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Articles 19221 through 19320 of 27558:
- The Show Will Go On (Hindustan Times, G Parthasarathy, Jul 30, 2001)
‘Veni, Vidi, Vici’ (I came, I saw, I conquered), proclaimed Julius Caesar as he triumphantly surveyed the scene after the conquest of Gaul.
- Death On The Box (Indian Express, Shailaja Bajpai, Jul 30, 2001)
The violent death of celebrities allows us to celebrate their lives in a way that would be impossible had they simply passed away in their sleep. Indeed, the more brutal the ending, the more we relish it.
- Kashmir Dispute: Digging Deep Into 50 Years Of History (Tribune, Anupam Gupta, Jul 30, 2001)
“IT seems to be our function to go on agreeing and Pakistan’s to go on refusing and rejecting, although we happen to be the victims of Pakistan’s aggression."
- Delhi, The Pride Of India! (Tribune, S. Raghunath, Jul 30, 2001)
DELHI-ites have become stuffed shirts and they are walking with their noses in the air and why not?
- Dealing With A Military Ruler (Tribune, T. V. Rajeswar, Jul 30, 2001)
THE most important outcome of the Agra summit was in General Pervez Musharraf revealing himself what he really is.
- Another Policy U-Turn (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 30, 2001)
A few years ago, Mr Yashwant Sinha had earned the derisive title of being a "rollback" Finance Minister. Now it seems the entire Union Cabinet has earned the epithet collectively.
- Vajpayee Under Pressure (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jul 30, 2001)
CLOSE observers of the Prime Minister have noticed of late a certain dejection written across his mien.
- Signs Of The Times In Up (Telegraph, MAHESH RANGARAJAN, Jul 30, 2001)
The brutal slaying of Phoolan Devi, member of parliament for Mirzapur, in the national capital only drives home the situation in the country’s most populous state.
- An Exemplary Island (Telegraph, S. L. Rao, Jul 30, 2001)
Mauritius is a small island in the Indian Ocean. It has no army or navy, only a small local police force.
- Pm’s Plain-Speaking (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 30, 2001)
ON Tuesday Prime Minister Vajpayee was brief and diplomatically restrained when he made his statement in Parliament on the abortive Agra summit.
- Integration Of Banking And Insurance (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Jul 30, 2001)
THERE is a worldwide debate about the fast-growing integration of financial services.
- Chemicals That Compromise Life (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 30, 2001)
Half a century ago, scientists made the unsettling discovery that manmade compounds, such as the pesticide DDT, accumulate in the bodies of people and wildlife.
- Classic Manila Mode (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 30, 2001)
Now look at Indonesia. The revolution that overthrew the dictator, Suharto, in 1998 was in the classic Manila mode, and the subsequent election was mostly free and fair.
- Pressuring Bureaucrats (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 30, 2001)
Sir, - This refers to the article `SC frowns on officials buckling under pressure' (July 26).
- Showdown On Slowdown (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 30, 2001)
IN his recent article (ET, July 25) Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar writes ``Even Shankar Acharya, former Chief Economic Adviser and one closely associated with the reforms.
- Mega Change (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 29, 2001)
The same forces that removed Abdurrahman Wahid as Indonesia's President could pose a threat to the new leader as well... But for now, says AMIT BARUAH, there is considerable goodwill for Megawati Sukarnoputri.
- Mega Change (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 29, 2001)
The same forces that removed Abdurrahman Wahid as Indonesia's President could pose a threat to the new leader as well... But for now, says AMIT BARUAH, there is considerable goodwill for Megawati Sukarnoputri.
- Phoolan Politics (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 29, 2001)
The sensational killing of reformed bandit queen, Phoolan Devi, left her Parliament colleagues stunned but not for long.
- Smart Sanctions For Dumb People (Pioneer, Elsa S Mathews, Jul 29, 2001)
When the oil-for-food programme for Iraq expired on June 3, 2001, the United Nations Security Council, under pressure from the US and UK, decided to impose a set of smart sanctions.
- Money Matters (Hindu, ALOK MUKHERJEE, Jul 29, 2001)
Only when the extent of a `natural calamity' is determined independent of the Government can politics be kept out of sanctioning aid.
- A Whiff Of Fresh Air (Tribune, Prem Kumar , Jul 29, 2001)
TO an occasional visitor in this city, one thing that strikes is the change in lifestyle. This being one of the conservative cities in the country, the change is coming gradually.
- Disinformation War (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 29, 2001)
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee did well to state on Thursday that General Pervez Musharaff's talk of a split in the Indian ranks during the Agra summit was baseless and could stand in the way of future talks with Pakistan.
- India Must Expose Musharraf’s Doublespeak (Tribune, R. Sharma, Jul 29, 2001)
THE Agra Summit has been like a blind ‘date’ for India ending up in a dangerous liaison with Pakistan.
- The Soldier Who Played (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 29, 2001)
LA Paloma, for me, will always be associated with Ram Singh. The INA officer who helped compose a national anthem at the instance of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose.
- India Needs To Step On Gas (Indian Express, Soun Jain, Jul 29, 2001)
THREE days of marathon negotiations ended recently in loud cheers in Bonn.
- Manmohan Takes The Cake At Tea Party (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 29, 2001)
IT was a tea party that was supposed to stir up the Opposition. Instead, it left the principal Opposition party stirred.
- New Nepal Pm Marks Change Of Generation (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Jul 29, 2001)
THE election of Sher Bahadur Deuba as Prime Minister of Nepal marks the change of generation in troubled Nepal.
- Significance Of Shelton’s Visit To India (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Jul 29, 2001)
THE dust and din in the aftermath of the Agra summit-level meeting seem almost to have blurred the significance of the visit here of General Henry Shelton, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff.
- Learning The Limits Of Diplomacy (Tribune, Bharat Wariavwalla, Jul 29, 2001)
THE Agra summit was the first summit in the history of summitry that was covered from minute and hour to hour on the television.
- Doing Their Business (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 29, 2001)
Business of America is business. When the US assistant secretary of state, Christina Rocca, was in Delhi a few days back.
- Index Of Disunity (Pioneer, Rajeev Deshpande, Jul 29, 2001)
The Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP) has been one of the "junior" members of the Left Front.
- India’s Urban Future (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 29, 2001)
THE Confederation of Indian Industry has circulated a study conducted by it on urban India. The picture is depressing to say the least.
- Deuba's Task (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 29, 2001)
The internal churning of the Nepali Congress in recent months has finally come out in the open with the removal of Mr GP Koirala as Prime Minister, and his replacement, through Parliamentary Party elections, by Mr Sher Bahadur Deuba.
- Agra Failure Means Love Failed, We’ll Meet On Front (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 29, 2001)
Moderate Hizbul Commander Masood was killed by security forces on Wednesday.
- Pitfalls In The Path To Peace (Pioneer, Cecil Victor, Jul 29, 2001)
The central theme of the renewed Indo-Pak dialogue was, in General Pervez Musharraf's words:
- Marital Status Quo (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 29, 2001)
Romancing the sanyasin. One doesn’t quite know who actually had this terrible idea.
- Blazing Guns, Security In A Blindfold (Pioneer, K P S Gill, Jul 29, 2001)
The murder of Phoolan Devi in broad daylight and in one of the relatively secure areas of the national capital, raises a number of crucial questions relating to India's internal security, policing and the health of the entire criminal justice system.
- Vice Parading As Virtue (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 29, 2001)
WHEN words die out, what happens to the concepts that they delineate? Do they die out too? Take two words: vice and virtue. These are terms one almost never encounters any more.
- Taking On Big Brother (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jul 29, 2001)
The way the anti-globalisation protests have been handled reflects the governing elite's increasingly adversarial attitude towards the people. HASAN SUROOR reports.
- New Chapter Of Blood-Letting? (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Jul 29, 2001)
It is not only the militant whose morale has gone up after the Agra summit.
- Of Promises Made (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 29, 2001)
Mr. Advani's rejection of the `autonomy resolution' also means a rejection of the promises made by New Delhi in recent years, says HARISH KHARE.
- For A Fair Deal (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Jul 29, 2001)
The Berbers of Algeria have risen in protest since the beginning of this summer.
- Post-Mortem Politics (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 28, 2001)
No matter how regrettable, there is no denying that murder plays a crucial role in influencing electoral politics.
- Wagner Among The Jews (Telegraph, RUKUN ADVANI, Jul 28, 2001)
Six major composers of the 19th century were born between 1809 and 1813: Mendelssohn in 1809; Schumann and Chopin in 1810; Liszt in 1811; Verdi and Wagner in 1813.
- The World Is One (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 28, 2001)
Anti-globalization is radical chic. This glosses over the fact that Karl Marx was the first prophet of globalization.
- Smart Sanctions For Dumb People (Pioneer, Elsa S Mathews, Jul 28, 2001)
When the oil-for-food programme for Iraq expired on June 3, 2001, the United Nations Security Council, under pressure from the US and UK, decided to impose a set of smart sanctions.
- The Unspooling Of General Musharraf (Indian Express, Ayaz Amir, Jul 28, 2001)
Pakistan’s military ruler and president has found his forte: the press conference.
- Pitfalls In The Path To Peace (Pioneer, Cecil Victor, Jul 28, 2001)
The central theme of the renewed Indo-Pak dialogue was, in General Pervez Musharraf's words: "Let us forget history.
- Vanity In Rhyming Verses (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 28, 2001)
Poetry is the greatest form of literature because it is more evocative of emotions than the best prose or fiction. it is closer to music than any other form of writing.
- After Agra (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jul 28, 2001)
THAT the Agra Summit would not deliver favourable results for New Delhi was a foregone conclusion -- even when the Prime Minister, Mr Vajpayee, sprang his `Summit surprise' on the nation on May 23.
- Lng: No Panacea For Fertiliser Woes (Business Line, Uttam Gupta , Jul 28, 2001)
FOR almost two decades, natural gas has occupied the centrestage in the Indian energy scene in view of its being the most preferred feedstock/fuel in various industries.
- Course Of Corporate Profit Rate In Us (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Jul 28, 2001)
THE Bureau of Economic Analysis of the US periodically presents data on national income, capital stock, international investment position, and so on.
- Staging Summits (Hindu, P. R. Chari , Jul 28, 2001)
IT WOULD be pointless to dispute whether the glass of Indo- Pakistan relations is half-full or half-empty after the Agra Summit.
- Welcome Wto Steel Ruling (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jul 28, 2001)
THE RECENT RULING by a WTO appellate body that the US had acted illegally in increasing duties on Japanese steel imports.
- On The Fringe Of Unfairness (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam, Jul 28, 2001)
T. C. A. Ramanujam says that the new rules for valuation of perquisites go against the recommendations of the Chelliah Committee.
- Index Of Disunity (Pioneer, Rajeev Deshpande, Jul 28, 2001)
The Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP) has been one of the "junior" members of the Left Front.
- Nuts And Bolts -- Ii (Business Line, K. Srinivasan , Jul 28, 2001)
A TAX deduction is recognised as a tax expenditure or subsidy which should be available only in respect of disclosed income.
- Welcome To The Campus (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, Jul 28, 2001)
True to our national character we pick up the silliest customs of the West and give them an oriental twist.
- Blazing Guns, Security In A Blindfold (Pioneer, K P S Gill, Jul 28, 2001)
The murder of Phoolan Devi in broad daylight and in one of the relatively secure areas of the national capital, raises a number of crucial questions relating to India's internal security, policing and the health of the entire criminal justice system.
- In The Fire (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 28, 2001)
He is still stricken by the fever he caught at Agra. More anger than fever maybe, but the heat still casts its spell on his face even a week after Agra.
- My Best Brief (Tribune, J. L. Gupta, Jul 28, 2001)
ON March 17, 1771, Sir William Jones in a letter to Count Reviezki observed that, “The only road to the highest stations in this county is that of the law.” More than two centuries later, I experienced the truth of this statement. May I share?
- Remembered For A Day (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 28, 2001)
THERE is a paradoxical contrast in the way India remembers its martyrs on sundry anniversaries and during the rest of the year. On the designated days, there are grand celebrations of the kind held on Vijay Divas.
- More Visas: The Route To Peace And Better Understanding (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Jul 28, 2001)
AT the Prime Minister’s lunch for Gen Pervez Musharraf I ran into Javed Akhtar. For some reason whenever we meet conversation usually turns to matters related to secularism and communalism, Hindus and Muslims, and this time was no exception.
- Uti’s Hidden Scams (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 28, 2001)
FIRST it was the crisis of disinvestment in government-owned enterprises such as Balco and Air-India. Now it is one of investment by government-owned financial institutions (FIs) like UTI, LIC, GIC MF and several banks.
- A Pro-Poor Reform Agenda (The Economic Times, N. Vittal, Jul 28, 2001)
THE FIRST decade of the economic reform process is over. There is discussion in the media about the successes and failures of the policies adopted so far.
- Foreign Investors Play Big Part In Dollar’s Run (The Financial Express, Jon E Hilsenrath, Jul 28, 2001)
Those doubting the staying power of the strong US dollar earlier this year clearly weren’t in touch with Chinese investor sentiment.
- It’s Not All Over Yet For The Tech Economy (The Economic Times, Srivasta Krishna, Jul 28, 2001)
THOSE who don’t respect the logic of demand and supply, learn only the hard way, often at their own peril. The recent downswing in the US New Economy is a classic instance.
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We Offer Medical Support, Globally (The Economic Times, THOMAS ABRAHAM, Jul 28, 2001)
INTERNATIONAL SOS, is a healthcare management company. Its Indian operations are headed by Vikas Kuthiala. He has rich exposure in the FMCG and allied industries in domestic and international markets.
- Lng Is No Panacea For Fertiliser Woes (The Economic Times, Uttam Gupta , Jul 28, 2001)
FOR almost two decades, natural gas has occupied the centre stage on the Indian energy scene in view of its being the most preferred feedstock/fuel in various industries.
- Rural Credit Shouldn’t Be Treated Like An Obligation (The Financial Express, Ravinder Yadav, Jul 28, 2001)
After a long hiatus, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) proposes to prepare a technical paper on directed lending.
- Foreign Food (Business Line, D. Murali , Jul 28, 2001)
A RECENT Customs circular focusses on the testing of food items before Customs clearance so as to ensure that the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act is not violated.
- More Than A Duel (Hindu, Rajmohan Gandhi, Jul 28, 2001)
LARGE NUMBERS of the public in India and Pakistan and in different parts of Jammu & Kashmir have felt saddened, disappointed and possibly even cheated by the outcome of the Agra summit.
- A Retrograde Stance (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 28, 2001)
THE UNION HOME Minister, Mr. L. K. Advani's statement in the Rajya Sabha unequivocally ruling out `autonomy' for Jammu and Kashmir reflects a rigid mindset that is recklessly insensitive to the concerns of an alienated people and, much more disquietingly.
- India’s Urban Future (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 28, 2001)
THE Confederation of Indian Industry has circulated a study conducted by it on urban India. The picture is depressing to say the least.
- Deadline Thoughts (Business Line, S. Rajaratanm, Jul 28, 2001)
THE Income-Tax Act, 1961 relies upon voluntary compliance on the part of taxpayers to meet their obligations.
- Large-Scale Modernisation Is The Only Way Out For Iisco (The Financial Express, Sunil Mukhopadhyay, Jul 28, 2001)
BURNPUR-BASED Indian Iron & Steel Company (Iisco), the oldest integrated steel company in the country, is facing extinction unless the Centre, especially the steel ministry, takes serious steps for its survival.
- Disinformation War (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 28, 2001)
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee did well to state on Thursday that General Pervez Musharaff's talk of a split in the Indian ranks during the Agra summit was baseless and could stand in the way of future talks with Pakistan.
- Democratic Shock Absorbers (Indian Express, Shekhar Gupta, Jul 28, 2001)
A liberal system wins out over dictatorial swagger.
- Brothers Under The Skin (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 28, 2001)
Let’s reconcile ourselves to the differences and get on.
- Drowning Of Orissa (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jul 28, 2001)
There’s more to disaster management than aerial surveys.
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