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How have advances in technology, especially television technology affected the development of contemporary cricket ?

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There is no denying the fact that advances in technology, especially in television technology, affected the development of contemporary cricket. This becomes quite clear from the following account : 

(i) Television coverage made the game of cricket quite popular even among the millions of people residing is small towns and villages. 

(ii) The television coverage made cricket quite popular among the children and they became great fans of the different cricket players, both bowlers and batsmen. they watched carefully the techniques of the various players and themselves used them in their own trained only due to the great advancement in the field of technology.

(iii) As a result of the television converge, the different cricket boards became quite rich by selling television rights to different televisions companies. 

(iv) Continuous deletions coverage made cricket create celebrities who began to earn a lot of money by commercial advertisements.

OR

To Gandhi, khadi, white and coarse, was a sign (i) of purity (ii) of simplicity and (ii) of poverty. Wearing khadi became a symbol of nationalism, a rejection of western mill-made cloth. Gandhi’s dream was to cloth whole nation if khadi. Khadi would be a means of erasing differences between religions, classes, etc. But Gandhi’s ideas could not find universal acceptance even in India. 

(i) The aristocratic Indian adopted Indian dhoti and kurta as their dresses; but these were made of fine fibers rather than the coarse khadi. 

(ii) Those who had been deprived by caste norms for centuries were attracted to western dress styles. For them these were symbols of liberation. 

(iii) Many poor women simply would not allowed to purchase khadi, which is relatively much expensive then the mill-made saris. 

(iv) Many woman wore coloured saris with designs. White was seen as symbolic of renunciation.

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