Miss America Begs School To Revoke Student Suspension

There’s been plenty of controversy surrounding a teenage boy who had the courage to ask Miss America to prom and earned himself 3 days of suspension as a result. Everyone from public tweeters to the the high school senior himself have shared their opinions on the matter, and now Nina Davuluri is speaking out.



Nina Davuluri, 25, was flattered when 18-year old, Patrick Farve interrupted her question-and-answer session at a Pennsylvania high school to present her with a flower and a very public invitation to prom. Patrick’s classmates thought his move was awesome, but the administration was furious. Click below to read what Nina has to say about the controversial issue!

Wipro to hire 150 frontline sales staff in United States

BANGALORE: WiproBSE -5.50 % will hire some 150 frontline sales staff in the United States in a singular development that denotes the company's twin ambitions of boosting revenue and presenting a local face in its main market. Over the next 3-5 months, Wipro will have hired young college graduates as well as experienced sales veterans to build up its team in US cities where it currently does not have presence, people familiar with the company's thinking said. 

Markets open higher; Nifty moves above 6,800

MUMBAI: The S&P BSE Sensex opened on a positive note for second straight session aided by supportive cues from Asian peers. All the sectoral indices were in the green with banks, metals, power and capital goods in the lead. 

The trade is likely to remain rangebound with positive bias in the truncated week. The stock exchanges have announced a trading holiday on April 24, on account of voting for the general elections in constituencies in Mumbai. As a result, the F&O expiry wil .. 


Rs 15 lakh cash seized in Jharkhand ahead of polls

Ranchi: Police on Sunday seized Rs. 15 lakh in cash in Jharkhand's Dhanbad district ahead of Thursday's Lok Sabha polls.

The cash was seized from a man travelling in a bus from Giridih to Dhanbad, near Barwadda area of Dhanbad district, around 240 km from Ranchi.

Police have launched search operations ahead of April 24 balloting for the Dhanbad Lok Sabha seat.

More than Rs. 2 crore has been seized from various parts of the state during the election. Jharkhand has three-phased polling scheduled for its 14 seats. It has already voted April 10 and 17 for four and six seats, respectively.

Mamata Banerjee: one of India's most capricious politicians

One of India's most capricious politicians, Mamata Banerjee, could be key to the country's future government.

The 59-year-old is predicted to win enough seats to count in a scenario where no political party wins a clear majority.

In the past two years, the West Bengal chief minister has been in the news more for controversial moves like ascribing political motives to a spate of rape cases; the arrest of a protesting scientist or a college professor who shared a cartoon that made fun of her; for enforcing a read list in public libraries in her state; for attempting to reduce emphasis on Marx and Engels in history books. 

Ahead of voting in Bengal for the national election, she has escalated a confrontation with the Election Commission over its order to transfer officials accused of bias, calling it an "insult" to her state.

At a national level, she is seen as the chief architect of reform policy rollbacks, using her political clout to arm-twist the government she partners. When the muscle-flexing finally did not work, she pulled out of the UPA government.

Her aggressive ways had critics shouting "Didigiri". 

But Mamata Banerjee is dismissive of the criticism; she has scored her governance a perfect 100 and insists that the media appears to paint a negative picture of her government's performance. 
 
In 2011, Mamata Banerjee stormed the Left citadel that was Bengal, ridding the state of the 34-year-long Communist rule. She had been building up to that moment from the very start of her political career, when senior Congressmen from the state recall a zealous, young party worker working through the night to paste anti-Left posters; in the morning CPM workers would remove them. When night fell again, she would be back pasting posters, undeterred. 

Mamata Banerjee's stated raison d'etre has always been the decimation of the Left in West Bengal. So acute is the hatred that a Trinamool minister asked party workers that their daughters should not marry into CPM homes.

Born on 5 January 1955 in Calcutta, Mamata Banerjee grew up in a lower middle-class family and is said to have been drawn to politics while still in school. She was very young when she joined the Congress in the '70s.

A history graduate from Jogamaya Devi College, Ms Banerjee got a Master's in Islamic History from the University of Calcutta followed by a degree in education from Shri Shikshayatan College. She earned her stripes as a lawyer with a degree from Jogesh Chandra Chaudhuri Law College. Ms Banerjee draws and likes to write poetry. She is the published author of 'Poribortan' (Change), 'Kobita' (Poems) and 'My Unforgettable Memories'.  

Personally, she lives a simple life, with few obvious vanities - she has forever been seen clad in an inexpensive cotton sari and rubber slippers. But hell hath no fury as Didi if anything or anyone presumes to scorn her.

From the unknown worker pasting anti-CPM posters to General Secretary of the Congress' youth wing, Ms Banerjee had a meteoric rise in the Congress. She first contested elections in 1984. 

In 1997, she parted ways with the Congress to float her Trinamool Congress. Here, Didi was all-powerful. It still took an arduous 14 years to get where she wanted - the CM's office in Kolkata's Writers' Building. On the way there, she partnered both BJP and Congress led governments at the Centre, treating both to her famed temper tantrums, threats to walk out and even breaking political partnerships with much elan.  

BJP set for best tally ever, Narendra Modi set to be the PM: Surveys

The BJP-led NDA could win up to 231 seats in the Lok Sabha elections and the Congress could slide to its worst ever electoral performance if elections were held in January, says a survey released on Friday.
The CNN-IBN CSDS election tracker said the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) would wrest 211-231 seats and the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) would win 107-127 seats if elections were held today.
The survey predicts the BJP winning 192-210 seats and the Congress sliding to 92-108 seats. At present, the saffron party has 117 MPs and the Congress 204.
It said the NDA would be within striking distance of forming the government.
The survey’s prediction said the Trinamool Congress, which rules West Bengal, was poised to bag 20-28 seats in West Bengal.
The AIADMK would win 15-23 seats in Tamil Nadu, Biju Janata Dal 10-16 seats in Odisha and the Samajwadi Party 8-14 seats in Uttar Pradesh.
The survey said the Janata Dal-United is slated to get 7-13 seats in Bihar and the Aam Aadmi Party 6-12 seats in Delhi. It predicts a dismal performance by the Left parties and said they would win 15-23 seats.
The YSR Congress is poised to win 11-19 seats, Bahujan Samaj Party 10-16 seats, Telugu Desam Party 9-15 seats, DMK 7-13 seats, Rashtriya Janata Dal 6-10 seats while both the Telangana Rashtra Samithi and the Janata Dal-Secular could bag four-eight seats.
The survey said UPA vote share was slated to go down from 31.5 percent in the 2009 general elections to 28 percent (January 2014) while that of NDA would shoot up from 21.5 percent to 36 percent over the same period.
The survey said BJP vote share could go up to 34 percent, a 15.2 percent jump since 2009 while the Congress vote share could decline to 27 percent from 28.6 percent.
The survey said 34 percent of those surveyed preferred Narendra Modi as the prime ministerial candidate and 15 percent wanted Rahul Gandhi.
Sonia Gandhi had five percent ratings as prime ministerial candidate while Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal had three percent.
“In a direct face-off between Modi and Rahul, 42 percent prefer the former and 25 percent the latter as PM (candidate). Forty-nine percent respondents across India say BJP’s decision to name Modi as PM candidate was correct,” the survey said.
It said 22 percent respondents preferred senior BJP leader L.K. Advani as prime ministerial choice if Modi is not accepted as the coalition leader after the elections.
- See more at: http://www.theindianrepublic.com/featured/bjp-set-best-tally-ever-narendra-modi-set-pm-surveys-100024260.html?utm_source=taboola&utm_medium=referral#sthash.LBICGSSg.dpuf

Narendra Modi gets more NO votes than Justin Bieber in TIME poll

New DelhiBJP prime ministerial candidateNarendra Modi had many more "NO" votes than Canadian pop singer Justin Bieber and polled far fewer popular votes than AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal in an ongoing poll as of late Sunday for TIME 100 list of the most influential people in the world.

The voting closes on April 22 and the final result will be announced on April 24.


Mr Modi, who opinion polls project as set to take over as India's next prime minister post the ongoing general elections, had polled 'NO' votes close to six, on a scale of one to 10. Bieber had polled fewer negative votes. (India Votes 2014: full coverage)

Bieber in fact polled more YES votes than Mr Modi.

The person topping the list was US actress Katy Perry, followed by Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader Arvind Kejriwal who had as many YES votes as her and fewer NOs.

Mr Modi was at ninth spot, below popular singer Beyonce Knowles and actor Benedict Cumberbatch.

However, a tweet showing the graph and the number of NO votes for Mr Modi had his fans swinging into action, with many voting YES and urging others on Twitter to do likewise.

On its site, the TIME asks voters if the person should be included in the TIME100 list.

By late Sunday night, Mr Kejriwal had nearly 87 percent people voting YES and just 13 percent saying NO. The number of votes polled, both for and against, were over 130,000, with the polling numbers changing every second.

In comparison, Mr Modi had over 62 percent voting NO and nearly 38 percent voting YES, with around 68,000 votes polled so far.

In comparison, world leaders like German Chancellor Angela Merkel had polled just 9,763 votes, with the meter barely moving. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had 13,000 votes polled, Chinese President Xi Jinping 7,777 and even Microsoft founder and the world's richest person Bill Gates had polled 13,730 votes.

Obama on mission to quiet Asia skeptics

[WASHINGTON] Five years after refashioning US foreign policy to emphasize Asia, President Barack Obama will face questions over his strategy's content and staying power in the region this week.
Obama will counter the impression that events, including carnage in Syria and the East-West showdown over Ukraine have dragged his administration's attention elsewhere.
He will argue in Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines that the "rebalancing" policy - of withdrawing US military, economic and human resources from Middle East wars and deploying them to emerging Asia - remains on track.
Obama will embark on his fifth visit as president to Asia when he lands in Japan on Wednesday.

Italy economy minister says 2014 growth could be above 0.8%: paper

[ROME] Italian Economy Minister Pier Carlo Padoan said in an interview published on Sunday he believed that growth in 2014 could be more than 0.8 per cent but that he could not say by how much.
In the interview in the Corriere della Sera, Padoan was asked if growth could come in more than the 0.8 per cent forecast earlier this month in the government's so-called Economic and Financial Document (DEF) containing new targets for coming years. "I really think so, even though one cannot estimate by how much," he was quoted as saying.
Italy's economy, the euro zone's third-biggest, shrank in 2012 and 2013, and returned to growth on a quarterly basis for the first time in more than two years during the final three months of last year.
A consensus of 20 economists polled by Reuters earlier this month predicted gross domestic product (GDP) will rise only 0.6 per cent in 2014.

A taste of nostalgia::

Do you long to re-experience cuisine from a bygone era?
Until time-travelling becomes a viable option, from now till end-May, Intercontinental Singapore's Chinese restaurant, Man Fu Yuan, is offering a blast from the past with its new menu - "A Taste of Nostalgia".
To adapt to the current fast-paced, profit-driven F&B environment, today's kitchens often replace manual processes with automation, drastically altering the taste of the food. Dishes and techniques from the past are almost non-existent. But restaurant manager, Patrick Ng, says they were compelled to recreate traditional cuisine using basic ingredients with the right techniques after often hearing people reminisce about food from the past, and how it tasted better. As such, after months of thorough research and experimentation, Man Fu Yuan will be offering customers "a taste of nostalgia".
But the nostalgia occurs even before the menu-tasting. It begins the moment you step onto the hardwood flooring of the newly refurbished Man Fu Yuan, located in the heart of Bugis, a heritage-rich district, where you are greeted with a combination of Peranakan-inspired louvred windows, rich tapestry and tabletop ceramics - an authentic setting that subconsciously throws you back to the precious golden days governed by rich traditions and strong culture.
The establishment has a seating capacity of 100 in the main dining room with four private rooms and four semi-private rooms accommodating up to 72 people - catering to business luncheons, family reunions and intimate dinners.
You are recommended to begin your fond trip down memory lane with the double-boiled winter melon with seafood soup. The clear and delicate soup, light on the palate, comprises prawns, scallops, crabmeat, conpoy and duck steamed and served in a whole winter melon, setting the bar for the rest of the meal up high.
As a follow-up appetizer, try the Hong Kong style steamed pork belly in shrimp paste. The pork belly is slathered in steamed fermented shrimp paste from Tai-O, a fishing town in Hong Kong, almost synonymous with its iconic shrimp paste, where for years it is prepared traditionally by indigenous methods, producing a strong aromatic flavour that enhances the meat.
During its experimentation process, Man Fu Yuan had tried making the dish with a handful of different shrimp paste brands before settling on the current, which most robustly brings out the flavour of the dish, says Mr Ng.
You may wish to pair your dishes with thoughtfully selected teas, a unique Man Fu Yuan offering. A hot cup of tea is an almost indispensable component of both ancient and modern Chinese cuisine. And Man Fu Yuan acknowledges this fact with its tea-infused menu, which most recently includes a co-creation by Mr Ng and Man Fu Yuan's Chinese executive chef, Kwan Yiu Kwan - the tea-smoked pork belly char siew - pork belly marinated in a combination of Chinese rose wine and barbecue sauce, and prepared by combining Cantonese roasting methods with a Szechuan technique of smoking the char siew, producing flavourful and succulent char siew delicately infused with the smoky aroma of Royal Red Robe tea, and finished off with a mouth-watering maltose glaze.
With char siew, the meat that you use needs to be sufficiently fatty to ensure that it remains succulent, but eating a lot of fatty meats tends to be a little heavy on the palate, says Chef Kwan. To counter this, Man Fu Yuan concocted a unique method of smoking the meat with tea after it has been barbecued, which adds another dimension to the overall taste.
The six treasures seafood, another highlight in "A Taste of Nostalgia", is a classic throwback to banquets in the '60s, comprising scallops, fish and lobster lightly pan-fried, and topped with crabmeat. The dish comes with deep-fried salted egg yolk, king prawns and braised abalone. Perhaps it had been one of the items at your own wedding banquet dinner, and Man Fu Yuan is offering you the chance to revisit those precious golden memories.
In many ancient cultures, animal fats were the only way of obtaining oil for cooking and were commonly used. But over time, the introduction of alternative cooking oils has led to a reduction in the use of lard.
Now, lard makes its comeback with Man Fu Yuan's steamed fish head with home-made black bean sauce. The morsels of lard studded onto the dish are a simple addition that is not commonly associated with luxury cuisine, but adds an irreplaceable depth of flavour to the dish.
At the restaurant, lard is also served with egg noodles. So unique and flavourful is lard that the restaurant wants you to appreciate it fully, with minimal culinary distractions.
As such, according to Chef Kwan, the restaurant had experimented with different types of noodles, sourced from places such as Thailand and Hong Kong, and tested with different cooking and cooling durations, which affect the overall texture and consistency of the dish - a time-consuming but necessary step in creating the menu - before 
The menu at Man Fu Yuan is the restaurant's attempt to recreate flavours from the past:
finally offering duck-egg noodles, served with first-pressed soy sauce and topped with crisp-fried lard.
It may sound enticing, but you might still find yourself in a bit of a pickle as there are other noodle offerings on the menu with similar history-rich promises, such as traditional wanton noodle, a mainstay in Cantonese cuisine, and flat rice noodles with river prawns drenched in roe-infused sauce.
Other dishes, too, will grab your attention - the mixed beef stew with handmade beef balls and the tender imperial chicken poached in a flavourful broth and served with minced ginger - both bursting with endless potential to recreate unforgettable memories of yesteryear.
Man Fu Yuan
InterContinental Singapore
80 Middle Road, Level 2, Singapore 188966
Tel: 6825 1008
6338 7600
Open from 11.45am to 3.30pm for lunch from Monday to Saturday, 11am to 3.30pm on Sunday and Public Holiday, 6.30pm to 10.30pm for dinner

New gold and platinum timepieces vied for attention at Baselworld 2014, where watch lovers also found standouts crafted out of stainless steel, ceramic, and titanium. Chuang Peck Ming reports.

THERE was enough gold on display to light up the dark halls of Baselworld 2014 last week - almost blinding the record 150,000 visitors at the world's biggest watch and jewellery show. So it was pretty smart of Patek Philippe to steal the show with an alternative display of steel timepieces at this annual fair, where about 80 per cent of global sales are sealed.
The two steel watches launched - Annual Calendar Chronograph and Nautilus Travel Time Chronograph - backed by the Patek Philippe pedigree, were among the key exhibits that stood out in a sea of gold and platinum timepieces at the week-long exhibition, held since 1917 in the Swiss city of Basel.
All of the 1,500 exhibitors from over 40 countries - dominated by the Swiss, of course - had plenty of new watches in precious metals to show off this year. Rolex's star piece was an updated version of its red and blue GMT-Master II which first appeared in 1955 in steel. The new version of the travel timepiece, fitted with the ceramic bezel Rolex has put on all its sports watches since 2005, is in white gold.
Chopard made much of the fact that its new L.U.C. Tourbillon Fairmined is created entirely from "Fairmined" gold. Small miners produce this gold in ways friendly to the environment - and miners are paid fairly. Yet apart from the positive spin given to it, Fairmined gold is no different from conventional gold.
Platinum also made a big showing at Baselworld 2014. Omega, which rarely launches new models in this noble metal, has a platinum version of not one but two novelties in its extensive offerings this year - the Seamaster 300 Master Co-Axial and the Seamaster Planet Ocean Orange. The Seamaster 300 is among the first to be powered by Omega's breakthrough anti-magnetic movement, which is to be fitted in all Omega watches by 2019.
Breguet, which shares with Omega the same parent - the giant Swiss Swatch group - took its invention, the gravity-defying tourbillon, to a higher level with the Classique Tourbillon Extra-Plat Automatique 5377. This is the world's slimmest automatic tourbillon - 7.0mm thick - and, fittingly, has a platinum case because it's Breguet's 2014 pride and joy.
Bulgari, in an aggressive push for its Octo line, claims the title for thinnest hand-wound tourbillon with the Octo Finissimo Tourbillon, a flying tourbillon that's only 5.0mm thick - and in platinum.
Other notables in platinum at Baselworld 2014 include independent watchmaker De Bethune's futuristic Dream Watch; Glashutte Original's Senator Chronograph Panorama Date; and Ulysse Nardin's Jazz Minute Repeater.
Showcased at Baselworld 2014 were also many timepieces in materials other than gold or platinum. Omega's limited edition Speedmaster Professional "Moonwatch", marking the 45th anniversary of the 1969 moon-landing, is a titanium version of the watch which the astronauts wore on that historic occasion.
TAG Heuer celebrated the 10th anniversary of its Monaco V4 - a watch powered by the world's first belt-driven movement - with the Monaco V4 Tourbillon, an avant garde timepiece that is the world's first tourbillon to be driven by micro belts. Its case is made from space-grade black titanium.
At Blancpain, another Swatch brand, chief executive Marc Hayek (also CEO of Breguet and Jaquet Droz) liked to show visitors the black ceramic variation of the new Fifty Fathoms Bathyscaphe Chronographe, a flyback chronograph that succeeds last year's Fifty Fathoms Bathyscaphe which remembers the 60th anniversary of the brand's iconic diving watch.
But while titanium and ceramic are increasingly used in watchmaking, they are, unlike gold and platinum, still high-tech materials that can turn out to be more interesting. Rolex has done what it claims to be the impossible by creating a blue and red ceramic bezel for the GMT Master II. Omega has similarly produced an orange ceramic bezel for the Seamaster Planet Ocean Orange.
Steel is more common than gold and platinum in watches, but that's true only for watch brands at lower price points. Longines' new commemorative Conquest Heritage 1954-2014 in steel is priced at just $2,390. You don't find an equivalent at that price among brands like Omega, Patek or Rolex.
The two new steel Pateks are priced around $70,000 each. And they will be in demand despite the stiff prices.
"Steel and complications are a rare combination in Patek Philippe's collection, so this is raising a lot of interest," Patek's president Thierry Stern explains.
The Annual Calendar Chronograph will be also Patek's first annual calendar chronograph with a steel bracelet, while the Nautilus Travel Time Chronograph is the most complicated timepiece in the iconic Nautilus line - and you can't get that in gold or platinum.

The 20 Best Job Search Sites for Finding a Job

When it comes to job hunting, navigating the vast expanse of the internet for the ideal job search website can feel like searching for a nee...