The Tribune Spectrum
Sunday, March 25, 2001


ART & LITERATURE
'ART AND SOUL
BOOKS
MUSINGS
TIME OFF
YOUR OPTION
ENTERTAINMENT
BOLLYWOOD BHELPURI
TELEVISION
WIDE ANGLE
FITNESS
GARDEN LIFE
NATURE
SUGAR 'N' SPICE
CONSUMER ALERT
TRAVEL
INTERACTIVE FEATURES
CAPTION CONTEST
FEEDBACK
 

Call it Love If You Like No one seems to know what love is. Some even doubt its existence. Of late love has attracted the attention of a group of people who are supposed to have nothing to do with gentler emotions: the scientists. While poets, writers, and artists have only made wild conjectures about love, scientists and evolutionary psychologists may have grasped the meaning of romantic love, says Kuldip Dhiman

Week Specials


Meena Kumari

The legend lives on
by Roshni Johar

Discovering the grandeur of Deeg
by Ranbir Singh

Making capital out of a tragedy
by Priyanka Singh

 


Samvatsara 2058
An year of conflict, chaos and anarchy
by Sansar Chandra

DREAM THEME: Dreaming of a woman
by Vinaya Katoch Manhas

  Week Specials
 

BOLLYWOOD BHELPURI:  Yukta Mookhey’s debut
by Madhur Mittal

TELEVISION: The goddess from Bengal
by Mukesh Khosla

'ART AND SOUL: Gutenberg and his ‘new art of writing’
by B.N Goswamy

FITNESS: All that stress can do
by Dr N.N. Wig & Dr B.K.Sharma

GARDEN LIFE:  Flowers that make your garden bloom
by Satish Narula

LIFE TIES: Nice guys can be tough too
by Taru Bahl

FEEDBACK: The masculinist construct of femininity

Book Reviews

Salman Rushdie: freedom writer
Review by Rumina Sethi

Off the shelf
How Hitler fooled entire Europe
Review by V. N. Datta

Truly speaking, it is it
Review by Kuldip Kalia

Punjabi Literature
Malwa: as the folk constructs and lives it
Review by Jaspal Singh

New-look history
Review by G.V Gupta

Troubles and threats of tourism industry
Review by
Ashu Pasricha

Water use: old is gold
Review by Randeep Wadehra

Williams, the prince of liberal values
Review by Shelly Walia

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