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The Rules You Need To Know When Airlines Lose Your Luggage

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When an airline loses your luggage, it’s never fun. But smart travelers can end up collecting major cash after such instances if they follow the correct protocol.

You should know that on flights within the U.S., airlines are legally required to reimburse you up to $3,500 if your bags are lost, damaged or delayed in getting to you.

Yep, by law, you can collect up to $3,500 for items you had to buy as a result of your bag issue, even if the bag is delayed but eventually returned to you, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. 

What can I get reimbursed for?

Expenses must be both reasonable and documented: Almost all airlines require you to file a claim within a specific timeframe if your bag is delayed, damaged or lost and to document your related spending with receipts. If they think an expense wasn’t necessary ― say, you buy a $3,000 bracelet to wear during the two days that your bag is delayed ― they likely won’t reimburse you for it. Ditto if you purchase something much more valuable than what was actually inside your lost bag.

Things like emergency toiletries and replacement clothes, however, are reasonable, and you should know that you’re entitled to be paid back for them. You could even get reimbursed for a hair straightener or salon visit if there were hair tools in your missing bag, one airline spokesperson told HuffPost. You just need to know and follow your airline’s protocol for filing reimbursement claims. 

How do I get reimbursed?

Each airline has its own rules for how you should report a lost or delayed bag. American Airlines, for example, requires that passengers present an initial complaint to American before leaving the airport, then mail in a claim form within 45 days if they want compensation. Delta requires passengers to notify a representative, then fill out a form online. You can find your airline’s rules on its website or in its contract of carriage, a document that explains passenger rights. It’s helpful to check your contract of carriage if your bag goes missing, so you know what you’re entitled to.

The contract or rules may also list extra options to take advantage of. For example, United’s website says the airline will pay you $1,500 if your bag is delayed more than three days, no documentation required. (You can file an official claim to receive more, up to the legal $3,500 minimum.) And Delta’s site explains that if your bags aren’t returned within 12 hours, you can request a rebate for the fee you paid to check them. On American, you can claim more than $3,500 in overall compensation if you declare your items were more valuable and are willing to pay a small fee. It’s helpful to know these extra options exist so you can request your money if it isn’t offered to you. 

So what’s my game plan?

The DOT outlines some general best practices for what to do when your bag goes missing: Report your issue to airline personnel before you leave the airport, and get a copy of the report along with a phone number follow-ups. Discuss what types of items the airline might reimburse you for, and keep receipts for all expenses. If your bag is confirmed as missing, then file a claim accordingly. 

It’s also important to remember that airlines rarely lose luggage forever. But taking the above steps will ensure you reap the silver lining of a very annoying situation. 

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Much Like 'The Dress,' People Can't Decide What Color These Shoes Are

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Two years after “the dress” divided people over its color, the internet is back with another puzzling wardrobe question. What color are these shoes?

Some people think these Vans sneakers look gray and mint (or teal), while others see pink and white. 

For some, the color changes the more they stare at the shoes: 

While others are dead-set on the color they see: 

Twitter user @dolansmalik explained one theory about why the shoes look like different colors to some people:  

“THE REAL SHOE IS PINK & WHITE OKAY?!” she wrote on Twitter. “The second pic was with flash & darkened, so it looks teal & gray. (depends on what lighting ur in).” 

Bevil Conway is an investigator with the National Eye Institute who helped contribute to a study on the differences in color perception for the famous “dress” controversy two years ago. He told HuffPost how and why our eyes play tricks on us, in situations like “the dress” and the shoes above.

“This is related to the famous dress insofar as both are related to issues of color constancy,” he explained. “Basically your visual system is constantly trying to color correct the images projected on the retina, to remove the color contamination introduced by the spectral bias in the light source.” 

Conway explained just how and why some people see turquoise in the shoes, while others see pink. 

“In that manipulated photograph there is a lot of the turquoise cast over the whole image. When you first look at it, after having looked at the pink version, your visual system is still adapted to the lighting conditions of the pink version and so you see the turquoise in the other version, and you attribute this to the shoe itself,” he said. “But after a while, your visual system adapts to the turquoise across the whole of that image and interprets it as part of the light source, eventually discounting it and restoring the shoe to the original pink version (or at least pinker).” 

He said that there are a few cues people can look for to see what the color of the light is in the photograph, by looking at the shoelaces of the Vans and the color of the person’s skin. 

“Everyone has a very strong prior belief that shoelaces are white. So when your visual system sees the manipulated photograph, where the shoe laces are a weird turquoise, it then subtracts that color from the rest of the scene, restoring the canvas of the shoe to pink,” Conway said. 

He added, “In the original photograph the human hand is clearly a normal color, whereas in the other photograph it is clearly weird. So when your visual system sees the weirdly lit hand, it tells your brain, ‘hang on, the color of the light must be kinda funny, fix it!’” 

In many ways, the inability of people to see certain colors of the shoes is a lot like “the dress,” Conway said, because there is “some ambiguity about the cues to the color of the light.” 

“It seems as if some people are ‘big picture’ people, who evaluate the color of the light by looking across the whole scene, and other people are ‘small picture’ people, who have some fairly strong internal set point about what the color of light is,” he explained. “The big picture people see the turquoise cast across the whole scene and discount it; the small picture people see the turquoise as part of the surface.” 

Mystery solved! 

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Five Ways Ancient India Changed The World – With Maths

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Bakhshali manuscript. Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford
Christian Yates, University of Bath

It should come as no surprise that the first recorded use of the number zero, recently discovered to be made as early as the 3rd or 4th century, happened in India. Mathematics on the Indian subcontinent has a rich history going back over 3,000 years and thrived for centuries before similar advances were made in Europe, with its influence meanwhile spreading to China and the Middle East.

As well as giving us the concept of zero, Indian mathematicians made seminal contributions to the study of trigonometry, algebra, arithmetic and negative numbers among other areas. Perhaps most significantly, the decimal system that we still employ worldwide today was first seen in India.

The number system

As far back as 1200 BC, mathematical knowledge was being written down as part of a large body of knowledge known as the Vedas. In these texts, numbers were commonly expressed as combinations of powers of ten. For example, 365 might be expressed as three hundreds (3x10²), six tens (6x10¹) and five units (5x10⁰), though each power of ten was represented with a name rather than a set of symbols. It is reasonable to believe that this representation using powers of ten played a crucial role in the development of the decimal-place value system in India.

Brahmi numerals.Wikimedia

From the third century BC, we also have written evidence of the Brahmi numerals, the precursors to the modern, Indian or Hindu-Arabic numeral system that most of the world uses today. Once zero was introduced, almost all of the mathematical mechanics would be in place to enable ancient Indians to study higher mathematics.

The concept of zero

Zero itself has a much longer history. The recently dated first recorded zeros, in what is known as the Bakhshali manuscript, were simple placeholders – a tool to distinguish 100 from 10. Similar marks had already been seen in the Babylonian and Mayan cultures in the early centuries AD and arguably in Sumerian mathematics as early as 3000-2000 BC.

But only in India did the placeholder symbol for nothing progress to become a number in its own right. The advent of the concept of zero allowed numbers to be written efficiently and reliably. In turn, this allowed for effective record-keeping that meant important financial calculations could be checked retroactively, ensuring the honest actions of all involved. Zero was a significant step on the route to the democratisation of mathematics.

No abacus needed.Shutterstock

These accessible mechanical tools for working with mathematical concepts, in combination with a strong and open scholastic and scientific culture, meant that, by around 600AD, all the ingredients were in place for an explosion of mathematical discoveries in India. In comparison, these sorts of tools were not popularised in the West until the early 13th century, though Fibonnacci's book liber abaci.

Solutions of quadratic equations

In the seventh century, the first written evidence of the rules for working with zero were formalised in the Brahmasputha Siddhanta. In his seminal text, the astronomer Brahmagupta introduced rules for solving quadratic equations (so beloved of secondary school mathematics students) and for computing square roots.

Rules for negative numbers

Brahmagupta also demonstrated rules for working with negative numbers. He referred to positive numbers as fortunes and negative numbers as debts. He wrote down rules that have been interpreted by translators as: "A fortune subtracted from zero is a debt," and "a debt subtracted from zero is a fortune".

This latter statement is the same as the rule we learn in school, that if you subtract a negative number, it is the same as adding a positive number. Brahmagupta also knew that "The product of a debt and a fortune is a debt" – a positive number multiplied by a negative is a negative.

Negative cows.Shutterstock

For the large part, European mathematicians were reluctant to accept negative numbers as meaningful. Many took the view that negative numbers were absurd. They reasoned that numbers were developed for counting and questioned what you could count with negative numbers. Indian and Chinese mathematicians recognised early on that one answer to this question was debts.

For example, in a primitive farming context, if one farmer owes another farmer 7 cows, then effectively the first farmer has -7 cows. If the first farmer goes out to buy some animals to repay his debt, he has to buy 7 cows and give them to the second farmer in order to bring his cow tally back to 0. From then on, every cow he buys goes to his positive total.

Basis for calculus

This reluctance to adopt negative numbers, and indeed zero, held European mathematics back for many years. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was one of the first Europeans to use zero and the negatives in a systematic way in his development of calculus in the late 17th century. Calculus is used to measure rates of changes and is important in almost every branch of science, notably underpinning many key discoveries in modern physics.

Leibniz: Beaten to it by 500 years.

But Indian mathematician Bhāskara had already discovered many of Leibniz's ideas over 500 years earlier. Bhāskara, also made major contributions to algebra, arithmetic, geometry and trigonometry. He provided many results, for example on the solutions of certain "Doiphantine" equations, that would not be rediscovered in Europe for centuries.

The Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics, founded by Madhava of Sangamagrama in the 1300s, was responsible for many firsts in mathematics, including the use of mathematical induction and some early calculus-related results. Although no systematic rules for calculus were developed by the Kerala school, its proponents first conceived of many of the results that would later be repeated in Europe including Taylor series expansions, infinitessimals and differentiation.

The leap, made in India, that transformed zero from a simple placeholder to a number in its own right indicates the mathematically enlightened culture that was flourishing on the subcontinent at a time when Europe was stuck in the dark ages. Although its reputation suffers from the Eurocentric bias, the subcontinent has a strong mathematical heritage, which it continues into the 21st century by providing key players at the forefront of every branch of mathematics.

Christian Yates, Senior Lecturer in Mathematical Biology, University of Bath

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

The New 'Stranger Things' Trailer Will Turn Your World Upside Down

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The first “Stranger Things” Season 2 trailer turned the internet upside down with the help of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.” Get ready for all that madness to happen again. 

In the latest trailer for the new season, which came out this Friday the 13th, fans finally get to see some of the moments we’ve been waiting for. The new video talks more about the tentacled monster we saw previously teased, with the kids initially describing it as a “shadow”; we get hints Nancy (Natalie Dyer) and Jonathan (Charlie Heaton) will finally be a thing ― so smell ya later, Steve Harrington (Joe Keery); there are cool one-liners like, “It’s judgement day,” perhaps giving a nod to the “Terminator” franchise; and Eleven seems to finally get those waffles that Hopper (David Harbour) left for her.

Mmmm. Nothing better than some stray waffles left outside in a box. Yum.

Somebody give her waffles ASAP!

Talking about the first trailer at San Diego Comic-Con this summer, producer Shawn Levy told HuffPost “every shot” was debated over, and they “wanted to show a real taste of what’s coming” but not reveal too much. If this is still just a taste, Eleven better save room and not eat all those Eggos. 

“Stranger Things” Season 2 premieres Oct. 27 on Netflix.

Also on HuffPost
The "Stranger Things" Kids At The Emmys

15 Reasons To Give In To Your Netflixation This October

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After careful scrutiny, I have chosen the best of the best for you from the Netflix India's October 2017 catalogue. Here are my top picks from their originals, or licensed series, shows, and movies:

1. Stranger Things, (season 2): After a roller-coaster of Season 1,Stranger Things is back with a whole new season of suspense and chaos. Want to know how the surviving citizens of Hawkins, Indiana will cope with the horrors of the Demogorgon and the secrets of Hawkins Lab? Well, you will have to wait until October 27, before all hell breaks loose again.

2. Wheelman:If you have a thing for adrenaline-pumping action and relentless thrill then Wheelman is just for you. The Jeremy Rush-directed flick will be available on Netflix India from October 20.

3. Haters Back Off (season 2):If you are a fan of comedy then you will be happy to learn that a brand new season of Haters Back Off is coming your way on the 20th.

4. Voltron: Legendary Defender (season 4): Fans of animation are up for a grand treat as the fourth season of Voltron: Legendary Defender started streaming on Netflix from October 13.

5. The Meyerowitz Stories:The Noah Baumbach-directed, Palme d'Or-nominated American comedy-drama film starring Adam Sandler, Ben Stiller, Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson, released on October 13.

6. Mindhunter (season 1):Also streaming on Netflix from October 13 is the first season of Mindhunter. If you love crime serials then this is right up your alley.

7. Riverdale (season 2):The second season of the popular American teen drama series Riverdale comes your way with a new episode every Thursday. It started on October 12, on Netflix India.

8. Dynasty (season 1):If you are a fan of the good old soap operas then you can feast your eyes on the first season of Dynasty. Starring the likes of Grant Show, Nathalie Kelley, Elizabeth Gillies, etc. It premiered on October 12 on Netflix India.

9. Arrow (season 5):The fifth season of Arrow began on October 6. And if you are a comic fan then you are in for a major treat.

10. Suburra (season 1):The first season of the Italian mafia series Suburra—the prequel to the 2015 film of the same name, premiered October 6.

11. Designated Survivor (season 2):Season 2 of the American political drama series Designated Survivor is a new addition to Netflix Indian catalog for this month.

12. Outlander (season 3): The popular Netflix original series Outlander is back with its third season. If you loved the first two seasons then surely you wouldn't be able to resist this one either.

13. The Dark Knight Rises:Fans of Christopher Nolan and Batman are surely going to cherish that fact that The Dark Knight Rises, starring Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Marion Cotillard, has been added to the Netflix India catalog this month.

14. Mechanic: Resurrection:There are few actors as kickass as Jason Statham. And he can be seen in all his glory in Mechanic: Resurrection which also stars Jessica Alba and Tommy Lee Jones. Get ready to experience a new kind of an adrenaline rush this October on Netflix.

15. The Whole Nine Yards:And last but certainly not the least, October brings to you the Jonathan Lynn crime comedy filmThe Whole Nine Yards, starring Bruce Willis, Matthew Perry, and Natasha Henstridge.

A version of this article was first published in A Potpourri of Vestiges.

The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.

Blake Lively Shares Her Own 'Terrifying' Sexual Harassment Story

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Blake Lively attends the American Ballet Theatre Spring 2017 Gala.

In the fallout of the many allegations of sexual misconduct against movie producer Harvey Weinstein, actors ranging from James Van Der Beek to Tippi Hedren have shared their own stories of harassment in Hollywood. Now, it’s Blake Lively’s turn. 

Speaking with the Los Angeles Times in a recent interview, the “All I See Is You” actress recalled the “terrifying” experience of working with a makeup artist who allegedly harassed her.

“He was saying things inappropriately, insisting on putting my lipstick on with his finger,” Lively said. “I was sleeping one night on location and I woke up and he was filming me. I was clothed, but it was a very voyeuristic, terrifying thing to do.”

Lively raised the issue with the producers on the project, but said that no action was immediately taken to ensure her safety. Instead, they approached the actress in her trailer months later to confront her about an entirely different issue: her dog defecating in her dress room. 

“After three months of complaining, they called me into my trailer and said, ‘We need to talk to you.’ I thought, ‘Well finally, they’re going to do something about this man who I had to have touching me all day,’” Lively recalled. “And they said, ‘Your dog left a poop behind the toilet in your dressing room and our janitor had to pick it up. And this is very serious and we can’t have this happen again.’”

Blake Lively attends the

The makeup artist was finally removed from the project after Lively circumvented the producers by taking up the issue with her lawyer, which resulted in an investigation into his behavior. 

“Our unit production manager wrote him a letter of recommendation because nobody wanted there to be bad blood,” she said. 

Earlier in the week, Lively joined a chorus of famous types condemning Weinstein’s alleged sexual assault and harassment in a strongly worded statement. The producer was fired from the Weinstein Company on Sunday after a damning New York Times expose detailing decades of abuse. Days later three women claimed Weinstein raped them in an investigative New Yorker report.

While Lively says she never personally experienced or witnessed Weinstein acting inappropriately, she called the various testimonies “devastating to hear.” 

 Harvey Weinstein pictured before news of his alleged sexual misconduct broke. 

“It happens to women all over the place, all the time, to the point where women don’t even think that this is a real assault,” she told The Hollywood Reporter. “I’ve had plenty of things happen to me whether it be trying on a dress for prom at some clothing store, to a director being inappropriate, to a guy walking down the street where you don’t think, ‘Oh well, that wasn’t actually sexual assault — this guy just, like, grabbed my butt.’”

“It’s important that women are furious right now,” she continued. “It’s important that there is an uprising. It’s important that we don’t stand for this and that we don’t focus on one or two or three or four stories, it’s important that we focus on humanity in general and say, ‘This is unacceptable.’”

Also on HuffPost
Blake Lively

Jane Fonda Admits She Knew About Weinstein Rumors And Stayed Silent

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While many in the film industry are claiming they had no knowledge of Harvey Weinstein’s alleged sexual misconduct, Jane Fonda is admitting that she first heard about the producer’s behavior a year ago, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Speaking with Christiane Amanpour in an interview set to air on CNN Friday, Fonda expresses regret that she didn’t call him out sooner. 

“I found out about Harvey about a year ago, and I’m ashamed that I didn’t say anything back then,” she said. 

The “Our Souls At Night” star says she was first made aware of Weinstein’s actions by actress Rosanna Arquette, who detailed an incident of alleged sexual assault at the hands of the producer in a report by The New York Times. According to Arquette, Weinstein invited her to his hotel room one night in the 1990s under the guise of picking up a script for a new role and then forced her hand on his crotch.

When asked about why she chose to stay silent, Fonda said, “I was not that bold. I guess it hadn’t happened to me, so I didn’t feel it was my place.”

The 79-year-old actress, who revealed she’s only met Weinstein once, explained that she never personally experienced feeling uncomfortable around him. 

“I only met Harvey when was old, and Harvey goes for young because that’s more vulnerable,” she surmised. 

Despite her previous silence on the matter, Fonda is “glad” the allegations of sexual harassment and assault are finally coming to light.

“I’m so proud of those fellow actors that are speaking up. I know that it has taken a long time,” she said. “It is a very, very, very hard thing to do. You don’t get anything out of it as the person who has been victimized, but it is important that it comes out.”

While abuse of power runs rampant in Hollywood, Fonda also made sure to mention that these actions take place across all industries and to many women, whether they’re famous or not. 

“Let’s not think that this is some unique, horrific … This goes on all the time,” she said. “This male entitlement in Hollywood and everywhere — in offices and businesses all over the world, in bars, in restaurants, in stores, women are assaulted, abused, harassed.”

Also on HuffPost
Jane Fonda Quotes

When Women Called Out Alleged Sexual Harassment In Pune's 'High Spirits' Bar, A Conspiracy Of Silence Emerged

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If there's one thing we've learned about the culture of sexual harassment, it is that so often, it's happening within plain sight. When the abuse finally gets called out, the darkest secrets about bro-codes, conspiracies of silence and perpetration through inaction are revealed. Harry Weinstein and Bill Cosby are living, breathing proof of how much men with power and privilege can get away with.

Closer home, in Pune, a similar pattern emerged in the last few days, with an outpouring of allegations of sexual harassment against Khodu Irani, the owner of a popular local bar, High Spirits, on Twitter.

It started with a series of tweets from blogger Sheena Dabholkar talking about being publicly shamed on the Facebook page of High Spirits for calling out sexism on its premises. She went on to talk about the extent to which the harassment and objectification of women have been normalised, by constantly dismissing it as a part of Irani's gregarious, 'mad' nature.

Whenever someone comes forward with their story of harassment, a whole lot of people predictably respond with disbelief -- many called Dabholkar a liar and an attention-seeker. Several men and women were skeptical, because they'd never seen women being harassed and abused themselves; while even more were of the opinion that if the harassment was such common knowledge among Pune's party-goers, women who still went there were tacitly giving consent to what happened when they went there. Apparently, the fact that women were still going to the club was proof of Irani's innocence.

All of this, of course, makes one wonder, once again -- what does a woman have to do to be believed when she talks about the corrosive bro-culture and benevolence with which sexual predators are shielded, effectively creating an environment so toxic that women are constantly feeling unsafe and objectified?

But despite all the hemming and hawing, and the cringeworthy #NotAllMen rhetoric making an appearance once again, something wonderful emerged from the sordid mess.

As Dabholkar's tweets began to get retweeted, she started sharing the stories of all the women writing to her privately, revealing how they too were harassed by Irani. While many requested anonymity, a bigger number drove the conversation forward by publicly talking about Irani's appalling behaviour.

As more and more disturbing details came to light, several stand-up artists declared that they would no longer perform at High Spirits.

As a venue that is known for hosting popular stand-up artists from around the country, it is undoubtedly important that comics publicly boycott a place that allows women to be treated so poorly on its premises. But that's not nearly enough. Two comics, Aditi Mittal and Agrima Joshua, tweeted about how most male comics treat feminism as a good-for-business act they studiously maintain on stage and in public, while privately, they're very much a part of the bro-culture that enables the harassment of women.

It is evident that the problem is far bigger than one man's allegedly sexually harassing women. The real problem is the entire machinery that makes it possible for him to do it with such impunity, without any fear of consequence. How do the aggressors come get to be so confident in the protection that sexism affords?

It's because it never fails them.

Every time such an incident comes to light, there is an unending list of questions for the women: Why didn't they speak up earlier? Why are they coming forward now? How is it possible that he could harass so many women for so long?

So many questions for women, none for the men.

How is it that male performance artists are now claiming to be "shocked" by the perpetrator's behaviour, when, by all accounts, the alleged abuse seems to be a matter of common knowledge for those on the inside? It is telling, that 'why women choose to stay silent' –- a question that is literally asked and answered every time the topic of abuse is discussed on any platform, anywhere in the world -- is asked with more scorn, disdain and suspicion, than 'why did you know and continue to pretend like it was all okay?'.

Stand-up comedy in India is not exactly an overcrowded industry, so it's a bit difficult to swallow that within a small group, so many people could be so utterly clueless about what was going on at a venue they often perform at.

Even so, the reality of the matter is that a string of tweets from frustrated, exhausted women on Twitter is unlikely to solve the problem of sexual harassment. Nor will it stop people from using feminism as a battle-cry to market themselves as socially conscious and aware artists, while happily indulging in misogyny and reaping the benefits of a sexist culture in private.

Despite that, conversations like these serve a very important purpose. Because when women come together to prop each other up, shore each others' courage and lend their voices to the narrative, it becomes that much harder for people to ignore the problem or shout the victim down. Case in point being that at the time of writing this article, High Spirits had made its Twitter account private and was steadfastly ignoring the matter on its Facebook page.

According to a report in Pune Mirror, Irani defended the allegations against him, saying, "High Spirits is 13 years old. I wouldn't dignify this baseless allegation by responding on Twitter. I am a victim of harassment here. We are deeply shocked and saddened by the allegations, and completely deny them. It appears that these lies are emanating from a single person, with an agenda, who appears to be a motivated by the desire to tarnish the reputation of a bar that has an unblemished record of not having any issues like this."

HuffPost India has reached out to High Spirits for comment.


Differently Abled Auto Rickshaw Driver Beaten Up On Suspicions Of Carrying Beef, Even As Akhlaq's Murder Accused Land Govt Jobs

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A cow holds a copy of a news paper on the outskirts of Srinagar, August 5, 2016. REUTERS/Danish Ismail

Five men, including a disabled auto rickshaw driver, became the latest victims to a vicious attack by self-styled "gau rakshaks" (cow protectors) in Faridabad on Friday morning.

Azad, along with a 14-year-old boy Sonu, were reportedly stopped by six men at the outskirts of Delhi on suspicion of carrying beef. They were carrying meat to a local shop, and reportedly told the men they were not carrying beef but would go to the police station with them if required. However, these men allegedly beat the two of them even as a crowd of over 40 people watched. When Azad's family members rushed to the spot and tried to save him, they were allegedly beaten up as well.

"When I could no longer take the pain... I fell unconscious," he told NDTV. The attackers waited for him to regain consciousness and ordered him to chant "Jai Hanuman", he told the channel. They even threatened to feed him pork, which is against his religion, if he didn't comply.

According to the report, the police was registered a case against the victims for "cow smuggling" but withdrew it after it was determined to be buffalo meat.

Meanwhile, 15 men, who were accused of lynching Mohammad Akhlaq in Dadri two years ago on suspicions of eating beef, have been given government jobs, reported The Hindu. Local Bharatiya Janata Party leader Tejpal Nagar got them the jobs with India's largest energy conglomerate NTPC Limited, according to the report.

Also On HuffPost:

Is This Advertising Campaign With Naked Men Sexist?

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A global suit company for women has stirred controversy with its new advertisements showing fully-clothed women alongside completely naked men.

The Dutch company Suistudio, which launched in August, has included the naked men in a number of different poses -- often with women looming over them.

One pose shows a women in one of Suistudio's designer suits sitting on a couch, with her feet resting on a naked male model's body.

In the Buff. It's time to go nude. #SUISTUDIO #NOTDRESSINGMEN #womeninbusiness #officewear

A post shared by SUISTUDIO (@suistudio) on


Another shows a fully-clothed woman posing with her hand on a male model's behind.

So are the advertisements objectifying men?

Vice president of Suistudio Kristina Barricelli doesn't think so.

"The problem is in recent history, we haven't seen men objectified in the background. How strange! If you're in the beverage business, you objectify thirst," she told Hindustan Times.

"The moment you take an image and photograph it, it becomes an object. We like naked men and I'm pretty sure there are lots of women that like them too."

However, there has been some negative reaction online too.

Suitstudio's CEO Fokke de Jong wrote in a statement that this wasn't just a simple role reversal exercise.

"Labelling [the Suistudio woman] as flipping a gender puts too much emphasis on flawed impositions that have been put on the sexes for far too long. She is powerful, confident, and proud of herself."

"She also has a naked man in her apartment".

Is th

3 Held After Self-Styled Cow Vigilantes Attack Differently-Abled Man Over Beef Suspicion

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In this photograph taken on November 5, 2015, a cow looks on at a cow shelter owned by Babulal Jangir, a rustic self-styled leader of cow raiders, and Gau Raksha Dal (Cow Protection Squad) in Taranagar in the desert state of Rajasthan.

FARIDABAD -- Three people have been arrested today in connection with the attack here on an auto-rickshaw driver and his friends by a group of cow vigilantes over suspicion that they were carrying beef, police said.

Those arrested have been identified as locals Lakhan, Dileep, Ram Kumar, a police official said, adding they were being questioned at the Assistant Commissioner of Police's office in Mujesar.

ACP (Mujesar) Radhshyam said the arrested trio was being quizzed and others involved in the case will be held soon.

On October 13 morning, the auto-rickshaw driver Azad along with his four friends was on their way from Fatehpur Billauch to Old Faridabad when 15-20 men intercepted their vehicle near Bajri village, the police said.

According to Azad, the group thrashed them and then called up the police. They handed Azad over to the police alleging that he was a cow-smuggler, a police official said.

The official said that based on the complaint of the group, initially a case was registered against the auto- rickshaw driver under the laws related to cow slaughter.

However, it emerged during the initial probe that it was buffalo meat that Azad and his friends were transporting.

"In the initial investigation, it was found that it was buffalo meat and not beef that was being transported.

Therefore, a case under relevant sections was registered on the complaint of Azad. Further action will be taken after probing the matter," SHO, Mujesar police station, Vinod Singh, had said yesterday.

The meat has been sent to a forensic lab for further tests, he had said.

Earlier one Bittu Bajrangi, who identified himself as the chief of the 'Gorakhsha Bajrang Force', told the police that members of his group had suspected beef being carried in the auto-rickshaw.

According to Bittu, soon a crowd gathered at the spot which thrashed the five men, the SHO said.

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25-Year-Old Indian Origin Woman Left To Die In Blazing Car After Accident In New York

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NEW YORK -- A 25-year-old Indian-origin woman was left to die in a blazing car following a fiery crash in the US, police said.

Harleen Grewal was burned to death on Friday after Saeed Ahmad, 23, slammed his luxury Infiniti 35G into a concrete barrier on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, the New York Daily reported.

The driver left the woman passenger to die in the fireball after hailing a cab to take himself to a hospital, it said.

When firefighters put out the flames, they found a badly burned woman in the passenger seat. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

While the car was still in flames, Ahmad took himself to Maimonides Medical Center, police said. He was being treated there for burns to his arms and legs, the report said.

Cops caught up with him at the hospital and charged him with manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, leaving the scene of an accident, aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle and speeding.

His arraignment was pending in Brooklyn Criminal Court, the report said.

Ahmad had been allegedly driving in and out of the traffic on the expressway before his car hit the barrier, it said.

Ahmad, who lives in Flatlands, admitted to having a few drinks before the crash but was not legally drunk when his blood was tested at the hospital, police said.

Ahmad's brother Waheed, however, claimed that his sibling had tried to rescue the passenger.

"He said the girl that was in the car was stuck in there and he tried to get her out, that's why his arms were burned."

The grieving boyfriend of Grewal, who worked for a catering company, said she was a selfless soul who always looked out for others.

"She would do anything for people," Karan Singh Dhillon was quoted as saying.

The Funniest Tweets From Parents This Week

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Kids may say the darndest things, but parents tweet about them in the funniest ways. So each week, we round up the most hilarious 140-character quips from moms and dads to spread the joy. Scroll down to read the latest batch and follow @HuffPostParents on Twitter for more!

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Cute Kid Notes

Why Nupur And Rajesh Talwar Will Return To Dasna Jail Every Fortnight

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File photo of Nupur and Rajesh Talwar coming out of CBI Court after hearing in Arushi-Hemraj case on November 6, 2013 in Ghaziabad, India.

DASNA -- Dentist couple Rajesh and Nupur Talwar will visit the Dasna jail every 15 days to attend to inmates facing dental problems after their release following acquittal in the murder case of their daughter Aarushi and domestic help Hemraj, jail authorities said.

The two are lodged in the Dasna prison in Ghaziabad since November 2013 after they were awarded life sentence in the case. Both Rajesh and Nupur Talwar are likely to be released tomorrow.

The dentist couple had helped revive the near "defunct" dental department at the prison hospital, a jail official said.

"We were concerned about the fate of our dental department after their (Talwars) release. They (Talwars) have assured us that they would visit jail to attend to inmates every 15 days even after their release," jail doctor Sunil Tyagi told PTI.

Tyagi said besides prisoners, Rajesh and Nupur Talwar have also been treating jail staff, police officials and their children.

"Since Talwars have come here (prison), they have treated thousands of patients who are happy with their services," he said.

To manage rush of dental patients at the jail hospital after Talwars' release, prison authorities have also tied up with a Ghaziabad-based dental college.

"The doctors from the dental college will also visit Dasna jail twice a week to attend to patients so that inmates don't face problem," Tyagi added.

Since their acquittal by the Allahabad high court, there has been a steady increase in patients wanting to consult the couple.

Sources in the jail said Rajesh Talwar's brother Dinesh Talwar, who is an ophthalmologist, would also visit the prison every 15 days along with his team to see patients.

The dentist couple had challenged the sentence in the Allahabad high court, which acquitted them in the sensational double murder case earlier this week.

Big Win For Congress In Gurdaspur LS By-Poll

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Punjab Chief Minister Capt. Amarinder Singh waves during a road show in favour of Congress candidate for Gurdaspur Lok Sabha bypoll Sunil Jakhar on October 9, 2017 in Gurdaspur, India.

Maintaining its winning streak from the assembly elections, Punjab's ruling Congress secured an emphatic win in the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha seat on Sunday.

Congress candidate Sunil Jakhar won by a margin of over 1.93 lakh votes, officials said. He polled over 4.99 lakh votes, compared to 3.06 votes polled by Salaria. The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) polled only around 24,000 votes.

Jakhar, who was in the lead right from the time the vote count began on Sunday morning, extended the margin over his BJP rival Swaran Salaria after each of the 14 rounds of counting.

Congress leaders and workers started had celebrating the impending victory by bursting firecrackers and distributing sweets in Gurdaspur, Chandigarh and other places even before the final result was declared.

"We won the election because of the positive policies of the Congress. People have faith in the party," Jakhar, who was termed an 'outsider' in the constituency by his opponents, told the media after his victory

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh hailed the "unprecedented" Congress victory "as a total rejection of the anti-people policies of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its ally, the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD)".

"The massive win for Congress candidate shows the people's complete denunciation of the corrupt and immoral BJP and SAD," Amarinder said, adding that it also underlined the political annihilation of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in the state.

"The over 1.93 lakh margin of victory has not only more than compensated for the 1.36 lakh vote defeat of Congress candidate Pratap Singh Bajwa against BJP's Vinod Khanna in 2014 but has surpassed even the 1.51 lakh lead by which Sukhbans Kaur Bhinder (Congress) had won in 1980," Amarinder pointed out.

The seat was earlier held by the BJP, which had won it in 2014. The seat fell vacant in April following the passing away of veteran actor Vinod Khanna, a four-time MP from the seat.

AAP candidate Maj. Gen. Suresh Kumar Khajuria (retd) lost his security deposit.

Khajuria left the counting centre alleging that the voting was rigged by the Congress, which came to power in the state after sweeping the assembly polls.

The counting was conducted in centres in Gurdaspur and Pathankot towns. There were 11 candidates in the fray for the October 11 election. Nearly 56 per cent of the 15.22 lakh registered voters exercised their franchise.

The voter turnout was much lower than the over 70 per cent polling in 2014.


Ranking The Best Shows On Netflix You Can Stream Right Now

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Netflix has become that friend who just won’t stop proposing outlandish new ideas. You definitely love a thing or two they come up with, but at a certain point, it’s simply way too much to process.

The company is spending $6 billion on original content in 2017. So the over 100 million people across the world who subscribe to the service have an inevitable paralysis of choice ― and not every show is going to be a hit. Honestly, most are kind of mediocre. But the service has a record of putting out at least a few gems every year, all of which will hopefully end up in the ever-changing list below.

For the weekend of Oct. 14, Streamline recommends “American Vandal” in the top spot. As mentioned in our main list, this has become an unlikely critical darling, while simply being extremely funny.

“Neo Yokio” and “Big Mouth” both joined the list for the first time. These are two cartoons with stellar voice-acting casts and great writing.

Note: This list only includes shows that debuted their most recent episode less than a year ago. Much like the main list, it prioritizes newness.

Woody Allen Says Harvey Weinstein Scandal Is 'Very Sad For Everyone Involved'

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Film director Woody Allen, who has been accused of sexual assault by his adopted daughter, told the BBC Sunday that he was not aware of Harvey Weinstein’s history of sexual abuse, much of which has come to light in recent weeks. 

“No one ever came to me or told me horror stories with any real seriousness,” the director said. “And they wouldn’t, because you are not interested in it. You are interested in making your movie.”

“But you do hear a million fanciful rumors all the time,” Allen added. “And some turn out to be true and some — many — are just stories about this actress, or that actor.”

The director was accused of sexually assaulting his adopted daughter, Dylan Farrow, when she was 7 years old. The reports first emerged in 1993, but were brought to light once again when Dylan reiterated her story in a 2014 New York Times piece. The director denied the allegations.

At a time when many shunned Allen over the allegations, Weinstein offered him a deal for the 1994 film “Bullets Over Broadway.” Allen would work with Miramax, the production company Weinstein co-founded, on several more films in the 1990s.

“The whole Harvey Weinstein thing is very sad for everybody involved,” Allen told the BBC. “Tragic for the poor women that were involved, sad for Harvey that [his] life is so messed up. There’s no winners in that, it’s just very, very sad and tragic for those poor women that had to go through that.”

Since the shocking allegations against Weinstein surfaced, the producer was fired from The Weinstein Company, and his executive producer credit will be removed from TV shows and upcoming films. On Saturday, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences expelled Weinstein

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this piece incorrectly implied that Allen was accused of multiple instances of sexual assault.

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Celebrities React To Harvey Weinstein

'Haven’t Seen Anything Like This', Says Director Of Ambulance Service After 200 Dead In Mogadishu Blasts

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EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content/Somali security officers patrol on the scene of the explosion of a truck bomb in the centre of Mogadishu, on October 15, 2017.

More than 200 people were killed by twin bomb blasts that struck busy junctions in the heart of Somalia's capital Mogadishu, officials said on Sunday, marking the deadliest attacks since an Islamist insurgency began in 2007.

President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo declared three days of national mourning and called for donations of blood and funds to victims of Saturday's attack. At least 100 others were wounded.

"Today's horrific attack proves our enemy would stop nothing to cause our people pain and suffering. Let's unite against terror," he tweeted.

Police said a truck bomb exploded outside a hotel in the K5 intersection that is lined with government offices, restaurants and kiosks, flattening several buildings and setting dozens of vehicles on fire.

Two hours later, another blast struck the capital's Medina district.

"We have confirmed 200 civilians died in yesterday's blast. We understand the death toll is higher than that."

"We have confirmed 200 civilians died in yesterday's blast. We understand the death toll is higher than that. Many people are still missing their relatives," Abdifatah Omar Halane, the spokesman for Mogadishu's mayor, told Reuters.

A spokesman for Aamin Ambulance service said it knew of more than 250 people wounded during the bombings on Saturday.

EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Somali soldiers patrol on the scene of the explosion of a truck bomb in the centre of Mogadishu, on October 15, 2017.

"Some people who searched for their relatives just found unrecognizable body parts," its director Abdikadir Abdirahman told Reuters.

"In our 10 year experience as the first responder in #Mogadishu, we haven't seen anything like this," tweeted the ambulance service, which is reliant on private donations and the only free ambulance service in the city.

"We're mourning the loss of 5 Somali Red Crescent volunteers, also killed in this attack," tweeted the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Police and emergency workers searched the rubble of destroyed buildings on Sunday. They had recovered dozens of corpses the night before, most of which were charred beyond recognition.

Hundreds of people came to the junction in search of missing family members and police cordoned off the area for security reasons.

People wear headbands as a sign of anger as they protest against the deadly bomb attack in Mogadishu on October 15, 2017, after a truck bomb exploded outside of the Safari Hotel on a busy road junction, levelling buildings and leaving many vehicles in flames.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, although the Islamist militant group al Shabaab, which is allied to al Qaeda, stages regular attacks in the capital and other parts of the country.

The group is waging an insurgency against the U.N.-backed government and its African Union allies in a bid to topple the weak administration and impose its own strict interpretation of Islam.

The militants were driven out of Mogadishu in 2011 and have been steadily losing territory since then to the combined forces of African Union peacekeepers and Somali security forces.

But al Shabaab retains the ability to mount large, complex bomb attacks. Over the past three years, the number of civilians killed by insurgent bombings has steadily climbed as al Shabaab increases the size of its bombs.

The Morning Wrap: The Congress Comeback; BJP Leader Threatens CPI(M) In Kerala

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The Morning Wrap is HuffPost India's selection of interesting news and opinion from the day's newspapers. Subscribe here to receive it in your inbox each weekday morning.

Essential HuffPost

Punjab's ruling Congress secured a decisive win in the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha seat on Sunday, with Sunil Jakhar, the party's candidate, winning by a margin of over 1.93 lakh votes and polling over 4.99 lakh votes, according to officials.

When some women publicly called out on Twitter the sexist culture at a bar called High Spirits in Pune, a conspiracy of silence emerged in no time. Here's what happened.

Five men, including a disabled auto-rickshaw driver, became the latest victims to a vicious attack by self-styled "gau rakshaks" (cow protectors) in Faridabad on Friday morning. The incident took place on the heels of a murder accused in a similar case being given a government job.

PARTNER BULLETIN | THE LIVE, LOVE, LAUGH FOUNDATION

Why We All Need To Sit Up And Take Notice Of Mental Health Problems In Society

Mental disorders like depression, anxiety, etc. are considered byproducts of urban living. However, they are equally common in rural India, where low awareness, mindsets and poor treatment facilities compound the problem. With 13.7% of adults suffering from mental health issues, it's plain India needs to get serious about mental health.

Main News

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to visit his home state Gujarat on Monday to address a gathering of Bharatiya Janata Party workers and mark the culmination of the two-leg Gujarat Gaurav Yatra, which he launched from Karamsad on 1 October and from Porbandar the following day.

BJP national general secretary and former Lok Sabha MP Saroj Pandey said on Sunday that the purpose of the Jan Raksha Yatra, launched by party president Amit Shah, was to show the CPI(M) that the BJP would respond to its strong-arm tactics by "entering homes and gouging out...eyes".

Najeeb Ahmad, a biotechnology student in the post-graduate stream at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, went missing on 15 October 2016. A year on, there is no trace of the 28-year-old. The Hindustan Times travelled to Budaun, Najeeb's hometown, to know more about him.

Off The Front Page

The Indian economy is on a solid growth track in the medium and long term due to the structural reforms undertaken by the government, and the current slowdown due to implementation of the Goods & Services tax and demonetisation is short-term, International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde has said.

Bengal has opted out of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat programme, aimed at promoting interactions between people of diverse cultures from different states, stating that the officials did not find some of its provisions agreeable.

As many as 15 passenger jets of Indian airliners suffered midflight engine damage, according to the civil aviation regulator's data till August this year. The numbers are the highest for six years and put to question aviation safety in the country.

Opinion

In The Indian Express, Gilles Vernier explains the difference between the BJP and the Congress in Gujarat, the way the former has attained the status of a successful regional party while the latter's strategies are still shaped in New Delhi.

In light of the Jay Shah incident, in The Telegraph, Manini Chatterjee says that the ruling party's defensive reaction to the allegations of financial irregularity against the son of its party president is telling for many reasons.

"Fancy talk of demographic dividend is empty rhetoric if we allow thousands of children to be abused, raped, trafficked and murdered," writes Nobel Laureate Kailash Satyarthi in the Hindustan Times. "If we truly want India to become a great nation, we must first make India safe for children."

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Activists Allege That An 11-Year-Old Jharkhand Girl Starved To Death Because Her Family Didn't Have Aadhar-Linked Ration Cards

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Image used to representational purposes only.

Activists alleged that PDS outlets in Jharkhand's Simdega district refused to give ration to a family, since their ration cards had gotten cancelled for not being linked to Aadhaar. Eleven-year-old Santoshi Kumari allegedly died of starvation on 28 September, after going without food for eight days.

In an exclusive report, Scrollfound out that in Simdega's Karimati village, the local dealer had been refusing to give ration to the Kumari's family, saying that their ration card wasn't linked to Aadhaar and hence was no longer valid. The family does not have Aadhaar cards. Non-profit organisations Right to Food Campaign and NREGA Watch discovered that the PDS outlet had taken off the name of Koyli Devi, the child's mother, along with those of 10 other families as their cards were not linked. Activists confirmed with Jaldega block office that Koyli Devi's card had indeed been cancelled. The activists placed a request for a new card explaining the circumstances, but the card arrived two weeks after Santoshi's death.

In February this year, the Centre made it mandatory to have Aadhaar numbers to access subsidised ration under the Public Distribution System (PDS). The victim's mother said that since school was shut for Durga Puja holidays, Satoshi didn't have access to the mid-day meals she usually had. The girl's father is not sound of mind and her mother and sister makes no more than Rs 80-90 a day cutting grass for others, reports Scroll.

Government officials, however, have argued that Santoshi died of malaria, not starvation.

Not just subsidised ration, the February 28 notification from the government also made it mandatory for children to have Aadhaar cards for access to mid-day meals in government schools. In August this year, Hindustan Times reported that only 42% children in the state have enrolled for Aadhaar. It also said that according to a notification from the Union ministry to Rajasthan government, the deadline for enrolling into Aadhaar was 31 August, 2017. Hindustan Times reported that 37 lakh students in 49,000 government schools in the state ran the risk of being denied mid-day meals if they did not get enrolled under the Aadhaar scheme within the stipulated deadline.

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