Harvard, Wharton or Tuck? Study in America or Europe? The top international B-schools breakdown.
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COVER STORY
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Economic uncertainty reflects in business school environs. The top tier endures, shakeout in bottom rungs.
French institutions are growing in influence in India through their alumni networks
So much of inspiration is what you hear or what you read. Young B-schoolers need look no further than this <i>Outlook</i> list.
The site has been adding almost a million users every month just in India, says its country manager
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Economic uncertainty reflects in business school environs. The top tier endures, shakeout in bottom rungs.
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French institutions are growing in influence in India through their alumni networks
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So much of inspiration is what you hear or what you read. Young B-schoolers need look no further than this <i>Outlook</i> list.
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In America, using alumni connections is never considered a sin
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This apolitical Dalit front had to swim against all kinds of politics
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The site has been adding almost a million users every month just in India, says its country manager
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An alumni event of Calcutta’s mighty South Point is a crush of thousands
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India’s Oscar entry film again in a soup
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Al Shabaab has bloody hands, but its attack brought Kenya together
OTHER STORIES
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Jagan’s release shakes up political scenery
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In l’affaire Singh, the biggest casualty is national security
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In early September, the former army chief spoke to NDTV, addressing questions on the TSD.
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The former army chief seems to find ways of keeping himself busy and simmering
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Just another home video? Nah, it opens up an entirely new, young window to the Northeast
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Just the right thriller, one that grips you by the collar, takes and keeps you to the edge of the seat till the end
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The photographer and creative director of the Delhi Photo Festival on why he wants a city carnival where photography transcends genre
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Really, there is no reason for any cholesterol scare
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Nudging the reader out of habit and complacency, the author constantly tests the barriers of the possible and probable.
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An affectionate biography of the city now known as Chennai that the author likes to call Madras
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Jhumpa Lahiri balances two worlds—the US and a Calcutta torn by Naxalism—in a tale of the political and the personal
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I angry. Why not? How can Leelaji Samson say 90% board members “uneducated” and “embarrassment”?
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Can a communal riot have a silver lining? Or is the idea absurd?
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The connection between India and Harvard goes back over half a century
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We cadets at the ‘West Point of Capitalism’ forged ties that endure
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When we were callow young Stephanians during the Emergency
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Alumni cults have been there as long as there have been alumni. It’s a members only club, and it looks out for its own.
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Flowerpots from a dishevelled lawn, all set out in an exalted row
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Slowly but surely, the heartland alumni clubs are also getting there
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With job placements no more a guarantee, the MBA’s lure dims
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There’s no community like the one provided by your extended alumni in a foreign land
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Some connections are much closer than others. This is one such.
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The author of <i>The Billionaire’s Apprentice</i> on the subject of her book and more
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If a manager has worked at a big few, she’s had it made
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The degrees of separation shrink, the parlaying of contacts expands