Derecognized Kadapa medical college students climb electricity towers, AP Govt faces ‘suicide’ threats

Aggrieved medical students of Fatima medical college in Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh have resorted to movie style agitation climbing the electricity towers seeking justice to 20-month-old saga that is hitting local headlines daily.

What has triggered the suicidal move by the students was a Supreme Court verdict on Friday that dismissed the AP government’s memo seeking to accommodate Fatima College students nine each in 11 medical colleges of the state.

The original recognition to the college was cancelled rendering these students of 2015-16 batch of the college hit the streets and the Medical Council of India refused to allow increase in the number of seats in other colleges in the state, citing its usual administrative procedures.

With the court not allowing diverting these students to other colleges, most of them girls, their agitation on Sunday hit the headlines of the state with the students following the footsteps of recent movie “Khaidi No. 150” of Chiranjeevi, in which the desperate farmers enter the water pipes in protest bringing the entire water supply in the city to standstill.

The bench refused to the state government proposal to increase the seats this year and reduce them next year. Though the counsel for AP government, Gourav Benerjee, said the proposal was in the interest of the students and their future, the court declined to interfere in the issue.

The fate of 99 students of Fathima Institute of Medical Sciences (FIMS) in Kadapa, Andhra Pradesh, has been hanging in balance for the last 20 months and even the state Opposition leader Jaganmohan Reddy (Jagan) visited the students recently extending his support.

“Just to favour the college management of private universities, Naidu’s government has refused to forgo 100 seats in the next academic year as advised by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court’s judgement has obviously not been positive,” Jagan noted.

Ironic but it happened in a rude way for the students when they were abruptly told in April, 2016, almost nine months into their course, that their college was derecognised, and that their admissions were null and void.

The problem worsened when the MCI refused the state government’s proposal to relocate the students to other medical colleges across the state. The Supreme Court too dismissed a case filed by the Andhra Pradesh government on behalf of the students of FIMS last Friday.

Now the AP government is facing the “suicide” threats from the students with MCI in Delhi being placed far away from the scene of protests. Who will be responsible for the future of these students? Why didn’t the government, the MCI and courts stop the Fatima College not to take in students when their recognition was facing dilemma?

 

AXA Call to Action puts Spotlight on Diversity & Inclusion for 2020 Workforce

Bangalore November 23, 2017: AXA Business Services hosted its second AXA Call to Action event focused on Diversity and Inclusion (D&I), a very topical area of focus for all corporates today. The event saw industry experts deliberate on the current practices and emerging aspects of D&I that organisations need to be cognizant of to manage the expectations of the 2020 workforce.

According to Marie-Louise Elhabre, Chief Executive Officer, AXA Business Services, “Diversity and Inclusion is an important part of our business andis infact a strong lever for business growth. It fosters innovation in an organization as diverse people bring their perspectives to the tableaiding a 360-degree approach and helping organisations proactively meet customer and partner needs better. As we prepare for 2020, it is important to connect with the industry to see how readywe are to implement the new diversity framework and to move towards 100% inclusion. Indeed, while diversity is in nature, Inclusion is a choice. Our AXA Call to Action event seeks to address this need and share back with the industry best practices from the panel discussion.”
The event saw a powerful line-up of panelists:Jaya Virwani, D&I Head, Talent Team, Global Delivery Services, E&Y; Padmapriya S., Head, Business Development, GSC&EBS, SocieteGenerale; Dr. Pradip K Dutta, Group VP – Synopsys Inc. and MD – Synopsys India; Archana Vohra, Director, Seller Enablement, Amazon; Jessie Paul, Founder and CEO, Paul Writer; and Srikrishna Madhavan, Head, Finance Operations CoE, AXA Business Services. The panel was moderated by Prashant Sankaran, Director, Interweave Consulting.

Key topics discussed were:
• Focus on Inclusion: Empowerment, engagement and growth
• Gender Diversity: Beyond empowering and establishing a culture that is gender neutral
• Generational Diversity: Focusing on how to deepen the collaboration between tech-savvy young workforce and senior employees

According to Nagarajan V., Head – HR, Communication, D&I and CR, AXA Business Services,
“The industry has moved away from affirmative action/managing diversity towards holistic diversity and enabling inclusion. Enabling inclusion would require organisations to focus on the twin pillars of addressing subconscious/unconscious bias as well as making the business impactvery apparent.”

About AXA Business Services

AXA Business Services is a 100% subsidiary of AXA, the number 1 insurance organization globally by brand. We are well positioned as a strategic innovation hub to leverage the value proposition that India as a market place presents to provide sustained value to our global partners and employees. We are at the forefront of driving transformation across all of AXA’s business lines: life savings and health, property & casualty, and asset management. We see ourselves as change agents for radical innovations spanning big data, risk modeling, robotic automation, and process and people transformation. Our employees are at the heart of our business and together we move forward in a culture of trust, such that our employees are in charge of the future.

Sclerosis Medicine can help Fight Drug-Resistant Bacteria

A surprising discovery shows that a widely used and 20-year-old medicine used to treat multiple sclerosis can also beat a type of multi-resistant bacteria for which there are currently only a few effective drugs.

Encountering bacteria with innocent names such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterobacteriaceae can lead to hospitalisation and – in a worst-case scenario – can also be life-threatening. The bacteria, which cause infections such as pneumonia, frequently develop multi-resistance towards classic antibiotics.

Researchers from Aarhus University have discovered that a drug known as glatiramer acetate, which is normally used for treating the disease multiple sclerosis, has a hitherto unknown effect on obstinate bacteria.

Laboratory experiments have shown that the drug kills half of the Pseudomonas bacteria in specimens from patients with cystic fibrosis who are often exposed to the bacteria in the lungs.

The research results have recently been published in the scientific journal Scientific Reports.The discovery is good news at a time where multi-resistant bacteria are a growing problem.

According to a British survey commissioned by the British government, in 2050 resistant bacteria will all-in-all kill more people around the world than cancer. Neither the pharmaceutical industry or researchers have so far succeeded in developing new types of antibiotics that can beat the bacteria following classic strategies for the development of new medicines.

The research project is part of a new global movement within the development of medicine that focuses on medicine recycling or, as it is also called, repurposing. This is where researchers and companies test already approved medicines or substances on other diseases or functions of human biology than those they were originally developed for.

The discovery also opens up for a new view of multiple sclerosis.

“The results give us greater knowledge about how the drug works on sclerosis patients and indicates at the same time that bacteria might be part of the problem with the disease. This is also indicated by some studies,” says Thomas Vorup-Jensen.

Aarhus University is collaborating with Aarhus University Hospital, Imperial College London, UK, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA and the British pharmaceutical company Cycle Pharmaceuticals, who specialise in the recycling of medicine.

Forgetting Face Recognition? Check for Dementia, say Japanese Researchers

A Japanese research group has proposed that failure to recognize or memorize human faces in the short term could be early stage of dementia. The elderly with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) suffer from weakened ability to recognize faces when compared to healthy elderly people. When trying to memorize, their gaze is also different, suggest Japanese researchers.

Alzheimer’s disease, the most common type of dementia, should be detected in its early stages to halt its progression into a more serious form of the disease. MCI, a preliminary stage of Alzheimer’s, is detected with weak cognitive functions, such as poor memory or inability to think though these traits do not affect daily life.

MRI scans of brain imaging show that areas for memory and visually processing human faces in people are structurally and functionally transformed during this stage.

Researchers from Kumamoto University in Japan conducted comparative experiments with normal elderly subjects and MCI patients (18 each) using a delayed-matching task with face and house stimuli in independent blocks.

In each block, they asked subjects to remember a single image and then, after a short delay, select a memorized image from a set new of images. The researchers also recorded subject gaze trends during the image memorization process.

Their experiments revealed that the memorization performance of MCI patients was lower for facial images than for house images. However they found no performance difference in normal subjects.

While memorizing, MCI patient’s gaze concentration on the eyes of an image decreased but the time spent looking at the mouth increased. They had reduced short-term memorization ability and a different gaze pattern for faces when compared to normal people, said researchers.

“Looking at the eyes is important for remembering the entirety of the face,” said Emeritus Professor Kaoru Sekiyama. “MCI patients probably have an abnormality in the cognitive processing of faces due to the deterioration of brain function. It is possible that the distributed gaze pattern is compensation for this decreased function.”

This research was published online in the journal Scientific Reports.

What does it mean for the husband when his wife keeps her own surname?

When a woman chooses not to take her husband’s surname after marriage, people perceive her husband as being higher in traits related to femininity and lower in traits related to masculinity. He is also perceived as having less power in the relationship. This is according to a study led by Rachael Robnett of the University of Nevada in the US. The research is published in Springer’s journal Sex Roles and is the first to examine whether people’s perceptions of a man’s personality vary depending on whether his wife adopts his surname or retains her own.

The tradition of women adopting their husbands’ surname after marriage is arguably one of the most widespread gender-role norms in Western cultures. In recent decades, it has gained attention from feminist scholars who want to understand why the surname tradition remains widely endorsed despite marked changes in the role that women play in society and in the labor force.

According to previous studies, women who violate the marital surname tradition are viewed differently from others. They are described in terms of instrumental traits that in a gendered society are typically assigned to men. These include having a higher status, yielding more power, being more self-focused, ambitious and assertive. These traits contrast with the expressive characteristics that are typically assigned to women, such as being more nurturing, kind and having less influence and power.

To date, researchers have not yet examined how a woman’s marital surname choice influences how others perceive her husband. To this end, Robnett and her colleagues carried out three studies in the US and UK. The first two studies showed that husbands whose wives keep their own surnames are often described through terms that are counter to the gender-typical personality traits and power framework used for men. They are described in more expressive than instrumental terms, and are seen to hold less power in a marriage.

“A woman’s marital surname choice therefore has implications for perceptions of her husband’s instrumentality, expressivity, and the distribution of power in the relationship,” says Robnett. “Our findings indicate that people extrapolate from marital surname choices to make more general inferences about a couple’s gender-typed personality traits.”

Results from the third study conducted by Robnett’s team suggest that people are not unanimous in how they think about such cases. People who firmly hold on to traditional gender roles and can be described as hostile sexists react particularly strongly to a man whose wife retains her surname because they see him as being disempowered.

“We know from prior research that people high in hostile sexism respond negatively to women who violate traditional gender roles,” says Robnett. “Our findings show that they also apply stereotypes to nontraditional women’s husbands.”

“This study joins several others in alluding to a link between traditions in heterosexual romantic relationships and power structures favoring men,” says Robnett. “The marital surname tradition is more than just a tradition. It reflects subtle gender-role norms and ideologies that often remain unquestioned despite privileging men.”

New tool can help job searchers better position themselves in market

With the decline of manufacturing, the U.S. economy has increasingly shifted toward knowledge-based production: industries focused on implementing new ideas surrounding technology, product design, machine learning, and other areas as their source of revenue. In this new economy, it can be challenging to evaluate the skillset of an individual, as combinations of various skills are important. For example, a software developer with design skills may be more valuable than a software developer with Russian translation skills.

A novel method, developed by an economist at the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University, has been created to evaluate a worker’s skillset and determine its impact on wages. The model appears in the scientific journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

“The interactions between skills are represented by a skill network. Skills on the network are connected if there are workers in the labor market who have both,” said Katharine Anderson, assistant professor of economics and entrepreneurship, who developed the model. “The position of a worker’s skills on the network indicates the type of worker she is, how diverse her skills are, and how well they work in combination.”

Anderson used an online freelance labor market and found that workers with diverse skills tend to fall into two different groups: ‘jacks of all trades,’ who use skills independently and have more job options, or ‘synergistic workers,’ who use their skills in effective combinations. Anderson found workers with diverse skills tend to earn higher wages, and those who use their diverse skills synergistically earn the highest wages of all.

“These findings are particularly important in online labor markets because employers are using them more frequently, and the candidates they see are selected algorithmically,” said Anderson. “Workers need to carefully craft their profiles to attract employers.”

The research introduces a method that can characterize a worker’s combination of skills (e.g., how diverse they are, how much they are in demand, and how well they work together) and can help employers with hiring decisions as well as workers trying to position themselves in the labor market. The findings suggest that workers who can use their diverse skills synergistically to fill a hole in the labor market will likely earn the highest wages. By providing a better way to characterize worker skill sets, this method could potentially improve online search algorithms, and help workers to better position themselves in the market.

“This model shows there is an opportunity to improve the online labor market search algorithms and better match employers and employees,” said Anderson. “Using this information, we can help job searchers better position themselves in the market, match employers to top talent, and inform worker training decisions.”

Mass media linked to childhood obesity

A task force from the European Academy of Paediatrics and the European Childhood Obesity Group has found evidence of a strong link between obesity levels across European countries and childhood media exposure. The experts’ review is published in Acta Paediatrica.

The findings indicate that parents and society need a better understanding of the influence of social media on dietary habits. In addition, health policies in Europe must take account of the range of mass media influences that promote the development of childhood obesity.

“Parents should limit TV viewing and the use of computers and similar devices to no more than 1.5 hours a day and only if the child is older than four years of age. Moreover, paediatricians should Inform parents about the general risk that mass media use poses to their children’s cognitive and physical development,” said senior author Dr. Adamos Hadjipanayis, of the European Academy of Paediatrics.

Leaving the house every day may help older adults live longer

In a Journal of the American Geriatrics Society study of community-dwelling individuals aged 70 to 90 years who were participating in the Jerusalem Longitudinal Study, leaving the house daily was linked with a lower risk of dying over an extended follow-up period, independent of social, functional, or medical factors.

The study’s investigators noted that getting outside of one’s home provides numerous opportunities for engagement with the world outside, and may facilitate exposure to a variety of beneficial experiences.

“What is interesting is that the improved survival associated with getting out of the house frequently was also observed among people with low levels of physical activity, and even those with impaired mobility,” said lead author Dr. Jeremy Jacobs, of the Hadassah Hebrew-University Medical Center, in Jerusalem. “Resilient individuals remain engaged, irrespective of their physical limitations.”

Inviting film makers to India is the endeavour of IFFI: Smriti Zubin Irani

48th International Film Festival of India inaugurated at Goa

Cultural extravaganza highlight of IFFI 2017

Minister of Textiles and Information & Broadcasting, Smt. Smriti Zubin Irani has said that India is a land of festivals, celebrations, dynamic youth and stories, where in stories were told in over 1600 dialects. Minister said this while addressing the opening ceremony of 48th international Film Festival of India in Goa.

Elaborating further, Smt Smriti Zubin Irani said that the endeavor of Government of India through International Film Festival of India is to invite film makers from all over the world to the land of stories. Speaking on the role of IFFI, Minister said that the festival will help the film lovers to meet the biggest and brightest names of Indian film industry.

Chief Minister of Goa, Shri Manohar Parikkar in his address welcomed all the delegates to IFFI 2017 and said that Goa will be ready in 2019 to host the 50th edition of IFFI in a magnificent way. Shri. Parikkar added that Goa has developed a good film culture over the last few years and the state government would continue its work towards further developing the film industry in Goa.

Earlier, Indian film star Shri. Shahrukh Khan while welcoming all film makers and delegates to IFFI 2017 said that films are about loving, about an idea transformed into reality by hundreds of people working together. He further added that story tellers and story listeners are like a family and stories have the power to bind each and every one together.

The opening ceremony of IFFI 2017 was anchored by Raj Kumar Rao and Radhika Apte and eminent Indian film personalities such as A.R Rahman, Sridevi, Nana Patekar and Shahid Kapoor graced the event. The inaugural ceremony also witnessed some mesmerizing audio visual performances like ‘Drums of India’, a musical treat with drums from all across the country and ‘Utsav’, a visual spectacle showcasing diversity of Indian culture.

The 48th IFFI will showcase the best of recent International cinema, along with special sections such as Retrospectives, BRICS Award-Winning films, Homages and an Indian Panorama Section featuring the best of Indian Cinema produced in the past year, with the aim of providing a platform for young creative minds to interact, view and learn.

IFFI 2017 will showcase 195 films from over 82 countries of which there will be 10 World Premieres, 10 Asian and International premieres and over 64 Indian premieres. The International Competition section of IFFI 2017 will have 15 films competing for the Golden and Silver Peacock awards. The International Competition jury is headed by renowned filmmaker Muzaffar Ali and other jury members include Maxine Williamson from Australia, Actor-Director Tzahi Grad from Israel, Russian Cinematographer Vladislav Opelyants, Director and Production Designer Roger Christian from the United Kingdom.

IFFI 2017 will also witness Indo-centric projects with a strong international connect at the Opening as well as the Closing films. Iranian master Majid Majidi’s first film made in India, “Beyond the Clouds” and Pablo Cesar’s Indo-Argentine co-production “Thinking of Him”, centered on an episode in the life of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore will be screened as opening and closing films respectively.

As the first of its kind in the country, IFFI 2017 has a specially curated section of James Bond films. The special section with 9 iconic James Bond films will showcase the various leading actors who have essayed the character of James Bond from 1962 to 2012. Further, IFFI 2017 will have a special focus on Canada curated by the Toronto International Film Festival.
The Homage presentations at the 48th IFFI will include tributes to the late Actors Om Puri, Vinod Khanna, Tom Alter, Reema Lagoo, Jayalalitha, Directors Abdul Majid, Kundan Shah, Dasari Narayana Rao and Cinematographer Ramananda Sengupta.

IFFI 2017 will also host a special curated selection of 7 award winning films from BRICS region as part of the BRICS Film package. The Accessible India, Accessible Cinema section at IFFI 2017 will showcase 2 audio-described cinematic works for the visually impaired thereby continuing the support for Government of India ‘Accessible India Campaign’.
Indian Panorama 2017 will further screen both Feature & Non-Feature films in Goa at 48th International Film Festival of India, 2017. The opening film of the feature film section of Indian Panaroma will be Pihu, directed by Vinod Kapri and the opening film of the non-feature film section of Indian Panorama is Pushkar Puran which has been directed by Kamal Swaroop. This will showcase the new Indian cinema from across the country.

 

 

Showman Subhash Ghai in conversation with film enthusiasts during the masterclass at IFFI Goa 2017

After unveiling the special edition of FTII Academic Journal ‘Lensight’ at IFFI Goa 2017 on day two (21st November, 2017), Showman of Hindi cinema Subhash Ghai enthralled the film aspirants and students at the masterclass doling out valuable advice to them on honouring their craft and making a mark in their respective fields at IFFI Goa 2017.

The veteran filmmaker had the audience in splits during the heart-to-heart conversation at the masterclass discussing his struggle as a filmmaker, facing failure and revealed interesting anecdotes that went into the making of his musical blockbusters including Kalicharan, Vidhata, Khalnayak and Karma among several other subjects.

Starting the conversation with ‘what next’, the filmmaker touched upon several topics related to his personal and professional life that inspired everybody present at the auditorium. From selling 6 stories to top producers in one year to making Saudagar in 11 months despite controversies on the rift between Dilip Kumar and Rajkumar to stating the fact that 2017 has not been a fruitful year for Hindi cinema, Subhash Ghai’s conversation with the crowd was quite a revelation.

The filmmaker has been a regular at IFFI Goa in the past offering his valuable contribution to the festival organisers.

The 48th Edition of IFFI is scheduled from the 20th to 28th of November, 2017 in the beach state of Goa.

 

Rashtrapati Bhavan will be open for public viewing for four days a week from tomorrow

Rashtrapati Bhavan will now be open for public viewing for four days in a week – Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday – from tomorrow (November 23, 2017) between 0900 hrs. to 1600 hrs. except on Gazetted Holidays.

Entry and exit for visitors will be through Gate No. 2 (Rajpath); Gate No. 37 (Hukmi Mai Marg); and Gate No. 38 (Church Road) of Rashtrapati Bhavan.

Visits can be booked on-line at the website http://rashtrapatisachivalaya.gov.in/rbtour. There are nominal registration charges of Rs. 50/- per head (Children below the age of 8 years will be exempt from these charges). Indian citizens are required to carry any valid photo ID Cards while foreign citizens are required to carry their original passport at the time of visit.

Contact details of the Visitors’ Management Cell are Tel No.: 011- 23013287, 23015321 Extn. 4662; Fax No. 011- 23015246; Email: reception-officer@rb.nic.in for any further assistance which may be required.

India, Japan to Send Joint Moon Mission Soon, Pact in 2 Months

India and Japan will visit Japan jointly to bring back samples as part of their joint exploration mission.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) have already been working on it. This is the third moon trip for both the nations.

ISRO Chairman and Secretary, Department of Space, A.S.Kiran Kumar, and JAXA president Naoki Okumura said the arrangement will be signed in a couple of months and the mission scope will be finalized in six months.

Addressing a news conference at the annual Asia Pacific Regional Space Agency Forum APRSAF-24, JAXA’s Dr. Okamura said, “India and Japan will lead the space sector in the Asia Pacific region. We hope we can do it as soon as possible.”

The Indian Space Research Organisation sent its first orbiter mission to moon, Chandrayaan-1, in 2008 and plans a lander rover mission as part of the Google Challenge to land a rover on moon by March 2018.

India’s private space agency TeamIndus will launch its spacecraft aboard the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota in December 2017 to inject the spacecraft into an orbit 880 km x 70,000 km above the surface of the earth.

There on, the spacecraft will set course to the Moon using a series of complex orbital manoeuvres. After hitting a maximum speed of 10.5 km per second en route to the Moon, it will fire its rocket engines again, to decelerate and soft-land as the dawn breaks on Mare Imbrium, a vast lava plain on the Moon.

ECA, the rover, will be released onto the surface to transmit high definition images to the spacecraft, which in turn, will transmit them to Earth. The mission will be operative over 24 days — 10 days in orbit and 14 days on the surface. The spacecraft (which is 2 m tall and 600 kg heavy) will run on 240 W of solar power and 28 V 24 A hour battery. The TeamIndus rover on moon will land and go into operation by March 2018.

ECA or Ek Choti si Asha will be lowered onto the surface in pre-programmed software mode, move for a minimum distance of 500 m, capture and beam back high definition videos and images to Earth through the spacecraft. One of the five ground stations on Earth (Goldstone, USA; Madrid, Spain; Byalalu, India; Baik, Indonesia; Canberra, Australia) will pick the signals up and relay them to the TeamIndus Mission Control Centre. It is an answer to Google Challenge for landing on moon successfully.

 

Gopichand’s 25th film with Sri Sathya Sai Arts hits floor

After delivering hit films like Andhrudu, Yagnam, Lakshyam, Shouryam and Loukyam, our hero Gopichand’s 25th film is launched on Sunday, Nov.19 at Ramanaidu Studios, Hyderabad. This prestigious project will be produced by Bengali Tiger fame KK Radhamohan on the banner of Sri Satya Sai Arts.
K. Chakravarthy, who provided wonderful screenplays for blockbuster films like Balupu, Power and Jai Lava Kusa will be introduced as director. While VV Vinayak sounded the claps for first muhurtham shot, TFDC Chariman P Ram Mohan Rao switched the camera and Dil Raju directed the first shot.
On this occasion producer KK Radhamohan said, “This is my 7th film as producer on Sri Sathya Sai Arts banner. Our last hit film Bengal Tiger was also kick started with muhurtham in the same area where now our new movie began today and I feel very happy. I hope, this movie will also score big success as Bengal Tiger. Gopi Sundar is providing music and Prasad Murella will be cranking the camera. K Chakravarti is getting introduced as director with this movie. Regular shooting will begin from December 16th.”
Director K Chakravarthy (Chakri) said, “I thank my hero Gopichand, producer KK Radhamohana for giving me an opportunity to direct this film. I am happy and I also feel more responsible because this Gopichand’s 25th film.” Heroine Mehreen said, “I am so fortunate that my 5th film is coincided with Gopichand’s 25th film. It is a pleasure to be part of such good movie and talented crew.”

Hero Gopichand said, ‘Story narrated by Chakri is very good. Regular shooting will be commenced from December 16th. We all know how powerful message my father’s films used to carry. Along with a good message, this film will have all the commercial elements. I also feel happy to work on Radhamohan’s banner.”

Artists: Gopichand, Mehreen, Prithvi and Jayaprakash Reddy and others.

Technicians: Art AS Prakash, Dialogues Ramesh Reddy, Screenplay K Chakravarti & Bobby (KS Ravindra), Co Director Bellamkonda Satyambabu, Music Gopi Sundar, Camera Prasad Murella, Producer  KK Radhamohan and Story, Direction K Chakravarthy (Chakri).

Gruham Emerges Super Hit, Siddharth Thanks Audience

Gruham hero Siddharth, who played lead role alongside Andrea Jeremiah in horror film Gruham released on November 17th and he also co-produced it in association with Viacom 18 Motion Pictures and Etaki Entertainment, thanked the audience for making the film a success. Its overseas box office collections were around $13,500 on the opening day alone.
Gruham is not just another horror film, but it is on par with Hollywood standards, he said. Siddharth, Andrea, Anisha Victor, Atul Kulkarni and Suresh’s performance and Girish’s background score are major highlights of the film, he noted while giving an interview to a TV channel.
Recently, Siddharth has also hinted at a sequel to the movie. Siddharth, a doctor with his wife, played by Andrea Jeremiah, encounter horror and come out of it. The film is purportedly based on a true story. Directed by Milind Rau the film was released in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu.
Shreyaas Krishna’s cinematography and Milind Rau’s unique story-telling with DI Coloring Cinema backdrop helped the movie do better. In fact, Gruham is a complete horror film after ages and it is raking in good numbers from theaters with positive talk all over, he said.
“It is once again proved that, Telugu spectators will always encourage films with potential content. I thank one and all for making Gruham that was released in Telugu, Tamil and Hindi languages a super hit,” he said.
Viacom18 team said, “It’s been long time since a perfect horror movie hit the Telugu screens. We didn’t compromise on anything to make Gruham as to provide such different experience to audience over here. It’s a pleasure feeling to receive overwhelming response for artists performances and technical brilliance from audience as well as critics.”

Meet India’s Manushi Chillar – Graceful Medico who Went on to Win Miss World 2017

 

India’s Manushi Chillar has finally brought India the much-required international glory that was achieved by Aishwarya Rai way back in 1994 and Priyanka Chopra in 2000.

Manushi, who represented India emerged the winner after a total of 118 contestants vied for the coveted title. Miss Puerto Rico, Stephanie Del Valle, who won the crown last year, crowned Ms chillar with 2017 crown. incidentally, Stephanie had crowned Manushi Miss India 2017 in June at Femina Miss India World pageant.

When nearer to winning the title after making it to the final 5, Manushi was asked which profession deserved the biggest salary and why. To this, the daughter of doctor parents in Haryana aptly replied:”A mother deserves the highest respect. It’s not always about cash but also the love and respect that we give to someone. My mother has been a huge inspiration to me. I think it is the job of a mother that deserves the biggest salary.”

Meet Manushi Chillar?

Daughter of doctor parents, Manushi Chillar studied at St. Thomas School in Delhi and joined the Bhagat Phool Singh Government Medical College for Women in Sonepat, Haryana before becoming Miss India 2017 in June this year. Since India did not get any crown in the last 17 years, nobody expected her to make it but the Haryana girl has finally won the crown.

Manushi Chillar went on to become Miss India in June 2017 and successfully represented India at the Miss World 2017 pageant held in China on Saturday, November 18, just one day before the nation was all set to celebrate the 100th birth anniversay of Indira Gandhi, the first woman prime Minister of India.

In an interview during the rehearsals for Miss India pageant, she had said: “The only thing I believe is certain in life is uncertainty and this is what is amazing about the pageant.” True to her spirit, she bagged the global honor.

Thank you, everyone, for your constant love, support at prayers! @feminamissindia @MissWorldLtd #MissWorld2017 This one’s for #India pic.twitter.com/kcnLV4C22P

— Manushi Chhillar (@ManushiChhillar) November 18, 2017

Manushi Chillar Gets Miss World 2017 Crown to India after 17 Years

India’s Manushi Chiller has finally brought India the international glory that was achieved by Aishwarya Rai way back in 1994 and Priyanka Chopra in 2000.

Manushi, who represented India emerged the winner after a total of 118 contestants vied for the coveted title. Miss Puerto Rico, Stephanie Del Valle, who won the crown last year, crowwned Ms chiller with 2017 crown.

When nearer to winning the title after making it to the final 5, she was asked which profession deserved the biggest salary and why. To this, the daughter of doctors in Haryana, replied:”A mother deserves the highest respect. It’s not always about cash but also the love and respect that we give to someone. My mother has been a huge inspiration to me. I think it is the job of a mother that deserves the biggest salary.” An apt reply from an Indian whose land is known for respecting mothers.

Soon her reply was adjudged the best and Manushi Chiller was on her way to be crowned Miss World 2017 title.

Who is Manushi Chillar?

Daughter of doctor parents, Manushi Chillar studied at St. Thomas School in Delhi and joined the Bhagat Phool Singh Government Medical College for Women in Sonepat, Haryana before becoming Miss India 2017 in June this year. Since India did not get any crown in the last 17 years, nobody expected her to make it but the Haryana girl has finally won the crown.

She thanked everyone who wished for her success in a tweet:

 

Human evolution was uneven, punctuated, due to Neanderthals?

Neanderthals survived at least 3,000 years longer than we thought in Southern Iberia – what is now Spain – long after they had died out everywhere else, according to new research published in Heliyon.

The authors of the study, an international team from Portuguese, Spanish, Catalonian, German, Austrian and Italian research institutions, say their findings suggest that the process of modern human populations absorbing Neanderthal populations through interbreeding was not a regular, gradual wave-of-advance but a “stop-and-go, punctuated, geographically uneven history.”

Over more than ten years of fieldwork, the researchers excavated three new sites in southern Spain, where they discovered evidence of distinctly Neanderthal materials dating until 37,000 years ago.

“Technology from the Middle Paleolithic in Europe is exclusively associated with the Neanderthals,” said Dr. João Zilhão, from the University of Barcelona and lead author of the study. “In three new excavation sites, we found Neanderthal artefacts dated to thousands of years later than anywhere else in Western Europe. Even in the adjacent regions of northern Spain and southern France the latest Neanderthal sites are all significantly older.”

The Middle Paleolithic was a part of the Stone Age, and it spanned from 300,000 to 30,000 years ago. It is widely acknowledged that during this time, anatomically modern humans started to move out of Africa and assimilate coeval Eurasian populations, including Neanderthals, through interbreeding.

According to the new research, this process was not a straightforward, smooth one – instead, it seems to have been punctuated, with different evolutionary patterns in different geographical regions.

In 2010, the team published evidence from the site of Cueva Antón in Spain that provided unambiguous evidence for symbolism among Neanderthals. Putting that evidence in context and using the latest radiometric techniques to date the site, the researchers show Cueva Antón is the most recent known Neanderthal site.

“We believe that the stop-and-go, punctuated, uneven mechanism we propose must have been the rule in human evolution, which helps explaining why Paleolithic material culture tends to form patterns of geographically extensive similarity while Paleolithic genomes tend to show complex ancestry patchworks,” commented Dr. Zilhão.

The key to understanding this pattern, says Dr. Zilhão, lies in discovering and analyzing new sites, not in revisiting old ones. Although finding and excavating new sites with the latest techniques is time-consuming, he believes it is the approach that pays off.

“There is still a lot we do not know about human evolution and, especially, about the Neanderthals,” said Dr. Zilhão. “Our textbook ideas about Neanderthals and modern humans have been mostly derived from finds in France, Germany and Central Europe, but during the Ice Ages these were peripheral areas: probably as much as half of the Paleolithic people who ever lived in Europe were Iberians. Ongoing research has begun to bear fruit, and I have no doubt that there is more to come.”

Unusual bone chips in Feet of Clog-Wearing 19th-Century Dutch Farmers Found

Bio-archeologists have discovered a pattern of unusual bone chips in the feet of clog-wearing 19th-Century Dutch farmers — injuries that offer clues to the damage we may unwittingly be causing to our own feet.

The unexpected prevalence of damage in the farmers’ foot bones is more than just an historical curiosity; researchers believe their findings provide new insights into how some micro-injuries happen.

“What we choose to wear on our feet plays a big role in the injuries and trauma our feet can sustain,” said co-author Andrea Waters-Rist, an associate professor of anthropology at Western University.

She has been co-leading a team from Leiden University in examining bones excavated during the relocation of a church cemetery in the tiny village of Middenbeemster, near Amsterdam. Using osteobiography and paleopathology methods as well as stable isotope analysis and mass spectrometry on about 500 skeletons from the dairy-farming area, they have been able to reconstruct the group’s diet, disease and overall health.

Team member and former masters student Irene Vikatou needed only good observation to detect a high prevalence of a rare type of bone lesion called osteochondritis dissecans (OD) in the foot bones.

“They’re like craters in the bones, at the joints, as if chunks of bone have just been chiselled away,” Waters-Rist said. “We didn’t need a microscope to see them, they were that obvious.”

The incidence of OD in most populations is rare, less than one per cent. But in this group, fully 13 per cent had the injury and it was only in their feet.

Researchers concluded that wooden shoes –ubiquitous farmer clogs called klompen — were partly to blame. “These shoes are hard and inflexible and are poor shock-absorbers. This was a time before industrialization and you can imagine people using their clog-covered feet to hammer, stomp, or kick an object into place, inflicting impact injuries in their feet, Waters-Rist said. “Wearing these clogs, combined with heavy physical activity, these farmers suffered repeated micro-trauma to their foot bones.”

Now, almost 200 years later, researchers say it’s a clear indication of how footwear can damage our bones in obvious and subtle ways. Said, Waters-Rist, “Look at what high heels do: the constriction of our toes, the strain it places on our joints. If bio-archeologists were to come along in 100 or 500 years and look at the bones of our feet — would they ask, what on Earth were these people wearing?”

The study is published in the International Journal of Paleopathology.

Madrid was Arid Savanna During Middle Miocene Period: Study

IMAGE: THIS IS AN IMAGE OF AN ARID SAVANNA DURING THE MIDDLE MIOCENE IN MADRID.

CREDIT: MARCO ANSÓN

The Central Iberian Peninsula was characterised by a very arid savanna during the middle Miocene, according to a study led by the Complutense University of Madrid (UCM) that compares the mammal assemblages from different localities in Africa and South Asia with those that inhabited the Iberian central area 14 million years ago.

The results of this study, recently published in PLOS ONE, are the product of more than fifteen years of fieldwork and previous paleontological studies of the fossil vertebrate remains found at the Somosaguas paleontological site (Madrid), which allowed paleontologists to inferthe type of environment that existed in the middle Miocene in the central part of the Iberian Peninsula. This fossil site is located at the Somosaguas Campus of the UCM, a particular feature as only two paleontological sites have been discovered up to now at university campuses worldwide (the other one being located in the USA).

The body size of every species is largely influenced by the environmental conditions of the habitat where each species lives. For example, elephants that inhabit humid places (such as those in Asian jungles) are smaller than elephants that live in dry places (such as those that inhabit in African savannahs).

“Based on this premise, the distribution of sizes within a mammal community can offer us valuable information about its climatic context”, explains Iris Menéndez, a researcher at the Department of Paleontology of the UCM and the Institute of Geosciences (UCM and CSIC).

In this study paleontologists have been able to infer that the centre of the Iberian Peninsula witnessed a very arid tropical climate with a high precipitation seasonality. After a brief wet period, the annual dry season could last up to 10 months. “These results confirm the previous inferences on the Savannahs environment of Somosaguas in the Miocene, but placing this habitat at their driest estimated, within the limits between the savanna and the desert”, says Menéndez.

This study compiled the information of climatic parameters for more than 60 current localities from Africa and Asia, including information of the body size of the mammalian species that inhabit these localities.

“For this purpose, we made a compilation of information on mammalian fauna lists, their body sizes, and climatic parameters for these localities, such as temperatures and precipitation. Based on this data, we developed statistical models suitable for the inference of different climatic parameters in the past”, says the UCM researcher.

“We included the information on the 26 mammal species found in the Somosaguas site, which allowed us to infer the environment by comparison with the extant assemblages”, she adds.

Somosaguas is a particularly interesting fossil site in the context of paleoecological and paleoclimatic studies because it was located at a turning point during the Miocene. At this time, there was a marked change from warm and relatively humid global conditions to colder and arid environments. This inflection point eventually led to the beginning of the Pleistocene glaciations.

Moreover, the Somosaguas fossil site, due to its location within a university campus, gives to the general public the opportunity to visit it and learn all the details of the investigations that have been carried out from the data collected in the successive excavation campaigns.

A new way to store thermal energy

In large parts of the developing world, people have abundant heat from the sun during the day, but most cooking takes place later in the evening when the sun is down, using fuel — such as wood, brush or dung — that is collected with significant time and effort.

Now, a new chemical composite developed by researchers at MIT could provide an alternative. It could be used to store heat from the sun or any other source during the day in a kind of thermal battery, and it could release the heat when needed, for example for cooking or heating after dark.

A common approach to thermal storage is to use what is known as a phase change material (PCM), where input heat melts the material and its phase change — from solid to liquid — stores energy. When the PCM is cooled back down below its melting point, it turns back into a solid, at which point the stored energy is released as heat. There are many examples of these materials, including waxes or fatty acids used for low-temperature applications, and molten salts used at high temperatures. But all current PCMs require a great deal of insulation, and they pass through that phase change temperature uncontrollably, losing their stored heat relatively rapidly.

Instead, the new system uses molecular switches that change shape in response to light; when integrated into the PCM, the phase-change temperature of the hybrid material can be adjusted with light, allowing the thermal energy of the phase change to be maintained even well below the melting point of the original material.

The new findings, by MIT postdocs Grace Han and Huashan Li and Professor Jeffrey Grossman, are reported this week in the journal Nature Communications.

“The trouble with thermal energy is, it’s hard to hold onto it,” Grossman explains. So his team developed what are essentially add-ons for traditional phase change materials, or, “little molecules that undergo a structural change when light shines on them.” The trick was to find a way to integrate these molecules with conventional PCM materials to release the stored energy as heat, on demand. “There are so many applications where it would be useful to store thermal energy in a way lets you trigger it when needed,” he says.

The researchers accomplished this by combining the fatty acids with an organic compound that responds to a pulse of light. With this arrangement, the light-sensitive component alters the thermal properties of the other component, which stores and releases its energy. The hybrid material melts when heated, and after being exposed to ultraviolet light, it stays melted even when cooled back down. Next, when triggered by another pulse of light, the material resolidifies and gives back the thermal phase-change energy.

“By integrating a light-activated molecule into the traditional picture of latent heat, we add a new kind of control knob for properties such as melting, solidification, and supercooling,” says Grossman, who is the Morton and Claire Goulder and Family Professor in Environmental Systems as well as professor of materials science and engineering.

The system could make use of any source of heat, not just solar, Han says. “The availability of waste heat is widespread, from industrial processes, to solar heat, and even the heat coming out of vehicles, and it’s usually just wasted.” Harnessing some of that waste could provide a way of recycling that heat for useful applications.

“What we are doing technically,” Han explains, “is installing a new energy barrier, so the stored heat cannot be released immediately.” In its chemically stored form, the energy can remain for long periods until the optical trigger is activated. In their initial small-scale lab versions, they showed the stored heat can remain stable for at least 10 hours, whereas a device of similar size storing heat directly would dissipate it within a few minutes. And “there’s no fundamental reason why it can’t be tuned to go higher,” Han says.

In the initial proof-of-concept system “the temperature change or supercooling that we achieve for this thermal storage material can be up to 10 degrees C (18 F), and we hope we can go higher,” Grossman says.

Already, in this version, “the energy density is quite significant, even though we’re using a conventional phase-change material,” Han says. The material can store about 200 joules per gram, which she says is “very good for any organic phase-change material.” And already, “people have shown interest in using this for cooking in rural India,” she says. Such systems could also be used for drying agricultural crops or for space heating.

“Our interest in this work was to show a proof of concept,” Grossman says, “but we believe there is a lot of potential for using light-activated materials to hijack the thermal storage properties of phase change materials.”