Thakur Amar Singh
Surprise! Surprise! Guess who called late last night? Julian Assange! The Wikileaks man had apparently heard of my huge collection of CDs...
Surprise! Surprise! Guess who called late last night? Julian Assange! The Wikileaks man had apparently heard of my huge collection of CDs...
Infosys, the accepted gold standard of Indian IT, is cut deep by shards of troubles
Union minister of welfare and social justice spells out his government’s agenda for scheduled castes
Thirty Dalit businessmen have defied odds and caste prejudice to become billionaires in their own right
What made <i>Midnight’s Children</i>? Re-examining the innards of a classic 30 years on, and the once capacious city that inspired it
Water might well irrigate the seeds of conflict its scarcity is sowing
The system moves in on Lokpal Bill prime movers, the Bhushans
A protest turns radioactive with the entry of the Shiv Sena
A dodgy sacking; a court order against it; next move, Infosys
Infosys, the accepted gold standard of Indian IT, is cut deep by shards of troubles
Union minister of welfare and social justice spells out his government’s agenda for scheduled castes
Thirty Dalit businessmen have defied odds and caste prejudice to become billionaires in their own right
The colas take a beating, fresh juices in new avatars stir up a summer storm
What made <i>Midnight’s Children</i>? Re-examining the innards of a classic 30 years on, and the once capacious city that inspired it
Cricket’s buffet is now too large. Digest it at your own peril.
Post-Fukushima, even France is thinking hard about N-plants
The fight against graft must invoke the spirit of the RTI movement
Some biriyani joints in Calcutta have acquired cult status. This is our favourite.
India Inc frets over ‘succession planning’
Lelyveld shows Gandhi, the great experimentalist and contradictor, at a half-awakened state in South Africa, his later self-magnification and an audacious claim to political command
Smear campaigns or not, the corruption fight is still worthwhile
A slickly crafted crime thriller: stylishly shot, crisply edited. But it gets exhausting midway...
The Telugu actor makes his Hindi debut in <i>Dum Maro Dum</i>
Without having sent the CD to any Indian or foreign forensic lab, I am confident the father and son duo of Prashant and Shanti Bhushan will come out clean.
A son and widow pin hope on YSR’s legacy