Sunday 29 July 2018

Sunday 8 July 2018

MAZDA

                                                  
                                                   MAZDA    

                                       
Since 1991 John Newell Mazda have been selling and servicing new and used vehicles in the Alexandria area and the surrounding region.

Our state of the art modern showroom and large display areas allow customers to casually browse the great range of Mazda Vehicles.

Our friendly staff are specialists who are proud of their association with Mazda Australia, and look forward to assisting you when searching for your new or used Passenger and Commercial vehicles.

Why choose John Newell Mazda:

A multi award winning Mazda Dealer.
Our awards are based on recognition for excellence in sales, service and Customer Satisfaction.
John Newell Mazda actively supports our local community, charities and foundations.
Our team is dedicated in providing you with the best of care at all times, so whether you are buying, selling or leasing come and experience the difference at John Newell Mazda.


JOHN NEWELL MAZDA CONTACT DETAILS

Address

94-98 O'Riordan St, Alexandria, Sydney, NSW 2015

Phone

(02) 9318 8800

Fax

(02) 9318 8801

Email
Nick.Steer@johnnewell.com.au

Saturday 7 July 2018

Engineering Inspections


Engineering Inspections .




Engineering Inspections are a major component of our range of engineering services as consulting engineers. It is important that engineering inspections are carried out to maintain the quality of construction in new developments as well as to ensure that existing buildings are maintained in a safe condition.


Why do I need an engineering inspection.

Periodic Engineering inspections are required for most development type projects. The inspections ensure that a project is technically sound and all design specifications have been adhered to.

For example, structural engineers are required to inspect before a construction can begin to determine the structural integrity of the existing building. A technically sound building is not only economical in the long run avoiding expensive maintenance costs, but most importantly safe for the occupants.

Therefore, it is no surprise that councils require engineering inspections and certification for all stages of construction. Council development approvals may also be conditional on critical stage engineering inspections for the adjoining buildings, council property or the new development. Compulsory engineering inspections are ordered when a building is found to be unsafe.


You can trust Neilly Davies when it comes to engineering inspections

Neilly Davies Consulting Engineers have been providing engineering inspections for small residential, commercial, industrial and infrastructure projects for over 40 years. You can rely on our consulting engineers to provide you with professional engineering inspections with advice that is practical, buildable and cost-effective.

Our engineering inspections include:

Bridge inspections.

Critical stage inspections.

Dilapidation inspections.

Pool inspections.

Pre-purchase inspections.

Stormwater inspections.

Structural inspections.


Structural adequacy inspections.

Top Mechanical Engineering Schools in 2018

1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology ( MIT )




The mission of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is to advance knowledge and educate students in science, technology, and other areas of scholarship that will best serve the nation and the world in the 21st century. We are also driven to bring knowledge to bear on the world’s great challenges.
The Institute is an independent, coeducational, privately endowed university, organized into five Schools (architecture and planning; engineering; humanities, arts, and social sciences; management; and science). It has some 1,000 faculty members, more than 11,000 undergraduate and graduate students, and more than 130,000 living alumni.
At its founding in 1861, MIT was an educational innovation, a community of hands-on problem solvers in love with fundamental science and eager to make the world a better place. Today, that spirit still guides how we educate students on campus and how we shape new digital learning technologies to make MIT teaching accessible to millions of learners around the world.
MIT’s spirit of interdisciplinary exploration has fueled many scientific breakthroughs and technological advances. A few examples: the first chemical synthesis of penicillin and vitamin A. The development of radar and creation of inertial guidance systems. The invention of magnetic core memory, which enabled the development of digital computers. Major contributions to the Human Genome Project. The discovery of quarks. The invention of the electronic spreadsheet and of encryption systems that enable e-commerce. The creation of GPS. Pioneering 3D printing. The concept of the expanding universe.
Current research and education areas include digital learning; nanotechnology; sustainable energy, the environment, climate adaptation, and global water and food security; Big Data, cybersecurity, robotics, and artificial intelligence; human health, including cancer, HIV, autism, Alzheimer’s, and dyslexia; biological engineering and CRISPR technology; poverty alleviation; advanced manufacturing; and innovation and entrepreneurship.
MIT’s Impact also includes the work of our alumni. One way MIT graduates drive progress is by starting Companies that deliver new ideas to the world. A recent study estimates that as of 2014, living MIT alumni have launched more than 30,000 active companies, creating 4.6 million jobs and generating roughly $1.9 trillion in annual revenue. Taken together, this "MIT Nation" is equivalent to the 10th-largest economy in the world.

Top 2018 Nbr 01 Uni Rank University of Oxford

1 > 

United Kingdom

University of Oxford








The University of Oxford is the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world’s second oldest surviving university. While its exact founding date is unknown, there is evidence that teaching took place as far back as 1096.
Located in and around Oxford’s medieval city centre, the university comprises 44 colleges and halls, and over 100 libraries, making it the largest library system in the UK.
Students number around 22,000 in total, just over half of whom are undergraduates while over 40 per cent are international, representing 140 countries between them.
Called the 'city of dreaming spires' by Victorian poet, Matthew Arnold, Oxford has the youngest population of any city in England and Wales: nearly a quarter of its residents are university students, which gives Oxford a noticeable buzz.
Oxford has an alumni network of over 250,000 individuals, including more than 120 Olympic medallists, 26 Nobel Prize winners, seven poets laureate, and over 30 modern world leaders (Bill Clinton, Aung San Suu Kyi, Indira Ghandi and 26 UK Prime Ministers, among them.

The university is associated with 11 winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, five in physics and 16 in medicine. Notable Oxford thinkers and scientists include Tim Berners-Lee, Stephen Hawking and Richard Dawkins. The actors Hugh Grant and Rosamund Pike also went to Oxford, as did the writers Oscar Wilde Graham Greene, Vikram Seth and Philip Pullman.

Oxfords first international student, named Emo of Friesland was enrolled in 1190, while the modern day university prides itself on having an ‘international character’ with connections to almost every country in the world and 40% of its faculty drawn from overseas.
As a modern, research-driven university, Oxford has numerous strengths but cites particular prowess in the sciences, having recently ranked number one in the world for medicine (if its Medical Sciences division was a university in its own right, it would be the fourth largest in the UK) and among the top ten universities globally for life sciences, physical sciences, social sciences, and the arts and humanities

Saturday 2 June 2018

Top 5 Islamic Uni in the World 2@18


Top 10 Islamic Uni in the World. # 1 King abdulaziz Uni Saudi Arabia.King
Abdulaziz University was established in 1967 in Jeddah on the banks of the Red Sea. The university was named after the founder of Saudi Arabia, King Abdul-Aziz Al-Saud. It was initially established as a private university but was converted to a public university in 1974, Students who attend the university receive free education and housing It has a comprehensive learning programme across faculties including the arts and humanities science and technology and medicine The university also offers some courses that are unavailable at any other universities in Saudi Arabia such as marine science meteorology and astronomy .King Abdulaziz University adheres to Islamic regulations by having separate campuses for men and women each equipped with a library and athletic and recreational facilities.
# 2 Alexandria University. Alexandria University is an urban university that stands among the top Muslim universities in the world. It started off as a branch of Fuad University before changing it’s name to Cairo UniThey become an independent entity in 1942. Shortly after it’s establishment in 1938 It changed its name to University of Alexandria, The founding curator of Alexandria Uni was Taha Hussein.
# 3 United Arab Emirates Uni, UAE United Arab Emirates University is an accredited institute located in Al Ain that was established in 1975, it is one of the first and oldest universities in the UAE In 2012/2013 they were ranked as the 370th best university in the world and was ranked number 48 among the top 50 world universities in 2011/2012, UAEUs business school was also named the third best business school in Africa and the Middle East in 2010, UAEU is ranked number one in the Gulf Cooperate Council [GCC] countries, number two in Arab World and ninth in the Muslim world for academic research, They were recognized by Times magazine as the 86th best university in Asia. UAEU can boast of having one of the most diverse undergraduate and post graduate courses offered at their colleges.
# 4 Qatar University. Qatar University is the largest and oldest university in Qatar. It is a public university located just outside the country’s capital, Doha,It comprises nine colleges: arts and sciences; business and economics; education; engineering; health sciences law; medicine; pharmacy; and sharia and Islamic studies, The university continues to expand the range of courses that it provides and currently offers the highest number of programme of any institution in the country,About 35 per cent of the student body consists of the children of expats, and the institution offers multiple opportunities for studying and research abroad. The student body is made up of 52 nationalities
# 5 Jordan Uni of Science and Technology The Jordan University of Science and Technology is a state-supported university located in nothern Jordan, The university campus is divided into two sections.The first is the Medical Faculties Complex comprising the faculties of dentistry, medicine, nursing, applied medical sciences, pharmacy and science and art. The second section is the Engineering Faculties Complexwhich contains the faculties of agri computer and information technology engineering architecture and design and veterinary medicine. Each complex also has its own library,The number of international students at the university has continued to increase since the university was established with students now coming from more than 60 countries

Top 10 2018 Pakistani Uni


# 1 Uni of the Punjab. # 2 National Uni of Sciences and Technology . # 3 COMSATs Institute's of Information Technology. # 4 Lahore Uni of Management Sciences. # 5 Aga khan University. # 6 Uni of Management and Technology. # 7 National Uni of Computer and Emerging Sciences. # 8 Government College Uni, Faisalabad. # 9 International Islamic Uni, Islamabad. # 10 Uni
of Engineering and Technology, Lahore.

Tuesday 22 August 2017

Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948

The confrontation between India and Pakistan dates from the first day of theirindependence from the British Empire, and the first war they fought was over the possessionof Jammu and Kashmir. The war was a limited affair – limited in its goals, in a limitedtheatre, with limited means. It was the first modern war in which one of the belligerents(Pakistan) relied on an artificially created and nurtured insurgency in the target area to realizeits political goals. The experiment – partly due to lack of doctrinal foundations and lack of experience – had only limited success, but its results encouraged Pakistan to rely oninsurgents and irregular militias in the enemy's rear in it later wars


This short and limited war is a fascinating story for several reasons. Its most significantelement is the employment of non-state actors as combatants in service of a state’s interests.The employment of non-state combatants was only partly successful, but the events haveshown how a modern state can deploy the principles, tactics, techniques and procedures of asymmetric warfare against another, much stronger state. The events of the war also callattention to the fact that contrary to the contemporary western attitude – which lingers on tothis day – there is absolutely no difference between western and Asian soldiers, when thelatter are properly trained and led. Asian officers are able to plan and execute large-scaleoperations, control, move and support divisions and corps without the benefit of westernadvisors, and their command performance can meet the highest standards. Asian soldiersunder Asian officers and NCOs can fight with as much skill as, and their self-sacrificingheroism and professional behaviour ca



THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

In spite of the economic and strategic advantages the colonies represented, maintaining alarge colonial empire was a huge burden for Great Britain after World War Two. The Labour


Party made the dissolution of the empire a key part of its post-war agenda, and following itselectoral victory in 1945 it set about granting independence to those colonies that weresufficiently developed to stand on their own as sovereign states – and India was among thefirst.Although the Muslims were in a significant numerical minority in India, they had dominatedthe subcontinent for hundreds of years. This dominant role ended by the middle of the 19

 century, as the European empires gradually extended their rule over India. The Muslims couldnot come to terms with the loss of their power, influence and privileges and adjusted to thenew social order with great difficulty. They barely tolerated the rule of the Christian infidels,and simply could not imagine living under the rule of peoples they had subjugated anddespised for centuries – the Hindus, Buddhists and Sikhs – even if independent Indiapromised secular democracy and free exercise of religion.

Their mass organization, theMuslim League, insisted on creating a Muslim state as part of the independence process.Pakistan – the Land of the Pure – was created by combining the Muslim-majority parts of thecountry (in the west Sindh, Baluchistan, the Northwest Frontier Province, and the western partof the Punjab, and East Bengal in the east). (See Figure 1.)According to the law governing the independence process (the Independence of India Act) therulers of India’s nearly 600 states could decide to join India or Pakistan, or remainindependent. Most rulers had no real choice: geography and demographics made the decisionfor them, but in the case of Kashmir the question was more complicated.

The state's locationon the borders of India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and China made it a strategically importantplace for both India and Pakistan. The ruler was Hindu, but the majority (about 2/3) of thepopulation was Muslim. However, even among the Muslims there was no consensus on thecountry’s future: the most influential politician, Sheik Abdullah was opposed to India’spartition, but if that had to be, then he stood for Kashmiri independence. The Maharaja couldnot – or did not want to – make a decision: he hoped that if he delayed the decision longenough, Kashmir could become an independent, sovereign state.India could perhaps have accepted an independent Kashmir, but Pakistan insisted that theMuslim-majority state should join the Muslim Pakistan. Pakistan's head of state, Ali Jinnah,was ready to settle the matter by force, but that would have led to open war with India – and
1
As India’s independence was becoming a reality, the Muslims had reason to fear Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist,Christian, Jaini, Jewish and other religious payback for centuries of abuse. (Goel, no year)
2
"Kashmir" as a geographic term is applied to the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir; to the Pakistani state of Azad Kashmir; to the Kashmir valley, and to the independent principality of Jammu and Kashmir.

the Pakistani armed forces, which were just being created, were nowhere near strong enough.In order to avoid the embarrassing spectacle of former colonies obtaining independence andimmediately attacking each other, the British government would also have prevented openconflict. Even before independence was declared, the Pakistani government already appliedeconomic pressure: it halted traffic on the only railroad line going into Kashmir, confiscatedKashmiri trucks and blocked the importation of essential staples and fuels (food grains, sugar,salt, gasoline, household kerosene) into Kashmir. Economic blockades generally work slowly,and it was not different in Kashmir’s case either. Since the blockade did not achieve resultsfast enough, the leading politicians of the Muslim League and senior officers of the armedforn be a match to, or even surpass, any European orAmerican regular force,,

Peerbuxbaloch

Tuesday 15 August 2017

Celebrate Independence Day 14th August 2017


Celebrate Independence Day 14th August 2017

Independence Day celebrate on 14th August of every year in Pakistan. Pakistan is facing difficulties from last few years and the economic problem and electricity is big problem in Pakistan.. This year Pakistan People will be celebrate 14th August 2017 with new dreams and success in every field in Pakistan. Indeed Pakistan will be solved all these problems with the passage of time.......

Wednesday 9 August 2017

A DEMOCRATIC PUNJAB 1937-47

Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah with Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan, probably at the time when the Jinnah-Sikandar Pact is signed in 1937. — Courtesy National Archives Islamabad


 1 After winning the general elections in the Punjab in 1937, Sir Sikandar, the leader of the Unionist Party in the Punjab, is faced with pressure from many of his Muslim parliamentary colleagues. Mindful of the need to maintain an equitable stance in a divided Punjabi political milieu, Sir Sikandar enters into negotiations with Mr Jinnah. As a consequence, the Jinnah-Sikandar Pact is signed.

The pact is essentially an arrangement whereby the Muslim League will represent the Muslims at the national level, while the Unionists will maintain a measure of independence at the provincial level.

Mr Jinnah’s ability to deal with various hues in the tapestry of the Punjab through democratic persuasion is reflected in the Muslim League’s ascension to power after 1947.

Mian Iftikharuddin is a scion of the Arain Mian family, custodians of Lahore’s Shalimar Gardens. He begins his political career in the Congress and rises to the presidency in the Punjab. In 1945, he joins the Muslim League. After Partition, he is elected as the first President of the Punjab Provincial Muslim League and Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah appoints him Minister for the Rehabilitation of Refugees.

In 1947, Mian Iftikharuddin founds the Pakistan Times; Faiz Ahmed Faiz is appointed Editor-In-Chief.

In 1949, Mian Iftikharuddin’s proposal for land reforms in the Punjab leads to a backlash from the feudal leadership within the Muslim League. In frustration, he resigns from his ministry and is expelled from the Muslim League in 1951.

After his death in 1962, Faiz Ahmed Faiz pays tribute to him with this couplet: Jo rukey tu koh-e-garan thay hum/ Jo chalay tu jaan say guzar gaye/ Raah-e-yaar hum ne qadam qadam/ Tujhay yaadgaar banaa diya (For when we stayed, we rose like mountains/ And when we strayed, we left life far behind/ Fellow traveller, every step that we ever took/ Became a memorial to your life

It is a tribute to Mr Jinnah’s political sagacity that he can mobilise talents like Mian Iftikharuddin’s to work within his government in the Punjab