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After
Basu, Work
Reviving
a listless economy and keeping the die-hard reds at baythe new Chief
Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya will require extraordinary grit to junk
the legacy of Basu raj.
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THE
COURT SAID
- "If
democratically elected governments give an impression to the citizens
of this country of being law-breakers, would it not breed contempt for
the law? Would it not invite citizens to become a law unto themselves?"
- "The
governments yielded to the pressure tactics of those who are out to
terrorise the police force and overawe elected governments."
- "No
one ever considered that people may lose faith in the democratic process
when they see the helplessness of the government, when they see public
authority being flouted."
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Web
Exclusives |
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COLUMNS |
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With
all the noise about the cabinet resolution on dilution of the government’s
stakes in public sector banks, is anyone buying shares of these banks,
asks V. Shankar Aiyar in Au
ContrAiyar.
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TALKING
POINT |
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"The emphasis will be to create a truly world class faculty with diverse
approaches, beliefs, research and pedagogical styles," Prof. Sumantra
Ghoshal, founding dean of the Indian Business School, tells INDIA TODAY
Associate Editor V. Shankar Aiyar in an
exclusive
interview.
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DESPATCHES |
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Long-forgotten
customs are invoked to preserve Meghalaya's endangered sacred groves,
and the legends surrounding them. INDIA TODAY's Teresa Rehman reports
on the unique conservation effort
in Despatches.
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