Ambassador Riva Ganguly Das Assumes Charge As Consul General Of India In New York

Ambassador (Mrs.) Riva Ganguly Das, Consul General of India in New York was accorded a warm welcome at the Indian Consulate in New York on Saturday, March 12, 2016 at a solemn event attended by the leaders of the Indian American community and diplomats.

Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin, a senior Indian diplomat with considerable multilateral experience, and currently serving as the Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations, recounted his experiences working with Ambassador Das in the past decades and said, “All of your talents will be best deployed while serving the community, which will expect much and you will be able to help bring the community to a new level.” He lauded the Indian American community as called them “standard bearers” and said, “What you do in New York has been recognized around the world.” He appealed to the Indian community in the region to work with the new Ambassador, he called them “the unofficial Ambassadors of India to the world,” and added, “We carry the title and you carry the clout.”

Ambassador Vijay Nambiar, who is the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Myanmar, a role he has held since 2010, recalled his association with Ambassador das, especially when she served at the UN Mission in New York in the past, praised her abilities and broader vision. Nambiar, who has also served as Chef de Cabinet to the Secretary-General at the rank of Under-Secretary-General from 2007-2012, while congratulating Ambassador Das for her assignment, said, “You have a bigger challenge in New York.” Stating that she will bring in her personal and professional experiences to her new rols, Nambiar said, “You are representing the new brand of diplomacy to the office with your youthfulness. You will bring in fresh breath of life in the Consulate and to the Mission at the United Nations.”

In his opening remarks, Dr. Manoj Kumar Mohapatra, Deputy Consul General of India, New York, praised Ambassador Das for her hard work, skills, and dedication. “Ambassador Das arrived here Monday and started working the same day. Since then, she has been working almost 10 hours daily, showing us the way,” he said. Quoting members of the Indian community,with whom Ambassador Das had chances to interact with, Mohapatra said, “She is very sweet and she listens to us.” He also praised her multilateral and bilateral experiences before she came to New York and these experiences are going to be of great help in leading the Consul Affairs, he said.

Among others who had felicitated the Consul General included H R Shah, Chairman of TV Asia, Dr. Sudhir Parikh, Chairman of Parikh media, Dr. Thomas Abraham of GOPIO, Yaspal Soi of Federation of Indian Americans, Dr. Indirajit Saluja, Publisher and Editor of the Indian Panorama, and Dr. Seems Jain, President of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin.

In her acceptance speech, she praised her administrative staff for having made numerous initiatives to address the concerns, and promised to work with an open mind in meeting the needs of the community. Das lauded the contributions of the Indian American community in shaping the fast growing relationship between India and the United States. You have played a significant role in shaping this relationship.” As been suggested in his remarks by Dr. Thomas Abraham, Founder of GOPIO, she promised to reaching out to local Congressmen and Senators in the states that come under her jurisdiction. Das was hopeful of bearing fruit in her efforts to reach out to the younger and second generation of people of Indian origin. Ambassador Das said, “With your support we will be able to address the concerns of the Indian American community.”

Hate Crime Charged Against Pittman For Spokane Gurdwara Vandalism

March 11, 2016 (Spokane, WA) – On the night of March 3, Jeffrey C. Pittman broke into a Spokane, Washington gurdwara and desecrated the Guru Granth Sahib Ji, while causing nearly $30,000 in additional damage.  Mr. Pittman, who was arrested by Spokane police on March 4, claimed that he broke in looking for food before coming to the mistaken conclusion that the gurdwara was a mosque connected with ISIS.

“No community should ever have to endure its house of worship being desecrated,” said Senior Staff Attorney, Gurjot Kaur. “We must continue to stand in solidarity with our neighbors of every faith in denouncing hate.”

The Sikh Coalition immediately provided legal and communications support to the Spokane sangat in the days following the incident and will continue to do so as authorities pursue a hate crime charge in the case. Mr. Pittman has been charged with first degree burglary, first degree malicious mischief, and malicious harassment. Malicious harassment denotes a hate crime under Washington law.

“We enormously appreciate the timely support that the Sikh Coalition has provided to us over the past week,” said Spokane gurdwara spokeswoman, Subarna Nagra. “The combined legal and media support guaranteed that this case received the necessary attention, and we’re now pivoting to using this as an opportunity to raise Sikh awareness.”

The Sikh Coalition’s legal team assisted the gurdwara in liaising with local law enforcement agencies, which immediately recognized the incident as a hate crime and swiftly filed appropriate charges against Mr. Pittman. The Sikh Coalition is grateful to Spokane County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich, the Spokane County Prosecuting Attorney, Spokane Mayor David Condon, and Spokane Valley Mayor Rod Higgins for taking action to ensure that the bias motivation behind the incident was thoroughly investigated and the perpetrator held accountable.

Following an increase in xenophobic political rhetoric, we have witnessed a sharp increase in the targeting of Sikhs and other minorities in the United States. The Sikh Coalition recently sent letters to law enforcement agencies and all 50 state superintendents of education about remaining vigilant in protecting the rights of the Sikh community.

Please notify law enforcement of any threats or violence, and contact the Sikh Coalition at 212-655-3095 or online here. In addition, we urge community members to review our FAQ guide on hate crimes, hate speech and reporting incidents. Also, please view our printable hate crime poster, which is in both English and Punjabi.

Please continue to use our new online tool, www.ReportHate.org, to report incidents of harassment, discrimination and violence. We will use the confidential data to better target our outreach efforts to law enforcement, lawmakers and educators.

Preity Zinta Confirms Her Marriage in LA

Bollywood actress Preity Zinta has confirmed that she has given up her ‘Miss’ tag by marrying her American beau Gene Goodenough. The dimpled beauty made the announcement on her official social media pages, just days after news of her secret wedding in Los Angeles surfaced.

“I was holding on the ‘Miss Tag’ rather seriously till now, until I met someone ‘Goodenough’ to give it up for. So now I join the Married Club folks. “Thank you all for your good wishes and for all your love. Love you all. Ting! Let the Goodenough jokes begin,” Preity wrote.

Last year, there were reports that she will be marrying Goodenough in January, and then around Valentine’s Day. But back then, she had declined the reports, saying that she is fed up with all the speculation about her personal life.

But the virtual world went into a tizzy earlier this week over news of the “Kal Ho Naa Ho” actress’ wedding as veteran actor Kabir Bedi congratulated her.

Preity’s close friends, fashion designer and stylist Surily Goel and Sussanne Khan were also reportedly a part of the celebrations. Online memes surrounding Preity and her husband began in no time once the news of their wedding news spread.

A user posted: “Finally #PreityZinta married a Goodenough Gene!”, while another shared: “Actress Preity Zinta gets married to Gene Goodenough – so will she now have the epic name, Preity Goodenough?”. But as one can make out from her latest social media post, Preity has taken them all in the right stride.

Dean Sujit Choudhry Resigns after sexual harassment allegation in US

Sujit Choudhry, Dean of the prestigious law school at the University of California at Berkeley, is taking an “indefinite leave of absence” from his position after he was sued for sexual harassment by his former executive assistant, who claims he made inappropriate advances toward her, officials at the University of California at Berkeley said.

Later reports say, the 45-year-old Indian-origin dean of a prestigious US law school has resigned from his post, days after a lawsuit was filed against him by his executive assistant alleging that he sexually harassed her over a period of several months.

University Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Claude Steele said in a statement that Choudhry will be “stepping down to his faculty position and salary” and the school will name an interim dean. “A thorough investigation of this case found that Dean Choudhry’s behavior in this situation violated policy,” Steele said, “and that he demonstrated a failure to understand the power dynamic and the effect of his actions on the plaintiff personally and in her employment.

“Based on the findings of the investigation I believed that a combination of disciplinary actions, monitoring of his behavior and formal training would be an appropriate and effective response, and would produce the necessary changes in his behavior.”

The complaint was filed against Berkeley Law Dean Sujit Choudhry and the University of California Board of Regents, claiming sexual harassment, retaliation and failure to stop it, among other actions. Tyann Sorrell, the former executive assistant, claims in the lawsuit that from September 2014 to March 2015, Choudhry sexually harassed her — rubbing her shoulders and arms, kissing her cheeks and giving her bear hugs that pressed her body against him, according to court documents. Sorrell claims that when she told supervisors, they first failed to stop Choudhry, and then tried to retaliate.

Choudhry has not yet spoken publicly about the allegations against him. Choudhry took over the position in July 2014, according to the university. Soon after, Sorrell claims, Choudhry started to initiate sexual contact.

Sorrell, a 41-year-old mother of five, claims in the lawsuit that “Choudhry’s kissing and hugging plaintiff was a near daily occurrence. The hugs became tighter and more lingering and the kissing more intimate in that over time Choudhry’s kisses began to land closer and closer” to her mouth, according to the court documents.

“She wondered what she had done to make him think it was OK for him to touch her,” according to the documents. “She was worried about her reputation and what her work colleagues thought of her. At the same time, she worried about upsetting him and possibly losing her job, on which her family depended.”

Sorrell said she is a victim of domestic and sexual abuse and claims in the lawsuit that the unwanted sexual contact made her anxious and depressed — causing her to lose sleep and dread her going to work. She said she suffered “insomnia, hair loss, depression and anxiety” as a result.

By March 2015, Sorrell said she had “had enough” and wrote a six-page email to Choudhry, telling him she felt “violated and humiliated” and forwarded the email to human resources, according to court documents.

It was reported to UC Berkeley’s Office for the Prevention of Harassment and Discrimination. “During the investigation, Dean Choudhry admitted to hugging, kissing, messaging (sic) and/or caressing” her several times a week, according to the documents. He purportedly said he had grabbed her hands, “putting them on his waist. He also admitted to hugging and kissing other female employees.”

The Berkeley School of Law was ranked No. 8 in the most recent U.S. News & World Report list of best American law schools. The law school has pioneered curriculums like intellectual property law and technology-related law and offers specialized curricular programs in areas such as Energy and Clean Technology Law and Environmental Law.

Choudhry is “an internationally recognized authority on comparative constitutional law and comparative constitutional development,” according to his Berkeley Law biography. He has served as a consultant to the World Bank Institute and is a member of the United Nations Mediation Roster. Prior to joining Berkeley Law, the biography states, Choudhry was a professor at the NYU School of Law and a faculty chair at the University of Toronto.

“In 2010, he was one of four Canadians to receive the Trudeau Fellowship, the Canadian equivalent of the MacArthur awards,” it states. “Professor Choudhry holds law degrees from Oxford, Toronto and Harvard, was a Rhodes Scholar, and served as law clerk to Chief Justice Antonio Lamer of the Supreme Court of Canada.”

UC Berkeley chancellor Nicholas Dirks and Provost Claude Steele said in a statement that they were wrong to not to take action against Choudhry even though the investigative report had supported the victim’s claims. “The dean’s resignation is an outcome in the best interests of Berkeley Law and the university as a whole. At the same time we are under no illusion that a resignation could or even should bring this matter and broader, related issues to a close,” they said.

CSU and Chicago Await Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu’ Visit

Chicago IL: Chicago State University student body of 5000 and its faculty is waiting for Mr. Chandrababu Naidu’s visit to its campus to receive an honorary doctorate. CSU first time in its history announced an honorary doctorate to a foreign head of government Mr. Chandrababu Naidu, Chief Minister of State of Andhra Pradesh, India.

As university prepares to host him at a mega event, top officials of university requested   the Indian media to give more insights about the Chief Minister’s visit and its impact on CSU and South Side of Chicago.

Speaking about the CSU, Dr. Thomas J. Calhoun, Jr, President of Chicago State University said that, the Chicago State University is one of the great universities in Illinois, formed 150 years ago. Speaking on this awarding honorary doctorate to Chandrababu Naidu, Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, India, Dr. Calhoun, Jr, said that Chicago State University’s Board of Governors unanimously awarded an honorary doctorate to the Chief Minister. We anticipate that he will be visiting our campus to be awarded the degree. His work is world renowned. The way he utilized high technology to bring a higher standard of living for the people of low or meagre resources, and be very competitive in nationally and internationally in IT areas. On CSU acting as possible gateway for commerce between Andhra and Illinois, Dr. Calhoun said that, the two states have a lot to offer each other.

Dr. Angela Henderson, Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs said that, entire CSU community is very excited and deeply honored that the Chief Minister will be visiting us.  His visit will reverberate educationally, economically and having him visit us from India to speak to us and work with us will offer hope and inspiration to all.

Noted political science Professor Dr. Bernard Rowan in his comments described the Chief Minister as a great leader and a person open to other cultures and societies and in the mission of serving those whom not have been served as properly as they should have been in the past, and building a bridge to the future.

Dr. David Kanis, Professor and Vice President in his remarks said that, “We are anxiously waiting for the arrival of the Chief Minister.  What he could do to the South Side of Chicago is to inspire the both old and young to do special things with their lives.”

Professor Rohan Attele, Chairman of Department of Computer Science and Mathematics, said that :the Chief Minister’s address will leave an indelible mark on our minds. His greatest legacy and the one he would cherish the most would be his inspiration of the young minds. They will be inspired to create, innovate, and lead the communities we serve on paths of upward mobility.”

Speaking about the Chief Minister’s visit, Dr. Rao Achanta, Chairman University-Industry Partnerships, said that, for past few years we have made tremendous progress in collaboration with universities in the Telugu speaking states. Dr. Achanta said that Mr. Chandrababu Naidu is only the second Head of a Government to receive an honorary doctorate from the University.

Chicago State University faculty and student body of more than a five thousand, eagerly await his visit.  It will leave a long lasting impression on our minds inspiring them to succeed, adopt IT and various technologies for the betterment of their lives and contribute for uplifting of underserved communities.

Harvard project aimed at translating ancient text sparks outrage among Hindu right

Harvard, MA: A group of Sanskrit scholars in India are calling for an American professor working on a groundbreaking project on Indian classics at Harvard University to be removed because of his “deep antipathy” to Indian ideals and culture, according to a Change.org petition filed last week.

Columbia University Professor Sheldon Pollock, a respected Sanskrit scholar and the author of “The Language of Gods in the World of Men: Sanskrit, Culture, and Power in Premodern India,” is the editor of a $5 million project by Harvard University Press to publish dozens of Indian classical texts with English translations.

More than 132 professors from some of India’s most prominent universities — some of them from the Hindu right — have signed the petition, which calls for Pollock’s removal as editor and “mentor” of the Murty Classical Library of India series; the project is funded by a Harvard graduate Rohan Murty, the son of Infosys co-founder Narayana Murty.

The petitioners argued that the work of translating the ancient texts should be done in India and “not outsourced wholesale to American Ivy Leagues.”

Ramesh C. Bhardwaj, professor and head of the Department of Sanskrit at Delhi University, said that the issue was an academic one, rather than personal. Pollock had associated himself with “Marxist” scholars in India, he said, and his work does not “provide the true picture of Indian heritage.”

Rohan Murty told the media that Pollock “has been critical to the success of the library, and Harvard and I look forward to having him on the board for many years to come.” The government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with the support of Hindu nationalists, has been trying to promote pride in India’s centuries-old knowledge systems and to reinvigorate Sanskrit, India’s ancient language, with classes and a new government committee to expand Sanskrit in schools and colleges.

Pollock was among a group of Western academics who signed a petition in support of students at the campus of Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi who were arrested and charged with sedition after they allegedly chanted anti-India slogans at a rally, another strike against Pollock, his critics wrote. The issue blew up into a national debate about freedom of expression and nationalism.

“It is crystal clear that Pollock has shown disrespect for the unity and integrity of India, the Indian scholars wrote, adding that “such an individual cannot be considered objective and neutral enough to be in charge of your historic translation project.”

They also asked for clarification on how Sanskrit words that are non-translatable words would be treated, whether there would be any link between the ancient texts and present day social and political problems and whether theoretical methods in Europe would be used to interpret the Indian texts.

Nimrat Kaur to Star in Fox’s Psychological Thriller Series ‘Wayward Pines’

Bollywood actress Nimrat Kaur will soon be jetting off to Vancouver, Canada, to shoot for India American filmmaker Manoj Night Shyamalan’s TV series, “Wayward Pines,” and hopes to have a lot “fun” with the show’s foreign cast.

The actress, who garnered applause for her role as a Pakistani ISI agent on Showtime’s political thriller series, “Homeland,” will be adding a mysterious twist to “Wayward Pines” as an architect. She said details of her role in the psychological thriller will be unraveled gradually.

“I’m playing the part of a girl called Rebecca, who’s an architect and it’s very mysterious, and you know like cards that unfold episode after episode and towards the end of the season, you realize who she really is and what her role is in the world they live in,” Kaur said in a statement.

She said the team will start filming very soon. “I will be joining them soon in three-four days at most. It should be fun. We will be filming in Vancouver and maybe little bit in Los Angeles, so I am going to be stationed out there.”

The “Airlift” actress will be paired with actor Jason Patric in the series, which is based on the “Wayward Pines’” novels by Blake Crouch and developed for television by Chad Hodge. The first season of the series is currently being aired on FX in India.

The series stars Matt Dillon as Ethan Burke, a U.S. Secret Service agent investigating the disappearance of two fellow agents in the mysterious small town of Wayward Pines, Idaho.

All praise for her co-stars Jason Patric and Djimon Hounsou, Kaur is already in prep mode for her part – and that too via Skype! “I actually Skyped with M. Night Shyamalan about a week ago and we had a really lovely chat about what season two is going to be about. He wanted me to watch it and then kind of discuss my character little better in depth but I have not come along to doing that yet.

“He is super excited about the season two and he’s like we are moving up a notch with how we are presenting the season two.” Kaur’s body of work might not be very elaborate, but her credibility shines through her work in films such as “Airlift” and “The Lunchbox.” And now with “Wayward Pines,” the actress is eager to explore a new arena.

“Well I am super excited because this is a genre that I have never worked in before and also found this premise very exciting.”

“I have to say that I haven’t watched the first season yet. I have had my hands full so haven’t gotten down to watching it, but I have heard incredible things about it. I have heard that it’s really cool and it had people hooked right up till the end,” she said.

Seven Indian Americans On Forbes World’s Richest People List

At least seven Indian Americans were named among the 1,810 individuals on Forbes’ World’s Billionaires List. The 30th annual list released March 1 had a familiar name at the top, with Bill Gates and his $75 billion net worth claiming the top spot for the 17th time in 22 years. The aggregate worth of the billionaires on the list is $6.48 trillion, down from $7.05 trillion last year.

Symphony Technology Group founder and chairman Romesh T. Wadhwani had the highest net worth among Indian Americans on the list. Ranking at No. 612 overall, Wadhwani boasts a total net worth of $2.8 billion.

Bharat Desai and his wife Neerja Sethi Desai founded IT consulting and outsourcing company Syntel in their apartment in Troy, Mich., in 1980. They turned it into a multi-million dollar operation and now have a net worth of $2.6 billion and are No. 688 on the list.

At No. 906 on the Forbes list is John Kapoor with his $2.1 billion net worth. Kapoor, 72, made his wealth in healthcare. He is the chairman and majority owner at drug companies Akorn and Insys Therapeutics.

India airline IndiGo co-founder Rakesh Gangwal made his first appearance on the list. The 63-year-old Miami, Fla., resident has a net worth of $1.9 billion and slides in at No. 959 on the list.

Kavitark Ram Shriram made his $1.85 billion with Google and as a venture capitalist. The 59-year-old has been investing in early-stage tech firms and has remains on Google’s board since 1998 when it was founded. He is No. 1011 on the list.

Vinod Khosla, 61, partner at Khosla Ventures comes in at No. 1198 on the world’s richest list. The Indian American has raked in his $1.51 billion as a venture capitalist for two decades, first at VC firm Kleiner Perkins before starting his own firm in 2004.

Brian Sheth, 40, of Austin, Texas, co-founded Vista Equity Partners in 2000 and is the firm’s president. Since then, Sheth has racked up a net worth of $1.1 billion and slides in at No. 1577 on the list. Additionally, he helped boost is net worth by buying and fixing up a less-than glamorous collection of enterprise software companies.

Outside of Indian Americans, another 84 Indians were part of the Forbes list. At the top of the list was Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani, whose net worth of $19.3 billion puts him at No. 36 on the list.

The 84 Indians comprise the fourth most of any country on the list. The U.S. had the most billionaires on the list, with 540, more than double the next country, China, which had 251. Germany had the third most billionaires with 120, and Russia was just behind India with 77.

China had the most of 198 newcomer billionaires, adding 70 to the list. Thirty-three newcomers were from the U.S., eight from India and 28 from Germany.

Notable newcomers included Flipkart co-founders Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal (No. 1476) of India. India’s top ten included Ambani; Dilip Shanghvi (No. 44) at $16.7 billion; Azim Premji (No. 55), $15 billion; Shiv Nadar (No. 88), $11.1 billion; Cyrus Poonawalla (No. 133), $8.5 billion; Lakshmi Mittal (No. 135), $8.4 billion; Uday Kotak (No. 184), $6.3 billion; Kumar Birla (No. 196), $6.1 billion; Sunil Mittal (No. 219), $5.7 billion; and Desh Bandhu Gupta (No. 233) with a net worth of $5.5 billion.

Behind Gates, Spanish clothing retailer Amancio Ortega with a net worth of $67 billion, Warren Buffet at $60.8 billion, Telecom mogul Carlos Slim Helu with $50 billion dropped the most in value on the list, previously boasting a $77.1 billion net worth and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos at $45.2 billion rounded out the top five.

Bezos jumped up 10 spots from No. 15 last year while Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg moved into the top 10 for the first time at No. 6 while making the biggest leap in value at $11.2 billion to a total net worth of $44.6 billion.

Decorated Sikh Soldier Sues, Earns Legal Victory

March 5, 2016 (Washington D.C.) – In a landmark decision on Thursday, a federal judge defended a decorated Sikh American soldier and ruled that the Department of Defense could not subject him to unfair and biased testing on account of his religious beliefs. The message from the court was crystal clear: the United States Department of Defense cannot discriminate and make up new rules to prohibit individual soldiers from serving in the U.S. military.

Earlier in the week, the Sikh Coalition, in conjunction with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty and McDermott Will & Emery, sued the United States Department of Defense on behalf of Captain Simratpal Singh. The lawsuit demands that the U.S. military accommodate Captain Singh’s religious articles of faith and abandon the impromptu, discriminatory testing procedures imposed upon Captain Singh.

The testing that the military planned to impose on Captain Singh is not required of any other soldier, even the tens of thousands with medical or religious accommodations, and including previously accommodated Sikhs. Given that Captain Singh has passed the standard safety tests, further testing would clearly be discriminatory.

“We have been advocating for the simple, straightforward, equal right to serve for years, and held onto the belief that the military would correct this injustice once they realized their mistake,” said the Sikh Coalition’s Legal Director, Harsimran Kaur. “The military’s treatment of Captain Singh, a decorated soldier, makes it clear that they deliberately want to squash diversity and religious freedom in their ranks; that is not something that any court, or American, should ever tolerate.”

The United States Department of Defense, which had granted and then extended Captain Singh’s temporary religious accommodation until March 31, 2016, is scheduled to make a final decision on Captain Singh’s permanent accommodation by that deadline. Captain Singh, who is a West Point graduate, Ranger, and Bronze Star Medal recipient, has successfully passed the safety tests required of his unit.

“I have so much pride in my Sikh identity and service to my nation,” said Captain Singh last December after receiving his temporary accommodation. “To feel spiritually whole, while continuing my military career, has always been the dream.”

Last year, 27 retired U.S. Generals called on the U.S. Department of Defense to eliminate the ban on observant Sikhs. These generals join 105 Members of Congress, 15 U.S. Senators, and 21 national interfaith and civil rights organizations, who have previously signed letters in support of American Sikhs’ right to serve.

“The U.S. Constitution and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act make it crystal clear that Captain Singh’s right to practice his faith and serve in our military are not mutually exclusive,” said Amandeep Sidhu, Partner at McDermott Will & Emery. “We are grateful that the court is on the right side of religious freedom with its ruling, which begs the question: does the world’s largest employer really want to be on the wrong side of history?”

Priyanka Chopra on Oscar Gown

Though not winning any wards, India was represented at the annual Oscar  by Bollywood actress Priyanka Chopra who is on an upward trajectory in Hollywood with her lead role as a rookie FBI agent in the series, Quantico. She appeared on the red carpet in a languorous, body hugging, shoulder less white embroidered dress with a trail, created by Lebanese designer Zuhair Murad and featured in his Spring-Summer 2016 collection.

Actress Priyanka Chopra, who chose a Lebanese designer’s pristine white ensemble for her Academy Awards appearance, says she wanted to turn up at the gala in a pretty, feminine and a “very classic” gown. The “Quantico” star was one of the presenters at the 88th Academy Awards — which took place here on Sunday — where she looked stunning in a structured cage bustier mermaid dress in white silk tulle adorned with 3D shimmering climbing flowers. The dress was a creation by Lebanese designer Zuhair Murad.

“I can’t be told what to wear. So, when I told Sophia I was like… It has to be a moment… the outfit. That I definitely want. It’s one of the biggest red carpets in the world. It’s super long so, I want to be comfortable for sure. And something that lasts the whole evening…you know it’s not ripping,” she told eonline.com. Comparing the Hollywood awards to Bollywood, she said “It’s similar– like Bollywood. It’s just giganomous. It doesn’t end.” During the awards, the camera rested several times over Chopra as it panned the crowd at the Dolby Theater.

British-Indian director Asif Kapadia, won the Oscar in the Best Feature Documentary “Amy” about jazz singing sensation Amy Winehouse who suffered from drug addiction and died from accidental alcohol poisoning in 2011. Thanking sponsors and supporters while accepting the Oscar, Kapadia lashed out at critics including Winehouse’s family. “Really, this film is all about Amy. This is all about showing the world who she really was, not her tabloid persona — the lovely girl, the unbelievable soul, funny, intelligent, witty, someone special, someone who needed looking after,” Kapadia said. Winehouse’s father Mitch Winehouse called it “a negative, spiteful and misleading portrayal.”

Pakistani documentary film-maker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy won her second Oscar for Short Documentary, this time for The Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness, dealing with honor killing in Pakistan. Chinoy, who splits home between Canada and Pakistan, was called the “Pride of Pakistan,” by that country’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. And U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry who was in Pakistan when the film won the award praised the documentary for changing the language around honor killing. “This is what happens when determined women get together,” Chinoy said accepting the award, adding, “This week the Pakistani prime minister has said that he will change the law on honour killing after watching this film. That is the power of film.”

She later told CBC News that living in Canada and Pakistan and going back and forth had taught her “that you need to strive to make Pakistan a better place,” and indicated her life was at risk when making the film.

Keralite Sajan Skaria, a character supervisor worked on the animated film, “Inside Out” which won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature Film. A graduate in computer science from the National Institute of Technology Kozhikode, Skaria is with the famed Pixar Animation Studio, a subsidiary of Walt Disney Company, and was present at the 88th Academy Awards, Indo Asian News Service reported.

Mindy Kaling, Indian-American comedian and creator of the popular series The Mindy Project, did the voice-over for one of the characters of “Inside Out.” Kaling walked the red carpet looking stunning in a black tight-fitting long gown by Elizabeth Kennedy, with a bright navy blue trail much like a Cinderella ball gown. Funny as usual, Kaling joked about the time it took her to dress for the event. “I’m very low-maintenance. No, actually, I’ve been doing this for 72 hours,” said the off-beat actress who is universally loved by fans for her candid portrayal of Hollywood behind the camera.

British-Indian actor Dev Patel of Slumdog Millionaire and Best Exotic Marigold Hotel 1 and 2, was a presenter; Another British-Indian actor famous for his role in My Beautiful Launderette and Gandhi, who appeared in Indian films like Shatranj ke Khiladi, was among those remembered in the “In Memorium” reel for those who lost their lives in 2015.

“Try to Altar Everything” Explores Hindu Mythology and Nepal’s Kathmandu Valley

Try to Altar Everything” an exhibition consisting of select paintings, sculptures, and installations by Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, exploring the ways that Hindu mythology and Nepal’s Kathmandu Valley have influenced the artist and h/er work, opens on Friday March 11th at the Rubin Museum in New York City and is on view through Monday August 1st.

For nearly half a century Genesis Breyer P-Orridge has been questioning the meaning and substance of identity through artistic endeavors, willful reincarnation, and physical shapeshifting. Both Genesis Breyer P-Orridge and Nepal itself have long shirked the confines of “either/or.” Hybrid traditions are a fixture of life and culture in Nepal, as people may even identify as Hindu and Buddhist at the same time.

Genesis, along with h/er late wife Lady Jaye, underwent physical alterations to create an elective and creative gender identity through their practice of Pandrogeny. The idea of identifying as both sides of a categorical option resonates with Nepalese approaches to identity and religion, as well as with Breyer P-Orridge’s own artistic practice, grounded in devotion and ritual.

Incorporating new works produced in Nepal, Try to Altar Everything will also give visitors opportunities to personally interact with the artist and engage with the provocative themes of self-expression and devotion.

Try to Altar Every Thing is a new, site-specific artwork by Genesis Breyer P-Orridge that incorporates small personal offerings from visitors. These objects will be arranged and rearranged throughout the gallery by the artist for the length of the exhibition. The installation enacts the concepts of devotion, exchange, and community that are at the heart of the artist’s multidisciplinary practice.

The exhibition is seriously ambitious, involving sculptural work by Genesis, in addition to paintings and installations consisting of objects taken straight from the artist’s own apartment. Genesis is hoping the artwork and the environment itself will convey a spiritual outlook on life that s/he acquired after first visiting Nepal. “When we think of Kathmandu, we think of magical things happening constantly,” s/he explained in an interview last week. Genesis recalled that on h/er first trip, nearly 30 years ago, a series of bizarre and seemingly cosmically attuned events transpired that had an enormous impact on h/er thinking and way of life. “There’s more in this universe, and what appears to be existence, than what we learn from the West,” Genesis said. “You have to reconsider your idea of reality, you just have to.”

New York City’s Dance Ambassador to the World Unveils 40th Anniversary Season

(New York, NY – March 4, 2016) 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. The Company celebrates its 40th anniversary season in 2016 with a world premiere and a diverse array of performances at home and abroad.

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 (3 Spruce Street) on May 10th at 2 p.m., May 11th at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and May 12th at 7 p.m., followed by a gala reception at the House of Morgan on Wall Street.

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).

The centerpiece of the New York season will be the world premiere of The Durga Project, which weaves together the movement vocabularies, sonorities and aesthetics of the U.S. and India into a choreographic fantasy of 30 minutes in length. Watch a sneak peek of the performance HERE!

“Selecting an Indian theme for the Company’s 40th Anniversary was a natural and fitting choice,” saidJonathan Hollander, founder and artistic director of Battery Dance. “Battery Dance is the best-known American dance company in India, having engaged in 7 national tours (17 cities reached thus far) since 1992 and having hosted dozens of Indian dancers and musicians in New York and across the U.S.,” Hollander explained. “The concept of Durga, or Shakti, the power and energy and magnificence of womanhood, underlies and informs the piece. And it follows other works that have been inspired by Indian music and with Indian guest artists such as Songs of Tagore and Layapriya.”

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.

The international 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.

Tickets will be available beginning April 1 at the Schimmel Center Box Office. General Admission is $25. Gala tickets for the May 12th performance are available through the company. For more information, please visit www.batterydance.org.

Leap Year 2016: Why February 29 only happens every four years

Google has celebrated the February 29 by giving the date that only comes around once every four years its own doodle. The season that 2016 has an extra day is due to planetary orbits.

The Gregorian calendar, the most widely used across the globe, measures a year to be 365 days following the Earth’s orbit around the Sun. However, the earth’s orbit takes 365.24 days to complete its solar orbit and an extra day every four years is added to keep calendar seasons synchronised with solar seasons.

February was chosen as the month to have the leap day as it is the only month without 30 or 31 days. It has long been suggested that February only has 28 days due to the jealousy of Roman Emperors.

According to the theory, the second month of the year had 30 days before the reign of Roman Emperor Augustus. Augustus supposedly wanted his month, August, to have as many days as July, the 31-day month named after Julius Caesar. As the theory goes. August was then only 29 days long, he took two off February for the benefit of August.

In reality, there is evidence that the direct predecessor of the Gregorian calendar, the Julian Calendar marked February with 28 days before August became a 31-day month. If someone is born on February 29 in the UK, their legal date of birth is treated on non-leap-years as March 1.

Arnav Advances to Top 4 on ‘Child Genius’, Vivek’s Dream Run Ends

Dobbs Ferry, New York: Arnav Krishna, a nine-year-old Indian American from Dobbs Ferry, New York, has made it to the ‘Top 4’ on Lifetime’s competition series, “Child Genius: Battle of the Brightest,” while 10-year-old Vivek Abraham, from Bloomington, Illinois, could not make it past the eighth round in a show that tests the intelligence of the country’s smartest kids.

As per the format of the show, two subjects are covered each week, and the brightest young minds are tested in categories such as mathematics, spelling, geography, and current events, among others.

The Feb. 25 episode of the show saw the little geniuses strut their stuff in the tough advanced logic and world history rounds. Arnav, who has now advanced to the semi-finals, scored nine out of ten in both the rounds.

Realizing that the competition will only get more intense from here on, the Indian American child’s mother, Seema Krishan, said, “Frankly, I think, it could be anybody’s game now. It’s going to be very hard and rough, so he will have to keep it together.”

Vivek, who was one of the youngest competitors on season 2 of the show, lost a crucial point for mispronouncing “Versailles” in the history round. He tied with another contestant, Claire, for the last place, and the judges decided his fate after analyzing the answers.

After his loss, a devastated and teary eyed Vivek said, “I really wanted to get to the last round but it’s alright.” His father, Antony Abraham, tried to cheer him up by saying, “We are very proud of what you have achieved.”

Vivek had earlier appeared on “The Meredith Vieira Show” with another “Child Genius” contestant, Sam Farah, where he shared that “he started doing puzzles when he was eight months old,” and he never believed in fairy tales.

Hosted by former NFL wide-receiver and astronaut Leland Melvin, the show will run for two more weeks, after which one of the four remaining whiz kids will win the title of “Child Genius” and a $100,000 college scholarship.

Sania Mirza, Virat Kohli Lead Group of 56 Indians in Forbes ‘30 Under 30’ Asia List

NEW YORK — Tennis star Sania Mirza, Indian batting mainstay Virat Kohli and top-seeded badminton player Saina Nehwal lead the pack of over 50 Indians in Forbes’ inaugural list of top “Promising Young Leaders and Game Changers” under the age of 30 in Asia.

The Forbes ’30 Under 30 Asia’ list includes 300 “young and driven entrepreneurs and game-changers” from countries including India, Indonesia, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, Pakistan, Vietnam and Australia who are contributing to their industries in a significant way.

As many as 56 Indians feature in the list with 27-year old Kohli, Mirza and Nehwal and 26-year old actress Shraddha Kapoor leading the pack. “At the top of India’s cricket culture is batting prince Kohli, who led India to a clean sweep in their Twenty 20 series against Australia in January,” Forbes said of Kohli, who was named among India’s highest earning celebrities in 2015 at $11.3 million.

Forbes said from the moment 29-year old Mirza turned pro at age 16 in 2003, she has been the “most successful female Indian tennis player ever” and one of the highest paid and highest profile athletes in the country.

She is currently the world’s number one female doubles tennis player with partner Martina Hingis. Describing 25-year old Nehwal as a “role model” and “Indian badminton queen,” Forbes said the number one ranked women’s singles player in the world is one of 24 top sportspersons from around the world standing for election for the International Olympic Committee’s Athletics Commission during the Rio Games this August.

With 10 categories in total, the Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia list highlights inspiring young leaders in various fields covering consumer technology, enterprise technology, arts, healthcare and science, media, social entrepreneurship, finance, industry and retail.

The entertainment and sports category also includes 27-year old Arunima Sinha, who is the first female and first Indian amputee to climb Mt. Everest in 2013 and 28-year old Chaitanya Tamhane, who is the writer and director of the critically acclaimed movie “Court.”

AARP’s Asian American & Pacific Islander Community Hero Awards

WASHINGTON, D.C., March , 2016 – AARP is pleased to announce its new Asian American and Pacific Islander Community Hero Awards to acknowledge hard-working staff and volunteers of non-profit organizations. The call for nominations is open now until March 31, 2016 at AARP’s AAPI Community Facebook page.

“We encourage everyone to nominate the passionate and committed individuals in our community for their work helping older adults,” said Daphne Kwok, AARP Vice President of Multicultural Leadership, Asian American and Pacific Islander Audience Strategy. “This award is our way to say thank you to individuals who are making the lives of our older adults better.  This award is also an opportunity to inspire others to work for or to volunteer time assisting our elders.”

To submit a nomination, visit facebook.com/AARPAAPICommunity to fill out the online form. Eligible nominees include any employee or volunteer of a non-profit organization that serves Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders age 50-plus. Nominees can be any age and ethnicity.

Finalists will be chosen from the submitted nominees and featured on a Facebook photo album for open voting. Users can “Like” the finalist to cast their vote during Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month in May. Three heroes will be announced in June, and they and their organizations will each receive a cash prize of $1,000.

AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization, with a membership of nearly 38 million, that helps people turn their goals and dreams into real possibilities, strengthens communities and fights for the issues that matter most to families such as healthcare, employment and income security, retirement planning, affordable utilities and protection from financial abuse. We advocate for individuals in the marketplace by selecting products and services of high quality and value to carry the AARP name as well as help our members obtain discounts on a wide range of products, travel, and services. AARP has staffed offices in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Learn more at www.aarp.org.

Ishaan Patel, an 8th Grader’s Charity Recognized

Hartford, CT: Ishaan Patel, an 8th Grader’s Charity has been recognized in Hartford for his efforts to help underprivileged students in the US and around the world with his charity organization, a media report said. Patel, founder of Planting Pencils, was recently honoured by the Milan Cultural Organization during the Republic Day celebration in the legislative office building in downtown Hartford, Bristol Press reported last week.

A son of immigrants from India, Patel attends Kingswood-Oxford School in West Hartford. He created his charity to improve access to education for underserved children around the world.  The Milan association is composed of people from India living in US. It is engaged in promoting the traditional art and culture of India in the US. It organises and participates in cultural events, setting up exhibitions of Indian handicrafts in schools, colleges, educational and cultural institutions, and works with other associations promoting social and civic activities.

“The goals of our organization are to let the values of our culture and heritage contribute to the strength of America, and for us to all be productive participants in the civic and social issues of the bigger community,” said Suresh Sharma, president of Milan Cultural Organization.  Sharma and all the directors of the organisation were impressed by this teenager’s efforts to tackle global education problems.

RANA to host grand Spring Festival Celebration on March 26th

New York: Rajasthan Association of North America (RANA) has planned to organize its annual Spring Festival Celebrations on March 26 at Hotel Hilton, Huntington, NY. In his address to the community leaders at the kick-off meeting held recently, Naveen C Shah said, “RANA has proven that we can celebrate all our festivals on one common platform. We want to continue this practice this year by organizing the Spring Festivals Celebration.”

The 2016 Spring Festival Celebration includes a Fashion Show event showcasing the attire of different states from India by top fashion designers, a segment on Wedding Day Attire by community members and cultural performances. This will be followed by a Kavi Sammelan featuring renowned poets and satirists from India, emceed by Shailesh Lodha. Over 1000 people are expected to attend the event.

“We expect people from all communities – Rajasthanis, Gujaratis, Punjabis and all other Indian communities to attend the day’s events and partake of the celebrations. RANA aims at bringing about harmony and celebrating the festivals of India jointly with other communities to foster the spirit of brotherhood and comradeship,” said Shah.

RANA has previously successfully organized Rajasthan Mahotsav – Festival of Festivals 2015 under the leadership of President Naveen C Shah, which saw participation from over 3000 attendees, complete with a grand parade featuring elephants, horses and camels to various dance & musical performances showcasing the variety and depth of Indian culture.

The Deepavali celebrations in November 2015 was another monumental sensation with over 600 people packing the Grand Ballroom at the Long Island Marriott and were entertained by the sensational music trio from India – Dhwani.

Tickets cost only $75 each and include lunch, afternoon tea & snacks, dinner and entrance to the fashion show, cultural entertainment, kavi sammelan & exhibitions area. For more information, visit website www.ranausa.org

Adnan Rashid of New Jersey Indicted For Alleged Tax Fraud

Adnan Rashid, 34, of New Jersey has been charged with a 20-count indictment by a federal grand jury in Peoria for alleged tax evasion, filing false tax returns, and mail fraud. Rashid was the sole owner of two Peoria area Marathon gas stations and partial owner of two additional Peoria Marathon stations.  The federal charges stem from an investigation conducted by the Illinois Department of Revenue, Bureau of Criminal Investigations and the Internal Revenue Service.

The indictment alleged that Rashid submitted false sales and used tax returns to the State of Illinois from January 2007 to January 2013.  Rashid allegedly defrauded the State of Illinois of $1.2 million in tax revenue by failing to report approximately $16 million in sales.

Rashid was additionally charged with tax evasion for personal taxes for the 2009 and 2010 tax years, and with the filing of false federal corporation income tax returns for three of the gas stations for the 2009 and 2010 tax years.

“We take allegations of tax fraud very seriously.  Not only does tax fraud deprive the State of critically needed revenues but it also puts businesses that play by the rules at an unfair disadvantage,” Connie Beard, Illinois Department of Revenue Director said.  “I thank our criminal investigation division for their hard work and cooperation with the federal government in bringing forth this indictment.” If convicted, the statutory maximum penalty for mail fraud on 12 counts is 20 years in prison.

Tulsi Gabbard Quits DNC, Endorses Bernie Sanders

Washington, DC: Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, resigned on Sunday in order to endorse presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.

Gabbard — who was the first Hindu and first American Samoan to be elected to Congress, as well as the youngest person ever elected to the Hawaii legislature, at age 21 — commended the leftist Vermont senator for his foreign policy, and his opposition to the hawkish policies of fellow presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

“After much thought and consideration, I’ve decided I cannot remain neutral and sit on the sidelines any longer,” she wrote in an email to fellow DNC officers obtained by Politico.

“There is a clear contrast between our two candidates with regard to my strong belief that we must end the interventionist, regime change policies that have cost us so much,” Gabbard said.

“This is not just another ‘issue.’ This is THE issue, and it’s deeply personal to me,” Gabbard continued. “This is why I’ve decided to resign as Vice Chair of the DNC so that I can support Bernie Sanders in his efforts to earn the Democratic nomination in the 2016 presidential race.”

Gabbard, who is a member of the House Armed Services Committee, has condemned U.S. policy in Syria. In late 2015, she introduced a bipartisan bill that called for “an immediate end to the illegal, counter-productive war to overthrow” Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.

Author, Entrepreneur, Life-Changer Shalini Vadhera Launches Global Platform “Power Beauty Living” to Engage, Educate & Empower Businesswomen

(New York, NY – March 3, 2016) United Nations Ambassadors, CEOs, entrepreneurs and celebrities packed the global launch of Shalini Vadhera’s new multi-disciplinary platform, Power Beauty Living, a holistic approach to powering up your business, beauty and life (for women by women), at the Millennium Hotel in the UN Plaza here last week.

Vadhera, a renowned, award-winning global beauty and lifestyle expert, founder and CEO of Power Beauty Living and best-selling author of Passport To Beauty, unveiled her newest platform earlier in the day at the IMPACT Leadership 21’s 3rd Annual POWER of COLLABORATION Global Summitat the United Nations Headquarters, where she showcased how to live powerfully and beautifully to more than 350 country heads, diplomats, ambassadors and high-level executive women from the UN.

Vadhera was recently appointed to IMPACT Leadership 21’s Global Advisory Council (GAC) as its newest member. A global leadership platform that provides solutions to creating inclusive economies, IMPACT Leadership 21’s GAC is comprised of men and women in diverse leadership backgrounds and influence from multi sectors.

“We are thrilled to add such a dynamic, passionate leader with a strong track record of success and zest for empowering women to the GAC. Shalini’s extensive entrepreneurial experience and industry knowledge is a welcomed addition to our team, especially as we expand our international reach,” saidJanet C. Salazar, CEO and Co-Founder of IMPACT Leadership 21.

To expand her own international reach, Vahera is launching a partnership withZoomin.TV, a global top-10 video producer and YouTube and Facebook multi-channel network, with a strong presence in the U.S. and India. She will be fronting Zoomin’s beauty and women’s empowerment vertical, appealing to many of the channel’s beauty vloggers worldwide.

“Zoomin is very proud to start a long-term partnership with such a highly talented and versatile woman as Shalini,” said Jan Reimens, CEO of Zoomin.TV. “Together, we will build up and out Shalini’s global digital presence through her brands like Passport to Beauty, Beauty starts at 40 and more. Her story needs global reach, and this is where we will focus in the coming years. ”

“I created Power Beauty Living based on my own business experiences as an entrepreneur and the lack of mentorship, community and resources, for women by women, in building their businesses and balancing their lives,” said Vadhera. “I feel a strong desire to create a destination for women to get the insight and tools they need to empower themselves in business, in beauty and in living a blissful balanced life.”

Shalini Vadhera is an award-winning global beauty and lifestyle expert, founder of Power Beauty Living, a social platform for women, and best-selling author of Passport To Beauty. Her global influence with women and young girls stems from her entrepreneurial passion to build companies and create products to empower women. Vadhera’s rise from jewelry and fashion entrepreneur, celebrity make-up artist and best-selling author, to a regular contributor on Dr. Oz, The Today Show, and The View and the founder of a multi-million dollar global cosmetics company is nothing short of remarkable. Vadhera has transformed this platform while using her business acumen to create global beauty, lifestyle and business solutions to empower women around the world. Vadhera was named the #1 Person To Watch by The Economic Times of India, Winner of the Game Changer Of The Decade Award in Beauty and winner of the coveted Oprah Beauty O~Ward.

Namrata Joshipura to present New York-inspired line at AIFW

Fashion designer Namrata Joshipura will showcase creations inspired by the creativity and vibrancy of New York City — a mash-up of fascinating street style juxtaposed with the most innovative ideas in fashion, art and technology — at the Amazon India Fashion Week (AIFW) Autumn-Winter 2016 edition later this month.

Joshipura’s show will be held in association with Maybelline New York on March 19 at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, read a statement from the beauty brand. The designer, who is known for global aesthetics and contemporary silhouettes with modern interpretations, will display creations which embody high-fashion New York style, complementing Maybelline’s latest innovations in make-up this season.

Talking about the new collection, Joshipura said: “Taking inspiration from the various hues of Color Sensational Lip Gradation by Maybelline New York, the collection has deep reds, berry tones, grape and wine used in ombre gradation in dresses, embellishments and other techniques.”

Joshipura is a fit for the association as she resonates the spirit, style and energy of the brand, says Pooja Sahgal, general manager, Maybelline New York – India. “We are looking forward to creating stunning ombré beauty and fashion looks on the runway. Through the show, we hope to inspire young girls and women to express themselves, define their beauty and make it happen with make-up,” Sahgal added.

Sunil Sethi, president of Fashion Design Council of India, is also excited about the collaboration and he is confident that the show “will see a resplendent amalgamation of the best in beauty and fashion, and create trendsetting statements that will capture the New York panache”. (Bollywood Country Report)

Zoroastrians Build New Religious, Cultural Center In N.Y.

Zoroastrians are opening a new religious and cultural center in Pomona, N.Y. this March, and are encouraged by a steady rise in their numbers. The new Dar-e-Mehr building is inspired by ancient Persian and Zoroastrian architecture of the fire temples of India.

The small community of 500 families of both South Asian and Iranian extraction, raised $5 million over a period of four years from local, national and international sources, to build a home for future generations, a press release from a group of organizations said. The current Zarathushti population in the Greater New York area is estimated at about one thousand and growing as the community becomes more culturally flexible and intermarriage is accepted.

On March 26th, Zarathushtis, from the Tristate area will inaugurate the new Arbab Rustam Guiv Dar-e-Mehr building, a religious and cultural community center, in Pomona, NY. The Zoroastrian Association of Greater New York (ZAGNY), the Iranian Zoroastrian Association (IZA), and the Dar-e-Mehr Zoroastrian Temple (DMZT) will host the event. The inauguration is scheduled to coincide with the week of Navroze, the start of the Persian new year, and March 26th coincides with the birthday of the Prophet Zarathustra.

“This will be the community’s third home in the last 40 years, but the first that will reflect traditional Zoroastrian architecture and character,” Mrinalini ‘Mindy’ Nair, spokesperson for the Dar-e-Mehr Zoroastrian Temple, who is married to a Zarathushti, Sheherzade Mehta, said. She also said that contrary to reports about a decline in population, there’s been an increase in membership of the Zoroastrian organizations. “There are multiple reasons for this growth, including more of them coming from India and other parts of the world to the U.S., more kids, and more marriages to non-Parsis,” Nair said.

The first Dar-e-Mehr in the country opened in 1977 in New Rochelle, N.Y. It soon proved too small to meet the community’s needs. It was relocated to an old Jewish synagogue in Pomona, N.Y. after the land and building were purchased. The desire to build a traditional Dar-e-Mehr and infrastructural problems with the old Jewish synagogue, drove leaders like Edul Daver, to rally others and fundraise successfully to achieve that goal. Sixteen individuals pledged $500,000 each initially. “In March 2014, they had enough money to pull the trigger and start with the groundbreaking,” Nair said and the construction began.

Considered one of the oldest religions, Zoroastrianism once widely followed in ancient Persia, found a home in India when followers had to flee religious persecution. The Tristate community prides itself o being able to maintain their cohesiveness, and follow the basic tenets of their religion attributed to Prophet Zarathushtra 3,000 years ago. Zoroastrians have made an outsize contribution to India’s growth in contrast to their numbers, as leaders in business, film, science, education, national security and other fields.

NYU, Cooper Union Students Show Solidarity With JNU Students

Indian-American studemnt from New York University and Cooper Union college in Manhattan, New York, gathered at Washington Square Park to support JNU Students Union leader Kanhaiya Kumar and other students who were arrested on sedition charges last month, Washington Square News newspaper reported Feb. 29.

An Indian-American student said during the protest that the primary purpose of the event was to raise awareness about Kumar’s arrest. “[Kumar] was arrested for making these comments against the government, even though he was not actually saying anything against the government, he was just having this poetry reading,” Anjana Sreedhar said. “We are protesting against the fact that he was arrested under the sedition law which is very antiquated and very outdated,” Sreedhar added.

Sreedhar, along with several other students read English transcripts of Kumar’s speech during the poetry reading and asked if his words warranted arrest. They also encouraged passersby and attendees to attend a forum discussion at Cooper Union next week.

A student activist at the NYU Sumathy Kumar said she attended the rally because she wants to show her support to the JNU students who were “beaten and arrested and so much violence was being committed against them just for speaking out”.

“I am an activist, and I think we take it for granted sometimes that we have the right to dissent and that home where my parents are from and where I call my ancestors are from, they are not allowed to dissent,” Kumar said.

Anthropology professor Tejaswini Ganti said that she was glad students were voicing support for JNU’s students and that universities should be an open forum for all opinions – even those that dissent against the governing party.

New York City To Enhance Outreach With Ethnic Media

Mayor Bill de Blasio and Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito has announced an expansion of New York City’s outreach and engagement with community and ethnic media outlets across the five boroughs. The announcement includes the launch of an online directory of ethnic and community media for City employees to use in outreach and informational and paid campaign efforts, and a system to ensure accountability with the aim of having equitable communications across diverse ethnic, racial and geographic communities. The Mayor and Speaker will convene community-based journalists in the coming weeks to discuss these efforts.

Many New Yorkers turn to neighborhood, youth and ethnic media to get their news, frequently in languages other than English, and the de Blasio Administration is committed to providing equal access to information. Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito has advocated for proactive and consistent engagement of community media, and has dedicated resources and expertise in working with the Administration to ensure inclusion of diverse outlets.

“In the city of immigrants, no person should be denied access to vital services or information due to their language. Half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English at home. Almost one-sixth of all NYC households – 1.8 million people – are proficient in languages that are not English. Today we are ensuring that the City speaks the language of our people,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

“Government has a responsibility to engage diverse media equitably so that we can communicate with a wide range of constituents,” said Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito. “I am pleased that we are raising the bar for the way agencies plan and execute their outreach, public service announcements and paid campaigns. By doing so, we move towards being a more inclusive city at all levels.”

“The de Blasio Administration is committed to speaking the language of multilingual New Yorkers, and as part of this outreach we must also reach them in the media outlets that are an integral part of their day-to-day lives,” said Nisha Agarwal, Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. “The Administration has also deepened its commitment to language access to ensure that information is made available to all New Yorkers by hiring an Executive Director at MOIA who works to implement citywide tools, training, and reporting mechanisms. 311 now also accepts complaints from New Yorkers who have experienced language barriers at City Agencies.”

“The Ethnic and Community Media Directory will strengthen the effectiveness of communications efforts throughout the city,” said Mindy Tarlow, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Operations. “Now communications teams have a guide that will further ensure their message is heard across the five boroughs.”

“The responsibility of ensuring that our communities have access to relevant news is shared by press and by government. This Council is interested in engaging community press sources in a real way and this commitment is memorialized in part by today’s announcement. Without a doubt, we need to remain engaged about how we strengthen our relationships with community press and by extension, with the communities that they serve. I am proud to be witness to this important first step,” said Council Member Carlos Menchaca, Chair of the Committee on Immigration.

“The ethnic and community press plays a crucial role in our city’s diverse neighborhoods –  especially to public school families who collectively speak more than 200 languages,” said Maite Junco, NYC Department of Education Senior Advisor for External Communications. “These media outlets spread out across our city are vital vehicles to reach our families and I thank the Administration for providing communication professionals in city government with an online tool to help us reach every New Yorker regardless of their zip code or language they speak.”

Historically, City Agencies’ media outreach has focused primarily on English-language outlets, in spite of the fact that New York City is the ethnic media capital of the country – with hundreds of community and ethnic media outlets speaking dozens of languages.

This trend has shifted under the de Blasio Administration, with the development of campaigns to inform all New Yorkers about IDNYC, Paid Sick Leave, and Pre-K For All, among other initiatives. Ethnic and community media were central to the outreach strategy, and the engagement and enrollment results clearly demonstrated the effectiveness of multilingual media outreach.

Anu Jain Praised at Fine Art and Photography Exhibition – “Truth & Beauty”

Long Island, NY: Anu Jain was the only Indian American artist, who had showcased two of her paintings, “Freedom-the Beauty of Life” in oil on canvas and the other, “Jesus” at the Fine Art and Photography Exhibition on March 2nd at the Theodore Roosevelt Executive Legislative Building in Mineola, New York. The contest was part of the National Women’s Heritage Month celebrations organized by Comptroller George Maragos, Nassau County on Long Island, NY.

Anu’s creations at the exhibition got accolades and recognition from not only fellow artists and organizers but from a large number of guests from Indian-American community, which included community leaders, prominent businessmen and leading media personalities.

As part of The exhibition’s title “Truth & Beauty” was inspired, probably, by the famous English poet John Keats’ Ode on a Grecian Urn’ wherein the poet says: ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty, —that is all / Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”

Fifty-five distinguished female artists and photographers participated. The paintings at the Exhibition were done in both water color and oil and included portraits and landscape. Anu Jain, as other artists, took in a stride the challenge of entering the world of art in a large format that expressed the feminine spirit- a moment in the life of a woman- Past, Present and Future – with one dominant figure as the main focus.

Many of the pieces of artwork presented depicted a global outlook on women’s issues and concern in a realistic style while others were Semi-abstract and symbolic, inviting the viewers to add their own interpretation.

The panel of judges included professors of art from finest local universities as well as renowned award winning artists and photographers. The invited judges included Robert Carter, Notable Artist; Emi Gomez, LIU Post Department of Art Professor; Kellyann Monaghan, Adelphi Professor; Gabriel Marques, Notable Artist; Catherine White, Renown Artist; and Xio Xiomaro, Notable International Photographer. The curators included Carla Hall D’Ambra and Minna Dun. The event was attended by over 200 guests, including Dilip Chauhan, Director, South East and Asian Affairs in the office of Nassau County Comptroller.

World’s Costliest Train Station Opens in NYC Near 9/11 Site

New York, NY: The world’s most expensive train station opened Thursday in New York, nearly $2 billion over budget and years behind schedule, but the European architect who designed it called it a gift of love to the city.

The World Trade Center Transportation Hub, which is expected eventually to serve more than 200,000 commuters daily, is built next to the site of the Twin Towers, which were destroyed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001.

Twelve years in the making, there was no official ceremony to mark the opening to rail commuters of the World Trade Center Transportation Hub next to the site of the Twin Towers, which were destroyed in the Al-Qaeda hijackings.

The building, designed by Spanish-Swiss architect Santiago Calatrava and called Oculus, is a giant oval made up of steel ribs and glass laid out in elliptical shape, reaching for the sky like wings of a bird. Calatrava said he hoped America’s financial and entertainment capital would enjoy a building that he hoped would become a “big civic monument like Grand Central” — one of New York’s most beloved landmarks.

“This is a great moment. This is a gift for all New Yorkers,” Calatrava said of the opening to rail commuters. “I hope the New Yorkers embrace it like we do and that they see the message of love to them,” he added.

The building has an elliptical shape, reaching for the sky like the wings of a bird. The space measures 350 feet (107 meters) long by 115 feet (35 meters) at its widest point, according to Calatrava’s website.

The building has become a major source of controversy — for its daring aesthetic, for spiraling drastically off budget and for closing seven years behind schedule. The center connects the PATH commuter rail to New Jersey with New York subway lines, provides indoor pedestrian access to the Trade Center towers and will also house an enormous shopping and restaurant plaza.

It was only a partial opening and the shops are slated to open in August. In the 12 years since the project was unveiled, it has been heavily criticized not just for its appearance but also for spiraling so drastically off budget and closing seven years behind schedule.

Initially budgeted at $2 billion, it has spiraled to $3.85 billion according to a spokesperson in Calatrava’s office, which would make it the most expensive station in the world. In contrast, the temporary station which was built straight after the September 11, 2001 attacks cost just $323 million.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey admitted in a report published in 2008 that the original cost estimate was “too low to begin with” but stressed the advantages it would afford the city. It said that when completed, the transit hub will serve 250,000 people and more than 200,000 commuters each day, making it the third-largest transportation center in the city.

Asif Kapadia To Document Diego Maradona’s Life

Asif Kapadia, an Indo-British director, is all set to capture the life trajectory of popular icon, the Argentinian soccer player Diego Maradona. Kapadia won an Oscar last month for chronicling Amy Winehouse’s life journey, and scoring an Oscar for it,

The feature documentary, “Maradona,” will look closely into the sportsman’s wildly celebrated time at Italian club Napoli, with the help of hundreds of hours of never-before-seen footage taken from his personal archive, according to a report in Hollywood Reporter. Speaking about the project, Kapadia said he had long been a fan of Maradona, and had wanted to make a film about the man even before he started the documentary, “Senna.”

“I was taken by his character, his genius, honesty, passion, humor and vulnerability,” the report quoted him as saying. “I was fascinated by his journey, wherever he went there were moments of incredible brilliance and drama, he was a leader, taking his teams to the very top, but also many lows in his career. He was always the little guy fighting against the system, against the wealthy, the powerful and he was willing to do anything, to use all of his cunning and intelligence to win.”

After “Amy” and “Senna,” Kapadia is reteaming with James Gay-Rees and Chris King on the film whose global sales rights have been picked up by British sales and distribution company Altitude. Joining them as a producer is Paul Martin (“Ronaldo”). Alongside “Maradona,” Kapadia and his team are also prepping a documentary on the British rock group Oasis.

Sikh Solider Simratpal Singh Sues U.S. Military Over ‘Discriminatory’ Testing

Washington, DC: March 7, 2015: In a first of its kind lawsuit, a decorated Sikh-American soldier has sued the U.S. military, alleging that because of his religious beliefs he is being subjected to “discriminatory” testing that no other soldier in the U.S. Army goes through.

Captain Simratpal Singh, 28 was in December of last year granted a temporary religious accommodation to serve in the U.S. Army while maintaining his Sikh turban, unshorn hair and beard.

The accommodation, a rare exception, was scheduled to remain in effect until March 31, but, in an unprecedented step backward, the U.S. Army recently ordered Singh to report on March 1 for “extraordinary, non-standard additional testing as a precondition for remaining in the Army,” international law firm McDermott Will & Emery, representing Singh, said in a statement.

The firm, along with the Sikh Coalition and the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, filed the federal lawsuit against the Department of Defense on behalf of Singh, who has earned a Bronze Star for clearing explosives from roads in Afghanistan, and received numerous other military accolades in various positions.

Singh is scheduled to be sequestered for three days to undergo testing that no other soldier in the U.S. Army has ever been subjected to, including the soldiers permitted to maintain beards for medical reasons and previously-accommodated Sikh soldiers, the law firms said.

The New York Times said the tests seek to determine if his helmet would fit over his long hair and if his gas mask could seal to his face.

The lawsuit, which is the first of its kind on behalf of a Sikh officer, demands that the U.S. military continue to accommodate Singh’s Sikh turban, unshorn hair, and unshorn beard and “abandon its unfair and discriminatory” testing.

“For years we have worked to avoid litigation under the guiding belief that the U.S. military would finally do the right thing,” said Amandeep Sidhu, partner at McDermott Will and Emery.

“The U.S. Constitution and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act make it clear that Captain Singh has the right to practice his faith in the military and we are confident that the court will agree,” said Sidhu.

Once the testing is enjoined, Singh seeks a further ruling directing the Army to make his religious accommodation permanent.

“I have so much pride in my Sikh identity and service to my nation,” Singh had said in December after receiving his temporary accommodation. “To feel spiritually whole, while continuing my military career, has always been the dream,” he had said.

India Denies Visa Request From Religious Freedom Monitoring Group

Washington, DC:  India has denied visas to a team from the United States government responsible for monitoring religious freedom, the group said in a statement last week.

The organization, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, had planned a trip to India, scheduled to begin this week, to assess religious liberty in the country. But India has not issued visas to members of the commission, it said. Robert P. George, the group’s chairman, said that the team was “deeply disappointed” by the Indian government’s action. “As a pluralistic, nonsectarian and democratic state, and a close partner of the United States, India should have the confidence to allow our visit,” he said.

The group has traveled to China, Myanmar, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Vietnam, “among the worst offenders on religious freedom,” he said. India has had a checkered history with religious violence, and the election of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party in 2014 raised concerns about the potential for increased religious tensions.

Debates over the issue heated up after a Muslim man accused of eating beef near the capital was beaten to death by a mob last year. Cows are sacred for Hindus, and their slaughter is prohibited in much of the country. A preliminary investigation found that the meat retrieved from the home of the man who was beaten to death was goat.

In a report published last year, the commission said that religiously motivated violent incidents reportedly increased for three consecutive years in India, and that the struggle to provide justice to victims “perpetuates a climate of impunity.”

The Indian Embassy in Washington said in a statement that there had been no change in policy regarding such visits and that the Indian Constitution guaranteed freedom of religion for its citizens. “We do not see the locus standi of a foreign entity like Uscirf to pass its judgment and comment on the state of Indian citizens’ constitutionally protected rights,” it said.

Rajendra Pachauri Charged With Stalking, Harassment

Rajendra Pachauri, the U.N. climate panel’s former chairman, has been charged with stalking and sexually harassing a woman who worked at the New Delhi environmental think tank he’s headed for more than three decades. Police filed the case in a Delhi court after investigating a complaint by one of Pachauri’s colleagues at The Energy Research Institute, Press Trust of India said.

Police have charged Pachauri, 75, with sexual harassment, stalking and criminal intimidation of the 29-year old woman. Pachauri had headed the four-decade-old think-tank for the last 34 years, when it emerged as a global center for research in efficient utilization of energy and sustainable use of natural resources. It has affiliate institutes in London and Washington.

Pachauri chaired the climate panel — considered the world’s authority on climate science — since 2002, and had accepted the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize on its behalf. The panel shared the award with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore.

Pachauri has denied the allegations, but had resigned last year from both the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and from TERI after the researcher’s allegations were published in Indian newspapers. The allegations caused a public uproar in a country where women face a stigma against discussing issues such as sexual harassment in the workplace.

His appointment last month to another top post at TERI renewed outrage, and a second woman, who had worked there for a year, came forward with additional allegations. The court scheduled an initial hearing on April 23.

Separate from the police investigation, TERI’s internal complaints committee examined the evidence presented by the researcher, and questioned nearly 50 other employees, and concluded that the allegations of sexual harassment leveled by the researcher were valid.

In his resignation letter to United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, Pachauri said he’d planned to step down on Nov. 2 last year after the release of the final portion of the panel’s fifth climate report, but “close friends and colleagues advised me against that action and to continue with outreach efforts worldwide.”

Pachauri also had colleagues on the panel who had, privately, been eager for new leadership for years. One reason was his habit of mixing personal advocacy with the authority granted by his position.

Sunil Sabharwal Is Alternate Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund

Sunil Sabharwal, who was confirmed by the US Senate after a long waiting, assumed the position as Alternate Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund on Wednesday, March 1st, 2016. US President Barack Obama nominated him for the post in April 2014 and then re-nominated Sabharwal in March 2015.

Given that the US commends more than 16.81 per cent of the total IMF voting share, this is described as one of the most powerful position in the International Monetary Fund. Sabharwal served as board chairman of Ogone, a European e-commerce payment services firm, from 2011-13 and advised Warburg Pincus on its acquisition of easycash, a German network services company, subsequently becoming a board adviser there from 2006-2009.

From 2003-2006, he was senior vice president, strategic investments, at First Data Corp/Western Union and from 1997-2003, held executive posts at GE Capital, including managing director. From 1992-96 Sabharwal worked at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, lastly as principal banker. He has a BS from Ohio State University and an MS from the London Business School. Born to an Indian father and a Hungarian mother in New Delhi, his parents separated when he was 9 years old and he later moved to Budapest.

NRI Summit in Haryana cancelled due to Jat Stir

Haryana chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar has announced that the ‘Pravasi Bharatiya Divas’ to be held here on March 9 has been cancelled following the Jat protests for job quotas that led to widespread violence in the state. Hundreds of Non-Resident Indians (NRI), specially belonging to Haryana, had registered themselves for the event.

Khattar said the state had witnessed “unhappy stories and we cannot go forward comfortably with events like an NRI summit though it was a dream event. We will plan it for some other time”.He said the cultural programmes scheduled to be presented during the ‘Happening Haryana’ Global Investors Summit on March 7-8 had also been cancelled. Khattar, however, said the two-day business meet, focused on attracting investment, will be held as per schedule on March 7 and 8.

Properties, business establishments, factories and vehicles belonging to non-Jats were looted and torched at several places in the state. The nine days of violence left 30 people dead and over200 injured.

Vinita Paunikar, Trisha Kothari, Sumita Basu Among 26 Top Women Engineers

WASHINGTON: Oracle’s Vinita Paunikar, Affirm’s Trisha Kothari and Intel’s Sumita Basu are among the top women engineers recognized in a Business Insider Feb. 24 piece on the “Most Powerful Women Engineers” of 2016, released in the midst of National Engineer’s Week, Feb. 21 through Feb. 27. The list was generated to give a “shout-out to the female engineers with powerful careers who are leading important technologies at their companies or being pioneers in other ways.”

Vinita Paunikar is a vice president at Oracle responsible for release management of products and services. Paunikar was the highest ranked of the Indian Americans, coming in at No. 14. She created a release-management team that has launched 200 products across more than 20 lines.

She’s also worked on several of Oracle’s mainstay products, including its flagship systems-management solution, Enterprise Manager Cloud Control, now also the core-management platform for Oracle’s cloud services. She is a graduate of Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology in Maharashtra.

Trisha Kothari has made it into the list at the young age of 23. Trisha Kothari is Affirm’s first female engineer at the financial-technology startup cofounded and led by Max Levchin, the former cofounder of PayPal. Affirm turns your smartphone into a credit card of sorts, allowing you to make monthly payments on things you buy from merchants that accept it. Levchin says, “Trisha Kothari is one of the most exciting up-and-coming coders in America.”

“Trisha was instrumental in building the core aspects of a financial platform that powers everything we do,” Affirm’s COO, Huey Lin, said about her. Before joining Affirm, Kothari did several internships at Google and LinkedIn. She also earned a Google Anita Borg scholarship and one from Microsoft and is a member of the high-IQ organization Mensa. She is a graduate of Dhirubhai Ambani International School and the University of Pennsylvania.

Intel’s Sumita Basu, who xcame 26th on the list, is a strategist and technical assistant to the Intel vice president and general manager. She’s been with Intel since 2002 with increasing responsibilities. In her last gig with the company, she oversaw the equipment installation for Intel factories worldwide — a huge job. For her PhD, she did experiments with the International Space Station.

One of Basu’s most impressive accomplishments is that she invented the world’s first lead-free patterning process, allowing Intel to become the first chip company in the world to limit the use of that toxic substance in its manufacturing processes.

A graduate of Jadavpur University (bachelor’s) and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (doctorate), Basu has also invented the world’s first lead-free patterning process. The invention has allowed Intel to become the first chip company in the world to limit the use of that toxic substance in its manufacturing process, according to the Insider piece.

400 million people in India live in poverty

UNITED NATIONS: The total number of people living in extreme poverty is over 1.2 billion out of a total world population of more than 7.2 billion people. India, with a rising population of over 1.3 billion people, and an annual population growth rate of 1.3 per cent, is projected to become the world’s most populous country by 2035. Currently, more than 400 million people in India live in poverty, mostly in rural communities.

Mayank Joshi of India says that development was only sustainable when all sections of society realized their full potential and contributed their fullest. India, which has a high percentage of rural poverty, has adopted a governance model that was focused on a faster, sustainable and more inclusive growth approach that focused on the welfare and well-being of its people. At the moment, he said, India was implementing the world’s largest cash transfer programme, allocating $5 billion in funds, to bolster national efforts towards inclusive economic growth.

The success of the UN’s post-2015 development agenda is predicated on one underlying theme: no one should be left behind – and certainly not the world’s rural poor –in the fight to eradicate hunger and poverty by 2030. Over 70 percent of the world’s poor live in rural areas and amongst indigenous communities which are deeply entrenched in rural environments.

The United Nations says these include subsistence farmers and herders, fishing communities and migrant workers, artisans and indigenous peoples – all of them struggling for economic survival.

But the world body points out that empowering rural people– largely in Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean– “is an essential first step to eradicating poverty”. In today’s world, says UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, too many people continue to face exclusion, too few economies have attained inclusive and sustainable growth, and people were frustrated at “working harder” while “falling behind”.

He said economies must be put at the service of people, through effective integrated social policies, particularly in a world where inequality was still too high and where too few economies had attained sustainable growth.

Perhaps one of the most successful weapons in the fight against rural poverty and economic inequality is social protection—as evidenced in several developing countries, including India, Kenya, Namibia, Cuba, Rwanda and Botswana.

These include state-funded health care, free primary and secondary education, cash transfers, economic subsidies, social security, old age pensions and affirmative action towards eliminating discrimination against women, indigenous peoples and the disabled.

The UN’s post-2015 development agenda provided an unparalleled opportunity for the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and the World Bank to join forces to make social protection a reality for everyone and everywhere, he told a meeting of the UN Commission for Social Development (CSD) in early February.

He said States could consider elaborating on a draft Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) resolution on national social protection floors as a step towards universal protection. Kunal Sen, Professor of Development Economics and Policy at the University of Manchester, told a recent UN panel discussion that weak administrative capabilities and lack of political commitment are some of the reasons for the poor implementation of social and economic policies.

On social protection, he said, current policies were an integral part of anti-poverty programmes in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Singling out his research in Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia, he argued that political commitment and sharing best practices, as well as funding, were keys to success.

Takyiwaa Manuh, Director of the Social Policy Division of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), said Africa was close to achieving universal enrolment in primary education and it had posted the highest increase globally in women’s representation in parliament between 2000 and 2014 while reducing the prevalence of HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis.

Still, progress had been slow and uneven in many social areas. Nearly half the population remained poor, hunger and malnutrition had fallen by only 8 per cent between 1990 and 2013 and youth unemployment remained a serious development challenge. Overall, few jobs offered secure employment and social protection. Highly educated workers tended to migrate, creating a dearth of skilled professionals.

The rapid growth of urban poverty coupled with climate change had had serious adverse consequences for the region. The African Agenda 2030 complemented the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The main challenge, he said, was to unlock the continent’s resource potential through suitable macroeconomic and social policies that would lead to sustained high economic growth.

Prof. Satish Ukkusuri-Led Team Investigates Disaster Recovery

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Strong ties to the community and a bond between neighbors can help areas affected by natural disasters recover faster, according to a survey conducted by Purdue University students and faculty. Satish Ukkusuri, professor of civil engineering, said that it is important to consider physical infrastructure – the power grid or roads – but it’s also important to understand people and encourage strong neighborhood and community ties that will be instrumental in helping people recover.

The Resilient Communities Research Team found that having a dense social network helps speed the recovery process, said Arif Sadri, graduate student in civil engineering. The team surveyed almost 400 people from the rural southern Indiana communities of Henryville, Marysville, New Pekin and Chelsea, all of which were in the path of deadly EF3 and EF4 tornadoes in March 2012. The survey was part of the project, “Resilient Communities: Strengthening Post-Disaster Recovery by Understanding Interdependent Social and Physical Networks.” Sadri presented the research at the RES/CON Student Research Expo in New Orleans on March 1-3.

The brief survey asked residents to provide information on when, where and how they evacuated the area, and whether it was before, during or after the tornadoes hit on March 2-3, 2012. It also asked about each household’s connection to the people around them and the extent to which those people came to their aid during the recovery process. Sadri said they found that those who were able to rely on their neighbors and community for help were able to bounce back from the disaster a bit faster than those who were not.

Seungyoon Lee, associate professor in the Brian Lamb School of Communication, said that there is much to learn about post-disaster recovery. “Very little is understood about how people draw upon their social connections after a disaster and how we can encourage strong neighborhood and community ties that will be instrumental in helping people recover,” she said. “We encourage community leaders and policymakers to consider the importance of social, neighborhood and community factors as they prepare for disasters.”

Engaging senior citizen and civic groups in disaster planning scenarios and encouraging neighborhood events that could build or strengthen social ties are a few ways the team suggests community leaders could better incorporate social factors into disaster preparedness, said team member Megan Sapp Nelson, associate professor of library science.

The research team included Sadri; Lee; Sapp Nelson; Rosalee A. Clawson, professor and head of the Department of Political Science; Abhijit Deshmukh, professor and James J. Solberg head of industrial engineering; Daniel Kelly, associate professor of philosophy; Justin Seipel, associate professor of mechanical engineering; Satish Ukkusuri, professor of civil engineering; and Daniel P. Aldrich, professor of political science at Northeastern University.

The team conducted its study as part of an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant and the 21st Century Grand Challenges project, an initiative created by President Barack Obama in 2013 to harness science, technology and innovation to solve important national or global problems. The $538,000 grant was issued to Purdue in March 2014 for a project titled “Catalyzing the Involvement of Humanists and Social Scientists in Grand Challenge Initiatives.”

Email Pioneer Shiva Ayyadurai Seeks Recognition

Washington, DC: March 7, 2015: The death of Raymond Tomlinson over the weekend, has been described as huge loss across the world as he has been credited as the “inventor” of email. While Tomlinson is widely recognized for selecting the @ symbol to connect a username with the destination address email, making it a central part of the communications process. the truth as been believed by many is that the real inventor of the most popular medium of modern day communications, is Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Shiva Ayyadurai.

Ayyadurai, who emigrated to the US with his family when he was only seven, and has been fighting an epic battle to be recognized as the primary inventor of email as we know it when he was only 14. “I’m the low-caste, dark-skinned, Indian, who DID invent #email not Raytheon, who profits from war, death and lies,” he raged in one tweet a few hours after Tomlinson’s death, referring to the deceased man’s employer, best-known as an armaments company.

Shiva Ayyadurai has the first US copyright for Email, or “Computer Program for Electronic Mail System,” in 1982. Numerous awards and honors recognize his work, from a “Westinghouse Science Talent Search Honors Award for creating EMAIL” in 1981 to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History accepted his code, papers and artifacts demonstrating HIS WORK on EMAIL. And while he may not have written the first email program or code, he is recognized in some quarters as the first to devise the form closest to today’s email – on commission from the Brookhaven National Laboratory.

But missing from the scroll is the official recognition, from the government and the tech community at large, which says he only capitalized on the infrastructure provided by the military and other pioneers, including Tomlinson, to make some contributions in the advancement of electronic mail as we know it today.

In interviews, Ayyadurai has argued that as a 14-year old in New Jersey in 1978, he not only had no access to the early technologies that were strictly in the military domain, he didn’t need their parts, their protocol, or the Internet. His work centered on using local area networks and Ethernet cords.

What Tomlinson did, Ayyadurai clarifies, is send text messages between computers. “It is also an obvious and inescapable fact that sending a text message is not email – since email, as we all know, is a system that includes features such as Inbox, Outbox, Drafts, Folders, Attachments, Carbon Copies. Groups, Forwarding, Reply, Delete, Archive, Sort, Bulk Distribution, and more,” he writes on his website.

Ayyaduari, on the other hand, invented a software system that duplicates the features of the Interoffice Mail System. “I named my software “EMAIL,” (a term never used before in the English language), and I even received the first US. Copyright for that software, officially recognizing me as The Inventor of Email, at a time when Copyright was the only way to recognize software inventions, since the US Supreme was not recognizing software patents,” he writes. He has influential supporters, including the philosopher-activist Noam Chomsky, who has known Ayyadurai since he was a sophomore at MIT, and who noted in a testimonial that “the steps taken to belittle the achievement” of a 14-year old immigrant … “suggest an effort to dismiss the fact that innovation can take place by anyone, in any place, at any time.”

“Given the term email was not used prior to 1978, and there was no intention to emulate ‘…a full-scale, inter-organizational mail system,’ (which is what Ayyadurai did) as late as December 1977, there is no controversy here, except the one created by industry insiders, who have a vested interest to protect a false branding that BBN (a military contractor like Raytheon) is the “inventor of email”, which the facts obliterate,” Chomsky noted in his support for Ayyadurai.

However, others, including some media outlets, who credited Ayyadurai for the invention of the email, have been forced to retract or clarify their stories – by the powerful US military-industrial complex, according to Ayyadurai. The US defense establishment, he argues, wants the public to believe that their tax dollars are well spent to invent things like Velcro and GPS (both of which it did). But often, innovations came from humble, hum-drum low cost environments which do not suck up billions of dollars – which is the point he is trying to prove.

Dr. Vivek H. Murthy Honored at UTHealth’s 2016 Lectureship in Child Health

(Austin, TX: March 4, 2016) – Dr. Vivek H. Murthy, U.S. Surgeon General was honored by the Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health Austin Regional Campus during its 10th annual Michael & Susan Dell Lectureship in Child Health on Thursday, March 3rd, 2016 at the Blanton Museum of Art.

Dr. Murthy was the keynote speaker and lectureship award recipient. Murthy spoke to nearly 400 attendees about creating resilient communities and raising healthy children. He then discussed ongoing public health issues in Texas, including youth tobacco use, with Deanna Hoelscher, Ph.D., R.D., director of the Center for Healthy Living and associate dean of the Austin Regional Campus.

“I believe there are four key things we must do to strengthen the health of our children. First, we must create a culture where healthy equals happy, where the healthy choice is the desirable choice. Second, recognize we can’t change our kids’ health behaviors until we change the environments in which they live. Third, health is not just about the body, but about mind and spirit, and we should invest in emotional well-being. Fourth, cultivate the ability of kids to give & receive kindness, to treat kindness as a source of strength,” said Murthy.

“It’s clear that Dr. Murthy understands the importance of prevention in the promotion of health, both here in the U.S. and globally, and shares our vision of ‘healthy children in a healthy world.’ We believe he embodies the essence of this award, and we are delighted to have him as our 10th Michael & Susan Dell Lectureship in Child Health award recipient,” said Cheryl Perry, Ph.D., regional dean of UTHealth School of Public Health Austin Regional Campus.

Faculty from UTHealth School of Public Health Austin Regional Campus collaborated with the U.S. Surgeon General’s Office for its 2012 report on preventing tobacco use among youth and young adults.

Murthy was confirmed on Dec.15, 2014 as the 19th U.S. Surgeon General. As “America’s doctor,” Murthy is responsible for communicating the best available scientific information to the public regarding ways to improve personal health and the health of the nation. He also oversees the operations of the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, comprised of approximately 6,700 uniformed health officers who serve in locations around the world to promote, protect and advance the health and safety of the nation.

The Michael & Susan Dell Lectureship in Child Health includes an award for researchers and leaders in child health, bringing world-class speakers to the Austin area each spring. The annual lectureship was established in 2007 by UTHealth School of Public Health, with funding from the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation.

The Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living was founded in 2006 with a grant from the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation to The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) School of Public Health. The Center for Healthy Living was established to conduct research to better understand and influence behaviors and environmental conditions that affect healthy living, with a vision of “healthy children in a healthy world.” The Center is housed at UTHealth School of Public Health Austin Regional Campus. For more information, visit www.msdcenter.org.

Indian Americans Coming Of Age In US Presidential/Congressional Elections

Washington, DC: March 7, 201: The coming of age of the Indian American community is evident all over with the tiny less than 1% of the US population leading in several areas of American life. With the record number of Indian Americans holding high jobs in the Obama administration, many more are even trying to take an active role in the politics of the country by trying to get elected to public offices across the nation. They are the most affluent and best educated of any immigrant group in the country, according to Pew. They include doctors, engineers, tech entrepreneurs and educators, and form a rich donor base. However, Indian-Americans are more spread out than other ethnic groups, and Indian-American candidates in expensive races often have to go out of state to raise funds.

With only one sitting US Congressman of Indian origin in the US Congress, many more are now vying to enter the US Congress. Kamala Harris in California is expected to win the US Senate race in November. With veteran House of Delegates member Kumar Barve running for Congress in Maryland, and Rep. Ami Bera currently ensconced representing a congressional district in Northern California, if the stars align themselves fortuitously, the Indian American community could have many more members elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2016.

The Indian American presence on the political stage was delayed until the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which opened up the quotas preventing Indians from migrating to the United States and sharply increased the presence of Indians in America. Dalip Singh Saund was the first Indian American member of the House of Representatives, a Sikh who converted his PhD in math to a successful farming career in California, garnering support for a brief Congressional career. But the Indian American presence in Congress since then has been limited, the only blip being former Congressman—and the former governor of Louisiana—Bobby Jindal and the rising star in the Republican Party, Nikki Haley, the governor of North Carolina.

They lean strongly toward Democrats, yet two Republican governors, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Nikki Haley of South Carolina, are of Indian descent. Harris will have to seek contributions to run in a state with some of the costliest media markets in the country. Asian-Americans could form a crucial part of her campaign.

Indian Americans are also aligning with presidential candidates of their choices across the nation. “By mid-March, we will have a clear Democratic nominee,” Indian American political activist Saif Khan, a volunteer for Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton’s campaign, told the media. “After ‘Super Tuesday,’ we will see a significant lead in delegates and the delegate allocation will show who the clear front runner is,” he said. Khan, an Iraq war veteran, is joining “Operation Rolling Victory,” a campaign initiative in which former war veterans come out to support Clinton at various rallies throughout the country. “When it comes to political contributions, that aspect of her identity will become important,” said Karthick Ramakrishnan, associate dean of the School of Public Policy at the University of California, Riverside.

People from New York and New Jersey have got busy this election year to give some time from work to party candidates. While it was difficult to get an exact count of how many Indian-American volunteers are working from the Tri-state area for the Democratic campaign, some young political activists, put the figure of leading volunteers in leadership roles close to 100. There are many others giving some of their time and energy to campaigns.

Sampat Shivangi, founder of the Indian American Forum for Political Education, has expressed disappointment over former Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush’s decision to drop out of the race, following the Republican primary Feb. 20 in South Carolina. Bush had fared dismally throughout the battle, trailing far behind Republican contenders Donald Trump, Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.

Dr. Zachariah P. Zachariah, a long-time supporter of the Bush family, also expressed dispaoointment: “I am very disappointed that Governor Bush has decided to get out of the race. I have great admiration for him. He is a fantastic human being.” Zachariah, also a long-time Republican Party leader, said he was “perplexed” as to how to move forward. “This is a new game. I have no idea what happens next.” “The extreme right wing of the Republican Party has hijacked the party. Trump is preying upon the angriest of people and dividing the electorate,” said Zachariah.

Calling Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump as the “best hope for America”, some Indian-Americans in the New York Tristate area have formed a Political Action Committee (PAC) to support and raise funds for him. Headed by Dr. AD Amar, a business professor with Seton Hall University in New Jersey, the ‘Indian-Americans for Trump 2016’ was registered as a PAC with the Federal Election Commission last month. Its sole goal is “to garner actively the support of all Americans, but particularly Indian-Americans, to have Donald J. Trump become the next President of the USA,” the PAC said in a press release.

Ash Kalra, a member of the San Jose City Council, is vying to become the first Indian-American elected to the California legislature. “The longer the Indian-American community has been in this country, the more it has matured,” Kalra said. “And part of that maturity is becoming more politically active.”

Last year, technology lawyer Ro Khanna, a Democrat, sought a seat in Congress, while former U.S. Treasury Department official Neel Kashkari, a Republican, ran for governor. Though both challenged popular incumbents and lost, their efforts are emblematic of the rise in Indian-American political engagement.

The election results could have major consequences for India and the Indian Americans. The average Indian American may be more interested in a US president who keeps the “golden door” open for immigrants, students and temporary hi-tech workers. They would also be reassured if the White House has a person who upholds traditional liberal democratic views on religious minorities and multiculturalism as a whole.

The populists in both parties, whether Trump or Sanders, have been the most vocal against migrants. Trump has targeted Muslims and Mexicans, Sanders H-1B visa workers. But their rhetoric would worry migratory birds the most. India, however, gets only a passing mention by even the most extreme candidates. Ultimately, says Twining, “the fact that India, unlike China, will not be an election issue should be reassuring to New Delhi.”

Says Sanjay Puri, head of the US-India Political Action Committee, “Indian-Americans tend to be more Democrats than Republicans and it has not changed much this election cycle, especially with Clinton running as she has long-standing relationships with the Indian-American community.” But, he notes, no candidate is allergic to Indians. “Each candidate has a support base in the Indian-American community.”

Raja Krishnamoorthi’s Run For US Congress Gains Momentum

Washington, DC: March 7, 2015: Of the many choices in endorsing candidates for the March 15 primary, the Chicago Tribune editorial board wrote that the decision for Congress in the 8th District of Illinois “isn’t close at all” and that the “Tribune endorses [Raja] Krishnamoorthi” for the seat to represent the voters of the northwest Chicago suburbs.

“Krishnamoorthi’s amalgam of business and government experience makes him the best candidate, hands down,” the Chicago Tribune editorial board stated. “A Harvard Law School grad who lives in Schaumburg, he’s been a deputy state treasurer and an assistant attorney general. He’s president of two high-tech firms focused on military security and renewable energy. Those overlapping experiences give him a valuable perspective on how government policy affects businesses and workers.”

The Chicago Tribune endorsement makes it a clean sweep of Chicago-area newspaper endorsements for the progressive Democrat Krishnamoorthi following the earlier endorsements from the Chicago Sun-Times and the Daily Herald, the largest suburban newspaper in the Chicago area.

Raja Krishnamoorthi’s Run For US Congress Gains Momentum
Raja Krishnamoorth

“We were impressed with Krishnamoorthi’s command of specifics about the tax code and the Affordable Care Act — and even more impressed when he emailed us after our meeting to correct himself on a minor point,” the Chicago Tribune editorial board wrote. “We like that he’s already scoped out opportunities to join in bipartisan initiatives on criminal justice reform and alternative energy. We agree with his maxim that government must do everything ‘faster, cheaper, smarter.’”

Raja Krishnamoorthi, the former deputy state treasurer of Illinois, an Indian American Democrat, who had lost to Rep. Tammy Duckworth in the Democratic primary for Congress in 2012, has announced his bid to join the fray to take the seat one more time. The 41-year-old Indian American has been campaigning to succeed Duckworth in Congress as the representative for the 8th District in the northwest suburbs of Chicago. Duckworth has declared her candidacy to the US Senate from the state of Lincoln.

The United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 881, has endorsed Raja Krishnamoorthi. In their endorsement, Ronald Powell, President, Local 881 and UFCW International Vice President said, “Local 881 United Food and Commercial Workers are proud to give Raja Krishnamoorthi our endorsement. Raja is the only candidate in the 8th District race with a working families agenda that offers a significant increase in the minimum wage, equal pay for equal work and guaranteed paid sick leave and maternity leave for workers.”

In the race to replace Tammy Duckworth in Congress, Raja Krishnamoorthi has opened up a double-digit lead. A live poll of 400 likely Democratic voters taken February 9-11 by GBA Strategies asked 8th District voters in the northwest Chicago suburbs which candidate they would vote for if the election were held today.

Krishnamoorthi had the support of 41 percent of voters with State Sen. Mike Noland at 27 percent and Villa Park President Deb Bullwinkel with 5 percent. Undecided voters accounted for 26 percent of the poll. The margin of error was +/- 4.9 percentage points.

Raja said, “I’m encouraged that voters are responding to our message of protecting Social Security and Medicare, fighting for sane gun laws and standing up for policies to help struggling working families.” A capable fundraiser who raised about $1.3 million for his 2012 run, he said in a press release that he wants to continue Duckworth’s advocacy for working families, with a focus on helping more people to succeed in the new economy. I will work hard to provide education and job opportunities so more families can achieve the economic security they need.

According to Krishnamoorthi, “The one issue that continues to resonate with voters is the economic insecurity of the middle class.” There is growing importance, he added, to gain access to jobs that pay a living wage and access to the right kind of jobs in the 21st Century. He said he knows he needs to raise at least as much money as he did in 2012 to win in the March 2016 Democratic primary in what could be a crowded field.

A resident of Schaumburg, Ill., where he lives with his wife, Priya, a doctor at a local hospital, and their sons Vijay, 9, and Vikram, 5, who attend public schools in school District 54, Krishnamoorthi is president of Sivananthan Labs and Episolar, small businesses selling products in the national security and renewable energy sectors.

In 2006, he was appointed by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan as a Special Assistant Attorney General in her public integrity unit and he served as a member of the Illinois Housing Development Authority. When he ran in 2016 against Duckworth, who had the support of many in the Democratic leadership, Krishnamoorthi lost by a 66.6% to 33.4% margin.

Co-founder of InSPIRE, a nonprofit providing training to Illinois students and veterans in solar technology, he is a former vice chair of the Illinois Innovation Council, a group supporting economic growth and job creation in Illinois.

Krishnamoorthi pointed out that when he served as deputy treasurer of Illinois, where he helped revamp the state’s unclaimed property system by using technology to increase the amount of property returned to taxpayers while cutting the program’s costs. Raised in Peoria, Ill., he has a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Princeton University and a law degree from Harvard Law School. Krishnamoorthi clerked for a federal judge in Chicago, became a partner in an Illinois law firm and was an issues director for Barack Obamaâ’s successful United States Senate campaign in 2004.

“We need people in Congress who understand the opportunities provided by the new economy and how to make sure more Americans are prepared to seize them,” the Indian American candidate said in a press release. “That requires practical, pragmatic ideas and far less partisanship and politics. I want to help provide this leadership and ensure that the same opportunities that my family had to escape tough economic times exist for other working families today and into the future,” he said.

“I am excited to have the support of the hardworking men and women of the United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 881,” Raja said. “UFCW, Local 881 represents more than 34,000 members employed in retail food, drug stores and grocery stores. Winning another labor union endorsement shows that my campaign’s message of helping more Americans find good jobs and help grow and strengthen the middle class is resonating with voters throughout the northwest Chicago suburbs.”

Hate Crime Charge Filed in LA Bus Driver Case

March 2, 2016 (Los Angeles, California)  – The Inglewood District Attorney’s Office filed a hate crime charge Tuesday against defendant K.C. Tard, who brutally attacked Balwinder Jit Singh, a turbaned Sikh L.A. County bus driver.

On November 6, 2015, Mr. Singh was called a “terrorist“ and “suicide bomber,” and was accused of hijacking the bus while being viciously assaulted.  The crime left Mr. Singh in the hospital with a disfigured face and infection in his eye that has required weeks of recovery.

Local police initially failed to take into account the hateful slurs used against Mr. Singh, instead classifying the crime as a simple misdemeanor assault. Nearly two months after the incident, the Sikh Coalition urged the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department to investigate the case as a hate crime and used the local media to increase public pressure on the case.  The joint legal and communications advocacy resulted in a felony count of Battery on Transit Personnel with a felony hate crime enhancement against Mr. Tard yesterday.

“I was attacked because of my Sikh religious appearance, and the only reason authorities re-examined my case and brought hate crime charges was because of the Sikh Coalition,” said Balwinder Jit Singh.  “I’m grateful to the Sikh Coalition for working with law enforcement, to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office, and to the DA’s office.”

The Sikh Coalition was joined in support by nine other civil rights organizations, led by the local L.A. chapter of Asian Americans Advancing Justice, who wrote a letter underscoring the importance of charging this case as a hate crime.

“Mr. Singh’s case sheds light on the failure of law enforcement agencies to recognize and respond appropriately to hate crime cases and the extraordinary efforts required to get them to reverse course,” said Senior Staff Attorney Gurjot Kaur. “We will continue to push for law enforcement agencies to properly identify and investigate hate crimes, and ensure that individuals who resort to racist violence are held accountable.”

In December and January, the Sikh Coalition sent letters to law enforcement agencies and school superintendents in all 50 states about remaining vigilant in protecting the rights of the Sikh community.

In February, www.ReportHate.org was launched to further ensure that all cases of backlash and bias get reported by Sikhs across the United States. “The Sikh turban stands for justice and equality,” said Ms. Kaur. “It should be celebrated, not feared, and we will continue to work tirelessly to further educate Americans while protecting Sikh rights.”

Please notify law enforcement of any threats or violence, and contact the Sikh Coalition at 212-655-3095 or online here. In addition, we urge community members to review our FAQ guide on hate crimes, hate speech and how to report incidents to the authorities and to the Sikh Coalition. Also please view our printable hate crime poster, which is in both English and Punjabi.

Decorated Sikh Soldier Sues U.S. Department of Defense

March 1, 2016 (Washington, D.C.) – The Sikh Coalition, in conjunction with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty and McDermott Will & Emery, took unprecedented legal action yesterday by suing the United States Department of Defense on behalf of a decorated Sikh American soldier. The lawsuit demands that the U.S. military accommodate Captain Simratpal Singh’s religious articles of faith and drop the impromptu, discriminatory testing procedures imposing upon Captain Singh.

Captain Singh was granted a temporary accommodation until March 31, 2016, to serve in the U.S. Army while maintaining his Sikh articles of faith. Last week, he was ordered to report on March 1st for additional testingthat no other soldier in the U.S. Army has ever been subject to. Captain Singh, who is more than willing to undergo the same safety testing as other soldiers, objects to being treated differently on account of his faith. Captain Singh has already passed the standard gas mask test administered by the U.S. Army.

“Captain Singh is being subject to discriminatory testing that isn’t required of any other soldiers, even those with medical or religious accommodations. The Army cannot delay in providing him his constitutionally mandated right to an accommodation to serve as an observant Sikh in the Army,” said the Sikh Coalition’s Legal Director, Harsimran Kaur.

Captain Singh, who was forced to compromise his faith in order to pursue a military career in 2006, graduated from West Point with honors in 2010 and was awarded the Bronze Star for clearing roads in Afghanistan of explosive devices.  He began maintaining his articles of faith and filed an accommodation request on October 21, 2015. On December 9, 2015, he was granted a temporary, 30-day accommodation to serve while maintaining his Sikh articles of faith. This accommodation was extended until March 31, 2016.

“I have so much pride in my Sikh identity and service to my nation,” said Captain Singh in December after receiving his temporary accommodation.  “To feel spiritually whole, while continuing my military career, has always been the dream.”

Last year, 27 retired U.S. Generals called on the U.S. Department of Defense to eliminate the ban on observant Sikhs.  These generals join 105 Members of Congress, 15 U.S. Senators, and 21 national interfaith and civil rights organizations, who have previously signed letters in support of American Sikhs’ right to serve.

“For years, we have worked to avoid litigation under the guiding belief that the U.S. military would finally do the right thing,” said Amandeep Sidhu, Partner at McDermott Will & Emery. “The U.S. Constitution and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act make it clear that Captain Singh has the right to practice his faith in the military, and we are confident that the court will agree.”.

Manisha Nagrani, Faking To Be A Cancer Victim Arrested In San Francisco

Manisha Nagrani, 40, an Indian American woman who raised thousands of dollars online allegedly posing as a victim of a rare blood cancer, was arrested here Feb. 26, and charged with five counts of felony fraud.

Nagrani is currently being held in San Francisco County Jail, on a no bail warrant from Santa Clara County, Max Szabo, a spokesman for the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, told India-West. She is scheduled to be transferred to Santa Clara County to appear on outstanding warrants from 2011.

According to her booking record, Nagrani has been charged with false personation; receiving or buying stolen property; 2nd degree commercial burglary; and acquiring access cards without the cardholder or issuer’s consent.

When she was arrested Feb. 26 afternoon in downtown San Francisco, she was initially transported to San Francisco General Hospital for medical treatment and then booked into jail, a San Francisco Police Department spokeswoman told India-West.

Nagrani was previously arrested in 2006 and served time before being released on parole. In 2009, the San Francisco Chronicle referred to her as an “accidental entrepreneur” who – after losing a job in public relations – founded a matchmaking business, which introduced over 40 couples who got married.

Sometime around 2014, Nagrani began posting on her Facebook page that she had been diagnosed with Myelodysplastic syndromes, a blood disorder affecting stem cells in bone marrow. (ABC’s “Good Morning America” host Robin Roberts also suffered from MDS, a rare blood cancer.)

Nagrani – who used the profile Manisha MN and also allegedly used several fake profiles including Matt Marc – stepped up her game on May 27, 2015, posting a lengthy, heart-rending post about her struggle with a terminal disease.

“Twenty days ago I received the news that no one wants to hear – my body is failing at its fight against the MDS. I received an ‘official’ expiration date,” wrote Nagrani.

“Three to four months I was told; one hundred days, give or take. That barely takes me to my birthday – barely makes it to the half marathon I’d plan to walk instead of run because of my failing health and strength.”

“If my doctors are right I won’t be celebrating Thanksgiving again, I won’t see my God-children celebrate their next birthdays, I won’t have the chance to experience some beautiful dreams on my bucket list,” wrote Nagrani.

Supporters immediately began raising funds for Nagrani’s treatments, creating campaigns on the web portals gofundme.comyoucaring.com; and giveforward.com. Nagrani’s fundraising pages are no longer visible on gofundme and youcaring, but her giveforward page shows donations of $17,552, with many donations of over $1,000.

Victims have created an investigation sheet on google docs – Nagrani Investigation Data Sheet – which donors can use to report their complaint. Reports can also be made by calling (415) 553-1754.

Sikh Temple Vandalized In Washington

In an apparent hate crime, a Sikh Temple in the US state of Washington was vandalized by a “naked” man who desecrated sacred items of the Sikh worship place, drawing condemnation from the community leaders. The incident occurred on Wednesday, March 2nd, when Jeffrey C Pittman, 44, broke into the Gurudwara in Spokane.

Deputies say that Pittman was arrested early Thursday morning wearing nothing but a sheet taken from the temple’s furnishings. He was also holding the Gurudwara’s ceremonial sword. He also desecrated sacred items of the Gurudwara. Pittman was booked in Spokane County Jail connection with charges of burglary, malicious mischief and malicious harassment, which is the state’s statute for a hate crime, The Seattle Globalist reported.

“All religions should be respected. Any crime committed due to someone’s religious beliefs will be a priority and fully investigated,” said Spokane Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich in a statement.

“They (deputies) detained Pittman after a short altercation. The damage is estimated to be several thousand dollars and there was damage to religiously sacred items of the Temple,” Mr Knezovich said.

Gurudwara priest Gurjwet Singh Augla said he and another man were able to detain the person until police arrived. “We don’t know the motivations behind the vandalism yet, but we do know that police are treating the case seriously and that the perpetrator has been arrested. There are no immediate indications that bias was involved,” a statement issued by the gurudwara said.

“No house of worship in America should ever be vandalised. The Sikh articles of faith, which include the turban and beard, show our commitment to equality, justice and freedom for all. These are not just Sikh values, they are American values,” the statement said.

Rajwant Singh, chairman of the Sikh Council on Religion and Education, expressed shock and anguish over the vandalising of the Sikh gurudwara in Spokane, Washington.

“This is terrible news for Sikhs in the Spokane area and nationwide… This kind of incidents should not become norm for us or for the country,” he said. “This can change and Americans can appreciate our values once they know that Sikhs believe in equality and tolerance towards other religions,” said Mr Singh, who is also the senior adviser to the National Sikh Campaign.

The incident is the latest in a number of hate crimes against Sikhs in America. A gurudwara in a suburb was vandalised with hateful anti-ISIS graffiti in December. In September, a Sikh-American father was viciously assaulted in a suburb outside of Chicago after being called “Bin Laden”. In 2012, a gunman with Neo-Nazi ties walked into a Sikh gurudwara and shot and killed six innocent Sikhs in Oak Creek, Wisconsin.

University of California Rejects $6 Million Gift to Endow Four Chairs in India Studies

The University of California, Irvine has decided to reject over a $6 million gift from donors affiliated with the Dharma Civilization Foundation, which would endow four chairs in Hindu, Sikh, Jain and Buddhist studies. The decision comes after faculty members objected to the establishment of the chairs, saying proper procedural practices had not been followed, and alleging that DCF is affiliated with Hindu fundamentalist organizations.

Catherine Liu, a professor at UC Irvine’s Film and Media Study Department, said that due diligence was not followed in accepting the donation and that DCF had not been properly vetted. Moreover, Liu claimed, South Asian scholars at UCI were excluded from the process of consultation. She reiterated the protesting professors’ belief that many of DCF’s members have ties to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and the Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh.

“This country has studies of most religions, but not Hinduism. We need Indian scholars to defend and create a narrative,” Ushakant Thakkar, who has helped establish a Chair in Indian Studies, said. Thakkar refuted such statements, noting that he is married to a Catholic woman, and his children practice Jainism and Buddhism.

The Thakkar Family chair was established at UCI in May 2015 in the university’s School of Humanities. Donations have also been secured to endow a chair in Jain Studies, one in Sikh Studies, as well as the Swami Vivekananda-DCF Chair in Modern India Studies. Plans are also in the works to endow a chair in Buddhist Studies and one in Parsi Studies; DCF has connected with the Godrej family to possibly fund the latter.

DCF was established in 2012 with the goal of establishing Indian religious and cultural studies at several U.S. universities. The organization was created after Shiva Bajpai, who served as professor of history and director of Asian Studies at California State University, Northridge, and psychiatrist Manohar Shinde, who was on the teaching faculty at UCLA’s School of Medicine, found there was a lot of misrepresentation of Hindus and India in current academia, and a lack of religious scholars, according to Thakkar, who serves as the chairman of DCF. Bajpai, who has a Ph.D. in ancient Indian history, has few contemporaries of his genre.

“I feel strongly violated, humiliated and discriminated against,” nephrologist Ushakant Thakkar, who gave $1 million to fund the Thakkar Family-Dharma Civilization Foundation Presidential Chair in Vedic and Indic Civilization Studies, has been reported to have told the media. “The university pursued us for two years. We never wanted to be in a place that was not receptive,” the Indian American physician added.

But shortly after the first chair was established, faculty at UC Irvine began a petition drive protesting the endowments. A total of 391 professors from UCI and other universities throughout the world have signed an online statement, which states that DCF has ties to fundamentalist groups in India, and seeks to establish its own agenda through the gift.

DCF has stipulated, however, that the chair of Vedic Studies must be held by a Hindu scholar and practitioner, and also proficient in Sanskrit as the Vedas are written in Sanskrit. DCF will take its money elsewhere, though it will be difficult to endow chairs at other universities as “the name of DCF has been tarnished as a fundamentalist organization,” said Thakkar.

Cinequest Film Festival 2016 to Celebrate Indian Cinema

The Cinequest Film Festival 2016, which will run from March 1- March 13 in San Jose, Calif., will present a line-up of Indian cinema, offering three examples of the current state of Indian film art. The films that will be showcased are: Director Selvamani Selvaraj’s debut film “Nila”; first-time director Atul Taishete’s “Vartak Nagar-A Story of Four Crows”; and “The Last Smile.”

“Nila,”which will see its North American premiere at the festival, deftly explores the murky realm of deceptive desire and the damaging consequences resulting from a passionate, but misguided pursuit of love, according to a press release.

“Vartak Nagar-A Story of Four Crows,” starring actor Jimmy Shergil, merges an emotionally stirring coming-of-age tale with real life drama. The premise of the film is: In 1982, the innocence of four boyhood friends is abruptly shattered during the Bombay Mill Strike and the encompassing violence imperils their lives. But through the combined forces of brotherhood, love, and the resilience of the human spirit, the boys not only survive, they thrive, according to the release.

“The Last Smile” is described as a film where an Indian American father suddenly loses his son under mysterious circumstances and simply wants to know what happened. But his pursuit of the truth plunges him into the corrupt and shady underworld of the unregulated dietary supplements business, a thriving $37 billion industry, the release said. Inspired by a true story, this drama exposes the greed-driven practices that prey on human vanity, gullibility, and the American obsession with the “quick fix.” Both “Vartak Nagar-A Story of Four Crows” and “The Last Smile” will have their world premiere at the festival.

Ro Khanna Energized Despite Democratic Endorsement Going To Rep. Mike Honda

California’s 17th Congressional district seat remains hotly-contested between Honda and Khanna. The two squared off in the 2014 election cycle in which Honda prevailed by less than 5,000 over the Indian American Stanford professor.

The endorsement for Honda at the state’s Democratic Convention, held Feb. 26 through Feb. 28 in San Jose, Calif., comes just a month after the delegates were unable to endorse a candidate at the Jan. 28 pre-endorsement conference.

The campaign of Honda’s Democratic challenger, Indian American Ro Khanna, however, was encouraged by the developments simply because Honda had to go to the convention to get the endorsement. “The entire (endorsement process) is rigged to protect the incumbent,” Khanna campaign spokesman Hari Sevugan told the media. The endorsement process has three rounds for the party to give its endorsement, with incumbents not getting endorsed if more than 20 percent, 30 percent or 50 percent oppose each round, respectively.

Honda did not receive 80 percent support in the first round, setting up the pre-endorsement conference in which he failed to secure the 70 percent needed. The fallout from that led to the February convention in which he needed 50 percent of the delegates’ support. “It’s embarrassing for Honda that it even got to this point,” Sevugan said, adding that the majority of the delegates voting are appointed by Honda or his allies.

Despite receiving the endorsement, Honda continues to lose support of many dignitaries, who are siding with Khanna in his campaign efforts. Among those shifting gears in 2016 are California Secretary of State Alex Padilla and the Laborers International Union of North American Pacific Southwest Region.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo, Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen and Santa Clara County Assessor Larry Stone have endorsed Democratic challenger Ro Khanna to represent the 17th Congressional District — a triple blow to Rep. Mike Honda.

None of the three prominent local Democrats endorsed either candidate last year during their first showdown that ended with Honda, D-San Jose, beating Khanna by 3.6 percentage points. And none, at least in their initial statements, hinted that the House Ethics Committee’s ongoing probe of blurred lines between Honda’s office and campaign influenced their endorsements.

The state’s 17th Congressional district includes much of California’s Silicon Valley cities such as Sunnyvale, Cupertino and Santa Clara, as well as north San Jose, Milpitas, Fremont and Newark. Many Indian American Silicon Valley luminaries have thrown their support behind Khanna. The primary election is scheduled for June 7 with the general election on Nov. 8.

Ami Bera, Kamala Harris Endorsed By Democratic Party

Sacramento, CA: Rep. Ami Bera, D-Sacramento, who is seeking reelection to US Congress and California Attorney General Kamala Harris, who is running for a U.S. Senate seat, have received endorsements from the California Democratic Party, during the state convention on February 27th.

Bera, who has been in an ongoing battle with Sikh Americans and labor groups in his district – CD-7 – handily won his endorsement, gaining nearly 90 percent of the vote. Fifty people voted for the sole Indian American in Congress, while six voted against him. Bera – who is seeking his third term in office – is running unopposed in the primary election June 7. He will face Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones – a Republican – in the general election Nov. 8.

Indian American-Led “Democrats For Truth” Attacks Rep. Ami Bera“I’m proud that local Sacramento County Democrats voted to award me the state party’s endorsement,” Bera said after the vote. “I came to Washington to fix Congress, and to help the working parents, business owners, seniors, and many others in my district get ahead and, today, these fine people recognized this. They know that I went to DC to fix a broken Congress, something I will never stop working to do,” said the physician, who formerly served as the chief medical officer for Sacramento County.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, told party delegates before the endorsement vote was taken that Bera’s position on TPA was different from her position, but that his vote on the issue should not be the sole basis for his re-election. “He is a valued member of the Congress. He has a great base of support at the grassroots level and I think he will win,” said Pelosi.

Kamala Harris also handily won her endorsement from the California Democratic Party, winning more than 78 percent of the vote. Harris is battling Rep. Loretta Sanchez, D-Orange County, and Republican contender Duf Sundheim, an attorney who formerly served as the state’s Republican Party chairman. California’s open primary allows the top two vote getters from either party to go on to the general election.

In her speech before the endorsement vote, Harris – who served as San Francisco’s District Attorney before ascending to the post of Attorney General in 2012 – chronicled her youth growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area, as the daughter of two civil rights activists. She spoke about the hateful rhetoric spewing out of the Republican Party and vowed to protect the fundamental rights of all U.S. residents. “For far too many, liberty and justice for all is a promise we have failed to keep,” said Harris.

After the vote, Harris’s campaign sent out a statement late Feb. 27. “I’m incredibly honored to have the endorsement of the California Democratic Party in the U.S. Senate race, and I’m so proud of the support our campaign has received from every corner of our state,” she said. “We know there is more that unites us than divides us, and I’m grateful to the Californians who joined together to send that message this weekend,” said Harris.

165 Million People Could Be Killed By Pandemics: Sonia Shah States

“Majority of pandemic experts of all kinds, felt that a pandemic that would sicken a billion people, kill 165 million people and cost the global economy about $3 trillion would occur sometime in the next two generations,” Indian American journalist and writer Sonia Shah writes.

According to her, epidemiologists are bracing themselves for what has been called the next “Big One” — a disease that could kill tens of millions of people in the coming years. In an interview to Fresh Air’s Dave Davies on NPR, Shah talked about her new book, Pandemic: Tracking Contagions from Cholera to Ebola and Beyond, Shah discusses the history and science of contagious diseases. She notes that humans put themselves at risk by encroaching on wildlife habitats. “About 60 percent of our new pathogens come from the bodies of animals,” she says.

Shah adds that international travel is also a factor in the spread of disease. “Air travel shapes our epidemics in such a powerful way that scientists can actually predict where and when an epidemic will strike next just by measuring the number of direct flights between infected and uninfected cities,” she says.

Looking toward the future, Shah says that epidemiologists can do more to identify potential outbreaks before they happen. But eliminating them altogether is another matter. “Our relationship to disease and pandemics is really … part of our relationship to the natural world,” she says. “It’s a risk we have to live with.”

INTERVIEW HIGHLIGHTS

On our first response to new pathogens

A lot of times when we talk about being more prepared in preventing pathogens from spreading or preventing pandemics, what we’re really talking about is first response, stepping up our first response, so that when we have outbreaks of disease that our hospitals are prepared and we have vaccines stockpiled and we are able to fly our experts around really quickly to get to the scene of the outbreak, and things like that. But that’s not actually preventing these pathogens from emerging and from causing outbreaks. That’s kind of after the fire has started, then we rush in with our fire extinguishers.

But to really prevent them would mean stepping it way farther back, and that is possible now, because … we know there’s certain places that have higher risk of pathogens emerging, and we can do kind of active surveillance in those places by mapping the microbes that are there, by surveilling people or animals who are more likely to spread or to have spill-overs of microbes into their bodies. … We have more advanced detection capacity now with genetic analysis and other kinds of ways that we can see where these invisible microbes are spreading and changing.

On how most of our pathogens come from animals

From bats, we got Ebola; from monkeys we got HIV, malaria, most likely Zika, as well; from birds we got avian influenzas, all other influenzas as well, West Nile virus, etc. So it’s when we invade wildlife habitat or when we disrupt it in ways that brings people and animals into close contact, that their microbes start to spill over and adapt to our bodies.

On how Zika emerged

I think Zika is a great example of how new pathogens are emerging today. It came out of the bodies of animals; for many years, we had Zika virus in the equatorial forests of Africa and Asia. It mostly infected monkeys and possibly other creatures, too, but it very rarely came into humans. …

We don’t know what the triggering event was that allowed Zika virus to start spreading into humans, but we do know what it exploited — and it exploited two things that a lot of other pathogens have exploited, too, which is urbanization and flight travel. So in the 1940s and ’50s and ’60s when we had Zika virus in the forests of Africa, it was carried by a forest mosquito and that mosquito very rarely bit humans, it mostly bit animals, which is why we didn’t have a lot of Zika virus in people, at least it’s one reason why.

What we’re seeing now is Zika virus has crossed over into a mosquito called Aedes aegypti, and this is a mosquito that has expanded its range over recent years as we have urbanized. It specializes in living in human cities. It loves garbage, it can breed in a drop of water in a bottle cap … and it only bites humans.

So once we had Zika virus coming into Aedes aegypti, this highly urbanized mosquito, that’s when we started having this explosive spread. Of course, it traveled from Asia. It came out of Africa. It came into Malaysia, and then probably into the Philippines, Micronesia and French Polynesia. And that was the sort of slow spread, but then the rapid expansion happened when it came from French Polynesia into Brazil, and that was almost certainly through a flight, either people from French Polynesia coming to Brazil for the World Cup or possibly an international canoe race. But whatever it was, it was on a flight that it came over, and from there it’s able to access these huge, highly urbanized populations and have no immunity, and that’s what created the epidemic.

On the evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

We’ve known since antibiotics were first developed that if we use them in ways that were not medically necessary that it would lead to the evolution of resistant bacteria. And yet, in this country, 80 percent of our antibiotic consumption is not medically necessary, it’s done for commercial reasons.

When we have livestock farmers giving antibiotics in low doses to their animals because it fattens them, it helps them gain weight faster and that gets them to market faster, so this is a commercial use. And that’s the vast majority of the antibiotics that are consumed in this country are for that reason. …

We’ve known this for years and we do have an increasing problem with antibiotic-resistant pathogens, which is a very serious problem where we’re running out of these drugs to treat these runaway infections, and we’re on the cusp of entering an era when we have no more antibiotics that work for some of these bugs. …

We need to use antibiotics more rationally. We don’t do that now. That’s sort of the hardest part of it that we need to do. But the other part of it is we also need to develop new antibiotics to keep up — these pathogens are always going to evolve resistance eventually, so we always need to come up with new weapons to fight them.

On why incidents of Lyme disease are increasing

Lyme disease is caused by a bacteria that lives in rodents and is spread by ticks. Now in the intact northeastern forest where Lyme disease first emerged, there used to be a diversity of different woodland animals there, like chipmunks and opossums as well as deer and mice and other things, but as we spread our suburbs into the northeastern forest and we kind of broke up that forest into little patchworks, we got rid of a lot of that diversity. We lost chipmunks, we lost opossums, and it turns out that those animals actually control tick populations. The typical opossum destroys about 6,000 ticks a week through grooming, but the typical white-footed mouse, which is what we do have left in those patchwork forests, a typical mouse destroys maybe 50 ticks a week. So the fewer opossums you have and the more mice you have, the more ticks you have and the more likely it becomes that this tick-borne pathogen will spill over into humans. And that’s exactly what happened with Lyme disease and now with many other tick-borne illnesses as well.

On what scares virologists most

Novel forms of influenza are what really keeps most virologists up at night, because we are so good at spreading those around quickly, and it happens every year. We have a flu pandemic every year, and now we’re hatching all kinds of new kinds of flu viruses, mostly in Asia, and then they’re spreading across the globe, and we don’t have immunity to some of those. …

Right now, a typical flu virus, the seasonal flu, will still kill a lot of people every year and it’s a real drain on our global economy. But we kind of put up with that, so if you had a new flu virus that even had a slightly higher mortality rate, you could see a lot more death and destruction because so many people get the flu. Think about the 1918 flu, which killed maybe 100 million people, maybe more, estimates vary, but certainly huge numbers of people died from that flu. The mortality rate was like 1 percent, which isn’t huge. It sounds like a small number, but when you think about how many people get the flu, that adds up to a huge number of deaths. So these new kinds of influenza, I think, are what virologists are most fearful of.

Mastering the Art of Ignoring Makes People More Efficient

People searching for something can find it faster if they know what to look for. But new research suggests knowing what not to look for can be just as helpful. Although previous studies concluded that attempting to ignore irrelevant information slows people down, Johns Hopkins University researchers found that when people are given time to learn what’s possible to ignore, they’re able to search faster and more efficiently.

The results, which offer new insight into how the mind processes difficult information, are forthcoming in the journal Psychological Science and now available online. “Individuals who explicitly ignore distracting information improve their visual search performance, a critical skill for professional searchers, like radiologists and airport baggage screeners,” said lead author Corbin A. Cunningham, a graduate student in the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences’ Attention and Perception Lab. “This work has the potential to help occupations that rely on visual search by informing future training programs.”

In two experiments, researchers asked participants to search for certain letters on a computer screen. They had to find either a capital “B” or an “F,” among other letters of assorted colors. Sometimes, the participants were told the “B” or “F” would not be a certain color, like red. Other times they were given no color hints.

When participants were given one color to consistently ignore throughout the experiment, their reaction time slowed at first, but after extended practice, about a hundred trials, they were finding the target letters significantly faster than participants who weren’t given a color to eliminate. In fact, the more information participants were able to ignore, the faster they found the target.

Although trying to disregard distractions might initially slow people down, the researchers concluded that over time, people are more efficient when they know what’s not worth paying attention to. The ability to ignore is a key part of the ability to pay attention, the researchers said.

“Attention is usually thought of as something that enhances the processing of important objects in the world,” said co-author Howard Egeth, a professor of psychological and brain sciences at Johns Hopkins. “This study, along with some recent work in which we measured brain activity while subjects responded selectively to stimuli presented in the midst of competing stimuli, highlights the importance of active suppression of those competing stimuli. It’s what I think of as the dark side of attention.”

This work was supported by Office of Naval Research Grant N000141010278, National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship DGE-1232825, and the Johns Hopkins University Science of Learning Institute.

Driverless Cars Could Increase Reliance on Roads

Driverless vehicles could intensify car use, reducing or even eliminating promised energy savings and environmental benefits, a new study shows. Development of autonomous driving systems has accelerated rapidly since the unveiling of Google’s driverless car in 2012, and energy efficiency due to improved traffic flow has been touted as one of the technology’s key advantages.

However, new research by scientists from the University of Leeds, University of Washington and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, published today in the journal Transportation Research Part A, says its actual impact may be complicated by how the technology changes our relationship with our cars.

Lead author Zia Wadud, associate professor in the University of Leeds’ Faculty of Engineering and a research group leader in the University’s Institute for Transport Studies, said: “There is no doubt that vehicle automation offers several efficiency benefits, but if you can work, relax and even hold a meeting in your car, that changes how you use it. That, in turn, may change the transport equation and the energy and environmental impact of road transport.”

The study uses analysis of self-driving technology combined with data on car and truck use, driver licenses and vehicle running costs to model the impact on energy demands of various levels of automation on U.S. roads by 2050.

It identifies several efficiency benefits of self-driving cars and predicts ranges of likely energy impacts, depending on the extent of adoption of the technology and other factors: More efficient computer-directed driving styles (0% to 20% reduction in energy use); Improved traffic flow and reduced jams because of coordination between vehicles (0% to 4% reduction); “Platooning” of automated vehicles driving very close together to create aerodynamic savings (4% to 25% reduction); Reduced crash risks mean that cars can be lighter (5% to 23% reduction); and, less emphasis from car buyers on high performance (5% to 23% reduction).

But the study also predicts that the very attractiveness of self-driving technology could reduce or even outweigh the efficiency gains. It estimates a 5% to 60% increase in car energy consumption due to people choosing to use highly automated cars in situations where they would have previously taken alternative transport (e.g. trains or planes).

Wadud said: “When you make a decision about transport, you don’t just think about the out-of-pocket costs of the train ticket or the car’s petrol; you also take into account non-financial costs.

“Car owners might choose to travel by train to relatively distant business meetings because the train allows them to work and relax. The need to drive is part of the cost of choosing the car, just as standing on a cold platform is part of the cost of the train. If you can relax in your car as it safely drives itself to a meeting in another city, that changes the whole equation.”

The study also predicts that people who currently find it difficult or impossible to drive, such as the elderly or some people with disabilities, will have increased access to road transport with the advent of the new systems, resulting in an estimated 2% to 10% increase in road energy use for personal travel.

Possible higher speed limits because of the improved safety of autonomous cars (7% to 22%) and demand for heavy extra equipment in driverless cars such as TV screens and computers (0% to 11%) might also tend to reduce efficiency savings.

A major uncertainty is the effect of autonomous driving technology on car sharing. The technology could allow vehicles to move independently between different users and therefore not only increase sharing but possibly also make it easier for users to match trip types to car types. Instead of using one car for all journeys, users might be able to use a shared, smaller car for a commute and a larger one for family leisure trips, for example. The authors say these factors could reduce energy consumption by 21% to 45%.

Co-author Don MacKenzie, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Washington, said: “There is lots of hype around self-driving cars, much of it somewhat utopian in nature. But there are likely to be positives and negatives. By taking a clear-eyed view, we can design and implement policies to maximise the benefits and minimise the downsides of automated vehicles.

“Vehicle automation presents a paradox: it may encourage people to travel much more, but at the same time it makes it practical to implement tools such as road pricing that can offset those effects. Ultimately, however, it’s up to the government to set appropriate policies to manage these impacts.”

Co-author Paul Leiby, distinguished research scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, said: “Because automation has the potential to provide convenient, lower-cost mobility, we see it could have large implications for transportation demand, energy use and resulting CO2 emissions, by both passengers and freight. For example, low-cost automated trucking could shift more freight away from efficient railways to trucks. To make continued progress in reducing carbon emissions from light-duty vehicles and large trucks in the face of expanded mobility, it will be essential to couple vehicle automation with the extensive use of advanced low-carbon vehicles, like electric or hydrogen vehicles.”

The study says many of the energy benefits of self-driving technology could be delivered by systems that still require the human driver to pay attention to the road and therefore do not radically alter transport decision-making.

The authors suggest that policymakers could focus less on accelerating the introduction of complete automation and more on promoting aspects of automation with positive environmental outcomes. For instance, regulators could encourage standardisation of car networking protocols to allow vehicles to communicate with each other on the road and therefore deliver benefits such as “platooning.”

The researchers warn that, if a high level of automation becomes the norm, it may be necessary to financially intervene in transport decisions. For example, self-driving cars’ navigation and communication systems could be used as a basis for road pricing schemes to control congestion and reduce overall travel demand.

Motivating Smokers with Mental Illness to Quit

New Brunswick, NJ – Significantly more individuals who smoke and have a serious mental illness made a sincere attempt to quit after receiving a single, 45-minute counseling session, compared to those who received an interactive educational intervention. According to a study published in Nicotine & Tobacco Research by investigators at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, the brief counseling session is more effective because it utilizes an adaptation of motivational interviewing, a goal-oriented, client-centered style facilitating change.

“Our research found that a brief motivational interviewing intervention is a reasonable approach for increasing quit attempts, even in smokers with serious mental illness who were not initially interested in quitting,” said Marc L. Steinberg, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and lead author of the study. “The findings suggest that motivational interviewing may be a more productive approach than traditional educational interventions.

“Many healthcare providers assume that individuals with serious mental illness will only respond to very intensive interventions, and therefore, do nothing due to time constraints.” Dr. Steinberg continued. “On the contrary, our data indicates that smokers with serious mental illness will respond to even a very brief intervention.”

While motivational interviewing provided a benefit with regard to quit attempts, Dr. Steinberg and his colleagues found that many of the quit attempts did not translate into lasting abstinence.

“Individuals with serious mental illness are less likely to quit as compared to those without mental illness, and while we were able to use a brief intervention to encourage quit attempts, it is likely to require more intensive treatments, including counseling and pharmacotherapy, to produce longer-term abstinence,” said Dr. Steinberg. Nicotine & Tobacco Research named Dr. Steinberg’s study as the Editor’s Choice in the March issue.

“The results of the Steinberg study suggests the usefulness of motivational interviewing with adults with SMI [serious mental illness] as well. Future studies can build on these results to determine the best ways to motivate the greatest number of adults with SMI to make a quit attempt,” according to the journal’s editorial. The study and editorial were published in advance online at http://ntr.oxfordjournals.org/content/18/3/243.

The study was supported by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health (5K23DA018203 and 1R34DA030652) awarded to Dr. Steinberg. Jill Williams, MD; Patricia Dooley Budsock, MA; and Nina Cooperman, PsyD, of Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and Naomi Stahl of American University, contributed to the study.

Analyzing Genetic Tree Sheds New Light on Disease Outbreaks

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Feb. 25, 2016—Scientists have a new tool for unraveling the mysteries of how diseases such as HIV move through a population, thanks to insights into phylogenetics, the creation of an organism’s genetic tree and evolutionary relationships.

“It turns out that three different types of transmission histories are possible between two persons who might have infected each other,” said Thomas Leitner of Los Alamos National Laboratory, the corresponding author of a new paper out this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “Using phylogenetic inference in the epidemiological investigations of HIV transmission, we’ve determined that between two sampled, potentially epidemiologically linked persons, we can now evaluate the possibility that an unsampled intermediary or common source existed, even without a sample from that individual.”

Like a detective inferring the existence of an unseen actor in a sequence of events, the Los Alamos team used computational phylogenetic analysis to examine how strains of HIV, both in computer modeling and compared with real-life case studies, would be transmitted.

The team’s research has broad implications. “The inference of donor-recipient relationships we describe here is not restricted to HIV transmissions; it applies to all situations when an original population seeds a new population with a restricted random draw (a bottleneck) of individuals. We use HIV transmission to illustrate the effects because it helps trace contacts among people and untangle investigations into outbreaks. Also, statistical guidelines are needed for interpreting phylogenetic results in court.”

Analyzing Genetic Tree Sheds New Light on Disease Outbreaks
Using computational techniques, scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory are working to more clearly understand how diseases such as HIV are spread. In this image, arrows indicate actual transmission; red and blue persons are sampled, and the grey outline person is an unsampled link discovered in the computer analysis of the phylogenetic trees of the disease agents. Image courtesy Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Phylogenetic inference of who infected whom has great value in epidemiological investigations, the authors point out, because it should explain how transmission(s) occurred. Until now, however, there has not been a systematic evaluation of which phylogeny to expect from different transmission histories, and thus interpreting the meaning of an observed phylogeny has remained elusive.

“Previously it was thought that it would be impossible to say who infected whom and whether there were unsampled intermediary links in an alleged transmission, or if both persons were infected by an unsampled/unknown third party. We show that this is now possible in many cases,” Leitner said. “This will have large impact on future epidemiological investigations, including forensics and outbreak investigations.”

In the paper, the team showed that certain types of phylogenies associate with different transmission histories, which may make it possible to exclude possible intermediary links or identify cases where a common source was likely but not sampled. “Our systematic classification and evaluation of expected topologies should make future interpretation of phylogenetic results in epidemiological investigations more objective and informative,” Leitner said.

The paper is titled “Phylogenetically resolving epidemiologic linkage,” by Ethan O. Romero-Severson, Ingo Bulla, and Thomas Leitner. The work was supported by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases/National Institutes of Health.

New Study Shows Link Between ADHD and Vision Impairment in Children

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder is one of the most frequently encountered neurodevelopmental disorders of childhood, and a new study from researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently published in Optometry and Vision Science shows a relationship between ADHD and vision problems in children.

Results from a large survey of 75,000 children suggest an increased risk of ADHD among children with vision problems that are not correctable with glasses or contacts relative to other children with 15.6 percent of children with vision impairment also having an ADHD diagnosis, compared with 8.3 percent of children with normal vision. These types of vision problems could range from color vision deficiency to a lazy eye but would also include children with vision impairment. The study included children ages 4 to 17 enrolled in the National Survey of Children’s Health.

This finding suggests that children with vision impairment should be monitored for signs and symptoms of ADHD so that if present, this dual impairment of vision and attention can best be addressed.

Director of the UAB Center for Low Vision Rehabilitation, Dawn DeCarlo, O.D., was the lead investigator on the study. She says just because vision problems that are not correctable with glasses or contacts are associated with ADHD that does not mean that one causes the other.

The national study was produced in response to patients of DeCarlo exhibiting vision impairment and ADHD. A previous paper reported an increased prevalence of ADHD among the children in her vision rehabilitation clinic.

“Because we do not know if the relationship is causal, we have no recommendations for prevention,” DeCarlo said. “I think it is more important that parents realize that children with vision problems may also have attention problems and that both require professional diagnosis and treatment.”

So if your child has vision problems, should you be worried about them developing ADHD?

“I wouldn’t worry about them developing ADHD,” DeCarlo said. “But if they seemed to have symptoms of ADHD I’d make sure that all of their vision needs are addressed through proper eye care and vision rehabilitation and would have them evaluated by an expert in attention disorders.” Other co-authors from UAB included Cynthia Owsley, Ph.D., Gerald McGwin, Ph.D., Mark Swanson, O.D.,and Kristina Visscher, Ph.D.

Jasmeet Singh Forced To Remove Turban At SFO Airport

SAN FRANCISCO: An Indo-Canadian Toronto-based Sikh comedian and YouTube and Vine star, Jasmeet Singh — better known online as ‘JusReign’ alleged that he was forced to take off his turban at the San Francisco airport during a security check, weeks after a Sikh-American actor was barred from boarding a flight in Mexico for refusing to take off his turban.

Although airline officials provided a private room for him to remove his turban so that it could be X-rayed, Singh said they would not provide a mirror for him to retie his turban, and suggested that Singh walk through the airport terminal bareheaded to find a public restroom in which to retie his turban.

“Pretty much the vibe that I was getting was that we’ve done our business, we’ve taken care of our security measures,” Singh told NBC News, “and you’re not our problem anymore. We’re not going to accommodate you now that we’ve done what we need to do.”

“Like any Sikh man in my position, it was demoralizing and embarrassing, to be sent out after being forced to remove my turban,” Singh, whose YouTube channel has nearly 700,000 subscribers and more than 99,000,000 views, said. “I’ve done YouTube videos where I have shown my hair and I have shown how to tie a turban, so I’m more comfortable in the public space, but if it was anyone else in my position — another Sikh man or maybe a woman in hijab — to force them to walk out to use a bathroom to tie their turban or hijab again, it’s kind of ridiculous. Just bringing a mirror to the private screening room will allow them to put it on again, which is not that big of a hassle on their end.”

In response to Singh’s experience, the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund (SALDEF) told NBC News that they contacted the Department of Justice (DOJ) and TSA as soon as they heard about what happened.

“We are disappointed but unfortunately not surprised by the situation faced by JusReign,” SALDEF Executive Director Jasjit Singh said. “TSA policies have been created to prevent this sort of humiliation. We need more trainings to ensure that security officials on the ground are aware of the policies.”

Harmann P. Singh, a policy fellow at SALDEF, added that SALDEF has worked to conduct trainings with TSA agents in 34 cities, and has trained agents who have served in hundreds of locations across the country. Since Singh began tweeting Sunday night, fans and others have spoken out on Twitter in support.

Santa Barbara Museum showcasing Hindu gods

The Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA) in California is showcasing images of Hindu deities in an upcoming exhibition “Puja and Piety”, which will run from April 17 to August 28. It includes 12th century volcanic stone sculpture of Shiva, 11th century sandstone sculpture of Balarama, 19th century paintings of Kali and Devi, cart of Vishnu, etc.

It presents over 160 objects of diverse media created over the past two millennia and is one of the major presentations of the SBMA’s 75th-anniversary year in 2016. Commending SBMA for exhibiting Hindu artifacts, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, said that art had a long and rich tradition in Hinduism and ancient Sanskrit literature talked about religious paintings of deities on wood or cloth.

Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, urged major art museums of the world, including Musee du Louvre and Musee d’Orsay of Paris, Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Los Angeles Getty Center, Uffizi Gallery of Florence (Italy), Art Institute of Chicago, Tate Modern of London, Prado Museum of Madrid, National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, etc., to frequently organize Hindu art focused exhibitions, thus sharing the rich Hindu art heritage with the rest of the world.

SBMA, whose Guiding Principles include “stimulate thought”; comprises of 27,000 works of art spanning over 5,000 years of human creativity, including classical antiquities and Monet paintings; serves about 150,000 visitors annually. Larry J. Feinberg is the Director, while John C. Bishop Junior is the Trustees Chair.

Vinod Khosla Demands $30 Million To Allow Access To ‘His’ Beach

Vinod Khosla, founder of Sun Microsystems, sparked public resentment earlier this month in San Francisco when he asked for $30 million from the State of California for allowing public access to Martins Beach, he had bought eight years ago.

The prime 53-acre parcel of Martins Beach, a haven for the beach-going public that Khosla had bought for US $37.5 million eight years ago, has become contentious in recent days. Initially, the Silicon Valley venture capitalist had let people use the beach, but in 2010 locked the gates on Martins Beach Road and posted guards, according to a New York Times report. But now Khosla is demanding $30 million from the state for re-opening the gates of the beach for public and also give access to another 39.5-acre parcel that includes coastal cliffs.

For nearly a century, the beach was a “popular destination for fishing, picnicking, and surfing and other recreational uses”, according to the California state lands commission. The previous owners provided a general store and public restroom and allowed the public to visit the beach, charging a fee for parking.

After purchasing the property, Khosla, who does not live on the property, initially continued to allow public access. But in 2010, he closed the gate and put up signs warning against trespass, prompting multiple lawsuits as well as legislation that required the commission to negotiate with Khosla about restoring public access.

In a letter to the State Lands Commission Khosla’s lawyer said that an “easement leading over his property” in San Mateo County to the beach would cost California about $30 million, not including the enormous additional costs for road repairs, annual operations and maintenance.

According to reports,. Khosla’s lawyer Dori Yob offered the estimate in a February 3 letter to the state Court of Appeal, which is handling one of several lawsuits over the property. The report said quoting Jennifer Lucchesi, the executive officer of the State Lands Commission, as saying that she was equally taken aback when she received the letter, which she submitted as evidence in the case. The commission contends the tidelands Khosla claims are actually owned by the state. “We have not seen any documentation or analysis supporting that $30 million value,” Lucchesi said.

Gary Redenbacher, a lawyer for Friends of Martins Beach that sued Khosla in San Mateo Superior Court said that the $30 million figure is rather amusing and that the state Constitution makes all beaches public property.

The report said that Friends of Martins Beach sued in San Mateo Superior Court, and Judge Gerald Buchwald ruled in Khosla’s favor in 2013, saying the beach was subject to the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War and required the United States to recognize Mexican land grants. In essence, Buchwald said, the beach had been in private hands long before laws were passed requiring public access to the coast, the SFGate report said.

But whatever be the outcome of the battle in the court that is expected to give its decision in summer this year, the issue has become the latest “class-charged standoff” involving a wealthy entrepreneur.

“People are saying, ‘Talk about entitlement: Rich people think they can get away with anything,’” the New York Times quoted Rob Caughlan, the former president of the non-profit Surfrider Foundation, as saying. “All we want is to get Khosla to follow the same law as everyone else does,” the report said. Beah goers had been staging protest outside the locked gates, demanding reopening of the beach.

The state commission’s executive officer, Jennifer Lucchesi, said on Tuesday that the state did not agree that the “value of the public access” was $30m. She wrote in an email: “We believe the fair market value is significantly less than that. As of today, we have not seen any documentation or analysis supporting the $30 million value.”

Prasad Moparti’s Death On Visit To Daughter’s Wedding Shocks Many

Prasad Moparti traveled all the way from his native Hyderabad to Sacramento, California, to attend his daughter’s wedding reception in January this year. Last week, police found his body floating in a river a few miles from the reception at historic Grand Island Mansion in Walnut Grove.

Law enforcement officials were unsure as to what had happened to the 55-year-old man who reportedly disappeared from the wedding reception on February 13, or how he landed in river water. He was reported missing that day by his relatives, who told authorities that he had left on foot and never returned.

Reports said quoting family members that he walked away about 4 p.m. from his daughter’s wedding reception at the Grand Island Mansion, a popular waterfront wedding resort in the region’s delta region about 30 miles south of Sacramento. He was reported missing a few hours later.

“Our only focus is to get our father back,” a local Fox affiliate quoted his daughter Durga as saying,’ according to an earlier report by Washington Post. She said she and the family will continue efforts until Moparti was found and brought back home.

But by the time Moparti was found, he was dead. News reports said the Sacramento County coroner confirmed that authorities had found the body of Moparti, Feb. 22 in a waterway about five miles downstream from the wedding reception where he was last seen alive Feb. 13.

The Washington Post earlier said Sheriff’s officials searched for three days for Moparti “utilizing all resources” to find Moparti who was not familiar with the area, but in vain, but the officials said at that time that no foul play or suspicious circumstances were suspected.

Sgt. Tony Turnbull, a sheriff’s department spokesman, told the Post after he went missing that Investigators believed Moparti was suffering from “some kind of depression.” His daughter, however, said that her father was an active participant in the wedding events.

At the wedding itself, “our dad was really very happy,” she said, according to Sacramento Bee. “He was dancing. He was really joyful.” Investigators said they have not determined whether Moparti’s died accidentally. “We may never know what happened,” Turnbull was quoted as sayin

Sikhs in US raise $400,000 to create awareness about Sikhism

San Francisco, CA: Sikhs in the US and around the world have been often misjudged or wrongly identified and subjected to harassment by people with little understanding of Sikhism. Efforts have been underway, especially after 9/11 attacks, to create awareness about the Sikh faith and the followers of Sikhism.

In a very first time in the fund raising efforts of Sikhs, the organization committed to creating awareness about their faith in America, has been able to raise $400,000. This is the first time, Sikhs have raised this amount of money to spread the awareness about their faith in America.

“This is a historic moment for the Sikh community in America. Never before have we had the opportunity to tell our story to our fellow Americans and that time has come now,” said, Kaval Kaur, National charter member of National Sikh Campaign(NSC). Previous record is of USD 90,000 in NSC’s Los Angeles Gala last year.

At a fund raising gala in San Francisco Bay Area, television advertisements created by AKPD, former President Obama’s campaign media team, were unveiled, a statement said. Last year, National Sikh Campaign had hired the services of AKPD and Hart Research Associates which is headed by Geoff Garin, Hillary Clinton’s former chief strategic advisor, to develop the messaging and framework of these advertisements.

Among the attendees were prominent Sikh entrepreneurs, leading Silicon Valley IT professionals, Medical doctors, owners of trucking companies and officials of all gurdwaras in the area. “We, Sikhs, need to change the narrative and present the correct image of who we are, showcasing how we are totally integrated in the American society and not only as victims,” said Rajwant Singh, co-founder of National Sikh Campaign, who presented the overview of the campaign and appealed to the audience to donate for the cause.

Reports here state that the Sikhs in the US are increasing their efforts for a national media campaign to generate awareness among Americans about their religion in the backdrop of increasing hate crimes against the community.

Republican hopeful Donald Trump, known for his caustic remarks and attitude towards Muslims, refugees and certain ethnicities, had recently attacked a Sikh man. Why? Because of the latter’s turban. The Sikh man was escorted out of a Donald Trump rally at Muscatine High School, Iowa.

This happened after the man interrupted Trump’s speech by displaying a banner that read ‘Stop Hate’. Trump then pointed to the crowd, referring to the protester and another person accompanying him, and said, “He wasn’t wearing one of those hats, was he? And he never will, and that’s OK because we got to do something folks because it’s not working.”

Indian American-Led “Democrats For Truth” Attacks Rep. Ami Bera

Congressman Ami Bera, running for reelection in the state of California has come under attacks by his own party men, this time, surprisingly by a group led by an Indian American, “Sacramento Democrats For Truth.” Led by Amar Shergill, a former Bera supporter an Indian-American, the new group has launched an attack on Rep. Ami Bera, D-California, on grounds he has “refused” to provide documentation about his overseas trips and that donors to his campaign had overseas interests.

Bera’s support among local Democrats in his district suffered a blow when local unions refused to endorse him for his vote in favor of President Obama’s Trans Pacific Partnership trade pact. Bera is now relying on getting enough support at the state party convention Feb. 26-28, to get re-nominated for his third term race. He is unopposed.

California’s District 7 is almost equally divided along party lines and has a significant uncommitted voter base, has proved a tough seat and Bera has won with small margins. Republicans have targeted the district for takeover.

Ami Bera won reelection over a year ago with a razor thin margin. Now with strong opposition from both Democrats, Labor Unions and Republicans, his reelection bid in the November 2016 election has come to be recognized as even harder. The National Republican Congressional Committee’s (NRCC) ad has tried to distort Bera’s record of finding bipartisan solutions and protecting and strengthening Medicare and defending against efforts to privatize Social Security.

“Congressman Ose’s DC Republican backers are just repeating the same tired old lies,” said Bera spokesperson Allison Teixeira. “They are resorting to more misleading attacks to try to distract voters from Ose’s partisan record of voting with his political party nearly 95 percent of the time while helping enrich himself and his Wall Street friends, and voting to privatize Social Security.”

According to Rep. Bera’s website, Bera has a clear record of finding bipartisan solutions to our nation’s challenges as a leader of the Problem Solvers’ No Labels coalition, and is one of the most moderate members of Congress. He is also an ardent defender of Social Security and Medicare, recently announcing the support of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare (NCPSSM) and the Alliance for Retired Americans (ARA) because he has been “a leader in the fight to preserve and protect Social Security and Medicare,” and has “a proven record of fighting plans that would end the Medicare guarantee for our seniors.”

In a press release, the Sacramento Democrats For Truth said that despite requests from some party delegates, Bera “has refused to provide documents describing payments for his overseas trips, with whom he meets and his political contributors with more than $1 million in assets overseas.” The group said they had gone through Bera’s campaign finance filings, and remain “troubled by contributions from those that appear to be closely connected to foreign investment funds and foreign nations.”

Bera calls the accusations unfounded and that all regulations relating to foreign trips had been complied with and quarterly filings with the Federal Elections Commission were public. Even Shergill conceded that Bera would get the state party endorsement this coming weekend. “At the state convention, it’s very likely the party establishment will rescue his endorsement and he will get it even though he is rejected by his local Democrats,” Shergill said.

Shergill’s list of 9 contributors to Bera, virtually all of them venture capitalists, showed none of them had given money to SuperPACs with overseas interests. Rather, they had contributed the maximum allowed, $2,700 to Bera and given large amounts to Democratic Party or Democratic candidate SuperPACs.

“All of the Congressman’s contributions are publicly available and disclosed on a quarterly basis, and as a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee he complies with all travel disclosure rules,” Congressman Bera’s campaign manager Jerid Kurtz said. “It’s unfortunate that the same detractors that worked against the Congressman since 2014 are continuing to lob baseless accusations,” Kurtz added.

Priyanka Chopra Joins Cast Of ‘Baywatch’ Movie

Indian actress Priyanka Chopra is out to put India on the global map again. She is on board to play the villain in the upcoming “Baywatch” movie, based on the hugely popular 1990s TV series, Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson announced via an online video.

“She’s one of the biggest stars in the world… the beautiful Priyanka Chopra, welcome to ‘Baywatch’,” Johnson said in a video posted on Instagram. He is seen in the frame with the former beauty queen against seaside and excitement seems to be at its peak.

Priyanka, who has found international popularity after playing the lead role in American show “Quantico”, shared on social media: “And it’s time to tell you all officially! Baywatch it is! Being bad is what I do best!!! You better watch out!”

Her debut film in Bollywood, “Aitraaz”, in fact featured her in a negative role. In “Baywatch”, she will be seen essaying Victoria Leeds, said a report by people.com.

In an Instagram post to welcome Priyanka, Johnson wrote: “She’s one of the biggest stars in the world. Insanely talented, relentlessly smokin’ and extremely dangerous – perfect for ‘Baywatch’. Welcome Priyanka Chopra to our bad a** and incredibly dysfunctional family.”

One of the most watched TV shows globally, “Baywatch”, was about the Los Angeles county lifeguards who patrol the beaches of Los Angeles, California. It starred David Hasselhoff and Pamela Anderson among others. Priyanka will begin shooting for the movie version of the show with its cast and crew next week.

Messages congratulating the actress, who was named to receive the Padma Shri honour from the Indian government last month, poured in from her friends in Bollywood. “Dostana” director Tarun Mansukhani, who made Priyanka act in a golden swimsuit for a scene in Miami, wrote to her: “You’re the only one who can make a red swimsuit sexier than a gold one!!! Way to go Priyanka Chopra!!!”

Indian-American Starrer ‘The Jungle Book’ To Open In April

Disney’s “The Jungle Book”, starring 12-year-old Indian-American Neel Sethi as Mowgli, has a special treat in store for Indian fans of the timeless tale. The film will come out in the Indian theaters on April 8, a week before it releases in the US.

“We are thrilled to confirm that Disney’s all-new live-action epic, ‘The Jungle Book’, will be out in Indian theatres a week prior to the US release. We have a few more surprises in store for ‘The Jungle Book’ fans in India,” Amrita Pandey — vice president, Studios, Disney India, said in a statement.

Directed by “Iron Man” fame Jon Favreau, and featuring voices by iconic actors like Ben Kingsley, Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Idris Elba and Christopher Walken, “The Jungle Book” is an all-new live-action epic adventure about Mowgli, a man-cub raised in the jungle by a family of wolves.

Mowgli embarks on a captivating journey of self-discovery when he is forced to abandon the only home he has ever known. It is based on the adventure stories penned by Rudyard Kipling and inspired by Disney’s animated adaptation.

The movie blends live-action with photorealistic CGI animals and environments, using high-end technology and storytelling techniques to immerse audiences. “Tales of ‘The Jungle Book’ have been an intrinsic part of most of our growing up years. Adventurous stories of Mowgli, Baloo, Bagheera, Kaa and Shere Khan are so beloved by the Indian audience,” Pandey added.

Hicksville Middle School team reaches Robotics competition finals

HICKSVILLE, NY: Hicksville Middle School’s Meteorites robotics created last year has made tremendous progress, reaching the finals in the FIRST LEGO Robotics Competition.

The South Asian dominated team comprises: Somya Mehta, Sejal Gupta, Rishika Thayavally, Viveka Jain, Victor Lobo, Dylan Gaznabbi, Rohan Manjrekar, Esha Singh, Aniket Sonika and Jaskaran Kohli. Catherine Temps is their coach, and their mentor is Indian American Shiv Chopra, President of Hicksville High School’s robotics program. Lauren Colwell and Michael Johnson are also mentors.

The Meteorites will meet JFK middle school’s Robotic Raccoons and other teams in the finals to be held on February 28 at Longwood High School, in Suffolk County, Long Island.

This year’s tournament theme being Trash Trek, the Hicksville Meteorites team tried to solve the problem of microbeads, little plastic balls that threaten the environment. Seeking help from professors and politicians, they were able to learn more about the issue and find solutions. And of course, the team was regularly meeting for the past several months to build and program the LEGO robot to perform tasks relating to trash as required by the competition.

A rookie team, Hicksville Middle School’s Meteorites has reached the FIRST LEGO Robotics Competition. Their mentor Shiv Chopra (front row, extreme right) is President of Hicksville High School’s robotics program.

NYCEDC And CUNY Launch IN2NYC H1B sponsorship Program For International Entrepreneurs

IN2NYC H1B, an initiative of the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC), in partnership with CUNY and is one of the first of its kind municipal program in the nation designed to help international entrepreneurs access visas so they can create jobs in the United States.

IN2NYC is expected to help up to 80 selected entrepreneurs gain access to the visas they need to grow their businesses in New York City, and is projected to create more than 700 jobs for New Yorkers in the first three years alone.

These 80 Entrepreneurs who would qualify for the H-1B visa will be outside the annual cap of 85,000 H-1B visas issued by the DHS, which now has a lottery system in place. Last year, 233,000 people applied for H-1B visa; with only around 1/3rd of applicants finally getting it. This year, more applications than ever before are expected when filing begins April 1.

IN2NYC will also serve as a model that can be scaled and expanded at both public and private schools throughout New York City, with the potential to ultimately contribute thousands of jobs to the city’s innovation economy. The program advances the de Blasio administration’s goals of encouraging entrepreneurship and supporting international partnerships to build a diverse and inclusive economy for New Yorkers in every borough.

IN2NYC will partner selected entrepreneurs with one of seven participating CUNY institutions: Baruch College, City College of New York, LaGuardia Community College, Lehman College, Medgar Evers College, Queens College, and the College of Staten Island. Entrepreneurs will be required to base their businesses in their partner school’s incubator, bringing new services, revenue streams, and employment opportunities to neighborhoods and strengthening their innovation ecosystems. Entrepreneurs must also commit to support the mission of the partner school by contributing to academic research, developing curricula, providing students with internship and employment opportunities, or serving as mentors.

The program is designed to foster innovation ecosystems and diversify the economy by retaining international talent that has been educated locally, and attract entrepreneurs from abroad who have skills and knowledge that would benefit CUNY students and educators. NYCEDC will begin accepting applications for IN2NYC this spring, with the first group of entrepreneurs expected to be in place by the fall. For more information, go to www.in2.nyc.

“This is a win for our universities, our working people and our city’s ability to compete on the global stage. We are making sure New York City remains a magnet for the world’s top talent, and putting New Yorkers to work at the technology and engineering firms of tomorrow,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

“The success of our innovation ecosystem is rooted in the diversity and the talent of our people,” said NYCEDC President Maria Torres-Springer. “For too long, we would graduate some of the world’s smartest entrepreneurs, only to send them packing as soon as they got their degree. This ends today. IN2NYC is the first city run program in the US to help international entrepreneurs access the visas they need to grow businesses, create jobs, and cultivate the next generation of talented New Yorkers. No matter our national origins, we’ve got to be One New York, innovating together.”

“New York City has created an innovative pathway for the next generation of international entrepreneurs to launch their businesses right here in NYC,” said Penny Abeywardena, Mayor’s Office for International Affairs Commissioner. “Not only does the IN2NYC program encourage entrepreneurship, and builds and strengthens New York City’s international partnerships, but the program also directly benefits CUNY students by training them on how to launch their own businesses. IN2NYC is good for the international entrepreneurs, good for the New York City neighborhoods in which they will grow their startups and create jobs, and good for the CUNY students who will be mentored by these innovators. Moreover, it reinforces New York City’s role as a global hub for innovation.”

“The program underscores how immigrants are integral to the economic, social, and cultural life of our City. New York City reaps countless benefits when immigrant entrepreneurs have opportunities to build their businesses. Through the IN2NYC program, the de Blasio administration demonstrates again how building a welcoming and inclusive city benefits all New Yorkers,” said Commissioner Nisha Agarwal of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs.

“Simply put, IN2NYC is a game-changer for NYC in the global competition to attract world-class tech talent and the businesses of tomorrow,” said Chief Technology Officer for the City of New York Minerva Tantoco. “IN2NYC builds on the Big Apple’s proud tradition of inviting bold and entrepreneurial thinkers to come to NYC and invent the future. IN2NYC supercharges the de Blasio administration’s goal of making New York the most tech-friendly and innovative city in the world.”

MoneyGram Cricket Bee Launched: Cricket Fans Get A Chance To Win $10,000

New York, NY: Leading multicultural marketing firm, Touchdown Media Inc. and MoneyGram, (NASDAQ: MGI) a leading global money transfer service, have announced the kick-off of the first annual Cricket Bee sponsored by MoneyGram on February 24th. The new competition allows cricket fans to compete for prizes while sharing their knowledge of the game in an effort to win a cash prize of $10,000.

Open to those 18 and older, the contest will begin with regional rounds in New Jersey, San Francisco and Toronto, each testing participants’ general cricket knowledge. The regional contest will have two components, a written test and an oral test. In the written qualifier, contestants will be asked 35 questions. They must get at least 25 correct in order to advance to the oral round. In the oral round, the contest will be held on a miss and out basis; simply if a contestant misses the right answer, they are eliminated.

The three finalists in each regional round will move on to the grand finals. Unlike quiz shows, the Cricket Bee will be conducted so that contestants are actually competing with themselves and the question posed to them as opposed to their peers. In the oral round, the initial rounds will be category wise.

Contestants can register to compete in the game of their choice at www.cricketbee.com. A sample set of questions and sources will be provided for the participants. “We are proud to sponsor the 2016 Cricket Bee,” says Joann Chatfield, MoneyGram’s vice president of marketing. “We know that the passion for cricket unites friends and loved ones around the world and brings them closer together. It’s always exciting to be a part of initiatives that support our South Asian communities.

Expressing her keen interest and understanding of cricket and the enthusiasm it generates among South Asians, while addressing a gathering of media persons at a Midtown Manhattan restaurant, Joann Chatfield, MoneyGram’s vice president of marketing had said last year, “We are proud to sponsor the 2016 Cricket Bee. We know that the passion for cricket unites friends and loved ones around the world and brings them closer together. It’s always exciting to be a part of initiatives that support our South Asian communities”.

Joann has served as vice president of marketing, since January 2013, most recently responsible for the US, Canada, UK, Ireland and northern Europe. Chatfield previously served as vice president, global marketing and services, and director of marketing, US and Canada. Since joining MoneyGram in May 2011, Chatfield has a proven track record of building and leading highly productive global teams, as well as demonstrated her proficiency in the intricacies of a complex, global, multi-cultural brand.

Joann has taken on several leadership roles and has consistently shown her business acumen with her innate ability to drive a wide range of internal and external marketing and communication strategies designed to establish market presence, and increase revenue and profitability.

Prior to joining MoneyGram, Joann served in a number of business development and marketing roles within the finance and telecommunication industries. She is a graduate of the University of New Mexico with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications.

Kawan Foods will serve as the powered by sponsor for the innovative event and has been deeply involved with the South Asian community through various initiatives and hopes to connect with the entire Cricketing community here in the US and Canada. “Cricket is an integral part of the demographic and as a household brand, we want to involve ourselves with initiatives that bring the community together,” said Tim Tan, MD Kawan Foods.

The brainchild of Founder Rahul Walia, who is credited with launching the successful South Asian Spelling Bee and other multicultural platforms, the Bee promises to attract all Cricket enthusiasts to test their knowledge and skills.

“The game of Cricket is an integral part of any commonwealth Expat community in North America and the objective is to leverage the passion of the sport to engage the diaspora in a fun and informative manner while promoting the game to the next generation,” said Walia.

TV Asia will serve as the exclusive broadcaster for the event and has been a strong proponent of promoting Cricket in the country. The broadcaster has been avidly involved with American College Cricket and also sponsors school children to play cricket in India.

“As the oldest broadcast medium for the community, it’s definitely an honor to be the exclusive broadcaster for the first ever MoneyGram Cricket Bee. We pride ourselves with connecting with our community and this initiative is in line with our continued commitment to the diaspora in North America,” said HR Shah, chairman and CEO of TV Asia and an avid cricketer himself.

MoneyGram is a global provider of innovative money transfer services and is recognized worldwide as a financial connection to friends and family. Whether online, or through a mobile device, at a kiosk or in a local store, we connect consumers any way that is convenient for them. We also provide bill payment services, issue money orders and process official checks in select markets. More information about MoneyGram International, Inc. is available at moneygram.com.

TV Asia is a New Jersey based Pay TV Channel with more than 30 bureaus in major cities of North America. It is the only South Asian channel to cover the community coast-to-coast in this part of the world, making it the voice and mirror of the community. The channel is the only South Asian network to produce a major portion of its programming in North America. It is available in USA in HD on Dish Satellite Channel 700, Sling International IPTV and in SD on major Cable systems such as Comcast Xfinity, Time Warner, Cablevision etc including Verizon FIOS & AT & T U Verse. TV Asia is celebrating 23 years in the United States. For further information, visit www.tvasiausa.com

Touchdown Media Inc. is a specialized South Asian advertising and promotions firm based in New Jersey. Now in its 12th successful year, Touchdown has helped clients- both mainstream and otherwise, reach out to the lucrative South Asian market, Touchdown Media represents more than 35 years of collective experience in this niche market. As a full service ad firm, Touchdown has helped many clients achieve their media and marketing goals within the South Asian Diaspora in the US.

Shalini Vadhera Unveiling Experiential Power Beauty Living Platform At UN

(New York, NY: February 25th, 2016) – Shalini Vadhera, a renowned, award-winning global beauty and lifestyle expert, founder and CEO of Power Beauty Living, and best-selling author of Passport To Beauty, proudly takes her Power Beauty Living brand global on February 29th, 2016 at the United Nations alongside IMPACT Leadership 21, for an exclusive VIP POWER UP Networking and Cocktail event.

Vadhera was recently appointed to IMPACT Leadership 21’s Global Advisory Council (GAC) as its newest member. A global leadership platform that provides solutions to creating inclusive economies, IMPACT Leadership 21’s GAC is comprised of men and women in diverse leadership backgrounds and influence from multi sectors.

“We are thrilled to add such a dynamic, passionate leader with a strong track record of success and zest for empowering women to the GAC. Shalini’s extensive entrepreneurial experience and industry knowledge is a welcomed addition to our team, especially as we expand our international reach,” said Janet C. Salazar CEO and Co-Founder of IMPACT Leadership 21.

On February 29th 2016, Vadhera will be unveiling her experiential Power Beauty Living platform – a holistic approach to powering up your business, beauty and life for women, by women – at IMPACT Leadership 21’s 3rd Annual POWER of COLLABORATION Global Summit at the Power Beauty Living VIP Networking and Cocktail reception, at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City. Vadhera will be showcasing how to live powerfully and beautifully to over 150 country heads, diplomats, ambassadors and high-level executive women from the United Nations. One of summit’s highlights will include a diverse panel of global thought leaders in the beauty, health and wellness space, curated by Vadhera, to discuss initiatives they’re implementing to turn conversations into action. Distinguished guests will also be treated to an enriching Power Beauty Living interactive experience and receive exclusive VIP gift bags from highly curated beauty and lifestyle brands.

“IMPACT Leadership 21’s Global Advisory Council is a first-class team of passionate innovators, creators and entrepreneurs and I’m thrilled to be a part of such a trailblazing group. I’m confident that together we will find unique ways to thrive in today’s increasingly diverse workplace and create game changing programs to help women live empowered and to lead their best lives. I’m excited to be bringing my Power Beauty Living platform to the United Nations to inspire women to be strong leaders while living their best life,” said Shalini Vadhera.

Vadhera created Power Beauty Living based on her own business experiences as an entrepreneur and the lack of mentorship, community and resources for women by women, in building their businesses and balancing their lives. She felt a strong desire to create a destination for women to get the insight and tools they needed to empower themselves in business, by providing mentorship, in beauty and in living a blissful balanced life.

Shalini Vadhera is an award-winning global beauty and lifestyle expert, founder of Power Beauty Living, a social platform for women, and best-selling author of Passport To Beauty. Her global influence with women and young girls stems from her entrepreneurial passion to build companies and create products to empower women. Vadhera’s rise from jewelry and fashion entrepreneur, celebrity make-up artist and best-selling author, to a regular contributor on Dr. Oz, The Today Show, and The View and the founder of a multi-million dollar global cosmetics company is nothing short of remarkable. Vadhera has transformed this platform while using her business acumen to create global beauty, lifestyle and business solutions to empower women around the world. Vadhera was named the #1 Person To Watch by The Economic Times of India, Winner of the Game Changer Of The Decade Award in Beauty and winner of the coveted Oprah Beauty O~Ward.

For more information, please visit: www.passport2beauty.com; www.powerbeautyliving.com

Alex Counts Is The New President And CEO Of American India Foundation

New York, NY: Alex Counts has been named as AIF’s next President and Chief Executive Officer, effective March 29. Courts worked extensively in microfinance and poverty reduction and will continue to build and scale AIF’s presence by leveraging its strong spectrum and networks as well as ensuring that AIF stays at the cutting-edge of innovative solutions for poverty alleviation and economic development in India, said a statement made available to The Indian Panorama by AIF

After training under Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus, the founder and managing director of Grameen Bank, Counts became president and CEO of Grameen Foundation in 1997 where he leveraged a $6,000 seed grant to grow Grameen Foundation to a global leader in international development with a $20 million annual budget.

Counts’ thought leadership in the field include the award-winning book, Small Loans, Big Dreams: How Nobel Prize Winner Muhammad Yunus and Microfinance Are Changing the World and Voices From the Field, and numerous contributions to The Washington Post, the International Herald Tribune, the Stanford Social Innovation Review, and many more.

“Alex is a highly regarded development leader who built one of the most successful international humanitarian organizations in the world,” said co-founder of AIF and Co-Chair Lata Krishnan. “He not only has the management experience, passion and drive, but also deep experience in India and South Asia to create the strongest development programs in India.”

“I am honored to have been selected to lead AIF in its next phase of growth. The achievements and capabilities of this organization are remarkable,” said Counts. “I look forward to leading the team to build on its impressive achievements and become an even more impactful, respected, and resilient organization that disrupts poverty and accelerates poverty reduction in exciting and innovative ways.”

Counts succeeds M.A. Ravi Kumar, who joined AIF as CEO in September 2012, and led the company through a significant growth trajectory. “I’m proud of the AIF team and I’m optimistic about how we will build on a foundation of innovation to succeed in the future,” Kumar said. “It’s been an honor to have led such dedicated teammates for more than three years, and I am deeply thankful to the Board, Trustees, Chapter leaders, volunteers and all supporters and well-wishers.”

“Alex is a rare professional who combines the drive of a social entrepreneur with the intellect of an academic. We look forward to working closely with Alex to innovate, build and scale AIF across India in the years to come,” remarked AIF Co-Chair Ajay Banga.

‘Jungle Book’ in India

A new trip to India from the London-based travel company Wild Frontiers is inspired by the Jungle Book, Rudyard Kipling’s famous collection of stories. The trip is in commemoration of a new adaptation of the 1967 Walt Disney Pictures animated film based on the stories and opening in theaters on April 15. Called the Jungle Book Tour, the 12-day itinerary takes travelers to Tadoba and Kanha National Parks, two of India’s most famous tiger reserves, where they take part in twice-daily game drives in search of tigers, leopards and other wildlife, and Satpura National Park for walking safaris. These rich landscapes, according to the Wild Frontiers founder Jonny Bealby, gave Mr. Kipling the inspiration for the characters in his stories such as the “man cub” Mowgli, the fearsome tiger Shere Khan and Toomai of the elephants. The itinerary also includes a stop in Bhopal to see the renowned Bhimbetka cave paintings. The tour includes most meals, accommodations, transfers, entrance fees to parks and guided excursions. The cost is $4,250 a person. Departure is Oct. 18.

Develop MOOC to Educate Students About India

Ohio State University and Delhi-based IndoGenius have developed an online course to help students learn about the importance of India. The course, which was launched last month by Ambassador to India, Richard Verma, at the American Center in New Delhi will be delivered via the world’s largest online course platform, Coursera.

The massive open online course (MOOC) is funded through the U.S. Department of State’s Passport to India initiative, which is jointly managed by Ohio State and IndoGenius. Passport to India seeks to increase the number and diversity of American college and university students studying abroad and interning in India by 2020.

The program was launched by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2011 to create a hub for U.S.-India higher education partnerships and to develop a stronger bond between the youth of both countries by increasing American student mobility.

“With India’s growing economy it is critical for our future leaders to understand India’s cultural, historic and economic importance in world affairs,” said William Brustein, vice provost for global strategies and international affairs at Ohio State. “Engaging young Americans to experience the depth and breadth of India firsthand will only produce stronger U.S.-India relations. For Ohio State to take a leadership role in this transformative process is an exciting and important opportunity.”

The curriculum for the course was developed by Brian Joseph, a distinguished university professor of linguistics at Ohio State and Nick Booker, co-founder of IndoGenius, and implemented through the Office of Distance Education and eLearning.

The course titled, The Importance of India, covers a broad range of topics, from India’s ancient trade relations with the Roman Empire, South East Asia and China to India’s rapidly growing startup ecosystem and its role in creatively solving global problems through technology.

The course’s final lecture is dedicated to presenting study, startup and internship opportunities in India along with references and advice for those wishing to travel to India.

By educating students about India through the online course, Ohio State and IndoGenius are hoping it will make a significant contribution toward meeting Passport to India’s goal of increasing the number of students studying abroad in India annually from its current, 4,583 to at least 10,000 in the next four years.

“India is relevant to American students of all backgrounds and interests,” said Booker of IndoGenius. “The Passport to India MOOC will demonstrate how India’s economic and civilizational re-emergence has renewed the importance of India. Take any of the grand challenges faced by the world today and if you can innovate a solution that works in India it can work anywhere.”

The course is free for anyone in the world and currently open for enrollment on coursera.org Indian students are actively encouraged to join and learn alongside their American peers. Those interested in learning more about Passport to India and its directory of 60+ study abroad and paid internship opportunities in India can do so at www.passporttoindia.com.

IMF warns the global economy is ‘highly vulnerable’

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said the global economy has weakened further and warned it was “highly vulnerable to adverse shocks”. It said the weakening had come “amid increasing financial turbulence and falling asset prices”.

The IMF’s report comes before the meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Shanghai later this week. It said China’s slowdown was adding to global economic growth concerns.

China’s economy, the second-biggest in the world, is growing at the slowest rate in 25 years. “Growth in advanced economies is modest already under the baseline, as low demand in some countries and a broad-based weakening of potential growth continue to hold back the recovery,” the Washington-based IMF said.

“Adding to these headwinds are concerns about the global impact of China’s transition to more balanced growth, along with signs of distress in other large emerging markets, including from falling commodity prices.”

The IMF also noted any future prospects for global growth “could be derailed by market turbulence, the oil price crash and geopolitical conflicts”. The agency has called on the G20 group to plan new mechanisms to protect the most vulnerable countries.

Earlier this year, the IMF downgraded its forecast for global economic growth. It now expects economic activity to increase 3.4% this year followed by 3.6% in 2017. It now expects economic activity to increase 3.4% this year followed by 3.6% in 2017.

That means growth of 0.2% less each year than when the agency last published a forecast in October. And there are warnings about the risks. The report says that if key challenges are not successfully managed, “global growth could be derailed”.

In many respects, the picture is a familiar one. The recovery after the financial crisis continues. But in the rich countries, it is still “modest and uneven”. Only three large advanced economies are forecast to beat 2% growth this year: the US, the UK and one of the eurozone’s crisis-hit nations, Spain, which has had its forecast upgraded. The forecast for the UK is unchanged, at 2.2% for both years.

The report describes the picture for many emerging and developing economies as “challenging”.

The largest downgrade for any individual economy is Brazil, where the IMF now predicts a contraction of 3.5% this year and no growth at all in 2017. That reflects the political uncertainty arising from the investigation into corruption at the oil company Petrobras. Russia, hit by the decline in prices of its oil exports, is also likely to remain in recession this year before returning to modest growth next year.

Beijing overtakes New York as new ‘billionaire capital’

Beijing has overtaken New York as the city with the highest number of billionaires for the first time, a new report by China-based firm Hurun says. A total of 100 billionaires are now living in the Chinese capital, compared with 95 in New York, the report says. Shanghai, China’s centre of commerce, comes in fifth place.

Hurun, which tracks wealth in China, has released an annual Global Rich List for the past five years measuring billionaires’ wealth in US dollars. The private research firm, which also publishes luxury magazines, uses a mixture of information from publicly traded companies plus interviews to compile its data.

Other companies such as Forbes and Bloomberg use different methodology and arrive at different conclusions. Hurun found that Beijing had welcomed 32 new billionaires since last year, allowing it to vault past New York which it calculated only saw four new billionaires.

Moscow was in third place with 66 billionaires, according to Hurun. Overall, China has overtaken the US as the country with the highest number of billionaires. However, the top 10 billionaires in Hurun’s list is still dominated by Americans.

China has 568 billionaires after gaining 90 new ones, compared with the US which has 535. China’s billionaires boast a combined net worth of $1.4 trillion (£1.01 trillion), which is similar to the GDP of Australia.

Hurun’s chairman Rupert Hoogewerf noted that the growth in China’s wealthy took place despite an economic slowdown and stock market instability. He told the AP news agency that it could be due to Chinese market regulators allowing a flood of new share issues after holding back Initial Public Offerings for several years.

Hurun found that the richest man in China is still Wang Jianlin, with an estimated worth of $26bn (£18.8bn). But he has not cracked the top 10 billionaires in Hurun’s list, which is dominated by Americans. It is topped by Bill Gates with a net worth of $80bn, followed by investor Warren Buffett with $68bn. In third place is Spanish fashion tycoon Amancio Ortega with a net worth of $64bn. The report found that overall there are now 2,188 billionaires in the world, a new record.

And It’s a WRAP! 2nd annual DFW South Asian Film Festival Celebrates Another Weekend of Film & Festivities in North Texas

(Dallas, Texas – February 24, 2016) The 2016 Dallas/Fort Worth South Asian Film Festival (www.dfwsaff.com) presented 13 ground-breaking, sold-out screenings of shorts, documentaries and feature films during its three-day festival (Feb. 19th to the 21st) at the Perot Museum in downtown Dallas and the Angelika Film Center in Plano. More than 350 people attended the opening night film, red carpet and festivities at the Perot, followed by another 1200 cinephiles at the Angelika on Saturday and Sunday. Every film was either a Texas or U.S. premiere, and the festival’s closing night film, Hansal Mehta’s “Aligarh,” was the North American premiere. Ravi Kapoor’s “Miss India America” and Prashant Nair’s “Umrika” were the opening night and centerpiece films, respectively. The entire lineup of films, including trailers and synopses, is available on the festival’s web site: www.dfwsaff.com.

Categories included education programming, arts programming, youth programming, women’s programming, men’s programming, family programming and LGBT programming. The topics explored varied in scope from slave brides in Rajasthan to the effects of depression & mental illness on the South Asian community to the plight of the LGBTQ community in India.

“The responses we got from our audiences were overwhelmingly positive,” said founder and festival director Jitin Hingorani. “People thanked us for bringing this revolutionary programming to North Texas, and they said they are already excited for next year’s festival.”

The festival, produced by JINGO Media, a NYC & Dallas-based PR & events boutique firm, also presented networking events, after-parties and post-screening Q&A sessions with 14 filmmakers and actors in attendance from all over the world.

Celebrities who walked the red carpet included: Suraj Sharma (Umrika, Life of Pi, Homeland, Million Dollar Arm); Tiya Sircar (Miss India America, The Internship, Friends with Benefits, Vampire Diaries); Meera Simhan (Miss India America, Anger Management, Date Movie); Tanima Bhattacharya (Shackle); and Viveck Vaswani (Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman, Pathar Ke Phool, Rough Book).

According to reports, 27 mainstream and South Asian brands supported the 2016 festival as sponsors and partners, including Wells Fargo; Etihad Airways & Jet Airways; Mercedes Benz of Plano; Civitas; Cambria Hotels & Suites; The Container Store; Shraman South Asian Museum;  Parish Episcopal School; American India Foundation; and Milaap USA.

Community Partners, who had joined the efforts included, Selig Polyscope Company; Patrick O’Hara Salon; U.S. India Chamber of Commerce DFW; Dallas Video Fest; Women in Film;  Indian Association of North Texas; Women Entrepreneurs DFW; Forever Rakhi; and World Affairs Council.

Ties with India on an upward swing: US envoy

Economic ties between India and the US are on an upward swing and American investment in the country has seen a more than three-fold jump in 2015-16, US ambassador to India Richard R Verma said on Tuesday while noting that a “stable tax regime and legal certainty” were key for growth in this area.

In Patna, to make a tour of “fast-progressing Bihar”, Verma underlined the utility of the single-window clearance system for attracting investment and hailed the southern states for having implemented such processes.

Lauding Bihar for the turnaround it has achieved in recent years, he said, “We hear about positive success story of Bihar in last few years. When I meet chief minister Nitish Kumar and governor Ramnath Kovind, we will identify specific areas where American establishments could have involvement.”

Verma pointed to the American multinational General Electric company manufacturing locomotives in Marauhra and Madhepura in Bihar at an investment of 2.5 billion dollar. The US company is to make 900 locomotives in Bihar, he said.

The US ambassador said that economic ties between his country and India would increase in the future. He added that American companies have two prime concerns before making any investment — “they look for stable tax regime and legal certainty for their investment”.

“US investment in India increased to $105 billion in 2015-16 as compared to $30 billion 10 years back,” he told reporters.  “About 200 US companies were present in India in 2005, which has increased to 500 in 2015-16,” added Verma.

More than 1.2 millions Indian got US visas in 2015, said Verma, who was accompanied by the US Consul General Craig L Hall on his visit to the state capital.  Asked about the JNU row, he underlined the importance of freedom of speech in a democracy, but refused to comment further, saying “the government is looking into the matter”.

On the sale of F-16 fighter aircraft to Pakistan, he said the US Congress was looking into it. As to India raising its concerns over terror outfits operating from Pakistani soil, Verma said, “We take the concerns seriously and have asked Pakistan to take more effective steps to check terrorism and demolish safe heavens of the terrorists.”

Sunny Leone’s New Video ‘#11minutes’ Goes Viral

Actress Sunny Leone’s message to youngsters who have not smoked till now and are thinking about it is to avoid picking up the cigarette. “For the youngsters out there, if you haven’t started smoking yet or are thinking about it, don’t pick up that first cigarette. It’s not worth it in the long run, and it’s not cool. If you want to try, just think twice before trying it,” said Leone at the launch of a special anti-smoking advertisement featuring her and “Tanu Weds Manu” actor Deepak Dobriyal.

“Smoking is bad for your health. This is something very close to my heart; my father passed away from cancer from smoking cigarettes,” she said. “I want people to stop smoking, and live a happier, healthier life. Unfortunately, you can’t force anybody, but you can tell people not to smoke around them. Maybe if the government, restaurant owners say that they don’t want smoke inside their buildings, then that would be the first step,” she added.

The informative advertisement titled “No Smoking #11minutes,” which also stars actor Alok Nath, has been directed by “Hawaizaada” director Vibhu Puri. The concept revolves around Dobriyal’s character, who is on his deathbed, and his near and dear ones trying to identify and fulfill his last wish of meeting up with Leone’s character, which creates a humorous climax.

About her own experiences of smoking, Leone mentioned about her first time: “It was gross, disgusting. It never has been for me, and it’ll continue to be that way.”

She also said, “I’ve been lucky; my co-stars that smoke cigarettes always are very respectful and say, ‘Do you mind if I smoke?’ I tell them it’s fine if they go a bit far. I personally don’t like second-hand smoke; it is as deadly as smoking a cigarette.” The “#11minutes” refers to the amount of life which apparently gets cut down with each cigarette.

MIT Team Wins First Round of SpaceX Hyperloop Design Contest

Indian American Lakshya Jain was part of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology team that was victorious in the first round of the SpaceX Hyperloop Design contest.

The Jan. 30 contest at Texas A&M University required teams to create a Hyperloop, which is a high-speed transportation concept imagined by Tesla Motors and SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk.

Jain and his graduate student teammates beat out more than 100 other teams from around the world, claiming best overall design.

The roughly-24 member MIT team is captained by Philippe Kirschen. Collectively, they have been working since last fall to create the design.

The team is gathering support from all over MIT. Douglas P. Hart of the mechanical engineering department is facilitating the team members’ work on the project for credit as part of his Engineering Systems Development course. The Edgerton Center has provided work and machining space, administrative support and advising.

The final design of the Hyperloop is roughly 2.5 meters long and weighs 250 kgs. Kirschen added in an MIT report that it has the aerodynamic feel of a bobsled.

Now the design needs to be made on a larger scale. Kirschen, in the MIT report, said the Hyperloop would reach speeds “in excess of 100 meters per second.”

The larger scales will be tested, albeit with no passengers on board, in the next phase of the contest. Each large-scale submission is due by mid-May.

TCS, Infosys, Wipro Join Obama’s ‘Computer Science for All’ Plan

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Three major Indian IT companies — Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro — have joined President Barack Obama’s ambitious Computer Science for All initiative as part of a public-private collaboration, pledging thousands of dollars in grants.

Obama announced his “Computer Sciences for All” plan in his weekly address Jan. 30 as he emphasized the need for teaching the subject as a “basic skill” to all children across schools in the country in a changing economy.

While Infosys has pledged a $1 million in donation, Tata Consultancy Services is providing support in the form of grants to teachers in 27 U.S. cities, the White House said in a fact sheet, also issued Jan. 30.

Wipro announced a $2.8 million grant for multi-year project in partnership with the Michigan University to involve over a hundred school teachers, with the aim of nurturing excellence in science and mathematics. This would start with the public school systems of Chicago, Obama’s hometown.

According to White House, the TCS and Infosys pledge is part of the National Science Foundation’s effort to collaborate with the private sector to support high-school computer science teachers.

“Infosys Foundation USA will be a founding member of this public-private collaboration with a $1 million philanthropic donation, and, as an initial participant, Tata Consultancy Services is providing additional support in the form of grants to teachers in 27 U.S. cities.

“This collaboration will ultimately provide opportunities for as many as 2,000 middle- and high-school teachers to deepen their understanding of CS,” said the White House.

A joint Wipro and Michigan University statement said the Wipro STEM Fellowship Program will focus on building leadership in these disciplines in urban schools by leveraging on research validated expertise of the college of education at the university in designing transformative and innovative instructional experiences.

Aarti Dhupelia, chief officer of College and Career Success at Chicago Public Schools, said this partnership with Wipro and Michigan State University will have a transformational impact in classrooms and communities.

India’s Solar Import Rules Discriminate Against U.S., Rules World Trade Organization

WASHINGTON – In a setback to India, a World Trade Organization dispute settlement panel has ruled in favor of the U.S. in its challenge to India’s alleged discrimination against U.S. solar exports.

The panel agreed with the U.S. that India’s “localization” rules discriminated against imported solar cells and modules under India’s National Solar Mission, according to an official news release citing U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman. The USTR initiated the dispute.

India’s domestic content requirements, it agreed, discriminate against U.S. solar cells and modules by requiring solar power developers to use Indian-manufactured cells and modules rather than U.S. or other imported solar technology, in breach of international trade rules.

The panel also rejected India’s defensive arguments and determined that India’s local content requirements are inconsistent with the national treatment obligations in Article 2.1 of the Agreement on Trade-related Investment Measures (TRIMs Agreement) and Article III:4 of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994.

The USTR said it initiated this dispute in February, 2013 because it considered that India’s domestic content requirements are inconsistent with WTO rules which prohibit discrimination against imported products.

The U.S., it said, has consistently made the case that India can achieve its clean energy goals faster and more cost-effectively by allowing solar technologies to be imported from the US and other solar producers.

“The WTO panel agreed with the United States that India’s ‘localization’ measures discriminate against US manufacturers and are against WTO rules,” Froman said.

The US and India “are strong supporters of the multilateral, rules-based trading system and take our WTO obligations seriously,” he said.

“This is an important outcome, not just as it applies to this case, but for the message it sends to other countries considering discriminatory ‘localization’ policies.”

“The United States strongly supports the rapid deployment of solar energy around the world, including in India,” Froman said.

“But discriminatory policies in the clean energy space in fact undermine our efforts to promote clean energy by requiring the use of more expensive and less efficient equipment, raising the cost of generating clean energy and making it more difficult for clean energy sources to be competitive,” he said.

Sling TV and DISH Announce Long-Term Agreement with Willow TV International to Provide the Most Extensive Cricket Offering in the U.S., Including ICC World Twenty20 2016

ENGLEWOOD, Colo., February 23, 2016 – Sling TV and DISH today announced they have expanded their strategic relationship with Willow TV International for the Willow cricket channel. The agreement brings some of the world’s most popular cricket matches and events including ICC, India, Pakistan, Australia, South Africa, West Indies and other top teams to cricket fans in the U.S., in high definition, as well as arrangements for coverage of live overlapping matches. With Willow included in most major South Asian packages, Sling TV and DISH customers will have access to the most extensive cricket programming available in the U.S.

This agreement marks the first time that major ICC events, including the highly anticipated ICC World Twenty20 2016, which begins March 8, 2016, will be provided at no additional charge on the Willow cricket channel. Previously many of these events have only been available via pay-per-view.

“We are proud to have supported the launch of the Willow cricket channel in 2010, and by extending this longstanding relationship, we are not only bringing our customers the best in live cricket for years to come, we’re delivering on our commitment to make Sling TV and DISH ‘your home for cricket’,” said Chris Kuelling, senior vice president of international programming for Sling TV and DISH.  “With this agreement we are now able to bring U.S. viewers the most comprehensive cricket offering in the market, all in high definition.”

“In just over five years since we launched Willow on DISH, we have expanded our coverage of live international cricket to unprecedented levels,” said Vijay Srinivasan, CEO of Willow TV International. “We are extremely pleased to further strengthen our partnership with Sling TV and DISH, and to announce the availability of the ICC World Twenty20 2016 and other ICC events on the Willow cricket channel for Sling TV and DISH viewers.”

Willow is available across South Asian packages on both Sling TV and DISH. More information on Sling TV’s cricket offering can be found here, and detail on DISH’s cricket offering can be found here.  New Sling TV viewers can try the service free for seven days, and DISH is currently offering the Hindi Mega Pack, which includes Willow, at 50% off for new subscribers.

Willow TV International, Inc. is the premier broadcaster of cricket in the U.S.  Willow distributes a high definition linear television channel dedicated exclusively to cricket in the U.S., and provides television and digital production services to its global partners.  Willow is an Official Broadcast Partner of the International Cricket Council (ICC) and several major international cricket boards and leagues.

Sling TV L.L.C., a subsidiary of DISH Network Corporation (NASDAQ: DISH), provides over-the-top television services including domestic and international live and on-demand programming. It is available on televisions, tablets, computers and smartphones. The Sling TV programming portfolio includes content from Disney/ESPN, HBO/Cinemax, AMC, A&E, Turner, Scripps, EPIX, The Weather Company and Univision. Sling Latino offers a suite of standalone and add-on Spanish-language programming packages tailored to English-dominant, bilingual and Spanish-dominant U.S. households. Sling International currently provides more than 200 channels in 19 languages across multiple devices to U.S. households. Sling TV is a next-generation service that meets the entertainment needs of today’s contemporary viewers. Visit www.Sling.com.

DISH Network Corp., through its subsidiaries, provides approximately 13.897 million pay-TV subscribers, as of Dec. 31, 2015, with the highest-quality programming and technology with the most choices at the best value. DISH offers a high definition line-up with more than 200 national HD channels, the most international channels and award-winning HD and DVR technology. DISH Network Corporation is a Fortune 250 company. Visit www.dish.com.

Prof. Munir Humayun, FSU Student Researcher Crack Origin Story of Meteorite

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Professor Munir Humayun and his student at Florida State University student have cracked the code to reveal the deep and interesting history of an ancient meteorite that likely formed at the time our planets were just developing.

Jonathan Oulton, a 2015 FSU graduate, working with Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science Professor Munir Humayun, studied the pieces of a meteorite called Gujba. Using sophisticated lasers and mass spectrometers at the FSU-headquartered National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Humayun and Oulton conducted in-depth chemical analysis of the meteorite samples that shattered previous theories about when and how this meteorite had formed.

“We tried to elucidate a story about its origins through this science,” said Oulton, who is now pursuing a doctoral degree at University of Colorado. Previously, scientists believed that Gujba was formed more or less from the dust of the solar system.

But, as Humayun and Oulton analyzed it, they discovered it had a far more complex geological history than previously thought. They inferred that Gujba formed from the debris of a collision between a parent planet that had both a crust and mantle, something that would only be found on a fairly large planet of the kind that is not seen today in the asteroid belt.

To get that type of formation, Gujba would have been involved in more than the equivalent of a solar system fender bender. Oulton, Humayun and their collaborators argue that Gujba formed from the molten debris produced when a large metallic body smashed into another planet and both bodies were destroyed in the process. Based on chemical traces preserved in Gujba, the target planet might have been even larger than the asteroid 4 Vesta, one of the largest bodies in the asteroid belt with a diameter of about 326 miles or 525 kilometers.

“People used to say that meteorites like Gujba were the building blocks of the solar system,” Humayun said. “Now, we know it’s the construction debris of the planets, to borrow a phrase from Ed Scott of the University of Hawaii.”

The research will be published in an upcoming issue of Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, but is currently available online. Oulton presented the preliminary results of the paper at the 2015 Lunar & Planetary Science Conference and received the Dwornik Award of the Geological Society of America for the best undergraduate presentation.

“In a broad sense, people have been trying forever to understand how we got here,” Oulton said. “Although this doesn’t get to that directly, this research gives us a greater understanding of the physical chemistry of everything that occurred at the time the Earth formed.”

Oulton served as the lead author on the article. Other researchers on the paper are Lawrence Grossman and Alexei Fedkin of The University of Chicago.

ATA is gearing up for Chicago conference

The American Telugu Association (ATA), a 25-year old premier national organization of Telugus in North America, is gearing up to unveil its Grand ATA Conference to mark the celebrations of its silver jubilee on an unprecedented scale.

It will showcase the rich enduring Telugu culture in the form of art, music, dance, literary, religious, social, economic, health forums during July 1-3 in Chicago at Rosemont Convention Center in Rosemont, Illinois.

ATA’s top-tier team from across the country has converged at Westin Hotel in Princeton, New Jersey and 70 important committees have been set up to host this mammoth convention.
The Telangana government will send a 15-member cultural troupe to augment the ATA festivities.

Kamala Chimata, conference coordinator, said the goal of the convention was to promote literary, cultural, educational, religious, social, economic, health and community activities of the people of Telugu origin.

Iftekhar Shareef, Reception Chair, disclosed the plans to rope in VIPs, dignitaries and elected officials both from India and the United States to grace the convention and added that some had already expressed a keen interest in attending.

Sudhakar Perkari, ATA president, Chandrasekhar Reddy Palvai, conference convener, K.K.Reddy, conference director and Hanumanth Reddy, ATA founder, spoke on the occasion.

Preity Zinta, American Beau Gene Goodenough to Have March Wedding in LA?

Bollywood star Preity Zinta’s wedding to American beau Gene Goodenough, is planned to be held this month, there is some news that the couple will actually tie the knot in Los Angeles in spring (March-April) with only close friends and family flying down. Goodenough is a financial analyst and met Zinta during one of her U.S. trips.

According to media reports, the white wedding will, however, be followed by a proper and ostentatious Rajput wedding in Mumbai. This grand celebration will have the film industry in attendance, as Zinta has developed a lot of goodwill in the industry. The bubbly and forthright actress, who has always stood up for her convictions and principles, has barely been seen in the millennium’s second decade because of her other priorities.

She was last seen in her home production “Ishqk in Paris” in 2013, followed by a cameo in “Happy Ending.” Though closest to Salman Khan among the ruling stars, Zinta has worked with every A-lister and a lot of heroines, and is on great terms with all of them as well as top filmmakers.

Zinta is said to auction off her wedding pictures for charities that she supports, including for educating children and for old-age homes. Zinta and Goodenough want to help society even with this happy occasion in their lives. While this move is a first among Indian stars, Hollywood couples like Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, and George Clooney and Amal Alamuddin have reportedly done it before overseas.

Dr. Rohit N. Kulkarni Named Harvard Medical School Professor

Rohit N. Kulkarni, senior Investigator in the Section on Islet Cell and Regenerative Biology at Joslin Diabetes Center, world-renowned for its deep expertise in diabetes treatment and research, has been named Professor of Medicine by Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Kulkarni’s research focuses on investigating signaling pathways impacting growth and function of pancreatic islet cells with the long-term goal of improving therapeutic approaches for the treatment of type 1 and type 2 diabetes and obesity-associated conditions. Dr. Kulkarni’s lab also focuses on the role of growth factor signalling in the renewal and differentiation of embryonic stem (ES) cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells with the aim of studying mechanisms that underlie differentiation into pancreatic endocrine cells.

“Dr. Kulkarni has made many seminal scientific discoveries throughout his career. He is internationally recognized for his work with beta cell growth and regeneration, a topic that is critical to the treatment and cure of diabetes,” said George King, M.D., Chief Scientific Officer at Joslin Diabetes Center and Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. “We are excited to have Dr. Kulkarni as a faculty member at Joslin and look forward to collaborating with him in the years to come.”

Dr. Kulkarni joined Joslin and the Harvard Medical School faculty in 1999. He has held several leadership roles at Joslin, including the Director of the Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center (DERC) Specialized Assay Core from 2002 to 2012. Currently, Dr. Kulkarni serves as the Associate Director of the induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPS) Core of the DRC at Joslin. In his own lab, he mentors post-doctoral fellows, graduate students and visiting scientists in addition to supervising research assistants.

Dr. Kulkarni contributes to the educational symposia organized by Joslin, the American Diabetes Association, and the JDRF in the areas of diabetes and obesity in addition to symposia organized by Harvard Stem Cell Institute in the area of stem cells and is a faculty member of the BBS Program at Harvard Medical School. He also serves on the editorial boards of Journal of Clinical Investigation, Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Journal of Biological Chemistry.

Kulkarni, an M.D. and Ph.D., received his medical degree and doctorate of philosophy from St. John’s Medical College and the Royal Postgraduate Medical School, University of London, England respectively. While pursuing his doctoral thesis on regulatory peptides modulating islet function in Sir Steve Bloom’s laboratory in England, Kulkarni trained in the Diabetes Unit at Hammersmith Hospital in London.

He moved to Boston where he obtained the F32 National Research Scholarship Award and completed a post-d fellowship in the laboratory of C. Ronald Kahn, chief academic officer and senior investigator at Joslin Diabetes Center and the Mary K. Iacocca Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Nirmal Dhamodarasamy, A Chicago Student Wins $1 Million In Powerball

Nirmal Dhamodarasamy, a graduate student at the University of Illinois at Chicago, has won $1,000,000 playing Powerball on February 6th. The winning numbers were – 04 – 13 – 31 – 36 – 52 – and the Powerball number was 08.

According reports, a few weeks ago, Dhamodarasamy decided to try his luck in a different way, and instead of buying a ticket at a store, he bought a Powerball subscription via the Illinois Lottery’s online sales channel. “It was very convenient to sign up and buy my tickets online,” Dhamodarasamy said. He won $1 million when he matched the five numbers in the Powerball drawing.

Before Dhamodarasamy received an email from the Illinois Lottery notifying him of his win, he already knew he had won. “That same evening, after I purchased my subscription using Quick Pick numbers, I used the Illinois Lottery app to check the winning numbers. My heart started racing when I realized I had won the lottery. I still can’t believe I won a million dollar!”

Dhamodarasamy, 23, originally from India, is completing his master’s degree in industrial engineering. His plans after the windfall, include bringing his parents here from India for his graduation. When asked what prompted him to start playing Powerball online, he said, “The historic $1.5 billion jackpot sparked my interest. I wanted to try my luck even after it hit!”

Thousands of Illinois residents, 18 and over can buy tickets for Powerball and all of the Illinois Lottery’s draw-based games online or at nearly 8,000 retailers statewide. Players can also use the Illinois Lottery’s mobile app.

The free app., the first of its kind in the United States, is available for download on iOS and Android devices and offers any Illinois adult the chance to purchase lottery tickets on their smartphone.

Mathers Museum Of World Cultures Newest Exhibition “Beyond Bollywood: Indian Americans Shape The Nation”

Bloomington, IN : The Mathers Museum of World Cultures has put up a new exhibition as part of three distinct exhibitions on Indian American experiences and their cultural contributions to United States & the American life.

“Beyond Bollywood: Indian Americans Shape the Nation” is the first of these three exhibitions which is a traveling exhib on loan from the Smithsonian Institution and will be on display until April 10.

Judith Kirk, assistant director of the museum, said alumnus Robert Johnson, who is on the board of the Asian Pacific American Center committee at the Smithsonian, suggested the idea to Provost Lauren Robel after a visit to Mathers.

“When it was discovered that ‘Bollywood’ was going to travel, we started working to bring it here,” Kirk said. “We were so fortunate in that we have an incredible India studies program, Dhar India Studies. They were very enthusiastic about being our partners.”

In conjunction with this exhibit, Mathers planned visits by prominent speakers and a few other events, such as films playing at the IU Cinema.

The next speaker in the series, Vijay Prashad, author of a work called “The Karma of Brown Folk,” will speak on March 10. Prashad will be speaking about the complicated status of Indian-Americans as the “model minority” and the issues with that term, Kirk said.

Another speaker, Vivek Bald, will visit March 24 to discuss the “lost history” of Bengali Harlem, and the movement of Asian immigrants into existing neighborhoods during the era of Asian exclusion — the 50 years leading up to the 1940’s.

“There were individuals, mostly men, who were involved in merchant marines, were seamen and other merchants, who ended up settling here,” Kirk said. “These were groups of men who, despite the exclusion-era laws, primarily settled in places like Harlem and New Orleans, communities that were typically African-American or Puerto Rican.”

These neighborhoods provided a community of support, opportunity and home, and Bald will speak to this relationship and his research on this period during his lecture, Kirk said.

US Catholic University holds weekly Hindu prayer

Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about three million adherents in USA. Benedictine University in Lisle (Illinois), a Roman Catholic research university, holds Hindu aarti prayer on Thursdays in its Kindlon Hall at 12.30 pm; as per its website.

Founded by the monks of St. Procopius Abbey in 1887, it claims to be “guided by our Roman Catholic tradition” and its Values include “a search for God by oneself and with others”. It “is grounded in the spirit of the founders who based their lives and work on St. Benedict’s Rule for Monks, written in the early sixth century”.

Commending Benedictine for holding weekly Hindu aarti prayer in the campus, distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed described it as a step in the positive direction. Zed thanked Benedictine for recognizing the intersection of spirituality and education, which was important in Hinduism.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, urged Benedictine for a permanent and dedicated “Hindu Prayer Room” on the campus; thus responding to the requirements of Hindu students for rituals, quiet reflection, festivals and spiritual exercise; which would help in their personal growth.

Rajan Zed further said that it was important to meet the spiritual needs of Hindu students, who had a substantial presence at Benedictine. Some other universities/colleges in USA now offered Hindu prayer room.

Zed suggested that the Hindu Prayer Room preferably should have an altar containing murtis of popular Hindu deities like Shiva, Vishnu, Rama, Krishna, Durga, Venkateshwara, Ganesha, Murugan, Saraswati, Hanuman, Lakshmi, Kali, etc. besides being equipped with ghanta (bell), dholak (drum), Shiva-linga, etc. Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about three million adherents in USA.

Forbes magazine named Benedictine among “America’s Top Colleges” for the fifth consecutive year in 2015. Besides 108-acre wooded main campus in Lisle, it has branches/centers in Springfield, Naperville, Bellwood—all in Illinois; Mesa (Arizona); and programs in China and Vietnam. It offers 56 undergraduate degrees, 15 graduate degrees and four doctoral programs. Dr. Michael S. Brophy is the President.

Indian American Singer Sonika Vaid On Path To Win American Idol Contest

Sonika Vaid, 20, from Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, is being touted as an early favorite to win the last season of American Idol, after just one soulful rendition which wowed the judges on the show. Vaid impressed the judges – Jennifer Lopez, Keith Urban and Harry Connick Jr – with her beautiful cover of ‘Look at Me’, the hit by former Idol winner Carrie Underwood, reported The National.

Sonika Vaid, a sophomore at William Smith College in New York, who grew up in Weston, Massachusetts, advanced to the top 10 of the reality competition American Idol, wowing judges on the way. Vaid was one of the 10 singers who advanced last week from the 14 who were left to participate for the cut-off voting stage.

“This is one of the only times this particular season that I saw somebody that I actually think can win this thing,” said Connick. “You sang beautifully. Perfect performance. I was totally engaged. Terrific job.” Lopez also congratulated Vaid, saying: “I love it, I love it a lot.” Urban added: “How beautiful that you just let it go, too? You didn’t stack it with a bunch of clever runs. You just sang.”

Vaid’s strong performance of “I Surrender” by Celine Dion got a standing ovation from judge Jennifer Lopez. She had also performed superbly “Bring Me to Life” by Evanesence. Vaid sang the Celine Dion classic, “I Surrender” for the first time for Idol audiences and on the American Idol stage. The song showed off Vaid’s powerful and commanding voice as well as her contemporary yet classic singing style, reported Romper.

“The song highlighted what a vocal powerhouse Vaid truly could be, while also offering audience members a glimpse as to what she would be like as a performer if voted into the Top 10. The performance showed off a true star quality to the 20-year-old from Massachusetts that viewers of the show had never seen in Vaid before. In other words, she killed her performance — and that is putting it lightly. Judging from the reactions of the judges and Twitter, everyone else seemed to agree” Romper noted.

The performance started off slow, with Vaid’s vocals accompanied only by a piano. When the backing band kicked in with the chorus of the song, Vaid’s voice truly began to shine. “I said your voice was from God in the (video) package. Its so true,” Lopez said. “I don’t think I’ve ever gotten goosies on my face. That was the first time!” Lopez added, referring to the goose bumps Vaid’s voice gave Lopez from her performance of the song. “The way your voice sits in the music is so out of this world,” Lopez continued. “It is insane! So beautiful!”

The rest of the judging panel, comprised of Harry Connick Jr. and Keith Urban resisted the urge to speak about the performance due to the show’s timing, but you could tell they were dying to comment on the stellar performance, said media reports. “You know, you sang beautifully. That was a perfect performance. . . . That’s a pure, God-given voice,” Connick Jr. said. Fans of Vaid and viewers at home seemed to agree with Lopez’s comments, taking to Twitter to praise the performance.

“The first time I remember singing was when I was 3 at my sister’s first birthday,” said Vaid, a summer resident of Martha’s Vineyard, and a 2013 graduate of Weston High School.  The first season of “American Idol” aired when she was about 5 years old. “I was an on-and-off ‘Idol’ fan growing up,” she said. “I thought, ‘This is the last [season]. This is the last opportunity I’ll get” to try out.

Singing for judges and an audience and millions of at-home viewers is “an out-of-body experience. It’s beyond me,” said Vaid, who “hated the thought of singing” in public as a little kid. A pianist since age 4, she loved that “I could hide my face behind the piano. Then in ninth grade, there was a talent show. My friends wanted me to sign up, and I was like, ‘No. I don’t want to do that.’ I was so shy,” she recalled. Vaid got up the gumption, sang “Believe in Me” by Demi Lovato in front of the whole school, then promptly ran out into the hallway and “started freaking out,” said the Globe report. Vaid won.

Vaid’s parents, Kuldip and Ananya, were born in India and moved to the US as kids. Vaid, the oldest of four children, said her “entire family is musical . . . except for my dad.” “The sayonara season of American Idol has only just begun, but we may already have a winner,” The Boston Globe reported.

American Idol’s latest season is its 15th and final edition. Since its premiere in 2002, only two contestants of South Asian origin have reached the final 12 stage of the competition: Sanjaya Malakar, who finished seventh during season six, and Anoop Desai, who placed sixth during season eight.

Swati Dandekar’s Congressional Hearing Begins After Obama Nominated Her As ADB’s Executive Director

Indian American politician Swati Dandekar, who was nominated as executive director to Asian Development Bank (ADB) with ambassadorial rank by US President Barack Obama in November last year, began her Congressional hearings by Senate Committee on Foreign Relations on February 11, 2016. If confirmed by the US Senate, Dandekar will replace Robert M. Orr who held the position since 2010.

Obama announced his intention to nominate Dandekar to the top position in Asian Development Bank (ADB) along with eight other key administration posts. “I am confident that these experienced and hardworking individuals will help us tackle the important challenges facing America, and I am grateful for their service. I look forward to working with them,” Obama said.

Dandekar, a Nagpur and Bombay University alumni, is a former Iowa state legislator and a member of the Iowa Utilities Board, according to her White House biography. She was the first Indian-American citizen to win a state legislature seat in the United States. Dandekar was a Democratic candidate for the United States House of Representatives in the 2014 elections in the 1st Congressional District of Iowa, but lost in the primaries.

Dandekar, the nominee for U.S. Executive Director for the Asian Development Bank with Rank of Ambassador U.S., in a prepared statement before the Senate Committee, stated, “I am honored to have been nominated by President Obama to be the next United States Executive Director with the rank of Ambassador to the Asian Development Bank.”

Recalling her immigration to this land of opportunities, Danekar, who came to the United States as an immigrant in 1973 after she I married her husband of 43 years, Arvind Dandekar , who is is President of Fastek International, a software development company, said, “During my nine years in the Iowa House and Senate, from 2003 until 2011, I had the chance to work at the state level. I am excited by the potential opportunity to work internationally as the U.S. Executive Director of the Asian Development Bank (ADB).”

Stating that as a legislator, she has always worked with both sides of the aisle to develop consensus positions that were acceptable to all interested parties. Over the years, she gained insight in to state finances and budgets, and she also has had extensive experience serving on a variety of boards in Iowa, such as the Linn-Mar School Board, Vision Iowa Board, Iowa Values Fund, Iowa Power Fund, and Iowa Utilities Board. “These experiences have provided me with a firsthand look at the transformative power of appropriate use of development funds. My extensive background in managing projects and cultivating partnerships will help me to carry out the responsibilities of the U.S. Executive Director at the ADB, which is dedicated to reducing poverty in the Asia Pacific region through sustainable and inclusive economic growth, investments in human capital, and good governance,” she said.

“If confirmed, my first priority will be to advance U.S. policy interests at the ADB. Additionally, I will work to ensure that the U.S. Commerce Department and other entities that publicize opportunities for U.S. businesses to compete for business overseas include information on how to compete for contracts from the ADB,” Dandekar said.

She also credited her upbringing in India to provide her with an excellent understanding of the Asian culture, pointing to her ability to speak in English and Hindi, Gujarati and Marathi, as well as having working knowledge in Urdu, Punjabi and Bengali languages. “My language skills and cultural awareness will position me well to address challenges facing the ADB and communicate how ADB is fueling positive economic development and stability throughout the region,” she said. Dandekar said, “I look forward to representing the United States at ADB and ensuring that our country’s priority initiatives are advanced.”

Nikki Haley Dismisses Rumors of Running for Vice President

Nikki Haley, the popular Governor of South Carolina has dismissed rumors of her running for Vice President of the United States in the upcoming presidential elections. Amid reports that she was emerging as a “fantastic choice” to be the Republican Party’s vice presidential candidate, Indian American Governor has ruled out any such possibility, saying her “plate is full.” She said she is quite “content” with her responsibilities as the governor of South Carolina and the mother of two kids.

When asked about the latest media reports that Rubio-Haley would be a dream Republican ticket, Haley told Fox News in an interview: “Not at all. I have said my plate is full. I am not only a mom, my daughter is going to college next year, and my son is in middle school. I got a state that I love. We have not finished all the work we want to finish here.

“So I am totally content and happy in South Carolina. What I do want to see is that America gets a great president,” the 44-year-old said in a joint appearance with Rubio on Fox News in South Carolina.

“I think we can do that with Marco Rubio,” she said, responding to questions of her potential campaign as the vice presidential mate of Rubio, which is being reported by some major media outlets.

Senator Tim Scott from South Carolina said that he is “all for” Haley being picked for vice president. Haley is articulate and a strong leader who went “through the fire” during a tragic 2015 in the state, he said. “She would be a fantastic choice and one that I think the country would be quite responsive to,” Scott said.

However, The Washington Post offered a word of caution. “A Rubio-Haley ticket might be many things. But a panacea for the GOP’s sundry political and demographic challenges? It certainly is not,” it said. But for The New York Observer, a Rubio-Haley ticket would be Democratic presidential front runner Hillary Clinton’s worst nightmare.

“The sight of Florida Senator Marco Rubio standing side-by-side with South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley after her blockbuster endorsement of his candidacy for president days before the South Carolina GOP primary gave the appearance of a presidential ticket that would be a game changer for the 2016 campaign,” it said.

“Maybe a Hispanic-Asian ticket with one candidate who’s rediscovering his tea-party roots and another who’s made herself into the top union-hater in the country is the best they can do,” The New Yorker wrote.

U.S. lawmakers urge Modi to take action on religious violence

Eight U.S. Senators and 26 members of the U.S. House of Representatives have raised “grave concerns about the increasing intolerance and violence experienced by members of…religious minority communities,” in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, citing threats to Christians in Chhattisgarh and vigilantism over beef that has led to the murder of four Muslims.
Applauding India’s commitment to pluralism and tolerance, and reminding the PM that he had promised to ensure complete religious freedom in the country, the lawmakers urged him to “turn these words into action by publicly condemning” such violence.
“Of particular concern is the treatment of India’s Christian, Muslim and Sikh communities,” the lawmakers –several of them consistently pro-India — have written to the PM. “Our strong support of this partnership encourages us to relay our grave concerns.” The lawmakers said they were also concerned about the lack of recognition of Sikhism as a distinct religion.
The Modi’s government’s drive against civil society organisations receiving foreign donations in India has been an irritant in bilateral relations for sometime now. The lawmakers’ letter on religious violence, specifically naming Vishva Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal that share the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) ideological universe with Mr. Modi, could be potentially embarrassing for the PM. Mr. Modi will be in the U.S. on March 31 and April 1, to attend the nuclear security summit being convened by President Barack Obama. The letter also comes against the backdrop of the Centre’s unprecedented steamrolling of political dissent in the country, which is increasingly a talking point in the U.S. capital.
“On June 17th, 2014, more than 50 village councils in the Bastar district of Chhattisgarh adopted a resolution banning all “non-Hindu religious propaganda, prayers, and speeches” in their communities. The Christian minority community has been dramatically affected: the ban effectively has criminalised the practice of Christianity for an estimated 300 Christian families in the region one day after a mob, which included members of the Vishva Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal, seriously injured six Christians in the village of Sirciguda. Since the ban was implemented, Christians in the Bastar District reportedly have been subjected to physical assaults, denial of government services, extortion, threats of forced expulsion, denial of access to food and water, and pressure to convert to Hinduism,” the letter said.
“We also are concerned that the nearly country-wide beef ban is increasing tensions and encouraging vigilante violence against the Indian Muslim community. On Monday, November 2nd, a Hindu mob killed Mohammed Hasmat Ali, a married father of three, in Manipur, India, after he was accused of stealing a cow. Mr. Ali reportedly is the fourth Muslim murdered in just six weeks by Hindu mobs angered over allegations of cows being slaughtered or stolen. We understand that the September 28th murder of 52-year-old Mohammed Saif in Uttar Pradesh sparked a national outcry over rising intolerance toward religious minorities which culminated in hundreds of prominent academics, business leaders, and authors protesting.”
“We want to raise additional concerns about the lack of recognition of Sikhism as a distinct religion, which prevents members of the community from accessing social services and employment and educational preferences available to other religious communities. Sikh community members reportedly are harassed and pressured to reject religious practices and beliefs distinct to Sikhism. On October 14, security forces killed two Sikhs and injured scores of others in Punjab who were protesting peacefully against the desecration of Sri Guru Granth Sahib, Sikhism’s holy book,” the lawmakers wrote.
“Mr. Prime Minister, we applaud India as a pluralistic society with a long-standing commitment to inclusion and tolerance. We also applaud your statements about religious freedom and communal harmony, including your promise in February 2014 that your government would “ensure that there is complete freedom of faith…and not allow any religious group, belonging to the majority or the minority, to incite hatred against others.” We urge you to turn these words into action by publicly condemning the ban on non-Hindu faiths in the Bastar District of Chhattisgarh, and the violent assaults and other forms of harassment against religious minorities throughout India. We also urge you to take steps to control the activities of groups, such as the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), and instruct Indian security forces to enforce the rule of law and protect religious minority communities from religiously-motivated harassment and violence.
Such steps would demonstrate your government’s commitment to fostering a stable and inclusive society and respecting international obligations on the rights of religious minorities, including religious freedom. We await your response,” the letter concluded.
Senators Roy Blunt (R-MO), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Al Franken (D-MN), James Lankford (R-OK), Ben Sasse (R-NE), Tim Scott (R-SC) and Representatives Keith Ellison (D-MI), Joe Pitts (R-PA), Brad Wenstrup (R-OH), Jim McGovern (D-MA), Doug Lamborn (R-CO), Trey Gowdy (R-SC), Juan Vargas (D-CA), Jim Costa (D-CA), Trent Franks (R-AZ), Betty McCollum (D-MN), Mark Walker (R-NC), Doug Collins (R-GA), Tim Walberg (R-MI), Ted Poe (R-TX), Adam Schiff (D-CA), John Conyers, (D-MI) have signed the letter.

Amnesty International Criticizes India for Supporting ‘Climate of Intolerance’

Amnesty International has joined a growing chorus accusing India of supporting a climate of intolerance by cracking down on dissent through arbitrary arrests, caste-based discrimination, extrajudicial killings and attacks on freedom of expression.

The rights group said in its annual global report, released on February 24, that India’s Hindu nationalist government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi had failed to prevent hundreds of incidents of communal violence, usually involving members of the Hindu majority pitted against Muslims or other minorities. Instead, ruling party lawmakers and politicians were fueling religious tensions with provocative speeches and justifications for the violence, it said.

Amnesty’s report also highlights the government’s continued harassment of civil society groups critical of official policies over the past year, as well as government legal action aimed at controlling foreign funds for nongovernmental organizations.

“Over 3,200 people were being held in January under administrative detention on executive orders without charge or trial,” the report said, adding that state authorities used “anti-terror” laws to illegally hold activists and protesters in custody.

The report is the latest criticism to be leveled at Modi’s government after a year fraught with communal tension as members of India’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party try to impose their brand of hyper-nationalism.

Dozens of Indian authors, scientists, historians and film industry workers have returned national awards to protest the trend, which has seen arrests of student protesters, the murder of three atheist scholars and mob killings over rumors of cow slaughter. Among India’s majority Hindu population, cows are considered sacred.

Last week, both the New York Times and Le Monde newspapers ran editorials lambasting Modi’s government. The Times editorial board said the ongoing confrontation between Hindu nationalists and free-speech advocates “raises serious concerns about Modi’s governance and may further stall any progress in Parliament on economic reforms.”

A group of 133 university professors from around the world – including linguist Noam Chomsky, Nobel-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk and economist James Galbraith – said the recent arrest of a student leader on sedition charges “is further evidence of the present government’s deeply authoritarian nature, intolerant of any dissent, setting aside India’s longstanding commitment to toleration and plurality of opinion.”

Modi and his government have remained largely unmoved by the criticism, saying little in response other than to denounce it as anti-government propaganda designed to distract from the government’s agenda. Meanwhile, Modi has insisted he is prime minister for all of India, and not just Hindus, and urged the nation to instead focus on growing the economy.

The Amnesty report also said that prisoner safety remained a serious concern, and that “over 282,000 prisoners – 68 percent of the total prison population – were pretrial detainees.” Most prisons are badly overcrowded, while torture and abuse in police or judicial custody led the country’s Supreme Court last year to demand that state governments install closed-circuit television cameras within the next two years.

The human rights organization criticized the Indian Parliament’s defeat of legislation to decriminalize same-sex relations, noting that the country was still adhering to a colonial-era law that makes homosexuality a crime punishable by up to a decade in prison.

Kamala Harris Files Paperwork Making Her US Senate Bid Official

Kamala Harris, California Attorney General, wants to be a U.S. Senator, and she has already been campaigning for a seat for more than a year. Wednesday, February 24th, she formally and legally declared herself a candidate, filling out the official paperwork at the registrar’s office in Norwalk. The Democratic attorney general is running for the Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Barbara Boxer, who retires from her post at the end of her term in 2017.

“We got in early, we’ve been running hard, and this makes it official. So I’m very excited,” Harris said. Since announcing, Harris has been the frontrunner, leading in the polls. If Harris wins the seat, she would be the first Indian American to ever serve in the Senate and the second-ever African-American woman. She says her strategy is to truly connect with voters. “Sitting and talking with them and listening, most importantly, and then hopefully, this work will result in a successful bid for the United States Senate,” Harris said.

Harris says there are some key issues she’s focusing on, including education, the economy, the environment and equality. “That’s everything from what we need to do around continuing to fight for the rights for our LGBT brothers and sisters, to what we need to do around immigration reform, to what we need to do around protecting a woman’s right to choose what to do with her own body,” Harris said.

Luis Vizcaino, a campaign spokesman for Harris’ Democratic rival Rep. Loretta Sanchez, maintained that Sanchez is the most qualified for the seat. He released the following statement: “California needs an experienced and proven leader to tackle the full range of economic, educational and foreign relation challenges we face today. Our next U.S. Senator must have an extensive legislative and national security background and share the life experiences of working families – and that’s Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, who last year was named one of the 25 most influential women in Congress by CQ Roll Call because she knows how to work with members from both sides of the aisle. She is the most qualified candidate for the job of U.S. Senator.”

Republican candidate lawyer Duf Sundheim says he disagrees with Harris’ stances but welcomes her into the race. His campaign released the following statement: “I welcome Ms. Harris into the race. Elections are about choices. The contrast between our candidacy and Ms. Harris’ could not be clearer.”

When U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, her name surfaced as a potential nominee, but Harris made it clear she did not want to be considered for that position. “I’m not putting my name in for consideration. I do not wish to be considered. I am running for the United States Senate,” Harris told reporters at a recent campaign stop.

Harris is viewed as a rising Democratic star. She campaigned for Obama in both his presidential bids, and he returned the favor by holding a fundraiser for Harris during her successful 2010 campaign to become California’s first female and first minority attorney general. California’s June 7 primary will send the top two vote-getters, regardless of party, to the general election in November.

Born of an Indian mother — Shyamala Gopalan, who emigrated from Chennai in the ‘60s — and Jamaican American father, Stanford University economics professor Donald Harris, she is the first ever Asian American and African American to be elected to this top position in California.

So far, only three Indian Americans have been elected to the U.S. House of Representatives — Dalip Singh Saund, Bobby Jindal and Ami Bera, who was re-elected for his second term last November.

India’s UN Envoy Urges Equitable Representation On UN Security Council

“When the UN Charter was adopted in 1945 – “we the peoples”-  in whose name the Charter was agreed to  numbered about 2.35 billion worldwide. Today “ we the people” are estimated to be  more than 7.3  billion . “We the peoples” have more than trebled since 1945,” Syed Akbaruddin, India’s Envoy to the United Nations, told the world body members, while urging equitable representation at the United Nations and the Security Council.

Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin, Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations was addressing the Informal Plenary Meeting of the Intergovernmental Negotiations on ‘Question of equitable representation on an increase in the membership of the Security Council and other matters related to the Council’: ‘ Size of an Enlarged Council and Working Methods of the Council’ on 22nd February, 2016.

Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin pointed out that at the time of the signing of the UN Charter in 1945, the Security Council had 11 members including five permanent members and 6 non-permanent members and the UN comprised of 51 members. In other words, there was one Council member for every five Member-States and 1 permanent member for every 10 members of the General Assembly. Today the membership of the UN has increased more than 3 times.

In essence, it was difficult to understand that if since 1945 the total population of the UN’s membership has increased more than 3 times, the number of  countries members of the UN has increased more than 3 times, Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin asked, there are “voices saying that increase of the size to less than 3 times what it was in 1945 is too much. Can someone explain to me the rationale of this numbers game?:

Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin criticized the argument by some at the United Nations that the low 20’s is compact and efficient while the mid 20’s or 27 seats results in undermining the efficiency and effectiveness of the Council.  “Efficiency is not merely an issue of numbers but stems from a broader set of factors such as credibility, equitability, legitimacy and representativeness,” he argued.  “We therefore must recognize that the case for optimal size of the expanded Council needs to be built on contemporary realities, as well as the need to ensure that the under-represented & unrepresented regions including the developing countries of Africa, Latin America and Caribbean and the vast majority of Asia and Pacific find their due place in this long overdue expansion of the size of the Council.”

Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin said, “Enlarged Council should enhance cooperation and coordination with regional and sub-regional organizations, particularly with the African Union as put forward by 5 countries (Australia, Poland, Romania, Viet Nam, Malaysia) and 42 members of L.69 Group. This proposal also has support of 54 African Countries.” Her also urged the UN to “formalize the provisional Rules of Procedure of the Security Council in order to improve its transparency and accountability as proposed by 14 countries (Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Trinidad and Tobago, Singapore, Malaysia, Cuba) and  54 Member States  from Africa.”

Manoj Saxena Elected Board Chairman of Dallas Fed’s San Antonio Branch

DALLAS, TX — Manoj Saxena of Austin, an Indian Americvan, has been elected chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas’ San Antonio Branch by its board of directors. Manoj Saxena has served on the San Antonio Branch board as a Dallas Fed appointment since 2012 and was appointed to the board of directors by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors for a three-year term on January 7, 2015.

In his new role as board chairman, Saxena will contribute to Federal Reserve’s monetary policy formulation by weighing in on regional economic and credit conditions on a regular basis. Saxena is a business leader, IT executive, and venture capitalist who serves as chairman of CognitiveScale, a provider of machine intelligence powered cognitive clouds. He is also the founding managing director of The Entrepreneur’s Fund IV, and also serves as a special advisor to IBM senior leadership.

Before joining The Entrepreneur’s Fund IV, Saxena was general manager, IBM Watson. He received the IBM Chairman’s Award for Watson commercialization and helped with the formation of Watson Business Group in January 2014. He holds two U.S. patents for web services technologies and is an author of several others.

Saxena holds a master’s degree in business administration from Michigan State University and a master’s in management sciences from the Birla Institute of Technology & Science in Pilani, India.

Saxena is a business leader, IT executive, and venture capitalist who serves as chairman of CognitiveScale, a provider of machine intelligence powered cognitive clouds. He is also the founding managing director of The Entrepreneur’s Fund IV, and also serves as a special advisor to IBM senior leadership. The San Antonio Branch board consists of seven members, four appointed by the Dallas Fed board and three by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors in Washington, D.C.

6 Researchers Of Indian Origin Named Presidential Early Career Award Recipients

President Obama has named six Indian American researchers among 106 individuals as recipients of the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers, the highest U.S. government honor for young independent researchers.

Milind Kulkarni, Purdue University; Sachin Patel, Vanderbilt University; Vikram Shyam, NASA Glenn Research Center and Shwetak Patel, University of Washington,Kiran Musunuru, Harvard Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology and Rahul Mangharam, University of Pennsylvania, the winners will receive their awards in Washington, DC this spring.

“These early-career scientists are leading the way in our efforts to confront and understand challenges from climate change to our health and wellness,” Obama said. “We congratulate these accomplished individuals and encourage them to continue to serve as an example of the incredible promise and ingenuity of the American people.”

Kulkarni of Purdue University is an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering who graduated in 2002 with a B.S. in both computer science and computer engineering from North Carolina State University and received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Cornell.

Sachin Patel is an associate professor of psychiatry and molecular physiology and biophysics. His overall research goal is to understand the role of ‘neuronal cannabinoid signaling’ in brain function relevant to psychiatric disorders.

While Vikram is a member of the Turbomachinery and Heat Transfer Branch at NASA Glenn and a member of the graduate faculty at Cleveland State University Shwetak N. Patel is the Washington Research Foundation Entrepreneurship Endowed Professor in Computer Science and Engineering and Electrical Engineering at the University of Washington.

“These early-career scientists are leading the way in our efforts to confront and understand challenges from climate change to our health and wellness,” President Obama said. “We congratulate these accomplished individuals and encourage them to continue to serve as an example of the incredible promise and ingenuity of the American people.”

This year’s recipients are employed or funded by various government departments and agencies. These departments and agencies join together annually to nominate the most meritorious scientists and engineers whose early accomplishments show the greatest promise for assuring America’s preeminence in science and engineering and contributing to the awarding agencies’ missions.

The Presidential Early Career Awards highlight the key role that the administration places in encouraging and accelerating American innovation to grow the economy and tackle America’s greatest challenges. The awards, established by President Clinton in 1996, are coordinated by the Office of Science and Technology Policy within the Executive Office of the President.

Awardees are selected for their pursuit of innovative research at the frontiers of science and technology and their commitment to community service as demonstrated through scientific leadership, public education, or community outreach.

Established by President Bill Clinton in 1996, the awards recognize pursuit of innovative research at the frontiers of science and technology and awardees’ commitment to community service as demonstrated through scientific leadership, public education, or community outreach.

K.P. Yohannan, An Indian-American Charged With Wasting Hundreds Of Millions Donations

Washington, DC: K.P. Yohannan, a Kerala-born Indian-American missionary, who founded and runs Gospel for Asia — one of the largest U.S.-based Christian mission agencies — has been charged with fraudulently soliciting hundreds of millions of dollars in charitable donations, and misdirecting the money for personal use.

A class action lawsuit filed Feb. 8 in a U.S. District Court in Arkansas alleges that K.P. Yohannan and other agency officials misrepresented how funds would be spent and funneled vast amounts of the hundreds of millions of dollars the organization has collected into for-profit businesses and an expensive headquarters, the Christian Post reported.

Gospel for Asia according to the lawsuit is a global missionary organization that operates in South Asia, primarily within India. The organization tells potential donors that it supplies the “poorest of the poor” with food, provisions, and a Christian message, but lead attorney Marc R. Stanley said in a statement that the agency has been exploiting the goodwill of Christians.

Matthew and Jennifer Dickson, who are listed as plaintiffs in the lawsuit, charge defendants with violations of RICO and the Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, as well as fraud and unjust enrichment. The plaintiffs allege that Gospel for Asia (GFA), Yohannan, and other GFA officials misrepresented to donors how, when, and where charitable donations would be spent, and funneled vast amounts of the hundreds of millions of dollars the organization has collected into for-profit businesses and an expensive headquarters.

“K.P. Yohannan and his Gospel for Asia inner circle have been exploiting the goodwill and generosity of devout Christians around the country for years. Gospel for Asia should return all the money it’s taken from donors who thought they were contributing to charity,” said Stanley.

According to the lawsuit: “Between 2007 and 2013, GFA solicited over $450,000,000 in donations from the United States alone, where the majority of GFA’s donors reside. Well over one million unique donations are made to GFA each year from tens of thousands of donors who give one time or on a recurring, sponsorship basis. However, despite repeated, explicit guarantees from GFA to donors, only a fraction of the donated money supports the people and causes for which it was donated, as Defendants redirect it for their own purposes.” GFA is present in numerous countries, including Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Laos and Thailand.

Veteran designer Manish Arora conferred France’s highest honor

Manish Arora has become the first Indian fashion designer to receive the highest honour in France. French Ambassador Francois Richier conferred the Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur, the country’s highest honor, on veteran designer Manish Arora on February 16  in recognition of his renowned and critically-acclaimed contribution to the fashion world.

“I’m thrilled and honored by the recognition I have received from the country that I love with all my heart. France has been an inspiration always. I now live between Paris and Delhi, and for me France is literally my own country. I hope to keep getting inspired by France, the beauty and the elegance of the French people,” said Arora at the investiture ceremony at the French embassy here. “It is the first time in the world of fashion in India to be awarded this honor. Only the French can do it. They can spot you, pick you up and say you deserve it.”

“Manish has a long-standing connection with France, which is like a second home for him,” Francois Richier said. “He is a pioneer in bringing the fashion culture of both countries together with his exuberant imagination. I am delighted to confer this high honor on him. Beyond what you have created, you are also representing the best of India. An India that creates, that is successful – an image of India that everybody loves and recognises across the world.”

Veteran designer Manish Arora conferred France’s highest honorThe event witnessed the attendance of socialites including Priya Paul, Ambika Pillai, Kalyani Saha, Rahul Mishra and Subodh Gupta. The Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur is France’s premier award to recognize eminent accomplishments of service to France. It is bestowed on both citizens of France as well as foreigners.

Pinning the insignia on the celebrated designer, Richier said: “Manish has a long-standing connection with France, which is like a second home for him. He is a pioneer in bringing the fashion culture of both countries together with his exuberant imagination. I am delighted to confer this high honor on him.”

Arora, who is best known for his obsession with gold and pink, launched his fashion label back in 1997, and went on to debut in London Fashion Week in 2005. The designer has regularly shown the fashion world his vibrant and exciting designs at Paris Fashion Week since 2008.\ He was appointed as the creative director at Paco Rabanne in 2011, and opened his flagship store in Paris in 2014.

With a long list of celebrity clientele that includes the likes of Aishwarya Rai, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga, the designer has established a reputable status in the industry. In the past, eminent personalities such as Pandit Ravi Shankar, Amitabh Bachchan and J.R.D Tata have been honored with the prestigious award.

Sridevi’s Daughter Jhanvi Kapoor to Attend Los Angeles Acting School

Jhanvi Kapoor has been preparing for a career in Bollywood. While the young girl is already a red carpet regular with a keen sense of style, she’s also training to be an actor. Bollywood stars Sridevi’s and Boney Kapoor’s elder daughter Jhanvi Kapoor has also joined the Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute in Los Angeles, reports here say.
Though Sridevi had been constantly denying all reports that Jhanvi Kapoor will be aspiring to act in films, and Jhanvi Kapoor herself was aiming for a career in fashion designing, she has clearly done a Sonakshi Sinha and moved towards cinema, without a mentor like Salman Khan and with admission into the iconic institute.
From the second Kapoor family, she is now the fifth Kapoor to come into films after Anil Kapoor, Sanjay Kapoor, Sonam Kapoor and half-brother Arjun Kapoor.  Many other Bollywood actors including Ranbir Kapoor are alumni of this prestigious institute. According to a report in Miss Malini, the 19-year-old is taking up acting classes in Los Angeles, from The Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute. And filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s niece will most likely be her classmate. The two have been rehearsing together.
Jhanvi has reportedly received many Bollywood offers but she’s still on the lookout for a perfect project for her big debut in the industry. Both Jhanvi and Khushi usually accompany mother Sridevi to various Bollywood events.

Jeff Bhasker, Asif Kapadia Win At 58th Grammy Awards

Indian American mega producer Jeff Bhasker, who is one of the hottest pop and hip-hop and in-demand producers in the American music industry, walked away with a Grammy in the ‘Producer of the Year’ (Non-Classical) category during the 58th edition of the coveted awards held Feb. 15 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

One of the biggest hits of 2015, “Uptown Funk,” featuring artist Bruno Mars, which Bhasker co-produced in conjunction with Mark Ronson, also won the ‘Record of the Year’ award. The prolific producer behind much of Kanye West’s “808s & Heartbreak” was bestowed the ‘Producer of the Year’ honor for helming songs such as Elle’s King’s “Aint’s Gonna Drown and “Last Damn Night,” Mikky Ekko’s “Burning Doves” and Cam’s “Runaway Train,” among others.

Bhasker, the son of an Indian American physician and a piano-playing American mother, has created breakaway hits for artists such as Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, Taylor Swift, Snoop Lion, the Rolling Stones, Blige, Kid Cudi, Jay-Z and Drake.

“Amy,” the documentary by Indo-British filmmaker Asif Kapadia about the life of late pop star Amy Winehouse, won a Grammy Award in the ‘Best Music Film’ category. Kapadia also secured a British Academy Film and Television Award, or BAFTA, for “Amy,” in the ‘Best Documentary’ category during a glittering ceremony held Feb. 14 at the Royal Opera House in London, England.

Jeff Bhasker, Asif Kapadia Win At 58th Grammy Awards
Asif Kapadia

At the Grammy Awards, “Amy” beat out “The Wall,” “Sonic Highways,” “What Happened, Miss Simone?” and “Mr. Dynamite: The Rise of James Brown.” For the BAFTA, Kapadia’s “Amy” was up against “Cartel Land,” “He Named Me Malala,” “Listen to me Marlon” and “Sherpa.”

Paying tribute to one of the biggest music icons in British history, Kapadia said onstage during BAFTA: “We really fell in love with her when making the film. And our aim and mission was really to try and tell the truth about her. To show the world what an amazing person she was, how intelligent, how witty, how beautiful she was, before it all kind of got out of control and went a bit crazy.”

Kapadia has won the BAFTA honor twice in the past. In 2012, he picked up a BAFTA for “Senna” and in 2003 for “The Warrior.” The documentary uses previously unseen footage of the “Back to Black” star who died of alcohol poisoning in 2011, at the age of 27. Winehouse’s family initially endorsed the project but later disassociated itself from the film.

The biggest night of the year in music also secured a win for world renowned Indian American alto saxophonist Rudresh Mahanthappa, who featured in the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, “The Afro Latin Jazz Suite,” which snagged the top honor in the ‘Best Instrumental Composition’ category.

Acclaimed sitarist Anoushka Shankar, who presented at the 58th annual Grammy Awards, said she had “fun” being backstage with the people she admires. Anoushka was also nominated for an award in the Best World Music Album category for her solo album “Home” but she couldn’t grab the coveted trophy. This was the fifth time that Anoushka was nominated for the Grammy Awards.  She lost out to Beninese singer Angelique Kidjo.   “I teased Angelique to stop beating me in that category! She’s an amazing artist and woman and deserves every win though,” Anoushka sportingly said about her defeat.

Shankar praised Indo-British filmmaker Asif Kapadia for winning Best Music Film award for “Amy”, a documentary on the life of late singer Amy Winehouse.  “Oh, without doubt he deserved that win. ‘Amy’ is an incredible documentary into the life of a unique artist and the trials of an addict. Recovery is something very close to my heart for personal reasons and therefore, the film impacted me greatly,” she said.

NAMAM Award Nite In New Jersey

NAMAM Excellence Award Night Show has been planned for Saturday, March 19th at 5.00 pm in Edison, New Jersey. “As all you know NAMAM is a leading Cultural organization engaged in various community outreach programs and activities in the Tri-state area,” said Madhavan B Nair, NAMAM Chairman.

“The opportunity to attend this function can open to the door to meet many individuals that have played an important role in the development of our community,” Nair said. “It is an opportunity to introduce you and create a vast profile within the Indian and American community as well. It will be an honor for us if you could attend this function. We are looking forward to hearing from you with a positive response soon.”

Over the last 7 years, this vibrant organization has been successfully conducting cultural, educational and charitable programs, with the participation from various Indian communities in Connecticut, New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia. NAMAM has established a tradition of celebrating its annual day by presenting its Excellence Awards at a magnificent Banquet that is attended by many. NAMAM Excellence Awards are given to 6 extremely accomplished individuals from various fields who have made significant contributions to the society.
In addition to the cultural events we will be providing Ethnic Indian Food as Banquet .We will also have a variety of entertainments preceding the business meeting. We expect the attendance this year to be the highest ever; in the area of 900 participants and 7 award Winners We will be glad to reserve seats for you all. Please let us know the availability. The focus of the business meeting is to help and rebuild a strong Indian American community strength in Tristate area with help of all professional and cultural associations and with fellow politicians.

NAMAM is an Indian cultural organization that was formed in the United States in 2010. Under the strong and inspiring leadership of Mr. Madhavan B. Nair, the founder and president of NAMAM, a team of enthusiastic people with unswerving dedication has transformed the organization into a platform for families to come together and experience a wonderful sense of belonging and oneness. Though, primarily an association of the Nair families in the US, NAMAM functions as a juncture of like-minded individuals across the community to engage in social and cultural activities.

NAMAM has been reaching out to the community with varied cultural programs, social gatherings and humanitarian aid efforts. It is our priority to pass a deep awareness about the rich heritage, unique customs and eclectic culture of Kerala to the younger generation in the us, so that they can appreciate and take pride in their genealogy. For more information, please visit:www.namam.org

Indian-American advocacy groups condemn JNU Student Leader’s Arrest

Protests against the violation of civil rights at the Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, where its student body’s president Kanhaiya Kumar was arrested last week on charges of alleged sedition, based on a complaint by the ABVP, a student’s body linked to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, reverberated in the United States this week with Indian-American advocacy groups condemning the incident.

The Alliance for Justice and Accountability, a broad coalition of Indian American organizations working to safeguard pluralism and democracy in India, along with prominent Dalit organizations such as the Ambedkar Association of North America and the Dalit History Month issued a joint statement condemning the “arbitrary arrests and the open violation” of civil rights of the protesting students, according to news reports.

Kumar was arrested Feb. 12 for raising allegedly anti-India slogans at an event organized by students on JNU campus to commemorate the death of Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru, who was executed in 2013.

His arrest has triggered widespread outrage among students and teachers and drawn severe criticism from non-BJP political parties, many of which felt this was yet another instance of the ruling party’s growing intolerance of different opinions and views that do not follow party lines.

The university teachers had rallied behind its protesting students, who had gone on strike, and questioned the administration’s decision to allow the police crackdown on the campus. They however, appealed to students to call off the strike.

“Use of sedition laws belongs to the colonial era, not to a modern democracy. It makes a mockery of the freedom of speech provisions of the Constitution”, Two circles Net quoted Umar Malick of Indian-American Muslim Council, as saying. “It clearly points to the penchant of the government to use the law, even archaic ones, as a political tool to silence student protests,” he added.

“We unequivocally condemn the action of the government and the portrayal of student protests as seditious. All citizens that value democracy should be concerned at this development and raise their voice in demanding that government and police stay out of campus politics. This is a direct assault on democracy,” read the statement.

The Indian Diaspora is keenly following these developments in recent months and is alarmed by the labeling of student protests and challenge to BJP allied ABVP as ‘anti-national’ activity. “An India without the freedom of speech is not a democracy,” said Bhajan Singh, founding director of the Organization for Minorities of India. “Students with differences of opinion are the natural byproducts of a vibrant and healthy atmosphere in education, which should be encouraged and not stifled by the ruling party in government,” he was quoted as saying.

The Indian-American organizations have demanded a judicial probe into the civil rights violations of the students and the role of Hindutva organizations in fomenting trouble by framing students as anti-nationals.

The Indian National Overseas Congress, USA also condemned the attack on Anand Sharma, former Union Minister and party leader who went to the campus after the arrest. “This attack is another illustration of growing intolerance in the country to the basic principles of a liberal democracy and the BJP-led Government seemed to have perfected the art of stifling dissent, shutting down debates especially on campuses and bringing sedition charges to silence any opposition”, George Abraham, chairman of the INOC, USA, said in a statement in New York.

The arrest has been widely criticized by political parties, including the Communist party of India (Marxist), and Bahujan Samaj party. Sitaram Yechury, general secretary of CPI(M), and himself a JNU Alumnus, reacted to the strict action taken by Delhi Police under the instruction of Centre against the students of Jawaharlal Nehru University. “What is happening in JNU? Police on campus, arrests and picking up students from hostels! This last happened during the Emergency,” Yechury said.

Indian children trafficked to United States is a reality, US Envoy says

New York, NY: Cases of Indian children being smuggled to the United States are a reality, a U.S. diplomat said last week, reacting to a media report that police had busted an international child trafficking racket operating in the southern city of Bengaluru.

Police  said they had arrested 16 members of a gang suspected of sending at least 25 children from the states of Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat illegally to the United States using fake documents in order to acquire visas.

Craig L. Hall, U.S. Consul General in Kolkata, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation he was not aware of this case as the visas had reportedly been acquired from the U.S. consulate in Chennai but said there had been similar cases in the past.

“We have seen examples of this,” Hall said on the sidelines of an international conference on human trafficking in eastern town of Siliguri.

“Last year, the United States issued more a million visas to Indians who were travelling to the United States and among those million, there were very likely cases of children being smuggled and trafficked into the U.S.”

According to a report by the New Delhi Television (NDTV), the children were matched with adult couples and made to pose as a family, presenting false documents at the U.S. consulate to get the required visas for their journey. The adult couples then flew to the United States with the children, left them there and returned to India.

The suspected traffickers told police they were reuniting the children with their parents in the United States, all illegal immigrants, NDTV reported. But it quoted police officials as saying they believed the children were being sold.

Hall said the U.S. consulate in Kolkata was thorough in the way it granted visas and that dozens of applications were rejected annually based on suspicions that human trafficking was involved.

“I know in our consulate in Kolkata, we have good relations with the law enforcement agencies and we have a team in the embassy dedicated and watching out for cases like this and when we suspect them, we investigate together with the Indian authorities,” said Hall.

“Dozens of applications have been blocked as we have thought them to be very suspicious. We feel confident that we have good systems in place and this is something we are vigilant about.”

According to the National Crime Records Bureau, there were 5,466 cases of human trafficking registered in 2014, an increase of 90 percent over the past five years. Activists say this is a gross under-estimation of the scale of the problem.

Thousands of Indians – largely poor, rural women and children – are lured to big cities each year by traffickers who promise good jobs but sell them into domestic or sex work or to industries such as textile workshops.

In many cases, they are not paid or are held in debt bondage. Some go missing, and their families cannot trace them.

Hall said New Delhi and Washington were working together to combat human trafficking and welcomed plans by India to draft a new anti-trafficking law and the creation a central agency to better coordinate between various states and institutions.

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