|
|
|
|
|
|
Articles 21 through 120 of 500:
- A Bridge To The Past (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 30, 2007)
There is more than that meets the eye with regard to the Dasara festivities held with traditional éclat in Mysore City.
- Korea Calling (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
When a work assignment led me to Korea, I was quick to do my research.
- ‘In The Tulsidas Ramayan, Sita Is Not Ram’S Wife But His Sister. Only In The Valmiki Ramayan Is She His Wife’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 29, 2007)
Do you think that, over the last 10-15 years, coalition politics has been the antidote to the poison of separatism?
- ‘Israel Planned To Hit Kahuta From India’S Jamnagar Base’ (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
India and Israel secretly planned to hit nuclear facility in Kahuta near Islamabad in 1983-84 but backed off when the CIA tipped off Pakistan’s then president Gen Ziaul Haq.
- ‘India, Israel Planned To Hit Kahuta In 1980s’ (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
India and Israel had secretly planned to hit Pakistan’s nuclear facility in Kahuta in 1983-84, but backed off when the CIA tipped off then president General Ziaul Haq.
- Mirroring A Democracy (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 29, 2007)
Give me the liberty to know, to utter and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties.”
- Despair And Despondence (Pioneer, JS Rajput, Oct 27, 2007)
The Prime Minister is sad, and competitive politics and fractured mandate have been formally identified as the culprits.
- The Gumption Of Gambit (The Economic Times, C P Bhambhri, Oct 27, 2007)
The current political situation in India has made every political party think about the timings of forthcoming elections.
- Nayachar Benefits All Cock-And-Bull: Rsp (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 27, 2007)
Left Front partner RSP has found holes in the state government's arguments in favour of setting up a chemical hub for rapid industrialisation in the state.
- Kashmir Integral To The India Story (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 26, 2007)
Today the relationship between India and the state of Jammu and Kashmir completes sixty years. It was on this day, October 26, 1947, that the ruler of the state, Maharaja Hari Singh, signed the Instrument of Accession with the government of . . . .
- Pawns In Pakistan (Pioneer, CP Bhambhri, Oct 26, 2007)
Benazir Bhutto's return was stage-managed by the US. Nawaz Sharif didn't succeed as he lacked American backing
- General (Retd.) S.F. Rodrigues (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
GENERAL (retd.) S.F. Rodrigues took over as Administrator for the Union Territory of Chandigarh and Governor of Punjab in November 2004. In this interview, he speaks of his vision for the development of the city. Excerpts:
- Sarabhai's Vision (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 25, 2007)
Governments lay down policies, but their implementation depends a lot on the personality and outlook of officials who, in turn, influence policymaking.
- In The Corridors Of Power (Tribune, B.K. Karkra, Oct 24, 2007)
There used to be a post of establishment officer in the C.R.P.F. in the rank of a Commandant who dealt with the appointment, leave, confidential reports, postings and promotions of the officers.
- Pakistan And Its Prisoners Of Destiny (Hindu, Ramesh Thakur, Oct 24, 2007)
Benazir Bhutto knows how to press the right buttons when speaking to Western audiences through the mass media.
- Sonia’S Kow-Tow (Indian Express, C Raja Mohan, Oct 24, 2007)
That Congress president Sonia Gandhi is heading to China later this week is good news.
- False Eloquence Does Pm In (Pioneer, Swapan Dasgupta, Oct 22, 2007)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has offered himself for direct election only once: In 1999, when he was the Congress candidate for South Delhi.
- Forget The Nuclear Deal! (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 18, 2007)
If the Congress-led UPA coalition decided that now was not the time to risk going for general elections, it need not have been the Indo-US nuclear deal but the rising price of onions which could have had a crucial say in the matter! It was . . .. .
- From Killing Fields To Smiling Fields (Hindu, M.S. Swaminathan, Oct 17, 2007)
The focus in dealing with the agrarian crisis should shift from suicide relief to suicide prevention.
- Upa Has Touched Its Lowest Depth, Says Advani (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
The BJP on Tuesday fired yet another salvo at the UPA Government on the India-US nuclear deal, saying the difficulties faced by it in operationalising the agreement reflected the very nature of the "opportunistic alliance".
- Suppressed Turns Oppressor (Pioneer, JS Rajput, Oct 17, 2007)
A shocked group of young cricket fans watches Bangladesh defeat India in the 2007 World Cup in South Africa.
- Nuclear Power Will Hurt India’S Development (Asian Age, V.R. Krishna Iyer, Oct 17, 2007)
The independence that India gained sixty years ago had a mission beyond liberation from the British.
- Bjp Fires Another Salvo At Upa Govt (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
The Bharatiya Janata Party today lashed out at the UPA government on the Indo-US nuclear deal, saying the difficulties faced by it in operationalising the agreement reflected the very nature of the opportunistic alliance.
- Fear Of Polls Made Congress Pause (Asian Age, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 17, 2007)
I wish the party were over. The participants would have at least gone home. But both the Congress and the Left have lingered to revive what may not be possible.
- Prayer For Congress (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Oct 17, 2007)
In a cautionary tale, a Muslim, a Christian and a Hindu are crossing a river in a ferry.
- Mawayati Draws Spotlight In Us (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 16, 2007)
Uttar Pradesh's firebrand Chief Minister Mayawati has been profiled by the US magazine Newsweek among eight women leaders worldwide who have reached the top despite all odds, with the dalit leader narrating her struggle to rally the oppressed community.
- Upa Shrewd On Suu Kyi (Pioneer, Sandhya Jain, Oct 16, 2007)
After hectic advocacy by Christian Solidarity Worldwide and Burma Campaign, UK, British MPs John Bercow and Baroness Caroline Cox met a Chin group on the India-Myanmar border last month, while Prime Minister Gordon Brown urged an emergenc. . .
- 'Maya Among Top 8 Women Leaders' (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 16, 2007)
Uttar Pradesh's firebrand Chief Minister Mayawati has been profiled by the US magazine Newsweek among eight women leaders worldwide who have reached the top despite all odds, with the dalit leader narrating her struggle to rally the oppressed community.
- Fear Of Polls Made Congress Pause (Asian Age, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 15, 2007)
I wish the party were over. The participants would have at least gone home. But both the Congress and the Left have lingered to revive what may not be possible. The Indo-US nuclear deal is not available in parts.
- Pm Condoles Justice Sarkaria’S Death (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 15, 2007)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has condoled the death of former Supreme Court judge Justice R.S. Sarkaria, who passed away in Chandigarh on Friday night, commending his “vital role” in the evolution of the Indian republic and the Constitution.
- Against The Grain (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 13, 2007)
Economic development has resulted in loss of agricultural land to residential and industrial projects. It is clear that government will have to resort to large-scale import of wheat — which could snowball into a problem that could threaten . . . .
- Sc Steps In Way Of Nro (Daily Times, Irfan Ghauri, Oct 13, 2007)
The Supreme Court (SC) on Friday declined to stay the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) 2007, but held that any benefit drawn by any public office-holder under the ordinance would be subject to the final decision of the court.
- Stand By The Leader (Telegraph, Malvika Singh, Oct 12, 2007)
When the Congress shows its inherent weakness and intellectual confusion by backtracking on the first confident assertion made by its president in recent months, it leaves one amazed.
- Probe Finds Jet’S Crew Broke Rules (Asian Age, Sonal Kellogg, Oct 12, 2007)
The directorate-general of civil aviation, in its investigation of the near-collision at New Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport on Sunday, said it "revealed deficiencies in the knowledge of the Jet Airways flight crew with regard to departure p
- The Fate Of Special Component Plan (Frontline, S. Viswanathan, Oct 12, 2007)
The failure of governments at the Centre and in the States to genuinely implement the Special Component Plan has cost Dalits dear.
- Path To Partion: (Frontline, A.G. NOORANI, Oct 12, 2007)
IN the entire corpus of American writings on India, this book stands out in all its uniqueness.
- An Avoidable Crisis (Pioneer, Ajoy Bose, Oct 11, 2007)
Had Sonia Gandhi been more firm with Manmohan Singh immediately after his interview to The Telegraph, daring the Left to bring down the Government on the nuclear deal, the current Congress-Left standoff could have been avoided
- Gone With The Wind (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Oct 11, 2007)
VP Singh once quipped that the one thing he could never adjust to was being described as a former PM. Not everybody is as philosophical about lost power. Anywhere in India you can see bungalows with nameplates saying ‘IAS retired’.
- Planes Nearly Collide At Igi (Asian Age, Sonal Kellogg, Oct 11, 2007)
Passengers on an Air India domestic flight from Chennai to New Delhi had a narrow escape on Sunday night when their pilot managed to avoid a collision with a Jet Airways aircraft.
- Unforgettable Courtesy (Tribune, Bhup Singh, Oct 10, 2007)
I had the good fortune of interacting with the most powerful men and women on earth (Heads of States; Heads of Governments, including of both erstwhile super powers; kings and queens; military dictators, and the religious heads like Agha Khan) . . ..
- Who Decides On Bio-Security? (Business Line, Kanchi Kohli , Oct 10, 2007)
When India enacted the Biological Diversity Act in 2002, it made it mandatory for all foreign entities (individual, corporate, organisation or individual) to seek the permission of the National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) before . . . .
- It’S Now Or Never (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 10, 2007)
October 5 has come and gone. D-day is now October 9. So the war of nerves drags on. In principle the government remains committed to carrying the Indo-US nuclear deal through. In practice it has been giving ground, inch by surreptitious inch, to the Left.
- History In The Making (Hindu, Jayati Ghosh, Oct 09, 2007)
Ashok Mitra is one of the more remarkable personalities of independent India, who has been involved and even deeply enmeshed in some of the most significant events and socio-economic processes of the sub-continent over the past six decades.
- Incredible Lives (Pioneer, Utpal Kumar, Oct 08, 2007)
The two had as much similarity as they were different. Both came from that part of Punjab which later merged with Pakistan, and both bore the brunt of Partition.
- Sonia Hits Out At N-Deal Critics (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
A day after she spoke of Congress's readiness to face mid-term polls, Sonia Gandhi on Sunday further pushed the party into election mode by lashing out at the critics of the India-US nuclear deal as "enemies of development" and urging people. . . . .
- Let's Get This Straight (Times of India, K SUBRAHMANYAM, Oct 08, 2007)
A lot of discussion takes place on the need to pursue an independent foreign policy.
- Sonia Targets Left: Deal Critics Are Enemies Of Cong, Progress (Indian Express, NEHA SINHA, Oct 08, 2007)
Launching a sharp but veiled attack on the Left, Congress president Sonia Gandhi today strongly defended the Indo-US nuclear deal and said that “elements” opposed to the country’s progress were “enemies” not only of the Congress but . . . .
- Tokenism: Politicisation Of The Ramzan Iftar (Deccan Herald, Firoz Bakht Ahmed, Oct 08, 2007)
Most political parties conduct Iftar 'religiously' to impress Muslims that they are the ones who really care for them.
- N-Deal Critics Foes Of Development: Sonia (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
A day after she spoke of Congress's readiness to face mid-term polls, Sonia Gandhi on Sunday further pushed the party into election mode by lashing out at the critics of the India-US nuclear deal as "enemies of development" and urging . . . . .
- Sonia Provokes Left Again (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
A day after claiming that the party was ready for mid-term polls, Congress president Sonia Gandhi launched a blistering attack on the opponents of the nuclear deal and went to the extent of dubbing them as enemies of peace and development.
- Cong Forcing Elections: Cpi (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
The UPA-Left relations soured today, with the Communists taking umbrage to UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi’s statement on the nuclear deal, saying if a mid-term poll was thrust on the country, then the Congress alone will be responsible for it.
- Sonia Raps Nuke Deal Opponents (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
In what appeared to be the first open attack on the Left over its opposition to the Indo-US nuclear deal ~ a move that may precipitate a political crisis at the Centre ~ Mrs Sonia Gandhi today without naming the Left sought to brand . . . . ..
- Govt. Gears Up For ‘Bijli’ Rally (Hindu, Rajesh Ahuja, Oct 06, 2007)
Hectic preparations are underway for the visit of Congress president Sonia Gandhi to Haryana this Sunday.
- Family First, Nation Later (Pioneer, Balbir K Punj, Oct 05, 2007)
More by coincidence than design, the Congress, by making Mr Rahul Gandhi the general secretary of the party, has tried to capitalise on the increasingly recognised global success of India's youth power. But no one with a sense of history has . . . .
- Vietnam To Iraq, The Same Old Story (Asian Age, Inder Malhotra, Oct 05, 2007)
In March 1966 when I first arrived here, to cover Indira Gandhi’s first official visit to the United States as Prime Minister, the main issue in the United States was Vietnam.
- Cbi's Move To Close Case Against Tytler Challenged (OutLook, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 05, 2007)
Two Sikh organizations today moved a court challenging CBI's decision to close its case against former Union Minister Jagdish Tytler in a 1984 anti-Sikh riots case for want of evidence.
- Ex-Mp Anand Mohan Gets Death (New Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 04, 2007)
A former MP and JD-U leader Anand Mohan was sentenced to death by a local court which also awarded life imprisonment to his wife, also an ex-MP, on Wednesday in a murder case where the then Gopalganj District Magistrate was lynched by a mob 13 years back.
- It Is Important To Listen To All Viewpoints: Sonia (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 03, 2007)
Left concerns over India-U.S. nuclear deal “no cause for alarm”
India confronting terrorism scourge
for a long time
Huge allocation made for agriculture
- Pre-Poll Bonanza (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 03, 2007)
PROMPTED by the standoff with the Left on the US nuclear deal, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance seems to have started preparing itself for a mid-term poll. Indications are many.
- Fundamental Judgments (Telegraph, ASHOK MITRA , Oct 01, 2007)
No, the Allahabad high court judge did not make the statement he made, in casual fashion, at a seminar or a university debate.
- Towards Darkness (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 01, 2007)
Thee following is an excerpt from the book, Values Devalued: Indira to Rao, by BP Saha, printed here with the permission of the writer.
- Donning The Gandhi Cap (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Oct 01, 2007)
The much awaited induction of Rahul Gandhi as general secretary of the Congress has paved the way for a complete change of power equations within the party.
- Salute To The Coffee House (Telegraph, RAMACHANDRA GUHA , Sep 29, 2007)
Surfing the internet, I came across an essay by a Swedish writer on the social significance of my favourite stimulant.
- National Security (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 29, 2007)
The nuclear deal, which India has concluded with the USA, is as historic as the Indo-Soviet Friendship Treaty which Indira Gandhi had concluded with the Soviet Union in 1971.
- Special Article (Statesman, MADAN BHATIA, Sep 29, 2007)
The nuclear deal, which India has concluded with the USA, is as historic as the Indo-Soviet Friendship Treaty which Indira Gandhi had concluded with the Soviet Union in 1971.
- Exercising Sovereignty (Tribune, K. Subrahmanyam, Sep 28, 2007)
The debate on the nuclear deal in the country throws light on how poorly certain sections of the Indian elite have developed a sense of national sovereignty during the last 60 years of Independence.
- Let's Move On (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Sep 28, 2007)
What a strange country India has become. Even after 60 years of independence, it still lacks self-confidence to feel comfortable in its own skin. It is happy about the welcome 'incredible India' receives in the Big Apple.
- Out With The Tyranny Of Secrecy (Business Line, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 28, 2007)
The news that the CBI has initiated proceedings against Maj Gen V.K.Singh, the author of the book India's External Intelligence: Secrets of RAW, and its publishers, Manas Publications of Delhi, would have come as a rude shock to those who are. . .
- Tough Times Ahead (Pioneer, Kalyani Shankar, Sep 28, 2007)
Rahul Gandhi will face a daunting task as Congress general secretary and his mettle will be tested in the coming months
- The Road Home From Khalistan (Hindu, PRAVEEN SWAMI, Sep 27, 2007)
Fifteen years after the end of the war for Khalistan, terror commanders are rebuilding their lives.
- Son And Substance (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 27, 2007)
CONGRESS President Sonia Gandhi has summoned up courage in appointing son Rahul Gandhi as General Secretary of the Congress in charge of the youth and student wings of the party.
- Nuke Wrangle Threatens Indian Government (Asia Times, Praful Bidwai, Sep 26, 2007)
As India's coalition government tries to complete the controversial nuclear cooperation deal with the United States, it finds itself caught between domestic opposition to the agreement from its left-wing allies and pressure from Washington to . . . .
- Kharge: Congress Responsible For Development Of State (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
President of Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee M. Mallikarjun Kharge and the former Chief Minister and leader of the Opposition in Legislative Assembly, N. Dharam Singh, on Tuesday accused the Bharatiya Janata Party and Janata Dal . . . .
- For National Interest's Sake (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
For all of the last month or so, people have been stopping journalists in the streets and asking the same questions: will there be an election? And when exactly will this mid-term poll be called?
- Rahul Begins Takeover (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
As Congress president Sonia Gandhi confidently walked across from her 10 Janpath residence to Congress headquarters with her 37-year-old son Rahul on Tuesday evening, the party seemed to have completely resolved the question of future . . . . .
- Ramlila At Red Fort (Pioneer, Jagmohan , Sep 26, 2007)
After cleaning up the environs and banning public functions near this ancient monument, it was restored to its past glory.
- Rahul Appointed Congress Gen Secy (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
The heir-apparent of Nehru-Gandhi dynasty finally made his formal entry into the Congress party.
- 3 Held For Rape Of Japanese Tourists (Tribune, Shahira Naim, Sep 25, 2007)
Acting promptly on the FIR filed by two Japanese women at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, the Agra police today arrested three alleged rapists. This information was given by principal secretary (Home) J.N Chamber today.
- Rahul Takes The Family Route, But Faces A Himalayan Task (The Economic Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
In His induction as AICC general secretary in charge of the Youth Congress and the National Students Union of India, Rahul Gandhi has taken the familiar family route — as captains of the Congress frontal organisations — that most of the . . . .
- Saffron Takes On Khaki (Pioneer, B Raman, Sep 25, 2007)
On Monday 100,000 anti-junta protesters led by Buddhist monks and nuns marched through Yangon, the largest crowd to demonstrate since the 1988 pro-democracy uprising that was brutally crushed.
- Not A Word On Nuke Deal At New York Gala (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
This was not the way it was meant to be. There was not even a whisper about the Indo-US nuclear deal at the glittering inauguration here yesterday of “India@60”, a multifaceted four-day extravaganza to celebrate the country’s achievements . . . . . .
- More Difficult Than Rajiv’S First Mission (Telegraph, RASHEED KIDWAI, Sep 25, 2007)
Sonia Gandhi has taken a leaf out of mother-in-law Indira Gandhi’s book by appointing son Rahul a Congress general secretary in his late thirties.
- Family Calling (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Sep 25, 2007)
In appointing Mr Rahul Gandhi as a general secretary of the All-India Congress Committee, the ruling party has given its strongest indication yet of impending elections.
- Rahul Is Gen Secy In Major Congress Reshuffle (Asian Age, Venkatesh Kesari , Sep 25, 2007)
Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Monday inducted her son and Lok Sabha member Rahul Gandhi as a general secretary of the party.
- India Could Have Been Nuclear In 1965 With Us Help (Daily Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 20, 2007)
India could have conducted nuclear tests in February 1965 if it had been given the “green signal” from Washington –- well within a year of the Chinese nuclear blast at Lop Nor in 1964, reported the Times of India on Wednesday.
- Jamaican Revival (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Sep 19, 2007)
It is difficult to believe that since Indira Gandhi’s journey to Jamaica in 1975, no Indian cabinet minister has made a bilateral visit to the largest country in the Caribbean, a region whose ancestral, cultural and traditional bonds with India . . . .
- Nepal Polls No Sure Thing (Asia Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 19, 2007)
All things being equal, as many as 17.6 million Nepali voters could conceivably to go the polls on November 22 to elect a Constituent Assembly to draw up a new constitution.
- Congress Civil War (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Sep 18, 2007)
The final days of a coalition are usually a free for all. The experience of the two Janata Party regimes and of the National Front and United Front Governments would bear this out; Cabinet colleagues, particularly those from different caste or . . . .
- Congress Loses The Plot (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Sep 18, 2007)
Even in the shabby world of Indian politics, it would be difficult to come by an example of political insanity combined with cynicism of the kind displayed by Congress in the controversy over the affidavit filed in court on behalf of the . . . . .
- Gag After Target Practice On Soni (Telegraph, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 18, 2007)
Sonia Gandhi has asked Congress ministers and office-bearers to stop airing their views in public on whether Ambika Soni should quit over the Ram setu row.
- For The People, All The People (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Sep 17, 2007)
The controversial affidavit on the Sethusamudram project filed by the Centre in the Supreme Court is a classic case of the UPA handing over an issue to the BJP on a platter. And that, too, prior to what seems like a virtually imminent mid-term . . . .
- ‘They Said I’D Taken One Lakh Per Goal . . . People Used To Introduce Me As Mr Negi Of Those Seven Goals’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 17, 2007)
My guest this week is the original Kabir Khan (of Chak De India), Mir Ranjan Negi, who didn’t quite fail to score the goal, but paid the price for consuming too many.
- Anthology Of Great Orators (Pioneer, MV Kamath, Sep 17, 2007)
The date is September 27, 1893; place: Chicago, USA; arena: Meeting of the World Parliament of Religions. An unknown sanyasi from India, a self-proclaimed spokesman for Hinduism, is asked to address an audience of over 1,000 people.
- What Is The National Interest? (Frontline, Bhaskar Ghose, Sep 14, 2007)
Differences of opinion on what constitutes the national interest do not necessarily weaken our polity; in many ways they actually strengthen it.
- Get The State Out Of The Sacred (Indian Express, CP Bhambhri, Sep 14, 2007)
Some weeks ago, the management committee of the Dargah Khawaja Saheb of Ajmer was dissolved by the Centre. It did this under the provisions of the Dargah Khawaja Saheb Act, 1955, which gives it the requisite authority to do so.
- Man Of Substance (Hindustan Times, Editorial, HindustanTimes, Sep 13, 2007)
Mohammad Shamim was perhaps the only journalist whom Rajiv and Sanjay Gandhi addressed as ‘Sir’. He was Indira Gandhi’s close confidant, but never used this proximity to promote himself. Shamim saab, as he was called, was a man of unimpeachable integrity.
- Where Grey Hair Scores (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Sep 13, 2007)
A recent time magazine poll of 1,013 respondents (with the data weighted to reflect the demographic composition of US adults) indicates that 79% of Americans see grey/white hair as a disadvantage in personal/social life.
- Indo-U.S. Deal Good Under Present Circumstances: M.R. Srinivasan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 12, 2007)
“It facilitates nuclear trade with not only America but also other countries”
“End of international isolation of India in nuclear technology”
Agreement signed between two unequal parties: Placid Rodriquez
- Leaders All: Lata, Laxman & Maruti (Times of India, SHASHI THAROOR, Sep 11, 2007)
Lata: Still doesn't need a surname to be recognised, indeed she doesn't even need a face; her ageless voice alone means magic to millions. The late Piloo Mody once defined All India Radio as an institution designed for the promotion of two women:
- Bulgarian Pm Hopes To Re-Energise Ties With India (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Sep 11, 2007)
Bulgaria may be part of India’s traditional arc of friends, but as this eastern European nation steps into the European Union, India and Bulgaria are re-energising ties, with more trade and investment calling the shots.
Next 100 Indira Gandhi Articles
Home
Page
|
|