OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK New Delhi, Saturday, June 7, 2003 WIN WITH THE TIMES Established 1838 Bennett, Coleman & Co., Ltd. More things in politics happen by accident or exhaustion than happen by conspiracy. — Jeff Greenfield NEWS DIGEST Chhattisgarh murder: Two unidentified men shot dead a local Congress leader, Trilok Agrawal, in Mahasamund district of Chhattisgarh, official sources said on Friday. Agrawal was a close relative of general administration and health minister K K Gupta. P6 www.timesofindia.com Capital 38 pages* Invitation Price Rs. 1.50 International India Times Sport Pop star Iglesias denies marrying Anna Kournikova Jinnah’s forgotten house to turn into cultural centre Verkerk blitzes Coria to reach French Open final Page 12 Page 11 Page 19 BJP elders blame it on the young By Smita Gupta TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The BJP’s ‘‘first generation’’ leaders are now engaged in formulating a patch-up formula to ensure the party is not ‘‘destroyed’’ by Generation Next’s young men ‘‘in a hurry’’. On Friday, these ‘‘first generation’’ leaders were at work to restore the image of a harmonious relationship between Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Deputy Prime Minister L K Advani, as well as to distance the latter from party president Venkaiah Naidu’s ‘‘twin leader’’ statement. The object was to neutralise the impression of a divided party or worse, a rebel- lion against Vajpayee. A contemporary of the party’s two top leaders said: ‘‘Can Vajpayee be reduced to a Vikas Purush when Advani is being referred to as Lauh Purush? If an appellation had to be coined for Vajpayee, it should have been something like Shikhar Purush, especially since the PM is at the zenith of his power now.’’ HRD minister Murli Manohar Joshi told a TV channel that the description Vikas Purush had not been coined at any of the party’s decision-making bodies. He indicated that Naidu had done it without consulting anyone else. Even as the Vikas Purush title was being rubbished by the The silence is broken L K Advani ‘‘There is absolutely nothing in it. There is no controversy. I don’t want to make any comment.’’ M M Joshi idated that image by fighting terrorism. And Vajpayee with his five years of good record at governance has been aptly described as Vikas Purush.’’ Meanwhile, the ‘‘first genera- BJP’s leaders, RSS spokesperson Ram Madhav — believed to be close to Naidu — said it was an apt description. ‘‘Ever since the Rath Yatra, Advani has been the Lauh Purush and he has consol- Another dusty day, but rain remains an illusion Neeraj Paul In a move to chalk out the Opposition’s strategy to topple the Mayawati-led government in UP, Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav held a meeting with Rashtriya Kranti Party president Kalyan Singh in Lucknow. P7 By Bhaskar Roy TIMES NEWS NETWORK Kutch earthquake film: The makers of a film on the Kutch earthquake of January 2001 are crying foul over the Central Board of Film Certification’s decision to deny permission to show the documentary since it depicts communalisation. P6 MiG-21 not to be grounded: Defence minister George Fernandes on Friday categorically denied the possibility of grounding MiG-21 in spite of the outcry against them. He asserted the MiG-21 was the ‘‘mainstay of Indian air defence’’. P10 by Laxman True to the met department predictions dust shrouded the city on Friday, but temperatures continued to soar. TOI Archives RISING TEMPERATURE FOREST FIRES COMING UP • Churu in west Rajasthan • 6 dead in forest fires in the • Higher humidity and storm recorded 49oC Garhwal region of Uttaranchal forecast for Delhi • In Orissa, Bolangir district • More than 3000 hectares of • Monsoon is expected to hit recorded 50oC on Thursday Kerala on June 8 or 10 forest lands were burning Heat wave loses some steam... TIMES NEWS NETWORK No, that one was taken after the patch-up and this at the height of hostility between us! indiatimes.com POLL Is being a sex symbol the latest shortcut to success in the entertainment industry? Yes 84% No 16% VOTE NOW : Has the concept of superstars disappeared from Bollywood? Vote on indiatimes.com or SMS ‘Poll’ to 8888 WEATHER Max: 43.1oC / Min: 30.0oC Moonset: Sunday — 0.57 am Moonrise: Saturday — 11.40 am Sunset: Saturday — 7.17 pm Sunrise: Sunday — 5.23 am Clear sky with dust haze. Dust storm or thunder storm accompanied by squall is likely in some areas. Maximum relative humidity 67% and minimum 22%. Book your Classifieds 24 hours service: “51-666-888” Times InfoLine “516-86-86-8” The ATM of information The Largest Classifieds Site * 22 + 8 pages of Delhi Times + 8 pages of Times Property STOCKS States to tame broadcasters Govt to push CASe on June 10 Mulayam meets Kalyan Singh: YOU SAID IT ‘‘Vajpayee is not only our vikas purush, he represents the sum total personality of the BJP. To limit him to a small segment of political development was never discussed.’’ tion’’ leaders are stressing that even if Naidu said what he did to ‘‘please’’ Advani, it was not at the latter’s instance. Advani’s well-wishers, sources said, had asked him to distance himself from Naidu’s statement and to break his silence on the subject. He had not uttered a word on it since the PM’s return from his foreign tour. Advani said neither Vajpayee’s leadership nor his position of supremacy was in question. He termed the whole affair as a media-created controversy. Sources said Advani was upset that Naidu’s statement had made it appear as though there was a rift between him and the PM. RSS against quota for Muslims: P8 New Delhi: The weather gods seem to be relenting. The met office said on Friday that conditions are now favourable for the monsoon to hit Kerala in the next two or three days. The monsoon has already stepped into the North-East and pre-monsoon showers have begun in Kerala and other parts of the peninsula. The good news is that the heat wave has begun to relax its grip and will make its exit in a day or two. But no immediate relief from the heat is expected in north-west India including the capital, where hot and dry north-westerly winds blowing in from Rajasthan are still holding sway. India Meteorological Department (IMD) deputy director-general S K Subramanian said this year the pre-monsoon showers are on a Countdown New Delhi: The Centre has decided to convene a meeting of representatives of the states concerned to discuss measures for a smooth transition to the CAS era. The meeting will take place a few days after the Govt interacts with broadcasters on June 10. The four state governments of Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Delhi will be represented by their top officials dealing with information and culture. At its June 10 meeting, the ministry is likely to stress the need for the prior disclosure of the number of pay channels and their rates. ‘‘The broadcasters cannot hold back information and this is what we are going to tell them,’’ an official said, hinting at the possible government line at the meeting. However, confronted with the government’s determination, many broadcasters have offered 70 channels — in • Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Delhi representatives to discuss measures • To stress the need for the prior disclosure of the number of pay channels and their rates • Broadcasters are offering 70 channels in the free-to-air bouquet for Rs 72 plus taxes. some cases even more — in the free-to-air bouquet for Rs 72 plus taxes. ‘‘The broadcasters will have to explore newer avenues to stay in business,’’ remarked Ashok Mansukhani, who represented a multi-system operator (MSO) at a meeting with the ministry. Mansukhani also said that CAS will bring in transparency and efficiency in the cable industry. Ministry sources indicate that in the meetings with the broadcasters and states, the effort will be at evolving a consensus on major issues. ... but Delhi still hot and humid TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The hopes of a midsummer respite for the city, raised by Thursday’s showers, have fizzled out. Friday’s maximum temperature was 43.1 degrees Celsius, higher than Thursday’s maximum of 42.5 degrees. However, the weather remained humid, raising apprehensions of a more oppressive spell of heat and hopes of a few more showers. ‘‘subdued scale’’. Overall, the Arabian Sea branch of the monsoon current is ‘‘still sluggish’’ but the parameters are now looking good for it to come in soon over Kerala. In met office language, there is an off-shore trough off the Kerala and Karnataka coast, indicative of According to a weather official, 2.6 mm rainfall has been recorded in Delhi since Thursday evening. However the rainfall was area specific. The met department had predicted duststorms and thunderstorms for the city on Friday too. But director Omkari Prasad said that the temperature and humidity are going to rise further. But, the monsoon isn’t expected till the first week of next month. something happening. The seasonal trough from north-west India to north Bay of Bengal is ‘‘getting organised’’. The third positive factor, said Subramanian, is that the hot north-westerly wind patterns are giving way to the south-westerly winds. Bottom line: The monsoon is coming. Digvijay’s swipe at PM angers BJP By Suchandana Gupta TIMES NEWS NETWORK Bhopal: The BJP is getting ready for war after the Madhya Pradesh Congress allegedly picked on Prime Minister Vajpayee again. There was much controversy over the state Congress’ slogans on the Prime Minister being a ‘beef-eater’ earlier this year. Now his bachelor status is being blamed for the severe drought in the country. BJP leader Uma Bharti alleged here on Thursday that MP chief minister Digvijay Singh had been addressing election meetings saying that, ‘not just Prime Minister Vajpayee but President A P J Abdul Kalam’s bachelor status is making the country dry, arid and infertile.’ So if the people of Madhya Pradesh vote for Uma Bharti who is unmarried, the monsoons will not arrive and it will prove to BSE: 3303.24 (+41.04) Dow: 9041.30 (+2.32) NSE 50: 1046.40 (+11.35) Nasdaq: 1646.01 (+11.36) BULLION Gold 22 ct /10g: Silver /1kg: Wedded to controversy The accusation • The President and the PM’s bachelor status is causing drought • If the unmarried Uma Bharti comes to power in MP then the monsoon will not arrive The retort • Rajasthan is suffering severe drought although CM Ashok Gehlot is married be fatal for agriculture. ‘‘On Wednesday Digvijay Singh held three public meetings in Jhabua, Petlawar and Thanda and while addressing each of these gatherings he said that the country is being ruled by a bachelor President and an unmarried Prime Minister. Delhi: Rs 5535 Mumbai: Rs 5198 Chennai: Rs 5310 Delhi: Rs 7485 Mumbai: Rs 7700 Chennai: Rs 7585 This according to Hindu shastra is very inauspicious and that’s the reason there is widespread drought,’’ Uma Bharti said. An angry national general secretary Pramod Mahajan said in Bhopal on Friday: ‘‘Digvijay Singh’s statement is beneath contempt. It doesn’t deserve a reply.’’ Addressing a public meeting in Gadarwara, Narsinghpur district Uma Bharti said: ‘‘If the President and Prime Minister’s bachelor status is responsible for the drought, how is it happening in Congress ruled states where the chief ministers are married men with children and grandchildren? The 100-years drought is in Rajasthan, a Congress ruled state, when chief minister Ashok Gehlot has children. So is he married or not?’’ Digvijay Singh, who was away in Indore, could not be contacted for his comments. EXCHANGE $: Rs 47.35 £: Rs 78.85 : Rs 56.20 ¥ (100): Rs 41.45 TOID70603/CR3/01/M/1 TOID70603/CR3/01/C/1 TOID70603/CR3/01/K/1 TOID70603/CR3/01/Y/1 CMYK Bhindranwale gets martyr status from Akal Takht TIMES NEWS NETWORK Amritsar: Finally, 19 years after Operation Bluestar an Akal Takht jathedar has declared Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, the 14th chief of Damdami Taksal who was in the forefront of the Khalistan movement, a martyr. Akal Takht jathedar Joginder Singh Vedanti made this declaration at a function jointly organised by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), the Dal Khalsa and other Sikh organisations at the Diwan Hall of Gurdwara Manji Sahib in the SGPC complex, on the occasion of Ghallughara Divas on Friday. Vedanti said that all the myths surrounding the status of Bhindranwale had now been cleared by the panth. ‘‘There should be no more controversy, especially with regard to Bhindranwale’s son Ishar Singh receiving a siropa,’’ he said. Condemning Operation Bluestar, Vedanti alleged that the Central government had ‘‘killed’’ those who could not tolerate the disrespect shown towards Golden Temple and other gurdwaras. ‘‘The demolition of Akal Takht by the Indian Army was a condemnable act, which would always remain a black chapter of Indian history,’’ he added. Earlier, SGPC president Kirpal Singh Badungar presented ‘siropas’ to Ishar Singh and Manjit Singh, brother of slain All India Sikh Students’ Federation president Amrik Singh, after the ‘bhog’ of ‘akhand path’. Besides Khalistan ideologues Jagjit Singh Chauhan and Wassan Singh Zaffarwal, acting jathedar of Takht Kesgarh Sahib Giani Tarlochan Singh, jathedar of Takht Damdama Sahib Giani Balwant Singh Nandgarh, AISSF president Harminder Singh Gili, deputy chief of Akhand Kirtani Jatha Bhai Baldev Singh and former SGPC general secretary Kiranjot Kaur attended the function. OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK 2 DELHI Saturday, June 7, 2003 Loadshedding schedule for Ghaziabad colonies TIMES NEWS NETWORK Ghaziabad: The Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation Ltd has announced a sixhour loadshedding schedule for different areas in the city. Kaushambi, Vaishali, Indirapuram, Vasundhra, Chandra Nagar, Surya Nagar and other colonies, fed by the 33 KV Kaushambi substation, will experience power cuts from 2 am to 4 am; 11 am to 1 pm and 5 pm to 7 pm. Areas fed by the Meerut Road sub-station will go without power from 4 am to 7 am and 4 pm to 7 pm. Areas fed by the Bulandshahr Road sub-station, including the old city areas, will have power cuts from 1 am to 4 am and 11 am to 2 pm. The 33 KV Raj Nagar substation, which supplies to colonies like Raj Nagar, Kavi Nagar, Shastri Nagar and Govindpuram will face loadshedding from 12.30 am to 2.30 am, 9 am to 11 am and 4 pm to 6 pm. However, although these orders became effective from Tuesday last, power consumers in a number of areas have been complaining of power cuts that last mor than 6 hours, or the UPPCL not sticking to the rostering schedule. City power distribution chief P K Goel, said, ‘‘It is not that we make unannounced variations in the roster. This impression goes around because supply is sometimes interrupted due to sudden local breakdowns. Nothing fishy about this cure R Burman By Nistula Hebbar and Anuradha Mukherjee Times News Network New Delhi: A trainful of asthma patients, all bound for Hyderabad, gathered at the Nizamuddin Railway station on Thursday night. The purpose of their journey was to take the famous ‘‘fish medicine’’ on June 8, in Hyderabad. The fish medicine can be administered only on one day in the year under the Punardamu Karti nakshatra. ‘‘The medicine, which tastes of hing and haldi, is put in a three-and-a- half inch long fish and forced down your throat,’’ said Sarita Sharma. This is Sharma’s third journey for the medicine which requires three visits. Sharma has been suffering from Asthma since 1995. Scores of hospital visits later, an acquaintance had told her about the special medicine. ‘‘I used to get five to six attacks in a week. TRAIN TO HOPE: The ‘Asthma Mail,’ specially laid to handle the rush to Hyderabad for the mysterious ‘fish therapy’ practitioners left New Delhi on Thursday. Though I was suspicious, I went anyway,’’ she said. “These days, two attacks in a year is as bad as it gets,’’ said Sharma. And it’s not as if it’s only the educated or the informed who are benefitting from the system. A group of 15 from Banwalike village in Punjab was also on its way to get the fish cure. ‘‘I took my mother to Hyderabad. Today she is almost normal,’’ said truck driver Ram Kishen. Part of the entourage was Muni Ram, a self-professed sanyasin. A pure vegetarian, he has, nevertheless, consumed the fish medicine. ‘‘The scriptures say in vipatti (danger) you can resort to any measure to get out of trouble,’’ he reasoned. And he was not the only one quoting the scriptures. Sharma, a brahmin and pure vegetarian says: ‘‘The shastras approve of this. The life of a small creature is expendable for saving the life of a bigger being,’’ she said. But what about scientific thought? ‘‘You have to have faith for the medicine to work. They recommend a special diet. We are not superstitious people, but I believe the family has some divine power,’’ Sharma said. This year 1,100 passenger took the Asthma Special, while an estimated 5 lakh people are expected to reach Hyderabad. For first-timers, however, the trip was not free from worries. As the train prepared to chug off, Mohit Saluja had only one worry — how will a live fish feel inside his gullet? City still grapples with water crisis TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Several parts of the city continued to reel under severe water shortage on Friday, a day after angry residents of the worst-hit areas had taken to the streets in protest. While some people in Chittranjan Park said they had not received any water in days, Greater Kailash-I residents said they were getting very low pressure supply for hardly an hour. Mansi Agarwal of Kalkaji said their house gets water only from tankers. Vikas Pahwa of R-block, GK-I, said the supply was very erratic and one never knew when the taps might spring to life for a few minutes. On its part, the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) says the situation in south and east Delhi will really improve from next year when the 140 million gallons a day (MGD) Sonia Vihar treatment plant becomes operational. So this summer will be all about fire fighting. For instance, in Sadiq Nagar and Greater Kailash, the faulty cables had been rectified and DJB chief P K Tripathi said current crisis there would be over by Saturday. ‘‘We are also reboring old tubewells. The number of tankers has been increased from 900 to 1,000 and 200 new drivers have been hired to run them constantly,’’ said DJB member (water) G C Nandwani. Moreover, the government recently imposed Essential Services Maintenance Act for ensuring that the water supply here is not disrupted. So even if private water tanker owners go on strike, the DJB will be empowered to take over their vehicles and run them. The field staff of the board says that breaking of water pipelines by different agencies during digging disrupts supply. ‘‘We have started filing FIRs against such agencies to stop disruption due to this reason,’’ said Tripathi. to 27. The course was inaugurated by S C Jain, deputy commissioner (KVS). Priya Thakur, education officer, KVS also graced the occasion. R K Singh principal and course director welcomed the chief guest. School students presented a cultural show on this occasion. SCHOOL NEWS Teachers’ training: Kendriya Vidyalaya, Tagore Garden teed off its 21 days in-service course for primary teachers from May 7 Silver jubilee: Ryan International School, Mayur Vihar-III was a part of FRAGRANCE an inter school competition to mark the silver jubilee celebrations at Vivekanand School, Anand Vihar. Mansi Bahuguna and The Times of India, New Delhi Israeli govt buys prime property on Aurangzeb Rd TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The Israeli government on Thursday informed the Supreme Court that it had deposited the full amount of Rs 25 crore as consideration for buying the Skipper Builder’s property on Aurangzeb Road in Delhi. The Israel government, through its embassy in India, said the balance amount of Rs 18.50 crore had been deposited with the Supreme Court registry. It had earlier deposited Rs 6.51 crore. A vacation Bench of Justices N Santosh Hegde and Shivaraj V Patil asked its registry to put the money received from the state of Israel in a fixed deposit with a nationalised bank. It will hear the matter relating to defrauding the allottees by the builder when the court re-opens in July after the vacation. The apex court had directed the sale of 3, Aurangzeb Road, belonging to the Skipper Construction Company to recover the money due to the allottees of the company’s other projects. The money had been defrauded by the company owned by Tejwant Singh. The lone bid for the house, amounting to Rs 25.01 crore, was made by the Israel government. It was allowed to buy the property for this amount as no other bids were received even after the lapse of sufficient time. To chat on SMS send 'cchat' <your question> to 8888 “The creative struggle is far from over” — SHUBHA MUDGAL, Singer Q. What is the contrast between your initial struggle with the present?- rhea A: Life is a little easier now, but the struggle to improve continues, and new and different challenges and struggles present themselves now. So, it has been wonderful to get lots of opportunities but at the same time, the creative struggle is certainly far from over. Q. What is the inspiration behind Maine Dekha Ek Sapna?- shiva A: The idea of the song came from an NGO called Amitasha that works with underprivileged girl children, and when I heard the song that Prasoon Joshi wrote for them, I was sure that I wanted to be a part of the project. Q. What is the future of Indian music in the era of remixes?- ko A: If you are talking of pop music in India, I think a major change is required both in the quality of music being recorded & promoted. There is a tendency to present only one kind of music, upbeat music meant for dance, but in the process, originality, quality, and variety is being ignored. Q. After so many years of Ali More Angana, do you think the classical community has reconciled to your innovation?- music A: Ali More Angana really has nothing to do with my classical music. When I present classical music, raag yaman, bahar or any other, there is no trace of the person who sang Ab Ke Sawan. But when I sing pop music, there is certainly every trace of a person who has been studying classical music. 12 noon: Payal Rohtagi Actress On what makes movies magical • EXCLUSIVE ‘There is nothing between me and Salman’ Boom star Katrina Kaif in a noholds-barred interview. • Uncensored: Is the superstar dead? Timesonline debates. For complete chat log on to http://chat.indiatimes.com To listen, log on to http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com Shuchi Paul stood second in face painting competition. Bharti Khanna and Resham Sikka secured second position in the news reading competition. Investiture: R S J Modern School held its investiture ceremony for the prefectorial board on May 7. School chairperson Anuradha Singh was the chief guest. The guest of honour was Rita, K Premchand, member board of trustees. The pledge of honour was conducted by school headmistress Manju Rajput. Win at Ansal Shopping Carnival TOI nsal Plaza Shopping Carnival brings to its shoppers a bagful of surprises and loads of shopping. Presented by Delhi Times and American Express, this shopping carnival is a big hit. Ansal Plaza brings to its shoppers a chance to win free gift vouchers on being spotted with shopping bags of any of the participating outlet. Over 30 premier outlets and food joints are participating in this carnival and they bring you a fortune for just Rs 500. Kids are having their share of fun too at free creative art workshops in the evenings everyday. Further, shoppers are enjoying free mehndi and free tattoos, while children have fun with inflatable cartoon characters. The carnival has been organised by Confluence and is co-sponsored by Aviva, Coca Cola, LML Freedom, Reliance and Select Holidays. Radio Mirchi is the official radio partner for the event and the names of the daily winners are announced every hour. There are shop and win schemes running in all the participating outlets and A Ansal Plaza wore a festive look as shoppers thronged the Ansal Shopping Carnival. A host of surprises, including free holidays, await the shoppers. customers may shop a fortune for just Rs 500. On every purchase of Rs 500 the shopper gets a coupon with which one can win prizes over Rs 25 lakh and holiday packages from Select Holidays, mobikes from LML and a chance to win many more prizes and the mega prize — a flat by the Ansal Group. The more you buy, the more coupons you get. American Express card members are entitled to two coupons for a purchase of just Rs 500 that doubles the chance to win the exciting prizes. There are also holiday packages to Heritage Village Manesar every day from Select Holidays as prizes on buying Coke. There are also special prizes every hour for visiting the Amex counters at the venue. HC tells Centre to resolve eviction tussle New Delhi: The Delhi high court has asked the Centre to approach the Lok Sabha Speaker and Rajya Sabha vice-chairman to resolve the dispute over a government order asking the Congress to evict three of its official premises in Delhi. ‘‘In case the aforesaid functionaries are able to give their advice and the matter is resolved, that will put an end to the dispute,’’ justice A K Sikri said. The judge said if the Speaker and vice chairman ‘‘still refuse to give any advice, the matter may be brought to the notice of the court and in that eventuality, it will proceed with the matter on merits.’’ The directorate of estates in April 2000 had communicated to the party to evict the three premises — 24 Akbar road, 5 Raisina road and C-II/109 Chanakyapuri — stating that as per the policy decision, political parties recognised by the election commission would be allowed to retain only one hou-sing unit from the general pool in Delhi for official use. The directorate had allowed Congress to retain 24 Akbar road subject to the undertaking that it would vacate the same within three years during which it would obtain a plot in an institutional area. The order had also cancelled all other premises in the occupation of the party with immediate effect. The Congress party had approached the high court after its petition challenging the eviction orders were dismissed by the additional sessions judge. While asking the Centre to approach the Speaker and vice chairman on the issue, the judge said he was refraining from expressing any opinion on the merits of the respective contentions of the party. ‘‘This restraint is exercised at this stage as any observations on merits may not prejudice the case of either party,’’ the court said adding that in such matters the Supreme Court had desired that the Lok Sabha Speaker and Rajya Sabha vice chair- TOID70603/CR1/02/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/02/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/02/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/02/Y/1 CMYK man should be approached for advice. Stating that government had sought the advice of the Speaker who refused to act in the matter, the court observed that different person is holding the the office of the Lok Sabha Speaker at the moment and further the vice chairman of Rajya Sabha was not approached. Instead, the government had written to the Rajya Sabha chairman who also refused to give any advice, the court said adding that ‘‘keeping in view these aspects, it would be appropriate if one more attempt is made by approaching the aforesaid authorities for their advice.’’PTI OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK DELHI The Times of India, New Delhi Metro police register first case A chartered accountant with Rs 45,000 in fake currency is held at a station TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The Delhi Metro Rail Police (DMRP) registered its first FIR after they arrested a Chartered Accountant carrying fake currency worth Rs 45,000. Piyush Rastogi (34) was apprehended at the checking point on Thursday, the metro police said. DCP (crime and railways), Dependra Pathak, said: ‘‘Rastogi is a resident of a Patparganj society. At about 3.45 pm on Thursday, the police team was on normal frisking duty at Welcome metro station Power of force • The force was set up to maintain law and order aboard the Metro rail • The 200-strong force has been deployed in six stations • It’s led by DCP (crime and railways) where Rastogi came to board the train.’’ The police got suspicious when Rastogi tried to dodge the checking. He was nabbed when he tried to flee. A search revealed he was car- rying Rs 45,000 fake currency in the denomination of Rs 100. The accused told the police he was a chartered accountant and had his office at Pataudi House, Daryaganj. Pragati for more power TOI TIMES NEWS NETWORK He confessed the currency was produced with a computer and scanner installed at his house. ‘‘He was on way to Kashmere Gate to deliver the fake currency at one-third price,’’ the DCP said. The police later searched his house where it, further, seized counterfeits worth Rs 15,000 in the denomination of Rs 100. They also seized the computer, scanner and other equipments used in producing the fake currency. Although the accused claimed this was first criminal act, the police is ascertaining his antecedents. Two women hang themselves in south Delhi Saturday, June 7, 2003 Two held for forging drafts worth Rs 45 cr TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Two persons were arrested for allegedly forging bank drafts worth Rs 45 crore. The drafts were of Housing Development and Finance Corporation (HDFC) Bank. The police also found a forged letter declaring the drafts to be original. The accused, Chandan Anurag (41), is a film producer and also runs a computer institute. He has a film production company under the name of ‘Maa Shakti Pictures’. Co-accused, Shabir Ahmed, posed as an IAS officer and helped Anurag strike a deal with Bank of Rajasthan. ‘‘The bank officials believed Ahmed and Anurag also had six accounts with the bank,’’ said deputy com- missioner of police (special cell) Ashok Chand. Anurag convinced bank officials he would deposit Rs 20 crore with them in lieu of 2.5 crore worth pay orders to invest in his business. On Thursday morning, Anurag and Ahmed met the bank officials in the lobby of Janpath Hotel. They showed them HDFC’s forged authority letter and gave them two bank drafts worth Rs eight crore. In return, the bank handed him eight ‘‘genuine pay orders’’ of Rs 2.5 crore. On a tip-off, a team led by inspector R S Bhasin apprehended Anurag and seized pay orders of Rs 10 lakh. Ahmed was arrested later. The police seized forged bank drafts worth Rs 37 crore from him. TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit dedicated the 330 MW gasbased Pragati Power plant to the public on Friday. Describing it as the first step towards making the city self-sufficient in power generation, the chief minister said that the new power plant will alter the power situation in the city. ‘‘Against the total peak demand of 3,170 MW, the power available to the city is 3,500 MW,’’ she said.‘‘therefore the power cuts that are sporadically happening in certain pockets are due to local faults in the distribution system and not due to paucity of power, which is available in abundance,’’ she added. The chief minister said that when her government The 330 MW power plant, which cost Rs 1,070 crore and is took over in 1998, the peak environment friendly, will run on natural gas. demand was about 1,900 MW, which has now grown bution companies are con- states but it would not comscious of the short-comings promise on the demands. to close to 3,200 MW. ‘‘The distribution infra- in the distribution system She said that the governstructure was not even fully and the problems caused by ment was planning to set up capable of handling 1900 them. ‘‘All necessary im- many more gas-based MW, leave apart the un- provement and rectifica- plants in the city. ‘‘Hydel precedented loads that it is tion measures are being and thermal power plants shouldering today,’’ she taken,’’ she said. in Himachal Pradesh and said. The CM said that the gov- Chhatisgarh respectively Dikshit said the govern- ernment was selling extra are also being planned,’’ ment as well as the distri- power to the neighbouring she said. New Delhi: Two women committed suicide in south Delhi on Thursday night. In one case, Neelam (26) of Devli village hung herself from the ceiling fan. The police said, about a month back she had been married to Dalip (42), an electrician. On Thursday night, when he returned home, he found her hanging. In another case, Babita was found hanging from the ceiling fan in her house in Mehrauli area. The police said a quarrel took place between Babita and her husband, Pankaj, on Thursday night. No power in power firm for 5 hours TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: An office complex of the Delhi state government-owned generation company (Genco) near Rajghat power plant faced a five-hour long power cut on Friday throwing work out of order. Residents of several other colonies complained of frequent cuts since Thursday. The office went without power around noon due to a fault in a cable fault in the distribution system near Daryaganj. ‘‘The restoration of a supply took a little long as the BSES officials refused to attend to the problem due to confusion over jurisdiction. They wanted us to rectify the fault on our own but we insisted the area fell under their area,’’ said a Genco official. Power cuts in south Del- hi continued since Thursday with residents complaining of several rounds of power cuts ranging from half an hour to one hour. Naraina, Kalkaji, Panchsheel Park, South Extension, Defence Colony, Gulmohar Park, Gautam Nagar, parts of Green Park, Krishna Nagar, Chandni Chowk, Patel Nagar, Mayur Vihar, Vijay Mohalla and Bajrang Mohalla. TOID70603/CR1/03/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/03/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/03/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/03/Y/1 CMYK 3 OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK 4 DELHI Saturday, June 7, 2003 FLIGHTS OUT OF DELHI NATIONAL Mumbai: I-A 0700, 0800, 0900, 1200, 1300, 1700, 1800, 1900, 2000, 2300 Jet Air 0650, 0800, 0935, 1400, 1725, 1935, 2030, 2200, Sahara 1700, 0935, 1520, 1800, 2025 KOLKATA: I-A 0700, 1600★★,1700,1945 Jet Air 0600, 1720, Sahara 0620,1915 CHENNAI: I-A 0640,0955★★★ 1645,1900 Jet Air 0645,1900 BANGALORE: I-A 0650, 1645, 1900 Jet Air 0635,1715, Sahara 0725, 1745 HY’BAD:I-A 0630, 1745 GOA: I-A 1200, Sahara 1200 KULU: Jagson 0630, 0650, 1215 ★ AHMEDABAD: I-A 0600,1700★★1845, Jet Air 0610 GUWAHATI—BAGDOGRA: I-A 0555★★, 1010• ★ Jet Air 1010 WEATHER Rain or thundershowers are likely at many places in Kerala and Lakshadweep, Andaman and Nicobar islands, Gangetic WB, Orissa, Jharkhand, TN and coastal Karnataka and at isolated places in Bihar, UP, Uttaranchal, HP, J&K, Konkan and Goa, South Madhya Maharashtra, coastal AP and interior Karnataka. Heavy rain is likely to occur at isolated places in Arunachal, Assam and Meghalaya, NagalandManipur-Mizoram-Tripura, WB and Sikkim during next 48 hours. INDIA WORLD Max Min Delhi Mumbai Chennai Kolkata Bangalore Ahm’bad T’puram Bhopal B’eshwar Pune 43 35 42 34 32 43 34 42 39 35 30 29 29 26 22 29 24 28 23 25 Guwahati Dehradun Hyd’bad Indore Jaipur Lucknow Patna Rajkot Shimla Srinagar Max Min 29 37 42 40 44 38 36 39 29 31 23 26 29 25 32 28 25 27 21 12 Max Min Amsterdam Bahrain Bangkok Beijing Chicago Geneva Hong Kong London Los Angeles Moscow 28 39 35 32 20 31 32 22 23 16 14 31 26 19 08 17 26 11 16 09 TRAIN RESERVATIONS 9arliest date on which berth / seats were available at 2000 hrs. on 06.06.2003 in important trains leaving various Delhi stations. MUMBAI: 0520 (AI 136), 2145 (AI 309), 2205 (AI 311), 2330 (AI 112) Train No. Train / Exp / Mail NORTH 4033 Jammu Mail 4645 Shalimar Exp 2403 Jammu Exp EAST 2302 Kolkata Rajdhani 2304 Poorva Exp 2382 Poorva Exp 2312 Kalka Mail 2392 Magadh Exp 2402 Shramjeevi Exp 2418 Prayag Raj Exp 4056 Brahmputra Mail 5622 North East Exp 2554 Vaishali Exp 2816 Puri Exp 2802 Purshottam Exp 8476 Neelanchal Exp 4230 Lucknow Mail WEST 2904 Golden Temple Mail 2926 Paschim Exp 2952 Mumbai Rajdhani 2954 AG Kranti Rajdhani 2474 Sarvodaya Exp 1078 Jhelum Exp 2916 Ashram Exp SOUTH 2616 G T Exp 2622 Tamil Nadu Exp 2432 Trivandrum Raj 2626 Kerala Exp 2618 Mangala Exp 2628 Karnataka Exp 2724 A P Exp 2430 Banglore Rajdhani 7022 Dakshin Express A-I: (City)23736446 /47/48 (Air.)25652050, British Air: (Air.) 25652908, Lufthansa: 23323310, Singapore Airlines 23356286, Thai Air: 3323638 No. of passengers dealt on 05.06.2003 (Delhi Area): 61,768 (N. Rly. Area) 2,59,060. It does not necessarily mean that reservation is available on all subsequent dates. For further information regarding reservation: Ph: 131 for computerised PNR, for status enquiry contact 1330, 1335, 1345. (Information supplied by Indian Railways) Ph: I-A:140,142. ★ Mon, Wed, Fri, ★★Tue, Thu, Sat, ★★★ Mon-Fri, Sun, Jet Air: (City) 6853700, (Airport) 25665404 Sahara: (City) 2335901-9, (Airport) 25675234/875, (TeleCheckin) 25662600. • Mon, Fri. INTERNATIONAL BANGKOK/TOKYO: Thai Air 0010 (TG-316), A-I 0050 (IC-855) FRANKFURT: Lufthansa 0305 (LH-761) AMSTERDAM: North west 0140 (NW-037) LONDON: British Air 0210 (BA-142) PARIS: Air France 0040 (AF-147), A-I 0735 (AI-141) SINGAPORE: Sin’pore Airlines 2315 (SQ-407), I-A 0500 (IC-855) ROME/GENEVA: A-I 0350 (AI-171) HONG KONG/OSAKA: A-I 2320 (AI-318) AIR INDIA 1 ac 2 ac Ac 3t Sl 16.06 — 08.06 23.06 28.06 23.06 08.07 03.07 23.06 28.06 29.06 29.06 11.06 11.06 13.06 N.A. N.A. 08.06 — — 09.06 — — — 12.06 13 .06 18.06 17.06 24.06 19.06 11.06 14.06 N.A. 27.06 23.06 25.06 29.06 29.06 16.06 13.06 22.06 23.05 03.07 17.06 17.06 11.06 14.07 07.06 22.06 25.06 24.06 27.06 17.06 — 26.06 30.06 01.07 17.06 16.06 12.06 13.07 08.07 22.06 18.06 19.06 20.06 17.06 10.06 15.06 21.06 18.06 — — 11.06 20.06 25.06 24.06 18.06 26.06 07.07 27.06 24.06 26.06 23.06 22.06 26.06 02.07 26.06 26.06 27.06 — — 19.06 03.07 18.06 15.06 16.06 24.06 — — — 18.06 30.06 — 22.06 19.06 08.07 26.06 30.06 28.06 26.06 01.07 24.06 24.06 25.06 06.07 24.06 30.06 28.06 27.06 07.07 — 17.06 16.06 — 19.06 18.06 17.06 22.06 — 16.06 Shatabdi express: The Delhi-Lucknow Shatabdi Express between New Delhi Railway station and Lucknow will continue to stop at Etawah. TNN The Times of India, New Delhi Why the application forms went missing? TOI By Nistula Hebbar TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Richa Jalota, a student of New Era School, had no problem getting hold of centralised forms, she faced a different problem altogether. When she went to her local post office in Janakpuri, she was forced to buy the information handbook on Delhi University (DU), also stocked there. ‘‘I was told that I had to buy the handbook for Rs 10, it is useless for me because I already have the DU handbook. The entire set of 25 forms plus the handbook cost me Rs 35,’’ she added. She is not alone. Mohita Sharma of St Mark’s School, Janakpuri, also faced the same problem. Not just that, she got stuck with handbooks she did not need. Parents help students with filling the admission forms at a college on Friday. ‘‘I was first given the sci- ECA form, no handbook cials concerned in the which does not accept cenence handbook. I said that I told me that,’’ she said. postal department, they tralised forms. I have 24 wanted the Arts one, but I Hema Raghavan admits have assured me that this spare forms with no idea was told that it could not be provision will be re- what to do with it,’’ she says. exchanged,’’ she says. moved,’’ she said. Neha’s father bought the She had to buy another Neha Gupta, a stu- forms from her school, set, for the Arts handbook. dent of Bharatiya thinking DU would be too ‘‘Even then I had to trudge Vidya Bhavan cannot crowded. ‘‘We were told that to individual colleges for understand why peo- regardless of how many specific information. I that the compulsion to buy ple cannot find enough forms they actually needed wanted to know what cer- the handbook is worrying. forms.‘‘I am applying only they had to buy it in sets of tificates to attach to the ‘‘I have spoken to the offi- in two colleges, one of 25,’’ said Neha’s mother. THE GREAT COLLEGE RUSH Panic as dates clash TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: A clash in the timing of entrance examinations for English and Economics in two different colleges has created trouble for some students. The economics entrance test to be conducted by Ramjas college on June 27 between 1 to 2 pm is overlapping with the English entrance of Daulat Ram college, being conducted from 12.30 to 1.30 pm. The English entrance is conducted by around 12 colleges and the schedule is coordinated by the university’s English department to prevent overlaps. However, Ramjas is the only college which conducts an economics test in North campus. ‘‘We are in a dilemma. My daughter wants to take both the tests, but this will be possible only if one of the colleges shifts the timing an hour,’’ Pramod Kumar Gupta, a parent said. Ramjas principal Rajinder Prasad said he was not aware of the problem. ‘‘The college will give it a serious thought and try to make an adjust- Farmhouses depleting groundwater By Saurabh Sinha TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The massive exploitation of groundwater by farmhouse owners is leading to a sharp fall in the water table in areas where the farms are located. According to the Central Ground Water Board (CGWB), the water table is falling by up to two metres in such places every year. ‘‘In Chattarpur, for instance, the water table is 45 metres below ground level. There’s hardly a 15-metre-deep layer of fresh water left in these places,’’ said CGWB chairman S S Chauhan. Most of the farmhouses are in areas like Bijwasan, Mehrauli, Chattarpur, and Rajokri in south and southwest Delhi, where hardly any sweet groundwater is left. The board estimates that if the exploitation goes on at this pace, the entire area will run out of sweet water in less than a decade. ‘‘We are headed towards desertification,’’ warned urban designer K T Ravindran. Each farmhouse is reported to have several tubewells that keep the sprawling lawns lush green. Groundwater meets all their requirements as the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) does not supply any water to areas on the city periphery like Chattarpur, said DJB member (water) G C Nandwani. DJB chief P K Tripathi said: ‘‘Because of the over-exploitation by farmhouses, the wa- Farming trouble • Most farmhouses depend only on groundwater • The over-exploitation as left to severely depleted aquifers • The sweet water left in farm areas will last for less then a decade • Leads to problems in nearby areas also as the water table falls • DJB tubewells keep running dry, disrupting the supply ter table in Vasant Kunj, which is near the farm area, keeps on falling. So our tubewells keep running dry and we have to drill deeper. The same thing happens in other south Delhi colonies. There is a disruption in the supply.’’ The CGWB is now planning to undertake a survey of the farmhouses. ‘‘Depending on the findings of the survey, we will decide the future course of action,’’ said Chauhan. But given the CGWB’s track record of acting on its announcements, experts want some concrete steps to be taken immediately. Ravindran said: ‘‘Watering lawns should be immediately banned in farmhouses. Treated waste water that is rich in nutrients can be used for this purpose. Groundwater College: To strive, to seek, to find TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Entering college is a rite of passage. At one level, it is liberation from the structured — even uniformed — life of school. At another, it is the first step into individual responsibilty as an adult. We approach it with excitement, awe and trepidation. But here is a view of a student who had just entered Stanford’s sunny portals: ‘‘One of the greatest things about going to school (college) in paradise is that you can study while working on a wicked tan.’’ ment,’’ he said. Economics test incharge Deb Kusum Das said he had received calls regarding this problem on Friday. ‘‘The matter will be put in front of the admission committee,’’ he added. REMEMBRANCE should be used only for meeting the basic necessities of life by those living in farmhouses,’’ he said. S Mukherjee of JNU’s School of Environmental Sciences said rainwater harvesting was the only way to improve the groundwater situation. Tripathi said as long as groundwater was available free of charge, its exploitation is difficult to stop till it dries up. ‘‘The DJB Bill on groundwater that has been cleared by the Centre should be passed as it gives us the power to check exploitation of groundwater and levies a charge on it.’’ Because of the over-exploitation by the farmhouses, the DJB chief added that even harvesting the rain was not showing any difference. ‘‘In several nearby places, people have installed rainwater harvesting systems. But all the water that is harvested, is pumped out out of all proportions and the water table does not improve’’ he said. The massive exploitation of groundwater over the years has led to a sharp drop in both the quantity and quality of the sub-soil reserve in the city. In a vicious circle, as the water table drops, the concentration of dangerous pollutants like nitrates, fluorides, pesticides, heavy metals and salinity keeps getting concentrated in the remaining water. OBCs to get financial aid TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Delhi state government has decided to form a separate body which will provide financial assistance to minorities and other backward classes (OBCs). The decision was taken at a meeting between chief minister, Sheila Dikshit, social welfare minister Raj Kumar Chauhan and concerned government officials on Friday. ‘‘The fund distribution agency will be on the lines of the existing finance corporation for scheduled caste and scheduled tribes,’’ Chauhan said. The government had included minorities and other backward classes in the ambit of the finance corporation in January this year. Officials felt that the commission’s scope had become too vast as there were four beneficiary groups, including handicapped persons, OBCs, SC and ST and minorities. ‘‘We have decided to create this new body as the existing body was burdened with too many applications. We want to accommodate all genuine requests for financial assistance from needy people,’’ the minister said. With the new body, people from minority communities and other backward classes can avail financial assistance, between Rs 50,000 and Rs 5 lakh. The procedures for availing funds will be the same as the one which is existing. ‘‘Applications are invited from needy people, and as we get the proposals for self-employment, they are thoroughly scrutinised,’’ he said. The proposal’s financial viability is assessed by the Commission’s officers, who are usually people with expertise on auditing of projects. ‘‘They evaluate the project submitted by the needy and we grant the approval, so that the self employment projects can take off,’’ the minister said. TOID70603/CR1/04/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/04/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/04/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/04/Y/1 CMYK OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK DELHI The Times of India, New Delhi Neeraj Paul RWAs seek more money from Govt TIMES NEWS NETWORK The LIG flat where a gas cylinder exploded on Friday and injured five people. Seven hurt in cylinder blast TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Seven persons, including a woman, sustained burn injuries when an LPG cylinder exploded in a Jhilmil Colony flat in east Delhi on Friday morning. The police said the blast took place at about 9.30 am. Deputy commissioner of police (east) Nuzhat Hassan said: ‘‘Yogesh Mehra (40) and his wife Ashu Mehra (32) sustained over 40 per cent burns. Ashu was making tea when the cylinder caught fire.’’ Five neighbours, who rushed to the rescue of the couple, also sustained burn injuries. The couple moved to Safdarjung Hospital. The other injured include Mridul (17), Varun (16), Rajkumar, Mohan Puri and Murli Kishore. The condition of Murali is still critical, the officer said. New Delhi: The Bhagidari state council on Friday submitted a proposal with the Delhi state government demanding financial aid and the discretion to utilise funds for developmental projects. According to a government official, details of the proposal will be thrashed out by month-end and a comprehensive policy finalised. Till now, the government has given grants only on specific projects of rainwater harvesting and solid waste management. If a policy is made, the 1,500 residents’ associations will have the power to decide on the allocation of funds internally. ‘‘This will streamline the process and cut down the bureaucratic procedure,’’ Dr M K Mohanty, state council member and Rohini resident Local police sabotage rape probe By Bhadra Sinha TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The Ambedkar Nagar police have been accused of violating directions from police headquarters on how to handle rape cases. As per the guidelines, a rape case has to be investigated by a woman officer. Metropolitan magistrate S S Rathi took a strong exception in a case where a male sub-inspector from the police station is investigating a rape case. The magistrate also held that the police were trying to tamper with the probe. The magistrate also said Directions • There is no confusion about the identity of the accused. The victim has named him and given his background in the FIR, says the judge • The commissioner of police has given strict directions to take the help of rape crisis intervention centre to deal with rape cases • According to the guidelines, only women police officers should probe rape cases the police’s move to get the accused identified by the victim was unfair. Rathi said:‘‘There is no confusion about the accused’s identity. The victim has named him and given his background in the FIR.’’ Rajpath exchange trips TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Erratic power supply led to the failure of Rajpath telephone exchange twice on Friday leading to disruption of telephone service in Sena Bhavan and North Block. The exchange failed first at 1 pm and then at 1.45 pm. The system was restored by making alternate arrangement of power supply by laying long He observed that since there was no justification in getting the accused identified again, this was an attempt by the investigating officer to sabotage the case. He said the police were attempting to coerce the vic- Saturday, June 7, 2003 Cyber data • Bhagidari will soon be online • Member RWAs are planning to set up a website that will provide data on their projects • The website that is supposed to be functional by month- end. • It will also boost communication between the associations said. The proposal suggests a three-tier democratically elected structure that will whet each project. Residents will be part of a RWA and 10-15 RWAs or market traders associations will form a federation that will in turn choose a limited number of representatives to form a district council. tim to not identify the accused during the test identification parade. The magistrate also pointed towards the lackadaisical attitude of the investigating officer who has failed to probe the case scientifically. Rathi said the officer failed to obtain semen sample of the accused and his clothes. Rathi claimed:‘‘There are strong objections to the conduct of the officers who have failed to follow their senior officers but have tried to scuttle the cause of justice.’’ The victim said she was allegedly raped by her husband’s friend. The accused, Raju, was arrested later. power leads, a Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited official said. RTV crushes man: Alauddin, a resident of Lal Quan, was hit by a speeding RTV at Mehrauli-Badarpur Road while crossing the road on Thursday night. The victim was taken to AIIMS where he succumbed to his injuries. The driver is yet to be arrested. TOID70603/CR1/05/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/05/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/05/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/05/Y/1 CMYK 5 OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK 6 INDIA Saturday, June 7, 2003 Nature’s fury turns fiery: Forest fire rages as you read Reuters Cong: Power struggle is on in BJP TIMES NEWS NETWORK A forest fire rages in Uttaranchal on Thursday. Six people died in the blaze so far. 14 children succumb to mystery disease Kolkata: Another child died of a mysterious disease on Friday in Murshidabad district of West Bengal. The disease has so far claimed 14 lives. However, unofficial estimates put the toll at over 30. Murshidabad district magistrate said with the fresh death at the Jangipur Sadar hospital 14 children had so far died of the disease characterised by high fever and profuse saliva secretion. The exact number of children dying of the disease was difficult to pinpoint as most of the cases had occurred in re- mote villages of the Lalbag sub-division of the district. Two teams — one of epidemiological experts and another from the National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases — rushed to the villages on Friday to collect blood and saliva samples. PTI New Delhi: The Congress on Thursday took potshots at the confusion over the leadership in the BJP by calling it an ‘‘unmistakable’’ power struggle between Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Deputy Prime Minister L K Advani. Party spokesperson Anand Sharma told reporters that BJP chief M Venkaiah Naidu, by making ‘‘confusing and conflicting’’ statements, had triggered off this debate. Sharma said this proved that there was a definite power struggle between Vajpayee and Advani. Sharma said these statements were yet another ‘‘act of the extension’’ of the ongoing multiple-speak. However, the final picture is not yet clear since Vajpayee could issue another statement contradicting himself, he claimed. In this regard, he gave the example of Vajpayee’s varying statements on Kashmir, Pakistan and even his own retirement. According to Sharma, irrespective of who leads the BJP, the Congress would fight and defeat BJP. Both Vajpayee and Advani are responsible for non-governance, he said. The Times of India, New Delhi One more murder rocks Chhattisgarh No FIR against Jogi in Jaggi case: Police TIMES NEWS NETWORK & PTI Raipur: A day after Nationalist Congress Party Chhattisgarh treasurer Ram Avatar Jaggi’s murder, two unidentified men shot dead a local Congress leader, Trilok Agrawal, in Mahasamund district, official sources said on Friday. Agrawal, who was a prominent rice mill owner and a close relative of general administration and health minister K K Gupta, was killed by two intruders at his Saraipalli residence, according to preliminary reports. Agrawal reached home from Raipur around 1 am, when his family members told him that there could be intruders in the backyard of the house. When Agarwal opened the door, two men shot at him twice from close range and fled the scene. The bullets hit him in the stomach. Agrawal was immediately rushed to the Raipur Medical College Hospital, but was declared brought Ajit Jogi dead. No arrests have been made so far. On Friday, Ram Avatar Jaggi’s murder case took an U-turn. Inspector general of police Ram Niwas told The Times of India that there was no FIR against chief minister Ajit Jogi and his son Amit. On Thursday, NCP state unit chief V C Shukla and his supporters lodged an FIR at the Maudhapara police station, naming the Jogis as co-conspirators in the murder. The police declared this FIR as null and void. In turn, town inspector V K Pandey filed an FIR against TOID70603/CR2/06/M/1 TOID70603/CR2/06/C/1 TOID70603/CR2/06/K/1 TOID70603/CR2/06/Y/1 CMYK Shukla and hundreds of supporters, alleging that they had forced him to register the FIR against Jogi and his son. An FIR lodged by Jaggi’s son Satish has also been quashed. Pandey claimed that Shukla had snatched his mobile, wireless set and phone and didn’t allow him to talk to his seniors. Cases of dacoity and causing obstruction to a government servant in discharging his official duties have been registered against the NCP leaders. The police said two other FIRs against unknown persons are operational in the Jaggi case. The IGP reported progress in the investigations. When asked about Shukla’s remarks that the police was framing a scrap dealer of the town in the case, Ram Niwas said, ‘‘We are investigating the case, not Mr Shukla.’’ Jaggi’s murder, he said, was not a political murder. OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK INDIA The Times of India, New Delhi Saturday, June 7, 2003 PTI Censor board objects to film on Kutch quake Bharat Desai TIMES NEWS NETWORK Ahmedabad: The makers of a film on the Kutch earthquake of January 2001 are crying foul over the Central Board of Film Certification’s decision to deny permission to show the 45minute documentary since it ‘‘depicts communalisation and discrimination in society’’. Defying the embargo, the film will be screened before reporters at the Press Club in Mumbai on Saturday where a demand will be made for removal of the board’s chairman, Arvind Trivedi, a former BJP MP from Gujarat, who played the role of Ravan in the popular television serial Ramayan. The film-makers have also decided to approach the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal against the censor board’s decision. Vision Graphers, the Mumbai-based company which made the film, Chords On The Richter Scale, over 18 months, was communicated the board’s decision on Thursday, in response to its April 21 application for certification. The decision, signed by the board’s regional officer, V K Singla, says: ‘‘The film depicts criminalisation and discrimination in society. It contains disbalanced speeches, commentary, visuals which give different tone (sic) to achieve its objective. By giving religious and communal colour, it may add more problems for those who are living in peace and harmony....’’ Says the film’s co-producer Ramesh Pimple: ‘‘It is based entirely on ground realities and the narrative is interspersed with interviews.’’ Medha Patkar ends fast: BJP’s election in-charge in Madhya Pradesh Uma Bharti stands on a chair to match her height with the newly-inducted Union minister Prahlad Patel during a photo session in Bhopal on Friday. Ajit urges farmers to defeat BJP, allies TIMES NEWS NETWORK Meerut: Former Union agriculture minister Ajit Singh expressed his annoyance over his ouster from the Central cabinet and exhorted farmers of western UP to frustate all attempts by the BJP and its allies to return to power in the Centre after next year’s Lok Sabha polls. Addressing his first farmers’ rally on Friday in his Parliamentary constituency after his dismissal from the Cabinet, Singh said the BJP’s days in most big states were numbered. Narmada Bachao Andolan leader Medha Patkar on Friday ended her seven-day indefinite fast demanding rehabilitation of tribals affected by the Sardar Sarovar Project, after the Maharashtra government accepted all their demands. PTI He clarified that factionalism within the central unit of the party on the leadership issue, attempt to revive the Ayodhya to derive mileage and fear of trying to repeat Modi’s experiment in states like UP may contribute to the party’s setback in the polls. ‘‘Voters are aware of their tricks to garner support and they are no longer going to be befooled,’’ he said. The RLD chief made it clear that the senior party leaders in the state, with the help of the Samajwad Party, Congress and RKP were trying to oust the government. Topple Maya mission is on Mulayam meets Kalyan TIMES NEWS NETWORK Lucknow: In an apparent move to chalk out the Opposition strategy to topple the Mayawatiled government in Uttar Pradesh, Samajwadi Party supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav held a closed-door meeting here with Rashtriya Kranti Party president Kalyan Singh on Thursday night. ‘‘We held detailed discussions on Thursday night about the Opposition’s plan to topple the corrupt Mayawati government. We will meet again on Sunday to give a final shape to the plan,’’ Kalyan Singh said. Singh said that Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) leader Ajit Singh and Congress leader Jagdambika Pal were likely to attend the proposed meeting. The Mayawati-led government is ‘‘already running on life support system and its days are numbered’’, he said, adding that after the withdrawal of support of the 14-member RLD, the government had been reduced to a minority. With the 14-member RLD withdrawing support and Congress, with 16 members supporting the Opposition move, the Mayawati govern- ment has been reduced to a minority, Singh said. Moreover, he said, there are over two dozen BJP legislators, who are ‘‘ready to cross the floor’’. ‘‘They are in touch with me and will act at the right moment,’’ he said. Meanwhile, with the BJP dissidents being assured of ministerial berths, following the return of chief minister Mayawati from her sojourn abroad, the focus has once again shifted on the Independents, whose support is proving crucial for both the ruling coalition and the Opposition combine. With the opposition strength going up to around 214, the RKP president said chief minister Mayawati should either step down or convene a session of the House to prove her majority. Singh also hoped that governor Vishnu Kant Shatri and Speaker K N Tripathi would hold the dignity of their office and not fail in discharging their constitutional responsibilities and obligations. The RKP president said inner discontent in the BJP was on the rise and the number of the dissidents had increased to over 30. SP is trying to buy MLAs, says Katiyar TIMES NEWS NETWORK Lucknow: Launching the second leg of his jan jagran yatra from Kushinagar in eastern UP, BJP state president Vinay Katiyar charged the Samajwadi Party leaders with using money-bags to buy ruling alliance MLAs to pull down the BJP-BSP coalition government. Katiyar began the second leg of his yatra after offering prayers to Lord Buddha. Addressing the gathering, there was a conspiracy to throw the state back into political turmoil. He charged the SP with being behind this move to destabilise the Mayawati govern- ment. ‘‘The SP is making frantic attempts to bring down the government. Several crores have been offered to woo MLAs for forging defections. But they could not succeed in their attempts. The government is firmly in the saddle and would thwart the Opposition’s bid to destabilise the government,’’ he said. Speaking on the occasion, BJP leader Lalji Tandon too claimed that there was no threat to the government from the opposition unity. ‘‘They have been involved in such activities from the day this government came to the power,’’ Tandon said. TOID70603/CR2/07/M/1 TOID70603/CR2/07/C/1 TOID70603/CR2/07/K/1 TOID70603/CR2/07/Y/1 CMYK 7 OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK 8 INDIA Saturday, June 7, 2003 Nitish admits need to improve rail safety Purnia: Railway minister Nitish Kumar on Friday conceded the urgent need for improving the overall railway safety system in order to restore passengers’ confidence. The minister said in all, 14,000 km of railway tracks, which had become wornout, outdated and therefore accident-prone, needed to be changed urgently. So far 5,000 km of such tracks had been changed. The railways proposed to complete the process by the financial year 2006-07, he maintained. Kumar, wo accompanied the PM to Nirmali for the inauguration of a rail bridge, shared the anxiety of the people over the spurt in derailment. TNN RSS opposes reservation for Muslims TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The RSS has reservations about BJP president Venkaiah Naidu’s advocacy of reservation for Muslims, an announcement he had made at the recent BJP rally in Rampur. RSS spokesperson Ram Madhav said on Friday that the economically and socially backward Muslims are already included in the list of OBCs. Further, he stressed that after long debtaes in the Constituent Assembly, it was decided that only SCs and STs should be granted reservation. He underlined the fact that it was felt at the time that it was the separate Muslim electorates created by the British in India that had led to Partition. Madhav said that there was need for a national debate on the subject before rushing into more reservations. The Times of India, New Delhi PTI Neighbours cannot be changed: PM By Sachchidanand Jha TIMES NEWS NETWORK Nirmali/Supaul (Bihar): The Prime Minister on Friday said India had no choice but to be on friendly terms with Pakistan. ‘‘You cannot change your neighbours,’’ he remarked on the occasion of laying the foundation stone for the Rs 323 crore Koshi Mega Rail Bridge. While admitting that there had been a decline in cross-border terrorism, the Prime Minister put a rider on further Indo-Pak interaction. ‘‘Dialogue with Pakistan cannot be initiated until murder of innocent people by terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir is stopped completely,’’ he said. The occasion was momentous for the people of Mithilanchal. Not only did Vajpayee lay the foundation stone for the Koshi Mega Rail Bridge which had been washed away about 70 years ago, he said he would initiate measures to include Maithili in the 8th Schedule of the Constitution. The demand for including Maithili in the 8th schedule has been on for over 40 years in the region. Vajpayee said Mithilanchal was virtually cut into two parts when the bridge on the Kosi was washed away. He hoped the bridge would reunite Mithilanchal and bring progress and prosperity to the region. The bridge made by the British over Kosi river had been washed away in 1934. This meant trains had to terminate at Nirmali and people had to take a 290 km road to reach the other side of Supaul district. Vajpayee arrived here at around 4 pm from Purnea airforce base, an hour behind the scheduled time. He was accompanied by several Union ministers including George Fernades, Nitish Kumar, Sharad Yadav. Bihar chief minister Rabri Devi was also present on the occasion and addressed the meeting. As Sipaul was inaccessible by road, the railways had to run a special train to carry its officials and reporters to the spot. This is the first time a Prime Minister has addressed a meeting in this remote corner of Bihar. Son of slain Jarnail Singh Bhinderawala, Ishar Singh (centre), at the Akal Takhat after he was honoured with a ‘shiropa’ by the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabhandhak Committee on Friday. Naidu swears by Vajpayee TIMES NEWS NETWORK Kolkata/Guwahati: BJP’s national president Venkaiah Naidu on Friday made it clear that Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee was the number one man, both in the BJP and in the NDA government and Deputy Prime minister L K Advani was his number two. On two different occasions during the day, the BJP president denied there was any difference within the party over leadership, and laid the entire blame for the ‘‘confusion’’ at the door of the media. ‘‘Sab theek hai bhayya (Everything is all right). We are enjoying the fun. There was confusion in the minds of a section of the media,’’ he said. The BJP would fight the next elections with Prime Minister Vajpayee as the leader, Naidu asserted in reply to questions at the Kolkata airport where he touched down briefly on his way to Guwahati from Delhi. ‘‘Vajpayeeji ka naam aur Vajpayeeji ka kaam (the name and performance of Vajpayee),’’ he replied, when asked how the BJP planned to fight the next election. ‘‘Advani is number two in party and government. Everybody knows that he is the deputy prime minister,’’ he quipped. ‘‘There is no confusion about the leadership of Vajpayee. He is our Prime Minister and evberyone is supporting him.’’ PTI Finalists of the Miss North India pageant pose for a photo session in Lucknow on Friday. Maharashtra Bar Council denies ‘listing’ By Swati Deshpande TIMES NEWS NETWORK Mumbai: The Bar Council of Maharashtra and Goa has denied that it gave its parent body a list of high court judges whose relatives practise in the same court. The Bar Council of India recently released a list of several high court judges whose relatives were said to be practising in the same court. The list included the names of five Bombay High Court judges. The State Bar Council on Friday shot off an angry letter to the Bar Council of India seeking an explanation and the source of its information. The central council had asked the Chief Justice of India to transfer these judges, failing which it threatened to take action against their relatives. Bar council rules prevent judges’ relatives from practising in the same court. ‘‘I was surprised to see the list issued by the Bar Council of India, especially since we had not passed information about any judge to it,’’ said Rajiv Patil, the vice-chairperson of the State Bar Council. He added that the central council should not have released the list without consulting the state body. The details on the list are incorrect, Patil said. For example, despite the list stating so, Justice Dhananjay Chandrachud’s wife does not practise in the high court. In addition, Justice HL Gokhale’s son does not appear before his father. Justice Ajit Shah of the Bombay High Court, whose nephew was mentioned as practising in the same court, said, ‘‘The person named in the list is a very distant relative. He does not practise in the courts I am presiding over.’’ Justice Shah’s daughter is also a lawyer, but she doesn’t practise in the high court. His wife, Swati, who got her licence to practice two years before he was appointed a judge in 1992, now works with a voluntary organisation. A high court judge observed that many judges in Mumbai did not take up matters involving relatives or lawyers who once worked under them. Patil of the State Bar Council said that he had raised the matter with the vicechairperson of the central council but had not received a satisfactory reply. He was now waiting for a written response from the apex body before chalking out the course of action. TOID70603/CR1/08/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/08/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/08/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/08/Y/1 CMYK OID ‰ ‰ † ‰‹ CMK INDIA The Times of India, New Delhi INDIA DIGEST PTI Another firm eyes Bt cotton market By Chandrika Mago TIMES NEWS NETWORK A 36-feet stone statue of ‘Pancha Mukha Anjaneyar’, stated to be the tallest in the country, is to be installed in Pondicherry shortly. More than 30 sculptors worked on it for nearly two years. New SSB chief: Director-general of civil defence B L Vohra has been asked to hold additional charge of the Special Service Bureau (SSB) following the retirement of SSB D-G, V K Malik. SSB personnel are deployed along the Indo-Nepal border. The force was recently asked to man the Indo-Bhutan border also. TNN Four militants held: Security forces have arrested four activists of militant outfit Harkat-ul-Mujahideen in Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir, police sources said on Friday. Acting on a tip-off, troops raided a hideout and arrested the four from Surankote forest belt of the district on Thursday night. PTI New Delhi: Transgenic cotton is trying to spread its wings — legally and illegally. A second firm has knocked on the doors of the government, hoping for a toehold in the Bt cotton market even as the authorities struggle to put systems in place to evaluate such crops. And, Mahyco Monsanto, the only company legally entitled to sell seeds of three Bt cotton hybrids in south and central India, has formally complained to the Union government about illegal seed production in Gujarat. It has given names of some farmers, villages and companies reportedly marketing transgenic seed. It has even sent across seed packets to the government as proof. J K Seeds, another company hoping to enter this market, is also learnt to have complained verbally. Both are making the same point: They are taking the legal route of trials and approvals and would like the government to act against those who are not. The Centre is yet to decide what to do. So, when the Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC), an interministerial body of officials and experts, meets on June 13, it will have before it three issues on genetically-modified crops: A report on possible monitoring mechanisms for seed production, distribution, quality control and performance; illegal production of GM seed; and an application from a second firm, Rasi Seeds, for Bt cotton hybrids meant for south and central India. Illegal production essentially makes a mockery of any attempt to regulate this new — some say dangerous — technology. In the case of cotton, a bacterial gene is introduced to make cotton resistant to the deadly bollworm pest and reduce pesticide use. Some suggestions on monitoring from a committee chaired by agriculture ministry joint secretary A Bahuguna: • On seed production, the company should tell states about locations, area and estimated quantity; quantity should be verified at the processing plant by seed inspectors. • To ensure quality control, the company must give states details of seed dealers and advance notice of delivery to enable random checks before the seed is distributed. Random checks should be on 0.1 per cent of the total seed. • If these checks don’t find the transgenic gene, the consignment should be impounded. If seed has already been distributed, farmers may approach consumer courts for compensation. • The Central Institute of Cotton Research (CICR) has sampling kits to test for the transgenic gene; it has trained some state officials and offered to train more. It may also be notified as the referral lab to test for the transgenic gene. • States should set up monitoring committees at the state and district levels. Bt cotton fields should also be classified according to type of area — irrigated, rain-fed, drought-prone. Bt cotton’s performance should be compared to its nonBt cotton counterpart in what is termed the refuge area. ‘Confused desi’ scores again By Ruchika Mehta TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Enter the age of the Gwen Stefani-bindi, Starbuck’s chai, Ganesha handbags, Krishna t-shirts and Bend It Like Beckham. India is hot and happening. While the West is raving about India, yet another American desi, Tanuja Desai Hidier, rides the wave with her bestseller debut book Born Confused making it to the Larry King ‘Pick of the Week’. Born Confused was published to critical acclaim in the United States and received rave reviews from the international press. The book gets its title from the phrase American Born Confused Desi (ABCD), a slang for Indian Americans. Hidier was born and raised in Massachusetts and is currently a vocalist for a British melodic rock band. So how was Born Confused born? ‘‘The Indian-American coming-ofage story was one I would have liked to have had on hand while growing up. So, I knew that one day I wanted to get a desi heroine on the book shelves,’’ said Hidier from her home in Notting Hill. Hidier felt she was pressured to write the book a few years ago, when being Indian was ‘‘hot’’. This stressed her out, because she felt she was not Indian enough. ‘‘It was only when I accepted the complexity of a viable culture that exists in the spaces between things, that I could really get Born Confused out,’’ she added. Set in the context of a largely burgeoning South Asian club scene, Born Confused is essentially a story about an ABCD female protagonist, Dimple Lala, her camera and the Saturday, June 7, 2003 Andhra fishing for asthma cure TIMES NEWS NETWORK R Burman Hyderabad: The fisheries department has cast its nets to ensure adequate supply of murrel fish in the city on June 8 and 9 to meet the demand from asthma patients expected to converge in Hyderabad for the Bathini brothers’ fish medicine. Due to the drought conditions in the state the fish breeding facilities have been affected. Faced with a shortage of the fish in the state, the fisheries department here has stretched its search for murrel to West Bengal, Karnataka and Maharashtra. Not having succeeded in getting the fish from West Bengal and Karnataka, offiTRAIN TO HOPE: Asthma sufferers off to Hyderabad for the mysterious ‘fish medicine.’ cials are hoping adequate supplies will arrive by Sat- ever, the supplies here could also called for tenders from lected from select breeding urday from Nanded. not meet the demand for private parties to supply the pools in Nalgonda, MahbubOfficials also tried to get fish for the Bathini broth- murrel, but has received no nagar, Khammam, Karimfish from Kolkata and ers’ asthma medicine. response. nagar, Adilabad, NizamRaichur in Karnataka, howThe fisheries department Murrel has also been col- abad and Medak. Goa to turn India’s Cannes New Delhi: If France can have its Cannes, why should India lag behind? So, the government has decided to make Goa a permanent venue for the annual film festival from next year. The idea of a permanent venue for the annual International Film Festival of India (IFFI) has been a subject of discussion in the film industry, the Goa government and the Centre ever since the authorities had to postpone the festival a few years ago. Karnataka, the state where it was to be held, backed out at the last moment. Official representatives from Goa visited Cannes during the annual film festival this summer. TNN complication of her relationships because of conflicting cultures. ‘‘I see a lot of myself in Dimple, when I first went to Brown University at the age of 20. Not Indian enough to be Indian and not American enough to be American,’’ Hidier said. This theme of first and second generation India, and of finding their place in America, figures prominently in much of Hidier’s other works as well. On why she chose Indian diaspora as her favourite subject Hidier said, ‘‘There just seems to be this sudden explosion of the second generation American going out there, and ‘doing it’. Now South Asian culture in America is going into its third generation.’’ What’s next? ‘‘A soundtrack of original songs based on Born Confused. At some point I want to make Dimple Lala’s story in to a movie.’’ TOID70603/CR1/09/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/09/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/09/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/09/Y/1 CMYK 9 OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK 10 INDIA Saturday, June 7, 2003 The Times of India, New Delhi AFP Freedom storm brews in PoK By Bisheshwar Mishra TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The peace process initiated by India has given a fresh momentum to the movement of the people in PoK to free themselves from the yoke of Pakistan’s military dictatorship, intelligence sources here indicated. They said this movement is being spearheaded jointly by the All-Parties National Alliance (APNA), the GilgitBaltistan National Alliance (GBNA) and other political groups. These organisations have also raised their voice against cross-border terrorism being aided and abetted by the military regime in Pakistan. APNA, GBNA, the Jammu and Kashmir National Awami Party (JKNAP) and several Kashmir-based political organisations have welcomed the latest IndoPak peace initiative of Prime Minister Vajpayee and hoped that it would lead to the resolution of the Kashmir issue. At the same time, the Kashmiri leaders have demanded that ‘‘the core party in the dispute, the people of Jammu and Kashmir, should have full representation in the process through genuine representatives’’. APNA had organised a ‘‘black day’’ on April 28 for it was on this day they said that ‘Karachi Agreement’ was signed between Pakistan and that of the socalled ‘‘Azad’’ Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) government in 1949. Following this agreement, Gilgit-Baltistan, the so-called Northern Areas, which are geographically and historically part of Jammu and Kashmir, were given to Pakistan by the puppet rulers of AJK. The sources said that the participation of the general public in various civilian protest programmes has increased since then. Early this month, the JKNAP had organised an international convention which was at- tended by APNA leaders from PoK. ‘‘Speakers at the convention expressed their dissatisfaction with the political, economic, constitutional and legal system introduced by Pakistan in the PoK and the Northern Areas,’’ the intelligence sources added. The sources quoted the speakers at the convention as saying that there was no ‘‘sign of democracy, no economic and social justice, no constitution and no rule of law whatsoever throughout Pakistan and in its extensions, wherever they are, be it ‘Azad Kashmir’ or the Northern Areas. Everything is subservient to the needs of the armed forces, especially a tiny minority in the forces. This minority in the armed forces is a law unto itself.’’ Sources say the speakers demanded that Pakistan’s armed forces be brought under a democratically-elected defence minister like other democratic countries. ‘OIC resolution on J&K irrelevant’ TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: India on Friday termed as ‘‘irrelevant’’ the resolution on Jammu and Kashmir adopted by the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC), saying, ‘‘No importance should be attached to this annual charade by Pakistan.’’ Referring to the proceedings of the OIC foreign ministers’ meeting in Teheran, an external affairs ministry spokesman said, ‘‘We have said on earlier occasions also that the OIC has no locus standi in matters concerning India’s internal affairs. We, therefore, reject all such irrelevant resolutions and statements.’’ The resolution, as has been the case year after year, accuses Indian security forces of committing atrocities on civilians in J&K. Dawood’s kin in politics?: Police have got reports that Iqbal Hassan Kaskar, younger brother of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and incarcerated accused in a case of alleged extortion, was desperately trying to become the member of a political party. ‘‘We have come across such information and are analysing it. We shall certainly pre-empt such move and foil Iqbal’s attempts to enter the political arena,’’ a police officer said here on Friday. PTI A fisherman awaits a catch on a platform in Bhopal on Friday. Fernandes: MiG 21 will not be grounded By Bhuvaneshwar Prasad TIMES NEWS NETWORK Purnia: Defence minister George Fernandes on Friday categorically denied the possibility of grounding MiG 21 in spite of the outcry against them. Fernandes, who is accompanying the Prime Minister to Purnia asserted that the MiG 21 was the ‘‘mainstay of Indian air defence’’. ‘‘Its worthiness and efficacy had been proven over the years,’’ he said. Taking to reporters at the Purnia circuit house, he said that contrary to public perception and what was being published in newspapers, the useful- ness of M i G s h a d been est a b lished m o r e n o w t h a n when it was inFernandes t r o duced 20 years ago. When questioned about Pakistan asking why India was not doing anything to thwart cross-border terrorism on its side, he ridiculed Pakistan’s insinuation and asserted that it was the outcome of sustained campaign on India’s part. He said more and more terrorists were being felled and that level of cross-border terrorism had come down lately. Asked about his volteface vis-a-vis China whom he once said was India’s number one enemy, George Fernandes said though India and China became free at around the same time, China was two and a half times more prosperous and was likely to become number one power by 2020 and as such it would never be advisable to ignore this giant economic power. He said the Prime Minister’s five-day tour of China would only further strengthen our age-old ties with the country. India signs a Sukhoi deal TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: With India planning to begin indigenous production of the Sukhoi-30MKIs within two years, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) has signed a $ 300-million deal with Russian company Stankoimport for the supply of equipment to produce the fourth-generation fighters at its Nasik plant. Defence ministry officials say the Indo-Russian collaboration will be for the licensed production of 140 SU-30MKIs at Nasik, along with ‘‘additional engines and sets of aggregates to cater to the lifetime exploitation of the aircrafts’’. As part of the overall $ 3.5-billion contract signed in December 2000, the IAF had already inducted a squadron of these multirole air dominance fighters to the Pune airbase last year. In all, 32 SU-30MKIs manufactured in Russia will join the IAF in a phased manner by next year. The 18 SU-30s, already in the IAF since 1997, will also be eventually upgraded to SU-30MKIs (‘I’ stands for India). The twin-seater SU30MKIs, which are capable of undertaking both strike and air defence missions, will form a crucial part of the IAF’s warwaging potential for over a decade since the indigenous Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) programme continues to be dogged by time-overruns. Doon murders: A security guard, his son and daughter-inlaw were gunned down by two of the girl’s close relatives and their friends on Friday morning in Mussoorie. One of the assailants is in police custody with firearms, while the others are yet to be arrested. The girl’s father has also been taken into custody for interrogation. DIG Anil Raturi said the By Srikala Bhashyam main motive appears to be girl’s TIMES NEWS NETWORK marriage which was against her fathers wishes as the boy was Bangalore: Investment and money from a lower caste. TNN have been the fancy of bigger cities like Mumbai and Delhi. But Bangalore seems to have changed the equation. Today, Bangalore is ‘‘a city of crorepatis’’ with as many as 500 to 600 of them. No, we are not talking about paper crorepatis — those who have their money largely in stock options. We are talking about individuals who are sitting with hard, investible cash of Rs one crore and above. And the list goes far beyond the IT barons Azim Premji and Narayana Murthy - who have already made it to the international rich list — and those in the tech sector. These are people who can be found across industry segments and live across the city — from Chickpet to Jayanagar to Koramangala. T Srikanth Bhagavat, managing director of Hexagon Capital Advisors, a company engaged in portfolio management, says: ‘‘It is not just the tech guys who have a crore in their kitty because of e-sops (employee stock options). ‘‘There are small businessmen like traders and cloth merchants, and professionals in the non-tech sector too.’’ Bhagavat says his company’s research indicates there are, at least, 500 people in Bangalore with investible cash of Rs one crore or more. What’s more, Bangalore is seen to have the potential to expand this list of crorepatis rapidly, as nearly 1,000 to 1,200 individuals are understood to be sitting with a surplus cash Rs 50 lakh-75 lakh. ‘‘These guys have the potential to increase it to a crore in the next one to two years,’’ says Krishna Mohan, vice-president of Sprism Securities, another company looking at portfolio management. Bangalore has around 500 crorepatis TOID70603/CR1/10/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/10/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/10/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/10/Y/1 CMYK OID ‰ ‰ † CMK INDIA The Times of India, New Delhi Saturday, June 7, 2003 Jinnah’s house all set for a revamp Mansion may get a cultural centre, a library and an exhibition hall By Vaishnavi C Sekhar TIMES NEWS NETWORK Mumbai: Mohammed Ali Jinnah’s house in Malabar Hill, lying empty for over two decades, may finally come to life again. The Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), which took over the house in 1997, has decided to convert the mansion into a cultural centre, complete with a library and an exhibition hall. It may also include a performance areas and a small permanent exhibit on Jinnah, said ICCR regional director Terence D’Souza. D’Souza said the plans were still at a preliminary stage. He said the Central Public Works Department had been asked to prepare a proposal and a feasibility report in this regard. The government of India will fund the project, he added. The decision comes after years of controversy. Pakistan has repeatedly asked pushed its case to occupy the mansion to house their consul general — most recently when Pakistan President Gen Pervez Musharraf visited India in 2001. Sources reveal that even Jawaharlal Nehru wanted this. In 1955, after it was declared evacuee property and taken over by the Rehabilitation Ministry, he had suggested that it should be neither sold nor auctioned but gifted to the Pakistan gov- ‘River-linking won’t harm environment’ TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Environmental and sociological concerns will be kept in mind while formulating the terms of reference for the project reports on the river-linking plan. This was stated by Radha Singh, director-general of the National Water Development Agency (NWDA). The task force on the riverlinking plan, headed by former Union minister Suresh Prabhu, has been busy over the last few months doing spadework for the mega-project. However, experts and environmentalists have been voicing concern about the ecological impact of the plan as also the large number of people who will be displaced. The NWDA is the agency entrusted with the task of preparing both, the pre-feasibility and feasibility reports for each of the 30 links that have been proposed under the river-linking plan. So far, it has completed pre-feasibility studies for all, and feasibility studies for eight of the links. Denying charges that the project is being rushed through, Singh said there is no reason for such apprehensions. As for fears that the project will have huge environmental and sociological impact with large-scale displacement, Singh said, ‘‘An Promises • NWDA will make feasibility reports for 30 links • Environmental impact assessment will be done for each link • Those displaced will be rehabilitated environmental impact assessment will be done for each of the links.’’ Singh also promised that apart from the environment and forest ministry’s clearance norms, concerns expressed by other quarters will also be addressed. It will also be ensured that those who will be displaced by the project are given their due and rehabilitated before work begins. The environment ministry has already made available a list of areas where studies for ecological impact will have to be done. Singh also maintained that in the case of several of the proposed links, the riverlinking proposal will only be trying to give a push to projects that have been in the pipeline for many years, even decades. ‘‘These dams have been on the anvil for years....So what is wrong if we string them together for the river-linking project?’’ she asked. ernment, to be used as a memorial. However, subsequent governments did not favour this. One reason being its proximity to the chief minister’s bungalow — directly opposite Mt Pleasant Road. Security concerns are definitely worrying officials but D’Souza they will hold parleys with the state government officials to work out the arrangements. It was built in 1939 and designed by Claude Batley. Jinnah was involved in the finest details of its construction, from the Italian marble tiles to the walnut woodwork. It was in this house, now hidden by overgrown grass and padlocked gates, that Police get nothing from Shetty TIMES NEWS NETWORK Surat: Actress Shilpa Shetty’s father Surendra Shetty, who was later joined by his wife Sunanda, was interrogated by the city police at Umra police station on Friday. However, the interrogators following the case were left exasperated. Senior police officials are planning to summon him for another round of grilling in a few days. Sources say Shetty was not co-operating on matters relating to his alleged contact with the gangsters. Shetty was interrogated by the investigating official B V Ramani. Additional comissioner of police Ashish Bhatia said Shetty was not forthcoming on matters pertaining to the underworld connection. ‘‘It is possible that he will be summoned again,’’ Bhatia said. As per the Gujarat High Court order on Tuesday, Surendra made himself available for interrogation by the police officials who are investigating the allegation that Shetty hired gangsters to recover payment of an ad film for Prafful in which Shilpa had been featured. the famous talks between Jinnah and Mahatma Gandhi in September 1944 were conducted. Till around 1983, it housed the British deputy high commissioner, after which it passed into the hands of the Central Public Works Department, who wanted to build high-rises there. Naturally, heritage activists are dismayed that the same organisation is in charge of the project. ‘‘The department is known for its ham-handedness,’’ says Intach convenor Tasleen Mehta. However, D’Souza says that the department will consult the heritage committee and ensure that regulations are followed. On the whole, heritage activists are cautiously enthusiastic. ‘‘As long as they don’t compromise on the external or internal architecture, it’s a good idea,’’ says Mehta. Agrees Neera Adarkar, architect and member of the Pak-India People’s Forum, ‘‘Giving it for official use would have made it inaccessible to people.’’ Adarkar suggests that a part of the centre be given for Pakistan culture studies. ‘‘There is a dearth of material on Pakistan, all we get to hear is about military equipment and politics, but this is an opportunity to showcase their music, art and culture.’’ Ran from home, waited at tables, topped boards By Ramu Bhagwat TIMES NEWS NETWORK Nagpur: It was a day of many pleasant surprises for the parents of Prasad Akkanouri. On Thursday, not only did their two-year-old search for their son who ran away from home end, they also learnt that Prasad topped the state education board’s Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) examination in the arts stream. He had been working here as a waiter all the while. Prasad says the desire to ‘‘achieve something in life’’ made him run away from home. He’s from Bothi village, Chakur taluka, of Osmanabad district, hundreds of miles from here. Poverty wasn’t the reason: His father has a substantial agricultural holding and his brother has a grocery store; Another has a job in Latur city. After passing his class X exam with 68 per cent marks, he was made to, against his wishes, enroll in an electrician’s training course. He knew he was capable of more and so, he says, he walked out of a factory job and took a train to Mumbai. Only to find himself ill at ease in that metropolis. A day later, he took the train to Nagpur. For two days he starved at the railway platform, having spent all his money. Then he steadied himself and took a waiter’s job. And put aside money to re-enroll himself. He joined the local R S Mundle Daharampeth Arts and Commerce College. For over two years, all ties with family were frozen, as Prasad singlemindedly focussed on his studies, renting a small place which he had to share with others. The outcome: 86.5 per cent marks. When news spread, he revealed his story. And his family, who had almost given him up for dead, heard of it through media reports. And next in the line of Prasad’s c h a l lenges is the IAS examin a tion. New states free to recruit as they wish: SC TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The newly created states can make their own recommendations for state Public Service Commission appointments and are not bound by what their parent states had decided earlier. The Supreme Court said keeping in view the Constitutional provisions, particularly section 78(4) of the State Reorganisation Act, the recommendations of the UP Public Service Commission to give appointments to candidates selected by it are not binding on the state of Uttaranchal. A Bench of Justices Shivaraj V Patil and Arijit Pasayat set aside an Uttaranchal HC directive to the new state to give effect to the UPPSC’s recommendations and appoint the selected candidates. But the court placed a rider on the implementation of its ruling considering the plight of the selected candi- dates. It said this judgment would not come in the way of UP if it wanted to consider the claims of the selected candidates. It also said that if the selected candidates applied for posts before the Uttaranchal Public Service Commission or the UPPSC in the next three years, the upper age limit could be relaxed suitably to allow them to appear for the test. The UPPSC had selected junior engineers for the hill cadre on January 4, 2000, and sent its recommendations to the UP government on October 30, 2000, 10 days before the new state of Uttaranchal was created. But the Uttaranchal government had refused to appoint any of the candidates selected for the hill cadre by the UPPSC saying the report of the UPPSC was never placed before its legislative assembly, which was mandatory under the Constitution. Allowing the Uttaranchal government’s appeal challenging the high court order, the Bench rejected the court’s finding that the reasoning given by the Uttaranchal government was invalid. 11 China gets more kits to fight SARS TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The defence ministry on Friday gifted an additional consignment of 249 cartons of SARS preventive kits, worth Rs 1 crore, to the Chinese embassy here. Defence ministry officials say each box contains double-layered nasal masks, paracetamol, celin, azithromycin and other ‘‘preventive medicines to arrest the spread of SARS’’. The cartons have been supplied by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and the Armed Forces Medical Services. Defence minister George Fernandes had earlier gifted 17 such cases to the Chinese ambassador, Hua Jun Duo, on returning from his ‘‘successful’’ visit to China a month ago. Strongly debunking his image as a ‘‘Chinabaiter’’, Fernandes says the theme throughout his visit was that ‘‘all problems have a solution’’, even the complicated border dispute to delineate the 4,057km-long Line of Actual Control. Cop dismissed for custodial deaths M Saleem Pandit TIMES NEWS NETWORK Explosives seized in J&K: The BSF on Friday morning seized about 25 kg of RDX before it could reach Hizbul Mujahideen militants. The RDX together with a timer, five detonators and Cordex wire was recovered. TNN Tourists flock to Kashmir: With the improvement of the situation in Jammu and Kashmir, a large number of domestic tourists have flocked to the Valley to escape the scorching heat of the plains.TNN Srinagar: The state government has dismissed a deputy superintendent of police allegedly responsible, in 1999, for the deaths of three people in custody. The officer, Abdul Rashid Khan, has been absconding for more than three years, to evade a court summons. In addition, the government confirmed in the state assembly on Friday, that investigations have been ordered against 53 personnel of the police’s erstwhile Special Operations Group, on charges of human rights violation. The three men had been arrested by Khan, then the DSP at Hazratbal here, while they were returning from a marriage party. Their bodies were recovered from different places. A case was registered by the police against the DSP TOID70603/CR2/11/M/1 TOID70603/CR2/11/C/1 TOID70603/CR2/11/K/1 TOID70603/CR2/11/Y/1 CMYK and the chief judicial magistrate issued a summons in November 1999. Khan has been missing since then. A formal dismissal order has been issued by the state’s director-general of police, on a charge of ‘absconding and continued unauthorised absence from duty with effect from November 27, 1999,’ said an official spokesman on Friday. Earlier, the police authorities had cancelled the allotment of official accommodation to Khan. The statement on probes against 53 Special Operations Group personnel was made by minister Abdul Rahman Veeri in response to a question raised on the subject. He said that the government has received around 49 complaints on atrocities allegedly committed by the personnel in question. OID ‰ ‰ † CMK 12 I N T E R N AT I O N A L Saturday, June 7, 2003 Earth older than we thought Washington: The Earth became a major planetary body much earlier than previously believed, just 10 million years after the birth of the sun, researchers say. Experts now believe that the inner solar system planets — Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars — actually began forming within 10,000 years after the nuclear fires of the sun were ignited about 4.5 billion years ago, says Stein B Jacobsen, author of an analysis appearing Friday in the journal Science. Early in its life, the sun was surrounded by clouds of dust and gas. This material slowly clumped together into larger and larger pieces. Eventually, enough was concentrated in four bodies to form the inner solar system planets. Within 10 million years, the Earth had reached about 64 percent of its present size and was the dominant planetary body within 93 million miles of the sun. Mercury and Venus orbit closer to the sun and Mars is farther out. The final major event in the formation of the Earth, says Jacobsen, was probably the collision with a Marssized planetary body. This huge smashup added many millions of tons of material to the Earth. Some material also went into orbit of the Earth and evolved into the moon. This massive collision, the final major event in the Earth’s formation, is thought to have happened about 30 million years after the sun was born. An earlier analysis of some chemical isotopes in the Earth’s crust had concluded that the planet formed about 50 million years after the sun. But Jacobsen said a reinterpretation of the data, along with new measurements of chemicals in some types of meteorites, supports the conclusion that Earth’s basic formation came much earlier. AP Reuters Supercomputer for weather work New York: America’s most powerful supercomputer for weather forecasting goes online Friday, IBM said, a machine that may eventually rival the Japanese Earth Simulator as the world’s fastest supercomputer. The new computer, with a theoretical peak computing power of 7.3 trillion operations a second, is expected to be enhanced over the next few years, and it may reach speeds up to 100 trillion operations a second by 2009. The government will use the new computer to improve the accuracy of weather forecasts, particularly to help predict the path of hurricanes three to five days in advance, provid ing additional time to prepare for the storms. The National Weather Service plans to spend more than $200 million on the IBM system. NYT News Service Iglesias denies marrying Kournikova Mexico City: Pop star Enrique Iglesias denied he and tennis star Anna Kournikova had tied the knot, and the Spanish singer said he might marry later in life but for now was “just practicing,” Reforma reported. “I am not planning on getting married yet. I think I will when I am 35 or 40, but I could not say that I will for certain,” Iglesias, 28, told the Mexican daily from Miami. “It is hard to trust people because there are more barriers between you and other people, you are more guarded, a bit more careful about your life,” he added. Some British press reports had indicated Iglesias had secretly wed Kournikova after a lengthy courtship. Asked about children, Iglesias — a Madrid-born, Miami-bred son of Spanish crooner Julio Iglesias — said “I am still a kid, and I am still too young to have a kid. I am not talking about age, but about mindset; I am not ready yet. I am too immature to have them.” He quipped: “I am just practicing.” AFP Why boys are bigger at birth Harvard University Law School graduates mock the reputation of their profession by waving inflatable sharks after receiving their degrees at Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Thursday. BRICKBATS Since you won’t stop this strip, I’ve stopped reading TOI. — Manu Where are all the nit-wits who can’t start their days without Dubyaman? Why aren’t they writing any more? To me, the fan mail was the only funny thing about this strip. Have TOI got them off its payroll? — Shernaz Lala, Bangalore For bouquets go to www.timesofindia.com e-mail: [email protected] Get your own stamp: Soon you can have your photo on stamps, at least in Finland. London: Swedish and American researchers have solved the puzzle of why baby boys are so much bigger at birth than girls —their mothers eat more during pregnancy. Women carrying male embryos consume about 10 percent more calories, eight percent more protein and have a higher intake of carbohydrates and animal and vegetable fats, according to research published on Friday. “It is widely accepted that on average newborn boys are heavier than newborn girls. The findings give us a better understanding of why that is the case,” said Rulla Tamimi, an epidemiologist at the Harvard School of Public Health. Reuters The Times of India, New Delhi AROUND THE WORLD AP No, minister: British Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott has unwittingly stolen the headlines after he appeared to make a crude gesture at journalists as he arrived for a crucial cabinet meeting. Prescott, who once punched a protester while on an election campaign, was pictured raising his hand behind his back to give a ‘‘Vsign’’ — a two-fingered insulting gesture — as he arrived for a vital meeting to discuss whether the country should join the European single currency. ‘‘Yob’’ declared the Daily Mirror above a photograph of Prescott outside prime minister Tony Blair’s Downing Street office, while the Sun’s verdict was ‘‘The same two you, Prescott’’. AFP Arnie as governor? Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, long mentioned as a potential Republican candidate for governor, told Esquire magazine for its July issue: ‘‘Yes, I would love to be governor of California. If the state needs me, and if there’s no one I think is better, then I will run.’’ With Democratic Gov. Gray Davis facing a recall campaign that could result in a special gubernatorial election as early as fall, Arnie’s political ambitions could be expedited. AP Jagger’s lament: Mick Jagger, staring 60 in the face, lamented the lack of women’s lingerie thrown on stage at a Rolling Stones concert in Germany — but said a few pairs of men’s underpants were hurled from the crowd. Jagger, 59, said on Thursday there seemed to be fewer women in the crowd at the start of the European leg of the Rolling Stones ‘‘40 Licks’’ tour in Munich’s Olympia Hall on Wednesday. ‘‘It was all men,’’ Jagger said at a news con- In the hunt for the assassins of Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic, police have arrested popular folk singer Svetlana Raznatovic. She was taken into custody after police raided the home of her husband, late underworld boss Zeljko Raznatovic Arkan, and confiscated contraband weapons. ference, noting a lamentable absence of the lingerie that is normally thrown at the band from the audience. ‘‘I don’t know what that says,’’ Jagger said, laughing. ‘‘They left all the girls at home or whatever, I don’t know. Usually we get a few bits of underwear on the stage. Last night there were a few Y-fronts.’’ Reuters Sputnik sale goes high and crashes: An online auction to sell a ‘‘genuine’’ Madonna’s tryst with Viagra Washington: Madonna’s company Maverick Films wishes to make a film based on a true story of locals in the small town of Ringaskiddy, County Cork, made famous by Pfizer, the company that makes Viagra. Provisionally entitled Something In The Air, the film will be about locals going sex mad after breathing in fumes from the factory. According to PeopleNews, Madge plans to set the film in the US rather than Ireland. A rival company plans a similar film and are scouting for locations in the Emerald Isle. ANI model of the Sputnik satellite that launched the Space Age went sky high before crashing down to Earth when the bidding was determined to be a hoax, officials say. Bidding started at $25,000 and soon resembled a shower of ever bigger meteorites of money. Reuters Washington seeks 100,000 new residents: Not satisfied with one of the hottest real-estate markets in the country over the past few years, Washington, DC officials have launched a promotional campaign to help lure 100,000 new residents. The effort builds on a dramatic turnaround in the city’s liveability after decades of urban decline and population flight to the suburbs. ‘‘We’re looking for the people who think it’s neat when the motorcade goes by, that there’s neon bouncing off the sides of the buildings at 10 o’clock at night,’’ a spokesman for the deputy mayor said. Reuters Computer worm Seattle: A variant of the “Bugbear” worm, which spread around the Internet last October, has started to infect users around the world, putting them at risk of losing confidential information. The Bugbear variant is better at using addresses in a user’s e-mail programme, sending itself to those addresses using the infected user’s identity. Reuters TOID70603/CR1/12/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/12/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/12/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/12/Y/1 CMYK OID ‰ ‰ † CMK The Times of India, New Delhi Hamas calls off truce talks to end attacks on Israel Gaza: The militant Islamic group Hamas said on Friday it was breaking off talks with Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas on ending its attacks on Israelis in a strong challenge to peace pledges he made at a US-led summit. The announcement set Palestinian hardliners and Abbas’s new reformist government on a collision course likely to stoke fears of civil war. “We have stopped the dialogue with the Palestinian Authority,” Hamas founder and spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin said. “This is our choice and we have no alternative. (Armed) resistance will continue.” Reinforcing Yassin’s words, thousands of Hamas supporters staged rallies across the Gaza Strip on Friday vowing to continue attacks, including suicide bombings, against Israelis. Yassin said Abbas made unacceptable commitments at the landmark summit in Aqaba, Jordan, on Wednesday with US President Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in which they affirmed initial steps in a “road map” for peace. Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, called for demilitarisation of a 32-month-old Palestinian uprising for independence, effectively advocating an end to an armed struggle for a state. The road map calls for a halt to Israeli-Palestinian violence and reciprocal confidence-building steps, including a freeze of Jewish settlement expansion on occupied Arab land, leading to establishment of a Palestinian state in 2005. Yassin said Hamas was ending dialogue since Abbas ignored at the summit key issues like the right of return of Palestinian refugees to what is now Israel and the future of Jerusalem. Commenting on the Hamas move, Palestinian cabinet minister Ziad Abu Amr signalled Abbas would do his utmost to steer clear of armed conflict with the group. Reuters I N T E R N AT I O N A L Saturday, June 7, 2003 UN nuclear experts return to Iraq 13 AFP Reuters Baghdad: United Nations nuclear experts were returning to Iraq on Friday for the first time since the US-led invasion to check on looting at a research facility that may have caused radioactive contamination. Seven experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) were due to fly into a US military base from Kuwait at the start of a limited mission under tight US restrictions. A US military spokesman said the media would have no access to the team’s activities. Such was the secrecy that there was no word that the experts had actually landed. The IAEA team plans to begin work on Saturday at one part of the sprawling Tuwaitha compound, Iraq’s main nuclear facility, about 20 km southeast of Baghdad. “We have been disturbed about reports of looting and that these barrels that con- Air Force One, carrying US president Bush, flies over Baghdad on Thursday as he returns to Washington from Qatar. At least four FA-18 fighter jets accompanied Air Force One in Iraqi airspace as Bush took a first-hand-look at the Iraqi capital at about 31,000 feet altitude. tained natural and low-en“We are going there to find account for every gram of riched uranium have been out what’s missing to see if it,” she told the BBC from Vilooted,” said IAEA spokes- we can repackage and secure enna. woman Melissa Fleming. the material so that we can A US official has said the AFP British school students enjoy their lollipops in front of the British Museum in London on Friday. A red bow have been displayed on the front entrance of the museum to mark its 250th anniversary to be celebrated on Saturday. Founded by an Act of parliament, it was the first national public museum in the world. IAEA mission, lasting a couple of weeks, will be under constant US military escort. The team’s task will be to ascertain how much nuclear material was looted from a three-building storage site at Tuwaitha before troops secured parts of the complex on April 7. It is barred from the main Tuwaitha complex and will have no access to six other nuclear sites that may have been looted. The US wants to draw a clear line between the team’s mission and pre-war inspections carried out under UN Security Council resolutions on disarmament. Chief UN inspector Hans Blix said on Friday banned arms might eventually be found. If not, the question arose as to why the Iraqis had failed to prove their innocence by cooperating fully with the inspectors, which might have averted war. Reuters Don’t boycott meet, US cautions LTTE Colombo: The US on Friday warned Tamil Tiger rebels not to boycott a crucial international donor conference aimed at reconstructing warravaged Sri Lanka, saying it would send a ‘‘wrong signal’’ to the international community. The conference — which opens Monday in Tokyo with representatives from more than 30 countries and 20 financial institutions — could help the government and the rebels solidify their 16-month peace process by helping to rebuild the worst-hit areas of the country. But the Tigers have said they would not participate in the conference unless the government agrees to set up an interim administration in the Tamil-majority northeast to give the rebels authority to dispense the aid money. ‘‘Its (Tamil Tigers) absence from these important proceedings will represent a lost opportunity for the people of Sri Lanka, particularly those in the north and east, whom the Tigers claim to represent,’’ Frederick Schieck, deputy administrator of the US Agency for International Development, told reporters. LTTE’s absence would send the ‘‘wrong signal to those within the international community who gather to pledge their support to a united Sri Lanka,’’ he said. AP A Jamaat-i-Islami activist puts black paint on a billboard in a drive against obscenity in Multan on Friday. Acid attacks haunt survivors in Pak Ahmedpur Sharqia: Shaheena moans in pain as the fierce summer heat sears her skin. She can no longer see and her once pretty face is horrifically disfigured. The 15-year-old is one of the hundreds of Pakistani women who fall victim each year to acid attacks perpetrated by jealous husbands or rejected suitors or as plain acts of revenge. For many victims, death would be less painful than living with pain and the humiliation of disfigurement. Shaheena’s nightmare began when the husband of her elder sister, Sakeena, threw acid over them after a row in November. Sakeena suffered 70 percent burns but her TOID70603/CR1/13/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/13/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/13/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/13/Y/1 CMYK face was largely spared. The pain of their injuries is bad enough, but the sisters have worse worries. Sakeena’s husband is in prison awaiting trial, but they still have to live in his house. Rights activists say acid attacks are among the worst of the huge numbers of crimes against women in Pakistan, where the human rights commission estimates a woman is raped every two hours. The rights commission says, as well as huge numbers of rapes, hundreds of women fall victim every year to “honour killings” in which close male relatives kill a woman to avenge perceived shame she has brought to the family. Reuters OID ‰ ‰ † CMK Saturday, June 7, 2003 The Times of India, New Delhi From Pokhran to Evian A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Most prime ministers would not be interesting unless they had been prime ministers and some are not interesting even then. — A J P Taylor Khukri Rum No apparent end to Nepal’s political crisis The situation in Nepal is getting more and more rum. It is anybody’s guess whether the new prime minister, Surya Bahadur Thapa — the 13th since 1990 — will have a better run of luck than his predecessors. When king Gyanendra removed Lokendra Bahadur Chand, there was speculation that the palace had bowed to pressure from the mainstream political parties. King Gyanendra’s usurpation of executive authority through his ‘royal coup’ on October 4 last year had led to widespread political unrest and agitation. In the eight months since then, the palace had achieved a measure of truce with the Maoists and brought the rebels to the negotiating table. Even so, the king continued to face opposition for excluding the mainstream parties from the political process. When he jettisoned Mr Chand and asked the agitating parties to name their consensus candidate for prime ministerial office, it was interpreted as a conciliatory move on the king’s part; a move aimed at giving the parties a bigger role in administration. In the event, the choice of Mr Thapa, four-time prime minister and widely-experienced in the panchayat system, has only added a new dimension to the spiralling of crisis. The perception of Mr Thapa as being close to New Delhi, read with the fact that he was in India on a PR mission in April, has led to allegations in Kathmandu of “meddling” by ‘Big Brother’. Whatever the truth about India’s role in Nepal, what is relevant for now is the mess in that country. The king, his men and the popular political forces have simply failed to get their act together. The political parties and the Maoist rebels, who point a finger at New Delhi, forget that this amounts to admitting that they are helpless in Nepal, indeed that their country can easily be swayed by external influence. Such accusations bring little credit to forces that overthrew the autocratic panchayat regime to usher in multiparty democracy. The political parties and the king must speedily resolve the many-sided conflict. If they don’t, the forces shaping a new world order elsewhere — from Palestine to Kashmir — will take charge of Nepal too. That ‘foreign hand’ will not be that of New Delhi. The south’s development fuels speculation about secession VIEW The South has Long Bypassed the North orget the growing north-south divide, the south F has already seceded from the Indian state — if not physically, then certainly in terms of social attitudes and identification. The south is far and away the better performer in the social indices — it is streets ahead in literacy, infant survival, gender sensitivity and all other health indicators. Indeed, if the south were assessed as an independent country, its nearest comparison would be, not the BIMARU states, but the countries in South East Asia. In the last decade, the south has also stolen a decisive march over the north in purchasing power capacity. Which explains why the retail power balance has shifted in favour of the south: Delhiites might swoon over the shopping malls and cineplexes that are suddenly dazzling them, but people in the south have long been matter-of-fact about these facilities. The self-service foodstore chains that dot the nooks and crannies of the southern cities are still to show up even in the Capital. No doubt because in the feudal-influenced north, self-service remains a demeaning chore. Pubs, discos and bowling alleys that are a way of life in Bangalore, and increasingly in Chennai, continue to be a rarity in the north, again largely because of the stigma attached to such places. One of the commonest sights in Bangalore and Chennai is of traditionallyattired women casually dispensing alcohol at liquor outlets — something unimaginable even in the north’s most happening place, Gurgaon. The higher visibility of southern women — be it in running computer schools or driving autorickshaws — is another sign of social progress where the north has much catching up to do. The socio-cultural identification in the south is more and more with South East Asia. And for obvious reasons: One, the complete growing away of the south in terms of interests: Such hot Delhi subjects as Kashmir and mandir are irrelevant in the Deccan. And two, the north is no longer the magnet that attracted the southern job-seekers: Today the lot heads directly for Singapore and the US, bypassing Delhi. COUNTERVIEW Market Forces will Keep India United n the 1950s, the Dravidian case for secession rested Iindustrial on neglect: The big dams, steel mills and heavy plants were all located in the north. Today, with the south growing thrice as rapidly as the Hindi heartland, there is renewed speculation over a parting of ways between the Deccan and the north. This fear is unfounded. The global trend is towards barrier-less markets. The southern states are unlikely to sacrifice the advantage of seeing India as one large market. Even in the European Union, not all states are equally well developed. Yet, they have come together to form a common market for mutual benefit. There are wide regional disparities in all continental-sized countries, from China, Russia and the US to Canada, Australia and Brazil. There have been separatist demands as in Quebec, west Australia and the southern states of America. But all that preceded global marketisation. Regional disparities in a large country generate their own integrating dynamics. With its lower birth rate, the south will soon be short of unskilled labour, leading to migration from the north to the south. Industrial houses in the south could well outsource some of their requirements to the north, taking advantage of the latter’s lower wages. Similarly, the skills generated in the south will be in demand all over the country. The only possible southern grievance can be that the south has to pay higher taxes to subsidise the stagnant north. But that could be regarded as an investment in a potential market. However slowly, the heartland states have eventually to emerge from their backwardness. And with that their consumption demands will rise and they will develop into viable markets. The south and the north already share civilisational and cultural bonds. Market forces will further strengthen the unity and integrity of India, which, as a model of multilingual and multicultural union, far predates the European Union. Former Pariah Joins the High Table By Manoj Joshi Domestic troubles and party-poopers notwithstanding, it has been a heady five years for prime minister Vajpayee’s foreign policy. India has gone from being an international pariah after the Pokhran test, to the high table at the St Petersburg summit last week. Just how much things have changed was brought home when president Putin ensured that the Indian prime minister was seated next to president Bush at the Winter Palace banquet. Five years ago, the last thing a Russian president would have done was to have facilitated Indo-US relations. A great deal of this has to do with Vajpayee, the man. His political astuteness and deft style are well known in India. But even abroad, he has emerged as a respected figure. Mr Bush, with the courteous Texan style, addresses the older Vajpayee with an occasional “sir” thrown in. Tony Blair has a relationship of easy familiarity with the prime minister, as indeed do Vladimir Putin and Jacques Chirac. This is not just about image, but a reaction to Mr Vajpayee’s record in dealing with events that impinged on them — India’s nuclearisation, Kashmir, Pakistan and Iraq. St Petersburg and Evian have confirmed that India is at the threshold of great power status. A combination of economic strength and democratic polity, with a dash of military strength are the currency of power today. India has all three in some measure but it was only the deft diplomacy of a seasoned leader that helped India to check out the high table. To have a permanent seat there, more is needed — sustained growth in all three areas, plus that adroit management. One or the other element alone will not do. Japan and Germany are economic giants but don’t as yet have a permanent seat in the UN Security Council. Russia has military power and some democracy, but it is in the G-8 more as a matter of courtesy laced with as yet unfulfilled expectation. India’s rival China is ahead on economic growth and military power, but the unresolved issue of democracy hangs over its head. After some impressive growth and a spectacular debut as an IT power, India’s economy is stalling. Competitive populism has blocked efforts to open the economy and overhaul the rusted bureaucracy. Mr Vajpayee’s bold decision to go for the nuclear test was followed by dramatic post-Kargil reforms in the management of the defence system. But implementation has stalled and things are back to the bad old days. India confronts several security challenges, but the Indian military uniform must be cut to the cloth available. The country is currently spending Rs 70,000 crore per annum on a security establishment that can neither deter terrorist attacks, such as the one on Parliament in December 2001, nor punish its sponsors thereafter. The lack of deep restructuring has made the Indian armed forces more impressive on paper than they are in real life. Things can only be changed by active political intervention. Integration of the three services, as is the case in the US, China and Israel, is the answer. This will reduce expensive command organisations roughly by a third and optimise the firepower available at any war front at any given time. By far the biggest problems lie with India’s democracy itself. It has achieved an incredible amount in the last 50 years, but has now become dysfunctional. Mindless populism, whose worst example was the 5th Pay Commission recommendations, has robbed the states of any worthwhile revenue for development. So governance has been replaced by a spoils system which serves the narrow interests of politicians. Competitive votebank politics is tearing the nation’s social and political fabric apart. The Congress, the BJP and a host of smaller parties have used religion and caste differences to advance their cause. The Congress’ responsibility for the rise of extremism in Punjab and Kashmir is well known. But the party is now being outdone in irresponsible politics by the BJP whose aggressive advocacy of Hindutva poses a much bigger threat to the country’s political fabric than the Islamic fundamentalism or pseudo-secularism it purports to oppose. The biggest hurdle to India making it to the most exclusive club is the Pakistani monkey sitting on its back. Prime minister Vajpayee’s greatest exertions have come in trying to make peace with Pakistan. His high standing with leaders abroad comes in some measure due to their perception that he is a principled statesman deeply committed to making peace with India’s troublesome neighbour. His popularity within the country also stems from this as well as the knowledge that he pointedly kept aloof from the divisive mandir campaign in the 1980s and last year, when the Gujarat massacres heightened tensions across the land, he made it a point to go public with his unhappiness with the Modi style of politics. One of the fundamental attributes of a modern great power is a perception that the government treats all citizens equally, politically and creates equal economic opportunity. The laws of the land are implemented impartially not just for citizens, but foreigners as well, since this encourages a good business climate. Mr Vajpayee today straddles the Indian political stage as perhaps the only personality who has the political savvy and determination to move along the broad agenda needed to transform India. No doubt if there was no Vajpayee, it would have been necessary to invent one. Peak of Telephony By Mukund B Kunte China is to open a mobile phone station at the Everest base camp. Quite a revolution since the first conquest of Everest in 1953. This summer marks the 50th anniversary of that climb. Peter, the 47-year-old son of Sir Edmund Hillary, plans to meet Jamling, son of Tenzing Norgay, at the base camp from where Peter will climb the southern face route from Nepal taken by his father. Tashi Norgay, the legendary mountaineer’s grandson is climbing with a Swiss expedition by a different route but the two plan to meet on the summit. That takes me back 50 years when the highest peak was conquered by Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary. Unlike today’s instant worldwide communication on cellphones, in 1953 word got around rather slowly. The mountaineers were on the top of the world on May 29 but the news first had to reach the base camp and then through a complex network on the ground it could be flashed only on June 1. It is said that the timing of the news flash was manipulated so as to make it appear to be a present for the new queen of England. We in fact got to hear of it most dramatically when newspaper vendors, announcing the sensational headlines, brought the morning editions around 2 a.m. It was the coronation day of Elizabeth II, and we, a dozen midshipmen from the aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable, had made our way to London from Portsmouth the previous day and parked ourselves overnight on a pavement in Pall Mall for a ringside view of the coronation procession starting from Buckingham Palace. The pomp and circumstance of the days of the Empire hadn’t been forgotten and the pageantry was beautiful. When I won a cadetship at the Britannia Royal Naval College in 1951, little did I imagine that I was on an unforgettable journey. The 17-day voyage in the P & O liner SS Ranchi took us through the Suez Canal past the statue of Ferdinand de Lesseps. Old travellers will remember how at Port Said they used to be besieged by an armada of boats carrying merchandise ranging from camel saddles to toothpaste, even aphrodisiacs, at prices which they expected to be halved after hard bargaining and still be profitable. And, what of the proficient magician who surprised the audiences into believing that they carried day-old chicks inside their shirts, eggs inside their ears and women’s undergarments in their pockets. CONVERSATIONS WITH READERS Policing Iraq With reference to the news report by Manoj Joshi, ‘India is still non-aligned, says PM’ (Jun 3), the prime minister has said that clarifications are being sought from the US on the issue of sending Indian troops to Iraq. The reality is that, the US wants Indian troops to do the messy job of policing a key sector of the Iraqi border with Iran, in order to halt the movement of Iraqis and Iranians, particularly Shias and Kurds, across the border. This would inevitably lead to Indian troops clashing with Iranian forces and alienating the people of Iran and Iraq with whom India has had friendly relations. It would be utter folly for Indian From timesofindia.com Undo Partition The construction of a temple at Ayodhya has needlessly been made a major issue. What we need is not a ‘temple for Ram’, but a ‘kingdom of Ram’, characterised by welfare and wisdom of people. And Kashmir should not be the core issue while reopening dialogue with Pakistan. If both the sides are serious about resolving the Kashmir problem, the core issue should be the re-unification of Bangladesh, India and Pakistan. By suggesting this, A B Vajpayee would become one of the greatest leaders of all time. By accepting it, General Musharraf would become the greatest general ever as he would attach nations like India and Bangladesh to Pakistan, without shedding even a single drop of blood. As a result, Ayodhya and Kashmir would become baseless issues. Sebastian Thomas, via e-mail troops to get bogged down in the US-created Gulf quagmire, especially at a time when the Bush administration has failed to stabilise the situation in Iraq. — Jawid Laiq, New Delhi Shani Temple This refers to the Speaking Tree article, ‘Shanidev is Partly Shiva’s Avatar’ (May 31). It mentions that the only Shani temple is at Kokilavan. There is another ancient Shani temple at Shani Signapur in Maharashtra, on the highway from Ahmednagar to Aurangabad. — Anant Sarma, New Delhi Peace Road Map The hopes raised by this week’s West Asia summit is justified by a decade of failed initiatives and 32 months of prolonged violence. The first optimistic signs were observed as Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon and his Palestinian counterpart, Mohmoud Abbas, shook hands in the company of president Bush in the Jordanian resort of Aquaba. But things may take a rough turn from here, as there are many contentious issues the peace road map has not touched. What happens in the next few months depends on Mr Bush’s commitment. While he is willing and able, he must lay the groundwork for a lasting peace. — Mark Rebello, Bangalore Letters to this column should be addressed to Letters c/o Edit page Editor, The Times of India, 7, Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg, New Delhi-110002. email:[email protected] No. 135 Vol. 54. Air charge: Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Mumbai ,Cochin, Chennai & via Rs.3, Indore and via 50 paise. National edition: No aircharge.Price in Nepal: NEP Rs 5, except Sunday: NEP Rs 7. RNI No. 508/57 MADE IN NEW DELHI REGD. NO. DL-25002/92. Published for the proprietors, Bennett Coleman & Co. 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Postal Registration No.: TN/Chief PMG/399/2002 Proof of Faith What if the excavations in Ayodhya find nothing to show that there was once a Ram temple there? “No matter,” says the 67-year-old Sri Jayendra Saraswati, 69th pontiff of the Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham, because “faith does not look for proof.” In the Capital to participate in functions organised by devotees to celebrate the 50th year of his tenure as the Kanchi Shankaracharya, the seer spoke to Narayani Ganesh: ago. They believe he died, they believe he was resurrected, they celebrate Easter — all on the basis of faith. Can anyone prove all this? Similarly, faith of any other kind — whether in Ram or any other bhagwan or spiritual head — cannot be explained. Similarly, many believe that Mahavtar Baba is alive and has been living in the Himalayas for the last 2,000 years. Hindu literature speaks of the seven ‘immortals’, including Ashwattama, Bali, Vyasa, HanuHave you really distanced yourself from man, Kripachariar and Parasuraman. It’s all the Ayodhya issue, as media reports seem a matter of faith. to suggest? You stayed at Mahavtar Baba’s ashram Yes and no. I’d like to distance myself from at Ranchi recently. Tamil superstar and the politicisation of the Ayodhya issue. By spiritual seeker Rajnikanth travelled with making my position on this clear, at least I’ve you and met with you there. Why? been saved from having to field questions on This is not the first time I’ve stayed in the the politics of the mandir-masjid imbroglio. Yogoda ashram — I go wherever there are The press hounds me no longer. I can breathe good people. As for Rajnikanth, he tells me free. But I have continued with my efforts at that he likes to learn from different gurus — a different level; I keep in touch with Muslim be it Ramakrishna, Yogananda, Mahavtar and other local leaders... Genuine well-wish- Baba, Sachidananda or the Shankaracharya. ers do not like politicising of such issues. He likes to think of himself as the bee What kind of work are you doing in Ayodhya? (seeker) that gathers honey (wisdom) from We run the Ayodhya Nagara Development various flowers. In fact, we will be travelling Trust, which was started a year ago. We have together to Badrinath and Kedarnath... taken on lease a place from the erstwhile Here’s a non-Ayodhya question: The Pope, royals of Ayodhya. Here, we are imparting while addressing bishops from India, recently vocational training to hundreds of students said that regardless of anti-conversion so that they can get gainful employment. Bills in some states, they should carry on with Forty per cent of their work. What is those undergoing your reaction? training are MusForced converlims, the rest are sions have to be Forced conversions Hindus. Ensuring a banned. I would like have to be banned. job is one of the to interpret the I would like to interpret ways of ensuring Pope’s words this the Pope’s words peace and progress. way: Regardless of this way: Regardless I am not affiliated what people say, of what people say, to any political carry on with your carry on with your party. On Sunday service to humanity service to humanity (June 8) at the Siri through good work. through good work. Fort auditorium (in See, we are only Delhi), both prime against forcible conminister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Congress versions or converting people by bribing party leader Sonia Gandhi will take turns to them with money or other things. A converspeak at the Peetarohana Swarna Jayanti tee has to get registered. If there is evidence celebrations, marking the 50th year of my of coercion, then the law will take its course. tenure as Kanchi Shankaracharya. While What do you have to say about the former president R Venkataraman will recent resurgence of the practice of dowry deliver the welcome address, Sheila Dikshit, among Hindus? chief minister of Delhi, will also speak on Nowhere in Hinduism is giving or taking the occasion, besides Murli Manohar Joshi, of dowry encouraged or extolled. MahaP C Alexander and others. periyaval (the 68th pontiff, Sri ChandraSo you see, people of different back- sekherendra Saraswati) always refused to grounds, faiths and political leanings have bless anyone who took dowry. In fact, he had been participating in the various events or issued strict instructions that his name functions organised either by the Kamakshi should not be printed alongside anyone else’s temple, Delhi, or my devotees elsewhere. who was known to have taken dowry — in Of course, for every celebrity, there are invitation cards, etc We tell people: Please hundreds of other lesser-known well- say ‘no’ to dowry. Kanniga Daanam means wishers who meet me every day. So I like to that you are giving away your precious stay away from politics. Why do you and daughter, to another family. That’s it. No your other journalist friends ask me only demands should be made for she then about Ayodhya? becomes part of the new family. What’ll happen if excavations fail to find What is the difference between Hindutva any proof that there was a Ram temple in and Hinduism? Ayodhya earlier? This is like making a distinction between These are diversionary tactics. I don’t insaan and insaniyat. All those for whom think faith should look for proof. Christians, India is home, are part of Hindutva — for instance, believe in Christ. They believe whether Hindu, Christian or Muslim. It is that Jesus was born some 2,000-odd years our entire culture and way of life. Q&A Udayshankar 14 Bouquet of Thoughts For Weekend Cheer By Deepak Hiranandani A flower, a thing of beauty, brings joy — but not forever. Soon, it withers and dies. Its transience helps us to understand the value we attach to flowers. Their ephemeral qualities, their fragility and vulnerability, make flowers precious. Flowers are transient like life itself. In all creation, change is eternal. This and their sensory qualities, particularly colour and scent, have made flowers popular as a universally loved symbol of greeting and felicitation. Whether traditionally worn in the hair of women, in the cap of a Himachali farmer or in the buttonhole of a gentleman’s tuxedo, flowers are the ultimate in personal adornment, their freshness, unsullied purity and natural perfection enhance the celebratory spirit of the wearer. Flowers have inspired creative people: poets, lyricists, writers and artists, designers and craftspersons. A great deal of applied decoration is derived from flowers, on a vast range of objects from handkerchiefs to furniture to architecture. The magnificent Bahai temple in Delhi is in the form of an enormous flower, a lotus in bloom, frozen in time. Flowers and expressions derived from them are a part of everyday life, as in ‘the flower of the collection’, ‘blooming beauty’, ‘budding genius’ and ‘flower children’. We impute human characteristics to flowers: Shy and retiring wallflowers, vain narcissism, brazen sunflowers, cheerful daisies. Flowers are brave, thrusting themselves out into the world and blooming valiantly in environments we may consider harsh and inhospitable. Flowers are used extensively in the rituals of organised religion. Like great works of art, flowers, too, go beyond merely pleasing and delighting. Bewitching, flowers help strengthen our perceived link with that great entity. Flowers are therapeutic and are used in the healing process. In his book Dhanavantari (named after the mythical physician of the Hindu gods) based on ancient concepts of good health, Harish Johari recommends looking at flowers first thing in the morning. Interestingly, looking at white flowers is supposed to be particularly beneficial. More recently, in 8 Weeks to Optimum Health, Andrew Weil, a medical doctor in America, recommends buying flowers for the home, together with dietary modifications, taking supplements, exercising, purifying air and water, avoiding radiation exposure, observing the breath, taking steam baths and observing a ‘news fast’. Contemplating the tiny flower of a roadside weed can transport you to a world of imagination and philosophical thought. A poet saw the world in a grain of sand; surely a flower could lead to comparable experiences? Traditionally, flowers and flames are popular subjects for yogic contemplation. Meditating on a flower could possibly lead to a spiritual experience. One of the most profound thoughts about the holistic nature of all creation contains mention of a flower. The quotation about it being impossible to pluck the petals of a flower without affecting a star, far away in outer space. The statement is rich with potential for interpretation applicable to everyday life: for example, every little act of kindness or truth which one can choose to perform is an act of some significance. Every drop of water or tiny bit of fuel saved; every bit of pollution prevented; every truth uttered, even if uncomfortable; every action of cruelty abstained from or prevented — despite the loud, rough cries of “What difference does it make?’’ made by some people every bit does indeed make a difference. Why not go contemplate a flower today? THE SPEAKING TREE http://spirituality.indiatimes.com TOID70603/CR1/14/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/14/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/14/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/14/Y/1 CMYK Walking & Well-being There is no happiness for the man who does not travel. Living in the society of men, the best man becomes a sinner. For Indra is the friend of the traveller. Therefore wander. Aitareya Brahmana ✥ You cannot travel the path before you have become the Path itself... Walk on! Gautama Buddha ✥ The Wayless Way, where the Sons of God lose themselves and, at the same time, find themselves. Meister Eckhart ✥ The aim of a dervish is to become a ‘dead man walking’: one whose body stays alive on earth yet whose soul is already in Heaven. Towards the end of his journey, the dervish becomes the Way not the wayfarer, that is, a place over which something is passing, not a traveller following his own free will. Kashf-al-Mahjub ✥ Our nature lies in movement; complete calm is death. Pascal ✥ If they heed not thy call, Walk alone, walk alone. Rabindranath Tagore ✥ Above all, do not lose your desire to walk: every day I walk myself into a state of well-being and walk away from every illness; I have walked myself into my best thoughts... Thus if one just keeps on walking, everything will be all right. Kierkegaard ✥ It is good to collect things, but it is better to go on walks. Anatole France OID ‰ ‰ † CMK The Times of India, New Delhi, Saturday, June 7, 2003 Rupee Value US $: 47.35 UK £: 78.85 A historic call Shaping up Better growth British Royal Mail train will stop transporting post by rail to cut costs. The postal group said mail trains will be cancelled from July and stopped later, with post being distributed by road and air NYSE chairman and CEO Richard Grasso said the exchange unveiled a set of corporate governance reforms aimed at strengthening the NYSE’s own governance Pakistan’s Finance Minister Shaukat Aziz said economic growth in Pakistan for 11 months exceeded the government’s full-year target by 0.6 per cent Euro: 56.20 S Fr: 37.55 Yen (100): 41.45 A $: 32.65 NZ $: 28.35 S $: 28.35 Saudi Riyal 13.00 UAE Dirham 13.30 Thai Baht (100) 115.55 Sensex set to rise with good monsoon TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The stock market has entered into a bull phase. The 30-share sensitive index of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) scaled the 3300 mark on Friday, after a gap of 15 weeks, to close at 3303 — netting a gain of 41 points. Since May 2003, the Sensex has moved up by 336 points. The big push has come from the growing interest of the foreign funds. In the last five trading sessions, their net purchase of the domestic stocks amounted to over Rs 600 crore while in May, 2003, it was around Rs 1,220 crore. Larry Ellison Fund managers feel the current bullish trend will continue, at least, for some more time. Head of a foreign fund said the market should cross 3,500 mark in the next two months. ‘‘If monsoon is good and well spread, the market may cross 4000 mark by September 2003.’’ Improvement in the market sentiment is also due to the government’s announcement to launch the disinvestment process again. This gives a message that reforms will not slow down due to forthcoming elections. ‘‘This is a good sign for the economy,’’ a fund manager said. On Friday, share prices of BSE Sensex since Jan’03 3500 3390 3303 3223 3085 2997 3000 3013 2500 Jan 1 Feb 14 Mar 17 most of the heavyweights like Infosys, Colgate Palmolive, Reliance, ITC, Bajaj Apr 15 May 15 Auto and State Bank of India moved up substantially on the sustained buying from AFP Oracle offers to buy PeopleSoft GM’s Optra to take Octavia and Corolla head on By Derek Caney New York: Oracle on Friday offered to buy rival PeopleSoft for $5.1 billion, a move that would bolster its flagging position in business software programs. It said it would go directly to shareholders with a cash offer of $16 a share, a 6 per cent premium over PeopleSoft’s closing price of $15.11 in Nasdaq trading. ‘‘The acquisition of PeopleSoft will make Oracle an even more profitable and competitive company,’’ Oracle chairman Larry Ellison said. ‘‘We won’t be actively selling PeopleSoft products, we will provide enhanced support for all products.’’ Oracle said it expects to begin the offer on Monday. Credit Suisse First Boston has provided bridge financing and is advising Oracle on the transaction. PeopleSoft shares rose 22 per cent to $18.40 in pre-market trading. The deal would strengthen Oracle’s position to take on market leader SAP AG. ‘‘The only way that Oracle’s going to be a player in applications is to buy someone,’’ said Bruce Richardson, an analyst with AMR Research. Agencies TIMES NEWS NETWORK It’s okay to make mistakes but it’s not okay not to try, US Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan tells students at a school in Washington. He said until 14, he was seen as a potential baseball professional but at 16 he was playing clarinet at $6 a day. ‘‘Money was money back then, it really bought something.’’ Companies will now be able to sell telecom licences TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The government has allowed phone companies to the sell telecom licences to facilitate consolidation in the industry. Until now phone companies could be bought or sold, that too through a long winding and complex process, but the licences could not be trans- ferred to the buyers. Also it was difficult for companies to pick and choose individual telecom circles from a seller because all the ‘‘licence agreements’’ were in one name. Now, if a cellular or a basic phone company has licences in more than one telecom circles, it can ‘‘transfer or assign’’ individual licences. The companies would still require government’s prior written approval to transfer the licence. The approval would be allowed only after a range of financial and network roll-out obligations under various agreements have been met. The government however has not allowed companies to buy licences/companies E X E C U T I V E NATIONAL Timex India MD is now director South Pacific: Timex Watches Ltd’s managing director Kapil Kapoor is being relocated to the Timex International headquarters in the US with effect from August 2003. He will now have an expanded role as regional director (South Pacific and In- INTERNATIONAL Martha Stewart fights back with campaign: Home decorating celebrity Martha Stewart took her case to the court of public opinion on Thursday, professing her innocence in a newspaper advertisement and a new Web site, a day after she was charged with securities fraud and lying to authorities. With the unusual move, Stewart sought to reassure investors in her media and design company, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia and its customers and clients, legal analysts said. The campaign could also soften potential jurors in her case, they added. Reuters within the same telecom circle to avoid ‘monopolistic’ situation. The move comes within weeks of Hutch’s decision to buy Escotel’s licence in Punjab, which the latter won in 2001 bidding but did not have the funds to set up the project. Besides, Hutch is in the process of merging three telecom businesses of Essar with its existing business. Cellular industry, which has been growing rapidly and has seen mergers and buyouts in the past few years, gave a lukewarm response to the development. Airtel and Hutch were expecting that the government would allow companies to buy licences within the same telecom circle. D I G E S T Bata initiates image makeover drive: Bata chief AL Mudaliar has launched an image revamp drive to cope with rising competition. The shoe major is repositioning its image from a manufacturing to a marketing company. Brand managers are working towards this corporate brand building exercise with focus on services and products. SIA cuts fares by up to 75% to boost traffic: Singapore Airlines on Friday announced a special summer campaign with promotional fares that are up to half that of its market fares. The campaign is part of attempts to restore travel confidence that had hit a low since SARS struck the nation. Besides, the airline is also offering upto 50 per cent off on its promotional rates to Singapore for the first 15,000 bookings to Singapore, where travellers would effectively pay just 25 per cent of the market fares. The package includes two nights stay in leading hotels and free sight-seeing benefits. Visitor numbers to Singapore had declined by up to 67 per cent in April compared to a year ago due to SARS. TNN June 6 the foreign as well as the domestic funds. Foreign fund managers said the timely arrival of Monsoon would improve the growth of the country and the purchasing power of the people in the rural India. This would help corporates in the fast moving consumer goods and automobile sectors to improve their sales. The share price of Colgate Palmolive gained 10 per cent to close at Rs 147.75. Following the trend of the US stock markets which improved on Thursday, the IT and media stocks here also spurted. Infosys gained Rs 96 to close at Rs 2953. UK-based fund to invest in BPL: The UK-based fund Celestial Overseas Ventures Ltd has decided to pick up 5 per cent stake in India’s consumer electronic major BPL Ltd. Celestial has sought the FIPB nod to go ahead with the purchase. One of BPL’s Indian stakeholders — Merino Finance Pvt Ltd, which holds slightly over 11 per cent stake in BPL will sell 5 per cent of its holding to Celestial at a price of Rs 42 per share. The UK firm will shell out Rs 5.81 crore for the stake. The boards of Merino and BPL have already approved the share transfer. TNN 03 were moved up and closer to a more realistic five per cent, the country’s GDP growth would be close to six per cent. PTI Rahul Bajaj appointed chairman of IIT, Mumbai: Rahul Bajaj, CMD of Bajaj Auto Ltd, has been appointed as chairman of the board of directors of the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai. The appointment is for a period of three years since May 12 and Bajaj took over from Prof M G K Menon who was the chairman of IIT Mumbai since 1997, an IIT release said. PTI GDP to grow by 5.9-6.3%, says ICRA: Credit rating ABN Amro Bank eyes acquisitions in India: agency ICRA has pegged India’s economic growth rate at 5.9-6.3 per cent with agriculture poised to grow by 4.9-6.7 per cent while industry and services slated to post over 6.0 per cent during 2003-04. ICRA’s GDP forecast is higher than 6.0 per cent made by Reserve Bank and Asian Development Bank for this fiscal, apart from IMF’s projection of 5.1 per cent for 2003. ICRA said in its report Money & Finance, that if growth estimates for 2002- Dutch banking major ABN Amro has said it was looking at all possible options including acquiring a private bank and setting up a subsidiary to increase its presence in India. ABN Amro Bank NV senior executive vice president Jan Peter Schmittmann, said the bank, having assets of over 598 billion euro worldwide, would like to have 51 per cent stake and management control if it goes for acquisition. “We have shortlisted at least six banks,” he said. PTI NYSE overhauls rules, will report Grasso pay: Ex-Xerox execs to pay $22m to settle probe: Six Ford Motor Co unveils new logo: Ford Motor Co, The New York Stock Exchange, under pressure to improve the way it runs its business, has said it would disclose the compensation of top executives as part of a plan to overhaul corporate governance at the world’s premier exchange. The NYSE — which has proposed tough rules for its listed companies but has been slow to fall into line itself — said the compensation disclosure would be in its annual report and include the package of chief Richard Grasso. Other measures would prohibit exchange executives from serving on other public company boards. Reuters former executives of Xerox Corp, including two chief executives, agreed to pay a total of $22 million to settle charges that they manipulated earnings in order to boost the company’s share price, federal regulators said on Thursday. In a civil suit filed in New York, the Securities and Exchange Commission accused the six of participating in a scheme from 1997 to 2000 that misled investors about Xerox’s earnings to polish the company’s reputation and boost its stock price. The steepest penalties will be paid by former CEOs Paul Allaire and Richard Thoman. Reuters in a nod to the past on its centennial, unveiled a modernised version of its signature blue oval logo on the face of its world headquarters. AP Ajit Ninan dia). “I will oversee the operations in markets like Philippines, Thailand, Australia and new Zealand in addition to running the India operations,” Kapoor said. TNN Matsushita explores CTV exports: Matsushita Television & Audio Ltd is exploring the possibility of exporting 30,000 colour television sets to West Asia and other overseas markets from its Noida plant. The first test consignment has already been dispatched and based on that “firm” orders are expected, the company informed the Bombay Stock Exchange. A decision on export would be taken at forthcoming board meeting of the company to be held next month, it added. PTI President of the European Central Bank Wim Duisenberg announced in Frankfurt on Thursday that the ECB has cut interest rates by an emphatic half percentage point in an effort to shove the continent’s stagnant economy toward growth. ET INSTA POLL Yesterday’s results: Can horror movies reverse the Bollywood slump? Yes 31% No 64% Can’t say 05% • The poll reflects the opinions of Net users who chose to participate, and not necessarily of the general public. Today’s question: Are you considering refinancing your existing loans? To vote, log on to http://economictimes.indiatimes.com Halol: Auto major General Motors India is all set to make its debut in the top-end of the ‘C’ segment car market with its yet-to-belaunched offering Chevrolet Optra. GM India rolled out its first indigenously manufactured Chevrolet model — the Optra — on Friday. Though company officials declined to divulge any details about the latest offering from the GM stables, market sources said the Optra is expected to be pitted against the Skoda Octavia and the Toyota Corolla. GM is also considering the possibility of reintroducing the Matiz from the Daewoo stables under the Chevrolet brand in the Indian market in a bid to rev up volumes. “The Matiz is under consideration for launch in India in addition to other alternatives for a bigger presence in the small car segment as it is a central part of the car market. We want to be actively present in the small car market,” Terence Johnson, ED, GM Asia Pacific, said. He hinted at leveraging on R&D facilities of Daewoo in Korea for new launches under the Chevrolet brand name. This confirmation comes amid speculation that the company was planning to tag Daewoo models like Nubira and Matiz as Chevrolet brands. GM acquired Daewoo in September 2001 by picking up 67 per cent stake for $400 million but left out most of Daewoo’s 12 overseas plants, including the Indian plant. GM has so far invested Rs 925 crore in its Indian operations, based at Halol near Vadodara in Gujarat, and plans to up it to Rs 1,380 crore by March 2004, Aditya Vij, president and MD, GMIL said. GM’s investment is expected to reach Rs 1,600 crore in 2 years. Selling rate: Currency notes Source: SBI, Mumbai BATTLE OF TECHNOLOGY Linux a growing threat: Ballmer icrosoft chief executive Steve Ballmer warned his staff in an email that cheap Linux-based software is a growing threat to the software giant. But he vowed to meet the challenge. ‘‘Over the long term, I’m optimistic about our growth opportunities. But we face significant challenges in the near and mid term,’’ he said in the e-mail, a copy of which was obtained by AFP. ‘‘Non-commercial software products in general and Linux in particular, present a competitive challenge for us and for our entire industry, and they require our concentrated focus and attention,’’ he said. Linux, a freely available operating system used mostly by businesses, had grown as a rival since IBM Corp. decided two years ago to spend a billion dollars to offer it to customers as an alternative. ‘‘IBM’s endorsement of Linux has added credibility and an illusion of support and accountability,’’ Ballmer said. As businesses fretted about lean budgets and about Microsoft’s attention to customers, non-commercial software such as Linux was seen as an ‘‘interesting’’ alternative, he said. Many customers were looking at Linux because it would let them move to an Intel microchip-based computer while using existing UNIX software skills and applications, he said. Linux is an offshoot of UNIX. Linux’s weakness, however, was the lack of a central body investing in its development in areas such as engineering, manageability, compatibility and security, Ballmer said. The major new Windows operating system release — Longhorn — would put Microsoft back in front, Ballmer said. But the software titan would not rush to get Longhorn out to customers until it got the program right, he said. ‘‘One of our board members asked me recently: ‘Is Longhorn a bet-the-company product?’ I said that would be a pretty good way to put it.’’ Longhorn was potentially a bigger breakthrough than the first Windows, eventually incorporating almost all Microsoft products, he said. ‘‘People have asked me if competing with Linux is so important, can the company wait as long as it will take to get Longhorn done?’’ Ballmer said. ‘‘My answer is twofold. First, the Windows Server 2003 generation of products offers stronger performance and value than Linux in most IT scenarios. Second, we will do the work and take the time required to get it right, because it truly is the next quantum leap in computing, which will put us years ahead of any other product on the market.’’ AFP M Call centres find ways to tackle high attrition rate By Gaurav Bhagowati TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The call centre industry is grappling to cope with growing attrition. And, to tackle this, the industry needs to define a long-term career goal for employees, besides addressing issues like fatigue and incentives, feel industry watchers. Research on motivation factors for retaining staff has revealed that call centre agents value good communication from their managers, while pay-packet and incentives are other main issues. Says RP Toppo, v-p, Global Vantedge: Monotony of the work and other stress factors cannot be ignored. ‘‘We have comprehensive incentive systems based on key performance-based metrics. Top performers could end up doubling their salaries based on performance.’’ And, employees of call centres spread across the country list clear objectives and performance-based pay as the best incentive for keeping loyalty to their employers. Agents are demanding greater management recognition and more structured performance metrics, says an industry analyst. Adds, Deepak Dhawan, v-p, EXL Services: As long as BPO remains just a job and not a career option, migration of talent to other sectors will continue.”Gradually, we’ve tried to provide better learning opportunities, training, besides providing an international work environment.” According to a study by NFO India and Bangalorebased HR firm PeopleEquity Consulting, agents feel that How to retain them? compensation packets are not good enough. As most candidates for the job of agent are graduates and overqualified as well. Toppo points out that employers are increasingly resorting to internal sourcing to meet staff requirement for agents. ‘‘We have been rolling out internal job postings. This has craeted growth opportunity for agents who are becoming team leaders or moved to other processes like, quality control. Adds Dhawan: ‘‘We’re increasingly hiring people from within. Agents on the floor have been transferred or promoted. Floor experience is the key and internal TOID70603/CR1/15/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/15/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/15/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/15/Y/1 CMYK sourcing is a good way to fulfill that requirement. Says Rahul Verma, manager at a call centre: ‘‘In a little over two years I’ve been promoted.’’ He adds that the incentive package could include performance-based bonuses, gifts, a holiday package and training stints abroad and posting to other processes and promotions. Overall, the measures taken by call centres have been met with some success in checking attrition. However, with a high growth rate of the industry, employers need to spruce up their human resource management constantly to keep attrition under control. OID ‰ ‰ † CMK 16 BUSINESS TIMES Saturday, June 7, 2003 The Times of India, New Delhi Doubts over Chrysler’s turnaround plan By Danny Hakim and Micheline Maynard Detroit: Little more than two years ago, DaimlerChrysler dispatched a talented Mercedes-Benz executive, Dieter Zetsche, to turn around its ailing Chrysler unit. Zetsche pledged to reduce costs, and started by eliminating 26,000 jobs. Now, in a shaky market glutted with every kind of car and truck, and after Chrysler projected a $1.2 billion loss for the second quarter, some analysts say the turnaround might need its own turnaround plan. ‘‘Do they have the time to step back and rethink it?’’ asked Maryann Keller, a veteran auto analyst. You just have to assume that the Japanese are going to continue to create cars faster. They’re now in every segment, and they can build them cheaper than we can.’’ The idea behind Daimler-Benz’s 1998 acquisition of Chrysler was that Daimler could function as a rich uncle and help Chrysler avoid the Big Three bloodletting. By sharing parts and costs with Chrysler, Daimler could have a lean, mean mass-market foothold in the world’s biggest auto market. Since the beginning of 1999, Testing times • Chrysler’s has projected a $1.2 billion loss for Q2 • Analysts say the turnaround plan might need a revamp • A shaky market glutted with every kind of vehicle may not have helped its cause however, stock in the combined DaimlerChrysler has lost more than two-thirds of its value. Zetsche’s plan to make the deal work is beginning to be tested as ICRA pegs GDP growth at 6.3% New Delhi: Credit rating agency ICRA on Friday pegged India’s economic growth rate at 5.9-6.3 per cent with agriculture poised to grow by 4.9-6.7 per cent while industry and services slated to post over 6.0 per cent during 2003-04. ICRA’s GDP forecast is higher than 6.0 per cent made by Reserve Bank and Asian Development Bank for this fiscal, apart from IMF’s projection of 5.1 per cent for 2003. “It is our assessment that provided the south west monsoon does not turn out to be a failure as that of last year, growth in 2003-04 is poised to show distinct improvement .... We expect that growth of GDP should range somewhere between 5.9 and 6.3 per cent,” ICRA said in its report “money & finance”. It said if growth estimates for 2002-03 were moved up and closer to a more realistic five per cent, the country’s GDP growth would be close to six per cent. “If no revision whatsoever is made to the advance estimate for 200203, then growth would be around 6.3 per cent,” the report said. In sectoral terms, ICRA said agriculture growth could range between 4.9 and 6.7 per cent this fiscal compared to the estimated negative growth of 3.1 per cent in 2002-03. Industry is slated to grow by 5.4 per cent this fiscal as against 6.1 per cent in 2002-03. PTI products developed under his watch begin to hit the market a tough test in a market that seems to be losing strength every month. The new Chryslers share parts with Mercedes and have a European flavor. The current showpiece is the Chrysler Pacifica, a kind of plump station wagon known as a crossover vehicle, which went on sale in April. Chrysler executives said that it would create its own market niche. Analysts have said that it is overpriced for a Chrysler, starting in the low $30,000 range. ‘‘It’s like they’re selling cars by the pound,’’ said Gerald Meyers, a professor, who once ran American Motors, now part of Chrysler. ‘‘The heavier it is, the more money they can get. That’s not the way it works, fellas.’’ Wall Street hasn’t lost faith in Zetsche, but analysts are generally pessimistic about the Big Three’s prospects as sales sputter while incentives soar. Chrysler has increased its incentives through gritted teeth, but it appeared prepared to make them even more generous after its marketing chief, James C Schroer, abruptly resigned last week. NYT News Service US unemployment rate on a 9-yr high Washington: The unemployment rate in the US climbed to 6.1 per cent in May, the highest level in nine years, as businesses cut 17,000 jobs in a weak economy struggling toward recovery. The rate was up one-tenth of a percentage point from April, peaking at a level not seen since the US came out from the last recession, the labour department reported Friday. July 1994 was the last time the jobless rate was at 6.1. It was higher only in April 1994, at 6.4 per cent. One reason for last month’s increase was that more people resumed their job searches, but failed to find work. Nearly 9 million people were unemployed in May. Payrolls fell by 17,000 in May following a revision in April, in which no jobs were lost. Those revisions are made annually, and the results showed that job losses were not nearly as steep as previously reported. The government also changed how it calculates payrolls data and expanded job categories. The report was slightly better than what analysts had predicted job losses of about 30,000. Industries driving the job losses last month were manufacturing, transportation and government. However, some sectors did gain jobs in May. Employment rose in construction and in service jobs, including education and health services. Another positive sign in the report was the hiring increase of 58,000 at temporary employment firms. Economists closely watch that industry because it can signal if companies may begin to hire permanent, full-time workers. But even if the economy improves later this year, as economists hope, the jobless rate still is expected to climb to as high as 6.5 per cent. Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan has called recent reports on the nation’s employment situation weak. The sluggish job market so far hasn’t caused consumers to shut their pocketbooks and wallets. They are the main force keeping the economy going, but they are being more selective. AP TOID70603/CR1/16/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/16/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/16/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/16/Y/1 CMYK OID ‰ ‰ † K The Times of India, New Delhi Saturday, June 7, 2003 TOID70603/CR1/17/K/1 CMYK 17 OID ‰ ‰ † CMK 18 STOCKS Saturday, June 7, 2003 Sensex rises 41 points Mumbai Led by a sus a ned ra y n he op heavywe gh coun ers he Sensex ex ended s ga ns o h rd s ra gh sess on and ended above 3300 eve on he s ock exchange here on Fr day on resh buy ng by opera ors as we as con nued ow o ore gn n ves men s In osys Techno og es T sco Zee Te e ms ITC SBI MTNL RIL and HLL ha have h gh we gh age n he Sensex surged up o a s rong n sh bu a ed o ma n a n he day s h gher eve s due o se ng repor ed y by he Un Trus o Ind a UTI wh ch booked pro s n se ec b ue ch ps The BSE benchmark 30 share ndex opened modera e y h gher a 3270 06 and gradua y moved upwards o he n ra day h gh a 3313 54 be ore end ng a 3303 24 as aga ns Thursday s c ose o 3262 20 a ne ga n o 41 04 po n s or 1 26 per cen The broad based BSE 100 ndex advanced ur her by 11 02 po n s o 1691 76 rom prev ous c ose o 1680 74 The marke cou d w hs and he res s ance n he orm se ng pressure by he UTI because o con nuous ne nves men s by ore gn unds brokers sa d P KEY The BSE quo a ons o a sc p a e g ven n he s ne wh e he quo es n a cs a e hose o he NSE The quo a ons a e n he sequence o he day s open ng h gh ow and c os ng Each me a company s c os ng sha e p ce a s be ow s as o e p ce on BSE he name o he company s unde ned BSE SPEC F ED & NSE NDEX ABB 350, 353, 344, 347.40 349.95, 353.80, 342.10, 345.40 Abbott (I) 266.60, 267.90, 265.20, 265.75 ACC 146.70, 149, 146.55, 148.05 146, 149.20, 146, 148.15 Adani Export 172.90, 183.40, 177.05 175, 182, 173.10, 177.55 Adlabs Films 52, 55.90, 51.25, 54.55 51.05, 54.95, 51.05, 54.05 Alstom Proj. 75, 76.50, 73.50, 73.70 70.05, 77, 70.05, 74.40 Andhra Bank 34.40, 32.15, 32.65 34, 34, 32.15, 32.75 Apollo Hosp. 117.85, 117.95, 115.35, 115.85 117.90, 118.35, 115.10, 116 Apollo Tyres 158.90, 164.85, 158.50, 163.65 158.70, 165.45, 158.60, 163.40 Arvind Mills 37.55, 37.70, 36.75, 36.85 37.75, 37.90, 36.80, 36.90 Ashok Leylan 118, 118.30, 114.50, 115.50 118, 118.40, 114.20, 115.85 Asian Paints 383.10, 385, 380, 381.55 382, 385.85, 380.15, 383.15 Aurobindo Ph 362, 336, 339.90 358.60, 358.60, 336.50, 339.95 Aventis Phar 327.45, 317.80, 322 318, 323.85, 318, 321.70 Aztec Soft. 19, 19.15, 18.40, 18.75 18.85, 19.25, 18.50, 18.75 Bajaj Auto 502.05, 508.80, 507.35 503, 509, 501.15, 507.95 Balaji Tele. 52.80, 58.50, 52.25, 58 52.85, 58.40, 52.25, 57.70 Ballarpur In 50, 48, 49.35 49.40, 49.80, 48, 49.35 Bank of Baro 108.50, 109.20, 105.35, 106.30 108, 109.20, 105.10, 106.40 Bank of Ind. 50.60, 51.75, 49.65, 50 50, 51.75, 49.75, 50.10 BASF 109.60, 110.50, 108.30, 109.55 110.75, 110.90, 108.25, 108.80 Bata (I) 37.90, 38.50, 37, 37.05 38.40, 38.40, 37, 37.15 Bayer Cropsc 161, 162.95, 158.05, 160 156, 160.95, 156, 160.90 Bh.Earth Mov 85.95, 87.20, 83, 84.05 85, 87.45, 83, 84.20 Bharat Elect 285, 285.35, 279, 280.15 282.90, 285.80, 279.80, 281.05 Bharat Forge 311, 308.80, 310.55 311, 312, 310, 310.80 Bharti TeleV 41.50, 42, 40.30, 40.70 41.25, 41.90, 40.35, 40.90 BHEL 250.35, 252.50, 247.05, 248 250, 252.45, 247.05, 248.15 Bombay Dyein 63.70, 64, 62.15, 62.50 59, 63.90, 59, 62.55 BPCL 266, 267.50, 262.70, 264.90 265.90, 267.40, 262.50, 264.80 Britannia 535, 532.50, 533.30 538.50, 538.50, 530, 534.65 BSES 220, 223.90, 217.75, 219.40 217.60, 223.85, 217.55, 220.40 Cadila Healt 126.50, 127.55, 125.10, 125.55 126.25, 128, 124.75, 126 Castrol (I) 192.25, 197.45, 189.50, 194 Century Enka 93.75, 91.70, 92.30 92.40, 93.20, 91.85, 92.15 Century Text 69.20, 69.70, 66.90, 67.25 69.95, 69.95, 66.75, 67.15 Chambal Fert 15.30, 15.75, 15.20, 15.40 15.35, 15.55, 15.25, 15.35 Chennai Pet. 54.25, 51.70, 52.20 54.35, 54.35, 52, 52.20 Cipla 726, 731, 716.10, 718.40 725.15, 730, 717, 720.20 CMC 473, 476.75, 467.45, 474.65 470, 477, 470, 474.50 Colgate 135, 153.80, 147.75 136, 154, 136, 147.90 Container Co 314, 303, 304.70 312.20, 314.85, 304.50, 305.95 Corpn. Bank 160.50, 165.25, 159.10, 163.10 161.70, 165.25, 159.50, 163.35 Crompton Gr. 63.05, 65.90, 62.60, 63.90 62.65, 65.70, 62.50, 63.95 Cummins (I) 70.55, 72.50, 69.25, 69.55 70.10, 72.50, 69.20, 69.65 D-Link (I) 50.50, 49.15, 49.50 50, 50.15, 49.25, 49.60 Dabur (I) 45.20, 45.65, 44.05, 44.30 45, 45.70, 44.20, 44.40 Digital Glob 526, 535, 496.20, 500.10 530, 534.80, 496.65, 500.50 Dr.Reddy’s 964.80, 979, 948.10, 971.30 964.80, 978.85, 953, 970.65 Dredging Cor 321.95, 325, 314, 315.35 E-Serve Intl 500, 507, 503.15 503.90, 507.40, 500, 505.10 EIH 165.50, 170, 169.05 167, 168.90, 165.35, 166.20 Engineers (I 290.30, 293.45, 283, 285.85 294.90, 294.90, 283, 285.90 Escorts 49.50, 50.20, 48.10, 48.40 49.75, 50, 48.15, 48.55 Essel Propac 169, 170.95, 166.50, 167.45 169.90, 169.90, 167.10, 168.05 Exide Inds. 130, 124.50, 124.80 127, 128, 123.55, 124.45 Federal Bank 152.25, 157.40, 151.60, 154.70 152, 157.80, 151.25, 154.95 Finolex Cabl 96.80, 97.60, 93.50, 95.25 96.45, 98, 93.50, 95.20 Finolex Inds 40, 40.15, 39.75, 40.10 40.50, 40.50, 39.85, 40.05 Gail (I) 104.65, 106.20, 103.10, 104.55 103.95, 106, 103.20, 104.70 GE Shipping 47.30, 46.05, 46.40 46.50, 47.25, 46.05, 46.40 Geometric So 365, 375.55, 372.70 373.75, 375.05, 365.05, 372.55 German Remed 226, 222, 226 221, 227.75, 221, 226.65 Gillette (I) 359.80, 360, 345.05, 352 334, 354.40, 334, 351.15 GlaxoSmith.C 242.05, 252.50, 251.85 238.45, 254, 238.40, 252.85 GlaxoSmith.P 366.40, 361.15, 364 364.50, 366, 360.30, 364.25 GNFC 33.20, 34.75, 32.80, 34 32.50, 34.90, 32.50, 34 Grasim Inds. 388.55, 389.60, 386.60, 388.25 386.10, 391.75, 386.05, 389.20 GSFC 22.50, 23.60, 22, 23.40 22.60, 23.60, 22.05, 23.35 GTL 73, 74, 72.05, 73.35 73.10, 73.90, 72.10, 73.35 Guj.Amb.Cem. 182.60, 186.75, 182.50, 184.80 182, 186.50, 182, 184.95 Guj.Gas Co. 411, 422, 417.05 405.55, 434.95, 381.40, 417.90 Guj.Mineral 102, 104.70, 102.55 106.40, 106.40, 102.70, 103.25 HCL Infosys. 125.10, 135, 124.30, 134.05 124, 134.80, 124, 133.10 HCL Techno. 144.80, 147.80, 143, 144.80 143, 147.65, 142, 144.90 HDFC 368.85, 371.90, 366, 366.50 366.05, 371.45, 365.25, 367.35 HDFC Bank 252.50, 263, 252, 259.15 252.80, 264.50, 252, 259.40 Hero Honda 233.50, 235.40, 230.10, 233.80 236.90, 236.90, 230, 233.90 Hexaware Tec 111.30, 113.25, 108.20, 110.35 110.80, 113.40, 108.05, 110.95 Him.Fut.Comm 32.10, 33.20, 31.40, 32.75 32.15, 33.25, 31, 32.80 Hind Lever C 176, 182.90, 180 180, 181, 179.50, 179.75 Hind.Oil Exp 29.90, 30, 28.05, 28.50 29.60, 29.85, 28.10, 28.60 Hind.Zinc 25.25, 24.30, 24.90 Hindalco 684, 673, 680.55 673, 682.80, 672.05, 681.65 Hinduja TMT 218.70, 228.90, 215.70, 224.95 216.85, 228, 215.60, 224.05 HLL 162, 163, 159.60, 161.80 160.95, 163, 159.50, 162.30 HMT 21.40, 22.15, 21.25, 21.30 21.35, 22.40, 21.10, 21.20 HPCL 315.40, 317.90, 311.80, 314.55 315.35, 317.80, 311.50, 314.50 Hughes Soft. 217.10, 226, 214.40, 224 218.50, 224.90, 214.55, 223.30 IBP 453, 480.95, 448.20, 476.45 447.80, 482.50, 447.80, 476.15 ICI (I) 135.05, 137.50, 135, 135.70 139, 139, 135, 135.75 ICICI Bank 143, 141, 141.45 141, 142.90, 141, 141.75 IDBI 34, 34.80, 32.40, 34.20 34.70, 34.75, 32.40, 34.15 IDBI Bank 27.20, 27.50, 26.65, 27 27.40, 27.50, 26.60, 26.95 India Cement 23, 23.90, 22.50, 23.35 23.90, 23.90, 22.60, 23.40 Indian Alumi 120 118.80, 119.90, 118.80, 119.50 Indian Hotel 206.50, 196.50, 197.45 202, 203, 196.30, 197.50 Indian Oil C 380, 405, 379.80, 384.40 380, 405, 380, 384.35 Indian Ov.Bk 26.45, 26.75, 25.85, 26.10 25.90, 26.75, 25.85, 26.15 Indian Rayon 100, 101.75, 98.05, 98.65 100.95, 101.50, 98.05, 98.50 Infosys Tech 2856.50, 2984.90, 2953 2882, 2984.95, 2879.95, 2948.95 Infotech En. 96.10, 104, 95.90, 103.30 98, 104, 95.80, 103.25 Ingersoll R 232.80, 238.90, 232.05, 237.45 231.25, 238, 231.25, 237.35 IPCL 105.50, 101.20, 102.05 103.75, 103.90, 101.40, 102.15 ITC 695, 710, 692.10, 705.80 695, 709.80, 692.10, 706.25 ITI 20.80, 21.45, 20.45, 20.90 20.90, 21.45, 20.35, 20.85 J&K Bank 206.80, 208.40, 202, 205.30 203.40, 210, 201.50, 204.50 Jaiprakash I 42.50, 40.80, 41.25 41.55, 41.75, 40.80, 41.30 JB Chemical 200, 195.25, 196.35 201.90, 201.90, 194.45, 196.75 Jindal Steel 460, 474, 448, 455.55 454, 469, 448, 452.50 Kochi Refin. 84, 84.55, 83.10, 83.30 84, 84.40, 83, 83.25 Kotak Mah.Bk 156.60, 158.50, 152, 153.80 155.05, 158.50, 151.50, 153.40 L&T 217.30, 218.50, 215.15, 216.10 217.90, 218.85, 215.50, 217.05 LIC Hsg.Fin. 104.95, 112.90, 108.90 110.15, 115.90, 107.10, 108.60 LML 36, 36.80, 36.15 34.90, 36.90, 34.90, 36.40 Lupin 205, 215, 201.70, 214.15 202, 215, 201.25, 213.40 M&M 131, 131.85, 128.20, 128.85 131, 131.45, 128.10, 129.25 Marico Inds 164, 165, 163.30, 164 168, 168, 163.50, 164.25 Mascot Systm 100, 102, 98.25, 99.10 99, 102.20, 98.20, 99.45 Mastek 270.40, 273, 263.70, 268.70 269.30, 273, 263.45, 268.60 Mastershare 11.12, 11.29, 11.10, 11.23 11.15, 11.30, 11.10, 11.20 Max (I) 83.05, 83.70, 79.60, 80.05 83, 84.25, 79.65, 80.10 Mcdowell Co. 45.45, 44.15, 44.30 45.30, 45.30, 44.25, 44.45 Merck 265, 266, 262.65, 264.35 260.60, 267.50, 260.55, 265.05 MIRC Electr. 422.95, 430.05, 418.05, 419.70 429, 433, 415, 418.20 Moser-Baer 293, 297.80, 288, 288.70 292, 298, 285, 289.80 Mphasis BFL 605, 606, 595, 595.25 581.10, 610, 581.10, 597.30 MRF 1200, 1210, 1145, 1159.75 1160.35, 1205, 1150, 1169.45 MTNL 100.65, 104, 99.60, 103.25 100.50, 103.90, 99.60, 103.10 Mukta Arts 56.95, 59.20, 55.60, 58.05 55.50, 58.90, 55.50, 58.05 National Alu 99, 99.75, 96.80, 97.10 99, 99.70, 97, 97.45 Nestle (I) 537, 531, 533.85 535, 536.70, 532, 535.75 Neyveli Lign 35, 37, 34.60, 35.20 35.90, 36.95, 34.60, 35.35 Nicholas Pir 275, 277.45, 271, 273.85 277, 278, 271.50, 273.90 NIIT 135.70, 139.40, 135, 138.40 135.25, 139.30, 135.20, 138.40 Nirma 299, 297.10, 298 297, 300, 296.10, 299 Novartis (I) 231.80, 231.85, 228, 229.75 ONGC 490, 493.90, 482.50, 484.25 487, 494, 482.05, 485.15 Oriental Bnk 132, 138, 126.95, 135.15 129.80, 138.75, 126.70, 134.65 P&G Hygiene 425, 440, 435 Padmalaya Te 70.20, 74.80, 73.85 70.25, 74.90, 70.25, 73.60 Pentamedia G 11.90, 12.14, 11.50, 11.96 11.95, 12.10, 11.50, 11.95 Pfizer 393.50, 395.50, 385, 386.20 392, 397.80, 384.50, 386.30 Philips (I) 105, 102.20 Pidilite Ind 252, 262.50, 261 252, 263, 251, 259.90 Polaris Soft 107, 108.95, 106.75, 107.60 108, 109, 106.75, 107.65 Pun.Tractors 150.15, 153.75, 149.35, 150.40 150.90, 153.50, 149.50, 150.40 Ranbaxy Lab. 682, 700, 680, 686.60 680.50, 700, 680, 687.10 Raymond 112, 109.65, 110.40 110, 112, 110, 111.05 RCF 30.50, 33.10, 31.80 31.20, 33.20, 30.55, 31.85 Rel Capital 60, 57.60, 58.25 59, 59.40, 57.60, 58.25 Reliance Ind 315, 316.90, 310.65, 313.20 315, 316.85, 310.70, 313.50 Rolta (I) 62, 68, 61.25, 67.15 62.50, 68.25, 61.30, 66.55 SAIL 12.36, 12.63, 12.35, 12.44 12.40, 12.60, 12.35, 12.45 Satyam Comp 180, 182.20, 177.50, 180.35 181.70, 182.30, 177.50, 180.45 Saw Pipes 117, 122.10, 115.50, 119 118, 122, 115.50, 118.80 SBI 350, 368, 365.90 365, 367.80, 354.15, 365.45 Shipp.Corpn. 79.60, 79.70, 78, 78.30 79.50, 79.50, 78, 78.30 Shyam Teleco 35.70, 35.80, 34.40, 35.20 35.30, 35.80, 34.40, 35.20 Siemens 356, 358, 350, 351 348, 359.85, 348, 350.20 Silverline T 8.63, 8.80, 8.38, 8.75 SKF Bearing 58, 61.90, 57.85, 61.20 58, 62, 58, 61.05 Sonata Soft. 13.80, 13.88, 13.35, 13.63 13.70, 13.90, 13.40, 13.65 SPICE 31.53, 31.50, 32 SSI 72.40, 84.40, 71, 82.65 71.55, 84.70, 71.10, 82.75 STC India 108.20, 103 116.50, 116.50, 102.65, 103.60 Sterl.Biotec 40, 45.40, 45.20 44.25, 45.35, 43.75, 45.05 Sterl.Optica 43.90, 41.80, 42.85 43.80, 43.80, 41.75, 43 Sun Pharma. 339, 333.55, 337.40 334, 338.65, 332.10, 337.25 Syndicate Bn 25.55, 26.20, 25.05, 25.20 25.50, 26.20, 25.05, 25.20 Syngenta (I) 114.40, 115.20, 114.30, 114.75 Tata Chem 68.20, 68.55, 67.55, 68.20 68, 68.50, 67.60, 68.20 Tata Elxsi 69.80, 73, 72.30 70.80, 73, 69.80, 71.90 Tata Power 131.90, 134, 130.50, 131.70 132.50, 134, 130.25, 131.95 Tata Tea 225.75, 230.50, 225.25, 226.25 226, 230, 225.10, 226.35 Tata Telcom 114.50, 118.90, 114, 116 114.75, 119.85, 114, 116.40 TELCO 182.85, 183.40, 178.30, 181.15 183.90, 183.90, 178, 181.35 Thermax 219, 226.95, 215, 224.40 217.80, 222.50, 215.15, 221.25 Thomas Cook 204.85, 198, 198.75 200.05, 202.80, 198, 198.65 TISCO 160, 162.75, 159.65, 161.85 160.75, 163, 160.60, 162.20 Titan Inds. 64.65, 66, 64, 64.30 64.85, 65.95, 64.10, 64.35 TN Newsprint 53.45, 55, 52.40, 53.05 53.50, 54.90, 52.25, 53.15 TN Petro 19.65, 19.80, 19.30, 19.35 19.80, 19.90, 19.40, 19.45 Torrent Phar 201, 202, 190.50, 190.80 201, 203, 190.20, 190.95 Trent 191.50, 182.85, 183.90 179, 191.95, 179, 183.45 TVS Electron 71.75, 72.40, 70, 71.75 66, 72.50, 66, 71.20 TVS Motor Co 506.70, 515.95, 513.15 509, 516.90, 509, 516.15 United Phosp 161.90, 163.50, 160.35, 161.15 160.80, 164, 160.20, 161.85 UTI Bank 50.25, 50.90, 49.75, 50.65 50.95, 50.95, 49.65, 50.65 Videocon Int 31.40, 32.85, 30.60, 32.10 30.75, 33, 30.55, 32.25 Vijaya Bank 22.55, 23, 22.05, 22.35 22.60, 23.15, 22, 22.20 Visual Soft 135, 140.40, 134.10, 139.50 135, 140.30, 134, 139.25 VSNL 100, 102, 99, 101.35 101, 101.80, 99.50, 101.10 Whirlpool 20.90, 21.40, 20.60, 21.35 20.90, 21.40, 20.60, 21.30 Wipro 850, 879.80, 871.60 873.15, 875, 851.50, 870.80 Wockhardt 375, 376.65, 370 373, 375, 370.50, 372.10 Zee Telefilm 87.15, 93.80, 92.75 87, 93.75, 87, 92.60 Zensar Tech. 83.85, 84.90, 82.10, 83.15 82, 85, 81.85, 83.55 B1 - GROUP 3 3M India 307.05, 310, 304.40 310, 310, 301.05, 303.05 A A Sarabhai 5.30, 5, 5.15 Aarti Drugs 28.85, 30.75, 30.50 Aarti Inds. 65, 65.50, 64.10, 64.65 67, 67, 64.85, 65.50 Aarvee Denim 15.90, 14.80, 14.85 Aban Loyd 195, 201, 193.20, 197.20 194, 201, 192.30, 197.60 ABC Bearings 11, 12.20, 10.28, 12.18 ABG Heavy In 14.99, 14.10 Abhishek Ind 9.20, 9.90, 8.80, 9.58 9.60, 9.60, 8.85, 9.30 Adam Comsof 5, 4.85, 5.25 Addi Inds. 30, 29 Advani Oerli 33.65, 33.85, 33.40, 33.70 34, 34, 33.50, 33.95 Aegis Logis. 9.50, 10.75, 10.50 11.50, 11.50, 10.20, 10.85 AFT Inds. 61, 62, 60.40, 60.85 Aftek Infosy 240, 253.85, 248.90 242, 249.80, 240.20, 248.50 Agro Dutch I 14.80, 14.65, 15.25 15, 15.45, 14.80, 15.30 Agro Tech Fd 36.40, 35.10, 35.50 35.25, 36.55, 35.05, 35.05 Ahmed.Elect. 60, 63.85, 59.80, 63.70 60.65, 64, 60.05, 63.60 Ahmednagar F 36, 33.75, 35.40 36, 36, 34.10, 34.35 Ajanta Pharm 29.60, 31.50, 29.50, 30.90 31, 31.35, 30.50, 31.10 Aksh Optifib 19, 19.30, 18.60, 18.90 19, 19.50, 18.50, 18.85 Albert David 28.60, 29, 28, 28.75 Albright & W 212, 212.25 Alembic 216, 219.25, 214, 218.25 214.80, 219, 213.10, 216.75 Alfa Laval 300, 301 298.35, 305, 298.30, 304.95 Alka (I) 0.25 Alkyl Amines 17.50, 17.65, 17.05, 17.15 Allahabad Bk 19, 19.30, 18.70, 18.90 18.50, 19.25, 18.50, 18.85 Alok Inds. 15.60, 16.45, 15.40, 16.15 15.50, 16.50, 15.40, 16.10 Alps Inds. 19, 20.50, 19, 19.60 Alstom 33.05, 34.25, 33, 33.25 Amara Raja B 69.75, 72, 70.90 69, 72.30, 69, 71.20 Ambica Agarb 46, 49.50, 45.10 Ambuja Cem.R 3.81, 4.02, 3.74, 3.93 4, 4, 3.75, 3.95 Amex Info. 14.50, 15, 14.25, 14.28 Amforge Inds 32, 30.45, 31 Amrutanjan 61, 73.95, 73.90 Amtek 53.65, 55.50, 54.90 Amtek Auto 192.10, 195.80, 191.70, 193.15 Andrew Yule 17.60, 17.95, 17.05, 17.10 Ankur Drugs 7, 6.90 Ansal Prop. 11.15, 11.20, 10.15, 10.52 AP Paper 52.35, 54.70, 51.30, 54.35 Apcotex Lat. 35, 34.05, 35.40 34.90, 35.40, 34.80, 35.30 Aplab 22.50, 24, 21.55, 23.75 Aptech 27.70, 29.85, 27.10, 29.35 27.70, 29.50, 26.55, 29 Archies 59.40, 60.25, 59, 59.25 60.75, 60.75, 59, 59.60 Arvind Rem. 5, 4.30, 4.70 4.80, 4.90, 4.50, 4.55 Asahi (I) Gl 52.20, 53.35, 51.80, 52 51, 53.95, 51, 52 Ashapura Min 91.15, 94, 91.25 Ashima 16, 16.90 17.45, 17.45, 15.80, 15.80 Ashok Ley.Fn 54.10, 55, 54.05, 54.50 54.50, 54.95, 53.90, 54.85 Asian Elect. 50.95, 51, 46.55, 48.15 51, 51.65, 46.80, 49.40 Asian Hotels 85.30, 83, 84.75 90.50, 90.50, 80.15, 84 Assam Co. 12.20, 15 Astrazen.Ph. 360, 365, 347, 347.60 359.15, 363, 359, 360 Atcom Techno 10.50, 11.65, 11.51 10.80, 11.70, 10.80, 11.50 Atlas Copco 250.50, 255, 254.85 Atlas Cycles 72, 72.10 72, 73.75, 71.75, 72.55 Atul 41.70, 40.50, 40.75 40.80, 41, 40.25, 40.40 Auto Axles 118.20, 120, 116.05, 116.90 119, 119.50, 116.25, 118.35 Avanti Feeds 22.10, 23, 22.75 Avery (I) 23.45, 24.50, 24.20 Avon Organic 40, 40.80, 37, 37.90 Chettinad Ce 44, 37.50, 38.10 Cheviot Co. 62, 70, 66.65 Chola.Inv&Fi 43.50, 43.70, 42.80, 43.05 43, 43.75, 42.60, 43.10 Chowgule Stm 5.15, 5.90, 5.81 Ciba Sp.Chem 108.55, 107.10, 108.40 Cinevistaas 26.75, 30.10, 29.70 29.70, 29.95, 27, 29.95 City Union B 46, 47.90, 46.05 46.30, 47, 45.90, 46.05 Clariant (I) 148, 144, 146.10 135.05, 148.50, 135.05, 146.60 Classic Diam 40, 41, 39.55, 40.95 Clutch.Auto 9.65, 9.75, 9.05, 9.17 Coates (I) 106.10, 106 108, 109, 105.30, 108.55 Cochin Minrl 14.70, 14.85, 14.35, 14.80 Color Chips 7.88, 8.40, 7.75, 8.20 7.80, 8.35, 7.70, 8.20 Colour Chem 240, 237.10, 237.55 236.55, 238.95, 236, 237.40 Compucom Sof 18.90, 17.30, 18.50 Compudyne Wi 18.40, 18.70, 17.21, 18.06 18.45, 18.90, 17.20, 18.10 Computech In 5.60, 5.79, 5.67 5.75, 5.80, 5.55, 5.65 Cont.Const. 10.05, 11, 10.81 Control Prnt 20.10 Core Health. 6.01, 7, 6.50 6, 6.90, 5.70, 6.55 Corom. Fert. 72, 75, 69.10, 69.25 73.50, 74.75, 68.80, 69.70 Cosmo Ferr. 8.74, 8.80, 8.30, 8.40 Cosmo Films 81, 82, 80.75, 81.30 82.45, 82.50, 80.50, 81.10 Creative Eye 14.50, 16.60, 15.98 14.90, 16.70, 14.40, 16.10 Crest Comm. 31.60, 33.80, 30.75, 32.65 31.60, 33.75, 29, 32.95 CRISIL 314, 315, 305 312, 315, 305.10, 308 Cybertech Sy 10.05, 10.19, 9.80, 9.94 10.15, 10.30, 9.55, 10 B D Bajaj Auto F 58, 59.70, 50, 59.50 57.95, 60, 57.95, 59.15 Bajaj Elec. 30.05, 30, 30.90 Bajaj Hindus 86.05, 94.20, 93 93.95, 95, 93.15, 93.15 Bajaj Tempo 115, 125, 122.85 Bal Pharma 19.50, 20.35, 19.95 Bal.Law.Vanl 16.70, 16.80, 16.50 Balaji Dist. 6.60, 7.50, 7.21 6.50, 7.55, 6.40, 7.30 Balkrish Ind 71.50, 74, 71.10, 72.70 Balmer Law.I 53, 50 Balmer Lawri 92.55, 94 92.60, 94.95, 92.60, 93.70 Balrampur Ch 138.50, 144.40, 138, 143.35 132, 144.25, 132, 143.90 Banco Prod. 75, 65.10, 66.45 Bank of Punj 18.20, 18.40, 17.90, 18.15 18.15, 18.50, 17.85, 18.20 Bank of Raj. 22.70, 22.80, 22.10, 22.30 22.85, 22.85, 22.15, 22.25 Bannari Aman 126, 122.40, 124.35 129.60, 129.60, 121.35, 122.95 Bayer (I) 1070, 1075, 1050 Bayer ABS 93, 93.70, 90.60, 92.15 93.05, 94, 90.05, 92 Bayer Diagno 193.95, 189, 190 Berger Paint 84.50, 82, 82.90 84.65, 84.70, 82.30, 83 BF Utilities 9, 10.57 Bhansali Eng 17, 16.80, 17.90 Bharat Bijle 287.75, 300, 286.30 Bharat Hotel 28, 29.45, 28, 29.45 Bharat Rasay 26.25, 26.25, 26.25, 26.25 Bhartiya Int 27.40, 26.40 26.40, 27, 26.30, 26.90 Bhushan Stl. 33.50, 36.80, 35.25 BI 66.15, 60, 65.75 Bihar Caustc 17.50, 17.90, 17.70 Bimetal Bear 120, 124.50 Binani Inds. 20.80, 20.90, 19.50, 20.25 Biopac (I) 7.01, 7 Birla Corp. 19.75, 19.15, 19.35 19.80, 19.80, 19.25, 19.55 Birla Eric. 14.75, 14.06, 14.36 14.65, 14.65, 13.80, 14.30 Birla Glob.F 16.20, 16.80, 16.45 16.40, 16.80, 16.30, 16.55 Birla Yamaha 18, 17.35, 17.75 BITS 0.57, 0.60, 0.42, 0.53 BLB 4.80, 4.90 4.35, 4.35, 4.15, 4.25 Blow Plast 13, 13.69, 12.66, 13.45 Blue Dart Ex 67.50, 67.80, 65.50, 66.50 66.95, 67.70, 65, 66.80 Blue Star 104.90, 104.15, 106.20 105, 107.65, 105, 106.95 Blue Star In 123.50, 125.95, 121.25, 122.05 128, 129, 122.75, 123.25 BOC 36, 36.40, 34.20, 36 35.90, 36.25, 34.20, 35.95 Bombay Burma 38.05, 38.50, 38.15 36.50, 36.50, 36.50, 36.50 Bongaigaon R 34.35, 34.90, 33.50, 33.60 34, 34.80, 33.50, 33.70 BPL 33, 35.50, 32.80, 33.90 33.45, 35.50, 32.85, 33.90 BPL Engg. 6.35, 6.40, 5.65, 6.07 6.10, 6.60, 6, 6.30 BSEL Inform. 9.45, 10 10.85, 13, 10.80, 13 BSL 27.50, 27.55 27.15, 28, 27.15, 28 Burrough Wel 293, 291, 292.15 Daewoo Motor 2, 1.74, 1.84 Dalmia Cemen 160, 160.50 164.20, 165, 160, 164.95 Danlaw Tech. 20.40, 20.25, 23 Datapro Inf. 0.59, 0.60, 0.56, 0.57 DCM 10.10, 10.80, 10.30 10, 10.75, 9.70, 10.35 DCM Shr.Con 80, 75.55, 76.10 76.30, 78.95, 75.25, 76.95 DCW 15.55, 15.80, 15, 15.31 15.10, 15.60, 15, 15.20 Deccan Cem. 35.10, 35 Deepak Fert. 24, 24.65, 23.35, 23.90 23.60, 24.15, 23.60, 23.85 Deepak Nitr. 58, 50.40, 52.80 Dena Bank 19, 18, 18.55 19, 19.10, 18.35, 18.55 Denso (I) 29.25, 29.45, 27.20, 27.85 Dewan H.Fin. 19.25, 20, 19, 19.55 19, 20.30, 18.75, 19.60 DFM Foods 8.51, 10, 8.50, 9.99 DGP Windsor 4.75, 5.40, 5.20 4.80, 5.45, 4.80, 5.45 Dhampur Sugr 16.35, 18.20, 16.20, 17.13 16.10, 18.15, 16, 17.30 Dhanalak.Bnk 20, 19.60, 19.65 Dharamsi Mor 6.15, 6.99, 6.75 Dhunseri Tea 16.45, 15.65, 16.35 Divi’s Lab 393, 395.95, 387.60, 391.65 400, 400, 386.55, 392.25 Dolphin Off. 12.36, 12.50 Donear Inds. 106, 107.80, 102.50, 104.70 DSJ Comm. 0.55, 0.72 0.60, 0.75, 0.60, 0.75 Duphar-Inter 120 E Eicher 32.25, 35.50, 34.05 32.50, 34.50, 32.50, 33.75 Eicher Motor 117, 117.75, 114.25, 117.10 117.50, 118, 114.50, 117.25 EID Parry 111, 111.50, 105.25, 108.20 109.80, 111, 105.10, 108 EIH Asso.Hot 13.25, 14, 13.30 Eimco Elecon 51.65, 52, 50.30 53, 54, 51, 51.05 Elder Pharma 39.50, 44.60 39, 44.10, 39, 44.10 Elecon Engg. 12, 12.05, 11.43, 11.50 Elect.Kelvin 8, 8.15, 8.09 Electro.Cast 300, 300.25, 293 305.80, 305.80, 292, 294.60 Elgi Equip 25.60, 26.25, 25.55, 26 25.05, 26.25, 25.05, 26.05 Elgitread (I 182.25, 181.05, 183 187, 188, 180.05, 181.05 Elpro Inter 22, 24, 23.30 Emco 35.25, 38, 35, 37.30 Encore Soft 12.80, 13.25, 13 Eonour Tech. 3.88, 3.25, 3.43 Epic Enzymes 8, 8.10, 7.55, 7.86 Esab (I) 40, 40.15, 38.50, 38.65 39.50, 40, 38.50, 39.10 ESI 20.50, 22 21, 21.75, 20.85, 20.85 Eskay K’N’It 3.05, 3.25, 2.92, 3.20 Essar Oil 6.70, 6.95, 6.50, 6.50 Essar Ship. 7.70, 7.73, 7.10, 7.17 Essar Steel 10.10, 10.30, 10.03, 10.06 10.15, 10.30, 10.05, 10.10 ETC Networks 45.70, 48.25, 44.75, 47.45 Eternit Ever 43, 44, 42.05, 42.10 44, 44.90, 42, 42.75 Eurotex Inds 12.60, 13.50, 13.01 12.50, 13.75, 12.50, 13.15 Eveready Ind 19.40, 20.25, 18.90, 19.80 C Camlin 69.60, 71, 68.50, 69.30 Camph.& All 24.25, 26.50, 25.65 Canara Bank 106, 102, 103.65 103, 105.65, 102.30, 103.70 Canfin Homes 37.50, 38.50, 37.30, 37.45 37.50, 37.90, 37.20, 37.75 Caprihans(I) 17, 17.20, 16.55, 16.65 Carborundum 134.60, 135, 133.50, 133.80 136, 136, 134, 134.45 Carrier Air. 92.95, 94.85, 94 CCL Products 18.05, 16.20, 18.10 Ceat 36.10, 37, 35.80, 36.60 37, 37, 35.60, 36.45 Centur. Bank 12.75, 12.27, 12.63 12.85, 13, 12.35, 12.55 Cerebra Inte 5.50, 5.70, 5.65 CESC 28.40, 28.80, 27.95, 28.50 28, 28.80, 27.65, 28.35 CG Igarshi M 40.50, 41, 40.25 40.30, 41.50, 40.30, 41 Chemfab Alk. 21.50, 23 Chemplast Sa 32, 32.25, 32 32.20, 32.50, 31.50, 32 The Times of India, New Delhi 19, 20.50, 18.90, 19.70 Excel Inds. 79.90, 81.65, 79, 79.50 80, 82, 79.50, 79.95 51.75, 52, 50, 51.15 Hind.Spg &Wg 12.70, 11.25 Hitachi Home 23, 23.05 23.80, 23.80, 23, 23.20 Honda SIEL P 136, 136.55, 136, 136.50 Hotel Leela. 20.05, 20.70, 20, 20.30 20.25, 20.70, 20.10, 20.60 F FAG Bearings 62, 62.50, 61, 62.20 61, 62.90, 59.25, 61.90 Fairfield At 4, 3.80 FCGL Inds. 2.30, 2.55, 2.20, 2.40 FCI OEN Con. 94, 98.80, 93.35, 95.15 94, 97.45, 93.25, 96.90 FCL Techno. 23.05, 24.45, 23, 23.10 FDC 32, 32.80, 31.85, 31.95 32.35, 32.65, 31.75, 32.15 Fert.&Chem-T 31.55, 30.80 31.90, 32.40, 30.90, 31.20 First Leasin 20.20, 20.60, 20, 20.10 20.30, 20.65, 20.20, 20.20 Flat Product 58.40, 68, 66.30 Flex Enginer 14.60 13.50, 13.60, 13.45, 13.50 Flex Foods 7.09, 7.35, 7.25 Flex Inds. 22.25, 23.15, 22.05, 23.05 23.50, 23.50, 20.55, 23.05 Floatglass 24, 24.20, 22.75, 23.40 23.70, 24.25, 22.20, 23.90 Forbes Gokak 69.10, 68.20, 69 Fortune Info 35.80, 38.80, 35.50, 37.60 Foseco (I) 124, 124.55, 123.45, 124.35 122, 124.85, 122, 124.80 Frontier Inf 3.91, 3.70, 3.95 Fulford (I) 100.05, 102, 100, 101.05 Futura Poly. 8, 9.54, 9.52 NSE SHARE INDEX 1046 40 I I-flex Solu 878, 880.90, 860, 864.20 874, 883, 861, 867.55 ICICI Premie 12, 12.60, 12.50 IFCI 8.45, 8.48, 7.80, 7.92 8.60, 8.60, 7.80, 7.95 IL&FS Invt.M 22.75, 23, 22.20, 22.25 22.10, 23.50, 22, 22.50 Ind.Swift 70, 66, 66.50 Ind.Swift La 22.60, 21.50, 21.80 23, 23, 21.50, 21.75 India Foils 7.75, 8, 7.70, 7.95 7.30, 8, 7.30, 7.90 India Gelat. 13.60, 13.50 India Glycol 50, 56.50, 55.10 India Gypsum 21, 21.85, 20.15, 21.70 20.80, 21.35, 20.80, 21 India Nippon 218 214.20, 215, 210.50, 211.70 India Online 7.95, 7.35, 7.50 India Polyfi 4.10, 4.40, 4 Indian Card 50.05, 51.15, 49.50, 50.05 49.15, 51.30, 49.15, 50.95 Indian Hume 700, 720, 712 Indian Resor 45.05, 53.90, 49 Indian SeamM 11.95, 11.55, 12.45 Indo Gulf Fe 59.80, 60.85, 59.10, 59.45 62, 62, 59.10, 59.50 Indo Mat.Car 72.55, 74, 73.50 Indo Nationl 360.05, 380, 355, 364.90 342.35, 342.35, 342.35, 342.35 Indraprast.M 14.25, 13.43, 13.67 13.55, 13.75, 13.50, 13.55 Indus.Inv.Tr 16.55, 18, 16.55 Indusind Bnk 20.50, 20.60, 19.65, 19.70 20.40, 20.45, 19.65, 19.85 ING Vysya Bk 273, 302, 295.65 300, 302, 258, 295.15 Innovis.E-Co 0.45, 0.38 Insilco 15.50, 14.15, 15.07 Inter.Travel 33.05, 33.50, 32.75, 33.10 Invest.Trust 21, 19 Ion Exchange 37.25, 38.50, 36.10, 37.50 IP Rings 48.50, 47, 47.10 IPCA Lab. 277.50, 265, 267.05 273.55, 276.95, 265.05, 267.20 Ispat Inds. 5.50, 5.80, 5.70 5.70, 5.80, 5.60, 5.70 IT & T 15.60, 14 14.25, 14.85, 14.10, 14.15 ITC Hotels 53.75, 51.55, 52.65 56, 56, 50.50, 50.95 IVP 23.60, 25, 24.45 25.75, 25.75, 24, 24.15 IVRCL Infras 56.50, 54.05, 55.80 56.50, 56.95, 54, 54.90 G Gabriel (I) 90.10, 88, 89.20 Galaxy Enter 21 Gammon (I) 124, 125, 121.50, 121.70 125, 125, 121.65, 122.80 Gandhi Sp.Tu 21.40, 21.45, 19.95 Garden Silk 33, 33.50, 31.95, 32.75 32.50, 33.50, 31.80, 32.70 Garware Poly 38.30, 38.35, 36.80, 37 Garware Wall 23.90, 24, 23.15, 23.50 Gati 46, 37.85, 44.65 Genesys Intl 34.75, 37.40, 33.80, 36.80 35, 37.40, 34.20, 37.20 Geodesic Inf 103.05 George Willi 52.95, 52.15, 52.50 52.50, 52.95, 51.90, 52.10 GIC Housing 16, 15.25 16.10, 16.15, 15.30, 15.40 GIVO 2.55, 3.60 Glenmark Pha 255.95, 264.90, 252, 261.75 254.85, 265.80, 251.15, 259.95 Global Tr.Bk 19.30, 19.90, 19.05, 19.10 19.85, 20, 19.05, 19.15 GMM Pfaudler 90.75 GMR Techno. 9, 9.36, 9.15 Goa Carbon 42, 45.35, 42.90 Godavri Fert 36.05, 39.95, 38.50 39.80, 40.05, 39, 39.20 Godfrey Phil 320, 316.50 320.10, 323, 318, 323 Godrej Cons. 114.25, 120, 118.95 110.15, 120.50, 110.15, 120.05 Godrej Inds. 26.60, 27.60, 26.40, 27.30 26.55, 27.50, 26.30, 27.25 Goetze (I) 33, 34.15, 32.90, 33 32.75, 38.50, 32.75, 33.10 Goldiam Int. 25, 25.75, 25.50 Goldstn.Tech 24.10, 25, 24, 24.75 24.85, 24.85, 24.10, 24.60 Goldstn.Tele 8.50, 8.21, 8.30 8.15, 8.45, 8.15, 8.25 Gonter Peip 4.90, 4.99, 4.60, 4.80 Goodlass Ner 199.75, 201, 200 202.20, 202.20, 199.50, 200.30 Goodricke 28.30, 28.70, 28, 28.50 Goodyear (I) 37, 39.40, 36, 36.25 Grabal Al.Im 16.75, 19.02, 17.21 Graphite Ind 36, 37.50, 37 36.85, 37.50, 36.60, 37.10 Grauer & Wei 21.65, 19.70, 20.10 Gravity (I) 7.50, 7.90, 7.10 Greaves 17, 19.85, 16.75, 19.45 Grind Norton 115, 130, 125.50 Gruh Finance 22.35, 22.80, 22, 22.15 GTC Inds. 8.20, 8.70, 6.70, 8.64 8.70, 8.70, 6.15, 8.30 GTN Textiles 33.90, 34.20, 33.10, 33.40 31, 34.45, 31, 33.45 Gufic Bio Sc 25, 26.10, 25.60 Guj.Alkalies 28, 28.45, 28.15 27.20, 28.55, 27.20, 28.10 Guj.Amb.Exp. 14.30, 14.65, 14.15, 14.53 14.30, 14.70, 14.30, 14.45 Guj.Apollo E 58, 60, 57.65, 59.95 Guj.Flouroch 73.20, 73.35, 71.10, 73.15 72.05, 74.45, 71.10, 73.35 Guj.H.Chem 21.35, 21.45, 21.20, 21.35 21.40, 21.50, 21.25, 21.35 Guj.Ind.Pow. 22.50, 23.70, 22.90 23.30, 23.65, 22.70, 22.80 Guj.Sidh.Cem 4.50, 4.35, 5.28 4.50, 5.30, 4.40, 5.30 Gulf Oil Cor 67.30, 55.80, 57.30 J Jagatjit Ind 24.80, 24.90, 21.75 Jagsonpal Ph 93.90, 94, 90, 90 Jai Corp 42, 42.30, 40, 40.50 Jain Irrig. 59.45, 61, 57, 58 61.50, 61.50, 57.30, 58.30 Jain Studios 17.30, 18.25, 16.15, 17.52 17.65, 18.40, 16.60, 17.65 Jaipan Inds. 15.10, 14.22, 16.22 Jay Bh.Marut 33.15, 33.10, 34.70 35.50, 35.90, 34, 35 Jayant Agro 51, 53, 50.60, 51.70 49, 52, 49, 51.65 Jaypee Hotel 9.55, 9.89, 9.88 Jayshree Tea 39 39.85, 39.85, 39.25, 39.30 JBF Inds. 11.25, 11.99, 11.80 JBM Tools 33, 32, 32.15 33.65, 33.65, 32.05, 33.20 JCT 6, 6.54, 6.38 Jenson&Nicho 5.80, 6.45, 5.10, 6.25 5.55, 6.50, 5.50, 6.40 JIK Inds. 15.70, 14.75, 15 15.90, 15.90, 14.10, 15 Jindal Drill 123.05, 123, 134 Jindal Iron 104.50, 106.90, 102.50, 104.25 105.40, 106.90, 102.50, 104.25 Jindal Photo 38.65, 42.80, 41.50 38.30, 42.50, 38.30, 41.65 Jindal Poly. 100, 100.25 107.40, 107.40, 103.50, 104.95 Jindal Strip 188, 194.40, 187.90, 189.40 189.90, 194.40, 188.50, 190 JK Corpn. 11.40, 12.60, 12.40 JK Inds. 32, 34, 31.50, 33 JK Synthetic 3.10, 3, 3.72 JL Morison 80, 92.45, 82.65 JMC Projects 22.30, 21, 21.20 Jog Engg. 8.25, 8.30, 7.52, 7.53 Jubilant Org 218.50, 235, 225.05 226.75, 235.50, 222, 225.80 Jupiter BioS 55.55, 56.30, 52.85, 53.10 Jyoti Struct 29.50, 31.40, 26.65, 30.20 30.40, 31.70, 26.80, 30.65 K H Kaashyap Rad 0.97, 0.99, 0.86, 0.89 Kabra Extr 36, 36.75, 36, 36.30 Kajaria Cer 26.30, 28, 27.50 26.50, 28, 26.50, 27.45 Kakatiya Cem 27.65, 28.50 27.15, 28.70, 26.75, 28.45 Kale Consul. 34.85, 35.35, 33.40, 34.95 34.70, 35.30, 33.80, 35.05 Kalpa.Power 42.50, 43.40, 41.85, 42.05 44.75, 45, 42, 43.45 Kalyani Brak 300.50, 300 Kalyani Shrp 6.55, 7, 6.55 Kalyani Stel 18.90, 18, 18.20 Kanoria Chem 40.40 35.30, 35.35, 35.30, 35.35 Karnatak Bnk 79, 80, 76.50, 76.75 80.70, 80.95, 77, 77.25 Karur Vysya 189.20, 192.80, 188.75, 191.40 191.50, 192.80, 188.50, 190.95 KDL Biotech 14.25, 14.90, 14.60 13.85, 14.95, 13.70, 14.40 KEC Inter. 21.15, 22.40, 20.40, 20.90 21.10, 22.50, 20.30, 21 Kerala Ayurv 8.45, 8.85, 8.35, 8.40 Kerala Chem. 19.95, 18.35, 18.40 Kesoram Inds 33.25, 32.30, 32.90 32.80, 33.20, 32.40, 32.95 KG Denim 12.55, 12.80, 12.25, 12.42 Khandwala Se 10.75 10.25, 10.25, 10.25, 10.25 Khoday (I) 13, 12.78, 13.46 Kinetic Eng. 71.95, 74.70, 70.50, 72 Kinetic Moto 29.35, 29.80, 29.15, 29.40 Kirloskar Br 111.05, 106 Kirloskar Oi 81, 77.50 Harr.Malayal 12.82, 14.80, 13.95 13, 14.35, 13, 13.85 Hathway Bhaw 11.95, 12.50, 10.75, 12.47 Hatsun Agro 68.50, 70, 68.45, 68.85 Havell’s (I) 114.70, 114.75, 114.70 111, 112.90, 110.50, 112.90 Hawkins Cook 20, 22 Hazoor Media 5.15, 5.26, 5.25 HBL Nife Pow 40.55, 41, 36.50, 39.75 HEG 34.50, 35, 34.30, 34.50 35.80, 35.80, 34.60, 34.70 Helios & Mat 15.80, 17.45, 15.50 Henkel Spic 20, 21.25, 20.30 Heritage Fds 55.95, 57.90, 55.20, 57.10 54.60, 58.25, 54.60, 57.55 Hi-Tech Gear 123.95, 119, 119.35 127.35, 127.35, 120, 120.05 Hikal 174.40, 179, 167.25, 175.30 173, 179, 167.25, 176.05 Himat. Seide 138, 135.60, 136.30 138, 138, 135, 135.25 Hind.Constn. 80.35, 82, 80, 80.65 82, 82, 79.55, 80.10 Hind.Inks&Re 228.40, 228.70, 223.45, 224.85 227, 228.95, 223.65, 224.85 Hind.Motors 12.10, 12.44, 11.86, 11.96 12, 12.45, 11.85, 11.95 Hind.Org.Chm 24.10, 24.80, 23.60, 23.85 24.90, 25.25, 23.75, 23.95 Hind.Power 30.40, 30.70, 30.35, 30.55 Hind.Sanitar 52, 49.40, 49.55 N m Open-ended Schemes N m NA R As on 05/06/2003 Alliance Capital Mutual Fund 95 (D) 28.49 95 (G) 51.40 Basic Inds.(D) 14.87 Basic Inds.(G) 14.87 Buy India (D) 4.94 Buy India (G) 4.95 Capital Tax Relief’96 61.22 Cash Manager (D) 10.00 Cash Manager (G) 14.98 Cash Manager Instnl (D) 10.00 Cash Manager Instnl (G) 10.08 Equity (D) 15.97 Equity (G) 28.85 Frontline Eq(D) 11.31 Frontline Eq(G) 11.31 G-Sec Long Term (D) 11.64 G-Sec Long Term (G) 17.30 G-Sec Short Term (D) 10.30 G-Sec Short Term (G) 13.99 Income (D) 11.12 Income (G) 21.79 Income 54EA (D) 11.13 Income 54EA (G) 21.79 Income 54EB (D) 11.14 Income 54EB (G) 21.65 Income Q’ly (D) 10.78 Monthly Income (G) 17.40 Monthly Income (M’ly) 10.49 Monthly Income (Q’ly) 10.73 New Millennium (D) 3.72 New Millennium (G) 3.72 Short Term (D) 10.02 Short Term (G) 10.87 Short Term Fund Instnl(D) 10.02 Benchmark Mutual Fund Nifty BeES 104.44 Nifty Junior BeES 164.69 Birla Sunlife Mutual Fund Advantage (A) 27.25 Advantage (B) 27.25 Balance (D) 9.88 Balance (G) 9.88 Bond Index Fund (Div) 10.13 Bond Index Fund (G) 10.13 Bond Plus Inst.(G) 11.28 Bond Plus Retail (D) 11.19 Bond plus Inst.(D) 10.45 Bond plus Retail (G) 11.28 Cash Plus Inst.(G) 16.45 Cash Plus Retail (D) 16.35 Cash Plus Retail (G) 16.45 Cash Plus-Inst.(D) 10.79 D Yield Plus(Div) 10.99 D Yield Plus(G) 11.76 Equity Plan 15.37 FMP 1 Year Group 3 10.82 FMP 1 Year Group 5 A (D) 10.62 FMP 1 Year Group 5 A (G) 10.62 FMP Quarterly Group 1 (D) 11.02 FMP Quarterly Group 1 (G) 11.24 Gilt Plus-Liquid-(A)(D) 10.67 Gilt Plus-Liquid-(B)(G) 15.01 Gilt Plus-PF Plan-(A)(D) 11.66 Gilt Plus-PF Plan-(B)(G) 17.96 Gilt Plus-Reg.-(AD) 12.00 Gilt Plus-Reg.-(BG) 19.74 INDEX (Div) 10.62 INDEX (G) 10.62 IT Plan A (Div Payout) 10.61 IT Plan A (Div Reinv) 10.61 IT Plan B (G) 12.34 Income Plus Inst. A(D) 26.75 Income Plus Inst. B(G) 26.75 Income Plus Plan A(D) 10.81 Income Plus Plan B(G) 26.66 MIDCAP (Div) 11.44 MIDCAP (G) 12.04 MIP Plan A (D) 10.66 MIP Plan B (Payment/G) 13.74 MIP Plan C (Payment/G) 13.74 MNC Plan A (Div Payout) 24.55 MNC Plan A (Div Reinv) 24.55 MNC Plan B (Gr) 30.74 Sweep Plan (D) 10.14 Sweep Plan (G) 10.34 R S 29.06 52.43 15.17 15.17 5.04 5.05 61.83 10.00 14.98 10.00 10.08 16.29 29.43 11.54 11.54 11.64 17.30 10.30 13.99 11.12 21.79 11.13 21.79 11.14 21.65 10.78 17.40 10.49 10.73 3.79 3.79 10.02 10.87 10.02 28.49 51.40 14.87 14.87 4.94 4.95 61.22 10.00 14.98 10.00 10.08 15.97 28.85 11.31 11.31 11.64 17.30 10.30 13.99 11.12 21.79 11.13 21.79 11.14 21.65 10.78 17.40 10.49 10.73 3.72 3.72 10.02 10.87 10.02 — — — — 27.52 27.52 9.98 9.98 10.13 10.13 11.28 11.19 10.45 11.28 16.45 16.35 16.45 10.79 11.10 11.88 15.37 10.82 10.62 10.62 11.02 11.24 10.67 15.01 11.66 17.96 12.00 19.74 10.68 10.68 10.72 10.72 12.46 26.75 26.75 10.81 26.66 11.55 12.16 10.66 13.74 13.74 24.80 24.80 31.05 10.14 10.34 27.25 27.25 9.88 9.88 10.13 10.13 11.28 11.19 10.45 11.28 16.45 16.35 16.45 10.79 10.99 11.76 15.37 10.82 10.62 10.62 11.02 11.24 10.67 15.01 11.66 17.96 12.00 19.74 10.62 10.62 10.61 10.61 12.34 26.75 26.75 10.81 26.66 11.44 12.04 10.66 13.74 13.74 24.55 24.55 30.74 10.14 10.34 BOB Mutual Fund Gilt (D) Gilt (G) Income (D) Income (G) Income Fund STP (D) Income Fund STP (G) Liquid (D) Liquid (G) Canbank Mutual Fund Canbonus Cancigo Cancigo (G) Canequity Tax Saver Canexpo Canexpo (G) Canganga Cangilt PGS (D) Cangilt PGS (G) Canglobal Canincome (B) Canincome (G) Canincome (I) Canliquid (D) Canliquid (G) Canpremium Canpremium (G) Cantriple Chola Mutual Fund FMP Q’ly (D) FMP Y’ly (Cum) FMP Y’ly (D) Fr.In.-STF (HY’ly) Freedom Income (C) Freedom Income (R) Freedom Income-Inst Cum Freedom Income-Inst Reg Freedom Tech.(Cum) Freedom Tech.(Reg) Gilt Invst.(Cum) Gilt Invst.(Reg) Gilt Series (Cum) Gilt Series (Reg) Growth (Cum) Growth (Reg) Liq.-Cum.-Inst Cum Liquid Instl. Div.Pay Liquid-Reg.-Inst.Plus Lq. (Cum) Lq. (Reg) Lq.Sr. Apr-06 (Reg) Triple Ace (B) Triple Ace (Cum) Triple Ace (Reg) Triple Ace Inst Cum Deutsche Mutual Fund Alpha Equity Insta CP-Reg.(D) Insta CP-Weekly(D) Insta Cash Plus Premier Bond (Reg) Premier Bond Instt. Premier Bond-Inst(MD) Premier Bond-Reg.(MD) Short Maturity Fund Short Maturity MD Short Maturity Weekly (D) DSP Merrill Lynch Mutual Fund Balanced (D) Balanced (G) Bond (D) Bond (G) Bond Fund Inst. Equity Floating Rate Fund Floating(D) Floating(WD) Govt.Sec. (A-D) Govt.Sec. (A-G) Govt.Sec. (B-D) Govt.Sec. (B-G) Liquidity (D) Liquidity (DD) Liquidity (G) Opportunities Savings Plus Short Term (G) Short Term (WD) Short Term(D) Technology.Com Top 100 Escorts Mutual Fund Balanced (D) Balanced (G) NA R R S 10.29 10.29 10.77 10.77 10.39 10.35 10.80 10.92 10.29 10.29 10.77 10.77 10.39 10.35 10.80 10.92 10.24 10.24 10.71 10.71 10.39 10.35 10.80 10.92 7.88 10.62 12.00 10.03 12.51 12.51 8.25 10.33 16.37 4.77 10.27 10.78 10.25 10.05 11.03 12.55 14.22 20.40 8.03 10.62 12.00 10.11 12.74 12.74 8.39 10.33 16.37 4.86 10.27 10.78 10.25 10.05 11.03 12.77 14.47 20.76 7.88 10.62 12.00 10.03 12.51 12.51 8.25 10.33 16.37 4.77 10.27 10.78 10.25 10.05 11.03 12.55 14.22 20.40 10.16 10.83 10.12 10.39 17.61 10.13 17.62 10.14 7.63 4.95 16.05 10.56 13.27 13.27 13.45 11.27 12.31 10.88 11.36 12.31 11.35 12.05 12.01 21.61 11.16 21.62 10.16 10.83 10.12 10.39 17.61 10.13 17.62 10.14 7.78 5.05 16.05 10.56 13.54 13.54 13.72 11.50 12.31 10.88 11.36 12.31 11.35 12.05 12.01 21.61 11.16 21.62 10.11 10.83 9.92 10.39 17.61 10.13 17.62 10.14 7.63 4.95 16.05 10.56 13.14 13.14 13.45 11.27 12.31 10.88 11.36 12.31 11.35 12.05 12.01 21.61 11.16 21.62 10.02 10.13 10.12 10.21 10.38 10.40 10.34 10.32 10.27 10.18 10.20 10.17 10.13 10.12 10.21 10.38 10.40 10.34 10.32 10.27 10.18 10.20 10.02 10.13 10.12 10.21 10.33 10.40 10.34 10.27 10.27 10.18 10.20 10.41 11.63 11.23 21.68 10.43 15.36 10.03 10.03 10.02 11.74 19.92 10.62 14.05 12.41 10.00 14.86 9.65 10.28 10.59 10.02 10.26 4.13 11.37 10.41 11.63 11.23 21.68 10.43 15.67 10.03 10.03 10.02 11.74 19.92 10.62 14.05 12.41 10.00 14.86 9.84 10.28 10.59 10.02 10.26 4.21 11.60 10.25 11.46 11.23 21.68 10.43 15.36 10.03 10.03 10.02 11.74 19.92 10.62 14.05 12.41 10.00 14.86 9.65 10.28 10.59 10.02 10.26 4.13 11.37 11.95 13.25 12.10 13.42 11.95 13.25 N m NA R Gilt (D) 12.20 Gilt (G) 13.34 Growth (G) 12.51 Growth (D) 11.46 Income (D) 10.59 Income (G) 18.66 Income Bond (D) 9.76 Income Bond (G) 11.60 Opportunities (D) 10.77 Opportunities (G) 12.59 Tax (D) 10.25 Tax (G) 10.25 First India Mutual Fund Gilt 10.52 Gilt Fund - (D) 11.02 Growth 10.81 Income 11.02 Income Fund (D) 10.35 Liquid (D) 10.20 Liquid (G) 10.90 Short Term 10.59 Short Term (D) 10.22 Tax Gain 36.69 Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund FT Asset Allocat.Bal Gr. 10.54 FT Asset Allocat.Cons Gr. 10.67 FT Asset Allocat.Infl 10.71 FT Asset Allocat.Pure Gr. 10.42 FT Asset Allocat.Steady G 10.51 FT Balanced (G) 10.04 FT Gilt Invst (G) 13.38 FT Gilt Invst (M’ly B) 12.34 FT Gilt Invst (Q’ly) 11.55 FT Gilt Liquid (G) 11.30 FT Gilt Liquid (M’ly) 10.31 FT Index - BSE 9.87 FT Index - Nifty 10.19 FT Monthly Income (G) 13.68 FT Monthly Income (M’ly B 12.56 FT Monthly Income (M) 10.84 FT Monthly Income (Q) 11.02 FT PE Ratio 9.21 Franklin Balanced(D) 11.07 Franklin Balanced(G) 11.52 Franklin Bluechip (D) 13.19 Franklin Bluechip (G) 25.95 Franklin FMCG 11.08 Franklin Growth 6.08 Franklin Index 7.91 Franklin Index Tax 8.09 Franklin Infotech (D) 7.51 Franklin Infotech (G) 10.97 Franklin Internet Opp 4.61 Franklin Pharma 9.42 Franklin Prima (D) 19.20 Franklin Prima (G) 37.47 Franklin Prima Plus (D) 14.42 Franklin Prima Plus (G) 26.45 Franklin T TMA (Dly) 1511.96 Franklin Taxshield (D) 12.74 Franklin Taxshield (G) 27.11 T Children’s Asset 18.40 T Floating Rate In LT (D) 10.23 T Floating Rate In LT (G) 10.98 T Floating Rate In ST (D) 10.01 T Floating Rate In ST (G) 10.95 T G Sec (D) 11.83 T G Sec (G) 20.87 T G Sec Tr (D) 10.62 T G Sec Tr (G) 11.51 T IBA (D) 11.22 T IBA (G) 22.17 T IBA (H-Y’ly) 14.95 T IBA (Instl Plan) 11.18 T IBA (M’ ly) 14.96 T IBA (M’ly B) 19.76 T IBA (Q’y) 14.94 T Income (D) 11.37 T Income (G) 22.51 T India Growth 14.62 T Liquid (D - D’ly) 10.00 T Liquid (D) 10.01 T Liquid (G) 15.13 T Liquid Plus 11.38 T Liquid Plus (D) 10.00 T MMA 1.00 T Monthly Income (G) 13.81 T Monthly Income (H-Y’ly) 10.69 T Monthly Income (M’ly) 10.33 T Monthly Income (Q’ly) 10.36 T Pension Plan (D) 12.16 T Pension Plan (G) 21.07 T ST Income (G) 1116.34 T ST Income (M’ly) 1023.01 R N m NA R S 12.20 13.34 12.70 11.63 10.59 18.66 9.76 11.60 10.77 12.59 10.25 10.25 12.20 13.34 12.51 11.46 10.59 18.66 9.76 11.60 10.77 12.59 — — 10.52 11.02 11.03 11.02 10.35 10.20 10.90 10.59 10.22 37.42 10.52 11.02 10.81 11.02 10.35 10.20 10.90 10.59 10.22 36.69 10.54 10.67 10.71 10.42 10.51 10.04 13.38 12.34 11.55 11.30 10.31 9.87 10.19 13.68 12.56 10.84 11.02 9.21 11.24 11.69 13.19 25.95 11.08 6.20 7.98 8.17 7.51 10.97 4.61 9.42 19.20 37.47 14.42 26.45 1511.96 12.74 27.11 18.40 10.23 10.98 10.01 10.95 11.83 20.87 10.62 11.51 11.22 22.17 14.95 11.18 14.96 19.76 14.94 11.37 22.51 14.91 10.00 10.01 15.13 11.38 10.00 1.00 13.81 10.69 10.33 10.36 12.16 21.07 1116.34 1023.01 10.70 10.83 10.87 10.57 10.66 10.24 13.38 12.34 11.55 11.30 10.31 9.97 10.29 13.68 12.56 10.84 11.02 9.35 11.07 11.52 13.45 26.47 11.30 6.08 7.91 8.09 7.66 11.19 4.70 9.61 19.58 38.22 14.71 26.98 1511.96 12.99 27.65 18.40 10.18 10.93 10.01 10.95 11.77 20.76 10.62 11.51 11.22 22.17 14.95 11.18 14.96 19.76 14.94 11.32 22.40 14.62 10.00 10.01 15.13 11.38 10.00 1.00 13.74 10.63 10.28 10.31 12.34 21.39 1116.34 1023.01 T ST Income (Q’ly) T ST Income (W’ly B) T ST Income (W’ly) T TMA (G) T TMA (W’ly) M W M M 1027.15 1047.23 1091.55 1520.57 1245.07 R N m NA R S 1027.15 1047.23 1091.55 1520.57 1245.07 1027.15 1047.23 1091.55 1520.57 12 M M M D w w m m m m m M M M M m m m m M m M M m m m m m m m m w M m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m M M M M M m m m m m w — — — — 3216 49 +1 09% 80, 81.50, 77.35, 77.75 Kit-Ply Ind. 5.10, 5.76, 5, 5.45 5.05, 5.80, 5, 5.40 KLG Systel 29, 30, 28.55, 29.55 28.50, 29.60, 28.35, 29.40 Kopran 29.25, 29.30, 28.50, 29.05 29.70, 29.70, 28.50, 28.95 Kothari Prod 180, 182.50, 178.55, 179.50 181.90, 181.90, 180.50, 180.50 KPIT Cum.Inf 140.90, 143, 138.75, 141.25 141, 143, 138.50, 141.10 KRBL 21, 21.85 19.30, 19.30, 19.30, 19.30 Krebs Bioche 117, 124.75, 116, 121.25 Krishna Life 1.80, 1.90, 1.83 Krone Comm 72, 73, 68.60, 72 KSB Pumps 84.20, 85, 83, 84 85.75, 85.75, 82.20, 83.70 L Lakhani (I) 97, 100 Lakshmi Au.C 97, 94, 95.20 92.25, 96, 92.25, 94.80 Lakshmi Elec 45, 47, 43.75, 44.35 Lakshmi Mach 1741, 1741.10 1722.40, 1722.40, 1722.40, 1722.40 Lanco Inds. 11, 11.20, 10.90, 11.10 Landmarc Lei 20.50, 20.70, 20 LCC Infotech 4.05, 4.80, 4.05, 4.80 LG Balkrish 95 91.35, 92.20, 91.35, 92.15 Liberty Shoe 60, 60.50 60, 61, 60, 60.55 Lloyds Steel 3.50, 3.99, 3.49, 3.91 3.45, 4, 3.45, 3.95 Logix Micro. 14.90, 12.40, 12.96 Loy.Tex Mill 49.05, 52.60, 49, 52.55 Lumax Ind 36.75, 37.50, 37 36.50, 37.90, 36.50, 37.35 Lyka Labs 33, 35.20, 32.25, 33.30 33, 34.50, 32.25, 33.70 M Maars Soft 10.68, 11, 10.45, 10.85 9.80, 11.10, 9.80, 10.90 Macmillan (I 168, 170.50, 165, 169.45 168, 171, 164.50, 168.80 Madhav Marb. 17.25, 16.65 Madras Alum 68, 69.05, 67.35, 68.90 Madras Cem. 4602, 4510, 4554.20 4650, 4700, 4469, 4632.50 Madras Fert. 17.15, 18.20, 17.45 17.40, 18.40, 17.15, 17.25 Mah.Scooter 70.10, 71.05, 71 70.10, 71, 70.10, 70.35 Mah.Seamless 142.95, 137.25, 138.30 142, 142.95, 138, 138.65 Mahavir Spg. 82, 79.90, 80.45 82.50, 83.85, 79, 79.95 Mahind.Gesco 14.41, 15.50, 14.40, 15.49 14.50, 15.60, 14.50, 15.25 Mahindra Ugi 10.60, 11, 10.89 10.55, 11, 10.55, 10.80 Majestic Aut 29, 26.60, 27.05 Malwa Cotton 36, 38.50 38.95, 39, 37.30, 37.70 Man Inds.(I) 35, 35.25, 33.60, 34.80 Mangalam Cem 9.30, 11, 10.61 9.65, 11.05, 9.65, 10.75 Manglr.Chem 6, 6.26, 5.96, 6.17 Manugraph In 25.90, 25.95, 25, 25.25 Maral Overs 15.75, 15.60, 15.95 16.10, 16.10, 15.75, 15.85 Mascon Globl 10.40, 10.20, 10.55 Matrix Lab. 467, 489.75, 465, 474.10 Matsush.Tele 9, 8.15, 8.38 8.95, 9, 8, 8.35 Matsushita L 40, 41.95, 40.60 Medicorp Tec 63, 70, 67.95 67, 70.40, 66, 67.35 Mega Corpn. 3.75, 4.60 Melstar Info 14.10, 15.25, 15.01 15, 15.25, 14.75, 15.10 Mercator Lin 27.25, 27.80, 26, 27.30 Metroche.Ind 23, 22.15 MICO 4625, 4700.10, 4624, 4679.15 4650, 4750, 4625, 4625 Mid-Day Mul. 17.60, 18.80, 17.15, 18.55 18.25, 18.90, 17.75, 18.70 Mindteck 17.25, 17.30, 16.60 Mirza Tanner 33, 33.30, 32.80, 32.85 32.65, 33.30, 32.60, 33 MM Forgings 112.10, 115.50 Mobile Tele 8.25, 8.50, 8, 8.02 Modipon 25.55 Monalisa Inf 0.27, 0.25, 0.29 Monnet Ispat 23.50, 23.60, 23, 23.05 Monsanto (I) 519.90, 528.90, 527.25 512.35, 529, 512.35, 526.95 Morarjee Goc 12, 11.90, 12.61 12.10, 14.30, 12.10, 14.30 Morepen Lab 16.25, 16.61, 15.80, 15.93 16.25, 16.70, 15.75, 15.90 Morgan Stan 9.15, 9.24, 9.01, 9.14 9, 9.50, 9, 9.15 Motherson SS 143.05, 145.50, 143, 143.45 141.20, 146, 141.20, 144.95 Moving Pictu 5 Mro-Tek 14.40, 15.30, 14.30, 15.12 14.10, 15.10, 14.10, 14.95 MRPL 20.20, 20.25, 19.15, 19.45 20.05, 20.25, 19.05, 19.40 Mukand 17.10, 17.50, 17, 17.20 16.85, 17.40, 16.85, 17.25 Mukand Engrs 12, 11.35, 11.81 11.80, 11.85, 11.25, 11.65 Munjal Auto 45, 47.50, 47.25 Munjal Showa 143.90, 145, 142.15, 144 142, 145.40, 142, 143.65 Murd.Ceram 11.75, 11.95 Mys.Cement 7.45, 8.35, 7.95 7.30, 8.25, 7.25, 7.90 m m m w m m m m m M & — — — — — — — — — — — — M m m M m m m M m m D N M M M M M M M M M M M m m — — — — — — — — — — — — m m m m m m m m m m w w w M W N M w M W M Nagar.Agrich 15.95, 15.90, 16 Nagar.Const. 71.70, 73, 64, 68.80 Nagar.Fertil 6.60, 6.78, 6.45, 6.49 6.60, 6.75, 6.35, 6.45 Nahar Export 23.30, 23.75, 23.05, 23.10 23.20, 23.50, 23.05, 23.10 Nahar Indl.E 14.10, 15, 14.70 Nahar Intl. 6, 6.78, 6.21 6.20, 6.20, 6.10, 6.15 Nahar Spg. 82.55, 82.85, 81.30, 81.70 82.05, 83.50, 81.15, 81.25 Narmada C.Pe 14, 14.20, 13.90, 14.10 13.95, 14.25, 13.75, 14.10 Narmada Cem. 29.50, 30.50, 28, 29 Natco Pharma 52.65, 52, 58.70 53, 58.50, 51.50, 58.50 Nath Seeds 10.20, 11.30, 9.75, 10.71 10, 11.35, 9.80, 10.70 National Fer 39, 40.35, 39.50 National Per 699, 700, 686.05, 690 National Ste 7.75, 7.90, 7.50, 7.56 7.90, 7.90, 7.60, 7.65 Nava Bh.Ferr 70.25, 63, 64.30 66.50, 68.50, 62, 63 Navneet Pub. 130.50, 131.50, 130 131, 132.40, 130, 131.60 NCL Inds. 5.25, 5.65, 5.49 Nelco 32.25, 33.65, 31.75, 31.95 32.90, 33.60, 31.80, 32.05 Neuland Lab. 52.50, 52.90, 51, 52.15 Nilkamal Pls 28.80, 30.75, 30.30 33, 33, 29.50, 30.35 Noble Explo. 5.65, 6.50, 6.16 NOCIL 8.47, 7.55, 7.79 8.15, 8.35, 7.50, 7.85 Noida Toll 8, 8.01 8.15, 8.15, 7.90, 7.90 Nova Petro. 35.05 41, 41, 37, 37 Novopan Inds 27.75, 32.85, 31.95 32.50, 32.50, 32.50, 32.50 NRB Bearings 71.55, 74, 73.30 71, 74.25, 71, 73.20 NRC 11.50, 11.75, 11.40, 11.50 11.35, 11.65, 11.25, 11.50 Nucleus Soft 71.95, 72, 69.50, 71.35 65, 71.50, 65, 71.35 O m M m m m m R S w w m 3262 20 1035 05 1021 05 N MUTUAL FUNDS BSE SHARE INDEX OCL (I) 86, 90, 85, 86.50 Odyssey Tech 11.05, 10.20, 10.40 Oil Country 10.15, 10.45, 9.91, 10.36 10.20, 10.45, 9.80, 10.30 Omax Autos. 37.75, 38.80, 36.60, 37.05 38.65, 38.75, 37.05, 37.45 Onward Techn 25, 26.30, 25.90 25.70, 26.25, 24.65, 25.70 Opto Circuit 39, 39.90, 37.30, 37.75 Orbit Multi 0.35 Orchid Chem 116.50, 118.50, 114.50, 115.55 119.50, 119.65, 115, 115.80 Orient Info. 35.60, 36.90, 34.75, 36.15 35.70, 36.70, 34.85, 36.15 Orient Paper 20, 21, 19, 20.40 19.05, 21.40, 19.05, 20.40 Oriental Con 19.75, 20.50 Oriental Hot 74.95, 78, 75.50 73.10, 78, 73.10, 76 Oswal Chem. 5.05, 5.20, 4.95 5.60, 5.60, 4.95, 5 P Panacea Biot 31.50, 30, 31.50 30.65, 31.80, 30.60, 30.85 Pantaloon Re 66, 68, 61.15, 61.85 62, 68.90, 61.25, 61.90 Paper Prod. 126, 127.50, 127 127, 128.05, 126, 126.90 Paramount Co 8.45, 8.50, 8.25 Parekh Plati 9, 10.74 8.90, 10.60, 8.90, 10.60 Parry Agro 75, 72 Parry’s Conf 94, 95 95.40, 97, 93.05, 93.05 Patel Engg. 154, 158, 152.30, 155.95 Patspin (I) 13.20, 13.60, 13.01, 13.35 13.85, 13.85, 12.50, 13.40 PCS Inds. 22.50, 23.50, 23.25 3303 24 +1 25% Pennar Alum. 2.90, 2.70, 2.79 Pentagon Glo 1.58, 1.59, 1.46, 1.51 Pentasoft Te 7.50, 7.53, 7.21, 7.30 7.35, 7.50, 7.20, 7.35 Pharmacia He 95.10, 99, 95.05, 98.40 99.75, 99.75, 96, 96.05 PHIL Corpn. 6.92, 6.35, 6.60 7.10, 7.10, 6.35, 6.75 Phillip Carb 29.60, 30, 27.20, 28.40 29, 29.80, 28.10, 28.50 Phoenix Lamp 14.45, 14.50, 13.85, 13.99 Pioneer Embr 28.75, 28.60, 30.20 Plastiblend 36.75, 37.65, 37.15 PNB Gilts 22.50, 23.50, 22.75 23.55, 23.60, 22.75, 22.85 Polyplex 48, 51.25, 47.65, 50.90 48.65, 50.80, 48.50, 50 Porrits&Spen 76, 76.95, 74.50, 76 Praj Ind. 69, 70.70, 67.20, 69.60 63, 71.40, 63, 68.70 Precision Wr 22.75, 23.80, 23.60 23, 24, 23, 23.80 Premier Auto 6.95, 7.50, 7.39 Premier Inst 231.40, 227, 231 230.05, 234, 230, 233.30 Prism Cement 5.50, 6.32, 6.04 5.60, 6.35, 5.55, 6.05 Pritish Nand 28.75, 30.40, 28.15, 30 28.20, 30.35, 28.05, 29.95 Priyad.Cemen 11, 11.95, 10.80, 11.60 11.10, 11.75, 11, 11.60 PSI Data Sys 62, 63, 59.30, 60.60 61, 62, 60.10, 61.05 PSL 56.95, 57.45, 53.50, 55.35 56.20, 56.20, 52.25, 55.90 Pudumjee Pul 24.70, 25, 24.10, 24.15 24.40, 24.50, 24.40, 24.40 Pun.Alkali 8, 8.44, 8.21 Pun.Chemical 97, 93.50, 94.35 Pun.Communi. 42.25, 44.75, 42.10, 43.40 Pun.Nat.Bank 154.80, 155.60, 147.70, 152.70 162, 162, 147.35, 151.15 R Rain Calcing 18.49, 18.50, 17.65, 18.03 18, 18.50, 17.75, 18 Raj.Spg.&Wvg 21.10, 23, 21.05, 22.95 21.70, 23, 21.70, 23 Rajesh Exp 74, 74.50, 70.30 73.70, 74.20, 70.10, 70.10 Rajshree Sug 12.50, 15.75 13, 15.85, 13, 15.85 Rallis India 69.50, 71, 68, 70.25 72, 72, 68, 71.05 Rama Newspri 4.95, 4.94, 5.65 5, 5.70, 4.90, 5.70 Ramco Inds. 145, 149.90, 145, 149.90 Ramco Systm 391.70, 418, 405.40 394.45, 418.70, 393, 405.25 Rane Brake 165.20, 167.10, 165.20 Rane Engine 139.90, 140, 134.95, 135 134, 142, 133.15, 134.90 Rane Madras 68, 72.45 70, 72, 69, 71.15 Ravalgaon Su 2195, 2344 Rayban Sun O 54.85, 55, 54, 54.20 Reg.Ceramic 24.50, 24.75 24.25, 25, 24.25, 24.85 Rel.Ind.Infr 36.20, 36.85, 36.80 36.20, 36.80, 36.10, 36.65 Relaxo Footw 16.40 Revathi Equ. 130.10, 131.60, 126, 127.20 Rico Auto 151.05, 154, 151, 153 152.70, 153.90, 151.75, 151.75 RPG Cables 11.89, 12.01, 11.25, 11.77 9.50, 12.15, 9.50, 11.50 RPG Life Sci 25.20, 25.35, 24.60, 25.30 24.60, 25.40, 24.55, 25.15 RPG Transmi. 8.10, 9, 8.80 8, 8.85, 8, 8.55 RS Software 23, 23.80, 22.45, 23.45 23, 23.70, 22.50, 23.40 Ruchi Soya 35.90, 36, 34.55 38.65, 38.65, 35, 35.55 S S Kumars Nat 5.85, 4.85, 5.48 5.90, 5.90, 5.15, 5.30 S.I.Bank 49.80, 47.30, 48.05 49.50, 49.95, 47.50, 48 S.I.C.Agency 8.05, 8.50, 7.75, 8 7.70, 8.95, 7.70, 8.30 Sabero Org. 5.06, 5.70, 5.67 6.25, 6.25, 5.55, 5.60 Saint-Gobain 12.50, 11.50, 11.82 Sakthi Sugar 9.20, 10.50, 9, 10.48 8.90, 10.40, 8.75, 10.35 Salora Int. 50.60, 51.70, 50.10, 50.50 51, 52.50, 50.35, 50.85 Samkrg Pist. 30, 31.75, 30.70 Samtel Color 30.15, 30.90, 29.50, 29.70 31, 31, 29.35, 29.65 Sandesh Ltd. 106.10, 108.90, 108 107.10, 109, 106.10, 107.05 Sangam (I) 16.50, 17.15, 16, 16.50 17, 17, 16.10, 16.90 Sanwaria Agr 14.99 Saregama (I) 54.95, 58, 54.50, 57.40 54, 59.70, 53.50, 57.45 SAT Invest. 8.25, 8.15, 8.40 Satnam Over. 19.25, 19.50, 19.35 19, 19.35, 19, 19.30 Satvah.Ispat 7.50, 7.90, 6.40, 6.98 Saurash.Cem. 10.90, 11.35, 10.85, 11.11 Savita Chem. 68, 73.25, 67.05, 68.80 66.30, 71.80, 66.30, 68.65 SBI Home Fin 13.35, 13.38, 12.86, 13.30 13, 13.50, 12.85, 13.30 Schenec.Beck 81.50, 84 Schenec.Herd 34.75, 36.25, 34.10 35.10, 36.25, 35, 35 Search Chem. 10.51, 11.18, 10.40, 10.50 10.80, 10.80, 10.45, 10.60 Selan Explor 9.81, 9.99, 9.76, 9.79 Sesa Goa 141, 143.50, 134, 136.70 141.80, 143.85, 135, 136.45 Sesha.Paper 44, 46 44.85, 46.75, 44.85, 46.05 Sh.Cements 64.50, 67, 63, 66.10 63.30, 67.80, 62.70, 66.55 Sh.Digv.Cem. 17.15, 16.70, 17.05 Sh.Rama Mult 8.25, 8.47, 8.29 8.25, 8.50, 8.25, 8.35 Shah Alloys 23, 23.20, 22.50, 22.55 Shalimar Pai 30.50, 32, 31.95 Shamken Mult 9.45, 10.50, 9.25, 9.74 9.45, 9.75, 9.15, 9.50 Shamken Spin 6.45, 6 Shanti Gear 96, 97, 96 98.50, 98.75, 96.25, 96.95 Shasun Chem. 160.10, 174, 170.65 161.90, 175.50, 161.90, 171.05 Shaw Wallace 33, 34.70, 34.30 Shirpur Gold 29.50 30.60, 30.60, 29.80, 30.25 Shiv Vani Un 13.60, 13.90, 13.50, 13.84 Shrenuj & Co 32.40, 32.75 32.10, 33.80, 32.10, 33.50 Shriram Inv 15.50, 16, 15.40, 15.90 Shriram Tran 15.50, 15.70, 15.60 15.50, 15.70, 15.50, 15.60 Siemens VDO 51, 49, 50.45 Siltap Che. 56.25, 56.35, 55.25, 55.90 55.75, 56.20, 55.55, 55.90 Simbh.Sugar 9.51, 12.05 Simplex Conc 28.75, 29.85 Sintex Inds. 45.20, 46, 44, 44.80 44.40, 45.85, 44.40, 45.75 Sirpur Paper 47, 46.50, 46.60 47, 47.50, 46.25, 46.60 Siyaram Silk 40.50, 41, 40, 40.95 Skanska Ceme 235, 237.95, 232.25 235, 236, 228.65, 228.65 Snowcem (I) 20.30, 21, 20.20, 20.55 20.75, 20.75, 20.25, 20.60 Soffia Soft. 15.49, 14.90, 15.70 15, 15.85, 15, 15.55 Softsol (I) 9.20 Software Tec 10.95, 10, 12.84 10.30, 13, 10.25, 12.85 Solectron Ce 33, 32.25, 32.50 Solvay Pharm 139, 140, 135, 137.10 Sona Koyo St 100.75, 105, 100.15, 103.50 Spel Semicon 3.60, 3.01, 3.45 SPIC 7.98, 8.10, 7.85, 7.91 8, 8.15, 7.85, 7.95 SPL 20.20, 21.50, 20.10, 21.30 21.90, 21.90, 20.90, 21 SQL Star Int 6.56, 7.18, 6.83 SREI Int.Fin 9.07, 9.26 9.25, 9.60, 9.25, 9.60 SRF 25.25, 25.65, 25.55 25.95, 25.95, 25.35, 25.45 SRF Polymers 20.05, 24.50 SRG Infotech 0.90, 0.91, 0.85, 0.90 0.90, 0.95, 0.85, 0.90 Sri Adhikari 75.85, 83.75, 75, 81.45 75.70, 84, 74.70, 81.60 Star Paper 11.50 12, 12, 11.35, 11.55 State Bnk Bi 772, 775, 762.50, 772.85 State Bnk My 776.50, 771.95, 785 State Bnk Tr 686.90, 693, 668.25, 690.30 Std.Indust. 5.60, 6.58, 6.39 5.45, 6.55, 5.45, 6.45 Sterl.Inds. 175, 178, 172.80, 176.30 Sterl.Tools 47.25, 47.80, 46.10, 46.30 Stl.Strips W 14.50, 13.56, 14 Su-raj Diamn 14.17, 15.60, 15.35 14.65, 15.70, 14.30, 15.40 Suashish Dia 20, 21.25, 20.10 Subex System 128, 131.40, 122, 129.40 Subhash Proj 25.10, 24, 25.05 23.25, 25.50, 23.25, 24.95 Subros 52.50, 58, 57.20 Sulzer (I) 144.90, 138.50, 138.60 Sundaram Cla 279.95, 285, 282.05 279.60, 288.90, 279.25, 286.15 Sundaram Fst 448.90, 478, 474.05 TOID70603/CR1/18/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/18/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/18/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/18/Y/1 CMYK 444, 464, 444, 462.05 Sunflag Iron 5.69, 5.17, 5.55 Super Spin. 88, 89, 87.75, 88.15 Supreme Inds 112, 114, 110, 112.85 113, 113, 110.60, 112.75 Supreme Petr 11.08, 12.75, 11.06, 12.04 11.20, 12.95, 11.20, 12.05 Surana Tele 14.50, 14, 14.20 14.45, 14.50, 14, 14.35 Surat Elec. 90, 92, 89.10, 90.80 Surya Roshni 14.51, 14.75, 14.40, 14.60 15.05, 15.05, 14.30, 14.60 Surylak.Cott 20.75 21.05, 22.50, 20.50, 21.85 Sutlej Inds. 49.95, 51.20, 50.10 49.50, 49.85, 49.50, 49.85 Suven Pharma 162, 168.25, 161, 167.25 Swaraj Engin 209, 205.15, 206.15 208.80, 210, 204.50, 205.95 Swaraj Mazda 93.05, 96, 95.25 93, 96, 93, 95.50 Syncom Form. 23.20, 23.50 Synergy Log 7, 7.18, 6.92, 7.02 T T Spiritual 183.10, 181.50, 183.50 Taj GVK Hotl 40.30, 41.05, 40.80 40.50, 41.90, 40.50, 41 Tanfac Ind. 17.95, 17.35, 17.85 TASC Pharma. 19, 19.40, 16, 18.95 20.25, 20.25, 20.25, 20.25 Tata Coffee 90.05, 93.50, 89.15, 90.15 92.75, 92.75, 89.25, 90.40 Tata Finance 24.15, 22.10, 22.45 22.80, 23.45, 22, 22.25 Tata Honeywl 275, 267 270, 271, 265, 267.60 Tata Infomed 84.90, 88.65, 83.35, 84.70 82.55, 85.50, 82.55, 85.05 Tata Infotec 132.80, 137.50, 132.35, 136.20 Tata Invest. 91.75, 93, 91.60, 92.35 91.15, 92.50, 91.15, 91.75 Tata Metalik 34.35, 35.20, 34.30, 34.45 34.85, 35.60, 34.50, 34.80 Tata Sponge 45.75, 46.55, 45.60, 45.95 46, 46.80, 45.50, 45.95 Tata Teleser 6, 6.25, 6.17 6.25, 6.40, 6.10, 6.15 Tata Yodogaw 45.50, 46.50, 44.05, 46.10 Tele Data In 28, 28.50, 26.50, 27.90 Texmaco Ltd. 27, 28.50, 27.90 Themis Medic 38, 36.35, 37.95 Thiru A.Sug. 27.50, 32.90, 32 23.50, 33, 23.50, 32.70 Thirumalai 53, 54.50, 52.05, 53.50 52, 54.65, 52, 53.90 Tide Water O 1047, 1090, 1045, 1050 TIL 11.15, 11.12, 11.80 Timex Watch 12, 12.40, 11.55, 11.79 Timken India 32, 33.50, 31.50, 32.45 Tinplate Co. 15.50, 15.75, 15.25, 15.70 Tips Indus. 37.65, 42.50, 37.50, 41 37.50, 42.80, 37.25, 41 TN Telecom 11.20, 11.90, 11.85 12.05, 12.25, 11.70, 12 Todays Writi 22.25, 23, 20.85, 22.30 22.50, 22.50, 21.05, 21.25 Torrent Guja 7.61, 9, 8.86 Tourism Fina 12.30, 13.60, 12.10, 12.84 11.90, 13.55, 11.90, 12.75 Transnat.Sec 30.25 Transpek Ind 14.99, 14, 14.08 Transport Co 20, 22, 21.80 21.80, 22.50, 21.80, 22.50 TRF 26.40, 25.10, 26.30 Trigyn Tech. 15.88, 17.40, 15.25, 16.92 15.75, 17.50, 15.30, 16.85 TTK Healthca 16.30, 17.50, 16.65 TTK Prestige 10.50, 10.20, 11.55 10.20, 11.50, 10.20, 11.25 Tube Invest. 126.75, 122, 122.30 132.90, 132.90, 122, 122.90 Tudor India 11.25, 11.30, 10.90, 10.95 Tuticorin.Al 3.75, 3.45, 3.95 TV 18 82.80, 85.90, 79, 84.75 83, 85, 78.85, 84.10 TVS Autolec 76, 75.10, 79 TVS Srichakr 50, 52, 51.10 U UB Holdings 21.05, 22.50, 18, 21.20 Ucal Fuel 242.80, 248.95, 240.05, 246.40 244.70, 249, 240.05, 247.30 Ugar Sugar 53.10 Ultramarine 74.50, 75, 71, 71.45 Unichem Lab 185.50, 187.40, 185.10, 185.75 185, 188, 184.20, 185.55 Uniflex Cabl 5.16, 5.15 Union Bank 37.40, 37.50, 36.05, 37.15 36.95, 37.50, 36.10, 37.10 Unitech 42.70, 43 42.50, 44.60, 42.50, 43.90 United Brew. 90.05, 95, 89, 94.30 United We.Bk 25.05, 25.70, 24.60, 24.80 25.15, 25.50, 24.25, 24.95 Univer.Cable 8.45, 7.87, 8.29 8.50, 8.55, 8.10, 8.30 Upper Ganges 15.65, 18.95, 18.15 16.90, 20, 16.90, 18.05 Usha Martin 28, 31.70, 31.10 28.50, 31.40, 28.50, 31.15 Usha Mat.Inf 5, 4.15, 4.20 4.40, 4.40, 4.25, 4.30 Uttam Galva. 9.40, 9.70, 9.52 9.60, 9.80, 9.40, 9.50 V Vaibhav Gems 22.30, 23.25, 22.25, 22.95 Vanavil Dyes 48.60, 48.90, 48.50 Vardhman Pol 47.75, 48.45, 47.10, 47.55 49.90, 49.90, 47, 47.50 Vardhman Spg 68, 70.70, 69.45 68.15, 71, 68.10, 69.15 Varun Ship. 12.35, 12.05, 12.19 12.15, 12.35, 12.05, 12.15 Vashisti Det 11.95, 12.68, 12.32 12, 12.70, 12, 12.30 Venky’s (I) 53, 53.05, 52.50, 53 53.60, 54, 53.20, 53.35 Veronica Lab 5.98, 5.99, 5.58, 5.90 Vesuvius (I) 80.50, 78.85, 79 81, 81, 78.40, 78.70 Viceroy Hot. 9.64, 10.34, 9.60 Videocon Apl 12.15, 12.49, 11.50, 12.06 12.10, 12.60, 11.45, 12.05 Videocon Fin 17.10, 16.20, 17.20 15.60, 17, 15.55, 16.95 Vidhi Dyestu 17.10, 16.65, 17 Vikrant Tyre 13.75, 13, 13.35 Vinati Org. 18, 16.50, 16.68 Vindhya Tele 25, 23.75, 24.60 24.70, 25.10, 24.25, 24.45 Vintage Card 9, 10, 9.94 10, 10.30, 9.50, 10 Vinyl Chem. 7.80, 9, 8.72 7.70, 9.10, 7.70, 8.75 VIP Indus. 20.30, 20.75, 20.25, 20.70 20.80, 20.80, 20.35, 20.60 Visaka Ind. 28, 28.95, 27.85, 28.75 27.75, 29.20, 27.75, 29.10 Visesh Info 6.50, 5.50, 5.60 6.25, 6.25, 5.45, 5.55 Vision Organ 1.50, 1.63, 1.62 1.45, 1.70, 1.40, 1.70 VJIL Consult 6.50, 7.80, 7.79 Voltas 57.55, 60.50, 59.45 58.05, 60.80, 58.05, 59.10 Vorin Lab. 64.50, 70, 67.75 VST Indus. 101.25, 106.50, 103 105, 105, 101, 103 VST Tillers 14.50, 14.78, 14.77 VXL Instrum. 23.50, 24.85, 24.75 W Walchandngr 33.05, 36.50, 35.45 34.85, 36.20, 34.85, 35.65 Warren Tea 41.90, 40.05, 41.10 Wartsila (I) 114.30, 114.25 114, 115, 112.40, 113.20 Wellwin Ind. 16, 14.60, 14.65 15.25, 15.50, 14.60, 14.70 Welspun (I) 29.90, 31, 30.55 Welspun Guj. 11.45, 11.50, 11.01, 11.22 Wendt (I) 325, 330, 326.55 West Coast P 141.70, 144, 139.30, 140.50 140, 142, 139.50, 139.50 Widia (I) 82.40, 83, 81.60, 82.60 Wim Plast 35.80, 34.55, 34.85 Wimco 27.25, 28.30, 27.80 28, 28.50, 27.50, 27.75 Wockhardt Lf 25.60, 26, 24.50, 24.70 25.25, 25.90, 24.75, 24.95 Wyeth 254.50, 256.40, 253.50, 255 250.15, 254.90, 250.15, 254.10 Y Yokogawa Blu 66.10 66.10, 66.25, 66.05, 66.10 Z Zandu Pharm 1495, 1496, 1495 1481, 1484, 1480, 1484 Zenith Comp. 8.42, 9, 8.98 8.60, 9.10, 8.30, 8.95 Zenith Exp. 27.70, 27.55, 28.95 29, 29, 29, 29 Zenith Info. 10.75, 11.40, 11.16 11, 11.50, 10.80, 11.20 ZF Steering 95, 92.10, 94 Zicom Electn 30.35, 30.65, 28.60, 29.10 Zigma Soft. 3.84, 3.91, 3.60, 3.80 Zodiac Cloth 86.90, 87.50, 86.90 83, 88.45, 83, 86.75 Zuari Inds. 24.90, 27.70, 26.75 25.45, 27.90, 25, 26.65 OID ‰ ‰ † ‹ CMK The Times of India, New Delhi, Saturday, June 7, 2003 An indecent proposal Not for sale? Javed’s worth Rs 10m For Annika Sorenstam, it’s turning out to be a bad dream. Just when she was settling down in her own circuit, a journeyman has challenged her to a million dollar playoff over 18 holes. John Riegger is confident even though he wallows in the 120s After the Beckham sale fiasco, Man United’s buying spree is running into trouble. They are ready to pay US$ 14.7 million for Ronaldinho but PSG is not biting. They want the Brazilian star to complete his contract till 2006 Javed Miandad has finally done it. Signed a contract, that is, with the Pakistan Cricket Board to coach the national team. And he will get a cool Rs (Pak) 10 million a year, including a monthly salary of US$ 8,000 Aussie players’ body suggests international One-day crcket league Cricket authorities have identified that cricket is potentially damaged by the over-scheduling. — ACA chief executive Tim May Verkerk takes on Ferrero India seek to AP SPORTS DIGEST Reuters Thongchai Jaidee of Thailand hits a tee shot at the 11th hole on the first day of the British Masters at Forest of Arden, Warwickshire, on Thursday. Sachin returns: Sachin Tendulkar on Friday returned home after a successful operation on his left hand ring finger at a hospital in Baltimore in the US. A tired looking Tendulkar arrived alongwith wife Anjali, daughter Sara and son Arjun. Family sources said he was fine and would now work on rehabilitation under Dr Anant Joshi. INRC round at Nahsik: A total of 14 cars will begin the MRF-Taj Challenge, the second leg of the MAI’s INRC, will be held over the next two days at Nashik. The 352-km long rally has six tramac special stages comprising 112kms. TNN Shivnath Singh dead: Asian Games gold medal winner and Arjuna awardee long distance runner Shivnath Singh died at his Adityapur residence in Jharkhand on Friday after a prolonged illness. The 57-yearold athlete was suffering from Hepatitis B. PTI Paris: Big-serving Dutchman Martin Verkerk roared into the French Open men’s singles final on Friday, beating Argentine seventh seed Guillermo Coria 7-6 (7/4), 6-4, 7-6 (7/0) in 2hr 40min. The 24-year-old Verkerk, the first ever Dutchman to make the final, will now meet either Spain’s defending champion Albert Costa or last year’s finalist Juan Carlos Ferrero in Sunday’s final. Only one Dutchman has even won a Grand Slam title. Richard Krajicek, like Verkerk a huge server, landed the 1996 Wimbledon crown. Verkerk, a late developer who won his first title at Milan in February, is only the third Dutchman to reach a Grand Slam final with Tom Okker having been 1968 US Open runner-up. His $468,000 pay cheque for reaching the final doubles his entire previous career earnings. Juan Carlos Ferrero, the third seed, defeated defending champion Albert Costa, seeded ninth, 6-3, 7-6 (7/5), 6-4 in 2hr 44min to reach his second straight French Open men's singles final. The 23-year-old Ferrero avenged last year's trophy loss to fellow Spaniard Costa and next runs into Verkerk. Agencies Sydney: Having put themselves in a comfortable position for a place in the final, a confident India would be keen to maintain their dominance over arch-rivals Pakistan in their last second-leg league match three-nation invitational hockey tournament here on Saturday. The Indians need only a draw to cruise into the final for the second time in the competition and the pressure will be squarely on Pakistan in what promises to be a classic duel of skill and nerves. The Pakistanis, handicapped by the absence of three senior players, have been struggling to make a mark in the four-team tournament but will be determined to avenge the first-leg defeat at the hands of their traditional rivals. The team, which went without a win in the first leg, broke the sequence with a solitary goal victory against Australia A but the 3-4 loss Paris: Sania Mirza and Saana Bhambri lost in the semifinals of girls doubles in the French Open Tennis tournament on Friday. The Indian pair lost in straight sets 0-6, 2-6 to Katerina Bohmova of the Czech Republic and Michaela Krajicek of Holland. Agencies Colombo: Sri Lanka’s former captain Arjuna Ranatunga suffered a humiliating defeat on Friday when he was crushed in elections for the top post in the nation’s cricket administration. Ranatunga, 39, managed to get just seven votes in the battle for the presidency of the Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka. Thilanga Sumathipala, 39, a former head of the BCCSL and leading Colombo businessman, won 121 votes out of a possible 144 and had his nominees elected uncontested for all other posts in the BCCSL. Ranatunga, a member of the Sri Lankan parliament BETTING METER GOLF French Open, Women’s Singles Kim Clijsters 1.61 Justine Henin-Hardene 2.20 (as per William Hill LIVE ON TV The Netherlands' Martin Verkerk is overcome with emotion after defeating Argentina's Guillermo Coria in their semifinal match of the French Open in Paris on Friday. Verkerk won 7-6, 6-4, 7-6. Johnson bags six to rip Zimbabwe Chester-le-Street: Richard Johnson took six wickets on his England Test debut as Zimbabwe collapsed on the second day of the second and final Test at the Riverside here on Friday. Somerset seamer Johnson finished with six for 33 in 12 overs as Zimbabwe were bowled out for a paltry 94 in reply to England’s 416. Vice-captain Tatenda Taibu top scored with 31 in an innings featuring four noughts and where only Raymond Price (17) and Andy Blignaut (13) also made it into double figures. England captain Nasser Hussain enforced the followon and at stumps Zimbabwe were 41 for one, still needing 281 to make their opponents bat again and prevent their second innings defeat, Dion Ebrahim was 22 not out and Stuart Carlisle 19 not out. Johnson, 28, first selected by England for the 1995 tour of South Africa before a back injury meant he never boarded the plane, took two wickets in two balls in his first over. He had opener Mark Vermeulen - who later com- India look at Ranji... ...Aussies at big picture TIMES NEWS NETWORK pleted a pair - lbw for nought off his third ball. Earlier, England resuming from their overnight score of 298 for five were all out for 416. Alec Stewart added just one run to his overnight 67 while Anthony McGrath made 81. England, 1st innings: (Overnight 298-5) A Stewart lbw b Streak 68; A McGrath c Taibu b Blignaut 81; A Giles c Ervine b Streak 50; R Johnson c Streak b Blignaut 24; S Harmison c Vermeulen b Streak 11; J Anderson not out 12; Extras: (b-1, lb-5, w-7, nb-25) 38; Total: (all out in 127.1 overs) 416. Fall of wickets: 1-49, 2-109, 3-146, 4-152, 5-156, 6305, 7-324, 8-356, 9-390, 10-416. Bowling: Streak 34.1-11-64-4 (3nb, 1w), Blignaut 23-4-95-2 (11nb), Hondo 22-1-98-3 (10nb, 2w), Ervine 3-0-17-0, Price 40-9-105-1, Friend 4-0-26-0 (1nb), Flower 1-0-5-0. Zimbabwe, 1st Innings: D Ebrahim lbw b Anderson 6; M Vermeulen lbw b Johnson 0; S Carlisle lbw b Johnson 0; G Flower c Trescothick b Anderson 8; T Taibu lbw b Johnson 31; S Ervine c Stewart b Johnson 0; T Friend lbw b Johnson 0; H Streak lbw b Johnson 4; A Blignaut c Anderson b Harmison 13. R Price lbw b Harmison 17; D Hondo not out 5; Extras: (b-5, lb-3, nb-2) 10; Total (all out in 32.1 overs) 94. Fall of wickets: 1-3, 2-3, 3-11, 4-18, 5-23, 6-31, 7-35, 8-48, 9-79. Bowling: Anderson 10-2-30-2 (1nb), Johnson 12-4-33-6, Harmison 9.1-3-22-2 (1nb), Giles 1-0-1-0. Zimbabwe, 2nd innings (following-on): D Ebrahim batting 22; M Vermeulen c McGrath b Anderson 0; S Carlisle not out 19; Total (For 1 wkt, 15 overs) 41. Fall of wicket: 1-5. Bowling: Anderson 4-0-18-1; Johnson 5-41-0; Harmison 4-0-11-0; Giles 2-0-11-0. AFP AP England's Richard Johnson celebrates his dismissal of Zimbabwe's Stuart Carlisle during the second day of their second Test at Chester-le-Street on Friday. HOCKEY against Australia on Thursday have left them with no option but to get the better of the Indians to keep their hopes of making it to the final alive. Though the Indians appear quite confident of beating the Pakistanis, coach Rajinder Singh has warned his boys not to get too complacent as their rivals were quite capable of turning the table on any fancied team. “We will have to play really well to beat a vastly improved Pakistani side, who have played superbly in their last two matches. They are limping back to their usual form and we will go all out to beat them tomorrow,” Rajinder Singh said. “A match between the two sides is always special for not only the players but also people worldwide. Saturday’s match will be fiercer than what Perth saw last week,” Rajinder Singh said. PTI Arjuna falls flat Indian girls lose DD Metro: 1800 hrs: French Open Tennis (Women’s singles final). DD Sports: 0830 hrs & 1700 hrs: Sr Asian Wrestling Championships. ESPN: 1510 hrs: Eng vs Zimbabwe (2nd Test, Day 3). Star Sports: 1900 hrs: WI vs Sri Lanka (1st ODI). dominate Pak Mumbai: The captains and coaches of the country’s first-class teams were in favour of the new two-tier system for Ranji Trophy but didn’t like the new Duleep Trophy format when they were asked for their views at a one-day conclave of the cricket board here on Friday. The meeting was chaired by Sunil Gavaskar and attended by at least a dozen internationals, either coaches or captains — Bishen Singh Bedi, Lalchand Rajput, Venkatesh Prasad, Arshad Ayub, Paras Mhambrey, Venkatpathy Raju, Amay Khurasiya, Reetinder Singh Sodhi, Vijay Dahiya, Ajay Ratra and Bhupinder Singh Sr. At the conclusion of the meeting, BCCI chief Jagmohan Dalmiya said ‘‘candid opinions were expressed. All liked the new Ranji system which makes for a level playing field. For Duleep Trophy they wanted to go back to the zonal system. We can make it more exciting by adding a sixth team, maybe one from abroad. There would be two groups and a final.’’ Another suggestion liked by the BCCI was that the domestic One-day tournaments should be played under lights and with coloured clothing and white ball. Dalmiya said the Challenger series could see these things happening. It was put on hold last season because of the World Cup and India A tour. Dalmiya said board’s attempts to imbibe fitness culture among the first-class sides had met with success. He said the feedback was good from the pitches made at ten centres in consultations with New Zealand curators. Sydney: The establishment of an international One-day cricket league was proposed here on Thursday by an Australian players’ body as a key part of a plan to save the sport from overkill. The Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) blueprint outlined by ACA chief executive Tim May also envisages countries being restricted to 30 One-day internationals a year. The plan was aimed at ensuring players were not burned out by too much One-day cricket, said May, a former Australian off-spin bowler. May unveiled the plan after Australian One-day captain Ricky Ponting — who led his country to a World Cup triumph in South Africa earlier this year — pleaded with Australian cricket chiefs to reduce players’ on-field burdens. Arriving home from the West In- dies tour, Ponting said too much cricket, leading to premature burnout, was his team’s biggest fear. And recently, outgoing International Cricket Council (ICC) president Malcolm Gray raised concerns about one-sided matches. May, writing on his organisation’s website, said the game had been damaged by a glut of lopsided Oneday matches across the globe — as well as the sheer number of games, seemingly haphazard in their organisation. “Cricket authorities have identified that ... cricket is potentially damaged by the over-scheduling of uneven matches, yet they continue to put more of it,” he said. May said One-day matches were cricket’s saviour in terms of revenue, but the ICC risked damaging its “blue-chip” product by putting on too much cricket. AFP Pay and shoot: It’s time for a new culture By Moraad Ali Khan The clay target shooters (trap, double trap and skeet) in India have always been a for midable lot. The good old days saw a legendary shooter like Karni Singh, who won a silver at the World Championship and was rewarded with an Arjuna Award; then we saw the emergence of Randhir Singh, who is perhaps the epitome of how a natural talent can succeed at the highest level. But then came the period from 1983 to 1993 when it looked like the sport had gone to sleep. It finally woke up when the Indian trap team (Mansher Singh, Kumar Maan Singh and myself) landed in Manila, Philippines for the Asian Clay Championship. The second phase of the golden decade for Indian clay target shooting began when Mansher shot an individual medal. Since then, we Indians Infrastructure is one of the key components in the making of a champion. Moraad sees it as one of the main problems in the country, especially in shooting have won medals at almost all the levels, except the Olympics. Even there we should an improvement by bettering our own scores at previous Olympics. Over the last 12 months, in fact, we have won 17 medals in clay target shooting. There were medals at the Commonwealth Games, the Asian Games, the Asian Championships and the World Cups too. Having said all this, let us now look at the problems facing our shooters. There are exactly seven clay target ranges in this country which boasts of over a billion people. Out of these only one functions on a regular basis: the Dr KSS Ranges in Delhi. The other ranges in Hyderabad, Chennai, Chandigarh, Meerut, Bikaner and Bangalore are not functional. All of them were built with lakhs and crores of rupees for some Games or Championships. But they INDIAN SPORT SLEEPING GIANT are hardly being used now. In fact, at most of these ranges, you won’t get stock of cartridges or clays. The endresult is very simple: It won’t work. It’s just like starting a car after a few years. Well, you will have to call a mechanic first, service it, change some parts, spend some money and only then it might start. This is what is needed at these ranges. Let’s just use them properly and we will soon see more talent emerging in the sport. This is very important as we have time and again proved that India is a very strong contender in this event. Why not use all these ranges on a pay and play basis? It will surely popularize the sport and even expand its base. I happen to shoot for India for over a decade and have shot at ranges all over the world. In each and every range, beieve me, there are provisions to pay and practice. One goes to the range, picks up a gun, buys cartridges and practice tokens and shoots. Here at home, it is an ordeal organising a practice session: one even has to carry our own clays. Is all this meant to build the organizing ability of a shooter or is to build a strong shooter? I happened to be in Dubai recently to take part in an invitation tournament. It was a pleasure shooting in the desert. The background was full of green grass, unlike the yellow dried grounds of our ranges. The ranges were ready by the time we reached for an early morning practice session, which was as early as 6:00 am. The rest area for the shooters too was comfortable with provisions for proper meals and snacks. This kind of facility is available at the ranges all over the world. Even in countries, where gun laws are much tougher than our country, the ranges function as a regular sports stadium, where an athlete can come and practice. Let us change the nature of these shooting ranges and go in for shooting club culture where one could practice and train. We could charge for cartridges and practice sessions, but let us not restrict the usage of the ranges for want of administrative will. The ultimate loser in this procedural network is India. As told to Pradeep Kumar Moraad Ali Khan Khan is one of India’s leading trap shooters. Besides talent, excelling in modern day sport also requires high quality infrastructure. In India, talent seldom has any support on this front. Readers can write their views to timessport@indiatimes. com or fax at 23323346, 23324173. TOID70603/CR2/19/M/1 TOID70603/CR2/19/C/1 TOID70603/CR2/19/K/1 TOID70603/CR2/19/Y/1 CMYK Sumathipala Ranatunga after retiring from international cricket, described his dismal performance as an “eye opener”. He had won over 100,000 votes in the national elections in December 2001, but managed to get only seven in the elections. He rejected an offer by Sumathipala to work together saying that he did not want to work with people who were allegedly corrupt. PTI Dyson named Lankan coach Colombo: Sri Lanka said on Friday that it would appoint former Australian Test player John Dyson as the island’s national cricket coach to replace sacked Dav Whatmore. The newly elected Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka (BCCSL) said it was about to sign a memorandum of understanding with Dyson to coach the national team from August. “By July 6, we will have him here meeting with you,” BCCSL’s new president Thilanga Sumathipala told reporters here a few hours after defeating former World Cup winning skipper Arjuna Ranatunga to take the top administration job. Dyson coached New South Wales after retiring from Test cricket. Whatmore was sacked in March afer Sri Lanka bowed out of the semi-finals of the World Cup. AFP ‘Karachi is safe for SA’ Karachi: Pakistan’s port city of Karachi, last year hit by terror attacks, will stage a One-day international and a Test match when South Africa’s cricket team tours the country in September, officials said on Thursday. “South Africa agreed to playing in Karachi straight away and we see no problems in staging international matches in the city,” Pakistan Cricket Board chief executive Ramiz Raja said. South Africa will play three Tests and as many Oneday games on their tour to Pakistan from September 22 to October 28. Two bomb blasts in the commercial hub of Pakistan, one outside a five star hotel where the New Zealand cricket team was staying, and the other outside the US consulate saw 26 people killed in May and June last year. AFP OID ‰ ‰ † ‰ CMK 20 TIMES SPORT Saturday, June 7, 2003 CAPITAL SPORT Zakir Hussain win: Zakir Hussain College, All India Institute of Medical Sciences and Reserve Bank of India rcorded victories over their respective rivals at the Delhi Soccer Association annual institutional soccer league here. In senior division Group A Zakir Hussain beat Employees State Insurance Corporation by a Davesh Kaushik goal. In A division Group B AIIMS beat a resilient Customs and Central Excise 3-2, while in a Group A match RBI trounced BSNL 5-0. Hot weather cricket: Bright Club ran over PUSA Youngsters by four wickets in a DDCA hot weather cricket tournament here. Nishant Sharma scored an unbeaten 109 for the victors. In another match Delhi Police beat Hind CC by seven wickets. PUSA youngsters: 233 all out in 39.3 overs (Sunit Sharma 58, Vinay Kumar 56; Vineet Sharma 4/35), Bright Club: 234 for 6 in 38.1 overs (Nishant Sharma 109 n.o, Nischal Gaur 31; Lalit Anand 3/43) Hind CC: 115 all out in 33.5 overs (Puran Singh 38; Sanjay Verma 4/7), Delhi Police: 121 for 3 in 14.3 overs (Naveen Upadhyay 31) RP Academy in final: RP Cricket Academy made it to final beating Chetan Sharma Academy by eight wickets in the semifinal of Peacock under-13 league cricket tournament. Chetan Sharma Academy: 95 all out in 28.1 overs (Kapil 40; Harjinder 3/21), RP Academy: 96 for 2 in 10.2 overs (Mukul Dagar 55, Vaibhav Rawal 30 n.o.) Laxman Das cricket: Sonnet Club annexed the Laxman Dass memorial cricket tournament beating Food Corporation of India by 34 runs. Mayank Sidana shone with the bat scoring a fine ton for the winners. Sonnet Club: 261 for 4 in 40 overs (Mayank Sidana 106 n.o, Dhruv Mohan 78, Saket Bhatia 50), FCI: 227 all out (Paras Dogra 64, Pankaj Thakur 42; Naresh Jain 3/33, Chetan Nanda 3/30) The Times of India, New Delhi Gurbinder, Geetika in hunt for gold K.K. Laskar By Vineeta Pandey TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: The Indian wrestlers came back to their winning ways on the second day as most of them won their bouts to the delight of the home crowd and kept the local hopes alive in the senior Asian wrestling championships. Seasoned Gurbinder Singh (55kg, Greco-Roman) and woman grappler Geetika Jhakhar (63kg, freestyle) have assured India of at least a medal each by making it to the final of their respective weight categories. Super heavyweight in freestyle, Palwinder Singh Cheema, India’s best bet for a gold medal, expectedly won both of his Friday’s bouts and now needs to win against a Bangladeshi opponent to reach the final. In his first bout of the day, Cheema came back strongly against Mongolian Gankhuyag Dorjpalam from 1-3 points deficit to pull level 3-3 and then went on to win 5-3. The Commonwealth Games champion, Cheema later pinned down Huang Cheun Sheng in less then a minute to maintain course. In freestyle, India also can pin hopes on Sushil Kumar, Sushil Kumar tries to pin down Jung Hung Ho of Korea in the 60 kg freestyle bout in the Sujit Mann and Jagdish senior Asian wrestling championship at Indira Gandhi Indoor Stadium on Friday. Baracudda ready for the show TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: Baracudda is expected to lift the Jerry Can Salver, the main event of the Bangalore races scheduled for Saturday. Selections: Guindy Plate: 1,400m: 2.30pm: Auchterarder 1, Acquire 2, Appolo Reef 3. Buck Passer Plate: 1,100m: Great Prospector 1, Imperial Fire 2, Sedgemere 3. Star Supreme Plate: 1,400m: Etiquette 1, Driven 2, RACES Right Status 3. Jerry Can Salver: 1,400m: Baracudda 1, Actuary 2, Star Patriarch 3. Sardar Khan Memorial Plate (div.I): 1,200m: Allespagne 1, Slanka 2, Amicable 3. Smart Chieftan Plate: 2,000m: Dark Knight 1, Queen And Country 2, Hoorpari 3.Flirting Vision Plate: 1,400m: Highlevel 1, Ithica 2, Silver Victress 3. Sardar Khan Memorial Plate (div.II): 1,200m: Fly For Fame 1, Banzai 2, Snow Deer 3. Kalliraman who need to win a bout each to make it to the semifinals. National champion in Greco-Roman, Virender Singh upset a much superior rival in the 120kg class and is also in contention for a medal. Women grapplers Gursharanpreet Kaur (72kg) and Kamini Yadav (48kg) will figure in the bronze medal bouts in their respective sections. Meanwhile, the participants got some respite from the heat in the Indira Gandhi Stadium as SAI officials managed to start one unit of the air-conditioner. Results (all Indians): Men, Greco-Roman: 60kg: Ravinder Singh bt Tengizbaev Nurbakyi (Kaz) 4-0, Hudoy ber Dievasliddin (Uzb) bt Ravinder Singh 9-1; 66kg: (3rd rd) Gurbinder Singh w/o YS Abdul (Syr); 74kg: Man Ba Xuan bt Sanjay Kumar 4-1; 84kg: (3rd rd) Marshein S. Ahmed (Irn) bt Satyadev Malik 8-0; 96kg: Yasuke Morikaku (Jpn) bt Satish Kumar 3-0; 120kg: Park Wol (Kor) bt Virender Singh 3-0, Virender Singh bt Djuraev Dilshod (Uzb) 5-1; Freestyle: 60kg: Sushil Kumar bt Jung Hung Ho 7-6; 66kg: Pawan Kumar bt Marebn Kool Mani (Syr) 31; 74kg: Sujit Mann bt Pham Thanh Quyet (Viet) by fall; 84kg: Anuj Kumar bt Takjao Isokawa 5-1; 96kg: Koo Hak Ja (Kor) bt Jagdish Kalliraman 6-3, Jagdish Kalliraman bt Brahm Dev Yadav (Nep) by fall; 120kg: Palwinder Singh Cheema bt Gankhuyag Dorjpalam (Mong) 5-3, Palwinder Cheema bt Huang Chun Sheng (Tpe) by fall; Women: 51kg: Nimako Hattor (Jap) bt Renu Bala by fall; Emkmjargal bt Renu Bala 13-3; 59kg: Alka Tomar bt Rena Iwamo (Jap) 11-0, Myagmar Suren Tumen (Mgl) bt Alka Tomar 7-0; 72kg: Kang Min Jeong (Kor) bt Gursharanpreet Kaur 3-2, Svetlana Yazoshevich bt Gursharanpreet by fall. Abhinn, Meenakshi dominate By Darryl Crasto TIMES NEWS NETWORK Mumbai: It may sound strange, but it happens quite often. The final of a major event, contested by, generally, the best players in the fray, turns out to be a damp squib. And that’s precisely what the title round in both, the men’s and women’s singles, of the NSCI all-India major badminton tournament turned out be. For, Petroleum Sports Control Board’s Abhinn Shyam Gupta and B.R. Meenakshi encountered the minimum of resistance from Anup Sridhar (Kar) and Shruti Kurien (PSCB) enroute to the top prize of Rs 50,000 and Rs. 35,000 respectively. The men’s final, in particular, was expected to provide exciting stuff. Not so much because of Abhinn’s superb performance thus far but more because his opponent, Sridhar, had two major scalps under his belt on way to the title round. However, that never really happened. And that was only because Abhinn was his usual consistent self while Sridhar was unaccountably and hopelessly erratic. The bursts of brilliance were fewer and further between when compared to the nu- CROSS COUNTRY merous errors the lanky Karnataka player committed. Results (all finals): Men’s singles: Abhinn Shyam Gupta (PSCB) bt Anup Sridhar (Kar) 15-7, 17-16. Women’s singles: B.R. Meenakshi (PSCB) bt Shruti Kurien (PSCB) 9-11, 11-6, 11-6. Women’s doubles: Jwala Gutta/Shruti Kurien (PSCB) bt Aparna Popat (PSCB)/Oli Deka (Assam) 15-8, 15-9. Gajjar,Amritraj ousted Mumbai: The Indian challenge in the men’s singles ended with the ouster of second seed Prakash Amritraj and unseeded Rohan Gajjar from the semifinals of the MSLTA-ITF Satellite tennis circuit here on Friday. Prakash was ousted by English qualfier Daniel Kiernan 6-2 7-6 (7/4) in one hour and 50 minutes. Gajjar fought well in the first set but lost the second easily to unseeded Prima Simpatiaji of Indonesia. Simpatiaji won 7-6 (7/4) 61 in one hour and forty minutes. Results (all semifinals): Singles: Prima Simpatiaji (Ina) bt Rohan Gajjar (Ind) 7-6 (7-4) 6-1, Daniel Kiernan (GBR) bt Prakash Amritraj (Ind) 6-2 7-6 (7-4). Doubles: Manoj Mahadevan/Rishi Sridhar (Ind) bt Saurabh Kohli/ Rohan Gajjar (Ind) 6-4 0-6 6-4, Daniel Kiernan (GBR)/Ajay Ramaswamy (Ind) bt Hendri-Susilo Pramono/Febi Widhiyanto (Ina) 6-4 6-3. PTI TOID70603/CR1/20/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/20/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/20/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/20/Y/1 CMYK OID ‰ ‰ † CMK TIMES SPORT The Times of India, New Delhi Saturday, June 7, 2003 Vogts, Voller set for bitter showdown AFP Paris: Scotland coach Berti Vogts comes face-to-face with his own countrymen on Saturday aiming to deliver a hammer blow to Germany’s Euro 2004 dream. Vogts, who has presided over just three wins in fourteen matches since taking over the national side, must get the better of Rudi Voller’s World Cup finalists at Hampden in their Group 5 qualifier to keep their campaign on track. However, in the weekend’s most highly-charged clash of the 19-game programme, the 56-year-old won’t expect any favours from a German side he used to coach until 1998. Michael Ballack has already warned that some players have “scores to settle” dating from their time under Vogts at Bayer Leverkusen. Ballack, now with Bayern Munich, has claimed that “working with Vogts was difficult from the start. “I don’t have to keep secret that some Leverkusen players had a problem with him. Some players want to show him something — me too.” ONE, TWO, THREE...: Portuguese players led by Luis Figo (2nd from right) train prior to their friendly against Paraguay in Lisbon on Thursday. In Group 10, the Republic of Ireland face Albania in Dublin with Sunderland winger Kevin Kilbane insisting he can help rekindle a campaign that has seen Brian Kerr’s men taking just four points from four matches. They are already four points behind leaders Switzerland who face second-placed Russia on Saturday in Basel. In Group 2, the race for the sole automatic qualifying place is developing into an all-Scandinavian battle with Norway out on top with 10 points and Denmark, the 1992 champions, in second spot on seven points. Both of them will clash in Copenhagen. The Netherlands, winners in 1988, can take top spot in Group 3 if they beat Belarus in Minsk where they lost 1-0 eight years ago. The Dutch are second in the table behind the Czech Republic who don’t play again until Wednesday against Moldova where they will be expected to welcome back playmaker Pavel Nedved. AFP SAI to appoint more foreign coaches By Indraneel Das TIMES NEWS NETWORK New Delhi: With an eye on next year’s Athens Olympics, the Sports Authority of India has acquired the services of 10 foreign coaches till date and plans to rope in 16 more. Out of the 10 employed by SAI, six are already training the national campers at various SAI centres in the country, according to a senior SAI official. “Olympics is our priority, but some of them (foreign coaches) are here as part of our Long Term Development Plan (LTDP), which has been initiated in association with the federations recently,” explained Shekhar Dutt, Director General of SAI on Thursday. “The coaches will be here for at least six months and will impart training to national campers for all international meets,” he added. Altogether SAI has received recommen- The coaches story Archery: Chei Woong Lim (Korea; From January 1 for six months), rowing: Nicole Vulpe (Romania; One year starting from May 10), squash: S Subramaniam (Malaysia; Nov 1 for one year), wrestling: Andzrej Malina (Poland; May 23 for six months), chess: Evgeny Vladimirov (Kazakhstan May 1-June 15), volleyball: Hristo Betkov (Bulgaria; from March 1 for six months) . Waiting in the wings: Athletcis: Seven (including three recovery experts), canoeing-kayaking: 1 dations for 26 coaches as part of the preparations for the Olympics and LTDP from some of the federations. “We are waiting for clearance from sports ministry for the remaining 16 coaches,” Dutt added. The six coaches engaged are in archery, rowing, squash, wrestling, chess and volleyball. Of the other four, one for yachting and the other three for chess, were here on a short-term plan. A SAI official claimed that though the ministry had approved one more wrestling coach, he’s yet to give his consent. “The coach (Vladimirov of Poland) has not responded as yet; we are waiting for that,” he said. Surprisingly no athletics coaches have been recruited so far. According to a SAI official the recommendation had already been sent to the sports ministry. “We are waiting for approval,” he said. The Amateur Athletics Federation of India has requested for seven foreign hands including three recovery experts, he said. Real pip United as richest club London: Real Madrid have replaced Manchester United as the world’s richest club, says a survey of club finances carried out by World Soccer magazine. Madrid, with an annual income of $300.5 million have a greater revenue than any United according to the figures for 2001-02 when they won the Champions League, and could easily afford to buy David Beckham from their rivals. Manchester United are second on the list with an income of $247.2 million. Newly-crowned European champions AC Milan come in fifth. Only one other Spanish club, Barcelona, features in the top 20, which is made up of eight clubs from England, five from Italy, three from Germany and two from Scotland and Spain. The research demanded the clubs to disclose financial information before reaching the conclusion. Top 20 richest clubs: 1. Real Madrid; 2. Manchester United; 3. 3. Juventus; 4. Bayern Munich; 5. AC Milan; 6. Chelsea; 7. Barcelona; 8. AS Roma; 9. Liverpool; 10. Arsenal; 11. Inter Milan; 12. Leeds United; 13. Lazio; 14. Borussia Dortmund; 15. THE S[PORTING WORLD AT A GLANCE CRICKET English County Championship — Division one: Sussex 311 all out in 95.1 overs (R Martin-Jenkins 67, C Adams 62; A Sheriyar 4 for 49) vs Kent 188 for 5 (A Symonds 54). Lancashire 503 for 6 decl (M Chilton 108, S Law 82, C Hooper 74, A Flintoff n.o. 71, I Sutcliffe 55, M Loye 54) vs Leicestershire 117 for 4. Middlesex 363 all out in 121.1 overs (B Hutton 107, E Joyce 69, Abdul Razzaq 54, P Weekes n.o. 51; J.Dakin 5 for 86) vs Essex 95 for 8 (S Cook 3 for 7). Warwickshire 351 all out in 87.3 overs (J Trott 63, M Wagh 58, C Obuya 55; G Smith 4- for 60) vs Nottinghamshire 389 for 3 (K Pietersen n.o. 140, G Welton 99, U Afzaal 72, C Cairns n.o. 52). GOLF PGA Tour FBR Capital Open, Maryland (Par 71) — 66 Robert Gamez; 67 Rich Beem, Notah Begay III; 68 Niclas Fasth, Tom Gillis, Glen Hnatiuk, Paul Lawrie, Rory Sabbatini, Patrick Sheehan, Hal Sutton; 69 Steven Alker, Jay Don Blake, Alexander Cejka, Joe Durant, Joel Edwards, Charles Howell III, John Huston, Troy Matteson, Darron Stiles, Hidemichi Tanaka, Esteban Toledo, Garrett Willis; 70 Briny Baird, Danny Ellis, Harrison Frazar, Fred Funk, Jason Gore, Mike Grob, Padraig Harrington, Richard S. Johnson, Cliff Kresge, Bernhard Langer, Davis Love III, Andrew Magee, Deane Pappas, Craig Parry, Kirk Triplett. LPGA Tour McDonald’s Championship, Delaware: 67 Hee-Won Han; 68 Wendy Ward, Joanne Mills; 69 Grace Park, Rachel Teske; 70 Young Kim, Annika Sorenstam, Suzann Pettersen, Jane Crafter; 71 Marcy Hart, Sally Little, Tracy Hanson, Beth Daniel, Natalie Gulbis, Juli Inkster, Dorothy Delasin; 72 Hilary Lunke, Leslie Spalding, Catriona Matthew, Jackie Gallagher-Smith, Michelle McGann, Lorie Kane, Kate Golden, Angela Stanford, Akiko Fukushima, Jeong Jang, Mi-Hyun Kim, Karrie Webb, Wendy Doolan, Se Ri Pak, Lorena Ochoa, Kim Saiki. SQUASH Women’s Hurghada International, Egypt — 1st round: 7-Natalie Grinham (Aus) bt Fiona Geaves (Eng) 7-9, 9-4, 9-6, 9-1; 4-Rachael Grinham (Aus) bt Shelley TOID70603/CR1/21/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/21/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/21/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/21/Y/1 CMYK 21 OID ‰ ‰ † CMK 22 TIMES SPORT Saturday, June 7, 2003 F R E N C H F R I E S Reuters Justine’s a late riser: Justine Henin-Hardenne was wide awake in beating Serena Williams to reach the women’s final - but she admits to being a late riser compared with husband Pierre-Yves. “PierreYves always gets up before me,” explains the diminutive star, who turned 20 last Sunday. “On my birthday he forgot to wish me many happy returns for a few minutes! That made me a bit nervous...” The nerves had gone by the time she came out to see off Serena. No full Slam dozen for Americans: Justine HeninHardenne’s win over Serena Williams put an end to a series of 11 straight Grand Slam finals with at least one American woman involved. The last all non-American women’s final was at Roland Garros three years ago when Frenchwoman Mary Pierce defeated Spaniard Conchita Martinez. ‘It’s all in the head’: French Open semi-final Guillermo Coria, who was hit with a doping suspension between August 2001 and February 2002 for taking a banned stimulant in a food supplement, warned other players that taking vitamins could ruin their careers. “It was the saddest moment of my life which allowed me to find out where I was,” recalled the Argentine. “I was naive and took vitamins which were given to me. I really went though a difficult period, I was totally innocent, and can only say to all players to pay attention to the vitament supplements they give you, there are a lot of contiminated vitamin and it doesn’t make any different to take them, it’s just physchological. “Even now when I’m sick I don’t take anyting at all. When I had terrible cramps in the quarters I prefer to lose through tiredness than take something.” Beautiful present: American legend proved that he was willing to give more than the shirt off his back following his quarterfinal loss to Argentine Guillermo Coria, who heroworshipped the eight-time Slam winner as a child. “It was the happiest day of my life, a magical moment,” said Coria. “He gave me his racquet. I asked for his jersey and he asked if I would not prefer the racquet. It’s really the most beautiful present in my life.” SILENT SERENADE: World No 1 Serena Williams hangs her head in anguish after losing to Justine Henin-Hardenne of Belgium on Thursday. Cops crackdown on ticket touts Paris: A massive police crackdown against ticket touts at the French Open has led to hundreds of arrests since the tournament began eleven days ago, organisers said on Thursday. Police in Paris’ chic 16th district which borders the Roland Garros complex have arrested between 25 and 30 touts daily with estimates that some 200 will have received verbal warnings by the time the tournament ends on Sunday. “We have to congratulate the police,” said tournament deputy director Frederic Longuepee, pointing out that the French tennis federation (FFT) have also been active in curbing the lucrative resale of tickets. ‘‘The new management put in place by the FFT has taken the problem by the scruff of the neck.” The black market generates an estimated 17 million Euros ($20.2 millions) during a two-week tournament whose overall revenue is 101.2 million Euros ($120 million).AFP The Times of India, New Delhi Smart Alec flirts with records Chester-le-Street (England): A proud Alec Stewart was handed an incentive to continue Test cricket after he moved into second place in England’s list of Test run scorers on the first day of the second Test against Zimbabwe at the Riverside on Thursday. Stewart’s 68 took him past fellow former England captain David Gower’s tally of 8,231 runs and into eighth place overall in the all-time list of Test run scorers. It also helped England re- cover from 156 for five to their stumps total 298 for five and after close of play Stewart said: “It’s something to go past the likes of David Gower and Geoff Boycott. It gives you another reason to carry on.” Aged 40, veteran wicketkeeper batsman Stewart’s continued inclusion in the Test team has provoked much media debate in England. Some pundits have said the selectors should drop the Surrey stalwart in favour of younger rivals such as Es- All-time list of leading Test scorers Runs player country matches innings average highest 100s 50s 11,174 10,265 10,122 8,900 8,832 8,811 8,540 8,281 8,231 8,114 Allan Border Stephen Waugh Sunil Gavaskar Graham Gooch Javed Miandad Sachin Tendulkar Vivian Richards Alec Stewart David Gower Geoffrey Boycott (AUS) (AUS) (IND) (ENG) (PAK) (IND) (WIS) (ENG) (ENG) (ENG) 156 160 125 118 124 105 121 128 117 108 265 249 214 215 189 169 182 227 204 193 50.56 49.83 51.12 42.58 52.57 57.58 50.23 40.39 44.25 47.72 Key: Stewart’s figures include the first innings of the second Test against Zimbabwe French Open finalists at a glance KIM CLIJSTERS (Seed: 2); Belgium - 19: Best performance at French Open - runner-up 2001 orld No 2 Kim Clijsters comes from the Dutch-speaking Flanders region. Has been closing in steadily on the all-powerful Williams sisters and tipped as favourite to lift Belgium’s first Grand Slam title after winning season-ending championship title and then holding two match points before losing the Australian Open semi-final to Serena Williams in January. Lost the final here two years ago to Jennifer Capriati going 12-10 in the longest final set at a French Open final having beaten HeninHardenne in the semis - but won third title this year on clay at the Italian Open which pushed her season earnings past the million dollar mark. Daughter of former Belgian soccer international Leo, with mother Elke a former top Belgian gymnast. Younger sister Elke plays on the WTA tour. Girlfriend of Lleyton Hewitt. Sometimes superstitious and likes to eat the same thing every day before a major final. Second Slam after 2001 French Open. W sex’s James Foster or Nottinghamshire’s Chris Read. But Stewart, extending his England Test appearance record to 128 matches in this game, said: “A lot’s been written and said about my position but all I’ve ever done is make myself available.” His 8,281 runs is still well behind Graham Gooch’s England record of 8,900. However, with five home Tests against South Africa still to come Stewart could surpass West Indies’ Viv Richards. AFP JUSTINE HENIN-HARDENNE (Seed: 4); Belgium - 21: Best performance at French Open - semi- finalist 2001 rom the French-speaking Walloon region. Beat world number one Serena Williams to take the Charleston title last month, and again to reach the final here and overcame the world number two Clijsters to win the German Open title earlier this month. She was 1997 French Open junior champion and youngest ever Belgian national champion at age 15. Reached 2001 Wimbledon final lost in three sets to Venus Williams. Steadily improving, winning three of her nine titles this season, becoming only the fourth woman in tennis history to win the clay court titles in Charleston and Berlin successively, which augurs well for her chances of her first Grand Slam title at the French Open. Baseliner who prefers clay courts. Married Pierre-Yves Hardenne last November. Superstition of not walking on the tennis court lines between points -- she makes sure she doesn’t. Second Grand Slam final after 2001 Wimbledon. F ‘I am performing two jobs — coach and dad’ TIMES NEWS NETWORK Mumbai: The main action was on the court. The main attraction was off it. As players contested the quarterfinals of the MSLTAITF Men’s Satellite tennis tournament here on Thursday, much of the attention was on Vijay Amritraj, who was at the venue to watch son Prakash play Vinod Sridhar. Prakash won in straight sets, after which a relaxed Vijay spoke to the media on various subjects. Excerpts. On guiding Prakash: He absorbs everything I tell him. He is like a sponge. He has the desire to become a successful tennis player, which is the important thing. Sure, I get nervous watching him. But the advantage is I know what he is thinking when he is on court. There are two jobs that I have to perform here: coach and Dad. I have even coached him on the phone, which is stupid. But an important part of coaching is to understand your pupil, even when you are not with him. On similarities between him and his son on court: Tennis is no longer the same game. What is common between us is that we like to go up to the net. He also has the same desire to win as I did. On the confusion over Prakash’s nationality: It’s American, since he was born and brought up in the US. The ITF, however, allows a player to represent another country. He applied for the same some time ago and on April 1 this year, he became eligible to play for India. On drugs in tennis: Hardly any. On a scale of one-toten, I would put it at 0.1. Tennis is played round the year, whereas most of the important events in track and field (in which doping is rampant) are quadrennial. TOID70603/CR1/22/M/1 TOID70603/CR1/22/C/1 TOID70603/CR1/22/K/1 TOID70603/CR1/22/Y/1 CMYK 205 200 236 333 280 217 291 190 215 246 27 30 34 20 23 31 24 15 19 22 63 46 45 56 43 35 45 44 39 42
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