Part 2 - South Asian Daily
Transcription
Part 2 - South Asian Daily
NISSAN INTRODUCING THE SWAY CONCEPT Models showcases fashion designer Anupama Dayal`s creations during Amazon India Fashion Week in New Delhi (IANS). National average home price forecast to rise by 2% to $416,200 in 2015; 1.9% to $424,100 in 2016 OTTAWA - The fur ther decline in oil prices since CREA's last forecast has shaken consumer confidence in the Prairies, pushing potential homebuyers to the sidelines and prompting more homeowners to put their home on the market. This has led to a rapid shift in market balance in Alber ta, and to a lesser extent, Saskatchewan. Annual sales in these provinces are expected to come in well below elevated levels posted last year, with small declines in average residential prices in 2015. Additionally, the Canadian dollar has weakened fur ther against the U.S. dollar, mor tgage rates have declined and the U.S. economy has strengthened since CREA's last forecast, which taken together are expected to benefit economic and job growth in other provinces. Accordingly, CREA has upwardly revised its forecast for sales activity for much of the rest of the country. The balance between supply and demand continues to tighten in British Columbia and Ontario. These are the only two provinces where tight supply relative to demand is expected to result in average price gains that surpass inflation this year. By contrast, average prices in Quebec and the Atlantic region are expected to remain relatively stable, as sales deplete elevated levels of supply. On balance, the forecast for national sales has been revised lower, reflecting downward revisions to the outlook for sales in Alber ta. SHRUTI HAASAN NEHA DHUPIA National sales are now projected to reach 475,700 units in 2015, representing an annual decline of 1.1 per cent. This would place annual activity slightly above but still broadly in line with its 10-year average (Char t A). British Columbia is projected to post the largest annual increase in activity in 2015 (+4.9 per cent) followed closely by Nova Scotia (+3.7 per cent), Quebec (+2.5 per cent), New Brunswick (+2.5 per cent), Ontario (+1.9 per cent), and Prince Edward Island (+1.4 per cent). These numbers represent upward revisions to CREA's previous forecast. Alber ta is expected to post the largest annual decline in sales this year (-19.2 per cent), though the trend for activity is expected to begin recovering from a weak star t to the year as consumer confidence recovers. Sales are also forecast to decline on an annual basis in Saskatchewan (-11.2 per cent), and Manitoba (-2.2 per cent). The national average home price is now forecast to rise by two per cent to $416,200 in 2015. Only British Columbia (+3.4 per cent) and Ontario (+2.5 per cent) are forecast to see gains in excess of the national increase. Prices are projected to remain largely stable elsewhere, with increases or decreases of around one per cent or less this year. The exception is Alber ta, where average price is forecast to fall by 3.4 per cent, reflecting a pullback in sales for luxury proper ties compared to homes in more affordable price segments. ELLI AVRAM GENEVA - Innovative design and product planning gave bir th to the Qashqai and Juke, two of the biggest automotive success stories in recent years. Now the company has applied the same radical thinking to one of the most important sectors of the market: the compact hatchback. Unveiled at the Geneva Show, the Sway is a glimpse at how a future generation of compact Nissan models might look if the company's striking new design language was applied to a European hatchback. It is a concept car designed especially to appeal to European tastes: it is seen as emotional, edgy and exciting. Sway has been designed to shake up the compact hatchback segment, traditionally a conservative sector of the market. With its swooping lines, striking nose, elegantly simple interior and bold use of sophisticated colours, the concept is a daring and emotional design. There is an overall sense of unity and harmony... but with edginess unexpected in this market segment. The interior, for example, applies techniques more usually seen in industrial architecture such as structural aluminum elements to signify both simplicity and strength, but also the attention to detail and use of colour and materials associated with premium goods. The exterior, meanwhile, blends four highly distinctive elements - the V-motion grille, floating roof, boomerang lamps and kicked-up C-pillar - to shape a new design signature that has already been seen on the Nissan Lannia Concept that was presented last year in Beijing at Auto China 2014, as well as the new Murano recently launched in North America. The Sway represents the first time this new design language has been expressed on a compact hatchback, while future Nissan models in different market segments in all regions will follow this styling direction. The Sway's character line begins with the V-motion grille, mounted low at the front between twin V-shaped quar ter bumpers. The grille is the star ting point for a bold contour that curves over the hood and front wheels before dipping dramatically towards the center of the front door. It then sweeps upwards towards the rear of the car, giving the side profile an almost sensuous form. DEEPIKA PADUKONE FOR BEST DEALS AND INFORMATION SEE PAGE 36 KATRINA KAIF PICS: IANS 30 MidWeek auto MIDWEEK NEWS WEEKLY TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 MIDWEEK NEWS NEWS WEEKLY WEEKLY TUESDAY, AUGUST TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 31, 2012 2015 lifestyle INDIA RUNWAY WEEK TO ENCOURAGE FASHION EDUCATION PERSPECTIVE MidWeek 31 Low family income affects brain development of children New York, (IANS) Low family income can affect the brain development of children, new research says. The study, led by researchers at the Children's Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) and Columbia University Medical Centre (CUMC), was published online in the journal Nature Neuroscience. "While in no way implying that a child's socio-economic circumstances lead to immutable changes in brain development or cognition, our data suggest that wider access to resources likely afforded by the more affluent may lead to differences in a child's brain structure," said Elizabeth Sowell from CHLA. In the largest study of its kind to date, the researchers looked at 1,099 typically developing individuals between the ages of 3 and 20 years. Associations between socio-economic factors (including parent education and family income) and measurements of surface area of the brain were drawn from demographic and developmental history questionnaires, as well as high-resolution brain MRIs. The findings showed that income was associated with brain sur face area. "Specifically, among children from the lowest-income families, small differences in income were associated with relatively large differences in surface area in a number of regions of the brain, associated with skills impor tant for academic success," said study first author Kimberly G. Noble from CUMC. How maternal diet influences offspring's body weight New Delhi, (IANS) The four th season of India Runway Week (IRW) is to star t from April 10 and besides giving the new trends in the fashion and lifestyle domain, the three-day event will encourage the fashion education perspective. Fashionista School of Fashion Technology, New Delhi, has joined hands with Indian Federation for Fashion Development (IFFD) for the event which will be held at Hotel Opulent, Chhattarpur, here. And the association promises great platform for students to understand fashion and throw light on the business of fashion. "India Runway Week is a great platform for designers and to understand fashion this is good platform for the fashion students. They will get explicit information with all real time experience," Neetu Pavan Manikatalia, managing director, Fashionista, said in a statement. The students will experience the pressure of the fashion week and will witness designers' interaction with domestic and international buyers and will learn their respective buyer landscapes, something which is ver y impor tant to grow in the industr y. "This collaboration between fashion and education is an attempt to integrate knowledge sharing among the young Indian fashion fraternity," Avinash Pathania, founder, IFFD, said. New York, (IANS) Consuming a high-fat diet during pregnancy and lactation may put your offspring at higher risk of obesity later in life, a recent research has found. The findings, published in the Journal of Physiology, showed that the mechanism that helps limit the amount of food one eats could malfunction in the offspring as a result of maternal highfat diet. "It is time that we star t to take seriously the idea that obesity is, in par t, a brain disease," said lead investigator Kirsteen Browning, associate professor of neural and behavioural sciences at the Penn State College of Medicine. She noted that not all people who are obese had mothers who ate high-fat diets when they were pregnant, and not all mothers who eat high-fat diets will have obese children. "It is just one more risk factor. An understanding of the biological mechanisms underpinning obesity could help stem the tide of obesity," she added. 32 MidWeek real estate MIDWEEK NEWS WEEKLY TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 MIDWEEK NEWS NEWS WEEKLY WEEKLY TUESDAY, AUGUST TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 31, 2012 2015 auto MidWeek 33 34 MidWeek lifestyle MIDWEEK NEWS WEEKLY TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015 AIFW: WHEN STYLISTS, DESIGNERS TURNED MODELS FOR 11.11/ ELEVEN.ELEVEN New Delhi (IANS): It was a show unique in its own way as some of the known stylists, designers and editors of fashion magazines turned models for brand 11.11/ eleven.eleven at the ongoing Amazon India Fashion Week (AIFW). Designer Shani Himanshu and Mia Morikawa feel that they cater to the common man and hence this different presentation. "We design for people like them hence rather than having an imaginary person in mind, we thought of these people. We usually don't know models so it was fun to have this show," Himanshu told IANS post the show. Added Morikawa: "They are the kind of the people who have their own identity so it was not difficult at all to work with them. Also our designs are for common people hence it would be great if get someone like them who inspire many commoners." The designer duo represented their autumn/winter theme on the third day of fashion gala that started Wednesday at Pragati Maidan here. Some of the faces who walked for them were Lauren Massoulier, Rashmi Kaleka, Elton Fernandez, Rakesh Thakore, Divya Singh, Asit Bhat, Jeet Thayil, Nitin Chauhan, Malika Verma, Ameet Sikka alone with designers themselves who represented their own range on ramp. There were sari pants, Egyptian cotton shir ts teamed well with high-waisted black silk trousers, shor t kimono coat, mini shor t dress, summer jackets, trousers in cotton linen - all dyed in natural indigo, long kimonos, parsi jackets and many more. There was also heavy display of bandhini and miniature tie dye on clothes along with block printing. "We have used our signature textile: a selection of fine silks vegetable dyed and hand-painted contrasted with our anchor handlooms rustic khadi denim and khadi kala cotton," said the designers, who shared their show with another designer label titled Eka. Titled "seekers-keepers", the collection draws inspiration from within. "I sought stories from my friends, across the world... small villages, big cities, travellers, gatherers, socialites, writers, readers, homemakers, a few very popular & others- loners, some giving up on all accumulate knowledge, some still on a learning curve, but all of them holding on to some smaller experiences, stories that made them," said designer Rina Singh Wrapped in pearly off-whites and rustic tones, the collection works with materials like wool, silk, linen, treated-boiled merinos, chambray herringbone, thick jacquard in merino wool and chunky basket weaves, block printed pattern overlay checks and stripes combine to create a story of the collection. CHITRANGADA SINGH AND MANISHA KOIRALA DURING THE GRAND FINALE OF FBB FEMINA MISS INDIA 2015 IN MUMBAI (IANS). MIDWEEK NEWS NEWS WEEKLY WEEKLY TUESDAY, AUGUST TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 31, 2012 2015 real estate MidWeek 35 36 MidWeek auto MIDWEEK NEWS WEEKLY TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015