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Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast; GettyEarlier this week, a lie rocketed around conservative media that the Biden administration planned to hand out “crack pipes” as part of a ...
The newspaper, Navajivan, the de facto precursor to Navjivan India was originally founded and published by Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru.In the early 20th century, the daily Navajivan and the Urdu newspaper Quami Awaz gave voice to the efforts of their influential leaders to create a nation that was determined to meet the world peace, scientific and logical criterion. [2]
Front page of Kudi Arasu (3 September 1939). The headline reads "Veezhga Indhi" (Down with Hindi) during Anti-Hindi agitation of 1937-40. Kudi Arasu (also pronounced as Kudiyarasu; English: Republic) was a Tamil weekly magazine published by Periyar E. V. Ramasamy in Madras Presidency (present-day Tamil Nadu) in India.
From the pages of The Hindu—The Last 200 Days of Mahatma Gandhi; The Hindu (Tamil) – Tamil language daily; Kamadenu – Weekly Tamil Magazine; NDTV Hindu – Chennai based English and Tamil news channel (now stopped) RoofandFloor.com - a Chennai-focussed real-estate portal [2]
And addicts told The Post that the free crack pipes help them afford more drugs to feed their habit. A man in Skid Row smokes narcotics from a pipe he received from Homeless Healthcare Los Angeles ...
Viduthalai was first launched on 1 June 1935, by the Justice Party as a bi-weekly, published at the address 14 Mount Road, Chennai and priced at 1/4 Indian annas. [1] It was converted into a daily in 1937 under the charge of Periyar E. V. Ramasamy who priced it at 1/2 Indian annas.
The Indian Opinion was a newspaper established by Indian independence leader Mahatma Gandhi. The publication was an important tool for the political movement led by Gandhi and the Natal Indian Congress to fight racial discrimination and again civil rights for the Indian community and the native Africans in South Africa. Starting in 1903, it ...
He also edited Mahatma Gandhi's newspaper Young India. [4] In 1951, Rajaji wrote an abridged retelling of the Mahabharata in English, followed by one of the Ramayana in 1957. [citation needed] Earlier, in 1955, he had translated Kambar's Tamil Ramayana into English. In 1965, he translated the Thirukkural into English.