Tuesday, November 8, 2016

US election 2016: Trump team tries to ease global concern

US election 2016: Trump team tries to ease global concern

NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES:
The unprecedented smog choking the national capital is prominently covered by the Press. "Worst smog yet wakes up Govt - Delhi Govt shuts schools, construction work, power plants, considers cloud seeding, and an odd-even replay", headlines Hindustan Times. The paper adds, "We've got company' : a tenth of China and most of eastern Pakistan are also reeling under a heavy smog blanket'.
In a meteriological forecast The Indian Express says, "Wait until Wednesday for a clear sky". Though the concentration of particulate matter would be a high 613 micro grams per cubic metre on Monday, the north westerly winds will soon cause a gradual improvement and on Wednesday we could experience a clear sky.
The Asian Age reports - Two army jawans were killed and five others - two solders, two civilian women and a BSF officer were injured - as the Pakistani army engaged in unprovoked firing along the LoC in Poonch area. The Times of India writes - Retaliatory shelling by India causes damage to 11 Pakistani posts.
"Missing JNU student's mother dragged, detained", headlines the Statesman. A scuffle broke out yesterday between the Delhi Police and students of the Jawaharlal Nehru University while they were protesting at India Gate over the disappreance of fellow student Najeeb Ahmed, who has been missing from his hostel room for more than 3 weeks.
On the Bhopal Jail-break the Indian Express writes, that Pointers such as moulds fashioned to match keys to locks, a knife found near a drain and non-functioning CCTV cameras that cover Block-B of Bhopal's Central Jail, are some of the pointers that have led senior police oficers in Madhya Pradesh to admit that the jailbraek of eight activists of the banned SIMI outfit last Monday was a result not just of lax policing but of insider help and complicity.
And finally, The Times of India informs us that researchers in Pitts-burgh in the United States have developed a 360 degree virtual reality application that lets you feel sensations such as  the falling of rain drops, or a beating heart, using a unique chair to provide these full body sensations.

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