Above the Fold: Top stories of the day
1. Former Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa has returned to the post after the Karnataka High Court acquitted her of corruption charges.
2. The Aam Aadmi Party has called a two-day emergency session of the Delhi Assembly from Tuesday in response to what it sees as encroachment of its powers from the Lt Governor.
3. The Mumbai Indians take on the Chennai Super Kings in the final match of the Indian Premier League tonight.

Weekend Reads
1. Ramachandra Guha in the Hindustan Times sketches out the reasons that the army stayed away from politics in India, when they so easily fell into it in so many other post-colonial nations.
2. Samanth Subramanian at Mint On Sunday delves into the lives of young people taking up traditional Hindu arts like upanyasam and harikatha.
3. For all the impression that nothing happened while she was away, Tamil Nadu managed to make some important decisions even when Jayalalithaa wasn't chief minister, writes Aditi Phadnis in the Business Standard.
4. Sweta Dutta in the Indian Express goes on the trail of the tiger in Ranthambore whose fate is being debate by people rather than the wild.
5. Though research suggests Ayurveda may not be as reliable as it claims to be, the new government plus a growing popularity means it's not going anywhere, writes Dhruv Munjal in the Business Standard.
6.  Ashish Mishra tells the story of how Premchand Roychand amassed a massive fortune, lost it all, got back some and then became an important philanthropist, in Mint On Sunday.
7. Pratap Bhanu Mehta in the Indian Express explains the crisis that has engulfed the most modern of professions, from medicine to law to academia.
8. Zac O'Yeah, in Blink, goes on a quest for RK Narayan's Malgudi and discovers that the town is actually a state of mind.
9. Indian restaurants are finding all sorts of ways to make the classic burger more appealing, writes Chanpreet Khurana in Mint.
10. Hadeel Obaid in Cricinfo writes about going to Pakistan's first international cricket match at home in six years.