowned internist, holds the title of medical director in a number of practices in the tri-state area but never forgets his roots.

    “I belong to a very remote village in India where in my school there was no table or chair. We had to sit on the mud floor”, he recollects those early days of struggle.

    Uponcompletion of primary education from his village, Vaijinath Chakote went to Hyderabad and Bidar for further studies and finally to Karnataka Institute of Medical Science in Hubli from where he got his medical degree.

    Then he worked in many countries like Iran, England, and Ireland and finally landed in USA in 1984.

    Dr. Vaijinath Chakote, an internist in Rockaway Beach, New York, is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Brookdale Hospital Medical Center and Lenox Hill Hospital. He is one of 67 doctors atBrookdale Hospital Medical Centerand one of 177 at Lenox Hill Hospital who specialize in Internal Medicine. During his decade long medical career Dr. Chakote has developed successful practices servicing patients with a wide array of care needs. Empire Medical Services is one of them that serve low-income communities in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Rockaway Beach, Flushing, and the surrounding areas. Catering to its patients is the main goal of Empire Medical Services that aimsto continue to provide individualized care to every patient and to be an ongoing educational resource for the surrounding medical community.

    Chakote Family. (L to R): Kirti Chakote, Dr. Jyoti Chakote, Kalpita Chakote, Dr. V Chakote, Karunesh Chakote
    Chakote Family. (L to R): Kirti Chakote, Dr. Jyoti Chakote, Kalpita Chakote, Dr. V Chakote, Karunesh Chakote

    Dr. Chakote is also serving as the current president of AAPI of Queens and Long Island that represents 660 active physicians and donates more than $60,000 annually for charitable purposes. He received numerous awards for his charitable activities including Nassau County Human’sRights’ Commission Award (first Asian to be awarded in 50 years), mahatma Gandhi Samman, and Hind Ratan-Jewel India- Award among others.

    Giving back to the community is the motto of his life – be it in America or back home in India. He is hosting a Diwali party for 350 people in a 7-star hotel with unlimited drinks and food, which is entirely free of cost. He is spending 50,000 dollars from his pocket to host this ‘Glamorous and beautiful’ event in Long Island on October 21.

    “My only dream is to serve the community -mainly in India – more so in my village where I come from. There are so many things to do (there). Still there is no drinking water in my village, no school. I feel so bad when I see my villagers are suffering so much.”

    He also feels that all Indians should work together for India and the whole world for harmony and peace. “The world recognizes Indians as the peace-loving people. We should continue the good work to maintain that. We should lead the world the way Mahatma Gandhi did.”

    Dr Chakote receiving Mahatma Gandhi Samman - 2012 from Rt. Hon'ble Baroness Sandip Verma, Minister of Energy & Climate Change, U.K. on 12th October 2012 at House of Lords, London U.K.
    Dr Chakote receiving Mahatma Gandhi Samman – 2012 from Rt. Hon’ble Baroness Sandip Verma, Minister of Energy & Climate Change, U.K. on 12th October 2012 at House of Lords, London U.K.

    Dr. Chakote praises the contributions of many Indians who donate thousands of dollars for many charitable works here but feelsthat prosperous Indian American community should come forward and provide the basic amenities in their respective places in India. “Roti, kapda, aur makan – these basic needs are still not there in many places. There is no drinking water, no roads, no proper transportation system. Because of lack of proper infrastructural systems like toilets, communicable diseases are spreading. ”

    Dr. Chakote's talented daughter Kalpita giving a dance performance
    Dr. Chakote’s talented daughter Kalpita giving a dance performance

    “In 40 years the conditions of rural India have not changed much. In fact, it has become worse. The big cities are getting bigger but villages are still in darkness. That’s why villagers are shifting to towns for a better life and the towns are unable to cope up with the increased population”, he further added.

    Dr. Chakote firmly believes that together we can change the world with honesty, sincerity, hard work, and without any discrimination.

    Dr. Chakote is married to Jyoti who is a doctor. The couple have three children. The eldest Karunesh, 23 studies at Dental College, Pittsburg; the middle one Kirti, 22, is a student of Albany Medical College. The youngest Kalpita, 16 is a high school student. She excels as a Bharat Natyam dancer and had Arrangetram at the age of 12. She is a regular performer at many prestigious events.

  • India stays at 130 on Ease of Doing Business ranks

    India stays at 130 on Ease of Doing Business ranks

    WASHINGTON (TIP): India has a lot of hard work ahead of itself to make it to the top 50 countries on the World Bank’s Doing Business list. It was ranked 130 in ranking for 2017 released on Tuesday, moving up just one small rung over 131 in 2016.

    The DIPP said in a statement that over the past two years, the government has implemented a host of reforms to make it easier for businesses to start, operate and exit.

    “It is therefore disappointing that these achievements are not covered by the report due to methodological issues,” it said on Tuesday. The top 10 positions went to the usual suspects: New Zealand was first followed by Singapore, Denmark, Hong Kong, Republic of Korea, Norway, United Kingdom, United States, Sweden and Macedonia. And based on reforms undertaken, Pakistan was among the top 10 improvers. India has a long way to go, evidently, before it makes it to the top 50 group, a goal set for his government by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In fact, on a key criterion of Doing Business,

    “Starting a Business”, India has slipped four positions from 151 in 2015 to 155, It also fell on “Dealing with Construction permits” (184 to 186), “getting credit” (42 to 44),

    “Protecting ministry investors

    (10 to 13). Source: HT

  • Embraer to pay $205 million  in graft settlement

    Embraer to pay $205 million in graft settlement

    NEW YORK/ NEW DELHI (TIP): Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer has agreed to pay over $205 million to resolve charges of corruption and making bribe payments to officials in foreign nations, including $5.76 million allegedly paid to an agent in India in connection with the sale of three military aircraft for Indian Air Force.

    The corruption charges in India relate to payment of $5.76 million to an agent in kickbacks for clinching a deal for the sale of three highly specialised military aircraft for the IAF’s Airborne Early Warning and Control System.

    Embraer entered into the resolution to resolve criminal charges and agreed to pay a penalty of more than $107 million in connection with schemes involving the bribery of government officials in the Dominican Republic, Saudi Arabia and Mozambique, and to pay millions more in falsely recorded payments in India via a sham agency agreement, the US justice department said. Under the settlement, apart from the $107 million penalty to the justice department as part of a deferred prosecution agreement, Embraer must also pay more than $98 million in disgorgement and interest to the Securities and Exchange Commission. According to the company’s admissions, Embraer executives and employees paid bribes to government officials and falsified books and records in connection with aircraft sales to foreign governments and state-owned entities in multiple countries.

    Embraer said that investigators found “the company was responsible for misdeeds in four transactions between 2007 and 2011”. The deals involved eight Super Tucano light attack planes sold to the Dominican Republic, three surveillance aircraft sold to India, two E190 commercial jets sold to Mozambique’s state airline LAM and three E170 jets sold to state oil company Saudi Aramco.

  • WORLD’S SECOND LARGEST TOBACCO COMPANY TELLS PEOPLE TO QUIT SMOKING

    WORLD’S SECOND LARGEST TOBACCO COMPANY TELLS PEOPLE TO QUIT SMOKING

    You want a trip to Philip Morris International to feel like a visit to Marlboro Country. But the company’s Swiss research centre, aka the Cube, just won’t play along. Perched above crystalline Lake Neuchatel, southwest of Zurich, the glass hexahedron holds secrets to a future when, Philip Morris says, the world will be blissfully smoke-free. That’s right: Philip Morris, of all companies, is telling smokers to quit. Here, beyond the sun-dappled reflecting pool, scientists in lab coats are searching for Big Tobacco’s magic bullet: cigarette substitutes that will sell — but won’t kill.

    The push gained new urgency on Friday with news that British American Tobacco was offering $47bn (£38bn) to buy out Reynolds American, a move that would topple Philip Morris as the world’s largest publicly traded tobacco company. The stakes could scarcely be higher. Tobacco claims more than six million lives every year. With smoking on the decline around the world, tobacco giants are racing to find new, supposedly safer products to feed nicotine addiction, even as they lean on old-fashioned cigarettes to sustain their profits.

    Can Big Tobacco really kick cigarettes?More to the point, can it afford to? “We can’t stop cold turkey,” says Andre Calantzopoulos, the chief executive officer of Philip Morris International. A crucial test could come next year when his next big hope — an iPhone-esque contraption that heats tobacco inside a cigarillo-size tube — potentially hits the US. Quitting old-fashioned smokes won’t be easy for tobacco companies or their stakeholders. Philip Morris turned out 850 billion cigarettes last year, generating net revenue of about $74bn. All that tobacco pays off handsomely for global investors: counting dividends, the company’s stock has returned roughly 70 per cent over the past five years.

    For Calantzopoulos, an electrical engineer by training and reformed smoker who’s spent his career at Philip Morris, the challenge will be to come up with new moneymakers as society radically redefines the way it uses tobacco. That, while BAT is grabbing the rest of Reynolds to help power its own push into so-called next generation products. Critics are sceptical. They say Big Tobacco is simply doing what it’s always done: selling addictive products, with a gloss of feel-good marketing, while keeping tobacco at the heart of a $770bn global industry. “Philip Morris has demonstrated time and time again in the past its introduction of new products has led to more smokers,” says Matt Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, a leading US anti-smoking group. “Given their history, no one should ever trust what a tobacco company says it intends to do.” Naysayers aside, what’s happening inside the Cube goes well beyond popular alternatives like electronic cigarettes, which exploded on to the scene in the late-2000s and made “vape” the Oxford Dictionaries’ 2014 word of the year.

  • WHY LAKSHMI AND GANESHA ARE WORSHIPED TOGETHER?

    WHY LAKSHMI AND GANESHA ARE WORSHIPED TOGETHER?

    On the day of Diwali Lord Ganesha is worshiped with Goddess Lakshmi instead Lord Vishnu. There are many questions arises, why Lord Vishnu is not worshiped with Goddess Lakshmi and what is the relation between Lakshmi and Ganesha? The answers of all these questions can be answered by one mythological story.

    Mythological Story

    Once upon a time Lord Vishnu and Goddess Lakhmi were having conversation in heaven and Goddess Lakshmi was praising herself and telling Lord Vishnu that she is the most worship worthy in the world and by her grace, a person can get all the pleasures of this world and becomes happiest person. By hearing the self praising by Goddess Laksmi, Lord Vishnu said to her for reducing her ego, “You are having all the qualities, still you did not feel the joy of motherhood till now and for a lady, the motherhood joy is the most important thing in this universe.”

    The comment from Lord Vishnu made Goddess Lakhmi become disheartened and in this pain she went to her friend Goddess Parvati. After listing the problem of Goddess Lakhmi, Parvati asked her, “How can I help you?” Goddess Lakshmi said, “You are having two sons and if you could give me your one son you will still have one son and I could get the grace of motherhood. So, in this situation you can help me out.”

    By listing her Goddess Parvati said to her, “I’m having two sons Kartikeya and Ganesha. Kartikeya is having six mouths (Faces) and because of this he needs to eat all the time. My second son Ganesha is very naughty, if I missed to keep eye on him for a bit, he ruined everything. And you cannot stay at one place for a long, so tell me how can you take care of my sons?

    By hearing this Goddess Lakshmi said to her, “I’ll keep your sons close to my heart and will shower my all love on them either Kartikeya or Ganesha. I can take care both of them. All the servants of heaven will serve them day and night so please give me one of them as my adopted child.”

    Maa Parvati knew her both the sons very well so she gave Lord Ganesha to Goddess Lakhmi as her adopted son. Goddess Lakshmi became very happy and said to Goddess Parvati, “From today onwards I’m giving my all accomplishments, luxury and prosperity to my son Ganesha. Also, Riddhi and Siddhi Lord Brahma’s daughters are alike my daughters will be married soon for which I give my word to you.

    I will fulfill all the desires of Ganesha. In all the three loks which person shall not worship Lord Ganesha and do back biting, I will be miles away from him. Whenever my worship will be performed, Lord Ganesha’a worship will be a must. Who will not worship Shri Ganesha along with me, he cannot get Shree or myself. By listening this Maa Parvati become too much happy and handed over her son Ganesh to Laxmi Ji. As such at Deepawali Poojan or Luxmi Poojan, Ganesh Poojan is a must.

    Katha of Diwali

    lakshmi-and-ganesha-1Take some flower and rice grains in hand after the worship, listen the following story(s) and sprinkle the flowers and rice on the statue of Lakshmi-Ganesha.

    Once upon a time seven brothers was living in a village. All these seven brothers were living in a poverty. One day the youngest son get married to a nice girl and he took his wife to his home. After sometime festival of Diwali was about to come. The youngest daughter in-law called up all the brothers and told them all that from now onward she is there to manage their house hold works but all of them should have go out for work and get at least one thing, what so ever they will get outside.

    By listening this they all went out for work and that Sister-in-law started cleaning the house. At evening all brothers came back and get something with them. One brother get the cow’s dung and sister-in-law asked him to keep it in a courtyard. Second brother get a dead snack sister-in-law asked him to keep it on the roof and other brothers gets some milk, vegetable, broom, paddy grains and wheat grains. The sister-in-law cooked for them and served dinner to them.

    Next day, there was a public proclamation by beat of the drum, that one eagle picked up Queen’s nine lacks necklace when she was bathing in a river so who so ever will find out the Queen’s necklace will get reward from the King of the state. At the same time eagle who picked up the Queen’s necklace was flying above the brothers’ house, dropped necklace on their roof by seeing the dead snake, picked up the dead snake and fly off.

    All the brothers were very happy and they all said that they will go to return Queen’s necklace but sister-in-law said that no one but she herself will go to return the Queen’s necklace. All brothers agreed on it. When Sister-in-law went to the palace to return the necklace, King was very happy and he said to her, “I’m very happy with you and now tell me, what would you like to get in return?” Sister-in-law replied, “I wish that on the day of Diwali whole city should be in dark and should not light a single lamp except in my home.” King granted her wish and on the day of Diwali, Sister-in-law cleaned whole house except one room and made her brothers-in-law clean.

    At night Lakshmi ji came to the city, whole city was in dark and she was looking for the little light; she found light on that Sister’s-in-law home and went there. Her door was closed so Lakshmi ji knocked her door, sister-in-law asked from inside, “who is on the door?” Lakshmi ji replied,”it is me Lakshmi, please let me come into your home, whole city is in dark and I very scared of dark.” Sister-in-law said, “No, I’ll not open my home for you, you are not staying at one place, today you are coming to my home and there is no guarantee that tomorrow you will be staying at my home.” Lakshmi ji was very scared and she promised to her that she will never go away from her home and will stay there forever.

    When Lakshmi ji promised to stay at her place, Sister-in-law opened the door for Lakshmi ji, she offered the best place of home to her with full of lights and worshiped her devotedly. After worshiping the Goddess Lakshmi. Thereafter Sister-in-law went to the dark room of the house and started beating the Daridra/Narak and kicked out him of the house; she also warned him to never return to her house.

    So as Sister-in-law filled her home with prosperity, Goddess Lakshmi must make each and every person to be happy.

  • Sunil Gavaskar named ‘Stroke Ambassador for India’

    Sunil Gavaskar named ‘Stroke Ambassador for India’

    HYDERABAD: Former cricketer Sunil Gavaskar has been named as the ‘Stroke Ambassador for India’.

    The announcement was made at the inaugural function of 10th World Stroke Congress (WSC) on Wednesday night by Indian Stroke Association which is hosting the event along with World Stroke Organisation, a World Health Organisation-affiliated NGO dedicated to the global fight against stroke.

    In his video message played for delegates, the Little Master said, “In my cricketing career spanning for many years I was looking for strokes to score more runs. But, as I grow up and get old, there is one stroke I am afraid of, and it may disable me or finish my innings. That is the brain stroke.” He is happy to be ‘Stroke Ambassador for India’ to create awareness that strokes are treatable.

    “Stroke is a leading cause of disability and death worldwide. Stroke affects young people in India during their productive period of life. Let us conquer stroke,” said Gavaskar. World Stroke Day is observed every year on October 29. WSC, organised once in two years, is being held in India for the first time.

    According to Jeyaraj Pandian, WSC co-chair from India, 1.7 million new stroke cases occur in India every year.

    “It affects young people in India during their productive period of life. Stroke care infrastructure is developed mainly in private hospitals with most of the public hospitals being ill-equipped to treat stroke patients,” he said.

  • Asian Champions Trophy: India to take on South Korea in semi-final

    Asian Champions Trophy: India to take on South Korea in semi-final

    KUANTAN (TIP): Top-ranked India will take on South Korea in the semi-final of the fourth Asian Champions Trophy after the Koreans conceded a late equaliser to Malaysia and finished fourth in the round-robin league standings on Oct 27.

    India had topped the league standings with 13 points after finishing their preliminary fixtures on Wednesday, but there was plenty of drama on the last day of the league fixtures.

    Pakistan defeated China 4-0 to take their points tally to nine, the same as Malaysia before the last outing against the Koreans, who had seven points ahead of the last match. Pakistan’s goal- difference was far inferior to that of hosts Malaysia, so a tie on points would put Malaysia ahead.

    Malaysia needed a victory or a draw to take the second spot in the group, but a victory in the last outing would have lifted the Koreans to the second place in the standings, pushing Malaysia down to the third spot and Pakistan to the fourth.

    In case of a Korean victory today, India’s semi-final would have been against Pakistan.

    This scenario was unfolding after Jeong Jun-Woo put the Koreans ahead in the 37th minute, while Malaysia’s strikers kept spraying their shots wide.

    With the Koreans leading by a goal until the 56th minute, an India-Pakistan semi-final was on the horizon, but seasoned shooter Razie Rahim converted a penalty corner four minutes from the end to earn Malaysia a draw.

    Behind India, Malaysia finished second in the league standings with 10 points, followed by Pakistan on nine and South Korea on eight. India now get a chance to make up for their erratic show against the young Korean team in the 1-1 draw, while defending champions Pakistan come face to face with Malaysia who had stunned them 4-2 in the opening match. Pakistan had to overcome some early Chinese resistance before sealing victory today

  • Sindhu, Prannoy advance at French Open Super Series

    Sindhu, Prannoy advance at French Open Super Series

    PARIS (TIP): Olympic silver medallist PV Sindhu and HS Prannoy advanced to the second round with straight-game wins but it was curtains for Ajay Jayaram in the$300,000 French Open Super Series badminton tournament on Wednesday.

    In a 45-minute gruelling contest, Sindhu, who had suffered a loss in second round in Denmark Open last week, dished out a gritty performance to prevail 21-9 29-27 over Hong Kong’s Yip Pui Yin in a women’s singles match.

    The two-time World Championship bronze medallist Indian will next take on the winner of the match between China’s He Bingjiao and Denmark’s Mette Poulsen.

    Swiss Open champion Prannoy also disposed of Thailand’s Boonsak Ponsana 21-16, 21-18 in a 41-minute clash to set up against Chinese Taipei’s Chou Tien Chen, seeded fifth.

    However, it turned out to a disappointing day for Jayaram, who squandered a first game advantage to go down fighting 22-20, 10-21, 18-21 to Anthony Sinisuka Ginting of Indonesia in another men’s singles match.

  • Murray beats Simon for 16th time to reach Vienna last-eight

    Murray beats Simon for 16th time to reach Vienna last-eight

    VIENNA (TIP): Andy Murray defeated France’s Gilles Simon for the 16th time on Thursday to reach the Vienna ATP quarter-finals and keep alive his bid to snatch Novak Djokovic’s world number one ranking.

    The Olympic and Wimbledon champion eventually triumphed 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 after two hours and 40 minutes in a match which saw Murray commit an uncharacteristic 58 unforced errors.

    Simon was almost as sloppy, hitting just three fewer.

    “It was a very long match, but I expected it to be very hard because it’s just that way against Gilles. You play a lot of long points. You feel like the harder you hit the ball, the harder it comes back,” said Murray.

    “You just have to try to use some variety, some slice and drop shots, and find that balance to get him out of his rhythm.”

    Murray, the 2014 champion in Vienna, goes on to face John Isner on Friday for a place in the semi-finals.

    If he wins the Vienna title and Paris crown next week, Murray could unseat Djokovic as world number one as long as the Serb star loses before the final in the French capital.

    After dropping the first set on a frustratingly slow court, a weary-looking Murray had to save six break points in the second game of the second set to stay in contention and two more in the fourth.

    But it was all one way traffic after those blips with the world number two sweeping four games in succession to level the match.

  • India v New Zealand, 5th ODI, Vizag: Under-fire Dhoni faces tricky Kiwis test in series-decider

    India v New Zealand, 5th ODI, Vizag: Under-fire Dhoni faces tricky Kiwis test in series-decider

    VISAKHAPATNAM (TIP): Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s leadership as well as finishing skills will be put through a stern test when an inconsistent India take on a rejuvenated New Zealand in the series-deciding fifth and final cricket ODI, here on Saturday.

    With the series locked at 2-2, Dhoni and his men will be eager to clinch the issue while history beckons Kane Williamson’s men as they have a glorious opportunity to taste their maiden success in a bilateral ODI rubber.

    The only thing that can play spoilsport is the cyclone threat which can lead to complete washout.

    While Dhoni’s captaincy may not be under immediate threat but a series loss against New Zealand will certainly raise questions about ‘Captain Cool’s’ ability to marshall his resources after his much publicised admission of being unable to rotate strike lower down the order.

    Under Dhoni, India lost three ODI series – 1-2 against Bangladesh in Bangladesh, 1-4 against Australia Down Under and 2-3 at home against South Africa. The only ODI series victory in the last 18 months has been against a lowly Zimbabwe.

    Away from home for four months spanning two continents, New Zealand’s only success was a 2-0 win against a lowly Zimbabwe, following which they drew South Africa 1-1 before being whitewashed 0-3 by India in the Tests.

    Their ODI campaign started off on a sour note in Dharamasala but some strong batting performances by skipper Kane Williamson and Martin Guptill in Delhi and Ranchi respectively have managed to catch India off guard and level the five-match series 2-2.

    That they have never won against India in four bilateral contests since 1988 will be a big motivation for the Black Caps to buck the trend and return home with an act of redemption.

    Weather permitting, a tantalising finish is on the cards as India would be equally hungry for success at the Dr YS Rajasekhara Reddy ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium, a venue where they boast of a 4-1 record. Their last win has been against Sri Lanka, a 5-0 whitewash way back in November-2014 and an under-fire Dhoni would not want another series loss at the fag end of his career.

    The world No.4 India have just three more ODIs, against England, ahead of the coveted Champions Trophy in June next year and it would be an opportunity for Dhoni to give them a boost against a team which is ranked a notch higher.

    The over-reliance on Virat Kohli has also been evident during the series as Indian Test captain was the prime performer in both victories during the first four matches so far.

    With their opening pair of Rohit Sharma and Ajinkya Rahane yet to provide a much-needed solid start, India’s batting is centred around their no 1 batsman Kohli.

    Consider this, India’s both the wins of the series had Kohli anchor the chase be it the 85 not out in a low-scoring chase in Dharamsala, or his majestic unbeaten 154 that hunted down New Zealand’s challenging 285 in Mohali.

    Chasing a modest 261 in the fourth ODI in Ranchi, Rahane returned to form with a half-century while Kohli looked in full flow on a slow wicket but both failed to convert their starts, and it was a familiar story for the inexperienced middle-order.

    Failure or not, Indian fabled opener Sharma has been a permanent member of the line-up with Dhoni seeming to be in no mood to give youngsters the chance and Mandeep Singh is seen warming the bench.

    Sharma’s last big knock came in Australia, and it’s been more than nine months he’s yet to score a century in either longer or shorter format. His scores in the ongoing series read 14, 15, 13 and 11, something that is hurting India’s cause more than anything else.

  • Indian-American Women launch a community app for Ethnic Fashion Exchange

    Indian-American Women launch a community app for Ethnic Fashion Exchange

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA (TIP): EthnicThread, a mobile app platform to trade your preloved ethnic fashion, recently launched on the iPhone and Android markets globally. This user-friendly app gives women a chance to exchange, sell or rent personally owned/designed clothing, accessories and home decor. In this social media era where women are hesitant to repeat outfits once the pictures go out, EthnicThread was a much needed responsible fashion platform where women can monetize their closets by selling new and gently used party wear outfits, and buy different ones from other women in the community at great prices.

    Sailee quit her well-paying hi-tech job to pursue this venture, where ethnic threads are used to bind the communities together
    Sailee quit her well-paying hi-tech job to pursue this venture, where ethnic threads are used to bind the communities together

    A primarily women run company, EthnicThread knows and understands the needs and challenges of today’s modern woman. Ethnic Thread founder, Sailee Raje, a Silicon Valley techie, wanted to create an easy and guilt-free way to keep her closet simple and organized, without compromising the shopaholic in her. It wasn’t long before she was joined by her equally passionate friends across USA and India to create a mobile friendly solution for it. As the app started taking shape, her research and surveys led to the discovery of tremendous hidden talent in the South Asian community – homemakers, students and hobbyists with expertise in designing, tailoring, embroidering, painting, henna, photography, makeup artistry, rangoli, and more. These talented individuals were eager to help the community by offering their expertise in their spare time. Until now they mostly relied on word of mouth to get work. Sailee realized that she had to create a trusted community platform for fashion and talent exchange, and not just a typical marketplace. EthnicThread was born to serve this purpose of connecting talent to opportunities. Sailee quit her well-paying hi-tech job to pursue this venture, where ethnic threads are used to bind the communities together.

    EthnicThread provides its users a major advantage by not charging any transaction fees. Ethnic Thread is unique in that it directly connects people globally as well as locally. The app allows you to chat with talented fashionistas across the world, and can also help you find local people or products based on your current location, on the go.

    Ethnic fashion is going strong in South Asian culture and has a multi-billion dollar market in India alone. Following the footsteps of dozens of fortune 500 companies, such as Uber, Facebook, Alibaba and Airbnb, EthnicThread chooses not to carry any internal inventory to sell, but rather provide a platform for people to connect with each other to share their products and talent. In addition to the app a physical platform for fashion and talent exchange is also being offered through their meetups currently held monthly in Delhi, Pune and Mumbai. Ethnic Thread is the first of its kind to give its users a complete ecosystem to repurpose their used ethnic clothing through community exchange, and be environmentally friendly through this responsible fashion concept. The impact of the app has been immediate. Thousands of women have started to not only trade their closets but also make great new connections along the way. New and used traditional Indian and Pakistani kids clothing has also been a popular category on the app. Medha Deshmukh, from Mumbai, says she has finally found an easy way to sell her daughter’s expensive Indian outfits. She is equally thrilled about being able to connect with like-minded moms she came across on the app who eagerly wait to see what she is uploading next. Talented individuals have started to list their work on EthnicThread to get broader visibility within the community.

    Through EthnicThread’s #RealPeopleRealModels movement for self-acceptance users are encouraged to post their personal style, embracing their own body shape and size, as opposed to catalog or magazine pictures. Unlike other marketplaces EthnicThread intentionally uses social network interface where you can follow, like, and comment through a thread of colorful images. Users can post images for making serious money through selling, renting or exchanging. However, similar to the appeal of Instagram, Pinterest, and Flickr, many users post pictures to showcase their personal style and provide inspiration for their followers. Apart from traditional ethnic fashion such as saree, salwar, lehenga, kurti, you can find trending fusion such as henna strokes on the shoe or candles, Indo-western outfits and fusion accessories. The EthnicThread women’s team has expanded the company in the largely untapped South Asian market throughout USA and India, and plan to expand to other ethnicities in the future.

    EthnicThread is available on iPhone 7.0 or later, and Android. The app is free to download for early adopters and will be available at a small subscription fee later, with Premium experience for paid users.

    To learn more about EthnicThread visit them on Facebook at EthnicThread.com/fb, or on Twitter @EthnicThread. To download the app, visit their website at www.ethnicthread.com.

  • Destiny of Victory for Raja to the U.S. Congress evinced

    Destiny of Victory for Raja to the U.S. Congress evinced

    CHICAGO, IL (TIP): The Indian Americans evince brimming optimism as they await for the defining moment in the political history to see their own Raja Krishnamoorthi emerge victorious as the United States Congressman representing not just the 8th congressional district but the entire Indian American diaspora as the winds of change gather momentum just days away from the elections  – This was articulated by a legion of Chicago leaders at the Community Reception hosted at Maharaja India Restaurant in Rosemont, IL on October 24, 2016.

    With the current trajectory of the congressional race looking increasingly reassuring, this defining moment seems to bear promise to see their beloved Indian American son Raja Krishnamoorthi to be ushered into the hallowed halls of the United States Congress. Raja Krishnamoorthi remains the most widely acknowledged candidate to have received a wide spread mainstream newspapers ringing endorsements hailing him as the “best candidate hands down” and extoling him for his “enthusiastic grasp on issues” advancing “working families agenda”; with President Obama joining to give a testimonial push on TV — augurs well for him to cross the finish line on in the national elections on November 8th, 2016

    Setting the event in motion, Sanhita Agnihotri invited Raja Krishnamoorthi along with the principal hosts Hanumanth Reddy, Iftekhar Shareef, Keerthi Kumar Ravoori, Ajai Agnihotri, Dr. Vijay Prabhakar and Ajeet Singh to join the lamp lighting ceremony and added saying that the lighting of the lamp symbolizes invocation of an auspicious outcome in the elections.

    Raja Krishnamoorthi thanked the host of community, organizational, business and grass- root level leaders gathered at the event and assured them of his undying devotion to represent them and added saying “when I go to the Congress, you go with me” amidst sustained applause.

    Keerthi Kumar Ravoori Co-Host, in his welcome remarks, said that this is truly a historic opportunity for the Indian Americans to help usher Raja into the most revered portals of the United States Congress for him to represent our hopes, values, aspirations that are central to the Indian Americans and his congressional constituents. Keerthi Ravoori reiterated that Raja Krishnamoorthi when elected he will hit the ground running to embark enthusiastically on driving his legislative agenda that seeks to uplift the lives of the working families.

    Iftekhar Shareef, co-host, introducing Raja, emphatically laid out the vision of Raja and said Raja represents the hopes of not just the diverse electorate of his congressional district but the entire Indian diaspora and added Raja will remain a tremendous force in the U.S. Congress in taking the lead in formulating policies and legislations that elevate every American. Iftekhar Shareef said under the congressional leadership of Raja a new vibrant chapter in the Indo US relations is envisaged.

    Ajai Agnihotri in his brief statement said Raja is a phenomenon that is likely to dominate the Capitol Hill with his refreshing voice of strength and conviction; while Dr. Vijay Prabhakar challenged the Indian Americans to seize this rare opportunity to rise in collective strength of unity to help elect Raja and added that Raja will be a shining inspiration for many generations to come.

    Proposing a vote of thanks, Sanhita Agnihotri was joined by Poonam Gupta-Krishnan, Nazneen Hashmi, Shirley Kalvakota, and Mrs. Inder Gauri who presented a flower bouquet to Raja. Some of the well-known attendees at the reception include Dr. Sriram Sonty, Babu [Marsha] Patel, Inder Gauri, Jitendra Digvanker, Harish Kolasani, John Trivedi, Dr. Hyder Mohhamned, Cecil Joseph, Satish Dadepogu, Baba Daljit Singh, Mitul Patel, Azhar Siddique & Emmanuel Neela.

    (Photograph and Press release by Asian Media USA)

  • Indian American Doctor Hopes Hillary Clinton Magic Will Help Him Enter US Congress

    Indian American Doctor Hopes Hillary Clinton Magic Will Help Him Enter US Congress

    DETROIT (TIP): An Indian-American doctor has expressed hope that Democratic party’s presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s surging popularity will help him enter the US House of Representatives by winning a traditionally Republican seat in the suburb of Detroit.

    Mumbai-born 65-year-old urologist Anil Kumar, who specializes in robotic surgery, is trying his luck to enter the US Congress for the second time after he was eliminated in the primaries in his first attempt in 2014. Armed with the popular support from the entire South Asian base and the growing popularity of Clinton, Dr Kumar said the latest internal polls showed that he was within the margin of error with his Republican incumbent David Trott.

    “No integration (of the immigrants) is complete, unless we are integrated politically,” Dr Kumar told PTI in Detroit in the most populous city of the US state of Michigan.In addition to the policy of healthcare, employment and education that he is advocating for his constituents, Dr Kumar said one of the reasons for him deciding to run for the Congress was to pave the way for the next generation of Indian Americans to be part and parcel of the political mainstream. “It is important that we do more in the political arena,” he said. The 11th Congressional District of Michigan has some 400,000 voters. Indian Americans account for some 20,000 and then there are 4,000 Pakistani Americans who have thrown their weight for him. Dr Kumar is running an effective campaign with a big team of 250 volunteers, 60 interns, several paid staff working from five offices spread over his sprawling constituency located in the northwest of Detroit. Dr Kumar made Detroit his home after he landed in the US in 1984 following his departure from Mumbai. He earned his medical degree from Mumbai.

    “It’s a tight race. And with Clinton’s popularity gaining ground, my chances have become better,” Dr Kumar said. Another Indian-American Syed Taj, who lost the election by 22,000 votes in 2012, is also campaigning for Kumar this time. “He has a chance as the poll dynamics and demographics have changed,” Mr. Taj said. However, mainstream media and political pundits consider it a safe seat for the Republicans.”This could potentially be a race to keep an eye on if Trump’s numbers continue to fall,” Detroit Free Press said. Dr Kumar said, if elected, he would work towards improving relationship between India and the US. “A larger and better representation of Indian Americans in the Congress would help strengthening the bond of India-US relationship,” he said.

    “Prime Minister Narendra Modi is doing a tremendous job. We (in the Congress) can further enhance it,” said Dr Kumar, who so far has been endorsed by several top Democratic leaders, including Senator Carl Levin.

  • Advantage India? Over 1 Million BPO Jobs at Stake if US Firms Say Goodbye to Philippines

    Advantage India? Over 1 Million BPO Jobs at Stake if US Firms Say Goodbye to Philippines

    NEW YORK (TIP): Economists and senators warned that Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s cheeky “goodbye” to the US was not the smartest move in a country where more than a million of service jobs are tied to many large US companies that operate business process outsourcing (BPO) there.

    It would rather be a shot in the own foot to turn away from the US in economic terms, particularly in large urban areas like Manila and Cebu City where many young people rely on call center jobs, they argue.

    Estimations are that about 1.2 million Filipinos would lose employment if US Companies pull out of the Philippines.

    Many of them are huge multinationals, including IBM, Microsoft, Amazon, American Express, JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Accenture and Citibank, just to quote a few, operating call centers with service hotlines and other back office processes.

    The BPO industry is the second largest source of foreign income for the Philippines after overseas workers’ remittances, generating $22 billion in revenue in 2015.

    By one estimate, 77 per cent of BPO services are done for US companies. According to earlier forecasts, by the end of this year the sector would employ 1.3 million people in the Philippines, according to the country’s IT and Business Process Association.

    Apart from the BPO sector, the Philippine sugar industry could be another casualty of a divorce from the US, since the sugar quota to the US might also be adversely affected.

  • Indian American neuroscientist in the forefront of research in autism, addiction and Alzheimer’s disease

    Indian American neuroscientist in the forefront of research in autism, addiction and Alzheimer’s disease

    NASHVILLE, TENNESSEEN (TIP): Three Vanderbilt University neuroscientists including an Indian American are on the forefront of research in autism, addiction and Alzheimer’s disease and will discuss their cutting-edge investigations during the next Flexner Discovery Lecture on Thursday, Nov. 3 as per media reports.

    Dr. Sachin Patel, M.D., Ph.D. is Professor of Psychiatry and director of the Division of Addiction Psychiatry who along with Laura Dugan, M.D. & Mark Wallace, Ph.D. will present their discussion titled “Translational Neuroscience Research at Vanderbilt: Mechanisms and Targets for Brain Disorders.”

    The Flexner Discovery Lecture Series were launched by Vanderbilt University Medical Center and featured some of the world’s most eminent scientists, who speak on the highest-impact research and policy issues in science and medicine.

    Patel, a 2016 recipient of a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, studies the response of endocannabinoid signaling to stress, with the goal of better understanding the pathophysiology of stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders including depression, addiction and post-traumatic stress disorder.

    For a complete schedule of the Flexner Discovery Lecture series and archived video of previous lectures, go to www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/discoveryseries.

  • Your Vote Can Make the Difference

    Your Vote Can Make the Difference

    With this year’s tight and controversial presidential race, and with anti-immigrant sentiment at a peak, we can take nothing for granted. This is why I am urgently calling to those among New York City’s more than 1.5 million naturalized citizens, if you are registered to vote, to go to the polls on November 8. Every single vote counts.

    The right to vote is not a given. Some of you have experienced undemocratic governments in places where voting is riddled with fraud, doesn’t happen at all or can put you at risk of reprisals. But as a U.S. citizen, your right to vote ensures your participation in the democratic process that gives you a voice in the decisions that shape your life.

    The electorate has never been so ethnically and racially diverse. According to a Pew Research Center 2016 report, this year 31 percent of the eligible voters are Hispanic, Asian, black or other minorities. In New York City, the Campaign Finance Board confirms that naturalized citizens lead in the gains made in voter registration, and their turnout rates equal or outpace native-born citizens. Yet, New York City hit a historic low in overall voter turnout in the 2014 midterm elections, when barely 20 percent went to the polls. This has to change.

    It is important we understand what is at stake here.

    In 2013, immigrant workers accounted for $257 billion in economic activity — that’s nearly one third of the value of all finished goods and services produced here. Immigrants represent almost half of the City’s workforce. Over 80 percent of dishwashers, nannies, garment workers and taxi drivers are immigrants. Seventy percent of medical and life scientists; 60 percent of civil engineers; 58 percent of registered nurses; and more than half of our dentists, mechanical engineers, tax preparers, and pharmacists are foreign-born. And one in four CEOs in corporations with a presence in our City are immigrants. Clearly, the economic contribution to the City is tremendous.

    So, casting your vote could be a YES to protecting the economic investment made for your children and their children, and to ensuring an enduring opportunity to work. A YES to keeping the doors open for others like you, who want a better life, and whose enterprise keeps our City and this country vibrant and growing. And a YES to protect the right to educate your children, without fear, who will carry on our immigrant tradition.

    Your vote could also be a NO to racism, discrimination and hate.

    It’s time to rally family, friends, and community members to vote. Remember your vote can help speak for those who are not eligible to go to the polls in November, but whose investment and commitment to their American life is just as strong as yours.

    For information about your polling site and ballots in languages other than English go to http://vote.nyc.ny.us/html/forms/forms.shtml, or call the Board of Elections office in your borough.

  • Political Debate Turning Americans Against Each Other: Neera Tanden

    Political Debate Turning Americans Against Each Other: Neera Tanden

    Washington: The political debate in the current election season has turned Americans against each other, Indian-American Neera Tanden from the Clinton campaign has claimed, while her counterpart from the Trump’s camp said the national prestige has gone down under the Obama regime.

    “The political debate this election season is turning Americans against each other,” Ms Tanden, co-chair of the Clinton Transition Team said during the first ‘Town Hall Meeting: Election 2016’.

    The townhall was organized by the DC chapter of South Asian Bar Association (SABA).

    “Some people are turned away from events because of how they look like is a very unfortunate development,” she said in response to a question.

    The Trump Campaign, represented by Puneet Ahluwalia who was recently appointed as the its advisor on Asia Pacific American Advisory Body.

    Mr Ahluwalia alleged the prestige and reputation of the United States under the Obama Administration has come down. and terrorism is on the rise.

    “The country is on a disastrous path. Our national prestige is down. We have to bring our country back again,” he said.

    Ms Tanden disagreed strongly to the allegations and claimed the friends and allies of the US are today worried and anxious a lot because of the rhetoric of Trump.

    “If she (Clinton) is so fortunate to be the president she would have an administration that would look like America,” she said.

    Referring to the fact that Clinton was the founder of co-chair of the Senate India Caucus, Ms Tanden said the Democratic presidential nominee is in the best interest of Indian-Americans and Indo-US relationship.

    The two Indian-American leaders from the GOP and Democratic parties sparred on various policy issues including economy, tax, jobs, health care and student loans.

    “This election has repercussions well beyond the executive, it will no doubt have a significant impact on Congress and the Supreme Court,” Rahul Das, chief of SABA said.

    “Donald Trump has vented the frustration of a lot of middle American youth,” Mr Ahluwalia said, adding that jobs of youths have been taken away.

    “He has given a sign to them that things have to change for the better,” he said.

    Responding to a question if the candidate is a role model for the child, the two Indian-Americans raised the personal allegations against the two presidential candidates.

    Ms Tanden first referred to the recent surfacing of a video in which Trump is seen making lewd remarks about women.

    Ahluwalia asked the young lawyers not to think about becoming a White House intern, because of the past allegation on former US President Bill Clinton.

    He said Mr Trump is a role model and as a successful businessman, the Republican presidential nominee has raised some great kids.

    Citing some of the rhetorics against minorities, Sikhs and Muslims, Ms Tanden said Trump can never be a role model.

    Referring to the accomplishments of the Bush Administration, Ahluwalia said Indo-US relations will be best under a Republican Administration.

    Responding to a question on Trump’s presence at an Indian American event in New Jersey, he said it shows that Trump has respect for the Indian-Americans and Hindus.

    “The party is open to immigrants who are willing to abide by the rules and enjoy the success of America,” he added.

    Countering him, Ms Tanden said , “this election cycle has been stark. For the first time I have faced anti-India slur and hate messages. I have been told that I would be deported, though I am born in the US,”

    “Do you know of an Indian-American who was thrown out of a Trump event,” she said referring to the level of intolerance in Trump Campaign and event.

  • New York City Council Works With Microsoft To Test First Paperless Stated Meeting

    New York City Council Works With Microsoft To Test First Paperless Stated Meeting

    Goals are to reduce paper use, create efficiency and modernize work

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and the New York City Council announced, October 27, the integration of Microsoft Surface tablets into the Council’s Stated meeting as a means of testing how technology can help Members view or easily search documents, reduce the use of volumes of paper and the preparation time involved with copying and distribution, and modernize the way the Council conducts its business. The use of tablets, along with QR codes for looking up documents, was first tested during a hearing of the Council’s technology committee in June. Today is the first trial run at a Stated meeting. This latest digital effort reflects the Speaker and Council’s commitment to building a Council that is technologically agile and that can engage the public both online and offline. In 2015, the Speaker announced Council 2.0, a roadmap for digital inclusion and open government that called for testing new ways of making the Council more accessible to diverse New Yorkers. Results from this plan include the introduction of a plain-language, mobile-friendly website, labs.council.nyc, the integration of texting in Participatory Budgeting and the release of a constituency services dataset.

    “The Council must be present and engaged online, across all the platforms we find diverse New Yorkers on, and this requires us to upgrade the way we work and interact,” said Speaker Mark-Viverito.

    “I am thrilled with this historic effort to embed digital and environmentally-friendly practices that will allow us to be more effective policy makers and public servants, and I thank Microsoft for being such an enthusiastic technology partner.”Microsoft loaned the Council more than 60 tablets and other equipment to perform today’s first-ever paperless Stated meeting.

    This Friday, tablets will also be integrated into the Council’s Sanitation committee hearing.

    Following the test at Stated and the hearing, the Council will study feedback from Members and work to advance the public’s digital experience with Council meetings.

  • Following Syosset, Hindus seek Diwali holiday in all New York school districts

    Following Syosset, Hindus seek Diwali holiday in all New York school districts

    NEW YORK (TIP): Hindus have welcomed reports of Syosset Central School District (SCSD) in New York adding Diwali, most popular of their festival, as an official holiday on the 2017-2018 school year calendar.

    Rajan Zed, a Hindu activist, in a statement in Nevada, describing it as a step in the right direction, urged all other public school districts and private schools in New York State to do the same.

    Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, pointed out that it would be a positive thing to do in view of presence of a substantial number of Hindu students at schools around the state, as it was important to meet the religious and spiritual needs of these pupils.

    Rajan Zed indicated that schools should make efforts to accommodate the religious requirements of Hindu students and show respect to their faith by not conducting regular business and scheduling classes on Diwali. We did not want our students to be put at an unnecessary disadvantage for missing tests/examinations/papers, assignments, class work, etc., by taking a day-off to observe Diwali.

    If schools had declared other religious holidays, why not Diwali, Zed asked. Holidays of all major religions should be honored and no one should be penalized for practicing their religion, Zed added

    Rajan Zed suggested all New York schools, both public and private, to seriously look into declaring Diwali as an official holiday, recognizing the intersection of spirituality and education. Zed noted that awareness about other religions thus created by such holidays like Diwali would make New York students well-nurtured, well-balanced, and enlightened citizens of tomorrow.

    Zed urged New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, New York State Education Department Board of Regents Chancellor Betty A. Rosa and New York State Commissioner of Education MaryEllen Elia; to work towards adding Diwali as an official holiday in all the 700 school districts, and persuading the private schools to follow.

  • Crime and Candidates

    Crime and Candidates

    Polling for the U.S. presidential election is less than weeks away. Most predictions favor Democrat Hillary Clinton, although the contest with Republican candidate Donald Trump is expected to be closer than many partisan supporters on either side would concede. What struck me most during the three rounds of television debates between the rival candidates was the intensity of mutual recrimination. Each continues to accuse the other of grave misdemeanor. While Mr. Trump believes Ms. Clinton deserved to be sent to jail for using an unauthorized private email server and causing the disappearance of more than 30,000 mails after being subpoenaed by U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the latter accuses the former of tax evasion and inappropriate conduct towards women.

    Mr. Trump’s principal charge against the Obama administration – of which Ms. Clinton had been a vital member for years – is the alleged soft approach to crime and neglect of the inner cities. The Republican candidate demands tough handling of crime, which resonates with his vow to stop immigration, especially of Latinos and Muslims. He believes that crime in the country has become uncontrollable, and the inner city in most urban areas has become a crime haven. His support to the influential National Rifle Association (NRA) is absolute. Ms. Clinton does not share her opponent’s pessimism. Her stance is moderate; she concedes that guns are a problem, but won’t go the whole hog condemning the NRA, obviously because of its widespread influence in the polity and large sections of the white population. One must remember here that President Barack Obama assumed office with a resolve to cut the NRA down to size. Later on his position became wishy-washy.

    Crime in the U.S.

    Crime in the U.S. and its impact nationally has always been an important aspect of the election debate for decades. The release a few weeks ago of crime figures for 2015 by the FBI has intensified the presidential debate. FBI statistics reveal that violent crime in 2015 went up by 4 per cent. Homicides registered an 11 per cent rise. In about 70 per cent of homicides firearms were used.

    The popular impression – one fanned by Mr. Trump – that the whole country has become more violent than before, however, appears skewed because the rise in homicides was confined to a few cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, Dallas and Las Vegas. In a few other important cities, homicides declined – the drop in New York, for instance, was 25 per cent. The reported spurt in murders during the first few months of the current year is again confined to a few cities, with Chicago contributing the bulk. Expert opinion is that crime trends are ephemeral and constantly fluctuating, hence taking any position on the basis of occurrences during a few years alone is preposterous.

    One feature of the U.S. crime scene that should cause consternation to many of us in India is the number of rapes. During last year these went up to 95,000, almost thrice as many as are reported annually in India. Significantly, a majority of rapes occurring in the country are on university campuses: during 2014, there were about 100 universities from each of which at least 10 rape cases were reported. Many American believe that a large number of rapes go unreported. There was a recent controversy over the award of a light six-month sentence to Brock Turner, a Stanford University student, by a judge, even though he was convicted on three counts of felony sexual assault in 2015. Public opinion was so exercised that the judge sought to be reassigned to the civil division instead of criminal trials.

    How do the U.S. police cope with crime?A lot has depended on the proactive role of individual police leaders. Chiefs are appointed by the city mayors, thereby injecting a little of politics into the process of day-to-day policing. The legendary Bill Bratton, who had two spells as Police Commissioner in the New York Police Department (NYPD), made a lot of difference to the city’s public order. His “broken windows” approach, that concentrated on petty crime in decrepit neighborhoods and thereby neutralized those prone to commit grave crime if their minor peccadilloes were ignored, resulted in a drop in crime rates.

    Another of Mr. Bratton’s innovations, one prescribing a computer-aided identification of hotspots of crime by field commanders, also helped. Named CompStat, this procedure made officers in charge of police stations accountable for acting swiftly on rising crime graphs. CompStat has, however, invited criticism that a lot of crime was being suppressed to dress up statistics; Mr. Bratton resigned from the NYPD a few months ago. This is again an index of the growing complexity of policing in the country, and the delicate police chief-mayor relationship.

    Policing with sensitivity

    Two other features of policing in relation to crime control have been frequently discussed across the country. The first of these is the practice of “stop-and-frisk” whereby citizens are stopped and frisked at random. Statistics have often been cited to prove that this was a racist practice. As a result, successive police commissioners – especially in New York City – have had to constantly assuage hurt public sentiment. On their part, the police in many cities claim that the practice had helped to recover firearms which would otherwise have been used to commit crime. While a lot has been done to reduce the frequency and intensity of the “stop-and-frisk” program, sections of the minorities continue to nurse a grievance that many U.S. police departments are insensitive towards them.

    The latest controversy is over the police’s inclination to open unprovoked fire at innocent citizens, especially African-Americans. The most recent one is the October killing of Deborah Danner, an old mentally ill woman of Bronx, by an NYPD policeman. Mayor Bill de Blasio has taken the incident seriously, but has not been able to arrive at any formula that would give reasonable assurance that incidents like these will not repeat themselves.

    Ms. Clinton has mentioned in her campaign the need to build police sensitivity so that African-Americans receives fairer treatment at the hands of the police. Mr. Trump has not had much to say on this. It’s not surprising though, since he proclaims himself to be tough on crime, and any police high-handedness towards the minorities fits into his framework of an America that is free from crime, especially in the inner cities.

    The U.S. crime situation is unusually complex. Race and the varying standards of the more than 15,000 stand-alone police forces are factors to reckon with. The growing number of police casualties makes policemen in many places trigger-happy. Only lip service has been paid to the eternal problem of gun control because of the political connotations involved. How much either Ms. Clinton or Mr. Trump can do to limit the damage caused by free availability of guns or make the police more citizen- friendly is a moot point.

    (The author, R. K. Raghavan, is a former Director of the Central Bureau of Investigation)

  • Why Putin fears a Clinton Presidency

    Why Putin fears a Clinton Presidency

    “For Putin, stopping Clinton is not only an important strategic goal. It is also personal”, says the author – Frida Ghitis.

    Though Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin seem to agree on a number of issues, there is one they apparently don’t see eye to eye on. While Trump argues that Hillary Clinton is too weak to be president of the United States, the Russian President appears to be genuinely afraid of Clinton.

    Evidence is growing that Russia is actively working to undermine Clinton’s presidential prospects. When hackers released the emails of the Democratic National Committee just hours before the Democratic National Convention, internet security specialists found the fingerprints of Russian agencies. Then came the latest hacks of Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta.

    The US government has now formally accused Russia of interfering in the US elections, and every instance of interference so far is clearly aimed at harming the Democratic candidate.

    It’s easy to see why Putin fears Clinton. While the Trump campaign is trying to get voters to focus on Clinton stumbling and coughing, Putin sees her as a real threat to his objectives.

    For Putin, stopping Clinton is not only an important strategic goal. It is also personal.

    Back in 2011, Putin faced the biggest protests the country had seen since the collapse of the Soviet Union. He had served two terms as president, the maximum allowed, and in 2008 had become prime minister, in a maneuver that allowed him to effectively hold power while his ally, Dmitry Medvedev, was president. Then he announced — to much anger, but little surprise — that he would seek a third term as president. Three months later, the opposition erupted in fury when his party won a landslide victory in legislative elections amid allegations of fraud.

    Is Russia trying to influence U.S. election?

    Despite the frigid Moscow temperatures, thousands massed in the streets calling for fair elections and for an end to Putin’s seemingly endless rule. Signs and chants declared, “Putin is a thief !” Putin’s hold on power faced a genuine threat. Then-Secretary of State Clinton openly sided with the protesters. “The Russian people, like people everywhere,” she said, “…deserve free, fair, transparent elections.”

    Putin was fuming. He blamed the protests on Clinton, accusing her of sending “a signal” to the opposition.

    Putin’s personal animosity toward Clinton coincides with his larger strategic goals. In recent years, he has launched an increasingly muscular foreign (and domestic) policy. He is challenging the US, NATO and the European Union at every turn. Despite a shrinking economy — not much bigger than Mexico’s — Russia has used its military power to make it a major player on the global stage.

    How Russian hackers could influence the election

    Russia, according to Western analysts, has mounted a campaign to “discredit the West’s liberal democratic model, and undermine trans-Atlantic ties,” manipulating Eastern European countries and “supporting the far right” against the EU. That “Kremlin Playbook” includes tampering with elections in Europe and the US.

    Clinton stands in direct defiance to Putin’s vision, already partly in place, of a Russia with a sphere of influence that includes the former Soviet territory and, more loosely, Eastern Europe, alongside a weakened Europe, US and NATO.

    In contrast to Trump, she has made countless comments over the years to suggest she would present a much tougher opponent to Putin’s ambitions than Barack Obama has been, saying she thinks the United States must find ways to “confine, contain, [and] deter Russian aggression in Europe and beyond.”

    What Reagan can teach us about handling Russia

    While Clinton looks poised to toughen America’s stance, Trump’s foreign policy coincides with Russia’s. He has suggested he might recognize Russia’s annexation of Crimea, which Putin captured by force from Ukraine; he might suspend economic sanctions against Russia; and would align his policies in Syria with Putin and Assad.

    During the Republican primaries, Clinton came under fire for leading the Obama administration’s failed diplomatic “reset” with Russia. But the former US ambassador to Moscow, Mike McFaul, said she was deeply skeptical that the plan would bear fruit.

    Once out of office, her criticism of Russia became cutting.

    When Putin justified Russia’s 2014 takeover of Crimea as an effort to protect Russian minorities there, Clinton said it was reminiscent of Hitler’s justification for taking over parts of Eastern Europe. Putin later commented that Clinton has “never been too graceful in her statements.” Russia is happy with its new status in the world

    How Russia views the west

    Clinton was implicitly critical of Obama’s restrained response, saying, “I am in the category of people who wanted us to do more in response to the annexation of Crimea and the continuing destabilization of Ukraine.”

    And just as Putin targeted her by name, she, too, has gone after him personally. In a speech last year, she said, “I remain convinced that we need a concerted effort to really up the costs on Russia and in particular on Putin.”

    The most urgent item on the foreign policy agenda for both the United States and Russia is the civil war in Syria. There, the Trump campaign has offered conflicting ideas, but in the most recent debate Trump seemed to stand with Putin.

    While Obama has maintained an extremely restrained approach to the crisis, sending Secretary of State John Kerry to multiple, so far useless, diplomatic marathons with his Russian counterpart even as Russia continues bombing civilians in support of Assad, Clinton sounds determined to impose a no-fly zone, which would defy not only Syria’s army but also Russia.

    She says she would keep the Russians informed, so no clashes occur, adding “I want them at the table,” but it is a sharp departure from the current policy, and one that must sound deeply disturbing to Putin.

    A few years ago, Putin mused, speaking about Clinton, that “It’s better not to argue with women.” It’s clear now why he’s going to great lengths to avoid having to argue with a President Hillary Clinton.

    (Frida Ghitis is a world affairs columnist for the The Miami Herald and World Politics Review, and a former CNN producer and correspondent. The views expressed in this commentary are her own.)