Tag: Dallas

  • New York – JUL 03 – 4th Of July INDEPENDENCE DAY Edition

    New York – JUL 03 – 4th Of July INDEPENDENCE DAY Edition

    A New Way to Read This Week’s Print Edition

    The Latest from The Indian Panorama | New York Desk

    Reimagined for the Web
    Volume 9 Issue 26
     | Desktop Edition | July 03

    VOL9ISSUE26-NY

    The Indian Panorama is a South–Asian English newspaper with print editions in New York City, the Tristate area and now also as the first English Indian Newspaper from Dallas, printed weekly every Friday.

    The newspaper is distributed free across the United States and is available at all Indian Temples, gurdwaras & Indian Stores.

  • Dallas JUL 03 – 4th of July INDEPENDENCE DAY Edition

    Dallas JUL 03 – 4th of July INDEPENDENCE DAY Edition

    A New Way to Read This Week’s Print Edition

    The Latest from The Indian Panorama | Dallas Desk

    Reimagined for the Web
    Volume 3 Issue 20
     | Desktop Edition | July 03

    VOL3ISSUE20-TX

    The Indian Panorama is a South–Asian English newspaper with print editions in New York City, the Tristate area and now also as the first English Indian Newspaper from Dallas, printed weekly every Friday.

    The newspaper is distributed free across the United States and is available at all Indian Temples, gurdwaras & Indian Stores.

  • Satnam Singh drafted in NBA, selected by Dallas Mavericks

    Satnam Singh drafted in NBA, selected by Dallas Mavericks

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Indian hoopster Satnam Singh Bhamara, on Friday, became the first player from the country to be drafted in NBA. Satnam, a versatile center player, was selected by Dallas Mavericks with the 52nd pick of the 2015 NBA draft.

    The youngster, who hails from a remote village in Punjab and stands 7 feet 2 inches tall, was hoping to become the first player born on the subcontinent to make the league. Mavericks had invited India’s biggest basketball hope, Satnam, for a pre-draft workout on Tuesday. It was the first time that the scouts of the Texas-based team witnessed the skills of the 290-pound Indian center. Confirming the development, Satnam had told TOI before boarding the flight to Dallas from Florida, “I am very excited to have a workout with Dallas Mavericks -one of the best and experienced team in the NBA. I will give my best and try to impress the selectors there.”

    NBA History has been made! #SatnamSingh has been picked by @dallasmavs-NOW the 1st Indian national in the NBA. pic.twitter.com/wkR21OAP9j — NBAIndia (@NBAIndia) June 26, 2015

    RT @Ananth_Pandian: First Indian to ever be drafted into the NBA – Satnam Singh https://t.co/1NmVwX4lCs – — Nathan (@Neshan_Nathan) June 26, 2015

    Satnam’s young age, giant frame and relatively little pro-league experience in basketball make him an intriguing prospect. However, it’s Satnam’s size and ability to guard multiple positions which is believed to have attracted the Mavs scouts as being a prospective contributor to a team on the defensive side of the ball.

  • Dallas June 26 Edition

    Dallas June 26 Edition

    A New Way to Read This Week’s Print Edition

    Reimagined for the Web
    Volume 3 Issue 19

    Desktop Edition

    vol3issue19-dallas

  • String of Dallas ATM robberies continues

    String of Dallas ATM robberies continues

    DALLAS (TIP): Police are searching for five suspects who busted through a Shell gas station and food mart Thursday, June 25 morning and took off with a bolted-down ATM while a clerk was working.

    The business at the corner of Composite Drive and Walnut Hill Lane is the latest victim in a string of smash-and-grabs.

    Surveillance video shows a truck backing into the wall twice. Four masked men wearing gloves get out, snatch the ATM in just minutes, then take off. A fifth suspect stayed inside the vehicle.

    “It’s pretty sad,” said customer Ever Perez. “I asked the guy, and he’s still shocked he didn’t want to talk about it.”

    Thursday’s crime marks the 22nd successful smash-and-grab of 2015, a trend Dallas police are trying to break.

    “To come in and see the ATM ripped out like that when people are working inside, that’s pretty brave,” said Danny Jezek.

    Tire marks show where are White 1990s GMC pickup rammed into the flood mart and plowed through merchandise around 5:30 a.m. Thursday.

    “It’s pretty messy,” added Perez. “He doesn’t even have time to clean it up cause he still has a business to run,” he said of the store manager.

    Regular customers like Jezek feel for the employees whose nerves are rattled and who now have a long day of cleaning up.

    “It’s not their ATM machine so I guess they don’t have to worry about losing their money, but somebody could have gotten hurt,” said Jezek. “Luckily they didn’t.”

    Dallas police created a task force back in January to catch ATM thieves. While nearly two dozen have gotten lucky this year, there were 30 other attempted smash-and-grabs.

    This is second in two days and fifth in two weeks police are investigating.

     

  • Man turns self in 29 hours after murdering wife

    Man turns self in 29 hours after murdering wife

    DALLAS (TIP): An internal investigation will be conducted into how Dallas Police handled a disturbance this week. Officers may have arrived at the scene of a murder Monday, June 22 night without taking immediate action, police said.

    A man called police to tell them he had suffocated his wife over 24 hours after the murder.

    Jonathan Edelen, 34, admitted early Wednesday, June 24 morning to suffocating his wife after a fight late Monday night at a Dallas apartment, police said.

    Police said Edelen “gave a voluntary statement” to officers, saying he had killed his wife, 28-year-old Ceaira Ford on June 22. Edelen admitted to killing Ford by holding a pillow over her head.

    “Put the cuffs on me and take me to jail, I killed my wife,” Edelen said, according to the arrest affidavit released by Dallas Police.

    Officers were first sent to the scene when a neighbor, a woman in her 90s, called to report a disturbance Monday night at 10:45 p.m., according to Randy Blankenbaker of Dallas PD. The woman didn’t answer her door when officers arrived, he said.

    A man who police believe is a close friend of Edelen’s answered the door at the unit where Ford was killed, Blankenbaker said. Blankenbaker said that, when officers arrived just after 11 p.m., Edelen may have been in another room with a deceased Ford. The man who answered the door told officers he was home alone.

    Police were working Thursday to determine whether that close friend played a role in the homicide.

    Blankenbaker said Edelen’s mother and two children, ages 4 and 6, were at the apartment with them Monday night. Police left the scene thinking no disturbance had occurred, Blankenbaker said.

    Edelen called police just before 4 a.m. Wednesday, roughly 29 hours after suffocating Ford, to report that his wife had stopped breathing.

    The arrest affidavit indicates that Edelen told police his wife “wouldn’t stop talking” after she called Edelen to come home from work Monday night. Edelen’s account of the fight included him taking a TV out to the patio to destroy it in order to keep Ford from talking, the affidavit reads.

    The couple left the patio and continued to fight in the bedroom, where Edelen told police he placed a pillow over Ford’s head until she stopped moving.

    Edelen was charged with murder and placed in Dallas County’s Lew Sterrett Justice Center, according to police. Records show he was being held on $500,000 bond.

    An investigation was ongoing.

     

  • Facing backlash, US Muslims counter with new advertising campaign

    Facing backlash, US Muslims counter with new advertising campaign

    SACRAMENTO (TIP): In California’s capital city of Sacramento this month, stark black billboards loomed over highways and faded commercial strips, offering solace to the troubled: “Looking for the answers in life?” one asked. “Discover Muhammad.”

    With messages that are part religious invitation to explore the Muslim faith and part public relations, the billboards anchor a national campaign to showcase Islam as a religion of love and tolerance, aimed at Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

    But the campaign by the mainstream Islamic Circle of North America, which is sponsoring billboards in other cities to publicize the Muslim prophet’s message, could also spark a backlash amid a spike in anti-Islamic sentiment marked by protests, advertising campaigns and sometimes vandalism and violence.

    “We thought a proper approach would be to actually educate the larger public about his personality, which exemplifies love and brotherhood,” said Waqas Syed, ICNA Deputy Secretary General.

    The billboard campaign is not the first high-profile bid by a Muslim group to bolster Islam’s image in America, tarnished by militant attacks. But it is the largest such effort by ICNA, the group most closely identified with billboard campaigns in recent years, and it includes some billboards that are clearly evangelical.

    “Under the circumstances, it’s a pretty bold move,” said Todd Green, a professor who studies Islamophobia, or fear of Islam, at Luther College in Iowa. “When you’re a minority religion, you face a lot of pressure from the majority population not to proselytize.”

    By asking Americans to discover Mohammad, the campaign is similar in some ways to efforts by evangelical Christians whose roadside billboards, especially in the US heartland, have sought to draw Americans into their fold with messages promoting Jesus as the Messiah, he said.

    Organizers said they launched the program as a response to a deadly Paris attack by Islamist militants on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January over its anti-Muslim cartoons, aiming their message in part at other Muslims to say that violence is not an appropriate response to provocation.

    By coincidence, the first billboards went up days after two US Muslim gunmen were killed in May as they tried to attack a Texas exhibit of cartoons depicting Mohammad, and shortly before heavily armed anti-Islam protesters demonstrated outside a Phoenix mosque.

    A previous billboard campaign by ICNA two years ago invited Americans to see similarities between Christianity and Islam, which views Jesus as a prophet but not as the son of God as Christians do. A campaign by another US Muslim group tried to show non-violent interpretations of jihad, such as a holy struggle to lead a moral life.

    Both campaigns prompted angry responses, and in the case of the “My Jihad” campaign, an opposing group put up signs and billboards linking Islam with violence.

    Message of peace, women’s rights

    The latest campaign, paid for by local ICNA chapters, will eventually include about 100 billboards from Philadelphia to Baltimore, Atlanta and Miami.

    Some signs, like those in Sacramento, are clearly invitations to explore the Muslim faith while others aim to portray Mohammad as a supporter of women’s rights and religious tolerance.

    “Kindness is a mark of faith,” a billboard in Elizabeth, New Jersey, reads. In Miami, another offers, “Muhammad believed in peace, social justice, women’s rights.”

    Sharing that view of Mohammad is more important to ICNA than proselytizing, Syed said, though newcomers who want to convert would be welcomed.

    Muslims make up 0.9 percent of the US population, but the number is expected to double by 2050, driven by immigration, high birth rates and a young population, the Pew Research Center says.

    The first wave of signs, including those in Sacramento and Los Angeles, came down last week. New ones will be posted in San Francisco, Dallas and other cities in coming weeks. Despite tensions, the billboards have not been defaced, and negative responses have been few, said Imam Khalid Griggs, vice president of ICNA and leader of a mosque in North Carolina.

    Last week, a group that fears radical Islam will grow in the United States erected billboards around St. Louis showing cartoon drawings of Mohammad, meant to flout the religion’s ban on depicting his image. In February, a Washington, D.C. mosque was vandalized twice in one week.

    In Elizabeth, New Jersey, where one ICNA billboard went up, Tyler Coltelli, a 23-year-old Catholic, said the sign made him uncomfortable: “You should be able to practice your own faith, but I don’t necessarily agree with trying to convert people from the streets.”

    But Bodia Wardany, a parishioner at the Salam Islamic Center in Sacramento said: “I think it’s a great idea, considering all the misperceptions about the faith and the terrorist, fanatical groups misrepresenting the faith itself.”

  • Dallas June 19 Edition

    Dallas June 19 Edition

    A New Way to Read This Week’s Print Edition

    Reimagined for the Web
    Volume 3 Issue 18

    Desktop Edition

    VOL 3 ISSUE 18

  • Dallas Teacher Fired After Disturbingly Racist Post

    Dallas Teacher Fired After Disturbingly Racist Post

    A teacher has been “relieved of her teaching duties” after posting a racist Facebook rant in response to recent events at a McKinney, Texas, pool party, according to a statement from Frenship Independent School District.

    Karen Fitzgibbons was a fourth-grade teacher a Bennett Elementary school of Frenship ISD in Wolfforth, Texas. On Tuesday, she posted an article to her page about Eric Casebolt, a police officer who recently resigned after being involved in a racially charged incident last Friday. Casebolt, who is white, was caught on tape throwing a black, bikini-clad teenage girl to the ground when responding to reports of a disturbance at a community pool. He also pointed his gun at other youths.

    “This makes me ANGRY!” reads the post from Fitzgibbons, referring to Casebolt’s resignation, according to Texas outlet the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. “This officer should not have to resign. I’m going to just go ahead and say it…the blacks are the ones causing the problems and this ‘racial tension.’ I guess that’s what happens when you flunk out of school and have no education.”

    The post continues, “I’m sure their parents are just as guilty for not knowing what their kids were doing; or knew it and didn’t care. I’m almost to the point of wanting them all segregated on one side of town so they can hurt each other and leave the innocent people alone. Maybe the 50s and 60s were really on to something. Now, let the bashing of my true and honest opinion begin….GO! #imnotracist #imsickofthemcausingtrouble #itwasatagedcommunity.”

    The post has since been deleted.

    The statement from Frenship ISD says the district “is deeply disappointed in the thoughtlessness conveyed by this employee’s post. We find these statements to be extremely offensive, insensitive, and disrespectful to our Frenship community and citizens everywhere. These comments in no way represent the educational environment we have created for our students.”

    “Employees are held to the same professional standards in their public use of electronic media as they are for any other public conduct. This recent conduct was unacceptable,” says the statement from the district.

    Spokespeople from Frenship ISD did not respond to further requests for comment.

    Fitzgibbons later issued an apology, according to local outlet KCBD-TV.

    “First, to anyone, of any race, that I have offended, I sincerely apologize. That was not my intent. I let my emotions get the best of me, and instead of taking a deep breath, vented in an inappropriate way. I am truly sorry,” it says in part.

    The apology goes on to say that Fitzgibbons teaches her students to treat others with dignity, and she is now “ashamed” of her previous Facebook post.

  • ‘The Challenge of Journalism is to Survive in the Pressure Cooker of Plutocracy’

    ‘The Challenge of Journalism is to Survive in the Pressure Cooker of Plutocracy’

    Thank you for allowing me to share this evening with you. I’m delighted to meet these exceptional journalists whose achievements you honor with the Helen Bernstein Book Award.

    What happens to a society fed a diet of rushed, re-purposed, thinly reported “content?” Or “branded content” that is really merchandising — propaganda — posing as journalism? But I gulped when [New York Public Library President] Tony Marx asked me to talk about the challenges facing journalism today and gave me 10 to 15 minutes to do so. I seriously thought of taking a powder. Those challenges to journalism are so well identified, so mournfully lamented, and so passionately debated that I wonder if the subject isn’t exhausted. Or if we aren’t exhausted from hearing about it. I wouldn’t presume to speak for journalism or for other journalists or for any journalist except myself. Ted Gup, who teaches journalism at Emerson and Boston College, once bemoaned the tendency to lump all of us under the term “media.” As if everyone with a pen, a microphone, a camera (today, a laptop or smartphone) – or just a loud voice – were all one and the same. I consider myself a journalist. But so does James O’Keefe. Matt Drudge is not E.J. Dionne. The National Review is not The Guardian, or Reuters The Huffington Post. Ann Coulter doesn’t speak for Katrina Vanden Heuvel, or Rush Limbaugh for Ira Glass. Yet we are all “media” and as Ted Gup says, “the media” speaks for us all.

    So I was just about to email Tony to say, “Sorry, you don’t want someone from the Jurassic era to talk about what’s happening to journalism in the digital era,” when I remembered one of my favorite stories about the late humorist Robert Benchley. He arrived for his final exam in international law at Harvard to find that the test consisted of one instruction: “Discuss the international fisheries problem in respect to hatcheries protocol and dragnet and procedure as it affects (a) the point of view of the United States and (b) the point of view of Great Britain.” Benchley was desperate but he was also honest, and he wrote: “I know nothing about the point of view of Great Britain in the arbitration of the international fisheries problem, and nothing about the point of view of the United States. I shall therefore discuss the question from the point of view of the fish.”

    So shall I, briefly. One small fish in the vast ocean of media.

    I look at your honorees this evening and realize they have already won one of the biggest prizes in journalism — support from venerable institutions: The New Yorker, The New York Times, NPR, The Wall Street Journal and The Christian Science Monitor. These esteemed news organizations paid — yes, you heard me, paid — them to report and to report painstakingly, intrepidly, often at great risk. Your honorees then took time — money buys time, perhaps its most valuable purchase — to craft the exquisite writing that transports us, their readers, to distant places – China, Afghanistan, the Great Barrier Reef, even that murky hotbed of conspiracy and secession known as Texas.

    And after we read these stories, when we put down our Kindles and iPads, or — what’s that other device called? Oh yes – when we put down our books – we emerge with a different take on a slice of reality, a more precise insight into some of the forces changing our world.

    Although they were indeed paid for their work, I’m sure that’s not what drove them to spend months based in Beijing, Kabul and Dallas. Their passion was to go find the story, dig up the facts and follow the trail around every bend in the road until they had the evidence. But to do this — to find what’s been overlooked, or forgotten, or hidden; to put their skill and talent and curiosity to work on behalf of their readers — us — they needed funding. It’s an old story: When our oldest son turned 16 he asked for a raise in his allowance, I said: “Don’t you know there are some things more important than money?” And he answered: “Sure, Dad, but it takes money to date them.” Democracy needs journalists, but it takes money to support them. Yet if present trends continue, Elizabeth Kolbert may well have to update her book with a new chapter on how the dinosaurs of journalism went extinct in the Great Age of Disruption.

    You may have read that two Pulitzer Prize winners this year had already left the profession by the time the prize was announced. One had investigated corruption in a tiny, cash-strapped school district for The Daily Breeze of Torrance, California. His story led to changes in California state law. He left journalism for a public relations job that would make it easier to pay his rent. The other helped document domestic violence in South Carolina, which forced the issue onto the state legislative agenda. She left the Charleston Post and Courier for PR, too.

    These are but two of thousands. And we are left to wonder what will happen when the old business models no longer support reporters at local news outlets? There’s an ecosystem out there and if the smaller fish die out, eventually the bigger fish will be malnourished, too.

    A few examples: The New York Times reporter who rattled the city this month with her report on the awful conditions for nail salon workers was given a month just to see whether it was a story, and a year to conduct her investigation. Money bought time. She began, with the help of six translators, by reading several years of back issues of the foreign language press in this country… and began to understand the scope of the problem. She took up her reporting from there. Big fish, like The New York Times, can amplify the work of the foreign language press and wake the rest of us up.

    A free press, you see, doesn’t operate for free at all. Fearless journalism requires a steady stream of independent income. It was the publisher of the Bergen Record, a family-owned paper in New Jersey who got a call from an acquaintance about an unusual traffic jam on the George Washington Bridge. The editor assigned their traffic reporter to investigate. (Can you believe? They had a traffic reporter!) The reporter who covered the Port Authority for the Record joined in and discovered a staggering abuse of power by Governor Chris Christie’s minions. WNYC Radio picked up the story and doggedly stuck to it, helped give it a larger audience and broadened its scope to a pattern of political malfeasance that resulted in high-profile resignations and criminal investigations into the Port Authority. Quite a one-two punch: WNYC won a Peabody Award, the Record won a Polk.

    A Boston Phoenix reporter broke the story about sexual abuse within the city’s Catholic Church nine months before the Boston Globe picked up the thread. The Globe intensified the reporting and gave the story national and international reach. The Boston Phoenix, alas, died from financial malnutrition in 2013 after 47 years in business.

  • 8-year-old girl killed in Dallas crash

    8-year-old girl killed in Dallas crash

    8-year-old girl, Jordin Barrett was killed Saturday evening after a car she was traveling in crossed one or two lanes of U.S. Highway 175 at Second Street, hit an embankment and flipped into floodwaters, authorities said.

    The vehicle was carrying the girl, her mother, a man and three other children, ages 5, 6 and 9. The vehicle landed upright, but the 8- and 9-year-olds were ejected, said Dallas County sheriff’s spokesman Raul Reyna.

    Dallas-Fire Rescue was able to rescue the 9-year-old. But the 8-year-old Barrett was carried away in the water, and fire department boats and other equipment were deployed to find her.

    Her body was found in the water, Reyna said.

    The surviving children were taken to Children’s Medical Center Dallas, where they were in stable condition, Reyna said. The adult victims were taken to Parkland Memorial Hospital, where their conditions were not known late Saturday.

    Investigators are working to determine what caused the crash.

  • North Texas battles rain and deadly flooding

    North Texas battles rain and deadly flooding

    DALLAS (TIP): Flood waters submerged Texas highways and threatened more homes Friday when a squall line stalled over Dallas overnight Thursday, dropping record-setting rainfall and triggering a Flash Flood Emergency in North Texas.

    The most recent rain added to the damage inflicted by thunderstorms that have killed at least 23 people statewide, including two overnight in North Texas, and left 13 missing.

    The rain seeped into homes and stranded hundreds of drivers across the Metroplex, many of whom lingered along Dallas’ Loop 12 for six hours Friday morning after being gridlocked by high water and abandoned vehicles.

    Overnight, Dallas Fire-Rescue crews responded to more than 270 calls that included trapped vehicles and crashes, authorities said.

     

    Mesquite Fire Department Capt. Kelly Turner said a man’s body was found early Friday morning after his truck had been swept into a culvert and submerged.

    The Dallas County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the flood victim as 47-year-old John Jeffrey Usfrey.

     

    In Dallas, police said Friday afternoon the body of a man was found near California Crossing and Northwest Highway as flood waters receded. Police did not release the man’s identity, but did say he was not found in a vehicle.

    Recent storms are being blamed for killing seven people in Oklahoma and at least 23 in Texas, where 13 remain missing or unaccounted for.

    Rainfall Sets New Record

    Thursday’s storm, which dropped nearly five inches of rain overnight at Dallas Love Field and more than two inches elsewhere around the Metroplex, helped set a record for the wettest May in Dallas-Fort Worth history.

    The previous record for May rainfall was set in 1982 at 13.66 inches and was eclipsed at midnight when 13.87 inches had been recorded for the month. By 8 a.m., the total rose to 16.07 inches; 8.62 inches received in the last week alone.

    According to The National Weather Service in Fort Worth, those 16 inches of rainfall amount to more than 35 trillion gallons of rain.

     

     

     

  • Dark Money in Politics

    Dark Money in Politics

    [quote_box_center] “I’ve covered corrupt regimes all over the world, and I find it ineffably sad to come home and behold institutionalized sleaze in the United States”, says the author.[/quote_box_center]

    I’ve admired the Clintons’ foundation for years for its fine work on AIDS and global poverty, and I’ve moderated many panels at the annual Clinton Global Initiative. Yet with each revelation of failed disclosures or the appearance of a conflict of interest from speaking fees of $500,000 for the former president, I have wondered: What were they thinking?

     

    But the problem is not precisely the Clintons. It’s our entire disgraceful money-based political system. Look around:

     

    • Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey accepted flights and playoff tickets from the Dallas Cowboys owner, Jerry Jones, who has business interests Christie can affect.

     

    • Senator Marco Rubio of Florida has received financial assistance from a billionaire, Norman Braman, and has channeled public money to Braman’s causes.

     

     

     

    • Jeb Bush likely has delayed his formal candidacy because then he would have to stop coordinating with his “super PAC” and raising money for it. He is breaching at least the spirit of the law.

     

    “For meaningful change to arrive, ‘voters need to reach a point of revulsion.’ Hey, folks, that time has come.”

     

    When problems are this widespread, the problem is not crooked individuals but perverse incentives from a rotten structure.

     

    “There is a systemic corruption here,” says Sheila Krumholz of the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks campaign money. “It’s kind of baked in.”

     

    Most politicians are good people. Then they discover that money is the only fuel that makes the system work and sometimes step into the bog themselves.

     

    Money isn’t a new problem, of course. John F. Kennedy was accused of using his father’s wealth to buy elections. In response, he joked that he had received the following telegram from his dad: “Don’t buy another vote. I won’t pay for a landslide!”

     

    Yet Robert Reich, Bill Clinton’s labor secretary and now chairman of the national governing board of Common Cause, a nonpartisan watchdog group, notes that inequality has hugely exacerbated the problem. Billionaires adopt presidential candidates as if they were prize racehorses. Yet for them, it’s only a hobby expense.

     

    For example, Sheldon and Miriam Adelson donated $92 million to super PACs in the 2012 election cycle; as a share of their net worth, that was equivalent to $300 from the median American family. So a multibillionaire can influence a national election for the same sacrifice an average family bears in, say, a weekend driving getaway.

     

    Money doesn’t always succeed, of course, and billionaires often end up wasting money on campaigns. According to The San Jose Mercury News, Meg Whitman spent $43 per vote in her failed campaign for governor of California in 2010, mostly from her own pocket. But Michael Bloomberg won his 2009 re-election campaign for mayor of New York City after, according to the New York Daily News, spending $185 of his own money per vote.

     

     

    The real bargain is lobbying — and that’s why corporations spend 13 times as much lobbying as they do contributing to campaigns, by the calculations of Lee Drutman, author of a recent book on lobbying.

     

    The health care industry hires about five times as many lobbyists as there are members of Congress. That’s a shrewd investment. Drug company lobbyists have prevented Medicare from getting bulk discounts, amounting to perhaps $50 billion a year in extra profits for the sector.

     

    Likewise, lobbying has carved out the egregious carried interest tax loophole, allowing many financiers to pay vastly reduced tax rates. In that respect, money in politics both reflects inequality and amplifies it.

     

    Lobbyists exert influence because they bring a potent combination of expertise and money to the game. They gain access, offer a well-informed take on obscure issues — and, for a member of Congress, you think twice before biting the hand that feeds you.

     

    The Supreme Court is partly to blame for the present money game, for its misguided rulings that struck down limits in campaign spending by corporations and unions and the overall political donation cap for individuals.

     

    Still, President Obama could take one step that would help: an executive order requiring federal contractors to disclose all political contributions.

     

    “President Obama could bring the dark money into the sunlight in time for the 2016 election,” notes Michael Waldman of the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law. “It’s the single most tangible thing anyone could do to expose the dark money that is now polluting politics.”

     

    I’ve covered corrupt regimes all over the world, and I find it ineffably sad to come home and behold institutionalized sleaze in the United States.

     

    Reich told me that for meaningful change to arrive, “voters need to reach a point of revulsion.” Hey, folks, that time has come.

    (NY Times May 28, 2015)

  • Indian American Joshua Chari now with 8 A.S degrees

    Indian American Joshua Chari now with 8 A.S degrees

    The Indian Panorama was the First to report this story which is now been picked by other News agencies like CNN

    DALLAS (TIP): The 16-year-old is scheduled to receive gubernatorial honors for completing much of his undergraduate studies and pocketing eight — yes, eight — associate degrees along the way.

    How’d he do it? Chari is one of hundreds of students who have taken part in the Richardson Independent School District’s dual credit program, where qualifying students can garner credit for both high school and college at the same time.

    Joshua Chari, son of Raj & Manjusha Chari of Richardson, Texas has earned a record 8 Associate degrees, moving past the known US record of 4 A.S degrees in parallel with the high school diploma. Joshua achieved this mostly through the “Early College Education” program in some US states which allow high school students to sign up for advanced level classes which give high school and college credit at the same time.

    Joshua attended Richland College, Dallas, from where he earned his degrees in Liberal Sciences, Computer Science, Electrical, Bio-Medical, Telecommunications, Software and Computer Engineering. Joshua started taking college credit classes since he was in the 7th grade. He got his 8th and final Associates’ degree in Mechanical Engineering this May as he got his high school diploma.

    Joshua has been honored by various government and educational institutions for his stellar academic achievements by proclamations and awards, pictures and videos of which could be seen on the internet. he Texas State legislature has recognized and honored Joshua by passing a bill exclusively in his honor through house bill HR480.

    After high school, Joshua plans to go to Univ. of Texas at Dallas, in for a fast-track BS/MS degree with Dual Majors in Bio-Medical and Mechanical Engineering with dual minors in Nano-Technology and Business. He already has a full ride Academic Excellence Scholarship for the entire college studies.

  • Dallas Edition May 29 Print Edition

    Dallas Edition May 29 Print Edition

    A New Way to Read This Week’s Print Edition

    Reimagined for the Web

    Volume 3 Issue 17

    Desktop Edition

    vol3issue17dlaas

     

     

     

     

     

  • $2.3 billion Dallas-Fort Worth water project put on priority list

    AUSTIN (TIP): A nearly $2.3 billion pipeline project that would deliver water from East Texas to Dallas-Fort Worth made the priority funding list for one of the first loans from a $2 billion fund for water projects approved by Texas voters in 2013.

    Voters approved the project amid concerns over how rapidly growing cities are going to meet future water needs.

    Dallas Water Utilities seeks a $140 million loan and the Tarrant County Regional Water District $300 million for their proposed pipeline project from the state water board’s revolving bank. State water planners announced Wednesday that the 150-mile Integrated Pipeline Project ranks in the top 20 for its first round of funding.

    Customers in both districts would contribute about $820 million to the project, which is expected to be completed by 2035. Construction began last year on the pipeline, which would transport water from Lake Palestine, Cedar Creek Reservoir and Richland Chambers to Tarrant Regional and Dallas customers.

    Supporters say the project is needed to supply the booming Dallas-Fort Worth area. But the pipeline has also drawn the ire of some of the 900 owners whose land is along the project’s path, according to news reports.

    The Texas Water Development Board has put on the priority list about $4.4 billion in water projects expected to be financed over the next decade. Being named on the priority list is an invitation for those projects to submit a formal application.

    A spokesman said the board is expected to begin cutting checks for projects this fall. The board will finance $1.7 billion this year for immediate projects. The remaining $2.7 billion for water projects around the state is expected to be financed in the next decade, the spokesman said.

    (Source: Dallas Morning News)

     

  • American becomes 2nd US airline to use Boeing’s 787

    FORT WORTH, TEXAS (TIP); American has joined the list of airlines flying the Boeing 787 jet, which it hopes will appeal to passengers and open new, profitable international routes.

    Passengers boarded at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport on Thursday morning for American’s debut flight of a 787 to Chicago. Domestic service is just a warm-up. Next month, American will begin using 787s on flights to Beijing and Buenos Aires and eventually other places.

    American joins United as the only U.S. airlines using the plane, which Boeing calls the Dreamliner.

    (Source: AP)

  • DRONE SPOTTED OVER PASSENGER JET IN DALLAS

    DRONE SPOTTED OVER PASSENGER JET IN DALLAS

    DALLAS (TIP): Pilots of a Virgin America flight reported seeing a drone flying above their airplane on Tuesday, April 28 night.Pilots notified Air Traffic Control at Love Field Airport just before 9:30 p.m. that the drone was flying about 200 feet above the plane, which was at 1,000 feet, according to Jose Torres from the City of Dallas’ Aviation Department.The plane was on final approach above the Crescent Hotel when pilots spotted the drone.

    The drone was not in Love Field’s airspace, Torres said. The drone was in downtown Dallas.

    Dallas Police Department’s helicopter, Air One, flew along the landing route, but did not find any sign of the drone. The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating.

  • Hindu Temple Vandalised in Lake Highlands – Dallas

    Hindu Temple Vandalised in Lake Highlands – Dallas

    A Hindu Temple in Lake Highlands is looking at increasing after vandals covered it in graffiti this week. The number 666 and an upside down cross now appear on the door of the North Texas Hindu Mandir.

    “It makes me sad inside, said 9 year old Gracie Reed. “To me, it’s really horrifying because I don’t know who would do this to a church.” Krishna Singh is on the temple’s board and says members discovered the graffiti Monday.

    “That was a big shock, really… The whole things has been very disturbing to the community.”

    Neighbors are upset, too. “The sentiment of the neighborhood is that we all find it appalling,” said Ted Hoffman, who lives across the street.

    Hoffman said neighbors have offered to help paint over the symbols.

    Singh says, the temple wants to add surveillance cameras, better lighting, and a fence to prevent this from happening again.

    A believer in karma, though, he says he won’t lose sleep waiting for the person responsible to be caught.
    “The forces will take care of it. We don’t have to worry about that.”

  • Dallas Businessman Arun Agarwal Receives Prestigious  ‘Non-Resident Indian (NRI) of the Year’ Award

    Dallas Businessman Arun Agarwal Receives Prestigious ‘Non-Resident Indian (NRI) of the Year’ Award

    (Dallas, Texas – April 20, 2015) CEO of Dallas-based home textiles company NexttArun Agarwal, was among 16 successful Indians honored at the second annual “TIMES NOW/ICICI Bank NRI of the Year Awards” at a ceremony in Mumbai on April 14, 2015, attended by top government officials, celebrities and entrepreneurs.

     
    TIMES NOW, India’s No. 1 news channel, and ICICI Bank, India’s largest private sector bank, celebrated the success and achievements of Indians across the world with the announcement of the winners in seven different categories – Entrepreneur, Professional, Academics, Art & Culture, Philanthropy, Special Jury Award, and India’s Global Icon Award. The achievers are contestants from four regions – North America, United Kingdom, Middle East and Asia Pacific. 
     
    Dallas-based home textiles company Nextt is as a key supplier to big retailers such as Walmart, Target, Kohl’s and Dillard’s; the $500-million company manufactures home textiles, garments, apparel fabrics and polyester yarns, primarily from India, and sells under popular name brands such as Trina Turk, Kathy Ireland, Jessica McClintock and Raymond Waites.
     
    “I am thrilled to be honored with this group of the most accomplished people in their fields around the world,” said Agarwal. “Due to their perseverance and creativity, non-resident Indians are making their mark in various industries, and we salute platforms such as these which recognize the diligence and accomplishments of those of living away from the mother land.”
     
    Agarwal, who studied at Harvard University before pursuing his dream to become an entrepreneur, has been building and nurturing the Indian home textiles sector in the U.S. for the past 15 years. Under his leadership last year, Nextt unveiled a 17,000 square feet flagship showroom on Madison Avenue in Manhattan. For more information about Nextt, please visit: www.nextt.com.
     

  • Small plane crashes in Texas, at least 2 seriously hurt

    DALLAS (TIP): Authorities say a small plane crashed into a North Texas home, leaving at least two people seriously injured. FAA spokesman Lynn Lunsford says a Beechcraft B35 aircraft smashed the house’s roof Sunday, March 29 afternoon, and then landed in the yard of a home in Gordonville, about 85 miles north of Dallas. Trooper Mark Tackett of the Texas Department of Public Safety said the engine and propeller came off the plane, which struck an unoccupied home before the plane landed in a backyard. Lunsford says two adults and two children were injured, and were taken to Texoma Medical Center. Tackett said the pilot and one passenger had serious injuries and the other two people were not seriously hurt. No bystanders were injured.

  • Mike Ghouse of World Muslim Congress to speak at Aligarh Muslim University

    Mike Ghouse of World Muslim Congress to speak at Aligarh Muslim University

    WASHINGTON DC (TIP): Aligarh Muslim University has organized a two day International conference with the theme -“Intellectual Crises of the Muslim Ummah: Rethinking Traditional Solutions”

    The speakers from around the world will speak on a variety of subjects focused on the theme and Mike Ghouse with the World Muslim Congress, a think tank will be presenting a paper on “Does Islam need a Reform or we just need new interpreters?  He will be participating in a few other panels, including “Can Muslims lead a conglomeration of faith communities?And is United Islam Possible?

    Mike Ghouse added, “I am pleased to see the efforts of Muslims in India, United States and elsewhere to hold these conferences and advance the idea of an inclusive world, where all of God’s creation is respected as members of one family. We all came from a single couple Adam and Eve, and were made into many communities and nations, as the Abrahimic religions put it, and the Dharmic traditions have its equivalent wisdom in Vasudhaiva Kutumbukum” meaning the whole world is one family.”

    Ghouse defines pluralism in action as “if we can learn to respect the otherness of others and accept the God given uniqueness of each one of us, then conflicts fade and solutions emerge to create a cohesive world, where no human has to live in apprehension or fear of the other.”  Mike plans to release soon on YouTube a 45 Minutes video on Pluralism and Islam.

    Mike has written over 2500 articles on Pluralism in religion, politics, society, work place and Islam. Readers can Google search “Pluralism speaker”, “Interfaith speaker” or “Muslim Speaker” for his articles. Dallas Morning News has published over 225 articles and Huffington post over 125 pieces with publication in myriad of other news and media outlets, including The Indian Panorama.

     

  • World record in academics established by Indian American Joshua Chari

    World record in academics established by Indian American Joshua Chari

    The 16-year-old is scheduled to receive gubernatorial honors Thursday for completing much of his undergraduate studies and pocketing eight — yes, eight — associate degrees along the way.

    How’d he do it? Chari is one of hundreds of students who have taken part in the Richardson Independent School District’s dual credit program, where qualifying students can garner credit for both high school and college at the same time.

    Joshua will soon be a Berkner High School alumnus, but at the time this article was published, his only alma mater was Richland College.

    [quote_box_right]The Indian Panorama was the First to report this story which is now been picked by other News agencies like CNN[/quote_box_right]

    DALLAS (TIP): A Richardson ISD  and Richland College student. Aged 16  has earned a world record of 7  A.S degrees while still in his final year of high school.

    Joshua Chari, son of Raj & Manjusha Chari of Richardson, Texas has earned a record 7 Associate degrees, moving past the known US record of 4 A.S degrees in parallel with the high school diploma. Joshua achieved this mostly through the “Early College Education” program in some US states which allow high school students to sign up for advanced level classes which give high school and college credit at the same time.

    Joshua attended  Richland College, Dallas, from where he earned his degrees in Liberal Sciences, Computer Science, Electrical, Bio-Medical, Telecommunications, Software and Computer Engineering. Joshua started taking college credit classes since he was in the 7th grade. He will get his 8th and final  Associates’ degree in Mechanical Engineering in May, 2 weeks before he gets his high school diploma.

    Joshua has been honored by various government and educational institutions for his stellar academic achievements by proclamations and awards, pictures and videos of which could be seen on the internet. he Texas State legislature has recognized and honored Joshua by passing a bill exclusively in his honor through house bill HR480.

    After high school, Joshua plans to go to Univ. of Texas at Dallas, in for a fast-track BS/MS degree with Dual Majors in Bio-Medical and Mechanical Engineering with dual minors in Nano-Technology and Business. He already has a full ride Academic Excellence Scholarship for the entire college studies.

    Links to some of Joshua’s TV interviews and honors and articles in the news are as follows:

    1. Text of the Bill HR480, honoring Joshua Chari, by the 84th Texas House of Legislature:
    https://legiscan.com/TX/text/HR480/1119381

    2. Dallas Morning News article : http://bit.ly/1Ajo7go

    3. Richardson School District Newsletter, Joshua Chari’s article:
    http://www.risd.org/SchoolTimes/010915/index.html#a2

    4. Richardson Mayor and City Council presenting Joshua with a Proclamation:
    https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=754213557950559&se t=vb.100000857648884&type=2&theater

    5. Dallas County Commissioners and County Judge recognizing Joshua for his achievements at the county
    administration offices:
    https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=741545482550700&se t=vb.100000857648884&type=2&theater

    6. WKRC TV channel:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5lVvsGucug

    7.     ABC TV channel: http://6abc.com/494187.

  • South Asian Film Festival in Dallas thrills Thousands

    South Asian Film Festival in Dallas thrills Thousands

    DALLAS (TIP) It was a rich fare  for three days  for film lovers in Dallas during the  first ever South Asian film festival held in  Dallas, Texas which saw over a thousand film lovers attending the event that featured films focusing on issues affecting the continent. The three-day Dallas-Fort Worth South Asian Film Festival, held at the Angelika Film Center in Plano, North Texas from Feb. 27 to Mar. 1, featured 14 shorts, documentaries and feature films. Carefully selected films had a focus on issues affecting the South Asian subcontinent and explored the lives and stories of the South Asian Diaspora in the United States.

    “The response was fabulous, especially given the crappy weather as news reports warned North Texans not to leave their homes because of the snowstorm, and we still had completely packed theaters for our screenings. It has been a very humbling experience, and we’re already preparing for DFW SAFF 2016,” said  Jitin Hingorani, Jingo Media CEO and DFW SAFF founder and festival director.

    The Indian Panorama team of editor Prof. Indrajit Saluja, Dallas Bureau Chief Lovllien Kaurr and Photo journalist Zia Khan attended the film festival on Saturday, February 28. Prof. Saluja and Lovllien Kaurr are seen with Jitin Hingorani, Jingo Media CEO and DFW SAFF founder and festival director, and festival organizers
    The Indian Panorama team of editor Prof. Indrajit Saluja, Dallas Bureau Chief Lovllien Kaurr and Photo journalist Zia Khan attended the film festival on Saturday, February 28. Prof. Saluja and Lovllien Kaurr are seen with Jitin Hingorani, Jingo Media CEO and DFW SAFF founder and festival director, and festival organizers

     

    The producers, directors and actors who attended the festival and walked the red carpet included Viveck Vaswani, Tannistha Chatterjee, Mahesh Pailoor, Jeffrey D. Brown, Jane Charles, Dylan Mohan Gray, Suma Reddy, Fahad Mustafa, Deepti Kakkar, Tarun Verma, Arun Sukumar and Ryan Matthew Chan.

    The festival kicked off with the opening night film “Brahmin Bulls” Feb. 27, followed by shorts and documentaries “Katiyabaaz/Powerless,” “Asian Pride Project,” “Fire in the Blood” and “Tomorrow We Disappear,” and women’s programming “Blouse,” “Happy Raksha Bandhan” and centerpiece film “Sold” Feb. 28.

    Makers of "Sold" and "Blouse" were honored  at Angelika Film Center,  Plano.
    Makers of “Sold” and “Blouse” were honored at Angelika Film Center, Plano.

     

    The showcase films screened Mar. 1 included family programming “Ravi and Jane” and “The World of Goopi and Bagha,” followed by youth programming shorts “Therapy,” “Just Friends” and “Acceptance.”

    A question answers session on February 28th night  after the screening of “Sold” and “Blouse” was indeed remarkably interesting. The makers of the two films  candidly answered questions from a number of spectators. The Indian Panorama editor Prof. Indrajit Saluja congratulated the director and producer of “Bold” for highlighting the issue of girl trafficking  which  is a serious challenge to  society everywhere, not just Nepal and India, the locations in the movie. He  said the movie had stirred the conscience of viewers.

    Film makers at the film festival  pose for a photograph with Jitin Hingorani
    Film makers at the film festival pose for a photograph with Jitin Hingorani

    “Rough Book.”  was premiered on the closing night.

  • Indian-American Renu Khator to head US Higher Education council ACE

    Indian-American Renu Khator to head US Higher Education council ACE

    Dallas (TIP) : Indian American Renu Khator, Chancellor of University of Houston System and also President of University of Houston, will be the new Chair of American Council on Education (ACE) which is the most influential higher education association. She will be succeeding James H Mullen Jr  from tomorrow.  

    Uttar Pradesh-born and University of Kanpur educated Khator told PTI that “On March 16, I will become chairman of the American Council on Education, a national organisation representing all institutions of higher education– from elite private to community colleges to ‘for profit’ universities – in America.” 

    “In the next decade, American higher education is going to be transformed. We need a collective voice, a shared platform, a place where we can collectively anticipate change, dare to innovate, and learn from each other’s mistakes. 

    “I think ACE provides that forum, that collective voice that shared space, and that togetherness,” reads a message by Khator on ACE’s official website.  

    She will be the first ever Indian immigrant to lead a comprehensive research university in the US. She is also the UH System’s first woman chancellor and UH’s first foreign-born president. Last year, she was named the chairperson of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas’ board of directors.  

    Currently the Vice Chair of ACE, she says she feels tremendously honoured to be selected for the new position by fellow presidents. 

    ACE represents the presidents of US accredited, degree- granting institutions, which include two and four-year colleges, private and public universities, and non-profit and for-profit entities. In its role representing all sectors of higher education, ACE provides higher education administrators multiple opportunities to learn from colleagues and experts. 
     
    According to Khator, both the Indian and US education systems have the same mission but take different approaches to accomplish it. 

    “India does not have a two-year college system for those who wish to pursue trade related degrees. It has a cohort system where a student enters a university and must continue and finish his or her degree at a predetermined course in a pre-selected field.

     
    In US, students can work on their own pace and start their degree at any age and change majors several times,” she says.

    “Bachelor’s education in the US includes two years of common core. Irrespective of your field of study – engineering or commerce or arts – everyone must take common courses in humanities, math and social sciences,” she says.

    A product of the Indian education system, she says she values it for all that it offers