cover image: The Indian Review  March 1936  a Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review March 1936 a Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

1936

The responsibility for the social wefare of the fifty millions of people that reprdsents the population of some of the Provinces is a task of the greatest magnitude calculated to test all the undoubted ability which exists among Indian politicians. [...] After all the avowed purpose of the visit of the Australians is to enable the selection of a team for the English tests and improve the chances of our men acquiting themselves more creditably in the home of cricket. [...] The second Renaissance came in the second century B. O. after the fall of the Mauryan empire and it gave us the final recensions of our great didactic epics— the Ramayana and the Mahabaratha including the immortal alto The third Renaissance came in the fourth century A. D. during the brilliant Gupta period of our history and as a result we have those monumental works of popular education— the P [...] The difference between the genius of Gujarati and that of Persian or of English (the two influences which moulded Parsi Gujarati) is certainly not greater than the difference between the genius of AnglSaxon and that of Norman-French ; and yet if these two blended to produce in the fulness of time the greatest of living languages and the greatest of modern literatures why should not ParsGuja [...] In the cellar at the base of the Solarium are the motor of the lift the electrical equipment the water tank and the container of the refuse.
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-i G. A. Natesan view
British Relationships with India
145-147 Herbert Williams view
Indian Cricket and its Future
147-150 P. R. Srinivas view
The Poetry of Rudyard Kipling
150-151 Buddhadeva Bose view
The Ramakrishna Centenary
151-152 G. A. Natesan view
Gujarati Literature
153-155 Kaikhushroo Mehta view
Democracy and Heaven
156-157 P. T. Raju view
The Solarium at Jamnagar
158-159 G. J. Joshi view
The Film in National Life
159-160 Sheikh Rasool view
Foreign Trade in India’s National Economy
161-163 S. Srinivasan view
“ The Murderess ”
163-165 Binoy Sinha view
Effects Named after their Discoverers
165-168 S. Aiyar view
The Late Sir Dinshaw Wacha
169-170 G. A. Natesan view
Population Conference Lucknow
170-171 G. A. Natesan view
Indian Affairs
172-173 “An Indian Journalist” view
World Events
174-175 A. J. Saunders view
Diary of the Month
176-176 G. A. Natesan view
The World of Books
177-180 G. A. Natesan view
Books Received
180-180 G. A. Natesan view
Indian States
181-182 G. A. Natesan view
Indians Overseas
183-184 G. A. Natesan view
Topics from Periodicals
185-192 G. A. Natesan view
India in Periodicals
192-192 G. A. Natesan view
Multum in Parvo
193-208 G. A. Natesan view