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Articles 20321 through 20420 of 27558:
- Ensure Competition (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 07, 2001)
ONE aspect of mobile telecom licensing policy that has hitherto gone unnoticed is the monopoly enjoyed by operators in certain circles.
- Conmen Strike Star-Struck Teenagers (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 06, 2001)
THAT teenagers enamoured by glamorous professions like acting and modelling are increasing being duped by conmen posing as agents.
- Soaped-Up Life (Times of India, Raghu Krishnan, Jul 06, 2001)
THESE days, soap gets into my eyes, especially from a Tamil TV serial called Chithi where the noble protagonist's well-behaved hubby gets tired of everyone but everyone doing the dirty on him and his better-half.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 06, 2001)
Seedsavers of crops worldwide have been threatened as never before. A technology appropriately called the 'terminator technology', has been creating waves in agricultural circles since March.
- Blind Confidence (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 06, 2001)
It is good to see confidence. The chief minister of West Bengal has it in abundance.
- The Hindu : Hysteria, Justice And Revenge (Hindu, Upendra Baxi, Jul 06, 2001)
THE UNFOLDING events in Tamil Nadu entail many tragic costs for Indian democratic development.
- Rs 1,000 Crore Down The Drain, Gurgaon Residents Still Await Basic Amenities (The Financial Express, C. R. Rathee, Jul 06, 2001)
Residents of Gurgaon’s privately-developed colonies are caught between the divergent versions of developers and the Town & Country Planning Department (TCPD) regarding the provision of basic civic services in and around the colonies.
- Agra Summit, A Good Opportunity (Hindu, Amit Baruah, Jul 06, 2001)
It has been a year since this correspondent's assignment in Pakistan came to an end.
- Monument For The Arts (Hindustan Times, Bhaichand Patel, Jul 06, 2001)
The Siri Fort Auditorium in the capital is a disgrace to the country.
- An Article Of Faith (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 06, 2001)
When the central leaders re-read the Constitution during the recent Tamil Nadu crisis to find any provision to deal with it, one of the measures which is said to have come under close scrutiny is Article 355.
- Ornamentalism: How The British Saw Their Empire (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 06, 2001)
The British Empire, David Cannadine argues in his new book, “was first and foremost a class act.”
- Will Summit Mean Better Trade? (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Jul 06, 2001)
IT IS understandable that New Delhi could not have continued with a rigid attitude towards Islamabad for long.
- Tenth Plan Rides High On Wishful Thinking (The Financial Express, R K Roy, Jul 06, 2001)
The Planning Commission has projected an annual savings rate of 29.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in the Tenth Plan. This absurdly high target has been fixed to achieve a GDP growth of 8 per cent a year (5.5 per cent in the ninth plan).
- Charitable Choice (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jul 06, 2001)
THAT is the name given to a programme by which the US President, Mr George Bush, sets much store and for which he is going all out to get financial allocation from the US Congress.
- Economic, Regional Security To Figure In Dialogue With Australia (The Financial Express, HUMA SIDDQUI, Jul 06, 2001)
By any reckoning, external affairs minister Jaswant Singh’s visit to Australia in June this year was a major event for both countries.
- Big Task , Small Talk (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 06, 2001)
Paradoxically while the coming Vajpayee-Musharraf summit has generated a euphoria in both the countries a trivial issue like the invitation to Hurriet leaders by the Pakistan high commission.
- Dark Shadow Over Agra Summit (The Kashmir Times, Inder Malhotra, Jul 06, 2001)
Both: Prime Minister: Atal Behari Vajpayee and Pakistan’s military ruler. General Pervez Musharraf have made it impossible for me to stick to my resolve to give the Agra summit a miss until it actually takes place.
- Taming Of The Monetary Hawks (Business Line, N.A.Mujumdar, Jul 06, 2001)
THE former RBI Deputy Governor, Dr S. S. Tarapore, confesses in his new book, Monetary Management and Institutional Reforms, of being labelled a ``primordial monetary hawk''.
- Murder Most Foul (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 06, 2001)
UNIDENTIFIED ASSAILANTS murdered in cold-blood an elderly couple in broad daylight in posh Trikuta Nagar Colony on Sunday.
- Is Ai Being Sold For A Song? (Hindu, T. S. Shankar, Jul 06, 2001)
CHENNAI, JULY 5. Even as the Centre is clearing the decks for the disinvestment of Air India (AI) besides approving the disinvestment of the Government's shareholding in it by incorporating stringent security guidelines.
- Small Step To Peace (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 06, 2001)
The tremendous attention that the forthcoming Atal Bihari Vajpayee-Pervez Musharraf summit meeting has attracted is reflective of the growing constituency for peace in India and Pakistan.
- A Boost For Tea (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jul 06, 2001)
THERE ARE CLEAR pointers that the Centre and even some of the State governments are in a mood to concede the genuine demands of the tea industry.
- How To Prevent Female Foeticide (Tribune, K.B. SAHAY, Jul 06, 2001)
EVER since the publication of the Census 2001 Provisional Report highlighting the decline in the child (0-6 years) sex-ratio from 945 in 1991 to 927 female child per 1000 male child in 2001.
- Mig Crashes Again, Pilot Killed Again (The Kashmir Times, B. K. Mathur , Jul 06, 2001)
This column was initially planned for a different subject, on what military rulers and Generals in Pakistan used to tell their sports teams and managers prior their departure for international competitions abroad, like the Olympiad and Asiad.
- ‘Let Them Have Temples!’ (Tribune, Abu Abraham, Jul 06, 2001)
A combination of missile technology and spirituality (our ancient remedy for all the ills of mankind) seems to be the driving force of our nation. Or at least that’s what I think.
- Unwrapping Kashmir (Hindustan Times, Vasant Sathe, Jul 06, 2001)
With a few days to go before President Pervez Musharraf arrives, expectations are building up in both India and Pakistan.
- The Hindu : More Than Trust (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 06, 2001)
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN the country's oldest and largest mutual fund, the UTI, leading to the abrupt exit of its Chairman, Mr. P. S. Subramanyam, are disquieting.
- An 'Enduring' Alliance (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 06, 2001)
AN EXTRAORDINARY APOLOGY, which has been tendered by a new U.S. Ambassador to Japan on his arrival in Tokyo this week over an alleged excess by an American serviceman based in Okinawa.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 06, 2001)
Seedsavers of crops worldwide have been threatened as never before. A technology appropriately called the 'terminator technology', has been creating waves in agricultural circles since March.
- Islamabad Signals (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jul 06, 2001)
The significance of general Musharraf's exclusive interview to this paper cannot be overstated, containing as it does refreshing new departures from earlier Pakistani formulations.
- Political High-Handedness (Hindu, P. V. Indiresan , Jul 06, 2001)
IT IS said, set a thief to catch a thief. That has now come to pass. Ms. Jayalalithaa, herself a person convicted for corruption, has hauled up her rival, Mr. Karunanidhi, on charges of - wonder of wonders - corruption.
- Preparing For Agra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 06, 2001)
BOTH India and Pakistan are making the right moves to ensure that the mood even after the July 14 Agra Summit remains that of love and bonhomie.
- Saving Trust Of Uti (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 06, 2001)
OPERATION Salvage has started in the UTI with the virtual sacking of chairman P.S. Subramaniam as a prelude to revamping the board of trustees. Now the government proposes to have a nominee as it used to have until the mid-nineties.
- Whitewashed Beaches? Not Quite (The Economic Times, Lubna Kably, Jul 06, 2001)
LAST night I was busy trying my best to complete my homework (an assignment which I had taken home and hoped to submit in proper shape and format next morning) but Zenobia Aunty kept interrupting.
- Patents And Licensing (The Economic Times, Biswajit Dhar, Jul 06, 2001)
THE MUCH debated WTO Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights has come into full public gaze once again in recent months as controversy has raged in South Africa over access to medicines at affordable prices.
- Know Your Nature To Live Joyously (Times of India, A. S. Negi, Jul 06, 2001)
A zen master in Japan had two monks as his disciples. One day he asked one of them to observe fast for three days but he did not say anything to the other.
- There's A Path To Peace (Times of India, Beena Sarwar, Jul 06, 2001)
PAKISTANI painter Salima Hashmi laughingly recalls an art seminar she participated in, hosted by a Japanese organisation, where the hosts apprehensively eyed her and the Indian delegate, wondering when hostilities would break out.
- `Reduce Government Debt By Rs 2000 Crore’ (The Economic Times, Shalini Singh, Jul 06, 2001)
FOR an organisation that has done its best to boost sentiment by repeatedly announcing that it expects the economy to grow by 6.5 to 7 per cent this year, the Confederation of Indian Industries.
- The Fall Guys (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jul 06, 2001)
The race for the top job at Unit Trust of India is on, and in many ways, it epitomises much of what has gone wrong with the Trust over the years. One of the contenders is, reportedly, favoured because he is `flexible', with all that this implies.
- On Changing The Course Of History (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jul 06, 2001)
A World Bank report says that South Asia is the poorest region of the world.
- India’s Food Revolution (Telegraph, Bibek Debroy, Jul 06, 2001)
M.S. Banga, chairman, Hindustan Lever Limited, delivered a talk titled “Food Revolution — A Win Win for Farmer and Consumer” at the annual general meeting on June 22.
- Using Police As Cms’ Private Army (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jul 06, 2001)
THE barbaric show put up by the police in Chennai in the wee hours of last Saturday at the prompting of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalitha carries far darker shades than we saw during the 1975 Emergency.
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Second Stage Of Reforms: New Imperatives (The Economic Times, Manoj Pant, Jul 06, 2001)
ONE of the furiously fought debates has been on whether reforms in the ‘nineties have increased or decreased poverty.
- Andhra’s Tryst With Infotech In Public Health (The Financial Express, Parul Malhotra, Jul 06, 2001)
Vision 2020 is Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu’s dream, within which he sets out a blueprint for providing affordable curative and preventive health care to all.
- Case For Lpg (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jul 06, 2001)
THE EVER-increasing air pollution, primarily due to vehicular traffic, forced the government to make the use of CNG mandatory for public transport in a few cities in India.
- Mr Sinha, No Dummy Figureheads At The Uti, Please (The Financial Express, Sharad Mistry, Jul 06, 2001)
Silence is normally considered golden. But some times it can even be deafening, if used strategically. Master strategist that he is, the Unit Trust of India’s former chairman, PS Subramanyam’s, silence is of the second type.
- Just Capital: The Liberal Economy (The Economic Times, Adair Turner, Jul 06, 2001)
WE don’t actually understand some of the more subtle drivers of economic success.
- Vajpayee And Musharraf Must Talk About The Future, Not The Past (The Financial Express, Sanjaya Baru, Jul 06, 2001)
It is wise not to count one’s chickens before they are hatched, more so when there could well be a slip between the cup and the lip.
- Government Spending Can Help Revive Growth (The Financial Express, Ajit Ranade, Jul 06, 2001)
The Central Statistical Organisation (CSO), the economic data watchdog for the country, revealed last week that last year’s growth was only 5.2 per cent and not 6 as was earlier estimated and popularly believed.
- Ornamentalism: How The British Saw Their Empire (Telegraph, David Cannadine, Jul 06, 2001)
The British Empire, David Cannadine argues in his new book, “was first and foremost a class act.”
- Sukhna Lake: Dam Safety Neglected (Tribune, G.S. Dhillon, Jul 05, 2001)
THE flooding of areas downstream of the Sukhna lake due to the operation of the regulator gates has led to the lodging of a complaint by the Punjab Government with the chief administrator of Chandigarh,
- Musharraf: Beginning Of End? (Business Line, B. Raman , Jul 05, 2001)
``IN THE face of such attacks on his legitimacy, there has been speculation in Islamabad that before going to New Delhi.
- Maran, Baalu Had Right Of Private Defence (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jul 05, 2001)
UNDER the Indian Penal Code, every person has a right to defend his own body, and the body of any other person, against any offence affecting the human body.
- Time To End The Dissonance (Business Line, T. P. Ghosh, Jul 05, 2001)
THE GLOBALISATION of capital markets and the cross-border raising of capital by companies -- more particularly by developing countries from the developed -- is facilitated by the listing of companies in foreign capital markets.
- Blind Confidence (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 05, 2001)
It is good to see confidence. The chief minister of West Bengal has it in abundance.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 05, 2001)
Seedsavers of crops worldwide have been threatened as never before. A technology appropriately called the 'terminator technology', has been creating waves in agricultural circles since March.
- Is Law Different For Ministers? (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Jul 05, 2001)
Long after the sound and fury generated over the Tamil Nadu happenings die down, several significant questions related to the incidents will in all probability remain unanswered.
- Not So Imperious Anymore (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 05, 2001)
It doesn't end till the fat lady sings, goes a familiar saying.
- Cooling A Face-Off (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 05, 2001)
TAMIL NADU Chief Minister Jayalalitha is strong-willed and never forgives or forgets. Yet on Tuesday she ordered the withdrawal of all cases against two Union Cabinet Ministers who threw their political weight behind her sworn enemy, Mr M. Karunanidhi.
- Hierarchy Does Count (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jul 05, 2001)
Seniors tend to assume control, just in case juniors...! This is often true, be it in a crisis situation or a press conference.
- Tiger’s Tale (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 05, 2001)
We are entitled to rub our eyes in disbelief.
- Mind Over Management (Business Line, Orla Leonard, Jul 05, 2001)
A DISCIPLINE as ordered and professional as financial management may seem a world away from psychology, but the two are more compatible than most people think.
- More Public Investment Needed To Achieve 4% Agricultural Growth (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Jul 05, 2001)
The Approach Paper to the Tenth Plan has recognised the need for the agriculture sector to grow by 4 per cent for pushing the overall gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate to 8 per cent per annum.
- How The British Saw Their Empire (Telegraph, David Cannadine, Jul 05, 2001)
The British Empire, David Cannadine argues in his new book, “was first and foremost a class act.”
- Dark Shadow Over Agra Summit (The Kashmir Times, Inder Malhotra, Jul 05, 2001)
Both: Prime Minister: Atal Behari Vajpayee and Pakistan’s military ruler.
- Deciding Kashmir's Future (Times of India, Zafar Meraj, Jul 05, 2001)
KASHMIR is not a bilateral issue, or a territory dispute between India and Pakistan and neither of the two has any moral or other right to discuss and take any decision with regard to its political future.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 05, 2001)
Seedsavers of crops worldwide have been threatened as never before. A technology appropriately called the 'terminator technology', has been creating waves in agricultural circles since March.
- Cricketers On Drugs (Tribune, Editorial, The Times of India, Jul 05, 2001)
JUST when Indian cricket was beginning to emerge from the shock of the match-fixing controversy an upmarket Delhi-based English newsweekly has come out with the startling disclosure about some players taking performance enhancing drugs.
- Developments In Indian Ocean (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Jul 05, 2001)
AS India prepares to embark on a path of accelerated economic growth of 8 per cent, reforms in two crucial areas need to be undertaken.
- A Case Of Soul-Searching For Uti Chief (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 05, 2001)
A day after the coutry’s largest mutual fund was tanked,
- The Third Factor For Scams (The Financial Express, P. N. Vijay, Jul 05, 2001)
The stock markets have been subject to so many shockwaves over the last few months that it is sometimes difficult to pin-point the actual factors that have contributed to this state of affairs.
- Small Step To Peace (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jul 05, 2001)
The tremendous attention that the forthcoming Atal Bihari Vajpayee-Pervez Musharraf summit meeting has attracted is reflective of the growing constituency for peace in India and Pakistan.
- Don’t Duck About Kashmir (The Financial Express, Subhash Agrawal, Jul 05, 2001)
As if to a schedule, Kashmir returns to global focus about once a year, around this time in summer and in dramatic if not bizarre style. Two years ago it was Kargil.
- Debt Recovery Tribunals: There’s A Way Out For Defence Of Guarantors (The Financial Express, Ram Kishan, Jul 05, 2001)
The expeditious summary proceedings in various Debt Recovery Tribunals (DRTs) in the country have rendered the guarantors an extremely worried lot.
- The Demystification Of Unit Scheme-64 (The Financial Express, Jai Kumar N.R, Jul 05, 2001)
In one stroke, the Unit Trust of India (UTI), on Monday choked liquidity in the country’s largest mutual fund scheme, Unit Scheme-64 (US-64), keeping millions of investors across the country on tenterhooks.
- Gurgaon Rentals May Not Rise Much Despite Its Fast Development (The Financial Express, Rajeev Jayaswal, Jul 05, 2001)
The property value of Gurgaon is not likely to shoot up in the near future despite the fact that it is fast emerging as an alternative to Connaught Place, which is the central business district (CBD) of the Capital.
- Fiddle On, Mr Sinha (Hindustan Times, K. A. Badrinath, Jul 05, 2001)
The boot landed on Unit Trust of India (UTI) chairman P.S. Subramanyam on Tuesday.
- Agra Summit (Hindustan Times, Romesh Bhandari, Jul 05, 2001)
Ever since Independence, Kashmir has made adversaries out of India and Pakistan.
- Big Task , Small Talk (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 05, 2001)
Paradoxically while the coming Vajpayee-Musharraf summit has generated a euphoria in both the countries a trivial issue like the invitation to Hurriet leaders by the Pakistan high commission at the high tea being hosted for the visiting Pakistan President
- Murder Most Foul (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 05, 2001)
UNIDENTIFIED ASSAILANTS murdered in cold-blood an elderly couple in broad daylight in posh Trikuta Nagar Colony on Sunday.
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