Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Brazilian Portuguese Classes at Embassy


Islamabad—The Embassy of Brazil in Islamabad has reopened the admissions for its free Portuguese language course. The admissions are open from November 13rd to 19th.

The classes will take place at the Embassy and are free of cost, starting on December 2nd. People above 16 are eligible to attend the course, which will have consecutive three months modules. This initiative is in the scope of the increase on educational cooperation between Brazil and Pakistan, which includes the offer of placements in Brazilian universities for Pakistani students, announced by the Embassy last May.

The admissions are open for beginner's level of Portuguese. Classes will take place at the Embassy i.e. St. 72, House # 01, F-8/3, Islamabad, Mondays and Wednesdays from 5pm to 6pm and Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6:10pm to 7:10pm. To become a part of this free language course, interested students should fill out a form available on the official website of the Embassy of Brazil. Pakistan Observer Reported.

If you are interesting so Click Here for the Application Form.

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

Useful Keyboard Shortcuts for Smart Work Lovers

Useful Keyboard Shortcuts for Smart Work Lovers | Woman Tribe
 
Technology is become essential in our daily lives, As a student, professional and even a staying-at-home person we can't ignore it. But the question, which irritates is 'technology use utilize lot of time and return-on-investment (ROI) is very low.

WomanTribe's correspondent Lara Cameron brings the solution with the keyboard shortcuts. Hope you will found it useful to produce a lot in short span of time.

Alt + 0153….. ™… trademark symbol

Alt + 0169…. ©…. copyright symbol

Alt + 0174….. ®….registered trademark symbol

Alt + 0176 …°……degre­e symbol

Alt + 0177 …±….plus-or­-minus sign

Alt + 0182 …¶…..paragraph mark

Alt + 0190 …¾….fractio­n, three-fourths

Alt + 0215 ….×…..multi­plication sign

Alt + 0162…¢….the cent sign

Alt + 0161…..¡….. .upside down exclamation point

Alt + 0191…..¿….. ­upside down question mark

Alt + 1………..smiley face

Alt + 2 ………..bla­ck smiley face

Alt + 15……….su­n

Alt + 12……….f emale sign

Alt + 11………..m­ale sign

Alt + 6………..s­pade

Alt + 5………… ­Club

Alt + 3…………. ­Heart

Alt + 4………… ­Diamond

Alt + 13………e­ighth note

Alt + 14………. ­beamed eighth note

Alt + 8721……. N-ary summation (auto sum)

Alt + 251……….s­quare root check mark

Alt + 8236…….. ­infinity

Alt + 24………… ­up arrow

Alt + 25………… ­down arrow

Alt + 26……….ri­ght arrow

Alt + 27……….l­eft arrow

Alt + 18………..u­p/down arrow

Alt + 29…….. left right arrow

Please share it with your friends and co-workers. It might help others.

Sunday, 27 October 2013

Steps to Take when Moving to Dubai for a Job

Dubai has become a favoured offshore location amongst international job seekers and professionals seeking a higher standard of living and unique career experience. Although the advantages of moving to Dubai are numerous, and many expats will tell you of the fantastic benefits there are to living in the UAE, it is also important that you are aware of the restrictions, downsides and any draw backs that may affect your time there.

There are many steps that need to be followed in order to successfully move to Dubai for employment, some of which are detailed below.

Obtain an offer of employment

Due to the fact that a sponsor is required, along with a work visa to reside and work in Dubai, it is vital that you have an offer of employment, together with an employment contract before relocating.

File for a visa

You must have the required visa before you can begin employment in Dubai. In order to obtain the visa, you may need the following documents; passport, birth certificate, degree certificate, 6 months bank statement and employment contract from sponsor in Dubai.

UAE driving license

If your job requires you to drive, you must obtain a separate UAE driving license as your current license will not be valid in Dubai.

Changing jobs in Dubai

You should note that it is not easy to change jobs in Dubai and this is because your employer is your sponsor and reason you are in the country. In order to move from one employer to the next, you must obtain a no objection certificate (NOC) which is to be signed by your current employer and which permits you to move employment.

Renting and living costs

Dubai is known for its high standards of living, attractive salaries and tax free incentives, however the renting market and general living expenses are also considered to be relatively high. It is therefore important that you have enough money in your bank account to fund your first month there before you receive your first month's salary. Usually, property owners can request anything from one – six months worth of rent upfront. 


         Posted by
         Emma Mackenzie
         http://www.careeraddict.com/2600/steps-to-take-when-moving-to-dubai-for-a-job
 

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Security Guard Job Description


Job Description

GENERAL DUTY1. Protect and guard office staff, premises and equipment.
2. To inform the staff member upon arrival of their guests/ visitors.
3. Inspect visitor bags and equipment's thoroughly.
4. Ensure that visitors are directed to the proper office/staff member. Unexpected visitors should be directed to the attention of Security focal point.
5. Ensure that all offices and windows are locked, computers and other electronic equipment is properly turned off, up on departure of staff members.
6. Persons who are not 10M staff members are strictly not permitted on the promises of 10M after-hours, on weekends or holidays, unless authorized/accompanied by a senior staff member of the office. 10M staff members should be logged in and out after office hours, on weekends and on holidays.
7. Check all vehicles moving in and out of office premises.
8. Immediately inform the security officer and security assistant about any unusual device if found in the car or attached with the car body.
9. Check all the official equipments moving in and out of office premises with duly signed GATE PASS by RR or RRMO.
10. Maintain a log of visitors to the office during office hours.
11. Maintain a log of telephone calls and radio receptions during non-office hours, weekend and holidays.
12. Occasional responsibility for taking telephone calls on a needs basis. All
13. Callers should be requested to leave their name, title, telephone number and, as appropriate, information concerning the subject of their call. This information should be passed to the Security focal point at the earliest opportunity.
14. Unusual circumstances should be brought to the attention of the CoM and the Security Focal Point immediately.
SPECIFIC DUTIES & RESPONSIBLITIESAll visitors have to leave a personal ID card at the gate before getting a visitor card.
Besure that entering and leaving times are registered in the protocol.
Their bags and anything they carry with them has to be searched, both when entering and leaving.
The person they want to see has to be informed before they are let into theoffices.
If above person is not available, they should be asked to wait in thereception area, and the reception person informed.
All vehicles are to be search for any suspicious objects that do not seems tobelong there, before entering the compound.
The same procedure has to be impounded when the cars are leaving the compound.
The passenger(s) has to go through the main gate at building I, carrying theirpersonal belongings and join up with the vehicle outside.
No vehicles are allowed parking in the street in front of the office between the
"No Parking" signs.
Private vehicles, that for the timebeing, are allowed parked between the street and the office near building, should be subject to the same procedure as vehicles entering andleaving the compound.
At least once an hour one guard should make a round around the back of thebuildings day and night.
After office hours check the offices to ensure doors are locked, lights off andthat everything is well.
The guards should not enter the building when they are locked down for thenight, when no staff is present.
If asuspicious package or item is discovered, it should not under anycircumstances be moved or touched.
If ina car, the engine must be stopped, the security informed immediately, and the area around evacuated, until the situation is cleared.
Incase of fire call the Fire squad, security and evacuate the buildings.
See tothat the staff and all the cars are leaving the compound.
In case of demonstration and other trouble, inform security and police.

Wednesday, 21 August 2013

KPK minister pledges to improve education


ISLAMABAD - A three-day international conference on 'Applications of Molecular Biology in Medicine and Agriculture started here at Quaid-i-Azam University (QAU) on Tuesday.
The conference was organised with an objective to foster fellowship and collaboration among the biochemists, molecular biochemists and the scientists of related fields.
State Minister for Education, Training & Standards in Higher Education, Muhammad Balighur Rehman in his inaugural speech said that development of the education sector is top priority of the government. He said that Prime Minister's Youth Training Programme is being launched to provide an opportunity for youth to equip themselves with practical knowledge and to get hands-on experience. "Our government is committed to providing more training opportunities to the youth and under the national internship programme 50,000 fresh graduates would be provided training opportunities. They would also be given a stipend Rs 10,000 a month. Similarly, MPI has been given fresh guidelines to provide extra training opportunities," the minister said.
While addressing the inaugural ceremony Prof Dr Masoom Yasinzai, Vice Chancellor QAU, said that in recent past the colossal development of the biological information is an outcome of vast advances in the field of molecular biology. These discoveries have resulted in transformation of new products or processes which have flooded world markets, therefore showering vast economic rewards on those nations which have had the courage and the vision to make Science & Technology the corner stone of their development programs.
The Vice Chancellor said that latest techniques and state-of-the-art methods in molecular biology provide researchers with a phenomenal opportunity for scientific research with new horizons. He urged the participants to deliberate all these new discoveries and should find ways to translate academic research into the socio-economic uplift of the country. Dr Bushra Mirza, Professor and Chairperson of the Department of the Biochemistry, highlighted the objectives of the conference. She said the objective of the conference is to stimulate interest and promote research and education in Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and other related fields.

The Nation

Friday, 12 July 2013

Girls throng to school in Swat as Malala addresses UN

Girls throng to school in Swat as Malala addresses UN

MINGORA: When the Pakistani Taliban shot Malala Yousafzai in the head, their message to the world was simple: girls have no right to an education and their dreams of a better future should be crushed.
The attack portrayed the world’s only Muslim nuclear power in an appalling light as Western leaders and celebrities fell over themselves to turn Malala into a global icon of child rights.
But while she gears up to address the UN General Assembly on Friday — her 16th birthday and nine months since the shooting — more girls than ever in her home, Pakistan’s northwestern Swat valley, are in school.
Educationalists say it has less to do with Malala’s fame and more to do with a growing confidence that far from being resurgent, Taliban influence is declining in Swat.
“Many students were actually scared when the government named a college after Malala,” said Anwar Sultana, head mistress of Government Girls High School No 1, the oldest in Mingora, the main town in Swat.
Last December, around 150 girls at another school protested against the renaming of their college after the injured schoolgirl, fearing it would make them a target for militants.
They tore up and stoned pictures of Malala, since nominated for the Nobel Peace prize and now being privately educated in Britain, accusing her of abandoning Pakistan.
But Sultana says more girls are now going to school because people feel more liberated as more time passes since the Pakistan army quashed a 2007-9 Taliban insurgency in the valley.
“Whenever you suppress something, it appears with more freedom,” she told AFP, sitting on a veranda as girls in long white shirts and baggy trousers poured out of congested classrooms.
“The Taliban banned girls education and threatened females for going to schools. Now more and more girls are joining schools which means the fear is over,” Sultana said.
In the first six months of 2013, 102,374 girls registered at primary schools in Swat compared to a total of 96,540 during all of last year, said Dilshad Bibi, Swat district education officer.
At Sultana’s school, there are no desks and chairs in the dark brown, grey and orange coloured classrooms. Instead the girls sit on the floor to pack a maximum number into each room.
Saeeda Rahim, 13, is one of those girls.
The Taliban stopped her and thousands of other girls from going to school between 2007 and 2009. When the army offensive came in 2009, she and her family were forced to flee for their safety.
Displaced for three months, she spent much of the time in tears, her dreams of getting an education and becoming a doctor in tatters.
“Those days were the most difficult of my life. I lost hope and courage. I had no energy to read. I thought I’d never be able to study again,” she told AFP.
Then when her family returned home, her mother initially refused to let her go back to school, fearing that she could be attacked.
But she is now back at Government High School No 1. She covers her face with a white veil, wears the pink strip of a prefect and says she takes inspiration from Malala.
“I really like her speeches. I want to continue her work, I want to appear in the media and convince parents that education is a right for their daughters,” she said.
There is certainly a long way to go.
Throughout Pakistan, nearly half of all children and nearly three quarters of young girls are not enrolled in primary school, according to UN and government statistics published late last year.
In Malala’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province only 36 percent of women and 72 percent of men are literate, according to the government.
Muhammad Atif, the provincial education minister, says hardline Islamist militants have destroyed 750 schools since 2008, of which 611 have been reconstructed.
The new provincial government, led by the party of former cricketer Imran Khan, has increased its annual education budget by 27 percent and declared female education its priority.
“Our government has allocated 66 billion rupees ($660 million), the highest amount in the provincial budget for education and female education is our top priority,” said Atif.
Azra Niaz, a teacher at Government Girls High School No 1, says Malala’s defiance and determination to continue her education — despite being so badly wounded — was a true inspiration.
“Every girl has been encouraged. Their fear has stopped. Every girl now wants to become a Malala. They say ‘we want to study and progress in life’,” she told AFP.

Sunday, 9 June 2013

Summary of the lesson Peshawar (B.A Part II)

Peshawar
J.Spain had visited Peshawar many times. He describes the city beautifully. His description is as under:

1. Medicine Seller

J.Spain begins the description of Peshawar from chowk Yadgar. He comes across a person who was Hakim. He was selling medicines. He was praising his balm. He was saying that it was antidote against the snake bite. A crowd of people was standing around him.

 

2. Old Serais


Gateway of Gor Khatri..Peshawar
Karavan Sarai Gor Khatri, Peshawar. Photo By Waheed Saleem
The writer began to walk about the streets and reached the old Serais. In the past the caravans of merchants came from Bokhara.  Sammar Kand, Herat, Kashghar and Meshhed and stayed here. Now, these serais no longer serve the purpose of hoteling. These have been changed into motor garages and workshops.









3. The mahabat khan mosque

Mahabat Khan Mosque Peshawar.
Mahabat Khan Mosque is one of the true Peshawaris favourite sights. It is hundreds of years old. One can reach the mosque through chow Yadgar. It has great importance in history. The minarets of the mosque are very high. It is very spacious and beautiful. The writer climbed a minaret to have a glimpse of the city. It is said that during the Sikh regime two Muslims were hanged every day from its high minarets.






4. Peshawar streets

Selling Dry fruits in Namak Mandi, Peshawar.
The business streets of Peshawar are highly specialized. They convey all the warmth of life. Different articles are sold I different streets. Each street deals in just one particular trade. The city is famous for a large number of products. Shoes, caps, carpets and hardware goods are a few of them. The shoes which are sold here are expensive as well as cheap. The writer bought a pair of shoes.





5. Tea stalls

Tea Stall in Peshawar
Tea stalls are another common feature of the city. The tea which is sold here if of different kind. Many peoples like strong black tea with milk and sugar mixed in it. Many shops serve Qahwa. It is a popular drink of all. It is prepared with great care. These stalls are scattered in every business street.
6. Peshawar cantonment
Peshawar cantonment is situated in the Sadar. It is modern both in style and character. It has broad streets. It has churches, hotels, parks, and shop of western type. Its large bungalows and comfortable hotels also add to its beauty. It has a bazar known as Sadar bazar.  It has a big museum. It contains painting and statues.
7. The University
The Peshawar University is situated near cantonment. It is the most important achievement of Peshawar throughout its history. In 1951, it was a single building which was known as Islamia College, it expanded rapidly and now it is one of the largest universities of the Europe, America and Asia. The writer came here in 1952. He met Khan Abdul Qayyum Khan, the Chief Minister of NWFP and chancellor of the university. Khan Abdul Qayyum khan asked him what help could American Embassy give. The writer did not reply and told that he would inform him shortly.