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Articles 22521 through 22620 of 25122:
- Passing Off And Infringement: Spate Of Litigation In Store (The Financial Express, Ravi Singhania, May 18, 2001)
The history of the passing off law can be traced back to the 19th century in the case of Millington versus Fox.
- After It, Naidu Sets His Eyes On Genome Technology (The Financial Express, K. V. V. V. Charya, May 18, 2001)
By 2020, Andhra Pradesh must achieve a level of development that will provide its people with varied and realisable opportunities to achieve prosperity and well-being and enjoy a high quality of life.
- Mr Greenspan Does Asia A Favour (The Financial Express, S. R. Kasbekar, May 18, 2001)
The latest in the Fed rate-cut series should perk up the region.
- Constitutionally Sound (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, May 18, 2001)
THE TAMIL Nadu Governor played it by the book when she invited Jayalalitha to take over as chief minister.
- China Over-Rated As A Market? (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, May 18, 2001)
DOES China matter, asks Gerald Segal, Director of Studies at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, London, in an article in “Foreign Affairs” (Sept/Oct. 1999).
- Whose Truce Is It In West Asia? (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, May 18, 2001)
A `COMPLETE CESSATION' of all potential acts of anti-Jewish violence by the Palestinians is the latest definitive demand from the Israeli side.
- Primary Markets Should Have A Separate Category Of Mutual Funds (The Financial Express, D. C. Patwari, May 18, 2001)
Events in the capital market during the past decade go to show that the system in India lacks accountability.
- It’s A Quid Pro Quo (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, May 18, 2001)
Quite simply, you only get what you give.
- Stock Market Trading: Badla Revisited (Business Line, G. V. Ramakrishnan , May 18, 2001)
THE WRITER is fully conscious of the fact that whatever he says on the subject of this article will be taken as a one-sided view coming from one who is `committed'.
- Putin On The Defensive (Hindu, Achin Vanaik , May 18, 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. Appropriate noises were made about the NMD issue.
- Aids To Development (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, May 18, 2001)
The chief minister of Andhra Pradesh seems to have hit upon a unique method of measuring development in his state.
- The Unexpurgated (Indian Express, Saeed Naqvi, May 18, 2001)
What’s democracy got to do with it?
- Censorship Of Foreign Ideas (Hindu, Rajeev Dhavan , May 18, 2001)
CENSORSHIP OF the flow of ideas from and into India is not new.
- Sangh Is The Soul (Indian Express, Harish Gupta, May 18, 2001)
If President K.R. Narayanan is proceeding to Shimla for a week beginning May 19, Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee will be holidaying at Manali from May 23 onwards.
- Market Myths (Times of India, Vikas Singh, May 18, 2001)
CHILDREN around the world are fed a rich mythological diet which celebrates the eternal battle between good and evil; Rama vs Ravana, knights vs dragons, Luke Skywalker vs Darth Vader.
- The Refugee (Times of India, Sheila Kumar, May 18, 2001)
CONDITIONED as I was by city mores, I tried not to stare.
- What The Assembly Verdicts Foretell (Telegraph, SURENDRA MOHAN, May 18, 2001)
The assembly elections for the states of Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and the Union territory of Pondicherry have caused great joy within the Congress.
- Global Scapegoat (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, May 18, 2001)
Every so often, a piece of writing stirs up a lively debate. So it is with ``Winners and Losers'', an article in The Economist written by Robert Wade, professor of political economy at the London School of Economics.
- There Is No Oasis For The Elderly (Telegraph, P. S. M. Rao, May 18, 2001)
The government, following the economic reforms, has a much reduced role in the problem areas of poverty, unemployment and social security.
- A Gentle Way With Words (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, May 18, 2001)
A week before he died at 95, news of his precarious health began appearing in all our national dailies.
- Conduct Mis-Rules (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, May 18, 2001)
In Miss Congeniality, Sandra Bullock's take on the life of a woman FBI officer, her character Gracie Hart is made to chew with her mouth open, snort while she laughs and leave her hair uncombed.
- Wake-Up Call (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, May 18, 2001)
UP, unlike the four states, will be a referendum.
- Gone With The Wind (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, May 17, 2001)
The Marxists have won another term in the Writers’ Buildings. Subrata Nagchoudhury says it was Mamata Banerjee’s inability to present a cogent and convincing political agenda that failed the Trinamool from defeating the Left Front in West Bengal.
- Kailash, The King (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, May 17, 2001)
Four faiths revere this mighty mountain.
- The Abc To Nmd Of Sanctions (The Financial Express, Sunil Jain, May 17, 2001)
Or why just going ga-ga about how great NMD is won’t help.
- Invite Malaysia For Palmoil Jvs Instead Of Lowering Import Duty (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, May 17, 2001)
The Prime Minister’s delegation to Malaysia does not seem to have done adequate homework before negotiating palm oil trade.
- An Economically Battered Assam Pins Its Hopes On Gogoi (The Financial Express, Santanu Saikia, May 17, 2001)
Assam’s chief minister designate, Tarun Gogoi, has a daunting task carved out for him over the next five years.
- Left Front May Induct Outside Talent In Bengal Cabinet (The Financial Express, Sunil Mukhopadhyay, May 17, 2001)
The people of West Bengal have provided Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, who is all set to continue as chief minister for the next five years.
- This School Is Different (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, May 17, 2001)
EL Puente means “the bridge” in Spanish, and this action sums up what this unusual state school is all about.
- Making Democracy Meaningful (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, May 17, 2001)
IF democracy is to become a more meaningful element in the life of society, and hence in the constructive exercise of political choice, three lines of reform need to be pursued...
- Slowly, Slowly, Down The Stream (Indian Express, Ravi Agarwal, May 17, 2001)
Cleaning up the Yamuna requires a multi-pronged initiative.
- What’s In It For Us? (Indian Express, J. N. Dixit , May 17, 2001)
On NMD, it is perilous to be impetuous.
- Don’t Go Wrong, Mr Clean (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, May 17, 2001)
Antony must not include the indicted in his Cabinet.
- Something's Rotten... (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, May 17, 2001)
THE ALBATROSS round the government's neck is proving difficult to dislodge.
- Tamil Nadu Poll Outcome -- Implications For Good Governance (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , May 17, 2001)
THERE will always be different sections of opinion which will be upset or upbeat in varying degrees over the outcome of any election.
- Presumptuously Futuristic (Business Line, S. Murlidharan , May 17, 2001)
ACCOUNTING Standard (AS) 20 `Earnings per share' issued by the Council of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India is mandatory in that non-compliance therewith would invite auditor's comments in his report to the members.
- Ia's Woes (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, May 17, 2001)
EARLY IN APRIL, Indian Airlines officials were quoted as saying that ``there is a growth in traffic whenever airlines add capacity in the market''.
- Children Of A Lesser God? (Business Line, M. Somasekhar, May 17, 2001)
``To catch them young'' is to spot talented young kids, especially in sports.
- Tn Mandate: The Wake-Up Call? (Business Line, Menka Shivdasani , May 17, 2001)
A NATION that bristles at the Tehelka corruption charges elects a person who was not even supposed to be eligible for the polls thanks to her conviction.
- Networking The Right Way (Business Line, T. H. Chowdary , May 17, 2001)
ONE OF the most progressive, non-controversial, technology-neutral, competition-promoting and people-friendly policies the Government has promulgated is the one on the Internet.
- The Business Of Defence (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, May 17, 2001)
RSS and Left respond predictably and quixotically.
- Four-Wheelers Could Drive India To Prosperity (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, May 17, 2001)
INDIA’S manufacturing can play a powerful role only if we can focus preferentially (not exclusively) on certain industries / segments in which we can become world class.
- Life Beyond India’s Immediate Circle (The Economic Times, Soumya Kanti Mitra, May 17, 2001)
THE PRIME Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s visit to Malaysia follows his January trip to Indonesia and Vietnam.
- Poor Afghans, Defiant Taliban (Indian Express, Hafizur Rahman, May 17, 2001)
... I object to so many things in the Taliban of Afghanistan, for they take a very narrow view of religion, of administration, of the social needs of their people and of culture; in fact of life as it should be lived.
- Turkey's Unending Crisis (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, May 17, 2001)
CAUGHT IN THE battle between a military top brass that zealously guards its self-proclaimed role as protector of democracy and an Islamic political group with an extremist agenda, Turkey appears set to slip deeper into crisis.
- Dismal Message Of The Mini-Poll (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, May 17, 2001)
EVEN more sensational than the outcome of the Assembly elections in five states is the smooth manner in which Ms Jayalalitha, having swept the polls, swept into the office of Tamil Nadu’s Chief Minister.
- A General And A Swayamsevak (Hindu, Harish Khare , May 17, 2001)
THE PAKISTANI High Commissioner has just announced the revised rules of international diplomacy: summits do not have agendas.
- India's New Pointman In Moscow (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, May 17, 2001)
EVEN after losing its super power status Russia occupies a unique place in India's scheme of things.
- Theory Of ‘Karma’ And Rebirth (Tribune, Nand Kishore Kapoor, May 17, 2001)
ALMOST all religions and sects of the world believe in the theory of “karma” and reincarnation in one form or the other.
- An Agenda For The Summit (Hindu, Suba Chandran, May 17, 2001)
THE DATE is fixed. The venue is fixed. But what are we going to talk Gen. Pervez Musharraf?
- Two To Tatami (Times of India, ASHIS RAY, May 17, 2001)
No Welcome Mat for India Yet.
- Jai Kisan And All That (Hindustan Times, Bhaskar Ghose, May 17, 2001)
THE RECENT announcements on steep tariffs on foreign goods, and press comment and stories on television just before the removal of the ban on imports agreed by the WTO have been incomprehensible.
- Aids To Development (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, May 17, 2001)
The chief minister of Andhra Pradesh seems to have hit upon a unique method of measuring development in his state. Mr N. Chandrababu Naidu thinks that the rise in the incidence of AIDS in Andhra Pradesh is the result of its high development profile.
- Balancing Act (Telegraph, S. Venkitaramanan , May 17, 2001)
The planning commission has been at the receiving end of much abuse and criticism.
- Now It Is The Turn Of Chinese To Hunt For Smoking Guns (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, May 17, 2001)
Tong Lihua is preparing for a fight — a big fight.
- The Khaki Revolution (Indian Express, Pradeep Dutta, May 17, 2001)
July 1998: A police team led by Shahzada Parveen, then in charge of Women Police Station, Ram Bagh conducted a raid and busted five brothels in the heart of Srinagar City.
- Mother's Land (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, May 17, 2001)
Among the pantheon of India's colonial administrators, those with the scholarly bent always reckoned that there was a strain in indigenous folklore, if not high political theory.
- Grain Policy, What Policy? (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, May 17, 2001)
MUCH was expected of the Abhijit Sen committee on long-term grain policy. Disappointingly, it has solely concentrated on suggesting ways to reduce the bulging stock (about 65 million tonnes by July) with the FCI.
- There Is No Oasis For The Elderly (Telegraph, P. S. M. Rao, May 17, 2001)
The government, following the economic reforms, has a much reduced role in the problem areas of poverty, unemployment and social security.
- A Gentle Way With Words (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, May 17, 2001)
A week before he died at 95, news of his precarious health began appearing in all our national dailies.
- What The Assembly Verdicts Foretell (Telegraph, SURENDRA MOHAN, May 17, 2001)
The assembly elections for the states of Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and the Union territory of Pondicherry have caused great joy within the Congress.
- Millennium Declaration -- Are Development Targets Within Reach? (Business Line, Harri Holkeri, May 16, 2001)
LAST September, the largest gathering ever of world leaders met at the Millennium Summit of the United Nations in New York.
- Didi The Self-Destroyer (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, May 16, 2001)
MS Mamta Banerjee has only herself to blame for the electoral drubbing she and her party received in West Bengal.
- Wronged In Rights (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, May 16, 2001)
The concept of rights can go very wrong. The Madhya Pradesh human rights commission seems to have lost sight of both rights and humanness in its report, “Caste-Based Prostitution in Madhya Pradesh”.
- Parallel Pursuit To Cure Cancer (Business Line, M. Somasekhar, May 16, 2001)
THIS is the tale of two scientist-technocrats who have traversed their own independent path over the last two decades and are on the verge of making significant contributions in one common area -- cancer cure.
- Trade Union Unity And Politics (Hindu, V. KRISHNA ANANTH , May 16, 2001)
ALMOST A decade after the Congress(I) was emboldened to give up its socialist pretensions and allow the then Finance Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, to announce in Parliament the decision to adopt the principles of market economy (July 1991).
- A Neat Operation (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, May 16, 2001)
THE siege of the Shangus mosque in Anantnag district ended on Monday. For once the terms for ending the siege were dictated by the security forces and not the militants who had turned the mosque into a mini fortress.
- Dirty Pictures (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, May 16, 2001)
Sometimes speculation could be fun.
- Jaya's People (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, May 16, 2001)
The happiest lot of people in the aftermath of Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalitha's whirlwind tour of the capital must surely be in the Bharatiya Janata Party.
- Parallel Pursuit To Cure Cancer (Business Line, M. Somasekhar, May 16, 2001)
THIS is the tale of two scientist-technocrats who have traversed their own independent path over the last two decades and are on the verge of making significant contributions in one common area -- cancer cure.
- Security Compromised (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , May 16, 2001)
ALTHOUGH the media in India made much of the news that the Hinduja brothers accompanied the Principal Secretary to the Prime Minister, Mr Brajesh Misra.
- Aids To Development (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, May 16, 2001)
The chief minister of Andhra Pradesh seems to have hit upon a unique method of measuring development in his state. Mr N. Chandrababu Naidu thinks that the rise in the incidence of AIDS in Andhra Pradesh is the result of its high development profile.
- Sebi's Flip Flop (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, May 16, 2001)
THE INTRODUCTION OF option contracts in individual scrips and the promise of more derivative instruments are welcome news for the stock market.
- Fresh Reverberations On Nuclear Issue (Tribune, Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri, May 16, 2001)
THE Bush administration has put its European allies on notice that it intends to move quickly to develop a missile defence, and plans to abandon or fundamentally alter the treaty that has been the keystone of arms control for nearly three decades.
- Banishing Badla (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, May 16, 2001)
After much dithering, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has finally swung its axe, ending the 135-year existence of badla in its various forms.
- Much Ado Over Nmd (Times of India, Raja Menon, May 16, 2001)
MOST countries rarely interact with each other on a single track.
- Kangaroo Democracy (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, May 16, 2001)
Politicians and members of Parliament often complain that as a class they are the favourite whipping boys of the media and the writers of funny edits.
- The Trouble With Inquiry Commissions (Tribune, Rahul Singh, May 16, 2001)
EVER since our independence and the horrific communal riots that accompanied it, there have been two major communal outbursts that have traumatised the nation:
- What Ails Privatisation In India? (The Economic Times, V. Ranganathan, May 16, 2001)
THE VERY word privatisation seems to scare people. In Sri Lanka they coined the word "peopilisation" and in China they call it "strategic adjustment of the lay out of the state sector".
- Balancing Act (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, May 16, 2001)
The planning commission has been at the receiving end of much abuse and criticism.
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