PRINCIPAL`S MESSAGE - Army Institute of Law

NOTICE
DATE SHEET FOR MID TERM-II EXAMINATIONS (SEM JAN – MAY 2015)
1.
Mid term-I examinations will be held as per schedule given below:-
S.No.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Time
1030hrs
to
1200hrs
Date and Day
Year
06.04.2015 (Mon)
st
07.04.2015 (Tue) 1 and
nd
08.04.2015 (Wed) 2 year
09.04.2015 (Thu)
10.04.2015 (Fri)
Paper
I
II
III
IV
V
2.
No re-appear examination for internal assessment shall be held and in case a
student is found absent, he/she will be marked zero in the award list.
(Dr Tejinder Kaur)
Offg Principal
1700/AIL/P/
___Mar 2015
CC to : Notice Boards, Wardens O/c, Mrs Amita Sharma, ACA, EM office
[email protected]
MINUTES OF HEADS OF INSTITUTES MEET 2013
AWES COLLEGES: PROGRESS
1.
Ref your email dated 26 Dec 2013 on the subject.
2.
Progress report on minutes of subject meet has already been fwd to SO (AIL)
vide our letter No. 1034/Adm/YF/506 dated 21 Oct 2013 for onward submission to HQ
AWES, Delhi.
Regards,
Dr Tejinder Kaur
Principal
[email protected]
UPDATE ON AWES ACTIVITIES
1.
Ref your email dated 26 Dec 2013 on the subject.
2.
Monthly update for the month of Oct and Nov 2013 in respect of this Institute
has already been fwd to SO (AIL) vide our following letters for onward submission to
HQ AWES, Delhi.
(a) 1002/AIL/MS/516 dt 28 Oct 2013
(b) 1002/AIL/MS/ 545 dt. 27 Nov 2013
Regards,
Dr Tejinder Kaur
Principal
various points Sub :
Greetings ―Teacher’s Day‖
Respected Sir,
Thanks for Greetings on the occasion of ―Teacher’s Day‖. It will be the endeavour of
all faculty members to live up to your expectations and keep the flag of AWES flying
high.
With best regards,
Principal & Registrar
Army Institute of Law, Mohali.
CIRCULAR
TEACHER’S DAY : TEA
1.
A Tea is being organized on the occasion of “Teacher’s Day” in the Conference Hall
at 1200hrs. All the teachers are requested to be present.
2.
The Chairman, AIL has sent his “Best Wishes on “Teacher’s Day” to all the teachers.
1700/AIL/P/
___Sep 2013
(Jagdish Chander)
Col
Offg Registrar
Copy to : Faculty, O/c
Thru’: Principal, AIL
Name
Mrs Amita Sharma
Mobile No.
9855616555
Signature
Mrs Amita Sharma
378, Sector 46-A, Chandigarh
[email protected]
[email protected]
Mrs Gagandeep Dhaliwal
K. No. 10, Sector 8-A,
Chandigarh
Dr Bajirao Rajwade
138 Sector 8-A
Chandigarh
Dr Kamaljit Kaur 1001, Sector
46-B
Mrs Gagandeep Dhaliwal
9988851992
Dr Bajirao Rajwade
9814013531
9814713531
Dr Kamaljit Kaur
8146758202
2633914
Dr Sunaina
9666077368
Dr Sunaina SCF 15, Sector 23C
Ms Sheetal Kapoor
9878722685
Ms Sheetal Kapoor No. 1404,
Sector 50-B, Progressive
Enclave
Chandigarh
Mrs Kulpreet Kaur
9815008545
Dr Kulpreet Kaur B-103 Ivory
Towers
Sector 70,
Mohali.
Ms Ekjyot Kaur
9855434154
Mrs Shiva Sharda
9815093970
Mrs Navneet Kaur Dhaliwal
9780520610
Ms Gurminder Kaur
8968626446
Ms Anju
9872768765
Ms Ekjyot Kaur
2164 Sunny Enclave,
Sector 125,
Mohali
Mrs Shiva Satish Sharda
#358 Sector 4, MDC,
Panchkula
Mrs Navneet Kaur Dhaliwal
3268 Sargodha Housing
Society, Sector 50-D, MDC,
Chandigarh.
9780520610
Ms Gurminder Kaur
1015, Sector 46B,
Chandigarh 8968626446
3208, Sec 35D, Chandigarh
9872768765
GUIDELINES FOR THE CONDUCT OF MOOT/SEMINAR/COURT VISIT
4TH YEAR, PAPER-IV
1.
As per new syllabus notified by Punjabi university, seminar, moot court presentations
and court visits have been included in paper IV of the curriculum prescribed for IV year. The
division of marks as per notification are as under:(a)
(b)
(c)
Moot court presentations 02 (30 marks each)
Seminar presentation
Court visits / Internship
60 Marks
20 Marks
20 Marks
Total: 100 Marks
2.
In order to conduct practical examinations in the form of Seminar, Moot Courts and
assessment of court visit/internship with corporate houses, NGO’s, banks, advocates and law
firms, the delineation of marks and schedule thereto is mandated, so that conduct of such
examination is facilitated and made apparent.
(a)
Division of marks for Moot Court Presentations*
Moot
diary
10 Marks
Clarity of
facts
5 Marks
Court mannerism
5 Marks
Total
Arguments
10
Marks
30 Marks
*Two moot court presentations shall be conducted in each semester making a
total of 60 marks for paper IV
(b)
Division of marks for seminar presentation
Written submission
presentation
Total
10 Marks
10 Marks
20 Marks
The schedule for seminar presentation and moot court presentations shall be
notified by the Institute. The defaulters shall be marked zero. Only extreme
emergency cases shall be allowed only on the recommendation of the teacher
in charge and due approval of the Principal.
(c)
Division of marks for court visit/ internship with corporate houses,
NGO’s, banks, advocates and law firms
Total Marks: 20
Students have to pursue four weeks internship in the form of court visits,
corporate houses, NGO’s, banks, advocates and law firms. The management
of record for the assessment purpose is purported to be done in the manner as
follows:
EVALUATION CRITERIA FOR MARKS OF COURT
VISITS/INTERSHIP:A diary shall be issued to the students by the Institute at the commencement of
their internship. The diary will be available in Accounts Section on payment of
Rs.30/- to the Accounts Clerk.
1700/AIL/P/
Kaur)
_____Aug 2013
Principal
(Dr Tejinder
Offg
ACADEMIC CALENDAR 2012-13
(JULY 2013 – DEC 2013)
Commencement of the Semester
15 Jul 2013
Demo Moot
25 Jul 2013
Internship of 4th year students
02 Sep 2013 to 30 Sep 2013
Mid Term Exam-I
(1st, 3rd and 5th semesters)
02 Sep to 06 Sep 2013
Novice MC Competition
20 – 22 Sep 2013
Internship of 5th year students
01 – 30 Oct 2013
Youth Fest (AWES)
09 -11 Oct 2013
Mid Term Exam-II
(1st, 3rd and 5th semesters)
25 - 31 Oct 2013
Diwali Break
05 – 08 Nov 2013
Blood Donation Camp
12 Nov 2013
Intra Institute Moot Court Competition
(2nd to 5th year students)
Preparatory Leave
14 Nov 2013
18 - 25 Nov 2013
Tentative date of Semester Exams
20 Nov 2013
Winter vacation
24 Dec 2013 - 04 Jan 2014
Note : The above dates are tentative subject to change of the event / at the discretion of
the Management.
1700/AIL/P/
Dated : ___Jul 2013
(Dr Tejinder Kaur)
Offg Principal
PDP PROGRAMME
AUG 2013
1ST YEAR
Date
05 Aug 2013 (Mon)
12 Aug 2013 (Mon)
19 Aug 2013 (Mon)
26 Aug 2013 (Mon)
2.00pm – 3.00pm
SECTION-B
Mrs Shiva Satish Sharda
Mrs Kulpreet Kaur
Mrs Amita Sharma
Mrs Shiva Satish Sharda
3.00pm – 4.00pm
SECTION-A
Dr Bajirao A Rajwade
Ms Gurminder Kaur
Mrs Gagandeep Dhaliwal
Mr. Shailender Slathia
2.00pm – 3.00pm
SECTION-A
Dr Kamaljit Kaur
Dr Bajirao A Rajwade
Dr Kamaljit Kaur
Ms Anju
3.00pm – 4.00pm
SECTION-B
Ms Anju
Mrs Shiva Satish Sharda
Dr Sunaina
Ms Gurminder Kaur
2nd YEAR
Date
02 Aug 2013 (Fri)
16 Aug 2013 (Fri)
23 Aug 2013 (Fri)
30 Aug 2013 (Fri)
3rd YEAR
Date
02 Aug 2013 (Fri)
16 Aug 2013 (Fri)
23 Aug 2013 (Fri)
30 Aug 2013 (Fri)
2.00pm – 3.00pm
SECTION-B
Ms Sheetal Kapoor
Dr Sunaina
Ms Sheetal Kapoor
Mrs Amita Sharma
3.00pm – 4.00pm
SECTION-A
Ms Ekjyot Kaur
Mrs Kulpreet Kaur
Ms Ekjyot Kaur
Mrs Gagandeep Dhaliwal
(Dr Tejinder Kaur)
Offg Principal
1700/AIL/P/
____Jul 2013
CONVOCATION 2012
(0764) S. PARKASH SINGH BADAL, HON’BLE CHIEF MINISTER PUNJAB,
LT GEN A S CHABBEWAL, YSM, COS HQ WC & PATRON AIL, DR J A
KHAN, DEAN, COLLEGE DEV COUNCIL, PBI UNIV, PATIALA, MAJ GEN S K
MANCHANDA, MG AOC & CHAIRMAN, AIL AND DR TEJINDER KAUR,
PRINCIPAL, AIL AT THE 4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL, 19 OCT 2012
0769 S. PARKASH SINGH BADAL, HON’BLE CHIEF MINISTER, PUNJAB
ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS AT THE 4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL ON
19 OCT 2012
831 LT GEN A S CHABBEWAL, YSM, COS HQ WESTERN COMD &
PATRON, AIL ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS AT THE 4 TH CONVOCATION
OF AIL HELD ON 19 OCT 2012
854 LT GEN A S CHABBEWAL, YSM, COS HQ WC & PATRON, AIL
AWARDING MS. MEGHNA KOHLI AT THE 4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL HELD
ON 19 OCT 2012
891
MAJ GEN S K MANCHANDA, MG AOC & CHAIRMAN, AIL
PRESENTING MEMENTO TO S. PARKASH SINGH BADAL, HON’BLE CHIEF
MINISTER, PUNJAB AT THE 4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL ON 19 OCT 2012
892
MAJ GEN S K MANCHANDA, MG AOC & CHAIRMAN, AIL
PRESENTING MEMENTO TO LT GEN A S CHABBEWAL, YSM, COS HQ WC
& PATRON, AIL AT THE 4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL, 19 OCT 2012
899 MAJ GEN S K MANCHANDA, MG AOC & CHAIRMAN, AIL PRESENTING
MEMENTO TO DR J A KHAN, DEAN, COLLEGE DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL,
PUNJABI UNIV, PATIALA AT THE 4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL ON 19 OCT
2012
CHECKMATE 2013 MOOT COURT COMPETITION
(0040) H.E. SH. SHIVRAJ V. PATIL, HON’BLE GOVERNOR OF PUNJAB &
ADMINISTRATOR U.T. CHANDIGARH, MAJ GEN R G KRISHNAN, VSM,
MGGS (SD/WE) & OFFG PATRON, AIL, MAJ GEN B N VIJAY KUMAR, MG
AAD & OFFG CHAIRMAN AIL, DR. RAJ KUMAR GUPTA, FOUNDER DIP
CHAND MEMORIAL AND DR TEJINDER KAUR, PRINCIPAL, AIL AT THE
―CHECKMATE-2013‖ NATIONAL MC COMPETITION , 22-24 FEB 2013
0044 H.E. SH. SHIVRAJ V. PATIL, HON’BLE GOVERNOR OF PUNJAB &
ADMINISTRATOR U.T. CHANDIGARH LIGHTNING THE LAMP AT THE
―CHECKMATE-2013‖ NATIONAL MC COMPETITION HELD ON 22-24 FEB
2013
0052 DR TEJINDER KAUR, PRINCIPAL, AIL ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS
AT THE ―CHECKMATE-2013‖ NATIONAL MOOT COURT COMPETITION
HELD ON 22-24 FEB 2013
0064 H.E. SH. SHIVRAJ V. PATIL, HON’BLE GOVERNOR OF PUNJAB &
ADMINISTRATOR U.T. CHANDIGARH ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS AT
THE ―CHECKMATE-2013‖ NATIONAL MC COMPETITION, 22-24 FEB 2013
]
NATIONAL SEMINAR 2013
0864 LT GEN T S GILL, SM, VSM, COS HQ WESTERN COMD & PATRON,
AIL ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS AT THE NATIONAL SEMINAR HELD
ON 6-7 APR 2013.
0874 PROF VEER SINGH, DIRECTOR (ACADEMICS), CHANDIGARH
JUDICIAL ACADEMY ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS AT THE NATIONAL
SEMINAR HELD ON 6-7 APR 2013.
879 HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE AJAY TEWARI, JUDGE, PUNJAB & HARYANA
HIGH COURT ADDRESSING THE STUDENTS AT THE
NATIONAL
SEMINAR HELD ON 6-7 APR 2013.
890 HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE AJAY TEWARI, JUDGE, PB & HAR HIGH
COURT, LT GEN T S GILL, SM, VSM, COS HQ WC & PATRON, AIL, PROF
VEER SINGH, DIRECTOR (ACADEMICS), CHANDIGARH JUDICIAL
ACADEMY, MAJ GEN R S RATHORE, MG AAD & CHAIRMAN AIL AND DR
TEJINDER KAUR, PRINCIPAL, AIL AT THE NATIONAL SEMINAR ON 6-7
APR 2013.
893 MAJ GEN R S RATHORE, MG AAD & CHAIRMAN AIL ADDRESSING
THE STUDENTS AT THE NATIONAL SEMINAR HELD ON 6-7 APR 2013.
700 S. PARKASH SINGH BADAL, HON’BLE CHIEF MINISTER,
PUNJAB AWARDING DEGREE TO MS MEGHNA KOHLI AT THE
4TH CONVOCATION OF AIL HELD ON 19 OCT 2012
Findout what hazardous material have to be dealt with while
disposal of electrical items
What these materials have effect on environment
When paper is recycled, it’s all mixed together into a pulp. That pulp is washed, cleaned, and then
pressed into new paper sheets. During that process, wastes like paper fibers, inks, cleaning
chemicals, and dyes are filtered out into one giant pudding known as paper sludge. The sludge is
then either burned or sent to a landfill, where it can leach dozens of toxic chemicals and heavy metals
into groundwater.
If you think that there would be regulations against that, you’d be right. But there’s one loophole:
mixing anything else with the paper sludge, even just sand, turns it from waste into a product. And
there are no regulations against tossing tens of thousands of tons of your product into a landfill.
There are about seven types of plastic that you’ll find in day to day life, and only two of them are
recyclable. Anything else placed in a recycling bin will be collected, processed, and sorted, and then
thrown straight into a landfill. Even trying to recycle some things—for example the plastic that
electronics are packaged in—wastes all those resources.
But it gets worse: Plastic is automatically sorted at recycling plants, but the process is far from
perfect. As a result some plastics can slip through even when they’re not supposed to, and you might
end up with chemicals like BPA in plastics that aren’t supposed to have it. So in a weird
way, recycling can make you fat.
Plastic is a pretty tricky animal overall, but in all honesty, we just have no idea what to do with it.
Take plastic shopping bags, for example. It’s estimated that fewer than one percent are recycled, and
that might be just because it’s so expensive. It costs $4,000 US to recycle one ton of plastic bags, but
a ton of recycled bags only sells for $32! As a result, about 300,000 tons of them end up in a landfill
every year.
t’s obvious that oil is a pretty major pollutant—just look at any ocean spill from a capsized oil tanker.
So it makes sense to try to recycle used oil back into something useful. But more often than not,
recycling creates even more toxic chemicals in the process.
Most small scale oil treatment centers use something known as the acid-clay process. This gets
impurities out of the oil, but leaves you with a toxic sludge containing all of those impurities, plus
dangerous chemicals like hydrochloric acid. So what do they do with that toxic waste? They burn it,
sending chemicals like nitric oxide and sulfur dioxide into the air. And that’s pretty much the official
method, even though it’s about as effective at fighting pollution as saving a person from drowning by
throwing them in a lake.
Demand for most recyclable products is growing way too fast to keep up with anything that recycling
can—at the moment—provide. Aluminum is especially difficult, since demand for it grows a little less
than ten percent every year. That means we’re still going to mine for new aluminum, especially since
recycled aluminum isn’t suitable for certain things. For example, recycled soda cans can’t give you
the quality you need to build an airplane, or even to use in electronic circuits.
Even if the cans go back to being cans, it’s not enough. Here’s some math: The average American
drinks 2.5 cans of soda per day. That’s about 778 million cans. If 100,000 cans are recycled every
minute (they are), we’re still about 600 million cans short. And that’s just in one day.
Deforestation is one of the main arguments for recycling. Imagine acres of pristine rainforest, happy
little animals, a native tribe or two—all bulldozed into oblivion. Except that doesn’t actually happen,
because eighty-seven percent of new paper now comes from trees that are raised for the sole
purpose of paper production. The US harvests about fifteen million acres of forest each year, but
they’re planting twenty-two million – every year we have seven million more acres of forest. More
recycling will actually reduce the demand for those forests.
And then there’s glass, which comes from sand, the most abundant resource on the planet. The
process for recycling glass is more detrimental than the process for creating virgin glass.
One of the recent trends in recycling right now is all-in-one recycling. All the paper, plastic, glass, and
metal waste goes into one recycle bin, which is sorted at the factory. The argument is that it requires
fewer trucks to pick it all up. But the trade off is even worse—all that extra sorting requires millions of
dollars worth of new equipment, and the pollution is just transferred over to the factories that have to
build it.
There’s also the problem of quantity over quality. All-in-one recycling centers focus on speed, which
is already introducing extra contamination issues.
9th Semester Students appearing for Semester Exams
Contamination is one of the biggest obstacles in the recycling industry right now. If there are
impurities or toxins on the original material—say lead paint from an aluminum spray can—
they’ll usually make it through the recycling process and end up buried in the new product,
which might turn out to be, say, a soda can.
The worst part is that sometimes we don’t know when something’s contaminated—until it’s too
late. For example, we’re just realizing that hundreds of buildings in Taiwan made from
recycled steel have been giving people gamma radiation poisoning—and not the good kind—
for the past twelve years.
The recycling process itself produces a lot of pollutants—from the exhaust billowing out of
recycling trucks to energy used at recycling plants. In 2009 there were about 179,000 waste
collection vehicles on the road—that’s both recycling and garbage collection. The exhaust
from each one of those vehicles contains over three dozen airborne toxins.
The thing is, you can’t separate garbage trucks from recycling trucks—there’s no lesser evil.
They both run on fossil fuels, and they both produce exhaust. By adding more trucks to the
fleet, no matter what their purpose, we’re increasing air pollution.
And that’s not even considering the recycling facilities. One recycling plant in Washington
state produces more toxic emissions than any other factory in the region. And the next three
biggest polluters in the area? Yeah, they’re also recycling plants.
The biggest reason recycling hurts the environment doesn’t have anything to do with the
technical process—it’s the mindset it gives people. The idea is that by putting materials in the
recycle bin, by buying products made from recycled material, we’re saving the environment—
we’re all a team of individual Captain Planets, kicking pollution to the curb. But how effective is
that when the US alone still produces 250 million tons of trash every year? Recycling’s main
impact is to convince us that it’s okay to be wasteful in other areas, because we make up for it
through recycling. It encourages consumption, rather than pointing out ways to reduce
consumption overall.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Mrs Amita Sharma
378, Sector 46-A,
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Mrs Gagandeep Dhaliwal
K. No. 10, Sector 8-A,
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Dr Bajirao Rajwade
138 Sector 8-A
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Dr Kamaljit Kaur
1001, Sector 46-B
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Dr Sunaina
SCF 15, Sector 23-C
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Ms Sheetal Kapoor
No. 1404, Sector 50-B,
Progressive Enclave
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Dr Kulpreet Kaur
B-103 Ivory Towers
Sector 70,Mohali.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Mr. Kushal Singla
Room No. 29, Block 3
Boys Hostel No. 6,
Teja Singh Hall
Panjab University,
Sector 14
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Ms Pooja Devi
Room No. 4, Hostel No. 3
Panjab University,
Sector 14
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Mrs Surekha Thukral
#252/2 Sector 45-A
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Ms Ekjyot Kaur
2164 Sunny Enclave,
Sector 125,
Mohali.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Mrs Shiva Satish Sharda
#358 Sector 4, MDC,
Panchkula.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Mrs Navneet Kaur Dhaliwal
3268 Sargodha Housing
Society,
Sector 50-D, MDC,
Chandigarh.
With Best Compliments from:ARMY INSTITUTE OF LAW
To
Ms Gurminder Kaur
1015, Sector 46-B,
Chandigarh.