cover image: Modern Review  September  1939

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Modern Review September 1939

1939

part of India; it is the only independent Hindu State in the world; and it is in this State alone that under the existing circumstances the Hindus can be taught " to rise to the full stature of their growth " in the twentieth century as Shivaji taught the Hindus of his age to rise to the full stature of their growth. [...] The hollowness of this claim has been exposed in this Review but nevertheless it finds place unaltered in the ' Final Report of the Delegates of India to the Seventh (ordnary) Session of the Assembly of the League of Nations (1.926)) ' We suggest that some future " delegate of India " should claim that the abolition of slavery by Great Britain and by the U. S. A. in the last century was du [...] The controlling personnel of the Government in India consists of birds of passage who think sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof and the Secretary of State for India residing in London is troubled more with anxiety for the safety of Britain and her empire imperilled by the international sitution than with the cEs:rass of the masses in different parts of India. [...] The purpose of the colletion of folk-lore—of the songs of the mother who sang the lullrhy the woman who sang to the tune of the grinding mill and the cultivator while garnering the Harvest —was to discover and illustrate the unity of thought underlying the songs and poems in every prvincial language. [...] The text of the agreement as released by the official German news agency reads :- Guided by the desire to strengthen the cause of peace between Germany and the Soviet Republics hued on the fundamental stipulations of the neutrality agreement cocluded in April 1926 the German and Soviet Governments have come to the following agreement : The articles follow : Firstly the two contracting powers
government politics public policy
Pages
129
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Notes
249-272 unknown view
Other Times
273-279 Tagore view
Rabindranath Tagore’s Address
280-280 unknown view
The First of September In Nepal
281-283 Siva Sen view
With An English Farmer
284-288 M. Mansinha view
Peace or Appeasement ?
289-292 D. Pole view
Culture of Hilsha
293-297 Chinta Mojumdar view
Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan
297-299 Dewane Fulsafi view
History of Bengal’s Salt Industry
300-303 Jitendra Nag view
Significance of Durga Siva and Kalee
304-306 Sukumar Das view
The Herd Halluinations
307-310 Krishna Mukerji view
An Example of American University Men
310-312 H.L. Roy view
On Museums
313-320 S.N. Sen view
Reconstruction of India’s National Future
320-323 Swami Nikhilanantda view
Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne
323-325 J.T Sunderland view
Jeremy Bentham and Rammohun Roy
326-327 Kaijidas Nag view
To Rammohun Roy: A Letter
327-328 Jeremy Bentham view
Book Reviews
329-336 unknown view
Illiteracy no More
337-340 S.Rama Char view
Safety First in Industry
340-343 Andre Lion view
July 4th and January 26th
344-347 H.W Boulter view
Lord Durham—s Report and Canadian Self-Government
347-350 Edward Thompson view
Moral and Spiritual Re-Armament
350-352 Marcus Gray view
Indian Periodicals
353-358 Marcus Gray view
Foreign Periodicals
359-363 unknown view
Moscow Pact?
364-367 Gopal Haldar view
Indian Womanhood
368-368 unknown view