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Dewas is a city in the Malwa region of the ... Satyakaar a daily evening newspaper is published from Dewas. ... Naidunia, Patrika etc. published from Indore are also ...
In the Panchayat era, newspaper were divided into either pro-Panchayat or anti Panchayat. [3] Gorkhapatra became daily from 7 Falgun 2017 BS (2017 BS (1960-1961)) Note: Popular newspapers such as Samaj daily, Chetana weekly, Motherland, Halkhabar, and Diyala were shut down in this period. [2]
It was founded by Karpoor Chandra Kulish in 1956 and published as Rajasthan Patrika in Delhi and Rajasthan, and as Patrika in 9 other states. [ 2 ] As per Indian Readership Survey 2013 , Rajasthan Patrika emerged as the fourth most-read Hindi language newspaper in India, and Patrika emerged sixth.
Amrita Bazar Patrika, a newspaper in India started 1868; Anandabazar Patrika, a Bengali-language newspaper published in Kolkata, New Delhi and Mumbai; Jugantar Patrika, a Bengali revolutionary newspaper founded in 1906 in Calcutta; Rajasthan Patrika, also known as Patrika, a Hindi-language daily newspaper; Syandan Patrika, a newspaper of ...
In July 1927, Sarkar took up the post of Home Minister to His Highness the Raja of Dewas, Malhar Rao Powar. In 1928, the regional tenants conference was held at the Jatindra Mohan Hall in Kushtia presided over by Muzaffar Ahmed. Hemanta Kumar Sarkar and Philip Spratt spoke at the conference. [3]
Dewas Tekri (also known as Maa Chamunda Tekri, Dewas Mata Tekri, and Devi Vaishini Hill) is a sacred mountain located in the city of Dewas, Madhya Pradesh, India.Tekri is known for its religious significance as it houses two important shrines: the Devi Chamunda Mata Temple and the Devi Tulja Bhavani Mata Temple. [1]
Dewas is one of the 29 Lok Sabha (parliamentary) constituencies in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. This constituency came into existence in 2008 as a part of the implementation of delimitation of parliamentary constituencies. Following delimitation, Shajapur constituency ceased to exist and Dewas constituency came into being.
Ten years later, Andhra Patrika had fallen to 24,000; Eenadu had risen to 2,82,000 and was publishing from four centres. Subsequently, Andhra Patrika closed in April 1991. With circulation at less than 20,000, the descendants of Nageswara Rao and Sambhu Prasad stopped paying their dues to the ABC in 1988 and sold the indebted newspaper in 1989.