AICTE approval for MBA and MCA programmes of St Aloysius College

September 3, 2011

Mangalore, September 3: The AICTE, Delhi, on September 1, uploaded the approval letters for the MBA and MCA programmes conducted by St Aloysius College (Autonomous) at AIMIT, Beeri, the new campus of St Aloysius College.

The College has been approved an intake of 240 seats for the MBA progamme and 120 seats for the MCA programme sunder the autonomous scheme.

AICTE has changed the mode of approval since this year. It has been trying to make the process transparent and easy for uploading institutional information on the AICTE web portal, after which approval could be downloaded. Thousands of Engineering colleges and other Management institutes were waiting for the final approval letters which were available only since yesterday.

St Aloysius College (Autonomous) has been conducting the MCA programme for the last ten years and the MBA programme since 2004. The College has moved these two programems to the world class campus set up at Beeri, Kotekar two years back. The Campus recruitment has been very good and most of the students have been placed in reputed firms.

A new Placement Team under the leadership of Mr David Noronha (USA) and under the guidance of Rev. Dr. Oswald Mascarenhas SJ, the Chairman, MBA dept. will be functioning from this year.

AIMIT has also been conducting a lot of MDP and Faculty Development Programmes. Recently an FDP on Research Methodology was held. MDP on Behavioural Processes in Management will be held on 13 and 14th of October and a MDP/FDP on Financial Modeling using Excel will be held on 23 and 24th Sept. Resource person will be from Mumbai.

M. Sc. (Software Technology) and M Sc(Bioinformatics) programmes are also conducted at the AIMIT campus.

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News Network
July 19,2020

Bengaluru, Jul 19: A total of 4,120 new COVID-19 cases were reported from Karnataka on Sunday, taking the total number of 63,772 in the state, informed the state's health department.

Out of the total cases reported in the last 24 hours, 2,156 were reported from Bengaluru.
The total figure includes 39,370 active cases, 23,065 recoveries, and 91 deaths.

"Karnataka crossed the 10-lakh-tests milestone today. So far, we conducted 10,20,830 tests across 88 labs in the state and 35,834 tests today," Minister for Medical Education of Karnataka tweeted on Sunday. 

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Agencies
June 30,2020

Washington, Jun 30: Researchers in China have discovered a new type of swine flu that is capable of triggering a pandemic, according to a study published Monday in the US science journal PNAS.

Named G4, it is genetically descended from the H1N1 strain that caused a pandemic in 2009.

It possesses "all the essential hallmarks of being highly adapted to infect humans," say the authors, scientists at Chinese universities and China's Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The researchers then carried out various experiments including on ferrets, which are widely used in flu studies because they experience similar symptoms to humans -- principally fever, coughing and sneezing. 

G4 was observed to be highly infectious, replicating in human cells and causing more serious symptoms in ferrets than other viruses.

Tests also showed that any immunity humans gain from exposure to seasonal flu does not provide protection from G4.

According to blood tests which showed up antibodies created by exposure to the virus, 10.4 percent of swine workers had already been infected.

The tests showed that as many as 4.4 percent of the general population also appeared to have been exposed.

The virus has therefore already passed from animals to humans but there is no evidence yet that it can be passed from human to human -- the scientists' main worry.

"It is of concern that human infection of G4 virus will further human adaptation and increase the risk of a human pandemic," the researchers wrote.

The authors called for urgent measures to monitor people working with pigs.

"The work comes as a salutary reminder that we are constantly at risk of new emergence of zoonotic pathogens and that farmed animals, with which humans have greater contact than with wildlife, may act as the source for important pandemic viruses," said James Wood, head of the department of veterinary medicine at Cambridge University.

A zoonotic infection is caused by a pathogen that has jumped from a non-human animal into a human.

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News Network
March 15,2020

Bengaluru, Mar 15: Karnataka government has said that as of now six cases of COVID-19 have been reported in the state, including one person who died.

"Till date six COVID-19 cases have been reported in the state including one death. The 5 Coronavirus positive cases are in isolation at the designated hospital in Bengaluru," the Karnataka government said on Sunday.

Meanwhile, the Health Department of Karnataka on Sunday said that all the family members and other contacts of the 76-year-old man who died of coronavirus in Kalaburagi are being monitored closely.

The Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare informed that India's tally in the number of positive cases for coronavirus has reached 107 on Sunday.

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