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Articles 19621 through 19720 of 27558:
- India’s Glorious Past And Pakistan (Tribune, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Jul 22, 2001)
BEGUM Sehba Musharraf’s tart but sad reply when asked if she had any memories of her birthplace, Lucknow, was a reminder of the heightened sensibilities of those whom Salman Rushdie calls “the type of Mohajir who had arrived (in Pakistan) with God.
- Different Voices From Varied Quarters (Tribune, Humra Quraishi, Jul 22, 2001)
THE day I returned ( remember I was in Srinagar) it was back to routine — talks centering around Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf and those farewell parties lined up for our writer bureaucrat Pavan Varma .
- Off-The-Record Public Conference (Tribune, Satish Misra, Jul 22, 2001)
QUOTING an off-the-record conversation is considered a sin in journalistic circles.
- Rooted Cosmopolitans (Telegraph, RAMACHANDRA GUHA, Jul 22, 2001)
Back in the Seventies, a group of political scientists advanced the theory that India was a “multinational” state rather than a simple “nation-state”.
- Doctrine Updated (Pioneer, Anuradha Dutt, Jul 22, 2001)
Former Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral is acknowledged as a foreign policy expert.
- They Were Feared, Now They Live In Fear (Tribune, David Devdas, Jul 22, 2001)
BETWEEN Kangan and Woyil in the north-east of the Kashmir valley, flows the Sindh Nalla.
- The Soldier Scores (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Jul 22, 2001)
At least in the short term, the summit was a big success for Gen. Musharraf.
- It Could Have Been A Better Summit (Pioneer, Ghazanfar Butt, Jul 22, 2001)
The warmth with which President Musharraf was received in India was unprecedented.
- Messages In The Media (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 22, 2001)
General Pervez Musharraf quite obviously views himself as a forceful communicator of Pakistan’s national interest.
- The Road Stretches On From Agra (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 22, 2001)
On the Indo-Pakistan front, the emphasis now is on absorbing the lessons from Agra and finding ways to move forward, says C. Raja Mohan.
- Conflict By Design (The Economic Times, Prakash Kaipa, Jul 22, 2001)
IN today’s rapidly-shifting markets, the law of nature —learn and adapt, or die -— has become the law of the marketplace.
- Drug Men Walking (The Economic Times, C. V. Aravind, Jul 22, 2001)
WHEN Ben Johnson, the Canadian sprinter, became the fastest man in the world pipping none other than the legendary Carl Lewis at the post, we watched with awe and admiration.
- 'We Are Concentrating On Quality Education' (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 22, 2001)
A CHEMICAL engineer from IIT, Kharagpur, Aditya Nath Jha preferred to do creative copy writing with ad agencies.
- Babus Complicit In Political Fights (Pioneer, Premvir Das, Jul 22, 2001)
Now that enough time has elapsed since the comedy enacted in Tamil Nadu, it is necessary to reflect dispassionately on what this portends for the nation.
- Stirring It Up (Hindu, Sarabjit Pandher, Jul 22, 2001)
The Khalistan protagonist, Dr. Jagjit Singh Chauhan, back in Punjab now, seems to be testing the waters with contradictory statements.
- Hard Times (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jul 22, 2001)
It is a time of trial for the ASEAN. Amit Baruah on the issues the grouping's Ministerial meeting will face.
- A Place To Preen (Hindu, BATUK GATHANI, Jul 22, 2001)
The G-8 summit is at best a giant media spectacle. The leaders and their aides are bothered more about image than any real outcome.
- Steal Ahead (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 22, 2001)
AFTER months of suspense, the US President George Bush has succumbed to pressure from the powerful US steel lobby and ordered an investigation under section 201 of the 1974 US Trade Act. The decision was long anticipated.
- Key Figure In Us Military Set-Up (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Jul 22, 2001)
EVEN before the din and dust kicked up in the aftermath of the collapsed Indo-Pak summit at Agra had settled down, the arrival of a top US military man in New Delhi was considered a meaningful development.
- Is Tony A Tory? (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 22, 2001)
While pro-reformers praise Mr. Tony Blair for not pulling any punches, critics find his tone unduly aggressive. Hasan Suroor on the growing confrontation over Labour's agenda.
- Starry-Eyed About Missile Defence (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Jul 22, 2001)
On missile defence, the U.S. administration believes that somehow or the other its allies can be won over and Moscow convinced it is no longer the enemy.
- Archer Off Target (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jul 22, 2001)
The "twist" in the rather sordid "tale" of Sir Jeffrey Archer's shenanigans has finally unravelled.
- Oh, For Nirvana In A Virtual World (The Economic Times, Raghu Krishnan, Jul 22, 2001)
IT was on his way to the showroom that Rajesh bumped into her. Slim, graceful, in a salwar-kameez, a green bindi on her forehead.
- Koirala Goes, Problems Remain (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 21, 2001)
NEPAL'S Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala has been swept off his perch by a political storm that had been brewing for the past several months. His mishandling of the Maoist rebel crisis only provided the immediate trigger.
- Clinging To Power (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 21, 2001)
Even as a Constitution bench of the Supreme Court has been set up to consider the question of J. Jayalalitha’s assumption of office as Tamil Nadu chief minister despite her conviction in corruption cases.
- Koirala Gives In (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 21, 2001)
Prime Minister of Nepal G.P. Koirala has finally thrown in the towel.
- Course Of Real Interest Rates In Us Economy (Business Line, P. R. Brahmananda , Jul 21, 2001)
THE concept of real rate of interest is a most important theoretical construct in monetary policy.
- Tilting At Windmills (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 21, 2001)
Little nameplate slabs deeply embedded in huge stone walls or heavily fringed by masses of bougainvillaea give New Delhi’s Amrita Shergill Marg a discreteness its residents have gotten used to.
- New Temples Of Secularism (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 21, 2001)
THESE days newly successful Indian entrepreneurs are under a lot of pressure to provide funds for the new temples of secularism: universities and institutes;
- How Far Will Pursuing The Ideology Of Hate Carry Pakistan? (The Financial Express, Maroof Raza, Jul 21, 2001)
The one feature for which the Vajpayee-Musharraf meeting at Agra will be remembered is its being the sub-continent’s first ever television summit.
- Babus Complicit In Political Fights (Pioneer, Premvir Das, Jul 21, 2001)
Now that enough time has elapsed since the comedy enacted in Tamil Nadu, it is necessary to reflect dispassionately on what this portends for the nation.
- Doctrine Updated (Pioneer, Anuradha Dutt, Jul 21, 2001)
Former Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral is acknowledged as a foreign policy expert. In his long and distinguished career, he has, among other posts.
- It Could Have Been A Better Summit (Pioneer, Ghazanfar Butt, Jul 21, 2001)
The warmth with which President Musharraf was received in India was unprecedented.
- Restructuring, Key To Uti Survival (Business Line, G. Thimmaiah , Jul 21, 2001)
THE controversy over insider-trading in the US-64 scheme has not really brought out the UTI's inherent weaknesses of organisational design and functioning.
- Leave Parleying To Envoys (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Jul 21, 2001)
However graceless the Agra summit’s abrupt end may have been, the absence of a joint statement or declaration was no great loss.
- Losing Battle On Capital Gains (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam, Jul 21, 2001)
T. C. A. Ramanujam says that the controversy whether capital gains should be considered for calculating book profits is yet to die down.
- Unemployment On The Rise (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 21, 2001)
THE rate of unemployment among rural youth, both male and female, in the 15-24 age group has increased between 1993-94 and 1999-00, reveals a study of the National Sample Survey.
- Icssr In Turmoil (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 21, 2001)
A controversy every three months is the norm in the Human Resource Development Ministry.
- Post-Mortem Of A Summit (Hindustan Times, Khushwant Singh, Jul 21, 2001)
By the time you come to read this piece you will know the outcome of the Indo-Pak summit talks.
- Past Precedents (Hindustan Times, Nayanjot Lahiri & Upinder Singh , Jul 21, 2001)
No Indian monument perhaps epitomises the beauty and the romance of a lost age as the Taj Mahal.
- The Crime Of Covering Up (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 21, 2001)
It gets worse. As the American Democrat, Mr Gary Condit, must be finding out.
- False Hopes (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 21, 2001)
THE RECENTLY released Human Development Report 2001 gives India’s HDR rank as 115, which is significantly higher than the 128 rank of HDR 2000.
- The Human Development 'Race' (Hindu, C. Rammanohar Reddy, Jul 21, 2001)
IT HAS been a week when India and Pakistan did not quite manage to take even the most hesitant of steps towards peace and friendship.
- Some Other Time, Some Other Place (Pioneer, Shobori Ganguli, Jul 21, 2001)
Why can't we be friends now ...."It's what I want. It's what you want".
- Requiem For A Summit (Hindu, Salman Haidar , Jul 21, 2001)
THE ENDING of the Agra Summit without any agreement has brought a great sense of disappointment.
- After The Summit: As Newspapers Look At It (Tribune, Gobind Thukral, Jul 21, 2001)
IT is indeed a divided media that has returned home after covering Indo-Pak summit at Agra.
- Saving Kyoto (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 21, 2001)
THE PROSPECTS FOR arresting global warming could not be more bleak as Governments resume negotiations in Bonn on the troubled Kyoto Protocol of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC).
- Image And Reality Of Agra Summit (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 21, 2001)
INDIA'S SUBSTANTIVE INITIATIVE of opening a re-engagement with Pakistan at the recent Agra summit can be sustained only if the progress card is viewed realistically.
- Dse Gears Up To Face The Futures Challenge (The Financial Express, C.M. Kulshreshtha, Jul 21, 2001)
Markets that feed themselves on their own frenzy, says international financier George Soros, tend to overshoot.
- Steal Ahead (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 21, 2001)
AFTER months of suspense, the US President George Bush has succumbed to pressure from the powerful US steel lobby and ordered an investigation under section 201 of the 1974 US Trade Act. The decision was long anticipated.
- Grim Export Outlook (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jul 21, 2001)
AS THE GLOBAL economic slowdown begins to bite, India's exporters are wincing.
- Doubtful Starter (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 21, 2001)
WILL the corporate debt recast package formalised by the government and the Reserve Bank of India be successful in freeing capital locked up in thousands of sick units in the country?
- 'We Are Concentrating On Quality Education' (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 21, 2001)
A CHEMICAL engineer from IIT, Kharagpur, Aditya Nath Jha preferred to do creative copy writing with ad agencies. He went on to script a couple of TV serials before joining Aditi Technologies and launched products like Talisma.
- Agri-Reforms: Start With Infrastructure (The Economic Times, O. K. Balraj, Jul 21, 2001)
TILL now almost all our efforts in agriculture have been on the pre-harvest stage, i.e., hybrid seeds, subsidised power and fertilisers, etc. No one really cared to attend to the post harvest transport, storage and other infrastructure related issues.
- Go For A Technology & Product Neutral Licensing Regime (The Economic Times, Anurag, Jul 21, 2001)
THE GREAT Indian Middle Class, whose pockets have the marketing men salivating, has recently been caught in the crossfire between the government, the cellular lobby and the basic services lobby on the contentious issue of limited mobility.
- The Ghost Of Sirpur (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jul 21, 2001)
Arvind P. Datar says that the CBEC continues to cling to an outdated judgment on immovable property.
- As 22 Or Catch 22? (Business Line, S. Rajaratanm, Jul 21, 2001)
S. Rajaratnam on why Accounting Standard 22, on accounting for tax on income, has limited scope.
- Education As A Form Of Investment (Tribune, H. K. Manmohan Singh, Jul 21, 2001)
John K. Galbraith, who was recently awarded Padma Vibhushan by the Government of India, has been frequently mentioned as a likely Nobel winner but perhaps never got beyond the shortlisting stage.
- Consumers Caught In Crossfire Between Broadcasters And Msos (The Financial Express, Sibabrata Das, Jul 21, 2001)
Ram Hingorani, the 65 year-old executive vice-chairman of IndusInd Media & Communications.
- Media Acted As A Mirror (Hindu, Kalpana Sharma , Jul 21, 2001)
Now that the dust has more or less settled after the Agra summit, what should ordinary people make of the events of the last couple of days?
- Flyover Jam (Business Line, D. Murali , Jul 21, 2001)
FLYOVERS never cease to be interesting, be it down South or in J&K, as the UP State Bridge Corporation Ltd case would show. The case, which came up before the New Delhi CEGAT, was about `arterial expressway corridor' constructed by the company in Jammu.
- A Rare Mix Up (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 20, 2001)
It seems a good thing that Ms J. Jayalalitha was allowed to become chief minister of Tamil Nadu.
- Money Can Be A Fickle Muse (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 20, 2001)
Tabla virtuoso Zakir Hussain is seriously contemplating ‘hanging up his fingers’.
- A General’s Warped History Lecture (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jul 20, 2001)
ONE turning-point in the India-Pakistan summit at Agra was Gen Pervez Musharraf's breakfast meeting with certain Delhi-centric editors picked up at random.
- Breastfeeding, A Child’s Birthright (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 20, 2001)
The theme of this year’s breastfeeding week in August is breastfeeding as a human right.
- Island Of Acrimony In The Floods (Telegraph, TILAK D. GUPTA, Jul 20, 2001)
Orissa seems to be caught in a never-ending cycle of misfortune.
- Marriage Movement (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jul 20, 2001)
IT is only to be expected that in a country like the US where 43 per cent of the marriages end in divorce,
- Enemies In Wait (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 20, 2001)
According to the Congress, the ruling coalition is busy with its internal squabbles instead of caring for the suffering people. Floodwaters have damaged crops covering about two lakh hectares of land as well as thousands of dwellings.
- Security As Primary Concern (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 20, 2001)
MILITANT organisations active in Jammu and Kashmir as their main area of operation, with all kinds of support from Pakistan's ISI, had been pronouncing their judgement on the Indo-Pak Agra summit much before it was held.
- To Work With Dignity And Freedom (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 20, 2001)
Most of the 36.1 million people infected with HIV are in the prime of their working lives.
- Rbi’s Cautious Stance On Higher Growth (The Financial Express, R.K. Roy, Jul 20, 2001)
After the disappointing growth performance of last year, the Reserve Bank of India has, expectedly, projected GDP (gross domestic product) growth this year in the cautious 5.5-6 per cent range and described this to be one of the highest rates in the world
- Security As Primary Concern (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 20, 2001)
MILITANT organisations active in Jammu and Kashmir as their main area of operation, with all kinds of support from Pakistan's ISI, had been pronouncing their judgement on the Indo-Pak Agra summit much before it was held.
- The Economic Profile Of South Asia (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jul 20, 2001)
FOR two thousand years, South Asia was the most developed region of the world. It produced cotton 2000 years before anyone else. It traded with the entire world. There was never anything like poverty.
- Up, Punjab Go The Haryana Way, Launch Mass Contact Drive (The Financial Express, C. R. Rathee, Jul 20, 2001)
The political culture of on-the-spot redressal of people’s grievances at their doorsteps.
- A Rare Mix Up (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 20, 2001)
It seems a good thing that Ms J. Jayalalitha was allowed to become chief minister of Tamil Nadu.
- Collective Obsession (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Jul 20, 2001)
There is a Bengali word that isn’t easy to translate, but which very aptly describes the behaviour of the media before, during and after the visit of Pervez Musharraf to India.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Jul 20, 2001)
Titli flits around her foster home. She lurches from one room to another on unsteady legs and loves to look at the Sydney harbour from the windows of her “penthouse’’ in the Australian capital.
- Breach Of Promise (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 20, 2001)
The crisis of political accountability in West Bengal has been confirmed again with a rather disgraceful clarity.
- Hindustantimes.Com - The Big Idea (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 20, 2001)
Atal Bihari Vajpayee has inadvertently become an unconscious agent of history in setting off what can only be described as a groundswell of robust popular sentiment for reconciliation and peace with Pakistan.
- Sonia Gandhi Supports New Round Of Wto Negotiations (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jul 20, 2001)
Says what about implementation of promises on agriculture, trade and services.
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