SERIAL NO. BOOK NAME AUTHOR 1387 1001 Things to Do

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SERIAL NO. BOOK NAME AUTHOR 1387 1001 Things to Do SERIAL NO. BOOK NAME AUTHOR 1387 1001 things to do when there's nothing to do louise colligan 1344 13 steps to bloody goodluck ashwin sanghi 1152 2 states chetan bhagat 759 A BETTER INDIA A BETTER WORLD NR NARAYANA MURTHY 1028 a brief history of time stephen hawkings 1030 a brief history of time stephen hawking 942 A Clash of kings George RR Martin 919 A Dance With Dragons George R.R.Martin 862 A FEAST FOR CROWS GEORGE R.R.MARTIN 1394 A horse of her own Selma Hudnut 1111 A manual of ethics Jadunath sinha 1201 A practical English Grammer Exercise 1 A.J.Thamson 1198 a prisonar in the caucasus Lev tolstoy 1099 A Promise of change David Mendell 850 A STORM OF SWORDS GEORGE R.R.MARTIN 891 A STUDY IN SCARLET AND THE SIGN OF FOUR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE 1265 A Swinger of Birches:A Portrait of Robert Frost Sidney Cox 954 A Twist In The Tale Jeffery archer 1225 A walk to remember Nicholas Sparks 993 Abraham Lincoln sangita Kanjilal 1142 Accupressure cure for common diseases Dr.Keith Kenyon 996 Adolf hitler mein kampf 1275 After the Darkness Sidney Sheldon 1241 Alister Mcclean Santorini 1188 All about words Maxwell nurnberg & Morris Rosenblum 804 ALL ABOUT WORDS AXWELL NURNBERG AND MORRIS ROSENBL 938 All Over the Place Compton Mackenzie 1234 All yours,Stranger Novoneel Chakraborty 1190 an apologie for poetrie sir philip sidney 1200 an apoogy for poetry Dr.O.P.Saxena 1285 An Ordinary Person's Guide To Empire Arundhati Roy 1126 An Orwal Reader T.C.kumari 910 And Therby Hangs a Tal Jeffrey Archer 1399 Angels and demons Dan brown 1067 Animal Nutrition Cyril Tyler 888 ANTON CHEKHOV COLLECTED WORKS VOLUME 2 ANTON CHEKHOV 1224 Antony and cleopatra R.E.C.Houghton 947 ANYTHING FOR YOU MAM 1114 Arts and the man Irwin Edman 896 ARUNDEL KENNETH ROBERTS 832 ASTROLOGY IN PREDICTING WEATHER AND EARTHQUAKES B.V.RAMAN 846 ASURA TALE OF THE VANQUISHED ANAND NEELAKANTAN 1026 atoms below george steel 1084 Awakening Indians To India Chinmaya Yuva Kendra 1196 bacon`s essays j.lahiri & A.L.ganguly 1197 bacon`s essays Selby 1218 Banco The further adventures of papillon Henri Charriere 824 BANKERUPT DESIRE.GREED.MURDER RAI SUBRAMANIAN 859 BEATING THE STREET PETER LYNCH 883 BEATRICE AND VIRGIL YANN MARTEL 854 BETWEEN THE ASSASSINATIONS ARAVIND ADIGA 897 BILLY BUDD HERMAN MELVILLE 1053 Biographical Dictionary of Great Astronomers G.Ramamurthy 976 biography of Steve jobs 1246 Bleachers John Grisham 1291 Blink Malcolm Gladwell 1292 Blink Malcolm Gladwell 924 Blood Line Sidney Sheldon 1247 Blood on the toungue Stephen booth 1276 Bloodline Sidney Sheldon 1141 body`s battles Bal Phondke 1065 Book of astrology Cheiro 1215 Boris Pasternak Doktor Shiwago Roman Fischer 1105 boyhood days Rabindranath Tagore 871 BRAIN ROBIN COOK 825 BRANSON TOM BOWER 1298 Breaking Dawn Stephenie Meyer 1166 Brida paulo coelho 932 Brisingr Christopher Paolini 1392 Brood of eagles richard martin stern 755 BUDDHA DEEPAK CHOPRA 1080 Bunch of thoughts M S Golwalkar 1311 business planning DRC Halford 1199 candida Mrs. Mary david 1338 Cashelow quadrant Robert kiosaki 1339 Cashelow quadrant Robert kiosaki 1340 Cashelow quadrant Robert kiosaki 1036 ceramics are forever BC Sharma 872 CHANAKYA'S CHANT ASHWIN SANGHI 1240 Charlotte Bronte Shirley 1402 Chicken soup for the soul ,Mark victor Hansen,Hanoch mccarty,Melad 1173 COMA robin cook 1027 coming back AC Bhaktivedanta 920 Commentaries on Living J.Krishnamurti 791 COMMENTARIES ON LIVING J KRISHNAMURTHY 1104 Commentaries on Living J.Krishnamurthi 1337 Common mistakes in english Hazel james 1328 Connect the dots Rashmi bansal 1364 connect the dots rashmi banasal 1032 conquest of disease leanon E martin 1034 conquest of disease leanon E martin 1045 conquest of disease leanon E martin 748 COUNT YOUR CHICKENS BEFORE THEY HATCH ARINDAM CHAUDRI 927 Coverley Papers from The Spectator T.Singh 1174 Critical robin cook 758 CULTURAL UNITY OF INDIA GERTRUDE EMERSON SEN 750 DANCES OF INDIA RAGINI DEVI 1007 David copperfield Charles Dickens 1266 Day Light Must Come Alan Burgess 863 DEAD LETTER DROP PETER JAMES 1230 Deadly chase Franklin W.Dixon 941 Deception point Dan brown 1231 Devil bones Kathy Reichs 752 DICTIONARY OF INDIANS GIRIJA VIRARAGAVAN 741 DIRECT FROM DELL MICHAEL DELL 1297 Eclipse Stephenie Meyer 1305 edward the second DK Chopra 1360 effective team work michael west 1329 Effective teambuilding John adair 1235 Eldest charles &Mary lamb 1167 Eleven minutes paulo coelho 1123 Empire of the Moghul Alex Rutherford 1358 english for engineers and technologists orient longman 1336 Essays of elia Raghukul thilak 1352 examination technique sudha publications 1120 Exit Lorentz Aleksander salnikov 928 Far Away and Long Ago W.H.Hudson 1058 Farm and Garden seeds S.P.Mercher 1031 fatal cure robin cook 1020 fifty shades of grey E L James 1314 Financial accounting Micheal antony 1317 financial planning &control RE Palmer 1205 FIRST LADY OF THE SEEING EYE MORRIS FRANK 806 FISH STEPHEN C.LUNDIN 1379 fish stephen lundin 1308 Five go off in a caravan Enid blyton 1307 Five go off to camp Enid blyton 1149 Five point someone chetan bhagat 1060 Flanagan's version Dennis Flanagan 1061 Flowers in Britain L.J.F.Brimble 911 Frank Llyod Wright Aylesa Forsee 1359 freakonomics levitt& dubner 902 Freedom Road Howard Fast 789 GAVASKAR AND TENDULKAR SHAPING INDIAN CRICKETS DESTIN SANDEEP BAMSAI 1270 General Knowledge Glimpses O.P.Khanna 1272 General Knowledge of all Subjects T.S.Elangovan 1261 Gifts from Eykis Dr.Wayne Dyer 930 Go Down Moses William Faulker 1070 God and Love G M Jagtiani 1081 God lived with them Swami Chetanananda 744 GOOD TO GREAT JIM COLLINS 1343 Good to great Jim collins 1213 GREAT EXPECTATIONS CHARLES DICKENS 756 GREAT WOMEN OF INDIA AK RAMABHUSHANAM 1251 Green River running red Ann rule 895 GREEN WINTER JAN CAREW 1254 Gulliver's Travels Jonathan Swift 1023 hardy composites NSK Prasad 1242 Hardyboys Undercover brothers 1021 harry potter and the chamber of secrets J K Rowling 844 HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE J.K.ROWLING 845 HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX J.K.ROWLING 1325 Harvard business review corporate strategy harvard business 1326 harvard business review innovation harvard business 1069 Hinduism Swami Nikilananda 1044 His master's slave Tapan bhattacharya 751 HISTORY OF INDIA ROMILA THAPER 818 HONOUR AMONG THEMSELVES JEFFREY ARCHER 906 Hostage Eric Jackson 1071 How do I proceed M P Pandit 822 HOW OPAL MEHT GOT KISS GOT WILD AND GOT A LIFE KAAVYA VISWANTHAN 1350 How to achieve superwordpower Ajai rai 1378 how to develop selfconfidence & influence people Dale carnigie 1349 how to devolop selfconfidence &influence people Dale crnegie 743 HOW TO SHINE AT WORK LINDA R.DOMINGUEZ 745 HOW TO SUCCEED IN GD AND PI SK MANDAL 1346 How to win friends & influence people Dale crnegie 1348 how to write better applications for jobs competition review 894 HUDSON RIVER BRACKETED EDITH WHARTON 1109 I Have a Dream Rashmi Bansal 864 I TOO HAD A LOVE STORY RAVINDER SINGH 865 I TOO HAD A LOVE STORY RAVINDER SINGH 946 I Too Had a love story Ravinder singh 1400 I,Michelangelo,sculptor 960 Iam the gate Osho 1300 If God was a banker Ravi subramaniyam 828 IF YOU MEET THE BUDDHA ON THE ROAD, KILL HIM SHELDON B.KOPP 810 IGNITED MINDS A.P.J.ABDUL KALAM 1156 Ignited minds A P J Abdul kalam 1158 Ilakku 2020 A P J Abdul kalam 1157 Illustrated biography A P J Abdul kalam 962 Illustrated biography of Amitabh Bacachan 974 illustrated biography of lokmaniya bhai gangadhar thilak 1013 illustrated biography of maharana pratap Rohan books 1106 Illustrated Biography of Manmohan singh rohan book company 982 Illustrated biography of motilal nehru 978 Illustrated biography of munshi premchand 958 Illustrated biography of Rajiv gandhi 1010 illustrated biography of sarojini naidu Rohan books 963 Illustrated Biography of shivaji 1012 Illustrated biography of sri aurobindo Rohan books 977 Illustrated biography of Surdas 979 Illustrated biography of swami dyananda saraswathi 1009 illustratred biography of Dr.jagadish chandra bose Rohan books 1008 illustratred biography of Dr.Rajendra prasad Rohan books 1082 Imagining India Ideas for the new century Nandan Nilekani 1347 Improve your personality by looking younger javelin books 840 IN HIGH PLACES ARTHUR HAILEY 956 In times Of Siege Gita Hariharan 1162 India 2020 A P J Abdul kalam 951 Inheritance Christopher Paolini 1330 innovation and entrepreneurship marketing drucker 1310 Innovation in marketing theodore levitt 1042 insect pests of glasshouse crops W&M Mills 1024 inside stars biman basu 1089 Intelligent Life in Universe I s Shklovskii & Carl sagan 793 INTERMEDIATE GENERAL ENGLISH CHAUDHRY 1283 Interpreter of Maladies Jhumpa Lahiri 1381 interview in a nutshell SK sachdeva 780 IS NEW YORK BURNING LARRY COLLINS 866 IT'S YOUR LIFE VINITA DAWRA NANGIA 1258 James Joyce Dubliners 775 JAPANS ECONOMIC POLICY GC ALLEN 892 JAZZ COUNTRY NAT HENTOFF 1397 Jennie gerhardt Theodore Dreiser 762 JINNAH INDIA PARTITION INDEPENDENCE JASWANT SINGH 1239 John Grisham Theadore Boone 1014 Julius caesar D.R.elloway 944 Kane & Abel Jeffery archer 1382 kiss that frog brian tracy 1022 know your body abridged edition 843 LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER D.H.LAWRENCE 937 Land of Five Rivers Khushwant singh 1267 Lateral Thinking Edward De Bono 1193 learn hindi in 30 days srinivasachari 1072 Let us think J.P.Balasubramaniam 1037 life from cell to cell bal phonoke 1249 Life is what you make it Preeti shenoy 948 Life of PI Yann Martel 901 Looking for the general Waarren Miller 936 Love & Marriage 1245 love for all 1192 macbeth bernard groom 803 MADE IN JAPAN AKIO MORITA AND SONY 890 MAIGRET
Recommended publications
  • Finland Bilateral Relations Finland and India Have Traditionally Enjoyed
    March 2021 Ministry of External Affairs **** India – Finland Bilateral Relations Finland and India have traditionally enjoyed warm and friendly relations. In recent years, bilateral relations have acquired diversity with collaboration in research, innovation, and investments by both sides. The Indian community in Finland is vibrant and well-placed. Indian culture and yoga are very popular in Finland. 2019 marked 70 years of diplomatic relations between the two countries. High-level visits - Prime Ministers • Prime Minister Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru Finland in 1957 • Prime Minister Smt. Indira Gandhi in 1983. • Prime Minister Pt. Manmohan Singh in 2006. • Mr. Vieno Johannes Sukselainen in 1960 - First Prime Minister of Finland • Prime Minister Mr. Kalevi Sorsa in 1984. • Prime Minister Mr. Matti Vanhanen visited India in March 2006, February 2008 and February 2010 (last two occasions to attend Delhi Sustainable Development Summit). • Prime Minister Mr. Juha Sipilä: Feb 2016 (for Make in India week) Presidential Visits • President of Finland Mr. Urho Kekkonen in 1965 • President Mr. Mauno Koivisto in 1987 • President Mr. Martti Ahtisaari in 1996. • President Mrs. Tarja Halonen in January 2007, February 2009 and February 2012 to attend the Delhi Sustainable Development Summit. • President Shri V.V. Giri in 1971 • President Shri R. Venkataraman in 1988. • President Shri Pranab Mukherjee: October 2014 President Shri Pranab Mukherjee, paid a State Visit to Finland on 14-16 October 2014 accompanied by Minister of State for Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises, four Members of Parliament, Officials, academicians and a business delegation. Agreements for cooperation in New and Renewable Energy, Biotechnology, Civil Nuclear Research, Meteorology, Healthcare and Education were signed during the visit.
    [Show full text]
  • Jinnah: India-Partition-Independence Abasyn Journal of Social Sciences
    Book review: Jinnah: India-Partition-Independence Abasyn Journal of Social Sciences. Vol.3 No.2 Book Review Jinnah: India-Partition-Independence Israj Khan* Author: Jaswant Singh Publisher: Oxford University Press Karachi Published on: August, 2010 ISBN 978-0-19-547927-0 Price: Rs. 995 Pp: 565 The book under review Jinnah: India-Partition-Independence written by Jaswant Singh,ex Indian Foreign Minister of BJP Government, is a large size, hard cover that also contains over twenty seven pictures of Jinnah and maps of Punjab, Assam and Bengal as well. Jaswant Singh paid a heavy cost on writing such book that was not less than his expulsion from the basic membership of BJP. The book was later banned in Gujarat. Jaswant Singh, ex- Indian Army officer, hails from a Rajput family of Jodhpur, Indian State of Rajasthan. He is one of the few political leaders who served as a Finance Minister, Foreign Minister and Defense minister of India in different political regimes and prolific writers who have many renowned books on his credit. His earlier work include; Defending India (Feb 15, 1999), District Diary (2001), Guru Ke Bete (Punjabi) (2002), Jiwni Baba Sangat Singh Ji (Punjabi) (2002), A Call to Honour: In Service of Emergent India (2006), Travels in Transoxiana (2006), Khankhana Nama (Hindi) (2006), Shoor Shoorma (2007), Till Memory Serves: Victoria Cross Winners Of India (2007), Conflict And Diplomacy East Pakistan Becomes Bangladesh (2008), Our Republic Post 6 December 1992: A Dialogue ,2008. His judicious political views, civility, self-confidence, jingoism and liberal egalitarian personality earned him Outstanding Parliamentarian Award for the year 2001.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Brochure
    Celebrating UNESCO Chair for 17 Human Rights, Democracy, Peace & Tolerance Years of Academic Excellence World Peace Centre (Alandi) Pune, India India's First School to Create Future Polical Leaders ELECTORAL Politics to FUNCTIONAL Politics We Make Common Man, Panchayat to Parliament 'a Leader' ! Political Leadership begins here... -Rahul V. Karad Your Pathway to a Great Career in Politics ! Two-Year MASTER'S PROGRAM IN POLITICAL LEADERSHIP AND GOVERNMENT MPG Batch-17 (2021-23) UGC Approved Under The Aegis of mitsog.org I mitwpu.edu.in Seed Thought MIT School of Government (MIT-SOG) is dedicated to impart leadership training to the youth of India, desirous of making a CONTENTS career in politics and government. The School has the clear § Message by President, MIT World Peace University . 2 objective of creating a pool of ethical, spirited, committed and § Message by Principal Advisor and Chairman, Academic Advisory Board . 3 trained political leadership for the country by taking the § A Humble Tribute to 1st Chairman & Mentor, MIT-SOG . 4 aspirants through a program designed methodically. This § Message by Initiator . 5 exposes them to various governmental, political, social and § Messages by Vice-Chancellor and Advisor, MIT-WPU . 6 democratic processes, and infuses in them a sense of national § Messages by Academic Advisor and Associate Director, MIT-SOG . 7 pride, democratic values and leadership qualities. § Members of Academic Advisory Board MIT-SOG . 8 § Political Opportunities for Youth (Political Leadership diagram). 9 Rahul V. Karad § About MIT World Peace University . 10 Initiator, MIT-SOG § About MIT School of Government. 11 § Ladder of Leadership in Democracy . 13 § Why MIT School of Government.
    [Show full text]
  • 7TOIDC COL 01R1.QXD (Page 1)
    OID‰‰†‰KOID‰‰†‰OID‰‰†‰MOID‰‰†‰C New Delhi, Wednesday,May 7, 2003www.timesofindia.com Capital 44 pages* Invitation Price Rs. 1.50 International Business Times Sport Saddam’s son took Microsoft comes up Wiseman’s 4-wkt $1 bn from bank with a PC that can haul helps NZ to hours before war answer your phones first innings lead Page 15 Page 17 Page 21 WIN WITH THE TIMES Cabinet okays Established 1838 Bennett, Coleman & Co., Ltd. Pakistan opens up all routes Bill to ban It is not power that corrupts, but fear. Fear of losing Graphic: Neelabh TIMES NEWS NETWORK & AGENCIES rious discussions for nuclear and power corrupts. cow slaughter strategic stability in our region.” — Aung San Suu Kyi Islamabad/New Delhi: Unveiling a se- “We hope that a reconvened dialogue TIMES NEWS NETWORK ries of confidence-building measures, will enable us to conclude substantive New Delhi: The Vajpayee govern- NEWS DIGEST Pakistan on Tuesday announced re- and result-oriented measures for arms sumption of air, rail and bus links with restraint and promotion of security in ment on Tuesday moved in the di- India as a goodwill gesture. our region,” the PM said. rection of enacting a ‘‘stringent’’ Ambanis summoned: A special central law to ensure a complete ban court has directed chief metropolitan After securing opposition backing to India reacted sharply to Jamali’s on cow slaughter. magistrate Sangeeta Dhingra Sehgal the government moves, Pakistan’s speech, describing it as a ‘‘completely to summon Reliance Group chair- Prime Minister Mir Zafarullah Khan inadequate response’’ and ‘‘not a mean- Any two states can empower the man Mukesh Ambani and its manag- Jamali addressed a press conference ingful move’’ since it doesn’t address In- Centre to enact such a law under Ar- ing director Anil Ambani, accused of here to announce restoration of full dia’s core concern of cross-border ter- ticle 252 of the Constitution, since entering into a criminal conspiracy diplomatic relations with India and rorism.
    [Show full text]
  • (Thursday) in the Committee Room, Dental Council of India, Aiwan-E-Galib Marg, Kotla Road New Delhi at 10.30 A.M.In Respect of Compliance Cases
    DENTAL COUNCIL OF INDIA Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Dental Council of India held on 8th August, 2019 (Thursday) in the Committee Room, Dental Council of India, Aiwan-E-Galib Marg, Kotla Road New Delhi at 10.30 a.m.in respect of compliance cases. Inspection Report MDS Scheme Andhra Pradesh 12(1). St. Joseph Dental College & Hospital, Eluru To consider the Joint Inspection Report of the Council's Inspectors Dr. Rashmi Nair, Bhilai & Dr. M.S. Rangareddy, Hyderabad to inspect and ascertain the physical facilities such as building, space teaching staff their qualification and other infrastructural facilities available as per the DCI Regulations, 2006 & 2017 for Increase of seats of MDS Course in the speciality of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics from 5 seats at St. Joseph Dental College & Hospital, Eluru on 25th & 26th July, 2019. Compliance Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics from 5 to 6 1. Staff:- Dr. Pushpa S, Professor & HOD - The details of the Publications at Srl. No. 16 in the Original Affidavit is not mentioned. Dr. Srihari Devalla, Professor - The details of the Publications at Srl. No. 16 in the Original Affidavit is not mentioned. Dr. Padmaja Mudunuri, Professor - The details of the Publications at Sri. No. 16 in the Original Affidavit is not mentioned. Dr. Srinidhi V.B., Reader - The details of the Publications at Srl. No. 16 in the Original Affidavit is not mentioned. - TDS certificate for the financial year 2018-19 alongwith part B is incomplete. Dr. Pramod Reddy L, Reader - The details of the Publications at Sri. No. 16 in the Original Affidavit is not mentioned.
    [Show full text]
  • (PPMG) Police Medal for Gallantry (PMG) President
    Force Wise/State Wise list of Medal awardees to the Police Personnel on the occasion of Republic Day 2019 Sl. Name of States/ President’s Police Medal President’s Police Medal No. Organization Police Medal for Gallantry Police Medal (PM) for for Gallantry (PMG) (PPM) for Meritorious (PPMG) Distinguished Service Service 1 Andhra Pradesh 00 00 02 15 2 Arunachal 00 00 00 02 Pradesh 3 Assam 00 00 01 14 4 Bihar 00 00 02 15 5 Chhattisgarh 00 14 01 10 6 Delhi 00 04 02 17 7 Gujarat 00 00 02 17 8 Haryana 00 00 01 12 9 Himachal 00 00 01 04 Pradesh 10 Jammu & 00 25 01 17 Kashmir 11 Jharkhand 00 03 00 04 12 Kerala 00 00 01 07 13 Madhya 00 00 03 17 Pradesh 14 Maharashtra 00 00 04 40 15 Manipur 00 00 01 06 16 Meghalaya 00 13 00 03 17 Mizoram 00 00 01 03 18 Odhisa 00 26 02 11 19 Punjab 00 00 02 15 20 Rajasthan 00 00 02 16 21 Tamil Nadu 00 00 02 21 22 Telangana 00 00 01 13 23 Tripura 00 00 01 06 24 Uttar Pradesh 00 10 06 74 25 Uttarakhand 00 00 01 05 26 West Bengal 00 00 02 20 UTs 27 Dadra & Nagar 00 00 00 01 Haveli 28 Daman & Diu 00 00 01 00 29 Lakshadweep 00 00 00 01 30 Puducherry 00 00 00 01 CAPFs/Other Organizations 31 Assam Rifles 00 01 00 11 32 BSF 00 08 05 46 33 CISF 00 00 02 24 34 CRPF 03 41 05 57 35 ITBP 00 01 02 13 36 NSG 00 00 00 04 37 SSB 00 00 01 11 38 CBI 00 00 06 22 39 IB (MHA) 00 00 08 26 40 SPG 00 00 00 03 41 BPR&D 00 00 01 00 42 NCRB 00 00 00 02 43 NIA 00 00 00 02 44 SVP NPA 00 00 00 01 45 NEPA 00 00 00 01 46 NDRF 00 00 00 04 47 NHRC 00 00 00 01 48 M/o Civil 00 00 00 01 Aviation 49 M/O Home 00 00 00 01 Affairs 50 M/o Railways 00 00 01 15 (RPF) Total 03 146 74 632 Page | 1 LIST OF AWARDEES OF PRESIDENT’S POLICE MEDAL FOR GALLANTRY / POLICE MEDAL FOR GALLANTRY ON THE OCCASION OF REPUBLIC DAY-2019 PRESIDENT’S POLICE MEDAL FOR GALLANTRY CRPF S/SHRI 01 LATE MOHD.
    [Show full text]
  • The Soviet Union's Partnership with India
    MastnyThe Soviet Union’s Partnership with India The Soviet Union’s Partnership with India ✣ Vojtech Mastny The partnership between India and the Soviet Union during the Cold War has been widely regarded as a success story. Although the two coun- tries did not pretend to share the same values, they had no serious conºict of interests and created a model of mutually beneªcial realpolitik. The relation- ship still evokes nostalgia in India, projecting the image of the Soviet Union as a respectful and reliable friend, and has been cited to Americans as an example to emulate. How accurate are these images? How did the two partners really see each other? What did they try to get in building their relationship, and how important to them was what they got? What beneªts did they derive? How can we tell?1 In both countries, most writings on the subject were traditionally of the celebratory kind. More balanced accounts were written by foreign authors, but their value was limited by the inºuence of the ongoing Cold War and by a dearth of reliable sources. Despite India’s American-style “Right to Informa- tion Act,” access to Indian archives has been routinely obstructed by the gov- ernment, which, with its penchant for secrecy, has kept the inside records of its decision-making out of public sight. Although much can be gleaned from private papers of important ofªcials, they are available only through the early 1970s. For later years, retrospective testimonies of fallible eyewitnesses and newspaper reports are the only Indian primary sources we have.2 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Indo-US Strategic Partnership: Are We There Yet?
    IPCS Issue Brief 39 October 2006 INDO-US STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP ARE WE THERE YET? Lalit Mansingh Even though they shared common “Americans always do the right values, India and the United States thing,” said Winston Churchill, “after had divergent views on their they have tried everything else”. In the respective roles in the world. The US contest of India, it took the Americans saw itself as the leader of the Free five decades to do the right thing. World, fighting a crusade against the These were the five decades of the evil forces of international Cold War, described by the late communism. India had no such Senator Moynihan, a former American phobia against communism and Ambassador to India, as a “half preferred to remain non-Aligned. An century of misunderstandings, enduring image of the Cold War, in miscues, and mishaps. “Former Indian minds, is that of John Foster External Affairs Minister Jaswant Dulles, Eisenhower’s Secretary of Singh called them “the fifty wasted State. Issuing a fatwa against non- years”. Alignment, Dulles pronounced it immoral and declared it incompatible INDIA’S STRATEGIC1 with friendship with the United States. IRRELEVANCE TO THE UNITED STATES Dulles was reflecting what the US Joint Chief of Staff had concluded-that India was strategically irrelevant for Ambassador Mansingh is currently an the United States. Their ally of choice Executive Committee Member, IPCS. He in the region was Pakistan. As Dulles was earlier India’s Foreign Secretary and pursued his ‘Pactomania’ and got Indian Ambassador to the US. Pakistan admitted to CENTO and SEATO, the political distance between This paper was originally delivered as a Delhi and Washington continued to keynote address at the Army War College, grow.
    [Show full text]
  • Partition – Independence
    Südasien-Chronik - South Asia Chronicle 2/2012, S. 449-455 © Südasien-Seminar der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin ISBN: 978-3-86004-286-1 Book Review Jaswant Singh, Jinnah: India – Partition – Independence. New York: Oxford University Press, 2010, 550 pages, ISBN 978-0-19-547927-0, Price 35.99 Euro. In the book Jinnah. India – Partition – Independence Jaswant Singh analyses “Jinnah’s public life and his political journey from being the ‘ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity’ to the Quaid-i-Azam of Pakistan” (p. xiv). So what does a high-ranking politician of the Hindu-revivalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have to say about the leader of the All India Muslim League and later the Governor General of Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Jinnah? At first sight, any relation between the two appears unthink- able. Between 1998 and 2004, while in the Union cabinet, Singh was in charge of External Affairs, Defence and the Finance Ministry of India. Following the 2004 elections the BJP was assigned the task of the oppo- sition with Jaswant Singh as its leader. This was when he began his five year long in-depth research which ultimately culminated in this book. Jaswant Singh attempts to investigate whether the partitioning of India in 1947 was inevitable or not. He endeavours to explain the roles 449 Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Ma- hatma Gandhi and Viceroy Mountbatten, just to name a few, played in the unfolding “tragedy” (p. 7). He questions the theory of Muslims being a separate nation, traces its evolution, and Jinnah’s persistent utilisation of it in order to obtain, “for the Muslims a voice in Indian politics which the straight arithmetic of numbers could have never given them” (p.
    [Show full text]
  • NMD Div YC 10 2010-2011-FINAL
    NMD_Div_YC_10_2010-2011-FINAL NMDC LIMITED STATEMENT SHOWING THE LIST OF SHARE HOLDERS - UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND PAGE : 1 NATURE OF AMOUNT : AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED AND UNPAID DIVIDEND FOR THE DIVIDEND YEAR:2010-2011-FINAL ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SLNO NAME/FATHER NAME(S)/ADDRESS DPID/CLIENT ID/FOLIO AMOUNT DUE DATE WAR. NO. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1.A B BHATNAGAR 145 65.00 19/10/2018 1151101 63, C-BLOCK, AMRUTHA ENCLAVE, ROAD NO 14, BANJARA HILLS, HYDERABAD 500025 2.A H RAMA RAO IN300610 10002171 1032.00 19/10/2018 1160988 LATE A HANUMANTHA RAO RAMNIVAS NO 285, 100 FEET RING ROAD, 7TH BLOCK, 4TH PHASE BSK III STAGE BANGALORE 560085 3.A JYOTHI IN301022 20080120 228.00 19/10/2018 1159625 DR A SATYANARAYANA H NO 1 8 254 CHIKKADPALLY HYDERABAD AP 500020 4.A K JOSE IN302871 20234257 108.00 19/10/2018 1162905 A O KUNJUVAREED ARIKATT HOUSE ALOOR KERALA 680683 5.A K SCHROFF IN300118 11093203 301.00 19/10/2018 1151523 F-42 PREET VIHAR DELHI 110092 6.A NAGARAJ 38400 1203840000270285 484.00 19/10/2018 1162193 ARUNACHALAM 378/10, ANNAIKATTU ROAD ARUVEPILAIKADU SURAMPATTI VALASU ERODE 638009 7.A PREMALATHA IN301637 40760530 215.00 19/10/2018 1161809 R ALAGARSAMY 42/9, ANNUPPANADI THEPPAKULAM MAIN ROAD 625009 8.A R RAGUPATHY IN302679 36241559 4.00 19/10/2018 1161764 RAJENDRANAYYAMPERUMAL 13 / 65 THOTTIAPATTY MANAPARAI TRICHY 621305 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [Show full text]
  • Modi's Foreign Policy Fundamentals
    Modi’s foreign policy fundamentals: a trajectory unchanged RAJESH BASRUR The advent of Narendra Modi to the Indian premiership aroused considerable expectations about India’s place in world politics. In the closing years of the last millennium, the spurt in India’s economic growth and its 1998 nuclear tests appeared to signal that the country was poised to become a major player in Asian and eventually global politics. The India–US nuclear agreement of 2005, which allowed India to bypass the tightening rules of nuclear commerce despite its refusal to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), seemed to symbolize the restructuring of the global balance of power, bringing Washington and New Delhi together to counter the rise of China. Yet, barely a decade later, the Manmohan Singh government (2004–2014) appeared to be irresolute and reluctant to press on with the task of consolidating India’s position. Modi’s election in May 2014 was widely viewed as signifying a more decisive phase in the country’s foreign policy, especially after he launched his tenure as prime minister with a flurry of overseas visits to large and small powers alike. There were three reasons for the high expectations of change. First, Modi’s personal style is starkly different from that of his predecessor. Singh was a low-key leader, inclined to position himself as primus inter pares and collegial in decision- making, while Modi is charismatic and authoritative. Singh was media-shy and bland in his public style, whereas Modi quickly displayed his media skills through orchestrated media events and the effective use of mass media such as Facebook and Twitter.1 The 2014 election manifesto of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) clearly carried his personal stamp, proclaiming a determination to ‘fundamentally reboot and reorient the foreign policy goals, content and process, in a manner that locates India’s global strategic engagement in a new paradigm’.2 Second, Singh was hampered by serious political constraints.
    [Show full text]
  • Recent Reports Highlight the Continuing Struggle for Sikh Human Rights
    TWENTY YEARS LATER: RECENT REPORTS HIGHLIGHT THE CONTINUING STRUGGLE FOR SIKH HUMAN RIGHTS As my auto rickshaw wound its way through New Delhi one July after- noon, I felt a peculiar sense of familiarity and sadness. While on the streets one can see the poverty associated with India's large population, what to me represented the greatest threat to the human rights movement in India was the road itself, one of the so-called "flyovers" superimposed on the city. Flyovers are roads that allow vehicles to rise above the narrow streets, beg- gars, cows, and potholes that swallow tires whole. For years, they have been touted as the answer to the congestion and chaos that' plague modern, ur- ban India. Although the flyovers do not hide the persistent problems be- low, from the perspective up above, the problems seem less urgent and the remedies less imperative. If the traffic keeps moving, the government ap- pears effective. Many of India's survival efforts employ the same strategy: adopt any means to keep moving. While the government creates powerless commissions and delays hearings on the widespread human rights viola- tions against minorities in India, recent reports such as Reduced to Ashes: The Insurgency and Human Rights in Punjab' and Twenty Years of Impunity: The November 1984 Pogroms of Sikhs in India2 focus our attention below, so that we may address and repair the damage caused by state violence. Although this Recent Development focuses on the condition of Sikhs, many other minority groups in India have been victimized, including Kashmiris, "Untouchables," and Muslims in Gujarat, to name only a few.
    [Show full text]