Articles 21221 through 21320 of 27558:
- Circle Of Anger (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 22, 2001)
He who, while still here, is able to withstand the impulse born of desire and anger, before liberation from the body -- is a yogi. He is a happy man.
- Wake Up To Realise The God Within You (Times of India, Seema Burman, Jun 22, 2001)
THESE days people change countries, jobs, houses and partners in a futile quest to live happily ever after. Those blessed with every imaginable luxury find that they cannot get happiness.
- Trial By Media (Times of India, Pooja Kothari, Jun 22, 2001)
THERE was one victim in the recent tragic happenings of Nepal who was not even present in the Narayanhity palace that fateful Friday night when the entire royal family was massacred, but has been put at the centre of the scene - Devyani Rana.
- Bihar Police, Railways Fail To Check Crime On Passing Trains (The Financial Express, Vikant Sahay, Jun 22, 2001)
Bihar has given more Union railway ministers to the country than any other state, but the facilities provided to commuters in the state are still quite poor.
- Revenue Shortfalls And Reform Roadblocks (The Financial Express, Sanjaya Baru, Jun 22, 2001)
After an R&R in cool Boston, Mr Sinha’s back to heat and sweat at the fisc.
- Not Quite Out Of Power! (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 22, 2001)
It is not unusual to hear ministers taking favours from public sector undertakings in their charge. All these are the ‘perks’ of the job, as a minister is the de facto CEO of the company. All this is true as long as the minister is in office, right?
- Outside Meaningless Legality (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 22, 2001)
HOW MANY laws in India are actually implemented, even half-way down the zigzag road to social justice?
- Bollywood Or Bust? (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 22, 2001)
Anti-piracy movement needs all the help it can get.
- Teaching The Elephant To Dance (The Economic Times, James A. Belasco, Jun 22, 2001)
WHEN asked the question, 'What kind of a company do I want?' most executives respond with either a product or market definition of their business or with a financial ratio measure of success.
- The Indian Market Is Very Fragmented (The Economic Times, Rumy Mukherjee, Jun 22, 2001)
IT'S not just India, TV broadcasters face problems all over Asia.
- Mum’s The Word For Zenobia Aunty (The Economic Times, Lubna Kably, Jun 22, 2001)
I RECALL that, a few years ago, Zenobia Aunty, being one of the highest taxpayers in Mumbai, was invited to a function to felicitate (bestow Sam-man) her and several other such tax payers.
- Higher Education: Benign Neglect Or Malign Intent (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 22, 2001)
THAT higher education must be de-prioritised (or better still privatised) seems to be a popular point of view. The PM’s economic advisory body endorsed it.
- China In A Wto Shop (The Economic Times, Narendar Pani, Jun 22, 2001)
WITH China working out the fine print of its agreement with the US and Europe, it is likely that the communist giant will join the WTO before the Doha ministerial in November.
- In Debt We Trust (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 22, 2001)
WHAT you lose on the swings, you gain on the roundabout.
- Tactical Silence (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 22, 2001)
IN October 1999, when General Pervez Musharraf overthrew Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s government in a bloodless coup and appointed himself Chief Executive of Pakistan, India was in the forefront of the campaign to isolate his regime internationally.
- Unhappy Rescue (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 22, 2001)
THE RS 1,264-crore rescue package announced by the government for Madhavpura Bank on Wednesday is a sad commentary on how narrow party politics has been allowed to triumph over sound economic logic.
- Play It Cool (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 22, 2001)
Two questions arise now that General Pervez Musharraf is Pakistan's president. To what extent he is in charge?
- On A New Path (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 22, 2001)
Having followed a stand-offish policy towards Russia in the early days of his administration.
- Going Radio Ga-Ga In Retreat (Pioneer, Chanchal Sarkar, Jun 22, 2001)
I was exiled to a desert island recently. Not quite.
- India Needs To Shed Caution On Compulsory Licensing Of Drugs (The Financial Express, Anju Ghangurde, Jun 22, 2001)
While the controversy in AIDS-ravaged South Africa has helped highlight the truism in drug consumption (those who need these medicines can least afford it).
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 22, 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.
- General Musharraf V. President Musharraf (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jun 22, 2001)
HOW different will be General Pervez Musharraf in the new civilian robe of presidency? Does it make him more respectable and acceptable to the world community, especially to India?
- Psu Privilege? (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 22, 2001)
IT IS DIFFICULT to relax for public sector units, as a special privilege, SEBI's capital market regulations, as sought to be made out by the Department of Disinvestment.
- Playing Pakistan's Man Of Destiny (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 22, 2001)
A PRECISE TIMING by Gen. Pervez Musharraf to anoint himself as Pakistan's President has attracted worldwide attention.
- Global War On Corruption - Ii: Picking Up Momentum (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 22, 2001)
THE World Bank president, Mr James Wolfensohn, soon after he assumed office in 1995, made the war on global corruption an inalienable part of the Bank's holistic strategy for eradication of poverty.
- Where's The Market? (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 22, 2001)
WHERE is the 250-million plus market? This is the question several foreign investors have raised. They complain that the buyer is elusive.
- Dead And Gone (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 22, 2001)
SIX years ago, in April 1995, bombs planted by Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma building complex housing federal government offices exploded, killing 168 innocent persons, including 19 little children in a day-care centre.
- Old Leaders (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Jun 22, 2001)
ADMITTEDLY, I was a bit envious watching the results of the British general elections.
- Aftermath Of Us Power Crisis -- Drilling Better Alternatives (Business Line, A. V. Swaminathan , Jun 22, 2001)
THE RECENT power crisis that shook the North West states of the US almost became a national problem, even attracting the Federal Government's attention.
- Kashmir And Indo-Pak Talks -- Case For A People's Referendum (Business Line, H. Kaushal , Jun 22, 2001)
THE Musharraf-Vajpayee talks are due to take place in a few weeks time, and the new Pakistani President is doing his homework well.
- A View From Pakistan: Resolving Kashmir Now (Hindu, Foqia Sadiq Khan, Jun 22, 2001)
The poor, illiterate, unhealthy, shelterless, unemployed, underfed of India and Pakistan want the Vajpayee-Musharraf summit to be truly successful.
- A Win-Win Summit As An Idea (Hindu, P. S. SURYANARAYANA, Jun 22, 2001)
CONVENTIONAL WISDOM is that the prospective meeting between the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, and the Pakistan Chief Executive, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, will be a gamble on good luck.
- Contempt Power - Ii (Hindu, V. R. Krishna Iyer , Jun 22, 2001)
IN ANY case relating to contempt power, Lord Denning's wise words and pen power are a quotational wealth. In a well-known case Denning declared.
- Gulls And Frauds (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 22, 2001)
Something must be terribly wrong with a society in which the passion for learning produces herds of gulls and frauds.
- Hindustantimes.Com - The Big Idea (Hindustan Times, Rahul Karmakar, Jun 22, 2001)
IT IS often said that New Delhi, dominated by the Hindi belt, is ignorant of the intricacies of the India that lies south of the Vindhyas.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 22, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- India & Maoist Menace In Nepal (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jun 22, 2001)
THE mystique of the Nepal monarchy is gone — perhaps for ever. There is now nothing to unite the Nepalese people.
- From Lahore With Hope (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 22, 2001)
Lahore looked different when I went there in the bus carrying Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee nearly two years ago.
- Ulterior Motives (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 22, 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.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 22, 2001)
Seedsavers of crops worldwide have been threatened as never before.
- Making Sense Of India’s Janus-Faced Reform (The Financial Express, R.K. Roy, Jun 22, 2001)
Assessing the pluses and minuses of the now decade-old reform is the flavour of the month.
- Spectre Of Drought (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 22, 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.
- Kingdom Come (Pioneer, Shobori Ganguli, Jun 22, 2001)
Way back in 1986, Mahesh Bhatt impressed his audience with a film called Naam.
- Shanghai Surprise (Hindustan Times, Bhaichand Patel, Jun 22, 2001)
IF YOU write about films from time to time, tantalising opportunities sometimes come your way.
- Seapower Creates Deterrent Waves (Pioneer, Premvir Das, Jun 22, 2001)
The successful testing of the PJ-10 missile, developed under the BRAHMOS joint venture programme, highlights a qualitative enhancement in our military profile.
- Restore Sanity To The System (Telegraph, Abhijit Banerjee, Jun 22, 2001)
Finally, we come to credit, perhaps the most significant constraint faced by small and new businesses.
- Market: Stock-Broke! (Business Line, T. Prem Kumar, Jun 22, 2001)
IT HAS been known for decades that brokers have been influencing the working of stock exchanges for their personal benefit at the expense of investors.
- Information Roadblock (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 22, 2001)
It is a classic case of the right hand not knowing - or, more likely, being cynically unconcerned - about what the left is up to.
- Ethanol And Petrol: A Sweet Blend (Business Line, Ram Niak, Jun 21, 2001)
INDIA imported 70 per cent of its annual crude requirement of 107 million tonnes in 2000-01.
- A Washington Itinerary (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 21, 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.
- Dumb Charade (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 21, 2001)
There is nothing better for the national morale than a show of solidarity vis-a-vis Pakistan.
- Hedging Your Bets (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 21, 2001)
David Allen looks at how to deal with business uncertainty.
- Silver Offers Help Against Infection (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 21, 2001)
MANKIND is locked in battle against scary resistant microbes and fears it is losing ground.
- Now We Shall Speak (Times of India, Syeda Saiyidain Hameed , Jun 21, 2001)
THE Supreme Court had recently issued notice to the government on a petition submitted by Zuleikha Bi of Shahdol, Madhya Pradesh. She had married Mohammad Fazal in 1989 when she was 20 years old.
- Beyond Texas (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 21, 2001)
Now that president George Bush is done with his Europe trip, his policy advisers can let out a sigh of relief.
- Restore Sanity To The System (Telegraph, Abhijit Banerjee, Jun 21, 2001)
Finally, we come to credit, perhaps the most significant constraint faced by small and new businesses.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 21, 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.
- Gadgil’s Formula (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 21, 2001)
Higher reward for economic performance is good.
- Gulls And Frauds (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 21, 2001)
Something must be terribly wrong with a society in which the passion for learning produces herds of gulls and frauds.
- A People's Diplomat (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jun 21, 2001)
China's Ambassador to this country, Mr. Zhou Gang, on completing his tenure, left for Beijing on Wednesday. Only the cognoscenti are aware of his remarkable hard work in the call of duty.
- Why Is Sunny Shooting From The Hip? (The Economic Times, C. V. Aravind, Jun 21, 2001)
A SOLOMON has come to judgement. India’s `Little Master’ has finally decided that the world’s best batsman Sachin Tendulkar is only the second best.
- Senseless Idea (The Economic Times, Sam Easow, Jun 21, 2001)
THIS refers to your report 'Govt plans direct export subsidies for farm goods, QR removal' (ET, June 20). Trade in agriculture is controlled by the WTO's Agreement on Agriculture and India is a signatory.
- Gordian Knots And Kid-Gloves (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 21, 2001)
THAT THERE ARE no soft options in restructuring State finances is obvious in the White Paper presented by the Kerala Government for wider public debate.
- Spectre Of Drought (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 21, 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.
- Advantage Muivah (Hindustan Times, Prakash Singh, Jun 21, 2001)
Kargil showed poor border management. Kandahar was a shame. And Kohima has been a disaster.
- Crowd Out The Environment (Hindustan Times, Bhaskar Ghose, Jun 21, 2001)
A little way outside the tiny village of Kinloch Rannoch, in the highlands of Perthshire, Scotland, the still waters of Loch Rannoch stretch out long, blue and shadowed between mountains thick with forest.
- Run-Up To The Summit (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 21, 2001)
THE countdown has started for the Indo-Pakistan summit but the diplomatic temperature in the two capitals are dramatically different. It is a leisurely pace in New Delhi with only High Commissioner to Pakistan Vijay Nambiar stirring things up a bit.
- President In His Labyrinth (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 21, 2001)
There can be no better example of the differences in the Pakistani and Indian styles of governance than General Pervez Musharraf’s decision to take over as President.
- Global War On Corruption -- I: Setting The Stage (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jun 21, 2001)
TO THE United States belongs the credit of putting in place as early as in 1977 the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, prohibiting the US companies from indulging in any transaction in foreign countries that involved payment of bribes.
- Standard Tease (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 21, 2001)
S. Murlidharan says that AS-21 should shed greater light on consolidation of accounts.
- Practicing Untouchability (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 21, 2001)
OUR former defence minister, the ever irrepressible and maverick, George Fernandes can never be accused of shying away from taking a separate stand.
- Soft Spoken But Tough Taskmaster (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 21, 2001)
SOFT spoken but a tough taskmaster, Brij Bihari Tandon, who has assumed charge as an Election Commissioner in the three-member Election Commission, is yet another civil servant capable of meeting peer pressure and challenge.
- Selling Of Education (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 21, 2001)
THE earmarking of 17 seats for NRIs for admission to the MBBS course run by Pt B.D. Sharma Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences and three seats in Government Dental College, both in Rohtak, amounts to cost-based reservation.
- Misgivings About Monarchical Order (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Jun 21, 2001)
THE shocking tragedy that engulfed Nepal’s royal family when the traditional Friday night gettogether turned into an appalling carnage is going to leave deep scars on the psyche of Nepal’s people.
- Violence In Bhopal Over ‘Gadar’ (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 21, 2001)
A chance remark by a person watching the film “Gadar,” produced by actor Sunny Deol, at the Lily Talkies in Bhopal sparked off violence in the Madhya Pradesh on Tuesday.
- Refining & Developing The Mind (Tribune, B. K. Nanda, Jun 21, 2001)
THE importance of the human mind cannot be overestimated. Milton, the great poet, sings “The mind in its own place, and in itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.”
- What Ho, Liberalisation? (Business Line, Menka Shivdasani , Jun 21, 2001)
ASK any one above 45 years of age if he/she is better off today than in the ``good old days'' and one would probably hear a litany of complaints about everything that is wrong with the world.
- Musharraf Becomes President (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jun 21, 2001)
SO GEN Pervez Musharraf has done what was expected of him for quite some time.
- The Bane Of Approval (Business Line, R. Ravi , Jun 21, 2001)
RECENTLY, the Ministry of Law, Justice and Company Affairs hinted that the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956 relating to managerial remuneration may be amended so that companies are free to engage the best managerial talents.
- Ethanol And Petrol: A Sweet Blend (Business Line, Ram Niak, Jun 21, 2001)
INDIA imported 70 per cent of its annual crude requirement of 107 million tonnes in 2000-01.
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