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Articles 21521 through 21620 of 27558:
- Here We Go Again (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 18, 2001)
There is surely something touching in the government’s apparent decision to set a Tenth plan disinvestment target of Rs 80,000 crore.
- Fruits Of Multipolarity (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 18, 2001)
Post-Cold-War partnership between India and Russia.
- `Reduce Government Debt By Rs 2000 Crore’ (The Economic Times, Shalini Singh, Jun 18, 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.
- Patents And Licensing (The Economic Times, Biswajit Dhar, Jun 18, 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.
- Whitewashed Beaches? Not Quite (The Economic Times, Lubna Kably, Jun 18, 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.
- Saving Trust Of Uti (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 18, 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.
- Two Steps Backward (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 18, 2001)
There are distressing signs that India and Pakistan are both upping the ante ahead of the forthcoming summit between general Musharraf and prime minister Vajpayee.
- Islamabad Signals (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 18, 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.
- Growth Fears (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 18, 2001)
THERE IS NO mistaking the direction of the economy. It slipped into the downturn started in the second half of 2000 and the skid has become more pronounced.
- Vsnl’s Tangled Lines (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 18, 2001)
MARKET capitalisation is purely notional. It represents the sum total of the worth of all shares of a company on any given day based on the stock market price.
- Small Step To Peace (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 18, 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.
- India’s Food Revolution (Telegraph, Bibek Debroy, Jun 18, 2001)
M.S. Banga, chairman, Hindustan Lever Limited, delivered a talk titled “Food Revolution.
- Message For Bush (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 18, 2001)
Allies, US president George W Bush might sigh, loyally wagged their tails in the good old Cold War days.
- Murder Most Foul (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 18, 2001)
UNIDENTIFIED ASSAILANTS murdered in cold-blood an elderly couple in broad daylight in posh Trikuta Nagar Colony on Sunday.
- Ornamentalism: How The British Saw Their Empire (Telegraph, David Cannadine, Jun 18, 2001)
The British Empire, David Cannadine argues in his new book, “was first and foremost a class act.”
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 18, 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.
- Doubts That Will Not Down (The Kashmir Times, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 18, 2001)
Dead men tell no tales. Nor do burning pyres. But they can bring out the poignancy of a tragedy.
- Big Task , Small Talk (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 18, 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.
- Mr Sinha, No Dummy Figureheads At The Uti, Please (The Financial Express, Sharad Mistry, Jun 18, 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.
- Dark Shadow Over Agra Summit (The Kashmir Times, Inder Malhotra, Jun 18, 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.
- The Fall Guys (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 18, 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.
- Hindustantimes.Com - Editorials (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 18, 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.
- Which Scam Is The Jpc Investigating? (The Financial Express, Sucheta Dalal, Jun 18, 2001)
Last week, Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) members turned the heat on an entire line-up of investigative, regulatory agencies and government departments.
- Using Police As Cms’ Private Army (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jun 18, 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.
- How To Prevent Female Foeticide (Tribune, K.B. SAHAY, Jun 18, 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.
- On Changing The Course Of History (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jun 18, 2001)
A World Bank report says that South Asia is the poorest region of the world. It was the richest for two thousand years. Who is responsible for its present debacle? Pakistan.
- ‘Let Them Have Temples!’ (Tribune, Abu Abraham, Jun 18, 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.
- Preparing For Agra (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 18, 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.
- Know Your Nature To Live Joyously (Times of India, A. S. Negi, Jun 18, 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, Jun 18, 2001)
Dare to Dream, Dare to be Different
- Unwrapping Kashmir (Hindustan Times, Vasant Sathe, Jun 18, 2001)
With a few days to go before President Pervez Musharraf arrives, expectations are building up in both India and Pakistan.
- Going Against The Grain (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
A part of the problem of plenty is because the coalitions ruling the Centre have been bulldozed by allies into relaxing quality norms and raising procurement prices.
- Gods Who Failed (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 17, 2001)
Indira Gandhi lost the general elections of 1977 to a people angered by a god who forgot that her magnificence could only be heightened by their prayers; yet she was promptly brought back in 1980, by a nation who felt she had repented.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 17, 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.
- Will The Generals Prove Gentlemen? (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
The guessing game goes on in Myanmar. However, says AMIT BARUAH, the recent visit of the U.N. envoy, Mr. Razali Ismail, has raised hopes that the dialogue between the Generals and Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi was back on track.
- Miles To Go, Promises To Keep (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
Mr. Khatami and his supporters know that the patience of their people is running thin, writes KESAVA MENON.
- Bracing A Brigand (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
After accusing the DMK regime of colluding with Veerappan, Ms. Jayalalithaa knows it is important to not only be different but to appear to be so, says SURESH NAMBATH.
- Trellis Of Entitlements (Pioneer, C K G Nair, Jun 17, 2001)
Like other rules and instructions for babus there are volumes written and unwritten but practised on the civil servants entitlements.
- Crouching Asian Tigers (Times of India, Meenakshi Shedde, Jun 17, 2001)
WITH Taiwanese director Ang Lee's kinetic poem, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Asian cinema has exploded into our collective consciousness.
- Orchestrated Anti-India Sentiment (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Jun 17, 2001)
THERE seems an uncanny resemblance in the way that anti-Indian sentiment began coordinatedly to be expressed in Kathmandu after the massacre of King Birendra and his family members.
- Individual Liberty Vs It (Tribune, Shyam Ratna Gupta, Jun 17, 2001)
SHOULD individual liberty be superceded by state or corporate edicts, backed by political or money power?
- Promoting Honest Thinking By Institutionalising It (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 17, 2001)
ALL talk about honesty is withering away. However, there still are people who cherish honesty.
- Focus Shifts On Devyani Now (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 17, 2001)
GOSSIP was never considered class in Indian journalism till a few years back. The explosion of information age and free availability of reports from abroad have changed all that.
- Tragedy In Himalayan Kingdom (The Kashmir Times, Arun Nehru, Jun 17, 2001)
Events in Nepal are truly baffling as the murder of the royal family gets into one controversy or the other. This is the twenty first century and we have a free press and the electronic media probes into every nook and corner.
- Agriculture: Question Of Producing Enough At Low Cost (Tribune, Surindar Singh Hara, Jun 17, 2001)
THERE is no shortage of food in the world. With the total area under cultivation today, 20 billion people can be fed at the nutritional level of the USA. Malthus had predicted a famine in the 20th century.
- Dipendra Died Soon After Massacre (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 17, 2001)
THE Nepal story ( no, can’t call it a plain and simple love story) is getting more and more complex.
- How To Clean Up A Very Dirty River (Telegraph, SAHELI MITRA, Jun 17, 2001)
It runs through the heart of India enriching its lands and providing livelihood to millions of countrymen.
- Terminator Technology In Agriculture (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 17, 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.
- Spice Of Life (Pioneer, Yoga Rangatia, Jun 17, 2001)
Biodiversity is not just about patents; it is about the livelihoods of poor tribals and villagers in India.
- Pro-Reform President Of Iran (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Jun 17, 2001)
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, after completing a visit to Iran in December, 1997, observed:
- Haunting Legacy (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
For the ruling Akali Dal, Bhindranwale even as a symbol epitomises competition. SARABJIT PANDHER on the political churning in Punjab.
- India Must Reassess Us Missile Defence (Pioneer, Cecil Victor, Jun 17, 2001)
Having made its initial response welcoming the US decision to implement its National Missile Defence (NMD) policy.
- The Budget In Jeopardy (Telegraph, SHAM LAL , Jun 17, 2001)
It has taken less than three months for the “dream” part of Yashwant Sinha’s budget for the current year to dissolve into thin air.
- Kingdoms Go And Come Again (Telegraph, ANURADHA KUMAR, Jun 17, 2001)
Till 1990, most newspapers and even the electronic media had one favourite sobriquet to describe Nepal — the peaceful Himalayan kingdom.
- Prime Cut (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 17, 2001)
Good sense and international pressure seem to be finally prevailing in Pakistan.
- Fixing The Price Of Hope (Telegraph, Sandhya Srinivasan, Jun 17, 2001)
“A diagnosis of HIV positivity is no reason to lose hope,” says the man on television.
- The Need For Accountability (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jun 17, 2001)
A crucial factor that can make governance successful and the implementation of schemes beneficial to the people is to ensure the accountability of officials.
- Un-Civic Sense, Civic Non-Sense (The Kashmir Times, Anuradha Bhasin Jamwal, Jun 17, 2001)
If divergent views and diverseissues or objects co-exist in the state of Jammu and Kashmir.
- Bush Finds It Hot In Europe (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
Many Europeans see the U.S. as a nation totally absorbed by its own interests and ready to go it alone if its allies fail to come to heel. VAIJU NARAVANE on Mr. George Bush's tour of the Old Continent.
- Politics & Patronage (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 17, 2001)
With elections round the corner, can sops be far behind? Uttar Pradesh chief minister Rajnath Singh has announced the implementation of the fifth pay commission recommendations on salary hikes to primary and secondary teachers.
- Bracing A Brigand (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
After accusing the DMK regime of colluding with Veerappan, Ms. Jayalalithaa knows it is important to not only be different but to appear to be so, says SURESH NAMBATH.
- Onerous Task For Musharraf (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 17, 2001)
Lahore is still Pakistan's political capital, although it is sans politics. Parties have ceased to count. Even their rhetoric does not make news.
- Satisfaction Guranteed (The Economic Times, Rajeev Bhide, Jun 17, 2001)
BUSINESS consists of real people. Every business buyer likes the comfort of being recognised, appreciated and listened to not just as a customer but as a human being as well.
- Race Relations (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 17, 2001)
IN A startling survey conducted by The Washington Post, the Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard University, it has been revealed that racial profiling is only one of many examples of intolerance that minorities continue to confront in the US.
- Price Of The ‘New World Blitzkrieg’ (The Kashmir Times, GWYNNE DYER, Jun 17, 2001)
"The survivors are scraps," says evolutionary biologist Dr. John Alroy about the large mammal species that remain in North America after the wave of extinctions that followed the arrival of the first humans less than 14,000 years ago.
- Wishful Thinking (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 17, 2001)
COMMERCE minister Murasoli Maran’s efforts to build an alliance of developing countries for the Doha ministerial of the WTO is characterised by a liberal dose of optimism.
- Agriculture: Question Of Producing Enough (Tribune, Surindar Singh Hara, Jun 17, 2001)
THERE is no shortage of food in the world. With the total area under cultivation today, 20 billion people can be fed at the nutritional level of the USA. Malthus had predicted a famine in the 20th century.
- Flush And Dredge (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 17, 2001)
The authorities never gave importance to the flushing techniques but only concentrated on the dredging process.
- King's Commission (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 17, 2001)
The report of the two-member fact-finding commission on the June 1 massacre of the royal family in Nepal contains no surprises.
- Miles To Go, Promises To Keep (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 17, 2001)
Mr. Khatami and his supporters know that the patience of their people is running thin, writes KESAVA MENON.
- To Make Or Break Is Japan’s Manufacturing Dilemma (The Financial Express, Sudarshan Kumar, Jun 16, 2001)
Toyota’s triumphant year notwithstanding, Japan’s manufacturing economy is facing a rather basic question: that of survival.
- For A Sub-National Vat (The Economic Times, Mahesh C. Purohit, Jun 16, 2001)
THE EMPOWERED Committee of states finance ministers is grappling with the problems related to introduction of VAT in all states.
- Is Law Different For Ministers? (Hindu, NEENA VYAS , Jun 16, 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.
- Report And After (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 16, 2001)
As had been generally expected, the official report of the panel investigating the circumstances in which King Birendra of Nepal and members of his family were brutally killed in Kathmandu on June 1.
- Liberation To Hindutva (Pioneer, Suman K. Jha, Jun 16, 2001)
BJP president Jana Krishnamurty has made some significant changes in his team while assigning specific tasks to central office-bearers.
- V. P. Singh's Second Coming (Hindu, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 16, 2001)
IN 1995, Mr. V. P. Singh, former Prime Minister, announced that he was withdrawing from active politics for five years.
- Sbi Feels The Heat (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 16, 2001)
THE 22 per cent fall in the State Bank of India’s net profit for 2000-01 is not surprising.
- Wishful Thinking (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 16, 2001)
COMMERCE minister Murasoli Maran’s efforts to build an alliance of developing countries for the Doha ministerial of the WTO is characterised by a liberal dose of optimism.
- The Presentation Needs To Be Interactive (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 16, 2001)
TWO years ago, the new buzzword around town was 'convergence' — the technological marvel that would change the way we live and work.
- Core Incompetence (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Jun 16, 2001)
Having a truck with cars can be disastrous!
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