Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Today (September-6-2007) Breaking News from Times of India

ISRO bleeds as scientists leave
Droves of scientists are leaving for greener pastures with the result that ISRO is hiring scientists in a great hurry to replace hundreds of trained hands.

GOC accused of sexual harassment
A woman Army officer has accused a major-general of "misconduct" in the strategically-located Leh area, sending shockwaves down the ranks.

New law to target sex workers' clients
Government is set to amend the Immoral Traffic Prevention Act to bring clients under its ambit, rendering them liable to imprisonment upto six months.

Show of strength at Malabar
Left Front hit the roads on Wednesday against the joint naval exercises.

Osteoarthritis is India's No. 1 ailment
Osteoarthritis is a condition in which the cartilage that acts as a cushion between bones in joints begins to wear out, causing inflammation and pain in joints, thereby restricting movement. Osteoarthritis is also known as degenerative arthritis or degenerative joint disease.

Voter IDs for Bangla nationals!
There could be around one lakh
Bangladesh nationals in Karnataka: this speculative figure could well describe the authorities' shoddy way of handling foreign visitors. The exact number is not available as almost all of them have voter identity cards!

India world's top BPO destination
NEW DELHI: When it comes to outsourcing, India continues to rule as the favourite global destination, even though factors like emergence of cheaper destinations, employee and salary crunch are adversely affecting the sector, a recent study shows.

Microsoft hints at iPhone rival
SEATTLE: Microsoft Corp said that it is "not unreasonable" for the company to introduce a mobile phone combined with features of its Zune digital music player to compete with Apple Inc's iPhone.

We are not in wrong, says TRAI
NEW DELHI: Telecom regulator TRAI has dismissed mobile operators' allegations of being non-transparent while recommending criteria to allocate spectrum to existing players and said it has not violated any law.

Sony unveils 'smart' camera
TOKYO: For those fed up with the family photos where one person is perpetually frowning, a new Japanese camera is said to automatically weed out pictures when a person isn't smiling.

Movie Reviews

RGV Ki Aag

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