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Articles 18921 through 19020 of 27558:
- Dial E For Eureka! (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 04, 2001)
MEDIA reports of two recent innovations indicate that the scientific temperament is not just alive and kicking but making a contribution towards resolving critical problems acutely common to the developing world.
- Load On Accounts (Business Line, S. Rajaratanm, Aug 04, 2001)
TAX LAWS would influence accounting measurements because the impact on tax income is causing a wide divergence between pre-tax and post-tax incomes.
- On A Wider Net (Business Line, T. A. Bhaskaran, Aug 04, 2001)
TAXATION of services acquires greater significance as India becomes more of a service economy.
- Dragon Comes Closer Home (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 04, 2001)
INDIA should lend an attentive ear to the smaller Saarc states’ demand that China be accepted as a member of the regional grouping.
- Course Of Money, Output, Velocity And Prices (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Aug 04, 2001)
WHAT has been happening to the relation between money and prices in recent years?
- Reneging On The Kyoto Protocol (Business Line, Sujata Gupta, Aug 04, 2001)
THE presence of certain trace gases in the atmosphere enables it to act like a greenhouse.
- Handling Kashmir (Hindu, P. V. Indiresan , Aug 04, 2001)
GEN. PERVEZ Musharraf comes from a culture that has irrevocable faith in one, and only one, God. It is natural for him to target one single issue to the exclusion of all others.
- Operation Salvage (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 04, 2001)
Restore the confidence of investors in UTI.
- Do We Need Universal Banking In India? (The Financial Express, Rudra Sensarma, Aug 04, 2001)
The phenomenon of universal banking—as different from narrow banking—is suddenly in the news.
- Financial Aid To Students (Tribune, Amrik Singh , Aug 04, 2001)
Dissatisfaction with the low level of fees has been growing apace during recent years.
- Defective Politics (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Aug 04, 2001)
THERE WAS a time in Indian politics when the word ‘defection’ was only mumbled.
- Disinvestment In Heritage (Hindustan Times, K. M. Shrimali, Aug 04, 2001)
THE TATAS taking over the maintenance of the Taj Mahal hogged the headlines in electronic and print media last month.
- Lessons Not Learnt At The Wto (Hindu, C. Rammanohar Reddy, Aug 04, 2001)
IT IS not too much of an exaggeration to say that the next couple of months will decide the shape of the World Trade Organisation in the future and how far the institution is going to enjoy the confidence of a majority of the world's Governments.
- Sprucing Up Hospitality (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 04, 2001)
AS KERALA PREPARES to formulate a comprehensive tourism policy, it is imperative that several crucial issues are addressed to make it an instrument that effectively taps the potential in the hospitality industry.
- With Malice Towards One And All: Monsoon Cloudburst (Hindustan Times, Khushwant Singh, Aug 04, 2001)
ONE EXPECTS a lot of thunder, lightning and rain during Parliament’s monsoon session — this one coming after the Agra summit and the multi-crore fiddling with investments made by 20 million middle-income earners.
- Of The Fixers, For The Fixers (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 04, 2001)
If this govt means what it says, why is Subramanyam in jail, not Manmohan.
- Lengthening Shadow Of Sectarian Violence (Tribune, Gobind Thukral, Aug 04, 2001)
In Pakistan sectarian violence is taking a heavy toll and the military dictator, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, is unable to control it.
- Replicate And Institutionalise Local Successes (The Economic Times, Jayaprakash Narayan, Aug 04, 2001)
THE CONCEPT of social capital is relatively new to India. In recent years many industrial houses have created Foundations and Trusts to channel their wealth for social causes.
- Pm And His (Non)performing Ministers (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Aug 04, 2001)
Who can blame the Prime Minister for wanting to resign?
- For The Love Of Liquor And Women (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, Aug 04, 2001)
The retired chief justice of the Punjab and Haryana high court, Ranjit Singh Narula, tells me as gently as he can to give up drinking.
- Issue Of Livelihood Dominates Public Hearing On Kalpakkam Pfbr (The Financial Express, Joseph Vackayil, Aug 04, 2001)
The mandatory public hearing for the prototype fast breeder reactor (PFBR), held in Kancheepuram on July 27, was like a classical play—it, too, had five distinct acts.
- `We’ve Had 100% Success In Brand Building’ (The Economic Times, Chaman Lal, Aug 04, 2001)
ITS one-and-half year old baby is a Rs 35-crore brand. Mouth freshner Pass Pass has emerged as the DS group’s most prized possession after the premium salt and pepper brand Catch.
- Sena’s Proxy War (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 03, 2001)
Naked power play to topple the Maharashtra government.
- Fumes Can Hit Non-Smoker’s Heart (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2001)
Inhaling other people’s tobacco smoke for just 30 minutes is enough to cause temporary damage to a non-smoker’s heart, according to new research carried out in Japan.
- Obesity Linked To Early Heart Attack (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2001)
OVERWEIGHT people suffer heart attacks at a younger age than heart attack victims whose weight is considered normal, according to a decade-long study by the Mayo Clinic.
- Cheerless On Economy (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2001)
SERIOUS political and diplomatic developments have blinded the nation to a crisis brewing in the economy.
- Time Maze (Telegraph, Malavika R. Banerjee, Aug 03, 2001)
Right at the end of Too Far Afield, the protagonist goes missing and his colleagues are tempted to put in an advertisement:
- Education In Amritsar (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2001)
Considerable progress has been made in the development of education in Amritsar district and the Rural Community Council, recently formed here, has also been divising methods for furtherance of this cause.
- Dealing With Nepal, Our Neighbour (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Aug 03, 2001)
WE cannot do good to Nepal for it will suspect our goodwill. Nor can we be indifferent to that country for that will confirm what it has always thought of us — that we are not sincere. So how do we deal with this country?
- Life Beyond The Market (Hindustan Times, Praful Bidwai, Aug 03, 2001)
TWO IMAGES from gorgeous Genoa, one true and the other misleading, will long remain etched on the public mind.
- Enron And Globalisation (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 03, 2001)
IT IS no more a secret that there was some funny business in the finalisation of the Enron Power project.
- Isn’t It Time We Knocked On World Bank’s Door? (The Financial Express, R.K. Roy, Aug 03, 2001)
The Unit Trust of India (UTI) has hogged the limelight in the multi-faceted scam 2001.
- ‘I Have Largely Been An Agent Of Change In Tata Steel’ (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Aug 03, 2001)
From turning around an ageing steel behemoth to a state-of-the-art one, to being adjudged the lowest cost producer in the world.
- Deep Into The Indian Roots (Telegraph, ARUNJYOTI BASU, Aug 03, 2001)
In recent years, a number of books based on the colonial experiences of our erstwhile rulers have appeared. In these we find nostalgia, sympathy and sometimes a mixture of both.
- Evading The Larger Issue (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 03, 2001)
THE `CRISIS' TRIGGERED by the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee's declaration of intent to quit office has dissipated.
- Religion And The State (Hindu, T N Madan, Aug 03, 2001)
AMERICAN PRESIDENTS conventionally take their oath of office on the Bible and invoke the blessings of God on America and the American people.
- Tackling Discrimination (Hindu, N.R. MADHAVA MENON, Aug 03, 2001)
EQUALITY MEANS many things to many people. It continues to capture the imagination of people everywhere in varying degrees of appeal and intensity.
- Caste Politics At Its Worst In Up (Tribune, Syed Nooruzzaman, Aug 03, 2001)
DEVELOPMENT in UP in the wake of bandit queen Phoolan Devi’s daylight murder at a little distance from Parliament have brought into sharp focus the worst kind of caste politics being played in the country’s most populous state.
- France Finds Convergence Of Strategic Interests With India (The Financial Express, HUMA SIDDQUI, Aug 03, 2001)
France seems to have undertaken a shift in policy emphasis towards South Asia lately.
- A Long Sulk From Mumbai (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Aug 03, 2001)
YOU CAN take the party out of Maharashtra but you can’t take Maharashtra out of the party.
- Did You Rsvp? (Hindustan Times, Bhaichand Patel, Aug 03, 2001)
IT WAS ten o’clock and the hostess was in a tizzy. She was the wife of a European ambassador who had been newly posted to New Delhi. Everyone had arrived except the guest of honour.
- Assimilation, Not Segregation (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Aug 03, 2001)
THE DECISION of the Nepalese Supreme Court to deny citizenship rights to ethnic Indians who have lived in that country for several generations is bound to cause dismay in India.
- India's American Alliance (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Aug 03, 2001)
Mr. Jaswant Singh has added yet another feather to his cap.
- Icai Needs To Further Modify Its Curriculum (The Financial Express, Sachchidanand Shukla, Aug 03, 2001)
The much-awaited Chartered Accountancy (CA) final and inter-exam results are out. As always, the successful are overjoyed and those who could not make it, a sad lot.
- Managing Scam-Stuck Polity (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Aug 03, 2001)
PRIME Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee has reasons to feel deeply hurt at the mounting criticism against him and his government from his partymen, especially those belonging to the Sangh Parivar, and some leaders of the ruling National Democratic Alliance.
- ‘65 Per Cent Of Nagas Have Already Fled Imphal’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 03, 2001)
The Centre’s decision to go back on the unilateral ceasefire announced in Bangkok on June 14 and restrict the truce to Nagaland has left Naga groups angry and bewildered.
- Strategic Weakness (The Economic Times, Narendar Pani, Aug 03, 2001)
AS countries refine their positions in the run up to the Doha ministerial of the WTO, India has chosen an extreme corner for itself.
- Fixing The Fuse (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 03, 2001)
RECENT REPORTS RELATING to the Dabhol Power Company's (DPC) power project in Maharashtra are both disquieting and even if predictable show the growing intractability of the problem.
- Vips Compromise Security (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2001)
PHOOLAN Devi's daylight murder at her Ashok Road residence has understandably provoked a debate on the many chinks in the security apparatus.
- Crying Wolf (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 03, 2001)
THE BOGEY of Chinese imports refuses to die. A recent study by the Tariff Commission makes almost the same points that industry lobbyists have made in the past: that certain Chinese imports are growing fast.
- Centre's Move On Tn Police Officials -- Good Governance Sidelined (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Aug 03, 2001)
JUDGED by some aspects of their handling of the issues pertaining to the fall-out of the arrest by the Tamil Nadu Government of the former Chief Minister, Mr M. Karunanidhi, and the two Union Ministers, Mr Murasoli Maran, and Mr T. R. Baalu.
- Election Reform In Us (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Aug 03, 2001)
THE report of the private bipartisan 19-member National Commission on Election Reforms, co-chaired by two former presidents, Mr Jimmy Carter and Mr Gerald Ford, submitted to the US President, Mr George Bush, on August 1.
- Cotton Concerns (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 03, 2001)
THE `SAVE COTTON, Save Textiles' conference held last week in Coimbatore has once again brought into sharp focus the imperative of evolving medium- to long-term strategies for building global competitiveness into the country's enormous cotton sector.
- Mncs In The New World -- How Much Do Developing Countries Gain? (Business Line, Abhimanyu, Aug 03, 2001)
THERE was a time when the developing world had little regard for multinationals and foreign investment. This was during the 1960s and the 1970s.
- Wto And The Doha Round: A Developing Country Perspective (The Economic Times, Manoj Pant, Aug 03, 2001)
THE DEVELOPMENT countries seem to want to declare the Uruguay round a success and start with a new round: the Millennium round at Doha.
- Stimulating The Economy -- On The Wrong Trajectory (Business Line, Sunil S. Bhandare, Aug 03, 2001)
WHAT India needs in its current economic predicament is fiscal expansion and not interest rate reduction.
- Non-Resident Children (Indian Express, Cookie Maini, Aug 03, 2001)
The sweet sadness of being parents of globe-trotters.
- Lonely At The Top (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 03, 2001)
IT was genuine exasperation and disgust at the anarchy within the NDA that caused the prime minister’s offer to resign.
- The Road To Rivoli: Napoleon’s First Campaign (Telegraph, Kaushik Roy, Aug 03, 2001)
The German expression for “total war”, der totale Krieg, meaning total mobilization of demographic and economic resources first came into use in the early 19th century to explain Napoleonic warfare.
- Red Alert: Prosperity Kills Girls (Indian Express, S. C. Gulati, Aug 03, 2001)
ALTHOUGH a marginal improvement of eight points in the overall female to male sex ratio in India.
- The Making Of Modern Indian Art: The Progressives (Telegraph, Ella Datta, Aug 03, 2001)
It is a very romantic story. Just the kind that myths are made of. Six young men, from very ordinary backgrounds, came to Bombay with a dream.
- Mergers: The Big Bang Theory (The Economic Times, Lubna Kably, Aug 03, 2001)
SINCE the past few days a ditty has been echoing in my head, for no rhyme or reason.
- Politics Of Hunger (Telegraph, Yougendra Yadav, Aug 03, 2001)
The establishment has finally discovered that there is a drought in the country. It happened at the Supreme Court on July 23.
- Export Subsidy Schemes Need To Wake Up To Wto Reality (The Financial Express, Rajeev Ahuja, Aug 03, 2001)
The practice of giving export incentives is near universal, and India is no exception. However, not all incentives are permitted under the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Agreement.
- Dismal Story (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Aug 03, 2001)
DATA on India’s trade with the rest of the world in the first quarter of the current fiscal reflect the slump at home and abroad. Growth in exports is a paltry 1.76 per cent.
- Critical Allies (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 03, 2001)
Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee used the threat of resignation to muster support for himself and to silence his critics.
- Sam’s Dragon (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 03, 2001)
The recent visit to China by the United States secretary of state, Mr Colin Powell, marks a new phase of engagement between the Republican administration and the Chinese government.
- Partisan Action (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 03, 2001)
Sir, - The incisive Editorial, `Cynical Manoeuvres' (July 31), has brought out the true intentions of the Central Government in transferring the three senior police officers involved in the former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister's arrest.
- Death Of Distance And Of Closeness (Telegraph, PARIMAL BHATTACHARYA, Aug 02, 2001)
Consider the incidents: an upper-middle class boy, on his way to get his higher secondary results, calls a helpline from his cellphone saying he is scared.
- Resignation That Never Was (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 02, 2001)
POLITICIANS are believed to have a thick skin but Prime Minister Vajpayee is an honourable exception. His offer to resign on Tuesday strengthens this popular impression.
- Submerged Orissa (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 02, 2001)
NATURE has been unsparingly harsh on Orissa. From 1995 to 1998, the state remained in the grip of a merciless drought in which more than 300 persons perished. In October, 1999, it was visited by a super cyclone that killed more than 20,000 persons.
- Why Cadaver Transplants Are Still Few (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Aug 02, 2001)
DESPITE the cadaver transplant legislation being passed by the Central Government in 1994, ``a pathetic number of heart transplants -- less than 20 -- have been done in the country,''
- The Outrage In Rajasthan (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 02, 2001)
THE DEMOLITION OF a mosque at Asind in Rajasthan by a lumpen crowd and the construction of a temple at the site soon after is indeed a reminder of the communal frenzy that has been at play across the country for over a decade now.
- Beware Of The Loony Brigade (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Aug 02, 2001)
TO NO one’s surprise, the VHP has had no qualms in acknowledging its role in the demolition of a disused 500-year old Kalandari mosque at Asind near Bhilwara in Rajasthan and ‘converting’ it into a ‘temple’.
- A Brand Called Philanthropy (Indian Express, Tara Sinha, Aug 02, 2001)
Or why American companies use ‘giving’ to sell their products.
- Kashmir Issue Should Be Put In Cold Storage For Some Years (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 02, 2001)
Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf talks like an evangelist who brings the gospel of Kashmir to peoples in Pakistan and India.
- The Migrant As Scapegoat (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Aug 02, 2001)
RECENT EVENTS and discussions in India's commercial capital should concern everyone in the country.
- How Best To Manage Other People’s Affairs (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 02, 2001)
The importance of creating a more effective conflict prevention paradigm is underscored by the alarming global trends forecast in the recent National Intelligence Council’s report, Global Trends 2015.
- ‘Autonomy’ V. ‘Special Powers’ (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 02, 2001)
THE problem with Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah is that he makes an announcement and gives thought to it later.
- A Look At India’s Strategic Interests (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Aug 02, 2001)
FOR the last two months the media and its young television anchors spent huge amounts of time and money trying to discover “concessions” that should be given to Pakistan’s military ruler even before he arrived in India.
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