BHEL JOBS

BHEL JOBS
Latest Job in Bhel

Saturday, October 13, 2012

1987 Siachen hero Brigadier Varinder Singh passes away | Brigadier Varinder Singh's biography

1987 Siachen hero  Brigadier Varinder Singh passws away | Brigadier Varinder Singh's biography

The Indian military on Saturday bade farewell to the man who led one of its most daunting operations in recent memory, at a snow peak over 21,000 feet high and across frozen bodies of his fallen comrades, to evict enemy soldiers occupying a post named after the founder of their nation.
    Brigadier Varinder Singh, then a young Major, led the small assault team of 8 Jammu & Kashmir Light Infantry that captured the Quaid Post in Siachen glacier on June 26, 1987, after weeks of laborious, logistically challenging operation and several casualties.
    Singh (57) collapsed on Friday while playing basketball, and passed away a few hours later. He is survived by his wife Anita, a daughter and a son. Once Singh’s team captured it, Quaid Post was renamed Bana Top, after Subedar Bana Singh, a member of Singh’s assault team, who was awarded Param Vir Chakra, the highest gallantry award for the operation. Maj Singh, who was wounded in the operation, was awarded Vir Chakra.
    “We had no strength to celebrate... Ultimately, sheer doggedness wins. If we had once hesitated, Quaid would still be with Pakistan,” Singh told a defence blog recently.
    The 1987 operation, many would argue, was the peak of Indo-Pak hostilities in some sense, stretching their hatred to the highest peak in a forlorn glacier that was beyond the gaze of all invading armies and expanding empires through centuries.

Result of recruitment of Mate(SSK) : CWE Bengdubi held on 02.09.2012 |

Result of recruitment of Mate(SSK) : CWE Bengdubi held on 02.09.2012 |
For see result see below

Recruitment of Various vacancy on vaious Zonal railways and Units by Railway recruitmnet Boards , Ministry of Railways dated 13.10.2012 | last date 12.11.2012

Recruitment of Various vacancy on vaious Zonal railways and Units by Railway recruitmnet Boards , Ministry of Railways dated 13.10.2012 | last date 12.11.2012

For more details see below

Recruitment of Land/Revenue records consultant at Rail land Development Authority dated 14.10.2012 | Advt No : RLDA/SA/ESTT/Consultant/2012 of October-12

Recruitment of Land/Revenue records consultant at Rail land Development Authority  dated 14.10.2012 | Advt No : RLDA/SA/ESTT/Consultant/2012 of October-12

For more details see below

Tata Innovation Fellowship - 2012-13 of Ministry of Science and Technology , Dept of Biotechnology , Govt of India - 2012

Tata Innovation Fellowship - 2012-13 of Ministry of Science and Technology , Dept of Biotechnology , Govt of India - 2012

For more details see below

Abhilash Tomy' biography , a naval pilot will set out on a six-month non-stop journey around the world .



 Pull, pull! Harder, faster,” exhorts Lt Commander Abhilash Tomy as three sailors — their muscles glistening in the afternoon sun — hoist the massive sail onto the 70-foot high mast. We are onboard the Mhadei, the boat that will take Tomy on a journey around the world almost a fortnight from now. It’s a solo circumnavigation attempt — the first time an Indian will be doing it without any stops or onboard assistance. The prospects are daunting. For instance, just the task of putting up the sail this morning—which has taken three able-bodied men a lot of tugs, grunts and sweat — is what the 33-year-old Indian navy officer, a trained Dornier pilot — would be doing on his own, quite possibly in choppy waters when winds billow at speeds of upto 100 km/hr.
    Does he have butterflies in his stomach? It’s a question that has been asked countless times to the Kochi lad who started sailing when he was sixteen. “Nobody believes it when I tell them I’m not having nightmares,” says Tomy with a grin that puts dimples on his tanned face. He is at the steering wheel of the Mhadei; the wind is pleasant; the sea soothing and we are doing a comfortable 5-6 knots off the placid Goa coast.
    But things would be different when he
is out on the globe’s mighty oceans. His sixmonth long voyage on the 56-footer boat — that cost about Rs 4 crore to make— will take him south of all the great capes — Leeuwin, Cape Horn, Cape of Good Hope and across the Atlantic and Pacific. “I know anything can happen when you’re out on the sea. I can break the mast, lose the rudder, collide with another ship or even fall overboard,” he says. “But I’m not thinking about any of it. I’ve wanted to do this voyage for more than 11 years and now that I’m doing it, I am just very very excited and focused on preparing for it.”
    A large part of the preparations involve keeping himself mentally and physically fit. “The weakest link on the boat is the sailor,” he admits candidly. “Usually, the sailor gives up before the boat does. That’s why keeping yourself well-nourished is extremely important.” Yoga and meditation are already part of his daily routine; to keep energy levels high — dieticians have recommended an average calorie intake of 3500 kcal per day for him— he’s packing in a mix of fresh food, tinned and ready to eat stuff along with rice, dal, dry fish and pickles. Also on board are two cooking gas cylinders and about 200 bottles of fresh water.
Keeping Tomy company when he sets out on the great, deep blue will be a stack of around 20 books (he’s left the choice of titles to a friend) and a satellite phone which will be his only link with the world. Will he miss not being in contact with family and friends? “I like being alone,” he says. “It may sound strange but my primary motivation for doing this voyage is not to set
a record but to savour the experience of being alone for six months. Also, thank god, I won’t be receiving any pesky calls.”
    But the people he’ll probably miss the most, apart from his mom (“I had to convince her for two years to let me do this”) are his man Friday Alam who, stoic and silent, helps him out even as he steers the boat to port (“He’s the unsung hero of this voyage; I’ll miss him terribly”) and his mentor Commander Dilip Donde. Donde — who sports a bushy chalk-white beard — became the first Indian to successfully complete a solo circumnavigation (with stops) two years ago. Tomy cut his teeth on the Mhadei acting as Donde’s shore support during his circumnavigation and later graduated to sailing with him, finally donning the skipper’s hat in a journey from Rio to Capetown. He brought the Mhadei alone from Capetown to Goa, eventually clocking a total of 25,000 miles of ocean sailing on the boat in
    the past few years.
Sitting on the deck after a climb up the mast along with Tomy as part of the ongoing drill to check for repairs, Donde is aware of the challenges his protégé faces — not just on sea but also on land.
“Even as I was setting out, there were plenty of naysayers who had predicted that the chances of the boat coming back were nil,” he says. “I had a point to prove and this kept me going.”
Tomy, though, prefers to shrug off what people might think. “It may seem like an insane idea to some,” he says with an impish grin. “But to borrow a line from Catch 22 — it’s more insane on land.”

Tender Notice for BCCI invites for a new India premier league franchise (IPL) | BCCI tender notification -2012

Tender Notice for BCCI invites for a new India premier league franchise (IPL) | BCCI tender notification -2012

For more details see below

UK Teen Fabiola Mann' Biography who beats Einstein's IQ | Mensa IQ

UK Teen Fabiola Mann' Biography who beats Einstein's IQ | Mensa IQ

With a Mensa IQ score of 162, a 15-year-old London teenager with Goan roots has beaten Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking. Fabiola Mann’s IQ has put her in the top 1% of intelligent people in the world, two points over the 160 scored by the scientific greats.
    Mensa, founded in 1946 as a society for intelligent people, awarded Fabiola her membership certificate in August this year. The Harrow-on-the-Hill-resident, who wants to study medicine at Cambridge University and become a
surgeon “because I like the idea of helping people”, told STOI from London that she wasn’t expecting the score.
    “I had heard about Mensa and so decided to take their test,” Fabiola said in an email. Being “always interested in puzzles”, she “begged” her parents to apply for the test and paid the fee.
    On July 30, the Northwood College School pupil sat down for a formal, supervised, three-hour test at the London UCL medical college. “The questions were slightly more confusing (from the practice IQ tests online) and we did not have much time to do them, so I could not really tell how I was doing,” said Fabiola.
    She had to wait for a month for her scores instead of the customary two weeks as the results were lost in transit. “We went on holiday soon after (the test), and it was a month before I finally got a letter through post telling me that I had an IQ of 162 and was invited to join Mensa. I was thrilled,” said Fabiola. Amazed at my daughter’s IQ: Fabiola’s mom
    Her mother Rene, a Margao native who moved to London in 1993 after marriage, said, “Obviously I had heard about Mensa and genius IQ level children, but I’m amazed that my own daughter is one.”
    Dad Anthony, who was born in England and is a lecturer, informed Fabiola’s school, which in turn contacted local UK newspapers. Fabiola was interviewed by BBC in September and is also mentioned on the Mensa website. In her interview with ‘Harrow Observer’, the paper observed that “162 is the highest possible score anyone can achieve in the UK and European test”.
    Asked what the Mensa membership means to Fabiola, Rene, a news producer for Associated Press Television Network, told STOI from London, “People keep asking me the same thing, and to be honest I don’t know. Hopefully it will mean an entry into the best universities and later job opportunities.”
    She quickly adds, “Of course Fabiola did not do (the test) for those reasons, these are just a mother’s dreams. More than that, I hope she can go forward and realize her potential and do good in this world.”
    Fabiola’s hobbies include martial arts — she has a purple belt in karate, and started taekwondo this year —chess and music. She plays the piano and guitar and according to her peers has an “amazing voice”. She also loves creative writing and is currently working on a novel. Fabiola’s Margaobased grandparents Palikaran George, 79, and Teresa, 67, are “speechless” on their granddaughter’s feat and can’t wait for her to visit in December.

Latest Jobs in Delhi Metro 2015

Latest Jobs in Delhi Metro 2015
Latest Jobs in Delhi Metro 2015