cover image: The Indian Review  June  1946  A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review June 1946 A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest

1946

"to awaken the dead"JUNE 1916 ] THE UNIVERSITY IN THE ATOMIC AGE 299 It is one of the hopeful signs of the present time that during the last ten years such a movement has been taking root in the Universities z.nd has linked them in some measure through the new quality of life lived by teachers and by students with the great problems of the age. [...] Necessarily Gupta art lost much of the genuine naivete of early Indian art and consequently the latter's powerful charm but it gained in qualities which appealed to the conscious intellect as well as to the subconscious aesthetic sense: in symmetry and proportion for example; in the structural propriety of its form ; in the reasoned restraint of ornament and in the definition of detail. Gupta a [...] The trunk from just below the neck to the abdomen formed like the neck of the cow thus suggesting the strength of the chest the slimness of the waist and the soft and folded character of the skinfoldings near the abdomen. [...] In female figures in the tribkanga pose the he-id would incline towards the right the bust towards the left while the legs to the right. [...] Such a Pakistan would comprise two areas ; one in the north-west consisting of the Provinces of the Punjab Sind NortWest Frontier and British Baluchistan ; the other in the north-east consisting of the Provinces of Bengal and Assam.
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
The University in the Atomic Age
297-299 R.S. Macnicol view
The Golden Age of Indian Art
300-303 S.N. Chakravarti view
A Patriotic Muslim
303-304 “A Hindu Politician” view
Russian Foreign Policy—An Apology
305-308 Bahaj Krishan view
Science and Postwar Administration
309-310 Shanti Swarup view
Future of War Time Industries in India
311-312 R.V. Rao view
The Unity of India
313-314 G.A. Natesan view
Acoustics of Bells
315-316 R.K. Viswanathan view
Woodcraft
317-319 V.P. Tampy view
An Aspect of Modern Banking
319-320 S. Narayanaswamy view
The Railwaymen’s Demands
321-321 G.A. Natesan view
Indian Affairs
322-324 “An Indian Journalist” view
Foreign Affairs
325-325 “Chronicler” view
The World of Books
326-327 G.A. Natesan view
Diary of the Month
328-328 G.A. Natesan view
Topics from Periodicals
329-332 G.A. Natesan view
Indian States
333-335 G.A. Natesan view
Indians Overseas
336-336 G.A. Natesan view
Multum in Parvo
337-352 G.A. Natesan view