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Articles 2221 through 2320 of 27558:
- Uncertainty On Pension Authority (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Apr 04, 2005)
THE NEW PENSION fund authority, which came into existence from April 1, presides over a segment of the asset management industry whose contours can only be described as still evolving.
- Tigers In Danger (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Apr 04, 2005)
The Rajasthan Government's suspension of the State's Chief Wildlife Warden, Mr Arun Sen, and seven other employees of its forest ...
- The Rbi Governor's Policy Options (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Apr 04, 2005)
THE biannual monetary policy statements of the RBI Governor are eagerly awaited by the general public as windows on policy changes of the central bank.
- Springtime’S Story Of Eternal Return (Deccan Herald, James Carroll , Apr 04, 2005)
If life and death seem equal, each with its season of triumph, the human story is not so simple
- Spring Fever Hits The U.K. (Hindu, Arvind Sivaramakrishnan, Apr 04, 2005)
If the Labour and the Conservative Party are in disarray, the largest third party, the Liberal Democrats, appears to be incapable of cashing in.
- Pope John Paul Ii (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 04, 2005)
The Pope’s death is bound to impact the Catholic Church
- Politics In The Time Of Tragedy (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Apr 04, 2005)
To some extent, the Bihar stalemate could be said to be continuing, in that 'advisors' to Governor Buta Singh have yet to be appointed-there is no
- Poaching On Pilots (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Apr 04, 2005)
The non-poaching agreement signed by Air Deccan and Kingfisher Airlines points to the growing shortage of trained manpower in the fast-expanding aviation sector.
- Developing Interest In Investment (Business Line, Anil K. Kanungo, Apr 04, 2005)
While a simple, transparent and investor-friendly policy regime is necessary for attracting foreign capital, the proposed Multilateral Agreement will only alter the balance of power between a developing country, and the asset holders.
- New Scenario For India (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma, Apr 04, 2005)
With both the US and India exploring a mutually beneficial relationship, neither should encourage unrealistic expectations
- Keeping The Dialogue On Course (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 04, 2005)
FOREIGN MINISTER NATWAR Singh was not looking for any breakthrough during his recent visit to Yangon.
- Judgement Day (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Apr 04, 2005)
There are two lonely communists in India today-Lok Sabha Speaker Somnath Chatterjee and CPI(M) Politburo member Biman Bose
- John Paul Ii (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Apr 04, 2005)
Christiandom has lost an abiding symbol and the world a colossus in the death of Pope John Paul II.
- India And China — A Game Of One-Upmanship (Business Line, Ashish Vachhani, Apr 04, 2005)
China and India may well dominate the international economic and trading system two decades from now
- Gurus, Heroes And Netas (Tribune, V.K. Kapoor, Apr 04, 2005)
INDIANS have an unthinking fascination for icons, imagery and symbols. Grinding misery, pervasive spirituality, poisoned with superstition and fatalism, breed an ideal climate for spiritual cowboys, fake heroes and sham netas.
- Grumpy Old Men A Myth, Say Researchers (Tribune, Maxine Frith, Apr 04, 2005)
The social stereotype of “Grumpy Old Men’’ is a myth, with women more prone.
- Fringe Benefit And The Multiplier Effect (Business Line, P V Indiresan, Apr 04, 2005)
Taxing fringe benefits may offer immediate small gains but larger losses later on.
- Existential Questions (Pioneer, Asheesh Shah, Apr 04, 2005)
The Webster New Collegiate Dictionary defines existence as continuance of life, repeated manifestation of life, etc.
- A Complex Papacy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 04, 2005)
CARDINAL KAR0L WOJTYLA, he with the Polish name that Vatican-watchers found close to unpronounceable when his ...
- Disappointing Growth (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 04, 2005)
Policy-makers need to pay attention to farming, which is crucial to GDP growth
- Victim Of History (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Apr 03, 2005)
History never says sorry. One reason for this is that what has happened in the past is over and done with and none of the principal actors are around to say sorry or to accept the apologies.
- Hardliners Find A Place In Maldives (Deccan Herald, Sudha Ramachandran, Apr 03, 2005)
There is a shift towards conservatism, the influence of hardliners is growing in the Maldives. The anti-Gayoom coalition is gathering strength.
- Battling For A Spiritual Seat In Badrinath (Deccan Herald, Shishir Prashant , Apr 03, 2005)
The Jyotirpeeth mutt, the seat of the Badrinath Shankaracharya is in the eye of a storm.
- Billy Fights For The Tiger (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Apr 03, 2005)
Dudhwa Tiger Reserve and National Park is located in Lakhimpur Kheri district of Uttar Pradesh.
- Call Of The Jungle (Deccan Herald, S K PRASAD PUTTUR , Apr 03, 2005)
S K PRASAD PUTTUR describes his trip to Kanha, the national park in Madhya Pradesh. Wildlife aficianados will find it tough to keep away from this destination
- Corrupt Ias Officers Must Be Brought To Book: Pradhan (Tribune, Shahira Naim, Apr 03, 2005)
Sharat Pradhan, 50, is a newsmaker in the real sense. Known for his tireless campaign in exposing corruption, this time he is in the limelight for being the whistleblower leading to the CBI raids against the consensually most corrupt IAS officer of . . .
- How To Govern Haryana Better (Tribune, M. G. Devasahayam , Apr 03, 2005)
In quick time, the Haryana government, headed by Mr Bhupinder Singh Hooda, a second-generation politician, has completed the first three formalities that have almost become a surrealistic ritual for any new governing dispensation.
- In Dandi, Salt Isn’T A Lifeline (Deccan Herald, Shruba Mukherjee , Apr 03, 2005)
Salt mine workers lead a life of drudgery in the very place where Gandhi led the Dandi march.
- 'India Can Achieve 8% Growth' (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
The director of research (chief economist) at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Dr Raghuram Rajan said here on Saturday that it is possible for India to achieve a growth rate of eight to ten per cent.
- Sympathy For The Devil (Telegraph, Ruchi sharma, Apr 03, 2005)
Bahuj saras, I could say as a Gujarati, in fact, I would even say fankdu thayu, meaning, respectively, “very good” and “what happened is fantastic”
- Where Manchow Soup Meets Muli Paratha (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
SAMEER NAZERETH writes about the interesting phenomenon of globalisation of taste, where chicken tikka masala has become the “national dish of Britain” and chinese food has acquired a punjabi flavour in India.
- Aiims: Human Touch Missing (Tribune, Chanchal Sarkar, Apr 03, 2005)
Memory gets so flickery nowadays. What is the name of John F. Kennedy’s book “Let Us Praise Famous Men”? I was reminded again and again of it in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences where I had time to watch things at leisure for about 17 days.
- Indians Keep The Peace In Cyprus (Deccan Herald, MICHAEL JANSEN, Apr 03, 2005)
Indian policemen are lending a hand to the UN force in a troubled sector in Cyprus which runs through the old city of the world’s last divided capital, Nicosia.
- The Fine Art Of Force Balance (Deccan Herald, Bidanda M Chengappa, Apr 03, 2005)
Air Chief Marshal S P Tyagi, the new Chief of Air Staff, gives priority to two things: reducing the aircraft accident rate and increasing the size of the fighter, helicopter and transport fleet. He goes about his mission in an enlightened and pragmatic ..
- The Dance Festival Of The Season (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
Veteran dance critic SUNIL KOTHARI attends the Khajuraho dance festival, after an interval of three years.
- Unfinished Business Or Unending Saga? (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
A little boy fondly hugs his wife from the last birth. A young woman is relieved of the pain from the shrapnel wound in her head, carried on from her last life. Another remembers terrifying moments from another life. For many like these, life is not. . .
- So Many Degrees Of Connection (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
For C F John art is more than a few strokes on the canvas. It is an active engagement with the reality. It tries to reconnect with the ‘body’ and know reality first-hand, notes JAYALAKSHMI K.
- Pm Keen To Meet Wen (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
Dr Manmohan Singh, who returned from Mauritius on Saturday, said India would persuade Pakistan to encourage contact between citizens of the two countries.
- Now, People Have Lent Dynamism To The Peace Process (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Apr 03, 2005)
Since the start of the ongoing peace process between India and Pakistan at the beginning of last year, there has been a huge jump . . .
- Multiplicity Of Meanings (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
SONYA DUTTA CHOUDHURY writes about Satish Gujral- an artist who has soared to tall heights despite a hearing impairment
- Modi Hangs On Despite Dissidence (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
The decision to form a coordination committee to link party and government is an attempt to clip Modi’s wings.
- Into The Subterranean Spiritual (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 03, 2005)
Many holy souls lay buried in blissful silence in the Catacombs, writes SURYAKUMARI DENNISON.
- F-16s On Radar, Let's Re-Count Dollars (Business Line, D. Murali , Apr 02, 2005)
RENU Kohli's "Liberalizing Capital Flows," from Oxford (www.oup.com) couldn't have come at a better time.
- And Say Which Grain Will Grow And Which Will Not (Business Line, D. Murali , Apr 02, 2005)
ABOUT "wheat, rye, barley, vetches, oats and pease," and "turfy mountains, where live nibbling sheep," one reads in The Tempest
- Building A Healthy Nation (Deccan Herald, U R RAO, Apr 02, 2005)
We should gainfully employ available technological tools to provide health care to the hitherto inacessible rural areas
- Combat Reddy? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Apr 02, 2005)
Has the Andhra Pradesh Government really woken up to the need to crush the naxalite menace? Or is it a case of the right hand not knowing what the left is doing? It is no secret the YS Rajshekhar Reddy regime's heart bleeds for left extremist "sons gone..
- Ensuring Airworthiness (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 02, 2005)
The latest in a continuing series of air mishaps has tragically taken the lives of two Haryana Ministers — former Haryana Chief Minister Bansi Lal's son Surender Singh, and industrialist O.P. Jindal.
- Advani’S Failure (Tribune, Editorial, The Times of India, Apr 02, 2005)
Mr Narendra Modi is as good as a pariah abroad. Most of his party colleagues in Gujarat too would like to see his back at the earliest.
- Fair Shift (Business Line, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 02, 2005)
The Government decision to amend the Factories Act to allow women to work the night shift is a recognition of the changed realities of business operations the world over.
- First, Buy Time (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam, Apr 02, 2005)
T. C. A. Ramanujam calls for deferring the fringe benefit tax
- Gross National Democracy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 02, 2005)
Jigme Singye Wanggchuk, the King of Bhutan, once said his country's "gross national happiness" was more important to him than its gross national product.
- Horse Trader, Pass By (Pioneer, KPS Gill, Apr 02, 2005)
There has been enormous focus on the 'constitutional crises' and the abuse of the Governor's office during the recent processes of government ...
- Lacking Direction (Tribune, Mohan Dharia, Apr 02, 2005)
The Finance Minister has presented his Feel Good budget for 2005-2006.
- Life Terminated? (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Apr 02, 2005)
Euthanasia is in the news again as family, lawyers and politicians differ on Terri’s death
- In The Free Land (Tribune, Dhirendra Sharma, Apr 02, 2005)
Narendra Modi had been denied entry into the Land of Free....
- The Criteria Mania (Business Line, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 02, 2005)
The one-by-six scheme merely generates paperwork and does not widen the tax base, says T. N. Pandey
- Forest Staff Gear Up To Prevent A Sariska In Bandipur (Hindu, R. Krishna Kumar, Apr 02, 2005)
Forest staff gear up to prevent a Sariska in Bandipur
- Historian Calls For Abolition Of Ichr (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Apr 02, 2005)
BANGALORE, APRIL 1. N.S. Rajaram, eminent historian, has called for the abolition of Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR), which has caused ``rot in the Indian history establishment.''
- National Milk Policy Has Failed (Tribune, Gurbhagwant Singh Kahlon, Apr 02, 2005)
Healthy human beings are the real capital of a nation
- Making Search And Seizure Less Taxing (Business Line, H. P. Ranina, Apr 02, 2005)
Keeping in mind the human rights of the tax-paying citizens, clear guidelines have been laid down for the tax authorities while authorising a search....
- Vasant Sathe, The Rare Rationalist (Deccan Herald, Khushwant Singh, Apr 02, 2005)
Undoubtedly the most outstanding of all sub-communities of India are the Chitpavan Brahmins of Maharashtra.
- Preparing For The Succession (Asia Times, Viju Naravane, Apr 02, 2005)
While electing a successor to Pope John Paul II, will the Church return to the old tradition of electing an Italian pope or will the Cardinals take into account the fact that most Church followers now come from outside Europe and opt for an African, Asian
- Sting Back In Anger (Pioneer, Sanjai Srivastava, Apr 02, 2005)
Casting couches have preoccupied the nation of late. Interestingly, the intelligentsia, the media in particular, seem divided.
- To Live, Or Not To Live (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Apr 02, 2005)
TERRI Schiavo, the brain-damaged Florida woman, has, at last, passed beyond the mortal threshold. But the abounding speculation on the legal, ethical and moral questions that her condition once again brought to the fore, and divided not just people in ...
- Shortage Of Officers (Tribune, Girja Shankar Kaura, Apr 02, 2005)
The shortage of officers in the armed forces continues. As per the latest figures available, the Army, as in the past, continues to face the maximum number of shortage with over 12,000 officers needed, the exact figure being 12,099.
- Rights And Wrongs (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Apr 02, 2005)
Strange are the ways of functioning of the US administration under President George W. Bush.
- Preparing For The Succession (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Apr 02, 2005)
While electing a successor to Pope John Paul II, will the Church return to the old tradition of electing an Italian pope or will the Cardinals take into account the fact that most Church followers now come from outside Europe and opt for an African,...
- National Milk Policy Has Failed (Tribune, Gurbhagwant Singh Kahlon, Apr 02, 2005)
Healthy human beings are the real capital of a nation.
- White And Well Written (Business Line, Mohan R. Lavi, Apr 02, 2005)
Mohan R. Lavi on the positive signals from the recent White Paper on VAT
- Stung By The West (Telegraph, RAMACHANDRA GUHA, Apr 02, 2005)
Back in the 1850s, Karl Marx wrote a series of essays on the results of British rule in India
- Manipur Link For Kashmirs (Telegraph, MUKHTAR AHMAD, Apr 01, 2005)
Srinagar, March 31: For John S. Shilshi, the afternoon of January 15 changed the meaning of his job as regional passport officer
- Legality Of Denying Visa (Hindu, Rajeev Dhavan , Apr 01, 2005)
The controversy over the U.S. denial of a visa to Narendra Modi cannot be raised to the level of an international crisis.
- Fuel For Arms Race (Tribune, General (Retd) V. P. Malik, Apr 01, 2005)
FIFTEEN years ago the US had promised to sell F-16s to Pakistan. Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, the company manufacturing the aircraft, took the necessary advance for it. Then there were sudden changes in the global and regional strategic environment.
- Pumping Up The Infrastructure Sector (Business Line, Subhasish Roy , Apr 01, 2005)
Faster progress on infrastructure largely depends on both effective demand for projects and proper usage of funds
- Federal Power (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 01, 2005)
IT IS A sign of the restless state of present-day politics that the Samajwadi Party led by Mulayam Singh has spread its wings across the Vindhyas to Karnataka.
- Gujarat Dissidents Unwilling To Give Up (Hindu, Jyotirmaya Sharma, Apr 01, 2005)
Ahmedabad: Despite the three-hour meeting between the BJP's central leadership and the dissidents in Gujarat on Thursday, the issue of change of leadership is far from settled.
- New Bank Chairmen, Thou Shall And Shalt Not... (Business Line, V. H. Ramakrishnan , Apr 01, 2005)
In the next two years, many nationalised banks will have new chairmen...
- Nothing Macho About Forex Reserves (Business Line, G. Ramachandran, Apr 01, 2005)
Foreign exchange reserves play an irreplaceable role in many emerging economies
- Eagle Is Blinded (Pioneer, Editorial, The Hindu, Apr 01, 2005)
No visa for Mr Narendra Modi. No entry to Maulana Kalbe Sadiq. No World Bank/IMF loans if India does not 'check' human trafficking.
- Pak Has Eye On Kashmir’S Water Resources (Tribune, Rajeev Sharma, Apr 01, 2005)
THE primary objective of Pakistan’s interest in Kashmir is to secure its water resources, according to a study made by the Strategic Foresight Group.
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