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MITS Deemed to be University Engineering Admissions 2025

MITS Deemed to be University Engineering Admissions 2025

mits-deemed-university-engineering-admissions-2025
Madanapalle, Andhra Pradesh – MITS Madanapalle, recently accorded Deemed-to-be University status by the Government of India, has opened Engineering admissions 2025 for B.Tech, MBA, MCA, and M.Tech programs.
Known for its NAAC A+ Grade, NBA-accredited programs, and AICTE approval, MITS is now a fully autonomous higher education hub offering future-ready engineering specializations, research opportunities, and merit-linked fee concessions. Academic Autonomy : Industry-focused curriculum in AI, ML, Data Science, Cyber Security, IoT, and next-gen tech.
: Industry-focused curriculum in AI, ML, Data Science, Cyber Security, IoT, and next-gen tech. Strong Placement Network : Proven record with top recruiters.
: Proven record with top recruiters. NAAC A+ & NBA Accredited : Assurance of quality and outcome-based education.
: Assurance of quality and outcome-based education. Global Linkages : Student exchange, International MoUs.
: Student exchange, International MoUs. Affordable Merit-Based Fee: Tiered structure rewarding academic performance.
MITS offers a total of 2,880 seats across UG, PG, and M.Tech programs: Branch Seats Computer Science & Engineering (Core) 900 CSE – Artificial Intelligence (CAI) 360 CSE – AI & ML (CSM) 300 CSE – Data Science (CSD) 360 CSE – Cyber Security (CSC) 180 Electronics & Communication Engineering (ECE) 180 Electrical & Electronics Engineering (EEE) 60 Mechanical Engineering (MEC) 60 Civil Engineering (CIV) 60 Program Seats MCA (Masters in Computer Applications) 180 MBA (Masters in Business Administration) 180 Specialization Seats M.Tech in Computer Science & Engineering 30 M.Tech in VLSI & Embedded Systems 30 Premium CSE Specializations (AI, ML, Data Science, Cyber Security):
₹1,79,000 to ₹2,25,000 (based on merit tier)
(AI, ML, Data Science, Cyber Security): ₹1,79,000 to ₹2,25,000 (based on merit tier) Core CSE : ₹1,79,000 to ₹2,25,000 (based on merit tier)
: ₹1,79,000 to ₹2,25,000 (based on merit tier) ECE : ₹1,59,000 – ₹1,80,000
: ₹1,59,000 – ₹1,80,000 Mechanical / Civil / EEE : ₹1,26,000
: ₹1,26,000 MBA / MCA: ₹90,000 – ₹99,000
(Fee concessions depend on JEE Main %, AP/TS EAPCET ranks, or Inter (+2) marks)
Visit Website for more details ➡ mits.ac.in/admission-form Application Mode : Online / In-Campus
: Online / In-Campus Eligibility : For B.Tech – JEE Main / AP-TS EAPCET / +2 Merit For PG – Graduation with minimum 50–60% (program dependent)
: Admissions Status: Started
Official Website: www.mits.ac.in
📞 +91 8712655132 / 8712655138 / 8712655134 / 9100601116
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'Pay them! Pay them!' Fans, WNBA players make clear, loud statement on salaries during All-Star Game
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'Pay them! Pay them!' Fans, WNBA players make clear, loud statement on salaries during All-Star Game
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INDIANAPOLIS – As ESPN reporter Holly Rowe passed the microphone to WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert to present the All-Star Game MVP, fans made their thoughts clear: "Pay them! Pay them!" What the fans were referring to were the ongoing negotiations between the league and the players' union for a new collective bargaining agreement. The current agreement, which the union opted out of, expires on October 31, and the two sides have had multiple meetings negotiating a new CBA. The most recent of those meetings came Thursday; a meeting union president Nneka Ogwumike said later was a "wasted opportunity." The two sides didn't make any progress on contract talks during this meeting, but talked through a lot of their points. "I want to call it constructive. We had candid dialogue. This is part of the process," Engelbert said before the All-Star Game on Saturday. "... Just want to say I really respect the players. We're listening. They're listening to our owners. We're kind of in the middle as the league trying to make sure we're setting this league up for success for decades. That's the goal, to have a fair CBA for all." Some of the biggest sticking points are salaries and revenue sharing, exemplified by two different campaigns the players did during the All-Star Game. The first came in their warmup shirts: fans cheered as players took off their warmup jackets to reveal shirts that read "Pay Us What You Owe Us." "That's something we wanted to make well known.," Ogwumike told Rowe postgame. "In the bubble we always knew how to make a stand with some T-shirts, so we did that today. We look forward to negotiating our fair share and our value.' The second came postgame as All-Star Brittney Sykes held a sign that read "Pay the Players" behind All-Star Game MVP Napheesa Collier as Rowe interviewed her on the court. Currently, WNBA players only receive revenue sharing profits if the league hits its 'cumulative revenue target' for the season. After that target is hit, players on a WNBA roster will receive 25% of the revenue sharing profits, and the other 25% will be added to the pool the WNBA pays players in the offseason for marketing agreements. In contrast, the NBA has a 50-50 revenue split with the players; they receive 50% of all the revenue generated, regardless of target. The players' union is also hoping to exponentially increase salaries. Right now, the super-maximum for the league is just about $250,000, and that is only available to cored players. The regular max is at $216,000, and the rookie scale contract starts around $72,000. Coming out of All-Star weekend, one thing is clear: the players aren't going to back down from the things most important to them. "It's no disrespect to the league, you just want to make sure that the statement is made clear of what we as players have come to deserve," Fever guard and All-Star Kelsey Mitchell said. "I think it was less about trying to make a statement, and more about making sure that statement is clear-cut."

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