Friday, October 18, 2024
MBBS admissions: Latecomers corner seats for orphans, PwDs
Govt initiates grants for genome research
grants ranging from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 2 crore for genomic sequencing and data generation projects for the Kerala Genome Data Centre (KGDC). The projects can be in the fields of plant genomics, animal genomics, microbial genomics, marine genomics, sickle cell anaemia, dengue, and deadly diseases that cause severe health conditions and mortality. KGDC has invited applications from scientists and researchers who are eligible for funding. The focus should be on research in these areas as part of the efforts to leverage genomic data and the state’s rich biodiversity. The scientific advisory board will approve the projects based on applications from the researchers, said a statement.
Biryani lunch on temple premises: HC for appropriate action
MBBS student caught with 200 grams of hydro cannabis Seized Ganja Worth ₹2.5L
Earlier, the customs department arrested a youth who arrived at the Kochi Airport from Bangkok with 4.23kg of hydro cannabis worth over Rs 2.5 crore. Rural police also arrested a Kasaragod native from near Nedumbassery, who was an accused in a case registered by Kodagu police for smuggling 3.31kg of hydra cannabis. He was nabbed by rural police before he could catch a flight to Bangkok.
HC slams NMC for allowing ‘deficient’ college take students
Personal Information Of Employees Like Service Records, Copies Of Promotion & Financial Benefits Can't Be Disclosed Under RTI Act: Delhi High Court
UG courses: Only 23 out of 900 colleges opt for 4th yr
Airfares skyrocket ahead of Diwali, up to 374% higher than normal
Thursday, October 17, 2024
BCI told to decide on law course attendance
BCI told to decide on law course attendance
TIMES NEWS NETWORK 17.10.2024
New Delhi : Delhi High Court has asked Bar Council of India (BCI) to have its legal education committee finalise a stance on the requirement of attendance in law courses. A bench of justices Pratibha M Singh and Amit Sharma was dealing with a case stemming from the death of a law student, Sushant Rohilla, who died by suicide in 2016 after allegedly being barred from writing his semester exam due to a shortage of attendance. The court earlier questioned the mandatory attendance norms, asking BCI to file an affidavit. Rohilla was a third-year law student at Amity Law School and left behind a note which allegedly stated that he was a failure and did not wish to live. While the matter was initiated by Supreme Court in Sept 2016 following the incident, the case was subsequent ly transferred to the High Court in March 2017.
In an order passed recently, the bench directed BCI's legal education committee to hold a meeting and file its affidavit within two weeks. Listing the matter for hearing on Nov 6, the court granted further time to Amity Law School to present its stance on granting ex-gratia compensation to the family of the deceased. During the hearing, the counsel for Amity Law School said the institution was not at fault, adding that the parents of the deceased student were duly notified about the shortage of attendance. However, the High Court reiterated its query about whether the institute is willing to compensate the family. The court previously expressed an imminent need to re-evaluate the mandatory attendance norms in colleges and universities, as teaching methods changed substantially post Covid-19.
Medical student loses seat over NRI quota ineligibility
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கொலுசு அணிந்த சரஸ்வதி * நாகப்பட்டினம் மாவட்டம் கடலங்குடியில் உள்ள சிவன் கோவிலில் வளையல், கொலுசு அணிந்தபடி சரஸ்வதிதேவி காட்சியளிக்கிறாள். ச...
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கட்சியிலிருந்து நேற்றே ஒதுங்கிவிட்டேன்! டி.டி.வி.தினகரன் தடாலடி பேட்டி vikatan news ராகினி ஆத்ம வெண்டி மு. படம்: ஸ்ரீநிவாசலு 'அ.த...