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Nehru: The Idealist and the Realist - Open The Magazine

Nehru: The Idealist and the Realist - Open The Magazine
openthemagazine.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from openthemagazine.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Nehru didn t even spare Gandhi in intellectual combat: Book

Nehru didn t even spare Gandhi in intellectual combat: Book - Jammu Kashmir Latest News | Tourism

Nehru didn t even spare Gandhi in intellectual combat: Book - Jammu Kashmir Latest News | Tourism
dailyexcelsior.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyexcelsior.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

The shadow of the First Amendment

The shadow of the First Amendment 30 April 2021 Jawaharlal Nehru, the prime minister at the time, entering the Parliament House, on 1 November 1962. In his book, the historian Tripurdarman Singh’s villain is Nehru, while his heroes are SP Mookerjee and Jayaprakash Narayan. Larry Burrows / The LIFE Picture Collection / Getty Images Jawaharlal Nehru, the prime minister at the time, entering the Parliament House, on 1 November 1962. In his book, the historian Tripurdarman Singh’s villain is Nehru, while his heroes are SP Mookerjee and Jayaprakash Narayan. Larry Burrows / The LIFE Picture Collection / Getty Images ON 16 MAY 1951, Jawaharlal Nehru stood in parliament and moved for a bill to be referred to a select committee. The Constitution (First Amendment) Bill sought to change the new Constitution that had come into effect less than sixteen months before. The bill would pass sixteen days later and change the Constitution even before the f

The Diggi dialogues: Conversations from JLF 2021, largest literary show on earth

DECCAN CHRONICLE. | SUCHETA DASGUPTA Updated Feb 21, 2021, 4:15 am IST S. Hareesh’s controversial novel, Moustache (original Meesha) has won the 2020 JCB Prize for Literature  Jaipur Literary Festival (Image: Twitter@GauravS36197247) The world’s largest literature festival, JLF, is back again with its lavish intellectual fare, albeit in an online-only avatar. Thanks to the hard work of the organisers, that has not turned out to be limiting or constraining in any fashion. Saraswati ke bhandaar kee badhi apoorav baat, jyo kharche tyon tyon badhe, bin kharche ghat jaat. With knowledge is associated this counterintuitive fact; that in the places where you expend it, it expands and, in the absence of that, it does verily contract. Novelist and festival co-director Namita Gokhale opened the 14th edition of JLF with this couplet from the quill of Vrind, the 17th century Marwari saint.

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