Flour Milling Technology Course Admission
Regular Residential Course in Flour Milling Technology at International School of Milling Technology (ISMT) scheduled for the year 2009 -2010.
Eligibility:
Degree/Diploma in Engineering/tech. OR Any Degree from a recognized University(Art, Commerce, Science or equivalent) Flour Milling Technology OR City & Guilds Certificate in Flour Milling.
Selection is based on the merit list of marks/grade of the qualifying degree examination, experience in flour milling and sponsorship and also if required an aptitude test/interview conducted by CFTRI.
The course fee is Rs. 75000/- for Indian participant and U.S. $ 8,000/- for participant from abroad.
The participant will have to bear the boarding & lodging expenses provided at the International Hostel situated inside the campus.
Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI)
Email: ttbd@cftri.res.in
Website: www.cftri.com
Institutional Profile
Genesis
Developing countries of the world have always realised that the key to their food security lies in the right intervention of science & technology, particularly of the indigenous kind, to conserve & preserve and process & distribute their available food resources.
The Bengal famine of 1943, and the ravages of the second world war, awakened the Government and the whole nation of India to this grave, scientific "realisation," like no other calamities ever before. The upshot of it was the coming together of the Industrial Research Planning Committee of the CSIR (under the chairmanship of Sir Shanmukham Chetty) and the Food Industries Panels of various Ministries of the Government of India to propose, in 1943, the formation of a food technology research institute, as part of the CSIR chain of national laboratories. The proposal was accepted in principle by the Governing Body of the CSIR in February 1948. Desiring that the institute be located in Mysore, the then Government of Mysore came forward with total support to the proposal, and alongside all basic facilities, offered Cheluvamba Mansion, a royal building surrounded by a sprawling estate, to house the institute. The government of India accepted the offer from among similar proposals from other provinces, and the then Prime Minister (also ex-officio President of CSIR) Jawaharlal Nehru himself came to Mysore in December 1948 and formally received the building for the institute.
Regular Residential Course in Flour Milling Technology at International School of Milling Technology (ISMT) scheduled for the year 2009 -2010.
Eligibility:
Degree/Diploma in Engineering/tech. OR Any Degree from a recognized University(Art, Commerce, Science or equivalent) Flour Milling Technology OR City & Guilds Certificate in Flour Milling.
Selection is based on the merit list of marks/grade of the qualifying degree examination, experience in flour milling and sponsorship and also if required an aptitude test/interview conducted by CFTRI.
The course fee is Rs. 75000/- for Indian participant and U.S. $ 8,000/- for participant from abroad.
The participant will have to bear the boarding & lodging expenses provided at the International Hostel situated inside the campus.
Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI)
Email: ttbd@cftri.res.in
Website: www.cftri.com
Institutional Profile
Genesis
Developing countries of the world have always realised that the key to their food security lies in the right intervention of science & technology, particularly of the indigenous kind, to conserve & preserve and process & distribute their available food resources.
The Bengal famine of 1943, and the ravages of the second world war, awakened the Government and the whole nation of India to this grave, scientific "realisation," like no other calamities ever before. The upshot of it was the coming together of the Industrial Research Planning Committee of the CSIR (under the chairmanship of Sir Shanmukham Chetty) and the Food Industries Panels of various Ministries of the Government of India to propose, in 1943, the formation of a food technology research institute, as part of the CSIR chain of national laboratories. The proposal was accepted in principle by the Governing Body of the CSIR in February 1948. Desiring that the institute be located in Mysore, the then Government of Mysore came forward with total support to the proposal, and alongside all basic facilities, offered Cheluvamba Mansion, a royal building surrounded by a sprawling estate, to house the institute. The government of India accepted the offer from among similar proposals from other provinces, and the then Prime Minister (also ex-officio President of CSIR) Jawaharlal Nehru himself came to Mysore in December 1948 and formally received the building for the institute.
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