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IMRAN IN BRIEFS, VICIOUS BUMRAH, AND DANCING WITH RANVEER
Sunny & Sunny discuss the World Cup's thrills and possibilities. THE WEEK presents Yajurvindra Singh (Team India, 1979) in conversation with Sunil Gavaskar (Team India, 1975, 1979, 1983, 1987)
The human race
I don't follow any 'Humans of' pages on Instagram. To me, they seem to be a mix of Reader's Digest's Drama in Real Life series and the Chicken Soup for the Soul books, and I find them too on-the-nose or treacly sweet. Besides, I keep getting the feeling that Bollywood story scouts are reading them breathlessly over my shoulder, trying to find plots for the next luridly uplifting 'based on a true story' blockbuster.
Sunak's downward spiral
Pollsters see British governments come and go-usually into oblivion. YouGov's chief polling researcher, Anthony Wells, has analysed several governments, prime ministers and opposition leaders also known as restless prime ministers-in-waiting.
See some evil too, Trudeau
He was Michelangelo's David dressed in a Saville Row suit-handsome face, sharp and a commitment to ... democratic openness\"; one about whom Vanity Fair warned people to \"have a fainting couch on standby as you watch him in action\".
Ultimate goal is to boost regional connectivity
ISRAEL PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu has lauded the US-backed plan to build a rail and shipping corridor linking India with the Middle East, Israel and Europe as the “great cooperation agreement” in Israel’s history.
DEFEATING DEPRESSION
For more than two decades Sarah Reeves battled suicidal tendencies. Now, after undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery in India, the Australian is rediscovering her zest for life
Cold And Sour
Trudeau sacrifices ties with India to save his sagging political career
Don't lose heart
Heart attacks are on the rise in young adults, but they are also preventable
Al will play a major role in drug discovery and development
There are theories about why Hippocrates, the father of medicine, named a cluster of abnormal cells karkinos (Greek for crab). Was it because the tumour felt hard as a rock, reminding him of the crab's shell?
CODE OF COMPASSION
Patients are at the heart of Magsaysay awardee Ravi Kannan's medical philosophy
Weaning woes and ways
THE PROCESS OF weaning a baby off its mother's milk has undergone a sea change. Babyled weaning (where the baby is introduced to solid food that he can eat on his own), breastfeeding till the age of two and gentle weaning (replacing one feeding with semi-solid or liquid food) have become part of the art and science of breastfeeding today.
STAYING FIT WHEN YOUNG COULD REDUCE RISK FOR 9 CANCERS
People with high cardiorespiratory fitness when young have a lower risk of developing nine types of cancer, including head and neck, lung, kidney, bowel, liver, oesophagus, stomach, rectum and pancreas.
Within reach, finally
The 'special' in the special Parliament session was finally revealed. It was not an early election, the announcement of 'one nation, one election, or a move to implement the Uniform Civil Code.
Notting Hill to Kala Ghoda
London's famous Indian bridal wear boutique comes home to India
Going to a drag party
Last weekend I did something I should have done a decade ago. I went to a drag party. It was the most sensational experience I have had in too long, and let me tell you why.
SHAPE-SHIFTING CIRCUS
To recover from the post-pandemic blues, some Indian circuses are reinventing themselves
DREAMING THE IMPOSSIBLE
CLIMATE RESEARCHER JOYEETA GUPTA WON THE SPINOZA PRIZE FOR HER SCIENTIFIC WORK FOR A JUST AND SUSTAINABLE WORLD. THE UNDERLYING THEME OF HER LIFE STORY: WHY CAN'T WE DO THINGS DIFFERENTLY?
FLIGHT RISK
India is on the cusp of an aviation boom. But a duopoly might ruin it
PODIUM PICKS
India's medal hopefuls at the Asian Games
When anchors spread rancour
Public culture in India, especially in the past decade, is not a fan of accountability.
Islamisation and hindutva
As I have described in my recently released Memoirs of a Maverick, I reached Karachi just a few weeks before President Zia ul-Haq declared the Nizam-e-Mustafa, the rule of the Prophet-the first step in what came to be called \"Islamisation\".
No country likes a killing on its soil
GURMANT GREWAL was a member of the Canadian parliament thrice and was the first Sikh to hold the position of the deputy house leader of the official opposition of Canada.
Haifa is potential alternative to Suez Canal
TRADITIONALLY, GOODS flowing between India and Europe have relied heavily on routes passing through the Suez Canal.
A passage for India
The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor bypassing the Suez Canal promises to change trade dynamics in the Gulf. Acquisition of the Haifa Port in Israel has placed India at a vantage point in the project that connects the east and the west
Kharge's Bhagirathan tasks
Is the Congress finally biting the bullet? After last week’s working committee confab in Hyderabad, general secretary K.C. Venugopal said the 2024 polls will be “a do-or-die fight.”
I Think Like An Athlete
Deepika Padukone actor
The Business Of Being Deepika Padukone
What Makes The Movie Star India's Most Successful Female Celebrity
Power dressing, G20 style
Now that the G20 Summit is done and dusted, host city Delhi can get back to its quotidian routine.
Seoul-fully Indian
Meet Aoora, mashup extraordinaire who is making waves blending Indian and Korean rhythms
Romantic side of Harish Salve
Between the sharp sartorial choices of the UK’s first lady Akshata Sunak (Can we please stop calling her Mrs Murthy?) at the recent G20 extravaganza in Delhi, and the even sharper responses to Harish Salve’s third wedding celebrations in London, India’s chattering classes were spoilt for choice.