"How falling in love in Rio compares to falling in love with Rio?"
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COVER STORY
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'Can it be called opportunism? Yes, of course. Or is it mere practice of power politics? Yes, again, is the answer.'
Sky-high tomato prices have set off WhatsApp jokes, but the farmer is shortchanged—and left only to weep
With a market-oriented, cross-discipline approach, corporate-led private varsities are changing education
The first <em>Outlook</em>-Drshti ranking of India’s top universities showcases the best in higher education
Union HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar talks about national education policy and the key issues ailing the system in the country...
The Hurriyat may harden its stance following its leaders’ arrests—unless they are ‘softened’ for talks
It seems the saffron party had always been planning from the dugout for reclaiming its share
An overbearing ally, public image and prospects for 2019: the factors that prompted Nitish to swing saffron this time
And the Doklam impasse drags on. To resolve it, India will have to forge a new diplomatic flexibility.
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'Can it be called opportunism? Yes, of course. Or is it mere practice of power politics? Yes, again, is the answer.'
-
Sky-high tomato prices have set off WhatsApp jokes, but the farmer is shortchanged—and left only to weep
-
With a market-oriented, cross-discipline approach, corporate-led private varsities are changing education
-
The first <em>Outlook</em>-Drshti ranking of India’s top universities showcases the best in higher education
-
Union HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar talks about national education policy and the key issues ailing the system in the country...
-
The Hurriyat may harden its stance following its leaders’ arrests—unless they are ‘softened’ for talks
-
It seems the saffron party had always been planning from the dugout for reclaiming its share
-
An overbearing ally, public image and prospects for 2019: the factors that prompted Nitish to swing saffron this time
-
And the Doklam impasse drags on. To resolve it, India will have to forge a new diplomatic flexibility.
OTHER STORIES
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Two Deloitte reports and a new, radical constitution seek to transform the rightly maligned BCCI
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Actor Anushka Sharma opens about her character in 'Jab Harry Met Sejal' and what it takes to be a good actor...
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Kamal Haasan’s anti-corruption outbursts of late can well be signs of the star’s next move: politics
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French cuisine drops its airs to make a promising entry in the Indian restaurant scene
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The Congress CM is into subtle social engineering tactics to retain power
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Below minimum wages, long, stressful hours, zero growth: it’s an accursed fate
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"Nurses’ strike in Kerala points to grievances in the sector, but Rs 20,000 minimum wages is irrational, says Dr Harish Pillai, Kerala president of Association of Health Care Providers India.
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Did Ravana Really Exist? Did you know that sporting a Buddha t-shirt will get you deported from Sri Lanka? Read the juicy gossip from the neighbourhood...
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As the world closes its doors, a strike in Kerala shows the abysmal state of nurses in the ‘granary of nursing’
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There is a new surge in the blood-soaked period we call Partition. A new novel plays to stereotypes, but captures the confused terror and panic well.
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Amid a young Indian’s notches on his American bedposts and flashes of life back in Bihar, Amitava Kumar floods his novel with studious ephemera
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Pattanaik takes each verse of the Hanuman Chalisa, unpacks it, then brilliantly links it to other stories and ideas across the vast sea of Hinduism
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How essential is industrialisation for raising a state's income? Kerala and Bihar are two important case studies, says former finance secretary EAS Sarma...
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The Raymond Davis affair shows the uniqueness of US-Pakistan ties: distrustful, yet accommodating. Davis’s own weak account skirts the issues which roiled relations.
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West Bengal is the new Orissa, while UP, Bihar and MP remain poor, distorting the India growth story