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Articles 15421 through 15520 of 27558:
- A Bird In The Bush (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 12, 2001)
It may not be in hand as yet, but it’s worth cultivating.
- ‘Our Thrust Is On Good Governance And Infrastructure’ (The Financial Express, Sunil Mukhopadhyay, Nov 12, 2001)
Chattisgarh, carved out of Madhya Pradesh on November 1, 2000, is one of the richest states in mineral and forest resources in the country.
- Malegam Committee Report On Uti -- Strategic Partner, No Solution (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Nov 12, 2001)
THE much-awaited report of the Malegam Committee on UTI has been placed before the public.
- Enron In Trouble; Microsoft Sees Reprieve (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Nov 12, 2001)
ENRON is facing corruption charges, and this time it has nothing to do with Maharashtra!
- Agriculture Needs A Fair Deal (Hindu, Bhanu Pratap Singh , Nov 12, 2001)
IT IS very unfortunate that most intellectuals and mediapersons live in cities, cut off from the realities of rural India.
- Pay And Use (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Nov 12, 2001)
IF IT WAS power yesterday, it is water today.
- Myth And Reality Of The `Powerful' Farmer (Business Line, Harish Damodaran , Nov 12, 2001)
The farming community is often pilloried for being the main stumbling block behind power sector reforms.
- Us Needs A ‘Few Good Men’ For Cracking Osama’s Code (The Financial Express, Prashant Bakshi, Nov 12, 2001)
The key to clandestine operations lies in covert communications: a fundamental principle that is only well understood and cleverly mastered by Al Qaeda’s chief architect, Osama bin Laden.
- Villagers See Benefits Of Urbanisation (The Financial Express, Manik Gupta, Nov 12, 2001)
It is one of the few autonomous organisations under the government that is carrying out social programmes for the uplift of the villages around it.
- India's Concerns Half-Met (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 12, 2001)
ON THE DAY the Northern Alliance, a friend of India and present ally of the U.S., scored a breakthrough victory in Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan.
- Twists And Turns In Public Policy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 12, 2001)
ECONOMIC THINKING THROUGHOUT the developed world is undergoing a major transformation in areas such as the role of government in business and social sectors.
- Security Of Pakistan's Nuclear Arsenal (Hindu, K. Santhanam, Nov 12, 2001)
AS THE war in Afghanistan enters the fifth week, concerns have emerged about the safety and security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal.
- House Of Shadows (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 11, 2001)
Finally it took four weeks and a foreign television channel to broadcast the truth that the George Bush administration would rather keep buried deep.
- Saddled With An Ally's Brashness (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Nov 11, 2001)
ON THE face of it, the idea that two of the world's most powerful countries with mindboggling communication resources should be seen to be losing the propaganda war.
- Subdued, For Now (Hindu, ARUNKUMAR BHATT, Nov 11, 2001)
ABU SALEM'S escape from the law has not resulted in his gang exploding with joy.
- New Equations (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 11, 2001)
Politics makes strange bedfellows. It was only the other day that the BJP top brass was hurling abuses at the Tamil Nadu strongwoman J. Jayalalithaa for what she did to the Vajpayee Government in its second stint of 13 months.
- They Have Only Their Chains To Lose (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Nov 11, 2001)
ALMOST every day there is a story about some unspeakable atrocity committed on a person because he or she is a Dalit.
- Subdued, For Now (Hindu, ARUNKUMAR BHATT, Nov 11, 2001)
ABU SALEM'S escape from the law has not resulted in his gang exploding with joy.
- Soft-Spoken Patil (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 11, 2001)
The Congress decision to make Mr Shivraj Patil its Deputy Leader in the Lok Sabha did not come as a surprise as he was seen a frontrunner for the post since the vacancy arose following the demise of Mr Madhavrao Scindia in a plane crash.
- India Is Us Friend In Need And Deed (Indian Express, Bill Richardson, Nov 11, 2001)
WITH each passing day, the US military action in Afghanistan puts greater focus on America’s allies in South Asia.
- Iran Keeps All Its Options (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Nov 11, 2001)
THEY HAVE more reason to hate the Taliban than almost anyone else, they are allied with arguably the most competent anti- Taliban commander in the field and they have a lot to gain from the collapse of the Taliban.
- Car Theft Mafia (Tribune, David Devdas, Nov 11, 2001)
I had parked my car in a lane off the Boulevard along the Dal lake the other day. When I returned after a boat ride a couple of hours later, it was dark.
- Chomsky Speaks Out His Mind Without Fear (Tribune, Humra Quraishi, Nov 11, 2001)
MY meeting with Prof Noam Chomsky last weekend left me in a rather introspective mood.
- Mamata May Finally Make It To The Cabinet (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 11, 2001)
YET another small but significant cabinet expansion seems to be on the cards. But it is unlikely to take place before the winter session of Parliament ends. Parliament session, starting from November 19, ends on December 20.
- Myanmar: The Core Of India’s ‘Look East’ Policy (Tribune, Ashok Kapur, Nov 11, 2001)
FOLLOWING its independence in 1948, Myanmar had a policy of neutralism and isolationism up to the 1980s but when the Myanmar military disallowed Sui Kyi to assume power following the 1990 elections, the country’s external stance changed.
- Poto Is A Must To Tackle Terrorism (Tribune, I. D. Swami, Nov 11, 2001)
THE promulgation of the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance (POTO) 2001 on October 24 has set off heated discussion in political circles.
- Blanking Out Of Afghanistan (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 11, 2001)
Professor Noam Chomsky teaches Linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with which he has been associated for four and a half decades.
- When Hospitality Makes Up For Glitches (Hindu, C. Rammanohar Reddy, Nov 11, 2001)
The Qataris have pulled out all stops to make the WTO meeting a success.
- Top Specialist In Biological Weapons And Defences (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Nov 11, 2001)
BEFORE defecting to the USA, Dr Ken Alibek was the top biological weapon specialist in erstwhile Soviet Union.
- History Of Conflict (Pioneer, Priyadarsi Dutta, Nov 11, 2001)
Hagia Sophia was built as a Christian Cathedral between AD 532 and 537 by the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justin I at Constantinople, now Istanbul (Turkey).
- The Tremors Spread Far Afield (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Nov 11, 2001)
THE AMERICAN war in Afghanistan has polarised key South East Asian nations.
- All For Themselves ... (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Nov 11, 2001)
GUESS WHO'S coming to dinner? Last Sunday, gate-crashers stormed Mr. Tony Blair's elegant sit-down dinner for four, turning it into a noisy, argumentative buffet for nine, with the last self- invited guest turning up embarrassingly late.
- Arms And The Agent (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 11, 2001)
ENTREPRENEURS IN the recession-hit economy have been in a state of eager anticipation ever since the Defence Ministry signalled its intention of allowing agents to represent foreign suppliers.
- They Have Only Their Chains To Lose (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Nov 11, 2001)
ALMOST every day there is a story about some unspeakable atrocity committed on a person because he or she is a Dalit.
- Is Bjp Really Going The Congress Way? (Pioneer, C P Bhambhri, Nov 11, 2001)
A very important public meeting was held at Jaipur on October 14, 2001 to celebrate 75 years of the RSS.
- Russia’s Putin: Playing A Bad Hand Well (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 10, 2001)
"The Cold War is over," Russian President Vladimir Putin (speaking in German he learned as a KGB officer in Dresden) told the parliament in Berlin in late September.
- House Of Shadows (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 10, 2001)
Finally it took four weeks and a foreign television channel to broadcast the truth that the George Bush administration would rather keep buried deep.
- Here A General, There A General (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 10, 2001)
Everywhere, it’s Musharraf but Vajpayee doesn’t have to feel left out.
- Blanking Out Of Afghanistan (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 10, 2001)
Professor Noam Chomsky teaches Linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with which he has been associated for four and a half decades.
- Minister Asked To Apologise For Defamation (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 10, 2001)
A senior Indian minister has been slapped a legal notice demanding Rs 10 million and a public apology for defaming a social scientist sacked in August from a top government post.
- No Need For Draconian Laws (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Nov 10, 2001)
IT is puzzling that in the debate that POTO (Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance) has generated there has been no mention of the Nadeem case.
- Melancholy But Mirthful (Tribune, I.M. Soni, Nov 10, 2001)
MISERY and sorrow are inseparable in day-to-day living. If we revel in gloom and doom, then we see nothing but gloom and doom.
- Small Enterprises In Dire Distress (Tribune, M. G. Devasahayam , Nov 10, 2001)
INSTEAD of talking endlessly about the political quagmire and economic gloom we are in it is time we turned our attention to specific issues and their solutions.
- The River Never Waited (Indian Express, Cookie Maini, Nov 10, 2001)
TIME nor tide wait for man, goes the old adage, or rather, the cliche.
- Pakistan And Taliban (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 10, 2001)
THE USA seems to be finally turning the heat on Pakistan as well. Some of the recent decisions of the Musharraf government are indicators enough that it is being pressurised like never before to sever the umbilical cord with its creation.
- Severe Blow To Farmers (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 10, 2001)
ANOTHER hare-brained proposal is being floated to tackle the mounting stocks of wheat and rice.
- India And Us Should Align Interests In Future Afghan Policy (The Financial Express, Arvind Virmani, Nov 10, 2001)
The art of foreign policy lies in making other countries (in the current case the US) believe that certain policies and actions that are in our (India’s) interest are also in its own (US’s) interest (and vice-versa).
- Looking Beyond The Taliban (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 10, 2001)
BUILDING A VIABLE alternative political arrangement for Afghanistan is proving to be as frustrating and elusive a goal as defeating the Taliban and its benefactor, Osama bin Laden.
- Labour Reforms: Time They Happened (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Nov 10, 2001)
THOUGH the reforming of India's labour laws and regulations is still the much-talked about component of the comprehensive economic reforms of the last decade, there has been scarcely any matching action.
- The Rss And The Bjp (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Nov 10, 2001)
THE latest `slanging match' between the RSS and its `political outfit', the BJP, is important not so much because of the impact it could have on the future of the Government at the Centre.
- Misuse Of Central Funds (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 10, 2001)
Paradoxically while the State Gov-ernment has been blaming the Centre for starving it of funds for development New Delhi complains of State’s failure to properly.
- History Of Conflict (Pioneer, Priyadarsi Dutta, Nov 10, 2001)
Hagia Sophia was built as a Christian Cathedral between AD 532 and 537 by the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justin I at Constantinople, now Istanbul (Turkey).
- Non-Trade Issues: Let Investment Not Lock The Talks (The Financial Express, Anwarul Hoda, Nov 10, 2001)
As the Fourth Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) gets under way at Doha, Qatar.
- A-Customed To Sin (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 10, 2001)
Why the IRS has become a green channel for crime.
- Broke State Creaks Under Its Ministers’ Burden (Indian Express, S. M. A. Kazmi, Nov 10, 2001)
Despite its financial liabilities, for hill state’s ministers, austerity ends with home.
- Burning Farmers' Fields - Ii (Hindu, Gail Omvedt , Nov 10, 2001)
HISTORICALLY, THERE is little evidence that Indian farmers are reluctant to innovate.
- Using The Food Mountain (Hindu, M. S. Swaminathan , Nov 10, 2001)
THE PRIME MINISTER and the Government of India are to be commended for three important recent initiatives for dealing with the mounting grain stocks in a socially and environmentally meaningful manner.
- Estimate Of Gdp Growth Rates -- Why Projections Must Be Revised (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Nov 10, 2001)
AS THE time for pre-Budget discussions and consultations approaches, it is usual to make some estimates about the rate of GDP growth this year, both at current and constant (1993-94 prices) prices.
- Japan Cuts Gdp Growth Forecast By 0.9 Per Cent (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Nov 10, 2001)
Tokyo, Nov 9: The Japanese government, as widely expected, on Friday cut its forecast for real GDP growth for the current fiscal year to March to minus 0.9 per cent, from a long-unrealistic forecast of 1.7 per cent growth.
- The Meaning And Importance Of Harbinson’s Words (The Financial Express, Bibek Debroy, Nov 10, 2001)
“Then you should say what you mean,” the March Hare went on. “I do,” Alice heartily replied; “at least — at least I mean what I say — that’s the same thing you know.”
- Dna Fingerprinting: Two Sets Of Standards? (Business Line, M. Somasekhar, Nov 10, 2001)
THE lack of awareness among Government departments of each other's work is fairly common. Despite the wide use of computers, launch of websites and inter-departmental committees, this `ignorance' persists.
- Maneka’s Salvo At Sonia, Congress! (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 10, 2001)
Maneka wins a libel case and fires a salvo at Sonia and a captive Congress party reacts.
- A Jail Named Jp (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 10, 2001)
It is not unusual in this country to remember and honour some hero by paying lip service to him while actually working against what he stood for or worked.
- Resolving The Food Riddle (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 10, 2001)
FOODGRAINS MANAGEMENT, BY the Centre, has unquestionably led to monstrous absurdities in recent years.
- Is Bjp Really Going The Congress Way? (Pioneer, C P Bhambhri, Nov 10, 2001)
A very important public meeting was held at Jaipur on October 14, 2001 to celebrate 75 years of the RSS.
- From Darkness To A Mess (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 09, 2001)
The sudden near-collapse of the Taliban regime -- both the Pentagon and Gen. Tommy Frank, the head of the U.S operation against Afghanistan.
- Pug Marks On Sri Lanka's Polls (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 09, 2001)
AS SRI LANKA gears up to elect a new Parliament, the island nation has difficult choices to make.
- ‘Moca And Poto Are As Alike As Apples And Potatoes’ (Indian Express, Arati R. Jerath, Nov 09, 2001)
While the BJP has been on the offensive from the beginning to accuse the Congress of double standards on POTO, the Congress has been strangely slow in reacting to the charges.
- Oil Politics & Arab Experience (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Nov 09, 2001)
Nationalism is not a strong point of the Arabs. Fundamentalism is. It comes easily to them. And it explains why they have remained so backward, and why they have been a drag on the march of Islam.
- Indo-Russian Security Relations (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 09, 2001)
QUITE CLEARLY, THE Prime Minister's visit to Russia went far beyond the generalities of the Moscow Declaration on international terrorism and the joint statement on globally relevant strategic issues.
- The First Month Of The War (Hindu, T. Sreedhar, Nov 09, 2001)
ANY ASSESSMENT of the U.S.-led grand alliance's month-long military operations in Afghanistan must take cognisance of three factors.
- Burning Farmers' Fields - I (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 09, 2001)
TEN YEARS ago, when the debate about GATT, patents and ``intellectual property rights'' was at its height, opponents raised a storm of fear.
- Physician, Heal Thyself (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Nov 09, 2001)
Some Dalits became Buddhists at a conversion ceremony a few days ago.
- Keeping The Cultural Contacts Alive (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Nov 09, 2001)
For a country that is essentially Euro- centric, Hungary's efforts to maintain contacts with India are noteworthy, particularly in the cultural field.
- Doha Ministerial: A Testing Time (Business Line, Priya Mutalik-Desai, Nov 09, 2001)
THE DOHA ministerial to begin today is the fourth successive meeting after the establishment of the WTO in 1995.
- Trade And Agriculture -- Case For True Reform In Farm Trade (Business Line, Devinder Sharma , Nov 09, 2001)
If you want to feed a man for a day, give him a fish; But if you want to feed him for life, teach him how to catch fish. -- a Chinese proverb.
- Gentlemen, The President (Tribune, V. N. Kakar, Nov 09, 2001)
THE British were drawing up a list of goody-goody knights and dames who could possibly be appointed the Governor General of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) after their departure from that country in years gone by.
- Reject Poto In Toto (The Kashmir Times, Praful Bidwai, Nov 09, 2001)
Nothing has recently caused as much disquiet in India’s political and journalistic communities as the promulgation of the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance. At stake is the citizen’s freedom and the fairness of the judicial system.
- Mega Merger Of Oil Companies Will Be A Difficult Test To Pass (The Financial Express, Ardhendu sen, Nov 09, 2001)
It was interesting to read about the proposed mega merger of Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) and Gas Authority of India Ltd (GAIL).
- India’s Strategy: You Scratch My Back, I Scratch Yours (The Financial Express, Pradeep S. Mehta, Nov 09, 2001)
For all practical purposes, the WTO’s Doha Ministerial Conference would be the “second” after the Singapore Ministerial Conference of 1996.
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