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Articles 21 through 120 of 500:
- Lacking Spark (Telegraph, S.L. Rao, Oct 24, 2007)
In the years that I have been actively engaged with energy, more particularly electricity, I have been surprised by the inability — even of experienced journalists, let alone the ordinary public — to understand the simple facts that lead to the . . . . .
- Why I Am An Atheist (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 24, 2007)
Excerpts from the article Bhagat Singh wrote in reply to a remark made by Bhai Randhir Singh, a Ghadarite, in Lahore Central Jail in 1930-31.
- Flying Blind (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Oct 22, 2007)
The narrow escape that the Jet Airways flight landing in Mumbai had on Friday isn’t just providential. It could be a forewarning of things to come. Unless India’s aviation authorities wake up immediately, the nation, which is slowly getting used to . . .
- Advani Wants Msp For Paddy Raised (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha L.K. Advani on Saturday urged the government to raise the minimum support price of paddy to Rs. 1,000 a quintal for the current kharif marketing season.
- Advani Seeks Revision Of Paddy Msp (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
In an attempt to corner the support of farmers lobby for the BJP, leader of opposition L.K. Advani today asked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to upwardly revise minimum support price (MSP) for paddy to bring it at par with wheat.
- Sting In The Stink (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 22, 2007)
A World Health Organisation official has claimed that the current chikungunya outbreak in northern Italy is the result of climate change. Paul Reiter finds this widely reported statement absurd, saying it's used tyres, not global warming . . . ..
- Increased Military Spending Keeps South Asia On The Boil (Deccan Herald, Gobind Thukral, Oct 18, 2007)
Rising defence spending will not only aggravate South Asias internal and external disputes, but also exacerbate human security.
- More At Stake Than Monks And Military In Myanmar (Business Line, G. Parthasarathy, Oct 18, 2007)
In the stormy street protests in 1988 across Burma that brought down the one party Socialist regime of Gen. Ne Win, over 3,000 people perished when the army opened fire on peaceful demonstrators.
- From Oct 27, Us To Allow Turbans At Airports (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 18, 2007)
In a major relief for American Sikh community, Transportation Security Administration on Tuesday announced a new security screening policy that will be put into effect at US airports starting October 27 and apply to all religious head coverings.
- Market Crises Have A Life Of Their Own, Separate From Value (Business Line, D. Murali , Oct 18, 2007)
If the cascade down in price is due to a liquidity-driven crisis, the best approach for the individual investor is to stand back and be patient.
- Economic Intelligence Vital In Tackling Organised Crime: Ib (Pioneer, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 17, 2007)
Organised crime networks like the D-Company of Dawood Ibrahim (designated by the US as global terrorist) have made inroads into the economic framework of the country by entering into diverse activities such as infotainment sector . . . . . .
- Bitter Sugarcane (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 17, 2007)
As dawn cracks over seemingly endless fields of sugarcane, a ragged army of men and women sharpen their machetes to harvest the raw material for Brazil's "white gold".
- Climate, Nobel And Al Gore (Business Line, N. R. Krishnan , Oct 17, 2007)
Nobel awards for Peace can often be contentious. But not so this year. Barring a few diehard critics who question the phenomenon of global warming itself, the world has welcomed the 2007 award to Al Gore, former US Vice-President and a . . . . .
- Sibal Mum On Indo-Us N-Deal (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 16, 2007)
Range of incentives planned for scientists, says Union Minister
- Wockhardt Set To Acquire Us Firm For $70 Mn (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 16, 2007)
Pharma major Wockhardt Ltd is in the final stages of acquiring US drug maker Morton Grove Pharmaceuticals Inc, a company that makes prescription liquid pharmaceutical products, sources close to the development said.
- Dealing With The Yangon Junta (Deccan Herald, Bidanda M Chengappa, Oct 16, 2007)
India needs to overtly engage the junta and cultivate contact with pro-democracy forces.
- Tax The Car, Fund Public Transport (Business Line, Bhanoji Rao, Oct 16, 2007)
None can deny the security one gets by owning a product instead of renting it.
- Blasts Rock Tunnel After Truck Pileup (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 15, 2007)
Interstate 5 is of vital commercial importance, but detours and disruptions along its 1,381-mile length from the Mexican border to Canada have become increasingly common. Many have been attributed to steadily-increasing traffic and a steady . . . .
- Friends, Australians, Americans Give Me Your Wheat (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 13, 2007)
If India’s wheat production has been flat for 10 years how come the consumers did not come to know about it till now? There are two reasons: foodgrain stocks and Australia.
- Displaced To Be Made Stakeholders (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 12, 2007)
The Union Cabinet today gave its approval to the new rehabilitation policy that defines the role of states in the acquisition of plots for industrial activities and provides for land-for-land compensation and preference to displaced families for . . . .
- Four Nris Win Canadian Polls (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 12, 2007)
The enterprising people of Punjab have proved their mettle once again and that too in a foreign land. Four Punjabis — Harinder Takhar, Vic Dhillon, Dr Kuldeep Kular and Amrit Mangat — have won the Canadian provincial polls, the results of which . . . .
- On How To Set Up Business In Brazil (Business Line, D. Murali , Oct 11, 2007)
Brazilian companies, beyond paying dividends to their shareholders, may also pay interest on equity to them. And such interest is a deductible expense.
- Discrimination In Disaster Relief (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Oct 09, 2007)
The Asian tsunami and Kashmir earthquake clearly demonstrated that while the hazards themselves do not discriminate between the various cleavages in society, the severity of impacts, and the speed of recovery of various individuals and groups . . . .
- No More A Silver Bullet (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Oct 09, 2007)
Biofuels will not be the "silver bullet" that will break the worlds dependence on fossil fuels.
- Delhi's Killer Buses (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Oct 09, 2007)
Death continues to stalk people on the streets of the nation's capital. A Blueline bus has tragically claimed yet another set of victims this Sunday. In a wholly avoidable accident, a blueline bus with a tampered speed governor killed seven and . . . .
- Towards A New Space Age (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
It was 50 years ago that the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, the world’s first artificial satellite.
- This One Was Overdue (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 08, 2007)
That mandatory fuel-efficiency norms for automobiles will be enforced in India within two years is a welcome announcement.
- 2 Ropeways To Link Siaraz With State (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 05, 2007)
After the death of three teenagers by drowning in the Chenab here, the authorities have decided to take preventive measures.
- Oil Firms Look To Step Up Expenditure On Security (Singapore Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Oct 05, 2007)
The impending threat of terrorist and naxal strikes on vital oil & gas installations looms large on domestic oil companies.
- For South Asian Cooperation (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Oct 03, 2007)
LOOKING at the history of South Asia, it becomes obvious that the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc) has not come up with sufficient initiatives to synergise the process of cooperation and give it an institutional base.
- Pipeline Glitches (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Sep 29, 2007)
New Delhi’s decision not to attend the trilateral meeting at Teheran on the India-Pakistan-Iran gas pipeline suggests that a hard line is being taken on the $7.4-billion project, which has been in the works for the past couple of years.
- How ‘Export Of Services’ Is Mired In Tax Complexity (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Sep 29, 2007)
Service exporters have something more to worry about than rupee appreciation: the lack of clarity on the service tax front.
- ‘Higher Rupee Both Problem And Opportunity For Exporters’ (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Sep 28, 2007)
The Government will work towards a level playing field but exporters must use the strong rupee as an opportunity for greater efficiency and cost consciousness.
- We Are Capable Of Sending A Spacecraft To Mars: Isro Chief (Hindu, T.S. Subramanian, Sep 28, 2007)
“Our GSLV can take a 500 kg spacecraft to the Martian orbit”
- India: Pipeline Will Be A Reality If Nations Agree On Fuel Price (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 27, 2007)
Despite skipping a crucial tri-nation talk, India has expressed the hope that the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline will become a reality if buyers and the seller agree on the fuel price.
- Confident State (Frontline, JOHN CHERIAN, Sep 27, 2007)
THE election of Abdullah Gul as the new President has opened a new chapter in Turkish politics. Gul, who until recently was the Foreign Minister, won the election despite the undisguised hostility of the Army, which views itself as the sole guardian . . .
- Nasa Plans To Put Man On Mars By 2037 (Tribune, Ramesh Kandula, Sep 26, 2007)
The United States is planning to put man on Mars by 2037, a top official of the American space agency said.
- Nasa Aims To Put Man On Mars By 2037 (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
The United States aims to put a man on Mars by 2037 and build a space civilisation.
- Pfizer: Managing Costs (Business Standard, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
Pfizer reported lacklustre results for the quarter ended August 31, 2007, as segment revenues in its core pharmaceuticals division declined 3.5 per cent y-o-y.
- Requiem For A Freedom Fighter (Dawn, Mahir Ali, Sep 26, 2007)
ON A midwinter afternoon in 1928, pistol shots rang out in the heart of Lahore. They were aimed at an assistant superintendent of police, J.P. Saunders.
- Nasa Aims To Put Man On Mars By 2037 (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 26, 2007)
"With manned mission to moon from 2020 onwards and Mars a decade later, we want to build a space civilisation for tomorrow," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said.
- India Seeks Help For Space Assets’ Protection (Statesman, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 25, 2007)
India today sought the robust protection of space assets, irrespective of their applications, while asking the international community to rectify the present asymmetry in technological flow and improve international cooperation.
- Filthy, Crowded And Dangerous (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Sep 24, 2007)
The once efficient railways have deteriorated to the point that derailments and brake failures are regular occurrences.
- India Raises Work Permit Concerns With Uk (Times of India, RASHMEE ROSHAN LALL, Sep 24, 2007)
India has officially expressed concerns about revisions to UK work permit regulations, with the visiting Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma extracting a promise from the British Trade Minister to look into NASSCOM's fears . . . .
- Organise Trauma Care (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Sep 22, 2007)
According to statistics available in Karnataka, more than 8,000 accidents occur every year. Nearly 10 per cent of them are fatal.
- Need To Wake Up To The Realities (Hindu, Prabhudev Konana, Sep 22, 2007)
The global success of “brand India” and continuous reinforcement of successes cloud many perceptions of reality. It is important for us to be more inquisitive about our claims of hackneyed success stories.
- Woman On The Move (Telegraph, Malavika Karlekar, Sep 20, 2007)
Indians have been peripatetic for centuries, travelling both within the country and abroad, and with British rule, employment-related middle-class migration picked up.
- Military Rule In Neighbourhood (Tribune, A N Sudarsan Rao , Sep 20, 2007)
Non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries was a cardinal part of Jawaharlal Nehru’s five principles of peaceful coexistence.
- Karat Calls For Six-Month Pause On Nuke Deal (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 19, 2007)
The crisis facing the UPA government over the nuclear agreement with the US deepened on Tuesday when CPM upped its anti-deal ante by asking the government not to 'operationalise' the deal for six months.
- Top Us Democrat Slams Govt Agency For Turban Checks (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 14, 2007)
The head of a powerful US House Committee has slammed the agency responsible for transport security for its "rampant religious discrimination and profiling" of Sikhs by forcing them to take off their turban during security screening at airports.
- Hyderabad Blasts: 2nd Narco Test Reveals Bulk Purchase Of Sim Cards (Indian Express, JOHNSON T A, Sep 13, 2007)
A second round of narco-analysis conducted on Hyderabad bomb blasts suspect Imran Sayeed on Wednesday has tied up loose ends regarding names given by him during the September 4 narco-analysis test.
- Edits (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 13, 2007)
The island of Nayachar has thrown up an issue that is critically academic, and for once economic development is beyond the purview of political discourse.
- Development Surge (Frontline, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 13, 2007)
THE beginning of the 21st century has opened a new chapter in the history of Tirumala-Tirupati Devasthanams with the administration focussing on various developmental activities to augment amenities for pilgrims.
- Top Us Democrat Slams Govt Agency For Turban Checks (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 13, 2007)
The head of a powerful US House Committee has slammed the agency responsible for transport security for its "rampant religious discrimination and profiling" of Sikhs by forcing them to take off their turban during security screening at airports.
- Edit (Statesman, Editorial, Statesman, Sep 12, 2007)
The commando-turned-President has for the moment silenced his major challenger. And yet palpable was the panic of the establishment on Monday afternoon, the defeat near-total and irreversible.
- ‘Financial Sector Is In Need Of An Agenda’ (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Sep 12, 2007)
We are looking to the Raghuram Rajan Committee for a broad-based view of the financial sector by scanning the whole structure to lay out an agenda.
- Nervous Gen Can Take Only Few Hrs Of Sharif (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 11, 2007)
Former Pakistan prime minister Nawaz Sharif was arrested here today and flown to Saudi Arabia after he arrived here intent on leading an effort to oust current president, General Pervez Musharraf.
- Truly In The Middle (Hindu, KALA KRISHNAN RAMESH , Sep 10, 2007)
The artists, whose works were exhibited in “Middle Path”, followed the old ways; much of the strength of their work coming from thus holding fast.
- Pilgrims As Hooligans (Times of India, RAVINDER KAUR, Sep 10, 2007)
While Anjolie Ela Menon celebrated the kavadiyas in San Francisco through her painting appropriately titled Yatra, these very pilgrims held Indian cities to ransom.
- A Bridge Collapses (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Sep 10, 2007)
SEPTEMBER ONE was a fateful day marked by a tragedy that should not have happened. The collapse of the Shershah bridge of the Northern Bypass in Karachi has had a ripple effect.
- Downtown On The L Train (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 08, 2007)
Downtown Chicago is a visual smorgasbord with so much to see and explore.
- Rbi Annual Report 2006-07: Pragmatic Remedies To Sustain Growth (Business Line, G. Srinivasan , Sep 08, 2007)
The words of fiscal prudence and economic wisdom from Mint Street in Mumbai where the country’s central bank is billeted are always looked upon with avidity by policy-makers and economists alike.
- India Sparks Wheat Price Rise (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 08, 2007)
Forget the import of jet fighters and uranium for the moment. It’s India’s purchase of wheat in the international market that is attracting world attention — besides domestic controversy.
- Where Is The Old Park? (Deccan Herald, KALPANA M NAGHNOOR, Sep 08, 2007)
As if the noise pollution is not too many decibels intolerably high, we now have dancing fountains to entertain the tone deaf and insight-impaired.
- Gas Pipeline Talks In Final Stage: Iran (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 07, 2007)
Talks on the Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipeline project are in the final stage where the technical aspects are being looked into, according to Iranian Deputy Oil Minister Reza Kasai’i Zadeh.
- Rise And Re-Emergence Of Putin’S Russia (Business Line, G. Parthasarathy, Sep 06, 2007)
In a televised address on July 17, President Vladimir Putin proclaimed: “There are forces both in Russia and the US that abide by 20th Century thinking, rather than the 21st Century, those who love and feed on ideas of the past competition.
- Should The Government Set The Price For Gas At All? (Business Line, Raghuvir Srinivasan, Sep 06, 2007)
Much before it fires the burners at power plants, gas from the Krishna Godavari Basin has ignited a major controversy over its value and has all the interested parties in a bind.
- Will The Rise Of India And China Spur Us? (Business Line, D. Murali , Sep 04, 2007)
There is one thing impossible for any company to move overseas, and difficult for other nations to duplicate, writes Robyn Meredith in The Elephant and the Dragon.
- The Bottlenecks (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Sep 03, 2007)
THE economy seems to be doing fine at one level, despite myriad problems like the global financial crisis, domestic unrest and growing Naxalite and terrorist attacks.
- Cbi To Probe Chhattisgarh Coal ‘Cartel’ (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2007)
Fresh CBI investigations have been ordered into the illegal practices of a “cartel” operating in Asia’s largest open cast coal mining facility at Chhattisgarh’s Ghewra-Dipika block. The mine comes under the jurisdiction of the South Eastern . . . . .
- Us Government In Dialogue With Sikhs (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Sep 03, 2007)
US authorities have initiated a dialogue with the Sikh community to find a "workable solution" to its concerns over new airport security procedures that involve a mandatory "pat-down" of turbans.
- Reality Check On Nuclear Option (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Sep 03, 2007)
To the strong pitch the Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, has been making for the nuclear deal, the Congress President, Ms Sonia Gandhi, has added her own formidable voice.
- Us Government In Dialogue With Sikhs (Hindustan Times, Arun Kumar, Sep 01, 2007)
US authorities have initiated a dialogue with the Sikh community to find a "workable solution" to its concerns over new airport security procedures that involve a mandatory "pat-down" of turbans.
- Dumping And Disposal Of Waste (Tribune, Janak Raj Gupta, Sep 01, 2007)
As the elections in four Municipal Corporations are over, it is now time to concentrate on the plight of urban dwellers whose number is swelling day by day and is expected to reach 50 per cent by 2030.
- Towards Equality (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Sep 01, 2007)
The amendment will boost the rights of women.
- Gas Pipeline: No Accord Yet On Transit Fee (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 31, 2007)
The Centre on Thursday said there was no agreement yet on the transit fees payable to Pakistan for the passage of natural gas through that country.
- New Airport Turban Checks Upset Sikhs (Hindustan Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 31, 2007)
Sikh organisations in the US have received dozens of complaints from community members saying they were told to remove their turbans at airports for security checks in the wake of a new rule that subjects air travellers wearing head covering to . . . . .
- Nepal's Govt Agrees To Peace Deal With Ethnic Rights Group (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 31, 2007)
Nepal's government has reached a peace agreement with a major ethnic rights group that was fighting for greater autonomy in the restive south, officials said.
- Malabar Series (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 31, 2007)
The forthcoming Indo-US naval exercises codenamed the 'Malabar' series since 1992 have created considerable political controversy this time around in the backdrop of the Indo-US nuclear deal.
- 'Vehicle Mix, Traffic Flow Characteristics Here Are Heterogeneous' (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 31, 2007)
In collaboration with two US-based companies, Venu Sarakki has provided the design for a "secure electronic network for travellers rapid inspection" (Sentri) programme, which "helps speed flow of commerce across transnational borders as also to . . . .
- Holiday Weeks (Telegraph, Anabel Loyd, Aug 29, 2007)
I was asked recently if I had known Lord Deedes, who died last week aged 94. Sadly the answer was no, I would have liked to.
- Sikhs In Us Protest Anti-Turban Norms (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 29, 2007)
Sikh Coalition, the largest civil rights organisation of American Sikhs is up in arms against the new US airport security policy that, it said, allows "arbitrary" searches of turbans.
- The Bottlenecks (Asia Times, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 29, 2007)
The economy seems to be doing fine at one level, despite myriad problems like the global financial crisis, domestic unrest and growing Naxalite and terrorist attacks.
- Jharia: A Town On Fire (Tribune, Amar Chandel, Aug 28, 2007)
When we say that such and such town is sitting on a powder keg, we mean that figuratively. But in the case of Jharia (Jharkhand), it is literally true. Coal burning uncontrolled underneath it has put a fiery question mark on the very existence of . . . .
- Us, Muslim Leaders Condemn Hyderabad Blasts (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 27, 2007)
America's largest Sikh civil rights organisation, the Sikh Coalition, has strongly opposed new turban screening procedures put in place by the Transportation Security Administration earlier this month.
- Sri Lanka Hunt Turns To Tigers In (Singapore Times, AJAI SAHNI, Aug 23, 2007)
With the eviction of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) from Batticaloa, capital of Sri Lanka's Eastern Province, and the Tigers' eventual collapse in the Thoppigala jungle area (Barron's Rock) on July 11, the expulsion of the. . .
- N-Energy Will Cost 3 Times As Much As Coal (Asian Age, Seema Mustafa, Aug 23, 2007)
Energy from imported nuclear reactors will cost three times as much as that available from coal-fired power plants and will on an average meet just about three to five per cent of the national power demand.
- Japan And India To Announce Partnerships And New Business Initiatives (International Herald Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 21, 2007)
India and Japan, scrambling to build closer economic ties as China's might grows, are expected to announce a spate of partnerships and new business initiatives as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan visits India this week.
- Southern Synergies (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 21, 2007)
At a Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) initiative last week, the Tourism Secretaries of Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Puducherry inked an agreement to forge a southern regional tourism grid.
- Three Ds Of Transportation (Business Line, D. Murali , Aug 20, 2007)
Cars and motorcycles, trucks and buses are what predominantly populate the roads.
- Getting Back On The Bike (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Aug 20, 2007)
The tour de France, the world’s premier cycling event, just finished for this year. Even after discounting for the scandals associated with drug-enhanced performance of the lead riders, there is a thrill as we watch the participants whiz past the camera.
- Fdi Inflow Crosses $10 Billion Mark (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 18, 2007)
The FDI equity inflows during 2006-07 stood at $15.7 billion, as compared to $5.5 billion received during 2005-06, Commerce Minister Kamal Nath said.
- A Policy For Unfreedom (Frontier Post, Jayati Ghosh, Aug 18, 2007)
THE Mayawati government in Uttar Pradesh has just announced the Agriculture Infrastructure and Investment Policy, which seeks to bring about radical changes in the structure of trading of agricultural produce.
- Compact Classic (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 18, 2007)
THE ubiquitous Compact Disc (CD) turns 25. Notwithstanding the obituaries already being written, it will be a few years before this versatile digital storage device outlives its usefulness.
- The Fatigue Factor In Flight Safety (Business Line, A. Ranganathan, Aug 17, 2007)
The recent DGCA (Directorate General of Civil Aviation) rule on flight and duty time limitation for flight crew is about the best safety initiative in India for a long time.
- “The Disabled Cannot Be Denied Air Passage” (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 16, 2007)
The Office of the Directorate-General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has issued new civil aviation requirements for disabled passengers that are scheduled to come into effect from Wednesday.
- Costing Body Plans `Accounting Technicians' Course (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 16, 2007)
In addition to the present shortage of 25,000 qualified finance professionals, there will be a demand for 10 lakh accountancy-trained personnel in the next 10 years at a the junior level, says Mr Chandra Wadhwa, the newly elected President of the . . . .
- Rain Fury: 19 More Killed In Hp (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 14, 2007)
The over century-old railway station at Koti on the Shimla-Kalka track was washed away in a cloud burst and 19 persons were killed at various places over the past 24 hours as rain havoc continued in the state for the second day today.
- Let's Reach For The Sky (Times of India, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 13, 2007)
India is where the action is. Not only is the nation one of the fastest growing economies of the world, it also boasts an outstanding research and development talent pool that can match, if not outshine, the very best.
- Heavy Rain Claims 11 Lives In Hp (Tribune, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 13, 2007)
Eleven persons were killed, about two dozen houses either collapsed or suffered damage, six bridges washed away as widespread heavy rain over the past 24 hours played havoc with private and public property in most parts of the state.
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