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BIBLIOGRAPHY Primary Sources: Secondary Sources
BIBLIOGRAPHY Primary Sources: Records and Proceedings, Private and party organizational papers Autobiographies and Memoirs Personal Interviews with some important Political Leaders and Journalists of West Bengal Newspapers and Journals Other Documents Secondary Sources: Books (in English) Article (in English) Books (in Bengali) Article (in Bengali) Novels (in Bengali) 11 BIBLIOGRAPHY Primary Sources Records and Proceedings 1. Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings Vol. LII, No.4, 1938. 2. Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings, 1939, Vol. LIV, No.2, 3. Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings, 1940, vol. LVII, No.5. 4. Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings-Vol. LIII, No. 4. 5. Election Commission of India; Report on the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth General Election. 6. Fortnightly Report on the Political Situation in Bengal, 2nd half of April, 1947. Govt. of Bengal. 7. Home Department’s Confidential Political Records (West Bengal State Archives), (WBSA). 8. Police Records, Special Branch ‘PM’ and ‘PH’ Series, Calcutta (SB). 9. Public and Judicial Proceedings (L/P & I) (India Office Library and Records), (IOLR). 10. Summary of the Proceedings of the Congress Working Committee’, AICC-1, G-30/1945-46. 11. West Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings 1950-1972, 1974-1982. Private and party organizational papers 1. All India Congress committee Papers (Nehru Memorial Museum and Library), (NMML). 2. All Indian Hindu Mahasabha Papers (NMML) 3. Bengal Provislal Hindu Mahasabha Papers (NMML). 4. Kirn Sankar Roy Papers (Private collection of Sri Surjya Sankar Roy, Calcutta) 414 5. Ministry of Home Affairs Papers (National Achieves of India), (NAI). 6. Syama Prasad Mookerjee Papers (NMML). Autobiographies and Memoirs 1. Basu Hemanta Kumar, Bhasan O Rachana Sangrahra (A Collection of Speeches and Writings), Hemanta Kumar Basu Janma Satabarsha Utjapan Committee, Kolkata, 1994. -
Annual Report 2020-21
ANNUAL REPORT 2020-21 Ministry of Mines Government of India Ministry of Mines Ministry of Mines Ministry of Mines https://mines.gov.in Geological Survey of India www.gsi.gov.in Indian Bureau of Mines www.ibm.nic.in National Aluminium Company Limited www.nalcoindia.com Hindustan Copper Limited www.hindustancopper.com Mineral Exploration Corporation Limited www.mecl.co.in Jawaharlal Nehru Aluminium Research www.jnarddc.gov.in Development and Design Centre National Institute of Rock Mechanics www.nirm.in Annual Report 2020-21 ii Ministry of Mines Abbreviations AAS Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometer ACR Annual Confidential Report AIMS Aluminium Import Monitoring System APAR Annual Performance Appraisal Report ASTER Advanced Space borne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer BEE Bureau of Energy Efficiency BGML Bharat Gold Mines Limited BISAG Bhaskaracharya Institute for Space Applications and Geo-informatics BSE BSE - Bombay Stock Exchange CBM Coal Bed Methane CCoM Chief Controller of Mines CEMS Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems CETP Common Effluent Treatment Plant CGPB Central Geological Programming Board CGWB Central Ground Water Board CHQ Central Head Quarter CHWTSDF Common Hazardous Waste Treatment, Storage & Disposal Facility CII Confederation of Indian Industry CIMFR Central Institute of Mining and Fuel Research CMFRI Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi CMPDI Central Mine Planning & Design Institute CPCB Central Pollution Control Board CPGRAMS Centeralised Public Grievance Redressal and Monitoring System CSR -
Birbal Sahni Supervision at the Institute
I NDIAN After retiring from the University in November 1955, Mitra continued as an Emeritus Professor. At the request of Bidhan Chandra Roy, the then Chief Minister of West Bengal, he restructured the ailing West Bengal Secondary N A Education Board into an efficient and disciplined organization. Despite his TIONAL heavy schedule of work at the Board, Mitra continued his research and Birbal Sahni supervision at the Institute. Mitra trained scores of experimental scientists S who later did pioneering work. Notable amongst his students were Prof A. P. CIENCE (1891 - 1949) Mitra (FRS), M. K. Das Gupta (Radio Astronomer) credited with the discovery of the double radio galaxy CYGNUS-A, and Prof. J. N. Bhar. A Mitra’s family life was not very happy because of the premature death of his CADEMY wife and elder son Dr. Ashok Mitra. The latter tragedy dealt a grievous blow Often the discovery of a rare fossil can change the interpretation of evolutionary on him. Soon after this however he was elected to the Fellowship of the Royal history. The person who laid the foundation for fossil research in India was Society and also selected as a National Professor. He spent most of his spare Prof. Birbal Sahni. Early parental influence often shapes a child’s personality INSA time at home reading and writing. Every evening he used to visit the nearby and mindset. Young Birbal was fortunate in having an inspiring man for his Club for recreation and sometimes played a game or two of chess. father...Ruchi Ram Sahni who himself was a self-made man. -
Chronicling a Newly Independent Nation Chronicling a Newly Independent Nation
Home » Journal » Vol. 55, Issue No. 32-33, 08 Aug, 2020 » Chronicling a Newly Independent Nation Chronicling a Newly Independent Nation Pulin B Nayak ([email protected]) formerly taught economics at the Delhi School of Economics, New Delhi. Reading India: Selections from the Economic Weekly edited by Pranab Bardhan, Sudipto Mundle and Rohini Somanathan, Volume I: 1949–1965, Hyderabad: Orient Blackswan, 2019, xiii + 430, price not stated. Review Article Pulin B Nayak Vol. 55, Issue No. 32-33, 08 Aug, 2020 The Economic Weekly (EW) was launched in Bombay (now Mumbai) in January 1949 under the editorship of Sachin Chaudhuri. Chaudhuri was an economist of rare intellectual timbre, who had studied in Dacca University during 1922–26, having been a classmate of A K Dasgupta, the doyen among India’s economic theorists. Due to the peculiar rules and conventions governing the institutions of higher learning in our subcontinent, poor result in his master’s examination ensured that a career in academics was sadly denied for ever to the young Chaudhuri. But Chaudhuri never lost his lust for ideas, regardless of whether they were from history, economics, sociology or archaeology. The several twists in his life’s chances saw Chaudhuri giving tuitions in Kolkata to make a living, and then shifting, in the 1930s, to Mumbai to stay alternately with his two younger brothers (for a fascinating account, see Mitra 1967, 1977, 2016), and earning his keep by writing political, economic, and even film commentaries for some newspapers. For a brief period, he took up the position of general manager of Bombay Talkies after Himanshu Rai passed away! But his final calling came in 1948 when his younger brother Hiten, working in the corporate sector, was able to prevail upon an initially reluctant Chaudhuri to edit a brand new weekly publication. -
Chapter 2 Review of Literature…
Chapter 2 Review of Literature… Review of Literature….. CHAPTER- II REVIEW OF LITERATURE 2.1 Conceptual review 2.1.1 History of Kachchh 2.1.1.1 The State 2.1.1.2 Origin of name 2.1.2 History of rulers of Kachchh 2.1.3 Assortment of Textiles in Court of Western India 2.1.3.1 Brocades 2.1.3.2 Silks 2.1.3.3 Mashru 2.1.3.4 Bandhani 2.1.3.5 Laheriya 2.1.3.6 Textile Crafts for Royal wardrobe 2.1.4 History of Indian Royal Garments for Men 2.1.4.1 Upper garments 2.1.4.1.1 Jama 2.1.4.1.2 Angarkha 2.1.4.1.3 Chogha 2.1.4.1.4 Atamsukh 2.1.4.1.5 Chapkan 2.1.4.1.6 Achkan 2.1.4.1.7 Bagalbandi 2.1.4.1.8 Sadri 2.1.4.1.9 Angarkhi 2.1.4.2 Lower garments: Paijama 2.1.4.3 Headdress 2.1.4.3.1 Pagh 2.1.4.3.2 Patka [13] Review of Literature….. 2.1.5 History of Indian Royal Garments for Women 2.1.5.1 Upper garments 2.1.5.1.1 Choli 2.1.5.1.2 Kanchali 2.1.5.1.3 Angia 2.1.5.1.4 Peshwaz 2.1.5.1.5 Kurta 2.1.5.1.6 Saris 2.1.5.2 Lower garments 2.1.5.2.1 Paijama 2.1.5.2.2 Ghaghra 2.1.5.3 Headdress: Odhani 2.1.6 Children’s costume 2.1.7 Ceremonies and festivals of Rulers of Kachchh 2.2 Empirical review 2.2.1 Studies related to traditional costumes of rulers of India 2.1 Conceptual Review 2.1.1 History of Kachchh 2.1.1.1 The State Kachchh is the Princely State with 17 gun salute, 19 guns local. -
Can Indian Think Tanks and Research Institutions Cope with the Rising Demand for Foreign and Security Policy Research?1
ISAS Working Paper No. 67 – Date: 16 June 2009 469A Bukit Timah Road #07-01, Tower Block, Singapore 259770 Tel: 6516 6179 / 6516 4239 Fax: 6776 7505 / 6314 5447 Email: [email protected] Website: www.isas.nus.edu.sg Can Indian Think Tanks and Research Institutions Cope with the Rising Demand for Foreign and Security Policy Research?1 Sanjaya Baru2 I sincerely believe that in the modern world, the relationship between governments is increasingly mediated through and influenced by the relationship between civil society and the business community. It is on the foundation of people-to-people and business-to-business relations that we in government try to build state-to-state relations. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Sixth India-European Union Business Summit New Delhi, India 7 September 2005 India’s relations with the rest of the world are increasingly being shaped by its economic and business interests.3 While the state remains the primary and decisive player in the shaping and articulation of Indian foreign policy, India’s international relations are no longer constrained by government-to-government relations. Business and civil society engagement are in fact forcing the government to re-examine its own priorities and prejudices.4 The outward orientation of the Indian economy since the early 1990s, the growing interest of Indian business in global markets, India’s increased economic engagement with her Asian neighbours, the increasing economic value of inward remittances of income by Indian workers and professionals working in diverse regions, ranging from the Persian Gulf to the United States, have increased business and civil society interest in international relations. -
Application No Rank
Application No Rank Candidate Name DOB Category Gender Email Mobile Address CHATRIWALI DHANI,MAHESHWARA ROAD IMUCET1422876 9509 RAJKUMAR MEENA 12-Jul-97 ST Male [email protected] 9950227724 DAUSA,DIST - DAUSA,Dausa-303303,Rajasthan VPO - KODYAI,TEH - BONLI,DIST - SAWAI IMUCET1418796 9503 OMPRAKASH MEENA 01-Aug-97 ST Male [email protected] 8696182466 MADHOPUR,Sawai Madhopur-322030,Rajasthan GANESH PUR,RAHMANPUR,CHINHAT IMUCET1413647 9501 MANISH KUMAR 20-Jul-97 SC Male [email protected] 7897989249 LUCKNOW,Lucknow-226028,Uttar Pradesh C-10 AKASHVANI COLONY,SECTOR-8 IMUCET1414405 9493 ANIVEH KUMAR 04-Jan-98 ST Male [email protected] 7408050958 OBRA,SONEBHADRA,Sonbhadra-231219,Uttar Pradesh VILL- POWER GANJ,GANESH RICE MILL PO- ANAITH,PS- IMUCET1422429 9483 ABHYMANU KUMAR 10-Aug-96 SC Male [email protected] 8521670288 * ARA NAWADA,Bhojpur-802301,Bihar 171,PURWA DIN DAYAL,ROORKEE,Rorkee- IMUCET1420839 9467 SACHIN 07-Apr-98 SC Male [email protected] 8439150233 247667,Uttarakhand V.P.O. UPPER LAMBA GAON,TEH. JAISINGHPUR,DISTT. IMUCET1416967 9447 SHUBHAM SONI 04-Nov-96 SC Male [email protected] 9736872264 KANGRA H.P.,Kangra-176096,Himachal Pradesh 007/75-B,EDENWALA CHAWL,J B MARG ELPHINSTONE IMUCET1408099 9448 DASHANKIT DATTATRAY LONDHE 04-Jan-97 SC Male [email protected] 8097948424 ROAD,Mumbai City-400025,Maharashtra E-L 3, SICHAI VIBHAG,,GOMTI BAIRAJ COLONY,BALOO IMUCET1420036 9453 SAURABH KUMAR 31-Dec-96 SC Male [email protected] 8115783483 ADDA,Lucknow-226001,Uttar Pradesh AT-KALYANPUR,PO-KALYANPUR,PS-BIDUPUR,DIST- -
Government of India Press Santragachi, Howrah
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA PRESS SANTRAGACHI, HOWRAH Information as per Clause(b) of Sub-section 1 of Section 4 of Right to Information Act, 2005 (1) IV (1) bi : The particulars of Govt. of India Press, Santragachi, Howrah, Function and duties. In the year 1863 the Govt. of India decided to establish in Calcutta and Central Press in which administration reports, codes and miscellaneous work could be printed. The Secretariate Printing Offices then in existence confining themselves to current despatches and proceedings. In January, 1864, the orders of the various department of Govt. of India and the Acts and Bills of Governor General’s Council which were formerly published in Calcutta Gazette were transferred to a new publication, the Gazette of India to which was appended a supplement containing official correspondence on the subject of interest of officers and to the general public. In 1876 a system of payment of piece rates was introduced in the composing Branch and subsequently in the distributing, printing and book binding Branches. In June, 1885, the presses of the Home and Public works Department were amalgamated with the Central press. The expansion of the Central Press from a strength of 109 employees, 1863, to that 2114 in 1889 necessiated the provision of additional accommodation pending the building of the Secretariate, the press was located from 1882 to 1885 at 165, Dharmatala Street. On completion of the Secretariate Building the Composing, Machine, press and warehouse, with the administration, Accounts and computing Branches were removed to 8, Hastings Street in 1886. During the World War II, work mostly in Connection with the war increased by leaps and bounds and to cope with the increases of volume of work the minimum strength of additional staff was recruited as a temporary measure and Night Shift was started in the year 1944 with the advent of Independence and consequent expansion of Govt. -
Comrade Ashok Mitra Passes Away Long Live
NARESH PAUL CENTRE 53 Radha Bazar Lane, (1st Floor), Kolkata – 700 001 e-mail:[email protected] Website: www.befi.in (Ph):033- 2225-4414/2236-5108 (M) 94331 44271 Fax: 033-2236-5109/2242-0690 Circular No 13/2018 02nd May, 2018 To all Units, Office Bearers, CC & GC Members COMRADE ASHOK MITRA PASSES AWAY With profound grief, we report the demise of Comrade Ashok Mitra, a noted economist and an outstanding columnist, the Finance Minister (1977 – ‘87) of the Left Front Government of West Bengal, a relentless crusader against the neo-liberal economic regime and an Ex-MP, at a Kolkata Hospital last morning, 01st May 2018; he was 90. Born on 10th April 1928 in Dhaka (now in Bangladesh), did PhD thesis, in 1953, under the guidance of Nobel Laureate Jan Tinbergen from the University of Rotterdam. After brief stints as a Professor of Economics in a number of the Universities/Institutions in India and abroad, he was appointed as the Chairman of the Agricultural Cost and Pricing Commission; in 1970, he was appointed as the Chief Economic Advisor to the then Prime Minister Srimati Indira Gandhi, a post he resigned from in 1972; he was also a fierce critic of the Emergency proclaimed by the then Central Government in 1975. An eloquent orator and a prolific writer, both In English and in Bengali, Comrade Mitra was known for his razor-sharp and critical analysis of the society and politics; he won the Sahitya Academy Award for his contribution to the Bengali Literature. A communist till death, Comrade Ashok Mitra was always vocal, whether as an academician or a parliamentarian or an administrator, for the working class and the downtrodden people; he also made significant contribution to the debate over Centre-State relationship that led to the constitution of the Sarkaria Commission. -
Ashok Mitra, the Former Bengal Finance Minister Who Wished He Were Forgotten* Subhanil Chowdhury
OBITUARY | Ashok Mitra, the Former Bengal Finance Minister Who Wished He Were Forgotten* Subhanil Chowdhury In an age where politicians speak venomous language, have criminal backgrounds, behave in the most outrageous manner, it is difficult to imagine that a cultured person like Ashok Mitra was once the Finance Minister of West Bengal. Mitra, however, was not merely a Finance Minister. He was an outstanding economist, a doyen of Bengali prose, an essayist, a parliamentarian, an editor and so much more that it is impossible for anybody to fill the void that he has left behind. As the Finance Minister of the first Left Front government in West Bengal he played a stellar role in bringing the issue of the skewed nature of the Centre-State financial relation to the forefront. It is because of Jyoti Basu and his efforts that devolution of more resources from the Centre to the state and restructuring of the Centre-State financial relations became major issues, uniting non-Congress state governments, in the 1980s. However, when differences with the party in power arose, he resigned from the post of Finance Minister and went back to his passion for writing. Mitra was perhaps the last of the bilingual intellectuals in India. He wrote as an outstanding essayist in both English and Bengali. His columns in The Telegraph were famous for its razor sharp analysis and humour. He wrote in the Economic and Political Weekly, since its inception. A collection of these columns known as Calcutta Diary were published as a book during the 1970s. The book was a fierce critique of the Emergency imposed in 1975 and the preceding semi-fascist repression unleashed on the people of West Bengal by the Congress regime. -
HIGH COURT, CALCUTTA APPELLATE SIDE N O T I F I C a T I O N This Is Relating to Recruitment to the Posts of P.A. / Stenographer
HIGH COURT, CALCUTTA APPELLATE SIDE N O T I F I C A T I O N Memo No. 2188 R (Recruitment) Dated, Calcutta, the 11th May, 2018 This is relating to recruitment to the posts of P.A. / Stenographer, Grade-C, 2018 at High Court, Calcutta in terms of Court’s Employment st Notification No. 695 RG dated 21 February, 2018. The candidates whose applications are “in order” are mentioned in List –A. The candidates who had not submitted the required amount of IPO with their applications and whose applications are otherwise ‘in order’ be directed to submit the required amount of IPO in the office of the Registrar (Recruitment & Management) on May 24, 2018 and May 25, 2018 between 12 noon and 4.30 pmin and original collect their Admit Cards on production of any Photo Identity proof . The candidates whose applications are “disqualified” are mentioned in List-B. The candidates whose applications are “partially qualified” (List-C), may cure the defect(s) of their applications by complying with the requirements as demanded in the Employment Notification No. 695 RG dated 21.2.2018, on June 4, 2018 and June 5, 2018 between 12 noon and 4.30 pm from the office of the Registrar (Recruitment & Management) and in collectoriginal. their Admit Cards on production of any Photo Identity proof In respect of the candidates in the group “partially qualified” (List-C), the defects are indicated in the “modalities of scrutiny” list (List-D). Sd/- Registrar (Recruitment & Management), A.S, High Court, Calcutta. LIST- A (IN ORDER) Sl. -
Indian Costumes
A. BISWAS t PUBLICATIONS DIVISION Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2018 with funding from Public.Resource.Org https://archive.org/details/indiancostumesOObisw . * <* INDIAN COSTUMES A. BISWAS PUBLICATIONS DIVISION MINISTRY OF INFORMATION AND BROADCASTING GOVERNMENT OF INDIA First print : 1985 (Saka 1906) Reprint: 2003 (Saka 1924) © Publications Division ISBN : 81-230-1055-9 Price : Rs. 110.00 Published by The Director, Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, Patiala House, New Delhi-110 001 SALES EMPORIA • PUBLICATIONS DIVISION • Patiala House, Tilak Marg, New Delhi-110001 (Ph. 23387069) • Soochna Bhavan, CGO Complex, Lodhi Road, New Delhi-110003 (Ph. 24367260) • Hall No. 196, Old Secretariat, Delhi-110054 (Ph. 23890205) • Commerce House, Currimbhoy Road, Ballard Pier, Mumbai-400038 (Ph. 22610081) • 8, Esplanade East, Kolkata-700069 (Ph. 22488030) • Rajaji Bhawan, Besant Nagar, Chennai-600090 (Ph. 24917673) • Press Road, Near Govt. Press, Thiruvananthapuram-695001 (Ph. 2330650) • Block No. 4,1st Floor, Gruhakalpa Complex, M.G. Road, Nampally, Hyderabad-500001 (Ph. 24605383) • 1st Floor, /F/ Wing, Kendriya Sadan, Koramangala, Bangalore-560034 (Ph. 25537244) • Bihar State Co-operative Bank Building, Ashoka Rajpath, Patna-800004 (Ph. 22300096) ® 2nd floor, Hall No 1, Kendriya Bhawan, Aliganj, Lucknow - 226 024 (Ph. 2208004) • Ambica Complex, 1st Floor, Paldi, Ahmedabad-380007 (Ph. 26588669) • Naujan Road, Ujan Bazar, Guwahati-781001 (Ph. 2516792) SALES COUNTERS • PRESS INFORMATION BUREAU • CGO Complex, 'A' Wing, A.B. Road, Indore (M.P.) (Ph. 2494193) • 80, Malviya Nagar, Bhopal-462003 (M.P.) (Ph. 2556350) • B-7/B, Bhawani Singh Road, Jaipur-302001 (Rajasthan) (Ph. 2384483) Website : http://www.publicationsdivision.nic.in E-mail : [email protected] or [email protected] Typeset at : Quick Prints, Naraina, New Delhi - 110 028.