Mangaluru: Continuing its trend of getting cent percent pass results in All India school Secondary School Examination (CBSE Grade 10), Al Ain Juniors School has once again bagged 100% results in CBSE Grade 10, 2018-19 results announced Monday.
This year a total of 70 students appeared for the examination. Of which, Miriam Rose Thomas topped the result with an overall percentage of 96.6%, Shreya Kulkarni outshone all the students in Al Ain when she topped Hindi with 98%, and Tania Theodore Fernandez scored an absolute 100% in social studies.
The following students scored more than 90% in the examination:
Shriya Kulkarni 96.4%, Sara Cherian 96%, Lirit Abraham (95.6%), Stanley John Sunny (93.4%), Mohammed Nabil (93.2%), Amogha Shetty(93%), Merril Susan Mathew (92%), Fatema Ujjainwala(91.8%), Ramnath Gejaraj(91.8%), Swizel Pereira (91.6%,) Afnan Afroz(91.2%), Tania Theodore Fernandez( 91.2%), Abraham Vellaiparambil Jose (90.8%), Avantikaraj Pallikkara Rajilal (90.4%), and Afzal Aujum Navaz( 90%).

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Bengaluru: Government employees in Karnataka have urged the state government to scrap the New Pension Scheme (NPS) and bring back the Old Pension Scheme (OPS), The New Indian Express reported.
The demand was made by the Karnataka State Government Employees’ Association, whose leaders met senior IAS officer Uma Mahadevan on Monday and submitted a memorandum. The association asked the NPS Review Committee, headed by senior IAS officer Anjum Parvez, to recommend the reintroduction of OPS in the state.
Association president C.S. Shadakshari reportedly said the review committee has already visited Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana where NPS was revoked and OPS re-implemented. The committee is yet to submit its report, but has told the government it will do so soon.
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Shadakshari allegedly said NPS has been in force in Karnataka since 2006. He pointed out that West Bengal never adopted the scheme, while Andhra Pradesh and Telangana replaced NPS with a contributory pension model.
States including Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Jharkhand have already scrapped NPS through cabinet decisions or budget announcements.
“Under NPS, 10% of the employees’ basic salary and DA, and 14% contribution from the state is credited to the employees’ fund. It constitutes 24% of the total which is non-withdrawable. This is invested in the share market and the final amount depends on the ups and downs of the market,” TNIE quoted Shadakshar as saying.
As per the report, he said that by limiting its contribution to 14%, the government could save up to ₹1.87 lakh crore annually if all vacancies are filled, strengthening the case for bringing back the old pension system.
