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Articles 16821 through 16920 of 27558:
- America's Passing Paranoia? (Hindu, Raju Rajagopal, Oct 05, 2001)
Remember the momentary panic over a fifth missing plane as we watched the unfolding horror on Sept. 11, and our collective sigh of relief when it turned out to be a false alarm?
- Martyrdom, The Prize For Taking One’s Life (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Oct 05, 2001)
It’s not just religious ‘zealots’ who are blowing themselves and their targets up; even the aetheist LTTE has chosen the suicide militancy route.
- India, Luckily, Left Out Of Great Game (Tribune, Arundhati Roy, Oct 05, 2001)
IN America there has been rough talk of bombing Afghanistan back to the stone age.
- Remembering Madhavrao Scindia (Hindu, Malini Parthasarathy, Oct 05, 2001)
I grieve at the passing of Madhavrao Scindia.
- The Milch Cow Of Higher Education (Hindu, Amrik Singh , Oct 05, 2001)
PERHAPS NO set of students in India were as luckless as those who joined the distance education sector some years ago.
- Governors, Politicians, Courts (Hindu, Rajeev Dhavan , Oct 05, 2001)
THE TAMIL Nadu case on Ms. Jayalalithaa's appointment as Chief Minister confronts many hidden issues in the Constitution.
- Where The State And The People Complement Each Other (The Financial Express, Kavita Kakani, Oct 05, 2001)
Scandinavia, the northern part of Europe, consists of three countries— Denmark, Finland and Sweden.
- Bloody Extravaganza (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 05, 2001)
By the way, who will these signatures help, Mr Khurana?
- Shoo Public Investment And Woo Fdi In Vain (The Financial Express, R K Roy, Oct 05, 2001)
The government is reported to be exploring a strategy to quadruple annual foreign direct investment (FDI), currently in the $2-3 billion range.
- Is Usa Worthy Of Trust Of The World? (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Oct 05, 2001)
NO! And twice No! Because America is a country, which has only one interest: its own. The interests of the world have been of no concern to the USA, although it claims to be the leader of the world.
- A Comedy Of Errors (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 05, 2001)
IT WAS NOT just the 52 on board flight CD- 7444 but the whole nation that was held captive, for a few agonising hours, to an infantile hoax.
- The Algebra Of Infinite Justice (Tribune, Arundhati Roy, Oct 04, 2001)
IN the aftermath of the unconscionable September 11 suicide attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, an American newscaster said: Good and evil rarely manifest themselves as clearly as they did last Tuesday.
- Rule By Proxy In Tamil Nadu (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 04, 2001)
MR O. Paneerselvam’s assumption of office as the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu on September 21 following the Supreme Court judgement quashing the appointment of Ms Jayalalitha by the then Governor, Mrs Fathima Beevi.
- The U.N. And Afghanistan (Hindu, K. Santhanam, Oct 04, 2001)
SERIOUS CONSIDERATION is needed to involve the U.N. more deeply in Afghanistan.
- For Imd It’s Official Now, But ‘Normal Monsoon’ Eludes Rural India (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Oct 04, 2001)
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has officially declared the current year’s monsoon as the 13th successive ‘normal’ monsoon. But, the country seems to have missed the ‘positive impact’ of IMD’s assessment.
- Buffer Stocks And Food Security (Telegraph, Jaydev Jana, Oct 04, 2001)
The coexistence of the hungry millions and the rising buffer stock of foodgrains has exposed the serious imbalances in India’s food policy.
- Look How Osama Builds His Brand; Time We Hired An Ad Agency Spin Doctors, Dead Or Alive (Indian Express, Ratna Rajiah, Oct 04, 2001)
Pachaas pachaas kos door gaun mein jab bachcha rota hai toh ma kehti hai ke soja...soja nahin to Gabbar aajayega.
- Disinvestment Dilemma (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 04, 2001)
DISINVESTMENT plans of the BJP-led alliance government are jinxed if one is superstitious.
- Fundamentalist Turn (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 04, 2001)
IN a country where pre-poll violence claims many lives, a citizen heaves a sigh of relief on the completion of the election process.
- After Taliban What? (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 04, 2001)
NOW it is almost certain that the infamous Taliban regime of Afghanistan has to pave the way, of course not voluntarily, for a new dispensation in the war-torn country.
- To Erase The Indelible Poverty Line (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 04, 2001)
Since independence, Indian governments have accorded great importance to poverty reduction.
- Cheshire Cat Grin (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 04, 2001)
In September, the International Monetary Fund scaled down growth forecasts in World Economic Outlook, compared to projections made in April.
- The Black Sheep In Black Robes (Indian Express, Manoj Mitta, Oct 04, 2001)
DURING the 50 years since the Constitution came into force, we have seen a lot of officers and ministers being thrown out of their jobs on the charge of corruption or for misusing their powers.
- Will Terrorists Have The Last Laugh? (Business Line, B. Raman , Oct 04, 2001)
WILL the world's terrorists have the last laugh?
- Waiting For The War (Telegraph, SHAM LAL , Oct 04, 2001)
The American administration did not lose a minute in declaring a war on international terrorism after three suicide squads of pilot-hijackers rammed three flying Boeings into two buildings.
- Us Action Against Osama And Taliban (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Oct 04, 2001)
THREE weeks after the infamous September 11 slaughter the future scenario is less clear than it seemed to be in the immediate aftermath of the ghastly terrorist outrage against the USA.
- Farmers’ Lobbies (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 04, 2001)
The building up of the huge buffer stock has resulted mainly from government intervention in the food market through high MSP combined with poor distribution of food grains under the price distribution system.
- Accelerated Decay (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 04, 2001)
Flesh and marble are both in deep peril in Calcutta.
- Shadow On The Palace (Telegraph, Tapas Chakraborty, Oct 04, 2001)
It was a balmy morning in the early summer of 1996. But the political temperature had already begun soaring in Gwalior’s palace.
- Making A Killing Post-Wtc (Indian Express, Anuradha Raman, Oct 04, 2001)
IF terrorism had found a captive audience, corporate houses were going in for the kill. After September 11, corporate houses loosened their purse strings and upped their ad spend on Indian news channels.
- Bangladesh Will Be Another Front, Unless Taliban Is Smashed (The Financial Express, Rohit Bansal, Oct 04, 2001)
Will the smashing victory of Ms Khaleda Zia eventually boil down to an alliance of India-baiters smacking their lips in Bangladesh and Pakistan? The question has repercussions on our polito-economic, and diplomatic interests on our eastern front.
- The Road To Doha Is Paved With Imponderables (Business Line, K. P. Prabhakaran Nair, Oct 04, 2001)
URUGUAY 1986, Seattle 1999 and now Doha 2001.
- A New Wave In Bangladesh? (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 04, 2001)
THE MASSIVE MANDATE obtained by Begum Khaleda Zia's Bangladesh National Party and its allies has provoked her chief adversary, Sheikh Hasina, to dispute the fairness of the latest parliamentary election.
- Simi And The Constitution (Hindu, V. R. Krishna Iyer , Oct 04, 2001)
Preventive detention of a person is subject to Articles 19, 21 and 22. Associations of citizens enjoy the collective human right under Article 19 as a fundamental freedom of association. Arbitrary action against it is violative of Articles 14, 19 and 21.
- Panchayat Raj In Karnataka - Ii (Hindu, M. Y. Ghorpade, Oct 04, 2001)
THE BASIC principles which should govern administrative decentralisation are well established.
- When Death Is The Weapon, And Message (Indian Express, Muzamil Jaleel, Oct 04, 2001)
The world and the Valley are looking the most gruesome side of militancy in the face.
- Letter From The Edge (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 04, 2001)
Dear Prime Minister...have we completely lost it?
- Crisis Lessons (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 04, 2001)
OF SPECIAL CONCERN has been the impact of the terrorist strikes in the U.S. on the financial markets, in the U.S. as well as elsewhere.
- Petroleum Sector Reforms -- Progress And Prospects (Business Line, A. R. Sihag, Oct 04, 2001)
THE MARCH 31, 2002, deadline of dismantling the Administered pricing mechanism for petro-products is now quite near and the question being asked is whether the Government is prepared for this final step.
- For Imd It’s Official Now, But ‘Normal Monsoon’ Eludes Rural India (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Oct 04, 2001)
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has officially declared the current year’s monsoon as the 13th successive ‘normal’ monsoon. But, the country seems to have missed the ‘positive impact’ of IMD’s assessment.
- Na Squirrel’s Story (Indian Express, V. E. Venkataramani, Oct 04, 2001)
MEN, in general, are not altruistic and in their every endeavour, whether it is to embellish their skill, expand their domain or render assistance, a veiled tinge of selfishness is apparent.
- Congressised Bjp (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 04, 2001)
The way Gujarat CM was replaced reflects badly on the party.
- Taliban And The Anti-Terror Stakes (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2001)
THE TALIBAN `GOVERNMENT' has put itself on a collision course with the United States by openly acknowledging that Osama bin Laden, the suspected evil genius behind the latest terrorist strikes against America, is actually present in Afghanistan itself.
- New Heights For Higher Education (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 03, 2001)
Universities as centres of learning and research have an important role in expanding the horizons of knowledge and providing intellectual leadership to society.
- Ambushed, Indian Doctor Feels Violated (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 03, 2001)
DR Prathap Chandran, who has been working in the USA at St Mary’s Hospital for 17 years, feels “violated, raped”.
- Barbarians At The Gates (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 03, 2001)
THERE was nothing arbitrary or rash about this attack.
- Cartoon Redeems Media Honour (Tribune, Surjit Hans, Oct 03, 2001)
THE coverage of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York by our papers was apocalyptic.
- Wto Talks: Draft Draws Fire From Poorer States (The Financial Express, Robert Evans, Oct 03, 2001)
Developing countries have voiced disappointment over an outline plan from World Trade Organisation (WTO) officials aimed at getting new global trade liberalisation talks launched later this year.
- Plunge In Exports (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 03, 2001)
EXPORTS have been rising, sometimes briskly and sometimes sluggishly, since the liberalisation year of 1991-92. Not any more if official information is anything to go by.
- The Chief Of Defence Staff Idea (Tribune, Harwant Singh, Oct 03, 2001)
THE Group Of Ministers approved the setting up of the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) some time ago.
- Killing Spree Unabated (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 03, 2001)
THE suicidal car bomb attack on the Assembly complex in Srinagar on Monday should force the security agencies to not only revise their strategy.
- The Indian Connection (Telegraph, SUGATO HAZRA, Oct 03, 2001)
Convergence, to an Indian in the villages, is something that applies to the rich living in big cities.
- His Madam’s Voice: Scindia Vs Pilot (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 03, 2001)
IT may be a cold war, fought almost entirely behind the scenes but Congress circles never seem to get tired talking about it, although they do so in hushed tones:
- Three Presidents And A Terrorist (Tribune, Amardeep S. Dahiya, Oct 03, 2001)
IT’S a strange world they say and a violent and unpredictable one as well.
- Battle Of The Begums (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 03, 2001)
Khaleda’s victory shows her new maturity as a politician.
- Panchayat Raj In Karnataka - I (Hindu, M. Y. Ghorpade, Oct 03, 2001)
FOR CENTURIES, India has had the experience of gram panchayats but they were based on traditional values, male dominated and caste ridden.
- Terror Revisited (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 03, 2001)
The terrorist attack on the Jammu and Kashmir assembly suggests that there is likely to be a rapid escalation of violence by terrorist groups operating in the state in the days to come.
- The Study Of Economics: A Revolution In The Offing? (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Oct 03, 2001)
Till the early 1970s, the approach to economics as was fashionable in Britain, especially in Oxford, Cambridge and the London School of Economics.
- Life After The Taliban (Telegraph, Chandrashekar Dasgupta, Oct 03, 2001)
Looking beyond the impending war in Afghanistan, the international community must start planning for the political and economic reconstruction of that ill-starred country.
- Will Fiscal Expansion Help? (Business Line, S.S. Bhandare, Oct 03, 2001)
THE appalling terrorist attack on the United States has sent shock waves across the world.
- A Government That Has Gone To Sleep At The Most Crucial Juncture (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 03, 2001)
New Delhi once again gives you the feeling of disarray. The war has come closer to India.
- Brain Re-Engineering -- Neurobiological Framework For Corporate Renewal (Business Line, G. Balasubramanian, Oct 03, 2001)
INFORMATION technology (IT) has propelled organisations into the new era of information and knowledge-based disciplines.
- Technology Business Incubators (Business Line, M. Somasekhar, Oct 03, 2001)
INCUBATORS, as commonly understood, are life support gadgets used by doctors to help pre-mature infants catch up and face the world like normal ones.
- Us Attacks: Reaping Whirlwind (Business Line, D. S. Soman , Oct 03, 2001)
THE unprecedented attack on the US has some lessons for not only the mightiest nation, but also the world.
- Musharraf, Brazening It Out (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Oct 03, 2001)
THOSE of us who watched Pakistan's President, General Pervez Musharraf's much-publicised breakfast meet with Indian editors in Agra a couple of months ago.
- ‘Russia Prefers Un-Sanctioned Action Against Terrorism’ (The Financial Express, Rashmi Das, Oct 03, 2001)
The growing problem of terrorism, which has been tearing at the fabric of many a country for decades, moved to the global centrestage after the terrible attacks in the US on September 11.
- Defining Moment For Wto (Hindu, Mike Moore, Oct 03, 2001)
With the successful conclusion of negotiations on China's and Chinese Taipei's terms of entry to the World Trade Organisation, the way is clear for the WTO Ministerial Conference in Qatar in November to formally adopt the texts of the agreements.
- ‘Foreign Policy Isn’t Sacred, It Changes To Suit National Interest’ (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Oct 03, 2001)
FORMER prime minister I.K. Gujral’s foreign policy initiatives, whether in government or out of it, has always been driven by the conviction that stability in South Asia should be the desired end of any move India makes.
- Unmitigated Terror (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2001)
THE SUICIDE BOMBER attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Legislature complex in Srinagar on Monday, by far the most dastardly act in the nearly three weeks since the U.S. declared a global `war' on terrorism.
- Neglecting Neighbours (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2001)
Even before September 11, when the World did change, this country, including its lively media, had paid scant attention to Bangladesh and the campaign for the election there that has ended in the victory of Begum Khaleda Zia.
- Unseated, But Not Entirely Undone (Telegraph, M. Siva Ram Prasad, Oct 03, 2001)
The dubious distinction of becoming the first chief minister to be removed from office by a court of law, goes to J. Jayalalithaa, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam leader.
- Vanguard At The Gateway To Freedom (Indian Express, Madhu Dandavate, Oct 03, 2001)
ON August 1, 1942, the Congress organised a meeting at Chowpatty in tribute to Tilak’s death anniversary.
- The Citizen And The Faithful (Hindu, Harish Khare , Oct 03, 2001)
SPARE A thought, if you will, for Mr. Amitabh Bachchan.
- Repeal Evil With Good (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 03, 2001)
What Gandhi would have told the US: war won’t ensure safety.
- Keeping Away From Us Will Not Help India’s Interests (The Financial Express, B. P. Singh, Oct 03, 2001)
This refers to Kuldip Nayar’s article “A wishy-washy foreign policy will not work to India’s advantage” (The Financial Express, September 26).
- Lost Fight (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 02, 2001)
Drama has always been Ms Mamata Banerjee’s forte. It is thus peculiarly fitting that her fall from popularity should be so spectacular.
- Purchased Silence (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 02, 2001)
THE news that Gen Pervez Musharraf bought several religious leaders over with hefty sums of money to keep a low profile on street demonstrations against the military government's decision to support American action makes interesting reading.
- Night Shift Puts Stress On Body (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 02, 2001)
Shift work may lead to an increased risk of heart disease — as well as causing fatigue and disrupting sleep patterns and social life, Dutch scientists have said.
- Penalised For Good Work (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 02, 2001)
THERE are striking similarities in the career graph of the displaced Ludhiana Municipal Commissioner, Mr Sukhbir Singh Sandhu, and the controversial former Commissioner of the Pune Municipal Corporation, Mr Arun Bhatia.
- Don’t Ignore Warning Signals (Tribune, P. Raman , Oct 02, 2001)
WITH everyone remaining glued to George Bush’s war against Bin Laden, Delhi’s political establishment finds it convenient to ignore all the unpleasant warning signals on the home front.
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