Monday, May 24, 2010
Check Gpat 2010 result
The Graduate Pharmacy Aptitude Test (GPAT 2010) was conducted under the aegis of National Monitoring Committee, All India Council for Technical Education, New Delhi by The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Vadodara, for the first time as per AICTE letter (No. D.O. No. Acad/GPAT/2010 dated 02.12.2009) and Advt.No.ACAD/01(02)/2010.
IELTS PPT
hsc results 2010 maharashtra
Please check out http://results.maharashtraeducation.net/ and http://mahresult.nic.in/ for HSC Results 2010 Maharashtra
IIT Jam 2010 Results http://jam.iitm.ac.in/
The result of IIT jam 2010 will be declared on 24-5-2010 at 5 pm on official IIT Madras website http://jam.iitm.ac.in/
JAM 2010 stands for Joint Admission Test for M.Sc. - JAM 2010 which was conducted on
02-05-2010
From the Academic Session 2004 - 05, Indian Institutes of Technology have started conducting a Joint Admission Test for M.Sc. (JAM). The objective of JAM is to provide admissions to various M.Sc., Joint M.Sc.-Ph.D., M.Sc.-Ph.D. Dual Degree and other post-bachelor degree programmes at the IITs based on the performance in a single test and to consolidate Science as a career option for bright students from across the country. In due course, JAM is also expected to become a benchmark for normalizing undergraduate level science education in the country.
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Managalore Plane Crash Helpdesk numbers
A Help Desk has been set up at the Mangalore airport.
Contact numbers are: 0824 2220422/0824 2010167
Managalore Plane Crash Pics images photos
Managalore Plane Crash Pics images photos 1
http://www.haaretz.com/polopoly_fs/1.289893.1273651258!/image/1391251330.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_295/1391251330.jpg
Managalore Plane Crash Pics images photos 2
http://drop.ndtv.com/albums/NEWS/manaircrash/1copy.jpg
Mangalore plane crash Video
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/ai-plane-crashes-in-mangalore-casualties-feared/115923-3.html?from=tn
Mangalore plane crash Video 2 :
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mangalore/Plane-overshoots-Mangalore-airport-runway-casualties-feared/articleshow/5960931.cms
The Mangalore - Dubai Air India flight cought the fire and almost 160 people are feared dead.
Mangalore Air India plane crash 2010
The incident happened near a valley 10 km from the airport, Karnataka home minister V S Acharya said.
The aircraft was on fire, he said. Ambulances and fire tenders are on the spot. The flight IX-892, operated by a Boeing 737-800, had 163 passengers, 4 infants and 6 crew members on board.
Aviation sources said the aircraft overshot the runway, hit the fence and went beyond the boundary wall of the airport.
All the contact with the aircraft was lost after 6.30 am as the left wing of the plane caught fire.
Aviation sources termed it an 'accident' instead of 'incident', they said. In aviation parlance an accident denotes causalities.
AI has opened helpline centre at Delhi Airport and the two numbers are 011-2565-6196 and 011-2560-3101.
DGCA Director-General S N A Zaidi said, "we have received only preliminary reports regarding the accident. But we are awaiting for the details including the number of passengers."
Indian plane crash kills 160
At least 160 people aboard an Air India plane were killed when the aircraft crashed after it overshot a runway near the southern Indian city of Mangalore early Saturday, officials said.
"At least 160 passengers have died in the crash," said V.S. Acharya, home minister of the state of Karnataka, according to Reuters.
The plane, carrying 163 passengers and nine crew members, burst into flames, the Times of India reported. It was flying from Dubai.
Seemant Singh, a police official at Mangalore airport, told The Associated Press that conditions were poor when the plane overshot the runway.
Indian TV showed images of smoke billowing from the crash site and rescue crews carrying people from the wreckage.
"This is a major calamity," Acharya told CNN-IBN TV.
Plane crashes in India, 160 feared dead
BANGALORE, India — At least 60 people were feared dead after an Air India plane with around 160 people on board crashed on landing in the southern Indian city of Mangalore on Saturday.
Senior Mangalore police official R. Ramesh said the plane, which was arriving from Dubai, crashed after severely overshooting the runway.
"So far I have only heard of seven survivors. Many are feared dead," Ramesh told AFP by telephone.
160 dead in Mangalore plane crash
160 dead in Mangalore plane crash
MANGALORE: At least 160 people were confirmed dead in an Air India plane crash in Mangalore, Karnataka early on Saturday, officials said.The accident occurred when the plane overshot the runway of the airport. Television channels said the flight was coming in from Dubai.
"At least 160 passengers have died in the crash," V.S. Acharya, Home Minister of the southern state of Karnataka, told reporters.
A second official also confirmed that 160 people had been killed.
The plane was carrying 163 passengers and nine crew members. Officials had said earlier 169 people were on the plane.
"The plane apparently overshot the runway and has crashed. We have news that the plane caught fire after crashing," Rohit Katiyar, a top airport security official, told Reuters.
Source : Economic Times
160 killed in Indian plane crash - AFP / Reuters
160 killed in Indian plane crash
At least 160 people are dead after a Boeing 737 Air India plane overshot a runway landing in the southern Indian city of Mangalore and burst into flames.
"At least 160 passengers have died in the crash," home minister of the southern state of Karnataka, VS Acharya, told reporters.
A second official also confirmed that 160 people had been killed.
Senior Mangalore police official R Ramesh said the plane, en route from Dubai to Mangalore in southern India, crashed after severely overshooting the runway.
"So far I have only heard of seven survivors. Many are feared dead," he told AFP by telephone.
The plane was carrying 163 passengers and nine crew members. Officials had said earlier 169 people were on the plane.
Television footage showed the plane, which was arriving from Dubai, apparently lying on its belly, with smoke billowing from the fuselage as rescue workers sought to douse the fire.
- AFP/Reuters