Thursday, December 2, 2021

IIT-BHU student bags ₹2cr package from US company in placement


IIT-BHU student bags ₹2cr package from US company in placement

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Varanasi:02.12.2021

On the first day of campus placement, a student of IIT (BHU) was offered a maximum package of Rs 2.05 crores ($274,250) by a United States company. According to the IIT (BHU) spokesperson, the campus placement started on Tuesday midnight at the IIT (BHU). Till the end of the first phase, 55 companies had given 232 offer letters to students having an average package of Rs 32.89 lakh per annum and a minimum of Rs 12 lakh.

The total number of registered students is 1,243. “Last year by this time we had 91 companies offering 324 jobs. Earlier, 66 companies had offered pre-placement to a total of 241 students of B Tech IIIrd year and IDD IVth year during their internship,” he said.

The campus selection process is being done in Aryabhatta Hostel of the institute.

Train runs over man, he remains safe


Train runs over man, he remains safe

Harveer Dabas TNN

Bijnor:02.12.2021

Umesh Jain, 60, escaped unscathed after he was run over by a goods train. Jain had fallen on a railway track at Dhampur railway station in Bijnor. He was unable to muster enough strength to get up because of a prolonged illness.

He was later rescued by the government railway police.

“I was trying to cross when I lost balance and fell on the track. I couldn’t get up even when I saw the train approaching. I laid down on the tracks remembering god. The last thing I heard was a loud rattling sound,” Jain, who is a hawker, said.

Dhampur’s GRP chowki in-charge, Ranveer Singh, said, “The train driver sent a message to the control room and informed them about a body on the track. When we reached, Jain was lying straight with his face down. We overturned him and found him in a semi-conscious state with a rapid heartbeat.”

Singh said the goods train comprised 48 wagons. “We informed Jain’s family members and they rushed to the railway station and took him to a private hospital. They said his condition is normal,” he added.

Sources said the train ran over him for roughly 45 seconds.

LU students learn to spot ‘fake news’


‘VERIFY FACTS, PIXES’

LU students learn to spot ‘fake news’

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Lucknow:02.12.2021

Students of Lucknow University were on Wednesday taught various techniques to identify fake news. They were told by teachers to forward only authentic news and information on social media platforms.

The techniques were taught to students during a workshop on ‘fake news’ held as part of cyber awareness campaign in the zoology department.

Head of journalism and

mass communication department Prof Mukul Srivastava informed students how they can identify fake news and morphed photographs on social media. Apart from fact checking, people should also use their ‘common sense’ to identify fake news and verify facts before forwarding anything on social media, he said.

Head of the zoology department Prof Sudhir Kumar, who was the chief guest on the occasion, said that the virtual world is as important as the real world.

After politics and history, the target of fake news and trolls are science subjects in which pseudosciences are projected as science and perception as history, he added.

Forms to be submitted at Collectorate



Forms to be submitted at Collectorate

Lucknow: 02.12.2021

According to the district administration, the official figure of coronavirus victims in Lucknow is 2,651. The state government has released funds for all these. An applicant needs to submit the form at room number 54 on the second floor at Collectorate along with Covid and death certificates. If there is no Covid certificate, the claims will be verified by an expert team. “If a family is denied a form at room number 54, they can visit my office. As many families don’t have Covid certificates, the directive says that a medical summary or note of symptomatic treatment will be acceptable for ex gratia sans Covid report. We will also allow submission of applications where there is no medical record. Such applications will be verified by an expert team,” said additional district magistrate (finance) Bipin Mishra. TNN

Suspected Covid treatment record enough to apply for death ex gratia


Suspected Covid treatment record enough to apply for death ex gratia

Arvind.Chauhan@timesgroup.com

Lucknow:02.12.2021

Families of patients who succumbed to suspected Covid-19 will be able to apply for ex gratia of Rs 50,000 even if there is no certificate confirming a Covid death. Medical records or doctor’s certificate detailing treatment of symptoms of Covid will be acceptable for claim, said an order from the state government on Wednesday.

Such applicants will have to submit whatever medical summary or doctor’s note they have indicating suspected coronavirus infection. However, the claim would be verified by a panel of experts. It would also only be applicable if a patient has succumbed within 30 days of treatment.

Further, responding to a query from TOI, additional district magistrate (finance) Bipin Mishra, the nodal officer for the Rs 50,000 ex gratia disbursal, said that even if there are no medical records at all, the application would be accepted.

In an investigation, TOI had found that there were many such patients who succumbed at home. In remote villages, victims died at clinics or private hospitals, often run by quacks. Such families had no document except for a death certificate to file for ex gratia claim.

The assurance from the administration has brought a ray of hope to scores of families which had followed the state government’s directives of home treatment in the absence of oxygen-supported beds in hospitals.

One such family is that of Sunita Singh’s. Her husband Sunit died in April and since then, life has been extremely difficult for Sunita and her three children. As Sunita is illiterate, her two daughters-—Saumya (18) and Shubhi

(15)—have become breadearners by taking tuition classes. The family till now could not receive any financial aid from the government because they had no medical summary or doctor’s note saying their father died of suspected coronavirus.

“There were no oxygen beds available at the time. We all were infected and took medicines (Ivermectin and Paracetamol) as advised by state health authorities. However, my father’s condition kept deteriorating and he succumbed on April 17, at a non-Covid hospital. Doctors did not give any medical summary, fearing action for admitting a Covid patient,” said Saumya, a student of LU. They live in a rented accommodation in Para.

“We have also applied for claims under Mukhyamantri Bal Vikas Yojana (Samanya) for non-Covid orphan and widow pension but have not received anything till now. On compassionate grounds, our landlord and children’s school waived off rent and fee for a year,” said Sunita.

Daily wage labourer Sanjeevan Lal (45) succumbed to suspected Covid on May 3. He is survived by his wife and five children. His eldest daughter Pooja (17) and wife Rajkumari had taken him to a local clinic in Bada Kasmandi village.

“We weren’t aware that the clinic was run by a quack. My father had all symptoms of corona, but since we don’t have certificates, we couldn’t apply for ex gratia,” said Pooja, who dropped out of school to work as domestic help to support the family.

Omicron grounds Dec 15 plan to resume regular int’l flights


Omicron grounds Dec 15 plan to resume regular int’l flights

Flights Within Air Bubbles Will Continue: DGCA

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:02.12.2021

Regular international flights to and from India are unlikely to resume from December 15, as originally scheduled, due to uncertainty over the impact of the Omicron variant of Covid-19 on the course of the pandemic, the country's civil aviation regulator said on Wednesday.

The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) will notify the new date “in due course”, depending on how the situation unfolds. International flights within air bubbles with 31 countries will continue till scheduled flights resume.

“In view of the evolving global scenario with the emergence of new variants of concern, the situation is being watched closely in consultation with all stakeholders and an appropriate decision indicating the effective date of resumption of scheduled commercial international passenger services shall be notified in due course,” DGCA said.


UP launches 6-day focused Covid-19 testing campaign

Lucknow:

To zero in on possible carriers of Omicron variant of coronavirus, the Uttar Pradesh government launched a focused six-day testing drive on Wednesday.

The campaign aims at intensifying testing and conducting focused activities in vulnerable pockets, reports Shailvee Sharda.

Additional chief secretary (ACS), health and family welfare, Amit Mohan Prasad said while prevention and adherence to Covid-19 protocol was the best defence against the virus, including the new strain Omicron, surveillance activities had been intensified and focused testing was being carried out in the state. P 6

Omicron may weaken demand for int’l flights again

India had only last week announced graded resumption of regular international flights from December 15, nearly 21 months after all air travel had been suspended on March 23 last year. Limited flights operating within air bubbles since international travel resumed worldwide have sent fares skyrocketing. It isn’t uncommon now for oneway fares to be higher than return fares for peak season. Omicron could weaken demand for international flights again. Resumption of regular scheduled flights might also get indefinitely delayed.

Quarantine fears see many int’l travellers cancel trips


Quarantine fears see many int’l travellers cancel trips

Mumbai: 02.12.2021

It was déjà vu for international travellers as well as the travel industry as Wednesday brought a spate of flight cancellations and rescheduling even as social media was inundated with queries from worried passengers about hotel quarantine, much like the past two pandemic summers.

Late on Tuesday night, the Maharashtra government had imposed new entry restrictions, among which was a mandatory week-long hotel quarantine for passengers arriving from or even transiting from “at-risk” countries. Prashant Pitti, co-founder, EaseMyTrip, said: “People were gradually opening up to the idea of international travel. In comparison with January-March 2021, we had witnessed a 50% jump in international travel bookings.”

A travel agent, requesting anonymity, said most cancellations and rescheduling came from students and passengers arriving and transiting from the UK and Europe. For those who have decided to go ahead with the India trip, booking hotels for quarantine is a problem. Social media queries poured in as confused passengers booked on international flights sought answers. TNN

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

அரசு பஸ்சில், கோழிக்கும் அரை டிக்கெட் வாங்கி பயணித்த விவசாயி


அரசு பஸ்சில், கோழிக்கும் அரை டிக்கெட் வாங்கி பயணித்த விவசாயி

Updated : டிச 01, 2021 04:24 | Added : நவ 30, 2021 22:04





கொப்பால்: விவசாயி ஒருவர் அரசு பஸ்சில்,கோழிக்கும் அரை டிக்கெட் வாங்கி பயணித்தார்.

கொப்பாலை சேர்ந்தவர் ராமப்பா, 45. விவசாயியான இவர், கடந்த 28ல் ஹைதராபாத்தில் இருந்து கொப்பால் கங்காவதிக்கு அரசு பஸ்சில் கோழியுடன் பயணித்தார்.அப்போது டிரைவர், 'கோழிக்கும் அரை டிக்கெட் வாங்க வேண்டும்' என, கூறியுள்ளார்.அதன்படி, 463 ரூபாய் கொடுத்து கோழிக்கும் தனியாக டிக்கெட் பெற்று பயணித்தார்.

ஒரு கோழியின் விலையை 300 ரூபாய் முதல் 400 ரூபாய் மட்டுமே இருக்கும். ஆனால் 463 ரூபாய் கொடுத்து பயணித்துள்ள இந்த கோழி, சமூக வலைதளங்களிலும் பரவி பரபரப்பை ஏற்படுத்தி உள்ளது.

இது குறித்து கண்டக்டர் அனிஷ் கூறுகையில், “ஹைதராபாத்தில் இருந்து கொப்பாலுக்கு வந்த ஒருவர், கோழியுடன் பஸ்சில் ஏறினார். கோழிக்கும் டிக்கெட் வாங்க வேண்டும் என கூறியதால் அவர் வாங்கி பயணித்தார். இது வழக்கமாக உள்ளது தான்,” என்றார்.

தலைமை செயலகத்தில் வாடகை திடீர் உயர்வு

தலைமை செயலகத்தில் வாடகை திடீர் உயர்வு

Added : நவ 30, 2021 21:47

சென்னை:தலைமை செயலகத்தில், ராணுவத்தின் கட்டுப்பாட்டில் உள்ள கட்டங்களில் இயங்கும் கடைகளுக்கு, வாடகை மூன்று மடங்காக உயர்த்தப்பட்டுள்ளது.

தலைமை செயலகம் வளாகத்தில், பெரும்பாலான கட்டடங்கள், ராணுவத்தின் கட்டுப் பாட்டில் உள்ளன. இவற்றில், ஓட்டல்கள், டீக்கடைகள், வங்கிகள் போன்றவை இயங்கி வருகின்றன. இவற்றுக்கு, சதுர அடிக்கு, 25 முதல் 30 ரூபாய் வரை வாடகை நிர்ணயிக்கப் பட்டிருந்தது.

தற்போது, ஒரு சதுர அடிக்கான வாடகை, 60 முதல் 66 ரூபாய் வரை நிர்ணயம் செய்யப் பட்டு உள்ளது. இதன் காரணமாக, மாதம், 6,000 வாடகை கொடுத்தவர்கள், 18 ஆயிரம் ரூபாய் வாடகை செலுத்த வேண்டிய நிலை ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது. மாதம், 25 ஆயிரம் ரூபாய் வாடகை செலுத்தியவர், 1 லட்சம் ரூபாய் செலுத்த வேண்டிய நிலை ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது.

தலைமை செயலகம் பழைய கட்டடமும், ராணுவத்திற்கு சொந்தமானது. அதில், அரசு அலுவலகங்கள் இயங்குவதால், வாடகை உயர்த்தப்படவில்லை என்று அதிகாரிகள் தெரிவித்தனர்.

ராஜஸ்தானுக்கு விமான சுற்றுலா ஐ.ஆர்.சி.டி.சி., ஏற்பாடு

ராஜஸ்தானுக்கு விமான சுற்றுலா ஐ.ஆர்.சி.டி.சி., ஏற்பாடு

Added : நவ 30, 2021 21:30

சென்னை:ராஜஸ்தானுக்கு ஐ.ஆர்.சி.டி.சி., விமான சுற்றுலாவை ஏற்பாடு செய்துள்ளது.

இந்திய ரயில்வே உணவு சுற்றுலா கழகமான ஐ.ஆர்.சி.டி.சி., பாரம்பரிய கோவில்கள், சுற்றுலா தலங்களுக்கு சிறப்பு சுற்றுலா ரயில்கள் இயக்குவதுடன், விமான சுற்றுலாவுக்கும் ஏற்பாடு செய்து வருகிறது.வரும் 12ம் தேதி ராஜஸ்தான் மாநிலத்துக்கு, ஏழு நாட்கள் சுற்றுலாவை ஏற்பாடு செய்துள்ளது.

இப்பயணத்தில் ஜெய்ப்பூர், அஜ்மீர், புஷ்கர், ஜோத்பூர், ஜெய்சல்மார் மற்றும் பிகானீர் சென்று வரலாம். ஒருவருக்கு 32 ஆயிரத்து 500 ரூபாய் கட்டணம்.மேலும் தகவலுக்கு, சென்னை அலுவலகம் - 90031 40682; மதுரை அலுவலகம் - 82879 31977; திருச்சி அலுவலகம் - 82879 31974 ஆகிய எண்களில் தொடர்பு கொள்ளலாம்.

ஷீரடிக்கு ரயில்

மதுரையில் இருந்து ஷீரடிக்கு, வரும் 24ம் தேதி யாத்திரை ரயில் இயக்கப்படுகிறது. இந்த ரயில் திண்டுக்கல், திருச்சி, விழுப்புரம், சென்னை எழும்பூர் வழியாக ஷீரடிக்கு செல்லும்.இப்பயணத்தில், ஷீரடி சாய்பாபா, பண்டரிபுரம் பாண்டுரங்கன், சிங்கனாப்பூர் சுயம்பு சனீஸ்வரர் மற்றும் ஆந்திர மாநிலம் மந்த்ராலயம் சென்று வரலாம்.

ஏழு நாட்கள் சுற்றுலாவுக்கு ஒருவருக்கு, 7,060 ரூபாய் கட்டணம்.ஷீரடியில், 65 வயதுக்கு மேல் உள்ளவர்கள், இரண்டு தவணைகள் கொரோனா தடுப்பூசி போட்டிருந்தால் மட்டுமே தரிசனத்துக்கு அனுமதிக்கப்படுவர். மேலும் தகவலுக்கு, சென்னை அலுவலகத்தை, 90031 40680 எண்ணில் தொடர்பு கொள்ளலாம்.இணையதளத்தில் www.irctctourism.com முகவரியிலும் தெரிந்து கொள்ளலாம்.

வங்கிகளில் கேட்பாரற்று கிடக்கும் ரூ.29,697 கோடி


வங்கிகளில் கேட்பாரற்று கிடக்கும் ரூ.29,697 கோடி

Updated : நவ 30, 2021 23:58 | Added : நவ 30, 2021 20:57 

புதுடில்லி:வங்கிகளில் நீண்ட காலம் பரிவர்த்தனை நடக்காத கணக்குகளில் வாடிக்கையாளர்களின், 29 ஆயிரத்து 697 கோடி ரூபாய் கோரப்படாமல் உள்ளதாக மத்திய நிதியமைச்சர் நிர்மலா சீதாராமன் தெரிவித்து உள்ளார்.

வாரிசுதாரர்கள்ராஜ்சபாவில் நேற்று மத்திய நிதியமைச்சர் நிர்மலா சீதாராமன் பேசியதாவது:கடந்த 2020 டிச.,31 நிலவரப்படி வங்கிகளில் 10 ஆண்டுகளுக்கும் மேலாக பரிவர்த்தனை நடக்காத, 9 கோடி வாடிக்கையாளர்களின் கணக்குகளில் 29 ஆயிரத்து 697 கோடி ரூபாய் கோரப்படாமல் உள்ளது. மேலும், 64 வங்கி சாரா நிதி நிறுவனங்களில் ஏழு ஆண்டு 'டிபாசிட்' காலம் முடிவடைந்தும், 71 லட்சம் ரூபாய் திரும்பப் பெறப்படாமல் உள்ளது. ஓராண்டுக்கு மேலாக பரிவர்த்தனை நடக்காத கணக்குகளை ஆராய்ந்து, வாடிக்கையாளர்களிடம் அதற்கான காரணங்களை கேட்கும்படி அனைத்து வங்கிகளுக்கும் ரிசர்வ் வங்கி உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது.

மேலும், சிறப்பு முகாம்கள் வாயிலாக இரண்டு ஆண்டுகள் செயல்படாமல் உள்ள கணக்குகளில் உள்ள வாரிசுதாரர்களை தொடர்பு கொண்டு பணம் கோரப்படாமல் உள்ளது பற்றி தெரிவிக்கும்படியும் வங்கிகள் அறிவுறுத்தப்பட்டுஉள்ளன. வங்கிகள் அவற்றின் வலைதளத்தில் கோரப்படாத டிபாசிட் தொகை, 10 ஆண்டுகளாக பரிவர்த்தனை செய்யப்படாத வாடிக்கையாளர்களின் பெயர், முகவரி விபரங்களை வெளியிடும்படியும் உத்தரவிடப்பட்டுள்ளது.

விழிப்புணர்வு

மேலும், 10 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு மேல் கோரப்படாத தொகை டிபாசிட்தாரர் கல்வி மற்றும் விழிப்புணர்வு நிதியத்தில் சேர்க்கப்படும். அதன் பின், டிபாசிட்தாரர் அல்லது வாரிசுகள் கோரினால் அந்த நிதியத்தில் இருந்து வட்டியுடன் டிபாசிட் தொகை திரும்பப் பெறப்பட்டு வழங்கப்படும்.இவ்வாறு அவர் பேசினார்.

How AI has given a boost to the chip design ecosystem



How AI has given a boost to the chip design ecosystem

Many companies and startups are building chips for specific AI use cases

Sujit.John@timesgroup.com

01.12.2021

Speech recognition had an error rate of 16% around the time Apple’s Siri was launched early last decade. Which means it wouldn’t understand many of the words/sentences we spoke to her, and so it provided no answers, or wrong answers. But as we spoke to her more, she learnt from it. Today, speech recognition systems have significantly lower error rates, they can even understand accents. But it has taken years to get there.

If you need to build great AI systems quickly, you need to throw a lot of data and compute power into it. More and more use cases are emerging where the AI system needs to instantaneously understand what’s going on to be able to respond to it. Braking by autonomous cars is a classic one.

Chips with AI acceleration, and chips that are designed for AI are coming in to deal with this. Semiconductor companies, startups, and even those like Google, Apple, Amazon and Facebook, for whom AI is central to what they do, are all developing such chips. A lot of this work is happening in India, one of the world’s foremost chip design hubs.

Srikanth Velamakanni, cofounder & CEO of analytics company Fractal Analytics, says such chips are essential to deal with the massive volumes of data that many systems now generate. “One flight of an aircraft generates more data than Google generates in a day. Because it’s got so many sensors and such high velocity data coming through,” he says. It’s similar in factories and industrial equipment. “You have to comb through all this data in real-time to see what may be failing. Human beings are not capable of that. It also needs hybrid computing, a combination of edge and server. We are looking at Intel’s new processors with AI acceleration to see how much of a performance boost we can create in these kinds of applications,” he says.

Fractal is also looking at these chips for a solution they call Customer Genomics, which mines massive customer data, like in banks, and recommends the next best action for the customer.

Ruchir Dixit, India country manager at semiconductor tools maker Siemens EDA, says such analytics is possible to do in software, but it won’t be fast enough. Many have used GPUs, because they are designed for heavy-duty graphics processing, but even those fall short for emerging requirements. “A machine learning algorithm implemented on hardware is always orders of magnitude faster. When I launch a software programme on my laptop, it has to find time from the CPU, even as the CPU deals with other computations it may be involved in, like an on-going video call. But if you put it in hardware, it doesn’t care what else you are doing, it will do it immediately because that’s what it is designed to do,” he says.

Different AI functions may require their own different chips. Understanding images in a car, with its limited power and limited ability to absorb heat, may require a different AI chip from that in a factory, which has AC power coming in and where how much heat the hardware dissipates may not be a concern.

Alok Jain, VP of R&D at semiconductor tools company Cadence Design Systems, says there are very specific chips for speech recognition, for face recognition. “It all depends on the level of complexity, the level of cores that are required on the size of data available to you. It depends on how dependent the variables it is dealing with are – if they are dependent, the communication between the cores becomes important,” he says.

Given the variety of chips needed, even startups, he says, have found a great opportunity to serve various niches. SambaNova, Groq, Cerebras in the US are among them. In India, there are those like AlphaICs and QpiAI.

IBM recently announced the Telum processor, its first processor to contain on-chip acceleration for AI inferencing and targeted at the financial services industry. Google is known to be building a large team in India for its chip design.

Prakash Mallya, MD of Intel India, says the choice of whether to use a chip designed for a specific AI application, or a general purpose chip with AI acceleration will depend partly on software capabilities within the organisation. The former, he says, requires more software capabilities to program and to build the IT stack.

Never dilute standards for recognition at workplace


Never dilute standards for recognition at workplace

By Prabir Jha

01.12.2021

At Diwali, we all received numerous messages. Many were the usual forwarded types, some were mass messages on egroups, some clear visual re-pastes, and still fewer were typed or customised for you, mentioning your name.

How did your response vary? Did some mean more to you than the others. Not that getting a cut-paste greeting had an indifferent intent, but it just did not connect. Worse, we were both recipients and transmitters, and responders. And we did also respond differently.

This is the issue with much of the recognition efforts in organisations. They either become de rigueur, a ritual that just stayed a checkbox. The Diwali moments got me to cull some learnings from experience for most firms and their leaders…

Clarity over intent: Corporations often get their intent muddled. What do you want to recognise? Outcome? Behaviour? Then, who do you want to recognise? Individuals or cross-functional teams? When do you want to recognise? Now or later? Who should recognise? Someone really big or someone closer to the awardee? The simple answer would be a medley. But think well on these questions. All of these will make or break your recognition culture.

Think of effect, not ease: Very often, firms adopt cookie-cutter thinking while designing their recognition programmes. What is easy to do? What can be scaled up? What can get system-generated? And they kill the spirit of recognition. If you do recognise, do it well. How will this be experienced by the recipient? Work backwards from there.

Harmonise but differentiate: Much of recognition can be a timely thank you, but an authentic one. Different levels of impact or behaviour must be expected across the hierarchy. Don’t dilute your recognition standards. Differentiate. You may have a broad framework that enables recognition at various levels of business. This helps interconnect but always differentiate, otherwise it will become another misplaced example of tokenism.

Heart over mind: While one makes a thoughtful judgment on what to recognise, the recognition philosophy is essentially a heart exercise. It must make the person feel appreciated, recognised and wanted. It must trigger a sense of pride and inspiration, after seeing the recognition to that person. It must make lunch table conversations positive, not toxic. So, think well about your recognition . Don’t distribute recognition like alms. You thought you bought peace? You just trivialised your recognition. Recognition does not breed complacency.

Period: I have had this conversation with many CEOs. Many are hesitant in appreciating, as they believe recipients will become lazy. And those upset will drag their feet. To me, both are untenable arguments. As I told one CEO once, “If you are waiting for them to reach Mount Everest before you appreciate, they won’t go beyond the first base camp.” Every recognition does not have to be an Oscar. But every positive word allows you to raise the bar.

The writer is the founder & CEO of Prabir Jha People Advisory

5,000 apply for ex gratia, many more sans Covid death docus


5,000 apply for ex gratia, many more sans Covid death docus

Amrita.Didyala@timesgroup.com

Hyderabad:01.12.2021

Around 5,000 people have so far applied for Covid compensation in Telangana, as per health authorities. With many more returning from Meeseva centres each day, hoping to get proper certificates so they can apply for the compensation.

The compensation for family members of Covid victims was announced by the Centre a month ago. The Telangana government released guidelines for payment of the ex gratia recently.

So far, 6.75 lakh people in Telangana have been infected by Covid-19, of which 3,992 succumebd to the virus, as per official figures. However, these figures have taken into account only deaths of patients who did not have any other ailment and deaths recorded in hospitals. Authorities say, deaths in patients having other complications were not labelled as Covid deaths, making it tough for their kin to seek compensation.

Elaborating on other situations where the kin would not have required certificates, an official from the health department, said, “several patients who died on the way to hospitals, in ambulances, during the first and second wave might have gone unrecorded. Many died in remote villages with or without treatment. Some underwent Covid tests, but there were no death certificates. Others do not have reports of supportive tests like CT Scan, RTPCR etc.”

“Besides this, in case of hospitalised patients, some families did not even take the bodies home during the first wave due to the associated stigma. The government itself conducted the cremation. Such family members have no evidence that the patient died due to Covid-19,” added the official.

Despite the fact that the state has formed a district-level ‘Covid-19 death ascertaining’ committee (CDAC) a fortnight ago, many are unable to get the necessary documents. “There are many people turning up saying that the patient had tested positive, but had died at home while undergoing treatment or had suddenly deteriorated and died. As a result, the families do not have the required reports. Their death certificates do not mention Covid as cause of death and they are now unable to apply for compensation,” said a meeseva employee from Ameenpur area.

Jr docs to boycott outpatient services


Jr docs to boycott outpatient services

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Hyderabad:01.12.2021

The Telangana Junior Doctors Association (TJUDA) will boycott outpatient services and hold protests from December 1 to December 3 over repeated delays in NEET counselling.

The doctors have maintained the delay has not only caused loss of pay for 1.6 lakh doctors across the country, but has also put and additional burden on the remaining batches. Moreover, in view of a possible third wave keeping an entire batch of the healthcare system could have devastating impact.

“T-JUDA stands in accordance with consensus decision of Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA) and other states resident doctors associations (RDAs) to hold protest and boycott OPD services from December 1 to December 3 regarding expedition of NEET PG-21 counselling process, provided the Supreme Court hearing happens by the stipulated date of 03-12-2021, beyond which we will have to escalate the protest by boycotting all elective services throughout the state,” the TJUDA said in an official statement. The association said repercussions of this will have to be borne by the government.

“Our primary demand is to take necessary measures for expediting NEET-PG counselling as well as admission process and to fast-track the court proceedings on an urgent basis by Union Government and Supreme court of India,” said Dr D Sagar, president TJUDA. “With the possibility of an imminent upcoming Covid wave, it is essential that the counselling process is started at the earliest to prevent collapse of the healthcare system...”

Kerala girl found dead in US with bullet wounds


Kerala girl found dead in US with bullet wounds

01.12.2021

A 19-year-old girl from Kerala was found dead with bullet injuries at her apartment in Montgomery, the capital of US state of Alabama, on Monday. Mariyam Soosan Mathew, a native of Niranam near Thiruvalla, was found dead in her room, as per information received by her relatives in India. According to the metropolitan of the Ahmedabad diocese Geevarghese Mar Yulios, who spoke to Mariyam’s father, a bullet fired from the apartment on the next floor had pierced through the ceiling and hit Mariyam. He added that celebrations were being held in the apartment above as part of the Thanksgiving weekend. Mariyam’s father, Boban Mathew, was a council member of the Ahmedabad diocese of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church while the family was in Muscat. They had relocated to Montgomery only few months ago after Mariyam’s mother, who is a nurse, got a job there. The family is trying to take the mortal remains to Kerala for the funeral. TNN

Prepare for common entrance for UG, PG seats from 2022-23: UGC



NTA UMBRELLA

Prepare for common entrance for UG, PG seats from 2022-23: UGC

Manash.Gohain@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:01.12.2021

The University Grants Commission (UGC) has written to central universities to “take appropriate measures” for conducting the Common Entrance Test (CET) for admission in undergraduate and postgraduate courses from the 2022-23 academic session onwards. It also stated that willing state and private universities too can adopt this computer-based test, which will be conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA) in 13 languages.

TOI was first to report that the education ministry was finalising the procedural details of CET to be conducted in 45 central universities from 2022 onwards and that the details would be announced in December.

The UGC has also said that for PhD admissions, NET scores shall be considered, wherever feasible.

The letter sent to the vice chancellors of the central universities stated, “After detailed deliberations, it was resolved that the CET for UG and PG courses may be conducted from the 2022-23 academic session through NTA.” The plan was put on hold this year due the ongoing Covid pandemic.

The exams, envisaged in the National Education Policy 2020, are likely to be conducted twice a year. According to the NEP 2020 document: “The NTA will facilitate a single entrance exam for admissions to universities across the country. It will offer a ‘high quality common aptitude test’ like the SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test, conducted in US & Canada), as well as specialised common subject examinations, at least twice every year.”

The CET for admissions to central universities, which includes the likes of JNU, BHU and DU, would be a three-hour test, divided into two sections — common aptitude test (50 questions) and domain specific tests (30 questions each) — and will eliminate the individual exams that many of the universities conduct presently.The UGC in its letter said: “Accordingly, all central universities are advised to take appropriate measures for the Common Entrance Test from the academic session 2022-23.”

Unarmed, ‘tiger’ mom snatches kid from leopard jaws


Unarmed, ‘tiger’ mom snatches kid from leopard jaws

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bhopal: 01.12.2021

A tribal woman took on a leopard with her bare hands and snatched her six year-old son from its jaws in a bloody fight in a village near Sanjay Gandhi National Park in MP’s Sidhi on Sunday.

The Baiga woman chased the leopard and caught up with it just when it sat down with its ‘prey’, say sources. She came out of the fight injured, but with the child in her arms. The boy also has deep claw and fang wounds, but scars — and the memory of his unarmed mother wrestling a leopard — are all that will remain.

Kiran, the feisty mother, lives in Badi Jhiriya village in the buffer zone of the national park. On Sunday evening, she was sitting with her children next to a fire outside her hut, waiting for her husband to return, unaware that a leopard was watching them. Her youngest child, a few months old, was in her lap.

In a flash, the leopard darted out of the shadows, caught six-year-old Rahul in its jaws, and ran off. Kiran was up in a flash, too. She handed the newborn to one of her other kids and sprinted after the animal. Even in the darkness, she kept up with the spotted cat and found it sitting in some bushes. Kiran says she lunged at the leopard, grabbed Rahul and pulled with all her strength. The predator seemed taken by surprise, and she could tear Rahul from its grasp.

Unwilling to give up its prey, the leopard lashed out with its claws and cut mother and child. Kiran fought back, screaming for help. By then, villagers were already running to her aid. The pounding feet and the shouts unnerved the leopard, which scampered back into the forest. The villagers took mother and child her to hospital.


Kiran with her son in Badi Jhiriya village in Madhya Pradesh

Convicted 4 yrs ago, Mallya told by SC to appear for sentencing


Convicted 4 yrs ago, Mallya told by SC to appear for sentencing

Dhananjay.Mahapatra@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:01.12.2021

The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked fugitive businessman Vijay Mallay, sheltered in the UK despite proceedings for his extradition to India attaining finality, to appear before it on January 18 for quantification of sentence, more than four years after he was convicted for contempt of court for transferring abroad $40 million from United Spirits despite the SC barring it.

On May 9, 2017, the SC had convicted Mallya guilty of contempt of court and directed him to appear personally before it on July 10, 2017 for determination of quantum of punishment. But Mallya had already fled the country to the UK by then and never bothered to appear before the court. while contesting in various forums the Indian government’s attempts to extradite him. After he lost in resisting his extradition, he appears to have entered into “secret” proceedings with the UK government.

The MEA, through solicitor general Tushar Mehta, told a bench of Justices UU Lalit, SR Bhat and Bela M Trivedi that the extradition proceedings have attained finality but the UK government hasn’t divulged any detail of the “secret” proceedings pending qua Mallya, which is delaying his extradition.

The Justice Lalit-led bench said he was found guilty of contempt of court on May 9, 2017 and has never bothered to appear before the court. Thereafter, even though the court had directed the Centre to secure his presence before the SC, it could not be done because of pending proceedings in the UK. Adjournments and intervention of pandemic delayed hearing on quantification of Mallya’s sentence, the bench said.

“If the person wants to appear before us on January18, he can do so. Otherwise, he can be brought before court through extradition. If these options don’t happen, he can appear through a lawyer,” the bench said and appointed advocate Jaideep Gupta as amicus curiae to assist court in the matter.

6 med colleges to be set up in MP; half in tribal areas


6 med colleges to be set up in MP; half in tribal areas

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bhopal:01.12.2021

The state cabinet, headed by chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, on Tuesday approved the setting up of six new medical colleges at a cost of Rs 1,547 crore. Half of them will come up in the tribal-dominated districts — Mandla, Sheopur and Mandsaur.

The other three will be built in Singrauli, Rajgarh and Neemuch. Announcing this after Tuesday’s cabinet meeting, home minister Narottam Mishra said, “It must be mentioned that in the Congress regime, before the BJP government with Shivraj Singh Chouhan as CM, there were only five medical colleges in the state. Today, there are 20.” P4

Death for child rape bill withdrawn

The MP cabinet on Tuesday withdrew the Criminal Law MP(Amendment) Bill 2017 that carried provision of death penalty for rape of minor girls. This was done as the Centre has passed the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act 2018 in Parliament, raising minimum punishment for rape of women from seven years to 10 years. “In 2017, because little girls were being raped, we sent a law to the Centre for approval. But the Centre, in 2018, made the law themselves. Our law which was sent for assent of the President has been sent back and the cabinet decided to withdraw the same on Tuesday,” home minister said.

Stenographer caught with ₹1 lakh bribe


Stenographer caught with ₹1 lakh bribe

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bengaluru:01.12.2021

Sleuths from Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) on Tuesday caught a stenographer attached with the sub-registrar’s office, Malleswaram, while accepting a bribe of Rs 1 lakh on behalf of superintendent of the same office.

According to an ACB release, Meenakshi accepted the bribe on behalf of superintendent Somashekaraiah. A complaint was filed by an association member of Bescom contractors association. “Somashekaraiah demanded the bribe to initiate proceedings into the elections of Bescom contractors association. They should have been held in 2020 but were postponed due to Covid-19. Somashekaraiah asked for Rs 1 lakh to begin the election work,” the press note read.

GP secretary trapped

The same day, ACB officials caught a secretary with Gollahalli gram panchayat in Ramanagar while accepting Rs 18,000 bribe from a land owner to carry out an official favour. The accused, S Krishnappa, had demanded Rs 20,000 from a farmer for e-khata of his land, said the ACB release. The complainant had paid an advance of Rs 2,000 and the trap was set up when he visited Krishnappa to pay the remaining amount.

K’taka to test all int’l flyers; 7-day home quarantine if -ve


K’taka to test all int’l flyers; 7-day home quarantine if -ve

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bengaluru:01.12.2021

In the backdrop of concerns over Omicron variant, the Karnataka government said on Tuesday that all international passengers will have to mandatorily undergo RT-PCR tests on arrival in Karnataka airports.

Those who test negative must remain in home quarantine for seven days; those who test positive will be hospitalized and treated separately. The state will soon issue a notification on when the new travel guidelines come into force.

After chairing a meeting of the Covid Technical Advisory Committee, health minister K Sudhakar said: “Currently, the RT-PCR test on arrival is conducted only on passengers coming from ‘at-risk’ countries notified by the Centre. Going forward, we have been instructed by the CM to test travellers from all countries.”

The state will write to the Centre seeking ban on travellers from the countries where Omicron variant has been detected. The state witnesses around 2,500 international arrivals per day, with a majority of them landing at the Kempegowda International Airport in Bengaluru and the Mangaluru international airport. “Those who are symptomatic and negative will have to undergo testing at home on the fifth day of their arrival. Asymptomatic passengers will be tested on the seventh day,” the minister said.

15 nursing students test +ve in Tumakuru


Cluster outbreaks in state educational institutions continue as 15 students in two nursing colleges in Tumakuru district tested positive. The samples of all 15 students have been sent to Bengaluru for genomic sequencing to find out the variant of the virus that they are infected with. P 4

Travel plans disrupted

While incoming passengers have to pay for the test (Rs 3,000 for the quick one), the state will deploy tech tools such as Quarantine App and Tele Medicine to track and treat them.

The government’s travel restrictions, which come ahead of Christmas-New Year season, has disrupted travel plans of thousands of Bengalureans, especially technology professionals working in the US and European countries and locals planning to fly abroad for vacation. Many would be forced to cancel or alter their travel plans fearing more restrictions in the coming weeks, thereby sending the travel and hospitality sector into a tizzy.

Sudhakar justified the restrictions, stating: “Unlike other countries which are banning foreign travelers following the fear of Omicron, we have been considerate and are telling people to undergo quarantine for a week at home. The new strain seems to be contagious. We need to take preventive action now so that we do not regret later.”

Medical teachers gear up to protest against salary cut


Medical teachers gear up to protest against salary cut

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:01.12.2021

Faculty members from six government colleges and eight GMERS colleges are planning a massive ‘Maha Rally’ next month to protest the reduction of their salaries.

“The salary cuts for professors range from Rs 25,000 to Rs 96,000 per month. The government gave dearness allowance for about five months and decided to withdraw it, and recover the money paid from the salaries of professors,” said Dr Rajnish Patel, president, Gujarat Medical Teachers Association (GMTA).

The Maha Rally will be held on December 4 to press their demands, he said.

The pay cuts have affected some 3,000 faculty members, including 360 professors at BJ Medical College.

Members of GMTA have already begun protests and plan to intensify their stir. Apart from the Maha Rally, they have planned Ram dhuns, blood donation camps and rallies at six government medical colleges, where they are expected to be joined by GMERS doctors and medical officers from every district.

A few months ago, GMTS members called off their strike when they were assured by the state government that their demands would be addressed. The demands of GMTS members included higher non-practising allowance in line with the Seventh Pay Commission recommendations. Another demand was regarding abolition of contract appointments.

As medical college teachers are barred from private practice, an allowance is paid to them as compensation.

GMTA had also demanded that medical college teachers be allowed to start private practice after 10 years of regular service. Citing a government resolution of 2017, GMTA also sought an increase in the cap on the maximum monthly salary. Promotions of many faculty members at GMERS colleges have also been pending for a long time. “We called off our protest after we were promised that our demands would be met. The government has gone back on its word, giving us a pay cut instead. We will continue our protest till our demands are fulfilled,” said Patel.

The pay cuts have affected about 3,000 faculty members, including 360 professors at BJ Medical College

Do you really need to drink 8 glasses of water a day?


Do you really need to drink 8 glasses of water a day?

Stop overthinking and ditch the calculations. Drink only when you’re thirsty — it’s that simple

You’re often bombarded with encouragements to drink more water. The purported benefits of excess water consumption are seemingly endless, from improved memory and mental health to increased energy to better complexion. “Stay hydrated” has become a new version of the old salutation “Stay well”.

But what, exactly, does “stay hydrated” mean? “When lay people discuss dehydration, they mean loss of any fluids,” said Dr Joel Topf, a nephrologist and assistant clinical professor of medicine at Oakland University, US.

But that interpretation “has been completely blown out of proportion”, said Kelly Anne Hyndman, a kidney function researcher at the University of Alabama, US.

From a medical standpoint, Topf said, the most important measure of hydration is the balance between electrolytes such as sodium and water in the body. And you don’t need to chug glass after glass of water throughout the day to maintain it.

How much do I really need to drink?

We’ve all been taught that eight glasses of water per day is the magic number, but that notion is a myth, said Tamara Hew-Butler, an exercise and sports scientist at Wayne State University, US.

Unique factors such as body size, outdoor temperature, and how hard you’re breathing and sweating will determine how much water you actually need, she said. A 200-pound person who just hiked 10 miles in the heat will obviously need to drink more water than a 120-pound office manager who spent the day in a temperaturecontrolled building.

The amount of water you need in a day will also depend on your health. For most young, healthy people, the best way to stay hydrated is simply to drink when you’re thirsty, Topf said. Those who are older, in their 70s and 80s, may need to pay more attention to getting sufficient fluids because the thirst sensation can decrease with age.

Do I have to drink water to stay hydrated?

Not necessarily. From a purely nutritional standpoint, water is a better choice than lesshealthy options such as sugary sodas or fruit juices. But when it comes to hydration, any beverage can add water to your system, Hew-Butler said.

One popular notion is that drinking beverages with caffeine or alcohol will dehydrate you, but if that’s true, the impact is negligible, Topf said. A 2016 randomised controlled trial of 72 men, for instance, concluded that the hydrating impacts of water, lager, coffee and tea were nearly identical.

You can also get water from what you eat. Fluid-rich foods and meals such as fruits, vegetables, soups and sauces all contribute to water intake.

But drinking more water, even when I’m not thirsty, will improve my health, right?

No. Of course, people with certain conditions, such as kidney stones or the more rare autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, may benefit from making an effort to drink a little more water than their thirst would tell them to, Topf said.

In the most extreme case, drinking too much water in a short period of time could lead to a condition called hyponatremia, or “water intoxication”. “This is very scary and bad,” Hyndman said. If the sodium levels in your blood get too low, it can cause brain swelling and neurological issues such as seizures, coma or even death.

— THE NEW YORK TIMES

City CBSE schools can suspend exam


City CBSE schools can suspend exam

Board Order After Rain Floods Exam Centres & Schools

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:01.12.2021

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has allowed schools in Chennai to suspend the term 1 exams for Classes X and XII if their campuses and surroundings areas are inundated by the recent rain. The objectivetype exam for Class X students started on November 16. For Class XII, the exam will start on December 1. “The board has allowed schools to decide whether to conduct or suspend the exam. But schools must convey their decision to the board with proof and justification,” a CBSE source said.

“In some places, exam centres may be safe but the neighbourhood may be inundated. Schools must take a call considering the safety of students,” the official said. Principals, however, said that many schools may not cancel the exam as the CBSE has not said anything about holding re-exams for these subjects.

New cyclone may end rain in TN, city

Northeast monsoon’s first cyclonic storm may form over the south Andaman Sea later this week, but it is likely to bring dry spells to TN as the system may block the steady flow of easterlies over TN coast. Meteorologists said there will be a significant decrease in rainfall in the city from Wednesday. P 6

Students eager to write exam despite rain, floods

On November 18, a handful of schools suspended the exam. But only two city schools suspended the exam on Tuesday,” a principal said.

Many parents and students are eager to write the exam despite the rain and flood.

“Though our school is not flooded, some surrounding areas got flooded in recent rain. Most students, however, turned up for exam as some parents shifted to hotels to help their children prepare for the exam,” said Susan George, principal, Hindustan International School, Padur.

Class XII students will start object type exams with sociology paper on Wednesday.

Pranay, a Class XII student from Semmencherry, said his apartment building is inundated but his preparation is not affected as his school is sending study materials online.

“My English paper is on December 3. If the water has not drained by then, I will use a fisherman’s boat to reach the main road. My school vehicle will pick me up from there,” he said.

Vasanthakumar, a parent from Varadharajapuram, collected the hall ticket for Class XII term 1 exam on Tuesday. “Our street was flooded on Saturday and Sunday. As the rain eased, water has drained. If it rains more during the exams, I plan to shift to a safer place to ensure my son writes the exams without any difficulty,” he said.

Some schools like Alwin Memorial Public School in Tambaram are planning to use buses to pick up students from houses in flooded areas. “We don’t want any student to miss the exam due to rain. Parents and students are eager to write the exam as they do not want marks to be based on weightage system like last year,” said N Vijayan, senior principal, Zion and Alwin group of schools.

College directed to return original papers to student


College directed to return original papers to student

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Tirunelveli:01.12.2021

The permanent lok adalat in Tirunelveli district on Tuesday directed a private college to return the original certificates to a student who had discontinued her studies.

M Saranya, a resident of Tuticorin district had filed a petition before the permanent lok adalat.

The petitioner had joined BE computer science course at PSN College of Engineering and Technology in Tirunelveli district during the academic year 2019-2020. But, she had to discontinue her studies due to poverty.

When the petitioner sought the college to return her certificates, the college had stated that it would be returned only if she pays ₹67,600 towards arrears of tuition and mess fees.

Chairperson and district judge of the lok adalat, S Sameena recalled that time and again the Madras high court had held that a college is not entitled to withhold the original documents submitted by a student at the time of admission for the reason that the student did not pay the tuition fees.

The college in its reply stated that the petitioner has stayed in the hostel for three-and-a-half months and she has to pay the fees for availing the facilities.

The chairperson directed the college to return the original documents and certificates to the petitioner on payment of ₹3,000 towards mess and hostel fees. It is also made clear that the college shall not insist the petitioner for payment of the tuition fees at the time of handing over of the documents.

The petitioner was forced to discontue studies and when asked the college to return her certificates, the college wanted her to first pay ₹67,600 fee arrears

Does your vehicle sputter? It’s the rainwater in petrol


Does your vehicle sputter? It’s the rainwater in petrol

Ram.Sundaram@timesgroup.com

Chennai:01.12.2021

Flooding on Chennai streets has affected the quality of fuel sold at petrol pumps in the region.

Despite precautionary measures, the surface runoff water had entered the underground storage tanks at a few retail outlets, particularly those in flooded suburban areas.

On Monday, motorists, who refilled fuel tanks in Thiruvallur, were shocked when they found out that petrol mixed with water was sold to them. This also led to a verbal brawl.

K Murali, president of TN Dealers Association said, "This is why we requested petroleum companies to stop supply of ethanol-mixed-petrol temporarily during the rainy season". Not all petrol pumps are equipped to prevent entry of rainwater. So, when runoff leaks through the manholes of underground storage tanks in bunks during rains, water gets mixed with ethanol in the fuel, said Murali.

Manikandan, a mechanic from Madipakkam, said that people usually don't suspect fuel adulteration.

ADULTERATION: A motorist shows diluted petrol at a fuel bank Thiruvallur

NEWS TODAY 28.12.2024