logo
#

Latest news with #BPT

MPMSU results 2025 for B.Sc. Nursing, MBBS, AYUSH, and other medical exams declared at mpmsu.edu.in; check direct link here
MPMSU results 2025 for B.Sc. Nursing, MBBS, AYUSH, and other medical exams declared at mpmsu.edu.in; check direct link here

Time of India

time20-05-2025

  • Health
  • Time of India

MPMSU results 2025 for B.Sc. Nursing, MBBS, AYUSH, and other medical exams declared at mpmsu.edu.in; check direct link here

MPMSU declares results for Nursing, MBBS, BAMS, BHMS and other medical exams MPMSU results 2025: Madhya Pradesh Medical Science University (MPMSU), Jabalpur, has officially released a comprehensive set of examination results on May 20, 2025. The notification includes outcomes from regular, supplementary, and re-verification assessments across various undergraduate medical and allied health science programmes. This significant announcement covers results of students from academic sessions spanning 2019 to 2025. Nursing third year results for general promotion announced Among the most awaited updates, MPMSU has declared the Nursing Third Year College Level Examination results conducted in December 2021 for the academic session 2019–2020. These results are issued under the general promotion scheme and have been approved by the Hon'ble Vice Chancellor. Detailed mark sheets, including theoretical and practical marks for each subject—such as Medical Surgical Nursing-II, Child Health Nursing, Mental Health Nursing, and Nursing Research & Statistics—have been published. One such example includes student Khushboo Singh from BVM Nursing College, Gwalior, who secured a total of 537 marks and has been declared 'PASS'. The results are available online, and students are encouraged to access them through the university's website. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Memperdagangkan CFD Emas dengan salah satu spread terendah? IC Markets Mendaftar Undo MBBS, BUMS, BAMS, BHMS and re-verification results also declared In addition to the Nursing results, MPMSU has declared several other important results: • MBBS Second Professional Examination – January 2025 • BUMS First Professional (Main & Supplementary) Examination – June 2024 • BAMS First Professional (Main & Supplementary) Examination – July 2024 (Corrigendum) • BAMS Final Year Examination – January 2025 (Corrigendum) • BHMS Final Year Examination – November 2024 (Corrigendum) The university has also published re-verification results for multiple courses: • BAMS Final Year (January 2025) • BPT First Year (August 2024) • BPT Final Year (January 2025) • Nursing First Year (September 2024) • Nursing Third Year (May 2024) • PBBSc Nursing First Year (September 2024) How to check the MPMSU results online: Step 1: Visit the official MPMSU website at Step 2: Navigate to the 'Examination' or 'Results' section Step 3: Click on the relevant course/exam result link Step 4: Enter your roll number or enrolment number Step 5: Download and save the result for your records Direct link to check the MPMSU Result 2025 Students facing any discrepancies are advised to report them through the university's GMS Portal, accessible via the helpdesk section on the website: MPMSU continues to streamline academic processes and ensures timely communication of results, benefitting thousands of students across Madhya Pradesh. Invest in Their Tomorrow, Today: Equip your child with the essential AI skills for a future brimming with possibilities | Join Now

Mydin boss suggests millers of hoarding local rice, fuelling shortage
Mydin boss suggests millers of hoarding local rice, fuelling shortage

Yahoo

time10-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mydin boss suggests millers of hoarding local rice, fuelling shortage

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 — Rice millers appeared to be hoarding local white rice (BPT) to manipulate supply and are demanding cash payments from retailers in the wake of the resulting shortage, said Datuk Ameer Ali Mydin. Speaking as the president of the Bumiputera Retailers Association, the Mydin Holdings managing director questioned why BPT, which had been scarce for two years, suddenly became available after the government allocated RM150 million in subsidies. He said it was curious that supply could improve so quickly, and suggested millers were taking advantage of the ongoing shortage to gain leverage over retailers, forcing them to accept unfair payment terms. 'Millers are using their power to control supply, telling retailers they must pay cash upfront if they want local rice,' Ameer was quoted as saying in an Utusan Malaysia report. Previously, supermarkets could purchase rice on credit with a 30-day payment term, a practice that still applies to imported rice but has been revoked for BPT. Ameer argued that such cash-only demands disrupt operations, as supermarket chains require warehouse processing and multi-level approvals before making payments. The industry veteran accused millers of playing games, saying they are taking advantage of shortages to change business terms in their favour. He pointed out that suppliers are delivering only 50 to 100 bags per store per week, when supermarkets require at least 500 bags daily to meet customer demand. Ameer then urged the Ministry of Domestic Trade and Cost of Living (KPDN) to intervene by facilitating discussions between supermarkets and millers. Ameer suggested that KPDN should set clear supply quotas, ensuring each supermarket receives a fixed number of rice bags per month, rather than leaving distribution to millers' discretion.

Drew Gill Wins MLF Bass Pro Tour PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 Presented by Strike King at Lake Murray
Drew Gill Wins MLF Bass Pro Tour PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 Presented by Strike King at Lake Murray

Associated Press

time10-03-2025

  • Sport
  • Associated Press

Drew Gill Wins MLF Bass Pro Tour PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 Presented by Strike King at Lake Murray

The Championship Round of PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 Presented by Strike King at Lake Murray quickly turned into a microcosm of the past two years on the Bass Pro Tour (BPT): a one-on-one battle between Drew Gill and Jacob Wheeler for the top spot. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: 22-year-old pro Drew Gill of Mount Carmel, Illinois, caught 19 bass weighing 58 pounds, 2 ounces, Sunday, to win the Major League Fishing Bass Pro Tour PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 at Lake Murray Presented by Strike King, and earn the top prize of $150,000. (Photo: Business Wire) Gill and Wheeler have been arguably the two most dominant pros not just on the BPT but in all of professional bass fishing over the past two years, when Gill arrived on Major League Fishing's top tour. Both have multiple national wins in that span. They finished first and second in the 2024 Fishing Clash Angler of the Year race and are now back in the top two spots in 2025. So, perhaps it shouldn't have come as a surprise that the two employed virtually identical game plans on Lake Murray, using forward-facing sonar during Period 1 to rocket to the top of SCORETRACKER®, then skipping boat docks with Neko rigs for the rest of the day. They separated themselves from the rest of the pack in the first couple hours of the Championship Round, but neither angler ever built a comfortable lead over the other in the race for the $150,000 top prize. Ultimately, despite a stressful third period that saw him fail to catch a scorable bass during the final 89 minutes, Gill prevailed. His total of 58 pounds, 2 ounces edged Wheeler by 2-3 – less than the average size of a scorable bass caught on Lake Murray this week. Link to HD Video of Highlights from Championship Round Competition Even though he spent the final hour convinced Wheeler was going to run him down, Gill came away with his second Bass Pro Tour victory in just 10 career events and his fourth win across BPT, Team Series and Tackle Warehouse Invitationals competition in the past 13 months. 'If you had told me, 'Hey, last hour and a half, you're not going to catch a bass. Do you think Wheeler is going to catch 4 pounds?' I would have been like, 'Absolutely, he is,'' Gill said with a chuckle. 'And [the bite] just died for both of us.' Gill rode an emotional roller coaster not just for the final period but the entire Championship Round. When he launched his boat Sunday morning, he admitted he didn't like his chances of winning, as he figured the overcast, cool conditions would hurt his afternoon dock pattern. 'I knew the conditions were going to shoot my dock bite, and to be honest, I didn't think I could do 45 (pounds) in the first period to make up for that,' the 22-year-old said. While Gill's prediction about a slower afternoon bite proved correct, he made up for it with his two greatest strengths – a well-thought-out, math-based strategy and his mastery of forward-facing sonar. Gill used the first period each day to target bass that were chasing blueback herring in ditches. He fished deeper than most other anglers, catching his fish in 28 to 35 feet of water, where some related to stumps on the bottom and others suspended. He believes those bass weren't getting as much pressure as the shallower populations other anglers targeted with forward-facing sonar, allowing him to fool a higher percentage of them into biting. 'With a lake like Murray that has so many bass in it, your focal point when you're using 'Scope should always be bite percentage,' Gill explained. 'You're always going to be able to put a bait in front of a bass. You're not going to beat other people by putting a bait in front of more bass than they are. You're going to beat other people by dialing your deal as best you can and ideally finding a population that other people aren't pressuring. And I fished for them deeper than anybody else did this week.' Wielding a 4-inch minnow on a 1/4-ounce jighead with a 1/0 hook, Gill used a pair of flurries to stack weight on SCORETRACKER® in a hurry. In one 37-minute window, he boated six bass totaling nearly 25 pounds. Then, toward the end of Period 1, he added four more for 11-8 within 23 minutes. He credits a fortuitous break for the latter action: The overnight switch to daylight savings time put the field on the water an hour earlier than they'd fished the rest of the week, extending his bite window. '(The bite) kind of went away around 9 a.m. all week,' Gill said. 'But because of the time change, we got out there an hour earlier, and so that 9 a.m. became today's 10 a.m. So, without the time change, I don't win this tournament.' Gill's first-period total of 45-7 led Wheeler by 9-6 and put him nearly 27 pounds clear of everyone else. At that point, even though he wasn't overly optimistic about skipping docks, he started to believe he could pull off the win. 'The two days when I needed to catch shallow fish, I caught like 17 pounds both days and shook them off the rest of the day,' Gill said. 'I thought no way, even though the conditions were worse, do I catch any less than 20 pounds.' The bass had other plans. After locking up his forward-facing sonar unit, Gill went more than 2 hours without boating a scorable bass. Meanwhile, Wheeler steadily added to his total. He passed Gill and built a lead of more than 6 pounds. Finally, with less than 10 minutes left in Period 2, Gill connected with his most important bass of the day. Twice, he skipped his Big Bite Baits Nekorama, which he paired with a No. 1 straight-shank hook and 1/16-ounce Bass Pro Shops tungsten nail weight, under the same dock, got bit and failed to hook up. On the third try, he let the fish eat his bait a tad longer, then connected with a 5-1. Not only did that fish close his deficit to one scorable bass, it gave him a clue about what sort of docks to look for – floating docks on round, shallow points, the more isolated the better. 'That 5-pounder was a real turning point in my day,' Gill said. 'Because it kind of clued me in to the deal that allowed me to get a handful of bites, which was anywhere I had a little, round, shallow point. If there was a dock on the side of it and under it was like 4 to 7 feet, I knew it was going to be pretty high percentage. Of my five scorable bites I got the rest of the day, four of them were on that deal. … They wanted to be on that break, that depth break, anyways, and if you had that depth break occur right under a dock, it just kind of doubled the percentage of that dock having a fish.' Armed with that information, Gill added three more bass for 7-10 early in the third period, not only retaking the lead but extending his advantage over Wheeler to more than 6 pounds. That included a 3-pounder that he somehow landed despite having his line wrapped around the motor of a docked boat and the dock's ladder – another break that seemed to prove the oft-repeated fishing axiom that when it's your time to win, it's your time. 'I don't land that fish, I don't win this tournament,' Gill said. 'Because of a couple very fortunate turns of events, we got it done.' The fact that it was Wheeler, an eight-time winner on the Bass Pro Tour, chasing him down made Gill's late lull even more stressful. Once he got the news that Wheeler had pulled within one bite with about 30 minutes left before lines out, Gill became convinced he needed to catch one more to ice the win. In the end, holding off the No. 1-ranked angler in the world made this win even more memorable. Gill seems to be making a habit of winning in stressful fashion, as he had to weather a similarly slow final period in his first BPT victory, which came on the Chowan River last June. 'At Chowan, I got chased within a handful of pounds by Michael Neal, and this one, by Wheeler,' Gill said. 'Those are two guys that I have tremendous respect for their fishing abilities, and they're two guys that you don't want to have chasing you. And it was something where I did not see that coming, and I was very gratified by the fact that I was able to hold my ground enough to steady this one out.' Gill – who, as recently as January 2024 was competing in Abu Garcia College Fishing events – emphasized that any national-level win is special to him, no matter how it comes. However, he acknowledged that he set out this season to prove that his success isn't just a product of forward-facing sonar. Mission accomplished. On the Bass Pro Tour, where anglers can only utilize the technology for one of three periods each day, he's finished seventh, 11th and first in three events. He sits second to Wheeler in the Angler of the Year standings, just six points back. Throw in a runner-up finish two weeks ago at an Invitationals event on the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes, where forward-facing sonar was banned on Day 2 of the three-day tournament, and Gill has left little doubt about his ability to catch them, no matter the circumstances. 'I will say, to come out here with the new format this year – and with some question marks spiraling – and to start the year with a seventh, an 11th and a win, I feel like is a statement that I was wanting to make to start the year, and it's one that is made now,' Gill said. 'Especially after the second at Kissimmee as well, not having it at all the second day of that tournament. 'It does mean something to me. But it's no sweeter than a win any other way. … A win is a win, man, and it's sweet either way.' The top 10 pros at the PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 at Lake Murray Presented by Strike King finished: 1st: Drew Gill, Mount Carmel, Ill., 19 bass, 58-2, $150,000 2nd: Jacob Wheeler, Harrison, Tenn., 20 bass, 55-15, $45,000 3rd: Marshall Robinson, Landrum, S.C., 11 bass, 37-10, $35,000 4th: Mark Daniels Jr., Tuskegee, Ala., 13 bass, 36-2, $30,000 5th: Brent Ehrler, Redlands, Calif., 10 bass, 30-4, $25,000 6th: Bryan Thrift, Shelby, N.C., nine bass, 27-4, $23,000 7th: Jeff Sprague, Wills Point, Texas, seven bass, 24-6, $22,000 8th: Matt Becker, Ten Mile, Tenn., seven bass, 23-3, $21,000 9th: Alton Jones Jr., Waco, Texas, seven bass, 19-8, $20,500 10th: Jake Lawrence, Paris, Tenn., seven bass, 18-10, $20,000 For a full list of results visit Overall, there were 110 scorable bass weighing 331 pounds even caught by the final 10 pros on Sunday. Pro Jeff Sprague of Wills Point, Texas, won Sunday's $1,000 Berkley Big Bass Award with a 6-pound largemouth that he caught on a crankbait in Period 1. Berkley awards $1,000 to the angler who weighs the heaviest bass each day. The four-day PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 at Lake Murray Presented by Strike King event was hosted by the Capital City/Lake Murray Country Regional Tourism Board and showcased 66 of the top professional anglers in the world, competing for a purse of $650,000, including a top payout of $150,000 and valuable Angler of the Year (AOY) points in hopes of qualifying for the General Tire Heavy Hitters all-star event and REDCREST 2026, the Bass Pro Tour championship. Television coverage of the PowerStop Brakes Stage 3 at Lake Murray Presented by Strike King will premiere as a two-hour episode starting at 7 a.m. ET, on Saturday, Oct. 4 on Discovery, with the Championship Round premiering on Sunday, Oct. 5. New MLF episodes premiere each Saturday morning on Discovery, with re-airings on Outdoor Channel. The 2025 Bass Pro Tour features a field of 66 of the top professional anglers in the world, competing across seven regular-season tournaments around the country, for millions of dollars and valuable points to qualify for the annual General Tire Heavy Hitters all-star event and the REDCREST 2026 championship. Proud sponsors of the 2025 MLF Bass Pro Tour include: 7Brew Coffee, Abu Garcia, Athletic Brewing, Bass Force, B&W Trailer Hitches, Bass Pro Shops, Berkley, BUBBA, E3 Sports Apparel, Fishing Clash, Grizzly, Lowrance, Mercury, MillerTech, Mossy Oak Fishing, NITRO, O'Reilly Auto Parts, Power-Pole, Rapala, Star brite, Suzuki Marine and Toyota. For complete details and updated information on Major League Fishing and the Bass Pro Tour, visit For regular updates, photos, tournament news and more, follow MLF's social media outlets at Facebook, X, Instagram and YouTube. About Major League Fishing Major League Fishing (MLF) is the world's largest tournament-fishing organization, producing more than 250 events annually at some of the most prestigious fisheries in the world, while broadcasting to America's living rooms on CBS, Discovery Channel, Outdoor Channel, CBS Sports Network, World Fishing Network and on demand on MyOutdoorTV (MOTV). Headquartered in Benton, Kentucky, the MLF roster of bass anglers includes the world's top pros and more than 30,000 competitors in all 50 states and 20 countries. Since its founding in 2011, MLF has advanced the sport of competitive fishing through its premier television broadcasts and livestreams and is dedicated to improving the quality of life for bass through research, education, fisheries enhancement and fish care. JOE OPAGER DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS p: 218.434.0748 e: [email protected] INDUSTRY KEYWORD: OUTDOORS FISHING SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT TV AND RADIO SOURCE: Major League Fishing Copyright Business Wire 2025. PUB: 03/09/2025 08:57 PM/DISC: 03/09/2025 08:57 PM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store