Lecture 1 Date: 29.07.2013 1. Syllabi: 8 units available at Solapur University website also under courses link 2. Note down the books to be referred to: 1. Management: Stoner‚ Freeman and Gilbert 2. Management: Global Perspective: Heinz Weihrich‚ Cannice and Harold Koontz 3. Principles of Management: Tripathi and Reddy 4. Principles of Management – Ramasamy 5. Principles and Practices of Management – LM Prasad 6. International Management
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New York: Pearson‚ 2013‚ 10th Edition by Frederic S. Mishkin. (You cannot hope to do well in the course without this text.) Read each chapter multiple times. Each time you read the material‚ you come away with a more solid foundation. Your class notes cannot substitute for the studying the text. [REQUIRED] There are several options for buying a book: a. Custom text: the publisher has provided a custom version that contains only the chapters we will cover this semester and that can be purchased
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Immigration Notes Deportation Law Abbreviations Imm=immigration D=deportation Crim=criminal/criminality Br=British Fam=family IA=Immigration Act P=person BNA=British Nationality Act What do we need to know? British law‚ implications of Art8‚ EU citizens and their family members. To what extent migrants with a right of residence should be liable to expulsion after having been convicted of one or more criminal offences. Lecture Notes Concerned with people who have a right to stay and have that right
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Department of Lifelong Learning: Study Skills Series Note taking skills - from lectures and readings Introduction When you are at university‚ the sheer amount of information that is delivered to you can be daunting and confusing. You may even think that you have to copy down everything you hear or read. When you are at a face-to -face lecture it is sometimes difficult to tell what is important and what is not. Distance learning students might feel the need to copy out fact after fact from
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linguistics often defined as a phenomenon of 2 or more sounds or forms appearing in the same environment without a change in the meaning & without being considered incorrect by native speakers. Sounds in the English Language (Refer class notes) Important Notes : 1. The next higher unit than the speech sound (phoneme) ‚ the syllable is made up of one or more than one speech sound. 2. The vowel element is essential to the structure of a syllable i.e.‚ a syllable is not possible without the vowel
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Microprocessors and Microcontrollers/Interfacing with 8086 Lecture Notes Module 3 Learning unit 8: Interface • • • • • • • • • We have four common types of memory: Read only memory (ROM) Flash memory (EEPROM) Static Random access memory (SARAM) Dynamic Random access memory (DRAM). Pin connections common to all memory devices are: The address input‚ data output or input/outputs‚ selection input and control input used to select a read or write operation. Address connections: All memory devices
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UH and Chevron Simple Model of Matrix Porosity Cubic Packing of Identical Spheres Unit Cell Calculate the porosity. φ≡ S Pore Grain Vv VT Rg Vv = VT − Vg where Vg ≡ volume of grains 2D picture to aid 3D calculation Note: You must define the unit cell in such a way that the entire rock can be constructed from contiguous copies of the unit cell. However‚ the unit cell can be moved for computational convenience. Simple Model of
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CHAPTER 14 NOTES Article II Article II‚ the Constitution’s Executive Article‚ begins this way: “The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.” With these few words‚ the Framers established the presidency. Why Presidential Power Has Grown * Over the course of American history‚ the champions of a stronger presidency have almost always prevailed. * The nation’s increasingly complex social and economic life has also influenced the growth of presidential
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46 50 54 58 60 67 68 72 80 81 83 86 These notes may be used freely by A level biology students and teachers‚ and they may be copied and edited. Please do not use these materials for commercial purposes. I would be interested to hear of any comments and corrections. Neil C Millar (nmillar@ntlworld.co.uk) Head of Biology‚ Heckmondwike Grammar School High Street‚ Heckmondwike‚ WF16 0AH July 2011 HGS Biology A-level notes NCM/7/11 AS Biology Unit 1 page 2 Biology Unit
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ADMS 2610 Law Notes Ch 1- The Law and the Legal System The Sources and Components of Modern Canadian Law The Common Law Def’n- law found in the recorded judgments of the courts -everybody abides by it; is written in a book Statute law- law passed by a legislative body Stare decisisto let a decision stand -a judge must apply the previous decision of a case similar to the one before the court if the facts of the two cases are the sme -adaptability of the Common Law has enabled it to absorb many legal
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