Saturday 12 November 2016

Donald Trump Is Picking His Cabinet: Here’s a Short List

Donald J. Trump’s transition team, which was handed over to Vice President-elect Mike Pence on Friday and includes a host of corporate consultants and lobbyists in addition to independent experts, is moving quickly to assemble leaders of the new administration. Here are some possibilities for the cabinet and other key posts.


Secretary of State

Whether Mr. Trump picks an ideologue or a seasoned foreign policy hand from past Republican administrations, his challenge will be that the State Department is the centerpiece of the post-1945 experiment of alliance-building and globalism, which Mr. Trump said he would dismantle.
  • John R. Bolton Former United States ambassador to the United Nations under George W. Bush
  • Bob Corker Senator from Tennessee and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
  • Newt Gingrich Former House speaker
  • Zalmay Khalilzad Former United States ambassador to Afghanistan
  • Stanley A. McChrystal Former senior military commander in Afghanistan

Treasury Secretary

The secretary will be responsible for government borrowing in financial markets, assisting in any rewrite of the tax code and overseeing the Internal Revenue Service. The Treasury Department also carries out or lifts financial sanctions against foreign enemies — which are key to President Obama’s Iran deal and rapprochement with Cuba.
  • Thomas Barrack Jr. Founder, chairman and executive chairman of Colony Capital; private equity and real estate investor
  • Jeb Hensarling Representative from Texas and chairman of the House Financial Services Committee
  • Steven Mnuchin Former Goldman Sachs executive and Mr. Trump’s campaign finance chairman
  • Tim Pawlenty Former Minnesota governor

Defense Secretary

The incoming secretary will shape the fight against the Islamic State while overseeing a military that is struggling to put in place two Obama-era initiatives: integrating women into combat roles and allowing transgender people to serve openly. Both could be rolled back.
Kelly Ayotte Departing senator from New Hampshire and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee
  • Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn Former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (he would need a waiver from Congress because of a seven-year rule for retired officers)
  • Stephen J. Hadley National security adviser under George W. Bush
  • Jon Kyl Former senator from Arizona
  • Jeff Sessions Senator from Alabama who is a prominent immigration opponent

Attorney General

The nation's top law enforcement official will have the authority for carrying out Mr. Trump's “law and order” platform, including his threat to “jail” Hillary Clinton. The nominee can change how civil rights laws are enforced.
  • Chris Christie New Jersey governor
  • Rudolph W. Giuliani Former New York mayor
  • Jeff Sessions Senator from Alabama

Interior Secretary

The Interior Department manages the nation’s public lands and waters. The next secretary will decide the fate of Obama-era rules that stop public land development; curb the exploration of oil, coal and gas; and promote wind and solar power on public lands.
  • Jan Brewer Former Arizona governor
  • Robert E. Grady Gryphon Investors partner
  • Harold G. Hamm Chief executive of Continental Resources, an oil and gas company
  • Forrest Lucas President of Lucas Oil Products, which manufactures automotive lubricants, additives and greases
  • Sarah Palin Former Alaska governor

Agriculture Secretary

The agriculture secretary oversees America's farming industry, inspects food quality and provides income-based food assistance. The department also helps develop international markets for American products, giving the next secretary partial responsibility to carry out Mr. Trump's positions on trade.
  • Sam Brownback Kansas governor
  • Chuck Conner Chief executive officer of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives
  • Sid Miller Texas agricultural commissioner
  • Sonny Perdue Former Georgia governor

Commerce Secretary

The Commerce Department has been a perennial target for budget cuts, but the secretary oversees a diverse portfolio, including the Census, the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  • Chris Christie New Jersey governor
  • Dan DiMicco Former chief executive of Nucor Corporation, a steel production company
  • Lewis M. Eisenberg Private equity chief for Granite Capital International Group

Labor Secretary

The Labor Department enforces rules that protect the nation’s workers, distributes benefits to the unemployed and publishes economic data like the monthly jobs report. The new secretary will be in charge of keeping Mr. Trump’s promise to dismantle many Obama-era rules covering the vast work force of federal contractors.
  • Victoria A. Lipnic Equal Employment Opportunity commissioner and work force policy counsel to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce

Health and Human Services Secretary

The secretary will help Mr. Trump achieve one of his central campaign promises: to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. The department approves new drugs, regulates the food supply, operates biomedical research, and runs Medicare and Medicaid, which insure more than 100 million people.
  • Dr. Ben Carson Former neurosurgeon and 2016 presidential candidate
  • Mike Huckabee Former Arkansas governor and 2016 presidential candidate
  • Bobby Jindal Former Louisiana governor who served as secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals
  • Rick Scott Florida governor and former chief executive of a large hospital chain

Energy Secretary

Despite its name, the primary purview of the Energy Department is to protect and manage the nation’s arsenal of nuclear weapons.
  • James L. Connaughton Chief executive of Nautilus Data Technologies and former environmental adviser to President George W. Bush
  • Robert E. Grady Gryphon Investors partner
  • Harold G. Hamm Chief executive of Continental Resources, an oil and gas company

Education Secretary

Mr. Trump has said he wants to drastically shrink the Education Department and shift responsibilities for curriculum research, development and education aid to state and local governments.
  • Dr. Ben Carson Former neurosurgeon and 2016 presidential candidate
  • Williamson M. Evers Education expert at the Hoover Institution, a think tank

Secretary of Veterans Affairs

The secretary will face the task of improving the image of a department Mr. Trump has widely criticized. Mr. Trump repeatedly argued that the Obama administration neglected the country's veterans, and he said that improving their care was one of his top priorities.
  • Jeff Miller Retired chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee

Homeland Security Secretary

The hodgepodge agency, formed after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has one key role in the Trump administration: guarding the United States’ borders. If Mr. Trump makes good on his promises of widespread deportations and building walls, this secretary will have to carry them out.
  • Joe Arpaio Departing sheriff of Maricopa County, Ariz.
  • David A. Clarke Jr. Milwaukee County sheriff
  • Michael McCaul Representative from Texas and chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee
  • Jeff Sessions Senator from Alabama

White House Chief of Staff

The chief of staff manages the work and personnel of the West Wing, steering the president's agenda and tending to important relationships. The role will take on outsize importance in a White House run by Mr. Trump, who has no experience in policy making and little in the way of connections to key players in Washington.
  • Stephen K. Bannon Editor of Breitbart News and chairman of Mr. Trump’s campaign
  • Reince Priebus Chairman of the Republican National Committee

C.I.A. Director / Director of National Intelligence

Mr. Trump takes over at a time of diverse and complex threats to American security. The new C.I.A. director will have to decide whether to undo a C.I.A. “modernization” plan put in place this year by Director John O. Brennan, and how to proceed if the president-elect orders a resumption of harsh interrogation tactics — which critics have described as torture — for terrorism suspects.
  • Michael T. Flynn Former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency
  • Peter Hoekstra Former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee
  • Mike Rogers Former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee
  • Frances Townsend Former homeland security adviser under George W. Bush

National Security Adviser

The national security adviser, although not a member of the cabinet, is a critical gatekeeper for policy proposals from the State Department, the Pentagon and other agencies, a function that takes on more importance given Mr. Trump's lack of experience in elective office.
  • Michael T. Flynn Former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency

Source - The New york Times

Monday 7 November 2016

US election polls and odds tracker: Latest results forecast as race for President reaches final few hours

with just hours to go before America goes to the polls to elect its 45th President, the race between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton remains as close as well. The investigations into Clinton's use of a private email server have now been concluded with no charges to be brought against the Democrat candidate. But the relevations last weekend have already done enough to give Trump momentum into the final week. Based on polling data from RealClearPolitics, we have the latest state-by-state predictions and an estimate of the overall electoral college vote.
source

Click on this link for full analysis, 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/0/us-election-polls-and-odds-tracker-latest-results-forecast/


I&B Ministry puts NDTV India ban on hold

In a report on its website, NDTV has said that it refuted the allegations and “pointed out that other channels and newspapers reported the same information”.


I&B Ministry panel ordered NDTV India be taken off air for 24 hours for it’s coverage of Pathankot attack.

Amid widespread condemnation over the one-day ban imposed on NDTV India, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (I&B) on Monday decided to put on hold its order against the prominent Hindi channel, according to news agency PTI.
Earlier in the day, NDTV has challenged the one-day ban by the government after an inter-ministerial panel concluded that the channel had revealed crucial and “strategically sensitive” information when the terror attack on Pathankot IAF base was being carried out. The channel has moved the Supreme Court in this regard.
In a report on its website, NDTV has said that it refuted the allegations and “pointed out that other channels and newspapers reported the same information”. The ban is supposed to be implemented from 00:01 hrs on November 9, 2016 till 00:01 hrs of November 10, 2016.
This is the first ever such order against a TV channel over its coverage of a terror attack, the norms regarding which were notified in 2015. The Editors’ Guild has condemned the ban and demanded that the decision be withdrawn immediately, saying it was reminiscent of the emergency period.
“The ostensible reason for the order as reported is that the channel’s coverage of Pathankot terror attack on January 2, 2016 that the government claims gave out sensitive information to the handlers of terrorists. NDTV, in its response to a show cause by the government, has maintained that its coverage was sober and did not carry any information that had not been covered by the rest of the media, and was in the public domain,” the statement read.
It added that the decision to take the channel off air for a day was a violation of the freedom of media.
The government, however, has defended the ban, saying freedom of press is important but the nation comes first. “We support freedom of press in a democracy but the nation comes first. There cannot be any compromise on national security,” BJP national secretary Shrikant Sharma said.
The decision drew sharp condemnation from the Opposition.
(Acknowledge - IndianExpressOnline)

Shivaay vs Ae Dil Hai Mushkil collection Day 11: KJo, Ajay all set to cross Rs 100cr

Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Shivaay are both all set to cross the Rs 100-crore mark at the box office in India.


Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Shivaay, which hit the screens this Diwali, are both doing well at the box office in India. While Ae Dil Hai Mushkil is just a few crores away from the coveted Rs 100-crore club in India, Shivaay too is racing towards the mark.
In their second week at the box office in India, Karan Johar's Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Ajay Devgn's Shivaay are both faring well. Ae Dil Hai Mushkil has earned Rs 97.15 crore in 10 days, and Shivaay has collected Rs 87.5 crore.
Here is the detailed break-up of the box-office figures for Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Shivaay for the last 10 days:
AE DIL HAI MUSHKIL:
Day 1 - Friday (October 28): Rs 13.3 crore
Day 2 - Saturday (October 29): Rs 13.1 crore
Day 3 - Sunday (October 30): Rs 9.2 crore
Day 4 - Monday (October 31): Rs 17.75 crore
Day 5 - Tuesday (November 1): Rs 13.03 crore
Day 6 - Wednesday (November 2): Rs 7.63 crore
Day 7 - Thursday (November 3): Rs 6.18 crore
Week 2
Day 8 - Friday (November 4): Rs 4.56 crore
Day 9 - Saturday (November 5): Rs 5.85 crore
Day 10 - Sunday (November 6): Rs 6.55 crore
Total collection (10 days): Rs 97.15 crore
SHIVAAY:
Day 1 - Friday (October 28): Rs 10.24 crore
Day 2 - Saturday (October 29): Rs 10.06 crore
Day 3 - Sunday (October 30): Rs 8.26 crore
Day 4 - Monday (October 31): Rs 17.35 crore
Day 5 - Tuesday (November 1): Rs 11.05 crore
Day 6 - Wednesday (November 2): Rs 7.4 crore
Day 7 - Thursday (November 3): Rs 6.05 crore
Week 2
Day 8 - Friday (November 4): Rs 4.61 crore
Day 9 - Saturday (November 5):
 Rs 5.40 crore
Day 10 - Sunday (November 6): Rs 7.08 crore
Total collection (10 days): Rs 87.5 crore
Both Karan Johar and Ajay Devgn left their fans waiting for Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Shivaay respectvely ever since their first promos were released. Karan's last full-length feature film, Student Of The Year, hit the screens in 2012 (he had a short segment for the film Bombay Talkies in 2013). Ajay Devgn last went behind the camera for his home production U Me Aur Hum that was released in 2008.
Over the last 10 days at the box office in India, Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Shivaay saw a considerable amount of footfall in theatres. While the KJo fandom flocked the halls to watch Ranbir Kapoor and Anushka Sharma's story of love, friendship and heartbreak, Ajay Devgn's fans were all praise for the kickass action sequences in Shivaay.

Ranbir and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan's sizzling chemistry left people with their jaws wide open right when the teaser of Ae Dil Hai Mushkil hit the web. After the first teaser, the trailer and other promos of the film had all lauding Ranbir and Aishwarya's equation on screen. On the other hand, Ajay Devgn's Shivaay was billed as one man's fight against the world to save his daughter.
Both Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Shivaay created much buzz long before their release. The films both tried to make the most of the Diwali weekend, and were released on October 28.
Ae Dil Hai Mushkil has musician Ayan (played by Ranbir) as the protagonist, and shows his journey of befriending and falling in love with Alizeh (Anushka). Apart from Ranbir and Anushka in the lead roles, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Fawad Khan, Lisa Haydon, Alia Bhatt, Imran Abbas and Shah Rukh Khan form the supporting cast of Ae Dil Hai Mushkil.

For Shivaay, Ajay Devgn threw his lot with the film. He directed it and played the eponymous lead role. The film is a mega-budget one, with the amount somewhere around Rs 105 crore. In Shivaay, Ajay is supported by Polish actor Erika Kaar, child actor Abigail Eames and Sayyesha Saigal, who made her debut with the film.
Ae Dil Hai Mushkil is said to have been made on a budget of Rs 70 crore. The Karan Johar film has already crossed that mark in six days of release.
Both Shivaay and Ae Dil Hai Mushkil are expected to cross the Rs 100-crore mark at the domestic box office in their second week. While Ae Dil Hai Mushkil is all set to enter the Rs 100-crore club in India today, it might take Shivaay a few more days to achieve that.

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10 Countries Where You Are Allowed To Drive In With Indian License

Travelling is the best experience, and travelling abroad can be something better than best. Actually, I should say travelling abroad is always awesome wherever you go. When you go abroad, the biggest question is “how you travel there”. Car rentals are the only option left with you to travel the whole country. But if you got your Indian license, you can actually drive in these countries.

1. You are allowed to drive anywhere in Britain up to one year with a valid Indian license.


2. You can drive in with Indian license in Australia as long as you are staying there. Only two things you need to keep in mind is – Your passport should be in English and you should also carry IDP.


3. You can drive in the country of United states of America for one year only if your license is in English. You need IDP, if the license is in any one local language.


4. With an Indian license, you can drive in Germany up to six months. You need to translate your license from embassy to drive in the country safely.


5. Any one is allowed to drive in the beautiful country of Switzerland for a year, with a valid Indian license.


6. Mauritius allow you to drive in the country for a year with a valid Indian license.


7. The small country of New Zealand allows a person to drive in with valid Indian license. However, you can be restricted to the kind of vehicle that your license is valid up to.


8. In France,you are allowed to drive in with Indian license, but you will need to convert the license into French language.


9. Norway is the country that is known for its breath taking beauty and lights. And now you can even drive across this land of the midnight sun. All you need is a valid driver’s license but it’s valid only for a period of three months.



10. South Africa allows you to drive in with Indian license, only the thing required is it should be in English.


Do you know any such other Country where we can Drive with an Indian License? YES? Then comment the names of those countries in the comments section below

Tuesday 14 June 2016

Apple launches iMessage Apps so third-party devs can join your convos


At today’s WWDC Keynote, Apple swung open the gates for developers. Not only has the company opened up Siri to third-party developers, but it’s also letting third-party devs into sacred space: messages.
With iMessage Apps, users can simply open up an app drawer from right within the Messages app to interact with others (and apps) at the same time.
This ranges from silly sticker apps like Mickey Mouse gifs to more sophisticated integrations, like paying friends through Messages with Square Pay or collaboratively ordering food from DoorDash.
iMessage Apps are the biggest addition to Messages in iOS 10, but certainly isn’t the only new thing to look for.
For one, users can now send each other rich links, with music and videos playing directly within the conversation.
Messages now offers emojification, letting users spot words that come with an accompanying emoji and translate those real words to emojis with a single tap.

Users can also use different bubble animations for their messages, adding a gentle touch to the delivery of their message or adding a ‘pow!’ to the message. In fact, there is an “invisible ink” option that you can use for both text and photos that hides the message until the recipient swipes their finger across it to reveal the content (not unlike Confide).
These animations are not just for the chat bubbles, but can also go full-screen, with options for balloons, confetti and more.
Plus, users can add Slack-like reactions to a single message, as well as Digital Touch (the same drawing feature that has been available on the Apple Watch since launch).
Apple also announced upgrades to QuickType. With iOS 10, the keyboard will understand when a friend asks for someone’s contact info and proactively serves up options to send them. The keyboard can understand when someone asks where you are and proactively let you send your location on a map.
With all these upgrades to the Messages app, our conversations will likely look very different after the launch of iOS 10. (credit-TechChrunch)

Baahubali - The Beginning won 13 awards at the CineMAA Awards 2016! Congratulations to all the winners


Monday 13 June 2016

9 of the most egregious lies and inaccuracies in Donald Trump’s foreign policy speech

Donald Trump has lied in debates, sent threatening tweets, misled interviewers, and circulated outrageous personal and political conspiracy theories throughout his presidential campaign.

On Monday, Trump made clear that his habit of getting the facts wrong wasn’t limited to the rough-and-tumble nature of a primary campaign: He made repeated, clearly false assertions throughout a high-profile speech about the Orlando shooting, a major domestic crisis. The speech was read from a teleprompter and presumably written over several hours and, one would imagine, with the help of Trump’s staff.

"The mouth moves and the lies pour forth," wrote the New Yorker’s David Remnick in a story published Monday morning about Trump’s response to the shooting. And that was before Trump’s speech in the afternoon.

Here are 9 of the most egregious things Trump got wrong in the speech.

1) Trump: There’s no screening for refugees coming to the US

We're not screening people. So why don't we have an effective screening system? We don't. We're being laughed at all over the world. The burden is on Hillary Clinton to tell us why we should admit anyone into our country who supports violence of any kind against gay and lesbian Americans.

The truth: Trump is wrong: There is an extensive, onerous screening process for refugees who come to America. You can see so yourself here.

2) Trump criticizes Libya intervention, supported it himself

For instance, the last major NATO mission was Hillary Clinton's war in Libya. That mission helped unleash ISIS on a new continent.

The truth: Trump has repeatedly characterized Libya as a unique failure of President Obama and Hillary Clinton’s foreign policy. But he actively supported that intervention, even though he's spent much of his candidacy pretending he didn't.

3) Trump: Clinton wants to admit "hundreds of thousands" of refugees to the US

Altogether under the Clinton plan, you'd be admitting hundreds of thousands of refugees from the Middle East with no system to prevent radicalization of the children and their children.

The truth: Trump is wrong here as well: Clinton has only called for increasing the number of Syrian refugees by 65,000, according to CNN.

4) Trump: The Orlando shooter was "born this Afghan"

The killer, whose name I will not use or ever say was born this Afghan, of Afghan parents, who emigrated to the United States.

The truth: Trump is wrong: Omar Saddiqui Mateen, the killer, was born in New York and raised in Florida.

5) Trump: "Large numbers" of Somali refugees joining ISIS

Large numbers of Somali refugees have tried to join ISIS. The male shooter in San Bernardino, again whose name I will not mention, was the child of immigrants from Pakistan and he brought his wife.

The truth: This dramatically misrepresents the number of Somali refugees from the US who have joined ISIS, which a New York Times story pegs at no more than 15. Perhaps Trump is speaking about Somali refugees globally, but given when he made this point — during a part of his speech about domestic terrorism — that’s almost certainly giving him too much credit.

6) Trump: Obama’s "famous apology tour" created ISIS

We've tried it President Obama's way. Doesn't work. He gave the world his apology tour. We got ISIS. And many other problems in return. That's what we got. Remember the famous apology tour

The truth: There is a coherent conservative critique of President Obama's speeches abroad, in which he has at times acknowledged America's faults in foreign wars. And there is a coherent conservative critique of President Obama's approach to defeating ISIS.

But Trump isn't engaging with either narrative. He's instead just drawing a direct link from Obama "apology tour" to the birth of ISIS, and I'm not aware of any serious attempt to connect the two. Trump certainly doesn't give any reason to believe they're related.

Even if you look at the supposed apologies that have to do with Islamic terrorism or the Muslim world, it’s not clear how they could have possibly created ISIS.

7) Trump: Hillary Clinton wants to ban guns

[Hillary Clinton] says the solution is to ban guns. ... She wants to take away Americans' guns and then admit the very people who want to slaughter us. Let them come into the country. We don't have guns. ...
She wants to take away Americans' guns and then admit the very people who want to slaughter us. Let them come into the country. We don't have guns. Let them come in, let them have all the fun they want.

The truth: Clinton has not called for anything remotely resembling a ban on guns — she wants to ban assault weapons but has otherwise not called for a gun ban. Someone listening to Trump's speech would have come away with an entirely wrong idea of her policy.

8) Trump’s criticism on pushing for regime change in Syria

The decision to overthrow the regime in Libya, then pushing for the overthrow of the regime in Syria, among other things, without plans for the day after, have created space for ISIS to expand and grow.

The truth: As with his initial approval of the Libya invasion, Trump has grossly distorted his record on Syria. (As Vox’s Matt Yglesias points out, he once called for a "big, beautiful safe zone" in the country.)

The weirder, specific problem here is the knock on Clinton and Obama for creating ISIS by "pushing for the overthrow of the regime in Syria" — when Trump has himself calledfor ground troops in Syria.
9) Trump suggests Muslims need to do more to help fight terrorism

They have to work with us. They know what is going on. They know that he was bad. They knew the people in San Bernardino were bad. But you know, what they didn't turn them in and we had death.


The truth: This line revives a long-running Trump suggestion that Muslims are largely to blame for not really joining us in the fight against terrorism. (Credit-Vox)

Blaming Muslims After Attack, Donald Trump Tosses Pluralism Aside

I said this was going to happen — and it is only going to get worse” Trump said in a statement because he know about this attack that this going to happen. it's feel like there is hand of @Donaldtrump in this mass murder.

Radical Donald Trump try to get everything to win election
How leaders react to challenging times of tragedy is an important measure of their ability to perform the duties demanded of their position. This candidate has chosen to misconstrue the facts around a horrible terrorist attack, conducted by an American citizen, to further his racist agenda calling for a ban on an entire religion. This is not Presidential. This is not American. This is not acceptable. It is illegal, dangerous, hate speech that devalues the lives lost in Orlando this weekend.


Donald Trump is looking benefits from #Orlandoshooting to win precidency election. it's okay...but can he also called #RadicalJewsandChristian because if you look at history of mass murder by using guns. you can found most of are christians. should he apologize for that?

#Boycottdonaldtrump

Sunday 12 June 2016

Shiv Sena releases posters on social media targeting Modi, BJP

In a series of posters released on social media, Shiv Sena is questioning Modi and BJP's performance in the last two years.

 

Escalating its turf war against the BJP government, Shiv Sena released a series of posters on the social media questioning Modi and BJP's performance in the last two years.
The posters doing rounds on Facebook and WhatsApp in Maharashtra  are depicting how the Union government had failed on many fronts like rise of crime against women, Swacch Bharat Abhiyaan,  etc have been made which show the statistics different than that claimed by the government.
While the first poster questions the slogan 'desh badal raha hai ' saying 'kya sach main desh badal raha hai?, another one talks about farmers and how government has ignored farmers who have been forced to commit suicide.




Other posters challenge government's claim with their own statistics on job creation, petrol prices and unrest on university campuses.

Even though Shiv Sena has not officially taken the responsibility for these posters but the posters are in line with Shiv Sena's criticism of Modi government's performance in its mouthpiece Saamana.



Even though the BJP is choosing to ignore this anti campaign by alliance partner but it's likely that Shiv Sena will get some reaction on social media by BJP.
 
This social media war has made it clear that both alliance partners are going to be die hard opponents in upcoming municipal corporations elections in Maharashtra due in February 2017. (Source-India today)

Saturday 11 June 2016

JEE (Advanced) 2016 results declared: Aman Bansal is topper

Aman Bansal of Jaipur has topped the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Advanced 2016, the results for which were announced on Sunday on the official website.
Bhavesh Dhingra of Yamuna Nagar has got the second rank while Kunal Goyal from Jaipur has stood third. Riya Singh (All India Rank (AIR) 133) from Kota is the topper among girls.
About 2,00,000 students qualified for the exam by clearing JEE (Main). Students who cleared the Main, the first phase of all India common engineering entrance examination, were eligible to sit for the Advanced on May 22.
The performance of a candidate in Advanced will form the basis for admission to the Bachelor’s, Integrated Master’s and Dual Degree programs (entry at the 10+2 level) in all the Indian Institute of Technology (IITs) and the Indian School of Mines (ISM).
The All India Ranks of successful candidates will be made available on the website but they will not get personalised rank cards.
Students can check their results on the official website of JEE (Advanced) 2016.
or
Click here to directly go to the candidate portal to check results.
Click here to see the summary of results, rank list and much more.
The exam was organised by IIT Guwahati along with the Joint Admission Board 2016 across hundreds of centres in the country for admissions to engineering courses.
“Around 96 marks can be considered easy overall, 118 marks moderate and 158 marks are considered difficult in the paper by the Resonance Team. Overall, it is felt that paper was of similar difficulty as last year,” Verma said.
Allen Career Institute director Brajesh Maheshwari too made a similar observation. He said the second physics paper was tougher than the first, and the first mathematics paper was lengthy than the second, in which calculus questions were tough.
In chemistry, questions related to physical chemistry were difficult but those on organic and inorganic chemistry were of moderate difficulty, he said.