London Gazette" - PROMOTIONS

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

London Gazette J R Army Med Corps: first published as 10.1136/jramc-94-04-09 on 1 April 1950. Downloaded from Extr:acts from the "London Gazetje" 221 JOURNALS RECEIVED Journal of R.A.S.C. ... February 1950 Clinical J ourruzl ... February 1950 Jourruzl of Royal Institute of 'Py,blic Health and Hygiene February 1950 St. Batholomews Journal February 1950 South African Medical Journal January 1950 Medical Press; Journal of Royal Navy Medical Service , current numbers Medical Jourruzl of Australia - . December 1949 Indian Medical Gazette ·Octo:ber 1949 British' lMedical Jou'Y1'lOl February 1950 Revista de la Asociation Medica Argentina December 1949' Military Review; Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine; Chronicle of World Health Organiza­ tion ... current :numbers South African Medical Journal January 1950 Sanidad Militar ... .. December 1949 International Health Bulletin ... October-December 1949 Anales de Medicina y Chirugia .. ( November 1949 British Journal. of Surgery current number British Journal of Dermatology and Syphilis February 1950 guest. Protected by copyright. Tropical Diseases Bulletin December 1949 Arain Instituts de Medicirui Tropical September 1949 . Journal of Royal Egyptian Medical Association NOIVem:ber, December. 1949 Boletm de Sanidad Militar June to December 1949 Journal of Royal Untted Servkes Institute ... February 1950 Revista Militar ... Jal}uary 1950 Canadian Journal of Public Hea,lth; Bulletim of Hygiene;lournal of the Medical Association of Eire; Medical Journal of. Australia:; Lancet; British Journal of Dermatology .and Syphilis; Bulletin of U.S.A. Medical Department; Glasgow Medical Journal; Post Grad. Medical Journal; Trans. and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia; Empire and CommlYf/1/J)'Calth; Bulletin of Johns Hospkins Hospital; East Africa http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/ Medical Jourruzl; South Africa Medical Journal; Medical Press; Military Spectator,; Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine; Transactions of Royal Society of TropicaliMedicine and Hygiene; New Zealand Medical Journal current numbers • Extracts from the "London Gazette" - PROMOTIONS . (1) R.A.M.C. and late R.A.M.C. (a) To :be Colonel:- on September 27, 2021 by Lt.-Col. G. T. L. Archer, M.B. 1.2.50 (b) To be Lt.:Col.:- Maj. J. R. Kellett, M.B.E., M.B. 7.2.50 (c) To be Majors:- Maj. J. Aitchison (S.S.C.) (sen. 14.2.49). 23.1.50 Capt. (War Subs.-Maj.) E. L. Moore 31.1.50 J R Army Med Corps: first published as 10.1136/jramc-94-04-09 on 1 April 1950. Downloaded from 222 E.xtracts from the "London Gazette" (d) To be Capt.:- Lt. E. W. McBirney, M.B. (S.S.C.) 13'.2.50 (2) RA.D.C. , To be Capt.:~ Lt. R M. Pearson (S.S.C.) 8.2.50 ApPOINTMENTS (a) Regular Army. Commands anri Staff. Maj.-Gen. T. Young, O.B.E., M.B., late RA.M.C., to be Director of Army Health 28.11.49. Maj.-G~n. J. C. A. Dowse, C.B., C.B.E., M.C., M.B., K.H.P., late RA.M.C., relinquishes the appointment as Commandant and Director of Studies, RA.M. College, 28.11.49. Brig. (T/Maj.-Gen.) J. M. Macfie, C.B.E., M.C., M.B., late R.A.M.C., to be Commandant and Director of StudIes, R.A.M. College, 28.11.49, retaining the temporary rank of MakGen. (b) 'From Short Serv. Comm. (Type B) to be Capt., S.S.C., retaining his present seniority:- Maj. J. Aitchison, M.B. 23.1.50 guest. Protected by copyright. (c) From Emerg. Comrnns. to be Capts., S.S.C., retaining present seniority:- Capt. Denis Ollivere, M.B. 27.1.50 Capt. Benson Daniel McKee, M.B. 31.1.50 Capt. Cameron Weymes, M.B. 31.1.50 . RETIREMENTS AND RESIGNATIONS, (1) R.A.M.C. and late R.A.M.C. Capt. T. E. Cleghorn, M.B. 9.11.48 (Hon. Maj.) Col. (L/Brig.) D. C. Bowie, O.B.E., M.B., F.R.C.S.Edin. 7.2.50 Col. V. J. Perez, O.B.E., M.D. 16.2.50 (Hon. Brig .., Capt. R- D. Calcott (Disability). 11.1.50 (2)RA.D.C. Capt. D. W. W. McLean 2.2.50 http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/ • on September 27, 2021 by J R Army Med Corps: first published as 10.1136/jramc-94-04-09 on 1 April 1950. Downloaded from xi BUREAU NOTI~ES The BULLETIN OF, HYGIENE is issued monthly. The subscriptiqn price, payable in advance, for the twelve monthly parts with index, is 50 shillings, and the price of individual ,current numbers is Ss. 6d. For back volumes pUblished a year or more previously (where ,still in print) the price is £4. O. O. per volume, and for individual copies the price is 7~. 6d. each. Copies of the BUlletin of Hygiene printed on one side 6f the paper, for convenience of cutting and pasting up, 'ilre available on request at the cost of 55 shillings for the twelve monthly parts. Also Published by the Bureau of Hygiene & Tropical Dis~ases guest. Protected by copyright. TROPICAL DISEASES BULLETIN . ,containing classifi,ed summaries of current papers and' reports from the medical and scientific publications of the world on diseases of the tropics and warm countries. (ISSUED MONTHLY) Yearly SUbscription (January to December) 50 shillings post free. Single numbers Ss.6d. each. The price of back volumes, where still in print, is £4. O. O. per volume, and for http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/ individual copies published a year or more previously the price is 7s. 6d. 'Orqers m,W be sent direct to the BUREAU OF HYGIENE & TROPICAL DISEASES, KeppelStreet, Gower Street, London, w.e.1 'or through any bookseller. Telephone: Museum 3041 on September 27, 2021 by Cheques and Postal Ordertl,should be made payable to .the " Bureau ,of Hygiene & Tropical Diseases," and crossed" Westminster Bank Ltd." c J R Army Med Corps: first published as 10.1136/jramc-94-04-09 on 1 April 1950. Downloaded from xii Clinical Efficiency The germicidal efficiency of 'Dettol' remains high even in the presence of blood, pus. and wound debris. This· guest. Protected by copyright. property, coupled with its wide margin of safety, makes 'Dettol' invaluable for use in emergencies; not only by you, but in the less qualified hands of others who in emergency might have to tender http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/ first aid. DETTOL on September 27, 2021 by THE MODERN ANTISEPTIC RECKITT & COLMAN LTD • (PHARMACEUTICAL DEPT.) HULL • ENGLAND H.O .
Recommended publications
  • Statute of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
    s t a t u t e of the office of the united nations high commissioner Published by: for refugees UNHCR Communications and Public Information Service P.O. Box 2500 1211 Geneva 2 Switzerland www.unhcr.org For information and inquiries, please contact: Communications and Public Information Service [email protected] General Assembly Resolution 428 (V) of 14 December 1950 statute of the office of the united nations high commissioner for refugees with an Introductory Note by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees s t a t u t e o f t h e o f f i c e o f t h e u n h c r 1 introductory note by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) In ResolutIon 319 (IV) , of 3 December 1949, the United Nations General Assembly decided to establish a High Commissioner’s Office for Refugees as of 1 January 1951. The Statute of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees was adopted by the General Assembly on 14 December 1950 as Annex to Resolution 428 (V).n I this Resolution, reproduced on page 4, the Assembly also called upon the Governments to cooperate with the High Com- missioner in the performance of his or her functions concerning refugees fall- ing under the competence of the Office. In accordance with the Statute, the work of the High Commissioner is humanitarian and social and of an entirely non-political character. The functions of the High Commissioner are defined in the Statute and in various Resolutions subsequently adopted by the General Assembly.
    [Show full text]
  • Download File
    •^tiSS^^i-S^ UNITED NATIONS Final Reprt of the' First Executive Beard of tiis MATiniMO ii \viftiiyi* •• L,^ & n 4 i' : y•-«•, pf-STPr^BSTSi^i Al ^P-^! f^-PSf^.?^ 1 \:A 11-111-1 ^ s ^ s I •" 1^ '-: ;-> i H; ?• "I I- ^•ii \ 1 * t; n a v) i 8 i ? i; •: '• •' *\ •* m I g.fiUiiig hJt^M- yssisu^slLia y kfe^tealSW E B C?«'iiai> 11 DECEMBER 1946—-31 DECEMBER 19SO ECONOMIC AND SOQAL COUNCIL OFFICIAL RECORDS TWELI^TH SESSION SUPPLEMENT No. 3 NEW YORK ) TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION ................................................ 1 I. SUMMARY .................................................... 1 II. ORIGIN OF THE FUND ........................................... 3 III. WHAT THE FUND DID AND WHY ................................. 3 The work in Europe ........................................... 3 The work in Asia ............................................. 8 The work in Latin America ..................................... 11 The work in the Middle East and North Africa ................... 13 IV. FINANCIAL HISTORY ........................................... 14 Government contributions ....................................... 14 UNRRA residual assets ......................................... 15 United Nations Appeal for Children .............................. 15 Allocations ................................................... 16 Expenditures ................................................. 17 Value of assistance remaining to be fulfilled ........................ 18 Annual and cumulative statistics ..............................r:. 18 Resources
    [Show full text]
  • University Archives Inventory
    University Archives Inventory Record Group Number: UR001.03 Title: Burney Lynch Parkinson Presidential Records Date: 1926-1969 Bulk Date: 1932-1952 Extent: 42 boxes Creator: Burney Lynch Parkinson Administrative/Biographical Notes: Burney Lynch Parkinson (1887-1972) was an educator from Lincoln, Tennessee. He received his B.S. from Erskine College in 1909, and rose up the administrative ranks from English teacher in Laurens, South Carolina public schools. He received his M.A. from Peabody College in 1920, and Ph.D. from Peabody in 1926, after which he became president of Presbyterian College in Clinton, SC in 1927. He was employed as Director of Teacher Training, Certification, and Elementary Education at the Alabama Dept. of Education just before coming to MSCW to become president in 1932. In December 1932, the university was re-accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, ending the crisis brought on the purge of faculty under Governor Theodore Bilbo, but appropriations to the university were cut by 54 percent, and faculty and staff were reduced by 33 percent, as enrollment had declined from 1410 in 1929 to 804 in 1932. Parkinson authorized a study of MSCW by Peabody college, ultimately pursuing its recommendations to focus on liberal arts at the cost of its traditional role in industrial, vocational, and technical education. Building projects were kept to a minimum during the Parkinson years. Old Main was restored and named for Mary Calloway in 1938. Franklin Hall was converted to a dorm, and the Whitfield Gymnasium into a student center with the Golden Goose Tearoom inside. Parkinson Hall was constructed in 1951 and named for Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Ratification Status of International, American and Caribbean Treaties
    RATIFICATION STATUS OF INTERNATIONAL, AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN TREATIES International Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide 19481 Participant Date of Signature Date of Ratification (Accession – a), (Succession – d) Antigua and Barbuda 25 October 1988 Argentina 5 June 1956 a Bahamas 5 August 1975 d Barbados 14 January 1980 a Belize 10 March 1998 a Bolivia, Plurinational State of 11 December 1948 14 June 2005 Brazil 11 December 1948 15 April 1952 Canada 28 November 1949 3 September 1952 Chile 11 December 1948 3 June 1953 Colombia 12 August 1949 27 October 1959 Costa Rica 14 October 1950 a Cuba 28 December 1949 4 March 1953 Ecuador 11 December 1948 21 December 1949 El Salvador 27 April 1949 28 September 1950 Guatemala 22 June 1949 13 January 1950 Haiti 11 December 1948 14 October 1950 Honduras 22 April 1949 5 March 1952 Jamaica 23 September 1968 a Mexico 14 December 1948 22 July 1952 Nicaragua 29 January 1952 a Panama 11 December 1948 11 January 1950 Paraguay 11 December 1948 3 October 2001 Peru 11 December 1948 24 February 1960 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 9 November 1981 a Trinidad and Tobago 13 December 2002 a United States of America 11 December 1948 25 November 1988 Uruguay 11 December 1948 11 July 1967 Venezuela 12 July 1960 a 1 The Convention entered into force on 12 January 1951. Source: http://treaties.un.org/. Updated to 04-11-2012. <UN> <UN> International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination of 19652 Participant Date of Signature Date of Ratification (Accession – a),
    [Show full text]
  • Question of Indonesia 302 (IV). A~Sistancc to Palestine Refugees
    301 (IV). Question of Indonesia which have materially assisted m bringing relief to Palestine refugees ; The Gtnerai Assembly, , 5. Recognizes that, without prejudice to the Having regard to its resolution 274 (III):i1 of provisions of paragraph 11 of General Assembly 11 May 1949, resolution 194 (III) of 11 December 1948, con­ l. Welcomes the announcement that an agree­ tinued assistance for the relief of the Palestine ment was reached at the Round Table Confer­ refugees is necessary to prevent conditions of ence held at The Hague between 23 August and starvation and distress among them and to further 2 November 1949; conditions of peace and stability, and that con­ structive measures should be undertaken at an 2. Cam mends the parties concerned and the early date with a view to the termination of inter­ United Nations Commission for Indonesia for national assistance for relief; their contributions thereto ; 6. Considers that, subject to the provisions of 3. Welcomes the forthcoming establishment of paragraph 9 ( d) of the present resolution, the the Republic of the United States of Indonesia equivalent of approximately $33,700,000 will be as an independent, sovereign State. required for direct relief and works programmes ior the period 1 January to 31 December 1950 of 27211d plenary meeting, which the equivalent of $20,200,000 is required 7 December 1949. ior direct relief and $13,500,000 for works pro­ grammes ; that the equivalent of approximately $21,200,000 will be required for works pro­ 302 (IV). A~sistancc to Palestine grammes from 1 January to 30 June 19 51, all refugees inclusive of administrative expenses; and that The General Assrn1/1/y, rlircct relief should be terminated not later than 31 December 1950 unless otherwise determined Recalling its resolutions 212 (111) 32 of 19 No­ by the General Assembly at its fifth regular vember 1948 and l <J..J.
    [Show full text]
  • Convention on International Civil Aviation Signed at Chicago on 7 December 1944
    CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION SIGNED AT CHICAGO ON 7 DECEMBER 1944 Entry into force: The Convention entered into force on 4 April 1947. Status: 193 parties. This list is based on information received from the depositary, the Government of the United States of America Date of deposit of instrument of ratification or notification of State adherence (A) Afghanistan 4 April 1947 Albania 28 March 1991 (A) Algeria 7 May 1963 (A) Andorra 26 January 2001 (A) Angola 11 March 1977 (A) Antigua and Barbuda 10 November 1981 (A) Argentina 4 June 1946 (A) Armenia 18 June 1992 (A) Australia 1 March 1947 Austria 27 August 1948 (A) Azerbaijan 9 October 1992 (A) Bahamas 27 May 1975 (A) Bahrain 20 August 1971 (A) Bangladesh 22 December 1972 (A) Barbados 21 March 1967 (A) Belarus 4 June 1993 (A) Belgium 5 May 1947 Belize 7 December 1990 (A) Benin 29 May 1961 (A) Bhutan 17 May 1989 (A) Bolivia (Plurinational State of) 4 April 1947 Bosnia and Herzegovina 13 January 1993 (A) Botswana 28 December 1978 (A) Brazil 8 July 1946 Brunei Darussalam 4 December 1984 (A) Bulgaria 8 June 1967 (A) Burkina Faso 21 March 1962 (A) Burundi 19 January 1968 (A) Cabo Verde 19 August 1976 (A) Cambodia 16 January 1956 (A) Cameroon 15 January 1960 (A) Canada 13 February 1946 Central African Republic 28 June 1961 (A) Chad 3 July 1962 (A) Chile 11 March 1947 China (1) 20 February 1946 Colombia 31 October 1947 Comoros 15 January 1985 (A) Congo 26 April 1962 (A) Cook Islands 20 August 1986 (A) Costa Rica 1 May 1958 Côte d’Ivoire 31 October 1960 (A) Croatia 9 April 1992 (A)
    [Show full text]
  • Inventory Dep.288 BBC Scottish
    Inventory Dep.288 BBC Scottish National Library of Scotland Manuscripts Division George IV Bridge Edinburgh EH1 1EW Tel: 0131-466 2812 Fax: 0131-466 2811 E-mail: [email protected] © Trustees of the National Library of Scotland Typescript records of programmes, 1935-54, broadcast by the BBC Scottish Region (later Scottish Home Service). 1. February-March, 1935. 2. May-August, 1935. 3. September-December, 1935. 4. January-April, 1936. 5. May-August, 1936. 6. September-December, 1936. 7. January-February, 1937. 8. March-April, 1937. 9. May-June, 1937. 10. July-August, 1937. 11. September-October, 1937. 12. November-December, 1937. 13. January-February, 1938. 14. March-April, 1938. 15. May-June, 1938. 16. July-August, 1938. 17. September-October, 1938. 18. November-December, 1938. 19. January, 1939. 20. February, 1939. 21. March, 1939. 22. April, 1939. 23. May, 1939. 24. June, 1939. 25. July, 1939. 26. August, 1939. 27. January, 1940. 28. February, 1940. 29. March, 1940. 30. April, 1940. 31. May, 1940. 32. June, 1940. 33. July, 1940. 34. August, 1940. 35. September, 1940. 36. October, 1940. 37. November, 1940. 38. December, 1940. 39. January, 1941. 40. February, 1941. 41. March, 1941. 42. April, 1941. 43. May, 1941. 44. June, 1941. 45. July, 1941. 46. August, 1941. 47. September, 1941. 48. October, 1941. 49. November, 1941. 50. December, 1941. 51. January, 1942. 52. February, 1942. 53. March, 1942. 54. April, 1942. 55. May, 1942. 56. June, 1942. 57. July, 1942. 58. August, 1942. 59. September, 1942. 60. October, 1942. 61. November, 1942. 62. December, 1942. 63. January, 1943.
    [Show full text]
  • Cleveland Bird Calendar Vol046
    46th Year December 1949-January-February 1950 Number 1 THE CLEVELAND BIRD CALENDAR Founded by Francis H. Herrick of Western Reserve University in 1905 Published and Edited by THE KIRTLAND BIRD CLUB In Co-operation With The Cleveland Bird Club Inc. THE CLEVELAND REGION (For Bird Calendar Records) (The circle has a thirty mile radius) At The Cleveland Museum of Natural History 2717 Euclid Avenue Cleveland 15, Ohio 46th Year, No. 1 December 1949-January-February 1950 Page 1 CLEVELAND BIRD CALENDAR Winter Bird Population Number Issued March 23, 1950 Edited by Arthur B. Williams CHRISTMAS BIRD COUNT The tenth annual Christmas Bird Count, conducted by the Kirtland Bird Club, was held December 26, 1949. The same 15-mile diameter area east of Cleveland which has been used in previous years was covered this year. Twenty-two people participated, putting in a total of 91 hours in the field, traveling 293 miles by car and 52½ miles on foot. They recorded 59 species of birds, totaling 6336 individuals. The list is as follows. Horned grebe 7, gannet 1, double-crested cormorant 2, great blue heron 1, mallard 91, black duck 188, canvasback 1, lesser scaup 700, baldpate 2, American goldeneye 6, bufflehead 3, oldsquaw 1, white-winged scoter 1, American merganser 11, red-breasted merganser 41, sharp-shinned hawk 1, Cooper's hawk 2, red-tailed hawk 2, red-shouldered hawk 4, rough-legged hawk 2, marsh hawk 1, sparrow hawk 1, bobwhite 64 (3 coveys), coot 2, herring gull 2083, ring-billed gull 731, Bonaparte's gull 1075, rock dove 1, mourning dove 3, great horned owl 2, snowy owl 1, barred owl 1, kingfisher 3, flicker 1, pileated woodpecker 3, hairy woodpecker 10, downy woodpecker 39, blue jay 67, crow 5, black-capped chickadee 84, tufted titmouse 33, white-breasted nuthatch 34, red-breasted nut­ hatch 3, brown creeper 7, robin 27, golden-crowned kinglet 5, cedar waxwing 203, starling 295, English sparrow 486, cardinal 35, purple finch 3, redpoll 2, pine siskin 30, goldfinch 14, slate-colored junco 228, tree sparrow 57, white-throated sparrow 1, song sparrow 17.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Paper (PDF)
    In the Shadow of the holocauSt the changing Image of German Jewry after 1945 Michael Brenner In the Shadow of the Holocaust The Changing Image of German Jewry after 1945 Michael Brenner INA LEVINE ANNUAL LECTURE 31 JANUARY 2008 The assertions, opinions, and conclusions in this occasional paper are those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. First Printing, August 2010 Copyright © 2010 by Michael Brenner THE INA LEVINE INVITATIONAL SCHOLAR AWARD, endowed by the William S. and Ina Levine Foundation of Phoenix, Arizona, enables the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies to bring a distinguished scholar to the Museum each year to conduct innovative research on the Holocaust and to disseminate this work to the American public. The Ina Levine Invitational Scholar also leads seminars, lectures at universities in the United States, and serves as a resource for the Museum, educators, students, and the general public. At its first postwar congress, in Montreux, Switzerland, in July 1948, the political commission of the World Jewish Congress passed a resolution stressing ―the determination of the Jewish people never again to settle on the bloodstained soil of Germany.‖1 These words expressed world Jewry‘s widespread, almost unanimous feeling about the prospect of postwar Jewish life in Germany. And yet, sixty years later, Germany is the only country outside Israel with a rapidly growing Jewish community. Within the last fifteen years its Jewish community has quadrupled from 30,000 affiliated Jews to approximately 120,000, with at least another 50,000 unaffiliated Jews. How did this change come about? 2 • Michael Brenner It belongs to one of the ironies of history that Germany, whose death machine some Jews had just escaped, became a center for Jewish life in post-war Europe.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Oklahoma Libraries Western History Collections
    University of Oklahoma Libraries Western History Collections Rogers County Medical Society Collection Rogers County Medical Society Collection. Records, 1915–1952. 1.33 feet. Professional organization. Correspondence (1915–1916, 1936–1952); minutes (1943– 1951); and printed material from the records of the secretary-treasurer of the Rogers County (Oklahoma) Medical Society, which became the Rogers-Mayes County Medical Society in 1950. ________________________ Arrangement: This collection consists of the secretary-treasurer's records of the Rogers County Medical Society, for 1915-1916, and 1936-1952. The records were originally fastened into folders and the folders labeled by the secretary-treasurer. When the collection was put into acid-free folders, the original filing order was retained and a file folder list with the original headings was prepared. In 1950, the Rogers County Medical Society merged with the Mayes County Medical Society, to become the Rogers-Mayes County Medical Society. Box R-14 - Correspondence Folder: 1. January - May 1915 2. June - December 1915 3. January - September 1916 4. October - December 1916 5. 1936 6. 1937 7. 1938 8. 1939 9. 1940 10. January - March 1941 11. April - December 1941 12. 1942 13. January - April 1946 14. May - October 1946 15. November - December 1946 Box R-15 - Correspondence Folder: 1. January - April 1947 2. May - September 1947 3. October - December 1947 4. January - March 1948 5. April - August 1948 6. September - December 1948 7. January - March 1949 8. April - September 1949 9. October - December 1949 10. From state office, 1950 11. 1950 12. 1951 13. 1952 Box R-16 Folder: 1. Miscellaneous Forms 2. Miscellaneous Publications 3.
    [Show full text]
  • Framing the Constitution 405
    FRAMING THE CONSTITUTION 405 Framing the Constitution THEME The Beginning of a New Eraaa FIFTEEN The Indian Constitution, which came into effect on 26 January 1950, has the dubious distinction of being the longest in the world. But its length and complexity are perhaps understandable when one considers the country’s size and diversity. At Independence, India was not merely large and diverse, but also deeply divided. A Constitution designed to keep the country together, and to take it forward, had necessarily to be an elaborate, carefully-worked-out, and painstakingly drafted document. For one thing, it sought to heal wounds of the past and the present, to make Indians of different classes, castes and communities come together in a shared political experiment. For another, it sought to nurture democratic institutions in what had long been a culture of hierarchy and deference. The Constitution of India was framed between December 1946 and November 1949. During this time its drafts were discussed clause by clause in the Constituent Assembly of India. In all, the Assembly Fig. 15.1 The Constitution was signed in December 1949 after three years of debate. 2021–22 406 THEMES IN INDIAN HISTORY – PART III held eleven sessions, with sittings spread over 165 days. In between the sessions, the work of revising and refining the drafts was carried out by various committees and sub-committees. From your political science textbooks you know what the Constitution of India is, and you have seen how it has worked over the decades since Independence. This chapter will introduce you to the history that lies behind the Constitution, and the intense debates that were part of its making.
    [Show full text]
  • Indiana County Newspapers on Microfilm (Excluding Saint Joseph County)
    Indiana County Newspapers on Microfilm (Excluding Saint Joseph County) Adams County Decatur Democrat Decatur, Indiana July 29, 1881-December 30, 1881 January 6, 1882-October 26, 1883 August 29, 1890-December 25, 1891 January 1, 1892-December 30, 1892 January 6, 1893-December 29, 1893 January 5, 1894-September 13, 1895 January 3, 1896-December 31, 1896 January 7, 1897-December30, 1897 January 6, 1898-December 28, 1899 Decatur Eagle Decatur, Indiana February 1857-May 1859; October 7, 1859 February 1862-December 1863 January 1864-December 1865 January 1866-December 1867 January 1868-February 1874 (scattered issues) Allen County Dawson’s Fort Wayne Daily Times Fort Wayne, Indiana February 1859-July 1859 November 1860-December 1860 January 1861-April 1861 May 1861-September 1861 Dawson’s Fort Wayne Weekly Times Fort Wayne, Indiana August 1859-August 1860 Dawson’s Weekly Times and Union Fort Wayne, Indiana September 1861-August 1863 August 1863-October 1864 Ft. Wayne Daily Democrat Fort Wayne, Indiana July1869-December 1869 January 1870-June 1870 July 1870-December 1870 Ft. Wayne Sentinel Weekly Fort Wayne, Indiana March 27, 1841-June 8, 1844 March 22, 1845-December 25, 1847 January 1, 1848-December 29, 1849 January 5, 1850-December 25, 1852 February 5, 1853-December 30, 1854 January 6, 1855-December 27, 1856 January 3, 1857-December 25, 1858 January 1, 1859-December 29, 1860 August 7, 1901-December 25, 1901 January 1, 1902-June 25, 1902 July 2, 1902-December 31, 1902 January 6, 1915-June 30, 1915 July 7, 1915-December 29, 1915 January 5, 1916-June 28, 1916 July 5, 1916-December 27, 1916 Ft.
    [Show full text]