Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

20
Vol. 27 No. 6 Friday, February 7, 2014 Published Weekly from Houston 713-774-5140 20 Pages ( 2 sections) 50 cents E-mail: [email protected] Over 25 years of dedicated service to the community VOICE OF ASIA Read Congressional Budget Office Report On Affordable Care Act or Obama Care on Page 14 Or Call 713-771-2900. 10,000 copies every week A-la-carte Menu Over 50 dishes Mouth-watering Dessert Items! Dinner - 15% discount Daily Dine-in Only! Rice, Naan, 2 Vegetables & Soft Drink $6.99 Niranjan Singh, Owner Baltej Singh, Chef 3 Piece Lamb Chops Rice, Naan, Dal Makhani and Salad $19.99 Lunch buffet - $7.99 GATEWAY INDIA Bar & Grill Ph: 832-539-6907 • Ph: 281-877-2101 Open 7 days a week 10:30 am to 11 pm Rice, Naan, Tandoori Chicken Curry & Soft Drink $6.99 Treat yourself to a Delicious North Indian feast today! * *Feb Only Gateway India Restaurant on 6302 Hwy 6 Suite:Q, TX 77459 WASHINGTON Microsoft moved Tuesday to reboot for a mobile future, naming Indian-born Satya Na- della chief executive as founder Bill Gates shed his title of chairman for a more hands-on role. Satya Nadella named Microsoft new CEO by Shobana Muratee R OSENBERG – On January 3, Texas Secretary of State Nan- dita Berry was in Rosenberg giving an overview of elections prepa- rations in the Fort Bend County, in ad- vance of the March 4 Texas primary. Berry and her team are on a month- long “aerial tour of Texas.” Berry’s responsibilities also include being the state’s chief election officer, liaison on Border and Mexican affairs and publishing government rules and regulations. While reminding the people of Texas she could not have put it simpler; “It is the law in Texas that they (voters) need a photo ID. So if they go to the polls they’ve got to take a photo ID along.” With just about two weeks left be- fore for the early voting which starts from February 18 – 28, Berry urged everyone to visit the VoteTexas.gov to learn more about the rules. Here is a list of the acceptable forms of photo ID: Secretary of State Nandita Berry reminds Texas voters to take photo ID during voting Texas secretary of state Nandita Berry during her visit to Rosenberg on Mon- day, Jan. 3, 2014. Photo by Shobana Muratee, VOA Ambassador Dr. Jaishankar joins Hous- tonians at India’s Republic Day reception L-R: Jagdip Ahluwalia, Executive Director, IACCGH, Felipe Bayon, Sr. VP, BP American and Head of Global Deepwater Response, John Minge, Chairman and President BP Americas, H.E.Ambassador Dr. S. Jaishankar, Con- sul General P Harish, Sanjay Ramabhadran, President IACCGH, Vani Rao, BP. Photo by Bijay Dixit (Unique Photo Images). Report on Page 8. IACCGH hosts reception in honor of India’s Ambassador to US, Dr. S. Jaishankar HE. Dr. S Jaishankar, the newly appointed India’s Ambassador to the US, met with US Representatives at the residence of Hon. Consul General P Harish during his recent visit to Houston. Seen presenting Congressional Certificate are from L-R: Congressman Al Green, Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, HE. Dr. Jaishankar, Hon. P Harish, and Congressman Pete Olson. Photos by Bijay Dixit (Unique Photo Images). Guru Pt. Suman Gosh (4th from rt.), was honored by HE. Dr. Jaishankar on Feb.1, 2014 when he gave a performance with his disciples seen L-R: Smt. Sucheta Roy , Smt. Sowmita Narayanan, Amiya Swami-Ghosh, Apurva Swami-Ghosh, Bhavi Pandya , Prasun Kolhe and Reet Sinha. By Shobana Muratee H OUSTON - Hosts Hon. Con- sul General P. Harish and Mrs. Nandita Harish gave a fitting tribute to India’s 65th Republic Day by having the newly appointed India’s Ambassador to the US, His Ex- cellence Dr. S Jaishankar as the Guest of Honor at a reception held on Sun- day, February 2, at the Hilton Hotel. Welcoming the dignitaries and guests the Consul General said, “I think today is especially memorable as we have with us the Ambassador of India from Washington, who was ap- pointed recently in December 2, 2013. This is his first visit out of Washing- ton,” he added. • Texas driver license issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) • Texas Election Identification Cer- tificate issued by DPS • Texas personal identification card issued by DPS • Texas concealed handgun license issued by DPS • United States military identifica- tion card containing the person’s pho- tograph • United States citizenship certificate containing the person’s photograph • United States passport Berry and her team are expected to continue their tour to other cities in Texas including El Paso, San Antonio, Austin, Dallas and Fort Worth. Berry is the first Indian-American to fill the state-level post of Secretary of State in the entire country. She was ap- pointed by Gov. Rick Perry as Secre- tary of State in late 2013 and she took office Jan. 7, 2014. Continued on Page 9 Satya Nadella Continued on Page 5

description

Voice of Asia Newspaper has been reaching South Asian and Asian American families in Houston and surrounding cities in Texas since 1987. To reach us - to subscribe to our newspaper or newsletter or advertise, call 713-774-5140. Visit us online: www.voiceofasiaonline.com for the latest in Community News in Houston, upcoming events and Job Classifieds.

Transcript of Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

Page 1: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 1 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

Vol. 27 No. 6 Friday, February 7, 2014 Published Weekly from Houston 713-774-5140 20 Pages ( 2 sections) 50 cents E-mail: [email protected] 25 years of dedicated service to the community

VOICE OF ASIA Read Congressional Budget Office Report On Affordable Care Act or Obama Care on Page 14 Or Call 713-771-2900. 10,000 copies every week

A-la-carte Menu Over 50 dishesMouth-watering Dessert Items!

Dinner - 15% discount DailyDine-in Only!

Rice, Naan, 2 Vegetables & Soft Drink $6.99

Niranjan Singh, OwnerBaltej Singh, Chef

3 Piece Lamb Chops

Rice, Naan, Dal Makhani

and Salad

$19.99

Lunch buffet - $7.99

GATEWAY INDIABar & Grill

Ph: 832-539-6907 • Ph: 281-877-2101

Open 7 days a week 10:30 am to 11 pm

Rice, Naan, Tandoori Chicken Curry & Soft Drink $6.99

Treat yourself to a Delicious North Indian feast today!

**Feb Only

Gateway India Restaurant on

6302 Hwy 6 Suite:Q, TX 77459

WASHINGTON — Microsoft moved Tuesday to reboot for a mobile future, naming Indian-born Satya Na-della chief executive as founder Bill

Gates shed his title of chairman for a more hands-on role.

Satya Nadella named Microsoft new CEO

by Shobana Muratee

ROSENBERG – On January 3, Texas Secretary of State Nan-dita Berry was in Rosenberg

giving an overview of elections prepa-rations in the Fort Bend County, in ad-vance of the March 4 Texas primary. Berry and her team are on a month-long “aerial tour of Texas.”

Berry’s responsibilities also include being the state’s chief election officer, liaison on Border and Mexican affairs and publishing government rules and regulations. While reminding the people of Texas she could not have put it simpler; “It is the law in Texas that they (voters) need a photo ID. So if they go to the polls they’ve got to take a photo ID along.”

With just about two weeks left be-fore for the early voting which starts from February 18 – 28, Berry urged everyone to visit the VoteTexas.gov to learn more about the rules.

Here is a list of the acceptable forms of photo ID:

Secretary of State Nandita Berry reminds Texas voters to take photo ID during voting

Texas secretary of state Nandita Berry during her visit to Rosenberg on Mon-day, Jan. 3, 2014. Photo by Shobana Muratee, VOA

Ambassador Dr. Jaishankar joins Hous-tonians at India’s Republic Day reception

L-R: Jagdip Ahluwalia, Executive Director, IACCGH, Felipe Bayon, Sr. VP, BP American and Head of Global Deepwater Response, John Minge, Chairman and President BP Americas, H.E.Ambassador Dr. S. Jaishankar, Con-sul General P Harish, Sanjay Ramabhadran, President IACCGH, Vani Rao, BP. Photo by Bijay Dixit (Unique Photo Images). Report on Page 8.

IACCGH hosts reception in honor of India’s Ambassador to US, Dr. S. Jaishankar

HE. Dr. S Jaishankar, the newly appointed India’s Ambassador to the US, met with US Representatives at the residence of Hon. Consul General P Harish during his recent visit to Houston. Seen presenting Congressional Certificate are from L-R: Congressman Al Green, Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, HE. Dr. Jaishankar, Hon. P Harish, and Congressman Pete Olson. Photos by Bijay Dixit (Unique Photo Images).

Guru Pt. Suman Gosh (4th from rt.), was honored by HE. Dr. Jaishankar on Feb.1, 2014 when he gave a performance with his disciples seen L-R: Smt. Sucheta Roy , Smt. Sowmita Narayanan, Amiya Swami-Ghosh, Apurva Swami-Ghosh, Bhavi Pandya , Prasun Kolhe and Reet Sinha.

By Shobana Muratee

HOUSTON - Hosts Hon. Con-sul General P. Harish and Mrs. Nandita Harish gave a

fitting tribute to India’s 65th Republic Day by having the newly appointed India’s Ambassador to the US, His Ex-cellence Dr. S Jaishankar as the Guest of Honor at a reception held on Sun-day, February 2, at the Hilton Hotel.

Welcoming the dignitaries and guests the Consul General said, “I think today is especially memorable as we have with us the Ambassador of India from Washington, who was ap-pointed recently in December 2, 2013. This is his first visit out of Washing-ton,” he added.

• Texas driver license issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)

• Texas Election Identification Cer-tificate issued by DPS

• Texas personal identification card issued by DPS

• Texas concealed handgun license issued by DPS

• United States military identifica-tion card containing the person’s pho-tograph

• United States citizenship certificate containing the person’s photograph

• United States passportBerry and her team are expected to

continue their tour to other cities in Texas including El Paso, San Antonio, Austin, Dallas and Fort Worth.

Berry is the first Indian-American to fill the state-level post of Secretary of State in the entire country. She was ap-pointed by Gov. Rick Perry as Secre-tary of State in late 2013 and she took office Jan. 7, 2014.

Continued on Page 9

Satya Nadella

Continued on Page 5

Page 2: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 2 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014OP-ED/OPINIONS/COMMENTARY

Publisher: Koshy ThomasAssociate Publisher: Sherly PhilipEditor-in-Chief: Shobana MurateeAustin Correspondent: Sherine ThomasPrint & Media Marketing: Jacob DavidMarketing: Susan Pothanikat Production: AR VadlamaniOffice Manager: Priyan Mathew Voice of Asia TV News

Online Editor: Shobana Muratee

All rights reserved. No material herein or portions thereof may be published without the consent of the publisher. Voice of Asia assumes no liability resulting from action taken based on the information included herein. Pub-lished weekly by Free Press LLC, 8303 SW Freeway, Suite # 325, Houston, TX 77074. Tel: 713-774-5140. Fax: 713-774-5143. Email for editorial submissions: [email protected]; Email for advertising inquiries and submissions: [email protected]

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Voice of Asia (USPS 010-215) (ISSN#10705058) is published every Friday (for a subscription rate of $30 per year) by Free Press LLC, 8303 SW Freeway, Suite # 325, Houston, TX 77074. Tel: 713-774-5140. Fax: 713-774-5143. Periodical postage paid at Houston, Texas. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Voice of Asia, 8303 SW Freeway, Suite # 325, Houston, TX 77074

It is the policy of Voice of Asia to publish letters to the editor which evidence a variety of viewpoints. The opinions expressed in any particular letter to the editor are not necessarily those of the management. Voice of Asia welcomes letters in reply to issues raised in letters to editor. In as much letters to the editor are not articles written or researched by members of Voice of Asia, it is not the policy of the Voice of Asia to perform any investigation or confirmation of any facts or allegations contained in letters to the editor. Moreover, Voice of Asia reserves the right to edit letters to the editor as necessary to correct errors of fact, punctuation, spelling and to comply with space constraints. - The Publisher

Nadella at the topTuesday’s announce-ment by Microsoft appointing India-born

Satya Nadella as its CEO is the culmination of a five-month-long search that began when Steve Ballmer announced his retirement in August last year. After considering some well-known names such as Ford Motor Company CEO Alan Mulally and Ericsson CEO Hans Vestberg, the company seems to have made a safe choice by settling for Mr. Na-della, a Microsoft veteran of 22 years. Mr. Nadella is known to be strong in technology, hav-ing headed less-glamorous but high tech businesses such as the Bing search engine and the cloud and enterprise business solutions. His appointment has elicited positive reactions from analysts and long-time observ-ers of the company, but Mr. Nadella’s challenge has only begun. Microsoft, once an agile corporation quick on its feet, is now a lumbering giant that is

playing catch-up in the market. The proliferation of hand-held devices such as tablets and smartphones at the cost of per-sonal computers is posing a ma-jor threat to Microsoft. The $78 billion giant has but a marginal presence in operating software for mobile hand-held devices, which prompted it to acquire Nokia’s mobile business re-cently. Integrating this business with Microsoft seamlessly will be among Mr. Nadella’s first challenges. He has to wrest back a share of the consumer’s mind-space — and wallet — that Microsoft held during the glory days of the personal com-puter, grappling with the likes of Apple and Google.

In India, the reaction to the appointment has been on pre-dictable lines with the media and the masses alike compli-menting themselves on the el-evation of “one of their own” to the top of the technology em-pire. While there is reason to be proud given that Mr. Nadella’s early education was in India and his parents still live here, it would be wrong to scream from the roof-tops that this is yet another event that marks the arrival of India on the world stage. To be sure, Mr. Nadella is not the first person of In-dian origin to head a blue-chip American corporation, and nor will he be the last. We should also remember that Mr. Nadel-

la has spent half his life in the U.S. and earned his spurs there. We need to introspect whether this story of an individual — forget an immigrant — rising to the top at so young an age through sheer merit would have been possible in the Indian sys-tem. Mr. Nadella and other In-dian immigrants before him in the U.S. could succeed thanks to the meritocracy that is the corner-stone of the American system. While we may have our occasional quibbles with America, we need to appreci-ate and learn from that country on how to respect and reward talent and merit, in any field of human endeavour. Courtesy: The Hindu

Mr. Nadella and other Indian immigrants before him in the U.S. could suc-ceed thanks to the meritocracy that is the corner-stone of the American sys-tem.

U.S approves pill cameraThe ingestible pill camera from Given Imaging is designed to help doctors

spot polyps and other early signs of colon cancer.

A kinder, gentler approach to one of the most dreaded exams in medicine is on the way — U.S. regulators have cleared a bite-size camera to help screen the large intestine of patients who have trouble with colonos-copies.

The ingestible pill camera from Given Imaging is designed to help doctors spot polyps and other early signs of colon can-cer. The Food and Drug Admin-istration cleared the device for patients who have had trouble with the cringe-inducing proce-dure, which involves probing the colon using a tiny camera on a four-foot long, flexible tube.

The pill camera was previously approved in 80 other countries, including in Japan, Europe and Latin America.

The Israeli company’s tech-nology, developed from missile defence systems, uses a battery-powered camera to take high-speed photos as it slowly winds its way through the intestinal tract over eight hours. The imag-es are transmitted to a recording device worn around the patient’s waist and later reviewed by a doctor.

While Given’s wireless, im-age-beaming system may sound like science fiction, it’s actually more than a decade old. In 2001, the company received FDA ap-proval for a similar device used to get a close-up view of the small intestine.

At that time, analysts expected Given’s approach to grow into a direct competitor with traditional colonoscopy. But company stud-ies found that the images taken by the mini-camera were not quite as clear as those from the in-office procedure. As a result,

the company has pursued a more limited market for its PillCam — patients who have trouble under-going standard colonoscopies.

The Food and Drug Adminis-tration approved the company’s PillCam Colon for patients who have experienced an incomplete colonoscopy. The company esti-mates 750,000 U.S. patients are not able to complete the proce-dure each year, due to anatomy issues, previous surgery or vari-ous colon diseases.

Even with this limited indica-tion, analysts estimate the new pillcam could grow to sales of over $60 million in North America by 2019, with room for expansion as the technology

improves. MorningStar analyst Debbie Wang said the company has shrewdly positioned the de-vice as another tool in the gas-trointestinal specialist’s tool kit, rather than a direct competitor.

“Given’s management un-derstands that the traditional colonoscopy is the gastroenter-ologist’s bread and butter right now,” Ms Wang said. “So they didn’t want to do anything that would position this as a substi-tute.”

Ms Wang notes that Given’s PillCam costs $500, signifi-cantly less than the $4,000 for a colonoscopy. Eventually, she thinks doctors may use the de-vice to attract adults who avoid

regular screenings due to fears of pain, embarrassment and gen-eral discomfort.

The Centers for Disease Con-trol and Prevention’s guidelines currently recommend regular colonoscopies beginning at age 50 and continuing until age 75, though the majority of American adults don’t follow the recom-mendations. In December, Irish medical device firm Covidien said it was buying Given for about $860 million. Given, head-quartered in Yoqneam, Israel, markets seven lines of medical devices and surgical supplies, including pillcams to screen the oesophagus and small intestine. Source: AP

Tortured till deathWhile countries around the world are going about abolishing the

capital punishment for its inhumane nature, we in India, one of the more ancient civilisations, are exacerbating the cruelty by tortur-ing death-row inmates while they are alive, to boot. Many studies have shown that the death penalty is no real deterrent to crime. If the courts still insist on sentencing our brethren to death for heinous crimes, the least they could do is to ensure that the double jeopardy of state-sponsored torture, which is a direct violation of the fundamental rights, does not seem to take place.

Prem Krishnan,

Malappuram

The article, “Condemned to die, but not to wait” (Feb. 5), brings out an incongruent duality in the Supreme Court’s adjudication. On the one hand, it callously denies the country’s LGBT commu-nity the fundamental right to freedom, and on the other, it makes a show of adhering to niceties in sticking up for the rights of persons who have committed heinous crimes. If the Court displays any semblance of integrity of purpose, it is in continuing — in retain-ing the death penalty as well as discriminating against homosexual persons — to baulk the refinement of mindsets that has occurred the world over.

C.K. Deshmukh,

Ranchi

Page 3: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 3 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

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PEARLAND - Indian Ambassador to the USA, HE Dr. Subrah-

manyam Jaishankar visited Sri Meenakshi Temple in Pearland on Sunday February 2nd. He is the fourth Indian Ambassador to visit Meenakshi temple adding to the list of its distinguished visitors in its thirty seven year history. MTS board members and devotees gathered near the Rajagopuram entrance. As the cavalcade of vehicles pulled up with the distinguished visitor,

Second Front Page

several children and ladies wel-comed the group with roses in their hands. The priests greeted the guests with the traditional Poorna Kumbam when they en-tered through the Raja Gopuram. The Ambassador was accompa-nied by Honorable Consul Gen-eral Sri. Parvathaneni Harish, Pearland Mayor Tom Reid and Eminent physicist Dr. E.C. G. Sudharshan.

The distinguished visitors entered the main temple as the

priests led them with the vedic chant where they had the dhar-shan of the deities in the main temple and took part in the aarthi. They were given on a short tour of the temple by MTS chairman Dr. Vaduganathan to the New Ganesh Temple, the Ratham and Visitor center. The Ambassador was thoroughly engaged during the tour and asked lots of ques-tions about the MTS history.

A group of children, who are students of Vidushi Smt. Raja-

rajeshwari Bhat, sang an invo-catory prayer song and rendered beautifully both the Indian & American national anthems.

Indian Ambassador visits Sri Meenakshi Temple in Pearland

HOUSTON - On February 4, 2014, GOPIO (Global Or-ganization of People of Indian Origin), Houston Chapter at its General Council meeting held elections for positions in the GOPIO Executive Board for the next two-year term in accor-dance with GOPIO’s By-Laws. The results of the elections are as follows:

GOPIO Houston Chapter’s New Executive Board Elected

President: Ms. Mitra Panchal, Vice President: Mr. S.K. Tre-han, Secretary: Ms. Uma Man-travadi (to continue), Treasurer: Mr. Som Nair (to continue).

For more information, contact GOPIO HOUSTON CHAPTER at [email protected] or [email protected].

GOPIO is a non-partisan,

non-sectarian global organiza-tion with chapters in several countries, actively promoting the interests of people of Indian origin worldwide by monitoring and addressing current critical issues of concern, and by en-hancing cooperation and com-munication between groups of Indians living in various coun-tries.

Seated: Exe. Board members L-R: Som Nair, S.K. Trehan, Mitra Panchal and Uma Mantravadi,Standing: Advisors L-R: Koshy Thomas, Sam Kannappan, Mehesh Shah and Chad Patel.

The Ambassador and the guests were felicitated with Ponnadai (silk shawl), a copy of book by Dr. Bala N Iyer and other small

temple gifts. The Ambassador thanked all and acknowledged Sam Kannappan for facilitating the visit.

HE Dr. Jaishankar and Hon. Consul Gerneral P Harish being received at the Meenakshi temple.

Page 4: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 4 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

Q. A policeman told me I was jogging on the wrong side of the street. Is there really a law about which side of the street you jog on?

A. Yes, there is a law and it applies to any pedestrian, whether he or she is jogging, walking, running or skipping. Under the law, a pedestrian must stay on the sidewalk. If there is no sidewalk, you may use the street but you must go in the direction facing traf-fic. If you were jogging in the street in the same direction as traffic, you were violating the law.

Q. I have been married for ten years. I am currently considering divorce. Last month my father passed away and I inherited a large sum of money. If I file for divorce will my husband be entitled to half of the money I inherited?

A. When you file for divorce, you basically split all of your “community” property. Most of what you or your spouse acquire after you are married is consider community property. Money you inherit, however, is “separate” property and does not get divided. You should be able to keep the money you inherited, even if you get divorced.

Q. I owed a credit car company $1,500. I could not afford to pay the full amount, so I sent a check for $1,000 clearly marked “paid in full.” They cashed the check. Now they say I still owe $500. I think the matter was settled when the bank cashed my check. Who is right?

A. Under the law, paying someone with a check clearly marked “accepted as payment in full” to settle a dispute might discharge the obligation. That means that in some cases, if a business cashes the check it may not recover any additional money. In your case, however, this rule does not apply.

For the “payment in full” rule to apply the check must be offered in “good faith” and the claim must be in dispute. In other words, it must be a good faith attempt to resolve a dispute about how much money is owed. Simply offering less than the full amount owed is not a good faith attempt to resolve a dispute. For example, if you and your mechanic have a dispute about how much you owe for repairs, he says $700 and you say $500, a $600 check marked “payment in full” would satisfy your obligation. If the mechanic cashed your check, he would not be legally entitled to any additional money. On the other hand, if you owed the mechanic $1,500 and the amount is not in dispute, you may not offer $1,000 to settle the undisputed amount. Even if the check is clearly marked “payment in full,” the mechanic may cash the check, and then seek to recover the additional $500. The bottom line-- the credit card company is right and you still owe the $500.

Q. Isn’t there a law that says I am entitled to paid sick leave?

A. There is no law entitling an employee to a paid sick leave. Federal law, however, does require that certain employees be given unpaid leave for up to six months, for things like illness or birth of a child. The law is called the Americans with Disabilities Act. You may learn more about this law at www.ada.gov.

Q. Did I hear you have a consumer news alert you distribute? How do I subscribe?

A. I do publish a free Consumer News Alert. It is distributed by email three times a week. It contains everything from news alerts and shopping tips, to budgeting and dis-cussions about the law. You may subscribe at my website, listed below.

To learn more about the law, or subscribe to my Consumer News Alert, visit my website, www.peopleslawyer.net.

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Introducing H.E. Dr. Dr. Subrah-manyam Jaishankar as “the most dy-namic diplomat of the Indian Foreign Service,” Hon. P Harish spoke of his distinguished reputation as a diplomat, held for more than 30 years while he represented India’s interests and fos-tered friendly working relationships in countries around the world. “It is a unique occasion with the Indian Amer-ican youth, who are pursuing classical arts and music, will be performing,” Hon. P Harish said.

The Consul General also welcomed elected officials: Harris County Judge Ed Emmett, Harris County Sher-iff Adrian Garcia, representatives of Senator Ted Cruz, David Schumer, Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee’s representative Michael Halpin and Congressman Al Green’s representa-tive, Sam Merchant. On the occasion, two special guests, Padma Shri AK Mago of Dallas and Dr. Renu Khator, University of Houston president and recipient of Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Award in India recently were honored. The CG also mentioned that US Rep-resentatives Sheila Jackson, Al Green and Pete Olson had meet the Ambassa-dor and spent time with him the previ-ous day at his residence.

Addressing the gathering, H.E. Dr. Jaishankar said, “I have been associ-ated with Indian Americans for more than 30 years now. Looking back, it has changed beyond recognition, and for the better. One reason is its Indian community. It is the community that has shaped how the average American thinks about India. They made it posi-tive,” he said. “I am confident that the relationship will be taken to new lev-els.”

Describing Indo-US relationshi, he said, “We think alike on international relations and economic partnership. We share the same bonds of responsibil-ity for freedom.” Stressing that much still needs to be done in certain areas, he said, “We need to get stronger in security relations, stronger in business relations and stronger in educational relations.” He urged Indian Americans to step forward and support efforts in these areas. About Houston he said that it had a special place in Indo-US rela-tionship. “I’m here for the renewal of my relationship with US and Texas,” he said.

On the occasion, H.E. Dr. Jaishan-kar recognized Padma Shri AK Mago, Chairman and CEO of Dallas-based business and investment consulting company Mago & Associates, who is acclaimed for his philanthropic contri-

Ambassador Dr. Jaishankar joins Houstonians at India’s Republic Day reception

butions and for helping raise mil-lions of dollars for Dallas-area Indian American organizations. This year, seven out of five Pad-ma awards were awarded to In-dian Americans, the Ambassador mentioned.

Dr. Renu Khator, chancellor of the University of Houston System and president of the University of Houston, has received the Prava-si Bharatiya Samman Award, the highest honor conferred on over-seas Indians. On the occasion, Ambassador Dr. Jaishankar con-gratulated and honored her.

Following the messages of the dignitaries was an enchant-ing presentation of a combina-tion of classical dance, music and singing. Earlier, Keerthana Bhat and Kruthi Bhat, students of guru Mrs.Vidhushi RajaRajeswari Bhat rendered the two national anthems of India and the USA. An ensemble of tabla art-ists: Anuraag Shah, Jason Zinn, Arun Sabapathy,Rahul Gupta, Sumedh Sau-rabh , Manan Mehta,Yash Kakodkar, Johaan Pally, Tejas Kolhatkar,Sanath Aithala ,Nikhil Balasubramanyam gave a breathtaking performance with their guru Pt. Shantilal Shah. A classi-cal dance group: Rachna Penmestha, Ravali Bhavaraju,Riya Mandalapu, Amani Parvathaneni,Swara Mukka-mala and Milinda Nutalapati, students from the Anjali School of Performing Arts, presented the most colorful of the items. The dance saluting Mother India

was choreographed by their guru Ratna Kumar.

The best was for the last; a classical vocal presentation by guru Pt. Suman Gosh and his disciples Smt. Sucheta Roy, Smt. Sowmita Narayanan, Amiya Swami-Ghosh, Apurva Swami-Ghosh, Bhavi Pandya , Prasun Kolhe and Reet Sinha.

H.E. Dr. Jaishankar honored all the gurus and the artists on the memorable occasion. Mrs. Nandita Harish de-scribed the dedication with which each and every one - even the very youngest worked to achieve such perfection on the occasion.

The program was efficiently emceed by Ganga Parne, Marketing Officer, Consulate General of India.

Continued from Page 1

Keerthana Bhat and Kruthi Bhat singing the National Anthem.

HE Dr. Subrahmanyam Jaishankar honors Padma Shri AK Mago. Also seen here are Mrs. Mago and Hon. Consul General P Harish.

HE Dr. Subrahmanyam Jaishankar Dr. Renu Khator. Seen here with husband Dr. Suresh Khator and Hon. Consul General P Harish.

Tabla artists performing.

A classical dance item by students of Anjali School of Performing Arts.

Page 6: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 6 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014COMMUNITYIt is a great pleasure to be back

at the Carnegie Endowment, as indeed in Washington itself. I was last here more than six years ago, speaking at this very institution as our nuclear agree-ment was nearing conclusion. Since then, I have watched the India-U.S. relationship evolve with great interest and some sense of ownership. The size of the briefing books they gave me as I was preparing to come to Washington led me to be-lieve that we have a good story to tell. Sentiment, as they say in the markets, however, seems less positive than I would have hoped, for a variety of reasons. What is clear is that there is much work to be done.

2. Looking back at the growth of Indo-U.S. relations in the last decade and a half, it is as if we were fated to come together. Now, that has not al-ways been our history. If we closely examine the three key drivers of our ties today, the reality is that each one has a specific context. First & fore-most is our geo-strategic and political convergence, some-thing that could only manifest itself after the Cold War. The second is our intersecting eco-nomic interests. These are the consequence of higher Indian economic growth rates as well as the broader rise of Asia. The third is a mix of our shared values and societal contacts. These reflect the expanding In-dian-American community and the growing middle class in In-dia. Each one of these factors evolved over a period of time. But their coming together cre-ated the basis for the current phase of our ties. It is not as if all of this happened on its own. On the contrary, the new level of our relationship was animated by strategic vision in both nations. Prime Minis-ter Manmohan Singh only re-cently singled out the coming together of the two countries, in the form of the civilian nuclear agreement, as the best moment of his whole tenure. This vision became reality due to the com-mitment and diligence on the part of many - on both sides. I stress this to drive home the point that our ties can neither afford dilution of attention nor weakening of faith.

3. So, where are our rela-tions today? Politically, there is no question that our comfort levels are higher than they have ever been before. From the highest levels of the Govern-ment to the legislature and bu-reaucracy, we see a frequency, intensity and candor of contacts that speak for themselves. Our dialogues have moved well beyond orthodox stocktak-ing of bilateral issues and an exchange of views on global ones. We are now talking de-fense cooperation, counter-ter-rorism and homeland security with as much ease as we are en-ergy, education or health. That we discuss East Asia regularly reflects our confidence levels as much as our doing trilateral dialogues with Japan and with Afghanistan. Expanding such conversations to cover the Indi-an Ocean region is the next step in this direction. Our economic interactions have similarly un-dergone a transformation. A greater sectoral focus and en-gagement on specific policies and regulations underline that this is for real. Where civil so-ciety is concerned, the physical flow of people has been mag-nified by virtual communica-tions. There is truly cause for satisfaction about the level our ties have reached.

4. Why then is there a problem of sentiment? The fact is that to a considerable degree, we are victims of our own suc-cess. The India-US relationship arrived - some would say, at last - and by doing so, ended the romance of the phase of court-ship. The change is visible in the less integrated approach we take, leaving each department or agency to handle its counter-part. That no longer allows the luxury of cutting some slack on an account that matters, expect-

Speech by Ambassador Dr. S. Jaishankar on U.S.-India Relations at the Carnegie Endowment

29 January, 2014ing to make up elsewhere. The willingness to take risks also decreases as there is no longer a great cause to pursue. And grand strategy, once achieved, quickly changes from rocket science to a no-brainer! As we settle into the partnership, it takes a different mindset to ad-dress the less exciting chores of maintenance, upkeep and prog-ress. The danger here is that individual problems that may well have been dismissed in the earlier era can now dominate the narrative.

5. This explanation, how-ever, does not suffice in itself. There is also the reality, often glossed over when it comes to our ties, that the world situa-tion changed profoundly even as the relationship was in the making. I refer here to the 2008 financial crisis and its after-math. This had a particularly sharp impact on American pri-orities, and with some time lag, on India as well. Conversations changed from grand strategy and geo-politics to more mun-dane issues of market access and investment conditions. Economic concerns assumed centre stage and every busi-ness dispute acquired a greater resonance. As it was bound to happen, this also created fertile ground for sometimes exag-gerating the nature of problems and their implications. The big change that I see returning to this account is the salience of tax disputes, localization and IP concerns on the US end and immigration reform, market access, protectionism and total-ization on the Indian one.

6. I am also aware that there is considerable disappointment that our nuclear understanding has not translated into substan-tial business for US companies so far. The debate, as many of you know, revolves around our civil nuclear liability law and its implications. There are discussions underway on how this issue can be addressed to the satisfaction of suppliers and recipient alike, taking into account the Indian legal and regulatory framework as well as the international conven-tion. The nuclear initiative has surmounted past challenges and speaking from experience, it must be approached with a positive spirit. Let me make another point in this context that is often overlooked. I re-call our Prime Minister telling Secretary Kerry - then a U.S. Senator - that our nuclear dif-ferences were a thorn stuck in the throat of our relationship. By reaching an understanding, the way was cleared for a much warmer relationship between us. To my mind, the indirect benefits flowing from the Indo-U.S. civil nuclear agreement far outweigh the direct ones.

7. Another issue that damp-ened sentiment somewhat was our not choosing an Ameri-can supplier for our medium multi-role combat aircraft. As someone involved in the initial phase of that exercise, let me testify to the process difficul-ties at the US end and the chal-lenge of creating a template for a country like India. There was also a sense of entitlement on the American side, which the last time I checked, is the pre-rogative of the customer. Sub-sequent events have disproven the political inferences that many drew from that episode. The Indian Air Force is today second only to the USAF in its fleet of C17 Globemaster heavy lift aircraft. The Indian Navy introduced the P8 Posei-don maritime surveillance air-craft at the same time as did the US Navy. We have just cleared an additional order of C130J Super Hercules aircraft. Un-like many other recipients of

American military hardware, India actually pays for these ac-quisitions. Nor does India ever given cause for technology pro-tection concerns. It is also en-couraging that an India-specific acquisition and co-production template is now under devel-opment in the Pentagon. The rest of the defense relationship is doing well too. The Unit-ed States is the country with which our Armed Forces con-duct the maximum number of exercises. These, I might add, have been growing in complex-ity. This year, India would be a full participant in the RIMPAC exercises for the first time, de-ploying naval assets in that re-gard. . Our policy dialogues and military exchanges have also grown in their frequency and comfort level.

8. Geo-strategic convergence is still the core of our relation-ship even if it is more circum-spectly expressed in day-to-day diplomacy. Looking across the global expanse, our concerns overlap to a large extent as do sources of our threat. As a re-sult, our national security struc-tures are engaged in the broad-est possible sense. Even as the U.S. recovers economically and strategically, the case for work-ing with India has only gotten stronger. There is a broad con-sensus in this town that any fu-ture security strategy has to be more partnership based. To our West, there are uncertainties arising out of the 2014 draw-down scenario from Afghani-stan and its consequences. To our East, maritime claims and disputes have heightened ten-sion in the Indo-Pacific region. Overall, Asia has become po-litically more volatile, yet eco-nomically more central. How India’s ‘Look East’ policy meets the United States’ rebal-ancing will have a significance beyond our individual interests. In addressing that and other pressing challenges, we would serve each other’s interests best by being ourselves. After all, India and the United States do have a common commitment to a peaceful, pluralistic and progressive world. And no one should dispute that, as a liberal democratic society, India’s rise poses no challenge to Ameri-can values.

9. In the nearer term, our diplomats and strategists are naturally confronted with a myriad of issues of internation-al politics. We seem to agree

on many of these issues but differ on some. That should not be surprising as our broad political and security goals are not in contradiction. At the same time, we must also ac-knowledge that our experienc-es, understanding and interests are not identical. Differences can, of course, be played up by a constituency pushing a par-ticular cause. There is also the temptation to be transactional under pressure. On issues of economic development, we cannot ignore the plain truth that we have very different sit-uations at home. This makes us often sit on opposite sides of the table. It is important to under-stand that negotiations on some of the more difficult issues are independent of our bilateral ties. At the end of the day, our overall relationship is larger than the individual problems we examine and debate. Hav-ing said that, it is also impor-tant that we resist calls to return to arguments of the past. The current phase of our ties came about precisely because there was a more acute understand-ing of the growing weight and potential of India by the United States. That must continue if we are to forge ahead.

10. Our economic coop-eration is based on a counter-part of this broad vision. This has allowed the relationship to foster an exchange of goods, capital and services and build new constituencies of support. Trade has quadrupled to $100 billion in the last seven years. Investments have crossed the $ 50 billion mark. While putting behind us the famous descrip-tion of economic cooperation being as flat as a chapati, we do have to contend today with the compulsions of the post-2008 era. As a result, we are now entering a period that estab-lished partners of the U.S. are more familiar with but which is still a novel experience for us Indians.

11. Let me make four big points here. One, we do rec-ognize that the slowdown in India is not just the result of the global crisis. Reviving growth through increasing invest-ment is our foremost priority. An empowered committee has cleared 286 stalled infrastruc-ture projects worth $ 97 billion last year. Our government’s fis-cal deficit, a serious source of concern, has also been brought down sharply. An improvement in the economic mood back

home will surely lift our bilat-eral interactions. Two, India is concerned about its reputation, and we mean to act to show that we are open to interna-tional business. That is evident from the recent announcement of “Safe Harbor” rules, the clarification of transfer pricing regulations, efforts at limiting the impact of the ‘Preferential Market Access’ policy for IT and telecommunications on the private sector, and maintaining the 100% FDI limit on brown field pharmaceutical acquisi-tions. An important mechanism to discuss and resolve tax dis-putes has been reactivated and will be meeting in Washington next fortnight. And discussions on the Bilateral Investment Treaty are also set to resume very shortly. Three, we could continue a public argument on trade and investment issues - both sides have their own nar-rative of woes - or move to a more constructive, if less pub-lic, dialogue. In my early con-tacts with the Administration, I have made clear our preference is for the latter. But if presented with the former, I fear that as naturally argumentative people, we could be well be tempted to respond in kind. Four, on some issues, we need to find an ac-ceptable compromise because the fact is that we are coming at it from different places. The pharmaceutical business is a good example and triangulat-ing affordability, profits, and respect for intellectual property is a challenge that merits more consideration.

12. Since the economy is now so central to our ties, I would also like to make it very clear that India’s interests war-rant supporting an early Ameri-can recovery. Not enough credit has been given to the invest-ments that Indian companies have made here since 2008. A recent study of 68 Indian com-panies revealed that their col-lective investments in the US exceed $ 17 billion. One third of them are actively engaged in R&D here, spending about $ 350 million in that respect. Similarly, the Indian aircraft orders that I spoke about ear-lier alone support 40,000 jobs in the defense industry. A fair dialogue should also take into account Indian priorities and concerns. Here, the bottom line is that the costs of doing busi-ness in the United States are systematically under pressure from competitors. A worrying

sign is the tendency by some to demonize the business climate in India. This tactic could well end up being counterproduc-tive.

13. You could reasonably ask what I would say about our ties to an Indian audience. To them, I would make two basic points. One, that to realize In-dia’s four key priorities - ener-gizing the economy, raising our technology and management capabilities, securing the home-land, and ensuring a favorable balance of power - the United States is the indispensable part-ner. Two, these big Indian goals are not at odds with the inter-ests of the US. In fact, these could even be complementary.

14. Relationship building is never without challenges. Some of it is structural; the rest emanates from our different histories. The U.S. has to over-come its inclination to view ties through the lens of alliance practices. Indians perhaps have to indulge themselves less in compulsive ambiguity. Ironi-cally, American complaints on that score usually come when it too is considering hedging. Building ties requires a degree of give and take that can test of-ficialdoms. Appreciating each other’s interests can be more difficult than we generally as-sume. And contrary to what many seem to believe here, domestic politics is not just the prerogative of the United States.

15. In going about my task as Ambassador, I draw support from the vast goodwill that now characterizes the attitudes of our societies to the other. The grand strategy underwriting our ties is fundamentally sound. It needs maintenance and from time to time, an upgrade. That puts the emphasis on detailing and problem solving.

16. For those of us who have devoted time and energy to building Indo-U.S. ties, the last few weeks have been truly distressing. What I have encountered since my arrival is the sense that this situation should never have happened. But since it did, we will now have to work through this prob-lem. That is part of the conver-sations underway. But what the issue does highlight is the need for greater sensitivity, for better understanding and for stronger oversight of our ties. I rest my case on that note.

Press, Information and Cul-ture). Embassy of India

Page 7: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 7 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014COMMUNITYThe India Culture Center Holds

I-Fair celebrating India’s 65

by Shobana Muratee

STAFFORD – India Culture Center (ICC), Houston’s longest

standing Indo-American or-ganization held its signature event I-Fair 2014 on Saturday, February 1st commemorating India’s 65th Republic Day at the Stafford Center in Stafford, Texas.

The formal session started with the lighting of the lamp by Mrs. Nandita Harish, wife of Hon. Consul General P Harish, ICC’s Chief Trustee Meera Ka-poor and PV Patel.

The day’s program started at 11 AM with children’s pro-grams, a magic show, and later the Grand Parade held within the premises of the Center and with ICC partnering organiza-tions participating.

Welcoming the gathering, PV Patel, ICC’s outgoing president expressed his pleasure and grat-itude in serving ICC especially during ICC’s 40th anniversary year. “During the year (2013) we did a lot of activities. We participated in many Indian-American local organizations and conducted programs to-gether. And ICC’s 40th year celebration was the best we ever had,” he said. “It was a collaborative effort of all the past presidents, trustees, direc-tors and volunteers to make it

such a huge success.” He men-tioned that the ‘Jatin Pandit, Live’ concert was the highlight of the anniversary celebration. Conveying his message as the outgoing president he said, “We as Indians must be united in ev-ery way. When we come out in public we are referred to as an Indian, not as a Gujarati, Mara-thi, or a Telugu. When we are facing any natural calamities related to American community

we should all get together and work.” He quoted the example of the incident wherein four Houston firefighters had lost their lives in a fire accident and the Indian American commu-nity had come together, raising over $57,000 in donations.

Highlighting this year’s theme “Unity in Diversity’, Charlie Patel, ICC’s Incoming president spoke on ICCs mis-sion and ideology. “ICC has focused on being inclusive and participated,” he said, “This entire decade has seen ICC col-laborating and coordinating for serving the community. ICC is a platform where I see people joining in and giving back to the community.” He made a special mention of the major organization that ICC has been working closely which include India House, IAPAC, IACF, IACCGH, Gujarati Samaj, Jain Society, BAPS, Punjabi Soci-ety, Tagore Society, Hindus of Greater Houston, TCA, and MG Library to name a few. Coming together and celebrating events has its advantages like having larger turnouts, avoiding du-plication and most importantly, conserving funds and resources, he pointed out.

Prasad Kalva, Event chair said “On the Republic day, India prompted its Constitution. This Constitution was a part of the heart work of so many talented

leaders and thinkers, and pro-vided the citizens of India with fundamental rights - justice, equality and liberty. When we left India to come to the United States, we were blessed with the same fundamental rights, that include freedom of religion and freedom of speech among other liberties. So this Republic Day is the celebration of the people of two democracies, the larg-est and the oldest, to salute the

Constitution and the leaders and thinkers who framed these con-stitutions.” Kalva expressed his thanks to ICC directors and vol-unteers who helped him put the event together. Ramesh Akaparu served as the Event Co-Chair.

He went on to explain that this program which included the grand parade, a vibrant cultural program showcasing the young talent of the children, and the

exhibited ethnic-wear jewelry, plus also delicacies from India. Prasad thanked the ICC presi-dent and the director for giving him the opportunity to conduct the event.

Jasmeeta Singh was the Em-cee for the afternoon part of the

program which comprised the formal and cultural program. As always, the program was very colorful with patriotic songs and other dances that enhanced the mood. Elected officials in-cluding Stafford Mayor Leon-ard Scarcella, Councilman Ken Mathews,Sugar Land Council-

men Harrish Jajoo and Himesh Gandhi spoke on the occasion and presented proclamations to the organizers. Sen. John Cronyn’s representative, Jay Guerrera and Congressman Al Green’s representative, Sam Merchant also presented mes-sages on the occasion.

ICC President Charlie Patel giving his message. Photos by Priyan Mathew, VOA.

The Grande Parade, one of the highlights of the celebrations was participated by ICC’s partnering organizations.

ICC’s Board of Directors, Trustees, and representatives of its partnering organizations.

Mrs. Nandita Harish, Chief Trustee Meera Kapoor and PV Patel seen lighting the lamp.

Members of the leading Indian American organizations were honored on the ocassion.

Elected officials and dignitaries sing the national anthems of India and the US with ICC members

Page 8: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014
Page 9: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 9 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014WORLD/US

New York — Sixteen juve-niles were recovered and more than 45 people arrested during a crackdown on child prostitu-tion linked to the Super Bowl, the Federal Bureau of Investi-gation said Tuesday.

An FBI statement said the youngsters aged between 13 and 17 had been found in an operation targeting commercial child sex trafficking during the American football showpiece.

“High-profile special events, which draw large crowds, have become lucrative opportunities for child prostitution criminal enterprises,” Ron Hosko, assis-tant director of the FBI’s Crimi-nal Investigative Division, said in a statement.

“The FBI and our partners remain committed to stopping this cycle of victimization and putting those who try to profit from this type of criminal ac-tivity behind bars,? he added.

The FBI worked with more than 50 law enforcement agen-cies in four states during the crackdown ahead of Sunday’s NFL season finale in East Ru-therford, New Jersey.

Several of the 45 people ar-rested admitted to traveling to New Jersey “specifically for the purpose of prostituting women and children at the Su-per Bowl,” the FBI said.

The teenagers recovered during the raid included high school students and children who had been reported missing by their families.

Additional enforcement ac-tions also led to the recovery of international human trafficking victims, the FBI added.

Last week US lawmakers warned child prostitution net-works were exploiting events like the Super Bowl, with con-gressman Christopher Smith describing the event as a “sex trafficking magnet.”

Smith cited figures from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which reported that more than 10,000 women and girls were traf-ficked to Miami for the 2010 Super Bowl.

Carol Smolenski, of the non-profit End Child Prostitution and Trafficking-USA, testified before lawmakers that around 100,000 children are trafficked into the US sex trade ever year.

Gates “will devote more time to the company” in his new role on the board as “founder and technology advisor,” a com-pany statement said.

Nadella, 46, who becomes the third CEO at Microsoft, has been executive vice presi-dent of its Cloud and Enterprise group.

The moves come with Mi-crosoft losing ground to rivals like Apple and Google amid a shift away from the traditional personal computer to mobile devices and cloud services.

“As the industry changes we have to innovate and move for-ward,” Gates said in a video released on the Microsoft web-site.

“I’m thrilled that Satya has asked me to step up. I’ll have over a third of my time avail-able to meet with product groups.”

The 58-year-old Gates said that “during this time of trans-formation, there is no better person to lead Microsoft than

Satya Nadella.”He called Nadella “a proven

leader with hard-core engineer-ing skills, business vision and the ability to bring people to-gether.”

Gates stepped down as CEO in 2000 and left day-to-day op-erations in 2008 to devote more time to his multibillion-dollar Bill and Melinda Gates Foun-dation.

Microsoft said John Thomp-son, lead independent director,

will assume the job of chair-man at the tech giant.

Nadella, who takes over from the retiring Steve Ballmer, said, “Microsoft is one of those rare companies to have truly revo-lutionized the world through technology, and I couldn’t be more honored to have been chosen to lead the company.”

He added, “The opportunity ahead for Microsoft is vast, but to seize it, we must focus clear-ly, move faster and continue to transform. A big part of my job is to accelerate our ability to bring innovative products to our customers more quickly.”

The shake-up at Microsoft drew positive responses from analysts.

“I think this is a terrific de-velopment for the company,” said Greg Sterling at Opus Re-search.

“Nadella also seems to have encouraged the new Gates role, which will be good for the com-pany too. Personally, Nadella is a more humble and understated figure than Ballmer, which will be good for the company’s im-age. I also think Nadella brings a strong mix of business and technology expertise to the role.”

Satya Nadella named Microsoft new CEOFrank Gillett at Forrester Re-

search said Nadella has shown “a willingness to shake things up, so that seems positive to us.”

Gillett added that by using Gates as a key advisor, “he’s reaching for Gates’s experience in running the company but also in the successes in that era. But by having him in an infor-mal role, it also says we are in a new era. All in all, it seems quite positive.”

Roger Kay at Endpoint Tech-nologies Associates said Na-della will need to articulate a vision for Microsoft, which under Ballmer was undergoing a transformation from software to “devices and services.”

“Nadella has to come up with the vision,” Kay said. “Gates’s vision was appropriate for the 1970s and 1980s.”

Kay said Nadella “admits that he is green in asking sup-port from Gates but that’s OK. I think people can come into a job green and grow into it.”

Nadella “has been the enter-prise guy, so I would expect him to go in that direction. They may even spin off the consumer business.”

Deutsche Bank analyst Karl

Keirstead said Nadella was a “good choice.”

“Although Microsoft is a big ship to turn, in our view Na-della will push to make Micro-soft more innovative and agile, more like Apple and less like IBM,” Keirstead said in a re-search note.

Matthew Hedberg at RBC Capital Markets called Na-della “a safe choice” and said his background “could mean a bigger emphasis on cloud and enterprise than Microsoft has had in the past.”

Hedberg added that the shift in roles for Gates would be a “bigger positive for investor sentiment.”

In late morning trading, Mi-crosoft shares were up 0.33 percent at $36.60.

Nadella heads the team that runs the public, private and ser-vice provider clouds for Micro-soft. Previously, Nadella was president of Microsoft’s $19 billion server and tools busi-ness.

He is a native of Hyderabad, India and earned degrees from Mangalore University, the Uni-versity of Wisconsin in Mil-waukee and the University of Chicago.

Bill Gates with his former CEO Steve Ballmer (far rt) and incoming CEO Nadella at MS event.

Continued from Page 1

Juveniles rescued, 45 arrested in Super Bowl vice raid

FBI Assistant Director Ron Hosko speaks during a press conference

Page 10: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 10 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

Page 11: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

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In India, a Pilgrimage to a Feast for Thousandsby Guy Trebay, (The New York

Times)

RAYAVARAM, India — Pala-niappa Chettiar has always been goal oriented, and when

he turned 97 three years ago, he set himself a new one.

No one within memory in his family, extended clan or village had reached 100. Determined to get there himself, he cut down on the yolks in the raw eggs he swallows daily for breakfast, took extra care on his daily four-mile walk to the local Hindu temple and started planning for a party the likes of which few here (or anywhere, for that matter) have ever seen.

Early in January, Mr. Chettiar cele-brated his century, and threw open the

doors to his pillared ancestral home in this remote village in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu, to what appeared to be every person he had ever met — about 7,500 of them.

Summoning a local cook his family has turned to over the decades, he and one of his numerous grandsons chose a menu and settled on a rough guest list that included immediate family; members of both his extended clan and the larger community of prosper-ous traders known as Chettiars; friends from neighboring cities like Chennai, Madurai and Tiruchirapalli, and peo-ple from the numerous small villages surrounding his own.

“He’d issued so many verbal invi-tations, actually, we had no way of knowing how many would turn up,” Mr. Chettiar’s grandson Arunachalam Kasi said recently as a steady stream of guests arrived at the Chettiar house seeking blessings from the old man.

When the first estimate of 1,500 became 3,000 and then ballooned to 5,000, the organizers stopped count-

ing. By the time the big day rolled around on Jan. 2, they had already quadrupled their order of the banana leaves they use as plates. “We were prepared for anything,” Mr. Kasi said.

Six months earlier, Mr. Kasi and his wife had begun planning in earnest, organizing a vegetarian feast served in shifts at tables set inside the Chettiar house and in a striped tent over an ad-jacent courtyard. The menu aimed to showcase a richly aromatic and highly spiced cuisine that has inspired an ad-age in India: You are lucky to eat like a Chettiar.

There would be three kinds of rice: white, savory and sweet; North Indi-an-style biryani, and dollops of dal. There would be sambar and a selec-tion of five different curries, at least one a hearty dish made with eggplant, or brinjal. There would be individual bowls of fresh curd, or yogurt, and crisp papadums on the side. There would be, of course, the various pickle relishes without which no Indian meal is complete.

Supersize parties are unexceptional in a country where “go big or go home” may as well be an immutable verity, a place where religious pilgrimages, like last year’s Kumbh Mela in Alla-habad, Uttar Pradesh, routinely draw

scores of millions. What set Mr. Chet-tiar’s wingding apart were the crowds it drew to a dusty village two hours by road from a major city.

“I don’t know why you’re surprised,” Mr. Chettiar said good-naturedly, wav-ing away a visitor’s amazement.

Among the Chettiar merchants and traders, celebrations with 1,000 or more guests may be considered intimate. “For my daughter’s wed-ding, 8,000 ate breakfast,” said Alagu Muthu, a former president of the Na-tional Association for the Blind, and a Chettiar. “We had 5,000 for lunch.”

Last year, when her 28-year-old nephew, Karthik Meyyappan, a de-scendant of the rajah of Chettinad, married Parvathi Saravanan, a 21-year-old from Bangalore, the two families descended on their ancestral homes like an occupying force.

The secret weapon in that case was Mr. Meyyappan’s grandmother Meenakshi Meyyappan, a redoubtable septuagenarian who runs the Bangala, an internationally known 25-room hostelry in the clamorous town of Karaikudi.

After decades of organizing wed-dings, reunions and Shashti Poorthi (as the highly significant 60th birth-day celebrations for male Chettiars

are known), Mrs. Meyyappan has large-scale feeds down to a system. “First you book the cook,” she said. “There is always a fight for the cook,” a fact that owes to the brevity of the local wedding season here and a gen-eral clamor for astrologically auspi-cious days on which celebrations can be held. A contract is drawn up over a bowl of nuts and betel leaves, Mrs. Meyyappan added, and “then you cre-ate a menu and get to work.”

For Mr. Chettiar’s birthday, there were 220 people in the kitchen un-der the supervision of another head cook. “Seven thousand is nothing much,” Natesan said through an in-terpreter. “We did a wedding once for the daughter of a politician, and so it was expected that all the people from the local villages would come.” For that party, Natesan and team cooked 35,000 meals.

As at Mr. Chettiar’s feast, they were proper meals, not soup-kitchen-style buffets. Seated in shifts, diners were served by waiters wearing starched white shirts and traditional male gar-ments called dhotis who, in unison, spooned out delicacies from pots of clay or stainless steel.

The list of ingredients was truly eye-popping. Among the 85 itemized com-ponents were 200 lemons; 400 snake

gourds; 77 pounds of green chiles; 200 bags of tomatoes; 75 pounds each of chile and coriander powder; 375 pounds of potatoes; 640 pounds of red, white or raw rice flour; 7,500 banana leaves, and 500 coconuts.

“People love my grandfather, and so the cooks provided the tables and chairs for free,” Mr. Kasi said. “They only charged for the labor and ingredi-ents,” he added, noting that there was no need for utensils because in much of South India, people eat with their right hand.

For his part, Mr. Chettiar distributed 500 saris and an equal number of dho-tis, and funded a new wing for the lo-cal school. The feast cost $100,000, or roughly $14 a head, a sum that barely fazed the centenarian, who spends mornings trading on the Indian stock market and evenings glued to cricket matches on television.

“Of course, it was worth it,” Mr. Chettiar said of his big day, pronounc-ing himself well contented with the way it all turned out. “Full satisfac-tion!” he said.

Mr. Chettiar. His birthday feast cost $100,000, or roughly $14 a head.

A feast of epic proportions at the birthday party of Palaniappa Chettiar.

Among the Chettiar merchants and traders, celebrations with 1,000 or more guests may be considered intimate. “For my daughter’s wedding, 8,000 ate breakfast,” said Alagu Muthu, a former president of the National Association for the Blind, and a Chettiar. “We had 5,000 for lunch.”

“People love my grand-father, and so the cooks provided the tables and

chairs for free,” Mr. Kasi said. “They only charged for the la-bor and ingredients,” he added, noting that there was no need for utensils because in much of South India, people eat with their right hand.

Page 12: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 12 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

Friday, February 7, 2014 Section 2 Email: [email protected] Tel: 713-774-5140

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SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Jan. 22, 2014 – Asian Indians make up the

highest earning segment of American multicultural groups, according to a 2010 Pew Re-search Center survey, and much of their higher household income goes toward saving for their children’s college educa-tion, according to a recently released study from Massa-chusetts Mutual Life Insur-ance Company (MassMutual), the third biennial 2013 State of the American Family Study that offers a broad snapshot of Americans’ financial views. This heavy emphasis on higher education, however, leads to times when Asian Indians pri-oritize saving for their children over saving for themselves.

The study indicated that Asian-Indians are savers; 33percent of Asian Indian re-spondents indicate that they have six months or more of their monthly living expenses set aside as savings, and their top two financial priorities for their savings are for their chil-dren’s college education and keeping the family financially shielded. As a result, one quar-ter of Asian Indians struggle between saving to pay for their children’s college education and saving for their own retire-ment.

“Being an Asian Indian my-self, I know and understand the importance that the commu-nity places on putting family first and the difficult financial decisions that often result,” said Nimesh Trivedi, director of multicultural market sup-port, U.S. Insurance Group at MassMutual. “With the current cost of a college education, it can be challenging for parents to provide for several children’s education and still be left with a surplus for their own future.”

Asian Indian’s savings rate is not coincidental; as a group they are hands-on, when it comes to their finances. An overwhelming 70 percent of Asian Indian respondents want to be actively involved in all decisions regarding their fi-nances, while just over half indicated that they tend to do their own research and make their own decisions about in-surance and investments.

Yet, in spite of having some solid financial planning in place—they are more likely to own mutual funds, individual securities and college savings

MassMutual Study Sheds Light on How Asian Indians Prioritize their Investments, Savings

by: Casey Galindo, Wells Fargo Education Financial Ser-vices

As millions of college graduates begin re-payment of their stu-

dent loans, many will view the experience as a juggling act; and make multiple payments to multiple lenders on multiple dates each month. Today’s sav-vier graduates, who are scour-ing the Internet on tips and best practices for saving money on their loans, are finding that the incentives associated with con-solidating student loans helps to bring the juggling act under control and better-manage pay-ments.

What does private student loan consolidation mean?

Consolidating private student loans allows a borrower to re-finance a single private student loan or multiple private student loans from multiple lenders into one new loan, with a single lender, and to make one month-ly payment.

Graduates aim to simplify fi-nances and save

According to the Consumer Bankers Association, since 1980, the average cost of tu-ition and fees has risen 1,100 percent, or more than four times the rate of inflation. In another context, between 1986 and 2011, inflation increased 115 percent and the cost of col-lege increased 498 percent. If that trajectory continues, the cost of tuition could double in ten years.

With institutions costing more than $40,000 per year to attend, coupled with other as-sociated and unknown costs, students may need additional financing to pay for their edu-cation. If a federal loan doesn’t cover the full cost, private stu-dent loans are available to help fill the gap.

Attending graduate school, medical school, or enrolling in a post-doctorate program fol-lowing the completion of un-dergraduate studies can double the cost of going to college, leaving many graduates with multiple private student loans to manage. Financial institu-tions today, like Wells Fargo, offer private student loan con-solidation and single-loan re-financing, which may lower payment amounts to a more affordable level – potentially saving graduates thousands of dollars in the long-term.

When student loan custom-ers consolidate their private student loans with Wells Fargo between January 2 and Febru-ary 28, 2014, they’ll receive an additional 0.25% interest rate discount.

Customers can also add this discount on to certain other dis-counts they receive from Wells Fargo, which may result in an interest rate discount of up to 0.75%. However, customers who aren’t current Wells Far-go customers will receive the 0.25% discount, just for con-solidating.

It’s these types of incentives that are providing graduates with some financial relief on monthly payments and leav-ing a little extra cash in their pocket to afford that first apart-ment, new car, or to invest to-wards their retirement. Let us not lose sight that college is an exciting time in a person’s life. Worrying about how to pay for college once you graduate shouldn’t diminish the excite-ment of that experience.

For more information on Wells Fargo’s private student loan consolidation offer, please visit www.wellsfargo.com/student/private-loan-consolida-tion/.

Teens who skip break-fast more likely to de-velop metabolic syn-drome in adulthood

A new study published in Public Health Nu-trition found that teen-

agers who skipped their morn-ing meal were 68 percent more likely to develop metabolic syndrome as adults.

Metabolic syndrome is char-acterized by abdominal obesity, high blood pressure, high blood sugar levels or a resistance to insulin. According to the Amer-ican Heart Association, some-one with three or more of these risks is considered to have the syndrome.

Researchers at Umea Uni-versity in Sweden started their study in 1981, asking 889 16-year-old students about their breakfast habits. Overall, 9.9 percent of respondents reported

poor habits, including skipping meals or only eating or drink-ing something sweet.

In 2008, researchers checked back with participants. Those who didn’t eat breakfast as kids were 68 percent more likely to have developed metabolic syn-drome. Researchers found that abdominal obesity and high fasting blood sugar levels were most associated with missing the morning meal.

Though more studies are needed, Maria Wennberg, the study’s main author from Umea University, said in a statement. “…our results… suggest that a poor breakfast can have a nega-tive effect on blood sugar regu-lation.” Source:FoxNews.com

Consolidating Student Loans: An increasing-ly attractive option to manage repayment

plans than any other group--only about a third are satisfied with their current financial situ-ation and one third are worried about being able to meet their long-term financial goal.

Additional findings from the survey further illustrate Asian Indians’ strong tendency to put family first:

• Sixty-seven percent of Asian Indians think about what is best for the family when making financial decisions.

• Three quarters of Asian Indians believe that it is important to educate their chil-dren about finances to ensure a strong economy in the future.

• Seventy percent feel it is important not to burden their own children with the cost of caring for them when they get older.

To learn more about Asian-Indian families from the 2013 State of the American family Study, visit massmutual.com/familyfinances. For informa-tion about planning your finan-cial future, logon to massmu-tual.com/asianindian.

MethodologyThe State of the American

Family study is a biennial sur-vey conducted in 2009, 2011 and 2013 for MassMutual by the Forbes Consulting Group, LLC. The 2013 study was conducted between Febru-ary 4 and 25, 2013 via a 20-minute online questionnaire. The survey comprised 1,337 interviews with American households with children un-der age 18 for whom they are financially responsible. Inter-views were conducted among men and women aged 25-64 as of 2013 with household in-comes greater than $75,000 (50 completes were allowed among 25-32 year-olds with HH in-comes falling between $50,000 and $75,000). Respondents had to contribute at least 40% to decisions regarding financial matters in their household to qualify. Results were weighted to the 2010 US Census distribu-tions for age, gender, ethnicity, region, and same sex married/partnered couples to be repre-sentative of American families in this age and income bracket. This study includes trending data for survey waves conduct-ed in 2009 and 2011.

About MassMutualFounded in 1851, MassMu-

tual is a leading mutual life

insurance company that is run for the benefit of its members and participating policyown-ers. The company has a long history of financial strength and strong performance, and although dividends are not

guaranteed, MassMutual has paid dividends to eligible par-ticipating policyowners con-sistently since the 1860s. With whole life insurance as its foundation, MassMutual pro-vides products to help meet the financial needs of clients, such as life insurance, disability in-come insurance, long term care insurance, retirement/401(k) plan services, and annuities. In addition, the company’s strong and growing network of finan-cial professionals helps clients make good financial decisions for the long-term.

MassMutual Financial Group is a marketing name for Massa-chusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (MassMutual) and its affiliated companies and sales representatives. MassMutual is headquartered in Springfield, Massachusetts and its major af-filiates include: Babson Capi-tal Management LLC; Baring Asset Management Limited; Cornerstone Real Estate Advis-ers LLC; The First Mercantile Trust Company; MassMutual International LLC; MML In-vestors Services, LLC, Mem-ber FINRA and SIPC; Oppen-heimerFunds, Inc.; and The MassMutual Trust Company, FSB.

For more information, visit www.massmutual.com or find MassMutual on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and Google+.

CRN201601-179143

Parents List Children’s College Education as Priority

Casey Galindo

Page 13: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 13 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

BOLLYWOOD MASALA Friday, February 7, 2014 Section 2 Email: [email protected] Tel: 713-774-5140

Aishwarya and Deepika on list of world’s most beautiful women

by Chandni Prashar

Bollywood actresses Aishwarya Rai Bach-chan and Deepika

Padukone are among the World’s 30 Most Beautiful Women of 2014 in a poll con-ducted by the website Holly-woodbuzz. While Ash clinched the fourth position - after Italian actress Monica Belluci, model Kate Upton and Hollywood star Angelina Jolie - Deepika ranked 29 on the list.

Pri’s bringing sexy back:

She was overlooked at the 2014 Golden Globes but Pri-yanka Chopra was the star of the 2014 Filmfare Awards.

The Bollywood actress hosted the annual event in Mumbai, India on Friday and made sure all eyes were on her on and off the red car-pet.

Before she got to her host-ing duties, the GUESS girl stomped all over the red car-pet in a slinky black Alexan-der McQueen gown that fea-tured gold embellished hips and a mermaid skirt.

With her dark hair pushed elegantly to one side, the 31-year-old looked as if she would fit right at home at the 2014 Grammys which took place on Sunday.

Being the show’s host, the “Exotic” singer changed into a modern-day warrior en-semble when she performed for the audience.

She’s fearless!

A statement from an elated Ash read, “The results of this poll by Hollywood Buzz was brought to my notice in fact by my well-wishers whatsap-ping me, believe it or not, and I must admit it’s overwhelm-ing to hear that over 4 million people across the globe have voted and listed me amongst their top choices with such beautiful and talented women. I say a huge loving thank you to all my well-wishers (fans) for making me smile and al-

ways being there for me. More power to our love.”

Ash and Deepika are the only Indian women to figure in the list which consists largely of Hollywood names includ-ing actresses Charlize Theron, Amber Heard, and Jennifer Lawrence. The list of 30 also includes musicians Beyonce, Katy Perry and Rihanna, with a sprinkling of models like Adriana Lima, Irina Shayk and Miranda Kerr.

The International (North) Indian Film Academy Awards,

also known as the IIFA Awards, are a set of awards presented annually by the In-ternational Indian Film Acad-emy to honour both artistic and technical excellence of professionals in Bollywood, the Hindi language film in-dustry. The ceremony is held in different countries around the world every year. This award ceremony has been organized by Wizcraft Inter-national Entertainment Pvt Ltd – one of India’s premier event management and en-tertainment agencies – since its inception.

In 2014, IIFA would visit Tampa Bay, USA and be-come the first Indian Award Show to do so.

For the very first time the most awaited event IIFA is taking place in Tampa Bay Florida from April 24 to April 26 .Tampa will have the opportunity to catch stars descend on the American soil.

To officially announce its commencement a press conference was organized in SLS Hotel Los Angeles which saw Leading actors of Bollywood Anil Kapoor, Pri-yanka Chopra, IIFA host Dr. Kiran Patel, Country Com-missioner Al Higginbotham, President and Chief Execu-tive, Santiago Corrada, Di-rector, Wizcraft International Entertainment Pvt. Ltd., Viraf Sarkari, Andre Tim-mins directors and Houston’s entertainment mogul, Ra-jender Singh president, Star Promotion, reputed to have brought high caliber shows to North America for the last 20 years, were all present in Tampa Bay.

(by Rachana Srivastava).

IIFA to take place in Tampa Bay Florida from April 24 to April 26

Priyanka Chopra Dazzles In Alexander McQueen At 2014 Film-fare Awards. (Courtesy: The Huffington Post Canada).

Rajender Singh, president, Star Promotion, Viraf Sarkari director of IIFA, Mayor of Tampa Bob Buckhorn and CEO of IIFA Andre Timmins.

Bollywood actoress Priyanka Chopra with Rajender Singh

Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Deepika Padukone

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Page 14: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 14 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014HEALTHHEALTHY LIVING Friday, February 7, 2014 Section 2 Email: [email protected] Tel: 713-774-5140

Read more healthstories on our website: www.voiceofasiaonline.com

Congressional Budget Office Report on Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)

The Congressional Budget Office is out with its latest report on the Affordable Care Act, and here are a few bottom lines:

— The ACA is cheaper than it expected.

— It will “markedly in-crease” the number of Ameri-cans with health insurance.

— The risk-adjustment pro-visions, which Congressional Republicans want to overturn as a “bailout” of the insurance industry, will actually turn a profit to the U.S. Treasury.

Given all this, why are the first news headlines on the CBO report depicting it as call-ing Obamacare a job killer?

The CBO projects that the act will reduce the supply of labor, not the availability of jobs. There’s a big difference. In fact, it suggests that aggre-gate demand for labor (that is, the number of jobs) will in-crease, not de-crease; but that many workers or would-be workers will be prompted by the ACA to leave the labor force, many of them voluntarily.

As economist Dean Baker points out, this is, in fact, a beneficial effect of the law, and a sign that it will achieve an important goal. It helps “older workers with serious health conditions who are working now because this is the only way to get health insurance. And (one for the family-values crowd) many young mothers who return to work earlier than they would like because they need health insurance. This is a huge plus.”

The ACA will reduce the total hours worked by about 1.5% to 2% in 2017 to 2024, the CBO forecasts, “almost entirely because workers will choose to supply less labor — given the new taxes and other

incentives they will face and the financial benefits some will receive.” That translates into about 2.5 million full-time equivalents by 2024 — not the number of workers, because some will reduce their number of hours worked rather than

leaving the workforce entirely.

The overall impact on the community will be muted, moreover, because most of that effect will be seen at the lowest levels of the wage-earning scale. The effect will be

“small or negligible for most categories of workers,” the CBO says, because there will be almost no impact on work-ers who get their insurance from their employers or who earn more than 400% of the federal poverty line (for a fam-ily of three, that’s $78,120), the point at which eligibility for federal premium disappears.

As for labor demand, the CBO estimates that on bal-ance, the ACA will increase aggregate demand for goods and services, in part by reliev-ing lower-income people of the burden of health insurance or healthcare expenses, so they can increase their spending on other things. In turn, that will “boost demand for labor,” es-pecially in the near term, while the economy remains slack.

Sudhir Mathuria

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By Michael Smith, North American Correspondent, MedPage Today

Higher levels of vitamin D, still within the normal range, are associated with an increased risk of nonmelanoma skin can-cer, researchers reported.

In a cohort study, people with higher serum 25-hydroxyvita-min D (25(OH)D) were more likely to develop squamous cell or basal cell carcinoma, ac-cording to Melody Eide, MD, and colleagues at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.

But other factors – such as increased exposure to sunlight – probably complicate the re-lationship, Eide and colleagues reported online in Archives of Dermatology.

Ultraviolet B light is known

Vitamin D Linked to Skin Cancer

As one of the nation’s 50 Top Cardiovascu-lar Hospitals accord-

ing to by Truven Health Ana-lytics, Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital celebrates American Heart Month in February with the following special events:

Wearing Red in February-All month long, the towers at Memorial Hermann South-west Hospital will be lit up in red at night.

Campus Heart Walk, Feb. 11, noon – 1 p.m. -Add a healthy activity to your day by walking one mile around the Memorial Hermann South-west Hospital campus located at 7600 Beechnut Street in Houston. The event begins in the breezeway between the Heart & Vascular Institute and the Breast Center entrance.

The Heart of the Matter @ Whole Foods, Feb. 15, noon

WA S H I N G T O N , February 1, 2014 (AFP) - US fed-

eral regulators said Friday they were investigating products containing testosterone after re-cent studies suggested a higher risk of strokes and heart attacks in men being treated with the hormone.

The Food and Drug Admin-istration stressed, however, that it has “not concluded that FDA-approved testosterone treatment increases the risk of stroke, heart attack or death.”

“FDA is providing this alert while it continues to evalu-ate the information from these studies and other available data,” it said in a safety alert, referring to two related studies.

Patients undergoing testos-terone therapy should not stop their treatment without consult-ing their physician first, the FDA recommended.

Health care professionals were also asked to consider whether the benefits of FDA-approved testosterone treat-ment were likely to outweigh the possible risk of treatment.

The announcement followed publication of a study on Wednesday by the PLOS ONE science journal suggesting that men aged 65 and older being treated with testosterone were twice as likely to suffer heart attacks in the month after they began treatment.

The study, which analyzed findings from 56,000 men

US regulators probing cardio risks in testosterone products

in the United States between 2008 and 2010, also revealed a sharply increased risk among younger men with a history of heart disease.

In November, a separate clin-ical study in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that older men using testosterone, including many with a history of heart prob-lems, faced a 30 percent greater chance of mortality, heart attack or cardiovascular event.

A US government-funded study to determine whether men using testosterone gel to build muscle and increase strength was halted in 2009 af-ter the high rate of cardiovas-cular problems related to the treatment.

to cause skin cancer, but it also increases cutaneous vitamin D synthesis, the researchers not-ed, adding that the relationship between vitamin D and skin cancer is complex and studies have yielded conflicting re-sults.

Indeed, some research sug-gests that vitamin D might re-duce the risk of basal cell car-cinoma, but other studies have had the opposite outcome.

To help clarify the situation, Eide and colleagues analyzed data, over an average of 9.8 years of follow-up, from 3,223 white members of a health maintenance organization who had a high probability of de-veloping nonmelanoma skin cancer.

The participants had sought

counseling for osteoporosis or low bone density between Jan-uary 1997 and December 2001, and their assessment included levels of serum 25(OH)D, a marker for vitamin D intake and storage.

The researchers used the HMO’s claims database to track incident cases of basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma.

When they were assessed, 2,257 participants did not have a sufficient vitamin D level, where sufficient was defined as at least 30 nanograms of 25(OH)D per milliliter of se-rum.

All told, the researchers found, 240 patients developed nonmelanoma skin cancer, in-cluding 49 with squamous cell carcinoma, 163 with basal cell

carcinoma, and 28 with both. Most cases -- some 80% -- oc-curred in sites frequently ex-posed to the sun.

When patients were divided into four groups according to their 25(OH)D levels, there was a trend linking the higher levels and skin cancer risk that was significant at P=0.02.

Compared with the lowest quartile, the highest (less than 19 nanograms per milliliter versus 31 or higher) had an odds ratio for cancer of 1.6 (95% CI 1.1 to 2.3), Eide and colleagues found. Intermedi-ate quartiles also had elevated risks, but they did not reach significance compared with the lowest quartile.

Logistic regression analysis found that having a vitamin D level that was just above the cutoff for deficiency – less than 15 nanograms of 25(OH)D per mL of serum – was as-sociated with an increased risk of nonmelanoma skin cancer. Specifically:

For both types combined, the adjusted odds ratio was 1.8 (95% CI 1.1 to 2.9, P<0.05).

For squamous cell carcinoma alone, the odds ratio was 1.7, but it did not reach significance with a 95% confidence interval from 0.7 to 4.0.

For basal cell carcinoma, the odds ratio was also 1.7 but reached significance at P<0.05 (95% CI 1.00 to 2.9).

The findings add “to the lim-ited and conflicting epidemio-logical investigation regarding the relationship between vita-min D and [nonmelanoma skin cancer],” Eide and colleagues concluded.

They added that, aside from UVB light, the finding might also be confounded by such things as participants’ vitamin D levels over a lifetime and consumption of vitamin D supplements, which they were unable to investigate.

Eide and colleagues also cautioned that the study was conducted at a single institu-tion and that people who seek counseling for osteoporosis risk represent a self-selected group that may not be a repre-sentative population.

Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital celebrates American Heart Month

– 6 p.m.- Have heart-to-heart discussions with cardiologists and dietitians from Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital and Memorial Hermann Sug-ar Land Hospital about heart disease and prevention. The event takes place at Whole Foods Market near Highway 59 and Highway 6 in Sugar Land.

Memorial Hermann is one of the world’s leading pro-viders of cardiovascular care performing more than 50,000 heart procedures annually. Every year, about 715,000 Americans have a heart attack. About 600,000 people die from heart disease in the Unit-ed States each year—that’s one out of every four deaths. Heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women.

The five major symptoms of a heart attack are:

Pain or discomfort in the

jaw, neck, or back.Feeling weak, light-headed,

or faint.Chest pain or discomfort.Pain or discomfort in arms

or shoulder.Shortness of breath.

Page 15: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 15 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014TECH & SCIENCE

by Glenn CHAPMANSAN FRANCISCO, February 4,

2014 (AFP) - The decade-long adven-ture since the founding of Facebook has been an “amazing journey,” but the best is still to come, Mark Zuck-erberg said.

The founder and chief executive of the world’s biggest social network cel-ebrated Tuesday’s milestone in a post on his own Facebook profile.

Facebook’s shares also joined the party, rising 2.07 percent to an all-time closing high of $62.75, giving a company founded by college buddies a market value of more than $150 bil-lion.

“Today is Facebook’s 10th anniver-sary... and I’m so grateful to be a part of it,” Zuckerberg wrote.

The 29-year-old executive said Fa-cebook succeeded because “we just cared more about connecting the world than anyone else. And we still do today.

“That’s why I’m even more excited about the next 10 years than the last,” he added.

He said the first decade was “about bootstrapping this network. Now we have the resources to help people across the world solve even bigger and more important problems.”

Zuckerberg said he is often asked if he knew Facebook would become what it is today and he responds, “No way.”

“I remember getting pizza with my friends one night in college shortly after opening Facebook. I told them I was excited to help connect our school community, but one day someone needed to connect the whole world.”

“When I reflect on the last 10 years, one question I ask myself is: why were we the ones to build this? We were just students. We had way fewer resources than big companies. If they had fo-cused on this problem, they could have done it.”

Zuckerberg said he sees a different role for Facebook in the future.

“Today, social networks are mostly about sharing moments. In the next decade, they’ll also help you answer questions and solve complex prob-lems,” he wrote.

The company’s own Facebook page carried a short message, saying “Turn-ing 10, Thanks to You: Our 10th birth-day only happened because of all your friendships, stories and memories along the way. Thank you.”

The page also showed a video of a birthday party of 10-year-old chil-dren.

For each user, Facebook provided a “Look Back” video with highlights from items shared on the network.

Facebook, which has some 1.23 mil-lion users worldwide and has grown into one of the biggest technology firms, was planning a low-key cel-ebration.

“Just as we do every year, we will have an internal party on Friday after-noon,” Facebook spokeswoman Ari-elle Aryah told AFP in response to a query regarding the company’s birth-day celebration plans.

Facebook broke ground late last year on an expansion to its campus in former Sun Microsystems digs in the Silicon Valley city of Menlo Park. The new West Campus was designed by respected architect Frank Gehry.

A Pew Research Center survey re-leased Monday suggests no slowing momentum, even though more than half of US users said they are turned off by over sharing and didn’t like the fact that they showed up in pictures without giving permission.

According to the research firm eMarketer, Facebook has become the second-largest recipient of digital ad-vertising spending behind Google, and is particularly strong in mobile ads.

Ben Harper at the research firm So-cialbakers said Facebook got where it is because of its constant innovation.

“It’s easy to forget that features such as timeline, graph search and business pages haven’t always been there for us to use,” Harper wrote in a blog post.

“For businesses, Facebook has be-come a platform for reaching and en-gaging with current and potential new customers,” he said.

“For users, Facebook has changed the way we interact with friends, fam-ily and our favorite brands. We’re sure Facebook has many more innovations and surprises coming in the near fu-ture.”

Best is yet to come, says Facebook’s Zuckerberg

New social network aims for real-time connections

by Rob Lever

WASHINGTON, (AFP) - Walk into a room of people, and your smartphone can tell

if you have a connection to any of them, if it can find the right data.

A social networking app called So-cialRadar released Thursday analyzes smartphone users’ social networks in-cluding Facebook and Twitter, and cor-relates that with location data, to let people know in real time about their connections to those around them.

While some apps already use geoloca-tion data, SocialRadar aggregates infor-mation from major social networks and matches that with a smartphone’s loca-tion for “real-time intelligence.”

This means you can see in real time the people around you with whom you share a connection across several services.

“There are over a billion people with smartphones, and more than two billion social media profiles in the cloud, but no intersection of that information,” says SocialRadar founder and chief executive Michael Chasen.

Chasen, 41, who founded the educa-tion software tool Blackboard in 1997 and sold it in 2011 for $1.7 billion, says SocialRadar can be useful for business networking as well as for socializing.

“I can walk into a restaurant and find three people I’m connected to,” Chasen told AFP in an interview in SocialRa-dar’s office in downtown Washington.

“All this is in the cloud if you can con-nect this information.”

Chasen said he believes SocialRadar may be used for dating, “but I think it will be used for business too. It is the ultimate networking tool.”

SocialRadar aggregates and merges data from top social networks including Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, Foursquare and Google+ with live loca-tion information from smartphones.

This enables users to find colleagues, friends, and friends of friends if they are connected on one of the networks.

For technical and privacy reasons, SocialRadar provides this information only where users already have a con-nection, such as on Facebook or another network, or if they use SocialRadar. But Chasen said that still represents a lot of connections.

“What I want to know is who is near

me and how I am connected,” he said.The app can create alerts or search

within a specific radius -- from a few hundred meters (yards) to several kilo-meters (miles) -- for people with con-nections.

SocialRadar has been released in North America for the iOS platform for iPhones, and a version is in the works for Android and for Google Glass -- which would enable users to get information delivered for easy viewing.

Chasen said he is acutely aware of pri-vacy concerns, especially about location information, and that SocialRadar allows its users to determine if they want to be visible or not to their social networking friends and connections.

“One of our top priorities in building this was allowing people to have com-plete control of their privacy,” he said.

The app can be set to allow a user to be public, seen only by friends, to be anonymous or invisible.

But Chasen said that during a beta test of the app using 500 people, the over-whelming majority chose to remain public.

“People don’t always want to meet ev-eryone, but they want to know who is there,” he said.

International versions of the app are in the works, but Chasen said the app can be used by international travelers -- for example to find someone who speaks their language, or friends who might be in the same location.

The company, which has 20 employ-ees in Washington, has received $12.75 million in venture capital funding in a first round led by New Enterprise As-sociates, Grotech Ventures and SWaN & Legend Ventures. Among the inves-tors are AOL co-founder Steve Case and sports magnate Ted Leonsis.

Chasen said his work on SocialRa-dar benefited from his experience at Blackboard, which is used by millions at 30,000 educational institutions.

“I got to spend a lot of time on college campuses and saw a lot of tech trends,” he said.

He learned that “students who were sharing their personal information on social networks were also sharing their location information,” which opened the door to a service like SocialRadar.

Michael Chasen, founder and chief executive of SocialRadar, poses in his offce in Washington, DC, on January 24, 2014 (AFP/File, Rob Lever)

Page 16: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 16 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014

Friday, February 7, 2014 Section 2 Email: [email protected] Tel: 713-774-5140

BUSINESS

by Roland JACKSON

LONDON, January 28, 2014 (AFP) - Emerg-ing economies scram-

bled to prop up their currencies on Tuesday as time runs out for US Federal Reserve stimulus, exposing them to capital out-flows.

The prospect of a further tightening of US monetary pol-icy on Wednesday brings closer the risk that stimulus tapering would vacuum more cash from emerging economies, slow global growth and dent the eu-rozone’s recovery.

Several top emerging mar-kets have already suffered from capital outflows as the US cen-tral bank curbs its so-called quantitative easing (QE) bond-buying stimulus.

That policy had fed flows of US money abroad in search of high returns.

The currency turmoil is hurt-ing emerging economies in Asia, Latin America, Russia and South Africa as investors pull out funds out of riskier in-vestments, analysts said.

India’s central bank an-nounced a surprise quarter-point increase in its key rate to 8.0 percent on Tuesday

The worries over markets such as Argentina, Brazil, India, Russia, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, Russia and Ukraine come as the eurozone is emerging from the worst of its sovereign debt crisis.

In addition, Turkey, Thailand and Ukraine have all faced po-litical unrest in recent weeks.

The Fed has already cut its stimulus this month by $10 bil-lion (7.3 billion euros) to $75 billion a month on signs of a pick-up in the US economy, the world’s biggest.

Traders are now on tenter-hooks to see whether the Fed will announce further stimulus cuts at the conclusion of its two-day monetary policy meet-ing on Wednesday.

Economists are also pricing in tighter monetary policy from the Bank of England (BoE), with Britain’s economic recov-ery expected to pick up more speed this year.

“Quantitative easing can be likening to a tide of cheap money across risky assets. So, when the tide goes out we can see who is swimming naked,” Rabobank analyst Jane Foley told AFP.

“If cheap money is being wound down, emerging mar-ket counties will be more ex-posed.”

She added: “These countries rely on foreign savings to fi-nance their deficits and when foreigners lose their nerve and pull their money out, the cur-rencies adjust lower.”

Argentina adds to pressures

The turmoil intensified last week when Argentina imple-mented a sharp devaluation in an attempt to stabilise its peso currency, which held steady on

Tuesday.

However, the fallout of Ar-gentina’s problems and global monetary tightening continued to hit other emerging markets this week, most notably neigh-bour Brazil where the real cur-

Emerging currencies hit as time runs out for US easy-money

rency hit a five-month trough.

South Africa’s rand hit a five-year low point on Monday, while Turkey’s central bank called a crisis meeting after its heavy intervention failed to halt a run on the lira.

for countries such as Turkey and South Africa with elevated current account deficits,” said economist Lee Hardman at The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in London.

All eyes on Turkey rate deci-sion

The beleaguered Turkish lira recovered from all-time lows on Tuesday amid expectations that the nation’s central bank will raise interest rates at mid-night, a move that could sup-port the lira.

The Turkish lira has plunged further in recent weeks, pres-sured also by the political crisis rocking Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s gov-ernment.

“Emerging markets continue to be the economic front line in the current market,”said Alistair Cotton, analyst at trad-ers Currencies Direct.

“Fed tapering is driving cap-ital flight and putting down-ward pressure on many emerg-ing market currencies.”

However, despite growing emerging markets turmoil, eu-rozone nations are not worried about contagion, Eurogroup chief Jeroen Dijsselbloem in-

sisted this week.

“Of course we are worried about this from the perspec-tive of the emerging countries,” said Dijsselbloem, whose Eu-rogroup comprises the finance ministers of countries that use the single currency.

“I am not particularly wor-ried about the risk of conta-gion. I think the position of the eurozone is different and that we have to maintain our prog-ress.”

He added that recent tapering of the US stimulus programme was partly responsible, but that emerging economies also had to tackle “structural imbal-ances”.

Analysts expressed caution over the eurozone outlook.

“Dijsselbloem and other poli-ticians probably feel obliged to give reassuring messages to in-vestors,” said Foley.

“Although it can not be said with complete certainty that there will be no contagion into the eurozone, the region’s large current account surplus, the fact that there has been little sign of systematic risk on the eurozone for a while, and the improving economic data are reassuring.”

People are reflected on a sign displaying the rate of exchange between the Argentine peso and the US dollar at a foreign exchange house in downtown Buenos Aires, Argentina, Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2014. Emerging economies scrambled to prop up their currencies on Tuesday as time runs out for US Federal Reserve stimulus, exposing them to capital outflows. AP Photo.

“The Fed’s decision to taper QE, combined with the increas-ing likelihood that the BoE is moving closer to tightening monetary policy, is serving to further reinforce investor con-cerns over external financing

Page 17: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 17 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014FEATUREYour Horoscope

(For week beginning Friday, February 7, 2014)

As per Indian Vedic Astrology the Moon sign is considered, in which every Rashi has control over certain letters, which are initials of your name. Whereas in Western system of Sun Sign, all the people born in one month belong to the same sign. For example, every year approximately around 21 of March to 20th April, the Sun is moving in the Aries Constellation. So all the people born in that month belong to the Sign of Aries. If you were born in between those two dates then you are a Aries born.

Hardik Vyas, Astrologer Cell : 832-298-9950

Aries (A,L,E) 21 March to 20 AprilChanges in your career objectives, Your skills are a valuable asset to any team on which you’re a player. Hold off on making your report final until you have listened to others concerns. There will also be changes in your domestic affairs. A chance meeting will be

the start of a fresh new things. Spend some quality time & realize how special you feel. Your entire outlook will be transformed. Gatherings may be heated, refuse to take sides in family disagreements. It’ll only cause you to make bad feelings.

Taurus (B,V,U) 21 April to 20 MayUse your wit & wisdom to help make others feel comfortable with new ideas. Invite others to join you while you step into a new realm of learning. Stress your indepen-dence, creativity and style. Your personality will be bubbling. Take on the leadership role & make sure you listen your own words. Relax and make yourself feel at home.

Be aware of the limits to which a business relationship can be stretched. Be open to new experiences, and remember to say thank you. By week’s end you’ll have an extra burst of energy.

Gemini (K,CHH,GH) 21 May to 20 JuneTransform information and data into a valuable opportunity. Take the time you need to streamline procedures and improve techniques. Once you do, you’ll be able to reap rewards beyond your expectations. Gather together with others who share your passion and want to succeed. Your ability to encourage them will pay off in many ways. Their gratitude will be

overwhelming and surprising. Family members will try to bring you into their web. Be careful with whom you share personal secrets, as the consequences of your actions could tarnish your reputation.

Cancer (D,H) 21 June to 22 JulyYou’ll be able to achieve your immediate goals if you learn to listen closely to others. Verify your information and obtain written reference material. There’s no reason to take everything quite so personally. Don’t jump to any conclusions right away, allow some time to soften your overall view of things. You’ll need the time to digest your

thoughts & emotions. Patience will be required in order to understand others perspective. Reconnect with what excites you and rejoin the life that’s going on outside your door.

Leo (M) 23 July to 22 AugustShare your creative ideas. Everyone will be fascinated with your conversations. Your showmanship & flair may be questioned by those in authority. Exhibit the benefits of the new venture. Peers may try to question your motives, respond with positive financial data. Collect & study the facts, you may be tested to remember, later. Don’t be too ready

to accuse someone without knowing the facts, but you probably shouldn’t trust everything you hear. If you are selling something, you are likely to close the deals and get top dollar.

Virgo (P) 23 August to 22 SeptemberTry to Accept others misgivings, honestly. The attention you receive will be encouraging rather than distracting. Your judgments could play a big role in their lives. A high level of confidence will announce to others that you’re ready to get down to business. Communicate your intentions clearly from the very beginning. The secret to your success will lie in finding

a compatible partner to bounce off of. If you continue to argue on every point, then you may need to look elsewhere.

Libra (R,T) 23 Sept to 22 OctWith new beginnings and a reconnection to the past, You could ruin your chances by us-ing your most effective ammunition too early in the week. Rude or impulsive behavior is not easily excused. Regrets have a way of softening the hard edges. An old wound may be slow to heal. No one ever said it was going to be easy, but you know it’ll be worth it. Open your eyes to the reality that exists not what you perceive through your rose colored

glasses. Look deeper and you will be able to make needed changes.

Scorpio (N,Y)23 Oct to 21 NovYou may connect with a new network of learning. Once you do, you’ll feel more con-fident in who you are. Volunteer work looks good on your resume, which can not only help others, but yourself, as well. By removing money from the equation, you allow

yourself new avenues of exploration and expression. New friends can lead you to new avenues of social & professional exposure. Be yourself & you’ll be accepted & loved by all. Encourage others to pursue their talents. Community spirit might be upstaged by individuals who lacks rational.

Sagittarius (BH,F,DH,TH) 22 Nov to 21 DecOpportunities for travel, romance & communications. Whether it be for business or for pleasure, take advantage of the situation before you. Set the standards, keep the flow positive & don’t try to preach your morals to others. Keep your private life private and your social life social. Your excess energy might put you in danger of saying or doing

something inappropriate. Others may not be in a mood to have their limitations challenged.

Capricorn (KH,J) 22 Dec to 20 JanPut things into a better perspective. Accent is on using your personality to open new doors of opportunity. Your cycle is high. You need to be cautious about who you trust with your per-sonal & financial matters. Time is on your side, so don’t rush any big decisions. Remember that a relationship is as much about friendship as it is about obligation. Use your imagination

& you’ll come up the winner. Small details, errands and ‘minutia’ that MAY lead to misunderstandings, arguments and certainly disagreements are possible.

Aquarius (G,S,SH) 21 Jan to 19 FebTime, schedules and your ability to have discipline in your life, This is the way to achieve your immediate goals. Talk to a trusted friend about their experiences. If possible, try to get an extension on your deadline. Hasty actions could be worse for you than not acting at all. If you have more time, try to devote it to getting it right. Someone close to you will disappoint you. There’s no point in pretending to be objective, but at least you can be fair

with your feelings. Partners in an intense friendship have many ways to communicate.

Pisces (D,CH,Z) 20 Feb to 20 MarchGain valuable information, as You are a survivor. Try looking up in reference books or on the internet. Remind others of how inventive you can be when you have to be. Enjoy the learning and bring the light to those who share your ideas. Check security issues and viable solutions will come to you. Everything will seem to be going in the opposite direc-tion from what you had anticipated. Instead of letting it get to you, look on the bright side

and be dazzled by what you see. Quick thinking could save everything. Strategy will take over once you can no longer accept the way things are. It’s possible to make changes without causing damage. Some of your efforts may seem to have disastrous results and not only that ‘backfire’ with extra work, misunderstandings and launch you into ‘faceoffs’ , most likely because they could be struggling with ‘issues’ themselves.

UMA MANTRAVADIAttorney and Counselor at Law

Experienced, Honest & AggressiveEmail: [email protected]

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Page 18: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 18 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014COMMUNITY EVENTSRELIGIOUS INSTITUTES & ORGANIZATIONS OF HOUSTON - call Voice of Asia 713-774-5140

Sri Meenakshi Temple Prog:Feb 7th Friday: 7:00 PM; Thai Sukravara Deepa PoojaFeb 27th Thursday: 6:30 PM; Maha SivarathriLocation: 17130 McLean Road Pearland, TX 77584Contact: (281) 489-0358Web: www.meenakshi.org

Hare Krishna Dham (ISKCON) Prog: Everyday, 7 Aratis and bhoga offerings daily. Sunday Festival: 5.30 p.m. to 7.30 p.m. Location: 1320 West 34th St, Houston, TX 77018.Contact:281-433-1635/E-mail [email protected] Website: www.iskconhouston.org

Shri Radha Krishna TempleProg: Location:11625 Beechnut, Houston, TX 77072Phone: 281-933-8100 Website: www.SRKT.org.

Arsha Vidya BharatiProg.:Sanskrit classes and spe-cial worship sessions for all agesLocation: 2918 Renoir, Sugar Land, TX 77479Contact: 281-606-5607 or [email protected]: https://sites.google.com/site/avbtexas/classes

Arsha Vidya SatsangaProg: Website: www.avshouston.orgContact: 713-412-2923 / Email: [email protected]

Chinmaya Mission

Prog: Location:10353 Synott Road, Sugar Land, TX77498.Phone: 832.541.0059.Website:www.chinmayahouston.org.

Sri Saumyakasi Sivalaya

Temple Hrs: 9 am to noon and 5 to 9 pm.;Sri Astalaksmi puja: 7 pm. Sri Laksmi Archana will be performed on request all day. Location:same as Chinmaya Mission.Website: www.saumyakasi.org;

Hindu Temple of The WoodlandsLocation: 7601 S. Forest Gate Drive at Woodlands Parkway, Spring, TX 77382.Contact: [email protected], 832-585-0001Website: www.woodlandshindutemple.org.

VPSS HoustonLocation VPSS Vallabh Hall, 11715 Belfort Village Dr. Hous-ton 77031. Contact:713-530-2900Website:www.vpsshaveli.org

Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Baitus Samee MosqueProg: Friday Prayer - 1:30 PM Children’s Classes | Interfaith meeting | Location: 1333 Spears Rd, Houston, TX 77067Imam - Mohammed Zafarullah Contact : Work: 281-875-3400 | Cell: 713-874-4363 [email protected]

Dr. Ambedkar International

Mission Inc. U.S.A Prog: Location: India House 8888 West Bellfort Avenue Houston, Texas 77031

Ashirwad - A Blessing TempleProg: Regular prog :Sloka Classes for kids and teens. Location: Katy, Hwy 249 & Sugar Land. Contact: 281.995.0930/ 281.808.2159

Vedanta Society of Greater HoustonProg: Vedanta teachings Sun-days at 10:30 AMLocation: at 14809 Lindita Dr. Houston, TX -77083. Website: www.vedantahouston.org.

ISSOProg: Darshan daily from 7.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 8.30 p.m.; Aarti daily from 7.45 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Location: 10080 Synott Road, Sugar Land, TX 77478Phone: 281-530-2565 Web: Shri Satyanarayan Sai Puja DarshanProg: Daily from 10:00 a.m. to 1:p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Every Thursday Abhishek Location: 16338 Kensington Dr, Ste 110, Sugar Land 77479. Phone: 713-933-8821 / 9359.

Gurdwara Sahib of SW HoustonProg: Sundays Dewan 10:00 - 11:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m. Langar Location:14811 Lindita Drive, Houston, TX 77083Phone: 281-498-5200Website: www.gurdwaraswh.com

Sri Ashtalakshmi TempleProg: Sri Vishnu Sahasranama Stotra Parayanam: daily 6.30 p.m. Location:10098 Synott Road. Sugar Land, TX 77478Phone: 281- 498-2344 Website: www.ashtalakshmi.org

Hindu Worship Society Prog: Open all days except Thursdays (by appt). Regular Puja and Prasad. Sunday Service 11:30 AM to 1:30 Location: 2223 Wirtcrest Lane Houston TX 77055.

Barsana Dham Houston ChapterProg: Satsang every Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Location: India House, 8888 West Belfort 77031Phone: (713) 855-9818 for detailsWebsite: www.jkphouston.org Weekly Radio Program-1460 AM Saturdays 10-11 a.m.

DivinityWebsite: www.godivinity.org

Lakshmi Narayan MandirProg: Every Friday Satsangh from 7:30 pm to 9 pm. Bhajans and Devi Puja, Discourses. Location: 12530 Ann Louise Road, Houston, 77086. Phone: Contact Vishnu at (832) 309- 7181.

JVB Preksha Meditation CenterProg: Location: 14102 Schiller Road, Houston TX 77082

Phone: 281.596.9642 Website: www.jvbhouston.org

Patanjali Yogpeeth CenterProg: Free Yoga Classes every Sat/Sun from 8 am to 9:30 amLocation: Arya Samaj @Schiller Road. Contact: 281-579-9433. Websites: www.pyptusa.org

Jain Center of HoustonLocation: 3905 Arc St. Houston, TX 77063Contact: 281-606-JAIN; Email: [email protected]:www.jain-houston.org

Durga Bari Society Prog: Sandhya Arati at 6:30 p.m.; Sunday: 9:00 a.m.- 7:00 p.m. Location: 13944 Schiller Road. Contact: 281-597-8100 Website:www.houstondurgabari.org

Gayatri Pariwar of Houston

Prog: Sundays Satsang, Bal-San-skar Shala, from 11am to 1pm. Location: 5645 Hillcroft, Suite # 307, Houston, TX 77036. Website: http://www.gayatripari-warhouston.org/ “

Sri Guruvayurappan TempleProg: Bhajans: Sat.7:00 -8:00 p.m.; Sundays 9:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m.Location: 1620 Ormandy Street, Houston, TX 77035Contact: 713-729-8994

Govindaji Gaudiya Math

Prog: Satsang every Sunday evening from 5 - 7 p.m. Vedic heritage classes for kids 5-14. Location: 16628 Kieth Harrow blvd. Houston, TX 77084Contact: 281-499-3347/281-491-4114.

Sathya Sai Baba CentersProg: Sundays from 3:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. at two locationsContact: (North) 832-418-3842 or (South) 281-788-4786. Website:www.saicenterofhous-ton.org

Telugu Christian FellowshipProg; Every third Saturday 6:30 PM. Worship is in EnglishLocation: The Triumph Church, 10555 West Airport Boulevard, Stafford, TX 77477.Contact:713-301-6444Website:

Brahma Kumaris Meditation CenterProg: Daily classes in Raja Yoga Meditation To register call or email.Contact:832-379-8888/ Email: [email protected]: bktexas.com

Bethesda Houston Tamil ChurchProg: Prog: Sundays Tamil Worship: 5 – 7pm Sunday school : in English. Bethesda Family Fellowship: in English 10.30 am-12.30 pm Free Tutorial for all children Mondays & Wednesdays 5-6 pm. Ladies Bible Study: Thur 9 am. Location: 1092, Suite F&G, Stafford. Tex 77477 Tel:281-317-7331, 281-317-7331Website:bethesdahoustontamilchurch.org

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Accounting, Tax Returns, Cost Accounting, Peachtree, Sales Tax, Franchise Tax.Visit our website www.karanika.net

Retail, Manufacturing, Construction, Franchise Accounting(832) 620.4757 - Email: [email protected]

BOOK-KEEPING INCOME TAXPersonal and Business Tax Returns, Payroll

Sales Tax, Income Tax Audits and RepresentationsS. Ram and Associates

Tel: 832-877-9625 Free Consultation asu2020.com

RestaurantsIndia’s Restaurant & Catering

for special parties and corporate events. Preferred Wine list, Authentic vegetarian & non-vegetarian dishes, finest

Indian cuisine with chef’s special dishes Ph: 713-266-0131/ 0805

Shiva Indian Restaurant & Catering specializing in North Indian cuisine, Office and Corporate catering.

• 2514 Times Blvd. Rice Village, Ph: 713-523-4753

• 2130 Lone Star Dr. Sugar Land, Ph: 281-494-2981

VEEDONE CONSTRUCTION, LLC. - ROOFINGRoofing, Siding, Gutters and Fence

WIND & HAIL INSURANCE CLAIMS SPECIALIST(281) 701-7760 www.VeeDone.com

Roofing

Visit Us www.VoiceofAsiaOnline.com

Call us

VOICE OF ASIA

713-774-5140

Electrical ServiceSuperior One Electric

Commercial & ResidentialKHOA TRINH, Electrical Technician

Tel: 832-359-5447 Free Estimate TECL# 27099* Repair/ Remodeling * New Installation * Ceiling Fans * Light Fixtures

* Electric Panel * Trouble Shooting * Services Upgrades

EducationEnglish Classes

• TOEFL & GRE Preparation • BUSINESS ENGLISH

English Express: 713-337-3775www.englexpress.com

Business ServicesLower Processing Credit Card rates & Fees

25% of the monthly agent commission Call 1-800-518-9776 Mon-Fri (9am-7pm EST)

http://MatchRatePLUS.com/CashBack/Use Promo Code: 34510

VideoTK Video

HD Video, Live Stream, Editing, Dubbing, Titles Call for Weddings, Anniversary, Baptism, Graduation

Call Tony Kalladanthyil at 281-799-4518

Electrical ServiceElectricity Service

No Deposit for Seniors 65+ or CommercialService Provided by Ambit Energy LC Puct Rep 10117

www.qfactor.joinambit.com 866.202.1086 Mon-Sat 8am-8pm

EducationBecome a Doctor

High School to Medical School - starts $45,000 for all 41/2 years - INDIA, EUROPE, Carib, China etc

209-830-8266; 248-419-0284 [email protected]; www.EasyMedSchool.com

Restaurants We cater from 10 people to 800

people for all occasions. We deliver to your venue.

Madhuram Mirch Masala 10758 FM 1960 West Houston, TX 77070 281.955.9878 216.338.3940 (cell)

For more information Call us today

713-774-5140

You need this Space

For more information Call us today

713-774-5140

You need this Space

Heating & CoolingSAJ Heating & CoolingResidential & Commercial

Free estimates on ResidentialRepairs & New Equipment replacement

Call Saji Mathew Ph: 832.633.4347

For more information Call us today

713-774-5140

You need this Space

Page 19: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014

VOICE OF ASIA 19 FRIDAY, February 7, 2014CLASSIFIEDS

Read Voice of Asia

for Community

News

HINDI PRARTHANADo you need PRAYER?Do you need a MIRACLE in your life?Can we pray for the CHILDLESS couple?

Contact Us 832-773-4457

today!

Have you been ABUSED, ATTACKED or INJURED?

Have you experienced a traumatic event such as:• Rape• Physical Assault• Child Abuse• A severe car accident• War• Natural distaster Does this continue to affect you with:• Upsetting memories • Irritability• Bad dreams or difficulty sleeping • Trouble concentrating• Lack of Interest in activities.

[email protected] you are a woman between the ages of 18 and 65,

you may be eligible to participate in a study of an investigational medication for PTSD conducted by

the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center and the Mood and Anxiety Program at the Baylor College of

Medicine. There is no cost for participation.

CALL 1-877-96-BCM-MOOD (226-6663), Visitwww.bcm.edu/psychiatry/mood, or email us at

[email protected] if you are interested in participating.

Reliable Caretaker Needed

A family needs a reliable Caretaker full time to take care of home, cook meals - breakfast, lunch and dinner, do some light house work, weekdays and week-ends. Timings are: 7:30 AM - 5:30 PM daily, flexible some evenings. Must be able to cook South and North Indian dishes. Please have a few references. Long term employment preferred.

For details, call: 832-419-7537

Friends matrimonial invite for Gujarati Vaishnav Young Man age 37, height 5’4” UT Grad, successfully self-employed, born and raised US Citizen. Strong family values, well cultured, understanding, good social skills, generous, kind, pleasant personality and a positive outlook on life. Seeking a kind-hearted young lady from the San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, and Houston areas, ONLY. Send bio and photo to:

[email protected] call: (713) 204-8116 or (713) 204-8110

Seeking Bride

Household Help Wanted in Houston

Full or part time; for light housekeeping and caring

for small children. Call 281-948-0404

2 Shoe Stores in Houston For Sale$250,000.00

Great opportunity, good business, busy locations

EASY TO MANAGE & RUNCall Sam [email protected]

Business for Sale

Employee for Liquor Store needed. Part time position. Store at North Houston, 1960 and I-45. Work from 3 PM - 9 PM.

Call: 832-419-4545(call between 10 am - 7 pm)

Employee Needed

Soil and Concrete Technician wanted.No experience Required.

Call 281-407-6335 or email resume to:

[email protected]

Job Opportunity

Ditta Meat is soliciting Subcontractors that are M/WBE for the upcoming HISD Project Bid # 14-01-04.Please Respond via E-Mail to [email protected].

Subcontractors Needed

HARD MONEY LOANS

VIRGO FINANCE CO., LLC.

[email protected]

• Business Loans

Call Kersi Engineer713-553-5151

• Real Estate Loans

• Emergency FundsNo Tax Returns or Credit Check Reqd.

Quick Close!

A Nevada Limited Liablity Company

Visit us on www.VoiceofAsiaOnline.com

Page 20: Voice of Asia Feb 07 2014