Friday, October 10, 2014

Nobel Peace Prize to child rights activists Malala of Pakistan, Kailash Satyarthi of India › The Lethbridge Herald









Nobel Peace Prize to child rights activists Malala of Pakistan, Kailash Satyarthi of India › The Lethbridge Herald 



TODAY'S NEWSPAPERS:-

Arun Jaitley warning Pakistan, the fresh twist inthe Sunanda case, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in India, the NIA to probe Burdwan blast and Chautala summoned to High Court today are some of the front page stories in the newspapers today.

The Asian Age quotes the government as saying 'Aggressor Pak will find cost unaffordable' adding that as firing rages BSF destroys 45 Pak border posts. While the Times of India writes 'India to Pak: Border trouble will bring 'unaffordable costs! The paper also writes that both sides step up intensity of mortar shelling.

Referring to the fresh turn in the Sunanda case, The Hindustan Times writes 'Sunanda case may be reopened after fresh poison twist', while the Asian Age reports that fresh forensic report by 3 doctors rules out Alprax overdose. The forensic report claims Sunanda was not suffering from lupus but was 'healthy'.

'Zuckerberg bullish on India' writes The Hindu. The paper also quotes the facebook founder as saying 'If you can do it successfully in India then you cando it anywhere else; while the Times of India quotes him as saying 'When 1 billion are offline, the world is robbed of ideas.

The Tribune reports that in the JBT scam 'The HC asks Chautala to appear in court today'. The Former Haryana Chief Minister Om Prakash Chautala has been sentenced to a 10 year imprisonment for his involvement in the scam.

"NIA to probe Burdwan blast,' Centre finds Bengal Police investigation report unsatisfactory' states the Pioneer, while the Hindustan Times writes 'Centre hands over Burdwan probe to NIA, bypasses Mamata Government.'

And finally, are you addicted to coffee? You have your genes to blame for that writes the Times of India. According  to a new large scale study genetics may be what separates people who can't function without coffee and those who never touch the stuff.

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