Monday, January 30, 2012
SOME USEFUL OBSERVATIONS IN OUR DAILY LIFE
1) Don't put your mobile closer to your ears until the recipient answers, Because directly after dialing, the mobile phone would use it's maximum signaling power, which is: 2watts = 33dbi. So, Please Be Careful. Please use left ear while using cell (mobile), because if you use the right one it may affect the brain directly. This is a true, a fact having been confirmed by Apollo Medical Team.
2) Do not drink APPY FIZZ . It contains cancer causing agent.
3) Don't eat Mentos before or after drinking Coke or Pepsi coz the person will die immediately as the mixture becomes cyanide.
4) Don't eat kurkure because it contains high amount of plastic. If U want to confirm, burn kurkure and u can see plastic melting. - News report from Times of India
5) Avoid these tablets as they are very dangerous
* D cold
* Vicks action- 500
* Actified
* Coldarin
* Co some
* Nice
* Nimulid
* Cetrizet-D
They contain Phenyl- Propanol -Amide PPA. Which causes strokes, and mind you, these tablets are banned in U.S.
6) Cotton Ear Buds... Please do not show sympathy to people selling ear-buds on roadside or at signals....... Pl be warned, that it is potentially unsafe to buy those packs of ear buds you get at the roadside. It's made from cotton that has already been used in hospitals.. They take all the dirty, blood and pus filled cotton, wash it, bleach it and use it to make these ear buds. So, unless you want to become the first person in the world to get Herpes Zoster Oticus (a viral infection of the inner, middle, and external ear) of the ear and that too from a cotton bud, pl don't buy them. It is safe to buy ear buds from an authorized medical store. Please forward to all your near and dear ones....!
source : extracted from other web pages
source : extracted from other web pages
ABOUT POST BANK - NEWS
Postal Dept works towards Bank Permit
The department of posts will formulate a detailed project report for setting up a bank, in the XII Plan.
“The postal department has already conducted a study and has found that the proposal is feasible. DPR (detailed project report) is the next step to chalk out the exact blueprint for the model,” a senior official from the department of posts (DoP) told Business Standard.
The department will apply for a banking licence from the Reserve Bank of India. Post Bank of India may be set up with the required authorised capital of Rs 700 crore, the official added.
“The plan is to offer banking services in rural and semi-urban areas by converting our post offices into banks. The department has about 1.5 lakh post offices across the country, which is mainly located in rural areas,” a source said.
The department also operates the Post Office Savings Bank, where it has over 240 million savings accounts. It has a customer base of over 23.75 crore with an outstanding balance of Rs 6,19,611 crore as on March 31, 2011.
The postal department offers schemes such as savings account, recurring deposit, time deposit, monthly income account scheme, postal life insurance, public provident fund, Kisan Vikas Patras and National Savings Certificates.
The feasibility report has already laid out ownership, capital and organisational structure, as well as new product and services to be offered, among others.
According to working group report for XII Plan, the demand for rural banking is particularly high with only 39 per cent of households covered by institutional banking. Globally, postal organisations have transformed financial services into banks successfully. The global firms include Deutsche Post Bank, Japan Post Bank, Kiwi Bank, La Banque Postale (France).
The department is also focusing aggressively on its postal life insurance product. According to the information with the postal department, the department has about 5 million policies under postal life insurance with an assured amount of Rs 58,132 crore, while under rural postal life insurance; it has about 13 million policies with an assured amount of Rs 67,162 crore.
The PLI has been clocking an average growth rate of 32 per cent in terms of premium income while the growth rate of RPLI stood at 60 per cent in terms of premium income in 2009-10 over the previous year.
CBI to adopt Bihar law to seize property of corrupt Officials--NEWS
Patna, Jan 29, 2012(IANS): Impressed with confiscation of the ill-gotten property of corrupt officials in Bihar under a special law to fight corruption, the CBI is set to adopt the legislation soon, officials said.
The CBI is studying the Bihar government’s Special Courts Act, 2009 that enables it to confiscate the properties of corrupt officials with ease and in a short period.“The CBI has approached the state government to understand the useful clauses of the act that give power to confiscate (accused’s) property before conviction,”said Bihar additional director general P K Thakur.
Thakur said that Bihar’s success in confiscating the ill-gotten property of corrupt officials was lauded by CBI officials, who contacted the state government with a view to adopt the special law.
The Special Courts Act, 2009 allows the confiscation of property of public servants, including bureaucrats, legislators and MPs, while they face trial for corruption charges.
“The CBI is keen to adopt Bihar’s model to confiscate ill-gotten property of corrupt officials, as it is easy and effective,” Thakur said.
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