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Articles 19721 through 19820 of 27558:
- Axe Falls On A Saffron Liberal (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 20, 2001)
So there was no light at the end of the tunnel after all.
- Indo-Pak Relations: Let Economics Dominate Politics (The Economic Times, Manoj Pant, Jul 20, 2001)
"I CAN see from your coat, my friend
That you’re from the other side, there's just one thing I want to know
Can you tell me please, who won the war?".
- ‘All Risk Factors Have Been Considered In Kalpakkam Eia’ (The Financial Express, S. B. Bhoje, Jul 20, 2001)
This refers to the article “Kalpakkam EIA leaves many risk factors untouched” by Joseph Vackayil based on a monograph by R Ramesh which appeared in The Financial Express (July 14, 2001). The article has several misleading statements and errors.
- Stand Firm (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 20, 2001)
THE SIMMERING discontent among brokers with the introduction of rolling settlement and ban on badla has finally found an outlet.
- For Universal Opulence (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 20, 2001)
THE UK-BASED global HR consultancy, William M Mercer, has come out with a ranking of the cost of living in the world's major cities.
- Recipe For Success (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 20, 2001)
It’s a failure which can pave the way for a forward movement.
- Treating The Symptom (The Economic Times, Narendar Pani, Jul 20, 2001)
WHEN seen in terms of the health of UTI the bail-out package for the US-64 scheme has every chance of success. The higher returns for later redemptions should ease some of the immediate pressure on the financial institution.
- Rains, Death And Displacement (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 20, 2001)
ORISSA'S CONTINUING AGONY, alternating between floods and drought, flies in the face of India's claims to advances made in science and technology.
- The General Saw Only Kashmir (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jul 20, 2001)
The General's howitzer-style of democracy may have impressed some; but once the echo ebbs away you are left only with the sound of emptiness.
- G-8 Meeting At Genoa -- Recurrent Ritual And Recycled Rhetoric (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jul 20, 2001)
THERE would at least be one member -- Mr Sylvio Berlusconi, recently elected Prime Minister of Italy -- of the Group 8 nations at its 26th annual meeting starting today at Genoa,
- G-8: Summitry Of Another Kind (Business Line, Mona Bhagati, Jul 20, 2001)
GENOA, the industrial port city in Italy's northwest, is in a state of siege.
- Clearing Corporation -- Getting Ready For The Long Haul (Business Line, G. Ramachandran, Jul 20, 2001)
WHILE commenting on the New Basel Capital Accord announced in January, the Reserve Bank of India has stated that low technical skills, structural rigidities and less-than-robust legal systems characterise emerging markets.
- Time To Act On Edible Oils (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jul 20, 2001)
BOUNTIFUL RAINS ACROSS the country -- with the exception of some meteorological sub-divisions in the southern region -- have considerably brightened the prospects of recovery in oilseeds from last year's weather-affected output.
- New Delhi’s Dilemma (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 20, 2001)
IN an unprecedented diplomatic decision India has asked Pakistan to treat the Agra summit as a non-event and revert back to the substance and spirit of the Shimla Agreement and the Lahore Declaration.
- Before And After Agra (Business Line, B. Raman , Jul 20, 2001)
IN AN article in the Sunday edition (July 1) of a New Delhi-based daily, one had described the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee's invitation to Gen Pervez Musharraf to visit India for summit talks at Agra as a calculated gamble.
- 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.
- Govt. Circulars - Violation Of Rights (Hindu, Rajindar Sachar , Jul 20, 2001)
THE REJECTION summarily by the Supreme Court, without giving any reasons, of the writ petition challenging the circulars of the Central Government by which prior approval is to be obtained from the Ministry of Home Affairs.
- Breakfast With Pervez (Hindustan Times, Nalini J. Singh, Jul 20, 2001)
Arriving, a couple of minutes after nine o’clock at the Amar Vilas Palace’s chandeliered room on July 15, my eye took in the lofty line-up of the country’s editors and senior journalists.
- Tentative Step Forward (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 20, 2001)
ONLY a crazy optimist would have imagined that something concrete would really emerge out of the Agra Summit.
- 'Our Strength Is In Global News' (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 20, 2001)
GRACE Wong is vice president, corporate and marketing communications for Turner International Asia Pacific. Based in the company's regional headquarters in Hong Kong, she oversees CNN marketing and PR for the region.
- Taxing Them Still The Hard Way (The Economic Times, Lubna Kably, Jul 20, 2001)
IT is not too easy to seek favours from Zenobia Aunty, but when it comes to filing my tax returns, my aunt very willingly queues up at the tax office.
- What Next After The Agra Summit? (The Financial Express, Ayesha Siddiqa-Agha, Jul 20, 2001)
Its failure should not be allowed to become fodder for hawks on both sides.
- What Really Went Wrong? (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Jul 20, 2001)
CERTAIN events come to have more impact than they should normally have because of their timing.
- Health Deteriorates (Hindu, Gita Sen, Jul 20, 2001)
THE IMPACT of the structural economic reforms of the 1990s on human development in India has been a subject of controversy from the start.
- Commendable Initiative (Hindu, G. Ranganathan, Jul 20, 2001)
Sir, - It is indeed heartening to read that the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Ms. Jayalalithaa, has announced the launching of a major wasteland reclamation project - covering 20 lakh hectares in select districts during the first phase.
- When Silence Is Not Golden! (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 19, 2001)
PAKISTAN has not only been waging a proxy war against India, it has also been engaged in a concerted propaganda offensive.
- Breach Of Promise (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 19, 2001)
The crisis of political accountability in West Bengal has been confirmed again with a rather disgraceful clarity.
- To Work With Dignity And Freedom (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 19, 2001)
Most of the 36.1 million people infected with HIV are in the prime of their working lives.
- Collective Obsession (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Jul 19, 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.
- A Rare Mix Up (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 19, 2001)
It seems a good thing that Ms J. Jayalalitha was allowed to become chief minister of Tamil Nadu.
- Aftermath Of Andhra (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 19, 2001)
SINCE THE initial trends in the local elections in Andhra Pradesh are suggestive of a decline in Telugu Desam’s popularity, it is bad news for the Vajpayee government. The regional party has been one of the pillars of the ruling coalition at the Centre.
- A Summit Unconquered? (Business Line, Menka Shivdasani , Jul 19, 2001)
ON THE night before Gen Pervez Musharraf's fruitless visit to India, CNN's Q&A focussed on Kashmir;
- States In Doldrums (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 19, 2001)
IT HAS now virtually become an annual ritual for the states to run to the Centre, asking for large financial packages to meet the exigencies of floods or droughts or other natural disasters.
- Kashmir At Breakfast, Lunch And Dinner (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Jul 19, 2001)
EVERY visit by a Pakistani ruler to India has its interesting and ironic moments. The visit of the author of Kargil, Gen Pervez Musharraf, was no exception. The lunch hosted by Prime Minister Vajpayee on July 15 had its own interesting facets.
- When Silence Is Not Golden! (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 19, 2001)
PAKISTAN has not only been waging a proxy war against India, it has also been engaged in a concerted propaganda offensive.
- Unprepared For Rain (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 19, 2001)
IMAGINE the plight of the family forced to live with rainwater in the house!
- Collective Obsession (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Jul 19, 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.
- Liberalise Trade By Removing Controls, Rationalising Taxes (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Jul 19, 2001)
It is high time India removed all direct and indirect controls on marketing, movement and stocking of agro produce. In fact, uniform level of taxes should be imposed on agro commodities if the country is to be treated as a single economic zone.
- A Proposal For Peace (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Jul 19, 2001)
Whenever anyone asked me in India or Pakistan in the last two- three weeks about the prospects of the summit, I said: It will not fail but it will not succeed either.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Jul 19, 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.
- Outside The Line Of Vision (Hindustan Times, Amita Malik, Jul 19, 2001)
WE’VE JUST been pounded by every image imaginable from the fairgrounds of Agra.
- Life Beyond Agra (Hindustan Times, K. Natwar Singh, Jul 19, 2001)
INDIA-PAKISTAN RELATIONS are accident prone. So, one has to be extra cautious when dealing with this particular diplomatic dynamite. An accident did occur at Agra.
- Hindustantimes.Com - Editorials (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 19, 2001)
THE IRONY is stark: even as the most authoritative statement yet about global warming is put out by the world’s top atmospheric scientists, politicians from some 180 countries.
- Coal Confusion (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jul 19, 2001)
THE RECOMMENDATION OF the Expenditure Reforms Commission that Coal India Ltd should be wound up in three stages over two years appears to have been made in haste.
- Us-64 Imbroglio -- Are Banks And Fis The Milch Cows? (Business Line, Subramanyan Sundaresan, Jul 19, 2001)
THE Finance Ministry will most likely ask a consortium of banks and financial institutions, perhaps led by the LIC, to bail out the beleaguered UTI, consequent on its US-64 fiasco. This move raises several far-reaching issues.
- Decade Of Transition, Structural Change (Business Line, S. D. Naik, Jul 19, 2001)
FOR India's industrial economy, the 1990s has been a period of transition and structural change.
- A Rare Mix Up (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 19, 2001)
It seems a good thing that Ms J. Jayalalitha was allowed to become chief minister of Tamil Nadu.
- Positive Spin? (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 19, 2001)
THE POSITIVE spin given by both India and Pakistan to the Agra summit is a clear indication that, somewhere along the way, the process has become more important than the result.
- Failure Of Agra Summit Is A Blessing In Disguise (The Financial Express, Prakash Shah, Jul 19, 2001)
Despite the painstaking attempts by politicians on both sides to describe the Agra Summit as a beginning, we all know in our hearts that it failed to live up to expectations.
- Plunging Investment In Manufacturing Bodes Ill For The Economy (The Financial Express, P Vinod Kumar, Jul 19, 2001)
While Union finance minister Yashwant Sinha says that economic growth is likely to revive by year end, available data on investment trends in the manufacturing sector suggest that without a steep increase in investment no dramatic results can be expected.
- The Weightless World (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 19, 2001)
THERE is a keen irony for most people in describing the kind of jobs market the US and UK enjoy — if that is the right word — as flexible. Flexible for their employer, perhaps. For most employees, there is less choice than at any time in recent memory.
- The Unravelling Of Unbundling? (The Economic Times, Sudha Mahalingam, Jul 19, 2001)
THE RAPIDLY unravelling Dabhol contract appears to have sent the Union government scurrying for less devastating payment security mechanisms for IPP power.
- Through The Third Eye (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 19, 2001)
l IF you thought the best way to climb up the professional ladder is to please the boss, think again. The Sebi official who had filed a suit casting aspersions on chairman Mehta’s integrity may be a role model with a difference.
- Now It’s E-Clothing (Tribune, Ian Boughton, Jul 19, 2001)
INSTEAD of carting around a mobile or a palmtop, wouldn’t it be lovely just to turn back a coat collar and whisper into a microphone, like they do in all the old spy films? Well, you can — the technology is already here. And it was a spy who invented it.
- Globalisation & G-8 Summit (The Economic Times, Jeffrey D Sachs, Jul 19, 2001)
THE RICH-COUNTRY G-8 summit will convene in Genoa, Italy this week, anti-globalisation protestors and riot police alongside. Both protestors and the G-8 leaders will accuse each other of not understanding the realities of globalisation.
- Your Pain Is Different (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 19, 2001)
DIFFERENT people experience pain in ways as individual as their own fingerprints, researchers said, documenting a study designed to give doctors greater insight into pain treatment.
- `Conation' Leaders (Business Line, M. Arul Jothi, Jul 19, 2001)
``LEADERS are born, not made'' is a familiar saying. Like all cliches, there is some truth in this though it cannot be taken literally.
- Redefining Power And Femininity (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jul 19, 2001)
THERE was little possibility that the shy and self-effacing woman would ever take up leadership at the Washington Post, the newspaper her wealthy father had snapped up at a bankruptcy auction in 1933.
- New Vistas Beyond Agra Summit? (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 19, 2001)
THE CONCERTED FASHION in which India and Pakistan have expressed their willingness to look positively beyond the latest Agra summit is a welcome sign of their maturity.
- Stumbling On The Catwalk (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 19, 2001)
THERE IS MUCH sound, but little stuff in India's fashion business.
- Engaging Pakistan: After Agra (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jul 19, 2001)
WHY HAS India chosen to engage Gen. Pervez Musharraf beyond Agra?
- Agriculture: A Long Road Ahead (Hindu, Abhijit Sen, Jul 19, 2001)
THERE WAS optimism about agriculture a decade ago. Of course, long-run problems of overcrowding and inequality continued, putting pressure on soil and water resources.
- Breach Of Promise (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 19, 2001)
The crisis of political accountability in West Bengal has been confirmed again with a rather disgraceful clarity.
- Competition Policy: Europe Begs To Differ With The Us (The Economic Times, T.T.Ram Mohan, Jul 19, 2001)
AS though the Microsoft case was not enough, the European Commission’s decision to block the merger of two American companies, General Electric and Honeywell, has provided more grist to the mill of competition policy economists.
- Experts Call For Indian Support For New Wto Round (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jul 19, 2001)
A group of economists, financial editors and trade policy experts met at the Indian Council of Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) and discussed the forthcoming ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organisation at Doha in November.
- Island Of Acrimony In The Floods (Telegraph, TILAK D. GUPTA, Jul 18, 2001)
Orissa seems to be caught in a never-ending cycle of misfortune.
- To Work With Dignity And Freedom (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 18, 2001)
Most of the 36.1 million people infected with HIV are in the prime of their working lives.
- Disappointment At Agra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 18, 2001)
INDIA-Pakistan relations received a setback – some would call it mild and pessimists would dub it damaging – at Agra.
- China Gdp Rises 7.9 Pc, But Export Worries Persist (The Financial Express, Paul Eckert, Jul 18, 2001)
Bucking the global slowdown, China said its economy grew 7.9 per cent in the first half of the year and the 2008 Beijing Olympics would boost it further.
- The Promise Of Equality (Hindu, Andre Beteille , Jul 18, 2001)
IN THE past, Indian society was unique in the extremes to which it carried the principle and practice of inequality; today Indian intellectuals appear unique in their zeal for promoting the adoption of equality in every sphere of society.
- Disappointment At Agra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 18, 2001)
INDIA-Pakistan relations received a setback – some would call it mild and pessimists would dub it damaging – at Agra.
- Open Doors And Mixed Signals (The Financial Express, Mimmy Jain, Jul 18, 2001)
WE had just stopped at a red light, the driver and I, when a man on a scooter drew up beside us. I began to get nervous and tried feverishly to remember how much money I was carrying in my wallet.
- Food For Thought (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 18, 2001)
IF official statistics are to be believed, India's food economy presents a major paradox. Official data suggests that per capita availability of foodgrains has actually declined by about 40 gms a day through the '90s.
- It’s Murder, They Said (Telegraph, MADHUSHREE C. BHOWMIK, Jul 18, 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.
- Collective Obsession (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Jul 18, 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.
- Breach Of Promise (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 18, 2001)
The crisis of political accountability in West Bengal has been confirmed again with a rather disgraceful clarity.
- Conquerors Of The Golden City (Hindustan Times, Dunu Roy, Jul 18, 2001)
THE 1985 Dehradun limestone case drastically changed the nature of justice, because the Supreme Court held that the Right to Clean Environment took priority over the Right to Livelihood.
- Militancy & Counter-Militancy (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 18, 2001)
AS Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf arrived in New Delhi on Saturday for summit-level talks with Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, the situation in the Kashmir valley took a turn for the worse. And in accordance with Pakistan's unholy designs.
- No Beating About The Bush (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 18, 2001)
THE BILATERAL treaty signed by Russia and China in Moscow marks a new game in international diplomacy.
- A Rare Mix (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 18, 2001)
It seems a good thing that Ms J. Jayalalitha was allowed to become chief minister of Tamil Nadu.
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