An inept Mumbai police, plagued by a new strain of educated jehadis, await more terror <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=11>Updates</a>
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COVER STORY
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Washington revives moves to get Indian troops into Iraq—via a UN mandate <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=25>Updates</a>
A cable strike in Pakistan? Well, it came about because banned Indian channels are the lifeblood for operators.
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Will Turkey and Pakistan serve US strategic interests in Iraq?
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Washington revives moves to get Indian troops into Iraq—via a UN mandate <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=25>Updates</a>
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A cable strike in Pakistan? Well, it came about because banned Indian channels are the lifeblood for operators.
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On Showdiff Worldwide, his new start-up
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OTHER STORIES
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A crushing burden of sins; A CAS for defence; The muezzin's call; You can't scream in space; Another round of musical chairs and The battle for final redemption
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In a gutsy move, the Inter-State Council moves to Srinagar. Then a suicide attack happens.
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Mridangam can't be mridangam sans cowhide. The ban can slaughter its sound.
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Expat Indians rain moolah on folks back home, as money transfer firms grin from pocket to pocket
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The flourishing migration racket accepts all: from cricketers to singers to dancers
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A foundation for underprivileged children brings light into the lives of some brainy little ones
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The state's hyped employment scheme is in doldrums. But no one thinks it's time for serious revamp.
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For Jha, the acid or Gangaajal is a metaphor for cleansing the corrupt system, a springboard for a violent public movement, of mob frenzy, nihilism and revenge. Problematic but powerful.
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Cheaper adulterated versions depress diesel consumption in an era of decontrol. Green fuels add to the lowered demand.
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The big boys demur, the money's bad, the players get stale. Where's the ticket out?
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The ASI's finds hot up the ideological war even further <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=321>Updates</a>
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It's the alienated post-Godhra Muslim who's morphed into a terror machine
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Formed in Aligarh on April 25, 1977 by Mohammed Ahmadullah Siddiqi, an ex-journalism prof in the US
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Muslims come out against the blast, but the "secular fabric" is rent
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The market, after initial tremors, bounces back brushing aside all fears. It's business as usual.
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Terror's new cells: motivated, educated, unseen
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Despite Mayawati playing the spoiler, the BJP refuses to give up on its fantastic plans
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Mulayam gets the crown after eight long years, but it could well be one of thorns <a href=pti_coverage.asp?gid=50>Updates</a>
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Two blasts rip the heart of Mumbai. Mayawati's government falls. The controversial ASI report on Ayodhya is made public. Can there be any more madness on a Monday?
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As with any institution, the Rajya Sabha too has been marked horribly by time
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<i>Outlook</i> sent bottles of Coke and Pepsi to Britain's largest laboratory to test for pesticides. The result: a clean chit for the colas.
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At the heart of the UP crisis is L.K. Advani's desperate need for a mid-term poll. Losing assembly elections in four states, a distinct possibility, would ...
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Recycling Khushwant, Roli looks beyond Kama Sutras and is there anything an Indian writer hates as much as 'the label'?
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No matter what was happening on the streets, the world of Amar Akbar Anthony inhabited the screen.
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How does a balding mid-50s nation, besieged from within by a trident imperviousness to the laws of the land commemorate those who launched, aided and celebrated murderous attacks on colonial officials in the early 1900s?
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Jha's second novel shows he's still in tormented territory, and thriving
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An IPS officer's crusade: to revive the state's lost pride