Ten PhD Students Of University Of Hyderabad Selected For Prime Minister Research Fellowship (PMRF)
Ten PhD Students Of University Of Hyderabad Selected For Prime Minister Research Fellowship (PMRF)
University of Hyderabad: While two scholars each from School of Chemistry and School of Life Sciences have been selected for PMRF, three students each from School of Engineering Sciences and Technology and School of Physics have also been shortlisted.
Education | Written By Mridusmita Deka | Updated: May 23, 2021 12:45 pm IST
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New Delhi:
Ten PhD students of the University of Hyderabad has been selected for the Prime Minister Research Fellowship (PMRF). All the ten fellows under the PMRF scheme will receive a starting monthly fellowship of Rs 70,000, which may increase to a maximum monthly fellowship of Rs 80,000 towards the end of PhD, provided the performance during the initial years o
Significantly improved patient survival and time to recovery observed following the treatment, says Transcell Oncologics
A breakthrough human Umbilical Cord (UC) tissue harvested and clinically processed adult Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs)-based therapy to COVID patients has been announced by Transcell Oncologics,
a biotech start-up company, incubated at ASPIRE-Technology Business Incubator (ASPIRE-TBI), University of Hyderabad (UoH) on Monday.
The firm had developed proprietary cell-based platform technology ‘HEMATO UC-MSCs’ with anti-cytokine storm properties, anti-inflammatory attributes and repairing abilities. The research recommends HEMATO UC-MSCs to be administered as “two intravenous infusions, at a dose of 100 million cells per infusion, given 72 hours apart to the COVID patients.
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The defiant politics of Rohith Vemula and the Ambedkar Students Association HARSHA VADLAMANI
ON THE EVENING OF 16 JANUARY, the mood on the campus of the University of Hyderabad was mellow. For around a month, there had been protests against the administration’s decision to bar five young Dalit men from using their hostels and the university’s public spaces. But support for the protests was flagging. Two days earlier, the students had tried to step up their demonstrations by occupying the administration building. But they were outmanoeuvred by the vice chancellor, or VC, Appa Rao Podile, who rallied some of the university’s staff, including mess workers, against them. These employees warned the students that they would shut down the campus messes if the blockade continued a threat which forced them to back down.
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