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Femina was founded in 1959. [1] [9] The magazine was first published in July 1959. [9]It has organized and sponsored the Femina Miss India beauty pageant since 1964. [10] [11] [citation needed] From 1994 to 1999, it also sponsored the Femina Look of the Year contest to send an Indian contestant to the Elite Model Look competition.
Miss India, also known as Femina Miss India, is a national beauty pageant in India that selects representatives to compete in the Miss World competition, one of the Big Four international beauty pageants. [1] It is organized by Femina, a women's magazine published by The Times Group. [2] [3]
Down to Earth – fortnightly politics of environment and development magazine; Electronics For You – technology monthly; Express Computer – monthly information technology; Femina India – women's magazine; FHM India – monthly; Filmfare – Bollywood magazine; Forbes India – business magazine; Frontline – current affairs magazine ...
women's magazine: Delhi Press India Today (Hindi) (इंडिया टुडे) weekly newsmagazine: The India Today Group Kadambini (कादंबिनी) monthly literary magazine Hindustan Times Media Sarita (सरिता) fortnightly general interest family magazine Mati Hindi Monthly Magazine
Femina Miss India is sponsored by Femina, a women's magazine published by the Times Group. From 2002, the third winner of Femina Miss India was changed from Miss India Asia Pacific International to Femina Miss India-Earth to designate India's representative to the new Miss Earth pageant, and a finalist was sent to Miss International.
Femina Miss India 2024 was the 60th edition of Femina Miss India pageant, marking its diamond jubilee, was held on October 16, 2024 in Mumbai, featuring 30 contestants representing all 29 states, including Delhi, along with a combined representative for the Union Territories.
An amended lawsuit filed in San Francisco federal court over OPM’s push to fire probationary federal workers cited Musk’s email blast in its effort to reverse the mass terminations and claimed ...
While studying journalism in London, Vimla Patil was a part-time trainee for The Telegraph [2] and then worked for a business journal called The Office Magazine.Upon returning to India, she joined Femina, a Times of India publication, from its inaugural issue in 1959.