It is the amount of money any bank has to maintain with the Reserve bank for every customer. Say you deposit Rs. 100 in ABC Bank, the bank cannot lend all the 100 bucks. They have to pledge a small amount say Rs. 10 with RBI and can lend only the remaining 90 and make an income out of that 90. This 10 bucks is the statutory reserve. The RBI modifies this reserve periodically.
$10 USD to me... depends on who you sell it to I suppose and it's condition.
Please don't assume that every old bill has to be a silver certificate. 1928 $10 bills were issued as gold certificates with gold seals and as Federal Reserve Notes, with the familiar green seal and the words "Federal Reserve Note" across the top.Please check the bill's seal color and wording across your bill's top front; then see one of the following questions:"What is the value of a 1928 US 10 dollar Federal Reserve Note?""What is the value of a 1928 US 10 dollar gold certificate?"
Not every old bill is automatically a certificate so it's important to check carefully. If it has a gold seal and says "Gold Certificate", see the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 10 dollar gold certificate?" for values. If it has a green seal and says "Federal Reserve Note", it's not a certificate, it's a Federal Reserve Note. See the question "What is the value of a 1928 US 10 dollar Federal Reserve Note?" for values.
Even though your bills have the phrase "redeemable in gold" on them they're Federal Reserve Notes rather than gold notes. $10 gold certificates were also printed in the 1928 series but they don't have any series letters. 1928 A $10 FRNs are definitely worth more than 1928 B bills, but the difference depends on the issuing Federal Reserve Bank letter. Please see the questions "What is the value of a 1928 A US 10 dollar bill?" and " ... 1928 B ... " for more information.
For persons in the National Guard or Reserves, in Title 10 they are serving in Federal Service in their role as a member of the Reserve Components of the United States militia.
That depends on what title is on the orders. Example; you could be on title-10 status in lieu of annual training which also falls into title-10 .
Air National Guard and Army National Guard
Air National Guard and Army National Guard
Only if you get assigned to an AGR slot or are activated on orders (such as Title 10). If you're only doing monthly UTAs and your Annual Training, you're not on active duty - that's why it's called the Reserve.
The National Guard performs many functions and members can perform duties under either Title 32 or Title 10. Additionally, a member can perform duties for their state which would not be under either Title 32 or Title 10; an example of this latter status would be a Guardsman who was part of the state's response to a natural disaster. To answer the question, one would have to look at the member's orders. A National Guard member will only be in a Title 10 status if they are serving under Active Duty orders. When a National Guard member is performing duties as part of their yearly federal training requirements, they are in a Title 32 status.
Yes, 10 years of inactive reserve service is generally eligible for the issuance of the Armed Forces Reserve Medal. The medal is authorized for individuals who complete 10 years of honorable and satisfactory service in one or more reserve components, including the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR).
Spouses of service members on active duty in pay grades E-1 to E-5, W-1 to W-2, and O-1 to O-2 who can start and complete their coursework while their military sponsor is on Title 10 military orders, including spouses married to members of the National Guard and Reserve Components in these same pay grades. Those who are not eligible include: Spouses married to service members in pay grades: E-6 and above; W-3 and above; and O-3 and above Spouses who are a member of the armed forces themselves currently on Title 10 orders Spouses who are married but legally separated (or under court order or statute of any state or US territory) from a member of the armed forces on Title 10 orders Spouses whose National Guard/Reserve Component military sponsor is in a Warning Orders/Alert, Post Deployment/Demobilization or Transition Status Spouses married to a member of the Coast Guard Spouses who are unable to start and complete their course(s) while their military sponsor is on Title 10 orders
HMAS Reserve ended on 1953-10-19.
it is the inverse of the reserve requirement. 1/rr. so if the required reserve is 10%, then MM would be 10.
Muogamarra Nature Reserve was created on 1954-10-29.
Devils Marbles Conservation Reserve was created in 1961-10.