Today's stories you shouldn't miss

April 20, 2016 10:23 pm | Updated October 17, 2016 08:07 pm IST

Here's a quick glance at today's top stories:

1. > Row over women's entry at Trimbakeshwar temple; 200 booked

With women activists combating intransigent temple authorities across Maharashtra to gain access to the inner sanctums of temples, the Trimbakeshwar temple was the scene of yet another melee as activists of the Pune-based Swarajya Sanghatana were denied entry.

2. >Report: IS kills its wounded soldiers, sells their organs

Cash-strapped Islamic State (IS) terror group has been killing its injured fighters so that their organs can be extracted and sold on the black market abroad, according to media reports.

3. >Sai Pallavi clears the air about Mani Ratnam project

Sai Pallavi, on Wednesday, denied that she would be working with Mani Ratnam on the untitled project in a series of tweets.

4. >Baahubali, this year?

In case you think we're talking about Rajamouli's two-part epic, rest assured we are not.

5. >The question of forgiveness

Canadian leader Justin Trudeau is to tender a full apology for the Komagata Maru incident of 1914. It should trigger similar repentance elsewhere for other sins of the past.

6. >The changing grammar of dissent

Increasingly, cadres are storming their own party offices in order to force the party leadership to accept their demands.

7. >Police horse 'Shaktiman' dies

After undergoing surgeries for over a month, Shaktiman, a police horse whose hind-limb was injured during a Bharatiya Janata Part protest rally last month, died.

8. >VIDEO: The Pulitzers at 100

The Pulitzer Prizes are celebrating 100 years since their founding. Get to know a bit of their history and some of the winners this year.

9. >50 cabs impounded following surge-pricing in Delhi

Cracking the whip on the taxi and cab drivers for surge-pricing, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said that his government will not tolerate 'daylight robbery' and 'blackmailing' by taxi aggregators during the odd-even scheme.

10. >Even President can go wrong, says Uttarakhand HC

The Uttarakhand High Court observed that the legitimacy of the President’s decision to suspend the Uttarakhand Assembly is open to judicial review.

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