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Sahay, A.
- Social Responsibility of Business Schools in India
Abstract Views :170 |
PDF Views:113
Authors
Affiliations
1 Management Development Institute, Gurgaon, IN
2 Strategic Management, Management Development Institute, Gurgaon, IN
1 Management Development Institute, Gurgaon, IN
2 Strategic Management, Management Development Institute, Gurgaon, IN
Source
Management Dynamics, Vol 7, No 1 (2007), Pagination: 69-75Abstract
Management education in India has great popularity and demand. Every second Indian is between the age bracket of 18 and 45. Thus management education in India is a necessity as the large pool of youth has to be groomed to lead this nation in the new millennium. But management education in India is yet in infancy. It has to grow to reach the youth and the women of smaller towns and rural India. Business schools in India have to develop innovative models to address this segment of Indian youth. This paper captures the attempts of certain Indian business schools, management associations and business organizations to spread management education to rural India and other segments where the present day management institutions have failed to reach.- Female Gynandromorphy-A Rare Biological Event in DABA Bi-Voltine Antheraea mylitta D. Ecorace
Abstract Views :231 |
PDF Views:83
Authors
Affiliations
1 Basic Tasar Silkworm Seed Organization, Central Silk Board, Pendari, Bilaspur 495 001, IN
1 Basic Tasar Silkworm Seed Organization, Central Silk Board, Pendari, Bilaspur 495 001, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 115, No 7 (2018), Pagination: 1235-1236Abstract
The Antheraea mylitta D. (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) is an important wild silkmoth endemic to India and distributed in diversified ecological and geographical regions ranging from 12°N to 31°N lat. and 72°E to 96°E long., accordingly 44 eco-races have been reported1. DABA bivoltine race has been reared extensively by the >3 lakh tribal and rural communities as a livelihood practice. The larvae of A. mylitta are polyphagous but, majorly it has been reared on Terminalia tomentosa, T. arjuna and Shorea robusta in the forest patches and block plantations commercially.References
- Jolly, M. S. et al., Tasar Culture, Ambika Publishers, Mumbai, 1974, pp. 1-166.
- Sen, S. K. and Jolly, M. S., Curr. Sci., 1976, 36(14), 385-386.
- Chaudhuri, et al., J. Res. Lepid., 1992, 31(3-4), 287-289.
- Scriber, J. M. et al., J. Lepid. Soc., 2009, 63(1), 37-47.
- Obara, Y. and Tamazawa, S., Physiol. Entomol., 1982, 7, 443-448.