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Articles 17621 through 17720 of 27558:
- Tehelka Expose - Means Do Matter (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Aug 29, 2001)
NEW DELHI, AUG. 28. Some bizarre arguments have been adduced in the intense debate triggered by the latest turn in the Tehelka episode, to justify the action of investigative journalists, seeking to expose corruption in sensitive matters.
- Launching The Qatar Round (The Economic Times, Arvind Panagariya , Aug 29, 2001)
INDIA has expressed its clear opposition to the launch of a new round of multilateral negotiations at the forthcoming WTO ministerial in Qatar.
- `We Have More Wholesalers Than We Need’ (The Economic Times, Nutan Gothivarekar, Aug 29, 2001)
Is the slowdown in the pharma industry here to stay?
- Car Of The New Millennium (Business Line, K. Jacob Samuel, Aug 29, 2001)
``I BELIEVE that one day hydrogen and oxygen, which make up water, will -- singly or together -- provide an unlimited source of heat and light,'' wrote the French science fiction writer Jules Verne in his 1874 book The Mysterious Island.
- When The Sena Mourns (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 29, 2001)
Can the inactive police bring the arsonists to book?
- Biotech Battles -- Blunting The Competitive Edge (Business Line, M. Somasekhar, Aug 29, 2001)
THIS is the tale of two biotech start-ups, both entrepreneurial ventures that came up in Hyderabad.
- Duping With Dope (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 29, 2001)
The public sees Kunjarani Devi, the bespectacled diminutive girl from Manipur, as the new face of doping in Indian sport.
- Back To Back (Pioneer, Girish Bhandari, Aug 29, 2001)
This tug of war was pseudo symbolic, as all bureaucratic tugs of war are.
- `How To...' Homilies (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Aug 29, 2001)
THERE has always been an insatiable craving in us for advice on quick fixes to situations we encounter in our daily lives at home or in office.
- Up In Election Mode (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 28, 2001)
UTTAR Pradesh has been brought on the election mode.
- Colin Powell To Avoid Un Conference On Racism (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Aug 28, 2001)
The United States Secretary of State Colin Powell will not attend the United Nations conference on racism opening on Friday in South Africa.
- My Sweet Uncle (Pioneer, Sudhansu Mohanty , Aug 28, 2001)
From childhood he was the only Mausa, uncle we knew.
- Doomed Selloff? (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 28, 2001)
THE PRIVATISATION of Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd is headed for the rocks.
- Online Learning Excites Students (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 28, 2001)
THE Internet age is increasingly changing the way students learn, say experts. “Children are getting more excited about experiments involving the Internet and are learning on their own,”
- Create More Breathing Space (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 28, 2001)
The rapid growth of Delhi in recent times has resulted in significant increase in environmental pollution...
- Not The Tehelka Tapes (Telegraph, Mani Shankar Aiyar, Aug 28, 2001)
This one-act play draws its inspiration from the British TV programme of the Seventies, Not The Nine O’clock News. The author’s apologies for the shameless plagiarism.
- Short-Term Anger (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 28, 2001)
ANGRY outbursts are nothing new from Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Dr Farooq Abdullah.
- ‘Signs Of Recovery Are Scattered...They Are Not Very Strong’ (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Aug 28, 2001)
THE finance ministry is banking on monsoon to do the trick. It is expecting the monsoons, which were better than what was recorded during the last two years, will lift the sagging economy, though with a time lag.
- No Scope For "Negotiations" (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 28, 2001)
GIVEN THE HORRIFYING demolition of the Babri Masjid in December 1992, and its traumatic impact on the national psyche and the blow it caused to India's cherished image as an upholder of a plurality of cultures and faiths.
- Friendly Interests (Telegraph, J. N. Dixit , Aug 28, 2001)
Our obsessive focus on the Pervez Musharraf-Atal Bihari Vajpayee summit at Agra was logical and inevitable.
- Dalits And Durban - Ii (Hindu, P. Radhakrishnan, Aug 28, 2001)
IF THESE lower castes (whom some States have classified under the Most Backward Classes category) have not been included among the Scheduled Castes it is for the reason that they were not identified as untouchables.
- Plotting An Economic 'Crisis' (Hindu, Kamal Nayan Kabra, Aug 28, 2001)
IT WOULD not be far short of foolish to turn a blind eye to the effects of conjoint bunching of various acts of agencies known to be working in tandem for the achievement of their grand projects.
- Unity On Wto Issues (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 28, 2001)
THE COMMON POSITION that the South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation has decided to take on the issues that will be deliberated at the Doha ministerial conference of the World Trade Organisation.
- Focus On Governance Of Financial Mkt (The Economic Times, Samir K Barua, Aug 28, 2001)
THE SITUATION prevailing in the stock markets today reminds one of a poignant episode from Boris Pasternak’s famous book Dr Zhivago.
- Risks And Returns Of Economic Partnership With China (The Financial Express, Kalyan Raipuria, Aug 28, 2001)
China and India are poised to play a greater role in the world economy in the 21st century, which will, to a large extent, facilitated by their co-operative stands and economic partnership.
- Get Real About Crop Area Statistics (The Economic Times, Nidhi Nath Srinivas, Aug 28, 2001)
IF monsoon forecasts make the stock markets jump, data on annual crop production, agricultural prices and land use is equally closely watched by policy makers, exporters and sectors as diverse as fertilisers, food, and black & white TVs.
- India Continues To Remain A ‘Partner Of Choice’ For Germany (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Aug 28, 2001)
Germany is India’s second largest trade partner, (the largest within the European Union), as also a major technology and investment source.
- A Dangerous Pay-Off (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 28, 2001)
Members of Parliament are shamelessly seeking raises in pay and perks.
- Avoidable Communal Incident (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 28, 2001)
IT is not clear why the Intelligence Bureau has been asked to investigate the incident of communal violence in the walled city area of Ahmedabad.
- On Caste... And The Market Economy (The Economic Times, Sauvik Sauvik Chakraverti verti , Aug 28, 2001)
IT was my first day in London, my first visit to the ‘developed’ world.
- Wages Of War Paid By The Weak (Pioneer, Ajoy Bagchi, Aug 28, 2001)
Bharat Jhunjhunwala, in his article "Unjust peace" (August 14), raves against the United Nations' Decade of Peace and Non-violence and advances a convoluted thesis against peace.
- Only The First Step (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 28, 2001)
THE GOVERNMENT has taken a step in the right direction by turning down the recapitalisation requests of weak banks.
- Not Too Late (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 28, 2001)
It is obvious from recent events in Calcutta and its environs that organized crime, based in Dubai, is attempting to gain a foothold in the city.
- Rites Of Dialogue (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 28, 2001)
It is always a relief when violence and distrust are followed by an effort to talk.
- How `Temporary' The Slowdown, Mr Sinha? (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Aug 28, 2001)
AT LAST, the NDA Government has come to accept what has been obvious to everyone outside that all is not well with the economy.
- Save Basmati (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 28, 2001)
IN THE DIN of the polemics over whether India actually succeeded in warding off threats to Basmati rice following the grant of patent to the Texas-based RiceTec Inc by the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
- It Outsourcing: Can India Continue To Lead? (Business Line, D. K. Sareen, Aug 28, 2001)
THE good news is IT outsourcing is fast becoming an innovative business model, despite the severe slowdown in the US and the stiff resistance by the labour unions against this model.
- Anti-Corruption Laws (Business Line, J. Nanda Gopal , Aug 28, 2001)
THAT the Central Government is not inclined to initiate legislation on forfeiture of ill-gotten wealth by corrupt public servants gives the impression that parasites can continue to feed off the nation.
- Terrorism: Glossing Over The Real Issues (Business Line, Premen Addy , Aug 28, 2001)
``GANGSTERS, not freedom fighters'' was the excoriating title of the Sunday Telegraph report on the arrest, recently, of three suspected members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in Colombia.
- Boosting Watershed Yields And Conservation Efforts (Business Line, A. V. Swaminathan , Aug 28, 2001)
THE shortage of potable water in cities and water of acceptable purity for irrigation purposes is becoming a universal feature.
- Muivah Is A Safe Bet (Indian Express, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 28, 2001)
IF it is transparency to which the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government is sworn, it should have made public the joint statement signed between former home secretary K. Padmanabhaiah on its behalf and Isak Muivah.
- Bio-Wealth Protection: Genetic And Legislative Approaches (Business Line, S. K. Ghosh, Aug 28, 2001)
THE quest for knowledge combined with profit-making or business aptitude have made science and technology move in a different paths.
- Denglish, Hinglish (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 28, 2001)
THE QUESTION sprechen Sie Deutsch (do you speak German?) should, according to German wire-service DPA, be rephrased as one of sprechen Sie Denglish (do you speak Denglish?)!
- Power Play (Pioneer, Bharat Jhunjhunwala, Aug 28, 2001)
Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Murasoli Maran should be congratulated on their bold and forthright stand that a new round of trade negotiations will be acceded to only after the built-in agenda of the Uruguay round has been satisfactorily addressed.
- A Close Look At Modern Growth Strategy (Tribune, Satya Prakash Singh , Aug 28, 2001)
THE story is well known. Yet, it is worth repeating. Once a person went through a rigorous process of penance to please Lord Shiva.
- Dalits Through The Looking Glass (Pioneer, Sandhya Jain, Aug 28, 2001)
The determined bid by Christian evangelists to take caste-based discrimination in India to the UN World Conference against Racism (WCAR) has inspired leftists, liberals and human rights activists into a frenzy of verbiage and sanctimoniousness.
- A Criminal Strike (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Aug 28, 2001)
Established as the premier national centre for excellence in medical facilities and research, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) is soon to don another mantle-that of an institute which thrives on chaos and irresponsible behaviour.
- Resolving Ayodhya (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Aug 28, 2001)
To put it mildly, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's expression of the hope in Lucknow on Sunday that the Ayodhya dispute would be resolved before March next year, came as a surprise.
- Widening Disparities (The Economic Times, N. J. Kurian, Aug 28, 2001)
This article highlights the frighteningly wide socio-demographic disparities among major states in the country.
- We Have Nothing To Hide In J&k (Indian Express, Manpreet Sethi, Aug 28, 2001)
THE ‘internationalisation’ of the Kashmir issue has remained a fearful prospect for Indian diplomacy. All efforts have been directed at keeping the issue away from international spotlight.
- Brutality Washed In Soap (Indian Express, Rakesh Shukla, Aug 28, 2001)
Encounter with a ‘‘clean’’ DGP in a post-Tehelka world.
- Doped Out (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 28, 2001)
A strict drug control regime for sport is the only way out.
- Speak Up, Pm (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 28, 2001)
There cannot be a secret solution to Ayodhya.
- ‘I Am Not Against Unconventional Means Being Used. But Here (Tehelka) Is A Case Of Using Prostitutes Or Women’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 28, 2001)
Minister for Disinvestment Arun Shourie made his name during his days at The Indian Express for his pioneering methods in investigative journalism.
- My Varied Adventures With ‘Ad-Venture’ (Indian Express, Tara Sinha, Aug 28, 2001)
ALMOST each day, I come across a news item or feature story, tucked away in a tiny corner of a newspaper or magazine, that tells of how an individual has made a difference to peoples’ lives.
- Nda: Rumblings Over Waning Stock (Tribune, P. Raman , Aug 28, 2001)
CALL it rumblings or the onset of a protracted cold war in the BJP establishment. Either way, the message is loud and clear.
- Why Is It All So Unsurprising? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Aug 28, 2001)
We are not surprised by the uncivilized manner in which the Iraqi Ambassador has responded to the series of reports published in your newspaper commemorating the eleventh anniversary of Iraqi invasion of the State of Kuwait.
- Keep The Guns (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 28, 2001)
Over 37 hardcore Naxalites surfaced in Giridih, his home turf, at a media-studded official event.
- A Bad Idea (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 27, 2001)
It won’t be easy for China to democratize either.
- Woman With The Rod (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 27, 2001)
An atrocity beyond the imagination of the Uttar Pradesh police must be something truly unspeakable.
- When The Boss Calls ... Sue Him (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 27, 2001)
Does your boss plague you with irritating phone calls at home? You would be well within your rights to sue, says Britain’s Institute of Management.
- A Matter Of Credit (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 27, 2001)
AVAILABILITY of easy and cheap credit is the second major crippling factor in agricultural operations.
- China’s Spitting Image (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 27, 2001)
Hosting the Olympics could bring about a vast transformation in personal habits.
- Gagging, Gujarat Style (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 27, 2001)
Chief Minister Keshubhai Patel clearly has a lot to hide.
- The Taliban's Defiant Rage (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 27, 2001)
AFGHANISTAN'S UNRULY TALIBAN seems determined to inflict another body-blow on a society which is already reeling under the impact of the fanatical outfit's diabolical destruction of the country's traditional spirit of tolerance.
- Remembering Nazi Attack On Russia (Tribune, M. L. Madhu, Aug 27, 2001)
AMONG a host of events dominating the Russian scene in the last few weeks, including the visit of Chinese President Ziang Zemin to Russia.
- Battle Between Orissa Govt And Aes Set To Intensify (The Financial Express, Dilip Bisoi, Aug 27, 2001)
The Orissa government and US power giant AES Corporation appear to be engaged in a war of wits in a bid to checkmate each other.
- Bsnl Must Pay (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 27, 2001)
INDIA could perhaps be the only country where state owned incumbents are handed out fiscal and regulatory concessions that strengthen them against fledgling private sector competitors.
- Lies And Lawlessness (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 27, 2001)
Why can’t China be a democracy? The United States has five times the population of France and still works as a democracy.
- Vision 2020 -- Economy On Nightmare Street (Business Line, P. V. Indiresan , Aug 27, 2001)
A NIGHTMARE is the opposite of a vision.
- Perilous Signal (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 27, 2001)
THE UNION HOME Minister, Mr. L. K. Advani's announcement that the Centre is considering extending ``relief'' to security personnel accused of human rights violations in their operations against militancy gives rise to serious misgivings.
- Waning Growth Expectations And The Decline Of Reform (The Financial Express, R.K. Roy, Aug 27, 2001)
The finance minister shrugs off the assessment of Moody’s and of Standard and Poor’s: the two foreign raters recently downgraded India as an investment destination.
- The Need To Go Ballistic On Basmati Patent (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 27, 2001)
BASMATI rice is again in the news. And for the wrong reasons too.
- Whither Fiscal Transparency (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Aug 27, 2001)
`FISCAL transparency' is the new buzzword in financial circles.
- The Focus At Doha (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Aug 27, 2001)
VERY briefly, the debate on what stand India should take at the fourth WTO ministerial meeting at Doha.
- Lay Off (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 27, 2001)
IN HOLDING OUT the threat of US sanctions against India over the Dabhol imbroglio.
- Doors Closed To Difference (Telegraph, ANURADHA KUMAR, Aug 27, 2001)
Despite several high-profile measures and publicity garnering acts, little effort has been expended by either the Centre or the state governments to alleviate the plight of the disabled or the differently-abled, in India.
- Tough Choices (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 27, 2001)
THE NEWS gets gloomier by the day. After Thursday’s report of dismal growth in six core sectors, comes the news of plummeting credit offtake.
- The Boys In The Backroom (Telegraph, S. L. Rao, Aug 27, 2001)
It is commonly accepted that governments all over the world are moving towards the form of executive presidencies.
- Talk, Don’t Bulldoze (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 27, 2001)
THE GOVERNMENT must have been asleep while corrupt officials were minting money by overlooking, or even permitting, construction of unauthorised structures in Sainik Farms.
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