GOODDAY Available all over the World : www.gooddaynewspaper.blogspot.in RNI No. : MAH MUL/2006/18939 Postal Reg. No. MH/MR/KDEVI/56/2013-15 MULTILINGUAL NEWSPAPER UNITING PEOPLE Volume : 8 Issue : 02 Mumbai, 9 to 16 November 2013 Pages : 4 Price : Rs. 2/- Editor : ASHOK DOSHI, R-15, Lane-II, Sector-9, CBD-Belapur, Navi Mumbai-400614, Tel : 27560695, Cell : 9322694549 Fixing your mind on Me, You will over come all the difficulties through My Grace alone! LORD SHRI KRISHNA MUMBAI E-mail : [email protected][email protected]cegbyeF&, veJeer cegbyeF&, heveJeues SJeb "eCes ce W øeâe r ne s ce e f [uee r Jeje r mJe. JeKleeJej ceuepeer peÙebleerueeue yeer, yeesjje (JetmeerJeeues) 9323975253 veekeâes[e mesued keâeheexjsMeve veJeer cegbyeF& 2783 3843 2783 0626 ]2784 0651 cegbyeF& 9324181226 94521733 2375 8287 67007127 veekeâes [e Sb šjØeeFpes pe 257/65 vÙet Deveble YeJeve vejMeerveeLe mš^erš, Yeele yepeej,cegbyeF& 400 009 website:http://pure-ghee.tel.co.cc INDIA'S MISSION TO MARS -ASHOK DOSHI - On Tuesday, the Indian Space Research Organisation, the national space agency, lobbed a three-thousand- pound spacecraft called Mangalyaan toward Mars. The orbiter's mission is to map some of the planet's surface and test for methane, a Mars mission history The USSR, Russia, US, Britain, Europe, Japan and China have all launched missions to Mars There have been around 40 missions (but the total depends on how they are added up) More than half the world's attempts to reach the Red Planet have failed Only the US, USSR and Europe have been successful to date Numerous studies over the years have found significant returns, as much as seven or nine times the investment. India's expertise with weather satellites, patiently developed over the years, had enabled predictions precise enough to save thousands of lives during a coastal cyclone the month before. PHOTO : ISRO possible marker of life. If Mangalyaan reaches the Red Planet and swings into orbit on schedule next September, that alone would be a remarkable victory: more than half of the forty Mars missions launched around the world have failed. Mangalyaan's mission to Mars cost India seventy-three million dollars. For comparison, Boeing prices its least expensive commercial airplane at seventy-six million dollars. And by India's profligate standards of public expenditure, the Mars Orbiter Mission has come cheap: an eight-lane bridge in Mumbai that opened in 2010 spans three miles and cost three hundred and forty million dollars. The I.S.R.O. has a reputation for austerity, exemplified in a famous photograph from 1981 of India's APPLE satellite being transported on a bullock cart. The agency's scientists are paid between 75000 Rupees to 125000 Rupees a month, and, unusual for space programs, its equipment is endlessly tweaked and recycled: the rocket that carried the Mars orbiter into space was adapted from a launch vehicle that first flew in 1993. Only one physical model of Mangalyaan was ever produced. In fact, at 0.0039 per cent of its G.D.P., India's expenditure on Mangalyaan has been neither lavish nor extraordinary; the United States spent a similar percentage of its G.D.P., 0.003 per cent, in 1962, on the doomed Mariner 1 probe to Venus, which cost eighteen and a half million dollars. The annual budget of the I.S.R.O. is just seven hundred million dollars, or 0.038 per cent of India's G.D.P. But the payoffs of space programs can justify their expense. While the exact economic impact of R. & D. spending is difficult to quantify, numerous studies over the years have found significant returns, as much as seven or nine times the investment. The benefits are not just monetary: in a press conference on Tuesday, the I.S.R.O. chairman argued that India's expertise with weather satellites, patiently developed over the years, had enabled predictions precise enough to save thousands of lives during a coastal cyclone the month before. What is impossible to quantify, however, is the ignition of imaginations that attends such successes-the spurt of optimism and confidence that can urge people, even for a brief moment, to lift their eyes upward and aim a little higher. Officials at the space center described it as a "textbook launch." If the mission is successful, India will become only the fourth nation to visit the red planet after the Soviet Union, the United States and Europe. "Capturing and igniting the young minds of India and across the globe will be the major return from this mission," mission director P. Kunhikrishnan said from the launch site. After 44 minutes, the orbiter separated from the rocket and entered into an elliptical path around Earth. Over the next 20-25 days, it will perform a series of technical maneuvers and short burns to raise its orbit before it slingshots toward Mars. "With teamwork and the kind of dedication we have today, any mission is not beyond our capability," said S. Ramakrishnan, head of the space center and launch authorization board. The 3,000- pound orbiter Mangalyaan, which means "Mars craft" in Hindi, must travel 485 million miles over 300 days to reach an orbit around the red planet next September. "The biggest challenge will be precisely navigating the spacecraft to Mars," said K. Radhakrishnan, chairman of the Indian Space and Research Organization. "We will know if we pass our examination on Sept. 24, 2014." He congratulated the scientists for putting the mission together "in a very limited time." The project began after the space agency carried out a feasibility study in 2010 after successfully launching a lunar satellite in 2008. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced the planned voyage to Mars only last year during his annual address to the nation. The government defended the Mars mission, and its $1 billion space program in general, by noting its importance in providing high-tech jobs for scientists and engineers and practical applications in solving problems on Earth. Decades of space research have allowed India to develop satellite, communications and remote sensing technologies that are helping to solve everyday problems at home, from forecasting where fish can be caught by fishermen to predicting storms and floods. Even a poor person, when he learns that my country is sending a mission to another planet, he will feel a sense of pride for his country. The orbiter will gather images and data that will help in determining how Martian weather systems work and what happened to the large quantities of water that are believed to have once existed on Mars. It also will search Mars for methane, a key chemical in life processes that could also come from geological processes. Experts say the data will improve understanding about how planets form, what conditions might make life possible and where else in the universe it might exist. The orbiter is expected to have at least six months to investigate the planet's landscape and atmosphere. At its closest point it will be 227 miles from the planet's surface, and its furthest point will be 49,700 miles away. SHOCKING... SHOCKING... SHOCKING... SHOCKING... SHOCKING... RBI allows third-party payment for export and import transactions Easing procedures, the Reserve Bank of India, RBI, has allowed third-party payment for export and import transactions. The RBI said that with a view to further liberalise the procedure relating to payments for exports/imports, banks are allowed payments for export of goods/software to be received from a third-party. It added, banks are also permitted to make payments to a third- party for import of goods. Third-party refers to an entity other than the buyer or the seller. Goodday News Network) 25 individuals and firms owe Rs.2.4 lakh cr in taxes Money due 1,24,274 : 2007-08 2,91,629 : 2010-11 2,01,276 : 2008- 09 4,08,418 : 2011-12 2,29,032 : 2009-10 Amount (in Rs. Cr) which I.T. officials failed to recover TOP DEFAULTERS Name Year Amount Rs. (Cr.) 1. Hasan Ali Khan 2007-08 1,16,773 3. Harshad S. Mehta (late) 1993-94 18,463 4. LIC 2010-11 10,468 5. Vodafone Intl Holding 2010-11 7,899 9. MSEDCL 2010-11 3,729 Twenty five companies and individual together owe a whopping Rs.2.4 lakh crore to the government in income tax which the authorities have failed to recover for years. To date, more than Rs.41 lakh crore remains uncollected. The Comptroller and Auditor General's (CAGs) report says that more than 94 per cent of the amount due is difficult to recover. In fact, looking at the high number of pendency cases, the CAG in its latest report said that the recovery mechanism is deficient. However, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) said that acute shortage of manpower is responsible for the ineffective recovery procedure. GOODDAY NEWS NETWORK) MARATHI, HINDI, GUJARATI & ENGLISH Copy of GOOD DAY 10 Nov.pmd 03/12/2013, 12:21 PM 1
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GOODDAYAvailable all over the World : www.gooddaynewspaper.blogspot.in RNI No. : MAH MUL/2006/18939 Postal Reg. No. MH/MR/KDEVI/56/2013-15
MULTILINGUAL NEWSPAPER UNITING PEOPLE
Volume : 8 v Issue : 02 vMumbai, 9 to 16 November 2013 v Pages : 4 v Price : Rs. 2/- Editor : ASHOK DOSHI, R-15, Lane-II, Sector-9, CBD-Belapur, Navi Mumbai-400614, Tel : 27560695, Cell : 9322694549
Fixing your mind on Me, You will over come all the difficulties through My Grace alone! LORD SHRI KRISHNA MUMBAI E-mail : [email protected]
Mars mission historywThe USSR, Russia, US, Britain, Europe, Japan and China have all
launched missions to
Mars
wThere have been around
40 missions (but the total
depends on how they are
added up)
wMore than half the
world's attempts to reach
the Red Planet have failed
wOnly the US, USSR and Europe have been successful to date
Numerous studies over the
years have found significant
returns, as much as seven or
nine times the investment.
India's expertise with weather
satellites, patiently developed
over the years, had enabled
predictions precise enough to
save thousands of lives during
a coastal cyclone the month
before.
PHOTO : ISRO
possible marker of life. If
Mangalyaan reaches the Red
Planet and swings into orbit on
schedule next September, that
alone would be a remarkable
victory: more than half of the
forty Mars missions launched
around the world have failed.
Mangalyaan's mission to
Mars cost India seventy-three
million dollars. For comparison,
Boeing prices its least
expensive commercial airplane
at seventy-six million dollars.
And by India's profligate
standards of public
expenditure, the Mars Orbiter
Mission has come cheap: an
eight-lane bridge in Mumbai
that opened in 2010 spans three
miles and cost three hundred
and forty million dollars. The
I.S.R.O. has a reputation for
austerity, exemplified in a
famous photograph from 1981
of India's APPLE satellite being
transported on a bullock cart.
The agency's scientists are
paid between 75000 Rupees to
125000 Rupees a month, and,
unusual for space programs, its
equipment is endlessly
tweaked and recycled: the
rocket that carried the Mars
orbiter into space was adapted
from a launch vehicle that first
flew in 1993. Only one physical
model of Mangalyaan was ever
produced.
In fact, at 0.0039 per cent of
its G.D.P., India's expenditure on
Mangalyaan has been neither
lavish nor extraordinary; the
United States spent a similar
percentage of its G.D.P., 0.003
per cent, in 1962, on the
doomed Mariner 1 probe to
Venus, which cost eighteen and
a half million dollars. The
annual budget of the I.S.R.O. is
just seven hundred million
dollars, or 0.038 per cent of
India's G.D.P.
But the payoffs of space
programs can justify their
expense. While the exact
economic impact of R.
& D. spending is
difficult to quantify,
numerous studies
over the years have
found significant
returns, as much as
seven or nine times
the investment. The
benefits are not just monetary:
in a press conference on
Tuesday, the I.S.R.O. chairman
argued that India's expertise
with weather satellites, patiently
developed over the years, had
enabled predictions precise
enough to save thousands of
lives during a coastal cyclone
the month before. What is
impossible to quantify,
however, is the ignition of
imaginations that attends such
successes-the spurt of
optimism and confidence that
can urge people, even for a
brief moment, to lift their eyes
upward and aim a little higher.
Officials at the space center
described it as a "textbook
launch." If the mission is
successful, India will become
only the fourth nation to visit
the red planet after the Soviet
Union, the United States and
Europe.
"Capturing and
igniting the young minds
of India and across the
globe will be the major
return from this mission,"
mission director P.
Kunhikrishnan said from
the launch site. After 44
minutes, the orbiter
separated from the rocket
and entered into an
elliptical path around Earth.
Over the next 20-25 days,
it will perform a series of
technical maneuvers and
short burns to raise its orbit
before it slingshots toward
Mars. "With teamwork and the
kind of dedication we have
today, any mission is not
beyond our capability," said S.
Ramakrishnan, head of the
space center and
launch authorization
board. The 3,000-
pound orbiter
Mangalyaan, which
means "Mars craft" in
Hindi, must travel 485
million miles over 300 days to
reach an orbit around the red
planet next September. "The
biggest challenge will be
precisely navigating the
spacecraft to Mars," said K.
Radhakrishnan, chairman of the
Indian Space and Research
Organization. "We will know if
we pass our examination on
Sept. 24, 2014." He
congratulated the scientists for
putting the mission together "in
a very limited time." The
project began after the space
agency carried out a
feasibility study in 2010 after
successfully launching a
lunar satellite in 2008. Prime
Minister Manmohan Singhannounced the plannedvoyage to Mars only lastyear during his annualaddress to the nation.
The governmentdefended the Mars mission,and its $1 billion spaceprogram in general, by notingits importance in providinghigh-tech jobs for scientistsand engineers and practicalapplications in solvingproblems on Earth. Decadesof space research haveallowed India to developsatellite, communications andremote sensing technologiesthat are helping to solve
everyday problems at home,
from forecasting where fish
can be caught by fishermen
to predicting storms and
floods. Even a poor person,
when he learns that my
country is sending a mission
to another planet, he will feel
a sense of pride for his
country. The orbiter will
gather images and data that
will help in determining how
Martian weather systems
work and what happened to
the large quantities of water
that are believed to have once
existed on Mars. It also will
search Mars for methane, a
key chemical in life processesthat could also come fromgeological processes. Expertssay the data will improveunderstanding about howplanets form, whatconditions might make lifepossible and where else inthe universe it might exist.The orbiter is expected tohave at least six months toinvestigate the planet 'slandscape and atmosphere.At its closest point it will be227 miles from the planet'ssurface, and its furthest pointwill be 49,700 miles away.
GUINESS WORLD RECORD IN MUMBAI BY KYC(GOODDAY NEWS NETWORK)
Kapol Young Couple (KYC) has organized
biggest event to attempt Guiness World Record
for "Largest Origami Mosaic" (made from
individual Origami pieces). The event will take
place at Raghuleela Mall, Kandivali -Mumbai
during 10th to 12th November 2013. Origami is
the traditional Japanese Art of paper folding which
started in the 17th century AD. Origami is defined
as folded paper creating a representation of object
without use of glue or scissor. The goal was set
by KYC for the world record attempt in 'Largest
Origami Mosaic' category under which the earlier
record was established in Greece on 31st May
2012 of @ 403 sq. mtr. (@ 4337 sq. ft). KYC
decided to break this record with member's
participants,m especially women. The size of
each origami piece is 143 mm Width X 120 mm
Breadth X 114mm Height (5.63" W X 4.75" B X
4.49" H). These pieces will be joined with Links
all over to become the largest Origami Mosaic of
6433 sq. ft. in size using @ 32125 pieces to
establish new World Record. The Mosaic would
be based on the theme of our National Integrity by
uniting all States together under the Blues & the
Indian National Flag on centre of the Mosaic, a
symbol of enhancement of the nation's pride. The
concept of the National unity was mooted by
President Couple Mr. Ashok Gandhi & Mrs.
Harshada Gandhi. This Origami process has
been taking place under the guidance of Origami
Handicraft experts Bharti Sanghavi, Prachi
Sanghavi and Hetal Doshi. Entry to the event at
Raghuleela Mall for VVIP, invitees, & KYC Members
will be on Sunday, 10th November 2013 from 4 pm
onwards. The event will be open for public from
10.30 am to 10.30 pm on 11th November 2013 &
on 12th November 2013 the timing will be from
10.30 am to 6.00 pm, to attract artists, school,
college students, etc. The expected visitors will be
crossing 50000 to this event.
Sales down reveal figures
from registrar's officeMonth wise registra-
tion figures:Navi
MumbaiJanuary 842
February 836
March 1,178
April 980
May 986
June 888
July 930
August 819
September 618
Vashi : While real estate developers say thatthe market is witnessing a growth in NaviMumbai, the officials from the Sub Regis-trar office feel otherwise. The officials saythat they have been receiving very less reg-istrations since the past three months whichshows that the market is seeing a slump.We have been getting very less registrationsover the past three months and people visit-ing our office are mainly registering leaveand licence agreements, mortgage deals etc.while the number of those registering anynew property is very less, an official fromVashi sub registrar's office said on condi-
tion of anonymity. GOODDAY NEWS NETWORK)
The Gauhati High Court had said that the CBI could not be treated as
a police force; it could only conduct "inquiries". This meant the
government's premier investigating agency stood to lose its power
to probe, file FIRs or First Information Reports, arrest suspects and
file charge-sheets.
In a major relief for the government, the Supreme Court today stayed
the Gauhati High Court's unprecedented order declaring the Central Bureau
of Investigation or CBI as "unconstitutional" which didn't have the power
to investigate crimes. The top court has fixed December 6 as the next date
for hearing in the matter. The Centre had moved the top court, seeking an
immediate stay on Wednesday's High Court order which it called
"erroneous", arguing that the verdict would adversely impact thousands
of criminal cases pending across the country. "There shall be a stay of
operation of impugned judgement of Nov 6, 2013 passed by Gauhati High
Court," said a bench of Chief Justice P Sathasivam and Justice Ranjana
Desai at an urgent hearing held at the former's residence. The bench also
observed that "the judgement has to be stayed as accused in two
sensational cases have sought stay of the trial." .It was referring to former
Telecom Minister A Raja and other accused in the 2G spectrum scam as
well as Congress leader Sajjan Kumar, accused in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots
case, who had cited the High Court's order to stop proceedings against
them. "We are concerned with all other CBI cases," the bench added after
the Centre, in its appeal, had contended that the High Court's order directly
impacted about 9,000 trials currently underway and about 1,000
investigations being undertaken by the CBI. The Gauhati High Court had
said that the CBI could not be treated as a police force; it could only
conduct "inquiries". This meant the government's premier investigating
agency stood to lose its power to probe, file FIRs or First Information
Reports, arrest suspects and file charge-sheets. The High Court order was
based on the premise that the Union Home Ministry's order, under which
the CBI was set up in 1963, was invalid as police investigations are under
a state's purview. The court said the Centre had failed to prove that the
CBI had been constituted as a special police force under the Delhi Special
Police Establishment Act of 1946, from which it derives its powers to
investigate. The Centre's resolution, it noted, was not even sent to the
President and never received his assent. But Attorney General Goolam E
Vahanvati, appearing for the Centre, said "the High Court's reasoning that
the DSPE Act not applicable to CBI is a convoluted logic." The Centre had
earlier contended that the CBI has stood the test of time. The High Court's
order had come on a petition challenging a CBI chargesheet on a
Mahanagar Telephone Nigam employee. The top court issued notices to
the petitioner as well as the Home Ministry and the CBI seeking their
response on the High Court ruling.
Stay by Me and keep quiet, I will do the rest – Shirdi Saibaba
Copy of GOOD DAY 10 Nov.pmd 03/12/2013, 12:21 PM2
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Happy Marriage Anniversary
Mr. Mrs. Dinesh & Rekha Singhavi 4/11
Mr. Mrs. Vivek & Sakshi Jain 14/11
Mr. & Mrs. Kaushal & Bhairvi Shah 16/11
Mr. & Mrs. Sureshkumar & Kanchan Banthiya 18/11
Mr. & Mrs. Popatlal & Sarojben Jain 18/11
Mr. & Mrs. Hukimchand & Jayshree Gandhi 19/11
Mr & Mrs. Pradeep & Madhubala Solanki 19/11
Mr. & Mrs. Madan & Prasan Modi 20/11
Mr. & Mrs. Sandesh & Poonam Babel 21/11
Mr. & Mrs. Mohanlal & Hemlata Modi 21/11
Mr & Mrs. Tarun & Sapna Jain 23/11
Mr. & Mrs. Sandeep & Priti Dhariwal 24/11
Mr & Mrs. Jitendra & Garima Mehta 26/11
Mr & Mrs. Prakash &Mangal Gandhi 27/11
Mr. & Mrs Surendra & Deepa Jain 28/11
Mr. & Mrs. Rajendra & Nanda Surana 28/11
Mr. Mrs. Mahendra & Dipti Bapna 28/11
Mr & Mrs. Alpesh & Bhavana Shah 29/11
Mr. & Mrs Surendra & Shaila Jain 29/11
Mr. & Mrs. Dilip & Nikita Singhvi 29/11
Mr. & Mrs. Rachit & Nikita Chheda 30/11
mijksDr lHkh dks YkXufnol ds miYk{; esa la?k fd vksj ls gkfnZd 'kqHksPNkAmijksDr lHkh dks YkXufnol ds miYk{; esa la?k fd vksj ls gkfnZd 'kqHksPNkAmijksDr lHkh dks YkXufnol ds miYk{; esa la?k fd vksj ls gkfnZd 'kqHksPNkAmijksDr lHkh dks YkXufnol ds miYk{; esa la?k fd vksj ls gkfnZd 'kqHksPNkAmijksDr lHkh dks YkXufnol ds miYk{; esa la?k fd vksj ls gkfnZd 'kqHksPNkAuksV %& ;fn bl ;knh es vkidk uke ugh gS ;k dqN xyr gS rks d`i;k gesuksV %& ;fn bl ;knh es vkidk uke ugh gS ;k dqN xyr gS rks d`i;k gesuksV %& ;fn bl ;knh es vkidk uke ugh gS ;k dqN xyr gS rks d`i;k gesuksV %& ;fn bl ;knh es vkidk uke ugh gS ;k dqN xyr gS rks d`i;k gesuksV %& ;fn bl ;knh es vkidk uke ugh gS ;k dqN xyr gS rks d`i;k gesfy[k sfy[k sfy[k sfy[k sfy[k s
4 MUMBAI GOODDAY Mumbai, Mumbai, 9 to 16 November 2013
Posted every Tuesday of every week at Kalbadevi HPo, Date of Publication : Every Sunday RNI No. : MAH MUL/2006/18939 Postal Reg. No. MH/MR/KDEVI/56/2013-15