In 1991, Mark Tully, by then the face of the BBC in India and one of the most recognisable foreign broadcasters covering the ...
Utahns may soon no longer be able to sue third parties for being responsible for damaging their marriages. That’s if the state Legislature votes to abolish the right to file ...
Few ideas about human behaviour arrive quietly. Those that attempt to explain why humans are capable of extraordinary ...
Quote of the Day: Albert Camus is remembered not only as a literary giant but as a moral voice urging balance, compassion and ...
A man goes on a journey, spiritual and physical, across America’s sprawling highways, and his trip is documented — either as ...
A clear instance of this was when he began questioning the blinkered way in which the English-language media in India covered ...
Public interest doesn’t always announce itself loudly. Sometimes it appears as a steady accumulation of thoughtful questions, ...
Butler Little Theatre opens its production of A.R. Gurney’s “Love Letters” at a moment when the very act at the center of the play is disappearing. At the end of December, Denmark’s national postal ...
Word of the Day: A word from literature now defines modern life. Kafkaesque describes confusing, oppressive situations where ...
Massimo F. D’Angelo and William M. Pekarsky offer a constitutional analysis of New York City’s Community Opportunity to ...
In Nigeria, as elsewhere, democratic governance is best understood not as a straight line or some mathematical progression, but as a learning curve--a nonlinear process shaped by all the things that ...
The old cliché that a certain kind of movie—slow, contemplative, and probably not starring The Rock—manifests as a ...