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To: ratan lal who wrote (10130)12/20/1999 12:08:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12475
 
Talking Point (BBC)- Ayodhya & Cancellation of Debt-Speak your mind.

Ratan:
Here is a chance to speak your mind about the above issues Oh BTW see if you find comments from anybody you know here.<vbg>

news1.thls.bbc.co.uk

news1.thls.bbc.co.uk



To: ratan lal who wrote (10130)12/20/1999 1:03:00 PM
From: sea_biscuit  Respond to of 12475
 
On the other hand, pakistan has helped in uniting India. You always need a common enemy to bring you together from time to time and forget your own differences.

Are you talking about the "united" India where states like Assam, Tripura, Nagaland, Manipur... have been waging war against their rulers for over 5 decades? Or are you talking about the "united" India where upper-caste people butcher those from the lower-castes in places like Bihar and UP? Or are you talking about the "united" India where people in Karnataka and Tamilnadu assault people, and loot and burn the property of those from the other state because of a river-water dispute?

God! If this is a picture of "unity", I wonder how it will all look when they're not united! <g>



To: ratan lal who wrote (10130)12/20/1999 9:05:00 PM
From: JPR  Respond to of 12475
 
Ratan:
White House spokeswoman Nanda Chitre said it was Clinton's first foray into Internet shopping
WASHINGTON, Dec 20 (Reuters) - U.S. President Bill Clinton
went shopping online for the first time on Monday, buying
horsehair bracelets and children's books as holiday gifts.
The self-professed "technologically challenged" president got on the Internet from the White House Oval Office, using a Compaq (NYSE:CPQ) laptop computer emblazoned with the presidential seal and a mouse set on his antique wooden desk.
Clinton bought the bracelets at www.lakotafund.org, a Web site run by a private nonprofit group set up to help South Dakota's Lakota Native Americans, and the books at
www.world2market.com, which sells items made by artisans from around the world.
White House spokeswoman Nanda Chitre said it was Clinton's first foray into Internet shopping and said he had only examined the two sites.
She declined to say who would receive the gifts, saying she
did not want to spoil the surprise.
According to the Lakota Fund Web site, a bracelet made with
a single braid of yellow- and red-dyed horsehair costs $21,
while the triple-braided version with white, black, red and
yellow horsehair sells for $26 each.
The Lakota Fund was started to help stimulate the private
sector at the Pine Ridge Reservation, a hardscrabble area with
a population of 22,000 that Clinton visited in July during a
tour of poor U.S. regions.
A search of the www.world2market.com for children's books
produced items ranging from a $16 book of artwork and writings
by North Carolina students about an imaginary land called
Xanadu to a $40 coffee-table book of children's photographs.
Chitre said Clinton used an American Express (NYSE:AXP) card
to pay for the gifts because of the company's policy of
offering consumers protection for online shopping.
He had the gifts shipped to the White House, she added,
saying she expected that he used the special zip code that
routes mail to the president's residence.
Asked if Clinton, who typically buys last-minute gifts on
Christmas Eve, had completed his Christmas shopping, the
spokeswoman replied: "I doubt it."

Copyright 1999, Reuters News Service