Tag: Texas

  • Osama bin Laden poster signed by SEAL Team 6 sells for $100,000

    Osama bin Laden poster signed by SEAL Team 6 sells for $100,000

    HOUSTON (TIP): A “wanted” Osama bin Laden poster, signed by US Navy SEAL Team 6 which carried out the raid in Pakistan to kill the then al-Qaeda chief, has been auctioned for a whopping $100,000 here.

    Before Admiral William McRaven took over the chancellor’s office at the University of Texas, he oversaw one of the most daring raids in modern military history —the assault on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

    The raid, recounted in a number of books, articles and the Hollywood blockbuster “Zero Dark Thirty,” saw a squad from the Navy’s elite SEAL Team 6 sweep into the 9/11 mastermind’s hiding place to kill the terrorist leader.

    The admiral’s personal Osama “wanted” poster, signed by SEAL Team 6, was auctioned off for $100,000 at a Houston dinner on Tuesday.

    “(The photo was a) reminder to all of us that this was guy we were looking for from 2004,” McRaven was quoted as saying by the Houston Chronicle.

    “It’s a USD 10 poster in a seemingly priceless frame,” he said.

    Later, Perrin asked the former commander of US Special Operations Command why he insisted on a proper burial for Osama.

    “As evil as he was, it’s all the more important to do the right thing,” McRaven replied to thunderous applause.

    The event raised more than USD 840,000 for Texas Children’s Cancer Center. Osama was killed in the US Navy SEALs raid on May 2, 2011. (PTI)

  • Oil market extends pullback as dollar rises

    Oil market extends pullback as dollar rises

    LONDON (TIP): Oil prices extended their retreat Thursday after hawkish US Federal Reserve meeting minutes strengthened the dollar and a weekly report showed rising US crude stockpiles.

    Prices hit 2016 highs Wednesday due in part to production outages resulting from wildfires around the Canadian oil sands hub of Fort McMurray but pulled back to settle lower after the dollar climbed.

    A stronger greenback makes dollar-priced oil more expensive, denting demand and hurting prices.

    Minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s policy meeting in April that were released Wednesday showed that policymakers kept open the door to raising interest rates in June. Higher interest rates typically encourage investors to move to the dollar for higher yields, lifting the currency.

    At about 1200 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for June delivery was down 84 cents at $47.35 per barrel. Brent for July dipped $1.08 to $47.85 a barrel. “The main factor weighing on prices is the much appreciated US dollar,” said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch.

  • Indian-American Teen Syamantak Payra Wins Intel Young Scientist Award

    Indian-American Teen Syamantak Payra Wins Intel Young Scientist Award

    A 15-year-old Indian-American boy has won the prestigious ‘Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award’ for developing a low-cost electronically-aided knee brace that allows a person with a weakened leg to walk more naturally.

    Syamantak Payra, a Texas resident, won the USD 50,000 award along with 17-year-old Kathy Liu. The award was given by Intel Corporation and the Society for Science and the Public (SSP) at the 2016 ‘Intel International Science and Engineering Fair’ in Arizona last week.

    “Our top winners this year – Syamantak and Kathy – clearly demonstrate that age has no bearing on your ability to conduct research and come up with solutions to important problems,” said Maya Ajmera, SSP president and chief executive.

    “We congratulate them not only for their success, but on their dedication and hard work. They and the rest of the Intel ISEF finalists are the rising stars of STEM and we look forward to watching them pursue their passions and in turn make the world a better place for future generations,” Ms Ajmera said.

    When Mr Payra tested his prototype with two individuals partially disabled by polio, it almost immediately restored a more natural gait and increased mobility, according to a statement.

    “Intel congratulates this year’s winners and hopes that their work will inspire other young innovators to apply their curiosity and ingenuity to today’s global challenges,” Intel Foundation president and Intel Corporation vice president of human resources and director of corporate affairs Rosalind Hudnell said in a statement.

    This year’s Intel International Science and Engineering Fair featured more than 1,700 young scientists selected from 419 affiliate fairs held in 77 countries.

    A team of students from India also attended the event. Five Indian Americans also figured in the 22 “Best of Category” winners and each received a USD 5,000 prize.

    These winners included Rajeev Jha (Hawaii) in the Behavioral and Social Sciences category, Marissa Sumathipala (Virginia) in the Cellular and Molecular Biology, Swetha Revanur (California) in Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, Tiasha Joardar (Texas) in the Energy: Physical category and Prashant Godishala (Minnesota) in the Translational Medical Science.

    Under the Intel and Indo-US Science & Technology Forum, three students won the award for a visit to India.

  • Anti-Trump Forces Build Shadow Third-Party Campaign

    Anti-Trump Forces Build Shadow Third-Party Campaign

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Anti-Donald Trump strategists are working behind the scenes to build the foundation for a third-party run even as the Republican Party takes steps toward unifying around the presumptive GOP candidate, says an ABC report.

    A small but dedicated group of Republicans say they’ve begun to cultivate donors in hopes of mounting a viable third-party challenge to a likely Hillary Clinton-Trump showdown that some strategists say has fed broad demand for an alternative option.

    “I think we’ll end up in a situation where we do see somebody who’s a conservative alternative to Trump and Mrs. Clinton come November,” Rick Wilson, a veteran Republican operative, said on ABC News’ “Powerhouse Politics” podcast.

    While Texas’ state ballot deadline passed this week and others are fast approaching, Wilson downplayed ballot access hurdles, citing legal precedent for rolling back early deadlines. The real challenge, he said, is fielding the appropriate candidate.

    “We recognize that finding that person who can pick up the mantle of the third party, who is also electable and compelling and has a great personal narrative, is a difficult lift,” he said. “It’s a lot harder than the ballot access question by an order of magnitude.”

    Another Republican at the heart of the effort, Weekly Standard editor and ABC News Contributor Bill Kristol, has tweeted about having discussed the possibility of a third party run with Mitt Romney, Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse, and former Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn. Kristol, Wilson, as well as GOP strategist Joel Searby, are heading up the effort, but it also involves donors and about a dozen other strategists.

    Sasse said he is not interested in running, but has bemoaned the two likely candidates and called for a third option in an open letter, writing “WHY is that the only choice?” Similar efforts by this same group to recruit Gen. James Mattis, a retired Marine Corps General, also have not come to pass.

    A source close to third party discussions told ABC News that Trump’s position as presumptive nominee explains why the third-party effort has now sprung into force.

    “It’s very realistic,” the source said when asked if it was possible to mount this type of effort in May. “We already have a number of serious and capable donors ready to help and while it is very difficult to do this, it is not complicated. It’s a pretty straightforward process. There are a number of signatures needed and a legal process in each state. We are focused on the timeline and while it’s difficult, it’s not a problem that can’t be solved by hard work and resources.”

    The same source said they are working on recruiting a candidate: “There are a lot of people who would like to run for president, but only a few that are truly qualified and could mount a bid of this stature this late in the game. We are focused on a very small number of candidates who would fit that profile.”

    Matt Kibbe, a former head of the fiscal-conservative group FreedomWorks who led a super PAC supporting Rand Paul in the GOP presidential primary, suggested there’s broad demand for an alternative to a Clinton-Trump matchup.

    “I think Libertarians, a lot of [Tea Party members], a lot of constitutional conservatives, and probably less relevantly establishment Republicans, are looking for another option as well,” said Kibbe, who has traditionally voted Republican but plans to attend the GOP, Democratic, and Libertarian conventions in search of a candidate, and is open to likely Libertarian nominee former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson.

    Some conservative leaders have cast doubt about the chances of a realistic third-party option as more party members make peace with Trump as their nominee.

    Al Cardenas, the former president of the American Conservatives Union and currently a senior partner at the lobbying firm Squire Patton Boggs, said talk of a third option has waned.

    “It’s a combination of lacking a superstar willing to do so, and a sense that the party will fare better in general election, down ticket, if it’s not split at top of the ticket,” Cardenas said. Many conservatives are more focused on keeping GOP majorities in Congress, with Trump on the presidential ticket, Cardenas said.

    The anti-Trump forces’ uphill climb may have grown steeper today as House Speaker Paul Ryan narrowed the gap between himself and Trump, with the two issuing a joint statement saying their meetings in Washington, D.C., signaled a “positive step” toward unifying the Republican Party.

    Other conservative leaders have also warmed to Trump. Despite the GOP nominee’s inconsistencies on whether he supports raising tax rates on the wealthy, Grover Norquist, the top anti-tax activist in Washington, D.C., defended Trump in an interview with CNBC, saying he is “not at all concerned that any taxes are going up at all” with Trump as president.

    But anti-Trump activist Wilson said the third-party movement can emerge and beat Clinton.

    “A large number of Republicans — 55 percent of the people that have cast their vote in the Republican primary or caucus this year — have done so against Donald Trump,” he said. “Now some of those folks are going to go to him [and] settle for Trump. But that’s because right now they don’t have a conservative alternative before them who can provide them with answers on how you preserve the Republican and conservative movement without it being simply a Hillary operation.”

  • Obama Honours Indian American Teacher Revathi Balakrishnan

    Obama Honours Indian American Teacher Revathi Balakrishnan

    HOUSTON, UNITED STATES:  An Indian-American woman elementary teacher from Texas has been honored by US President Barack Obama at the White House for her excellent work in the field of education.

    Revathi Balakrishnan, a gifted teacher at Patsy Sommer Elementary School, was also named 2016 ‘Texas Elementary Teacher of the Year’.

    “It is not work for me. It is actually a passion,” said 53-year-old Austin-based Ms Balakrishnan who has taught in the district’s talented and gifted programmes for nine years.

    Currently teaching math classes in third through fifth grade at Sommer, Ms Balakrishnan, who was honoured last week, will now represent Texas in the ‘National Teacher of the Year’ competition.

    “I’m an Indian-American, so I think the Indian community is feeling a lot of pride and joy,” Ms Balakrishnan said, adding that about 30 per cent of the students at ‘Sommer Elementary’ are Asian or Indian.

    “I feel proud to represent those and I can convince a lot of younger generation Indian kids to turn to teaching for a career. So I feel I can actually have some impact on that,” she said.

    Ms Balakrishnan has taught at ‘Sommer Elementary’ for six years before teaching at Forest North Elementary for three years.

    Originally from Chennai, Ms Balakrishnan was a systems analyst with Liberty Mutual, managing databases and programming for about 12 years before becoming a teacher.

    Terming her style of teaching as “no nonsense”, Ms Balakrishnan, who earned her economics degree from University of Madras, attributes her success in the field of education to her love of teaching.

    She said the excitement of teaching, learning with students and the opportunity to shape students who are the “leaders of tomorrow” drives her.

    “Not one day is the same, which is what I like. I don’t like structure. I just go with the flow and I love what happens,” Ms Balakrishnan said.

    The ‘National Teacher of the Year Programme’ identifies exceptional teachers in the country, recognises their effective work in the classroom, engages them in a year of professional learning, amplifies their voices and empowers them to participate in policy discussions at the state and national levels.

  • Donald Trump wins big in Indiana, becomes presumptive GOP nominee

    Donald Trump wins big in Indiana, becomes presumptive GOP nominee

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Donald Trump won the Republican primary in Indiana on Tuesday, May 3, a resounding victory that sets him up to be the presumptive Republican nominee.

    Rival Ted Cruz announced later in the evening that he was dropping out of the race, removing Trump’s most formidable foe.

    Read also: Trump’s Win will have Consequences

    Speaking to supporters, Trump said he didn’t know whether Cruz liked him or not but called him “one tough competitor.” Just hours earlier, when Cruz was still in the race, they were trading insults.

    “This has been an amazing evening. I didn’t expect this,” Trump said, as he called for party unity.

    On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders was the projected winner in Indiana over Hillary Clinton, a surprise as she had held a slight lead in recent polls.
    Trump is now the favorite to win the GOP nomination, a notion unthinkable to many in the GOP establishment a year ago when his potential presidential bid was regarded as a lark or publicity stunt. Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus said in a tweet that Trump was the “presumptive nominee” and that the party should unite behind him.

    Cruz could no longer amass a majority of the delegates by the time of the Republican National Convention in July, and Trump’s string of victories raised doubts that he could deny Trump a majority by that point.

    “Lyin’ Ted Cruz consistently said that he will, and must, win Indiana,” Trump tweeted shortly after the race was called. “If he doesn’t he should drop out of the race-stop wasting time & money.”

    The Hoosier State had once been considered a state favorable to Cruz, and even he had seen it as a firewall to Trump’s wins in the northeast. But an alliance that the Texas senator made with John Kasich unraveled, and Cruz’s announcement that Carly Fiorina would be his running mate hasn’t changed the dynamics of the race.

    Clinton has tried to turn her attention to the general election, but Sanders has been bolstered by a hefty fundraising network of small donors. Even though the amount that he raised fell in April, it was still almost $26 million, nearly the same amount that Clinton raised for the primary.

  • Donald Trump aiming to secure 1,400 delegates: Report

    Donald Trump aiming to secure 1,400 delegates: Report

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Buoyed by his massive New York primary win, Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump is aiming to secure 1,400 delegates before the July convention and secure an outright nomination, according to a media report.

    Internal documents show that the Trump Campaign advisers are projecting the 69-year-old tycoon-turned-politician to have 1,400 delegates when he goes to the Cleveland Convention, Washington Post reported.

    This is more than the 1,237 delegates required to win the Republican presidential nomination.

    The projections were part of an internal memo sent by his campaign Tuesday night with talking points to his surrogates.

    “The RNC has a lot to answer for as do those who are part of the donor class and the party establishment. We will get most of the delegates and we will, in just another week, close the door on other candidates getting to 1,237 before the convention,” the memo said.

    “Speaking of delegates we are working every delegate elected just as hard as the other campaigns the Cruz spin machine produces more lies than anything else. Ourprojections call for us to accumulate over 1,400 delegates and thus a first ballot nomination win in Cleveland,” the internal memo was quoted as saying.

    However, his rival Senator Ted Cruz from Texas disagreed claiming that Trump would not be able to reach the 1,237 figure before the convention.

    “We are headed to a contested convention at this point. Nobody is getting to 1,237,” Cruz told Philadelphia radio.

  • Indian-American Woman Amongst 6 Dead In Houston Floods

    Indian-American Woman Amongst 6 Dead In Houston Floods

    HOUSTON, TEXAS:  At least six persons, including an Indian-American woman, were killed in “historic” flash flooding in Houston, submerging of scores of subdivisions and several major interstate highways and forcing the closure of schools.

    Sunita Singh, 47, senior electrical engineer at Bechtel Oil & Gas was found dead in her car Monday during the flash floods that killed six people

    She was going to work as usual at 6:30 am, her husband Rajiv Singh told the media. Since the exit was closed she drove to another one. Around 6:50 am she called her husband saying that the water was rising. She thought rescue workers were around, but there was none.

    Rajiv Singh continued to call her with no reply.

    She is survived by her husband and 15-year-old son.

    One of the victims was found in a submerged 18-wheeler cab on the N Beltway 8 frontage road near the Hardy Toll Road. Two others were found in separate vehicles.

    In Waller County, a 56-year-old Royal ISD teacher was found inside a submerged vehicle off Adams Flat Road.

    More than 470 flights were cancelled at Bush Intercontinental and Hobby Airport in the morning hours.

    An overnight storm dumped between 8 and 16 inches of water on the area. The heavy rainfall also closed local schools, knocked out power for more than 121,000 residents and made many roadways impassable.

    More than 1,200 high water rescues have been reported by Houston and Harris County officials. Officials in Harris County have declared a disaster area and estimate at least 1,000 homes have already been flooded. More than half the watersheds in Harris County are experiencing significant flooding, with least one cresting above its estimated 500-year flood mark, a new all-time record.

    The local National Weather Service (NWS) has warned residents not to travel “unless you are fleeing an area subject to flooding or under an evacuation order.”

    About 120,000 homes are without power, and school and transit systems are shut down across the region.

    “Houston is in the midst of an unbelievable deluge, with already more rainfall in a single day than any hurricane to ever hit the hurricane-prone city. The flooding is “historic”, NWS said in a statement.

    The City of Houston closed city offices, including municipal courts, and has told non-essential employees to stay home for the day.

  • Texas Indian American Couple Found Dead in Apparent Murder-Suicide

    Texas Indian American Couple Found Dead in Apparent Murder-Suicide

    An Indian American couple has been found dead April 12 in a bedroom inside their home, in what police have said is a murder-suicide.

    Southlake police said the man fatally shot his wife before killing himself.

    Police were called to the 400 block of Thistle Court about 2 p.m. after a family member discovered the two bodies.

    The Tarrant County medical examiner identified the pair as Anil Kharabanda, 62, and Neeta Kharabanda, 58. They were found dead in the bedroom.

    Court records cite tension in the couple’s relationship. They married in 1980 but were involved in divorce proceedings twice, as reported by Dallas Morning News.

    Neeta Kharabanda had submitted petitions seeking a divorce in 2003 and 2011, but filed documents later on to say she didn’t want to pursue the cases.

    The Tarrant County medical examiner’s record show Neeta Kharabanda died at 2:07 pm as result of homicide and Anil Kharabanda died due to suicide at 2:03 pm.

    Records accessed from https://mepublic.tarrantcounty.com/MEPublic/default.aspx

  • Mahila Raises $85K for Underprivileged Women in India

    Mahila Raises $85K for Underprivileged Women in India

    Dallas, Texas – April 11, 2016 – With the beautifully-lit Dallas skyline as the backdrop, more than 300 of Dallas’ crème-de-la-crème, from businessmen to financiers to fashionistas, packed the d.e.c. on Dragon in downtown Thursday evening and raised more than $85,000 for Mahila, an organization comprised of powerful female community leaders: attorney Bina Palnitkar Patel, architect Purva Jain, media guru Priya Bhola Rathod, cultural advocate Preeta Mongaand social entrepreneur Ami Doshi.

    “This was our very first fundraiser, and I’m quite pleased at the turnout,” said founding member Monga. “Dallas is a very giving community, and we are thrilled that people in our city resonate with this international cause. I have to thank all of our incredible monetary & in-kind sponsors, the community and, of course, my fellow ‘Mahilas,’ without whom none of this would be possible.” 

    All the proceeds raised will directly benefit struggling, low-income village women in India who have a dream of starting their own business through Milaap USA, the beneficiary of the fundraiser.  The non-profit strives to provide low-cost microloans to the working poor to empower them to live dignified, self-sufficient and healthy lives. Through microlending, women receive small business loans which are repaid over a period of time. Milaap USA advocates financial inclusion for individuals and families in the following sectors: enterprise development, clean energy, water and sanitation, education and vocational training and health care. Watch the Milaap video HERE!

    “We are so humbled and honored that Mahila picked us as their charity of choice for their inaugural fundraiser,” said Paulomi Polo” Patel, Executive Director of Milaap USA. “Our organization is driven to provide a ‘hand-up,’ versus a ‘hand-out,’  to the women we work with in India. We know if that if you mobilize ONE woman, you help mobilize her family, and, ultimately, her community; these rural women are leading the next generation out of poverty. It’s an investment worth making as global citizens.” 

    To support the cause, ‘Real Housewives of Dallas’ star LeeAnne Locken and Satnam Singh, the first player from India to be drafted into the NBA by the Dallas Mavericks, also attended the event and walked the red carpet.

    Mahila would like to thank its generous headlining sponsors:

    • North Texas Preferred Health Partners
    • Ericsson
    • Pratiksha Jewelry
    • Competitive Cameras
    • CMC Commercial Reality Group
    • Monitoring Concepts

    For more information about Mahila, please visit www.mahiladallas.org,
    and to find out more about Milaap’s work, please visit www.milaapusa.org.

  • Mainstream NYC Dance Company Unveils US-India Collaboration – “The Durga Project”

    Mainstream NYC Dance Company Unveils US-India Collaboration – “The Durga Project”

    (New York, NY – March 14, 2016) Battery Dance, New York City’s dance ambassador to the world, is proud to announce its 40th anniversary season lineup, which will feature the world premiere of “The Durga Project,” an original work created by founder and artistic director Jonathan Hollanderthat weaves together the movement vocabularies, sonorities and aesthetics of the U.S. and India into a choreographic fantasy of 30 minutes in length.

    cf585443-b2c6-4d24-9005-156a5e8aa490The program will be complemented by works commissioned by European and African choreographers: “Inter/Ago,” created in 2015 by Tadej Brdnik, the recently retired Martha Graham principal dancer and choreographer, who has danced with Battery Dance since 1998; and “Observatory,” created in 2014 by Theo Ndindwa, founder of South Africa’s iKapa Dance Theatre, and since performed in tours of South America, Europe, Asia and at the first Cape Town International Dance Festival in December, 2015.

    Founded in New York’s financial district in 1976, Battery Dance is an anchor in the cultural life of Manhattan and a global ambassador for dance, with signature performances in 65 countries across six continents. This year, the Company celebrates its 40th anniversary season with a diverse array of performances in New York, Texas, South Korea, Germany, India and elsewhere around the globe.

    "Observatory," choreographed by Theo Ndindwa at 33rd annual Battery Dance Festival From L to R: Clement Mensah and Mira Cook Photo Credit: Darial Sneed
    “Observatory,” choreographed by Theo Ndindwa at 33rd annual Battery Dance Festival
    From L to R: Clement Mensah and Mira Cook
    Photo Credit: Darial Sneed

    Two events will showcase the Company’s artistry and its commitment to its lower Manhattan home base, where Battery Dance was born some 40 years ago:

    • New York Season performances at The Schimmel Center for the Arts at Pace University (3 Spruce Street) on May 11th at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and May 12th at 7 p.m., followed by a VIP gala reception. 
    • 35th annual Battery Dance Festival in Battery Park City from August 14th to the 19th, with a grand finale at Schimmel Center on the 20th (performances at 6:30 pm – schedule to be released soon).

    “Selecting an Indian theme for the Company’s 40th Anniversary was a natural and fitting choice,” said Hollander, founder and artistic director of Battery Dance. “We are the best-known American dance company in India, having engaged in seven national tours (17 cities reached thus far) since 1992 and having hosted dozens of Indian dancers and musicians in New York and across America.” 

    In “The Durga Project,” guest artist Unnath H.R., one of the leading classical dancers of his generation in India, engages in a symbiotic process with Battery’s Western-trained team of five brilliant and diverse dancers, yielding swaths of distinctive, yet undefinable, choreography that are like none other in the Company’s repertoire. A commissioned score by award-winning composer Frank Carlberg adheres to the musical notes that define the Hindustani Classical Raga Durga, a late evening raga that pays tribute to the Goddess Durga, but spins his own melodic and rhythmic invention. Costume designer Solé Salvo applies her vision and skill to adorn the dancers in garments suggestive of a primitive time and place, in hues inspired by the spices of India. Calvin Anderson employs a variegated palette in his lighting design with sculptural chiaroscuro suggestive of the bas relief on Indian temples.

    “With its beautiful images and soulful music, The Durga Project evokes the sentiment of Bhakti(devotional love of the Goddess),” said Indian dance historian and critic Sunil Kothari. “The choreography is excellent, drawing inspiration from Indian classical dances and music.  The human chain performed in the beginning with Bharatanatyam dancer Unnath H.R. gradually gathers momentum, resolving into the pas de deux which offer imaginatively suggestive and iconic poses of Goddess Durga in motion. Hollander and his dancers from the U.S. and India have captured the essence of Shakti, the female principle of divine energy, in a meaningful manner.”

    Watch a sneak peek of the performance HERE!

    Tickets are available now at the Schimmel Center Box Office. General Admission is $20 for the matinee performance and $25 for evening performances. Gala tickets for the May 12th performance are available by contacting info@batterydance.org. For more information, please visit www.batterydance.org.


    The Durga Project Credits:
    Artistic Director:  Jonathan Hollander
    Composer:  Frank Carlberg
    Dancer/Choreographers:  Robin Cantrell, Mira Bai Cook, Clement Mensah, Bethany Mitchell, Sean Scantlebury
    Guest Dancer/Choreographer:  Unnath H.R.
    Costumes:  Solé Salvo
    Lighting:  Calvin Anderson

    Media Contact: JINGO Media
    Jitin Hingorani
    Jitin@JingoMedia.com

  • After F-16s, US to give attack choppers to Pakistan

    After F-16s, US to give attack choppers to Pakistan

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The Obama administration on Monday awarded a $170 million contract to Bell Helicopter of Texas to manufacture and deliver nine AH-1Z Viper attack helicopters to Pakistan, continuing the US policy of arming a country that many of its lawmakers say is two-faced about fighting terrorism.

    The American reward for Pakistan came even as Islamabad continued to protect Masood Azhar, leader of the terrorist outfit Jaish-e-Mohammed, with Chinese support, while subverting New Delhi’s efforts to bring to justice Pakistani perpetrators of terrorists attacks in India.

    Pakistani charges that India is staging terrorist attacks on itself to malign Islamabad evoked little interest in Washington, as the Pentagon signed off yet another consignment of lethal arms to the country that claims it is also a victim of terrorism, even as it continues to foster terrorist groups and protect leaders of such outfits.

    Part of the US policy of continuing to arm Pakistan amid pious lectures about military doctrines and arms race has to do with the nature of the bloated US arms industry itself that feeds off such foreign military sales for profit and for creating local US jobs. The Pentagon notification disclosed that the contract for the helicopters and nine auxiliary fuel kits would be performed in Fort Worth and Amarillo in Texas.

    As with Bell’s attack helicopters, the eight F-16s US has announced for Pakistan will also be manufactured in Fort Worth, Texas, ensuring that it has support of local lawmakers who are more concerned about the economy and jobs, even if they are wellinclined towards India. Both contracts are part of a $950 million arms package.

    In fact, as per that notification, Pakistan had requested a possible sale of 15 AH-1Z Vipers, but the Obama administration appears to have signed off on only nine. Islamabad also has no money to pay for any of the arms it asks for, and they are usually supplied under concessional foreign military sales agreements.

    Regional experts surmise that all these piecemeal supplies to Pakistan is aimed at keeping the country’s tin-pot generals happy while ensuring access and cooperation on the Afghan front, even at the risk of offending India.

  • Indian-American Professor Selected for Fulbright Specialist Roster

    Indian-American Professor Selected for Fulbright Specialist Roster

    HOUSTON (TIP): An Indian-American professor and pharmaceutical department chair at a prestigious American university has been selected for the Fulbright Specialist Roster for his outstanding achievements in the field of pharmacy. Rajender R Aparasu is the first pharmacy faculty member at the University of Houston selected to be the candidate roster of the Fulbright Specialist Program, which helps US faculty share their academic expertise and develop linkages with non-US institutions on curriculum, assessment, faculty development and research training.

    The Fulbright program which is funded by the Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, serves to promote international engagement of academic scholarship and build linkages between US and overseas institutions.

    “There are very few Fulbright specialists in pharmacy; I am really honored to be selected for Fulbright Specialist Roster,” said Aparasu, whose five-year term ends in 2021.

    “This is a great opportunity to offer my expertise in developing professional and graduate pharmacy programs that involve pharmaceutical health outcomes and policy,” he said.

    “I am looking forward to the opportunity to visit overseas pharmacy institutions to assist faculty and administrators with respect to academic and research programs in pharmaceutical outcomes research.”

    Aparasu obtained his Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm) from Kakatiya University, and Master of Pharmacy (MPharm), from Jadavpur University, India.

    Aparasu obtained his Ph. D in Pharmacy Administration, University of Louisiana, Monroe, LA and joined University of Texas in 2006 after serving on the faculty at the South Dakota State University for more than a decade.

    His primary areas of expertise include geriatrics, pharmacoepidemiology, psychopharmacology and evidence-based medicine. His current research project, supported by a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), is evaluating safety profiles of anticholinergic medications in the elderly nursing home residents.

    He has authored and co-authored nearly 100 peer-reviewed journal articles and seven book chapters, as well as served as editor or co-editor of two books (Principles of Research Design and Drug Literature and Research Methods for Pharmaceutical Practice and Policy).

    Aparasu was recognized by his peers with the Fellow of the American Pharmacists Association (FAPhA) for his exemplary professional achievements and outstanding service and contribution to the pharmacy profession.

    He holds editorial board appointments on six peer-review journals and has been recognized as an “exceptional” reviewer by five peer-review journals.

  • Pak-American who put up anti-Hindu signs at eatery forced to sell franchise

    Pak-American who put up anti-Hindu signs at eatery forced to sell franchise

    A Pakistani-American owner, who put up anti-Hindu signs at a popular US eatery, has been forced to sell the franchise amid furore over the controversial posters that upset thousands of Indian-Americans.

    Mohd. Dar
    Mohammad Dar (pictured), 65, posted the messages six months ago at his location in Kemah, Texas

    Mohammad Dar, 65, agreed to give up his business in Kemah, Texas, Dairy Queen said.

    “We are pleased to announce that as of Wednesday, March 30th, the DQ location in Kemah, Texas is now under new ownership and all interior and exterior signs posted by the former franchisee were immediately removed from that location,” said Dean A Peters, Associate Vice-President of Communications of American Dairy Queen Corporation headquartered in Minneapolis.

    For the past six months, Dar’s Dairy Queen restaurant posted signs bashing Hinduism as a force of racism. Some of the messages, displayed on tall panels, mentioned Hinduism specifically and accused it of being based on racism.

    Dar taped more messages near the register, on the drive- through window and placed a large sign outside of the restaurant in the parking lot.

    The owner told local media that he planned to leave because of a new, expensive “corporate mandate”.

    The Hindus of Greater Houston, Hindu American Foundation and Diversity USA, welcomed a change in ownership at the Dairy Queen eatery.

    “After speaking with Dairy Queen’s spokesperson, we applaud Dairy Queen for taking action to move up the timing of the sale of this location in Kemah to another franchisee owner in order to have these anti-Hindu signs removed swiftly,” the statement said.

    “We also urge Dairy Queen to incorporate policies and procedures in their franchisee agreement to prevent such a situation from happening again,” it said.

     

  • Texas Governor Appoints First Indian American CEO to State’s Small Business Development Board

    Texas Governor Appoints First Indian American CEO to State’s Small Business Development Board

    (Dallas, Texas – March 30, 2016) Texas Governor Greg Abbott recently appointed Arun Agarwal, CEO of Nextt, the Dallas-based leader in the U.S. home textile industry, to the Product Development and Small Business Incubator (PDSBI) Board for a term set to expire on February 1, 2019. This is the first time an Indian American has been bestowed this honor in the state’s history. The PDSBI is a revolving loan program, administered by the Office of the Governor, and overseen by a nine-member board appointed by the Governor. The PDSBI Fund provides financial aid for the development, production and commercialization of new or improved products and to foster the growth of small businesses in the State of Texas.

    “It is such a huge honor for me to serve on one of the Governor’s boards,” said Agarwal. “As global business owners, it is our responsibility and civic duty to help other local small businesses survive and thrive in this global economy, and I am excited to do my part.”

    Nextt is a $500 million revenue, privately-held company that provides textiles to all of the major U. S. retailers including Dillard’s, Belk, Wal-Mart and Kohl’s. Nextt also has a robust portfolio of leading celebrity brands, such as Beautyrest, Ellen Tracy, Jessica McClintock and Royal Sateen. The company was recently awarded the patent for “alpha cotton,” a luxurious fabric that will make sheets 30 to 40 percent cheaper than 100 percent cotton.

    Nextt CEO Arun Agarwal was awarded “NRI of the Year” by TIMES NOW and ICICI Bank in 2015 and was selected as a 2014 Minority Business Leader by the Dallas Business Journal, while Agarwal’s company was ranked 17th in the 2014 Dallas 100 list of fastest growing companies selected by the Caruth Institute for Entrepreneurship of SMU.

    Nextt has its headquarters and distribution facilities in Dallas, while also operating a state-of-the-art design studio and showroom in New York.

  • 2015’s Festival Sweetheart Film – “Miss India America” – Announces Limited Theatrical Release in D.C., Chicago & San Jose This Month

    2015’s Festival Sweetheart Film – “Miss India America” – Announces Limited Theatrical Release in D.C., Chicago & San Jose This Month

    (Los Angeles, CA – March 18, 2016) After 22 sold-out screenings at mainstream and South Asian film festivals around North America in 2015 and multiple audience and jury awards under its belt, the smart, witty, coming-of-age comedy feature, “Miss India America,” will have a special, red-carpet screening, followed by a Q&A with the cast/team, in Los Angeles on March 24th. The limited theatrical release will take place at theaters in Washington, D.C., Chicago and San Jose starting on Friday, March 25th, for a one-week run. Following the theatrical release, the movie will be available on the following broadband platforms starting Tuesday, April 5th: Amazon, GooglePlay, iTunes, Vimeo, Vudu, Xfinity and Sling.

    The brainchild of husband/wife creative team Ravi Kapoor (director/co-writer) and Meera Simhan (actor/co-writer), the cross-cultural comedy is set against the backdrop of the Indian beauty pageant world in Los Angeles. Inspired by Simhan’s one-woman-show of the same title, “Miss India America” stars Texas native Tiya Sircar (The Internship, 17 Again, Vampire Diaries) and Hannah Simone (of Fox television series New Girl fame), along with a supporting cast of talented actors, including Kosha Patel, Satya Bhabha, Cas Anwar, Rizwan Manji, Anjali Bhimani and Bernard White. Produced by Megha Kadakia and Saurabh Kikani and distributed by MarVista Entertainment, the feature film “establishes an authentic tone that pays respect to Indian cultural norms, while poking gentle fun at these traditions,” raves The Hollywood Reporter.

    Special Screening
    Thursday, March 24, 2016: 

    L.A. Market – Laemmle Monica Film Center
    1332 2nd Street,
    Santa Monica, CA
    7:30 p.m. – one-time screening

    ***Open to public – limited tickets available HERE!

    Theatrical Release Schedule
    Friday, March 25 to Thursday, March 31, 2016:

    D.C. Market – AMC Rio 18 with IMAX
    9811 Washingtonian Blvd.,
    Gaithersburg, MD
    3:00 p.m. daily

    Chicago Market – AMC Barrington 30 with IMAX
    175 Studio Drive,
    South Barrington, IL
    3:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. daily

    San Jose Market – AMC Mercado 20 with IMAX
    3111 Mission College Blvd.,
    Santa Clara, CA
    3:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. daily (show times may vary by 10 – 30 minutes)

    To purchase tickets in advance, click HERE!

    For a complete list of the film’s 2015 & 2016 festival run, please click HERE!
    For testimonials from top Hollywood writers and producers, please click HERE! 

  • Trump, Clinton add to their lead with wins in Arizona

    Trump, Clinton add to their lead with wins in Arizona

    WASHINGTON(TIP): Under the shadow of overseas violence, Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton padded their leads on Tuesday with victories in Arizona and attacked each other as the 2016 presidential contest turned into a clash over who could best deal with Islamic extremism.

    Democratic challenger Bernie Sanders scored a win in Utah’s Democratic caucuses, claiming victory in the Western state as he tries to keep pace with Clinton who has a seemingly insurmountable lead in the delegate count. He netted some delegates in Utah, but not enough to make up for his loss to Clinton in Arizona.

    Long lines and high interest marked primary elections across Arizona, Utah and Idaho that were largely an afterthought for much of the day as the world grappled with a new wave of bloody attacks in Europe. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for blasts at the airport and a subway train in Brussels that left dozens dead and many more wounded.

    “This is about not only selecting a president, but also selecting a commander-in-chief,” Clinton said in Seattle as she condemned Trump by name and denounced his embrace of torture and hardline rhetoric aimed at Muslims. “The last thing we need is leaders who incite more fear.”

    Trump, in turn, branded Clinton as “Incompetent Hillary” in an interview with Fox News as he discussed her tenure as secretary of state. “Incompetent Hillary doesn’t know what she’s talking about,” the billionaire businessman said. “She doesn’t have a clue.”

    The back and forth between the front-runners came amid a frenzy of activity from voters eager to make their voices heard in the 2016 election.

    In Utah, caucus-goers were dispatched by poll workers to local stores with orders buy reams of paper and photocopy fresh ballots amid huge turnout. The state Democratic Party’s website crashed due to high traffic.

    In Arizona, voters waited two hours or more in some places to cast primary ballots, while police were called to help control traffic.

    The results from Arizona didn’t bode well for Democrat Bernie Sanders and Republicans Ted Cruz and John Kasich. They are running out of time to slow Trump and Clinton’s march toward acquiring all the delegates needed to claim their parties’ nominations at the parties’ national conventions in July.

    Trump’s Arizona victory gives him all of the state’s 58 delegates, while Arizona awards its delegates proportionally on the Democratic side.

    As voters flooded to the polls, the presidential candidates lashed out at each other’s foreign policy prescriptions, showcasing sharp contrasts in confronting the threat of Islamic extremism.

    Clinton – and Trump’s Republican rivals – questioned the Republican front-runner’s temperament and readiness to serve as commander in chief, and condemned his calls to diminish U.S. involvement with NATO.

    Addressing cheering supporters in Seattle, Clinton said the attacks in Brussels were a pointed reminder of “how high the stakes are” in 2016.

    Cruz seized on Trump’s foreign policy inexperience while declaring that the U.S. is at war with the Islamic State group.

    The ultraconservative Texas senator also issued a statement following the Brussels attacks that it was time for law enforcement to “patrol and secure Muslim neighborhoods before they become radicalized,” without providing more details.

    Trump’s brash tone has turned off some Republican voters in predominantly Mormon Utah, where early returns suggest Cruz has a chance to claim more than 50 percent of the caucus vote – and with it, all 40 of Utah’s delegates. Trump could earn some delegates should Cruz fail to exceed 50 percent, in which case the delegates would be awarded based on each candidate’s vote total.

    Arizona’s win gives Trump a little less than half the delegates allocated so far. That’s still short of the majority needed to clinch the nomination before the party’s national convention this summer.

    However, Trump has a path to the nomination if he continues to win states that award all or most of their delegates to the winner. Overall, Trump has accumulated 739 delegates, Cruz has 425 and Kasich 143. It takes 1,237 delegates to win the nomination.

    On the Democratic side, Clinton’s delegate advantage is even greater than Trump’s.

    The former secretary of state is coming off last week’s five-state sweep of Sanders, who remains popular among his party’s most liberal and younger voters but needs to improve his performance if he expects to stay relevant.

    The Vermont senator, now trailing Clinton by more than 300 pledged delegates, had targeted Tuesday’s races as the start of a comeback tour.

    He, too, addressed the world’s security threat: “We will stand as a nation with our allies and our friends and people all over this world,” he told supporters in San Diego. “We will stand with them and we will together crush and destroy ISIS.”

    For the evening, Clinton stands to win at least 45 delegates to at least 34 for Sanders based on the results in Arizona and Utah.

    To date, Clinton has a delegate lead of 1,208 to Sanders’ 878, based on primaries and caucuses. Clinton has at least 1,675 delegates to at least 904 for Sanders when including superdelegates – elected lawmakers and party officials who can cast votes at the convention for any candidate.

  • Indian American Incumbent Judge Loses Seat in Re-election at Fort Worth, TX

    Indian American Incumbent Judge Loses Seat in Re-election at Fort Worth, TX

    FORT WORTH, TX (TIP): In a March 1 election for the Fort Worth, Texas, 360th District Court, incumbent Judge Mike Sinha fell short to his challenger, Patricia Baca Bennett. The high drama election saw more than 200,000 votes cast in a record county turnout.

    Bennett received 57 percent of the vote in the Republican primary, with the Indian American judge tallying just 43 percent. With no Democrats running for the seat, Bennett has all but won the position.

    Leading up to the election, an anonymous person authored a smear campaign against Sinha on social media titled, “Sinha Muslim,” according to a Fort Worth Star-Telegram March 8 report.

    The five-paragraph message claimed that Sinha, who was appointed by Gov. Rick Perry in 2010, “wants to bring Sharia … into our family courts” and used “Muslim poll workers,” the Star-Telegram reported.

    The e-mail was signed “Alex Jackson” with an address leading to a vacant storage space, according to the report.

    Bennett posted on Facebook following publication of the e-mail saying, “My opponent is a Christian with a pretty amazing Christian walk. … I would never condone disparaging another religion,” adding she is having the incident investigated.

    All of the incumbent judges on the March 1 primary won except Sinha.

    “I think, unfortunately, my last name was an issue,” Sinha said in the Star-Telegram report without blaming Bennett. With Donald J. Trump voters thronging the polls, Sinha said his poll workers and family heard the same line repeatedly: “You’re a Muslim.”

    “We were called all kinds of names,” added Sinha.

    Sinha is a first-generation American. His father came to the U.S. from Bengal, India, in 1952.

  • US faces major Zika virus outbreak risk in summer: Study

    US faces major Zika virus outbreak risk in summer: Study

    NEW YORK (TIP): The conditions in a number of US cities will become favourable for a possible Zika virus outbreak during peak summner, warns a new research.

    The Aedes aegypti mosquito, which is spreading the virus in much of Latin America and the Caribbean, will likely become increasingly abundant across much of the southern and eastern US as the weather warms, the study said.

    “This research can help us anticipate the timing and location of possible Zika virus outbreaks in certain US cities,” said lead author of the study Andrew Monaghan from US National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR).

    “While there is much we still don’t know about the dynamics of Zika virus transmission, understanding where the Aedes aegypti mosquito can survive in the US and how its abundance fluctuates seasonally may help guide mosquito control efforts and public health preparedness,” Monaghan noted.

    Summertime weather conditions are favourable for populations of the mosquito along the East Coast as far north as New York City and across the southern tier of the country as far west as Phoenix and Los Angeles, according to specialised computer simulations by the researchers.

    Spring and autumnl conditions can support low to moderate populations of the Aedes aegypti mosquito in more southern regions of its US range. Wintertime weather is too cold for the species outside southern Florida and southern Texas, the study found.

    By analyzing travel patterns from countries and territories with Zika outbreaks, the research team further concluded that cities in southern Florida and impoverished areas in southern Texas may be particularly vulnerable to local virus transmission.

    The results were published in the journal PLOS Currents: Outbreaks.

    First identified in Uganda in 1947, the Zika virus has moved through tropical regions of the world over the past decade. It was introduced into Brazil last year and spread explosively across Latin America and the Caribbean, with more than 20 countries now facing pandemics.

    Monaghan, however, stressed that even if Zika establishes a toehold in the mainland United States, it is unlikely to spread as widely as in Latin America and the Caribbean. This is partly because a higher percentage of Americans live and work in air-conditioned and largely sealed homes and offices.

  • A Win for the Front-Runners

    A Win for the Front-Runners

    Hillary Clinton, the Democratic front-runner and Donald Trump, the Republican front-runner have won some crucial primary victories in Florida, Ohio, Illinois, North Carolina and Missouri. Marco Rubio, a much-touted candidate by the Republican Party leaders and the media, who was defeated in his own state of Florida, where he won only in his own county. He has now suspended his campaign. It is no surprise that he lost, as he was nothing but an empty suit.

    On the Democratic side, Hillary had a clean sweep in the southern states. With the addition of the big states like Ohio, Illinois and Florida, she now has almost a commanding lead. Donald Trump cannot claim such an advantage.

    Hillary’s rival, Bernie Sanders, is trailing behind and is not expected to reach the minimum number of the delegates required to secure the nomination, which is now easy for Hillary. But he has posed a challenge to the Democratic front-runner. On the side of the Grand Old Party (GOP), it is a strange spectacle. Though the front-runner, Trump, has emerged victorious in many states, the Republican leadership is not happy, as Trump is a threat to the establishment which might not have envisaged that Trump, who had never actively participated in active politics, would get so much support from the voters.

    The New Yorker has defied the imagination and now is the leader among the three contenders. All this is indicative of the pervading disillusionment of the supporters of the Republican Party.

    The leaders and those near to them were initially confident about the candidacy of Jeb Bush, former Ohio Governor. But internally he had several enemies and the Republican voters had enough of Bush.

    After the demise of Jeb’s campaign, the Republican leadership stood behind Rubio. He had nothing to offer to the voters. He was talking about the 21st century but his views were that of the 19th century. Trump savaged him, retaliating Rubio crossed all norms of decency and used foul language.

    Republicans are not happy with Ted Cruz, the senator from Texas. He has no friends in the Party and in the Senate. He calls them the “Washington Cartel”. Both Cruz and Rubio are the products of the Tea Party, which is the cause of the present dissentions and decline of the Republican Party.

    Sanders is able to pose a challenge to Hillary Clinton, because, though 74 years old, he represents the angry age group between 18 and 35, of present-day America. Of course, they are mainly White. These young people feel that they have been neglected and have not benefited by the creation of new wealth.

    They are also angry that the CEOs of the big companies are awarded millions even when they fail the companies. Sanders says that he has a message and would not withdraw from the race. But he does not seem to want to analyses his message in light of the reality. He criticizes the Wall Street and wants the state ownership of those institutions. But state ownership is also not above board. Clement Attlee, when he was the Prime Minister of UK, once observed that people like Harold Laski had written books on the grammar of politics but were ignorant of the practice of politics. Sanders’ speeches remind us of Attlee’s observations.

    The young African-Americans and Latinos are not visibly so inclined as are the Whites and that is why Sanders’ crowd generally is white. He has failed to get the support of the blacks, who overwhelmingly support Hillary. She even gained about 80 per cent in some black constituencies. That is because she and her husband kept a constant personal contact with blacks and the Latinos. Bill Clinton, while president, had implemented some measures which were beneficial to the blacks.

    After Obama had won the presidential race handsomely, the Republican Party stalwarts decided to take steps to reform the party, to make it more inclusive and diverse. But the report to that effect was put aside. Instead, the most reactionary new element, the Tea Party, got hold of the GOP, which is why the last seven years have witnessed the disruptive record of the Republican Party. Now, the Party leadership is praying and plotting to stop the front-runner, Trump, from getting the required number of delegates and the nomination. They want to bring in their chosen candidate. That may split the party. The Republican Party is in a fix. It does not want either Trump or Cruz and the third candidate, Kasich, has won nowhere, except in Ohio, his own state. The Republican party in the House and the Senate, unmindful of the changes in the world, is still obsessed with the cold war politics and so all the while talks about dominating the world. The American people, themselves, by and large are tired of the war. President Obama’s slow withdrawal of the troops from several theatres of war is welcomed by them. The American leadership has to rise to the occasion and adjust to the changing world which wants cooperation and exchange of ideas and not lectures and least of all orders. The refugee problem has been handled by Europe itself and it has not asked for help and guidance from America.

    The Democratic Party also has its problems. The recent campaign for the primaries has revealed several drawbacks of the party and its leadership. The rise of Sanders, who has no party base, shows the party leadership is docile. Sanders is not a winnable nominee but no other candidate has come forward. Hillary Clinton would win the nomination, but ordinary voters all the while would be worried of her credibility gap. She had changed her positions every now and then. Moreover, the fund-raising craze of the Clinton family foundation has no limit, which is also a problem. At the moment people are not happy with any of the candidates. Most people are fed up with the politicians.

  • Obama rebukes Trump for campaign rhetoric

    Obama rebukes Trump for campaign rhetoric

    DALLAS: President Barack Obama today gave a mocking rebuke of Republican frontrunner Donald Trump for his incendiary language on the campaign trail.

    At a Democratic party fundraising event in Dallas, Texas, Obama offered a blunt condemnation of the “divisiveness” fomented by Trump on the campaign trail, including his motto “Make America Great Again.”

    “We are great right now,” Obama retorted, in remarks that came one day after skirmishes broke out at a scuttled Trump rally in Chicago.

    “What the folks who are running for office should be focused on is how we can make it even better — not insults and schoolyard taunts and manufacturing facts, not divisiveness along the lines of race and faith. Certainly not violence against other Americans,” Obama said.

    A Trump campaign event was canceled in Chicago yesterday when throngs of protesters — many of them blacks and Latinos angered by Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric — massed outside and inside the venue, mingling and in some cases brawling with the candidate’s supporters.

    Critics warned that Trump’s inflammatory language set the tone for the violence, and urged him to tone down the campaign rhetoric.

    As Trump has edged further ahead of the once-crowded Republican field, Obama has sharpened his criticisms of him.

    In Dallas, he also took a swipe at the mogul’s antics in showcasing his wine label at a recent press conference.

    “Has anybody bought that wine?” Obama joked. “I want to know what that wine tastes like. I mean, come on, you know that’s like some USD 5 wine. They slap a label on it, they charge you USD 50, saying this is the greatest wine ever. Come on!”

    Obama’s ever-more direct criticism of Trump reflects a belief that the bellicose businessman may be the main thing standing between Democrats and a third consecutive White House term.

    Obama is expected to campaign vociferously for the eventual Democratic nominee, wielding his status as one of the country’s most popular politicians to fire up the party faithful and make the case to young, black and Latino voters.

    According to a recent Gallup poll, he has a 50 per cent approval rating, as high as it has been in three years and above average for a president in the last year of a two-term administration.

    A Republican victory would throw much of Obama’s legacy into doubt — from landmark health care reforms to the detente with Cuba.

  • Michael Bloomberg says no to 2016 Presidency run

    Michael Bloomberg says no to 2016 Presidency run

    NEW YORK (TIP): Michael Bloomberg, the former New York City mayor, has said that he will not run for the post of US president as an independent candidate, citing his fear that a three-way race could lead to the election of a candidate like Donald Trump who he thinks would endanger the country.

    “As the race stands now, with Republicans in charge of both Houses, there is a good chance that my candidacy could lead to the election of Donald Trump or Senator Ted Cruz. That is not a risk I can take in good conscience,” Bloomberg wrote in an op-ed yesterday.

    The 74-year-old billionaire businessman had in February publicly announced the idea of leading a third-party campaign. Blomberg slammed Trump, 69, for running a divisive campaign.

    “I have known Mr. Trump casually for many years, and we have always been on friendly terms. I even agreed to appear on ‘The Apprentice’ – twice,” he said.

    “But he has run the most divisive and demagogic presidential campaign I can remember, preying on people’s prejudices and fears,” Bloomberg, the three-term mayor of New York and founder of financial titan Bloomberg, said.

    “Threatening to bar foreign Muslims from entering the country is a direct assault on two of the core values that gave rise to our nation: religious tolerance and the separation of church and state,” he alleged.

    “Attacking and promising to deport millions of Mexicans, feigning ignorance of white supremacists, and threatening China and Japan with a trade war are all dangerously wrong, too,” he said.

    “These moves would divide us at home and compromise our moral leadership around the world. The end result would be to embolden our enemies, threaten the security of our allies, and put our own men and women in uniform at greater risk,” Bloomberg said.

    Bloomberg was similarly critical of Ted Cruz, saying the Texas senator’s “pandering on immigration may lack Trump’s rhetorical excess, but it is no less extreme”.

    His refusal to oppose banning foreigners based on their religion may be less bombastic than Trump’s position, but it is no less divisive, he said.

    “We cannot ‘make America great again’ by turning our backs on the values that made us the world’s greatest nation in the first place. I love our country too much to play a role in electing a candidate who would weaken our unity and darken our future — and so I will not enter the race for president of the United States,” he said.

    “However, nor will I stay silent about the threat that partisan extremism poses to our nation. I am not ready to endorse any candidate, but I will continue urging all voters to reject divisive appeals and demanding that candidates offer intelligent, specific and realistic ideas for bridging divides, solving problems, and giving us the honest and capable government we deserve,” Bloomberg wrote.

  • US election 2016: Sanders beats Clinton in Maine caucuses

    US election 2016: Sanders beats Clinton in Maine caucuses

    Bernie Sanders has beaten Hillary Clinton in the Maine caucuses, the latest contest in the battle to be the Democratic presidential candidate.

    With 80% of the vote counted, Vermont Senator Mr Sanders is polling 64%, while former Secretary of State Mrs Clinton has 36%.

    In the Republican race, Marco Rubio easily won Puerto Rico’s primary, beating billionaire Donald Trump.

    Mrs Clinton and Mr Trump remain overall leaders in the nomination campaigns.

    Sunday night saw Mrs Clinton and Mr Sanders clash in a CNN-hosted debate in Flint, Michigan.

    In Saturday’s round of voting, Mr Sanders took two states – Kansas and Nebraska – but Mrs Clinton maintained her Democratic front-runner status after a big victory in Louisiana.

    While the win in Puerto Rico – a US territory – will boost Florida Senator Mr Rubio’s campaign, it sends just 23 delegates to the Republican convention which nominates a presidential candidate.

    Republican hopefuls need the votes of 1,237 delegates to get the nod for the presidential race proper.

    Mr Rubio still trails Donald Trump and Texas Senator Ted Cruz.

    Speaking after wins in the Republican Kentucky caucuses and Louisiana primary election on Saturday, Mr Trump told a news conference: “I would love to take on Ted Cruz one on one.”

    “Marco Rubio had a very very bad night and personally I call for him to drop out of the race. I think it’s time now that he dropped out of the race. I really think so.”

    Meanwhile, Texas Senator Mr Cruz – who won Republican caucuses in Kansas and Maine – said he believed that “as long as the field remains divided, it gives Donald an advantage”.

  • US Presidential Elections: Cruz catches up

    US Presidential Elections: Cruz catches up

    The march of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton to Republican and Democratic presidential nominations was slowed a little as rivals Ted Cruz and Bernie Sanders notched two more wins each in five nomination contests.

    While real estate mogul added Louisiana primaries and Kentucky caucuses on Saturday to his 10 victories in 15 states earlier, Texas Senator Ted Cruz put Kansas and Maine in his victory column to slow the Trump train.

    Though with 12 victories to date, Trump remains far ahead overall in the Republican contest, Cruz’s two wins Saturday combined with his earlier success in four other states — Iowa, Nevada, Oklahoma and Alaska — back up his claim to be Trump’s main rival.

    “I have been in competitions all of my life,” Trump said in a press conference at Trump International Golf Course in West Palm Beach, Florida. “There is nothing so exciting as this stuff.”

    But rival Cruz said at an event in Idaho, which votes on Tuesday, that “the scream you hear-the howl you hear from Washington, DC – is utter terror for what we the people are doing together. What we’re seeing is conservatives coming together”.

    “I think what it represents is Republicans coalescing, saying it would be a disaster for Donald Trump to be our nominee and we’re going to stand behind the strongest conservative in the race,” he said.

    Boasting of his “breadth of support”, Cruz suggested it was time for the other two Republican candidates, Florida Senator Marco Rubio and Ohio Governor John Kasich, to consider dropping out of the race.

    Establishment favourite Rubio, who has won only one state so far, put on a brave face, saying that the states being contested on Super Saturday favoured other candidates, but predicted that his fortunes would soon change.

    He predicted victory in his home state of Florida on March 15, but polls show Trump leading him by double digits there.

    On the Democratic side, self-styled Democratic Socialist Sanders won in Nebraska and Kansas, while Clinton picked up another win in Louisiana, where black voters make up a large portion of the Democratic electorate.

    In a statement after his victory in Kansas, Sanders pointed to wins in a geographic range of states. “We have now won double-digit victories from New England to the Rocky Mountains to the Great Plains to the Midwest,” Sanders said.

    “Tonight, we won Kansas with a good vote. We won Nebraska with a good vote,” he said. “I think we are going to do well in Maine tomorrow. We are going to do very well here on Tuesday.”

    Saturday’s results were not likely to alter the broader contours of the Democratic race as Clinton maintains a significant delegate lead.