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
January 23,2026

Karnataka Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot read only three lines from the 122-paragraph address prepared by the Congress-led state government while addressing the joint session of the Legislature on Thursday, effectively bypassing large sections critical of the BJP-led Union government.

The omitted portions of the customary Governor’s address outlined what the state government described as a “suppressive situation in economic and policy matters” under India’s federal framework. The speech also sharply criticised the Centre’s move to replace the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) with the Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, commonly referred to as the VB-GRAM (G) Act.

Governor Gehlot had earlier conveyed his objection to several paragraphs that were explicitly critical of the Union government. On Thursday, he confined himself to the opening lines — “I extend a warm welcome to all of you to the joint session of the State legislature. I am extremely pleased to address this august House” — before jumping directly to the concluding sentence of the final paragraph.

He ended the address by reading the last line of paragraph 122: “Overall, my government is firmly committed to doubling the pace of the State’s economic, social and physical development. Jai Hind — Jai Karnataka.”

According to the prepared speech, the Karnataka government demanded the scrapping of the VB-GRAM (G) Act, describing it as “contractor-centric” and detrimental to rural livelihoods, and called for the full restoration of MGNREGA. The state government argued that the new law undermines decentralisation, weakens labour protections, and centralises decision-making in violation of constitutional norms.

Key points from the unread sections of the speech:

•    Karnataka facing a “suppressive” economic and policy environment within the federal system

•    Repeal of MGNREGA described as a blow to rural livelihoods

•    VB-GRAM (G) Act accused of protecting corporate and contractor interests

•    New law alleged to weaken decentralised governance

•    Decision-making said to be imposed by the Centre without consulting states

•    Rights of Adivasis, women, backward classes and agrarian communities curtailed

•    Labourers allegedly placed under contractor control

•    States facing mounting fiscal stress due to central policies

•    VB-GRAM (G) Act accused of enabling large-scale corruption

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