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November 19, 2001
Issue



COVER
   

Discovery Of India
Nervous about its allies and looking to a post-Afghan war scenario, the United States proposes a military alliance with India. The Government turns it down but this may not be the last word. An EXCLUSIVE report.

 

 
RUSSIAN TOUR
   

War And Peace II
In the Moscow Declaration Against Terrorism, Prime Minister Vajpayee and President Putin have reiterated friendship between India and Russia during peace time and shared firepower in case of war with a third party.

 
BOOK EXCERPTS
 

Inside The Secret World Of Bin Laden
Exclusive excerpts from Peter L. Bergen's Holy War, Inc. Currently terrorism analyst for CNN, Bergen met bin Laden in Afghanistan in 1997. His book is a sprawling thriller on the world's most wanted fugitive and his empire of terror.

 

 
STATES
 

Clash Of Comrades
Bhattacharya's economic reforms are stymied by differences with Politburo purists.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
 
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NEWSNOTES

SCIENCE

Spore Pour: Many thought it was a sign of divine wrath. But the red rains that splashed Kerala this summer had an earthy ex planation-algae. Red-coloured spores of a lichen-forming algae were found in samples of the rainwater by a team from the state's Centre for Earth Science Studies and the Tropical Botanical Garden and Research Institute. Kerala's humid climate is ideal for multiplication of these spores, generally found on rocks, trees and lamp posts. How they got into the clouds, however, remains a meteorological whodunit.

HEALTH

Sweat it Out: Sweating could keep your body germ-free. A German study reported in Nature Immunology shows that sweat contains an antibiotic protein called dermicidin. It is the first antimicrobial compound to be discovered in sweat. Dermicidin has proved potent against four common species of bacteria, including the potentially lethal bugs Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. Dermicidin also has an unusual structure. If it proves effective against antibiotic-resistant bugs, it could have tremendous commercial potential.

Indian Anti-dote: A new Indian anthrax vaccine may be on the way. The existing vaccines are expensive and have severe side-effects. The new one, developed by Rakesh Bhatnagar of Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, and Yogender Singh of the Centre for Biochemical Technology, Delhi, is expected to be cheap and non-toxic. The vaccine has proved reasonably effective on animals, but is yet to be tested on human beings. So it may be a while before we can seriously celebrate its success.

Left Ahead: Left-handed people are unique in more ways than previously thought. The two brain hemispheres of left handers are more strongly connected than right handers. This implies, among other things, that lefties are better at remembering specific events, says a report in the online edition of Science. Sixty-two volunteers in the US were told to watch a series of 55 words flashed on a computer screen and asked to write down the words some minutes later. Lefties outscored right handers, getting more than double the number correct. Further experiments indicated that this was linked to communication between the brain hemispheres.

Fusion Fallout: The means can be as significant as the end. Cold fusion, the process of producing energy by the coming together of two nuclei at manageable temperatures, was expected to solve the world's energy problems. So far experiments to this end have not been successful-but there have been useful spinoffs. Technology developed while experimenting with nuclear fusion is being used at Cornell University, US, to create high resolution X-ray images of minute objects, such as the filaments that keep dandelions afloat in the air. Living beings, such as wiggling ants, can also be filmed in this manner allowing researchers insights into the processes involved in movement.

ASTRONOMY
THE SCIENCE OF DIWALI

Divine Stargazing

For the devout Hindu, the period from Navratri to Diwali is the most important. Does it have an astronomical significance? Rajesh Kochhar, astrophysicist and director of the Delhi-based National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies, argues so. The two Navratris in a year, Kochhar said in a recent lecture, correspond with the equinoxes.

The Siddhantic calendar, the basis of all Hindu rituals, uses a lunar month. So does the Islamic Hejira calendar. A Hejira year, however, ends after 12 lunations-the time between two successive new moons, roughly corresponding to four weeks. The Siddhantic year occasionally-seven times out of 19, to be precise-allows for 13 months, "so that the year remains as close as possible to the 365-day solar year". Each Siddhantic month has 30 tithis, "days" of unequal duration.

The last full moon of a Siddhantic year is celebrated as Holi. The new year is ushered in with a nine-tithi Navratri I, ending in Ram Navami. Six months later comes Navratri II, heralding the month of Ashvina, which contains the vernal equinox. The eighth and ninth tithis of Navratri II are dedicated to Durga. The next tithi is Dussehra. The new moon following Dussehra is Diwali. The next full moon is Nanak Jayanti.

The Siddhantic cycle repeats itself after 19 years. So the calendar for 2001 will recur in 2020. "The Siddhantic calendar," Kochhar concludes, "is a fascinating living document because its elements have been calculated orally for 1,500 years. It deserves a close look from a civilisational and intellectual point of view, not merely for the sake of festivals and gazetted holidays." Amen.


 
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