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The D.A.V. College Managing Committee, commonly known as DAVCMC, is a non-governmental educational organisation in India and overseas with over 900 schools, [2] 75 colleges and a university. It is based on the ideals of Dayananda Saraswati and Arya Samaj .
The school is affiliated to CBSE, New Delhi (Affiliation Code: 1930141)(School Code:007052 and/or TN7052)(Affiliation expires on 31/March/2015) [1] and is also affiliated to Dayanand Anglo-Vedic College Managing Committee (DAVCMC) till VIIIth Standard. D.A.V. Public School, Velachery is managed by MGM Charitable Society, Chennai.
DAV Public School, Unit-8, Bhubaneswar is a co-educational school in Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India. It is part of the Dayanand Anglo-Vedic Schools System and the DAV College Trust and Management Society, New Delhi. It has more than 3800 students. The campus occupies 8.82 acres, with an additional 4.25 acres of playgrounds.
[1] [2] [3] Suri is president of the D.A.V. College Managing Committee and Chancellor of DAV University. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] He was formerly managing editor of The Daily Milap, an Indian newspaper . [ 6 ]
DAV College, Abohar was established in 1960 under the aegis of the DAV College Managing Committee, New Delhi.The first principal of this college was N. D. Grover. The institution is affiliated to Panjab University, Chandigarh.
Vikas Divyakirti was born on 26 December 1973 in Bhiwani, Haryana.He completed his early schooling in Hindi medium at Halwasia Vidhya Vihar. After completing his schooling, he studied at Zakir Husain Delhi College, pursuing a Bachelor of Commerce (honors) degree.
Dharamvir Bharati (25 December 1926 – 4 September 1997) was a renowned Hindi poet, author, playwright and a social thinker of India. He was the chief editor of the popular Hindi weekly magazine Dharmayug, [1] from 1960 till 1987. [2] Bharati was awarded the Padma Shree for literature in 1972 by the Government of India.
He began asking questions which worried his parents. He was engaged in his early teens, but he decided marriage was not for him and ran away from home in 1846. [20] [21] Dayanand Saraswati spent nearly twenty-five years, from 1845 to 1869, as a wandering ascetic, searching for religious truth.