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COVER STORY
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Two good seasons for Gloucestershire prompted the English selectors to ask Symonds if he was willing to join the A squad, but Symonds had his eyes set on a place in the Australian side.
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Two good seasons for Gloucestershire prompted the English selectors to ask Symonds if he was willing to join the A squad, but Symonds had his eyes set on a place in the Australian side.
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The colour red may prevail if the old genie isn't reawakened
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The two-time Grand Slam winner on her comeback trail and on playing in India
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OTHER STORIES
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The accord that portends discord; Fizz goes out of school recesses; Missing the wood, go for the trees; Muddy waters flow through his canal; That incredible air dash and When life's line runs dry
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A push in the 'write' direction was all the prof offered his maid. It unlocked gritty, dark memories.
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Fear is the real virus. Religious doomsayers hamper the battle against polio's last stand—in the hovels of central-eastern UP.
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Islamabad feels India just wants to keep tensions simmering
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International support is essential but finally, thebattle againstterrorism has to be fought by us alone.
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Despite the current ebb in Indo-Pak relations, the external affairs minister Yashwant Sinha remains an optimistic man. It is just a periodic phase, he tells Outlook.
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Defined exclusively by a policy of expulsions, India-Pakistan interaction is fast becoming an official farce <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=9>More Coverage </a>
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Intelligence pulls up its socks but hawala-fed separatists may still find a way to beat the law <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=313>More Coverage </a>
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It is not so bad as to make you dash for the door. But you would not have missed much if you never entered the hall at all.
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The author is director, India Development Foundation
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The author is president, Oxus Investments. His latest book is 'Imagine There's no Country'.
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The author is professor, JNU, and former chairman, Agricultural Prices Commission
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The author is director, National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, Delhi
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The author is professor, Indira GandhiInstitute for Development Research, Mumbai
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The author is director, Institute ofEconomic Growth, Delhi
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The experts - B.B. Bhattacharya, Ashima Goyal, Govinda Rao, Abhijit Sen, Surjit S. Bhalla, Shubhashis Gangopadhyay - on their wishes and fears.
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Post-quake rebuilding in rural Kutch is an epitome of self-reliance
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Action from across the boundary
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It's Cup fever in Silicon Valley too. No one's missing the action.
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The team's psychiatrist says there's no problem with the boys (except that they are not homicidal)
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Outlook spoke with Dr Ali Bacher, executive director of the Cricket World Cup, 2003, on February 13, the day the England-Zimbabwe match had been scheduled to be held. Excerpts:
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Off-field play vies with action from the centre in what's becoming a helluva Cup
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Suddenly, older Sangh leaders found that they were on the left of the central faultline of Indian politics, with the VHP on the other side.
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It must have been a tough time for the rest of the players to see their key bowler leave under such circumstances, and just hours before their opening game. But it must be said that they handled the situation extremely well.
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Bollywood is no longer shy about using cusswords
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In the coming weeks the world will watch Iraq. But Indians should watch Pakistan. A theory has spread among media pundits worldwide. According to it, ...
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Book on Bombay blasts becomes big; Pico Iyer on Islam and West; gratuitous advice for Uncle Rushdie.
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Meticulously documenting the stunning transformation in political representation in North India.
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Resurrecting the all-too-familiar battle of our historical establishment
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The VHP honcho overshoots his range, gets clipped down a notch
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The BJP now settles in as the natural party of governance as the Congress gropes in the dark
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A school built by Raja Bhoj and an abutting Sufi shrine are the latest progeny of Ayodhya<a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=85>More Coverage </a>