From,
April 16, 2006 to April 22, 2006
`Domestic
Violence Is Taken For Granted In
Bihar'
Where
are the gender rights? Where there is
so much discrimination against women,
where is the
question
of rights? — Ms Renu Ranjan, Head,
Department Of Sociology, Magadh Mahila
College . . .
0
Pct India Growth Is Feasible, Imf's
Rajan Says
India's medium-term goal of growing its economy 10 percent
a year is realistic if it can boost
infrastructure and job creation, the International Monetary
Fund's chief economist said on
Wednesday.
Pune
Plans Wire-Free City For Internet
Users
Intel Technology India
Private Limited was recently appointed
as chief technology and programme
management consultant by Pune
Municipal Corporation (PMC) to build a
wire-less Pune by 2007.
&a:
'Informal Understanding That It Is
Asia's Turn'
Shashi Tharoor is under-secretary-general for communication
and public information at the United
Nations and author of several books. He spoke to Ronojoy
Sen on issues related to the UN:
Karat
Interview: Vs Refuses To Bite The
Bullet
S Achuthanandan, CPI(M)’s top hardline honcho and likely
chief minister if the Left comes to
power
this poll, declined to comment whether he agreed with his
General Secretary Prakash Karat that
the
strife in Kerala CPI(M) was between two . . .
Kashmir
Militants Coming Home, Says India
General
India's most senior army general in Kashmir said on Sunday
that militants based in Pakistani
Kashmir
have been giving up arms and returning to their homes in
the Indian part of the Himalayan
region
following last year's devastating earthquake.
Q&a:
'Ramanujan's Story Is That You Can't
Imprison The Mind'
Writer-director Dev Benegal,
45, has never walked the easy line.
His debut feature English August
(1994) was a wry look at
bureaucracy. His second movie, Split
Wide Open (1999), scraped the
jagged edges of globalisation
from below. Now, Benegal is . .
.
Reality
Check
Siddiq Barmak on how his films are drawn from what's
happening in Afghanistan
Interview:
Anil Naidoo
Interview with Anil Naidoo, Director of the Blue Planet
Project, which is fighting against the
commercialisation of water.
Q&a:
'Ramanujan's Story Is That You Can't
Imprison The Mind'
Writer-director Dev Benegal,
45, has never walked the easy line.
His debut feature English August
(1994) was a wry look at
bureaucracy. His second movie, Split
Wide Open (1999), scraped the
jagged edges of globalisation
from below. Now, Benegal i . . .
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