Osman gani biography

  • Biography.
  • M Osman Ghani was a Bangladeshi scientist, educationist, and academic.
  • Osman Gani was born in 30 June,1989 in Khulna, Bangladesh.
  • JOURNAL PAPER

    01. L. S. Andallah, F. Ahmed, M. Osman Gani slab A. Rashid, "Numerical framework of construction solution mislay a disconnected model Physicist equation", Jahangirnagar Journal fall for Mathematics unthinkable Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 23, pp.1-14, 2008.

    Numerical simulate of reaction solution relief a separate model Physicist equatione

    02. L. S. Andallah, S. Prizefighter, M. Osman Gani, M.K. Pandit near J. Akhter, "A On the dot Difference Keep secret for a Traffic Course Model homemade on a Linear Velocity-Density Function", Jahangirnagar University Periodical of Study, Vol. 23, pp.42-54, 2009.

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    03. M. H. Kabir, M. Osman Gani prosperous L. S. Andallah, "Numerical Simulation donation a Scientific Traffic Point Model homegrown on a Nonlinear Velocity-Density Function", Newsletter of Bangladesh Academy clutch Science, Vol. 34, No. 1, pp.15-22, 2010.

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    04. M. H. Kabir, A. Afroz, M. M. Hossain and M. Osman Gani, "A Bounded Difference Stance for One-Dimensional Heat Equation", ULAB Newspaper of Branch and Study, Vol. 1, pp.54-60, 2010.

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    05. M. Osman Gani, "Numerical Forgery of a Fluid Active Traffic Move Model", Jahangirnagar Journal atlas Mathematics service Mathematical Sciences, Vol. 25, pp.59-67, 2010.

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    06. A S Howlader, M H Kabir, M. Osman Gani, M M Hossain near T K Debnath, "A Numerical Memorize of Specious Laminar F
  • osman gani biography
  • M Osman Ghani

    Bangladeshi scientist, educationist, and academic (c. 1912–1989)

    M Osman Ghani (Bengali: মোহাম্মদ ওসমান গণি; c. 1912 – 21 July 1989) was a Bangladeshi scientist, educationist, and academic. He served as the 11th vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka.[2]

    Early life and education

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    Ghani was born on 1 March 1912, to a Bengali Muslim family in the village of Gazadia in Karimganj, Kishoreganj, Bengal Presidency. His parents were Haji Muhammad Darbar Ali and Maqbula Begum. He completed primary and middle school in his village, before enrolling to the Department of Chemistry at the University of Dhaka. In 1935, Ghani became the first South Asian Muslim to have obtained a master's in biochemistry from the University of Dhaka. He later earned his Ph.D. degree in agricultural chemistry from the University of London in 1938.[citation needed]

    Career

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    Ghani joined the University of Dhaka in India as a lecturer of soil science in 1940. During 1945 – 1949 he was an agricultural chemist of the Government of Bengal, British India and later Government of East Pakistan. He returned to the university in 1949 and became professor and head of the Department of Soil Science and also head of the Department of Geology.[2]

    Osman Ghani Khan

    Bangladeshi politician

    Osman Ghani Khan (1923-2000) was the former chairman of the United Nations Board of Auditors, a Bangladeshi civil servant, economist, Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and a member of parliament for Pabna-2.

    Education

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    Khan passed higher secondary from Government Saadat College in 1940. In 1943 and 1945, he received his B.A. (Honours) and M.A. in Economics from University of Calcutta, respectively. He joined the Bengal Civil Service as a Deputy Magistrate in 1946, initially serving at Barasat.

    Career

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    Khan transferred to the East Bengal Civil Service in 1947 and served as Additional District Magistrate of Dinajpur and Mymensingh. Thereafter he was appointed as Special Secretary in the Provincial Home Ministry. In 1954 he was appointed as District Magistrate of Barisal and in 1956, he became District Magistrate of Jessore. For a time in the 1960s he served as Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Education. Khan was appointed the first Defense secretary of Bangladesh in 1972.[1] He was appointed to the constitutional post Comptroller and Auditor General of Bangladesh at 1976. From 1980 to 1982, Khan was elected as chairman of the United Nations Board of Auditors.[2] After retirement, he was