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Friday, August 1, 2025
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Home50-Word EditTest cricket isn’t dying, it's just waiting for big fights to bring...

Test cricket isn’t dying, it’s just waiting for big fights to bring back its glory

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Kohli has quit Tests; others are leaving the format early for flashier T20s. And so, South Africa’s challenge to Australia at WTC final is special. There’s no cricket without grinding grit. Test cricket isn’t dying, it’s waiting for big fights to bring back its glory, one session at a time.

CBSE’s mother tongue rule must align with Indian parents’ aspirations for English-medium schools

CBSE’s push for mother tongue as medium of instruction at primary level is well-intentioned and can improve cognitive growth among children. What’s worrisome is its hasty rollout. It mounts logistical stress on schools to make teachers and textbooks readily available. Such measures must align with parents’ aspirations for English-medium schools.

TV news coverage of the Sonam Raghuvanshi case is an abominable embarrassment

After TV news channels earned India infamy with their Operation Sindoor spectacle, there’s now a sequel playing out with Sonam Raghuvanshi case. It’s become an unfortunate template. Criminal investigation is on. Channels are interviewing families of accused; dispensing the ‘alleged’; and engaging in thoughtless AI-enabled fictionalising. It’s an abominable embarrassment.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Would The Print publish an editorial on the anti-Hindu violence in Maheshtala and Rabindranagar?
    Muslims had illegally encroached upon a temple’s premises there. When they were asked to vacate the area, the mob turned violent and attacked ferociously with stones and sticks leaving even West Bengal police personnel severely injured. Many Hindus were injured too. Shops and homes of Hindus were looted and burnt.
    The entire incident happened right beside Rabindranagar police station – under the watch of West Bengal police.
    But The Print chose to not report on this issue. No article was published on this platform regarding this incident. Maybe because the victims are all Hindus.

  2. Hey The Print!
    What is your editorial take on the arrest of Ms. Sharmistha Panoli by Kolkata Police?
    Also, what is your take on the disappearance and subsequent arrest of Wajahat Khan?
    Again, what is your take on the chargesheet filed by West Bengal Police in the Murshidabad riots case? What do you think of the allegations leveled by Ms. Mamata Banerjee against the BSF and “outsiders”?
    Care to put out editorials on such important issues?

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