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CWC offers new courses to students
Ludhiana, March 29 Director Khaira informed that CWC was a growing company and totally committed towards its goal. It has a broad vision and huge canvas. One of the wings of the CWC cater to a variety of courses for students. The students are trained to secure good jobs in Canada and Australia. The CWC has also collaborated with two institutes in Canada- Evergreen College, Canada and York College of Business, Toronto. The CWC Immigration Solutions has also started its services for those who wish to go to Australia. In this endeavour, company’s collaborators in Australia are with J P Internal College, Australia. The college will be conducting courses in hospitality and information technology. After two months of study in India, the students will go to Australia to complete their courses. The study done in India will get them credits for their diplomas to be completed in Australia. Thus, they will qualify for PR status in Australia. The company has the authority of enrolling students on behalf of the college in Australia, said the director. |
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Lectures on banking, logistics held at DIMT
Ludhiana, March 29 Addressing students, K.S.Gill began with historical developments of Indian banking industry. He guided the students on how to fill up pay-in slips. cheques, withdrawl forms, demand draft forms, fixed deposits, recurring deposits and saving accounts. Students were asked to fill these forms and clarify their doubts. Malkiat Singh highlighted development in the modes of logistics. The air transport and water transport were used generally for exporting products to overseas markets. |
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Grooming workshop held
Ludhiana, March 29 Project Head of ‘The Languages Council' Amardeep Lall was the resource person for the workshop. The workshops and practice sessions ended with leading industrialist Vikas Mehra taking interview of students. |
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Placement camp held at RIMT-IMCT
Mandi Gobindgarh, March 29 He said more than 20 companies of repute have visited the campus for placements. He also told that Vardhman Polytex Limited, Ludhiana had visited the campus and selected three students of which two, Meenakshi and Bhagat Singh, are of RIMT-IMCT while the third, Vishal, belonged to RIMT-IET. The package offered by the company was Rs. 1.80 lakhs per annum.The director conveyed that second company to visit the campus was Bonanza Portfolio Limited and it selected Niranjan Kumar and Vandana Verma at an annual package of Rs. 1.60 lakh plus incentives. The third company, Karvy Securities Limited, picked up students at an annual salary package of 1.20 lakhs plus incentives. The students include Surbhi Bansal, Tushar Bhalla, Harpreet Singh, Mridula Kakkar and Sandeep Bansal. |
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Annual function organised at Ryan International
Ludhiana, March 29 In the three-day annual function organised by the school, besides a graduation function, a musical ‘We are the World’ was staged . The play started with the situation prevailing across the globe. The turning point comes when the reality hits hard and one is rudely awaken. The realisation that the world needs a healing touch comes to the fore and that is what the play has sought to accomplish. In the graduation ceremony of Montessori kids, the students received their certificates. The students presented a cultural programme that floored the audience. Grace Pinto, director of the school said that 1800 students had participated in the three-day programme. She said that all the children were encouraged to participate to develop their self-confidence. The staff members too had worked hard to put the show together. Chairman A F Pinto, and principal Jaishree were also present on the occasion. |
SC withholds 27 pc quota for OBC
Ludhiana March 29 The students of professional colleges were in upbeat mood as soon as the news channels flashed the Supreme Court's decision. Ludhiana Tribune spoke to a few medical and non-medical students, who expressed their gratitude towards the apex court. Student of Dayanand Medical College and Hospital Nidhi said professional students had withdrawn their agitation against the 27 per cent OBC reservation because they knew that the Supreme Court would come to their rescue by providing an impartial judgment. “There should not be a divide and rule policy. The politicians should believe in united development. For their own vote bank, they had made 93rd Amendment (of 27 per cent reservation) in 2006, which was rejected by the court", she added. Most of these students said the reservation should be there for the needy in the form of providing basic needs and not the professional seats. They said the court had also asked to procure latest data on OBC, after which final judgment or decision would be taken. Parents of these students have also welcomed the judgment. They said politicians or the governments must not divide the country on the basis of caste and creed. |
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