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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 02, 2001 |
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dated August 2, 1951: Indian writers meet in Moscow
Tass reported in London that a meeting between Indian and Soviet
writers was held in Moscow on July 29. Dr. S. Radhakrishnan,
India's Ambassador to Russia was a distinguished guest. About
1,000 writers, students, and others attended the meeting in the
Trade Union House. The leader of the Indian group, poet
Harindranath Chattopadhyaya, said the best practitioners of
Indian literature and art had helped the Indian nation and her
people in the struggle to become free from foreign rule. He said
``now, the attention of progressive Indian writers and artists is
focussed on the struggle for peace. We create plays, poems,
songs, pictures, and sculptures calling on people everywhere to
fight against war-mongers.''
Clenched Fist Society of Pakistan
On August 1, in Lahore, was inaugurated what was to be known as
the ``Clenched Fist Society'', in consequence of a public meeting
addressed in July by Pakistan's Prime Minister, Liaqat Ali Khan.
The Prime Minister had said in Karachi that the symbol of
Pakistan henceforth would be a clenched mailed fist. That
announcement was welcomed by enthusiastic cries from the crowd
for Pakistan to conduct `jehad' to conquer Kashmir along with
India, and Palestine. PTI reported that the Lahore meeting had
been attended by psychologists, scientists, philosophers,
artists, authors, and others. Dr. Niaz Ahmed, Director, Institute
of Chemical Technology, Punjab (Pakistan) University, who
delivered the inaugural address of the C.F. Society, said that
one of its principal objectives would be ``discussion of the
technicalities, philosophy, and moral aspects, of the clenched
fist.''
Storing Atomic Weapons
The latest half-yearly report of the United States Atomic Energy
Commission revealed that secret facilities were being built at
considerable cost to store the country's atomic weapons. Word of
these came at a news conference held in connection with the
publication of the report. When newspersons asked Mr. Gordon
Dean, the Commission's Chairman, about the development of the new
sites and facilities, he replied tersely, ``We don't announce
where we store our bombs.''
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