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COVER STORY
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Public sector banks trying to shed flab go for VRS, which is great news for employees, not so good for banks
The VHP's dharam sansad has resurrected Ram, but will it fetch electoral dividends for the BJP?
Sonia's soft saffron play at the Kumbh uplifts party spirits, as it signals the arrival of a new, confident political actor
"People have a wrong impression about me. If I don't mingle with the rest of the team, nobody else does either."
It's a series they badly want to cap their dream 15-Test run with. But Steve Waugh's buoyant Kang aroos face a hurdle in the slender but stern prince from Calcutta.
Polychrome dreams die fast. Five years into its fitful life, Calcutta's answer to FTII still speaks in infant babble.
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Public sector banks trying to shed flab go for VRS, which is great news for employees, not so good for banks
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The VHP's dharam sansad has resurrected Ram, but will it fetch electoral dividends for the BJP?
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On her second album Anourag
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Sonia's soft saffron play at the Kumbh uplifts party spirits, as it signals the arrival of a new, confident political actor
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"People have a wrong impression about me. If I don't mingle with the rest of the team, nobody else does either."
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It's a series they badly want to cap their dream 15-Test run with. But Steve Waugh's buoyant Kang aroos face a hurdle in the slender but stern prince from Calcutta.
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Polychrome dreams die fast. Five years into its fitful life, Calcutta's answer to FTII still speaks in infant babble.
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Two Karnataka villages become labs for Sanskrit popularisation
OTHER STORIES
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Language as BJP's political whip
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The BJP plans to coopt prevailing Sanskrit scholarship in the service of its revivalist agenda
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The white revolution may fall victim to an ongoing drought
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Islamabad is keen on it because it wants to rein in the jehadis
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The ceasefire evokes a dampened response—Kashmiris perceive no real difference on the ground
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Hope gets an extension, but hardliners within the Hurriyat—and the BJP—might not be stalled for long
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The Hinduja connection claims Peter Mandelson, but the controversy might have just begun
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The Hindujas finally present themselves for questioning, but will it help the case go ahead?
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What caused it is a story of many ifs. But it's one more wake-up call.
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Among the first spot despatches from Ground Zero speaks of a devastated town.
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It was one of India's worst earthquakes. As the human loss is rendered into dry statistic, other disturbing questions loom.
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A new breed of Indian-American radio programmers begin to claim the wavelengths—nostalgia now means communing across the static
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The Hurriyat must accept that it can't set the agenda for Kashmir. That's for India and Pakistan to decide after talks begin, though Kashmiri groups will be consulted.
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Nepal's youth tend to be more openly anti-Indian but for the most part, many of them say they're hostile to officialdom and the Delhi media, not individuals.
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On January 15, The Indian Express columnist Francois Gautier wrote: "Yet, one should remember that the Hindu 'fundamentalists' did not kill a single soul ...
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The Millennium Book on New Delhi; Mastermind and Zadie Smith
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A gentle indictment of the present-day power politics and value systems.
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An obligatory read for all who are interested in nature and its protection.
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Sociological study finds a new arena: the open secular institutions
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Purported to be a mega art event, the Triennale instead bares the rot in the Lalit Kala Akademi