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Articles 40621 through 40720 of 53943:
- Advani's Karachi Speech Decoded (Hindu, Suhas Palshikar, Jun 09, 2005)
The RSS has failed to understand the line of legitimation Mr. Advani has opened up; and the Congress, in its enthusiasm to mock him, has chosen to neglect the challenge this speech has thrown up for it.
- Manmohan's Visit Offers A Chance (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jun 09, 2005)
The key is for India to recognise that a speedy solution to Siachen is in its national interest and in the interest of the Army and is essential for the process of normalisation.
- In Search Of An Eastern Suez (Indian Express, N. MANOHARAN , Jun 09, 2005)
The Union cabinet recently cleared the Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project (SSCP) which is perhaps one of the oldest proj-ects that are still at the proposal stage. A.D. Taylor,
- Advani Sets Jinnah Among The Parivar (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 09, 2005)
Opinion on Atal Bihari Vajpayee has always been divided. To some he embodied moderation in a party wedded to bigotry and right-wing extremism;
- Arms And The Man (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 09, 2005)
GLOBAL military spending has once again crossed the one-trillion dollar mark, for the first time since the Cold War ended.
- Baglihar, Neutral Expert And `Differences' (Hindu, Ramaswamy R. Iyer, Jun 09, 2005)
Pakistan's concerns in the Baglihar project are only partly over water-sharing; they are more over security aspects.
- Integrated Goat Farming For Drylands, Wastelands (Hindu, M.J. PRABU , Jun 09, 2005)
Integrating goat farming with cropping systems can supplement income.
- Bjp Pleads, Advani Vacillates (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 09, 2005)
The BJP resolution was silent on the Jinnah issue and RSS. It was clear that none was ready to stick out their neck in support of Advani’s views.
- So Many Jinnahs (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jun 09, 2005)
The furore surrounding L.K. Advani’s recent visit to Pakistan and his homage to its founder at Jinnah’s mausoleum in Karachi has reopened the debate about the Quaid-e-Azam’s vision for the subcontinent
- Long Wait For Justice (Hindu, Meena Menon, Jun 09, 2005)
In August 2004, 22 years after Yashwant Dongarwar and a group of about 200 workers were denied work in 1982 in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra,
- Retail Therapy (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jun 09, 2005)
The move by RBI to allow banks to offer financial assistance to Indian companies for acquisition of companies abroad is welcome.
- It Is A Very Mixed Blessing To Be Brought Back From The Dead (Business Line, D. Murali , Jun 09, 2005)
Don't go to the grave with life unused, advises Bobby Bowden, and professional firms normally don't end their life unsued, which is what happened in the case of Arthur Andersen.
- Eastern Disturbances (Telegraph, Sumanta Sen, Jun 09, 2005)
Both the Centre and the Assam government are turning a blind eye to the collaboration between ULFA and the ISI, writes Sumanta Sen
- Some Questions About Inflation (Business Line, A. Vasudevan, Jun 09, 2005)
There is much talk of inflation but it is not understood fully, especially its measurement. For various reasons the WPI is the preferred choice, though now with services occupying an important role, inflation on this count has been rising, as in the US. I
- Trade Crosses Every Border And Touches Every Wallet In Every Nation (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 09, 2005)
ART is like a border of flowers along the course of civilisation, said Lincoln Steffens, the author of The Shame of the Cities. Artful traders crossed borders long ago, and business now is anything but local.
- Cut For Value (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 09, 2005)
Axes never fall painlessly. A little more than 1,400 students who have cleared their joint entrance tests will now find it difficult or impossible to enter engineering colleges all over West Bengal.
- The Challenge Of Turning A Concept Into Reality (Business Line, Kausik Datta, Jun 09, 2005)
Kaushik Dutta and Kshama V. Kaushik analyse the Irani Committee Report
- Reduce Fdi To Control Trade Deficit (Business Line, Bharat Jhunjhunwala, Jun 09, 2005)
The Finance Minister clearly sees foreign direct investment as a solution to the problem of rising trade deficit, rather than its cause. But, paradoxically, as foreign investment inflows stall the adjustment that should take place through the movement of
- The China-India Race (Telegraph, S. Venkitaramanan , Jun 09, 2005)
Comparisons of India’s economic growth with China’s have become the order of the day. Even the prime minister, Manmohan Singh, recently compared the state of India’s economy,
- Slow Change (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 09, 2005)
Watching the changes within the Communist Party of India (Marxist) is like watching a giant tanker turning on its axis in the high seas.
- Threat Of Climate Change Clear (Tribune, Miguel Bustillo, Jun 09, 2005)
The National Academy of Sciences and 10 similar scientific organizations from some of the world’s most powerful nations released a statement on Tuesday calling for a stronger international response to global warming,
- Bean Counters Vs Business Sense (Business Line, K. Srinivasan , Jun 09, 2005)
K. Srinivasan on the likely tussles between audit committee and management
- Funds For Clean Drinking Water (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 09, 2005)
ISLAMABAD: The government has earmarked an amount of Rs 2 billion under the Public Sector Development Programme 2005-06 for clean drinking water project.
- Ninth Round On Siachen (Tribune, Lt-Gen Vijay Oberoi, Jun 09, 2005)
The ninth round of negotiations between the Defence Secretaries of India and Pakistan ended on May 27, 2005,
- Blood Contamination (Telegraph, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 09, 2005)
THE Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment, which caught the headlines with its startling studies on contamination of soft drinks a few years ago,
- Ways To Contain The Spread (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 09, 2005)
Article 24: Conveyance operators 1. States Parties shall take all practicable measures consistent with these Regulations to ensure that conveyance operators:
- Pipeline Of Prosperity (Telegraph, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 09, 2005)
WITH India and Pakistan finally agreeing to participate in the Iranian gas pipeline project,
- The Charm And Challenge Of Empowerment (Business Line, R. Devarajan, Jun 08, 2005)
TO SUCCEED in the fast-forward and fiercely competitive business environment, corporates need to use the knowledge, skill, ideas, and energy of every employee in the organisation.
- Hooda’S Mantra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 08, 2005)
FOR some time Haryana had been suffering from the flight of industrial units to Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal and elsewhere.
- Plug The Leaks (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 08, 2005)
This is one remedy which has proved to be as bad as the disease.
- Unfriendly Neighbourhood (Telegraph, Sanjib Baruah, Jun 08, 2005)
India’s unilateralism in dealing with illegal immigration shows a misunderstanding about its power and influence, says Sanjib Baruah
- Small-Scale Industry — The Right Time To Make It Big (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Jun 08, 2005)
Over the years, the SSI sector has received a spate of sops, even as several problems have prevented it from achieving its full potential.
- Seal The Entry Points (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 08, 2005)
Extracts from the WHO’s revised international health regulations, adopted at the World Health Assembly, May 16, 2005
Where justified for public health reasons, a State Party may designate ground crossings...taking into consideration:
- Was Jinnah Secular? (Business Line, RUDRANGSHU MUKHERJEE, Jun 08, 2005)
The year was 1923, the month was November. Mohammad Ali Jinnah was a candidate in Bombay for membership to the Legislative Assembly.
- Knowledge Based Farms (Tribune, Dr M.S. Bajwa , Jun 08, 2005)
AGRICULTURE in our country in general and in Punjab in particular is at a crossroads today economically, technologically and ecologically.
- The Energy Route To Peace (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 08, 2005)
The establishment of a joint working group on energy cooperation marks a new high in the development of bilateral relations between India and Pakistan.
- Is It An Advani Gambit? (Deccan Herald, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 08, 2005)
Though the UPA regime seems well entrenched in power at the moment, seasoned players such as the BJP leader, Mr L. K. Advani, know only too well the pitfalls of power and the fragility of coalition governments.
- World Of Puzzles (Deccan Herald, S Subbaraman, Jun 08, 2005)
Solving crosswords not only promotes lateral thinking but also improves one’s vocabulary
- Why Not Stub It Out? (Deccan Herald, S. Muralidharan, Jun 08, 2005)
The Health Ministry's move to ban showing of smoking in films and television has revived the old question:
- Imponderables In The Eu (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 08, 2005)
Whitehall's Decision To put on hold plans to hold a referendum in the UK on the 2004 Treaty of Rome,
- After L.K. Advani's Yatra To Pakistan (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jun 08, 2005)
Mr. Advani has come uncomfortably close to departing, suddenly, without any warning, from the prescribed orthodoxy. Why?
- The Map Policy Redrawn (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 08, 2005)
It is 30 years since the Indian Space Research Organisation introduced in India the use of images taken by cameras on remote sensing satellites.
- Limitations Of A Lokayukta (Deccan Herald, L C JAIN, Jun 08, 2005)
The move to extend the reach of the State Lokayukta officials to the panchayat level, will prove disastrous
- The Myth Of Upward Mobility (Tribune, MICHAEL KINSLEY, Jun 08, 2005)
According to America’s founding documents and its national myth, we are all created equal and then it’s up to us.
- Foundation Laid For Maruti's New Car Plant (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 07, 2005)
To begin production by 2006-end
- Israel, Palestine, And The United States (Hindu, Hamid Ansari, Jun 07, 2005)
Crafty manoeuvring is under way with regard to West Asia. The U.S. is reported to be at the beginning of a process of reappraising the post-9/11 policies of shock and awe, of seeking the road to Jerusalem through Baghdad.
- Britain Shelves Move To Hold Vote On E.U. Statute (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jun 07, 2005)
There is need for further "discussions'' by E.U. leaders: Jack Straw
- World Court Launches Probe Into Darfur Crimes (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 07, 2005)
The Hague : The International Criminal Court on Monday formally announced the start of an investigation into alleged war crimes in Sudan's troubled Darfur region.
- A Setback For Eu (Tribune, S. Nihal Singh, Jun 07, 2005)
THERE is a bend in the road to the European enterprise but we are not looking at a precipice.
- Tuning In The New (Tribune, Ramesh Luthra, Jun 07, 2005)
My daughter Abha is all glued to the FM radio — her eyes closed and ears plugged to it. As if in a trance.
- Zafar Has Followers In Myanmar (Tribune, Manish Chand, Jun 07, 2005)
Bahadur Shah Zafar, India’s last Mughal emperor, is revered now as a saint-poet in Myanmar,
- Fdi In Captive Coal Mining May Be Allowed For Steel, Cement Cos (Business Line, Ambarish Mukherjee, Jun 07, 2005)
The move will also pave the way for international steel manufacturers such as Posco and Arcelor, who have announced plans to set up steel plants in India, to have their own captive coal mines to meet their coal requirements.
- In A High Place (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 07, 2005)
Some actions acquire dimensions that go beyond the event. Especially when it is the prime minister undertaking that action.
- Economists May Have Some Answers... But Not All (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jun 07, 2005)
The papers provide a useful glimpse of what professional economists are thinking about these days on the 10 most serious challenges facing the world today
- Two Makeover Artists (Business Line, Ashok V. Desai, Jun 07, 2005)
Last month I described the transformation of General Musharraf from a no-holds-barred adversary of India to a jigarjaan dost.
- Look Back Without Anger (Telegraph, N.J. Nanporia, Jun 07, 2005)
China and Japan have to be more pragmatic in reading their common history, both past and more recent, argues N.J. Nanporia
- Ksrtc Buses Will Run On Bio Fuel (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 07, 2005)
Bangalore : The State Government will encourage environment-friendly initiatives of the transport undertakings, the Minister for Transport and Water Resources, M. Mallikarjun Kharge, said here on Monday.
- Developing World Relies On Indian Arvs: Lse Update (Business Line, Sudhanshu Ranade , Jun 07, 2005)
PRIOR to January 2005, India was the last country in the world with an advanced pharmaceutical sector that did not offer product patents on drugs.
- New Territory (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 06, 2005)
A man going to visit his birthplace can be a simple enough affair. But Mr L.K. Advani could not have expected that it would be so in his case,
- Kalam Will Go Back To Teaching (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 06, 2005)
The President said his dream of a developed India would be fulfilled only when the 260 million people living below the poverty line are uplifted.
- Music Must Be Felt (Deccan Herald, Jagadha Kumar , Jun 06, 2005)
Conjure up before your eyes the maestros of Indian classical music, and you will not fail to see the great Ustad Bismillah Khan with his shehnai.
- Visitless Year (Deccan Herald, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 06, 2005)
Ranking officials and senior executives, working for government departments or public and private sectors, have a euphemistic technique of avoiding callers who seek an appointment or ring them up in pursuance of a public service.
- Ins Mumbai On A Historic Voyage (Hindu, Ravi Sharma , Jun 06, 2005)
Celebrations off England coast to mark the 200th Anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar
- It All Started In June 1967 (Deccan Herald, MICHAEL JANSEN, Jun 06, 2005)
Israel seems to be doomed to ‘live by the sword’. Its policy will, ineluctably, continue to radicalise West Asia, exacerbate Muslim anti-US sentiments.
- A New Cold War In East Asia? (Deccan Herald, Joshy M Paul, Jun 06, 2005)
Japan is concerned about China’s peaceful rise and seems to be taking an aggressive stance
- This Is Death By A Thousand Blogs (Deccan Herald, NICHOLAS D KRISTOF, Jun 06, 2005)
So where is China going? The Internet is hastening China along the same path that South Korea, Chile and especially Taiwan pioneered.
- Death By The Wings (Telegraph, GWYNNE DYER, Jun 06, 2005)
The long-term solution is to invest billions of dollars and a huge amount of political capital in persuad ing peasant families throughout China and south-east Asia to change the way they raise their poultry.
- Nightwatch (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 06, 2005)
There is always an inexplicable element in human brutality. This is more so when the aggressiveness is collective,
- India Ready To Make Overseas Investments (Hindu, K. V. PRASAD, Jun 06, 2005)
New DelhiI : Stating that India was prepared to make overseas investments, President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam said it was time that its missions marketed the country as an economic power and a knowledge society with a rich cultural heritage.
- Thaksin For New Trade Links With India (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 06, 2005)
Thailand's Prime MinisterThaksin Shinawatrasees scope for his country to be India's strategic partner on issues of common concern. In written answers to questions submitted byP.S. Suryanarayana, Mr. Thaksin emphasised, in particular, the emerging economic
- Advani’S Doublespeak (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 06, 2005)
Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) chief Ashok Singhal is angry with BJP President Lal Krishna Advani. What has upset him is Mr Advani’s statement in Pakistan that December 6, 1992,
- Sri Lankan Fears On Sethusamudram Addressed (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 06, 2005)
Project will have dissipating effect on tsunami, says T.R. Baalu
- Of A Hen (Tribune, Gurmel Singh Sra , Jun 06, 2005)
My father’s family was a large one, including six of his sons and four daughters born from his three wives. Every item, article, eatable and even pets were evenly distributed among the male offspring of my father.
- A Handicapped Prime Minister (Tribune, G.S. Bhargava, Jun 06, 2005)
Lenin dubbed George Bernard Shaw “a good man fallen among Fabians.
- The Politics Of Disinvestment (Deccan Herald, G. Ganesh, Jun 06, 2005)
AS WITH any other policy initiative, disinvestment has also become a victim of politics in this country. How else would you explain the flip-flops in policy initiatives that have been witnessed the last few years?
- Predictable Damage-Control Step (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 06, 2005)
Days before the May 29 referendum on the European Constitution, French President Jacques Chirac ruled out his resignation in the event of a `Non' result, arguing it was not a vote on his track record in office.
- China And Asean: India's Emerging Markets (Deccan Herald, S. Majumder , Jun 06, 2005)
There has been a remarkable shift from west to east. Till last year the US was the sole power driving India's global trade.
- If Pigs Had Wings, So Would Elephants! (Deccan Herald, JAYALAKSHMI K, Jun 06, 2005)
After the pygmy man, it is now the pygmy elephant. And this one is alive, no fossil.
- Us Ponders Next Move On N Korea (Deccan Herald, Reuters, Jun 06, 2005)
The US is considering to take the issue to the United Nations because it did not see any effort from North Korea to cooperate, an official said.
- Germany's Battle For A Cleaner Environment (Deccan Herald, Mohan Murti, Jun 06, 2005)
AS I write, thousands of Germans are rinsing out their yoghurt pots before tossing them into their colour-coded waste-bins.
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