Tag: Texas

  • IANT to host Independence Day Celebrations in Dallas

    IANT to host Independence Day Celebrations in Dallas

    DALLAS(TIP): The India Association of North Texas will host its Annual Anand Bazaar to celebrate India’s Independence Day. This will be the first time the event will be held in the heart of the DFW Metroplex, at Addison Circle Park in Addison.

    The program will showcase multiple food stalls featuring regional Indian and Non-Indian cuisine. The cultural program will include music and dances from all over India. Vendors from across the metroplex will have their wares displayed creating tempting shopping opportunities. The evening will also include parades and phenomenal fireworks!

    This year’s entertainment features renowned Shibani Kashyap accompanied by Salil Bhadekar. Arunima Abraham will MC the program.

    This is a FREE event, along with FREE parking! However, as proud supporters of North Texas Food Bank and the “Hunger Mitao!” campaign we request you to bring a jar of peanut butter as donation to feed the hungry in North Texas.

    For information on Sponsorship, Booth registration, Vendor Guidelines or to volunteer, visit www.iant.org

  • Detained immigrants in Texas on hunger strike -rights group

    Detained immigrants in Texas on hunger strike -rights group

    DALLAS (TIP): A group of immigrant fathers, recently reunified with their sons and detained in Texas, have gone on hunger strike to demand their release, an immigrant rights group representing them said on Thursday, August 2.

    The immigrants said they were being held at a detention center in Karnes, Texas, with no notification from U.S. authorities on their immigration status, the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES) said.

    It was not immediately clear how many fathers have joined the hunger strike, which began on Wednesday.

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency denied there was a hunger strike by residents of the Karnes County Residential Center, about 51 miles southeast of San Antonio.

    “On Aug. 2, a small group of fathers and their children (fewer than 50 total) staged a brief sit-in and expressed their concerns about their immigration cases,” ICE said in a statement. The residents “appreciated the information and dispersed.”

    Fathers had staged sit-ins, children were refusing to take part in school activities, and some fathers had started a hunger strike, RAICES spokeswoman Jennifer Falcon said on a conference call with reporters on Thursday.

    “The dads are on a hunger strike and they are refusing to obey any directions from ICE and GEO guards,” she said, a reference to private contractor GEO Group Inc, which runs the center.

    GEO did not respond to a request for comment. Falcon could not immediately be reached later for comment on the ICE statement.

    U.S. President Donald Trump has made a hardline stance on immigration an integral part of his presidency and has promised to keep immigrants targeted for deportation locked up “pending the outcome of their removal proceedings.”

    Some 2,500 children were separated from their parents as part of a “zero tolerance” policy toward illegal immigration that began in early May. Many of them had crossed the U.S.-Mexican border illegally, while others had sought asylum. The U.S. government said last week it had reunited just over half of them.

    Fathers at the Karnes center said they were misled into agreeing to deportation as a condition of seeing their children again, RAICES said. Others said they had not been given the opportunity to apply for asylum.

    A federal judge in San Diego indefinitely suspended deportations.

  • August 03 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    August 03 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • July 27 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    July 27 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • 3 Fort Worth bank employees shot during attempted robbery

    3 Fort Worth bank employees shot during attempted robbery

    FORT WORTH, TEXAS(TIP): Three employees were shot during an attempted bank robbery in the Arlington Heights neighborhood of Fort Worth Thursday, July 19 morning.

    Fort Worth Police Department’s Officer Chris Britt said it happened around 9:20 a.m. at the Veritex Community Bank on Merrick Street.

    According to preliminary reports, at least two men walked into the bank with weapons and fired shots.

    Three of the bank’s female employees were shot. All were taken to area hospitals in serious condition. Their injuries appear to be non-life-threatening, according to MedStar officials.

    The president and CEO of Veritex Community Bank said “we ask for a healthy and positive outcome for our three teammates which we believe is the best medicine. We will provide the Fort Worth Police Dept. With any assistance and cooperation they request of us. “

    Officers are still searching for the gunmen in the area. Britt did not have a description of them and said it’s not yet clear if they got away on foot or in a car.

    A home on Blackmore Avenue was surrounded by heavily armed police for nearly four hours. Investigators are gathering evidence at the scene where three people were detained in the area of this home.

    Just after 11 a.m., officers swarmed around the home in the 5700 block of Blackmore Avenue. A woman that was inside the home walked out frantically as guns were aimed at her.

    SWAT team members arrived on the scene and secured the perimeter of the home and nearby residents were evacuated just as a precaution.

    Police and Federal agents on the scene told FOX 4 News this white vehicle in the driveway next door was the suspect’s vehicle from the bank shooting.

    Two Fort Worth PD armored vehicles moved into the front of the home to provide officers with cover. From Sky 4, a huge police presence could be seen and SWAT officers strategically placed all around the home.

    For several hours, police worked patiently to try to make contact with who might be inside. Once a search warrant was obtained SWAT members moved into the home.

    Police say they have three people detained, but it’s still not clear if they are connected to the attempted bank robbery.

    “If anybody in the area saw anything unusual, vehicles leaving the scene quickly that now hearing about this seems odd, if they were any people running from the area that seems odd… if you saw anything that might seem unusual, please give us a call,” he said.

    One resident who lives in Arlington Heights described it as a very old and quiet neighborhood.

    “There are a lot of businesses and a lot of residences mixed together so as far as I know, this is very unusual for there to be a shooting here. But there is a lot of petty crime in the area as there is all over the city and the county,” said Brent Hyder, who lives in Arlington Heights.

    He called the shooting appalling.

    “I’m really sad for those ladies. That’s just unconscionable,” he said.

    Veritex’s Merrick Street branch is closed for the day, the bank said on its website.

    The FBI has the lead role on the investigation as authorities continue their effort to ID the suspects from evidence in the bank and any possible surveillance video.

    (Source: FOX 4)

  • July 20 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    July 20 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • July 13 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    July 13 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • Houston based entrepreneur Amit Bhandari donates $50,000 to Ekal’s Digital Literacy Program

    Houston based entrepreneur Amit Bhandari donates $50,000 to Ekal’s Digital Literacy Program

    By Manu Shah

    HOUSTON (TIP): Houston based entrepreneur Amit Bhandari and his wife Arpita shaped their own American dream but along the way they also nurtured the aspirations of thousands of children, whether in the remote village of Rampura or the slums of Mumbai.

    Ekal was one of the first charities the Bhandaris supported and they have consistently raised this support. They recently topped it by donating $50,000 dollars to outfit a bus with 10 laptops for the Ekal-on-Wheels Mobile Computer Labs program.

    The Ekal movement which started in 1989 to transform India, one village at a time, today, has a school in 70,000 villages offering free schooling, vocational training, digital competence and agricultural education. It has impacted 4 million children and 10 million families to date.

    The Mobile Computer Labs initiative is working to enhance digital literacy and has helped over 50,000 children become computer literate. The solar powered bus has pre-installed self-learning software developed by IIT, Mumbai and accommodates two students per computer. One dedicated trainer, assisted by the local Ekal teacher provides two and a half hours of training in one village.

    The bus, which will serve the Khargone district of Madhya Pradesh near Indore, was inaugurated by Amit and Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan. Amit was impressed by how “coachable and open to learning the children were.”

    However, this isn’t the first time the Bhandaris have opened their checkbook. They support the Jain Society of Houston, donated six acres of land for the Gujarati Samaj center in Houston, wrote a quarter million dollar check to Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner’s Fund for Hurricane Harvey relief work, paid off the loans of a temple in Phoenix and raised $3 million for Magic Bus, an NGO that is deeply personal to them and aims to bring children out of poverty through a unique sports based curriculum.

    Amit attributes this empathy to his modest upbringing. He is a native of Indore, Madhya Pradesh. His parents were professors but the family was always stretched financially. Despite this, his parents supported a handicapped school and were always ready to provide a helping hand.

    Amit’s entrepreneurial leanings kicked in as early as middle school when he and a friend made paper bags and sold them to local vendors. At 17, he was accepted in the Rotary Student Exchange Program and attended High School in Hicksville, Ohio. America turned out to be “a tremendous experience” so much so that he got his aunt to sponsor his green card. He headed to Drexel University in Philadelphia for Chemical engineering and footed his tuition by waiting on tables. The job was a formative lesson in “time management, juggling priorities and dealing with people.”

    The engineering degree landed him a job at ExxonMobil but Amit’s afterhours were spent scouting for a good business idea. He plunked his savings into a daycare, rental properties and a convenience store and in 2006, started his own company BioUrja (Urja in Hindi means energy.)  The company trades in ethanol, petroleum products, crude oil, grains, metal tubing for the oil production sector and now renewable energy. It is ranked as one of the most successful companies in Texas.

    There’s parental pride in his voice when he talks of his daughter and son who spent weeks as Magic Bus Youth Leaders in slums and villages engaging with the children. The experience moved Aanya, 16, to present a paper at the United Nations outlining ways of providing nutritious food and educating farmers on employing better agricultural methods. Ansh, 14, on his part, is looking forward to spending more of his summers supporting Magic Bus programs worldwide.

     

  • July 06 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    July 06 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • June 29 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    June 29 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • First lady Melania Trump visits US-Mexico border amid crisis over separated migrant children

    First lady Melania Trump visits US-Mexico border amid crisis over separated migrant children

    DALLAS, TEXAS(TIP): Melania Trump is visiting two Texas facilities housing some of the more than 2,300 migrant children sent by the U.S. government after their families entered the country illegally, says an AP report.

    The first lady’s visit to Upbring New Hope Children’s Center on Thursday, June 21 comes after President Donald Trump signed an executive order halting the practice of separating families. However, his policy of criminally prosecuting illegal border-crossers remains.

    Mrs. Trump, whose focus is on children, may have helped encourage her husband to act.

    The first lady said earlier through her spokeswoman that she “hates” to see families separated at the border. A White House official followed up Wednesday, saying Mrs. Trump had been making her opinion known to the president that he needed to act to keep migrant families together.

  • June 22 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    June 22 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • Indian American Neel Gonuguntla among The Dallas Business Journal 2018 Women in Business Awards honorees

    Indian American Neel Gonuguntla among The Dallas Business Journal 2018 Women in Business Awards honorees

    The 30 honorees, including US India Chamber of Commerce President, Neel Gonuguntla represent a variety of industries and roles

    DALLAS(TIP): The Dallas Business Journal has announced the honorees for its 11th annual Women in Business Awards program.

    These 30 individuals, including Indian American Neel Gonuguntla represent a variety of industries and roles that are crucial to the Dallas-Fort Worth ecosystem, including financial and legal services, commercial real estate and construction, and non-profit organizations.

    From leaders of global institutions, like Frito-Lay Chief Marketing Officer Jennifer Saenz and AT&T Business’ Anne Chow, to entrepreneurs behind innovative startups, like Elyse Dickerson of Eosera, the 2018 class of Women in Business touches on a concentration of transformative ingenuity and enterprising imagination that can only be found in North Texas.

    Four members of the Women in Business Awards class – Betty Garrett, Linda Kunz, Sandy Phillips, and Courtney Sinelli – have been selected to receive the distinction as a “Tourism, Travel and Hospitality” honoree. This category highlights the vital role that these verticals play in keeping North Texas a contender in national and international spheres.

    The 2018 honorees will be honored at a luncheon and trade show on Thursday, August 23, at the Omni Hotel Dallas.

  • Agents raid Texas ‘stash house’ and find 62 undocumented immigrants, says border patrol

    Agents raid Texas ‘stash house’ and find 62 undocumented immigrants, says border patrol

    DALLAS(TIP): Agents found and arrested 62 undocumented immigrants hidden inside a home in Laredo, Texas Tuesday, June 12, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

    The immigrants were processed and found to be from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.

    Laredo Sector Border Patrol found the “stash house” after receiving a tip that a large number of people were being held at a residence and awaiting transfer to the interior of the United States.

    This is one of several raids completed by border patrol in Texas this week. On Sunday, agents found 50 undocumented immigrants hiding inside a house in Mission, Texas. The following day three more houses were raided resulting in the discovery of 109 undocumented immigrants, according to a press release.

    Those men, women and unaccompanied children were from Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Ecuador and Belize.

    The arrests come amid a national conversation about the Trump administration’s new “zero tolerance” policy towards undocumented immigrants which requires federal prosecutors to criminally charge anybody caught illegally crossing the border.

    The policy has resulted in the separation of families, drawing outcry from immigrant advocates.

  • A Tent City to house Migrant Kids

    A Tent City to house Migrant Kids

    It will have 450 beds; Kids will sleep in tents

    BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS(TIP): The Trump administration has selected Tornillo, Texas, for the construction of tents to house the overflow of immigrant children, many of whom have been separated from their parents under a new “zero tolerance” policy, according to three sources familiar with the decision.

    The Department of Health and Human Services will erect a “tent city,” full of large tents whose walls touch the ground, that is estimated to hold 450 beds for children, say the sources.

    It will not be the first time the U.S. government has erected tent cities to house immigrants. U.S. Customs and Border Protection used tents to house an influx of immigrants in 2014 and at the end of the Obama administration. But now the overflow of a particular immigrant population — in this case, children — is a government-created problem.

    The increase of children who are alone and in need of care at the border is the product of a new Trump administration policy that on May 7 began criminally prosecuting all adult migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border between ports of entry. As a result, the Department of Homeland Security separates any children traveling with those adults before prosecution.

    One shelter in Brownsville, holding nearly 1,500 boys aged 10 to 17, opened its doors to reporters on Wednesday. NBC News was among the first to tour the facility, which closely resembled a jail and allows children outside for only two hours per day.

    The overflow of children at HHS facilities has caused backup at border stations, the first stop for immigrants crossing into the United States. As of last week, over 570 unaccompanied children were in the custody of the U.S. Border Patrol, and nearly 300 of those had been held for more than 72 hours, the limit for holding an immigrant of any age at a border station.

    Ron Vitiello, acting deputy commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, told MSNBC on Thursday that about 1,500 immigrants are being arrested each day for crossing the border illegally. Vitiello said the policy is meant to deter families of immigrants from coming to the U.S.

    “If you apply consequence to illegal activity you get less of it,” he said in defense of the policy. “They are only in these shelters long enough to be reunited with their family members. That’s the purpose of them.”

    The facility in Brownsville is holding children for 52 days on average. They are sometimes sent to foster homes if relatives in the U.S. cannot be found.

    Just confirmed with @ckubeNBC: @HHSGov has selected Tornillo Land Port of Entry near El Paso as the first temporary shelter location.

    It will have 450 beds.Kids will sleep in tents.

    “HHS is legally required to provide care and shelter for all unaccompanied alien children referred by [the Department of Homeland Security] and works in close coordination with DHS on the security and safety of the children and community,” a spokesman for HHS said in a statement.

  • Trump’s efforts to scare away Immigrants aren’t working very well

    Trump’s efforts to scare away Immigrants aren’t working very well

    DALLAS, TX(TIP): In the last two months, the Trump administration has mobilized the National Guard to all four Southern border states, implemented a “zero tolerance” policy mandating prosecutions for unauthorized crossings and begun systematically separating mothers from their children when they are caught crossing illegally.

    None of that has stopped the migrants from coming.

    The number of illegal crossings increased slightly in May, to nearly 52,000, according to figures released Wednesday by the Customs and Border Protection agency. That total includes 11,568 people who came through legal ports of entry, some of whom were asking for asylum or other humanitarian protections under U.S. law.

    Tyler Houlton, press secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, painted a bleak picture about the situation at the border in an accompanying statement.

    “These numbers show that while the Trump administration is restoring the rule of law, it will take a sustained effort and continuous commitment of resources over many months to disrupt cartels, smugglers, and nefarious actors,” Houlton wrote. He highlighted that border arrests had jumped 160 percent over May of last year.

    The truth is those numbers remain low by historical standards. Border Patrol arrests stand at roughly 252,000 so far for the fiscal year, which began in October. That would put them on track to exceed last year’s exceptionally low number of 304,000 arrests, but the predicted yearly total would still represent only a quarter of the 1.6 million arrests recorded in 2000. And an increase in illegal crossings during the spring months is typical ― the weather is warmer.

    For the last few years, border arrests have hovered at their lowest levels since the early 1970s. Since 2014, people seeking humanitarian protections ― particularly from the violence-plagued Central American countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras ― have made up a large percentage of all unauthorized crossings.

    Nonetheless, the numbers are sure to infuriate President Donald Trump, who has made cracking down on immigration a signature issue. Most of the measures his administration implemented over the last two months aimed to deter asylum seekers, whom the White House accuses of exploiting legal “loopholes” in order to gain lawful entry to the country or avoid getting locked up indefinitely in immigrant detention.

    (Source: Yahoo.com)

  • Thousands without power after storms packing high winds, lightning blow through Dallas-Fort Worth

    Thousands without power after storms packing high winds, lightning blow through Dallas-Fort Worth

    DALLAS (TIP): A line of thunderstorms that darkened skies in Dallas-Fort Worth on Thursday, June 7 evening brought rain and gusty winds to some areas before petering out.

    Denton County and parts of Collin County were hit hardest by the storms that moved south into the region from the Red River, KXAS-TV (NBC5) meteorologist Rick Mitchell said.

    The storms were already weakening as they made it into Dallas County, and by 7:15 p.m. they had been reduced to a small shower in the southwest part of the county, Mitchell said.

    A collection of non-severe showers and storms off to the northeast was also in the process of dying out, he said.

    Some areas saw strong winds including Denton Enterprise Airport, which recorded a 68 mph gust, according to the National Weather Service.

    The thunderstorms knocked out power to about 12,500 Oncor customers in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and the agency was in the process of restoring service Thursday night, spokeswoman Connie Piloto said.

    Though the heaviest rainfall was about an inch, most areas saw less — if any at all.

    DFW International Airport recorded a quarter of an inch, and Grand Prairie and Irving got about half an inch, Mitchell said.

    Some flight delays and cancellations were also reported at DFW Airport.

    The impending weather was enough to cancel the final practice of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at the Texas Motor Speedway and delay the start of the Texas Rangers game.

    There were also some reports of small hail, but “none of it was that scary stuff,” Mitchell said, referring to Wednesday’s hailstorm that caused thousands of dollars in damage.

    At least one tree was damaged by wind in Coppell, which also saw significant hail damage early Wednesday.

    A house fire was reported Thursday in Sanger that may have been caused by a lightning strike, Mitchell said.

    The weekend is shaping up to be dry with highs expected in the mid-90s.

    “The last few days we’ve had these waves of showers and storms that most of us have not had but have been affecting parts of North Texas,” Mitchell said. “But I think that kind of winds down tomorrow.”

    (Source: Dallas News)

     

  • June 08 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    June 08 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • Texas Gov. Greg Abbott reveals plan to make schools safer

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott reveals plan to make schools safer

    DALLAS(TIP):  An Associated Press report says Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday, May 30, called for schools to have more armed personnel and said they should put greater focus on spotting student mental health problems but he proposed only a few small restrictions on guns following a shooting at a high school near Houston that left 10 people dead.

    The Republican and staunch gun-rights supporter released a 43-page report following three days of mostly closed-door meetings last week organized with school district officials, shooting survivors and groups on both sides of the gun-control debate, among others.

    The recommendations are voluntary, and some would require changes to state laws that would need approval from the Legislature, which doesn’t come back into session until 2019. School districts wishing to make some of the changes could begin doing so, such as sending staff for free gun training this summer.

    The lack of major gun control measures is not surprising in a state that embraces its gun-friendly reputation and has more than 1.2 million people licensed to carry handguns.

    The only significant gun-related proposal was a possible “red flag” law, although Abbott gave it a tepid endorsement, asking leaders of the Legislature to “consider the merits.” Eight states have red flag laws that allow family, law enforcement and others to file a petition to remove firearms from a potentially dangerous person. Florida, Vermont and Maryland passed such laws after the mass school shooting in Florida in February.

    Abbott’s report does not appear to depart much from the playbook of the powerful National Rifle Association following school shootings.

    Alice Tripp, legislative director for the NRA-affiliated Texas State Rifle Association said Abbott’s proposals wouldn’t lead to weapons being seized without some protections for gun owners. “Gov. Abbott has pledged due process. He’s a gun owner himself,” Tripp said.

    Abbott is proposing a change to the state law that says guns can’t be accessible to children under 17, with exceptions such as hunting or parent supervision. He’s encouraging the Legislature to consider making the law also apply to 17-year-olds. Authorities have charged a 17-year-old student, Dimitrios Pagourtzis, with capital murder in the May 18 attack at Santa Fe High School. Pagourtzis is accused of using a shotgun and .38 revolver that belonged to his father.

    Abbott also wants a new law that would require gun owners to report a lost or stolen firearm within 10 days.

    The report says the state will have access to nearly $70 million through federal funding and state grants for the proposals. The state also expects to compete for an additional $40 million from federal programs, and Abbott says he’ll ask state lawmakers for a further $30 million.

    “We all share a common bond: And that is we want action to prevent another shooting like what happened at Santa Fe High School,” Abbott, who is campaigning for re-election, said during a news conference at Dallas school district headquarters.

    Abbott’s Democratic opponent for governor, Lupe Valdez, said it’s “astounding” how few of the proposals directly address gun violence.

    So far, the governor has not been enthusiastic about calls for a special legislative session on gun laws – a sharp contrast to the response in Florida following the February high school shooting there that killed 17 people. Florida lawmakers, who were already in session, passed a gun-control package three weeks later, thanks in part to a lobbying campaign led by student survivors of the attack.

    In Texas, any attempts to create a mechanism to seize weapons is likely to be met with skepticism in a Republican-controlled Legislature that has expanded the rights of gun owners in recent years and made it easier and cheaper to be licensed to carry a handgun.

    Also, unlike the students in Florida, several students at Santa Fe High School have been vocal opponents of increased gun control, including some who were invited to meet with Abbott last week.

    Kris Brown, the co-president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said: “The answer to preventing school shootings isn’t some deep-seated secret. It’s guns. It’s the fact that it’s frighteningly easy for dangerous people to get access to a gun, and this proposal does little to stop that.”

    Texas State Teachers Association President Noel Candelaria said he “strongly objects” to arming more teachers. “Teachers are trained to teach and to nurture, not double up as security guards,” Candelaria said.

    Abbott’s recommendations include measures to “harden” campuses such as creating vestibules where doors must by remotely unlocked before visitors enter, installing metal detectors and having an alarm that would signal there’s an active shooter.

    Abbott is also recommending an expansion of a program that identifies students at risk of committing violence and provides help for them. He also wants to increase the number of people trained to identify signs of mental illness and increase awareness of a state system that allows people to report people who may be a threat and suspicious activity.

  • President Trump stops in Dallas for private fundraiser

    President Trump stops in Dallas for private fundraiser

    DALLAS(TIP): President Trump, Thursday, May 31, attended a fundraiser at the Adolphus Hotel in downtown. Air Force One touched down in Love Field around 4 p.m. He arrived at the hotel around 4:30 p.m. and was greeted by supporters and protestors.

    Trump’s fundraiser in Dallas was originally supposed to happen on May 8, but it was rescheduled due to developments with North Korea at the time. Trump still came to the NRA Convention, but he did not mix that with raising money.

    The Thursday night reception came at a minimum cost of $2,700 per person. The dinner was $25,000 a plate. Those who wanted to take a picture with the commander-in-chief had to pay $50,000 for their ticket.

    In anticipation of his visit, Dallas police closed down several roads around Downtown Dallas like Commerce, Field, and Griffin and Main Street near the hotel. They have since been reopened to traffic.

    Early in the day, President Trump was in Houston for another private fundraiser. The White House said he also made sure to add in his original schedule time to meet with the Santa Fe High School shooting victims and their families.

    Trump departed Love Field around 6:15 p.m. as he headed back to the White House.

    (Source: Fox 4)

  • Indian American Karthik Nemmani is the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee Winner

    Indian American Karthik Nemmani is the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee Winner

    DALLAS, TX(TIP): 11th year in a row, an Indian American has emerged victorious in the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

    Karthik Nemmani, 14, an eighth grader at Scoggins Middle School of McKinney, Texas, has won the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee. His winning word was “koinonia”.

    Nemmani was all smiles after winning the Bee. When asked when he knew he won the competition, he responded “When I heard it [the word]”. He thanked his parents and his coach, stating that “I wouldn’t have been able to do it without her [his coach]”.

    Spelling Bee veteran, Nayasa Modi, 11, a seventh grader from Texas, finished second. She was stumped by the word “Bewusstseinslage,” which she spelled “bewustsseinslage.” Nemmani however, seemed to know the word, nodding along to every letter Modi spit, shaking his head once he knew she spelled it incorrectly.

    Nemmani will walk away with a cash prize of $40,000 and a trophy from SNSB, a $2,500 cash prize and complete reference library from Merriam-Webster, a trip to New York City to appear on Live with Kelly and Ryan, a trip to Hollywood to appear on ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! and a pizza party for his school sponsored by Pizza Hut and Book It!

    Eleven-year-old Abhijay Kodali, the youngest speller of the evening, finished third. He was eliminated after misspelling “aalii.”

    The commencement of round 11 saw 7 spellers, all of whom were Indian American. 11 of the 16 finalists tonight were Indian American.

    The 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee was held at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland from May 29-31.

    (Source: The American Bazar)

  • June 01 New York & Dallas Print Editions

    June 01 New York & Dallas Print Editions

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  • Indian American BAPS Charities hosts Walk Green 2018 in Dallas, TX

    Indian American BAPS Charities hosts Walk Green 2018 in Dallas, TX

    DALLAS(TIP): Community members of all ages came out with their families to support the annual BAPS Charities Walk Green 2018 in Dallas, TX on May 19th. 2018 marks the third year that the annual BAPS Charities walkathon will benefit The Nature Conservancy and their effort to conserve the lands and waters on earth to sustain life for upcoming generations. BAPS Charities will contribute $165,000, an equivalent of planting 130,000 trees, to The Nature Conservancy to support their initiative to plant a billion trees globally by 2025. In addition to supporting this global effort, this year’s BAPS Charities walkathon also supported Irving Schools Foundation and the Irving Citizens Fire Academy Association. The Irving Schools Foundation provides financial resources to maximize educational opportunities for teachers and students in Irving ISD by funding innovative programs, scholarships, and activities that enhance creativity, leadership, and academic success.

    Altogether, over 1200 participants attended the walk. “Coming out to support BAPS Charities is always rewarding, and it makes me feel proud to be helping The Nature Conservancy and its Plant a Billion Trees campaign. It is a great way for me to teach my children about protecting the planet and accepting environmental responsibility,” said Rina Jariwala from Southlake, who has participated in the BAPS Charities Walk Green efforts for the past three years.

    BAPS Charities uses these opportunities to instill a spirit of service and commitment to preservation and environmental responsibility in community members. Events such as this help instill consciousness in community members surrounding their actions, and, in turn, helps inspire global harmony with nature.

    Commenting on activities of BAPS Charities, Irving Mayor Rick Stopfer said, “There’s so many good things that can be done and when you see everyone coming together, when you see these young people here realizing how important it is to volunteer and give back to the community, I want to thank BAPS for teaching us how to all work together and take care of the environment. The fact that we’ll have 300,000 trees planted by the end of the year it is amazing!”

    About BAPS Charities

    BAPS Charities is a global charity active in nine countries across five continents. Volunteers drive its efforts, dedicating a portion of their lives in selfless service of others, both in their local neighborhoods as well as globally. Working in five key areas, BAPS Charities aims to express a spirit of selfless service through Health Awareness, Educational Services, Humanitarian Relief, Environmental Protection & Preservation and Community Empowerment. From organizing Walkathons that raise funds for local and global needs, to supporting humanitarian relief in times of urgent need; from hosting community health fairs to sustaining hospitals and schools in developing countries, BAPS Charities provides an opportunity for individuals wishing to serve locally and globally.

  • Border Patrol agent kills migrant near Texas-Mexico line

    Authorities said the agent opened fire after he came under attack by a group of migrants, but a witness disputed that account.

    DALLAS(TIP): A U.S. Border Patrol agent shot and killed a migrant near the Mexican border in Texas, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Thursday, May 24.

    The agent was responding at about 12:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. ET) Wednesday, May 23, to a report of “illegal activity” near a culvert in Rio Bravo, in Webb County about 10 miles south of Laredo, when he encountered a group of migrants, according to Customs and Border Protection.

    “Initial reports indicate that as the agent attempted to apprehend the group, he came under attack by multiple subjects using blunt objects,” the agency said in a statement.

    The agent fired at least one round and fatally shot one of the migrants, according to the agency, which said three people whom it described as “illegal aliens” were arrested. It didn’t identify the officer or the shooting victim.

    Marta Martinez, who lives near the scene, said that she heard the shot and began recording video on her cellphone. She told NBC affiliate KGNS of Laredo that the victim was a young woman.

    In the video, which Martinez posted to Facebook, people in uniform can be heard yelling, apparently at the migrants, “See what happens?” and “See what you caused?”

    Martinez said she was shocked by the events.

    “They come here to the United States to live the American dream,” she told KGNS. “So, there’s no American dream right there. She died right there on the scene.”

    The FBI and the Texas Rangers are investigating, Customs and Border Protection said. Authorities scheduled a news conference for Friday, May 25.

    The shooting comes as President Donald Trump has been ramping up his rhetoric about illegal immigration. In a speech last week in Washington, the president referred to some people who cross the border illegally as “animals.”

    (Source: KGNS)

  • First step into the new building of Swaminarayan Gurukul USA, Plano-Dallas

    First step into the new building of Swaminarayan Gurukul USA, Plano-Dallas

    DALLAS (TIP): On the auspicious day of Akshaytrutiya, holy saints performed first mahapuja and thal in the new magnificent facility of Shree Swaminarayan Gurukul USA located in Plano, Texas, USA.

    This new 32-acre campus boasts the beautiful temple with the idols of Lord Shree Swaminarayan, Shree Radhakrushn dev, Shree Sita-Ramji, Shree Venketeshwar Balaji, Shree Siddheshvar Mahadev, Shree Vighnvinayak Ganapatiji, and Shree Kashtbhanjan Hanumanji.

    Campus also includes cultural and education classes for kids, function hall for social events, exhibition on Vaidik Sanskruti, and residential facilities for the guests. This beautiful campus has in-built natural surroundings with lake, river and wooded areas. Its serene environment provides tranquility and relaxation to all of its visitors. Thousands of families living near-by will greatly benefit from it. This place will provide spiritual and cultural guidance to persons of every age. For kids, there will be cultural and spiritual classes during the weekends. It will act as a bridge for Indian descendant kids to connect with their rich Indian heritage.

    This new temple’s Murti Pratishtha Mahotsav will be celebrated with great zeal and devotion from August 11th to 19th. More than 30 saints and 5000 devotees will arrive to take part in this once in a lifetime opportunity in the divine presence of His Holiness Sadguru Guruvarya Shree Devkrushnadasji Swami. Various spiritual and community programs like 25 Kundi Mahavishnu yag based on Vaidik rituals, 1008 Mahapuja, discourses on Shrimad Satsangijivan, special discourses on various topics by scholarly saints, 51-hour Swaminarayan mantralekhan and dhoon, cultural programs by kids, youth and women devotees, health camp, blood donation etc. are organized during this event.