Screen: The business of entertainment  
 
  Flair: Weekend Reading from The Indian Express
 
 
 
  PUBLICATIONS
 
  Expressindia
  The Indian Express
  The Financial Express
  Screen
  Kashmir Live
  Express Columnists
 CITY NEWS
 
  Top Stories
  Ahmedabad
  Chandigarh
  Delhi
  Mumbai
  Pune
  COMMUNITY
 
  Message Board
  SERVICES
 
  Flights to India
  Matrimonial
  SUBSCRIPTIONS
 
  Free Newsletter
  Express North
American Edition
 ARCHIVES
    New! Flair
  Indian Express
 
March 17, 2002

Band of Brothers
Pradeep Kaushal profiles the zealous torchbearers of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, the men who hold the key to the country’s commitment to secularism.
[ full story ]

Other Stories
Medicine Man Dev Chatterjee meets Cipla’s Dr Yusuf Hamied, the man who’s taken on the MNCs by exporting cheap AIDS drugs to Africa
On the ball As Chandigarh Administrator Lt Gen J F R Jacob prepares to set up a hockey academy, Manraj Grewal looks back at his first love, a football school for boys with stars in their eyes and grit in their hearts
A Cut Above Ram Sareen’s digital technology promises to revolutionise the garment industry. But are Indian manufacturers ready for the brave new world , wonders Shalini Sharma
The Lost World Filmmaker Mohsen Makmalbaf’s Kandahar goes beyond 9/11 to a examine the deeper ills of a ravaged country, says Sreelatha Menon
Talking Pictures Waiting in the Wings
 
 
 
 
The spiritual tourist
Time out or time warp? Macleodganj trips out Renuka Narayanan.
[ full story ]
Other Stories
The Wondering Eye by Rupika Chawla What Lies Beneath
A lifeine on wheels He’s a bank clerk by day, an angel of life by night. Sukhmani Singh meets Kanwaljit Singh, Jaipur’s hope in a Maruti van
Not Just People Next Door
Mohalla committees that sprang up in Mumbai after the riots of 1992-93 have gone a long way in brokering peace between Hindus and Muslims despite serious provocation, says Smruti Koppikar
Hot, hot, hot: The price India paid for US aid Sonu Jain examines the possible fallouts of Kyoto protocol.
 
 
 
Left arm: Over?
Once Indian cricket’s most reliable and deadly weapon, left-arm spinners are currently languishing in cold storage while they flourish in other countries. Vikrant Gupta laments the passing of an art. [ full story ]