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Articles 16921 through 17020 of 27558:
- Mahatma Gandhi’s Vision Of India (Tribune, Poonam I. Kaushish , Oct 02, 2001)
“IT'S a week of ironies. At one end, war clouds gather on the horizon as superpower USA flexes its muscle. At the other, India pays homage to the apostle of peace, Gandhi,” exclaimed a schoolgirl.
- Bapu, You Count Less And Less With The Nation (Indian Express, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 02, 2001)
Bapu, if you come here on your birthday, you would not recognise the country you once led to freedom. We are now a high-flying nation.
- Not Cricket (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 02, 2001)
The election of the office bearers of the Board of Control for Cricket in India proves one thing: those who administer cricket have little or nothing to do with the game.
- Our Future Is In Forests (Indian Express, Yoginder K. Alagh, Oct 02, 2001)
SOME experts say that India is not changing and is stagnating. They say that the country was changing fast in the eighties and is not doing so now.
- Lighting Bush Fires (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 02, 2001)
ARE we fighting USA’s war on terrorism? Or are the Americans fighting our war on terrorism?
- Moronic Measure (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 02, 2001)
THE ministry of health is really on a moronic ego trip, going by the Express report of Saturday.
- Bombay: When Freedom Was The Buzzword (Indian Express, Madhu Dandavate, Oct 02, 2001)
Though Bombay (now Mumbai) was not considered the nucleus of the Independence Movement, the role it played was crucial.
- Manhattan’s Mumbai Connection (Indian Express, J. Dey, Oct 02, 2001)
The E plot to hijack the Indian Airlines flight IC 814 was hatched by the Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) sometime in 1997 after Maulana Masood fell into the hands of Indian authorities.
- Battle Hymn Of The Republic (Telegraph, Partha Chateerjee, Oct 02, 2001)
Let me say at the outset that I consider the attacks carried out in this city on September 11 as heinous and barbaric.
- The Loss Of Vision (Telegraph, SURENDRA MUNSHI, Oct 02, 2001)
Ever since the terrorist attack on critical targets in the United States, officially characterized as war against the US, a peculiar situation has emerged from the images and words that the tragedy has thrown up.
- From The Classroom To The World (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 02, 2001)
Inculcating the national feeling and enabling the student to develop a national vision is another important aspect of education.
- Pakistan-U.S. Strategic Idiom (Hindu, P. S. SURYANARAYANA, Oct 02, 2001)
AMERICA'S ``WAR'' on international terrorism is now being plotted in a nebulous strategic environment.
- War In Afghanistan (Hindu, V. R. Raghavan , Oct 02, 2001)
A NEW Afghan war is about to commence shortly. A massive coalition of countries interested in eliminating terrorism has agreed to combine its resources to cleanse Afghanistan of its terrorist ideology.
- The Man To Emulate (Business Line, N. R. Krishnan , Oct 02, 2001)
IN THE untimely demise of Madhavrao Scindia, the country has lost a political leader of commendable dynamism and vision.
- Prescription For India Inc (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 02, 2001)
A POLL by the Confederation of Indian Industry released over the weekend, confirms the of anecdotal evidence of despondency that hangs over India Inc: corporate chiefs believe recovery can be expected only beyond 2002.
- Rationale For Protection (Business Line, C. P. Chandrasekhar, Oct 02, 2001)
THE handloom sector is the only non-agricultural, commodity-producing sector (other than perhaps the manufacture of beedis) that employs a huge number of workers and yet is dispersed in rural and semi-urban areas.
- In Defence Of Handlooms (Business Line, C. P. Chandrasekhar, Oct 02, 2001)
IN SEPTEMBER, Hyderabad was the location for an unusual conference organised by Dastkar Andhra, a non-governmental organisation working with handloom weavers.
- For A Bureaucrat, Working With Him Was Living In The Days Of Camelot (The Financial Express, Yogesh Chandra, Oct 02, 2001)
We met when I was director-general tourism, and he took over as my minister, in the Cabinet of Narasimha Rao.
- Now To Make It Work (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 02, 2001)
THE FORMAL LAUNCH of the Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana, the new Rs. 10,000-crore food-for-work programme.
- Liberalisation Paves Way For Stronger Indo-Brazil Trade Ties (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Oct 02, 2001)
Economic liberalisation in India and Brazil in the past decade has opened up vast opportunities for trade and investment.
- ‘There Is Enormous Scope For Co-Operation In Information Technology’ (The Financial Express, HUMA SIDDQUI, Oct 02, 2001)
Brazil’s Ambassador to India, Vera Barrouin Machado, spoke to Huma Siddiqui on various avenues of bilateral co-operation. Excerpts:
- Economy Is The Key (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Oct 02, 2001)
THE RECENT ban on the Students' Islamic Movement of India was necessitated by allegations (probably backed by concrete evidence) of links between the organisation and outfits and individuals answering to the description of terrorist.
- Packing Off Patel (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 02, 2001)
THE question is no longer whether Gujarat Chief Minister Keshubhai Patel should go, but when he will go.
- It’S Always Been A Single Issue (Tribune, Kathryn Hughes, Oct 02, 2001)
THE New York Times recently carried a piece that went straight to the heart of the new century’s biggest moral panic, at least after terrorism: single women.
- Veerappan Cases-I: Mass Acquittals Overshadow Few Convictions (Hindu, Mukund Padmanabhan, Oct 01, 2001)
MYSORE, SEPT. 30. Only the defence lawyers broke into smiles as the Mysore Special Court Judge, Mr. Krishnappa, announced the string of acquittals in the so-called ``Veerappan associates'' cases.
- U.N. And The Anti-Terror Focus (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 01, 2001)
THE UNITED NATIONS Security Council has enthusiastically spelt out a comprehensive framework of do's and don'ts to promote a global-scale campaign to combat terrorism.
- What Is Appropriate Asset Allocation Now? (Business Line, V. Anantha-Nageswaran , Oct 01, 2001)
IT MUST be interesting for the readers to know what sort of advice we (Credit Suisse, Asia Pacific) are giving our clients now, in the aftermath of the attacks on the US.
- Advani Can Learn From Bush (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 01, 2001)
It may seem ironical but it is not surprising that the day Prime Minister Vajpayee was cautioning Opposition leaders that the battle against terrorism should not acquire communal overtones.
- What Ails Our Fis? (Indian Express, S. H. Khan, Oct 01, 2001)
WHILE the UTI crisis was still hogging the headlines, the government announced a bailout package for IFCI.
- Thoughts To Remember (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Oct 01, 2001)
It’s frightening, the amount of spleen being vented on the Muslims of the world as a consequence of the Tuesday Terror, that Americans are killing Sikhs because they sport beards and turbans.
- The Death Of Promise (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 01, 2001)
Scindia: another politician of energy and integrity departs.
- Second Thoughts On The Taliban! (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 01, 2001)
NEW DELHI, SEPT. 30. What should the United States do with the Taliban?
- Handle With Care (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 01, 2001)
Banning any organization is an extreme step, and the two-year ban on the Students’ Islamic Movement of India has naturally provoked violence, outrage and frenzied arguments among political parties.
- Driven To Death (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 01, 2001)
Most Calcuttans are resigned to their city being a form of slow death. But the killing machinery is speeding up.
- The Many Unanswered Questions Of (Tribune, Anupam Gupta, Oct 01, 2001)
APART from a non-legislator’s appointment as Minister or Chief Minister under Article 164 (4) of the Constitution — on which I focussed last week — the September 21.
- The Battle To Breathe (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 01, 2001)
The apex court must hang on to that broom for Delhi skies.
- An American Somersault (Telegraph, J. N. Dixit , Oct 01, 2001)
The world at large remains concerned and bemused by the policy statement made by the president of the United States of America, George W. Bush, on May 1 at the US National Defence University.
- There’s A Time Bomb Close By (Telegraph, Ashok Kapur, Oct 01, 2001)
The world today reveals a major fault line. It involves on one side those who attack civilian targets — something the communists did not do vis-à-vis innocent citizens of countries who opposed their policies.
- An Uninspiring And Disconcerting Picture (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 01, 2001)
Education is...the most important dominion of our national life. Needless to reiterate that education holds the key to development and progress in every sphere of our existence.
- Survivor Sickness (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 01, 2001)
THE global economy has entered a bad patch, with the IMF predicting an all-round recession.
- India's Oilseeds Revolution (Business Line, Devinder Sharma , Oct 01, 2001)
INDIA recorded a spectacular increase both in area under oilseeds as well as its output, with production doubling from 11 million tonnes in 1986-87 to 22 million tonnes in 1994-95, thereby justifying the term ``yellow revolution''.
- Wto And Indian Agriculture: Trading In Food Insecurity (Business Line, Devinder Sharma , Oct 01, 2001)
FOR any tourist, Kerala is an attractive destination.
- Crime Doesn’t Pay! Nor Does Farming! (Tribune, Khushwant Ahluwalia, Oct 01, 2001)
SITTING comfortably in a bar in Delhi drinking rum with water and swallowing pork sausages on sticks, I was introduced to a rich businessman of Delhi by my host.
- Three Indians On Forbes List (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 01, 2001)
Three Indian Americans, including 12 Technologies CEO Sanjiv Sidhu whose company’s stocks have nosedived during the IT industry recession, are on the just released list of Forbes 400 richest people in the USA.
- Whither Coal India? (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Oct 01, 2001)
ALTHOUGH THERE WAS no proposal before the Centre to privatise Coal India Ltd, trade unions and colliery workers have been apprehensive about the fate of CIL.
- Sri Lanka: Dimensions Of A Crisis (Hindu, Jayadeva Uyangoda, Oct 01, 2001)
WHILE SRI LANKA'S present political crisis deepens, the ruling People's Alliance administration of Ms. Chandrika Kumaratunga has averted a regime collapse by entering into a surprise understanding.
- Fallout From Terrorism -- Bailing Out The Us Airline Industry (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Oct 01, 2001)
FOR several months now, the US' corporate announcements of layoffs have just about become a routine event.
- Scarcity Amid Plenty: A Paradox (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Oct 01, 2001)
THE great Indian mystery of a mountain of foodgrains amidst episodes of starvation deaths has eluded answers over the years.
- America's Script For Afghanistan (Hindu, T. Sreedhar, Oct 01, 2001)
THE DEVELOPMENTS in the international system since September 11 clearly indicate that the U.S. is attempting coercive diplomacy to defeat its adversary in Afghanistan.
- Pension System Needs Separate Regulatory Body (The Financial Express, Mukul G Asher, Oct 01, 2001)
AS Indian policy makers start focussing on reforming the pension system, one of the major issues is: who should regulate the pensions industry?
- ‘India’s Battle Over Basmati Patent Not Fully Lost Yet’ (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Oct 01, 2001)
India could not present its case well before the United States Patents & Trademark Organisation (USPTO) in the recent battle over basmati rice despite ample evidence given by the country’s scientific community.
- Lifting Of Sanctions No Big Deal: Experts (The Financial Express, HUMA SIDDQUI, Oct 01, 2001)
The lifting of US sanctions on Pakistan seems ill-timed for India. For, the US seems to have arrived at the conclusion that it was imperative to keep Pervez Musharraf in power for the present, whatever the costs.
- On The Precipice (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 01, 2001)
IN THE WEEKS since the terrorist attacks in the U.S., dark clouds have quickly formed over the global economy.
- Kerala Pilot-Study On Corruption Put Borderline Cases To Shame (The Financial Express, Rohit Bansal, Oct 01, 2001)
It hasn’t got the attention it deserved. But a recent pilot study on azhimathi (Malayalam for corruption) under jurist N R Madhava Menon of Transparency International in Kerala.
- Un Bans Terrorism (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 01, 2001)
IN what is obviously a tentative first step, the United Nations Security Council has called on all member-countries to crackdown on terrorism of all types.
- Cyber Challenges & Priorities (Tribune, Satya Prakash Singh , Oct 01, 2001)
STEPHEN Hawking recently recommended in an interview to German magazine Focus “that humans change their DNA through genetic modification in order to keep ahead of advances in computer technology and stop intelligent machines from taking over the world”.
- Boosters Engaged (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Sep 10, 2001)
In times of crises, it appears, emerge creative thinking.
- More Women Harassed At Workplace (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 10, 2001)
If the callers to a new telephone helpline launched in May this year are anything to go by, the incidence of sexual harassment is rapidly rising in government institutions as well as in the public and private sectors.
- The Itinerary Beyond Life (Pioneer, Harish C Gaur, Sep 10, 2001)
Life is a journey. It starts with birth of the body, considered to have three manifestations: gross, subtle and causal.
- Students Take To Drugs (Tribune, Smriti Kak, Sep 10, 2001)
Prescription drugs are fast making their way into the chemical drug market.
- Disassembled (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Sep 10, 2001)
It would be cynical to say that all politicians are unscrupulous self-seekers masquerading as people’s representatives.
- Reservation War In Up (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 10, 2001)
The speed with which Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Rajnath Singh is unfolding new job reservation packages may or may not help the Bharatiya Janata Party regain its popularity in the Hindi heartland.
- Msp And Other Constraints (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 10, 2001)
An increase in the MSP (minimum support prices) of paddy by about 4 per cent will be treated as a joke but for the damaging effect this will have on farmers.
- Salary Tops The Bill-Boards (Pioneer, Anuradha Dutt, Sep 10, 2001)
The monsoon session of Parliament ended on August 31. It was significant for two reasons.
- 30 Die After Taking Viagra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 10, 2001)
At least 30 men have died in Germany after taking Viagra since use of the sexual potency drug was authorised within the European Union in September, 1998, the Health Ministry revealed on Saturday.
- My Task Is To Unite The Various Akali Dals Into The Panthic Morcha (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 10, 2001)
A respected religious leader of the Sikh community, Baba Sarabjot Singh Bedi has always remained in the sidelines.
- Did Govt Learn Any Lesson From Agra? (Tribune, Sumer Kaul, Sep 10, 2001)
The Vajpayee government appears to be keenly looking forward to another meeting between the Prime Minister and the Pakistani President later this month in New York.
- External Shine (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Sep 10, 2001)
The external sector represents both the success and the failure of the reform attempt.
- A Head For Numbers (Telegraph, S. L. Rao, Sep 10, 2001)
The government of India (including Union territories without legislatures) has an estimated staff strength in the current financial year of 3.45 million people.
- Strong Winds In Tamil Nadu (Telegraph, MAHESH RANGARAJAN, Sep 10, 2001)
In the battle to cleanse Indian politics of corruption, few cases have been as sensational as that of J Jayalalitha.
- China Is The Shopper's Stop (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Sep 10, 2001)
BEIJING, SEPT. 9. The Indian and Chinese governments may want to argue with each other on their contested border, Pakistan, and nuclear weapons for years to come.
- Kids Cause Earthquake In Giant Jump (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Sep 10, 2001)
Around one million British school children succeeding in causing an earthquake, jumping up and down simultaneously in the world’s largest scientific experiment.
- Back To Our Abcs (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 10, 2001)
Astrological prediction: without literacy we are nothing.
- Understanding Barriers To Rapid Growth And Employment Creation (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Sep 10, 2001)
Edited excerpts of the McKinsey report that tries to find out if better economic policies can significantly improve India's economic growth.
- Growth Mantras (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Sep 10, 2001)
Revive market activity to tide over economic crisis.
- Running On Empty Ideas (Indian Express, Anil Agrawal, Sep 10, 2001)
THE ministry of petroleum has shown extreme sagacity in reducing air pollution control to a high school debate: CNG vs Diesel.
- Slavery, Then And Now (Indian Express, Devaki Jain , Sep 10, 2001)
A GRIPPING aspect of the words, the stories and the anger in Durban was the reference to slavery.
- Father Of Man (Pioneer, Shubha Singh, Sep 10, 2001)
Indian parliamentarians are not known for their interest in welfare issues.
- The Picture In The Frame (Indian Express, Shailaja Bajpai, Sep 10, 2001)
When you set yourself impossibly high standards, it’s impossible to scale them. This should not inhibit you from baying at the moon but chances are you won’t land upon it. Still, if at first you don’t succeed...
- 300 Days For Murder (Indian Express, Indra Mohan Sahai, Sep 10, 2001)
Surely serious crime needs more serious punishment.
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