The adventures of Marxist Brothers continue. The Supreme Comrade lets the secret out: "We follow strategy in one state, tactics in the other!"
- COVER STORY
The animation filmmaker's <i>Printed Rainbow</i> won the Fipresci critics award for short animation at Krakow International film festival 2007.
We ask four top leaders in the IT sector and think-tanks to debate the critical issues that may derail the rapid offshoring journey.
When will our moral police grow up? Sex education can't be coy about the subject.
The BJP chief who has had to expend far too much energy in climbing the slippery slope of the BJP's power structure on his not-so-smooth innings as party president.
The judiciary scores over the army. Will it benefit democracy?<a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=40 target=_blank> Updates</a>
It could well be a world-defining, mind-altering nuclear pact<a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=4 target=_blank> Updates</a>
Govinda's dancing in one sequence could be the only reason to watch the film that, like all Dhawan films, eschews logic and is full of innuendos.
The UPA-Left's vice-presidential candidate has consistently opposed the American policy in West Asia and will carry his beliefs to his new office
'Deemed university'— too broad a definition
The animation filmmaker's <i>Printed Rainbow</i> won the Fipresci critics award for short animation at Krakow International film festival 2007.
We ask four top leaders in the IT sector and think-tanks to debate the critical issues that may derail the rapid offshoring journey.
When will our moral police grow up? Sex education can't be coy about the subject.
The BJP chief who has had to expend far too much energy in climbing the slippery slope of the BJP's power structure on his not-so-smooth innings as party president.
The judiciary scores over the army. Will it benefit democracy?<a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=40 target=_blank> Updates</a>
It could well be a world-defining, mind-altering nuclear pact<a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=4 target=_blank> Updates</a>
Govinda's dancing in one sequence could be the only reason to watch the film that, like all Dhawan films, eschews logic and is full of innuendos.
The UPA-Left's vice-presidential candidate has consistently opposed the American policy in West Asia and will carry his beliefs to his new office
OTHER STORIES
State-promoted service apartments, with a 'feel India' flair, are wooing foreigners
India's only marriage bureau for HIV-positive people brings some hope back in their lives
The people are out in support for Haneef. If only the Indian high commission would do the same.
The terror case has come as a 'new, unknown road' for Australia. For Haneef, it's good news.<a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=2 target=_blank> Updates</a>
Children of rickshaw-pullers, farmers, clerks are cracking the IAS. Will they lead to a better, kinder bureaucracy?
Eastern India's retail market is in thrall of cheap, stylish Chinese goods
A record 11 Indians making it to the Man Asian Literary Prize's longlist and what to do instead of killing your publisher...
The seventh and final volume of the Harry Potter series is a pleasure to read. It plunges immediately into the story and is crisply narrated.
So what is it between Arundhati Roy and Shahrukh Khan? Why's King Khan cut up with the Booker Queen?
Cub hunks may be snapping at his heels, but Shahrukh Khan remains the face of Bollywood in the era of globalisation, when India is the new kid on the power bloc
A poaching spurt at Kaziranga this year points to a global syndicate
Shailesh Krishna, principal secretary to Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mayawati, spoke to <i>Outlook</i> about Amitabh Bachchan's controversial land in Barabanki.
New revelations confirm the Barabanki allotment was a sham