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Articles 10921 through 11020 of 11444:
- Amma's Revenge (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jul 02, 2001)
The timing and manner of former Tamil Nadu chief minister M.Karunanidhi's arrest will confirm the worst fears of the media and the public about Ms Jayalalitha's second term in office.
- A Clear Signal To Jayalalithaa (Hindu, V. Jayanth , Jul 02, 2001)
CHENNAI, JULY 1. With the decision to recall the Tamil Nadu Governor, Ms. Fathima Beevi, the NDA Government at the Centre has not only tried to please its constituent, the DMK, but sent out a clear signal to the Chief Minister, Ms. Jayalalithaa.
- Mediation: Effective Alternative To Dispute Resolution (Business Line, Sanhita Chakraborty, Jul 02, 2001)
THE QUEST for the ideal recovery system is endless.
- Microsoft, New Economy And Loss Of Monopoly (Tribune, Anupam Gupta, Jul 02, 2001)
JUST a year after he had received the biggest rebuff of his career from a little-known district judge, putting his whole business empire in jeopardy, the world’s richest man, Mr Bill Gates,
- General Musharraf’s Self-Coronation (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Jul 02, 2001)
PERHAPS inevitably General Musharraf’s sudden decision to crown himself as his country’s President has got inextricably intermixed with the summit at Agra between him and the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Behari Vajpayee.
- Changing History (Times of India, K. Subramaniam, Jul 02, 2001)
GENERAL Musharraf has publicly stated that he is hopeful of changing history with his visit to India.
- Paranoia At Poes Garden (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jul 02, 2001)
TAMIL NADU under J. Jayalalitha has come to represent the most reprehensible brand of politics in the country.
- Heil Fuhrer Jayalalitha! (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 02, 2001)
IN this ancient land of the most populous democracy, there is a dark area of pure despotism.
- Who Said Charity Begins At Home? (The Financial Express, Benn J Kochuveettill, Jul 02, 2001)
This is not about whether the National Sample Survey’s claim of a 10 per cent decline in the below poverty level population is contestable or not.
- The Dabhol Controversy Revisited (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Jul 02, 2001)
THE Dabhol Power Project has been a subject of controversy ever since it started.
- Wish You Were Here (Hindustan Times, K.R. Malkani, Jul 02, 2001)
GENERAL PERVEZ Musharraf of Pakistan is visiting India in the next few days. He is welcome. Khush-Aamdeed.
- Is This A Democracy Or A Police State? (Hindustan Times, H. L. Kapoor, Jul 02, 2001)
IT’S AN irony that we feel proud of being the largest democracy when the police and government can almost always violate our constitutional rights. What happened with M. Karunanidhi in Chennai on Saturday is outrageous.
- Murder Most Foul (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 02, 2001)
UNIDENTIFIED ASSAILANTS murdered in cold-blood an elderly couple in broad daylight in posh Trikuta Nagar Colony on Sunday.
- Why Are We Still Poor? (Hindu, Bhanu Pratap Singh , Jul 02, 2001)
SOMETIME BACK, the Government of India had announced that there had been a 10 per cent decline in the incidence of poverty in the country from about 36 per cent in 1993-94 to 26 per cent in 1999- 2000.
- A Crime By A Crude Khaki Crowd (Hindu, V. R. Krishna Iyer , Jul 02, 2001)
An old man in poor health was dragged by a khaki corps by housebreaking into the home of Mr. M. Karunanidhi in the wee hours after midnight.
- Mig Crashes Again, Pilot Killed Again (The Kashmir Times, B. K. Mathur , Jul 02, 2001)
This column was initially planned for a different subject, on what military rulers and Generals in Pakistan used to tell their sports teams and managers prior their departure for international competitions abroad, like the Olympiad and Asiad.
- His Luck Runs Out (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 01, 2001)
Mr. Slobodan Milosevic's extradition has caused Yugoslavia to once again lurch towards political uncertainty. Vaiju Naravane reports.
- A Sense Of Deja Vu (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 01, 2001)
It was not the action but its timing that came as a surprise to the people of Pakistan. B. Muralidhar Reddyon the reactions to Gen. Pervez Musharraf declaring himself President.
- Ayodhya Again (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 01, 2001)
The Ayodhya issue is back on centre stage with Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh round the corner. J. P. Shukla reports.
- Why Is Sunny Shooting From The Hip? (The Economic Times, C. V. Aravind, Jul 01, 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.
- Mig Crashes Again, Pilot Killed Again (The Kashmir Times, B. K. Mathur , Jul 01, 2001)
This column was initially planned for a different subject, on what military rulers and Generals in Pakistan used to tell their sports teams and managers prior their departure for international competitions abroad, like the Olympiad and Asiad.
- Murder Most Foul (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Jul 01, 2001)
UNIDENTIFIED ASSAILANTS murdered in cold-blood an elderly couple in broad daylight in posh Trikuta Nagar Colony on Sunday.
- His Luck Runs Out (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 01, 2001)
Mr. Slobodan Milosevic's extradition has caused Yugoslavia to once again lurch towards political uncertainty. Vaiju Naravane reports.
- Bill Gets Bigger (Times of India, Vikas Singh, Jul 01, 2001)
JUNE 28, 2001 is undoubtedly a red-letter day for Redmond - and all the other offices of software giant Microsoft.
- The Seeds Of Separatism In The North-East (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Jul 01, 2001)
THERE are two aspects of the demand for which the Isaac Swu-Thuingaleng Muivah faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland is engaged in insurgency.
- Corporate Conservation (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 30, 2001)
THE TAJ MAHAL has now found a new saviour. The Tatas have agreed to spend Rs. 1.87 crores initially to preserve it and improve its environs.
- Managing Ne: More Foresight Needed (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 30, 2001)
Some decisions provoke a disaster because they are fundamentally wrong; others because they are wrongly timed or implemented.
- How Musharraf May Gain From India Visit (Tribune, Syed Nooruzzaman, Jun 30, 2001)
NO one is expecting much from the coming Indo-Pak summit. Yet there is great enthusiasm in Pakistan.
- The Casualties Of Peace (Hindu, Balakrishnan Rajagopal, Jun 30, 2001)
The coming summit between the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee and the Pakistan President, General Pervez Musharraf, is hailed as the harbinger of hopes for a transition to peace in Jammu and Kashmir.
- Roles Rolled Into One (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 30, 2001)
T. C. A. Ramanujam says that bias creeps in when officers perform divergent tasks.
- Retrenchment Compensation -- Deductible Or Not? (Business Line, V.K. Subramani, Jun 30, 2001)
ANY EXPENDITURE incurred for establishing a business unit can be, as per Section 35D, accumulated and classified as preliminary expenditure eligible for deduction in five annual instalments.
- Bill Gets Bigger (Times of India, Vikas Singh, Jun 30, 2001)
JUNE 28, 2001 is undoubtedly a red-letter day for Redmond - and all the other offices of software giant Microsoft.
- Tunnel Vision (Business Line, D. Murali , Jun 30, 2001)
THE Elgi Equipments case, which came up before the Chennai CEGAT, shows how excise officials miss the woods for trees.
- Ulterior Motives (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 30, 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.
- A Look At Federal Fiscal Relations (Tribune, C. Narendra Reddy, Jun 30, 2001)
CHIEF Ministers have been making a strong plea for the transfer of Centrally sponsored schemes (CSSs) to the states.
- At Last, A Tyrant On Trial (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 30, 2001)
REVENGE, UNLIKE Revolution, devours other people’s children. If one considers how justice has been meted out in history, it will be obvious that the judges unerringly deliver their sentences from a position of victory.
- Time To Ignore Chohan (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 30, 2001)
PUNJAB is not for Khalistan. Those who are making yet another attempt at reviving old bitter memories — they include Dr Jagjit Singh Chohan — are surely not friends of the people.
- Ceasefire Extension (Hindu, Murkot Ramunny, Jun 30, 2001)
Sir, - The Home Ministry has made a mess of the Nagaland `ceasefire' extension.
- How To Make Transfer Pricing Effective (Business Line, T. C. A. Ramanujam, Jun 29, 2001)
The Finance Ministry has woken up to the large-scale leakage of revenue due to the abuse of the transfer pricing mechanism.
- Tied To A Leash (Hindustan Times, Prakash Patra, Jun 29, 2001)
It is political expediency which has driven the Union government to give a two-year extension to cabinet secretary T.R. Prasad.
- Censorship Of Foreign Ideas (Hindu, Rajeev Dhavan , Jun 29, 2001)
CENSORSHIP OF the flow of ideas from and into India is not new.
- Ulterior Motives (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 29, 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.
- Blank Call (Hindustan Times, R. Krishnan , Jun 29, 2001)
Communications Minister Ramvilas Paswan announced that the government would approach the Supreme Court for restoring the powers of the Telecom Dispute Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT).
- While Laloo Fiddles (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 29, 2001)
The word 'burn' as a metaphor in the context of Bihar has assumed a clearly literal connotation.
- Arresting The Slowdown Is Possible (Pioneer, Brij Bhardwaj, Jun 29, 2001)
The serious implications of the economic slowdown on the nation at large are generally being ignored.
- Imphal Imbroglio (Times of India, Sanjoy Hazarika, Jun 29, 2001)
THE Indian government and the dominant Naga militant group,
- Armchair Analysis (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 29, 2001)
MMCB’s revival with a massive infusion of Rs 1,264 crore of good money may not appear at first sight to be a prudent measure from economic point of view, as pointed out in your editorial `Unhappy rescue’
- The Cat That Can Catch Mice (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Jun 29, 2001)
AS two ancient civilisations in Asia, India and China, are always special themes for a comparative study of their progress and performance in critical areas of economy and technology.
- Will China Back Maoists In Nepal? (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Jun 29, 2001)
AFTER the conquest of Tibet by China, the Chinese Communist Party sent a message to the Communist Party of Nepal in the middle of 1951 saying: “After the liberation of Tibet,
- No Change In Foreign Policy: Nepal (Tribune, Tripti Nath, Jun 29, 2001)
NEPAL’S Foreign Minister and former Ambassador to India Chakra Prasad Bastola has struggled his way to the Cabinet.
- At A Precipice (Hindu, Ajay K. Mehra, Jun 28, 2001)
SWAMPED COMPLETELY in the storm over saffronisation of education, little news items appearing in the media relating to principals of colleges of the Delhi University (D.U.) drew little attention.
- Turkey’s Secular Polity (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2001)
TURKEY is not a multi-religious state. Yet, the zeal with which it protects its secular character, as fashioned by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, father of modern Turkey, is amazing.
- Tchanging Rules For Andhra’s Prasad (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 28, 2001)
PRIME MINISTER Atal Behari Vajpayee appears to have nullified the game plan of the hawks in the BJP to get one of their protagonists as the next Cabinet Secretary.
- Red Badge Of Nepal (Hindustan Times, Ashok K Mehta, Jun 28, 2001)
MAOIST REBELS in Nepal have good reason to celebrate the slaughter of royalty in the Narayanhiti Palace.
- A New Age-Old Question (Tribune, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 28, 2001)
A government servant retires at the age of 60. This is what the fifth Pay Commission stipulated while raising the superannuation from 58 years and what the government accepted when introducing a Bill in Parliament.
- Ulterior Motives (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 28, 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.
- The General's Gambit (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 28, 2001)
It comes as no surprise that Pakistan's 16-party Alliance for Restoration of Democracy (ARD) has boycotted the all-party meeting convened by general Musharraf.
- An Expression Of Regret Will Help (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 28, 2001)
Nations should never let the dust of time accumulate on certain episodes of history.
- Collateral Damage (The Economic Times, Editorial, Economic Times, Jun 28, 2001)
HERE’S an update on the suspension of Air-India MD Michael Mascarenhas.
- 26 Years Later, Lessons Of Emergency Yet To Be Learnt (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Jun 28, 2001)
Even a couple of weeks after the Emergency—imposed on the 26th of June 26 years ago—it was quite well known in the capital that Rajiv Gandhi, then a pilot with the Indian Airlines, and his wife, Sonia Gandhi,
- It's Gadar Again (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Jun 27, 2001)
Reports that some Muslim groups have taken to the streets protesting against the screening of the Hindi film Gadar because it is alleged to have "hurt the religious sentiments of the community" evokes a depressing sense of deja vu.
- Pride And Prejudice (Hindustan Times, J. N. Dixit , Jun 27, 2001)
It’s been almost a month since the bloody assassination of the royal family of Nepal.
- Significance Of Speakers’ Conference (Tribune, C. K. Jain, Jun 27, 2001)
INTERESTINGLY, the agenda for the Speakers’ conference in Chandigarh on June 28 and 29 has on its top a discussion on “the need to evolve a code of conduct for legislators.
- Resolving Kashmir (Times of India, Ghulam Nabi Khayal, Jun 27, 2001)
THE summit between Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and President Pervez Musharraf may not fulfil all the high hopes the people of Kashmir have begun to attach with it.
- Ulterior Motives (The Kashmir Times, SURENDRA MOHAN, Jun 27, 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.
- Back To Barbarism (Hindustan Times, Editorial, The Hindustan Times, Jun 27, 2001)
Old habits, they say, die hard, especially if they have the stamp of tradition.
- Compensation Must Be Meaningful (The Economic Times, S. S. Kumar, Jun 27, 2001)
A LOS ANGELES Supreme Court jury has awarded Richard Boekin, a securities and oil broker, three billion dollars as punitive damages and another 5.5 million dollars in compensatory damages to be paid by tobacco giant Philip Morris.
- Upholding The Right To Food (Hindu, Jean Dreze, Jun 27, 2001)
The indefinite dharna launched by the Akal Sangharsh Samiti in Jaipur is entering its third week.
- An Idea Whose Time Has Gone (The Financial Express, S. S. Tarapore, Jun 27, 2001)
Offshore banking in India is a pipe dream that has periodically come up for the last forty years. In a milieu of rigorous exchange controls, an offshore banking centre provides hassle-free operations.
- Turkey's Unending Crisis (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 27, 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.
- Water-Dispute: A Historical Perspective (Tribune, G.S. Dhillon, Jun 27, 2001)
THE river water dispute between Punjab and Haryana can be viewed from “historical aspects” by narrating various events relating the dispute as they happened.
- Ipr: `Intellect' Unlimited (Business Line, Arvind Padmanabhan , Jun 27, 2001)
INTELLECTUAL property (IP) is a term used to describe intangible creations of the human intellect protected by law. In simple terms, IP is a product got after applying human intelligence that has commercial value.
- The Collapse Of Reason (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jun 27, 2001)
OBFUSCATING THE FACTS seems to be the order of the day.
- An Agenda For The Summit (Hindu, Suba Chandran, Jun 27, 2001)
THE DATE is fixed. The venue is fixed. But what are we going to talk Gen. Pervez Musharraf? In the past, we did talk to each other and there were meetings which were termed `historic', `new beginning' etc.
- Economic Progress Must Go Along With Social Justice (The Financial Express, Mohan Dharia, Jun 27, 2001)
The Planning Commission has prepared a Draft Approach Paper for the 10th Five-Year Plan (2002-2007).
- What Happened In Nepal? (Business Line, Ramesh Upadhyaya, Jun 26, 2001)
THE massacre of King Birendra, Queen Aishwarya Rajyalakshmi, their two sons, Crown Prince Dipendra, Nirajan, sister Shruti, among others, in the Narayanhiti palace in Kathmandu has cast a dark shadow over the future of both monarchy and democracy in Nepal
- Kashmir & Secession (Times of India, Rahul Shivshankar, Jun 26, 2001)
MOMENTS after prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and president Pervez Musharraf had resolved to ``tone down the rhetoric'' ahead of the Agra summit, Pakistan was back in rhetoric mode.
- Dangerous Games (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jun 26, 2001)
The violent demonstrations against and attacks on cinema halls showing the film Gadar: Ek Prem Kahani, on the ground of its being "anti-Islamic", deserves the strongest condemnation. Rioting and assault cannot be defended in the name of religion.
- Turkey On His Mind (Hindustan Times, Gajendra Singh, Jun 26, 2001)
General Pervez Musharraf has anointed himself President of Pakistan while retaining the all-powerful post of army chief.
- Who Comes First? Cleric Or Reformer (Pioneer, Ehtashamuddin Khan, Jun 26, 2001)
The landslide victory of President Mohammad Khatami in the recently-concluded Presidential election in Iran indicates an important fact-that religion, the 'opium of the masses', can no longer numb the aspirations of Iranians.
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