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IN FOR THE LONG DRIVE
A stellar show in a difficult year. This could be the beginning of a dream run for Tata Motors
Sourav Ganguly: The Best New Zealand Team In A Long While
As captain of the Indian team or president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India, Sourav Ganguly has always treated Test cricket as the pinnacle format of the game.
My film shows how patriarchy plays out in everyday life
Indian-American actor-director Lakshmi Devy, currently settled in New York, is living the dream.
INTEGRATED INTENT
Unified theatre commands can augment India’s military might, but concerns remain
When empathy is criminal
A lynching is no longer a new or unusual occurrence in “New India”. It has become something of a routine.
VALHALLA BECKONS
An atmospheric and evocative Viking survival simulator with sunsets worth weeping over
Pressure politics, pleasure tactics
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee says she has written thrice to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking recall of ‘meddling’ Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar.
KEEP YOUR HEAD
The right helmet at the right moment could save thousands of lives
HIMALAYAN MISADVENTURE
The Galwan clashes and the Ladakh standoff may have validated China’s mobilisation doctrines ahead of the Chinese Communist Party’s centenary, but they also exposed the PLA’s several weaknesses and have brought India into the mainstream of China’s security narrative
ELEGY FOR A FALLEN SHRINE
The Bhatkhande Music Institute, once home to Indian classical giants, is now steeped in controversies
BOOTS ON HEIGHTS
India needs a dedicated, fully equipped mountain strike corps to tackle China
FEAR AND SLEUTHING IN LAS VEGAS
From the arid desert lands of the US to the corridors of power in Washington, DC, the science, technology and politics behind UFOs
THE GREAT SILENCE
Is it a good idea to try and contact alien civilisations? The answer could be a big fat no
EYES ON THE SKIES
How Indian UFO investigators are searching for alien life with science, meditation
A GRAVE NEW WORLD
A short preface
THE BLUE BOOK OF SECRETS
Were UFOs ‘weaponised’ by Joseph Stalin as black propaganda amid the Cold War?
‘Hubris to suggest we know what we are looking for'
INTERVIEW PUSHKAR GANESH VAIDYA
Antonio Banderas On An Actor's Pain And Glory
After an Oscar nomination and a Cannes win, Antonio Banderas is going back to his Spanish roots—and, theatre
Sachin Tendulkar - Would Have Been Nice If We Had A WTC In My Days
Sachin Tendulkar, former cricketer
Covid-19 Worsens Centre-State Relations
The pandemic has worsened the already strained relations between the Centre and state governments
How The Pandemic Will Be The Game Changer For Robotics In India
The need for robots was never felt more than during this pandemic—for companionship, domestic help or medical assistance. The race is on to create more socially intelligent robots, and Indian players are populating the field
HUNTER'S LOVE AND LOSS
Beautiful Things: A Memoir By Hunter Biden
Doctor steady
Mantra could bridge the global disparity in access to robotic surgeries
A mighty roar
Will Newton director Amit Masurkar score another Oscar entry with his next, Sherni?
ALL HEAT, NO DUST
The Gehlot-Pilot tussle is again on the boil, but political constraints prevent both from drastic moves
Machine's learning
Covid-induced automation in industries can be a double-edged sword
Mughlai chicken à la robot
These entrepreneurs are redefining our culinary future, bot by bot
Citizen bane
India claims he is still Indian. Fugitive diamond trader Mehul Choksi claims he is an Antiguan citizen. Dominica has to decide and, possibly, set a precedent for runaway fraudsters
Mehul Choksi - How India Bungled In Dominica
After failing to get fugitive Mehul Choksi deported from Antigua, and stumbling into the local political mess and institutional complexities of the Caribbean, Indian agencies are regrouping and hatching new plans to nab the diamond trader
In Britain, there is national amnesia about the Empire
Even though William Dalrymple's City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi (1993) is a travel memoir, for some of us it is also a lesson in history. For historian Dalrymple, the shift to travel writing came in the 1990s when he discovered the ill-fated love story between James Achilles Kirkpatrick, East India Company resident at the Court of Hyderabad, and Khair un-Nissa, a Persian noblewoman. And thus was born White Mughals (2002), which brought alive a lesser-known world when the east and west easily consorted in the age of the Empire.