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Articles 21621 through 21720 of 27969:
- Experimental Fusion Reactor In France (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Jul 02, 2005)
The troubled negotiations over where to site the world's largest nuclear fusion reactor, the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), came to an end in Moscow on June 28 with the international consortium agreeing to build it at Cadarache..
- Time To Call The Bluff (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Jul 02, 2005)
The PM knows the US too well to be taken in by its flattery.
- India Can Be America's Best Friend (International Herald Tribune, Brahma Chellaney , Jul 01, 2005)
At a time when anti-Americanism has spread across the globe, a new poll shows that more people in India have a positive view of the United States than in any other nation surveyed. The poll, conducted by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, raises . . .
- The Arms Agreement (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jul 01, 2005)
The agreement charting a 10-year course for defence cooperation between India and the United States, formalising the intentions already expressed on both sides, is indeed a landmark. It is broad ranging, covering not only arms sales to India but also...
- Indo-Us Pact: ‘new Framework’ Just An Appetiser (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jul 01, 2005)
The “framework” document signed by both countries is significant to the extent that it defines the scope and declares intentions in the area of defence co-operation.
- Tread With Caution (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jul 01, 2005)
The ten-year India-United States defence agreement is being hailed as historic, heralding a new era in bilateral relations.
- India Is Entering Uncharted, Risky Territory (Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan, Jul 01, 2005)
The new military agreement with the U.S. will help advance Washington's strategic goals in Asia and expand the global market for American defence contractors. But it is not clear what good it will do for India and Asia.
- U.S. Restores Concessions For Some Exports (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Jul 01, 2005)
U.S. President George W. Bush has restored duty-free access for some export commodities from India and Pakistan to the U.S. citing progress on intellectual property and worker rights.
- India Can Be America's Best Friend (International Herald Tribune, Brahma Chellaney , Jul 01, 2005)
At a time when anti-Americanism has spread across the globe, a new poll shows that more people in India have a positive view of the United States than in any other nation surveyed.
- An Emerging Alliance With India (US News & World Report, Michael Barone, Jul 01, 2005)
You didn't see it in the headlines this week, but it's likely to be more important in the long run than many things that received much more notice. The "it" in question is the New Framework for the U.S.-India Defense Relationship signed Monday . . .
- Indian Hard-Liner Adjusts His Sails To Catch Winds Of Peaceful Change (Christian Science Monitor, John Nemec, Jun 30, 2005)
The impossible occurred last month in South Asia. A conservative Indian nationalist leader praised the founder of Pakistan.
- Indian Hard-Liner Adjusts His Sails To Catch Winds Of Peaceful Change (Christian Science Monitor, John Nemec, Jun 30, 2005)
The impossible occurred last month in South Asia. A conservative Indian nationalist leader praised the founder of Pakistan.
- Blaming Pakistan Won't Help (Japan Times, Farhan Bokhari, Jun 30, 2005)
The latest diplomatic rift between Pakistan and Afghanistan speaks volumes about the underlying frictions among both countries and the United States in the so-called war on terror.
- Peace No Closer In West Asia (Hindu, Jonathan Freedland, Jun 30, 2005)
They are calling it the war of the colours. On one side, the Jewish settlers facing eviction from Gaza urging their fellow citizens to wear or wave orange to protest the withdrawal.
- There's Nothing Wrong With Cash, It Gives You Time To Think (Business Line, D. Murali , Jun 30, 2005)
The latest issue of Bookkeeping Tips from the American Institute of Professional Bookkeepers (www.aipb.org) begins with what one always takes for granted — petty cash.
- India: U.S. Ally Or Independent Power? (Japan Times, Brahma Chellaney , Jun 29, 2005)
The courtship between the world's most powerful and most populous democracies is in full swing,
- A Gambling Epidemic Hits Russia (Hindu, VLADIMIR RADYUHIN, Jun 29, 2005)
Lax controls have helped the gambling industry grow to frightening proportions.
- A Tidal Wave Of Optimism (Japan Times, TOM PLATE, Jun 29, 2005)
Talk about an ocean of optimism! Here's a positive current for you if there ever was one: A close friend -- whom I dub The Very Successful Korean-American Businessman (VSKAB),
- Culture Is Key To Sustainable Development (Indian Express, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 29, 2005)
The slogan at the 1974 World Population Conference was "Development is the best contraceptive."
- "India Can Be An Excellent Base For U.S. Defence Industry" (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Jun 29, 2005)
However we are looking for a long-term commitment, says Pranab
- Thanks To Mukherjee, America Is Now Willing To Listen To India (Telegraph, K.P. NAYAR , Jun 29, 2005)
If defence minister Pranab Mukherjee’s two days of talks in Washington this week are indicative of what to expect during Manmohan Singh’s visit to the White House on July 18, the prime minister will be no pushover for the Americans.
- Succour For Africa In Four Easy Pieces (Deccan Herald, Jeffrey D Sachs, Jun 28, 2005)
America should double aid to African countries to alleviate poverty and control diseases
- Quality Control (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Jun 28, 2005)
A regulatory body would curb sale of spurious drugs
- Conmen On The Prowl (Deccan Herald, Rajeshwar P, Jun 28, 2005)
America may not fool you with fast cars and beer, but watch out for certain industrious conmen.
- Pitching A Japan That Can (Japan Times, KEIZO NABESHIMA, Jun 28, 2005)
A clash of interests among major U.N. member states is clouding the prospects for reform of the Security Council.
- How An Idea Took Flight (Indian Express, AMRITA DUTTA, Jun 28, 2005)
There is hectic activity inside the office of the South Asia coordinator for the initiative, ‘1000 Women for the Nobel Peace Prize 2005’.
- So That They May Live (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Jun 28, 2005)
Swift trials and harsh punishment may discourage criminals from targeting the elderly, writes Bhaskar Ghose The author is former secretary, ministry of information and broadcasting
- The Effect Of Credit Growth On Npas (Business Line, A. S. Ramasastri, Jun 28, 2005)
Financial year 2004-05 has seen substantial growth in bank credit. As on March 18, 2005,
- Protecting Farmers From World Markets (Business Line, Bharat Jhunjhunwala, Jun 28, 2005)
A SPATE of suicides by the pepper farmers of Kerala's Waynad district has been reported. The price of black pepper had scaled to Rs 270 a kg a few years ago.
- The Chinese Challenge (Deccan Herald, Paul Krugman, Jun 28, 2005)
The US should be relieved that at least for now the Chinese aren’t dumping their dollars; they’re using them to buy American companies.
- Taj Takes Over Management Of New York Hotel (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 28, 2005)
To invest $35 m on The Pierre renovation
- `Privatise And Incentivise Transport Infrastructure' (Business Line, Raja Simhan T. E., Jun 27, 2005)
Norasia as a shipping line focused on the East-West trades before being acquired by the Compañía Sudamericana de Vapores (CSAV),
- To Keep Things In Order (Telegraph, GWYNNE DYER, Jun 27, 2005)
“The great force on which we must rely is the hatred of the cruelty and waste of war which now exists.
- Divestment: The Chinese Example (Business Line, S. Venkitaramanan , Jun 27, 2005)
The latest episode in the UPA serial has shown the Left and its sympathisers protesting against the divestment of 10 per cent stake in one of India's industrial public sector units (PSUs) — BHEL. It is instructive to compare this with what China has been
- Across A River (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 27, 2005)
It could be wrong to be over-optimistic about the outcome of the recent talks between the foreign secretaries of India and Bangladesh.
- Orchestrated Terror Related Propaganda (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jun 27, 2005)
Foreign Office spokesman Jalil Abbas Jilani has repudiated Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s claim about existence of terrorist training camps in Pakistan.
- Media’S Role In The Hype And Hyperbole (Indian Express, Sucheta Dalal, Jun 27, 2005)
When BSE Sensex soared past the psychological benchmark of 7,000 points last week, it was to the cheering drumbeat of the media.
- Agenda To Put India On Stem Cell Research Map (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 27, 2005)
We will move to cell-based therapies, individualised treatment for patients: Anbumani
- From The Ashes (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 27, 2005)
Sometimes it seems that the most important quality an architect can possess is optimism. For example,
- Why Did Krishna Return The Dance Bar Ordinance? (Deccan Herald, Parag Rabade, Jun 27, 2005)
Publicly the Congress may be all for the ban, but it would be happy to see the NCP humiliated and egg on young Patil's face.
- Naipaul’S Challenge (Indian Express, JAITHIRTH RAO , Jun 27, 2005)
The year 2005 will be remembered for, among other things, V.S. Naipaul’s milestone speech in which he challenged Indians to come up with a contemporary intellectual discourse.
- Russia Ambivalent On U.N. Reform (Hindu, VLADIMIR RADYUHIN, Jun 27, 2005)
Even as Russia supports India's bid for a Security Council seat, Moscow's position on United Nations reform is ambivalent.
- Executive Defense Industry Round Table (Indian Embassy, Pranab Mukherjee , Jun 27, 2005)
I am indeed honoured to be here today to address this august gathering of leaders of the Indian and US defence industries. I must congratulate the US India Business Council for organizing this event.
- Executive Defense Industry Round Table Lunch (Indian Embassy, Pranab Mukherjee , Jun 27, 2005)
I am indeed honoured to be here today to address this august gathering of leaders of the Indian and US defence industries. I must congratulate the US India Business Council for organizing this event.
- Carnegie Endowment For International Peace (Indian Embassy, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 27, 2005)
It is a great privilege for me to be here in Washington, before this distinguished gathering at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, to speak on ‘India’s strategic perspectives’.
- Sectarian Violence Is Shattering Iraq's Hopes (Hindu, Peter Beaumont, Jun 27, 2005)
When they killed Abdul Sattar Saffar al-Khazraji, he was waiting for the minibus that would take him to his work as a laboratory supervisor at Nahrain University. As the 30-year-old stood with other workers commuting from the Harriya district of Baghdad,
- Us Determined To Stay The Course (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Jun 27, 2005)
Americans have started seeing in the Iraqi sands a “quagmire” but Bush is determined to carry on regardless
- Rumsfeld’S Concerns (Dawn, Fred Hiatt, Jun 27, 2005)
Earlier this month Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld questioned the priorities of editorial pages in some newspapers.
- Growing Discord In Europe (Dawn, Shadaba Islam, Jun 26, 2005)
The recent ill-fated European Union summit will probably be remembered as one of the worst in the bloc’s history.
- Issues Of Identity (Dawn, Anwar Syed, Jun 26, 2005)
I have been reading a volume, entitled, “The Final Settlement,” prepared by a think-tank in Mumbai, called “Strategic Insight Group.”
- Curbing Antiquities’ Smuggling (Dawn, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
The seizure on Thursday of Dubai-bound antiquities worth Rs 700 million by the customs at Karachi port points to the long prevailing problem of historical relics being smuggled out of the country.
- Reining In The Taliban (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 26, 2005)
In one of the biggest attacks in the last two years, 130 Taliban fighters were killed in three days by Afghan and US-led coalition forces determined to put an end to the insurgency prior to September’s presidential elections.
- India Disappointed With Offer Made By Us (Deccan Herald, D Ravi Kanth, Jun 26, 2005)
New Delhi had sought unlimited H1B visas for temporary relocation of software engineers, but Washington refused to indicate anything.
- Another Vietnam (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jun 26, 2005)
PRESIDENT Bush has refused to set a timetable for withdrawal of US troops from Iraq because ‘it would allow Iraqi insurgents to wait us out’. Speaking at a joint Press conference with the visiting Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari at the White House
- Outcome Of Iranian Elections (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jun 26, 2005)
Tehran mayor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has obtained a clear majority in the run-off presidential elections in Iran. Despite some complaints of voter intimidation, aides of veteran leader Akbar Hashmi Rafsanjani have conceded his defeat.
- Justice Above Prejudice (Dawn, Kunwar Idris, Jun 26, 2005)
The current world perception is that it is General Musharraf at one end and fundamentalists at the other who dominate the community life in Pakistan to the exclusion of law and reason.
- Representations Of India (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Various voices reveal encounters that mostly hang on the common thread of western cliche that surrounds India.
- Entire Environmental Clearance Process Has Been Subverted, Says Jayalalithaa (Hindu, CP Bhambri, Jun 26, 2005)
Chief Minister expresses inability to participate in the inaugural function
- Sethu Project: Mou On Dredging Signed (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Tuticorin Port Trust allotted 13.57 km to Dredging Corporation of India
- Borrowing To Fund Welfare Schemes To Continue: Ysr (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
The Congress Government will not hesitate to borrow any amount to implement the welfare schemes for the poor and farmers to honour the priorities it has set for the growth of Andhra Pradesh, the Chief Minister, Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, said here on Saturda
- ``Ministry Bulldozed Into According Clearance'' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Startling, unseemly haste to organise launch function of Sethu Canal Project: Jayalalithaa
- The Beginning Of Empathy? (Japan Times, BRAD GLOSSERMAN, Jun 26, 2005)
Honolulu - The strains in the Japan-South Korea relationship are far too deep-rooted for any single summit meeting to assuage.
- Clio And The State (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Jun 26, 2005)
The relationship between the state and the writing of history has always been difficult and fraught with contradictions.
- How Best To Tackle The Problem Of Suicide (Tribune, Shalini Marwaha , Jun 26, 2005)
OF late, there has been an increasing number of suicides. The reasons are many — marital discord, dejection in love, failure in the examination, unemployment and non-repayment of loans.
- Lost Energy (Washington Post, Editorial, Washington Post, Jun 26, 2005)
Here's a Prediction : At some point -- maybe 10 years from now, maybe 20 -- the energy bill currently wending its way through the Senate will be seen as an enormously significant lost opportunity.
- Sheikh Rashid Deprived Of Visit To Ihk (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Jun 26, 2005)
India has refused permission to Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed to visit occupied Kashmir by the Muzaffarabad-Srinagar peace bus, an Indian External Affairs Ministry announcement in New Delhi said.
- Eu Seeks More Tariff Concessions From India (Hindu, SUSHMA RAMACHANDRAN , Jun 26, 2005)
Important ally in WTO trade talks; the two sides are in agreement on many issues"
- Older Than Us, Still Going Strong (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Usha Kris discovers the Narasimha Jayanthi, which has been celebrated every year for the past 364 years at Tanjavur.
- Bharat Forge Acquires Us Firm For $9.1 (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Bharat Forge Ltd (BFL), the flagship company of the US $1.25 billion Kalyani Group, has acquired US-based Federal Forge Inc through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Bharat Forge America Inc, in all cash deal worth US $9.1 million (about Rs 40 crore).
- Master Of Miniature (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Artist Vijay Hagaragundgi steadfastly pursues traditional miniature painting in the near-extinct Surapura style, discovers Giridhar Khasnis.
- Advani Sees Nazi Analogy (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
BJP President L K Advani, then Jan Sangh leader, was taken into police custody on June 26, 1975 in Bangalore soon after the imposition of Emergency by then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.
- Burns Finalises Agenda For Pm’S Us Visit (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns continued his discussions with Indian leadership for the second day on Indo-US bilateral ties.
- Jayalalitha To Boycott Sethu Project Inauguration (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Jun 26, 2005)
Jaya maintains that further studies are needed before undertaking projects that may pose a threat to the bio-diversity of the region.
- Religious Scholar’S Murder (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 25, 2005)
Yet another religious scholar has been shot dead in Karachi.
- Comrades Conspiring To Create Chaos? (Deccan Herald, Tavleen Singh, Jun 25, 2005)
The comrades claim to speak for the ‘people’ but they have never led an agitation demanding that the people get that most fundamental of human needs: water
- Taking The High Road (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 25, 2005)
The Bush administration is finally preparing to set new fuel economy rules. That’s reason to cheer, even if this hardly represents leadership.
- Moments That Matter (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Jun 25, 2005)
IN a memorable 1980 episode of Yes Minister, the wily mandarin Sir Humphrey Appleby explains to hapless minister Jim Hacker that the purpose of British foreign policy for the past 500 years has been to create a disunited Europe.
- Dabhol Re-Powered (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Jun 25, 2005)
If There are no further hitches, the 740 MW Dabhol power plant on Maharashtra's Konkan coast should once again begin generating by the end of 2005, under new owners.
- Outsourcing Crime (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Jun 25, 2005)
CALL centre work is actually the low-rung business in the IT hierarchy. But since it gives employment to over 3.5 lakh people in India,
- Price Of Cracking Confidence (Tribune, Roopinder Singh, Jun 25, 2005)
Two security breaches have highlighted international vulnerability,
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