Jobless' Anupama Shenoy meets Kalladka Bhat

[email protected] (CD Network)
June 29, 2016

Mangaluru, Jun 29: Former police officer Anupama Shenoy, who is now known for unpredictable actions, on Wednesday gave a surprise visit to Kalladka town on the outskirts of the city and met RSS stalwart Prabhakar Bhat.

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Anupama, who resigned earlier this month as Deputy Superintendent of Police, Kudligi Sub-division, Ballari district, today spent some time in Sri Rama Vidya Kendra.

Sources said that she wholeheartedly praised the way of functioning of this education institution under the leadership of Mr Bhat.

Though she held discussions with Mr Bhat on the occasion, she declined to reveal the details to media.

Last Saturday Anupama had visited Pejawar Mutt pontiff Vishwesha Tirtha Swami. She had told media persons that the intention of the visit was seeking his blessings to find herself another job.

Prior to that she had called on former Revenue Minister V Srinivas Prasad and slammed Karnataka chief minister Siddaramaiah for dropping him from the cabinet during recent reshuffle.

Also Read: Anupama slams govt for dropping VSP from Cabinet; seeks Pejawar's blessings

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Comments

PK
 - 
Thursday, 30 Jun 2016

Siddaramaiah is doing good job by keeping communal dirty minds out of his administration...
WELL DONE ... We see it today

Sameer
 - 
Thursday, 30 Jun 2016

Apni asli aukaat pe agayi maharani...

SHAMEER
 - 
Thursday, 30 Jun 2016

This type of crocodiles hidden under water are unfit for public services.
and they raise above the water when there is some personnel issues.
This is the clear message to citizens not to support such types of communal public servants.

She will make favour to chaddis ...

Ahmed Ali K
 - 
Thursday, 30 Jun 2016

Or May be to get a teacher job in KBs school.

Ahmed Ali K
 - 
Thursday, 30 Jun 2016

May be she went to Kalladka to enroll her name in KBs school to study from bottom again. I mean KG to .......!!!!!

harish babu
 - 
Thursday, 30 Jun 2016

same on you guys. what headline jobless. she served our police department.

please try to use the correct word.

Shabeer Puttur
 - 
Wednesday, 29 Jun 2016

As I said before I am sure she will join BJP soon.

Suresh
 - 
Wednesday, 29 Jun 2016

She is not fit for police dept. She is affiliated to RSS. She tried to favor some of her nagpur /kalladka boss and lost the job.

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News Network
April 22,2020

Bengaluru, Apr 22: The Karnataka government has announced partial relaxation of COVID-19 lockdown norms in the state allowing certain construction activities, manufacturing of packaging materials, courier services, among others, from April 23.

The activities will be permitted only outside the COVID-19 containment zones identified by the government.

Service provided by self-employed people like electrician, IT repair, plumbers, motor mechanics, and carpenters in local areas have also been given exemption.

Tea, coffee and rubber plantation have been allowed to work with 50 per cent workforce, and a similar exemption have been given to processing, packaging, sale and marketing of these produce.

“To mitigate hardship to the public, select additional activities have been allowed,which will come into effect from 00.00 hours of April 23,” Chief Secretary TM Vijay Bhaskar said in an order on Wednesday.

However, these additional activities will be operationalised by District Administrations and BBMP (city corporation in the case of Bengaluru city) based on strict compliance to the guidelines on lockdown measures, it said.

Before operating these relaxations, district administrations and BBMP (city corporation) shall ensure that all the preparatory arrangements on social distancing in offices, work place establishments as also sectoral requirements are in place, it said, adding that relaxations will not apply in containment zones.

Facing a financial crunch, the state government has been eager to kick-start economic activities in the state that had come to halt due to the coronavirus lockdown.

While hospitality services, bars, malls, theatres, shopping complexes, religious and places of worship among others will continue to remain shut, relaxation of norms has been for activities that are linked to essential services such as health, infrastructure and agriculture.

As per the order, while, public transportation will continue to remain suspended till May 3,private vehicles with passes for emergency services and personnel commuting with passes to places of work and back will be allowed.

Activities permitted include construction of roads, irrigation projects, buildings and all kinds of industrial projects, including MSMEs, in rural areas and all kinds of projects in industrial estates, where workers are available on site and no one is required to be brought in from outside.

Also permitted to function are manufacturing units of essential goods – drugs, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, their raw materials and intermediates;

food processing industries in rural areas, coal production (mines and mineral production and activities incidental to mining) besides manufacturing units of packaging materials.

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Agencies
May 8,2020

Washington D.C., May 8: The prime time for brain development in a child's life is the first year, where the infant spends most of the time asleep. It is the time when neural connections form and sensory memories are encoded.

However, when sleep is disrupted, as occurs more often among children with autism, brain development may be affected, too.

New research led by the University of Washington finds that sleep problems in a baby's first 12 months may not only precede an autism diagnosis but also may be associated with altered growth trajectory in a key part of the brain, the hippocampus.

The study, which was published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, researchers report that in a sample of more than 400 taken of 6- to 12-month-old infants, those who were later diagnosed with autism were more likely to have had difficulty falling asleep.

It also states that this sleep difficulty was associated with altered growth trajectories in the hippocampus.

"The hippocampus is critical for learning and memory, and changes in the size of the hippocampus have been associated with poor sleep in adults and older children.

As many as 80 per cent of the children with autism spectrum disorder have sleep problems," said Annette Estes, director of the UW Autism Center and senior author of the study.

"In our clinical experience, parents have a lot of concerns about their children's sleep, and in our work on early autism intervention, we observed that sleep problems were holding children and families back," added Estes, who is also a UW professor of speech and hearing sciences.

"It could be that altered sleep is part-and-parcel of autism for some children. One clue is that behavioural interventions to improve sleep don't work for all children with autism, even when their parents are doing everything just right. This suggests that there may be a biological component to sleep problems for some children with autism," said Estes.

To consider links among sleep, brain development, and autism, researchers at the IBIS Network looked at MRI scans of 432 infants, surveyed parents about sleep patterns, and measured cognitive functioning using a standardized assessment.

At the outset of the study, infants were classified according to their risk for developing autism: Those who were at higher risk of developing autism -- about two-thirds of the study sample -- had an older sibling who had already been diagnosed.

Infant siblings of children with autism have a 20 per cent chance of developing autism spectrum disorder -- a much higher risk than children in the general population.

In the current study, 127 of the 432 infants were identified as "low risk" at the time the MRI scans were taken because they had no family history of autism.

They later evaluated all the participants at 24 months of age to determine whether they had developed autism. Of the roughly 300 children originally considered "high familial risk," 71 were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at that age.

Problems with sleep were more common among the infants later diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, as were larger hippocampi. No other subcortical brain structures were affected, including the amygdala, which is responsible for certain emotions and aspects of memory, or the thalamus, a signal transmitter from the spinal cord to the cerebral cortex.

The authors note that while parents reported more sleep difficulties among infants who developed autism compared to those who did not, the differences were very subtle and only observed when looking at group averages across hundreds of infants.

Sleep patterns in the first years of life change rapidly as infants transition from sleeping around the clock to a more adult-like sleep/wake cycle. Until further research is completed, Estes said, it is not possible to interpret challenges with sleep as an early sign of increased risk for autism.

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coastaldigest.com news network
June 23,2020

Mangaluru, Jun 23: An elderly person, who was undergoing treatment for covid-19 in Mangaluru, breathed his last on today. 

The victim, identified by number P-6282, was a 70-year-old man. He had returned from Bengaluru on June 7. 

He was suffering asthma and pneumonia. He had Severe Acute Respiratory Infection (SARI) symptoms and was hence admitted to the designated covid-19 hospital in Mangaluru on June 12. 

His condition continued to worsen and today he breathed his last, sources said.

With this the total number the deaths of covid-19 patients in Dakshina Kannada district mounted to 9.

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