Three youngsters killed in car mishap

[email protected] (CD Network)
October 16, 2016

Madikeri, Oct 17: Three youths from Mysuru died and three were injured when the car by which they were travelling met with an accident in the early hours of Sunday near Anekadu road on the Madikeri-Kushalnagar highway in Kodagu district.

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The police said that six youngsters from Mysuru – all in the 19-25 age group – had arrived in Madikeri on Saturday night. The accident occurred around 1.45 a.m. on Sunday when they were returning to Mysuru after their meal, a police official attached to the Kushalnagar Rural Police station said.

The three youths, including Chethan, who was at the wheel, died on the spot after the car reportedly toppled over and came to a halt after hitting a retaining wall on the road.

Three others in the vehicle suffered serious injuries. A few local residents reached the spot and took the injured to K.R. Hospital in Mysuru. “The injured were subsequently shifted to a private hospital,” the police added. Chethan's friends in the ill-fated car included Nandish, Ravi, Suhas, Chandru, Pratap and Shivakumar.

The bodies were extricated from the mangled remains of the car and sent to the Kushalnagar Government Hospital. A post-mortem was conducted and the bodies were handed over to the relatives.

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Comments

Bharath
 - 
Sunday, 16 Oct 2016

OMG. when you by a car take a pledge to drive slow

Sharavan
 - 
Sunday, 16 Oct 2016

for this we dont have any solution. year by year more speeding cars are being launched.

Harish
 - 
Sunday, 16 Oct 2016

o god really horriffic look at the impact.

Priyanka
 - 
Sunday, 16 Oct 2016

RIP. youngsters please ride carefully at least after seeing this.

Lathesh
 - 
Sunday, 16 Oct 2016

why this youngsters dont understand? speed trills but its kills also. these boys should think about at least thr parents.

Abdul
 - 
Sunday, 16 Oct 2016

All parent should observe their children. Now days more student dying in accidents.

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News Network
February 28,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 28: Historian S. Shettar, 85, breathed his last early on February 28 in Bengaluru. He was suffering from respiratory problems and was hospitalised for over a week.

Shettar was known for his multi-disciplinary work, encompassing linguistics, epigraphy, anthropology, the study of religions and art history. He had extensively worked on the Jain practice of ritual death in Karnataka and Asoka edicts. He had studied and compiled early edicts in Kannada and worked extensively on the growth of Kannada language down the ages.

Born in 1935 at Hampasagara, Ballari district, he went on to study at Cambridge University and started his career as a Professor of History at Karnatak University, Dharwad, his alma mater. He later headed the National Museum Institute of the History of Art, Conservation and Museology in 1978 and Indian Council for Historical Research in 1996. He was also a visiting professor at the National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru.

He was a bilingual historian who wrote in English for most of his career, but started writing in Kannada in later years. In the last two decades, he developed a keen interest in linguistics and wrote multiple books on classical Kannada and Prakrit. His 2007 book “Shangam Tamilagam” is considered a seminal work in the study of the early period of Dravidian languages. It won him Bhasha Samman from Central Sahitya Akademi. He later wrote two works on Halegannada, classical Kannada. His most recent work was “Prakrita Jagadvalaya” in 2018.

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News Network
May 19,2020

Mysuru, May 19: Union Housing and Urban Affairs Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Tuesday announced the results of garbage free-star rating for Indian cities.

He said that Ambikapur in Chhattisgarh, Rajkot in Gujarat, Mysuru in Karnataka, Indore in Madhya Pradesh and Navi Mumbai in Maharashtra have got a five-star rating.

Puri extended the wishes to the cities who got a five-star rating and said it came at a time when the entire world, including India, are reeling under the impact of COVID-19 pandemic.

"It was the intention of my senior colleagues and others to declare the result of star rating of garbage-free cities much earlier but we decided to postpone because we wanted at least some degree of opening to take place and we thought the timing is correct," Puri said.

The minister said that of all the flagship programmes Prime Minister Narendra Modi has announced, Swachta Mission is the most important programme for him.

"I have often shared with you my assessment that of all the flagship programmes that the Prime Minister had announced after the 2014 election results. But my personal view, a view I have had a citizen and certainly a view that is fortified by my experience as Minister for Housing and Urban Affairs, that the Swachta Mission by far is the most important programme of all the missions," Puri said

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News Network
July 14,2020

Mangaluru, July 14: In order to detect COVID-19 cases quickly in Dakshina Kannada, the government has commissioned a programme to administer rapid antigen tests.

The coastal district has already received 3,500 rapid antigen test kits, which can give results in 30 minutes, an official said, adding that tests will be conducted shortly and training is being imparted on the use of the kits.

The antigen tests will be conducted for emergency cases like delivery, surgery, persons with severe symptoms of Covid-19, multiple-organ failure and for those whose condition is critical. 

"If a symptomatic patient tests negative for Covid-19, then his throat swab sample would be sent for lab testing," the district health officer (DHO) said.

The rapid antigen tests is expected to help in increasing the number of tests and bring down the load of testing on labs, as antigen kits allow faster diagnosis.

It takes a minimum of eight hours to get the results via real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test. Antigen tests can provide results within half an hour.

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