Wednesday, August 29, 2012

RRC South Western Railway, Hubli Recruitment of Group-D Posts


Applications in the prescribed format are invited from eligible Indian Nationals for filling up of following 790 various Group-D posts in South Western Railway, Hubli in the pay scale of Rs.5200-20200 grade pay Rs.1800/- (age : 18-33 years as on 01/01/2012) :

Trackman/ Helper/ Porter/ Hamal/ Sweeper cum Porter/ Safaiwala etc.

Education Qualifications :
Candidates must have at least 10th class or ITI to apply.

Age Limit :
Min. Age – 18 and Max. Age – 33

Age Relaxation:
Age Relaxation will be given to the categories according to the Govt Rules for reserved category.

Application Fee : Rs.40/- in the form of DD/ IPO  in favour of FA&CAO/SWR/Hubli  payable at Hubli. Candidates belonging to SC/ST, PWD(PH), Women, Minority Communities and Economically Backward Classes/Sections are exempted from payment of examination fees.


Selection Process :
Selection process is based on performance in based on the performance in Written exam, PET and Medical test.



How to Apply : Applications in the prescribed format complete in all respects along with required enclosures should be sent by post to the Assistant Personnel Officer (Recruitment), Railway Recruitment Cell, DRM Office Compound, South Western Railway, Hubli - 580020, so as to reach on or before 28/09/2012 up to 18.00 hrs. For candidates residing in Far-Flung areas and North-East, the closing date for receipt of applications by post will be 13/10/2012 up to 18.00 hrs.

For more Details Visit:  http://www.swr.indianrailways.gov.in/uploads/files/1345868686438-E_NotificationNo1_2012.pdf

Monday, August 27, 2012

RRC Eastern Railway Recruitment of Group-D Posts

 
Eastern Railway, Kolkata invites Applications in the prescribed format from eligible Candidates for filling up 1990 Group-D posts,  in the pay scale of Rs.5200-20200 grade pay Rs.1800/- 

  • Helper-II/Khalashi/ Store Khalashi/ Peon/Sweeper/ Safaiwala/ Helper-II/ Chowkidar/ Porter/ Waiting Room Bearer/ Parcel Porter/ W.B.Portar/Station Peon/ Call Peon/ Keyman/ Gateman 
Education Qualifications :
Candidates must have at least 10th class or ITI to apply .
 

Age : 
18-33 years as on 01/01/2012
 

Application Fee :
Rs.40/- in the form of DD/ IPO  in favour of Assistant Personnel Officer (Recruitment), Railway Recruitment Cell, Eastern Railway” payable at “KOLKATA. Candidates belonging to SC/ST, PWD(PH), Women, Minority Communities and Economically Backward Classes/Sections are exempted from payment of examination fees.


How to Apply :
Applications in the prescribed format complete in all respects along with required enclosures should be sent by post to the Assistant Personnel Officer (Recruitment), Railway Recruitment Cell, Eastern Railway, 56, C.R.Avenue, RITES Building, 1st Floor, Kolkata – 700 012, so as to reach on or before 01/10/2012 up to 18.00 hrs. For candidates residing in Far-Flung areas and North-East, the closing date for receipt of applications by post will be 16/10/2012 up to 18.00 hrs.


For more Details Visit http://www.rrcer.com

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Food Corporation of India Assistant Grade III Recruitment



Food 
 Corporation of India (FCI) had announced  Recruitment in 2012, as it had advertised 6545 Assistant Grade III vacancies.The Detailed Advt cum Notification for the SSC FCI Exam 2012 will be published in the Employment News Paper Dated: 25th Aug, 2012.The Online Registrations for the SSC FCI Exam 2012-13 will start from 25th Aug, 2012 and the Last Date to apply Online is 21st Sept, 2012.However for Candidates belonging to Far fling ares the Last Date will be 28th Sept,2012.


 Zone-Wsie Break up of FCI Assistant Grade III vacancies


North-Zone Assistant Grade III Vacancies
Name of the posts
Post Code
SC
ST
OBC
PWD
Ex-Ser
UR
Total
AG III (General)

A
96
20
120
15
74
280
516
AG III (Accounts)

B
54
03
56
08
34
125
238
AG III (Technical)

C
365
20
321
50
239
946
1652
AG III (Depot) 

D
134
0
151
19
89
332
617
Now

East-Zone Assistant Grade III Vacancies
Name of the posts
Post Code
SC
ST
OBC
PWD
Ex-Ser
UR
Total
AG III (General)

A
13
10
13
03
10
49
85
AG III (Accounts)

B
26
14
28
04
20
74
142
AG III (Technical)

C
77
37
83
11
60
214
411
AG III (Depot) 

D
22
09
21
04
16
63
115

 
WEST-Zone Assistant Grade III Vacancies
Name of the posts
Post Code
SC
ST
OBC
PWD
Ex-Ser
UR
Total
AG III (General)

A
04
09
08
02
09
41
62
AG III (Accounts)

B
03

07
06
01
07
31
47
AG III (Technical)

C
50
79
92
14
69
253
474
AG III (Depot) 

D
29
47
55
09
41
155
286

 
South-Zone Assistant Grade III Vacancies
Name of the posts
Post Code
SC
ST
OBC
PWD
Ex-Ser
UR
Total
AG III (General)

A
23
06
42
05
23
85
156
AG III (Accounts)

B
21
05
36
04
19
72
134
AG III (Technical)

C
103
23
187
19
91
318
631
AG III (Depot) 

D
111
30
199
22
107
398
738


North East-Zone Assistant Grade III Vacancies
Name of the posts
Post Code
SC
ST
OBC
PWD
Ex-Ser
UR
Total
AG III (General)

A
02
12
02
0
02
23
39
AG III (Accounts)

B
04
25
13
02
12
47
89
AG III (Technical)

C
05
33
13
03
15
61
113

   Age Limit : Max: 27 years


Educational Qualifications:
  • For AG III (General ) and AG III (Depot) :  Graduation in any discipline from a recognised University of India.
  • For AG III (Accounts) : Graduation Degree in B Com.
  • For AG III (Technical) : Degree in B Sc. Agriculture OR Degree in B Sc (Botany/Zoology/Bio-Technology/Bio-Chemistry/Microbiology/Food Science) OR B.Tech./BE in Food Science/Food Science & Technology/Agricultural Engineering/Bio-Technology
Note: Computer Proficiency is must for all these posts

Selection Procedure:

The Selection Procedure for the Recruitment of Assistant Grade III in FCI Shall consists of a Written Test.The Details of Written test (Paper-I, Paper-II and Paper-III) are given as under

Paper-I : The Paper-I in an Objective Paper of 200 marks that have duration of 2 hours that contains sections such as General Intelligence, General Awareness, Quantitative Aptitude, English Language.Paper-I will be held on 11.11.2012

Paper-II : The Paper-II is also an Objective Paper of 200 marks with 2 hours of Duration. In Paper-II, the Questions will be asked on Quantitative Methods and English Language & comprehension.Paper-II will be held on 06.1.2013

Paper-III: Paper-III is only for those candidates who have applied for AG III Technical Posts. The Duration of Paper-III will be hours and Questions will asked on Biological Sciences. Paper-III will be held on 06.1.2013


For AG-IIII (General, Accounts and Depot Posts): Candidates who have applied for these posts will have to appear only in Paper-I and Paper-II.

For AG-III (Technical Posts): Candidates who have applied for this Post will have to appear in Paper-I and Paper-II.

Note: 

1) Paper-I is for shortlisting candidates for Paper-II and Paper-III
2) Selected Candidates in the Paper-II and Paper-III will have to undergo a Computer Proficiency Test, based on which they will be considered for Final Selection.
3) There will be no exemption from Computer Proficiency Test

 How to apply:

In order to apply for Assistant Grade -III Jobs in Food Corporation of India (FCI), applicants are required to apply Online and Submit the Online Application before the Last Date ie 21st Sept, 2012

Applicantion Fees: Applicants are required to pay an application fee of Rs 200 either Online at the time of filling Online form OR Offline through a Challan form in any branch of State Bank of India (SBI)

Online Application: Before applying Online,, candidates must note that they must apply with in the Dates for Submitting the Online Application. The Dates for Submitting the Online Application is 25th Aug, 2012 to 21st Sept, 2012.Applications can be submitted Online at the Official Websites .ie www.ssconline.nic.in and www.ssconline2.gov.in.The Online Registration will be done in two Parts ie Part-I and Part-II

Part-I Registration : In Part-I Registration, you have to fill the basic Details by following the On-screen Instructions.After completion of Part-I registration, the System will generate a Registration No, that must be noted down.Then proceed for Part-II Registration

Part-II Registration : In Part-II Registration, the Candidates will have to Upload the scanned Photo and Scanned signature and Filling the Application fee details (For offline Payment Mode) OR Making Online Payment of Application fee(For Online Payment Mode)

After, completion of Part-II Registration, a Conformation email will be sent to the candidates. 

For more Details Visit http://fciweb.nic.in

POSTAL / SORTING ASSISTANTS PATTERN OF EXAMINATION


    The Applicants shall be subjected to an Aptitude Test with  a total 100 marks covering the following subjects/topics. Aptitude Test will be comprising following four parts (A/B/C/D). The total duration of the Aptitude Test will be 2 Hrs. (120 minutes). There is no negative marking.

Part - A:    25 Questions on General Knowledge - Questions on Current events, Sports, History, Geography, Basic economics, General Polity, Indian Constitution, Science environment etc. - 25 Marks

Part - B:    25 Questions on Mathematics of matriculation standard which may cover number system, simplification, decimals, corrections, simple and compound interest, percentage, average, profit & loss, discount, mensuration, time & work and time & distance etc. - 25 Marks

Part - C:    25 Questions on English covering grammar (prepositions, adverbs, conjunction, direct / indirect speech, singular & plural, tenses, antonyms / synonyms etc. - 25 Marks

Part - D:    25 Questions on  Reasoning and Analytical Ability - 25 Marks

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Indian Bank Specialist Officers Recruitment

 
Indian Bank invites ONLINE Application from India citizen who have taken Common Written Examination(CWE) for Specialist Officers conducted by Institute of Banking Personnel Selection(IBPS), Mumbai on 11.03.2012 and have valid score card issued by IBPS and meet the eligibility criteria.

1. Legal Officer : 25 Posts
2. Computer Officer (IT Officer)
: 10 Posts
3. Rural Development Officer/Asst Manager (Agri) 
: 151 Posts
4. Rajbhasha Adhikari/Hindi Officer/Asst Manager (OL)
: 29 Posts

Age: Candidates age should be below 32 Years for Legal officer , Computer Officer (IT Officer) Recruitment Posts . And Who is Candidate are going to apply for all other remaining post then your age should be below 30 years as on 1 December 2011 .

Selection process: Candidates will be selected on IBPS CWE Score card and Personal interview base .

How To Apply: Eligible candidate mus apply Online through INDIAN BANK- IBPS website link provided below before 5th September 2012.
 
Important Dates:
Date of Commencement of Application: 22/08/2012
Date of Closure: 05/09/2012
Start Date for Fee deposit:22/08/2012
Last Date for Fee deposit: 05/09/2012
Last Date for Reprint: 20/09/2012
 
 

Friday, August 17, 2012

RRC SOUTH CENTRAL RAILWAY GROUP-D 1250 POSTS RECRUITMENT


Railway Recruitment Cell (RRC) South Central Railway invites applications for recruitment of Group D vacancies to fill up 1250 posts.



MINIMUM EDUCATIONAL QUALIFICATIONS:
Candidates should possess the qualification of 10th Pass or ITI or equivalent.Candidates appearing at and/or awaiting results of the final examinations of 10th/ITI or equivalent on the date of application are not eligible to apply.

AGE LIMIT:
The normal age (in completed years) for the recruitment is 18-33 years reckoned as on 01.01.2013.

APPLICATION FEE:
Rs. 40/- (Rupees forty only) are, in a form of crossed Demand Draft from State Bank of India or from any other Nationalized Bank or crossed Indian Postal Order drawn in favour of Assistant Personnel Officer (Recruitment), Railway Recruitment Cell, Secunderabad – 500 071 payable at Hyderabad or Secunderabad. Remittance of examination fee in any other form will not be accepted. These instruments should not have been issued earlier to 17.08.2012.

HOW TO APPLY:
Candidates should submit the applications in the format annexed as Annexure- 1 to this Notification.
The application should be on good quality A-4 size bond paper (80 GSM) using one side only. News paper cuttings should not be used as applications.
Candidates should ensure that application on a single sheet conforming to the above specifications. The candidates can also download the application format from the web site: www.scr.indianrailways.gov.in. Candidates using printed application form from any other source should ensure that it conforms to the prescribed format.

WHOM TO APPLY:
 The filled in application form along with the required documents should be addressed to the Assistant Personnel Officer (Recruitment), Railway Recruitment Cell, 1st Floor, ‘C’ Block, Rail Nilayam, South Central Railway, Secunderabad – 500 071.
On the envelope containing the application it should be clearly been written “APPLICATION FOR ERSTWHILE GROUP-D POSTS - GRADE PAY 1800/-”, EMPLOYMENT NOTICE NO. RRC/SCR/GROUP-D/1/2012.




Can Fin Homes Junior Officers Recruitment

Can Fin Homes Invites application from eligible Candidates for the following post on Contract Basis for Karnataka and Kerala Branches. The details are given below :

Name of the Post : Junior Officers

No. of Posts : 15 (Karnataka – 7 Posts ; Tamilnadu – 8 Posts)

Period of Contract : one year, Which may be extended by one more year or even more.



Qualification : Graduate in any discipline with knowledge of computer operation. Candidates should be able to read,write and speak the local language. Two wheeler license is essential.

Age Limit : 21 – 30 years as on 1st August 2012.

Application fee : Rs.100/- DD drawn on Can Fin Homes Limited, Payable at Bangalore.

How to apply : Candidates are required to apply in the prescribed format. The application complete in all respects with the necessary enclosures viz one recent size passport size photo and application fee. The application  should be addressed to The Assistant General Manager – HRM, CanFin Homes Limited, No.29/1 First floor, Sir.M.N.Krishna Rao Road, Basavangudi, Bangalore – 560 004.

Last Date : 27th August 2012



Wednesday, August 15, 2012

London Olympics, 2012

On August 12, 2012, London bade a flamboyant and madcap farewell to the Olympic Games with a romp through British pop and fashion, bringing the curtain down on more than two weeks of action that ended with USA topping the sporting world with 46 gold medals.

Actor Timothy Spall read from Shakespeare’s “The Tempest” dressed as war-time Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and after a London “rush hour” featuring real cars and trucks, Prince Harry entered to represent his grandmother Queen Elizabeth.

The Spice Girls, Take That and George Michael were among the acts taking part in an exuberant finale that sought to sum up Britain’s enthusiasm for the Games despite reservations about the 9 billion pound cost.

During a special eight-minute segment, the stadium was bathed in the colours and sounds of Brazil, as the Olympics looked ahead to 2016 when Rio de Janeiro is the host city.

The Olympic flag was handed to Eduardo Paes, Rio’s Mayor, before International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge described the London Games as “happy and glorious” and declared them closed—the words taken from Britain’s national anthem to the queen.

The main stadium was the setting for some of the most spectacular moments of the Games, including Jamaican sprint king Usain Bolt defending the 100, 200 and 4x100 metres titles he won in Beijing, the latter in a world-beating time.

British supporters will also cherish memories of the venue, where Somali-born runner Mo Farah won the 5,000 and 10,000 double to deafening roars and was celebrated as a symbol of the capital’s multi-culturalism.

The hosts won 29 golds to take third place in the rankings, their best result for 104 years, helping lift a nation beset by severe spending cuts and worried about social stability a year after violent riots swept parts of the capital.

Many will remember London 2012 for the record-breaking exploits of American swimmer Michael Phelps, who took his life-time medal haul to 22 including 18 golds, making him the most decorated Olympian in history. His tally helped the United States to the top of the Olympic table with 46 golds to second-placed China’s 38, reversing the order of the Beijing Games in 2008.

There was, of course, Bolt, the biggest name in athletics and a charismatic ambassador for sprinting. After winning the 4x100 he went on to a London nightclub to delight dancing fans with a turn as a DJ, shouting out “I am a legend” to the packed dance-floor.

Opening Ceremony
On July 27, 2012, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth declared the London Olympics open after playing a cameo role in a dizzying ceremony designed to highlight the grandeur and eccentricities of the nation that invented modern sport.

Children’s voices, intertwining from the four corners of her United Kingdom, ushered in an exuberant historical pageant of meadows, smokestacks and digital wizardry before an audience of 60,000 in the Olympic Stadium, and a probable billion television viewers around the globe.

Many of them gasped at the sight of the 86-year-old queen, marking her Diamond Jubilee this year, putting aside royal reserve in a video where she stepped onto a helicopter with James Bond actor Daniel Craig to be carried aloft from Buckingham Palace.

A film clip showed doubles of her and Bond skydiving towards the stadium and, moments later, she made her entrance in person.

More than 10,000 athletes from 204 countries competed in 26 sports over 17 days of competition in the only city to have staged the modern Games three times.

Most of them were there for the traditional alphabetical parade of the national teams, not least the athletes from Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Yemen competing in their first Olympics since their peoples overthrew autocrats in Arab Spring revolutions.

Brunei and Qatar were led in by their countries’ first ever female Olympians and so, along with Saudi Arabia, ended their status as the only countries to exclude women from their teams.

At the end of a three-hour extravaganza, David Beckham, the English soccer icon who had helped convince the IOC to grant London the Games, stepped off a speedboat carrying the Olympic flame at the end of a torch relay that inspired many ordinary people around Britain.

Past Olympic heroes including Muhammad Ali, who lit the cauldron at the 1996 Atlanta Games, and British rower Steve Redgrave, the only person to win gold at five successive games, welcomed the flame into the stadium.

Yet it was not a celebrity but seven teenage athletes who lit a spectacular arrangement of over 200 copper ‘petals’ representing the participating countries, which rose up in the centre of the stadium to converge into a single cauldron.

India’s Performance
   

     
India’s tally of two silver and 4 bronze medals was its best tally in Olympics. 81 athletes from India had competed in 13 sports.

Sushil Kumar became the first Indian to get back-to-back Olympic medals. He won silver medal in 66kg Freestyle Wrestling. He had won a bronze medal in the Beijing Olympics.

Subedar Vijay Kumar Sharma of 16 Dogra Regiment bagged silver medal in 25m rapid fire pistol event.

Yogeshwar Dutt, 2010 CWG gold winner, won India its fourth Bronze medal in 60kg freestyle Wrestling.

Five-time world champion MC Mary Kom won a bronze medal in women’s boxing (51 kg) event. Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna (2009), Arjuna Award (2003) and Padamshree (2006) awardee, Mary Kom is the first Indian women boxer to qualify for Olympics. The 29-year-old boxer from Manipur came back from a two-year sabbatical after the birth of her twins to clinch her fourth successive world title in 2008, a feat that got her the sobriquet ‘Magnificent Mary’.

Ace marksman Gagan Narang opened India’s account in London Olympics by clinching a bronze medal in the men's 10 meter air. The burly Indian, who narrowly missed the final in Beijing, raised his gun above his head as his many compatriots in the crowd cheered loudly at the country's first medal of the Games.

Beijing Games gold medalist Abhinav Bindra, however, could not defend his title and crashed out of the event.

Saina Nehwal won women’s singles bronze in badminton when her opponent Wang Xin of China broke down with a knee injury after taking the opening game. Nehwal, ranked fifth in the world, became only the second Indian woman to win a medal in an individual Olympic sport.

22-year-old Irfan from Kerala did not win any medal but produced the best effort by an Indian in an Olympic walking event, finishing 10th in the 20km race, with a national record to boot.

In Hockey, India finished last in their group. This was the first time in Olympic history that India lost all their group matches.

History of India in Olympics
The first authentic Indian team took part at the 1920 Antwerp Olympic Games in athletics and wrestling. A National Olympic Committee was finally formed in 1927.
India's greatest successes at the Olympics have come in men’s hockey. They won every men’s title from 1928 to 1956. In 1960 they reached the final but lost to Pakistan to end the sequence. India were an ever present on the men’s hockey medal podium until 1976 and their last gold medal success in this sport came at the Moscow 1980 Olympic Games.

Indian shooters have challenged for medals in the new millennium. Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore won silver in the men’s double trap in Athens 2004. Shooter Abinav Bindra became India’s first individual gold medalist when he won the 10m air rifle at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.

At the 1900 Olympic Games in Paris, Norman Pritchard had won silver medals in the men’s 200m and the now discontinued 200m hurdles. He was the first medal winner born in India but confusion surrounds his nationality as India was then under British rule.

HIGHLIGHTS
Jamaica's Usain Bolt won the men’s 100m race in 9.63 seconds—a new Olympic record. Yohan Blake ran 9.75 for the silver. Justin Gatlin got the bronze in 9.79. With the exception of former world record holder Asafa Powell everyone finished under 10 seconds.

Bolt sealed his status as the greatest sprinter of all times after retaining the men’s Olympic 100m title.  The world’s fastest man and his Jamaica relay team mates provided three of the enduring moments of the Games. The showman opened his campaign with a Games record in the 100 metres, followed up by becoming the first man to retain his titles in the 100 and 200m—where Jamaica finished 1-2-3—and then anchored the 4x100 relay to a world record time.

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce of Jamaica won the women’s 100m race. With the victory, she became the first woman to repeat in the 100 since Gail Devers of the US in 1992 and 1996.

Michael Phelps became the first male swimmer to win the same individual event at three straight Olympics, capturing the 200-meter individual medley for his 20th career medal—and 16th gold. He touched in 1 minute, 54.27 seconds, just off his winning time in Beijing, but still good enough for gold. His final tally: 18 career golds, 22 medals.

Tahmina Kohistani was the sole Afghani female athlete at the London Olympics.

Mexico got first Olympic football gold. It beat 5-time world champion Brazil in the final. South Korea beat Japan to win the bronze.

Germany won the gold in men’s hockey. The women’s gold was won by Netherlands, who became only the second team, after the great Australia side of the late 1990s, to win back-to-back Olympic titles.

Mo Farah won 5,000 and 10,000 meters gold. Mogadishu-born but proudly British, Farah’s feat was hailed as the greatest in the country’s athletic history. The first Briton to win a long-distance gold, he was only the seventh man to do the Olympic 5,000/10,000 double.

US women win 4x100 meters relay gold. Their record, a sizzling 40.82 seconds, smashed the world mark of 41.37 set by the old East Germany in 1985.

Saudi Arabia sent female athletes for the first time, ensuring every country competing was represented by both sexes. Judoka Wojdan Ali Seraj Abdulrahim Shaherkani, a painfully shy teenager with no international experience and wearing an ill-fitting suit and head-covering, made a brave debut in front of a global audience of millions. She lasted only 80 seconds but won plenty of applause nonetheless.

After years of battling for Olympic inclusion, female fighters finally had their moment. The first to take gold in the ring was 29-year-old British flyweight Nicola Adams whose previous jobs included tiling and working as an extra in television shows.

Kenyan David Rudisha’s world record-breaking time in 800 meters race was hailed as the standout performance of the Olympics

USA fell in love with gymnast Gabby Douglas, the “Flying Squirrel” who became the first African American to win an Olympic title in the women’s individual all-round event.

Kirani James's 400 metres gold was the first Olympic medal for Grenada. However, equally memorable was the moment after the semi-final heat when he and South African “Blade Runner” Oscar Pistorius, the first double amputee to compete on the track at a Games, exchanged name bibs.

After one hour 59 minutes and 48 seconds of swimming, cycling and running, Switzerland’s Nicola Spirig and Sweden’s Lisa Norden crossed the line together in women’s triathlon. It took a photo-finish to separate them. The men’s race also stood out for the sight of British winner Alistair Brownlee winning gold.

Ye Shiwen, the 16-year-old Chinese swimmer, won two golds in London but her smashing of the 400 meters individual medley world record, with a time five seconds faster than her personal best, was astonishing.

A huge crowd packed the streets of central London to see Kiprotich win Uganda’s first medal of the Games. Running side by side with Kenya’s world champion Abel Kirui and Wilson Kipsang, the 23-year-old shook off his rivals and crossed the finish line draped in his national flag. He was Uganda's first gold medalist since John Akii-Bua 40 years ago in the 400m hurdles.

Mascot
Wenlock was the official mascot of the Games. The mascot was created and designed by iris, a London-based creative agency. Wenlock is an animation depicting two drops of steel from a steelworks in Bolton. It was named after the Shropshire town of Much Wenlock, which held a forerunner of the current Olympic Games.