Tag: Texas

  • 709,000 seek US jobless aid as pandemic escalates

    709,000 seek US jobless aid as pandemic escalates

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The number of people seeking U.S. unemployment benefits fell last week to 709,000, a still-high level but the lowest figure since March and a sign that the job market might be slowly healing.

    The figures coincide with a sharp resurgence in confirmed viral infections to an all-time high above 120,000 a day. Cases are rising in 49 states, and deaths are increasing in 39. The nation has now recorded 240,000 virus-related deaths and 10.3 million confirmed infections.As colder weather sets in and fear of the virus escalates, consumers may turn more cautious about travelling, shopping, dining out and visiting gyms, barber shops and retailers. Companies in many sectors could cut jobs or workers’ hours. In recent days, the virus’ resurgence has triggered tighter restrictions on businesses, mostly restaurants and bars, in a range of states, including Texas, New York, Maryland, and Oregon. Last week’s new applications for unemployment benefits was down from 757,000 the previous week, the Labor Department said Thursday. The still-elevated figure shows that eight months after the pandemic flattened the economy, many employers are still slashing jobs. The number of people who are continuing to receive traditional unemployment benefits fell to 6.8 million, the government said, from 7.2 million. That suggests that more Americans are finding jobs and no longer receiving unemployment aid. But it also indicates that many jobless people have used up their state unemployment aid — which typically expires after six months — and have transitioned to a federal extended benefits programme that lasts 13 more weeks. The viral outbreak threatens to upend the improvement in the job market in recent months. The unemployment rate plunged a full percentage point in October to 6.9 per cent while employers added a solid 600,000 new jobs.

    (Agencies)

  • November 13 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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    E-Edition

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  • November on track to be worst month of pandemic so far in US as cases surge

    November on track to be worst month of pandemic so far in US as cases surge

    • Wednesday marked new record for daily cases with 143,231 new infections and 2,005 deaths

    NEW YORK (TIP): November is on track to be the worst month of the pandemic so far in the US as new cases and hospitalizations continue to surge to record highs. There were 143,231 new cases and 2,005 deaths in the US on Wednesday, November 11, according to figures recorded by Johns Hopkins University. It marked the ninth consecutive day of cases topping 100,000 and a new record for daily cases. It comes after the country recorded more than a million cases in the first 10 days of November. Total cases in the US have now r eached over 10.3m and 241,910 people have died, the highest totals in the world.Health experts have in part put the increase down to incoming cold weather driving people indoors and frustration with public health precautions such as masks. Dr Anthony Fauci, America’s top infectious disease expert, said America can slow the spread by “doubling down” on precautions such as mask-wearing, avoiding crowds, keeping activities outdoors and social distancing – and that if people do so a national lockdown could be avoided.

    “We would like to stay away from that [a national lockdown] because there is no appetite for locking down in the American public. But I believe that we can do it without a lockdown, I really do,” he told ABC on Thursday morning.

    He added: “The best opposite strategy to locking down is to intensify the public health measures short of locking down. So if you can do that well, you don’t have to take that step that people are trying to avoid which has so many implications, both psychologically and economically.”

    He urged the American public to “hang in there”, saying a vaccine should be on its way to highest priority people in December and to everyone else within the second quarter of 2021.

    “The cavalry is coming. Vaccines are going to have a major positive impact … So if we can just hang in there, do the public health measures that we’re talking about, we’re going to get this under control, I promise you,” he said.

    Daily cases are on the rise in 49 states, and deaths per day are climbing in 39.

    North and South Dakota and Wisconsin are among the worst affected states, while Texas this week became the first state to record a million cases.

    California is also heading towards the 1m mark, recording a total of 995,575 cases, according to Johns Hopkins data. In Los Angeles, the Dodger stadium is being used as a testing center.

    A White House coronavirus taskforce report distributed to states on Tuesday, November 10 evening reportedly said: “There is continued, accelerating community spread across the top half of the country, where temperatures have cooled and Americans have moved indoors.”

    It also warned of continued deterioration in the so-called sun belt states across the south and “the most diffuse spread experienced to date”, reported CNN.

    Hospitalizations in the US broke records for a second consecutive day. The Covid Tracking Project recorded 65,368 people hospitalized on Wednesday – up from 61,964 the previous day and double the figure for a month ago. Amid healthcare staffing concerns in North Dakota, the governor, Doug Burgum, has said that asymptomatic healthcare workers with Covid-19 will be allowed to continue working in Covid-19 hospital units. In New York, where infection rates are on the rise, the governor, Andrew Cuomo, announced on Wednesday, November 11,  that restaurants, bars and gyms would be required to close at 10pm, starting on Friday, November 13 and that gatherings at private homes would be limited to 10 people. “If you look at where the cases are coming from, if you do the contact tracing, you’ll see they’re coming from three main areas: establishments where alcohol is served, gyms and indoor gatherings at private homes,” Cuomo said. New York City was the world’s worst hotspot for the virus back in the early spring, then gradually got infections under control and is now urgently trying to ensure that the city and state do not experience a full-blown “second wave” of coronavirus.

    (Source: The Guardian)

  • November 6 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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    E-Edition

    [/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column width=”2/3″][vc_custom_heading text=”” font_container=”tag:h2|text_align:center” google_fonts=”font_family:Istok%20Web%3Aregular%2Citalic%2C700%2C700italic|font_style:700%20bold%20regular%3A700%3Anormal” link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theindianpanorama.news%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2020%2F11%2FTIP-November-6-Dual-Edition.pdf|||”][vc_single_image image=”102372″ img_size=”full” add_caption=”yes” alignment=”center” onclick=”custom_link” link=”https://www.theindianpanorama.news/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/TIP-November-6-Dual-Edition.pdf”][/vc_column][vc_column width=”1/3″][vc_single_image image=”82828″ img_size=”medium” alignment=”center” onclick=”custom_link” link=”https://www.theindianpanorama.news/advertising-media-kit-portal-indian-panorama/”][vc_single_image image=”82829″ img_size=”medium” alignment=”center” onclick=”custom_link” link=”https://www.theindianpanorama.news/advertising-media-kit-portal-indian-panorama/”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column width=”2/3″][vc_custom_heading text=”Lead Stories This Week” font_container=”tag:h2|text_align:center” google_fonts=”font_family:Istok%20Web%3Aregular%2Citalic%2C700%2C700italic|font_style:700%20bold%20regular%3A700%3Anormal” link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theindianpanorama.news%2F%20|||”][/vc_column][vc_column width=”1/3″][vc_widget_sidebar sidebar_id=”mh-sidebar”][/vc_column][/vc_row]

  • Four Democratic Indian American Lawmakers of “Samosa Caucus” Re-Elected to US House of Representatives

    Four Democratic Indian American Lawmakers of “Samosa Caucus” Re-Elected to US House of Representatives

    WASHINGTON  (TIP): In an impressive show, all the four Indian American Democratic lawmakers – Dr Ami Bera, Pramila Jayapal, Ro Khanna and Raja Krishnamoorthi – have been re-elected to the US House of Representatives.

    The Indian American community has emerged as a force to reckon with for the first time in the history of the US presidential election. Both the Democrat and the Republican campaigns had initiated several measures to woo the approximately 1.8 million members of the community who have emerged as a critical voting bloc in the battleground states of Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Texas.The ‘Samosa caucus’ currently comprises five Indian American lawmakers, including the four members of the House of Representatives and Senator and Democratic vice-presidential nominee Kamala Harris, 56.

    Raja Krishnamoorthi, 47, easily defeated Preston Nelson, 30, of the Libertarian Party. When last reports came in, he had accounted for nearly 71 per cent of the total votes counted.

    Ro Khanna, 44, easily defeated fellow Indian-American Ritesh Tandon, 48, of the Republican Party with a margin of more than 50 percentage points. This was his third-consecutive win from the 17th Congressional district of California. Dr Ami Bera, 55, the senior most member of the ‘Samosa Caucus’, won the seventh Congressional District of California for the fifth consecutive term. When the last report came in, he had established an inaccessible lead by more than 25 percentage points against his Republican rival 65-year-old Buzz Patterson. The House of Representatives is the lower house of the US Congress, with the Senate being the upper house.

  • Indian Americans make a splash in yet another election cycle

    Indian Americans make a splash in yet another election cycle

    NEW YORK (TIP): Besides the four member ‘Samosa Caucus’ of Indian American lawmakers re-elected to the US House of Representatives, over a dozen others, including five women have won state level elections scoring a few firsts for the community.

    Among the five women, Democrat lawyer Jenifer Rajkumar, 38, became the first South Asian woman elected to the New York state assembly defeating her Republican rival Giovanni Perna.

    Rajkumar, a Stanford-educated lawyer and an immigrant rights advocate, is a professor at the City University of New York. She has previously served as the Director of Immigration Affairs and Special Counsel for New York state.

    Democrat Kesha Ram, who served in the Vermont House of Representatives from 2009 to 2016, became the first woman of color elected to the Vermont State Senate.

    Daughter of a Punjabi from India, she was one of the youngest ever to be elected to State Assembly at the age of 21.

    Other three elected to state houses were immigration attorney Nima Kulkarni in Kentucky, Vandana Slatter, a pharmacist, and scientist, in Washington and Democrat Padma Kuppa in Michigan. Kuppa was the first Indian immigrant and Hindu in the Michigan Legislature.

    “This year’s election represented a giant leap forward for the Indian Americans’ role in US politics,” says Neil Makhija, Executive Director of IMPACT.

    The leading Indian American advocacy and political action committee had raised a $10 million war chest to get Democratic vice-presidential candidate Kamala Harris and other Indian origin candidates elected. “Indian American voters and candidates demonstrated the burgeoning power and influence of this important voting bloc in decisive fashion,” he said.

    With a record number of Indian American candidates running for office across the nation, around two million Indian Americans voted in the 2020 election, according to the Center for American Progress.

    Winners

    US House:

    The longest serving Indian American House member Ami Bera, 55, won his fifth consecutive term to the House from California. Son of immigrant parents from Gujarat, Bera is a physician by profession. New Delhi-born lawyer Krishnamoorthi, 47, defeated his Libertarian Party rival in Illinois to win a third term.

    So did lawyer, academic Ro Khanna, 44, who defeated another Indian American challenger Ritesh Tandon of Republican Party in California.

    Chenna-born civil rights activist Jayapal, 55, the first and the only Indian American woman in the House, also won a third consecutive term from Washington State.

    States:

    In Arizona, Democrat Amish Shah, a doctor who defeated incumbent Ken Clark in 2018 was reelected to the State House from District 24.

    In California, Ash Kalra was re-elected to the California State Assembly for the third consecutive term.

    In Michigan, Democrat Ranjeev Puri was elected to 21st House District with a promise to help fight for a better Michigan.

    Also elected to Michigan state House 3rd District was Shri Thanedar, 65, millionaire businessman, scientist, who made an unsuccessful bid for governor two years ago,

    In New York,  Jeremy Cooney of Democratic Party, Working Families Party, was elected to the state senate from district 56.

    Born in an Indian orphanage, Cooney was adopted by a single-mother and grew up in the South Wedge neighborhood of the City of Rochester.

    Zohran Mamdani, son of filmmaker Mira Nair, won a New York State Assembly seat.

    In North Carolina, Democrat attorney and professor Jay Chaudhuri, who in 2016 became the first Indian American state legislator, was re-elected from State Senate’s 15th District.

    In Ohio, Republican Niraj Antani, 29, who in 2014 became the youngest member of the Ohio state house, has been elected as Ohio’s first Indian American state senator.

    He was the first Indian American Republican to serve in the Ohio House and second to get elected from the community to the statehouse.

    In Pennsylvania Democrat Nikil Saval, a writer and community organizer, was elected to District 1 of State Senate. He was the first Indian American elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly.

    In Texas, Ravi Sandill, who in November 2008 became the first judge of South Asian descent elected in Texas, was re-elected as District Judge in Harris County.

    A number of Indian Americans also lost their races on Tuesday.

    In Maine, state house speaker Sara Gideon, 48, lost the US senate race to incumbent veteran Republican Senator Susan Collins.

    Gideon grew up in East Greenwich, Rhode Island, where her father was a pediatrician who emigrated from India and her Armenian American mother was a psychiatrist.

    In New Jersey, Republican Rik Mehta, 42, a pharmaceutical entrepreneur and political newcomer, lost to popular Democrat senator Cory Booker, a former mayor of New Jersey’s largest city and onetime Democratic presidential aspirant.

    In California, Republican Ritesh Tandon lost the US House race to fellow Indian American lawyer, academic Ro Khanna.

    So did Nisha Sharma, another Republican, to sitting Democrat Mark DeSaulnier.

    In Texas, former US diplomat Sri Preston Kulkarni, 42, lost to his Republican rival Troy Nehls in the state’s 22nd congressional district. He had narrowly lost the race in 2018, too.

    In Arizona’s 6th congressional district, Democrat Hiral Tiperneni is trailing narrowly at 10:30 am EST.

    In Virginia, Republican Manga Anantatmula failed to unseat Democrat Gerry Connolly.

  • Mutation in novel coronavirus may have made it more contagious: Study

    Mutation in novel coronavirus may have made it more contagious: Study

    The novel coronavirus is accumulating genetic mutations, one of which may have made it more contagious, according to a study involving more than 5,000 Covid-19 patients in the US.

    The research, published in the journal mBIO, however, did not find that these mutations have made the virus deadlier or changed clinical outcomes.

    The researchers noted that the mutation, called D614G, is located in the spike protein that pries open our cells for viral entry.

    “The virus is mutating due to a combination of neutral drift — which just means random genetic changes that don’t help or hurt the virus — and pressure from our immune systems,” said Ilya Finkelstein, associate professor at The University of Texas at Austin, US.

    The researchers noted that during the initial wave of the pandemic, 71 per cent of the novel coronaviruses identified in patients in Houston had this mutation.

    When the second wave of the outbreak hit Houston during the summer, this variant had leaped to 99.9 per cent prevalence, they said.

    This mirrors a trend observed around the world, according to the researchers. The reason why strains containing this mutation outcompete those that didn’t have it may be that natural selection would favour strains of the virus that transmit more easily, the researchers said. However, some scientists have suggested another explanation, called “founder’s effects.” In that scenario, the D614G mutation might have been more common in the first viruses to arrive in Europe and North America, essentially giving them a head start on other strains, according to the researchers.

  • October 30 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • US Election 2020- What the Polls Say

    US Election 2020- What the Polls Say

    Results may not be available on November 3

    Validating and counting of ballots may delay the results

    By Ven Parameswaran

    US Election 2020 is being described as an unusual election dominated by a disruptive  COVID-19 . The raging pandemic made the traditional campaigning in the form of huge public meetings nearly impossible. Novel ways to reach out to the voters were discovered, adding them to the list of radio, television and  print media. Pandemic, notwithstanding, it is believed this election may have the highest percentage of voting in a hundred years- a record. It surely speaks of the enthusiasm and involvement of the American people in what appears to be “mother of all elections”.

    The Indian Panorama has been during the last couple of weeks, bringing to the readers opinions of well informed and scholarly analysts of US election. They kept readers informed about  the various trends and turns in the fortune of both the Republicans and the Democrats. Four days to the  final day of polling now, and we decided to bring to the readers the wisdom of pollsters. Let readers form their own impression of what the end result could be. -EDITOR

    Major Polls predict Biden Win. However, Trafalgar Poll predicts Trump will be re-elected

    Gallup Poll reported that it asked the question “Are you better off today than four years ago?” and 56% answered “YES”.

     

    The Trafalgar Group Poll of Georgia claims that  it is the only poll that correctly predicted that Trump would win 2016 against Hillary Clinton.   It was able to do it by closely polling the battleground States of Michigan and Wisconsin.  It is again predicting that Trump will be reelected defeating Joe Biden, former Vice President.

                                              BIDEN               TRUMP

    National                              49.4                   49.6

    Nevada                                49.4                   47.1

    Florida                                 46.9                   49.6

    Michigan                             46.6                    49.1

    Minnesota                          48.0                     44.8

    Wisconsin                            47.5                     47.1

    Pennsylvania                       48.4                      47.6

    I am giving below the statistics of all other major polls to enable the readers to predict the election.

    Biden                Trump             Advantage

    REAL CLEAR POLITICS AVERAGE

    51.3                    43.5               Biden +7.8

    CNN

     54                      42                   Biden+12

    NYT/Siena

     50                      41                   Biden+9

    NBC/WSJ    

     53                       42                 Biden+11

    ABC/Wash Post  

     55                       43                   Biden+12

    Fox News

    53                       43                   Biden+10

    IBD/TIPP (Raghavan Mayur)   

     51                       44                    Biden+7

    Reuters/Ipsos

     52                        42                   Biden+10

    USA Today/Suffolk

     52                        44                   Biden+8

    The margin of error for all these polls range from 2 to 3.6%.     RCP Average mentioned above is  based on 30 different polls.    I have given the statistics of major polls only.

    RAGHAVAN MAYUR, DIRECTOR, INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY (IBD) claims he also predicted that Trump would be the winner. For reasons not known to me, the mainstream media failed to inform the public about IBD or Trafalgar Polls.   Raghavan Mayur has the potential to become most successful and outstanding in market research and polling.

    GALLUP POLL:

    The Gallup Poll is a very independent poll not affiliated with any major print or TV medium.  Although the Gallup did not predict the 2016 election correctly, it has had a better batting record than all other polls.  The Gallup poll asked the voters in a survey : ARE YOU BETTER OFF TODAY THAN FOUR YEARS AGO ? (this question was asked by President Reagan during his debate)   56% of  AMERICANS SAID THEY ARE BETTER OFF.     If so, even though President’s job approval is in mid 40’s, Gallup survey could have an impact on the voters.

    2020 U.S. Presidential Election is the most important historically speaking.  Because of Coronavirus the Mail-In Voting was allowed.  As of October 29, 2020   82 million have already voted.  On an average, because of early physical voting and mail in voting, 10 million a day vote.  At this rate by the election day on Tuesday, November 3rd, 120 million would have voted.   In 2016, I think 130 million voted.    The turnout has been heaviest so far.  On the election day next week one would expect massive turnout to vote physically and I estimate at least another 50 million.  Thus, it is possible in all 170 million eligible voters would have voted.  I have been in the USA for the past 66 years and have not seen such a heavy turnout.

    It is mentioned in the media that the Republicans generally prefer to vote physically.   If so, majority of voters on the Election Day would be Republicans.

    Because more than 50% have already voted, there is no need to poll the LIKELY VOTERS.  In the past, the poll on LIKELY VOTERS would give some kind  of indication for  whom they are going to vote.  In as much as majority has already voted, it is possible to find out who voted for whom.  It is, therefore, possible that we may be able to know who has won even before the date of the election, November 3rd.  I am sure on the election day, the pollsters and the TV networks will conduct Exit poll as usual. If the majority of voters on the Election Day is Republicans, the Exit polls will be misleading.

    BATTLEGROUND STATES WILL ULTIMATELY DECIDE WHO HAS WON THE ELECTION:

    No Republican has won the Presidency without winning Ohio and Florida.   Based on the polling available today it is possible Trump could win these states.  He won Ohio by 8 points in 2016 and has been leading in the polls.   The Latinos are the largest minority, not the Blacks.  There is a large Latino population in Florida, Texas and Arizona.   It has been reported that there is a big turnout of Latinos in Florida and Arizona.   If so, Trump is most likely to win these States.

    Michael Moore(Democrat),  movie director from Hollywood living in Detroit, Michigan, predicted that Trump would win in 2016.  This morning, he is again predicting Trump would be winning Michigan and the election.   Third quarter GDP grew by 33%.  Auto companies in Michigan have been working three shifts  manufacturing cars, trucks, and other vehicles to capacity.  The economists have pointed out that this contributed significantly to the phenomenal GDP growth.   The media mentioned that majority of Michigan autoworkers were likely to vote for Trump.

    Trump is most likely to win Pennsylvania because Biden’s position on oil and gas industry announced during the second Presidential debate has disappointed the voters.  Oil and gas industry is a major source of employment in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Ohio, Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.   It is mentioned that Trump would gain because jobs are more important than party loyalties.   It is therefore possible and probable that Trump would carry Pennsylvania by a razor thin margin as in 2016 (he gained by 44000 votes).

    If Trump wins Florida, Georgia and North Carolina, and Ohio, he needs to win only Michigan or Pennsylvania or Wisconsin to capture 270 electoral votes, assuming he wins Arizona.  In 2016 he won by 306 electoral votes.

     

    IMPOSSIBLE TO PREDICT THIS ELECTION

    I must conclude by saying that it is impossible to predict this election because as in 2016, it is going to be very close in the battleground states of FL, NC, MI, WI, MN, PA, AZ.   Just because Trafalgar was right in 2016, we cannot go by that.   But, I have more faith in what the Americans answered to the Gallup poll: “WE ARE BETTER OFF TODAY THAN FOUR YEARS AGO.”    I am also awaiting the latest poll from Gallup before the election.  The Gallup poll has been the most reliable indicator of Presidential election for several years.

    VALIDATING AND COUNTING THE BALLOTS:

    This is going to be laborious in spite of modern technology.   One has to verify the Signatures from the Mail-in and Absentee ballots.  Many states require that the mails containing the ballots must be date stamped by the post office as of  Nov.3 or before.   But some states are allowing one week’s time to receive the ballots.  If so, there is scope to change the ballots after the election creating room for fraud.  President Trump has already raised this issue.

    Republicans have majority in the legislatures of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, though their governors are Democrats.  If there are discrepancies, the final arbiter is the Legislature.   The legislature has the authority to decide the outcome of the election.    In 2000, the Supreme Court decided George W Bush won the election against Al Gore in Florida by a margin of a very small number of votes.

    Hillary Clinton has stated publicly that Vice President Joe Biden should never concede to Trump under any circumstances.  If so, the matter may go finally to the Supreme Court if either party challenges.   Therefore, more important than the election is the validating and counting of the ballots.    Normally, American voters know who has won on the election night.  I do not think it is going to be possible this year because the election in battleground states will be very close and razor thin.    Usually, the Associated Press takes the lead in announcing the results.  What can they do this year if they have no information as to who has won.

    Let us all pray that Americans will demonstrate respect for law and refrain from holding  demonstrations and riots on the streets.

    (Ven Parameswaran immigrated to the USA in 1954.  He is Chairman, Asian American Republican Committee (founded 1988).  Lives in Scarsdale, NY. Email: vpwaren@gmail.com)

     

  • U.S. coronavirus cases cross nine million: a Reuters report says

    U.S. coronavirus cases cross nine million: a Reuters report says

    NEW YORK (TIP): U.S. coronavirus cases crossed the 9 million mark on Friday, October 30, rising by 1 million in two weeks as the world’s worst-affected country faces a resurgence in the pandemic just ahead of elections, Reuters says.

    Cases are rising faster than ever before. The previous record for 1 million new cases was during a surge in infection in July and August – when it took 16 days. Now the country has recorded over 1 million cases in 14 days with no sign of the outbreak slowing.On Thursday, October 30, the United States reported a record 91,254 new cases. On average, over 77,000 cases are being reported every day in the last seven days, double the level seen two months ago. Hospitalizations of COVID-19 patients are hitting records in 21 out of 50 states. Deaths are also trending higher and have reached nearly 230,000.For every 10,000 people in the United States, over 272 coronavirus cases have been reported and about seven people have died, according to a Reuters analysis. In Europe there have been 127 cases and four deaths per 10,000 residents. Texas has surpassed California as the worst-affected state in the United States, with Florida in third place. More than a half million lives could be lost to COVID-19 across the United States by the end of February, according to researchers at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).U.S. President Donald Trump, who is seeking a second term  has been saying for weeks that the country is “rounding the turn,” even as new cases and hospitalizations soar.The United States performed 7.7 million coronavirus tests last week, of which 6.3% came back positive, compared with 5.4% the prior week, according to data from The COVID Tracking Project, a volunteer-run effort to track the outbreak. South Dakota led the nation with the highest positive test rate at 40%, followed by Idaho at 34% and Wyoming at 29%. A total of 14 states had a positive test rate of over 10%.

    According to a Reuters analysis, the South region comprises nearly 44% of all the cases in the United States, with nearly 4 million cases in the region alone, followed by the Midwest, West and Northeast.

    (Source: Reuters)

  • Kamala Harris seeks creation of national police registry with records of misconduct

    Kamala Harris seeks creation of national police registry with records of misconduct

    Calls for creating national standards on use of force, decriminalizing marijuana and expunging criminal records of people convicted of marijuana offences

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Democratic vice-presidential candidate Kamala Harris has sought the creation of a national registry of police officers with records of misconduct, amidst the ongoing protest following the shooting of a black man by police officers in Philadelphia earlier this week. Police said Walter Wallace Jr, 27, was wielding a knife and ignored orders to drop the weapon before officers fired shots Monday afternoon. But his parents said that officers knew their son was in a mental health crisis.Responding to a question over the issue after her rallies in Arizona on Wednesday, Harris said she has discussed and supports creating a national registry of police officers with records of misconduct. Harris, 56, also called for creating national standards on use of force, decriminalizing marijuana and expunging the criminal records of people convicted of marijuana offences, according to a report.

    The death of Wallace has triggered protests after the incident.

    About 500 people had gathered at a West Philadelphia park Tuesday night and began marching through the neighborhood, chanting. There were sporadic reports of arrests in other areas.

    Answering further to questions on the protests against police brutality and particularly the killing of Wallace and Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s call for a new commission on policing, Harris said that it is not another commission. “Part of the reason that people are marching in the streets is that there has not been the level of attention, especially recently over the last few years, that is necessary from the president of the United States. And Joe’s committed to that,” she  said.On Friday, Harris is scheduled to travel to Texas, making her the first Democratic vice-presidential nominee in decades to campaign during elections. “We’re talking to people everywhere and there’s no area that’s off limits because people in all these areas have so much at stake in this election,” she said. Harris met with a group of a couple dozen Black community leaders at The Van Buren, a music venue in downtown Phoenix.

    (Source:  PTI)

  • October 23 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • NJSO MEETS BOLLYWOOD: In The Comfort of Your Home

    NJSO MEETS BOLLYWOOD: In The Comfort of Your Home

    By Mabel Pais

    NJSO Musicians playing Bollywood tunes Photo/Courtesy NJSO

    “The Spectacular Bollywood,” October 24, 2020, 7 PM EDT
    “Best of Bollywood,” November 6, 2020, 7 PM EDT

    Join the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra (NJSO) String Quartet for a pair of virtual musical journeys inspired by Bollywood, the Hindi-language Indian film industry. The Oct 24 concert is presented by New Jersey City University (NJCU) and the Nov 6 performance is presented by Metuchen Arts Council (MAC).

    Explore historical influences on the growth of Bollywood and hear insights into signature music and lyrics of the genre. Listen for themes from the Oscar-winning movie Slumdog Millionaire! This interactive virtual event will include a Q&A with NJSO musicians. The program explores historical influences on the growth of Bollywood and offers insights into signature music and lyrics of the genre. Famed works include themes from the Oscar-winning movie “Slumdog Millionaire”.

    These interactive virtual events—co-hosted by Archana Athalye and James Musto—will include a Q&A with NJSO musicians. The programs feature NJSO violinists Wendy Chen and James Tsao, violist David Blinn, cellist Sarah Seiver and percussionist James Musto.

    Both online events are free. Registration is required; audiences can register at www.njsymphony.org/neighborhood

    Tickets

    The Orchestra’s online hub for free NJSO Virtual 20–21 content is njsymphony.org/virtual

    Tickets for paid events are available via phone at 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or at njsymphony.org

    NJSO LAUNCHES 20–21 VIRTUAL EXPERIENCES

    The NJSO announces NJSO Virtual 20–21, a season of free digital experiences, from broadcasts of virtual orchestral concerts led by Music Director Xian Zhang at NJPAC to solo and chamber performances in iconic New Jersey locations to collaborations with fellow New Jersey arts organizations. Season launch highlights include the world premiere of a new commission by Daniel Bernard Roumain and a virtual event with Newark community leaders for the release of selections from Michael Raphael’s “Emmett Till” oratorio with Trilogy: An Opera Company, facilitated by Trilogy founder and bass Kevin Maynor.

    The Orchestra celebrates the launch of NJSO Virtual 20–21 with an at-home performance of the finale of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, with music director Zhang conducting from home. The video premieres on October 29 on the NJSO’s YouTube and social channels and at njsymphony.org

    Connect with NJSO:
    Website: njsymphony.org
    Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @NJSymphony
    YouTube: @NewJerseySymphony
    Email: information@njsymphony.org

    WIPA OFFERINGS…..

    NJYS Masterclass & Webinar-Participants Photo/Courtesy WIPA/NJYS

    NJYS 2020-21 FOCUS: FREE DIGITAL COLLABS

    While in-person teaching remains critical and an important component of all of our education programs, the online environment is also creating new opportunities that definitely will expand the footprint of all of our offerings. – Peter H. Gistelinck, Exec. Dir – NJYS 

    The New Jersey Youth Symphony (NJYS) opens its 2020-21 season with a wealth of digital programming for its existing community and beyond, featuring guest artists who are not only excellent musicians but also important voices surrounding the role of the arts as a unifying force.

    The NJYS, a program of the Wharton Institute for the Performing Arts (WIPA), will open the 2020-21 season with new and compelling online education programs that include 15 master classes and 12 webinars with world-renowned guest artists and educators.

    With a hybrid schedule of both online and socially distant outdoor rehearsals, students will also participate in over 30 online classes weekly ranging from music theory, composition, and ear training to jazz history, video editing, how to improve sight-reading skills, and fiddling in an unprecedented elevation of both the quantity and breadth of educational programming. Following the U.S. Youth Orchestras eFestival on September 20 with fellow programs from Chicago, Hawaii, Los Angeles, and Texas, live performances at venues around the state of New Jersey will be replaced with a digital format that has opened new doors of artistic collaborations for the NJYS, now in its 42nd season. “Recordings of the young musicians’ solo performances at home will be compiled into a digital concert and sent to nursing homes and assisted living facilities for residents to enjoy as a calming respite during this time of social distancing,” said Helen H. Cha-Pyo, Artistic Director & Principal Conductor. The Monday Master Class Series launches this fall and imbues the essence of the NJYS’s originally scheduled season, including artists, genres, and diversity, and offers its students a rare touchpoint with professional symphony orchestra musicians and leaders in today’s world of performing arts education. The digital series, expanding the limits of what would have been possible to present in person due to the cost and logistics, features a wide variety of acclaimed instrumentalists. The series kicked off on September 14 with newly appointed Oberlin Conservatory faculty member and French hornist Jeffrey Scott and includes Cleveland Orchestra Principal Clarinet Afendi Yusuf on November 2, the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra (NJSO) Principal Bass Ha Young Jung on November 9, and Seattle Symphony Principal Flute Demarre McGill on December 7, as well as instructors from The Juilliard School, University of Massachusetts, and Jazz at Lincoln Center. The Monday Master Class Series takes place weekly from 7:00-8:15 p.m. EST through December 14. Viewing for this online series is free via Zoom.

    Friday Webinars at Wharton Arts is a series dedicated to making authentic connections between art and life through the sharing of stories, expertise, and creations by guest artists of varied disciplines. Friday Webinars at Wharton Arts take place weekly from 7:00-8:00 p.m. EST through December 11. Viewing for this online series is free via Zoom or on WhartonArts.tv.

    For more information on the Monday Master Class Series and Friday Webinars at NJYS as well as the full line-up of guest artists, visit NJYS.org.

    To learn more about NJYS, visit NJYS.org. To learn more about WIPA, visit WIPA.org

    NJYS – FREE OUTDOOR CONCERT

    NJYS Outdoor Community Concert Photo / Courtesy WIPA/NJYS

    For the past seven months, the pandemic has prevented us from performing together in-person. We are thrilled to have the opportunity to share live music with our community here in New Providence,said Helen H. Cha-Pyo.

    The (NJYS), a program of the WIPA, presents a free outdoor community concert on Sunday, October 25 at 3:00 p.m. The concert will take place at the New Providence Centennial Park located on Academy Street in New Providence. Performances by the NJYS Youth Symphony Brass and Percussion, Youth Orchestra Brass, Youth Symphony Winds, NJYS CL4tet, NJYS Percussion Quartet, and NJYS Mingus Jazz Combo will bring a message of hope to the community through the sounds of young musicians performing works by Joan Tower, Valerie Coleman, Charlie Parker, George Gershwin, and Aaron Copland, among others. The ensemble directors are Mesia Austin, Julius Tolentino, and Bryan Rudderow. The live concert will be conducted by Artistic Director and Principal Conductor Helen H. Cha-Pyo. For more information about the outdoor community concert, visit NJYS.org.

    PMP HOSTS ‘BUILDING HARMONY’ BREAKFAST

    The Paterson Music Project (PMP), a program of the Wharton Institute for the Performing Arts (WIPA), hosts the 2020 Building Harmony Breakfast on Thursday, October 29 at 10:00 a.m. EST via Zoom. This free, one-hour virtual fundraising breakfast to benefit PMP will help provide over 250 students with instrumental music in grades 1 – 10 across the city of Paterson.

    The virtual gathering will bring together local business leaders, elected officials, and civic and community leaders and culminate with performances by PMP students as well as a new video showcasing the program’s tremendous growth and imprint on the community since its inception in 2013. The event hopes to raise nearly $200,000 in donations and pledges to sustain the after-school music program over the next five years.

    The event is FREE and open to the public. For more information and to register for the event, visit PatersonMusicProject.org

    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Spirituality, and Health & Wellness)

     

  • US Election 2020

    US Election 2020

     By Ven Parameswaran 

    Biden wins, according to polls sponsored by the mainstream media; Trafalgar poll predicts Trump will win

    There are only 12 days to the Presidential election on November 3, 2020. Everyone is interested in knowing who has better chances to win – President Trump or former Vice President Biden. This discussion and speculation will keep on going till the election. All the TV networks including Fox, CBS, ABC, NBC, CNN and the mainstream media including NYT and Washington Post and the polls sponsored by them have been predicting Biden will win by a comfortable margin. How can one believe them? They predicted in 2016 that Hillary Clinton would win. But Trump defeated Clinton by 306 electoral votes, though Clinton won the popular vote by 2%.
    Therefore, the decision will be made by the voters in battleground states of Florida, North Carolina, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin. In 2016, Trump’s major victory against Clinton was in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Michigan. He won with a narrow margin of 77,000 votes combined from these four states. According to my calculations Trump has good chances to win New Hampshire, Nevada, and Minnesota this year.
    The upstart Trafalgar does not see 2020 the same way everyone else does. Trafalgar’s strategist Robert Cahaly was born in Georgia and got involved in politics going door-to-door as a kid. He started a political consulting firm with some others in the late 1990s. Around 2008, he says, they realized that the polling they were getting was not very good, so they started doing their own. He says they got good, accurate results in the races they were working.
    In the 2016 primaries, they started putting out some of their own polls. “Our polls ended up being the best ones in South Carolina and Georgia, “ Cahaly says. “So we started studying what it was that made those so different.”
    Then there was the breakthrough in the 2016 general election. “We ended up having an incredible year,” he says. “I mean, we got Pennsylvania right. We got Michigan right. We had the best poll in five of the battleground states in 2016. And I actually predicted 306 to 232 on the electoral college. And we went from doing a little bit of polling on the side to that (being) our primary business in about 24 hours. And since then, that is what we have been doing.”
    As a general matter, he discounts national polls. First, because the race for the presidency is won state by state, not on the basis of the national vote. Second, because all the methodological difficulties involved in getting a balanced, representative sample in a state poll of 1,000 people are magnified in a national survey. It is easily skewable at that point, and you start making assumptions.
    So how does he see the 2020 race? Fundamentally, as a motivation race, rather than a persuasion race, with perhaps 1.5 per cent, at most, of the electorate UNDECIDED in battleground states.
    The likeliest Trump electoral path to victory involves winning the battlegrounds of North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Arizona, and either Michigan or Pennsylvania among the former Blue Wall states (assuming he does not lose states such as Iowa or Ohio).
    THIS IS CAHALY’S BREAKDOWN: He believes Trump will win North Carolina and Florida and discount’s Biden’s chances in Georgia because the Republican-base vote is too big there (the same is true in Texas).
    As for Arizona, “I think Trump has the lead,” Cahaly says. “I think Republican Senator Martha McSally has some ground to make up. I see her about 5 points behind Trump, but I think Trump will probably win the state. And win it by a couple of points or more. And if he wins it big enough, McSally has a shot.”
    Trump is not there yet in Pennsylvania, according to Cahaly. “Right now, we have got him down in Pennsylvania,” he says, “I think if it were held today, the Undecides would break toward Trump and there would be some hidden vote.
    In Michigan, Trafalgar has Trump ahead. “I think he will win Michigan, “ Cahaly says, citing fear of the Democratic economic agenda.
    Overall, Cahaly sees another Trump win. “If it all happened right now,” he maintains, “my best guess would be an Electoral College victory in the high to 270s, low 280s.”
    THERE IT IS. AMONG POLLSTERS, YOU HEARD IT FROM ROBERT CAHALY FIRST, AND PERHAPS EXCLUSIVELY—A POSITION HE HAS BEEN IN BEFORE.
    I must point out that the second Presidential debate scheduled for 22nd October can have an impact.
    Do not forget Trump has been most unpredictable. President Obama said Trump won’t run, won’t be nominated and cannot win against Hillary Clinton. Nobody expected Trump would defeat nine veteran governors and 5 senators in the Primaries. Trump proved everyone wrong by defeating the most popular Hillary Clinton. There are more women voters than men voters.
    Trump is generating more enthusiasm than Biden. The working class of America cannot forget Trump brought the unemployment to 3.4%, a 50-year record. Four organizations have nominated Trump for Nobel Peace Prize based on foreign policy achievements, especially peace in the Middle East.

    THE GALLUP POLL ASKED THE AMERICANS:

    Are you better off today than four years ago? 56% said they are better off. This is the most favorable poll for Trump. The question was coined by President Ronald Reagan during the Presidential debate.

    (Ven Parameswaran, Chairman, Asian American Republican Committee (founded 1988), lives in Scarsdale, NY. He can be reached at vpwaren@gmail.com)

  • Indian American Committee IMPACT raises $10 million war chest for Indian American candidates

    Indian American Committee IMPACT raises $10 million war chest for Indian American candidates

    NEW YORK (TIP): IMPACT, the leading Indian American advocacy and political action committee, has raised a $10 million war chest to get Indian origin candidates including Kamala Harris, the first Indian American on a national ticket, and Joe Biden, elected. Raised in just three months, the funds will be spent to support turnout efforts in the Asian American and Indian American community and to elect IMPACT’s 2020 slate of candidates, as well as Indian American candidates running up and down ballots in states across the country.
    Besides the Democratic presidential ticket of Biden and Harris, the slate includes six candidates for the US House and 16 candidates for Statewide and local offices: seven for State Senates, Five for State Houses and four others.
    “IMPACT’s fundraising strength reflects trends we’re seeing across the country,” IMPACT Executive Director Neil Makhija, said Monday, October 19, announcing the organization’s groundbreaking effort.
    “There’s a level of enthusiasm and excitement about this year’s election among Indian American voters that is palpable, and unrivaled in previous cycles,” he said.
    “With an Indian American on the presidential ticket for the first time in history, and a record number of Indian American candidates running for office, Indian American voters are poised to exert a considerable amount of influence in this year’s election, and IMPACT will help mobilize and harness this emerging power.”
    IMPACT said it will invest in the presidential, state-wide, and congressional races in battleground states across the country. Investments include committee contributions, paid advertising, targeted turnout operations, and infrastructure building.
    This groundbreaking investment comes at a time when Indian Americans — the second largest immigrant group in the US — are beginning to flex their political muscle on the national political stage, it said.
    In addition to an Indian American being a historic Democratic nominee for Vice President, the number of Indian Americans in Congress has grown five-fold in just the past eight years and the campaign arm charged with electing Democrats to Congress released its first-ever Hindi-language political ad earlier this year, it noted.
    All of these developments have come less than 75 years since South Asians began emigrating to the US, and 55 years after the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which ended discriminatory quotas and opened the doors to Asian immigrants, IMPACT said.
    Besides four sitting members of US Congress — Ami Bera (California), Ro Khanna (California), Pramila Jayapal (Washington), Raja Krishnamoorthi (Illinois) — Impact is backing two more, Sri Kulkarni (Texas), and Hiral Tipirneni (Arizona) for the US House.
    Seven State Senate candidates backed by IMPACT are: Sara Gideon (Maine), Jay Chaudhuri (North Carolina), Jeremy Cooney (New York), Kevin Thomas (New York), Rupande Mehta (New Jersey), Kesha Ram (Vermont), and Nikil Saval (Pennsylvania).
    Five candidates for State Houses are: Nima Kulkarni (Kentucky) Padma Kuppa (Michigan), Jennifer Rajkumar (New York), Amish Shah (Arizona), and Vandana Slatter (Washington).
    Impact is also backing Nina Ahmad (Pennsylvania Auditor General), Ronnie Chatterji (North Carolina Treasurer), Pavan Parikh (Ohio Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas) and Ravi Sandill (Texas District Judge).

     

  • October 16 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • October 9 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • October 2 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • September 25 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • September 18 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • September 11 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • September 4 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • August 28 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • August 21 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • August 14 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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