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FIFA World Cup - A FewTeams That Could Spring Surprise In Qatar
A few teams that could spring surprises in Qatar
PORT OF CALL
iPhones may soon get USB-C ports, and that is good news for users
SHINE & SHARE
Short video format aficionados celebrated Halloween with a beauty trend that demanded an Edward Cullen-esque sparkle. For those who need a refresher, Edward Cullen—the protagonist of the vampire-themed romantic fantasy Twilight—has skin that sparkles in sunlight.
JUSTICE LEAGUE
In the opening scene of Indian Predator: Murder in a Courtroom, a group of women resolutely march on as saris hung on clotheslines flutter in the wind. The juxtaposition is fascinating, for unlike the gently swaying garments, there is no unsteadiness in the women who walk on armed with knives, sickles, hammers and stones.
Making ripples
Vasudhendra, author of the acclaimed novel Tejo Tungabhadra, says he always wanted to look at history from the commoner’s perspective
ON A ROLL
Virali Modi, India's first wheelchair model, on how she found the courage to follow her dreams
Throwing shade on slim Kim
Unlike so many women who will not admit it, I am addicted to The Kardashians. I cannot accept that it drops on Thursday in the US and Friday noon here in India. I don’t love the show, so I will also submit. It has none of the shock and awe that its predecessor, Keeping Up With The Kardashians, (that ran for an amazing 20 seasons) had.
SWEATING IN THE HILLS
The only thing swadeshi about the apples are the soil and the water we use,” says Rohit Verma, an apple grower in Sarion village, near Theog in Himachal Pradesh.
Management trainees will stay relevant in the future
INTERVIEW Sunil Alagh, former MD and CEO of Britannia Industries Limited
Relooking industry integration
Many business schools have a department or an area of activity that is given the name “industry integration”. Typically, the activities under this head include areas like executive education, guest lectures by industry faculty, field visits, internships and jobs. Perhaps this is the first area that we need to address.
Indian b-schools offer more structured placements than international b-schools
INTERVIEW Himanshu Rai, director, IIM Indore
MOULDED FOR THE NEW WORLD
MODERN MANAGEMENT PROGRAMMES ARE GEARED TOWARDS PRODUCING MANAGERS WHO CAN, EVENTUALLY, LEAD ACROSS FUNCTIONS AND THROUGH CRISES
On guard
At a seminar organised by THE WEEK, experts agreed on the need to be vigilant against breast cancer
Robed in hope
Justice D.Y. Chandrachud is known as the judge who gives law a human face, is not afraid to dissent and speaks truth to power while possessing a brilliant legal mind that stays true to the Constitution
Physical besides political
Two images have really caught my eye, re-cently. Rishi Sunak’s washboard abs in his tucked-in office shirts, and Rahul Gandhi sprinting spontaneously and without any signs of fatigue against a trio of young boys during the Bharat Jodo Yatra. Both reveal a long-term, sustained commitment to fitness, the kind that can’t be faked by staged photo-ops or cunning photoshop.
Rishi Sunak - The Postcolonial Fantasy
Rishi Sunak has risen to the top not because of his Indian origins, but because of his capability to handle the economy and to infuse confidence in his fellow parliamentarians
CAST AWAY
How ignorant are we of the needs of our mentally ill languishing in hospitals or abandoned to the streets?
HELPING TO HEAL
Eight years ago, Deepika Padukone spoke up about her depression. Today, she tells THE WEEK about her foundation’s mental health outreach programme in rural communities
MIX AND MARCH
A young and hip brass band is making original horn music joyous for all
From seed to stitch
Few designers excite me with their narratives of handspun, handwoven, handmade clothing more than the fashion label 11.11.
MICROSCOPE MUSINGS
There have been other Indian doctorwriters before, but none as popular as Pulitzer-winner Siddhartha Mukherjee. He is out with his new book, The Song of The Cell, and is trying to make cancer treatment cheaper in India, one step at a time
Absent in Qatar
This World Cup is without a few prominent teams and stars. But, this could be the last time we would be missing big names
TRADING BENEFITS
A successful FTA with India will be a major win for Sunak, but his hawkish Home Secretary Suella Braverman could prove to be a major challenge
RISHI IS READY
Sunak treads in a treacherous environment of prowling enemies and harsh economic conditions. His biggest asset is the awareness that his coronation comes with a crown of thorns
Hustling at the hustings
The BRS wants to make a statement, the BJP wants to expand and the Congress wants to retain its seat—the story of a byelection in Telangana
BIG GUNS DEPLOYED
Though favourites in Gujarat, the BJP is not taking anything for granted and Modi and Shah are both on the ground
New India is rising
Transformational changes in the realm of welfare delivery mechanisms, application changes in institutional frameworks for enhancing productivity in economic activities and governance, and making India a destination for next-generation technological research and global manufacturing have been the hallmarks of the eight years of the Narendra Modi government.
The guilty military of 1962
On October 20, 1962, the Chinese launched a pre-emptive counterattack to the threat held out to them by the Indian prime minister eight days earlier that he had ordered the Army to “throw the Chinese out” of the Thagla Ridge. Within a month, they had conquered all of NEFA; then, as their troops stood poised on the edge of the Brahmaputra Valley, the Chinese suddenly undertook a unilateral withdrawal from the territories they had conquered, including even Tawang.
HIGH AND LOWS
Guarding the Line of Actual Control not just takes a physical toll on jawans from the IndoTibetan Border Police, but more so a mental one
Get real with Rishi, folks
David Cameron had foretold this, once in the presence of Narendra Modi—that there would soon be a day when the monarch calls a Singh or a Patel as “my prime minister”.