Front Page of The Indian Express on May 11, 1978
Looking back to measure gains and losses of Pokhran tests 20 years ago is essential to looking ahead
Front page of The Indian Express on May 10, 1978
Civil-military relations are delicately poised. Keep them away from electoral battles
Trump’s decision to withdraw from Iran deal diminishes US stature, can unsettle region. Delhi can play a mitigating role
After Trump walkout from Iran pact, all actors in the Middle East are left with shrinking choices
There is nothing like a bit of pseudo-scientific charlatanry to part gullible Indians from their money
On its ill-advised CJI impeachment bid, it should have cut its losses. Instead, it’s compounding its mistakes
The rupee is sinking. But move to review prudent investment limits for FPIs is worrying
Growing dependence on algorithms will affect defence, privacy, social fabric
In a country obsessed with trappings of office, SC strips UP’s former CMs of official residences, makes a much-needed point
Loyalty tests are as old as the Chinese Communist Party. VR headsets are just a neat trick
Shia leaders are drawing closer to the Hindutva agenda in UP under Yogi Adityanath’s chief ministership
Front page of The Indian Express on May 9. 1978
Proposal to adapt MBBS exam to a National Exit Test can revitalise medical education
Cow, namaz, historical monuments, Jinnah — we are back to cultural issues in the prelude to Partition
A two-day meeting of the NNC has been called at Khonoma, the native village of Phizo, beginning May 11.
Manchester City’s dominance of the football league table is a stirring spectacle
The Manual Scavenging Act in its current version came into force in 2013. It’s time it was implemented
Apex court decision to transfer Kathua case to Pathankot, but not to the CBI, is well-judged
Karl Marx envisioned a world where humans are not abstracted by societies or commodities
Why government must not ask public sector outfits to bear burden of high oil price regime
The two reports on Emergency excesses submitted by the Shah Commission are expected to be made available to Parliament before the end of the session.
The administration's job is to enforce the law without bias. It must allay the impression that it favours the socially powerful







