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d award. List of all Bharat Ratna awardees so far: 1. Late Pandit Bhimsen GururajJoshi in 2008 : Karnataka 2. Kumari Lata Dinanath Mangeshkar in 2001 : Maharashtra 3. Late Ustad Bismillah Khan in 2001 for contribution in the field of Arts : Uttar Pradesh 4. Prof. Amartya Sen in1999 for Literature & Education : United Kingdom 5. Lokpriya Gopinath (posth.) Bordoloi in1999, for Public Affairs : Assam 6. Loknayak Jayprakash (Posth.) Narayan in 1999 for Public Affairs: Bihar 7. Pandit Ravi Shankar in 1999 for his contribution in the field of Arts : United States 8. Shri Chidambaram Subramaniam in 1998 for Public Affairs : Tamil Nadu 9. Smt. M.S. Subbulakshmi in 1998 for her contribution in the field of Arts : Tamil Nadu 10. Dr APJ Abdul Kalam in 1997 for his contribution in the field of Science and Engineering : Delhi 11. Smt. Aruna Asaf (Posth.) Ali in 1997 for her contribution in the field of Public Affairs : Delhi 12. Shri Gulzari Lal Nanda in 1997 for his contribution in the field o
PART IXA THE MUNUCIPALITIES ARTICLE 243P. Definitions. 243Q. Constitution of Municipalities. 243R. Composition of Municipalities. 243S. Constitution and composition of wards Committees, etc. 243T. Reservation of seats. 243U. Duration of Municipalities, etc. 243V. Disqualifications for membership. 243W. Powers authority and responsibilities of Municipalities etc. 243X. Power to impose taxes by, and funds of, the Municipalities. 243Y. Finance Commission 243Z. Audit of accounts of Municipalities. 243ZA. Elections to the Municipalities. 243ZB. Application to Union territories. 243ZC. Part not to apply to certain areas. 243ZD. Committee for district planning. 243ZE. Committee for Metropolitan planning. 243ZF. Continuance of existing laws and Municipalities. 243ZG. Bar to interference by courts in electoral matters. PART X THE SCHEDULED AND TRIBAL AREAS ARTICLE 244. Administration of Scheduled Areas and Tribal Areas. 244A. Formation of an autonomous State comprising certain tribal areas in A
PARTVI I THESTATE S INPART B OFTH E FIRS T SCHEDUL E Art . (238 ) PART IX THE PANCHAYATS ARTICLE 243. Definitions. 243A. Gram Sabha 243B. Constitution of Panchayats. 243C. Composition of panchayats. 243D. Reservation of seats. 243E. Duration of Panchayats etc 243F. Disqualifications for membership. 243G. Powers authority and responsibilities of Panchayats. 243H. Powers to impose taxes by, and funds of, the Panchayats. 243I. Constitution of finance Commissions to review financial position. 243J. Audit of accounts of Panchayats. 243K. Elections to the Panchayats. 243L. Application to Union territories. 243M. Part not to apply to certain areas. 243N. Continuance of existing laws and Panchayats. 243O. Bar to interference by courts in electoral matters. -0-
PART VI THE STATES CHAPTER I.- GENERAL Art.( 152 ) CHAPTER II.-THE EXECUTIVE The Governor ...Art. (153-162) Council of Ministers ...Art.(163-164) The Advocate- General for the State ...Art.(165) Conduct of Government Buiseness ...Art.(166-167) CHAPTER III.-THE STATE LEGISLATURE General ...Art. (168-177) Officers of the State Legislature ...Art.(178-187) Conduct of Business ...Art.(188-189) Disqualificatins of Members ...Art.(190-193) Powers, Privileges, Immunities of State Legislature and thier Members ...Art.(194-195) Legislative Procedure ...Art.(196-201) Procedure in Financial Matters ...Art.(202-207) Procedure Genarally ...Art.(208-212) CHAPTER IV.-LEGISLATIVE POWER OF THE GOVERNOR Art.( 213 ) CHAPTER V.-THE HIGH COURTS IN THE STATE Art.( 214-231 ) CHAPTER VI.- SUBORDINATE COURTS Art.( 233-237 ) CHAPTER I.- GENERAL ARTICLE 152. Definition. The CHAPTER II.-THE EXECUTIVE Governor ARTICLE 153. Governors of State. 154. Executive Power of State 155. Appointment of Governor . 156. Term o
PART V CHAPTER I.-THE EXECUTIVE THE UNION The President and Vice President ...Art.(52-73) Council of Ministers ...Art.(74-75) The Attorney- General for India. ..Art.(76) Conduct of Government Business ...Art.(77-78) CHAPTER II.- PARLIAMENT General...Art.(79-88) Officers of Parliament ...Art.(89-98) Conduct of Business ...Art.(99-100) Disqualifications of members ...Art.(101-104) Powers, Privileges and Immunities of Parliament and its Members ...Art.(105-106) Legislative Procedure ...Art.(107-111) Procedure in Financial Matters ...Art.(112-117) Procedure Generally ...Art. (118-122) CHAPTER III.- LEGISLATIVE POWERS OF THE PRESIDENT Art.(123) CHAPTER IV.- THE UNION JUDICIARY Art.(124-147) CHAPTER V.- COMPTROLLER AND AUDITOR-GENERAL OF INDIA Art.(148-151) The President and Vice President ARTICLE 52. The President of India. 53. Executive power of the Union. 54. Election of President. 55. Manner of election of President. 56. Term of office of President. 57. Eligibility for re- election. 58.
PART IV DIRECTIVE PRINCIPLES OF STATE POLICY ARTICLE 36. Definition. 37. Application of the principles contained in this Part. 38. State to secure a social order for the promotion of welfare of the people. 39. Certain principles of policy to be followed by the State. 39A. Equal justice and free legal aid 40. Organisation of village panchayats. 41. Right to work, to education and to public assistance in certain cases. 42. Provision for just and humane conditions of work and maternity relief. 43. Living wage, etc., for workers. 43A. Participation of workers in management of industries. 44. Uniform civil code for the citizens. 45. Provision for free and compulsory education for children. 46. Promotion of educational and economic interests of Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and other weaker sections. 47. Duty of the State to raise the level of nutrition and the standard of living and to improve public health. 48. Organisation of agriculture and animal husbandry. 48A. Protection and impr
INDIAN CONSTITUTION: PART III FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS General ARTICLE 12. Definition 13. Laws of inconsistent with or in derogation of the fundamental rights. Right to Equality ARTICLE 14. Equality before law. 15. Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion,race,caste, sex or place of birth. 16. Equality of opportunity in matters of public employment. 17. Abolition of Untouchability 18. Abolition of titles. Right to Freedom ARTICLE 19. Protection of certain rights regarding freedom of speech, etc. 20. protection in respect of conviction for offences. 21. Protection of life and personal liberty. 22. Protection against arrest and detention in certain cases. Right against Exploitation ARTICLE 23. Prohibition of traffic in human beings and forced labour. 24. Prohibition of employment of children in factories, etc. Right to Freedom of Religion ARTICLE 25. Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion. 26. Freedom to manage religious affairs. 27. Freedom
PART I THE UNION AND ITS TERRITORY ARTICLE 1. Name and territory of the union 2. Admission or establishment of new States. 2A. [Repealed.] 3. Formation of new States and alteration of areas, boundaries or names of existing States. 4. Laws made under article 2 and 3 to provide for the amendment of the First and the Fourth Schedules and supplemental incidental and consequential matters.. PART I THE UNION AND ITS TERRITORY ARTICLE 1. Name and territory of the union 2. Admission or establishment of new States. 2A. [Repealed.] 3. Formation of new States and alteration of areas, boundaries or names of existing States. 4. Laws made under article 2 and 3 to provide for the amendment of the First and the Fourth Schedules and supplemental incidental and consequential matters.****PARTIICITIZENSHIPARTICLE5.CitizenshipatthecommencementoftheConstitution.6.RightsofcitizenshipofcertainpersonswhohavemigratedtoIndiafromPakistan.7.RightsofcitizenshipofcertainmigrantstoPakistan.8.Rightsofcitizenshipofcert
COMPANY-SLOGANS: Hutch - wherever u go our network follows Kingfisher airlines - Fly the good times Jet airways- the joy of flying LG - Life's good Videocon - The Indian Multi National ONGC- Making tomorrow brighter Bharat Petroleum - Energising lives HSBC- World's local bank State Bank of India (SBI)- the nation banks on us UTI bank - Solutions for a lifetime INDIAN(Indian airlines) - New horizons. Enduring values Hyundai - Drive your way Chevrolet - For a special journey called life Tanishq - Pure Jewellery. Pure joy. -BSNL : Connecting India Nokia : Connecting People Indian Railways : Life Line of India
Indira Gandhi Matritva Sahyog Yojana (IGMSY) October 24th, 2010 2 The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) has approved the implementation of Indira Gandhi Matritva Sahyog Yojana (IGMSY) on pilot basis in selected 52 districts during the remaining period of 11th five year plan at a total cost of ` 1,000 crore. Objective: The objectives of the scheme are to improve the health and nutrition status of pregnant, lactating women and infants by promoting appropriate practices, care and service utilization during pregnancy, safe delivery and lactation; encouraging the women to follow (optimal) Infant and Young Child Feeding practices (IYCF), including early and exclusive breast feeding for the first six months and contributing to better enabling environment by providing cash incentives for improved health and nutrition to pregnant and nursing mothers. Cash Incentive: This scheme envisages the cash transfers to be made to all pregnant and lactating women as incentives based on fulfillm
THE CONSTITUTION (EIGHTY-SIXTH AMENDMENT) ACT, 2002 [12th December, 2002.] An Act further to amend the Constitution of India. . BE it enacted by Parliament in the Fifty- third Year of the Republic of India as follows:- 1. Short title and commencement.- (1) This Act may be called the Constitution (Eighty-sixth Amendment) Act, 2002. (2) It shall come into force on such date as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint. 2. Insertion of new article 21A.- After article 21 of the Constitution, the following article shall be inserted, namely:- Right to education.- "21A. The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of six to fourteen years in such manner as the State may, by law, determine.". 3. Substitution of new article for article 45.- For article 45 of the Constitution,the following article shall be substituted, namely:- . Provision for early childhood care and education to children below the age of
Schedules Schedules are lists in the Constitution that categorize and tabulate bureaucratic activity and policy of the Government. First Schedule (Articles 1 and 4)- This lists the states and territories of India, lists any changes to their borders and the laws used to make that change. Second Schedule (Articles 59, 65, 75, 97, 125, 148, 158, 164, 186 and 221)- – This lists the salaries of officials holding public office, judges, and Comptroller and Auditor-General of India . Third Schedule (Articles 75, 99, 124, 148, 164, 188 and 219)—Forms of Oaths – This lists the oaths of offices for elected officials and judges. Fourth Schedule (Articles 4 and 80) – This details the allocation of seats in the Rajya Sabha (the upper house of Parliament) per State or Union Territory. Fifth Schedule (Article 244) – This provides for the administration and control of Scheduled Areas [Note 2] and Scheduled Tribes [Note 3] (areas and tribes needing special protection due to disadvantageous conditions).
Chief Ministers & Governors of Indian States S. NO. Name of States Chief Minister Governor 1 Andaman & Nicobar Lt. Gen. (Retd.) Bhopinder Singh, PVSM, AVSM 2 Andhra Pradesh Nallari Kiran Kumar Reddy Shri. E. S. L. Narasimhan 3 Arunachal Pradesh Nabam Tuki General (Rtd.) J.J. Singh 4 Assam Shri Tarun Gogoi Shri. Janaki Ballav Pattanaik 5 Bihar Shri Nitish Kumar Sh Devanand Konwar 6 Chandigarh Shri Shivraj V. Patil 7 Chhattisgarh Dr. Raman Singh Shri Shekhar Dutt 8 Goa Shri Digambar Kamat K. Sankaranarayanan 9 Gujarat Shri Narendra Modi Dr. Kamla Beniwal 10 Haryana Shri Bhupinder Singh Hooda Shri Jagannath Pahadia 11 Himachal Pradesh Prof. Prem Kumar Dhumal Urmila Singh 12 Jammu Kashmir Omar Abdullah Sh. N. N. Vohra 13 Jharkhand Arjun Munda Dr. Syed Ahmed 14 Karnataka Shri D V Sadananda Gowda Shri H R Bhardwaj 15 Kerala Shri Oommen Chandy M. O. Hasan Farook Maricar 16 Madhya Pradesh Shri Shivraj Singh Chouhan Ram Naresh Yadav 17 Maharashtra Shri Prithviraj Chavan K. Sankaranaraya
weight is 0 at the centre of earth why.....? and mass can't be zero at any where.why? Ans- weight is zero at the centre of earth because weight of a body is the force with which the body is attracted towards the centre of earth.Obviously when the body reaches the centre of earth there will be no force of attraction b/w earth and the body and hence the weight becomes zero at the centre of earth
Indira Gandhi Prize Recipients Year Name Recipient Description 1986[1] Parliamentarians for Global Action International Organisation of Parliamentarians 1987[2] Mikhail Gorbachev Former Soviet Union Leader 1988[3] Gro Harlem Brundtland Former Prime Minister of Norway 1989[4] UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund 1990[4] Sam Nujoma First President of Namibia 1991[5] Rajiv Gandhi Former Prime Minister of India (posthumous) 1992[6] Saburo Okita Japanese Economist 1993[7] Václav Havel 1st President of the Czech Republic 1994[8] Trevor Huddleston Anti-Apartheid Activist 1995[9] Olusegun Obasanjo 12th President of Nigeria 1996[10] Médecins Sans Frontières Voluntary Organisation 1997[11] Jimmy Carter 39th President of the United States 1998[12] Muhammad Yunus Founder of Grameen Bank 1999[13] M S Swaminathan Indian Agricultural Scientist 2000[14] Mary Robinson 7th President of Ireland 2001[15] Sadako Ogata Former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 2002[16] Shridath Ramphal 2nd C
LIST OF UNESCO HERITAGE SITES IN INDIA: 1983 Ajanta Caves 1983 Ellora Caves 1983 Agra Fort 1983 Taj Mahal 1984 Sun Temple, Konarak 1985 Group of Monuments at Mahabalipuram 1985 Kaziranga National Park 1985 Manas Wildlife Sanctuary 1985 Keoladeo National Park 1986 Churches and Convents of Goa 1986 Group of Monuments at Khajuraho 1986 Group of Monuments at Hampi 1986 Fatehpur Sikri 1987 Group of Monuments at Pattadakal 1987 Elephanta Caves 1987 Brihadisvara Temple, Thanjavur 1987 Sundarbans National Park 1988 Nanda Devi and Valley of Flowers National Parks 1989 Buddhist Monastery at Sanchi 1993 Humayun's Tomb, Delhi 1993 Qutab Minar and associated monuments, Delhi 1999 Mountain Railways of India 2002 Mahabodhi Temple Complex at Bodh Gaya 2003 Rock Shelters of Bhimbetka 2004 Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus 2004 Champaner- Pavagadh Archaeological Park 2007 Red Fort 2010 Jantar Mantar
PUC.2 TIME-TABLE: The Time-Table announced is as given below : March 15 : History March 16 : Biology / Business Studies March 17 : Political Science / Basic Maths March 19 : Economics / Geology March 20 : Mathematics / Geography March 21 : Sociology / Statistics March 22 : Physics / Education / Carnatic Music/ Hindustani Music / Psychology March 24 : Electronics / Computer Science March 26 : English March 27 : Accountancy/ Logic / Home Science March 28 : Chemistry / Optional Kannada March 29 : Kannada / Tamil / Malayalam / Marathi /Arabic / French March 30 : Hindi / Urdu / Telugu / Sanskrit Karnataka Second PUC 2012 Board exam dates and Time-Table have been eagerly anticipated and this time, the holidays between exams may or may not be removed.
KAS New Syllabus : KAS Exam 2012 Exam Pattern KAS (Prelims) Exam Pattern : Objective Type Questions: There are two papers in KAS (Prelims) Exam. Paper – I & Paper – II. Each paper contains two parts. Part – I & Part – II. The questions will be in both Kannada & English. 20 questions carry 400 marks. Paper – I : Part – I (National / International / Current Affairs) Part – II (Humanities / Arts / History) Part – I contains 40 questions from National & International current affairs carries 80 marks in total. Part – II contains 60 questions from humanities, Arts & History carries 120 marks in total. So from both the parts, Paper – I contains 100 questions that carry 200 marks. Paper – II : Part – I (General Knowledge / Karnat aka State Current Affairs) Part – II (Science & Technology, Enviro nment & Ecology / General Mental Ability) Part – I contains 40 questions from General Knowledge / Karnataka State current affairs carries 80 marks in total. Part – II conta
Biography for Jawaharlal Nehru: Date of Birth 14 November 1889, Allahabad, India Date of Death 27 May 1964, New Delhi, India (stroke) Nickname Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru Height 5' 10" (1.78 m) Mini Biography Jawaharlal Nehru was born on November 14, 1889, in Allahabad, India. He was the son of Swaroop Rani and Motilal Nehru, a wealthy lawyer and a prominent leader of the Indian independence movement. The Nehru family belonged to the saraswat Brahmin caste. Nehru graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge University and came back to India in 1912. In 1916, by his parents' arrangement, he married seventeen- year-old Kamala from a Kashmiri business family in Delhi. He became the top political leader of the Indian National Congress Party along with his associate Mohandas K. Gandhi. Nehru and his family made transformations in their upper class lifestyle. They followed Gandhi and abandoned fashionable British clothes and expensive possessions. Nehru and his family adopted the nativ
the names of seventeen railway zones, abbreviations, headquarters and date of establishment is given here. S.No Name Abbr. Headquarters Date of Establishment 1. Northern Railway NR Delhi April 14, 1952 2. North Eastern Railway NER Gorakhpur 1952 3. Northeast Frontier Railway NFR Maligaon (Guwahati) 1958 4. Eastern Railway ER Kolkata April 14, 1952 5. South Eastern Railway SER Kolkata 1955 6. South Central Railway SCR Secunderabad Oct' 2, 1966 7. Southern Railway SR Chennai April 14, 1951 8. Central Railway CR Mumbai Nov' 5, 1951 9. Western Railway WR Mumbai Nov' 5, 1951 10. South Western Railway SWR Hubli April 1, 2003 11. North Western Railway NWR Jaipur Oct' 1, 2002 12. West Central Railway WCR Jabalpur April 1, 2003 13. North Central Railway NCR Allahabad April 1, 2003 14. South East Central Railway SECR Bilaspur, CG April 1, 2003 15. East Coast Railway ECoR Bhubaneswar April 1, 2003 16. East Central Railway ECR Hajipur Oct' 1, 2002 17. Konkan Railway KR Navi Mum
A SHORT BIOGRAPHY OF ABUL KALAM AZAD: Maulana Abul Kalam Muhiyuddin Ahmed (11 November 1888 – 22 February 1958) was a Muslim scholar and a senior political leader of the Indian independence movement. He was one of the most prominent Muslim leaders to support Hindu-Muslim unity, opposing the partition of India on communal lines. Following India's independence, he became the first Minister of Education in the Indian government. He is commonly remembered as Maulana Azad; he had adopted Azad (Free) as his pen name. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad was born in the year 1888 in Mecca. His forefather's came from Herat (a city in Afghanistan) in Babar's days. Azad was a descendent of a lineage of learned Muslim scholars, or maulanas. His father's name was Maulana Khairuddin and his mother was the daughter of Sheikh Mohammad Zaher Watri. In 1890, Azad's father moved to Calcutta. Educated according to the traditional curriculum, Azad learned Arabic and Persian first and then philosoph
United Nations Secretaries-General Secretary-General Nationality Dates in Office @ Trygve Halvdan Lie Norwegian 1946–53 @ Dag Hammarskjöld Swedish 1953–61 @ U Thant Burmese 1962–71 @ Kurt Waldheim Austrian 1972–81 @ Javier Pérez de Cuéllar Peruvian 1982–91 @ BoutrosBoutros-Ghali Egyptian 1992–96 @ Kofi Annan Ghanaian 1997–2006 @ Ban Ki-Moon South Korean 2007–till date

RTE Main Points:

Sixty-three years after independence, India on Thursday enforced a historic Right to Education (RTE) act that promises freedom from illiteracy for this vast and diverse country. Following are the key points of the legislation that expects to empower the nation through education: * Free related stories State to send every child to school now and compulsory education to all children of India in the six to 14 age group; * No child shall be held back, expelled, or required to pass a board examination until completion of elementary education (up to class eight); *A child who completes elementary education (upto Class 8) shall be awarded a certificate *Calls for a fixed student-teacher ratio; * Will apply to all of India except Jammu and Kashmir; *Provides for 25 percent reservation for economically disadvantaged communities in all private and minority schools. The reservation to start with Class One beginning 2011 *Mandates improvement in quality of education; *School teachers will need ade
i: The National Herald founded 70 years ago by India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru on Tuesday published its last editorial as it "temporarily suspended" operations.
The first woman Everest climber was Junko Tabei [1975], a Japanese student … " . K,taka post offices hav to open ATMs -- Sent from my mobile device
On Sep. 8, 1664 - The Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to the British, who then renamed it New York. -- Sent from my mobile device
Successful persons can never be defeated by problems! They become masters of the situation and defeat the problems! Have A Great Day...Gm -- Sent from my mobile device
KPSC.FDA Cut off marks GM XMP-175.5 GM B/L-183 GM LC/MT-186 GM HI-205 GM LOCO-220 GM WOM-210 GM RUR-223 GM KMS-229 GM PDP-211 GM OTHER-223C 1 XMP-168 C 1 B/L-93 C 1 WOM-201 C 1 RUR-217 C 1 KMS-222 C 1 PDP-211 C 1Other-2162A XMP-139 2A B/L-147 2A HI-199 2A LOCO-216 2A WOM-202 2A RUR-217 2A KMS-220 2A PDP-207 2AOTHER217 2B XMP-135 2B B/L-111 2B WOM-195 2B RUR-213 2B KMS-219 2B PDP-196.5 2B Other-211.5 3A XMP-168 3A B/L-169 3A WOM-207 3A RUR-222 3A KMS-222 3A PDP-210 3A OTHER-220.5C 1 XMP 3B XMP-166.5 3B B/L-163.5 3B WOM-205.5 3B RUR-222 3B KMS-222 3B PDP-211.5 3B other220.5 SC XMP-121.5 SC B/L-106.5 SC HI-187.5 SC LOCO-204 SC WOM-198 SC RUR-213 SC KMS-219 SC PDP-199.5 SC OTHER-213 ST XMP-169.5 ST B/L-108 ST WOM-199.5 ST RUR-216 ST KMS-217.5 ST OTHER-216 -- Sent from my mobile device
General knowledgeTop 10 countries with high literacy rate-1-Georgia 100.02-Cuba 99.93-Estonia 99.84-Latvia 99.85-Barbados 99.76-Slovenia 99.75-Barbados 99.76-Slovenia 99.77-Belarus 99.78-Lithuania 99.79-Ukraine 99.710-Armenia 99.7UNDP report -- Sent from my mobile device
ADARSHA VIDYALAYA/RMSA Trs' Document Verification Places: 1.Bagalkote-BLOCK RESOURCE CO ORDINATOR OFFICE,VIDYAGIRI ,NAVANAGAR,BAGALKOTE 2.Banglr South:Federation building,opposite kims,next to DDPI Office south. 3.Banglr Rural-DDPI office,K.G Road,next to SHIKSHAKARA SADANA BANGLR RURAL DIST. 4.Banglr North-DDPI office,K.G Road,next to SHIKSHAKARA SADANA BANGLR north DIST. 5.Belguam-DDPI OFFICE,CLUB ROAD BELGAUM. 6.Bellary-DDPI OFFICE,Bellary. 7.Bidar-DIET,NAWBAD,BIDAR 8.Bijapur:DDPI OFFICE,NEAR BUS STAND AND DC OFFICE. 9.Chamaraja Nagar:DDPI OFFICE. 10.Chikkaballapur:K.M.H.P.S,CHIKKABALLAPUR,DDPI OFFICE PREMISES,CHIKKABALLAPUR. 11.Chikkamagalur:DDPI OFFICE,ZILLAPANCHAYATH,CHIKKAMAGALUR. 12.Chikkodi:DDPI OFFICE,CHIKKODI. 13.Chitradurga:DDPI OFFICE,CHITRADURGA 14.Dakshinakannada:BRC CITY,GANDHI NAGAR,MANGALORE. 15.Davangere:DIET,DAVANAGERE. 16.Dharwad:DDPI OFFICE, DHARWAD 17.Gadag:BRC URBAN,HOMBAL ROAD,GADAG. 18.Gulburga:GOVT.PRACTICING HIGH SCHOOL,NEAR GOVT.B.Ed COLLEGE,GULBURGA.
Applicants arecalled for Document verificatio nunderthe following criteria. Thelistis prepared District wise, school type-wise andpost category wise. Meritlist is generated on1:2 ratio(1 post:2 applicants) basis. Eachlist contains2 Applicants for1 vacant post.(Ina ratioof 1:2) Postsare tobe filledup with retired teachers abovethe ageof50 andbelow theageof 65years, first;the remaining postswill befilled withfresh graduates inthe orderof meritas generated throughthe software basedon the weightage asprinted inthelast tablein the application .Weightage iscomputed as10%for SSLC,25% forPUC, 40%for Degreeand 25%for B.Ed.In caseofany tie,senior byagegets the preference. Graduation Criteria: Applicant shouldhave scored50 percentas anaverage ofallthe years Professiona l Qualificati on Criteria: Applicant shouldhave scored60 percent marks (excluding the internal assessment marks) Calltothe Applicant for document verificatio nisnota confirmatio nofoffer of contract. Theoffer ispurely temporary ona
African Stock Exchanges GhanaStock Exchange, Ghana Johannesburg Stock Exchange , South Africa The South African Futures Exchange (SAFEX), South Africa Asian Stock Exchanges Sydney Futures Exchange , Australia Australian Stock Exchanges , Australia Shenzhen Stock Exchange , China Stock Exchange of Hong Kong ,Hong Kong Hong Kong Futures Exchange ,Hong Kong National Stock Exchange of India,India Bombay Stock Exchange , India Jakarta Stock Exchange , Indonesia Indonesia NET Exchange ,Indonesia Nagoya Stock Exchange ,Japan Osaka Securities Exchange , Japan Tokyo Grain Exchange, Japan Tokyo International Financial Futures Exchange (TIFFE) , Japan Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Korea Stock Exchange, Korea Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange , Malaysia New Zealand Stock Exchange , New Zealand Karachi Stock Exchange , Pakistan Lahore Stock Exchange, Pakistan Stock Exchange of Singapore (SES) , Singapore Singapore International Monetary Exchange Ltd. (SIMEX) , Singapore Colombo Stock Exchange , Sri Lanka S
e records which were made during the matches played in this world cup. 1. Sachin Tendulkar become the Second Player in the History of Cricket to participate in 6 Cricket World Cup Tournament after Javed Miandad (Pakistan). 2. Virender Sehwagscored his career best score of 175 runs. He got injured in the middle of the match otherwise everyone was guessing about the another innings against the world record of 200 runs by Sachin Tendulkar. 3. Virender Sehwag becomes the first Indian Batsman to score a century against bangladesh in World Cup matches. 4. Sachin Tendulkar Become the First Batsman to Score Maximum Centuries in World Cup by Scoring the fifth Century in the India England World Cup Match on 27th Feb 2011. 5. Sachin Tendulkar Made his 47th ODI Century in the same match against England. 6. Andrew Strauss becomes the first English Caption to score the highest run against India in Cricket world cup history. 7. A new world cup record made and that is highest match aggregate in world
R K Narayan's Works Fiction 1935 Swami and Friends 1937 The Bachelor of Arts 1938 The Dark Room 1945 The English Teacher 1949 Mr. Sampath - The Printer of Malgudi 1952 The Financial Expert 1955 Waiting for the Mahatma 1958 The Guide 1961 The Man-Eater of Malgudi 1967 The Vendor of Sweets 1976 The Painter of Signs 1983 A Tiger for Malgudi 1986 Talkative Man 1990 The World of Nagaraj 1993 Grandmother's Tales Non-Fiction 1960 Next Sunday 1964 My Dateless Diary 1974 My Days 1980 The Emerald Route 1988 A Writer's Nightmare Short Stories 1947 An Astrologer's Day and Other Short Stories 1956 Lawley Road 1970 A Horse and Two Goats 1974 Reluctant Guru 1982 Malgudi Days 1985 Under the Banyan Tree 1993 Salt and Sawdust Mythology 1965 Gods, Demons and Others 1972 The Ramayana 1978 The Mahabarata Recent Publications Memories of Malgudi / published on 11/1/00 Indian Epics Retold / published on 3/1/00 World of Malgudi / published on 1/8/00 Awards and Honours Padma Bhushan -1964 Sahity
court is in session. High Courts The following are the twenty-one High Courts sorted by name, year established, Act by which it was established, jurisdiction, seat of governance (headquarters), benches (branches), and the maximum number of judges sanctioned. Court name Established Act established Jurisdiction Seat Benches Jud. Allahabad High Court [1] 1866-06-11 High Courts Act, 1861 Uttar Pradesh Allahabad Lucknow 95 Andhra Pradesh High Court 1954-07-05 Andhra State Act, 1953 Andhra Pradesh Hyderabad 39 Bombay High Court 1862-08-14 High Courts Act, 1861 Maharashtra, Goa, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu Mumbai Nagpur , Panaji, Aurangabad 60 Calcutta High Court 1862-07-02 High Courts Act, 1861 West Bengal, Andaman and Nicobar Islands kolkata Port Blair (circuit bench) 63 Chhattisgarh High Court 2000-01-11 Madhya Pradesh Re- organisation Act, 2000 Chhattisgarh Bilaspur 12 Delhi High Court[2] 1966-10-31 Delhi High Court Act, 1966 National Capital Territory of Delhi New Delhi 36 Gauh
Postal Assistant Solved Previous Question Paper Part 2 1) Name of the First Postage Stamp is A – Penny Black B – Two Penny Blue C – Halfpenny Rose Red D – Penny Red 2) The headquarters of Universal Postal Union (UPU) is in A – New York B – London C – Rome D – Bern 3) El Nino is A – A name of Thyphoon B – A Sea Storm C – A Warm ocean current D – Name of Hurricane 4) Which country received Global audience for the rescue operation of 33 trapped miners A – Chile B – Vietnam C – China D – Japan 5) Shora is the parliament of ? A – Argentina B – Australia C – Afghanisthan D – Spain 6) What is GARNISHEE order? A – An order issued by the court prohibiting withdrawal from the account of a depositor B – An executive order prohibiting withdrawal from the account of a depositor C – A Court order issued prohibiting transaction of a particular land D – None of these 7) Which Indian bank introduced Credit Card facility first? A – State Bank of India B – Central Bank of India C – Canara Bank D – ICICI
T BRANCHES OF SCIENCE Branch Concerning field Aeronautics Science of fligt of airplanes. Astronomy Study of heavenly bodies. Agronomy Science dealing with crop plant. Angiology Deals with the study of blood vascular system. Anthology Study of flower. Anthropology Study of apes and man. Apiculture Honey industries (Bee Keeping). Araneology Study of spiders. Batracology Study of frogs. Biochemistry Deals with the study of chemical reactions in relation to life activities. Biotechnology Deals with the use of micro-organisms in commercial processes for producing fine chemicals such as drugs; vaccines; hormones,etc. on a large scale. Cardiology Study of heart. Craniology Study of skulls. Cryptography Study of secret writing. Cryogenics Study concerning with the application and uses of very low temperature. Cytology Study of cells. Dermatology Study of skin. Ecology The study of relationship between organisms and enviornment. Entomology Study of insects. Etiology Study of cause of insects. E
ead and share your heart. Write a book review List of Booker Prize winning novels The complete list of Booker Prize winning novels is as follows: Year Author Title 1969 P. H. Newby Something to Answer For 1970 Bernice Rubens The Elected Member 1971 V. S. Naipaul In a Free State 1972 John Berger G. 1973 J. G. Farrell The Siege of Krishnapur 1974 Nadine Gordimer The Conservationist 1974 Stanley Middleton Holiday 1975 Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Heat and Dust 1976 David Storey Saville 1977 Paul Scott Staying On 1978 Iris Murdoch The Sea, the Sea 1979 Penelope Fitzgerald Offshore 1980 William Golding Rites of Passage 1981 Salman Rushdie Midnight's Children 1982 Thomas Keneally Schindler's Ark 1983 J. M. Coetzee Life & Times of Michael K 1984 Anita Brookner Hotel du Lac 1985 Keri Hulme The Bone People 1986 Kingsley Amis The Old Devils 1987 Penelope Lively Moon Tiger 1988 Peter Carey Oscar and Lucinda 1989 Kazuo Ishiguro The Remains of the Day 1990 A. S. Byatt Possession: A Romance 1991
fiinance ministers of India Finance Minister Term Liaquat Ali Khan 1946-1947 (interim government) John Mathai 1948-1949 R. K. Shanmukham Chetty 1949-1951 Chintamanrao Deshmukh 1951-1957 T. T. Krishnamachari 1957-1958 Jawaharlal Nehru 1958-1959 Morarji Desai 1959-1964 T. T. Krishnamachari 1964-1967 Morarji Desai 1967-1970 Indira Gandhi 1970-1971 Yashwantrao Chavan 1971-1975 C. Subramaniam 1975-1977 Morarji Desai 1977-1979 Choudhary Charan Singh 1979-1980 Ramaswamy Venkataraman 1980-1982 Pranab Mukherjee 1982-1985 V.P. Singh 1985-1987 S.B. Chavan 1987-1990 Madhu Dandavate 1990-1991 Manmohan Singh 1991-1996 P.Chidambaram 1996-1998 Yashwant Sinha 1998-2002 Jaswant Singh 2002-2004 P.chidambaram current
Bookmark: Important Constitutional Amendments Methods of Amendments in Constitution 3 Methods : 1. Method of Simple majority: Applies to matters related to Citizenship, abolishing or creating second chambers in the states provisions relating to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, etc. 2. In this, the following conditions should be fulfilled : Both the houses must pass the proposal by a majority of the total membership. By a 2/3 majority of the members present. After this, the amendment bill must also be ratified by not less than half of state legislatures. Applies to matters related to election of President and Vice – President, executive powers of union and states, subjects related to the division of legislative powers between Centre and State, matters relating to Supreme Court and High Court, representation of States in Parliament, amendment of article 368 itself, etc. 3. This method consists of first two conditions of the II method. In this, there is no need of ratification by th
The Pampa Prashasti is presented by the Minister of State for Kannada and Culture, during the Kadambotsava, a cultural festival held annually in poet Pampa's town of Banavasi in Uttar Kannada district.[5] List of Awardees Year Writer Works 1987 Kuvempu Sri Ramayana Darshanam 1988 T. N. Srikantaiah Bharathiya Kavya Meemaamse 1989 K. Shivaram Karanth Mai Managala Sulliyali 1990 S. S. Bhoosnurmath Shoonya Sampadaneya Paramarshe 1991 P. T. Narasimhachar Shri Haricharitha 1992 A. N. Murthy Rao Devaru 1993 Gopalakrishna Adiga Suvarna Puthalli 1994 Sediyapu Krishna Bhatta Vichara Prapancha 1995 K. S. Narasimhaswamy Dundu Mallige 1996 M. M. Kalburgi lifetime contribution 1997 G. S. Shivarudrappa lifetime contribution 1998 D. Javare Gowda lifetime contribution 1999 Chanaveera Kanavi lifetime contribution 2000 L. Basavaraju lifetime contribution 2001 Poornachandra Tejaswi lifetime contribution 2002 M. Chidananda Murthy lifetime contribution 2003 Chandrashekhara Kambara lifetime contribution
List of the Chief Election Commissioner of India [1] : 1. Sukumar Sen ICS (b. 1899) : 21 March 1950 to 19 December 1958 2. K. V. K. Sundaram : 20 December 1958 to 30 September 1967 3. S. P. Sen-Varma : 1 October 1967 to 30 September 1972 4. Dr. Nagendra Singh : 1 October 1972 to 6 February 1973 5. T. Swaminathan : 7 February 1973 to 17 June 1977 6. S. L. Shakdhar : 18 June 1977 to 17 June 1982 7. R. K. Trivedi : 18 June 1982 to 31 December 1985 8. R. V. S. Peri Sastri : 1 January 1986 to 25 November 1990 9. V. S. Ramadevi : 26 November 1990 to 11 December 1990 10. T. N. Seshan : 12 December 1990 to 11 December 1996 11. M. S. Gill : 12 December 1996 to 13 June 2001 12. J. M. Lyngdoh : 14 June 2001 to 7 February 2004 13. T. S. Krishnamurthy : 8 February 2004 to 15 May 2005 14. B. B. Tandon : 16 May 2005 to 29 June 2006 15. N. Gopalaswami : 30 June 2006 to 20 April 2009 16. Navin Chawla : 21 April 2009 to 29 July 2010 17. Shahabuddin Yaqoob Quraishi : 30 July 2010 - till date
List of Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Awardees S.No. Year Name of the Sportsperson(s) Sport Discipline 01 1991-92 Viswanathan Anand Chess 02 1992-93 Geet Sethi Billiards 03 1993-94 Not Conferred* - 04 1994-95 Cdr. Homi D. Motivala (Joint) Yachting (Team Event) 04 1994-95 Lt. Cdr. P. K. Garg (Joint) Yachting (Team Event) 05 1995-96 Karnam Malleswari Weightlifting 06 1996-97 Nameirakpam Kunjarani (Joint) Weightlifting 06 1996-97 Leander Paes (Joint) Tennis 07 1997-98 Sachin Tendulkar Cricket 08 1998-99 Jyotirmoyee Sikdar Athletics 09 1999–2000 Dhanraj Pillay Hockey 10 2000-01 Pullela Gopichand Badminton 11 2001-02 Abhinav Bindra Shooting 12 2002-03 Anjali Ved Pathak Bhagwat (Joint) Shooting 12 2002-03 K. M. Beenamol (Joint) Athletics 13 2003-04 Anju Bobby George Athletics 14 2004-05 Lt. Col Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore Shooting 15 2005-06 Pankaj Advani Billiards and Snooker 16 2006-07 Manavjit Singh Sandhu Shooting 17 2007-08 Mahendra Singh Dhoni Cricket 18 2008-09 Mary Kom (Joint) Boxing 18 200
Change ur operator w/out chngin ur No. Sms PORT UrMobileNo to 1900. Then u vl get 8 digitCODE. giv ds CODE & ur ID 2 ur desired operator.(Rs.19 chrgd)

History

Jan. 18, 1778 - English navigator Captain James Cook discovered the Hawaiian Islands, which he called the "Sandwich Islands."
HERE'S WISHING YOU ALL A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM THE ENTIRE FREEGKSMS FAMILY! :) -+- Tamagellarigu Hosa Varsha-2011 ra Hardika Shubhashayagalu -+-
HERE'S WISHING YOU ALL A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM THE ENTIRE FREEGKSMS FAMILY! :) -+- Tamagellarigu Hosa Varsha-2011 ra Hardika Shubhashayagalu -+-