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Interviews |
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Negative signals being sent to investors -
Rajat Nag, MD, ADB, Bus Std
The cut in outlook is negative. What S&P said was nothing new. It has already been debated. However, an announcement from S&P does have a psychological impact. It is the information content, not in terms of analytics, but in terms of the fact that S&P has suddenly said it.
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The Astronaut who brought samosas into space -
Sunita Williams, WSJ
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Did Muslims vote for Modi-led BJP out of fear? -
Asifa Khan & Zafar Sareshwala, Manushi
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Team is mine, but i took others into confidence -
Rajnath Singh, BJP President, ET
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NSE’s new CEO a music-lover, perfectionist -
Chitra Ramkrishna, Hindustan Times
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Novelist, screenwriter with satiric voice -
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Indian Express
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Indian Patent Law will be emulated by many nations -
C Chandrasekaran, Ex-patent Controller General, India, Economic Times
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Auditor or crusader? The debate continues -
Vinod Rai, Mint
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Rise and rise of the other Gandhi scion -
Varun Gandhi, India Today
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Southern steel that severs ties -
MK Stalin, NewIndianExpress
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We will not withdraw support; UPA themselves will hold elections in November -
Mulayam Singh Yadav, SP President, NewIndianExpress
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FDI in defence sector would be an effective catalyst for self-reliance -
Dick Olver, Hindu
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India's medicine men -
Anji Reddy & Yusuf Hamied, Business Standard
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Meet the teenage multimillionaire -
Nick D'Aloisio, Business Standard
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An American at large -
Strobe Talbott, Economic Times
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He mas Millions and a new job at Yahoo. soon, he’ll be 18. -
Nick D’Aloisio, NYT
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MP has shown growth rate of 11.98 per cent -
Shivraj Singh Chauhan, Outlook
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Rahul Gandhi’s outsider Madhusudan Mistry churning the insides in Karnataka -
Madhusudan Mistry, Economic Times
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Beginning of the endgame? -
Subrata Roy Sahara, Mint
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A quieter Alagiri returns where he once reigned -
MK Alagiri, Indian Express
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Mulayam, enigmatic as ever -
Mulayam Singh Yadav, Indian Express
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Giving people the gift of life -
K Anji Reddy, Hindustan Times
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Tryst with dynasty -
Sonia Gandhi, Economist
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Faces corruption charges, again -
Veerappa Moily, Petroleum Minister, Business Standard
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The angry optimist -
Surjit Bhalla, Economist, Business Standard
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Queens phenom goes for redemption at National Spelling Bee finals -
Arvind Mahankali, Daily Beast
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The UPA 2 government was conceived in corruption – and never really recovered from that taint. Right from the day the election results came in, the back-channel negotiations began for the reappointment of A Raja as Telecom Minister to advance the interests of certain telecom majors (in return for illegal gratification). It was an enterprise which set the stage for India’s biggest corruption scandal and virtually set the political tone for the rest of the four years. As subsequent exposes have established, Manmohan Singh and other key Ministers knew full well that mischief was afoot, but pointedly looked the other way. That was the beginning of the slide, and the UPA government in general – and Manmohan Singh in particular – was mortally wounded from that episode. But rather than press ahead with remedial action, the government slid further into the cesspool of corruption.
Venky Vembu |
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Split with Nitish will only boost BJP in Bihar - K Balakrishnan, LensOnNews WITH THE BJP seemingly decided on projecting Narendra Modi as its PM candidate and its close ally Nitish Kumar of JD(U) equally firm in his opposition to the idea, a split in the NDA alliance looks inevitable; most observers think it’s not a question of if, but when. |
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