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Articles 1121 through 1220 of 3170:
- Indices Will Help Market Mature (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 02, 2006)
When Tyeb Mehta’s tryptich Celebration from The Times of India collection sold for a record $330,000 in September 2002 at Christie’s New York, Indian art had a lift-off.
- Nature Of Economic Change (Hindu, C. T. Kurien, Aug 01, 2006)
Economic change is for the most part a deliberate process shaped by the perceptions of the actors .
- Arab, Israel Envoys Face Off In Delhi (Asian Age, Seema Mustafa, Aug 01, 2006)
The widespread anger over the Israeli war against Lebanon has affected the diplomatic community in New Delhi with Israeli ambassador to India David Danieli’s attempts to justify the aggression drawing strong criticism from the Arab envoys posted here.
- A Multi-Dimensional Monetary Policy (Business Line, K. Subramanian, Aug 01, 2006)
The Monetary Policy is not one-dimensional but is seen more as a vehicle that enhances various segments of the financial market, improves credit delivery, nurtures credit culture and enhances the quality of financial services.
- A Multi-Dimensional Monetary Policy (Business Line, K. Subramanian, Aug 01, 2006)
The Monetary Policy is not one-dimensional but is seen more as a vehicle that enhances various segments of the financial market, improves credit delivery, nurtures credit culture and enhances the quality of financial services.
- Train From China (Indian Express, K Srinivasan, Aug 01, 2006)
Yana Banerjee-Bey, in ‘Tibet on the train to the future’ (Bywords, IE, July 14), writes about how Tibetans’ traditional way of life can only change for the better, thanks to the new train that links Tibet to mainland China.
- New Drivers Of Economic Growth (Hindu, A.V. VEDPURISWAR , Aug 01, 2006)
Synthesises today's emerging trends to give an overall perspective of how the global economy works .
- Raw Opens Field Office In Lucknow To Monitor Nepal Border (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 01, 2006)
Special stress on functioning of madarsas on the border areas of U.P. and Bihar
- Terrorism Is Inherent In Pok (Daily Excelsior, Samuel Baid, Jul 31, 2006)
A few years ago an angry feminist told a women conference in Lahore that the condition of women in Pakistan would not improve unless the two-nation theory was discarded.
- High Cost Of Treatment Adds To Troubles Of Hiv Positive Persons (Hindu, Divya Ramamurthi, Jul 31, 2006)
A retired clerk had to sell his two-bedroom house to pay for this treatment
Persons living with HIV/AIDS
Loss of income due to absence from work in rural areas — 10.32 per cent
Loss of income due to absence of work in urban areas — 11 per . . .
- Ladakhis Seek Reopening Of Age-Old Trade Routes (Hindu, Luv Puri , Jul 31, 2006)
Renewal of ties will ensure the well-being of the region
- Blow Hot, Cold (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 31, 2006)
With the monsoon clouds looming over us, a hill holiday at this time can turn out to be a misty but somewhat damp experience.
- Light In Cm Yard, Darkness Next Door (Telegraph, DHIRENDRA K. JHA, Jul 31, 2006)
With its two glittering stadiums, airport, an institute of medical sciences and a post-graduate college, Sefai’s success story should have been a beacon of hope for every heartland hamlet.
- Kidney Trade (News International, Editorial, The News International, Jul 31, 2006)
Earlier this week, a demonstration was organised in Hyderabad to protest the alleged kidnapping of two brick kiln workers whose kidneys were removed by some unscrupulous elements some months back.
- Know India Better (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
Know India Better; Published by One India One People Foundation, Mumbai, R.s 2500.
- Music Of The Gods (Hindu, RAMACHANDRA GUHA , Jul 30, 2006)
An anecdotal history of an art form that has perhaps not got its due from historians and writers alike.
- Roman Holiday (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
While in Rome, must we do as the Romans do?
- In A Glass Of Its Own (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
Vinaya Kumar takes a trip through the Kanch Mandir of Indore and tells the story behind this unique work of glass.
- Past Housing Present (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
A slice from history, Berlin’s Bundestag still holds its old world charm even as it reflects the marvels of modern architecture. Abha Sharma reports.
- How Best To Reform The Police (Tribune, Kiran Bedi, Jul 30, 2006)
Addressing a conference of state chief secretaries, the Prime Minister said, “…You will have to empower your police forces to be able to discharge their functions at higher levels of efficiency.
- India Attacked In Mumbai (Hindustan Times, Pankaj Vohra, Jul 30, 2006)
The recent bomb blasts in Mumbai should serve as a lesson for our politicians, who should stop making attempts to derive political advantage from a tragedy aimed at destabilising the country.
- A Flawed Proposal (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
The Bush administration’s draft bill to authorise military tribunals to try accused terrorists, which was leaked in Washington this week, is still evidently a work in progress. It nevertheless illuminates the administration’s thinking about how to . . .
- Feeling For Wildlife (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
Two impressive perspectives on the basis of insights gained as conservationists.
- Talking Aimlessly (Frontline, A.G. NOORANI, Jul 30, 2006)
IT is a damning censure on the emptiness of social life of pomp and show at a ritual dinner party, "where time flies amidst emptiness" and one returns home to "retake possession of our being and our home" and "put ourselves under strict arrest . . .
- Tulum: Paradise By The Sea (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 30, 2006)
The three levels found in the Temple of the Frescoes in Tulum, Mexico, symbolise the three realms of the Mayan universe: underworld of the dead, middle level of the living and finally heaven, where the gods lived in paradise,writes K V Krishnan
- Looking At Oneself (Deccan Herald, Swami Sukhabodhananda, Jul 29, 2006)
It is easy to see others but why is it so difficult to see oneself? Our sense organs are meant to see the outside world. The mind supports the sense organs – in the process it is tuned to be outward-looking.
- A Bollywood Beat Steeped In Culture (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 29, 2006)
Salsa had its time in the sun. And it doesn’t seem so long ago that every other club had a weekly swing dancing night. Even Irish step dancing had its moment, what with “Riverdance’’ and that shirtless Flatley guy and all. Now, if Priya Pandya’s . . .
- The Unfinished Agenda (The Economic Times, PUSHPA SUNDAR, Jul 29, 2006)
Bill Gates’ decision to retire and devote himself entirely to philanthropy, followed by Warren Buffet’s stupendous donation of $38 billion or 85% of his personal wealth to the Gates Foundation, has created an unprecedented interest in . . .
- Aspiration Level (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Daily Excelsior, Jul 29, 2006)
Everyone has an aspiration level. The majority of people struggle. It is a big task for them to earn enough for survival. It is a daily grind for them. Almost all of them want to become rich.
- ‘Vimochana Samaram Ii’ (Statesman, Sam Rajappa, Jul 29, 2006)
History is repeating itself in Kerala. Exactly 47 years ago on 31 July, 1959, the first democratically elected Communist government of EMS Namboodiripad in Kerala, after only two years and four months in office, was dismissed by the Union government . . .
- Why Israel Is On Warpath (Times of India, DAVID DANIELI, Jul 28, 2006)
With the flurry of news updates and analyses, the plain truth behind the crisis in Lebanon is blurred, if not lost. Hezbollah's war of terror against Israel is neither about the occupation of Lebanon nor about Palestinians' right to have their own . . .
- This Land Is Their Land (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 28, 2006)
As someone who has spent several years working with aboriginal Australians, it is with great sadness that I watch the great efforts being undertaken to pass the tribal bill in India.
- Dealing With Art (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 28, 2006)
Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath is in a poor light
- The Publizen’S Life? It’S An Open Blog (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 28, 2006)
The me decade- It’s the age of the publizens who are of all ages and both sexes, and quite young.
- Ethical Values In Business — The Tata Way (Business Line, R. M. Lala, Jul 28, 2006)
In the public mind, business ethics is mainly connected with financial integrity. Tatas are not the only ones to pursue ethical values in business. But their eminent position and tradition stretching well over a 100 years makes them distinctive and . . .
- Facing The Challenge Of Inclusiveness (The Economic Times, MUKUL SHARMA, Jul 28, 2006)
In addition to our relationship to the land, we also need to consider our relationships with other people.
- Tourism Festival To Be Held In Kolli Hills (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 28, 2006)
The district administration will organise `Valvil Ori Vizha' and tourism festival in the Kolli Hills on August 2 and 3.
- How Not To Promote Tourism (News International, Editorial, The News International, Jul 28, 2006)
Simply declaring such and such year as the 'year of tourism' does not bring in thousands of foreign tourists.
- The Biggest Threat (Telegraph, Swapan Dasgupta, Jul 28, 2006)
In the dominant political culture of India, citizens are encouraged to treat terrorism as an unavoidable feature of modern existence and undertake no independent initiatives to counter it.
- After Serial Blast (Daily Excelsior, Editorial, Daily Excelsior, Jul 27, 2006)
After Srinagar-Bombay serial blasts, it is becoming increasingly clear that the terrorist organizations based in Pakistan have played the key role in planning and executing the serial blasts.
- The Perils Of Estrangement (The Economic Times, Pothik Ghosh, Jul 27, 2006)
In this rather prolonged season of cold-blooded terror and irrational bombing of soft targets, the idea of backlash appears to have caught the imagination of middle India.
- Big Achievement Of Karachi Police (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 27, 2006)
In a breakthrough, Anti-Crime Violent Cell of the Karachi Cell has arrested three culprits who engineered the suicide attack on Allama Hasan Turabi. They used 16-year-old Abdul Karim, a Bengali, to carry out the heinous crime.
- Is Up Going Mayawati's Way? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 27, 2006)
National and international issues hardly ever influence elections in Uttar Pradesh and 2007 is unlikely to be any different, says CP Bhambhri.
- Chinese Director Bemoans Commercialism In Arts (Reuters, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 27, 2006)
Gu Anyi has weathered many storms during his career, from doing gruelling farmwork far from home to being recruited to perform revolutionary communist versions of traditional Peking Opera before Chinese soldiers.
- Ensuring Elementary Education For All (Hindu, Krishna Kumar, Jul 27, 2006)
Indian society regards children not as a collective responsibility but as a parental burden. Few realise that the nation loses when children do not attend school.
- Better Late Than Never (Tribune, R. Vatsyayan, Jul 26, 2006)
Procrastination is our national trait and all of us are very much attuned to it. “Don’t bother about time” seems to be the only imperative to be followed in our country and people are totally oblivious of any discipline where binding for a time . . .
- Pakistan Vital For Region’S Trade, Energy: Musharraf (Pakistan Observer, John Thakur Das, Jul 26, 2006)
President Pervez Musharraf noted Tuesday that Pakistan provides vital connectivity to all trade and energy linkages in the region.
- Terrorism Is A Battle Within The Muslim Community (Indian Express, Asif Jalal, Jul 26, 2006)
Till yesterday the debate was why and how Indian Muslims are free from the contagious effect of the so-called jehad sweeping the Islamic world, having no concern, barring some in Kashmir, with the business of Al Qaeda, the ISI and terrorism.
- Talking Aimlessly (Frontline, A.G. NOORANI, Jul 26, 2006)
Stephen Miller's book is a lament on and an elegy for the declining art of conversation.
- Leading Retailers Battle It Out In China (Tribune, Don Lee , Jul 26, 2006)
In this remote region along the old Silk Road, Paris-based retailer Carrefour is on the march. They have already opened two stores here, one in the northern end where many ethnic Chinese live and another next to a mosque in the Muslim section . . .
- Literary Crossover (Hindu, Prema Nandakumar , Jul 25, 2006)
The sacred and the secular form a perfect helix in the best of Indian culture.
- Will Islam Reform? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 25, 2006)
All Muslims are not terrorists but all terrorists are Muslims; it is for the community leaders to identify jihadi elements amidst . . .
- Animation As Career (Frontline, T.S. Subramanian, Jul 25, 2006)
"Animation has evolved as one of the fastest growing and most in-demand industries in the world today, and has become a popular feature in movies and advertising commercials that make heavy use of special effects," says a brochure from Aptech.
- Seeking Growth With Human Face (Business Line, Bhanoji Rao, Jul 25, 2006)
Growth is undoubtedly important, but not at any cost. It has to be fair and just, employment oriented and environmental friendly, not ruthless, rootless, voiceless and futureless.
- Not Exactly Total Recall (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jul 25, 2006)
Jaswant Singh provides a partial account of a key period in Indian diplomacy
- A Rescue And Some Issues (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 25, 2006)
The dramatic rescue in a Haryana village of Prince, a little boy, from a 60-foot-deep pit by a team led by men from the Army's Corps of Engineers is inspiring.
- To Catch A Fly (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jul 24, 2006)
One shouldn’t underestimate the daily challenges facing the modern CEO. Recently, our reporters were being briefed by a CEO on the master plan for a major project that involved studying similar international projects . . .
- Opinion: The Rising (Daily Excelsior, Deepti Priya Mehrotra, Jul 24, 2006)
When Narmada Bachao Andolan's Medha Patkar broke her 21-day hunger strike, a journalist asked her whether "pressure tactics" like indefinite fasts should be used to influence decisions.
- Vitality Is Both Physical & Mental (The Economic Times, K VIJAYARAGHAVAN, Jul 24, 2006)
Bertrand Russel considers four qualities as vital for an ideal character — vitality, courage, sensitiveness and intelligence.
- Lashkar-E-Taiba's Saudi Connection (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 24, 2006)
Saudi Arabia is an important stopover for Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) men on their way to Pakistan for training.
- A Rich Legacy (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 24, 2006)
ONE of the highlights of the tricentenary celebrations of the Danish Halle Mission (Tranquebar Mission) in Chennai in early July was an impressive week-long . . .
- Ziegenbalg's Mission (Frontline, S. Viswanathan, Jul 24, 2006)
The tercentenary of Tranquebar Lutheran Mission is celebrated in Chennai.
- Harassment Of Journalists (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jul 23, 2006)
On the face of it, Pakistan has what President Bush described in the days preceding his March visit to the country a “lively and generally free press”.
- Back To The Glorious Past (Tribune, Humra Quraishi, Jul 23, 2006)
It’s a perfect idea to focus and re-focus on the immediate past. The present anyway seems rather bleak. So it is best to not really forget and bypass what had been happening not too long back.
- Art Connects People And Builds Bridges, Says Muzaffar Ali (Tribune, Charu Singh, Jul 23, 2006)
Muzaffa ali, an ardent Sufi, director and designer, is back in action.
- Portrait Of Artiste As Historian (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 23, 2006)
Sujit Chowdhury remembers renowned portrait photographer Arnold Newman, who captured 20th century’s history through indelible images.
- Terrorists Sneak Into State As Organic Farmers (Deccan Herald, Bala Chauhan, Jul 23, 2006)
According to highly placed sources in the Home Department, members of a frontal organisation with bases in Kerala and Tamil Nadu have acquired land in Chamrajnagar and Mysore districts for organic farming.
- Birth Of A City (Hindu, Mala Kumar, Jul 23, 2006)
A book that urges readers to look at how Bangalore became the `Garden City'.
- Monuments Get A New Protector (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 23, 2006)
India's rich heritage seems to be in safe hands, finally. The ministry of culture will form a National Heritage Commission, the first of its kind, to conserve about 1.5 lakh unprotected monuments in the country.
- Inhuman Sacrifices (Frontline, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Jul 22, 2006)
Islamists have harvested the public outrage against the Srinagar sex scandal.
- Hymn Of Kunti (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jul 22, 2006)
During the incarnations of the Lord, many realised souls have recognised and paid obeisance to Him.
- It Takes Two To Tango (Daily Excelsior, M L Kotru, Jul 22, 2006)
It's time someone reminded Gen Pervez Musharraf, the military ruler of Pakistan, that the bilateral peace process is not a Kashmiri papier mache doll to be gift wrapped and handed over to him by whoever . . .
- Truth & Falsehood (Deccan Herald, Kushwant Singh, Jul 22, 2006)
Everyone praises the truthful and runs down liars. But when it comes to the nitty-gritty, we have to concede that liars get a better deal in life than the truthful.
- Friendly Warnings (Telegraph, RAMACHANDRA GUHA , Jul 22, 2006)
British politicians are widely regarded as the wittiest and best read in the world.
- Pemra’S Resolve To Check Brutalisation (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jul 22, 2006)
According to reports, television channels have been asked to stop showing gruesome pictures of accidents, bomb blasts and other acts of violence.
- Dead & Dying (Business Standard, Editorial, Business Standard, Jul 22, 2006)
Personal biographies become identical with their (men's) medical biographies: Philip Roth.
- Secrets For Sale (Frontline, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Jul 22, 2006)
The second major espionage scandal in two years highlights the growing vulnerablity of India's covert services.
- Train To Lhasa (Frontline, PALLAVI AIYAR, Jul 22, 2006)
The Qinghai-Tibet railway is an engineering marvel and the Chinese government hopes it will bring about an economic renaissance in Tibet.
- The Grand Life In Art Deco (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 21, 2006)
The grand life in art deco The interesting thing about Bindu . . .
- ‘Dare Is Constantly Exploring Emerging Technologies’ (Deccan Herald, Bidanda M Chengappa, Jul 20, 2006)
Mr R P Ramalingam, Director, the Defence Avionics Research Establishment (DARE), Bangalore, speaks to Deccan Herald:
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