Additional information
| Weight | 100 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 21.5 × 14 cm |
| Weight | 100 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 21.5 × 14 cm |
The grate scientist of this from India, Dr. Homi Bhabha, who established many scientific institutions during his life and many promising scientist have gained inspiration from him, When he was alive and even after death. He has remained a source of inspiration. This book is a homage with all possible information about his life and his devotion to science. It includes various pictures related to his dicoveries and inventions.
The service law, which is difficult to understand, is made easy through this book in Marathi. The related people such as lawyers, debt and taxpaying people and the students of C. A. are benefited through the book. The high court judgement, the result of tribunal can be selected by taxpayers and act according to these rules easily.
Board of directors constitutes member of different disciplines such as intellectuals, serial thinkers etc. All are supposed to work for carrying the institution and making progress in it, so that it can work for a long period. The institutions established should remain during the life time of the established and after them also, it should survive in order to fix the method for the election of these directors, what is to be done to make it powerful and responsible, the guideline are available in this book.
Isreal is a country wellknow for the practice of different techinigues in different fields of life the proparity due to it with progress has become a Keyword for Israel. What are the reasons behind this progress and prospaurity them all times is a motto, the writer wants to be adopted by Indians. This is the main reason for which the book is written by leiturent Padmakar Deshpande.
Since our Bahujan icons inspire us in each and every struggle of our life, we must celebrate and propagate their work. This book is a step towards that direction. The work of Barrister Saheb is very inspiring. In the socio-political arena of independent India, we rarely come across a leader who is so dedicated to his cause as Barrister Saheb was. He carried forward Babasaheb’s legacy of simultaneous engagement with parliamentary politics and ground politics. Limiting him only to the identity of a Republican leader would be an injustice to his versatile personality. He was a parliamentarian, a barrister, a journalist, a diplomat of India’s foreign policy, a champion of the rights of the marginalized and women, a mass leader, and a staunch ideologue of Ambedkarite thought. One can feel thrilled and overwhelmed to find these many aspects within only one personality. Without an unwavering resolution to devote one’s life to the cause of the downtrodden, one cannot do such a mountain of work. This book is tribute to Barrister Saheb and his humongous work on his birth centenary year and 40th death anniversary year.