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Wednesday, March 30, 2011, Chandigarh, India
Updated at 2:30 am (IST)

Battle of nerves
The team with the coolest head will have the winning edge in India-Pak semifinal today
Mohali, March 29
Every afternoon, the entire Mohali looks up at the sky as a giant Indian Air force plane flies over the cricket stadium. But for the last two days, everyone in the two countries — India and Pakistan — has been looking heavenwards, seeking divine grace and the Almighty’s favours for the match to come.

Sri Lanka beat New Zealand, enter final


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Close encounters of the extreme kind
Why Mohali could be a win-win for both countries
In terms of excitement, Chandigarh is considered as placid as the waters of Sukhna Lake. But when a cricketing tsunami, in the form of an India-Pakistan World Cup clash, strikes the city it cannot but be overwhelmed. More so, if the occasion is also converted into a close encounter of the highest kind with Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan planning to hold an informal summit at the venue. Just for today, Chandigarh will become the centre of our universe.

Get beyond the fear factor
The occasion is piled high with difficulty and you have to rise to the occasion. The biggest deterrent to the top will be the weight of expectancy. Everyone, from a bellboy to the man in Parliament has one thing to say - you can lose to anyone but not to Pakistan! This is the match, they say, winning this is like a dip in the Ganges.

Unmatched security for a high-voltage thriller
Pulling out all the stops to give security like never before, Punjab police deploys Special Weapons and Tactics Team, hi-tech gadgets, sniffer dogs and a fleet of 3,500 cops convert the PCA into a fortress
Mohali, March 29
Leaving nothing to chance for tomorrow’s World Cup cricket semifinal clash between India and Pakistan at the PCA stadium here, Punjab Police today further strengthened security around the stadium by rushing in an additional 1500 policemen, taking the total count of policemen to 3,500.


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Jayalalithaa & Karunanidhi
The Last Word
Southern Shootout
The battle lines are drawn. The principal actors, M.Karunanidhi and J.Jayalalithaa are in combat gear. Tamil Nadu’s April 13 election is not a run-of-the-mill contest. It’s a clash of two formidable adversaries
A no-holds-barred battle lies ahead in Tamil Nadu as the countdown begins for the high-stake Assembly elections slated for April 13. The octogenarian M. Karunanidhi, who at 87 continues to be at the helm of the DMK and is vying for his sixth term as Chief Minister, is up against his vengeful bete noire J. Jayalalithaa who is cast in the Goddess Durga mould, pining to vanquish him come what may.

Home Secys iron out ‘creases’, PMs have perfect pitch to play
New Delhi, March 29
To use cricketing lingo, the Home Secretaries of India and Pakistan, at the end of their two-day talks, today laid out a perfect ‘pitch’ for their Prime Ministers to ‘play positively’ when they meet tomorrow. Making a significant progress, Home Secretary of India GK Pillai and his counterpart Chaudhary Qamar Zaman today issued a 17-point statement here. After the November 2008 Mumbai attacks, this was the first secretary-level dialogue between the two countries.

Cricket will spread bonhomie, says Pak minister

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