SPACE second de-orbiting 2 manoeuver...

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I COMMANDMENTS OF APJ KALAM First and foremost, I will love teaching. Teaching will be my soul. Teaching will be my life's mission. For playing healers... Insecurities, doubts, confusion, inner demons — all of these hound us in our teenage years. Teachers play best counsellors and help us in the healing process. Thank you for connecting with us whenever we need you and working on us like an artist moulding clay. RITHIKA MR, class X A, Gitanjali Devashray, Secunderabad For hand-holding... Thank you teachers for holding our hands till the time we are ready to open the gate to the real world... Dear teachers, you had faith in us even when we were losing faith in ourselves. We will remember your motivating words forever and work towards it. ANUPAMA SHARMA, class XII, Indus Valley Public School, Noida For brightening our days... Thank you teach- ers for making us stronger. You brighten our days. Your passion is inspir- ing. We salute you for your patience, and for being gentle with us. Our heartfelt gratitude for understanding and helping us from time to time without even thinking twice. KOVELA KARTHIKEYA, class VIII, Canary the School, Hyderabad For spreading happiness... It is not about being a perfect teacher but about being a happy per- son. We are fortunate to have teachers who walk into the classroom with a smile and a treasure trove of life stories. There is no better lesson to learn than real life examples. RAKSHIT DUBEY, class VIII, Zebar School for Children, Ahmedabad For being character builders... Be it any subject or matters that cloud your judgement in teenage years, teachers often are sav- iours. We salute you teachers for identify- ing our weaknesses and at the same time, not making us feel silly about it. Thank you for identifying our strengths. SHIVIKA SINGH, class VI, CMS Gomtinagar, Lucknow For making learning fun for us... You have one of the toughest jobs, of making learning fun for us, and you give it your 100 per cent to ensure that even the weakest students succeed in life. Thank you for helping us grow and treating each of us as special and grooming us for future roles. PRAKRITI SHAH, class X, Podar International School, Mumbai For being our protectors... Teachers invest time in creating an environment of safety and security. We salute them for giving us a gentle and secured learning environment. ANANYA KAMBOJ, class X, Vivek High School, Mohali T he Austrian capital Vienna has retained its ranking as the world’s most liveable city, according to an annual report from the Economist. Vienna once again came ahead of Melbourne — which had held the top ranking for seven years until losing it to Vienna in 2018 — according to a report by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). The top two were followed by Sydney, Osaka and Calgary. Vienna — known for its convenient public transport, refreshing Alpine tap water and varied cultural life — scored 99.1 points out of 100, as it did last year. Each year, the EIU gives 140 cities scores out of 100 on a range of factors such as living standards, crime, culture, transport infrastructure, access to education and healthcare, as well as political and economic stability crowned ‘most liveable city’ for second year 5 Chandrayaan-2 completes second de-orbiting manoeuver successfully: Isro T he second de- orbiting ma- noeuver for Chandrayaan-2 space- craft was performed successfully in the wee hours of Wednes- day, informed Indian Space Research Or- ganisation (Isro). The duration of the ma- noeuver was 9 sec- onds. With this ma- noeuver, the required orbit for the Vikram Lander to commence its descent towards the surface of the Moon is achieved. The Chandrayaan-2 spacecraft will be the first Indian expedi- tion to carry out a soft land- ing (a soft landing is any type of aircraft, rocket or space- craft-lander landing that does not result in damage to the destruction of the vehicle or anything on board) on the lunar surface. This mission will make India the fourth country after the US, Russia, and China to conduct a soft landing on the Moon SPACE S alman Rushdie’s tragicomic nov- el ‘Quichotte’ is among six titles from around the world to be named on the shortlist of the 2019 Book- er Prize for Fiction, released in London on Tuesday. The 72-year-old former Booker Prize winning British Indian novelist has also won the Booker of Bookers for ‘Midnight’s Children’ dur- ing anniversary celebrations of the pres- tigious literary award. 1 Each of the shortlisted authors will receive £2,500 and a specially-bound edi- tion of the book. The 2019 Booker Prize winner will be announced on October 14 at an awards ceremony at London’s Guildhall, with a winning prize of £50,000 2 Last year’s winner was Northern Irish writer Anna Burns for ‘Milkman’, which has sold around 546,500 copies in all formats since the award 3 The Booker Prize for Fiction, first awarded in 1969, is open to writers of any nationality, writing in English and published in the UK or Ireland BOOK This year, he is shortlisted alongside another former winner, Margaret Atwood, besides Lucy Ellmann, Bernardine Evaristo, Chigozie Obioma, and Elif Shafak. The shortlist was selected from 151 submitted books published in the UK or Ireland between October 2018 and September 2019 Rohit Sharma to launch ‘Rohit4Rhinos’ campaign F ifa on Tuesday unveiled the official emblem of the 22nd edition of the Fifa World Cup, which is sched- uled to be hosted in Qatar. Flashed on big screens and projected onto landmarks worldwide, the 2022 Qatar World Cup logo was revealed with a design that reflects both the tournament’s compact infrastructure and winter schedule. Fifa said the design also draws “inspiration from a traditional woollen shawl,’’ a winter garment reflecting the World Cup being played in November and December 2022 to avoid the fierce summer heat in June and July, when the tournament is usually played. Using the colours of the Qatari flag, the white emblem is set against a maroon background. The swooping curves of the emblem represent the undulations of desert dunes and the unbroken loop depicts both the number eight and the infinity symbol. The eight repre- sents the number of stadiums that will host the football tournament while the infinity symbol reflects the inter- connected nature of the event C ricketer Rohit Sharma is launching the Rohit4Rhi- nos campaign, in part- nership with the WWF India and Animal Planet, to help build awareness for the need to con- serve the Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros or the Indian Rhino. In a campaign launching on An- imal Planet to commemorate World Rhino Day on September 22, Rohit has pledged to do his bit to save the “vulnerable” species from extinction. Of the estimated 3,500 Indian rhinos left in the world, 82 per cent are found in India. Once found abundantly across the Indus, the Ganga and the Brahmaputra river basins, the animal is now found only in select pockets in Assam, West Bengal, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. “It is our duty as co-inhabi- tants of this planet to try and protect other species that walk this planet, along- side us. The future is in our hands and we should do whatever we can to ensure that our children are able to enjoy the rich bio-diversity this world has to offer” Rohit Sharma At 490 Kmph, Bugatti Chiron is now the fastest car in the World B ugatti, known for its exotic hy- percar lineup, just broke the top speed record of being the fastest hypercar. This record was pre- viously held by Koenigsegg Agera RS, which, ironically, it had snatched from Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Super Sport, some time back. The modified Chiron clocked a mind boggling speed of 490.48 kmph, trumping the Agera RS’ record by more than 40 kmph. The modification on the car included a long-tail aero concept that made this car 25 cm longer than the current Chiron Sport. It even removed the pas- senger seat to make it a dedicated one-seater. Backed by a quad-turbo W16 8.0-litre engine, the fastest car produced a whopping 1,578 PS of power during the run. The vehicle was built in coopera- tion with Ballarat and Michelin The Hypercar is a design concept car developed by energy analyst Amory Lovins at the Rocky Mountain Institute, USA. This vehicle would have ultra-light construction with an aerodynamic body using advanced composite materials, among other designs CARS Facebook rolls out face recognition, kills tagging option I n a relief for 2.41 bil- lion users, Facebook is rolling out Face recognition feature to all. It will replace the earli- er “Tag Suggestions” settings that notified you, if someone uploaded a photo and automatically tagged you in it. People who are new to Facebook or who previously had the “Tag Suggestions” setting will have the face reco- gnition setting by default and will receive infor- mation about how it works. If you have face recognition turned on, FB will notify you if someone uploads a photo of you, even if you aren’t tagged. In December 2017, Facebook introduced a new setting for some people called face recognition. People who still have the tag suggestions setting will begin to see a notice in their News Feed. The notice will include infor- mation about the new features and options to learn more about how Facebook uses face recognition TECHNOLOGY Qatar 2022 World Cup logo unveiled SPORTS The national capital has dropped by six places to rank 118th on the list. Mumbai also fell two places since last year to rank 119th. The EIU said decline in Mumbai’s rank was mainly due to a downgrade in its culture score. New Delhi has fallen in the index because of downgrades to its culture and environ- ment score (read pollution) as well as fall in the stability score owing to ris- ing crime rates E-commerce firms go green, promise to eliminate single-use plastic E-commerce firm Amazon India said it aims to eliminate single-use plastic from its packaging by June 2020 as part of its sustainability efforts in the country. Flipkart too promises to honour the green move, which comes after PM Modi urged all to shun single-use plastic in the country Amazon India will intro- duce ‘paper cushions’ that will replace plastic dunnage like air pillows and bubble wraps across its fulfilment centres (FC) in India. This environment-friendly and fully-recyclable packaging solution has already been launched in select ware- houses and will be extended across all Amazon FCs in the country by year-end Flipkart had last week said it has reduced its usage of single-use plastic by 25 per cent across its packaging value chain, as it aims to move towards 100 per cent recycled plastic consumption in its supply chain by March 2021 Have you ever done something noble? Share your stories with us. The best three entries will be published in our news- paper. The write-up should not exceed 250 words; also men- tion your name, class, school, city and a picture showcasing your cause at [email protected] BE THE CHANGE FOR A CAUSE Salman Rushdie’s ‘Quichotte’ on Booker Prize 2019 shortlist 1 2 3 4 5

Transcript of SPACE second de-orbiting 2 manoeuver...

Page 1: SPACE second de-orbiting 2 manoeuver …nie-images.s3.amazonaws.com/gall_content/2019/9/2019_9...Chandrayaan-2 completes 5 second de-orbiting manoeuver successfully: Isro The second

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COMMANDMENTS OF APJ KALAM First and foremost, I will love teaching.

Teaching will be my soul. Teaching will be mylife's mission.

For pplaying healers...Insecurities,doubts, confusion,inner demons — allof these hound us in ourteenage years. Teachers play best counsellors and help us in the healingprocess. Thank you for connecting with uswhenever we need you and working on uslike an artist moulding clay. RITHIKA MR, class X A, Gitanjali

Devashray, Secunderabad

For hhand-hholding...Thank you teachersfor holding ourhands till the timewe are ready to

open the gate to thereal world... Dear

teachers, you had faith in us even when wewere losing faith in ourselves. We willremember your motivating words foreverand work towards it.ANUPAMA SHARMA, class XII, Indus ValleyPublic School, Noida

For bbrightening oourdays...Thank you teach-ers for making usstronger. Youbrighten our days.Your passion is inspir-ing. We salute you for yourpatience, and for being gentle with us.Our heartfelt gratitude for understandingand helping us from time to time withouteven thinking twice.KOVELA KARTHIKEYA, class VIII, Canary

the School, Hyderabad

For sspreading happiness...It is not aboutbeing a perfectteacher but about

being a happy per-son. We are fortunate

to have teachers who walk into theclassroom with a smile and a treasuretrove of life stories. There is no betterlesson to learn than real life examples.RAKSHIT DUBEY, class VIII, Zebar School

for Children, Ahmedabad

For bbeing ccharacterbuilders...Be it any subject ormatters that cloudyour judgement in

teenage years,teachers often are sav-

iours. We salute you teachers for identify-ing our weaknesses and at the same time,not making us feel silly about it. Thank youfor identifying our strengths. SHIVIKA SINGH, class VI, CMSGomtinagar, Lucknow

For mmaking llearningfun ffor uus...You have one ofthe toughest jobs,of making learningfun for us, and yougive it your 100 percent to ensure that eventhe weakest students succeed in life.Thank you for helping us grow and treating each of us as special andgrooming us for future roles.PRAKRITI SHAH, class X, Podar

International School, Mumbai

For bbeing oour protectors...Teachers invest timein creating an environment of safety and security.We salute them for giving us a gentle and secured learningenvironment. ANANYA KAMBOJ, class X, Vivek HighSchool, Mohali

The Austrian capital Vienna hasretained its ranking as theworld’s most liveable city,according to an annual report

from the Economist. Vienna once againcame ahead of Melbourne — which hadheld the top ranking for seven years untillosing it to Vienna in 2018 — according toa report by the Economist IntelligenceUnit (EIU). The top two were followed bySydney, Osaka and Calgary. Vienna —known for its convenient public transport, refreshing Alpine tap waterand varied cultural life — scored 99.1points out of 100, as it did last year.

Each year, the EIU gives 140cities scores out of 100 on arange of factors such as living standards, crime, culture, transport infrastructure, access to education and healthcare, aswell as political and economicstability

crowned ‘most liveablecity’ for second year

5Chandrayaan-2 completessecond de-orbitingmanoeuver successfully: Isro

The second de-orbiting ma-noeuver for

Chandrayaan-2 space-craft was performedsuccessfully in thewee hours of Wednes-day, informed IndianSpace Research Or-ganisation (Isro). Theduration of the ma-noeuver was 9 sec-onds. With this ma-noeuver, the requiredorbit for the VikramLander to commenceits descent towardsthe surface of theMoon is achieved.

The Chandrayaan-2 spacecraftwill be the first Indian expedi-tion to carry out a soft land-ing (a soft landing is any typeof aircraft, rocket or space-craft-lander landing that doesnot result in damage to thedestruction of the vehicle oranything on board) on thelunar surface. This missionwill make India the fourthcountry after the US, Russia,and China to conduct a softlanding on the Moon

SPACE

Salman Rushdie’s tragicomic nov-el ‘Quichotte’ is among six titlesfrom around the world to be

named on the shortlist of the 2019 Book-er Prize for Fiction, released in Londonon Tuesday. The 72-year-old formerBooker Prize winning British Indiannovelist has also won the Booker ofBookers for ‘Midnight’s Children’ dur-ing anniversary celebrations of the pres-tigious literary award.

1 Each of the shortlisted authorswill receive £2,500

and a specially-bound edi-tion of the book. The 2019Booker Prize winner willbe announced on October14 at an awards ceremonyat London’s Guildhall, with

a winning prize of£50,000

2 Last year’s winnerwas Northern Irishwriter Anna Burns for

‘Milkman’, which has soldaround 546,500 copies inall formats since the award

3 The BookerPrize for

Fiction, firstawarded in1969, is open to writers ofany nationality, writing inEnglish and published in theUK or Ireland

BOOK

This year, he is shortlisted alongside anotherformer winner, Margaret Atwood, besides LucyEllmann, Bernardine Evaristo, Chigozie Obioma,and Elif Shafak. The shortlist was selectedfrom 151 submitted books published in the UKor Ireland between October 2018 andSeptember 2019

Rohit Sharma to launch‘Rohit4Rhinos’ campaign

Fifa on Tuesday unveiled theofficial emblem of the22nd edition of the Fifa

World Cup, which is sched-uled to be hosted in Qatar.Flashed on big screensand projected onto landmarks worldwide, the2022 Qatar World Cup logowas revealed with a design that reflects boththe tournament’s compactinfrastructure and winterschedule. Fifa said the designalso draws “inspiration froma traditional woollen shawl,’’ awinter garment reflecting the World Cup being played in November and December 2022 to avoid the fierce summer heatin June and July, when the tournament is usually played.

Using the colours of the Qatari flag, the white emblemis set against a maroon background. The swoopingcurves of the emblem represent the undulations ofdesert dunes and the unbroken loop depicts both thenumber eight and the infinity symbol. The eight repre-sents the number of stadiums that will host the footballtournament while the infinity symbol reflects the inter-connected nature of the event

Cricketer Rohit Sharma islaunching the Rohit4Rhi-nos campaign, in part-

nership with the WWF India andAnimal Planet, to help buildawareness for the need to con-serve the Greater One-HornedRhinoceros or the Indian Rhino.In a campaign launching on An-imal Planet to commemorateWorld Rhino Day on September22, Rohit has pledged to do hisbit to save the “vulnerable”species from extinction.

Of the estimated 3,500Indian rhinos left in theworld, 82 per cent arefound in India. Oncefound abundantly acrossthe Indus, the Gangaand the Brahmaputrariver basins, the animalis now found only inselect pockets in Assam,West Bengal, Bihar andUttar Pradesh.

“It is our duty as co-inhabi-tants of this planet to tryand protect other speciesthat walk this planet, along-side us. The future is in ourhands and we should dowhatever we can to ensurethat our children are able toenjoy the rich bio-diversitythis world has to offer” Rohit Sharma

At 490 Kmph, Bugatti Chiron is now thefastest car in the World

Bugatti, known for its exotic hy-percar lineup, just broke thetop speed record of being the

fastest hypercar. This record was pre-viously held by Koenigsegg Agera RS,which, ironically, it had snatched fromBugatti Veyron 16.4 Super Sport, sometime back. The modified Chironclocked a mind boggling speed of490.48 kmph, trumping the Agera RS’record by more than 40 kmph.

The modification on the car included a long-tailaero concept that made this car 25 cm longer thanthe current Chiron Sport. It even removed the pas-senger seat to make it a dedicated one-seater.Backed by a quad-turbo W16 8.0-litre engine, thefastest car produced a whopping 1,578 PS of powerduring the run. The vehicle was built in coopera-tion with Ballarat and Michelin

The Hypercar is a design concept cardeveloped by energy analyst AmoryLovins at the Rocky MountainInstitute, USA. This vehicle wouldhave ultra-light construction with an aerodynamic body using advancedcomposite materials, among other designs

CARS

Facebook rolls out face recognition, kills tagging option

I n a relief for 2.41 bil-lion users, Facebookis rolling out Face

recognition feature to all.It will replace the earli-er “Tag Suggestions” settings that notified you,if someone uploaded a photo and automaticallytagged you in it. Peoplewho are new to Facebookor who previously had the“Tag Suggestions” settingwill have the face reco-gnition setting by defaultand will receive infor-mation about how itworks.

If you have face recognition turnedon, FB will notify you if someoneuploads a photo of you, even if youaren’t tagged. In December 2017,Facebook introduced a new settingfor some people called face recognition. People who still havethe tag suggestions setting willbegin to see a notice in their NewsFeed. The notice will include infor-mation about the new features andoptions to learn more about howFacebook uses face recognition

TECHNOLOGY

Qatar 2022 World Cuplogo unveiled

SPORTS

The national capital has dropped by sixplaces to rank 118th on the list.Mumbai also fell two places since lastyear to rank 119th. The EIU said declinein Mumbai’s rank was mainly due to adowngrade in its culture score. NewDelhi has fallen in the index because ofdowngrades to its culture and environ-ment score (read pollution) as wellas fall in the stabilityscore owing to ris-ing crime rates

E-commerce firms go green, promiseto eliminate single-use plastic E-commerce firm Amazon India said it aims to eliminate single-use plastic from its packaging byJune 2020 as part of its sustainability efforts in the country. Flipkart too promises to honourthe green move, which comes after PM Modi urged all to shun single-use plastic in the country

Amazon India will intro-duce ‘paper cushions’ thatwill replace plastic dunnagelike air pillows and bubblewraps across its fulfilmentcentres (FC) in India. Thisenvironment-friendly andfully-recyclable packagingsolution has already beenlaunched in select ware-houses and will be extended

across all Amazon FCs inthe country by year-end Flipkart had last weeksaid it has reduced itsusage of single-use plasticby 25 per cent across itspackaging value chain, as itaims to move towards 100per cent recycled plasticconsumption in its supplychain by March 2021

Have you ever done something noble? Share your storieswith us. The best three entries will be published in our news-paper. The write-up should not exceed 250 words; also men-tion your name, class, school, city and a picture showcasingyour cause at [email protected]

BE THECHANGE

FOR A CAUSE

Salman Rushdie’s ‘Quichotte’ on Booker Prize 2019 shortlist

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