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Новости за 01.12.2024

GST collection rises 8.5 pc to Rs 1.82 lk cr in November

Economictimes.indiatimes.com 

GST collection increased to Rs 1.82 lakh crore in November, an 8.5 per cent rise from the previous year. Central GST was Rs 34,141 crore, State GST at Rs 43,047 crore, Integrated IGST at Rs 91,828 crore, and cess at Rs 13,253 crore. The total collections from April to November stood at Rs 14.57 lakh crore.

Pink-Ball Warm-up: Fit-again Gill, Harshit shine; Rohit disappoints

Timesofindia.indiatimes.com (sports) 

Shubman Gill's confident half-century highlighted India's performance in a pink-ball warm-up game against the Prime Minister's XI in Canberra, easing worries about his thumb injury. With decent contributions from Yashasvi Jaiswal and Nitish Kumar Reddy, India chased down the target of 240. Harshit Rana impressed with four key wickets, solidifying his place for the upcoming Adelaide Test.

Manish Sisodia challenges ED chargesheet in Delhi HC over lack of sanction approval

Economictimes.indiatimes.com 

Manish Sisodia has challenged the trial court's decision on the ED's chargesheet in the Excise Policy case. He claims it was filed without necessary sanction approval. He seeks to quash all related proceedings. The Delhi High Court will hear the plea on Monday. Sisodia previously got bail from the Supreme Court in related cases involving money laundering and corruption.

Ducks bid to alter recent fortunes in encounter vs. Senators

BigNewsNetwork.com (sports) 

(Photo credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images) The Anaheim Ducks have just one win in their past four outings as they prepare to host the Ottawa Senators on Sunday. That's the glass sitting half-empty. The Ducks see that same glass as half-full when they consider they are 5-3-1 in their past nine outings. As well, their latest setback wasa positive performance against their biggest rivals. As the Ducks prepare for the Se

3D-printed particles propel themselves across the surface of a fluid

Phys.org 

A small team of physicists at the University of Amsterdam has demonstrated the ability of 3D-printed particles to propel themselves across the surface of a fluid, given the right fuel. The group has posted a paper describing their particles on the arXiv preprint server.