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Articles 20721 through 20820 of 27558:
- An Equal Governance (Hindu, Pulapre Balakrishnan, Jun 30, 2001)
WE ARE on the eve of the passing of one decade since a pronounced turn in the national economic policy.
- A Decade Of Lurching From One Financial Scam To Another (The Financial Express, Sucheta Dalal, Jun 30, 2001)
In terms of reform and development, the Indian capital market and financial sector have been the fastest to grab every opportunity presented by the paradigm shift in India’s economic policy.
- Time To Ignore Chohan (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 30, 2001)
PUNJAB is not for Khalistan. Those who are making yet another attempt at reviving old bitter memories — they include Dr Jagjit Singh Chohan — are surely not friends of the people.
- A Giant Is Born (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 30, 2001)
EXCITING things are happening in the world of cellular telephone.
- Spectre Of Drought (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 30, 2001)
the spectre of drought looms large in Jammu and Kashmir due to prolonged dry spell that has led to acute drinking water scarcity, drying up of ponds and lakes, fall in groundwater level and a severe drop in the flow of rivers, big and small.
- Manipur: Another Story Of Neglect (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Jun 30, 2001)
THE Indian North-East remains a mystery to me as it does to most Indians.
- Code For Legislators (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 30, 2001)
LOK Sabha Speaker G. M. C. Balayogi while inaugurating the three-day conference of presiding officers in Chandigarh.
- Return From Exile (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 30, 2001)
Pro-Khalistan ideologue Jagjit Singh Chauhan has returned to India in a glare of publicity.
- Ceasefire Extension (Hindu, Murkot Ramunny, Jun 30, 2001)
Sir, - The Home Ministry has made a mess of the Nagaland `ceasefire' extension.
- The Financial Express: Editorial (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 30, 2001)
AscertainING the Cement Manufacturers’ Association’s (CMA) claim -- based on the Crisil Advisory Services (CAS) study commissioned by it,
- What’s In A Name, Anyway? (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 29, 2001)
MRecently, a film club in the capital organised a screening of some of actor Farooque Shaikh’s films. But unfortunately for the organisers, things didn’t really go according to plan.
- Fis Take Over (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 29, 2001)
WITH THE FINANCIAL institutions set to take over the management of Malavika Steels and Bellary Steels, the wheel has indeed come a full circle in the matter of conversion of FI loans into equity.
- Don’t Cheer Just Yet (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 29, 2001)
The United Nations’ global action plan to combat HIV/Aids, adopted on Wednesday by its 189 member nations, provides a welcome impetus to the fight against the pandemic.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 29, 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.
- Dissolve The Corporation (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 29, 2001)
AFTER Wednesday's fiasco Union Territory Administrator J. F. R. Jacob may have to perform the unpleasant duty of recommending the dissolution of the Chandigarh Municipal Corporation.
- Commodity Derivatives Trading -- Looking To A Brighter Future (Business Line, C K G Nair, Jun 29, 2001)
WHILE the global commodity markets are experimenting with various new products and forms of derivatives, the Indian commodity market is still in a state of flux.
- Chasing A Mirage (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 29, 2001)
IT IS GOOD to be ambitious about the targets for economic growth, but such ambitions must be based on what is possible and not the impossible.
- Putin On The Defensive (Hindu, Achin Vanaik , Jun 29, 2001)
AT THE recent summit meeting in Ljubljana, Slovenia, Russia's President, Mr. Vladimir Putin, said he saw the U.S. as a partner and did not see NATO as a threat.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 29, 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.
- A Fifth Player, Please (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 29, 2001)
THE MERGER of BPL and the Birla-AT&T-Tata (Batata) consortium into a single operating entity creates one of India’s largest private telecom operations.
- Ban On Badla, Take 2 (The Economic Times, Susan Thomas, Jun 29, 2001)
JULY 2 will see badla banned once again. In addition, equity trading will move to rolling settlement for the largest stocks. Settlement will be done on a T+5 basis.
- How To Make Transfer Pricing Effective (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam, Jun 29, 2001)
The Finance Ministry has woken up to the large-scale leakage of revenue due to the abuse of the transfer pricing mechanism.
- The Missing Pieces In Hll’s Agrarian Jigsaw Puzzle (The Economic Times, Narendar Pani, Jun 29, 2001)
THE CASE that has been built by the chairman of Hindustan Lever for agricultural reform will, hopefully, prompt reformers to extend the process into this sector.
- Tied To A Leash (Hindustan Times, Prakash Patra, Jun 29, 2001)
It is political expediency which has driven the Union government to give a two-year extension to cabinet secretary T.R. Prasad.
- The Importance Of Travel (The Financial Express, Sanjaya Baru, Jun 29, 2001)
Time was when you lost your caste if you crossed the seas. Today, Indians who don’t travel are jealous of those who do.
- Censorship Of Foreign Ideas (Hindu, Rajeev Dhavan , Jun 29, 2001)
CENSORSHIP OF the flow of ideas from and into India is not new.
- `Help Growers Overcome Price Variations’ (The Economic Times, Raghu Krishnan, Jun 29, 2001)
AS SOMEONE who retired as commerce secretary a year ago and was chairman of the Coffee Board in the early 1990s,
- Whose Truce Is It In West Asia? (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 29, 2001)
A `COMPLETE CESSATION' of all potential acts of anti-Jewish violence by the Palestinians is the latest definitive demand from the Israeli side.
- Patent Regime And Pricing Innovations (Business Line, Sudhirendar Sharma, Jun 29, 2001)
BY SMEARING a cake on Mr N K Sharma, Managing Director, National Research Development Corporation (NRDC), inventor Sandeep Jaidka gave vent to the growing frustration of inventors and innovators.
- Indo-Pak Summit At Agra -- Should The Leaders Meet? (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 29, 2001)
THE more one thinks about it, the more one wonders what precisely were the considerations that weighed with the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee, in deciding that the time was ripe for smoking a peace pipe with the Chief Executive of Pakistan.
- Worldjam (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 29, 2001)
IN the era of globalisation, companies are getting bigger and bigger with thousands of personnel manning offices at far-flung locations within a country and round the globe.
- Save The Tiger (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 29, 2001)
What happened to the high profile Project Tiger meant to save the magnificent creature hounded by the organised mafia of poachers?
- Ulterior Motives (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 29, 2001)
THE extremely irresponsible vendetta by the Tamilnadu Chief Minister Jayalalitha has provided the Union Government an opportunity, which it was looking for since after her installation as Chief Minister by the Governor.
- From Lahore With Hope (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 29, 2001)
Lahore looked different when I went there in the bus carrying Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee nearly two years ago.
- Spectre Of Drought (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 29, 2001)
the spectre of drought looms large in Jammu and Kashmir due to prolonged dry spell that has led to acute drinking water scarcity, drying up of ponds and lakes, fall in groundwater level and a severe drop in the flow of rivers,
- Practicing Untouchability (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 29, 2001)
OUR former defence minister, the ever irrepressible and maverick, George Fernandes can never be accused of shying away from taking a separate stand;
- The Market & The Poet (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 29, 2001)
THE BOTTOM line in business conferences is no longer the net profit.
- Pleasure As Protest (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 29, 2001)
In Taliban country, to enjoy is to protest.
- Blank Call (Hindustan Times, R. Krishnan , Jun 29, 2001)
Communications Minister Ramvilas Paswan announced that the government would approach the Supreme Court for restoring the powers of the Telecom Dispute Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT).
- The More Things Change, The More They Remain The Same (The Financial Express, Shefali Misra, Jun 29, 2001)
Ten years on almost to the day since India’s historic economic reforms were kicked off, there is consensus that their biggest beneficiary has been the external sector, most notably foreign exchange reserves which today stand at a healthy $43 billion.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 29, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- Mellowed Mamata (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 29, 2001)
After Trinamool's not-entirely-unexpected humble showing in the West Bengal assembly elections, the interesting question was always going to be when, and not whether, Mamta Banerjee might want to return to the NDA fold.
- Restore Sanity To The System (Telegraph, Abhijit Banerjee, Jun 29, 2001)
Finally, we come to credit, perhaps the most significant constraint faced by small and new businesses.
- Gulls And Frauds (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 29, 2001)
Something must be terribly wrong with a society in which the passion for learning produces herds of gulls and frauds.
- Arresting The Slowdown Is Possible (Pioneer, Brij Bhardwaj, Jun 29, 2001)
The serious implications of the economic slowdown on the nation at large are generally being ignored.
- Anticipatory Planning For Policing (Pioneer, Hiranmay Karlekar, Jun 29, 2001)
Delhi Police's official report that the 'monkey man', whose alleged attacks on people had sent waves of panic in many parts of the Capital, never existed, has important implications for policing all over India.
- Countering Terror (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 29, 2001)
The decision to set up a joint Indo-US Centre for Counter Terrorism has been long overdue.
- Zara Yaad Karo Qurbani (Pioneer, Wilson John, Jun 29, 2001)
Captain Vijayant Thapar was barely 22 when he died somewhere on a desolate, God-forsaken place called Three Pimples.
- Imphal Imbroglio (Times of India, Sanjoy Hazarika, Jun 29, 2001)
THE Indian government and the dominant Naga militant group,
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 29, 2001)
When Brajesh Mishra, national security adviser and principal secretary to the prime minister, walked into the Central Intelligence Agency’s headquarters near Washington a few days ago for his scheduled,
- Plan Platitudes (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 29, 2001)
AN approach paper to a five-year Plan is a road map to economic and social development during the next few years.
- Armchair Analysis (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 29, 2001)
MMCB’s revival with a massive infusion of Rs 1,264 crore of good money may not appear at first sight to be a prudent measure from economic point of view, as pointed out in your editorial `Unhappy rescue’
- The Cat That Can Catch Mice (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jun 29, 2001)
AS two ancient civilisations in Asia, India and China, are always special themes for a comparative study of their progress and performance in critical areas of economy and technology.
- States Should Concentrate On Being More Competitive (The Financial Express, P.K. Vasudeva, Jun 29, 2001)
A meeting of state chief ministers was held in May 2001 to apprise them about India’s point of view regarding the World Trade Organisation (WTO) agreement, especially on agriculture,
- Will China Back Maoists In Nepal? (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jun 29, 2001)
AFTER the conquest of Tibet by China, the Chinese Communist Party sent a message to the Communist Party of Nepal in the middle of 1951 saying: “After the liberation of Tibet,
- No Change In Foreign Policy: Nepal (Tribune, Tripti Nath, Jun 29, 2001)
NEPAL’S Foreign Minister and former Ambassador to India Chakra Prasad Bastola has struggled his way to the Cabinet.
- Export Subsidies For Farm Commodities (Tribune, Balraj Mehta, Jun 29, 2001)
THE government is proposing to give direct budgetary subsidy for the export of agricultural commodities.
- The Libertarian Reader (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 29, 2001)
THE UNIFORM equality of human beings as subjects of a state is perfectly consistent with the utmost inequality of the mass in the degree of its possessions,
- Kadalundi Tragedy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 29, 2001)
Sir, - Your Editorials and the news reports on the Kadalundi train accident have raised a number of points.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 28, 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.
- At A Precipice (Hindu, Ajay K. Mehra, Jun 28, 2001)
SWAMPED COMPLETELY in the storm over saffronisation of education, little news items appearing in the media relating to principals of colleges of the Delhi University (D.U.) drew little attention.
- Memory Block (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 28, 2001)
Soren Keirkegaard, the existentialist philosopher, wrote about a professor who had forgotten that he was alive until the moment of his death.
- We Can Reap Only What We Sow (Tribune, J. L. Gupta, Jun 28, 2001)
MAN cries at the time of birth. Also at the time of his death. During the interval, he strives and struggles.
- Changing Eating Habits (Tribune, Jane Clarke, Jun 28, 2001)
MOST of my patients come to me because they want to change the way they eat — permanently. They want to improve their health, their bodies, have more energy.
- Regimented Joy (Pioneer, Urvashi Gulia, Jun 28, 2001)
Imagine the desert at the height of summers. Hot sand, hot wind and a extremely hot sun.
- Shift The Paradigm (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 28, 2001)
THE SELECTIVE manner in which extensions are being handed out to senior civil servants who should be retired has raised many hackles, especially among junior officers.
- Turkey’s Secular Polity (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2001)
TURKEY is not a multi-religious state. Yet, the zeal with which it protects its secular character, as fashioned by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, father of modern Turkey, is amazing.
- Will Muzaffarabad Highway Reopen (Tribune, Binoo Joshi, Jun 28, 2001)
THERE is a definite glow in the eyes of 70-year-old Manohar Singh when he hears that the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad highway will reopen.
- Compete And Grow (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 28, 2001)
ANOTHER STEP on the road to the new economy has been taken with the cabinet approval of the Competition Policy Bill.
- Musharraf’s Bid For Consensus (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2001)
WITH the Alliance for the Restoration of Democracy (ARD) boycotting Wednesday's meeting of political leaders convened by President Musharraf to secure their viewpoints vis-a-vis India before his visit to New Delhi,
- Tchanging Rules For Andhra’s Prasad (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2001)
PRIME MINISTER Atal Behari Vajpayee appears to have nullified the game plan of the hawks in the BJP to get one of their protagonists as the next Cabinet Secretary.
- Dealing With Bangladesh (Tribune, Sumer Kaul, Jun 28, 2001)
THAT there is at last a forward movement of sorts on resolving the India-Bangladesh border dispute is welcome.
- Restore Sanity To The System (Telegraph, Abhijit Banerjee, Jun 28, 2001)
Finally, we come to credit, perhaps the most significant constraint faced by small and new businesses.
- Red Badge Of Nepal (Hindustan Times, Ashok K Mehta, Jun 28, 2001)
MAOIST REBELS in Nepal have good reason to celebrate the slaughter of royalty in the Narayanhiti Palace.
- Budget And Beauty (Times of India, Anurag, Jun 28, 2001)
AT Budget time so many self-appointed advisers go into over drive to proclaim a host of dos and don'ts for the government of the day.
- Shabad-Kirtan: The Highway Of Bliss (Times of India, Kulbir Kaur, Jun 28, 2001)
SUCH is the extent of importance attached to the life of a householder that the sight of a sannyasi Sikh, who has renounced family life in pursuit of personal salvation, is a rare phenomenon.
- Foreplay & After (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 28, 2001)
Those in the know have always suspected that there might be a link between achievement on the soccer field and performance off it.
- A New Age-Old Question (Tribune, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 28, 2001)
A government servant retires at the age of 60. This is what the fifth Pay Commission stipulated while raising the superannuation from 58 years and what the government accepted when introducing a Bill in Parliament.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 28, 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.
- Kick-Start The Economy (Times of India, T. K. Arun, Jun 28, 2001)
IN these times of fiscal correctness, it is heresy to call for expansionary fiscal policy to revive the economy.
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