Archive for April, 2010

Worlds Richest Women

April 30, 2010 By: Tips On Interview Category: General Knowledge, News, Woman Articles

Worlds Richest Women

Christy Walton & family

$22.5 billion – Walmart. U.S.

World’s largest retailer benefited as cash-strapped shoppers looked to
discount merchandise at start of economic slump. Boost may have waned; recently reported 1.6% decline in same-store sales in its U.S. Walmart and Sam’s Club stores, warned of soft sales in current quarter. Still, shares are up 7% in past 12 months and family fortune rose a combined $13 billion, largely recovering losses from market crash. Sam Walton started as J.C. Penney clerk. Opened Benjamin Franklin five-and-dime in 1945; lost lease five years later. Founded Bentonville, Ark., general store with brother James in 1962. Today Walmart has $405 billion in annual sales, 2 million employees, more than 8,400 stores. Christy is the richest of the Waltons thanks to late
husband John’s early bet on First Solar; alternative energy stock up more than 350% since 2006 public offering.

Alice Walton

$20.6 billion

Walmart. U.S.

Arkansas benefactor funded $100 million airport in Bentonville in 1990; building Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. World’s largest retailer benefited as cash-strapped shoppers looked to discount merchandise at start of economic slump. Boost may have waned; recently reported 1.6% decline in same-store sales in its U.S. Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club stores, warned of soft sales in current quarter. Still, shares up 7% in past 12 months and family fortune rose a combined $13 billion, largely recovering losses from market crash

Liliane Bettencourt
$20 billion

L’Oreal. France

Makeup heiress’ fortune rebounding with L’Oreal shares. Company, founded by her father, celebrated its 100th birthday in 2009. Last year only daughter and heir, Francoise Bettencourt-Meyers, petitioned courts to investigate reported $1.4 billion worth of cash and gifts her mother allegedly gave to Francois-Marie Banier, 61, a well-known photographer, writer and painter whom she befriended. Daughter claims Banier took advantage of her mother, who became a widow in 2007. Liliane denies it; has been ordered to undergo psychological testing before July trial. Mother and daughter apparently no longer speak.

Birgit Rausing & family
$13 billion

Packaging. Sweden

After death of her husband Gad Rausing in 2000, with her three children, inherited packaging giant Tetra Laval. In 1944 her father-in-law founded the company, which revolutionized the packaging of liquids such as juices and milk. Today sales are $15.3 billion. All of her children sit on Tetra Laval’s board; son Jorn is head of mergers and acquisitions. Son Finn is chairman of the board of the Swedish R.R. Institute of Applied Economics. Daughter Kirsten is a horse breeder in the U.K. Birgit lives quietly in Switzerland.

Savitri Jindal
$12.2 billion

Steel and power. India

Nonexecutive chair of the O.P. Jindal Group, a steel and power conglomerate founded by her late husband, Om Prakash Jindal, in 1952. Took over group after he died in a helicopter crash in 2005. In his lifetime, patriarch had handed down operations to their four sons, Prithviraj, Sajjan, Ratan and Naveen, who today run their independent units. Net worth up $9.5 billion in past year, mainly due to Naveen’s Jindal Steel & Power whose market capitalization soared more than threefold in 2009. Sajjan took his JSW Energy public, raising $830 million; his JSW Steel forged an alliance with Japan’ s JFE Steel. Savitri won the elections in Haryana, her home state, last November.

Abigail Johnson
$11.5 billion

Fidelity. U.S.

With father controls Fidelity Investments, America’s largest mutual fund company. Firm also boasts large brokerage business, insurance outfit. Father Ned joined his father’s company as analyst 1957, president 15 years later. Abby ran her first diversified fund 1993. Ned trimmed ownership 1995, Abby inherited 24% stake; rumored to have sold some shares back to family members years later. Ownership a mystery: family owns 49% of Fidelity, but size of individual stakes unknown. Abby runs personal and workplace investing division; believed by some to be father’s chosen successor.

Susanne Klatten
$11.1 billion

BMW. Germany

Inherited stake in automaker BMW from late father, Herbert Quandt, who rescued it from bankruptcy decades ago. A trained economist with an MBA also inherited a 50% stake in chemical manufacturer Altana; sits on board. Since February controls over 95% of Altana; has made squeeze out request for remaining shares and plans to delist the firm. Also holds 22% of wind power outfit Nordex AG; 22% of carbon and graphite producer SGL; and 29% of Geohumus, a company that is developing a water storing granulate to be used in agriculture. Has won a civil case against Helg Sgarbi, the ex-lover who tried to blackmail her for millions in a salacious scandal last year. Sgarbi is in jail.

Iris Fontbona & family
$ 11 billion

Copper. Chile

Second wife, and now widow, of billionaire Andronico Luksic, who died of cancer in 2005. Family controls Antofagasta, one of the world’s largest copper miners. Company’s shares have jumped 80% in a year. Also holds shares in Quinenco, a consumer packaging and beverage maker, and Plava Laguna, a chain of Croatian beach resorts. Son Jean Paul serves as chairman of Antofagasta.

Jacqueline Mars
$ 11 billion

Candy. U.S.

Cash-strapped consumers still have appetite for the Mars family’s nearly recession-proof products: chocolate (Snickers, M&Ms), pet food (Pedigree). Created world’s largest confectionery company by acquiring gum maker Wrigley last year for $23 billion. Combined sales now exceed $30 billion; much of the deal paid for with debt. Grandfather Frank Mars began making chocolates in 1911 in his kitchen in Tacoma, Wash. Father, Forrest Sr., invented M&Ms, then introduced malt-flavored nougat, the foundation of famous candy bar line that includes Milky Way, Snickers, 3 Musketeers. Third generation inherited company when dad died in 1999.

Anne Cox Chambers
$10 billion

Cable and media. U.S.

Daughter of Cox Enterprises founder James M. Cox (d. 1957), who finished high school at 17 and worked as a school teacher and newspaper reporter before shelling out $26,000 for the Dayton Evening News in 1898. James Sr. later moved into politics. Today Cox Enterprises includes Cox Communications cable company, 17 daily newspapers, 15 TV stations, 86 radio stations, Manheim auctions (cars), AutoTrader.com. Revenues of $15 billion; ad sales at media operations dwindling. Fortune up $1 billion in past year.

World Top Ten Cleanest Countries

April 23, 2010 By: Tips On Interview Category: News

Worlds Ten Cleanest Countries.

Researchers ranked Worlds top ten Cleanest countries based on 25 indicators, including water and air quality, greenhouse gas emissions and the impact of the environment on the health of the population. A score of 100 is excellent. Sierra Leone ranks at the bottom of the list with a score of 32. The U.S. ranks in the middle of the pack with 63.5. Iceland took top honors with a score of 93.5 thanks to ample clean water, lots of protected nature areas, good national health care and a plenitude of usually clean geothermal power.

1. Iceland

EPI score: 93.5

GDP per capita: $36,000

Population: 311,000

In the category of air pollution (effect on humans), Iceland scored 97.4,

compared with 84.8 for countries of similar GDP per capita.

2. Switzerland

EPI score: 89.1

GDP per capita: $37,000

Population: 7.6 million

Switzerland scores a perfect 100 in forestry, water quality (effects on

humans) and biodiversity and habitat. Like most rich, industrialized nations,

its lowest scoring was in air pollution (effects on ecosystem).

3. Costa Rica

EPI score: 86.4

GDP per capita: $9,600

Population: 4.5 million

That such a relatively poor and developing country ranks third in the EPI is

testament to the natural endowments of Costa Rica, with dense forests,

plentiful water and abundant wildlife. With smart development, Costa Rica can

avoid the standard path that growing nations take of polluting their

environment, only to clean it up again once they become wealthy. Costa Rica

touts its EPI ranking in ads for its tourism sector.

4. Sweden

EPI score: 86

GDP per capita: $33,400

Population: 9.1 million

Sweden has bragging rights, for the moment, among the Scandinavian states,

where out-greening one another is a regional competition.

5. Norway

EPI score: 81.1

GDP per capita: $48,000

Population: 4.7 million

Norway is a nation of astonishing wealth, built on vast offshore reserves of

oil and natural gas. The global warming impact of those fossil fuels is not

debited from Norway’s results, rather it is recognized in the nations that

burn them.

6. Mauritius

EPI score: 80.6

GDP per capita: $10,000

Population: 1.3 million

A tiny island nation in the Indian Ocean to the east of Madagascar, Mauritius

is far and away the highest-ranking nation of Sub-Saharan Africa; Djibouti

comes second with a score of 60.5. Isolation is its benefit, helping keep

pollution low and attracting a tourist trade eager to enjoy healthy marine

areas.

7. France

EPI score: 78.2

GDP per capita: $31,000

Population: 62 million

By far the most populous country in the top 10, France ranks very high in air

and water quality and fisheries management. The EPI methodology benefits

countries with significant nuclear power programs.

8. Austria

EPI score: 78.1

GDP per capita: $35,000

Population: 8.3 million

Neck and neck with France, Austria benefits in the rankings by being

landlocked. With no fisheries to be evaluated, Austria’s 100 score on biome

protection gets a greater weighting.

9. Cuba

EPI score: 78.1

GDP per capita: $8,500

Population: 11.3 million

Does Cuba prove that a communist idyll can also be an environmental one?

Don’t count on it. Researchers doubt the veracity of Cuba’s data, which shows

higher levels of public health, (including almost universal access to

sanitation and clean water) than GDP would suggest. The average EPI score for

Cuba’s income peer group is 65.7.

10. Colombia

EPI score: 76.8

GDP per capita: $7,600

Population: 44 million

The poorest country in the top 10, Colombia’s high ranking is due to the

quality of its natural endowments. Its score for biodiversity and habitat, at

82.7 compares with an average of 51 for its income group. Colombia’s carbon

emissions are relatively low because of plentiful river systems feed enough

hydropower generators to supply some 70% of electricity needs.

Emergency Numbers in Andhra Pradesh State

April 22, 2010 By: Tips On Interview Category: News

Emergency Numbers

Crime Stopper —- 1090

Electricity Complaint —- 1912

EMRI —- 108

Police —- 100

Police Control Room —- 23232222

Traffic Help —- 1073

Railway Enquiry —- 131/135

Apollo Ambulance —- 1066

CDR —- 23456789

Free Service Ambulance —- 102

Gandhi Hospital —- 27505566

Government Chest Hospital —- 23814421/22/23/24

Government ENT Hospital —- 24740245/24742329

LionClub Blood Bank —- 24745243

Yashoda Hospital (Somajiguda) 23319999

Yashoda Hospital (Secunderabad) 27713333

Medwin Blood Bank —- 23202902/4616

Image Hospital (Madhapur) —- 23116666

Post/Telegraph Emergency Numbers

Speed Post Business Centre:24617013

General Post Office Hyderabad 24745978

Secunderabad H.P.O 27842683

C.T.O Hyderabad 24609929

C.T.O Secunderabad 27841345

Ambulance Emergency Numbers

Apollo Emergency 23548888

St. John’s Ambulance Services 24656785

Andhra Mahila Sabha: 27617801

Pioneer Ambulance:23312145

Blood Banks Emergency Numbers

Blood Bank Narayanguda 27567892

Chiranjeevi Blood Bank 23353114

Matadin Geol Blood Bank 23226624

Medwin Blood Bank 23202902 / 4616

Hyderabad Hospitals Emergency Phone Numbers:

Andhra Mahila Sabha 27617801

Apollo Hospital 23607777

Cancer Hospital 23318422

CDR Hospital 23221221

Gandhi Hospital 27702222

Govt.Chest Hospital 23814421

Govt. E.N.T. Hospital 2590245

L.V.Prasad Eye Institute 23608262

Mahaveer Hospital 23393134

Mediciti 23237644

Medinova 23311122/23311133

Newciti Hospitals 26260106/26260104

Neloufer Hospital 23314095

Gandhi Hospital 27702222

ESI 23700531

The Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences 23320332

Vijay Marie Hospital 23315055

Please report to us if any of the emergency phone numbers are not working, we will try to update with new numbers.

Emergency Numbers

April 22, 2010 By: Tips On Interview Category: General Knowledge

Andhra Pradesh Emergency Numbers
Tamil Nadu State Emergency Numbers
Karnataka State Emergency Numbers
Kerala State Emergency Numbers