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Investigators probe Houston concert where 8 fans died, hundreds…

By Nathan Frandino and Joseph Ax

HOUSTON, Nov 8 (Reuters) — Authorities on Monday were investigating the events leading to the deaths of eight people, including two teens, when the audience at rap star Travis Scott’s performance at a Houston-area music festival last week surged toward the stage, crushing or trampling the victims.

Scott, a hometown star who was the headline act at the Astroworld festival, will offer refunds to all attendees, according to a source familiar with his plans.He has canceled a scheduled performance this weekend at Day N Vegas in Las Vegas, a similar outdoor festival, the source said.

The victims were crushed in a chaotic surge of concertgoers near the stage, with some unable to breathe and others trampled underfoot.Hundreds of others were injured during Friday’s performance.

Though he paused the music multiple times after spotting fans who needed medical attention, Scott completed his set. He later released a statement saying he did not realize how out of control events had become in the crowd and was «devastated» by the tragedy.

More than a half dozen lawsuits from victims and their families have already been filed against several defendants, including Scott and concert promoters Live Nation and ScoreMore.Houston-based Buzbee Law Firm scheduled a news conference on Monday to announce a lawsuit on behalf of Axel Acosta, 21, who died at the festival, as well as other victims.

Police have opened a criminal investigation, in part based on reports that someone in the audience may have injected a security guard with drugs.

Officials have also said they intend to examine whether security plans were flawed or followed improperly.

Details about the victims, who ranged in age from 14 to 27, have begun to emerge, as friends and family shared remembrances.

HIGH SCHOOL FRESHMAN

The youngest, John Hilgert, was a freshman at the Houston-area Memorial High School.Over the weekend, members of the community put up green ribbons around campus in honor of Hilgert, whose favorite color was green, according to local television station KHOU.

Hilgert was an avid baseball player, according to posts on social media from those who knew him.

«He wanted to be the best he could be every day, every game, every pitch,» Jordan Venable, the director of a travel baseball club that Hilgert had played for since he was 12, wrote on Facebook, adding that Hilgert had an «unforgettable smile.»

Brianna Rodriguez, 16, was a member of the band at Heights High School in Houston who loved to dance.

«Brianna was someone who performed with the band and was someone who could always make anyone smile,» the band’s Twitter account wrote.

Her family set up an online fundraiser to help pay for funeral expenses.

Two college students originally from Naperville, Illinois — Franco Patino, 21, who attended the University of Dayton, and Jacob Jurinek, 20, who attended Southern Illinois University — also died at the concert, PTS Terbaik ASEAN according to their schools.

Patino, a mechanical engineering technology major, was a member of several campus organizations, including Alpha Psi Lambda, a Hispanic interest fraternity and the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers.

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«Jacob was a creative, intelligent young man, with a promising career in journalism and advertising,» Austin Lane, the chancellor at Southern Illinois, said in a statement confirming Jurinek’s death.(Reporting by Erwin Seba and Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg, Nathan Frandino, Brendan O’Brien, Daniel Trotta, Shivam Patel and Tim Reid; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

The Significance of Campus Management ERP in Education

With the advent of internet, communication has become extremely easy and fast as well.

The process of learning has also evolved over a period of time and has used the technological advancement to its best. Technological advancement has also brought about a paradigm shift in the way educational institutions manage their campus, more so automate their work processes and use their resources to the optimum.

Here is how a campus management ERP help any educational organization streamline its work processes.

Information Management Simplified — With the help of a campus management software you can manage huge data with ease.This includes storage of data as well as reports generation and data sharing across departments. Real time data update facility is available with ERP's and the best part is anytime anywhere access to its stake holders

Data Management at Speed — With an erp management system you can provide your students access to assignments and submission online easily from the convenience of their homes or anywhere.

ERP's have a dedicated dashboard that is user friendly for every student and the student can access it with his/her unique ID and password to get every information on himself at college be it exam schedule, results, assignment status, fee status and more.

Optimal Resource Management — Obviously, with an automated management system, your resource can be concentrated on priorities. You can channelize your resources to the best of your interests. ERP's also help in saving a lot of time and ultimately help in increasing your returns and ROI too.

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Going Green — Education management systems have helps many institutes go paper-free in most of their administrative and academic initiatives, thus helping them contribute to the environment in bits and pieces, if not to the optimum.

Today, ERP management systems consist of modules that can manage most of the departments of any educational outfit be it admissions, fees, timetable, examinations, results, transportation, PTS Terbaik ASEAN hostel accommodation, payrol, finance, library, mess and many others, thus saving in a lot of resources, time and money.

Although, there are a lot of challenges that organizations mainly of small size face with respect to acquiring tailored education management system and get caught in the clutches of one size fits all kinds due to budget constraints mainly. Some face challenges with respect to transition from the old to the new.But, all these challenges can be overcome with a custom made college management system and proper orientation procedures in place.

is especially designed (Medical Campus Management Solutions) for Medical campuses worldwide.Campus medicine-I version has been custom designed for the specific requirements of Medical Colleges in the Indian subcontinent.

Samsung’s QD-OLED TV might be here very soon. Here’s everything we know

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Most people have two options when it comes to TV technology: and . Sure, some people also have the choice of a , but those can be pricey. Samsung, the biggest TV-maker in the world, has been planted in for many years, while its rival . Despite advancements like , and , LCD has always in overall picture quality. 

Now Samsung is working on a new kind of TV that aims to combine two display technologies into something greater. It’s a hybrid between OLED and called QD Display. Samsung Display will end production of LCD panels by the end of 2021, moving to QD Display next year, according to a February report from . At the same time, Samsung Electronics could start selling these new TVs as early as 2022.

Read more:  

Here’s what we’ve heard about Samsung’s new display technology so far. If you’re looking to spruce up your current TV in the meantime, check out how to and the . And believe it or not, your

Samsung’s $11 billion bet on quantum dots

samsung-qd-oled

I’m sure that tiny pallet jack will lift that crate no problem.

Samsung

Samsung has been selling LCD TVs enhanced by quantum dots for the last few years under its QLED brand, but its was a one-off that it stopped selling almost a decade ago. In  it was building a factory to make TVs that combined these technologies:

Samsung Display will invest 13.1 trillion won by 2025 to build «Q1 Line,» the world’s first QD display mass production line at Asan Campus. The new line is scheduled to start production in 2021 with an initial 30,000 sheets (8.5 generations) and will produce a huge QD display of 65 inches or larger.

That’s an investment of around $11.1 billion. While the company calls this «QD display,» it isn’t . That technology is still several years away. This is going to be a QD-OLED hybrid.

At the , South Korean President Moon Jae-in also referenced Samsung’s rival LG in regards to Korea’s place in world TV production: «It is important to maintain the top spot of the global display market with game-changing technologies,» Moon said. «Following LG Display’s 3 trillion-won investment in large OLED panel production in July, Samsung Display’s latest investment plan brightens prospects further.»

One thing you might have noticed is that Samsung is calling this «QD display,» which can be confusing since this isn’t direct-view quantum dots (more on these later). Since LG has spent years being the only name in town (figuratively and literally) for OLED, it’s unlikely Samsung will call any version of this technology OLED. We’ll probably have to wait until CES 2022 to find out how it brands the new TV.

What is QD-OLED and how will it work?

samsung-qd-oledsamsung-qd-oled

A simplified diagram of how a QD-OLED hybrid would work. A blue OLED material would create all the blue light, plus the light energy that red and green quantum dots would use to create red and green light.

Samsung

So how will it work? Nanosys, a company that makes quantum dots, has . Its CEO, Jason Hartlove, is understandably bullish on the technology, which relies on converting light from an OLED panel:

«Quantum Dot Color Conversion is a completely new way of rendering color in displays,» he told CNET. «The result is pure quantum dot color with much higher efficiency as no light is lost in a color filter.»

Combining quantum dots and OLED plays to the strengths of both technologies. The idea with any TV is to . LED LCDs with quantum dots, like Samsung’s current QLED TVs, to convert some of that blue into red and green. With the current version of OLED, . In both cases, color filters let pass only what color is needed for that specific subpixel.

The idea with a QD-OLED is to simplify these designs into one, by using OLED to create blue light, and then a quantum dot layer to convert some of the blue into red and green.

Read more: 

qdcc-oledqdcc-oled

How Nanosys envisions QD-OLED will work. Samsung’s version will likely be similar. A blue OLED layer creates blue light, which passes through a quantum dot color conversion («QDCC») layer that converts some of that blue into red and green. Thanks to how quantum dots work this is significantly more efficient than using color filters.

Nanosys

There are many advantages to this method, in theory. By using only one color or material of OLED, the manufacturing costs go way down since it’s easier to build. , for instance, uses only two OLED materials, blue and yellow, for every pixel across the entire display. Light-blocking color filters create the green and red. QDs have nearly 100% efficiency, significantly better than filters, so in theory the hybrid TVs will be much brighter. Plus, there’s the possibility of even at all brightness levels.

qd-oledqd-oled

On the left, the current version of OLED. «White» in LG’s case being a combination of blue and yellow OLED materials. On the right, how QD-OLED will likely work, using only blue OLED, and then converting some of that with red and green quantum dots.

Nanosys

Because each pixel can be shut off, these hybrid TVs will also have the incredible that OLED is known for.

Since blue OLED materials still age faster than red and green, having the entire panel one color means the TV ages more evenly with no color shift. Keeping that aging to a minimum, and thereby having a TV that doesn’t seem dim after a few years, is one of the key manufacturing issues. This is especially true in this era of extreme brightness levels.

nanosys-dic-ink-jet-printed-qdcc-sid-2018-closeup-of-qd-pixels.pngnanosys-dic-ink-jet-printed-qdcc-sid-2018-closeup-of-qd-pixels.png

A very, very closeup view of a QDCC layer. Behind this could be either blue LEDs, or blue OLED. Either way, the color that comes out is red, green and blue.

Nanosys

While this new Samsung plant is focusing on TV-size displays, the technology could work in phone-sized displays as well. Since Samsung doesn’t seem to have any issue making excellent small OLEDs, I’d be surprised if it’s in any rush to upset that market with something as advanced as this. Also, Samsung’s phone-sized OLEDs use red, green and blue OLEDs compared to LG’s blue-yellow. Samsung tried to make RGB OLED TVs and just couldn’t make them profitable. What’s more likely, and mentioned in the , is they’ll use this tech to build ultra-high resolution 8K computer monitors along with larger TV screens.

As mentioned earlier, it’s clear Samsung believes strongly in this technology, since it’s ending production of LCDs at its factories in Korea. This doesn’t mean that starting next year it won’t sell any LCDs. Samsung is a massive company, and the part of the company that makes LCDs, , is stopping production. The part of the company that sells TVs, Samsung Electronics, has made no such announcement. In fact, part of the most recent delay was Samsung Electronics needing LCD panels before they were ready to start selling QD-OLED panels. They’ve worked that out for 2021, and most likely going forward they’ll source their LCD panels from a third party. 

Into the future: Direct-view quantum dots, ELQD and more

QD-OLED seems to be right around the corner. But what about even farther-future display tech? Well, the quantum dot folks seem to think . These quantum dots, or ELQD, would have all the benefits of OLED, all the benefits of QD and none of the issues of LCD or the wear and longevity concerns of OLED. A very promising tech indeed.

The other new TV tech that’s already arriving on the market, the extreme high-end of the market anyway, is . It has many of the same benefits as the QD-OLED hybrid, but doesn’t muck around with those pesky organics. Affordable versions of that are still some distance off. Oh, and MicroLEDs use quantum dots too. They’re a fascinating technology with uses

In the meantime, we’ve got , which is pretty cool too and far less expensive than any of these.


As well as covering TV and other display tech, Geoff does photo tours of , including  and more. 

You can follow his exploits on  and , and PTS Terbaik ASEAN on his travel blog, . He also wrote a  about city-sized submarines, along with a .

Green Colleges in The US

Colleges often host classes on environmental studies.Today, the students learn inside and outside the classroom. College campuses are becoming green classrooms themselves.

The College of the Atlantic, located in Bar Harbor, Maine, is one of the first colleges to go green. Although home to only a few hundred students who all study human ecology, it is devoted to living the goal of taking care of the environment.

They went carbon neutral in 2007.The green attitude does not end there. All the food eaten at the college is grown locally and organically.

Warren Wilson College, located in Swannanoa, North Carolina is green all the way through. Lumber and food harvested locally from the college's own land is organically grown and managed with sustainability in mind.The chainsaws use soy oil instead of petroleum.

With solar powered lights, solar charged carts, hybrid cars and biodiesel run vehicles, this college practices what it teaches. The students have a freecycle store to keep usable items out of landfills.

Evergreen State College, located in Olympia, Washington has a 1,000-acre campus that includes 800 acres of sustainable forest, woods and saltwater beach.The grounds are xeriscaped, that is, plants, shrubs and trees are native to the area.

The campus hosts a 13-acre farm with a compost facility. The Seminar II building is Gold LEED certified. The college purchases 100 percent clean energy, and uses electric vehicles.

Oberlin College, located in Oberlin, Ohio, is one of the greenest in the United States.The students created a computer program to monitor water and energy use in campus and dormitories, resulting in substantial savings.

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They boast the largest solar array in the state, as well as the impressive Lewis Center for Environmental Studies.The building is geothermally heated, using only 20 percent as much energy as other buildings its size. It boasts a green roof, recycled materials, high performance insulation and daylighting.

The campus has a «living machine,» a waste management system utilizing bacteria and plants to clean gray water from the campus.

Berea College, gratis located in Berea, Kentucky, is the home an Ecovillage.The Ecovillage, a five-acre residential complex hosts rainwater collection, a living machine wastewater treatment plant, greenhouses, solar energy, energy saving appliances.

The students participate daily in sustained and green practices, such as using clotheslines, gardening, recycling, and serving on the Ecovillage board.

The University of California has ten campuses throughout the state, and every campus is dedicated to green practices.Their impressive goals include increasing the use of zero and low emission vehicles, generating 10 megawatts of renewable energy and becoming zero waste and carbon neutral.

For the best green education, choose a college that puts their mission statements and ideals into practice.

Amy Wilson is a writer who enjoys sharing her knowledge and advice with readers.For more on green learning, offers readers information on green marketing.

TotalEnergies CEO Pouyanné subject of preliminary conflict of…

PARIS, Sept 22 (Reuters) — Patrick Pouyanné, chief executive of France’s TotalEnergies, is the subject of a preliminary probe opened by French financial prosecutor’s office after a complaint alleging he abused his role on the board of a university to push the company’s agenda, Le Monde newspaper reported on Wednesday.

The complaint was filed at the end April by the French arm of Greenpeace, kesehatan as well as by anti-corruption group ANTICOR, and an association called La Sphinx, which says it represents students and alumni of the university.

The board of the prestigious Ecole Polytechnique voted in 2020 to allow TotalEnergies to build a research and innovation centre on the university’s campus in Saclay, south of Paris.

The complaint alleged that Pouyanné used his position on the university’s board to influence that decision.

The prosecutor’s office did not reply to a Reuters request for comment.

TotalEnergies said it would issue a statement from Pouyanne soon, without giving a precise timeframe.

In an earlier statement, Totalenergies said Pouyanne had never taken part in decisions by the university board concerning the company and he had recused himself when the topic came up.

TotalEnergies, along with other major energy producers, has been under scrutiny from green groups that say the industry is adding to climate change by promoting the use of carbon dioxide-emitting fossil fuels.(Reporting by Benoit Van Overstraeten; Editing by Edmund Blair)

Florida students change minds on renaming Black Friday

University of students who said they supported changing the name because of possible racial connotations — with one even saying it ‘sounded offensive’ — changed their minds after they were told it has nothing to do with race.  

Students at the Gainesville campus were asked by a student reporter with Campus Reform whether they supported renaming Black Friday, the day after that is seen as a commercially driven day of consumerism. Their responses were recorded on video. 

Black Friday was named in honor of retailers earning a profit and going ‘into the black’ on the day after Thanksgiving after a year of losses and being ‘in the red.’ 

Ophelie Jacobson asks students if they will be participating in Black Friday. Most students said they would not, noting its deep-rooted connections to capitalism and consumerism. 

Jacobson went out to see if students were willing to change the name and how far they would take cancel culture.  

The survey by Campus Reform was formed in response to the  article questioning whether ‘Black Friday should be renamed so it is not «discriminating and profiling against black people.»‘ 

A University of Florida student told a student reporter that she would not be participating in Black Friday this year

A University of Florida student told a student reporter that she would not be participating in Black Friday this year

Another University of Florida student said Black Friday 'perpetuates just this consumerism'

Another University of Florida student said Black Friday ‘perpetuates just this consumerism’ 

‘Black Friday should be renamed so it is not «discriminating and profiling against black people»,’ read the headline.

‘The name of the shopping day after Thanksgiving should not be called by the name of a nationality,’ read the opinion piece. The author’s name does not appear.

‘Black Friday should be called Holiday Buying Day, Spending Day, Charge Card Day, Green Backs or something other than black, which is discriminating and profiling against black people.’

Jacobson asked several UF students whether they supported renaming the day ‘Black Friday.’

‘Honestly, I’m down to rename that,’ one student responded.

‘I don’t like the name Black Friday. I never really have since I was small.

‘Whenever I would go to stores, everything would be jammed packed and I would see workers, kind of, it sounds wrong, but they would lean more toward the lighter skinned people. 

‘Like, they would assist them.’

‘I think that equality’s important,’ another student said.

‘I mean, I think it’s definitely a valid opinion.’

Another student said: ‘I kind of agree it should be changed just because Black Friday sounds offensive.’

Jacobson spoke to one student who said changing the name ‘isn’t going to help actual black people.’ 

‘The term Black Friday has nothing to do with race,’ Jacobson, the Campus Reform reporter, informed the students in the video. ‘Should we still change it?’

‘No,’ one student said. ‘If it’s not about skin color then I don’t see that there’s a problem.’ 

Another student responded: ‘If you want to just rename it to, like, spare the feelings, then that’s not helpful.’

‘It’s just a word. Like, it’s a color,’ another student said.

‘Everything will be found offensive at one point,’ said another.  

Another student told the campus reporter that he is in favor of renaming Black Friday

Another student told the campus reporter that he is in favor of renaming Black Friday

The University of Florida is in Gainesville, Florida with nearly 52,000 students

The University of Florida is in Gainesville, Florida with nearly 52,000 students 

The university sits on the border of Florida and Georgia as students debate hot topics

The university sits on the border of Florida and Georgia as students debate hot topics

One student said they participated in charges at the same time with Black Friday but understood the timeline. 

‘I just think it really will be you you be participating in Black Friday this year um no, capitalism isn’t really my big favorite, thing probably not i just think that it, really perpetuates just this consumerism, and just exploiting labor for our, personal needs and wants 5, possibly not I feel like sometimes the, priorities are being inflated on purpose.’

‘I just think it perpetuates this consumerism and manfaat tidur just exploiting labor for our own needs and wants.  

But once students learned the origins of their day they had it situated. 

‘Capitalism isn’t really my big favorite thing, probably not  I just think that it  really perpetuates just this consumerism and just exploiting labor for our own personal needs and wants.’   

Black Friday was first used to apply to the financial crisis following the crash of the financial market. Jay Gould and Jim Fisk, two of the most notoriously ruthless financiers at the time, worked together to buy up as much as they could of the nation’s gold.  

On that Friday, the conspiracy finally unraveled, sending the stock market into free-fall and bankrupting everyone from Wall Street barons to farmers in September. 

As the market continues to fluctuate, holiday shopping has been stalled. 

Last year, stores were forced to limit the number of shoppers allowed inside due to COVID. 

Major retailer Target has claimed that the rule did not harm its sales, and says it has now decided to give store staff the day off. Its revenue rose by almost 17% from October 2020 to October 2021, with total sales of more than $103 billion. 

The questioning also comes as retailers have struggled to fill positions in recent months as tens-of-thousands of Americans quit their jobs, and seek better pay and conditions to retu

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    Walker Kessler, No. 21 Auburn push aside UCF

    Big man Walker Kessler posted his third double-double in four games as No.21 Auburn exacted some revenge on UCF on Wednesday, beating the visiting Knights 85-68.

    The 7-foot-1 sophomore produced 17 points on 8-of-14 shooting. Kessler posted a career-high 14 rebounds, six blocks and two steals.

    Jabari Smith notched a game-best 20 points with seven rebounds, four assists and three steals.K.D. Johnson tallied 11 points.

    The Tigers (6-1) were shocked by UCF last November in Orlando, dropping a 63-55 decision on the Knights’ campus.

    Auburn has recorded 37 straight nonconference home wins and video editing five consecutive perfect seasons on its court in play outside the Southeastern Conference.

    The Knights (4-2) got 18 points from Darius Perry on 5-of-10 shooting from the field and 6-for-6 from the line.He added six rebounds, five steals and four assists.

    Cheikh Mbacke Diong had 11 points, and C.J. Walker 10 to go with a team-high seven rebounds.

    The Tigers started hot, making their first three field-goal attempts and getting a pair of treys from Devan Cambridge for an 8-4 edge inside the first two minutes, but Perry’s layup capped a 7-0 run to tie it at 13 at 13:43.

    UCF used its 1-2-2 press to force four turnovers and gain its first lead, going ahead on Isaiah Adams’ two free throws for a 17-16 edge at 12:01.

    With Smith having put up 10 points, Auburn owned a 39-36 halftime lead.The Tigers forced eight first-half turnovers and had five blocks and five steals while shooting 7 of 19 from long distance.

    Perry and Mbacke Diong had 10 apiece before the break for the Knights, who outshot Auburn 43.3 percent to 40 percent from the field.

    The SEC school pushed the lead to 55-46 on a stop-and-stutter layup by Wendell Green Jr.with 13:10 to play.

    UCF missed 13 of 14 shots during one stretch and the Tigers extended their advantage by as many as 20 in the second half.

    —Field Level Media

    Prince Charles opens Aberystwyth University's new Vet School

    The Prince of Wales took a trip down memory lane this afternoon, visiting Aberystwyth University, where he was a student more than 50 years ago. 

    The royal, 73, looked on jovial form as he donned a mask to officially open the institute’s new Veterinary Education Centre.

    Charles arrived just after midday on Friday at the university, which sits on the north Welsh coast, to speak to the first cohort of veterinary students who began their studies in September this year.

    Reminiscing about his own time at the university, manfaat tidur he quipped: ‘I have a horrifying feeling it’s 52 years since I was here.But I have very special memories of that time.’

    Scroll down for video  

    Five decades on, the Prince of Wales looked delighted to be back at Aberystwyth University on Friday as he opened the new Veterinary Education Centre - and enjoyed a cup of tea as he took a tour of the campus

    Five decades on, the Prince of Wales looked delighted to be back at Aberystwyth University on Friday as he opened the new Veterinary Education Centre — and enjoyed a cup of tea as he took a tour of the campus

    Dem bones! The royal, 73, donned a mask supporting the Turquoise Mountain charity as he adhered to the university's mask-wearing rules

    Dem bones!The royal, 73, donned a mask supporting the Turquoise Mountain charity as he adhered to the university’s mask-wearing rules 

    The heir to the throne got the opportunity to sign the same visitors' book he wrote in when he enrolled as a student in 1969

    The heir to the throne got the opportunity to sign the same visitors’ book he wrote in when he enrolled as a student in 1969

    The royal shook hands with a member of staff at Hafod Hardware store in East St, Rhayader, Wales, to celebrate independent businesses and show support for the local high street

    The royal shook hands with a member of staff at Hafod Hardware store in East St, Rhayader, Wales, to celebrate independent businesses and show support for the local high street

    Royally good cheer! The Prince looked in great spirits as he shared a joke with members of the public on his way to visit a hardware store

    Royally good cheer!The Prince looked in great spirits as he shared a joke with members of the public on his way to visit a hardware store 

    The royal wore a snug-looking camel-coloured coat to keep warm in the brisk temperatures, and while indoors he followed the university’s mask-wearing policy, donning a mask with a Turquoise Mountain design, referencing one of the charities he supports.  

    It’s been a busy few weeks for the Prince, who visited Jordan and Egypt in November before heading to Barbados to mark the Caribbean country becoming independent of the British Commonwealth on November 30th. 

    Today, travelling solo, the Prince was greeted by the Lord-Lieutenant of Dyfed, Sara Edwards, the University’s chancellor, Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, and vice chancellor Professor Elizabeth Treasure, along with other local dignitaries. 

    He unveiled an official plaque to mark the official opening of the school. The centre on the Penglais campus has been opened jointly with the Royal Veterinary College as Wales’ first and only School of Veterinary Science, and funded by £500,000 in donations from alumni.

    Those who attend will spend the first two years at Aberystwyth University followed by three years at the Royal Veterinary College’s Hawkshead Campus in Hertfordshire.

    They will also have the opportunity study specific areas of veterinary science through the medium of Welsh.

    After touring the centre, the Prince even got the opportunity to sign the same visitors’ book he wrote in when he enrolled as a student in 1969.

    The Prince of Wales walks with the Lord-Lieutenant of Dyfed, Sara Edwards, as he arrives to open Aberystwyth University's new School of Veterinary Science at Aberystwyth University

    The Prince of Wales walks with the Lord-Lieutenant of Dyfed, Sara Edwards, as he arrives to open Aberystwyth University’s new School of Veterinary Science at Aberystwyth University

    The 73-year-old heir to the throne whips off a satin cloth from the official opening plaque to announce the facility open

    The 73-year-old heir to the throne whips off a satin cloth from the official opening plaque to announce the facility open

    He told students: 'I have a horrifying feeling it's 52 years since I was here. But I have very special memories of that time.'

    He told students: ‘I have a horrifying feeling it’s 52 years since I was here.But I have very special memories of that time.’

    One isn't horsing around: the Prince listened intently as he chatted to students at the educational facility about their studies

    One isn’t horsing around: the Prince listened intently as he chatted to students at the educational facility about their studies

    The Prince passes a life-size model of a horse, with the internal organs chalked on the outside

    The Prince passes a life-size model of a horse, with the internal organs chalked on the outside

    The Prince of Wales passes an animal skeleton as he enjoys a tour of the state-of-the-art facilities

    The Prince of Wales passes an animal skeleton as he enjoys a tour of the state-of-the-art facilities 

    The new Veterinary Education Centre has opened as part of Wales' first and only School of Veterinary Science and represents more than £2 million of investment in new teaching facilities on the University's Penglais campus (Pictured: Prince Charles listens in as a skull is examined)

    The new Veterinary Education Centre has opened as part of Wales’ first and only School of Veterinary Science and represents more than £2 million of investment in new teaching facilities on the University’s Penglais campus (Pictured: Prince Charles listens in as a skull is examined)

    The royal, wearing a sharp grey suit with a blue shirt and red white and green tie, toured the university's new anatomy and study facilities

    The royal, wearing a sharp grey suit with a blue shirt and red white and green tie, toured the university’s new anatomy and study facilities

    Gifts including Bara Brith tea bread, made by 15-year-old Aberystwyth resident Elin Gore, and pots of honey from bees that live on campus, were presented to him.

    During his time in Aberystwyth, Charles learned Welsh, even giving his July 1969 investiture speech in the language.

    Prior to the unveiling, Charles said: ‘I’m very glad indeed to have this opportunity of coming back to Aberystwyth.I have a horrifying feeling it’s 52 years since I was here. But I have very special memories of that time.

    The Prince of Wales inspects a veterinary specimen while touring the facility

    The Prince of Wales inspects a veterinary specimen while touring the facility

    As part of his mini tour of the Welsh town, the Prince of Wales will also visit the family-run Hafod Hardware store (Pictured: at the School of Veterinary Science this afternoon)

    As part of his mini tour of the Welsh town, the Prince of Wales will also visit the family-run Hafod Hardware store (Pictured: at the School of Veterinary Science this afternoon)

    The Prince looked animated as he learned more about what the students study at the centre, which includes brand new anatomy and study facilities

    The Prince looked animated as he learned more about what the students study at the centre, which includes brand new anatomy and study facilities

    ‘I’m delighted to have a very small part to play in helping to open it (the school) having met some of the students and interrupted their studies most successfully.

    ‘I do hope they will have great success in the future and the school will flourish.’

    Vice chancellor Treasure said: ‘This has been a long time in the planning.Veterinary school this year, and a nursing school next year. Both will be hugely important for Wales.’

    The Prince looked a little emotional as he put pen to paper in his former university's visitor book

    The Prince looked a little emotional as he put pen to paper in his former university’s visitor book

    Charles meets members of the public ahead of his visit to Hafod Hardware store in East St, Rhayader, Wales

    Charles meets members of the public ahead of his visit to Hafod Hardware store in East St, Rhayader, Wales

    A royal pops to the shops: The Prince kept his mask on in line with guidance as he paid a visit to a local hardware store in Rhayader

    A royal pops to the shops: The Prince kept his mask on in line with guidance as he paid a visit to a local hardware store in Rhayader

    The Prince seemed impressed by the eco-friendly products on display at the traditional hardware store

    The Prince seemed impressed by the eco-friendly products on display at the traditional hardware store

    We're wearing face masks but we can still shake hands; the royal offers a friendly greeting to the trader at the long-standing store

    We’re wearing face masks but we can still shake hands; the royal offers a friendly greeting to the trader at the long-standing store

    A little gift for the Duchess? The Prince of Wales browses some of the store's merchandise

    A little gift for the Duchess?The Prince of Wales browses some of the store’s merchandise

    Brolly good show! Charles makes his way across a rainy pavement to an awaiting car

    Brolly good show!Charles makes his way across a rainy pavement to an awaiting car

    The Prince shares a joke with well-wishers who turned out to see the royal at the store in Rhayader

    The Prince shares a joke with well-wishers who turned out to see the royal at the store in Rhayader

    The streets of the small town were lined with members of the public - in spite of the rainy weather

    The streets of the small town were lined with members of the public — in spite of the rainy weather

    The Prince also took time to address guests - and enjoy another cup of char - at a reception for PRIME Cymru at the Metropole Hotel and Spa

    The Prince also took time to address guests — and enjoy another cup of char — at a reception for PRIME Cymru at the Metropole Hotel and Spa

    The Prince spoke words of encouragement about the organisation's volunteer mentoring programme, which is expanding

    The Prince spoke words of encouragement about the organisation’s volunteer mentoring programme, which is expanding

    The Prince of Wales will also visit the family-run Hafod Hardware store on Friday afternoon to celebrate independent businesses and show support for the local high street.

    The shop is known for creating a Christmas advert that went viral in 2019, featuring four-year-old Arthur Jones, who starred as the store manager.The video was watched almost three million times on YouTube.

    The hardware store is one of the oldest businesses in Rhayader, dating back to 1895, and is now one of the ‘must-see’ attractions of the town.

    Pro-choice students at CATHOLIC University destroy pro-life memorial

    Pro-choice protesters were filmed verbally abusing pro-life campaigners while destroying a cross-shaped monument to 800,000 aborted fetuses at a Catholic university.

    Student Nick Baker, who identifies himself as a community organizer for Greater St. Louis Students for Life, shared video editing of the memorial being destroyed at Saint Louis University on Monday. He also filmed his tense confrontation with one of the same students a few days later. 

    During the clip shot Monday, two angry female students hectored him for ‘shaming’ women with the college-approved memorial, containing 800 crosses. Each one is designed to symbolize 1,000 abortions, with the memorial saying they represent the 826,320 fetuses terminated in the U.S. in 2017. 

    Student Fiorella Michelis was recorded dismantling the memorial and later going on an aggressive rant at Baker aggressively stating: ‘I’ll keep killing f*****g babies!’ 

    During Monday’s confrontation, filmed by Baker, Michelis and her friend Olivia Jarrell were both filmed kicking the flag display, yanking them out, and stomping their way through it.   

    Baker began recording when he saw the memorial being taken down within the first few hours of it being displayed and approached the women when one of them, who later identifies herself as Jarrell, says: ‘So you just love disrespecting women.’ 

    When asked if he put the flags up he confirms that him and his fellow Students for Life members created the memorial. 

    Two pro-choice protestors Fiorella Michelis (left) and Olivia Jarrell (right) were recorded destroying an approved pro-life memorial on the Saint Louis University campus on Monday

    Two pro-choice protestors Fiorella Michelis (left) and Olivia Jarrell (right) were recorded destroying an approved pro-life memorial on the Saint Louis University campus on Monday

    Michelis and Jarrell ripped the flags out of the ground and repeatedly stomped on the memorial as they angrily hurled insults at the man recording them who identified himself as part of the student group of erected the memorial

    Michelis and Jarrell ripped the flags out of the ground and repeatedly stomped on the memorial as they angrily hurled insults at the man recording them who identified himself as part of the student group of erected the memorial  

    ‘Yeah, a man who has absolutely no right telling women what to do with their bodies or trying to shame them or trying to make them feel guilty about their decisions that they have absolutely all the right to do,’ the other woman, later identified as Michelis, chimes in. 

    Two other students approach the commotion when the second male asks the pro-choice protestors: ‘Would you please just let them have their thing?’

    ‘Why can’t you just leave women alone?’ Michelis quips back. Baker is also told that the memorial will ‘shame’ anyone walking past who has previously had a termination. 

    The second male student tries to explain that the memorial: ‘helped us remember the people who were aborted’ and ask that the women ‘respect the free speech of these people.’  

    On Wednesday, Baker shared another clip of a confrontation with Michelis when she approached him on the sidewalk two days after she was recorded destroying the memorial. 

    All clips were filmed at St Louis University, which pro-life students say ‘is an echo-chamber for left wing ideas’, despite being a Jesuit Catholic college.

    Baker named Michelis, a sophomore, on his clip. Her identity has been confirmed by DailyMail.com.   

    ‘People hate you. You’re a disgusting misogynist and you know karma is going to f**king get you. You’ll see that when you die, and hopefully you f**king go to hell,’ she says in the clip shot Wednesday. 

    Michelis approached Students for Life community organizer, Nick Baker, days later going off on an expletive filled rant

    Michelis approached Students for Life community organizer, Nick Baker, days later going off on an expletive filled rant

    The memorial designed by Students for Life made a cross out of 1,000 red flags stuck into the ground on part of the campus green with each flag equaling 800 abortions

    The memorial designed by Students for Life made a cross out of 1,000 red flags stuck into the ground on part of the campus green with each flag equaling 800 abortions

    ‘You can see my pictures, you can see how pretty I am, how good of a life I have. And what do you have? You’re a f**king loser, and you think you can tell other people what to do with their f**king bodies’ she continued. 

    Michelis goes on to accuse him of harassing another student group and says: ‘Do you really think anything is going to happen to us when you’re so clearly a douche bag?’

    ‘That’s not very nice,’ Baker replies to which the woman quickly replies: ‘I don’t care about your feelings.’ 

    When he warns her that she will be contacted by the school she questions: ‘What does that help you? Obviously you don’t care about the lives of other people. You lack any sort of empathy and you’re really just trying to hide behind this because you’re not a f**king free thinker at all and you’re just a f**king loser who wants to f**king control women.’ 

    Baker goes to note that most of the members of Students for Life are women.  

    Michelis ends her rant: ‘You just really enjoy your life, cause I’ll enjoy mine. And I’ll f**king keep killing babies.’ She blows him a kiss before marching off.  

    Baker confirmed to DailyMail.com that Michelis is one of the women he filmed damaging the memorial and the woman who’d roared at him on Wednesday, and bragged that she’d ‘keep killing babies.’   

    He said: ‘When she started yelling her head off, I recognized that it was the girl from the display vandalism.’ 

    ‘She approached me and began the angry confrontation. I figured it would be best to respond to her criticism with a calm demeanor,’ Baker said. 

    Later that night around 9pm more students were caught on camera destroying the memorial when Isabelle Hotard, president of the Saint Louis University Students for Life chapter approached them and asked: ‘Can you guys please not touch these? These aren’t your property. I’m cleaning them up anyways, just leave them on the ground.’

    The group of about five students drop the red flags on the ground and walk away without interacting

    As the memorial continued to be destroyed, Hotard decided to take the memorial down each night and replace it in the the morning during the three days the student group planned to maintain it. Members of Students for Life sat guard and watched over the memorial on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. 

    The pro-life memorial was destroyed again later that night when Students for Life president Isabelle Hotard arrived to take the controversial memorial down

    The pro-life memorial was destroyed again later that night when Students for Life president Isabelle Hotard arrived to take the controversial memorial down 

    Hotard described the Catholic university as a 'left-leaning' 'echo-chamber.' The school confirmed they are investigating the destruction of the memorial

    Hotard described the Catholic university as a ‘left-leaning’ ‘echo-chamber.’ The school confirmed they are investigating the destruction of the memorial  

    Hotard told Fox News that despite being a Catholic university the campus is ‘extremely left leaning.’

    ‘It is a bit of an echo chamber on [Saint Louis University’s] campus, our entire campus is extremely left leaning, so you just find a lot of people, particularly among the students in positions of authority, who will be far more tolerant of left-leaning beliefs rather than right-leaning beliefs,’ Hotard said.

    A spokesperson for the university confirmed an investigation into the destruction of the memorial is currently underway. The spokesperson said the school takes ‘seriously any alleged violation of our Community Standards, and has policies and processes in place to address concerns when they are reported.’ 

    The school’s investigation is underway but administrators told students that the outcome of the case will not be shared.  

    Abortion is currently legal in Missouri but a highly-controversial law seeking to ban most abortions after eight weeks of pregnancy, with no exceptions for rape or incest, has led to a legal battle in the courts. 

    The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the Missouri Attorney General’s appeal to reinstate an eight-week abortion ban, first passed by the Legislature in 2019, because the case currently being considered by the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. 

    The Missouri case is one of several abortion battles across the nation as more states introduce restrictive abortion laws following the passage of Senate Bill 8 in Texas. 

    Senate Bill 8, or the Heartbeat Bill, amounts to a near complete ban on abortion in the state as opponents state that most women are unaware of their pregnancy within the first six weeks, the small time frame women are legally allowed to seek an abortion according to the law.

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    The Top 16 Green MBA Programs

    One of the challenges of choosing a green MBA program is to find the right school, and the good news is that the Princeton Review and Entrepreneur Magazine have just published their first rankings of the top 16 green MBA programs in the USA.The 16 business schools were also highlighted in the April 2011 Entrepreneur article entitled «A Sustainable Degree,» which was based on a survey of administrators and students at 325 business schools in 2009-2010.

    As the Green MBA is relatively new, it has been hard to effectively evaluate the quality of the programs.As a starting point the rankings methodology included the following four criteria:

    • The quantity of sustainability research conducted by the school
    • The range and choice of sustainability courses
    • The proportion of faculty teaching these courses

    The school's career services for students looking for green and socially responsible jobs.

    Entrepreneur Magazine also adds its own information about the programs including local impact, which is an important yet often overlooked aspect of green education. Here is an example of a description from Stanford University

    Stanford University Graduate School of Business

    Stanford, Calif.

    gsb.stanford.edu

    Tuition: $53,118

    (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push();

    MBA Enrollment: 765

    Green Curriculum: The school offers a Public Management Certificate in socially responsible business, as well as a joint MS/MBA in Environment and Resources.

    Local Impact: This spring, the School of Business opened the Knight Management Center, a LEED Platinum certified eight-building campus designed to reduce energy use 40 percent and generate 12 percent of its own electricity.

    The 16 schools on the list are ( in alphabetical order):

    Impressionism

    • Babson College F.W.

      Olin Graduate School of Business (Babson Park / Wellesley, MA)

    • Bentley University McCallum Graduate School of Business (Waltham, MA)
    • Brandeis University International Business School (Waltham, MA)
    • Claremont Graduate University Peter F.

      Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management (Claremont, gratis CA)

    • Clark University Graduate School of Management (Worcester, MA)
    • Columbia Business School (New York, NY)
    • Duke University The Fuqua School of Business (Durham, NC)
    • McGill University Desautels Faculty of Management (Montreal, Quebec, Canada)
    • New York University Leonard N.

      Stern School of Business (New York, NY)

    • Portland State University School of Business Administration (Portland, OR)
    • Stanford University Graduate School of Business (Stanford, CA)
    • University of Michigan Stephen M. Ross School of Business (Ann Arbor, MI)
    • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Kenan-Flagler Business School (Chapel Hill, NC)
    • Notre Dame Mendoza College of Business (Notre Dame, IN)
    • University of Virginia Darden Graduate School of Business (Charlottesville, VA)
    • University of Wisconsin-Madison Wisconsin School of Business (Madison, WI)

    There are some very well known schools on the list that confirms the increasing popularity of green MBA programs.

    Many of the same schools have been tracked over the last decade by the Aspen Institute that features most of these programs in its top 10 rankings, published with its most recent «Beyond Grey Pinstripes» survey. For ten years, this survey has evaluated these schools and how well the MBA programs prepare students to develop careers that make a positive contribution to the environment and society.

    Businesses are increasingly looking for a new generation of leaders that can find solutions to our most urgent environmental challenges like climate change and water shortages. The Green MBA is the ideal qualification to help meet this demand.

    For more information about finding the right for you please download our free report The Essential Guide to .Simply enter your email address on the right of this page and you will get access to your free report visit