ART & LITERATURE
'ART & SOUL
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION

GARDEN LIFE

NATURE
FOOD TALK
CONSUMER, BEWARE!
FASHION
HOLLYWOOD HUES
BRIDGE
ULTA-PULTA
INTERACTIVE FEATURE
CAPTION CONTEST
EARLIER FEATURE
TRAVEL
RELATIONSHIPS
DREAM THEME
TIME OFF


Second
season
On the eve of International Women’s Day, meet some women whose second innings has them going high on creativity, a concern or a cause, writes Chetna Keer Banerjee
"B
E the change you want ..." is a catchphrase that has come to embody collective churnings and sweeping shifts. But very often it’s the imperceptible individual imprints or singular stirrings that form the bedrock of a transition for the better or for betterment.

Pride of India
Indian Naval Academy at Ezhimala (Kerala) is equipped with modern labs and workshops. The syllabus has been drafted keeping in mind the skill that will be required in handling future acquisitions of the Navy, writes Umesh Dewan
T
HE eight-hour journey from Kochi to Ezhimala was definitely worth it as it started our morning on a beautiful note. Right before our eyes there was nature in its splendid form of picturesque hillocks and a seafaring tradition to welcome us.

Not cut off from merry-making
During winter Lahaul remains cut off from the rest of India. But the harsh season doesn’t deter its people who call it the best period when they just relax, celebrate and enjoy, writes Vishal Gulati
IT's is icy cold here. The temperature hovers around minus 15 °Celsius and the valley is covered in snow, cutting it off from the rest of India. Sounds too grim and harsh, but not when one sees people dancing, feasting and merrymaking!

Look chic with bangles
Gone are the days when bangles were worn with traditional outfits. Today,
jean-clad girls wear these accessories with as much style as their mothers did, says Chandrika Mathur

I
F in 2009 long and beady necklaces overtook the hegemony of the chandelier earrings, this year they have been gladly elbowed out by bangle stacks. Bangles (the word having been derived from the Hindi bangri or bangali, which in Sanskrit means the ornament which adorns the arm) have become a fashion statement today.

Kashmiri touch for Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard”
Zafri Mudasser Nofil
R
USSIAN playwright Anton Chekhov’s famous play "The Cherry Orchard" will now have a Kashmir setting. Theatre artiste-director Mushtaq Kak is working on a bilingual adaptation of the play and will touch issues like migration, cherry orchards and train services.

The hit formula
Scientists find out what makes a Hollywood blockbuster
T
HERE is something about the rhythm and texture of early cinema that has a very different feel than modern films. But it’s hard to put one’s finger on just what that something is. New research may help explain this elusive quality.

Home is where the heart is
A. R. Rahman tells Shilpa Jamkhandikar that wherever in the world he may be, his heart will always remain in India
W
ITH two Oscars and two Grammy awards in less than a year, Indian composer A.R. Rahman is riding high on his international success, but his heart still remains at home.

‘I am proud of my work’
R. Madhavan talks to Ritika Kumar about his latest film Teen Patti
H
E may be a superstar down south but when it comes to Bollywood, R. Madhavan has no illusions. The actor admits that he is no star in Bollywood but he is enjoying the kind of work he is doing in Hindi cinema.

COLUMNS

’Art & soul: Houses of the Chettiars
by B. N. Goswamy

Nature: The jumbo code
by Lieut-Gen Baljit Singh (retd)

TELEVISION: Three’s company

HOLLYWOOD HUES: Modern fable
by Ervell E. Menezes

Food talk: Smoked surprise
by Pushpesh Pant

Charging higher tax unfair trade practice
by Pushpa Girimaji

BRIDGE
by David Bird

ULTA PULTA: Generation gap
by Jaspal Bhatti

BOOKS

Cloistered in their world 
Reviewed by Kanwalpreet
Jat Sikh Women: Social Transformation — Changing Status and Lifestyle
by Amarinder Sandhu.
Unistar.
Pages 152. Rs 295.

Books received: english

Tantra demystified
Reviewed by Seema Sachdeva
An Immortal Story
by M. Sreekumar. 
Translated by Varghese C. Abraham.
Rupa.
Pages 204. Rs 195.

Standing tall amidst men
Reviewed by Nonika Singh
Woman: Many Hues Many shades
Complied and edited by Satjit Wadva.
Lahore Book Shop.
Pages 162. Rs 295.

Classic autobiography revisited
Reviewed by Kanchan Mehta
Ardhakathanak (A Half Story)
by Banarasidas. 
Tr Rohini Chowdhury.
Penguin.
Pages 310. Rs 350.

hindi book review
A promising poet
Reviewed by Randeep Wadehra
Baarish ki boondein 
by Manoj Dhiman
Sahitya Silsila Prakashan.
Pages 111. Rs 150.

Newsmakers
Humra Quraishi
Waves in the Hinterland raises a toast to rural women reporters who made news
M
ainstream papers usually talk to the 'sarpanch' (village head) and a few other important people. But we talk to everyone. We are interested in everyone." This is what Shanti, 45, an ace reporter with Khabar Lahariya (KL) has to say about the country's first and only newspaper brought out by women in Bundeli, a dialect of Hindi spoken in the Bundelkhand region of Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh (UP).

Labour pains
New book says Brown blamed Blair for ruining him
G
ordon Brown subjected Tony Blair to ill-tempered and expletives-laden tirades, claiming Blair had ruined his life, in a fierce bid for British premiership in the months leading up to Blair's resignation, says a controversial new book.

Pen-chant
Rushdie to pen down memoirs of days spent in hiding from the death fatwa
B
OOKER Award Indian-origin novelist Salman Rushdie has said he plans to pen down his experiences of a decade of hiding from a death fatwa from the Iranian clergy.





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