NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES
Law Minister Salman Khurshid speaking to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh against the backdrop of the Election Commission complaint against him to President Pratibha Patil, is on the front pages of most papers today. "Khursheed issue now at PM's door" headlines The Hindu.
"High turnout in UP stumps parties, calculations go awry". Under that headline The Pioneer writes that in the absence of any perceptible wave, the unprecedented large percentage of polling in Uttar Pradesh has baffled political pandits.
"India means business in Pakistan", is the main headline in The Tribune. The paper writes, starting Monday, an Indian business delegation, led by Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma, will be taking part in a series of high-end events, including an 'India Show' in Pakistan, amid expectations that the neighbouring country will make a announcement granting the 'MFN Status' to India.
The Health Ministry is ready to role out a 30,000 crore rupee "Medicine for All" scheme, with the strong backing of the Prime Minister's Office, where free medicine given to all patients at all government facilities will soon became a reality, says The Times of India.
Whitney Houston, whose soaring voice lifted her to the top of the music world but whose personal decline was fueled by years of drug use, died Saturday afternoon in a Beverly Hills hotel room, report most papers. "Whitney, 48, found dead in LA Hotel on Grammy-eve" reads the Asian Age headline.
And finally, Hindustan Times informs us that the Supreme Court has ruled that an estranged wife has the right to stay in a portion of her husband's house and is entitled to maintenance from him and that he should provide her with all necessary amenities to make her stay habitable.
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