Swati Vishnoi

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Girls have fun sexting friends

If boys are flirtatious, girls know how to have their share of fun too. Sexting, or the act of sending sexually explicit messages via mobile phones is popular with both the sexes. And a new survey in Daily Mail reports that women are far more likely than men to engage in ‘sexting’. City girls couldn’t agree more and confess that sexting is their way of keeping the romance alive while they’re away from their partner.

Hindu old boys reunite for nostalgic hostel night

I’m looking forward to staying up all night, chatting and singing with old friends,” shares Saba Karim, former Indian cricketer and TV commentator, who is among the 200 old boys attending the Hostelle

Walled City gets a facelift

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The Walled city of Delhi is slated to get a makeover. The much-awaited Chandni Chowk redevelopment plan that covers areas between Red Fort and Fatehpuri Masjid by Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), that had been lying on the back-burner for years, is finally expected to kickoff this month. And MCD officials are hopeful that the process of decongesting the area will be completed soon. In the first phase, all the services such as overhead electric cables and telephone lines will be laid underground.

Bowling fever grips corporates

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Golf course and football grounds has been taken over by bowling alleys in the corporate circuit and it looks like our corporate executives have found a perfect place not only to hang out but also beat

In tune with times

Soulful and mellifluous ghazals are the love of Pankaj Udhas’s life, and they’re also his ticket to fame. As he turns 60 this year, he looks back at his musical journey with a smile and a slight grimace and finds the ghazal world to be “good, bad and ugly”.

Soaring silver makes GenY’s buys nosedive

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Silver is now the new gold. The metal has broken all previous price records breaching the `75,000/kg mark for the first time ever.

Young IPL volunteers have a ball at work

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Nineteen-year-old Shristi Tewari from NIFT is not a cricket buff and has never watched a match on TV, let alone watching the match live at a stadium.

Money, machismo lure city youngsters to crime

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Young minds are ruling city’s crime scene. Recent figures released by the National Crime Records Bureau show that while youth aged between 18-30 years were behind 57 per cent of all crimes in Delhi, 12 per cent of criminals caught in the capital were educated. And 85 to 93 per cent of these were first timers, who were younger than 25.

Parents see red over continuous fee hikes

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Tuition fee hike in schools has become a cause of concern for many parents. Recently, parents of some children studying in the Ramjas School moved the Delhi High Court seeking a fee reduction, alleging the school had notched up an annual profit of `5 crores and there was no justification for a fee hike. Annoyed by the school’s rampant commercialisation of education by demanding extra fees without even prior notice, city parents are left hassled without any option.

Schools on high alert to check substance abuse

It’s time to be alarmed more than being shocked.

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I want to begin with a little story that was told to me by a leading executive at Aptech. He was exercising in a gym with a lot of younger people.

Shekhar Kapur’s Bandit Queen didn’t make the cut. Neither did Shaji Karun’s Piravi, which bagged 31 international awards.