|
|
|
|
|
|
Articles 9421 through 9520 of 9735:
- Time Ripe For Peace Parleys (Hindu, Swami Agnivesh, Jan 16, 2002)
We are delighted that the Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee's new year appeal to Pakistan to return to the way of peace has now evoked a matching response from the Pakistan President, Pervez Musharraf.
- Time Ripe For Peace Parleys (Hindu, Swami Agnivesh, Jan 16, 2002)
We are delighted that the Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee's new year appeal to Pakistan to return to the way of peace has now evoked a matching response from the Pakistan President, Pervez Musharraf.
- Medical Ethics (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 16, 2002)
DR. K. ANANDAKANNAN, Vice Chancellor of the MGR Medical University, is reported to have rejected out of hand a recommendation by a group of eminent citizens to include a course on medical ethics in the curriculum.
- War And Pleas (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Jan 14, 2002)
Strange how ancient voices ring louder at certain times in the life of a people. The Pakistani stand on Kashmir suggests nothing so much as Duryodhana’s vehement stand when Krishna comes to the Kauravas in one last attempt to broker peace.
- ‘Everyone Is Sick Of Kalashnikov Culture’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 14, 2002)
I think, these people have declared more Muslims as Kafirs (infidels) than motivating the non-Muslims to embrace Islam. Look at the damage they have caused.
- India Vision 10-20-50 (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Jan 14, 2002)
Just 10 per cent more real time for listening and 20 per cent more quality time will result in 50 per cent more Kama (enjoyment of the senses) and Artha (wealth of such enjoyment).
- India Vision 10-20-50 (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Jan 14, 2002)
Just 10 per cent more real time for listening and 20 per cent more quality time will result in 50 per cent more Kama (enjoyment of the senses) and Artha (wealth of such enjoyment).
- Hindutva Is Elst-Where (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jan 14, 2002)
According to a body of opinion, the handling of the KN Govindacharya affair by the RSS last week was symptomatic of a malaise that afflicts the Sangh parivar.
- A Positive Gesture From Pakistan (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 14, 2002)
THE POLITICAL COURAGE exuded by the Pakistan President, Pervez Musharraf, in addressing India's concerns raises the visions of a truly promising turn in the crisis-ridden bilateral relationship.
- How To Break Free (Telegraph, ANURADHA KUMAR, Jan 14, 2002)
In a recent report released by the Madhya Pradesh state human rights commission, jails and lock-ups across several towns in the state were seen to openly flout the 1997 Supreme Court guidelines that had called for respectable living conditions.
- ‘Everyone Is Sick Of Kalashnikov Culture’ (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 14, 2002)
In the first part of Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf’s address to the nation, the focus is on sweeping reforms in the country. The second part deals with Kashmir.
- A Positive Gesture From Pakistan (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 14, 2002)
THE POLITICAL COURAGE exuded by the Pakistan President, Pervez Musharraf, in addressing India's concerns raises the visions of a truly promising turn in the crisis-ridden bilateral relationship.
- Binary Application Of Laws (Indian Express, Sudhanshu Ranjan, Jan 14, 2002)
St. Augustine in The City of God remarked: ‘‘Justice being taken away, then what are kingdoms but great robberies? For what are robberies themselves, but little kingdoms?’’
- Hindutva Is Elst-Where (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jan 13, 2002)
According to a body of opinion, the handling of the KN Govindacharya affair by the RSS last week was symptomatic of a malaise that afflicts the Sangh parivar.
- Off With Their Heads (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Jan 12, 2002)
Here we are at the beginning of a new year once again, and as usual there is much comment in the air on the year that we’ve left behind, the year that’s just begun.
- Hindutva Is Elst-Where (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Jan 12, 2002)
According to a body of opinion, the handling of the KN Govindacharya affair by the RSS last week was symptomatic of a malaise that afflicts the Sangh parivar.
- General Needs A Rewrite (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 12, 2002)
APART from saving yourself the nightmare of getting stranded on a fogged out Delhi morning, now there is an added advantage in taking a flight westwards from Chennai instead.
- Muruga, Muruga (Business Line, D. Murali , Jan 12, 2002)
ONE can't drag gods to courts but that may not hold good for devasthanams.
- Respect The Chair! (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 11, 2002)
ONE of the barbaric trends that is poisoning public life and apt to make boors of the younger generation is to insult the person in the chair in order to express one's displeasure and disagreement.
- New Golden Triangle (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Jan 11, 2002)
BACK in the old days when India was an exotic destination, tourists did the Golden Triangle.
- New Golden Triangle (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Jan 11, 2002)
BACK in the old days when India was an exotic destination, tourists did the Golden Triangle.
- Respect The Chair! (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 11, 2002)
ONE of the barbaric trends that is poisoning public life and apt to make boors of the younger generation is to insult the person in the chair in order to express one's displeasure and disagreement.
- The Year That Went By (Pioneer, C. P. Chinda, Jan 10, 2002)
Year 2001 will be remembered as one of the turbulent years of Indian history.
- The Many Faces Of An Indian (Telegraph, Bidyut Chakrabarty, Jan 10, 2002)
Rewriting history textbooks for schools is part of a grand design. Based on the belief that the available National Council for Educational Research and Training books are distortions of the “Hindu” past, arguments are marshalled to defend the project.
- Family Ties (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 10, 2002)
The family has, arguably, been among India’s most traditional institutions and has set the parameters for social relationships in the country. It has dictated not just how people marry, dine and generally socialise.
- Unbundling Benefits Of Ownership (Business Line, K. M. Thiagarajan, Jan 10, 2002)
THE concept of ownership has always been a powerful source of motivation and competition in human societies. It is pivotal to the organisation of societies and their power structures.
- One World (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 10, 2002)
Identity is always an elusive concept. It is impossible to tie it down to one particular thing.
- Iron Mask (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 10, 2002)
Political ideologues also need to be politicians. That might be the very hard lesson that Mr K.N. Govindacharya, the former Bharatiya Janata Party general secretary, is learning.
- Unbundling Benefits Of Ownership (Business Line, K. M. Thiagarajan, Jan 10, 2002)
THE concept of ownership has always been a powerful source of motivation and competition in human societies. It is pivotal to the organisation of societies and their power structures.
- An Epistle To Mr Advani (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jan 09, 2002)
Dear Advaniji,
You have begun what is unquestionably the most profound and consequential interaction between our country and the United States of America.
- The Opportunity In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 09, 2002)
It is now for the Hurriyat Conference leaders to prove their democratic credentials in a democratic contest (the Assembly elections due in seven months) under the watchful international eye.
- Slipshod Indian Diplomacy (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jan 09, 2002)
Handshakes - or lack of them - have been leaving their imprint on diplomacy long before the SAARC summit at Kathmandu.
- The Opportunity In Kashmir (Hindu, Harish Khare , Jan 09, 2002)
It is now for the Hurriyat Conference leaders to prove their democratic credentials in a democratic contest (the Assembly elections due in seven months) under the watchful international eye.
- Slipshod Indian Diplomacy (Hindu, Inder Malhotra, Jan 09, 2002)
Handshakes - or lack of them - have been leaving their imprint on diplomacy long before the SAARC summit at Kathmandu.
- The Bjp's Game Plan In U.P. (Hindu, Zoya Hasan, Jan 08, 2002)
The intertwined issue of temple and terror is designed to redirect the electorate's attentions from the problems of governance and economic development.
- The Bjp's Game Plan In U.P. (Hindu, Zoya Hasan, Jan 08, 2002)
The intertwined issue of temple and terror is designed to redirect the electorate's attentions from the problems of governance and economic development.
- An Anti-Terror Dialogue (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 08, 2002)
THE PRIME MINISTER of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair, may have hoped to exert a ``calming influence'' on India and Pakistan so as to encourage them to pull back from the brink in their latest confrontation.
- An Anti-Terror Dialogue (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jan 08, 2002)
THE PRIME MINISTER of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair, may have hoped to exert a ``calming influence'' on India and Pakistan so as to encourage them to pull back from the brink in their latest confrontation.
- Limited By Law (Indian Express, Anil Divan, Jan 08, 2002)
Over 50 years of the working of the Constitution have brought about a radical change in our democratic institutions. There is a steep fall in the values of public men.
- Why Flog A Dead Nam? (Indian Express, Subramaniam Narasimhan, Jan 08, 2002)
This is apropos of recent columns invoking the ‘glorious days of the Non Aligned Movement’ by Kuldip Nayar and Mani Shankar Aiyar in this paper. Messrs Nayar and Aiyar, both members of Parliament, are excellent men of letters.
- Imf: It's Monetary Fratricide! (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Jan 07, 2002)
WHEN the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was established many years ago, its founding fathers enshrined within its constitution great and noble ideals and intentions.
- Economy And Elections (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jan 07, 2002)
CURRENT conventional wisdom has it that much of the drumming up of the "conflict situation" with Pakistan is directed at whipping up support for the BJP in the Assembly elections scheduled to be held in the next few months in states such as Uttar Pradesh.
- Making It With Dolly (Telegraph, Indranil Basu, Jan 07, 2002)
From gene therapy to genetically modified foods, issues involving DNA evoke ethical rhetoric and fiercely polarized opinions.
- Economy And Elections (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Jan 07, 2002)
CURRENT conventional wisdom has it that much of the drumming up of the "conflict situation" with Pakistan is directed at whipping up support for the BJP in the Assembly elections scheduled to be held in the next few months in states such as Uttar Pradesh.
- Imf: It's Monetary Fratricide! (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Jan 07, 2002)
WHEN the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was established many years ago, its founding fathers enshrined within its constitution great and noble ideals and intentions.
- Tapping Discontent (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Jan 06, 2002)
The shoe-bomber's case has focussed attention on an apparently widespread campaign by Muslim extremists in Britain to recruit socially maladjusted youth.
- An Unconventional Meeting (Telegraph, Khushwant Singh, Jan 05, 2002)
I have attended many writers conferences in different parts of the world: Phillipines, England, Scotland, the United States of America and India.
- Beneath The Veil: How Afghan Artists Beat The Taliban At Their Own Game (Indian Express, Kevin Sullivan, Jan 05, 2002)
KABUL: It was a moody impressionist painting of a cobblestone street winding down a hill-deserted, until Mohammad Yousof Asefi came along with his wet sponge.
- Why Saarc Does Not Spark? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 04, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 3. The failures of the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation over the last two decades have led to agonising soul searching among sections of the intelligentsia in the subcontinent.
- Ultimate Conquest (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 04, 2002)
HAS the last surviving bastion of the world outside the US fallen? Has the US succeeded in making the ultimate cultural conquest?
- Why Saarc Does Not Spark? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Jan 04, 2002)
KATHMANDU, JAN. 3. The failures of the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation over the last two decades have led to agonising soul searching among sections of the intelligentsia in the subcontinent.
- Free Verse (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jan 04, 2002)
Time, and a few unsuspecting bureaucrats, have delivered Rabindranath Tagore from the clutches of proprietorship.
- Ultimate Conquest (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 04, 2002)
HAS the last surviving bastion of the world outside the US fallen? Has the US succeeded in making the ultimate cultural conquest?
- Peak Season Blues (Indian Express, Sukhmani Singh, Jan 04, 2002)
IT’S peak tourist season in old world Bikaner, but the town looks desolate and dead. The slew of heritage resorts — palaces, havelis, hunting lodges, et al, present a sombre appearance.
- Warming Up Exercises (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Jan 03, 2002)
Please send VHP and Friends a copy of the PM’s musings.
- Tourist Deals Send Indians Rushing To Lanka (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jan 02, 2002)
THE Taj Samudra in Colombo is known for the sumptuous buffet breakfast it offers and its employees can be forgiven for boasting that it is the best breakfast deal in Colombo.
- Will We See 2003? (Telegraph, Mani Shankar Aiyar, Jan 02, 2002)
The one hundred volumes of The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi must rank among the least read books in India post-December 13.
- Picasso And The Art Of Display (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Jan 02, 2002)
A Great painter comes and hangs on our walls. Naturally, a slew of crisp stories appear in print.
- Tourist Deals Send Indians Rushing To Lanka (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Jan 02, 2002)
THE Taj Samudra in Colombo is known for the sumptuous buffet breakfast it offers and its employees can be forgiven for boasting that it is the best breakfast deal in Colombo.
- The Lost History (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Jan 01, 2002)
Though the controversy has got muffled under the crush of recent events, it will be resumed.
- Make 2002 Year Of The Common Man! (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 01, 2002)
OF all the public functions to which the President, or any dignitary, for that matter, had lent his presence in all the years since India became independent.
- Can The Us Fight An Even-Handed Battle? (Business Line, Prabhat Kumar, Jan 01, 2002)
AFTER settling the Afghanistan issue, the US is now busy drawing up plans for the second phase of the anti-terrorist campaign by targeting terrorist groups with global reach.
- Can The Us Fight An Even-Handed Battle? (Business Line, Prabhat Kumar, Jan 01, 2002)
AFTER settling the Afghanistan issue, the US is now busy drawing up plans for the second phase of the anti-terrorist campaign by targeting terrorist groups with global reach.
- Make 2002 Year Of The Common Man! (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Jan 01, 2002)
OF all the public functions to which the President, or any dignitary, for that matter, had lent his presence in all the years since India became independent.
- The Lost History (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Jan 01, 2002)
Though the controversy has got muffled under the crush of recent events, it will be resumed.
- A Wideranging Exercise (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 31, 2001)
THE ELECTION COMMISSION'S announcement of the timetable for the Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Manipur and Uttaranchal has come amidst a worrying escalation of tension on the Indo-Pakistan border.
- Whither Environmental Protest (Hindu, Harsh Sethi , Dec 31, 2001)
The issues raised by environmental struggles remain much too important to be frittered away. This is why protest movements bear a responsibility greater than what their leaderships may realise.
- Reshaping Human Nature In Beijing (Business Line, Alex Abraham, Dec 31, 2001)
MAYOR Liu Qi of Beijing has decided to reshape human behaviour on a massive scale.
- A Wideranging Exercise (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Dec 31, 2001)
THE ELECTION COMMISSION'S announcement of the timetable for the Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Manipur and Uttaranchal has come amidst a worrying escalation of tension on the Indo-Pakistan border.
- Whither Environmental Protest (Hindu, Harsh Sethi , Dec 31, 2001)
The issues raised by environmental struggles remain much too important to be frittered away. This is why protest movements bear a responsibility greater than what their leaderships may realise.
- ‘We Favour Peace, But For That Terrorism Has To Stop’ (Indian Express, Sonia Trikha, Dec 31, 2001)
Had he been in the Prime Minister’s chair, says Inder Kumar Gujral, he would have reacted the same way.
- Money For Terror (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 31, 2001)
With its unprecedented diplomatic offensive gathering momentum, India now needs to crackdown on the financial network of terrorists.
- Heart’s Ease On Earth... (Indian Express, Renuka Narayanan, Dec 31, 2001)
With a clouded New Year about to dawn, it might be pleasant to catch up with some intense conversations with God. Here’s a particularly nice verse from Psalm 34:
- Historical Necessity (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 30, 2001)
Human Resource Development Minister Murli Manohar Joshi believes that the existing history text books for schools largely ignore contributions of several nationalist leaders, which needs to be corrected.
- On Not Being Able To Pray (Telegraph, AMIT CHAUDHURI, Dec 30, 2001)
A little more than a year ago, a friend of mine flew from England to Calcutta because his mother was ill.
- Come 2002! Will The Adoption Of Euro Be A Smooth Ride? (The Financial Express, N. Madhavan, Dec 29, 2001)
It was a nervous Christmas for people in the European Union (EU). Not on account of terrorist threat from Osama Bin Laden and his Al Qaeda cronies but more so from the imminent launch of Euro, the common currency.
- From Darkness To Light (Tribune, Kiran Bedi, Dec 29, 2001)
IN my last ‘Reflections’ column, I had written why we introduced Vipassana (Meditation) in the Delhi Police Training programmes.
- Historical Necessity (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 29, 2001)
Human Resource Development Minister Murli Manohar Joshi believes that the existing history text books for schools largely ignore contributions of several nationalist leaders, which needs to be corrected.
- Syamaprasad Mookerjee And Macaulay (Pioneer, Hiranmay Karlekar, Dec 28, 2001)
The late Syamaprasad Mookerjee was one of the most outstanding Indians of his time.
- Alms And The Man (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Dec 28, 2001)
When beggars become a nuisance, what does the state do?
Previous 100 Heritage Articles | Next 100 Heritage Articles
Home
Page
|
|