TS High Court Hall Ticket 2023 Out: The Telangana State High Court has released the Telangana High Court hall ticket for the 2023 exams. Candidates who have registered for the Telangana High Court recruitment exam can now download their hall tickets from the official website. The hall ticket is an essential document that must be carried to the examination center. Candidates without a hall ticket will not be allowed to appear for the examination.

TS High Court Hall Ticket 2023 Download Link: The TS High Court hall ticket 2023 download link is available on the official website of Telangana High Court. Candidates can also access the direct TSHC Hall Ticket Download 2023 link provided by the concerned authorities via email or SMS. Candidates should carefully verify all the details mentioned on the hall ticket before appearing for the examination. In case of any discrepancy, candidates must immediately inform the concerned authorities for necessary action.


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TS High Court Exam Date: The Telangana State High Court has announced the TS High Court Exam date for the post of Office subordinate. The TS High Court Recruitment 2023 Exam will be held on 29th April 2023. The Telangana High Court Admit card has been released on 25th April 2023 and the exam date is mentioned on the hall ticket. Candidates must make sure to reach the examination center well before the reporting time mentioned on the hall ticket.

The candidates can download the TS High Court Hall Ticket for various posts on the official website @tshc.gov.in. once it is available. To download the hall ticket the candidates required their login credentials. The link to download the TS High Court Hall Ticket 2023 has been activated here which has been released on 25th April 2023.

In case the candidates forget their Key Number or Password while downloading the Kerala High Court Assistant Admit Card, then they should not worry because still, they have the option to recover the lost password and download the hall ticket by following the steps mentioned below:

The candidates should remember a few important points while downloading the Kerala High Court Assistant hall ticket to avoid any downloading issues or obstruction on the examination day. The important points are stated below:

Along with the Kerala High Court Assistant hall ticket, the candidates should bring valid Photo ID Proof to the exam hall. If they fail to do so, they will not be allowed to appear in the examination. The list of required documents is stated below:

The candidates should be familiar with the Kerala High Court Assistant Syllabus and Exam Pattern and overall selection process before they start the preparation. The selection of the candidates for the post of Assistant in the high court of Kerala will be done on the basis of the Objective Test, Descriptive Test, and Interview. The Kerala High Court Assistant exam pattern of the objective exam round is shared below in a detailed manner.

The writ petition was filed by three candidates who had appeared for the Group-I preliminary test, contending that there were many lacunae on the part of the TSPSC in conducting the re-exam on June 11. Their counsel A. Giridhar Rao told the bench that the TSPSC had failed to get the hall ticket numbers and photographs of the candidates on the hall tickets of candidates appearing for the test.

The judge also sought to know why the hall tickets issued to the candidates had no specific numbers and the reasons for not displaying photographs of the candidates on the hall tickets. These aspects were basic ingredients of conducting the exam without giving any scope for any mistakes, the judge said.

Delhi High Court has issued admit cards for the Senior Personal Assistant (Open) Examination 2023. Eligible candidates can now download their hall tickets from the official website delhihighcourt.nic.in or recruitment.nta.nic.in.

About: High Court of Andhra Pradesh has released the hall ticket for Civil Judge (Junior Division) 2023 written examination. To download the hall ticket, click on the link provided below.

The National Testing Agency has not released the admit cards of some candidates whose images were blurry. In case of any difficulty regarding the hall tickets, they should contact 011-40759000 or e-mail at jeemain@nta.ac.in

Hyderabad: The Telangana High Court on Saturday cancelled the Group-1 preliminary examination conducted by TS Public Service Commission (TSPSC) on June 11. It cited several lapses like the biometrics of candidates not being obtained and OMR sheet issued without the hall ticket number and photograph of the candidates.

Signatures of candidates did not tally with their signatures on the hall tickets. Petitioner cite the case of K. Nandini/Y. Nandini, say her signature on OMR sheet and hall ticket did not match. It was the same with the signature of another candidate, Bharath Naroju.

The overwhelming view at the town hall meeting was that the people of the St. Louis region want the Missouri Supreme Court to fix the problems caused by having 80 municipal courts and nearly 60 police departments in one metro area. Too many of those courts are using their police departments as ticket-writing machines to raise money to fill city budgets. Their targets are often poor, and black, like Howard, or like Dawn Jones, the St. Louis woman in the video at the town hall meeting.

An action by the plaintiffs under Section 1340 of the Revised Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A.  1340, to recover from the defendant Collector taxes claimed to have been illegally and erroneously collected. The question involved is whether the receipts of a ballroom operated by the plaintiffs are subject to the so-called "cabaret tax." Section 1700(a) (1) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A.  1700(a) (1), provides for a tax on, "the amount paid for admission to any place, including admission by season ticket or subscription." Section 1650 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A.  1650, fixes the rate of this "admissions tax" at 1 cent for each 5 cents or major fraction thereof paid within the terms of Section 1700(a) (1), supra. Section 1700(e) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A.  1700(e), provides for a tax on, "all amounts paid for admission, refreshment, service, or merchandise, at any roof garden, cabaret, or other similar place furnishing a public performance for profit, by or for any patron or guest who is entitled to be present during any portion of such performance. The term `roof garden, cabaret, or other similar place' shall include any room in any hotel, restaurant, hall, or other public place where music and dancing privileges or any other entertainment, except instrumental or mechanical music alone, are afforded the patrons in connection with the serving or selling of food, refreshment, or merchandise. A performance shall be regarded as being furnished for profit for purposes of this section even though the charge made for admission, refreshment, service, or merchandise is not increased by reason of the furnishing of such performance. No tax shall be applicable under subsection (a) (1) on account of an amount paid with respect to which tax is imposed under this subsection." Section 1650 of the Code, supra, fixes the rate of the tax under Section 1700(e) at 20 per cent.

"As all of us who have attended cabarets know, there is a uniform increase in price in the food, drinks and merchandise sold. In many instances the bar price of a drink will be 15 cents, and in the cabaret hall it will be as high as 50 or 60 cents for the same thing. Certainly, it would not be worth the 50 or 60 cents to carry it up one flight of stairs. So that in all instances where a public performance of this character is given the public pays an admission price, although as Justice Holmes said, it may be disguised in the price of the article sold. We would suggest that it would not be difficult to draft an amendment to bring public performances for profit under the bill."

Prior to the change in Example No. 1, Section 101.14 of Regulations 43 in the year 1941, noted above, the Treasury Department apparently was well aware that the usual practice of dance halls or ballrooms was to impose an admission charge upon each patron, for several earlier rulings had been made relative to the taxability of admission charges to dance halls. Informal ruling No. 5, dated July 28, 1932, provided: "An admission charge of ten cents to a park containing a dance pavilion is made. A further charge of 35 cents is made for a ticket entitling the purchaser to dance the entire evening. Many people enter the park by paying the 10 cents admission charge but do not dance and are not required to pay the 35 cents. Since the admission charges are separate and each is less than 41 cents, neither is subject to the tax." Standard Federal Tax Service, CCH, 1940, Par. 2303D, p. 5215.

There have been a number of rulings issued in regard to the admissions tax under Section 1700(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. These rulings would indicate that they were intended to apply to those types of entertainment establishments which impose a direct admission charge upon their patrons such as a theater, opera, skating rink, ballroom or dance hall, rather than to the type of establishment which imposes no direct admission charge on its patrons, such as a cabaret or night club. Representative examples of rulings concerning the admissions tax section are: T.D. 5129, C.B. 1942-1, 271; M.T. 6, C.B. 1942-2, 245; M.T. 29, C.B. 1948-2, 166; M.T. 30, C.B. 1948-2, 167. A recent decision of the United States Supreme Court dealing with Section 1700(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, the admissions tax section, is Wilmette Park District v. Campbell, 1949, 70 S. Ct. 195. Lower court opinions in this case are commented on in, 61 Harvard Law Review 894 (1948); 42 Illinois Law Review 818 (1948). 006ab0faaa

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