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NRI doctor among 10 outstanding young Americans
Indian American doctor Vikram Sheel Kumar will join the ranks of former US
President Bill Clinton, entrepreneur Henry Ford and rock legend Elvis Presley as
a recipient of the "Ten Outstanding Young Americans (TOYA)"
award. Twenty-nine-year-old Vikram, who is an alumnus of Modern School and
the Indian Institute of Technology in New Delhi, and the Harvard Medical School
in Boston, Massachusetts, will be the first Indian American to receive the
award. The honor will be given to him at the 67th TOYA awards ceremony in
Boston September 17, for showing leadership and helping people in the healthcare
sector.
The Junior Chamber of Commerce of the US set up the award in 1938 to
felicitate 10 young Americans of 21-40 years of age for their contribution to
the society and considered one of the most prestigious recognition programmes in
the world.
Among prominent personalities who have received the TOYA award in
the past are former US presidents John F Kennedy and Richard Nixon, as also
former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger.
"It is an honor for me, my
family and above all the whole country. I just can't express my joy," Vikram's
father Vijay Sheel Kumar said.
"Vikram helps people in the US through his
clinic Dimagi. He provides healthcare to people in South Africa, Zambia, Rwanda
and many other countries."
Vikram, who migrated to the US in 1996, was
earlier named among the 'World's 100 Top Innovators Under 35' in biotechnology
and medicine by the prestigious Technology Review magazine of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
The founder of a medical clinic - Dimagi Inc - in
Boston, he was honored by the magazine for his contribution in erasing the
boundaries between life sciences and information technologies.
NRI techies in the US release music album!
They have been called code coolies, techno drudges, alpha geeks and beta
nerds. But the commonest term for the swarm of computer programmers who have
made their way from India to the US over the past 15 years is
H1Bees. Appropriately then, a group of NRI techies in the Washington DC area
whose talents range from programming to musical notes are releasing this weekend
an album titled "H1Bees" to the best possible local buzz - a campus release at
the University of Maryland and a 1,100-word spread in the Washington
Post.
The seven-song, tri-lingual album - in English, Hindi and Tamil -
celebrates the life of the immigrant techies starting with their encounter with
the US visa officer on their journey out of India. "The songs convey sentiments
every immigrant goes through at different stages in life. This is a journey of
independence from frugality and conformity," says Srikanth Devarajan, a computer
engineer who leads the yet-to be-named band.
Much like Indian students in the
US whose campus life is said to revolve "between advisor and Budweiser," the
tech crowd is ribbed about being constricted "between Gateway and Safeway," - a
computer brand and a grocery chain. Devarajan's support in the band is a mix
of H1Bees and ABCDs. Like Devarajan, Kartik Venkataramanan, a database manager
at Verizon, is also a Chennai native. They roped in Devesh Satyavolu and
Srivatsa Srinivasan for lyrics and production and brought in vocals from high
school students Alisha Sarah Thomas and Swati Raman.
MIT names four NRIs among world's top 35 innovators
Four Indian Americans have been named among the world's top 35 young
high-tech innovators by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT)
prestigious Technology Review magazine.
Anita Goel of
Nanobiosym, Narasimha
Chari of Tropos Networks, Rajit Manohar of Cornell University and Shiladitya
Sengupta of Harvard Medical School - all aged below 35 - have been named top
high-tech innovators for "exemplifying the spirit of contemporary technology
leading to a road map to what's hot in emerging technology." Goel, a
physicist as well as a physician and also the founder and CEO of Nanobiosym was
named top young innovator for developing nanotech devices that could identify
viruses and bacteria in blood samples more rapidly, accurately and cheaply than
existing techniques.
Chari was selected for setting the wireless mesh
networking standard. He created elegant algorithms that tailored mesh
networking, once an exclusive province of the military, for routine civillian
communication.
Tropos Networks, the company Chari founded in 2000 with
co-inventor Devabhaktuni Srikrishna, helped launch commercial wireless mesh
networking. With this, mesh networks have eased into plentiful use both outdoors
-- on campuses, in public safety networks, and at gatherings such as festivals
-- and in hospitals and factories. Rajit Manohar, an associate professor of
electrical and computer engineering in Cornell University, was chosen for
creating computer chips with greater speed and lowered power consumption by
removing the on-board clock that synchronizes the different functions of the
chip.
He is also credited with building the first low-power processor for
sensor networks, enabling them to run on the same batteries for years instead of
weeks.
Shiladitya Sengupta of Harvard Medical School was chosen for
delivering drugs to cancer cells using a nanoscale device. He is also the brain
behind an anti-inflammatory gel that is now sold in India under the brand name
Nimulid. Unlike the previous four years, this year the names of young
innovators have been whittled down from the usual list of 100 (called TR100) to
a more compact 35.
"TR reminds us that the winners from previous years have
changed your world. And, indeed, they have. The awardees -- all under age 35 --
were selected by a prestigious panel of judges for their potential to profoundly
impact the world," said Technology Review Editor in Chief Jason Pontin.
The
winners were selected by a prestigious panel of judges for their potential to
"profoundly impact the world," he said. In addition to being selected to the
TR35, two awardees have been chosen as Technology Review's Innovator of the Year
and Technology Review's Humanitarian of the Year by the magazine's editors.
President Bush sends NRI Baruah's nomination to Senate
US President George
W Bush has sent the nomination of Santanu K Baruah, an Indian-origin former
management consultant whom he picked as an Assistant Secretary of Commerce for
Economic Development, to the Senate for approval.
The White House announced
its intention to appoint Oregon-based Baruah, who is currently serving as the
Chief of Staff for the Economic Development Administration at the Department of
Commerce, to the post. Prior to joining the Administration, he was a Senior
Management Consultant for Performance Consulting Group in Portland,
Oregon.
Earlier in his career, Baruah has also worked for the Secretaries of
Interior and Labor. He received his Bachelor's degree from the University of
Oregon and his master's degree from Willamette University. He can assume
office only after approval by the Senate.
NRI appointed to senior post in US intelligence agency (CIA) The Central
Intelligence Agency's National Intelligence Council (NIC) will now have an
Indian brain. Professor Summit Ganguly; who holds the Rabindranath Tagore chair
in history in the University of Indiana, Bloomington, will join the NIC to help
shape US policy on South Asia.
As part of what is known as the Global
Expertise Reserve Program, the National Intelligence Council will use Ganguly's
expertise on South Asia, specially India, as it seeks to interpret events and
prophesy trends in South Asia. When contacted, Ganguly said he was not at
liberty to talk about the appointment.
But according to the National
Intelligence Council's website, experts like Ganguly will work with the
intelligence community in warning policy makers of potential humanitarian,
diplomatic, economic, or in better understanding the factors contributing to
those crises.
Ganguly's appointment comes as US and India have embarked on an
ambitious relationship to change the contours of the global nuclear order,
signing a deal in July that gives India access to civilian nuclear
technology. The deal is only part of a larger focus on India by US policy
makers. In the welter of criticism against the India-US nuclear deal, Ganguly's
has been a appositive voice.
Writing in Foreign Affairs early this month he
criticised those seeing India "through the narrow and parochial prism of
non-proliferation."
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