Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "K. R. Narayanan" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Narayanan's and Indian
The principal event of the golden jubilee of Indian independence was President K. R. Narayanan's midnight address to the nation during the special session of Parliament convened on the night of 14 August ; in this address, he identified the establishment of a democratic system of government and politics to be the greatest achievement of India since independence.
President K. R. Narayanan's address to the nation on the golden jubilee of the Indian Republic ( 26 January 2000 ) is considered a landmark: it was the first time a President attempted to analyse, with due concern for growing disparities, the several ways in which the country had failed to provide economic justice to the Indian people, particularly the rural and agrarian population ; he also stated that discontent was breeding and frustrations erupting in violence among the deprived sections of society.

Narayanan's and .
As Narayanan's tenure neared its end, various sections of public opinion looked forward to a second term of his Presidency.
Narayanan's other major works contain a variety of mathematical developments, including a rule to calculate approximate values of square roots, investigations into the second order indeterminate equation nq < sup > 2 </ sup > + 1 = p < sup > 2 </ sup > ( Pell's equation ), solutions of indeterminate higher-order equations, mathematical operations with zero, several geometrical rules, and a discussion of magic squares and similar figures.

tenures and Indian
During his tenures in office, gun runners were allowed to do business using Indian territories, often as stop overs en route from Thailand to Bangladesh.
His contribution to the Green Revolution in India and modernising Indian agriculture, during his two tenures as Union Agriculture Minister are still remembered, especial during 1974 drought when he was asked to hold the additional portfolio to tide over the food crisis.

tenures and first
VOC headquarters were located in Ambon during the tenures of the first three Governors General ( 1610 – 1619 ), but it was not a satisfactory location.
Eggen's first of four tenures as coach was a resounding success ; Rosenborg won The Double.
As of 2007, both logging tenures within Clayoquot Sound are controlled by first nation logging companies.
Other states with long tenures of no death penalty include Wisconsin ( with the distinction of being the only state to perform a single state-level execution in its history, and also the first to abolish the death penalty for all crimes ), Rhode Island ( although later reintroduced, it was unused and abolished again ), Maine, North Dakota, Minnesota, West Virginia, Iowa, and Vermont.
The first 63 issues of Animal Man featuring Bolland's artwork covered the tenures of writers Grant Morrison, Peter Milligan, Tom Veitch and Jamie Delano, with Bolland's images maintaining a continuity of style and imagery while the interior work underwent several changes of style and storyline .< ref name =" vert-ency ">
The first book concludes with a very interesting chapter on copyhold tenures, which marks the exact point at which the tenant — by-copy-of-court-roll, the successor of the villein, who, in his turn, represented the freeman reduced to villeinage by the growth of the manorial system, acquired security of tenure.
The record is approached, but not matched, by the nearly-15-year tenure of Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York ( January 1959-December 1973 ) as well as the 14-year tenures attained by Branstad's first gubernatorial predecessor, Robert D. Ray of Iowa ( 1969 – 83 ); Governor James R. Thompson of Illinois ( 1977 – 91 ); and Governor Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin ( 1987 – 2001 ).
He was thus Georgia's first chief executive under a proper constitutional government, but the third chief executive in all, following the brief tenures of presidents William Ewen and George Walton.
Among his other accomplishments during his tenures in office were the building of the first span of the Delaware Memorial Bridge, developing numerous other roads and highways, establishing the Delaware Public Service Commission and initiating the Delaware State Development Department.
According to his testimony at a televised religious service, Woodson was first diagnosed with throat cancer during one of his tenures with The Temptations.
During each of David Lee Roth's, Opie and Anthony's, and Kidd Chris's tenures at WYSP since January 2006, Preston and Steve were ranked first in the key demographics.
He was succeeded by Lord Granville, the first of his three tenures as Foreign Secretary.
This was the first of 12 tenures that Canterbury enjoyed as shield holder, to the end of the 2007 season.
Alan Wendell Livingston ( October 15, 1917 – March 13, 2009 ), born Alan Wendell Levison, was an American businessman best known for his tenures at Capitol Records, first as a writer / producer best known for creating Bozo the Clown for a series of record-album and illustrative read-along children's book sets, then as the executive who signed The Beatles to Capitol in November 1963.

tenures and such
Appointment tenures in extension ministries, such as Military Chaplaincy, Campus Ministry, Missions, Higher Education and other ministries beyond the local church are often even longer.
Feudal baronies ( or " baronies by tenure ") are now obsolete in England and without any legal force but any such historical titles are held in gross, that is to say are deemed to be enveloped within a more modern extant peerage title also held by the holder, sometimes along with vestigial manorial rights and tenures by grand serjeanty.
During his various tenures of office, Franscini was frequently sent on extraordinary missions, such as relief and calming missions in the Mendrisiotto during a cholera epidemic in 1836, and again during the famine of 1847.
Feudal land tenures existed in several varieties, most of which involved the tenant having to supply some service to his overlord, such as knight-service ( military service ).
Holmgren is noted for his role in molding quarterbacks such as Steve Young, Brett Favre and Matt Hasselbeck during his tenures in San Francisco, Green Bay and Seattle, respectively.
In the inner-city estates and suburban cités, the solution is often more drastic, with 1960s and 70s state housing projects being totally demolished and rebuilt in a more traditional European urban style, with a mix of housing types, sizes, prices, and tenures, as well as a mix of other uses such as retail or commercial.
Enfeoffment could be made of fees of various feudal tenures, such as fee-tail or fee-simple.
It is probable, however, that many supposed tenures by serjeanty were not really such, although so described in returns, in inquests after death, and other records.
TFC students fill rolls such as radio station manager and program director, with tenures generally beginning at the beginning of the student's junior or senior year and ending with graduation.

tenures and high
One of the unusual features of the kinship structure of the white-headed capuchin, relative to other primate species, is the high degree of relatedness within groups that results from the long tenures of alpha males who sire most of the offspring.
The Special Forces ( Airborne ) units in rotation form part of the parachute brigade alternatingly serving their field tenures in counter-insurgency / high altitude areas.

tenures and level
In contrast to her short tenures in the WNBA, Taylor has enjoyed far greater success in Europe and Asia, especially in the Polish Women's League where she is known by her sobriquet Lindska and has achieved a level of recognition comparable to that of Lisa Leslie in the WNBA and the Women's Chinese Basketball Association ( WCBA ).

tenures and country
Then, in 1973, Rich had million-selling hits with " Behind Closed Doors " and " The Most Beautiful Girl ," and it wasn't long before several of his older recordings made during his tenures at RCA, Mercury and Sun records — " I Don't See Me ..." included — were released as singles to country radio.

tenures and after
The Spectator described her as, " at heart, an old, isolationist, pacifist Leftist " and called on her to resign, and the New Statesman accused her of allowing the Foreign Office to become subservient to 10 Downing Street after the tenures of Jack Straw and Robin Cook.
He has also been the Chairman of Bar Council of India for four tenures both before and after the emergency.
Ahuluwalia, after graduating from University of Oxford, joined the World Bank during the tenures of Hollis Chenery and Robert MacNamara.
He became a household name all over Latin America during his tenures as world champion, especially after the Spanish boxing magazines Ring En Español and Guantes helped popularize him.
They were a usual accompaniment to feudal tenures, and the power which they conferred on great families, being recognized as a source of danger to the state, led to frequent attempts being made by statute to restrict them, both before and after the Union.
According to the Halberstam book, Stern's tenures at both networks were cut short due to health problems caused by his addiction to painkillers, which dated back to the period after his leg was amputated.
The Fort was supposed to be unlucky for rulers who occupied the site ; Humayun, Sher Shah Suri, and Hemu all had but relatively brief tenures ensconced there --- Humayun on two separate occasions, having lost the Fort to Sher Shah only five years after erecting it, and dying within a year of recapturing it 15 years later.
The effort to shoehorn Greece into the eurozone dates back to shortly after Cohn was serving as the global head of Goldman Sachs ' commodities business and through his tenures as a senior manager in charge of the company's global commodities and global securities units.
Shortly after the exile, being disappointed in the Habsburgs, Bocskay went back to his tenures in Bihar County.

0.704 seconds.