Althea Gibson‚ Tennis Pro The life of Althea Gibson‚ a dominant tennis player in the 50s‚ was filled with successes that influenced the participation of African Americans in tennis‚ as well as leading the way for female tennis players by being the first black‚ male or female‚ to win a Grand Slam title. Althea was born on August 25‚ 1927 in Silver‚ South Carolina‚ but was raised in Harlem where she had a less than opulent life. For recreation‚ Althea began playing table tennis at a young age. Buddy
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..........................4 (CAPITILISM ECONOMIC SYSTEM) CHAPTER 3 ...........................................................................11 (SOCIALISM ECONOMIC SYSTEM) CHAPTER 4 ..........................................................................14 (MIXED ECONOMIC SYSTEM) CHAPTER 5 ………..……………………………………………………………….16 (ISLAMIC ECONOMIC SYSTEM) CHAPTER 6 ………..……………………………………………………………….24 (COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ISLAMIC ECONOMIC AND OTHER ECONOMIC SYSTEM) 1. DIIFFERENCE BETWEEN ISLAM
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INTRODUCTIONIndia represents an economic opportunity on a massive scale‚ both as a global base and as a domestic market. Indian Retail sector consists of small family-owned stores‚ located in residential areas‚ with a shop floor of less than 500 square feet. At present the organized sector accounts for only 2 to 4% of the total market although this is expected to rise by 20 to 25% by next 3 years. Retail growth in the coming five years is expected to be stronger than GDP growth‚ driven by changing
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Corporate Governance in India: Disciplining the Dominant Shareholder Abstract The nascent debate on corporate governance in India has tended to draw heavily on the large Anglo-American literature on the subject. This paper argues however that the corporate governance problems in India are very different. The governance issue in the US or the UK is essentially that of disciplining the management who have ceased to be effectively accountable to the owners. The problem in the Indian corporate sector
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Services lie at the hub of economic activity in the United States. Service jobs account for almost 80 percent of total U.S. employment. As such‚ we say that the U.S. has a service economy. Within this service economy‚ the term service has several meanings when paired with other words. For example‚ a service firm is defined as one that derives more than 50 percent of its sales from providing services. RCA’s service revenues now exceed its revenues from electronic manufacturing. A service package is
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inclusive growth in many parts of the country. MMFSL has extended loans to over 2 million customers across 170‚000 villages belonging to low income groups‚ helping rural India surge ahead. Mahindra Finance envisions to be the preferred provider of retail financing services in the rural and semi-urban areas of India‚ by providing the complete range of financial products and services to customers through the nationwide distribution network. MMFSL’s unique ability is to successfully develop consumer
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Economics | | |Sr. No. |Core Areas |Percentage | |1. |Micro-Economics |15% | |2. |Marco-Economics |15% | |3. |Econometrics
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RETAIL ASSETS (USD bn) | |FY2003 |FY2004 |FY2005 | |Outstandings |153 |217 |298 | |Disbursements |18 |22 |29 | Source: Economic Times • The retail loan market
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A PROJECT REPORT On Study of HR Practices & Process of Performance Appraisal With special reference to ADITYA BIRLA GROUP GRASIM I DUSTRIES R.M.C Division Head Office - MUMBAI Submitted To TILAK MAHARASHTRA U IVERSITY‚ PU E Submitted by SATISH PRAKASH GOYAL MBA- H.R (2007-2009) I STITUTE OF BUSI ESS STUDIES & RESEARCH IBSAR Navi Mumbai (satishpgoyal@yahoo.co.in) Page 1 Table of Contents CHAPTER O. 1 2 3 4 5 6 TITLES Acknowledgement Executive Summary Company Profile Organizational
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competition lead to different market structures‚ with differing implications for the outcomes of the market place. Each of the above mentioned market structures describes a particular organization of a market in which certain key characteristics differ. The characteristics are: (a) number of firms in the market‚ (b) control over the price of the product‚ (c) type of product sold in the market‚ (d) barriers to new firms entering the market‚ and (e) existence of nonprice competition in the market.
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