Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Along with its flagship English paper, Searchlight also tried to diversify itself into the Hindi press. In 1947, it had a Hindi counterpart with the launch of Pradeep from Patna, which was the most sought-after source of news during the anti-corruption JP Movement of the early 1970s. The newspapers suffered a lot because of revealing the truth.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Aj (Hindi: आज, romanized: Āja, lit. 'Today') is a Hindi language daily broadsheet newspaper in India, currently published from 12 cities in the Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand states. The main edition is published in Varanasi. The newspaper was founded by a freedom fighter named Shiv Prasad Gupta.
Bismil Azimabadi's real name was Syed Shah Mohammad Hasan, he was born in 1901 at Azimabad (Mughal name of Patna) in Bihar. [5] He belonged to a family of zamindars and they initially resided at Nawada but later settled in Patna.
Mohammad Shahabuddin (10 May 1967 – 1 May 2021) [1] [2] was a politician and former Member of Parliament from the Siwan constituency in the state of Bihar. [3] He was a former member of the National Executive Committee of the Janata Dal and the Rashtriya Janata Dal. [4]
On 3 July 1999 two bodies of a boy and a girl were discovered in a semi nude state inside a car in a parking near quarter number 12, Frazer Road, Patna.This quarter belonged to Sadhu Yadav, the brother-in-law of Lalu Prasad Yadav and a Member Of Legislative Assembly for the ruling party RJD.The bodies were identified as Shilpi and Gautam.
After the blasts, the terrorist mastermind Tehsin Akhtar was revealed by news media as the nephew of Taqui Akhtar, a leader of the Janata Dal (United), party which is currently in power in Bihar led by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. Taqui publicly disowned his nephew after reports of his involvement in the serial blasts arose in the media. [25]
Dainik Jagran was established in Jhansi, [10] a district town in United Provinces (later renamed Uttar Pradesh), [11] by Puranchand Gupta and first published in 1942. Prior to this, Gupta had worked as the managing editor of a local magazine since 1939 and would frequently visit Bombay to secure advertisements to publish in the magazine, which gave him the required connections and confidence ...