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In 2000, India Today named Jai Hind College as one of the best and most sought-after colleges in Mumbai city. [ 1 ] It was established just after independence , by a small group of teachers who were displaced from D. J. Science College of Karachi, Sindh , Pakistan [ 2 ] under the supervision of Dr. Mohinder-Miles Morton.
Chempakaraman Pillai (alias Venkidi; [1] 15 September 1891 – 26 May 1934) was an Indian-born political activist and revolutionary. [2] Born in Thiruvananthapuram, to Tamil parents, he left for Europe as a youth, where he spent the rest of his active life as an Indian nationalist and revolutionary.
Jai Hind (Hindi: जय् हिन्द्, IPA: [dʒəj ɦɪnd]) is a salutation and slogan that originally meant "Victory to Hindustan", [1] and in contemporary colloquial usage often means "Long live India" [2] or "Salute to India".
It is a nationalistic slogan, [3] and has been used in nationalist protests such as radical peasant movements in post-colonial India. [4] Another variation of the slogan is Jai Hind. Such slogans are common while cheering the Indian team in cricket matches. [5] [6]
Abid Hasan Safrani, IFS, born Zain-al-Abdin Hasan, was an officer of the Indian National Army (INA) and later, after 1947, an Indian diplomat.He famously introduced the slogan 'Jai Hind', which translates to 'victory belongs to India' that is used for official and semi-official purposes including army salutes, moral upliftment and in pop culture.
CJK Radicals Supplement is a Unicode block containing alternative, often positional, forms of the Kangxi radicals. They are used as headers in dictionary indices and other CJK ideograph collections organized by radical-stroke.
There are two CJK radicals blocks: the "Kangxi Radicals" block that includes the 214 standard radicals used in the Kangxi Dictionary; and the "CJK Radicals Supplement" block that includes 115 radical components used in other modern dictionaries, including simplified Chinese and Japanese radicals forms. [1]
The song was "Jai Hind, Jai Hind, Jai Hind, Yeh Hind Ki Kahaniyan" from the film Mansarovar (1946). [3] He gained popularity as an actor when he started playing the role of Hanuman in mythological and religious films like Homi Wadia 's Shri Ram Bhakta Hanuman (1948) and Hanuman Pataal Vijay (1951).