Statements A, B and D correctly describe the nature of central, state and open universities. Central universities are created by Acts of Parliament, state universities by Acts of State Legislatures, and open universities typically operate predominantly through distance or open learning modes. Statement C is wrong because deemed-to-be university status is declared by the Central Government on the advice or recommendation of the UGC, not by the UGC alone. Therefore, the correct combination must include A, B and D but exclude C.
Option A:
Option A is incorrect because it recognises A and B as correct but leaves out D, which is also correct about open universities offering programmes mainly through distance mode. By omitting D, it fails to capture all the true statements.
Option B:
Option B is correct because it includes exactly the three true statements A, B and D and excludes the false statement C. It reflects the statutory processes of establishing central and state universities and the characteristic distance mode of open universities. This combination fully matches the set of correct statements.
Option C:
Option C is incorrect because it includes statement C, which wrongly attributes the power to declare a deemed-to-be university solely to the UGC. Even though B and D are true, the inclusion of C makes the entire combination invalid.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect because it treats all four statements as correct. Since statement C misrepresents the legal process for declaring deemed-to-be universities, including it among the correct statements contradicts the regulatory framework.
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