cover image: The Indian Review  March 1950  A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of All Topics of Interest

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The Indian Review March 1950 A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of All Topics of Interest

1950

The spread of Christianity developed further that individual conception of civil liberty by causing revolt against unreasonable control of the individual or the family by the head or chief as well as of the state by the Sovereign thus recognising the inalienable rights of the individual or the sacredness of human personality. [...] He would compare the spiritual light and energy of the heroic ages of the Upanishads when the sages of India voyaged through strange seas of thought alone with the mental poverty the immobility the static repetition the cessation of science the long sterility of art the comparative feebleness of the creative intuition. [...] The moment it left the shores of Mangalore Ripaud backed by all the members of the crew surprised the Mysoreans and at the point of the pistol demanded from them Tippu's letter to the authorities at Mauritius. [...] This army of 40 000 soldiers was to be joined with Tippu's 60 000 and the combined armies were to take Goa from the Portuguese Bombay from the British to raze Madras to the ground and to conquer Bengal the Mahrattas and the Deccan." But the envoys were bitterly disappointed to learn that no force of Africans and Europeans was ready to sail to India and light the British. [...] On Wednesdays for example questions may be addressed to the Foreign Secretary the Colonial Secretary the Minister of Defence the Minister of Food the representative of the Admiralty (the First Lord of the Admiralty is in the House of Lords) or the Postmaster-General ; on Thursdays to the Minister of Education the Secretary for Commonwealth Relations the President of the Board of Trade the
government politics public policy
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Round the World in Seventy-Five Days
201-203 T. Vijayaraghavacharya view
An Hour With Prof. John Dewey
204-205 S.N Agarwal view
What is Civil Liberty?
206-207 P.C. Ghosh view
Literature in Free India
208-210 Jagdish Chandra view
The Publishers Regretted
211-212 David Gunston view
Indian Philosophy To-Day
213-216 S. Ramaswami view
18th Century Indian Diplomatic Missions
217-219 “Libra#x201D; view
Question Time in the Commons
220-222 Wilson Harris view
From my Notebook
223-224 “Bee” view
Churchill—A Man of Destiny
225-229 V.Krishna Rao view
Indo-Pakistan Trade Deadlock
230-232 Kamal Ghosh view
New Problems of Adult Education
233-235 K.N. Kini view
Improvement in Agriculture
236-237 Jagatjyoti Pal view
Topical Cartoons
238-239 B. Natesan view
Jana Gana Mana
240-240 Haricharan Mukerji view
The Five Tests
241-242 V.R. Ratan view
Home and Foreign Affairs
243-245 “An Indian Journalist” view
The World of Books
246-247 B. Natesan view
Diary of the Month
248-248 B. Natesan view
Readers’ Digest
249-254 B. Natesan view
Indians Outside India
255-256 B. Natesan view
Multum in Parvo
257-264 B. Natesan view