The SAI cultivates the Sabar children's natural skills to produce sporting talent
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COVER STORY
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Frequent elections are bad. But some prefer to focus on the glimmers of hope beyond the gloom.
Innovative techniques and specialist cricketers with allotted roles can only go that far. Talent is what really counts.
With her Delhi foray turning a fiasco,Jayalalitha's charisma— and chances at the hustings— take a beating
Imran cocks a snook at his detractors by leading his dead and buried outfit to the pinnacle of glory in the '92 edition
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Far better things to do with the poll money
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Frequent elections are bad. But some prefer to focus on the glimmers of hope beyond the gloom.
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Innovative techniques and specialist cricketers with allotted roles can only go that far. Talent is what really counts.
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The Hollywood actor on religion, acting and his disenchantment with the press
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With her Delhi foray turning a fiasco,Jayalalitha's charisma— and chances at the hustings— take a beating
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More than just pride was at stake in the '92 World Cup
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Imran cocks a snook at his detractors by leading his dead and buried outfit to the pinnacle of glory in the '92 edition
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Icecream or frozen dessert? Marketers enter a semantics row
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Sony Pictures bloods Rinke Khanna for its Bollywood foray
OTHER STORIES
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In contrast to all precedents, the fall of the BJP-led regime has not led to a breakup of the coalition. Only the third front shrunk.
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SACHIN'S 523 IN 7 INNINGS IN '96 (AVG. 87.17) IS THE BEST AGGREGATE YET IN A WORLD CUP.
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In his first interview after the defeat of his government in the Lok Sabha, a confident and relaxed Atal Behari Vajpayee met Outlook's Editor-in-Chief Vinod Mehta and Special Correspondent Ishan Joshi on Thursday evening. Excerpts:
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P. Shiv Shankar, CWC member and a key figure in Sonia Gandhi's inner circle, is confident that the BJP's smear campaign — dubbing the Congress president an Italian-born 'foreigner'— will not go down well with the electorate. In an interview, Shiv Sha
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Other countries on what their head of state should be— natural-born citizen or long-term resident
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Sonia's Italian origin may be an issue in the elections. But is public perception polarised enough for it to be decisive?
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It's a side without superstars. In '92 they showed what team play and tactics can achieve. Now, they're back on the prowl .
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Amar Singh, the man who stymied Sonia's bid to become PM, is more than a backroom boy
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The acharya lost his eyesight in infancy, but had a keen sense for the oral rhythms epics. He aims to shape his varsity round this kernel.
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BJP leaders are still dazed after their government fell byone vote. Why did it fall? George Fernandes said that a foreign hand had worked againstthe ...
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M. K. Rasgotra served as India's foreign secretary from 1982 to 1985. He shares his views:
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Karl 'Rick' Inderfurth, assistant secretary of state for South Asia in the US State Department, talked in Washington about Indo-US rela tions, the CTBT, and India's nuclear programme. Excerpts:
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Why is India worsening the China syndrome?
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From international pariah to wannabe global player,it's been a hard road form Pokhran II
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A flawed but sincere introduction to Ray's oeuvre
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Not hagiographic, but a well- written, affectionate biography
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Anywhere, anytime, anyhow banking will be a reality when virtual kiosks replace brick'n mortar branches.
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As literary launches become glittering social extravaganzas, the lowly reader starts to drop out
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The Third Front will not be able to get a large share of seats in this general election, feels former prime minister V. P. Singh. But he hopeful that it will later consolidate its position. "The Left will be the rallying point of the Third Front," he
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With its constituents following different agendas, the collapse of the Third Front seems complete