Thursday, December 1, 2016

Dr.Reddy's launches cycle share programme in Hyderabad

Dr.Reddy's launches cycle share programme in Hyderabad

Newspapers Headlines
The Supreme court asking all cinemas to play the national anthem before a film is screened makes for front page news in all the dailies this morning. Quoting the Supreme Court The Statesman writes "National Anthem must in Cinema halls." "Supreme Court makes national anthem mandatory in cinema halls" writes the Hindu adding "Doors must be closed while it is played and all should stand up."
Writing on the payday chaos Hindustan Times writes "Note scarcity bites on payday." On the cash shortage the paper writes "Banks seek protection, companies give day off, public anger erupts at several places." "Banks brace for payday chaos" says Asian Age adding "RBI trying to rush more cash, crunch likely to last 7-10 days."
Quoting the Prime Minister Narendra Modi the Economic Times writes " Tell People Cash Crunch will Crush Culprits". The paper writes that "Core team to inform citizens about social, cultural benefits of demonetisation."
Referring to the gross domestic product (GDP) growth the Business Standard notes "GDP grows 7.3 % in quarter 2 but slowdown looms." The paper writes "Demonetisation impact weighs on governments target; RBI panel faces rate cut pressure."
On the Union Governments assistance to displaced families from Pakistan occupied Jammu and Kashmir and the Chhamb Niabat The Tribune writes "Families displaced from Pakistan occupied areas to get rupees 2000 crore. Rupees 5.5 lakh for each in Prime Ministers J&K package."
"India inks 5 thousands crore deal with US for 145 howitzers" reports the Times of India.
On the Uri Attacks The Indian Express writes "Data from seized GPS set shows Uri attackers did travel from Pakistan.
"Rahul's Twitter account hacked" informs the Asian Age about congress vice president Rahul Gandhi who's account was hacked multiple times on Wednesday evening with the series of offensive and abusive tweets appearing on his timeline.
"Japan may hire a Lakh Indians for Olympics" is the banner headline in the Mail Today. The paper says "Modi-Abe bond likely to bring job bonanza for Indian workers in run-up to 2020 Tokyo Games."
And finally, sleepy workers are taking a big bite out of GDP. Well, The Times of India reports sleep-deprived workers are costing developed nations billions of dollars each year, according to a new study. The calculation is based on tired employees being less productive or absent from work altogether.

No comments:

Post a Comment