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How an Oxy Grad Helped Create a Musical Adventure For iPad and iPhone
“Cabby Cat & the Missing Cello,” an interactive picture book, is inspired by the hunt for musical wizard Yo-Yo Ma’s lost cello.

About Ajay
I grew up in the world's largest human laboratory—India. Only in India can you go to a Protestant British boarding school, as I did, come home once a year to a village where farmers still use oxen to plough their fields, and then set out to see a country so bewilderingly diverse that it has 25 officially recognized languages, including English, which is understood in every corner, and more than 3,000 dialects.
Over the years, I have made my home in India, Japan and China. And I have written about life and politics in every continent except Africa and Antartica, sometimes going to extreme lengths to find material to write about: In the early 1990s, for example, I took a Greyhound bus from New York City to San Jose, and worked undercover as a curry chef in an Indian restaurant in Tokyo to research the lives of undocumented workers serving Japan's postindustrial economy.
I started out in journalism in 1988 at the New Delhi bureau of the Wall Street Journal Asia, went on to the Associated Press and eventually to Asiaweek, a Time Inc. newsweekly in Hong Kong. For six years until 2009 I was a writer and editor at an online newspaper and quarterly magazine at UCLA.
Email: Ajay.Singh@Patch.com
Phone: 323-351-4542
Birthday: August 15.
BELIEFS: At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.
HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR POLITICAL BELIEFS?
I consider myself an old-fashioned liberal who would like to see humane values firmly rooted in our political, social and educational institutions. I favor public education, universal health care, large but environmentally sound public works projects, strict regulations on capital markets, managerial rather than investor control of corporations, tax credits, guaranteed employment, social safety nets and international trade policies that protect domestic workers not just in the United States but everywhere.
ARE YOU REGISTERED WITH A CERTAIN PARTY?
No.
HOW RELIGIOUS WOULD YOU CONSIDER YOURSELF? (CASUAL, OBSERVANT, DEVOUT, NON-RELIGIOUS)
When it comes to religion—or matters of spirituality—I find myself in such a labyrinth that I have great trouble being consistent in my opinions. I therefore prefer to plead the privilege of a skeptic, a position that, I confess, I often find very difficult to understand.
“Cabby Cat & the Missing Cello,” an interactive picture book, is inspired by the hunt for musical wizard Yo-Yo Ma’s lost cello.

What, in your view, are the biggest stories so far in the neighborhood this year?
Sign up a 2013 membership at the Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock for as little as $25.
Michael Scott of Eagle Rock Backyard Farms wishes everyone a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays.
As many as 19 restaurants will be open Monday, some of them at reduced hours—and just three on Tuesday.
Bring your kids to hear family folk music and try their hand at musical instruments.
From a stained glass store on Colorado to fashion boutiques on Eagle Rock Boulevard, window decorations dot the neighborhood.
David Cordova's home on Yosemite Way in Eagle Rock features a tree decorated with images from his Echo Park boyhood.
David Cordova's home on Yosemite Way is like a Christmas Disneyland.
Property crimes dominate Eagle Rock's statistics for the first two weeks of December.
Crime in NELA has been going down historically, but not this year, and the LAPD wants your help to contain it yet.
If either of these two houses in Sherman Oaks and Chatsworth wins the final round of voting, its owner will get $100,000 to be spent on LAUSD schools.
High winds along tree-lined Maywood Avenue, near Eagle Rock City Hall, sent some palm fronds flying onto the street.
Volatile cyber threats will be severely dealt with, LAPD Capt. Bill Murphy tells the Northeast Community Police Advisory Board meeting, where he announced the arrest of a suspect in the 2008 slaying of a sheriff's deputy.
What a community should do in the aftermath of homicidal school violence and media exposure to an international tragedy.
"Turning a Curse Into a Blessing" at the Eagle Rock Seventh-Day Adventist Church
The crime figures are significantly higher east of the Los Angeles River when compared to the area west of the Los Angeles River.
The crime figures are significantly higher east of the Los Angeles River when compared to the area west of the Los Angeles River.