cover image: Modern Review  August  1927

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Modern Review August 1927

1927

The refusal upon the part of our rulers to come to the aid of our most important industry can be explained only upon the hypothesis that the raising of the WM from 11 to 15 per cent might hit the English cotton industry in Lancashire. [...] Above all the memory of the deaths of thousands of their women and children in the concentration camps (towards 'the end of the Boer.Var) stands between the Dntch and English. [...] But lately the direct dealing with the Indian Government instead of through Great Britain together with the presence of eminent Indians in South Africa and also the visit of Dutch nationalist.; to India has opened their eyes to the fact that Dutch and Indians alike have suffered under the pressure of the dominating British Empire and that they are now both winning their freedom together. [...] The following is a been most effectively used by the Kusample of a leaflet widely circulated among min-tang is the weapon of propaganda among the British sailors :- the people and the soldiers of the enemy British sailors we must know that you are ranks. [...] Similarly if the moderate element of the Chinese nationalists led by General Chiang kai-Shek be not supported by the governments of Great Britain and the United States and these governments follow the policy of intervention in China as they tried in Russia they will strengthen the hands of Soviet Russia and the Chinese radicals.
government politics public policy
Pages
142
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i Ramananda Chatterjee view
India’s Contributionn to Japanese Prosperity
129-135 Nihal Singh view
Dutch South Africa
135-138 C.F. Andrews view
China’s Struggle for Freedom
138-143 Taraknath Das view
Legislation Re the Minimum Marriageable Age
144-147 Jyoty Gupta view
Educational Progress in Japan
147-149 T.K. Vadivelu view
More About Sind
150-152 Nagendranath Gupta view
What Americans Say About Subject India
153-157 J.T. Sunderland view
Ancient Painting in Ceylon
157-166 Manindrabhusan Gupta view
Gleanings
166-170 unknown view
Exploration in Central Asia
171-178 Niranjan Chakravarty view
Unequal Treatment of the Provinces Under the Reforms
179-186 Ramananda Chatterjee view
Recent Hindi Literature
186-189 Ila Joshi view
Common Electorates
190-191 C Rajagopalachari view
Truth About the Position of the Hindus in the United States
191-192 Mary Das view
Reviews and Notices of Books
193-198 unknown view
Japanese Womanhood
198-199 D.C. Gupta view
Indian Periodicals
200-209 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
209-216 unknown view
Greater India
216-219 Jadunath Sarkar view
Greater India Revisited
219-224 Kalidas Nag view
India’s Womanhood
224-227 unknown view
Indians Abroad
227-228 unknown view
Our Portrait Gallery
229-230 unknown view
Correspondence
230-231 unknown view
G. Shaw on India’s Civilization
231-235 Ramananda Chatterjee view
Notes
236-252 unknown view