cover image: The Asiatic Review  October  1945

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The Asiatic Review October 1945

1945

The capacity of the Bengal-Assam Railway was quadrupled by additional construction by the improvement of ferry and transhipment points and by the provision of American operating personnel; numbers of advance bases were developed and depOts stocked for the maintenance of forces larger than the whole of the B.E. [...] The majority of the States are Hindu Rajput; the origin of many of them is veiled in the mists of antiquity. [...] The main elements in the plan are the improvement of agriculture a great expansion of industry the development of roads and of electric power. [...] The Travancore Government follows the example of Hyderabad and of the Government of India in putting the increased productivity of the soil in the forground of their planning. [...] After the reading of the foregoing paper The CHAIRMAN said : I am sure we have all been greatly interested in the paper from which we have derived a much clearer appreciation of the powerful support which the States of Southern India have afforded to the war effort and the very fareaching plans they have for the economic improvement after the war of their own large populations.
government politics public policy
Published in
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-ii unknown view
India’s War Effort
321-324 Mosley Mayne view
Post-War Development Schemes in Thestates of Southern India
324-336 William Barton view
How to Raise Standards of Living in India
336-349 Parekunnel Homas view
Indian Health Problems: Some Recent Voluntary Efforts
349-358 unknown view
The British in India: their Present and Their Future
359-368 C. P. Lawson view
The Seventy-Eighth Annual Report of the East India Association
368-371 Atul Chatterjee, T. Smith, F.H. Brown view
Annual General Meeting
371-374 unknown view
Japan: A Problem in Reconstruction
375-378 T.R.G Lvell view
The Need for Continued Aid to China
378-379 Rev. Slater view
The Recovery of Singapore
379-380 Frank Swettenham view
Slam—Buffer State or Federal Unit ?
380-381 E. W. Hutchinson view
The Attitude of Malays to the War 1941-2
382-383 Tengku Mahmud view
The Netherlands East Indies After Three Years of War
383-385 A Correspondent view
Broadcasts from Ankara
385-388 unknown view
Preparing a Base in India
388-392 G. N. Molesworth view
Sir Brojendra Mitter’s First Budget
392-393 unknown view
Bikaner’s War Services
393-396 unknown view
Victory Celebrations in Mysore
396-397 unknown view
Timothy Richard Missionary and Mandarin: A Centenary Tribute
397-403 Henry Cowell view
Some British I Admire III.—Charles Lamb
403-407 Ranjee Shahani view
Japan’s Surrender—What Next ?
407-409 H. Redman view
Modern Baroda
409-411 R. W. Brock view
Political and Economical Progress in Indian States
411-412 unknown view
Backmatter
i-ii unknown view