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CAP colleges admission forms issuance deadline extended
CAP forms issuance deadline extended
Karachi, Aug 21, 2008: The committee set up under the Centralized Admission
Policy-2008 for admission to first year classes in the city government colleges
has extended the date for purchasing prospectus/placement forms from banks up to
Aug 26. However, the committee is yet to decide about the last date for the
submission of the forms.
A member of the CAP committee, when asked,
stated that the students seeking admission to Class-XI were supposed to ensure
submission of their duly filled placement forms along with the required
documents by Aug 26, the new deadline for the issuance of the
forms.
Admission seekers and their parents appeared confused about the
matter as many of them desperately sought some information about any extension
in the date for the submission of forms.
They wondered why the CAP
committee was unable to extend the date, thus making people assume the same date
should be the last date for receiving and submitting the admission forms. "It
must be obligatory upon the CAP committee to fix a date for submitting the
placement forms different from that of the deadline for the issuance of the
forms. The committee should announce a schedule in unambiguous terms to remove
confusion," a woman caller from Gulshan-i-Iqbal said.
Meanwhile, the 42
HBL branches authorised to issue the placement forms along with prospectus for
admission in Class-XI have, so far, issued more than 80,000 sets to admission
seekers.
Your Comments
"When the CAP 2008 results will be announced?"
Name: Tahir Alvi
Email: tahir.alvi@geo.tv
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"Iam not satsfy your goverment education system"
Name: murtaza
Email: murtazaakbar69@yahoo.com
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"When CAP 2008 results will be announced."
Name: sarfaraz
Email: sarfaraz@pnsc.com.pk
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"When commerce admissions will be open? "
Name: Sunny
Email: sunnyvrj@yahoo.com
City, Country: Hyderabad, Pakistan
"When the CAP 2009 results will be announced?" how can we get cap forms??? "
Name: saniya
Email: sanya-zahid@hotmail.com
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"same Question! "When the CAP 2009 results will be announce?"
Name: gohar rehman
Email: goharrehman35@yahoo.com
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"When the CAP 2009 results will be announced?" how can we get cap forms???"
Name: shazad
Email: shazadahmed06@gmail.com
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"Thank u so mush,,,,,,,,,,,,, "
Name: Raheem
Email: raheemshah9@gmail.com
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"Assalamualikum am abdul wahab actualy i was not here in these dates were CAP form is filling ...! kindly ma request that i want addmision in scondry board so What can i do!!!!? now a dayz form is present in the bank that i purchased it ....please tell me ur suggesion ur hournable candidate!!!!!! "
Name: Abdul Wahab
Email: freshmind_w@hotmail.com
City, Country: Karachi, Pakistan
"plz let us know, what is the last date of submitting cap form 0f ssc year 2010?"
Name: fariha
Email: fariha_jannat93@live.com
City, Country: karachi, pakistan
"when cap form result will be come?"
Name: javairia anwar.
Email: javairia_94@yahoo.com
City, Country: pakistan, karachi.
"I WANT TO KNOW THE ISSUE DATE OF CAP FORM FOR B.E. AFTER DIPLOMA"
Name: ASHISH SARKATE
Email: www.ashish.ass29@rediffmail.com
City, Country: NAGPUR (INDIA)
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Consensus on fixing age limit for Matric-Technical admission
Karachi: A two-day meeting of controllers of examinations of
technical boards concluded here on Wednesday after recommending that the age for
a candidate of Technical School Certificate (Matric-Technical) Part-I
examination be fixed as 14-18 years.
The meeting, held under the aegis of
the Sindh Board of Technical Education (SBTE) at its campus, also unanimously
resolved to implement uniform assessment and promotion rules for Diploma of
Associates Engineer (DAE), Diploma of Business Administration (DBA), Diploma of
Commerce (DCom) and TSC/Matric (technical) courses.
There was also
consensus among participants of the meeting on the issue of promotion from first
year to second year in the DAE, DBA and DCom with the condition that the
promotion be allowed to only those students who would clear at least two
subjects.
According to SBTE controller of examinations Prof
Siraj-ul-Islam Bukhari, the meeting also recommended compulsory holding of
supplementary examination for DAE third year students, besides a separate grace
marks policy for DCom, DBA, DAE and TSC examinations.
The meeting
suggested certain changes in the grace marks policy in view of the fact that
aggregate marks in technical courses, except for the TSC, are far more than the
general education courses which should be awarded after completion of each
course.
The moot was opened by SBTE Chairman Mohammad Saeed Siddiqui and
attended, besides Mr Bhukhari, by Punjab Technical Board's controller of
examination Chaudhry Mohammad Jamil, NWFP Technical Board Chairman A. Ghaffar,
who also holds the charge of controller of examinations, deputy controller of
examinations of the Balochistan Technical, Intermediate and Secondary Education
Board Syed Salman Shah.
SBTE Chairman Mohammad Saeed Siddiqui, speaking
at the meeting, emphasised the need for promoting technical and vocational
education in the country, and hoped that the controllers of examinations of all
the technical boards of the country would ensure implementation of a uniform
policy vis-à-vis assessment and promotion rules. Dawn
Your Comments
"i want to know the date of announcing the result of deplomain business administration part 2 please inform me ."
Name: asma
Email: nikki.rathord@yahoo.com
City, Country: karachi,pakistan
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Bio-diesel is the best portable solution for our food and fuel crisis, shows NED expert
Karachi: Bio-diesel is an environment friendly fuel, with far less emissions
than mineral diesel fuel, and is the perfect solution for the food and fuel
crisis, according to NED University of Engineering and Technology, Department of
Environmental Engineering Co-Chairman Associate Prof. Dr Mohammed Harun.
"The fuel can be obtained by chemically converting non-edible oil from
plants that can thrive on marginal land and can be cultivated with saline and
waste water. Farmers should be given incentives to grow these non-edible crops,
as fuel prices are consistently rising," said Prof. Harun.
He said that
it was also possible to obtain organic balanced fertilizers, rich in nitrogen
and having less adverse effects on the soil, from the biomass waste of oilseeds.
"At present, Pakistan appears to be on the verge of a major food and fuel crisis
but, on the other hand, for the past few decades, the US and European countries
have been cultivating edible oil crops for bio fuel production, in an apparent
bid to reduce greenhouse emissions in the wake of global warming," he said.
Prof. Harun said that the use of edible crops for bio-diesel production,
such as the use of corn oil in USA and sugarcane in Brazil, was a mystifying
act, as it leads to unnecessary price hikes and shortages in less developed
countries. He said that Pakistan has the potential to cultivate non-edible oil
yielding plants, as more than 60 percent of Pakistan's land lies barren. The
bio-diesel can be used for buses, wagons and railway engines, helping in
reducing harmful emissions, and can also be utilized for power generation.
"There are around 100 million acres of barren land in Pakistan and
Pakistan State Oil has already taken a step in the right direction by planting
Jatropha plants in Sindh. They even converted the oil obtained to bio-diesel to
run one of their showcase vehicles and other plants, such as castor bean
(Arhand) and pongame (Sukh Chaen), can also be used," he said.
Prof.
Harun was confident that bio-diesel production from non-edible plants would
benefit Pakistan in several ways, such as the utilization of marginal land, work
for farmers, reduced pollution and a greener Pakistan. He especially stressed
upon the fact that bio-diesel production would give a boost to the economy, as
it can drastically cut down our fuel imports.
"These plants, such as
Jatropha Curcas and Castor bean plants can be grown in wastelands and consume
very less water. Plus, the cultivation of these plants, which includes seed
collection, oil extraction and the actual bio diesel production, will provide a
large number of employment opportunities," he said, adding that the by-products
of bio-diesel production, such as glycerin and seed cake, can be used in soap,
pharmaceutical and fertilizer industries.
Prof. Harun revealed that
1,000 Jatropha saplings cost Rs 5,000. "Jatropha cultivation has the potential
to generate an income of Rs 25,000 per hectare per month. On an average, 12 tons
of seeds are planted per hectare, from which 35 percent oil can be extracted,
and in the case of Castor bean, 8 tons of seeds per hectare produce 35 percent
oil. The maximum yield of Jatropha is around 1,892 Litres per hectare, while for
castor bean it is around 1,413 litres per hectare," said Prof. Harun. Daily Times
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