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Articles 16921 through 17020 of 22438:
- Acquittal Of Geelani, Afsan Challenged (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
Delhi Police seek review of judgment
- Kalam's `10 Commandments' For Teachers (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
Ever a teacher, President A P J Abdul Kalam today administered a ten-point oath on Teachers' Day asking teachers pledge that they would love teaching and ensure children blossom into creative enlightened citizens.
- A Unique Opportunity To Find More About Animals, Birds (Hindu, G. Krishnakumar, Sep 06, 2005)
Animal lovers in schools and colleges in Ernakulam have some good news. The Ministry of Environment and Forests has come up a unique plan on animal care.
- State Stands Second In Milk Production (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
Minister says Karnataka exporting milk powder to Singapore
Drinking water scheme, veterinary hospital and school building inaugurated
Services of 192 doctors appointed on contract confirmed
Animal diseases diagnostic labs to be set up in taluks
- Pakistan Polls Manipulated (Deccan Herald, M B NAQVI, Sep 06, 2005)
It might be possible to predict the broad results of the 2007 general election in Pakistan: many friends of Gen Musharraf will win
- Court's Remarks Against Geelani Unfair, Say Teachers (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
"The comments amount to passing a civil death sentence and must be expunged"
- Just Reprimand (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
The Election Commission has rightly reprimanded the Bhupinder Singh Hooda Government in Haryana ....
- Contemporary Governance (Tribune, Gurcharan Das, Sep 06, 2005)
We have got used to the dubious honour conferred by Transparency International (TI) of being one of the world’s most corrupt nations
- Take A Leaf Out Of Convent School Edn: Muniyappa (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
On the occasion of Teachers’ Day, teachers were given a piece of advice by Minister of State for Highways and Land Transport K H Muniyappa.
- Indian Companies Were Investing In A Big Way Into Australia (India Daily, Harish Baliga, Sep 06, 2005)
The rules for foreign direct investment (FDI) into Australia will be made "clearer and easier to deal with" to assist...
- There's A Much Larger House On Fire (Hindu, P. SAINATH, Sep 06, 2005)
About the time 50 Dalit houses were set ablaze in Gohana, the country marked 50 years of a law giving effect to the Constitution's abolition of untouchability. As if to rub it in, 25 more Dalit homes were torched the same week in Akola, Maharashtra.
- India: A Super Power Or A Failing State? (Greater Kashmir, Editorial, Greater Kashmir, Sep 06, 2005)
The term “failed state” entered our lexicon, initially, in the context of Somalia, Afghanistan, and now, increasingly, for Iraq.
- Smile, And Pass It On (Tribune, Usha Bande, Sep 06, 2005)
IT takes 64 muscles to frown and only 13 to smile. So, why overwork yourself by frowning. So said a report by some US psychiatrists; and that set me on my nerve-racking mission of spotting smiling faces among the sea of humanity. I had not noticed till th
- Our Character Reflected In Our Pets (Hindu, Justine Hankins , Sep 06, 2005)
Our love of our furry companions is often cited as evidence of depth of character.
- Ragging Still (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 06, 2005)
Government must find foolproof remedies
- For A Child-Inspired Education System (Hindu, Yash Pal, Sep 06, 2005)
Children's questions do not respect the insularity of disciplines normally taught in our schools and colleges. Creativity often resides at the boundaries of disciplines.
- Functioning Of Democracy (Hindu, Harish Khare , Sep 06, 2005)
Alam explores the working of democracy in India and his judgments flow from a post-1996 Lok Sabha election survey conducted by the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies
- Women's Panel Dissatisfied With Facilities In State's Family Courts (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 06, 2005)
The National Commission for Women has expressed dissatisfaction over the facilities provided at family courts in the State and said many of them are short of presiding officers and staff.
- Why Milk Adulteration? (Tribune, Gurbhagwant Singh Kahlon, Sep 06, 2005)
The adulteration of milk in India has been going on for years, presumably in connivance with officials and politicians.
- The Ncf Can Open Classroom Windows (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 06, 2005)
It is a curious truth that the subject of school education in India has been both highly political and totally apolitical.
- Essence Of What Genius Is (Deccan Herald, L SUBRAMANI, Sep 06, 2005)
Are we any closer to discovering what genius actually is? Is it inborn or accomplished through sweat, blood and tears? Does our publicity-crazy generation need an ad campaign even to recognise the faces of great people? Or does our culture shape our . . .
- Voters Reverse Islamists' Rise In Pakistani Politics (Christian Science Monitor, Ashraf Khan, Sep 06, 2005)
Voters in Pakistan have dealt a surprising blow to religious extremists, bucking the rise in recent years of radical Islam in politics here.
- Kalam’S Ten-Point Oath For Teachers (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 06, 2005)
The President interacted with teachers at a function on the occasion of teachers’ day when he presented the National Award to Teachers for 2004.
- Kargil: The Forgotten Land -I (Greater Kashmir, Editorial, Greater Kashmir, Sep 06, 2005)
Musavir Ahmed writes at length on history, culture and the lifestyle of Kargilites
- For A Generation That Reads (Deccan Herald, Rohini Nilekani, Sep 06, 2005)
If we want all our children to be literate in the next few years, we need to engage their minds by drowning them in good books
- University Of Madras Evolves Healthy Practices Charter (Hindu, VANI DORAISAMY, Sep 05, 2005)
The University of Madras has formulated a charter of healthy practices for its administrators, teachers and students to improve the delivery of education and ensure that the university remains internationally competitive,
- Election Commission Pulls Up Madhya Pradesh (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 05, 2005)
"Remove lotus symbol from social science textbooks for class VI students"
- Rank Anomalies (Telegraph, Bibek Debroy, Sep 05, 2005)
The author is director, Rajiv Gandhi Institute for Contemporary Studies, New Delhi
- Towards A World Free Of Child Labour (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 05, 2005)
A Pakistani boy who worked as a camel jockey, an Ethiopian girl exposed to sexual exploitation, a Banjara boy rescued from a stone-crushing unit in Rajasthan and others will share their experiences at the Children's World Congress on Child Labour that ...
- A Teacher Par Excellence (Daily Excelsior, Ashok K Lalpuri, Sep 05, 2005)
September 5, is celebrated as the birthday of Dr S Radhakrishnan the second President of India as well as the The Teacher's Day all over the country.
- Dialogue In Search Of Common Ground (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Sep 05, 2005)
Zero tolerance towards human rights violations and terrorist violence is the most important CBM that the Government and the Hurriyat must agree upon.
- National Curriculum Framework & The Social Sciences (Hindu, Romila Thapar, Sep 05, 2005)
Textbooks should certainly be child-friendly but it is equally necessary that the schoolteacher should be made child-friendly. Teachers need a more intensive exposure to social science concepts, changes in data and methods in history, and critical enquiry
- Love Laws (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 05, 2005)
West Bengal prides itself on not being Gujarat.
- Obesity Epidemic Threatens Britain (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 05, 2005)
The number of Britons resorting to drastic weight-loss surgery will double in the next 12 months, say medical researchers, in a further sign of the growing obesity epidemic.
- Of Signatures And Security (Daily Excelsior, Rajkumar Vijayveer Vikram Singh, Sep 05, 2005)
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) will come up for review by the end of this month. Since its inception in 1965, superpowers have converted ploughshares into spanners in their desperation to build up to that mythical level which would guarantee..
- A Nursery Teacher (Daily Excelsior, Udhay Singh Pathania, Sep 05, 2005)
The day of a Nursery class teacher begins with the morning assembly of the students she teaches the students, how to stand properly in a row, how to sit property on chairs, how to walk properly and how to eat properly and proper time.
- Dogged By Terror (Statesman, BULA BOSE, Sep 05, 2005)
Moving around in today’s world is no longer easy. Not at least if July 2005 was a representative sample.
- Afghan Refugees’ Travails (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Sep 05, 2005)
Pakistan may have acceded to Kabul’s request for delaying the closure of Afghan refugee camps in the tribal areas because of the hassles involved in repatriating 100,000 Afghans by the unrealistic deadline of August 31,
- An Unjust Stranglehold (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 05, 2005)
When the Chief Justice of India, R.C. Lahoti, rem-onstrated with Parliament last month for its ‘‘unwarranted criticism’’ of the recent Supreme Court order ending caste-based quotas in privately run professional institutes,
- Now And Again : Summer Of ’52 (Statesman, MAITREYI CHATTERJEE, Sep 05, 2005)
My schooldays in the early fifties had one important day. November 14 was a holiday just for schools because it was Chacha Nehru’s birthday.
- Rebels Mock At Delhi Mine-Buster (Telegraph, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 05, 2005)
Naxalites struck in spectacular fashion yesterday, killing 23 policemen and a civilian in an explosion that tossed their anti-landmine vehicle 20 feet in the air and split it into two.
- Animal Form (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 05, 2005)
Man is described as a social animal. Yet, the emphasis is less on the “social” and more on the “animal” when you tell a guy that he is making a monkey or ass of himself.
- Reservation In Colleges (Tribune, K.N. Bhat, Sep 05, 2005)
The late Dr T.M.A. Pai would not have anticipated his name filling the pages of law reports for no fault of his. He was a visionary who freed technical education from the clutches of governments in the mid-1950s and turned Manipal, once a desolate village
- Learn To Live With Exam Phobia (Telegraph, Ardhendu Chatterjee, Sep 05, 2005)
Recent reports in the media about the suicides of schoolchildren who have “failed”,
- Teachers’ Day In Our Times (Tribune, R. Vatsyayan, Sep 05, 2005)
For most of the people of my fifty-plus generation Teachers’ Day brings nostalgic memories of our school days.
- Spare The Rod, But Don’T Spoil The Child (Tribune, Amar Chandel, Sep 05, 2005)
One piece of conventional school wisdom which has been squarely rejected in the recent years is the adage, “Spare the rod and spoil the child”. It has been replaced with a “hands-off” policy.
- Universities Under Siege (Tribune, Sucha Singh Gill, Sep 05, 2005)
Having reasonably played a good and successful role the Indian university system as a whole is under siege.
- Regs: How To Make It Really Work (Business Line, P. V. Indiresan , Sep 05, 2005)
The Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, though laudable, is an idea that is beset with problems
- Globalisation And Persistent Inequality (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Sep 05, 2005)
The agenda for globalisation is "dominated by the issues of free trade, intellectual property rights, financial and capital account liberalisation, and investment protection".
- Expand The Dialogue On Kashmir (Telegraph, Bharat Bhushan, Sep 05, 2005)
Up to a few weeks ago, the government had no plans to meet the All Party Hurriyat Conference.
- Guidance Gone Askew (Deccan Herald, V C Bhaskaran , Sep 05, 2005)
Unlike at present, teaching was truly a noble profession in those days, as teachers led by example
- India’S Mini-Multinationals Make Waves In Western Markets (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 05, 2005)
Large Indian business houses which are small compared to their international peers, are buying up businesses in developed economies.
- Politicians And The Police (Dawn, Anwar Syed, Sep 04, 2005)
If any politicians were ever to ask me how he should practise his craft (which none has done to date), I would say: “be good, but if you cannot be good, be careful.”
- Reforming Madressahs (Dawn, Mansoor Alam, Sep 04, 2005)
Why are the ulema opposed to the registration of madaris (seminaries) when they claim that these are not the breeding ground of extremism and hatred?
- Of Unique Traditions And Divine Rings (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2005)
Payyanur, home to the temple of Parasurama, has something for everyone, from pilgrims to wannabe astrologers, says U S Iyer.
- Somewhere In Time (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2005)
India’s most poignant novelist’s last book was also his magnum opus. Strangely the book has remained largely unacknowledged till now.
- Scientific Research: Making Universities Accountable (Tribune, Rupamanjari Ghosh, Sep 04, 2005)
Infrastructure plays a vital important role in raising the quality of teaching and research in the universities.
- Breaking Barriers In Panchayats (Tribune, Dharam Pal More, Sep 04, 2005)
Ever since Parliament passed the Constitution 73rd (Amendment) Act and empowered over a million women,
- We Don’T Have A Minority Status, Says Jamia Vc (Tribune, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 04, 2005)
Leading historian, academician and educationist, Professor Mushirul Hassan, the Vice-Chancellor of Jamia Milli Islamia is committed to changing the face of the university.
- Understanding The Past (Daily Excelsior, Arun Nehru, Sep 04, 2005)
As a student of History and having studied at La Martiniere School in Lucknow and spending a great deal of time studying and being surrounded by the 'relics' of 1857
- Mci Approval Sought For Government Medical College In Pondicherry (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2005)
College expected to start functioning from next academic year'
- Role Of All Agencies Involved In Tsunami Rehabilitation, Relief Sparks Robust Debate (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2005)
Participants thrash out peculiar issues that cropped up after December 26, 2004
- A Clean Sweep For Congress At Delhi University (Hindu, Lakshmi B. Ghosh , Sep 04, 2005)
Defying all talk of an anti-incumbency factor playing a major role in the battle of the ballot on the campus,
- Speed Up Growth: Manmohan Singh (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2005)
Prime Minister unveils statues of Gandhiji, Ambedkar, Nehru at Assembly complex
- Time To Take Tamil Nadu Forward: Prime Minister (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 04, 2005)
Manmohan releases Vaiko's book, praises his breadth of scholarship
"Prison a stepping stone, not a boulder"
Strong bonds with Vaiko: Karunanidhi
No trace of self-pity in book: Ram
- When Rules Break Down (Hindu, RAJI NARASIMHAN, Sep 04, 2005)
The questions that Disorderly Women asks are older than the story.
- Signposts In An Artistic Journey (Hindu, KALA KRISHNAN RAMESH , Sep 04, 2005)
Sinha's writing maintains a sensitive balance of technical and human-interest angles...
- Demystifying General Dyer (Hindu, Aditi De, Sep 04, 2005)
He does not think he would have enjoyed Dyer's company if he had met him in the officer's mess. Nigel Collett talks about the controversial General and his recently-published book.
- How He Lost It (Hindu, BERNARD POTTER, Sep 04, 2005)
We have little personal evidence about Dyer... Collett compensates with well-researched reconstructions of the milieux.
- Growing Up Pains (Hindu, NIMI KURIAN, Sep 04, 2005)
A light and entertaining read, the story will stay with you a long, long time.
- Savita's Choice (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Sep 04, 2005)
Hundreds of child marriages are held across Rajasthan with no one stopping them. The reality sinks in when the children attain puberty by which time they are told they have no choice. But they do.
- Approval For Broadband Wireless Research Centre In Chennai (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2005)
Alcatel, C-DoT to work together to develop technology suitable for rural areas.
- A New Theory On Mad Cow Disease (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2005)
British team of scientists suggests origins in the Indian subcontinent
- Hurricane: A Toxic Brew Of Sewage And Oil (Hindu, John Vidal, Sep 03, 2005)
We know there has been lots of damage to oil installations and that the sewage system is extensively damaged.
- Plan To Convert Waste Into Petrol (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 03, 2005)
With Pondicherry generating a high volume of plastic waste, the government owned Pondicherry Agro Services and Industries Corporation (PASIC) has hit upon a plan to generate petrol from the waste.
- A Rather Cold D-Day At Delhi University (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2005)
The much-talked about elections for the Delhi University Students' Union (DUSU) turned out to be a rather lacklustre affair on Friday with colour and enthusiasm clearly missing among students and the turnout of voters being put at a moderate 40-45 per cen
- Japan For Investment In It (Hindu, Staff Reporter , Sep 03, 2005)
India is an emerging global power and investors from Japan are eager to invest in Information Technology and manufacturing sectors in the country," according to Consular General of Japan Yoshiaki Kodaki.
- Lic's Udupi Division Tops In "Bima School" (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 03, 2005)
Senior Divisional Manager of Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) Ltd. Jyoti Kumar Sen on Thursday said that the Udupi Division has sold 80,000 policies netting a premium of Rs. 40 crores as on August 15, 2005.
- Australian Companies Keen On Investing In India, Says High Commissioner (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2005)
Bilateral cooperation in tourism, education and services sector possible, he says
- Lic Udupi Division Sells 80,000 Policies This Fiscal (Hindu, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 03, 2005)
Udupi division of the Life Insurance Corporation of India has topped the South Central Zone consisting of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh in first premium income.
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