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Hate Endowment Taxes? Reform the University
Universities are bracing for the second Trump administration, anticipating the most adversarial relationship between the presidency and higher education in American history. Unlike the first go-round when Trump seemingly surprised even himself by winning and had no clear educational policy to implement, Republicans have now had years to develop an agenda for addressing what they see as the many sins of the sector. Not only is the incoming administration better prepared for a clash, but universities are in a weaker position to defend themselves. Trump is more popular now than when he first took office, while universities are at their nadir of public approval. Should Republicans prove determined in their vision of reform, universities will find it more difficult to resist.
One avenue that Republicans may pursue is to tax university endowments. In 2023, Vice President JD Vance, then serving as an Ohio senator, put forward legislation that would have placed a 35 percent tax on the investment income of wealthy universities. Republican lawmakers beyond Vance have expressed their approbation of the principle. These proposals follow the precedent of Trump’s first term. The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act introduced a 1.4 percent excise tax on the investment income of a few extremely rich universities. Despite the great alarm with which this tax was met in the worlds of higher education and philanthropy, the public doesn’t seem to have soured on the idea: A 2024 poll found that likely voters supported taxing endowments further.
Rather than simply denouncing these developments, university leaders should work to understand why they came about—and why they might be in a weaker position to fight them off than they imagine.
Some preliminary points are in order. First, it should be recognized that large endowments are not the normal mechanism for funding education. Primary and secondary education, in the US and abroad, is usually provided by institutions that receive the entirety, or nearly the entirety, of their funding from taxes. Even private education need not be funded through endowments—that is, through the accumulation of a capital surplus (based largely on donations, which in this country are themselves tax-exempt) from the investment income of which institutional activities are funded. Private education could be sustained through the conventional practices of the private sector—namely, by a mixture of the revenue from the products they sell and taking on debt.
“There is nothing inevitable about endowments as a financial basis for education.”
There is nothing inevitable about endowments as a financial basis for education, and the vastness of the present endowments of the major American universities is anomalous both in a comparative and historical perspective. Other countries’ universities have nothing like endowments of this size, when they have endowments at all. And historically US university endowments were smaller and covered a smaller proportion of their overall costs. It is not a law of nature that societies be so permissive toward the accumulation of capital and property beyond the necessary operating expenses of educational institutions. Laws can be made that tightly condition the privileged tax position of endowed nonprofits on certain spending and institutional requirements; or that restrict or disincentivize gifts to universities; or that simply stipulate that universities distribute each year such a portion of their assets that their endowments dwindle. Measures of this sort were contemplated in this country a mere half-century ago in the deliberations that led up to the 1969 Tax Reform Act that placed heavier regulations on private foundations, and other liberal nations have policies in place that are designed to discourage endowment accumulation.
Nor should we think of skepticism toward endowments as an intrinsically right-wing proposition, even if that is the direction from which hostility is coming at present. As I have noted in these pages before, what historians considered liberalism’s heyday saw liberal politicians and authors express wariness toward educational endowments and encourage the state to reform them. Arguably the greatest liberal statesman in history (not to mention one of the most devoted to education), William Gladstone, proposed removing the tax exemption from the endowments of charitable foundations, including schools and universities. In this attitude, such figures were drawing on a venerable legacy. Animosity toward endowments of all sorts was a feature of the French Enlightenment, and Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations included an extended discussion of how inappropriate endowments were for educational purposes, arguing that they insulated professors too much from the realities of market demand (or lack thereof) and left schools ill-adapted in the long run to the needs of the population.
An endowment can be conceptualized as a third way between relying entirely on market competition or on public provision. Interestingly, it was precisely as an alternative to market-based education practices that they were seen in prior periods when their fate was being decided. In Victorian England, a leading Liberal politician framed the choice in education policy as being between “endowment or free trade.” In the higher-education context, an endowment is a way of offering to scholars and teachers a degree of insulation from direct market discipline. Instead of merely fetching what they could charge by directly hawking their wares to potential pupils or consumers of their research, professors are subsidized by a mass of accumulated capital—capital whose accumulation has been aided by being exempt from taxes.
Finally, and at the risk of stating the obvious, we should remind ourselves that exemption from taxation is a subsidy. To pay no or lesser tax than other similarly situated institutions or persons effectively increases the resources available to the exempt entity no less than receiving a direct financial grant from the government would. And it likewise increases the burden on others. As one report puts the matter plainly, “the favorable tax treatment of private non-profit and public higher education is a mechanism to transfer resources to higher education.” If universities wish for their endowments to remain in this fiscally privileged position, what is needed is a set of justifications for the specific proposition that the current methods of financing higher education, which facilitate the development of institutions at once less reliant on consumer preferences and on government largesse, are so valuable that we should continue placing extra fiscal requirements on the rest of the public to preserve it, rather than simple denunciations of endowment taxes as attacks on education. After all, higher education is provided the world over, while American universities almost alone enjoy such enormous untaxed or undertaxed resources.
Let us consider three common justifications for tax-privileged endowments in higher education, in ascending order of importance and ask whether universities are in a strong position to put them forward at present. The first is that they permit experimentation and diversity. If all institutions had the state as their sole funder, or if they all faced short-term market pressures, one might expect conformity and convergence. Large endowments give individual institutions financial wherewithal and a margin of independence for trying out new initiatives, setting out on their own path, making a risky venture to differentiate themselves from others, and maintaining their own distinctive traditions. It was this rationale which led John Stuart Mill to abandon his initial hostility to educational endowments: Endowments were a protective shield against the homogenizing forces of government dictation and the fashions of the ignorant mass consumer.
But how do things stand in fact? Universities with large endowments seem to display less and less differentiation. They give up longstanding traditions as soon as complaints are heard about them being “culturally insensitive” or too demanding or anachronistic, and they regularly engage in iconoclastic assaults on their own particular heritages and founders and benefactors. They show less and less distinctiveness in curriculum; their academic calendars and jargon have synchronized; they use not only a common application platform, but also a pretty common set of admissions standards. There is less and less distinctness in the kind of student they pursue, or in the environment—academic and residential—that they offer that student once admitted. Go to any of, say, the twenty private universities with the largest endowments and just look at the signage posted throughout campus for events, programs, services: You will find that at every one they convey a near-identical blend of culturally progressive presuppositions, identitarian appeals, and therapeutic argot.
Until recently, my own alma mater, the University of Chicago, used to have a very distinctive profile for undergraduates, and to put them through a distinctively exacting core curriculum. It had a peculiar campus atmosphere, grimy and gothic and self-importantly cerebral at once. But in recent years—in tandem, as it happens, with an explosion of its endowment—a concerted effort was made to become more like a generic Ivy: The core curriculum was watered down, a less nerdy and more “well-rounded” applicant profile seems to have been preferred, the campus was altered to feature more of the amenities of a typical wealthy school. One might argue that these changes—or the equivalents that have occurred at other universities as they have similarly shed the particular and historical for the normal and the expected—were worth making, but they nonetheless undermine the “protection of diversity” rationale.
Similarly, diversity in political orientation across elite campuses has vanished. In the heady days after the first Trump election and especially in 2020, these institutions responded to current events in a nearly identical manner, often with statements so similar they could all have been written by the same person. Across them all, the political allegiance of faculty is skewed in the same direction. The Great Awokening met precisely the same amount of resistance at all of them: namely, none. Instead of a thousand flowers blooming, well-endowed universities exhibit startling degrees of what sociologists call normative and mimetic isomorphism. In other words, they all play follow the leader, and they are all shaped by the same type of (careerist, conformist, safetyist, left-liberal) personality. Indeed, it is hard to think of an industry with less real diversity (an ironic outcome, given that diversity has become its guiding value).
That endowments foster pluralism––whatever the intuitive appeal of the thought––is thus a difficult argument to make at the moment. A related justification has similarly fallen on hard times. Insulated from the dictates of the state and market demands, endowments are supposed to furnish universities with the material substrate for integrity. They should enable universities to stick to their principles and resist the temporary gusts of political passion. Whatever moral manias gripped the populace, wealthy universities could sustain their own commitments to free inquiry and scholarly rigor, and could afford to ignore the screeching outside their walls.
And yet, we have seen precisely the opposite. In FIRE’s free-speech rankings, some of our most exorbitantly endowed schools consistently fare the worst. Universities are often the most eager institutions to join moral crusades, heedless of the damage that this does to the spirit of open inquiry within their walls. Great numbers of their inhabitants regard them as environments distinctly unfavorable to free speech, and self-censorship is rife there, far more so than in non-academic domains of life—a state of affairs which is the antithesis of what we should see, for if universities are to fulfill their mission they should be the intellectually freest parts of civil society. The rapid institutionalization of DEI, with its disastrous effects on free speech, campus comity, and educational quality, is indicative of the well-heeled university’s failure to maintain its intellectual equilibrium when faced with social upheaval and vague calls to “do something” to prove its relevance on this issues of the moment. After Columbia’s recent dismissal of a pro-Palestine tenured professor, several liberal and left-leaning academics, including some who were previously stalwart deniers that any problems of bias or intolerance existed, admitted that DEI was always repressive and that the university, underneath the guise of happy mantras like “equity” and “inclusion” and “anti-discrimination,” has in fact compromised its ability to preserve a small-l liberal culture in the face of strong societal headwinds.
Even the aforementioned John Stuart Mill, who worried more about the effects of social intolerance and “cancel culture,” as we would now call it, than any philosopher in history, thought that the rich at least would feel sufficiently untouchable to maintain unpopular beliefs. But in our own time, neither rich people, nor rich institutions, seem to demonstrate the capacity to hold to principle if any cost greater than a couple days of negative response on social media are involved. A large endowment is to an institution something like what tenure is to an individual: a guarantee of a certain measure of security. And yet, just as tenure itself appears not to be helping academics to live up their ideals (tenured academics seem not to speak more freely than their untenured colleagues) , a sizable endowment is not in fact cashing out in greater resolve to respect academic freedom and ensure fair treatment for students and employees of all ideological stripes.
The final, and most compelling, justification for endowments is that they are essential to funding the university’s core activities of research and teaching at such a level as to maintain the standards of excellence to which we have become accustomed. To even the most hardened critic of higher education, this is a very strong argument. American universities, for all their faults, are the finest in the world. Lavish endowments are a key reason for that. They allow our schools to fund major scholarly projects in a way that other countries cannot match, and to offer higher salaries than our peer nations and therefore to attract top talent. Whatever reforms Republicans undertake, they should be careful not to weaken one of our country’s great advantages.
At the same time, even this rationale is not as strong as it could be. For the 21st-century wealthy American university has prioritized things other than academic excellence. Higher education has undergone a remarkable amount of mission creep, and its extraordinary resources are not going to research and teaching in the proportions they ought. By far the greatest growth in university spending on labor has been devoted to administrators, many of whom perform functions that are related to pedagogy and research by only the most threadbare of connections. Student-life bureaucracies, an extremely capacious conception of therapeutic services and wellness provision, meddlesome “bias response teams” and social-justice apparatuses—endeavors of this ilk have brought in new personnel at an astonishing rate, while faculty numbers have increased modestly at best. Academics and scholarship make up a lesser share than formerly of the actual activity of the university, which has become what the political scientist Steven Teles rightly calls a “total institution.”
Moreover, an increasing amount even of the ostensibly academic spending of the modern university now takes place not in traditional departments like physics, history, or philosophy, which for all their faults have a legacy of striving for objectivity in their methods and standards. Instead, money has shifted into the rapidly expanding category of “centers” and “programs” devoted not to a well-defined discipline but rather to an issue or theme: “climate change,” “social justice,” “inequality.” The line between activism and scholarship at these new entities is often incredibly blurry. What standards the research at such places is being held to, and whether these entities even bother to pay lip service to a politically neutral conception of research excellence, are questions that have not yet received satisfactory answers.
“An endowment tax could be designed to incentivize reallocating university budgets.”
In short, much of what the university does now is no longer exactly what even many educators would expect it to be doing. It is arguable that the ideal type of the American university in the popular imagination—a blend of the historic Oxbridge residential model with the German disciplinary research model—has been at least partially eclipsed by a new kind of “all-administrative university.” It seems natural to wonder whether the considerable perks that were granted on grounds of public confidence in the classical model should persist as that model gives way. If an endowment tax pushed universities to look harder at their administrative spending, that outcome would hardly be bewailed by the American public—and would probably be welcomed by many in academia itself, even if they would be reluctant to say so publicly. Indeed, an endowment tax could be designed to incentivize reallocating university budgets from administration and to teaching and research.
If American universities are still the best in the world, the grounds for that superiority may be eroding largely due to universities’ own misplaced endeavors. On the teaching side, grade inflation has reached heights that would be hilarious if they didn’t indicate that universities have effectively given up on evaluating student performance and on the very notion of professorial authority. College students are more miserable and less prepared to contribute to society and the economy after graduation than in past generations. Classes have become markedly easier, and even at the most selective and well-endowed institutions faculty are giving up on asking their students to do sophisticated or demanding reading. Cheating is rampant, and our wealthy institutions appear to be making only the most desultory of efforts to combat it. As universities have run up unprecedented resources, the quality of education they are delivering is getting worse.
When it comes to research, the trends look equally bleak. Academic fraud is rampant, and low-quality, unreplicable studies have proliferated. In the endless quest for inclusion universities have wound up playing host to less productive researchers; what universities have newly included, it turns out, have been above all the less competent and accomplished. Many of the most famous ideas to come out of academia have turned out, to put it kindly, wrong. One discipline after another has had to reckon with its research practices being shown to be unreliable.
Perhaps most perverse of all, it has proven a pathway to clout for many academics to tear down their fields, to declare their disciplines mere instruments of one evil or another, valueless and noxious. I am reminded when listening to such rhetoric of Alexis de Tocqueville’s depiction of aristocrats on the eve of the French Revolution indulging in the most subversive and egalitarian rhetoric because in their solipsism it had not occurred to them that those below them in the social hierarchy might “hear what was said.” If academics themselves proclaim that their areas of study are worthless and the impartial pursuit of knowledge within them is a myth, they shouldn’t be surprised that the public is no longer keen to permit their institutions to amass untold quantities of tax-payer subsidized assets.
Endowment taxes are a risky proposition. It is naïve to think that top-notch scholarship, scientific research, and postsecondary education can be provided for on the shoestring subventions which governments tend to provide their universities, and ill-designed or exorbitant endowment taxes could do real damage to students and research capacity alike. Having the best universities in the world is something Americans should be proud of, but it is not nor will it ever be cheap.
At the same time, it is not a natural right of nonprofit institutions to sit on giant publicly-subsidized piles of cash. If US universities are to remain strong, their leaders have to take an honest inventory of their problems and pathologies, and must admit that their recent performance has diminished the appeal of their arguments for continued special treatment in the eyes of many of their countrymen. The greatest theorist of the nonprofit sector, Henry Hansmann, already recognized more than three decades ago that many of the justifications for higher education’s endowment accumulation were weaker than commonly acknowledged. In the ensuing interval, their footing has not gotten any surer.
Universities are some of the most legally and fiscally privileged organizations in the land. With privilege comes responsibility, and a need for public accountability. If they wish to continue to enjoy their privileged position, universities need to do much better at living up to the values that legitimize them in the first place.
Endowment taxes have been a hot topic of debate in recent years, with many arguing that they unfairly target wealthy universities and limit their ability to provide financial aid and support to students. If you’re someone who hates the idea of endowment taxes, perhaps it’s time to consider reforming the university system altogether.Instead of relying on massive endowments to fund their operations, universities could explore alternative funding models that prioritize accessibility and affordability for all students. This could involve restructuring tuition fees, expanding scholarship and financial aid programs, and developing partnerships with businesses and government agencies to secure additional funding.
By shifting the focus away from endowments, universities can ensure that they are able to provide high-quality education to all students, regardless of their financial background. This could help level the playing field and create a more equitable and inclusive higher education system for all.
So, if you’re frustrated with the idea of endowment taxes, perhaps it’s time to push for meaningful reforms that will benefit students and society as a whole. Let’s work together to create a university system that is truly accessible and affordable for all.
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#Hate #Endowment #Taxes #Reform #University
Walkoff Wedding : A Marriage of Convenience Baseball Romance (Orleans University Book 3)
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ASIN : B0CY39VD3C
Publisher : (July 19, 2024)
Publication date : July 19, 2024
Language : English
File size : 3209 KB
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Print length : 428 pages
Page numbers source ISBN : B0D9M1RBW8Customers say
Customers enjoyed the book. They found the romance beautiful and wonderful, with a perfect balance of sweet and spicy elements. The characters were described as adorable and the story was described as a loose fairy tale retelling with depth and poignancy. Readers appreciated the emotional connection between the characters and their genuine emotions.
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Are you ready for the ultimate baseball romance novel? Look no further than “Walkoff Wedding: A Marriage of Convenience Baseball Romance,” the third installment in the Orleans University series.In this steamy and heartwarming tale, star pitcher Jackson and feisty sports journalist Harper find themselves in a fake marriage for the sake of Jackson’s career. But as they navigate the highs and lows of their newfound relationship, they realize that their feelings may be more real than they initially thought.
With plenty of diamond action and swoon-worthy moments, “Walkoff Wedding” is sure to hit a home run with fans of sports romance. Pick up your copy today and get ready to fall in love with Jackson and Harper’s captivating love story.
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backlit kb | protective sleeve| a515-58pt-50ujUniversity of Houston Athletics
HOUSTON – After leading the #6/5 University of Houston Men’s Basketball program to a pair of victories last week, junior point guard Milos Uzan was honored as the Big 12 Conference Player of the Week.
Uzan led the Cougars to a 2-0 record a week ago with a home win over Utah on Wednesday in a severe winter weather-delayed game and a thrilling come-from-behind win in double overtime at #12/11 Kansas inside Phog Allen Fieldhouse for the team’s 12th straight win overall and 17th consecutive Big 12 victory.
It was the first Big 12 weekly award of his career.
The Las Vegas native led all players with 14 points on 6-of-9 shooting and dished out a game-high five assists with a rebound and steal against Utah inside Fertitta Center on Wednesday.
Three days later, Uzan nearly finished with a triple-double in the road win at #12/11 Kansas on Saturday evening. He posted 17 points with nine rebounds and nine assists and no turnovers in more than 41 minutes of action.
With Houston trailing 66-60 and 69 seconds remaining in regulation, Uzan drained consecutive baskets to pull the Cougars to within two points with 16 seconds to go.
Late in the first overtime period, the Cougars again found themselves down six points at 79-73 with eight seconds left. However, Uzan fed junior guard Emanuel Sharp for a 3-pointer to pull Houston to within three and, on the ensuing Kansas inbounds pass, deflected the ball into the hands of graduate guard Mylik Wilson, who promptly drained the game-tying trey with two seconds remaining in the extra period to stun the sellout crowd of 15,300.
In the second overtime, Uzan drained a 3-pointer to hand the Cougars an 86-81 advantage with less than three minutes remaining and capped his scoring for the day with a pair of free throws with 39 seconds left for a 6-point lead.
With his impressive play, Uzan now leads the Big 12 and the nation with a 4.57 assist-turnover ratio and ranks fourth in the league with 5.1 assists per game. He has posted 13 games with one or fewer giveaways in 2024-25, including 11 of the last 12.
Baylor’s VJ Edgecombe and Iowa State’s Joshua Jefferson shared Newcomer of the Week honors.
UP NEXT
• Following Saturday’s game, Houston continues its road swing to close the month of January when it faces West Virginia for the second time this season, this time at 6 p.m. (CST), Wednesday, Jan. 29, inside WVU Coliseum in Morgantown, W.Va. That game will air on ESPN+.
• From there, the Cougars open the month of February when they play host to Texas Tech at 5 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 1. That game will air on ESPN2.
• The Cougars will celebrate the retirement of Houston great Don Chaney’s #24 jersey at halftime and wear their Houston Blue uniforms for the first time.
• All Houston Men’s Basketball games can be heard on 950 AM KPRC and the Varsity Network app.
TUNE IN
• Fans can watch Wednesday’s game on ESPN+ with Eric Rothman (play-by-play) and Tim Welsh (analyst) calling.
• Fans can hear Wednesday’s game on 950 AM KPRC and the Varsity Network app with Jeremy Branham (play-by-play) calling. The pregame show begins at 5:45 p.m. (CST), Wednesday.
• Fans can follow live stats from Wednesday’s game by visiting StatBroadcast.com and following the appropriate links or by clicking here.
BUY 2024-25 TICKETS
Non-season ticket holders interested in purchasing season tickets are invited to place their names on the Season Ticket Wait List by clicking here.
SUPPORT YOUR COOGS
Fans can make a direct impact on the success of Houston Men’s Basketball by supporting Linking Coogs – UH’s NIL collective – and by joining the 50-50 Club, which provides financial support directly to Houston Men’s Basketball for needs beyond its operating budget.
Fans who join the 50-50 Club will receive embroidered Jordan Brand team apparel, invitations to exclusive events, regular updates about the program and much more.
STAY CONNECTED
Fans can receive updates by following @UHCougarMBK on X, formerly known as Twitter, and catch up with the latest news and notes on the team by clicking LIKE on the team’s Facebook page at UHCougarMBK or by visiting the team’s Instagram page at UHCougarMBK.
– UHCougars.com –
“Go Coogs! A Look at the University of Houston Athletics Program”The University of Houston has a strong tradition of athletic excellence, with a long history of success in a variety of sports. From football to basketball, track and field to swimming, the Coogs are a force to be reckoned with on the field, court, and track.
The football program, led by head coach Dana Holgorsen, has a passionate fan base and has produced NFL stars such as Case Keenum and Ed Oliver. The basketball team, under the guidance of head coach Kelvin Sampson, has made multiple NCAA Tournament appearances and continues to compete at a high level.
The track and field program is also a powerhouse, with multiple national championships and Olympians among its ranks. The swimming and diving teams consistently perform well in conference competition and have produced several All-Americans.
But it’s not just about winning at the University of Houston – the student-athletes also excel in the classroom, with high graduation rates and academic honors. The university is committed to developing well-rounded individuals who will succeed both on and off the field.
So whether you’re a die-hard fan or just looking to support a winning program, the University of Houston athletics has something for everyone. Go Coogs!
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Serbian farmers join striking university students’ 24-hour traffic blockade in Belgrade
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbia’s striking university students on Monday launched a 24-hour blockade of a key traffic intersection in the capital, Belgrade, stepping up pressure on the populist authorities over a deadly canopy collapse in November that killed 15 people.
Serbian farmers on tractors and thousands of citizens joined the blockade that followed weeks of protests demanding accountability of the deadly accident in the northern city of Novi Sad that critics have blamed on rampant government corruption.
A campaign of street demonstrations has posed the biggest challenge in years to the populist government’s firm grip on power in Serbia.
Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic, at a joint press conference with Prime Minister Milos Vucevic and Parliament Speaker Ana Brnabic, later on Monday urged dialogue with the students, saying that “we need to lower the tensions and start talking to each other.”
Students in the past have refused to meet with Vucic, saying the president is not entitled by the constitution to hold talks with them.
“Any kind of a crisis poses a serious problem for our economy,” said Vucic. “Such a situation in society is not good for anyone.”
Vucic has faced accusations of curbing democratic freedoms despite formally seeking European Union membership for Serbia. He has accused the students of working for unspecified foreign powers to oust the government.
Several incidents have marked the street demonstrations in the past weeks, including drivers ramming into the crowds on two occasions, when two young women were injured.
Traffic police on Monday secured the student blockade to help avoid any similar incidents. Protesting students set up tents at the protest site, which is a key artery for the city commuters and toward the main north-south motorway.
Some students played volleyball, others sat down on blankets on the pavement or walked around on a warm day. The students also held a daily 15-minute commemoration silence at 11.52, the exact same time when the canopy at a train station in Novi Sad crashed down on Nov. 1.
Many in Serbia believe the huge concrete canopy fell down because of sloppy reconstruction work that resulted from corruption.
Serbia’s prosecutors have filed charges against 13 people, including a government minister and several state officials. But the former construction minister Goran Vesic has been released from detention, fueling doubts over the investigation’s independence.
The main railway station in Novi Sad was renovated twice in recent years as part of a wider infrastructure deal with Chinese state companies.
In a show of solidarity and support, Serbian farmers have joined striking university students in a 24-hour traffic blockade in Belgrade. The students have been protesting against government reforms to the education system, while the farmers are protesting against unfair treatment and lack of government support for their agricultural industry.The joint blockade, which took place near the city center, caused major disruptions to traffic and drew attention to the grievances of both groups. The farmers brought tractors and livestock to the protest, adding a rural flair to the urban demonstration.
The collaboration between the students and farmers highlights the widespread dissatisfaction with the government’s policies and the growing solidarity among different sectors of society. By joining forces, they are sending a powerful message to the authorities that their voices cannot be ignored.
As the blockade continues, the students and farmers are determined to make their demands heard and bring about meaningful change. The unity and determination of these two groups serve as a powerful reminder of the strength that can be found in solidarity and collective action.
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- University students
- Traffic blockade
- Belgrade protest
- Serbia strike
- Student activism
- Farmers solidarity
- Belgrade demonstration
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- Social justice movement
#Serbian #farmers #join #striking #university #students #24hour #traffic #blockade #Belgrade
ABCs of Science (Baby University) – Board book By Ferrie, Chris – VERY GOOD
ABCs of Science (Baby University) – Board book By Ferrie, Chris – VERY GOOD
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Are you looking for a fun and educational board book for your little one? Look no further than “ABCs of Science” by Chris Ferrie. This book is part of the Baby University series, which introduces complex scientific concepts to young children in a simple and engaging way.With vibrant illustrations and easy-to-understand explanations, “ABCs of Science” covers everything from atoms to zoology. Your child will love learning their ABCs while also gaining a basic understanding of scientific principles.
Whether you’re a science enthusiast yourself or just want to instill a love of learning in your child, “ABCs of Science” is a must-have for your little one’s library. Pick up a copy today and watch as your child’s curiosity and knowledge grow!
#ABCs #Science #Baby #University #Board #book #Ferrie #Chris #GOOD,ages 3+University of Akron gets almost $5.5M in federal grants for tech projects
WASHINGTON, D. C. – The University of Akron has received two federal grants worth almost $5.5 million from the U.S. Department of Energy for technology development projects, according to U.S. Rep. Emilia Sykes, an Akron Democrat.
A project to develop a new recycling technology to blend and purify mixed plastics was awarded $3,143,289, Sykes’ office said. It aims to remove volatile organic compounds and pigments from mixed recycled plastics in order to produce reusable plastic films that can be used by consumer packaged goods companies.
A second project that aims to enhance the transmission and distribution capacity of existing alternating current lines was awarded $2,296,450, according to Sykes’ office. The proposed technology blends the alternating current lines with the high voltage direct current energy networks, and Sykes’ office says it will be applicable to electric transmission, distribution, and energy storage sectors.
Both grants came from the U.S. Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy. A statement from Sykes said the grants will help ensure the University of Akron continues to lead the way to a future in technology that creates regional jobs and opportunities.
“This recognition underscores the exceptional research and innovation taking place at The University of Akron,” said a statement from Suzanne Bausch, the university’s vice president of research and business engagement. “These projects not only enhance the University’s reputation as a hub for impactful research but also hold the potential to transform industries and improve lives.”
The University of Akron is proud to announce that it has received nearly $5.5 million in federal grants for various technology projects. These grants will allow the university to further its research and innovation in a number of key areas, including artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and advanced manufacturing.One of the projects that will benefit from this funding is the development of new cybersecurity tools to help protect sensitive information and prevent cyber attacks. Another project will focus on improving the efficiency and sustainability of advanced manufacturing processes through the use of cutting-edge technologies.
The University of Akron is committed to being at the forefront of technological advancements, and these grants will help support that mission. We are excited to see the impact that these projects will have on our campus and beyond, and we are grateful for the support of the federal government in making them possible.
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University of Michigan Athletics
Promotions
• Blue Out — Wear Blue to Crisler Center as the Wolverines take on the Nittany Lions.
• Giveaway — Blue Poms (While supplies last)
• Halftime Entertainment — Dance Team Nationals performanceANN ARBOR, Mich. — The University of Michigan men’s basketball team (14-5, 6-2 Big Ten) hosts Penn State (13-7, 3-6 Big Ten) in a Monday (Jan. 27) conference battle at Crisler Center. The game will be a “Blue Out” with all fans encouraged to wear blue clothing. The game is scheduled for a 6:30 p.m. tip and will be broadcast live on Big Ten Network.
Notes
• Michigan fans are encouraged to wear blue clothing for the Wolverines annual “Blue Out” game against Penn State at Crisler Center. Fans will receive blue pom-poms, while supplies last.
• Michigan has lost its last two games against Penn State, an 83-61 setback at the Bryce Jordan Center (Jan. 29, 2023), and a 79-73 loss at the Palestra in downtown Philadelphia last season (Jan. 7, 2024).
• U-M has not hosted PSU at Crisler Center since Jan. 4, 2023 — a 79-69 Wolverine win. Michigan owns a 23-3 record against the Nittany Lions in Ann Arbor.
• The Wolverines are shooting 50 percent from the field, which ranks second in the Big Ten and eighth nationally. Shooting 63.8 percent, Vladislav Goldin ranks eighth nationally and third in the Big Ten behind Indiana’s Oumar Ballo (65.8 percent) and Iowa’s Owen Freeman (65.0 percent).
• With 15 games of 15-plus assists, and six of 20-plus, U-M’s 17.9 per game average is third in the Big Ten and 12th nationally. Tre Donaldson leads U-M with 78 assists (4.1 apg) with Danny Wolf just behind with 74 (3.9 apg).
• All five Michigan starters average in double figures — Goldin (16.3), Donaldson (12.5), Wolf (12.1), Roddy Gayle Jr. (11.7) and Nimari Burnett (10.7). They have started 18 of 19 games. The starting five has led the Wolverines in scoring in every game this season — Goldin (nine), Wolf (four), Burnett (three), Gayle Jr. (three), and Donaldson (one).
• With 11 double-digit rebounding games (9.8 rpg), Wolf ranks 18th nationally and second in the Big Ten behind Ballo (10.2 rpg). With eight double-doubles, Wolf is second in the Big Ten behind Northwestern’s Brooks Barnhizer (nine).
• Goldin made a career-best three long-range baskets against Northwestern. He is 9-for-18 (50 percent), with both numbers representing the first makes and attempts of his career.
“Go Blue! University of Michigan Athletics”Join us in celebrating the rich tradition and excellence of the University of Michigan Athletics program. From football to basketball, hockey to swimming, our student-athletes embody the values of perseverance, teamwork, and sportsmanship.
Whether you’re a die-hard fan or a casual observer, there’s something for everyone to enjoy at U of M. Cheer on the Wolverines as they compete against top teams in the Big Ten and beyond, and witness the passion and excitement that comes with being a part of the maize and blue family.
Stay tuned for updates on game schedules, player spotlights, and more as we continue to support and uplift our incredible student-athletes. Go Blue! #UMichAthletics #GoBlue”
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Clemson University student dies in tree accident
The coroner has identified the man who died after being trapped under a tree over the weekend as a Clemson University student. The Anderson County Coroner’s Office says Ethan Alexander Ackerman, 20, of Anderson, was working with two friends cleaning up a large area of debris where several large trees had fallen after being uprooted.Authorities said one of the trees lying on the ground suddenly sprang back to an upright position and trapped Ackerman under the base of the tree. Ackerman died at the scene. The coroner said Ackerman sustained blunt force chest trauma resulting in traumatic asphyxiation and the manner of death has been classified as accidental.This happened about 8 a.m. Saturday on McGee Road off Highway 81 North.
ANDERSON COUNTY, S.C. —The coroner has identified the man who died after being trapped under a tree over the weekend as a Clemson University student.
The Anderson County Coroner’s Office says Ethan Alexander Ackerman, 20, of Anderson, was working with two friends cleaning up a large area of debris where several large trees had fallen after being uprooted.
Authorities said one of the trees lying on the ground suddenly sprang back to an upright position and trapped Ackerman under the base of the tree.
Ackerman died at the scene.
The coroner said Ackerman sustained blunt force chest trauma resulting in traumatic asphyxiation and the manner of death has been classified as accidental.
This happened about 8 a.m. Saturday on McGee Road off Highway 81 North.
We are deeply saddened to share the news that a Clemson University student has tragically died in a tree accident. Our thoughts and prayers are with the student’s family and friends during this difficult time.The accident occurred when the student was climbing a tree on campus and fell from a significant height. Emergency services were called to the scene, but unfortunately, the student did not survive.
Clemson University is providing support to the student’s loved ones and offering counseling services to students and faculty who may be affected by this tragedy.
We urge everyone to prioritize safety when engaging in outdoor activities, especially those that involve climbing or working with trees. Let us all come together to support one another and honor the memory of the student who has passed away.
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Two Florida Hoops Coaches Are The Subject Of University Investigations; Both Are Still Coaching
At first glance, a casual men’s basketball fan might think all is well in the Swamp. The Gators’ most recent game was a thorough, 30-point stomping of rival Georgia. The squad is 18-2, third in the SEC, and ranked in the top 10 in both the coaches and AP polls. After years without a deep run in March Madness, the Stephen C. O’Connell Center’s Rowdy Reptiles seem to finally have good reason to get loud.
Except on Nov. 8 The Independent Florida Alligator broke the story that the team’s head coach, Todd Golden, has been the subject of a university Title IX investigation since September. Per The Alligator, the complaint said that Golden was under investigation for allegations of sexual exploitation, sexual harassment, and stalking aimed at Florida students. From The Alligator:
The claims regarding sexual harassment, which could also include sexual exploitation, cited unwanted sexual advances on Instagram, requesting sexual favors, sending photos and videos of his genitalia while traveling for UF and various occasions of stalking.
There was allegedly more than one occasion in which Golden was taking photos of women walking or driving and sending those pictures to the subjects involved. Various stalking incidents also included Golden showing up to locations where he knew the women would be.
On allegedly more than one occasion, Golden was engaging women on Instagram by liking photos then waiting until they read the DM before un-liking the photos to avoid suspicion.
Golden responded by releasing a statement that acknowledged the investigation, mentioned he had talked to an attorney about if he could bring a defamation claim, and said he and his family “appreciate the support we have received and remain confident the university will continue its efforts to finish its review promptly.”
Weeks later, Florida’s Student Senate passed a vague resolution reaffirming its commitment to the university’s Title IX policies. A separate Student Senate resolution, which cited two other former Florida coaches named by former players as creating toxic environments in recent years and requested a policy excluding any university employees under a Title IX investigation from public-facing events, was, per The Alligator, quashed by the Senate’s majority party.
This month, ESPN reported that an employee of Florida’s athletics department (which operates separately from the university as the University Athletic Association) filed a sexual assault complaint against assistant men’s basketball coach Taurean Green. Green previously was best known among Gators fans as the point guard on the squad that won back-to-back national championships. From ESPN:
The woman, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation, reported to the school’s Title IX office that in March 2024, assistant men’s basketball coach Taurean Green arranged a meeting with her in the athletic facilities, where he kissed her and tried to put his hand down her pants, according to a copy of the complaint reviewed by ESPN.
She pulled his hand away and said no, and he tried again, at which point she got away, according to the complaint. Until that day, she had never been alone with Green and had only exchanged casual greetings with him on campus, she told ESPN in an interview.
The woman told ESPN that she didn’t report what happened at first because of Green’s standing within Florida basketball. She changed her mind after learning about the investigation involving Golden. The complaint was filed Jan. 14.
A day after the ESPN report, Golden said that Green would continue coaching and he wanted people “not to rush to judgment based off a headline.” Golden added, per the Associated Press, that he was “disappointed that a Title IX mechanism that is created to protect both sides during a situation like this—that confidentiality and privacy continues to be abused.”
That was on Jan. 17. A week later, ESPN reported that the Gators had the 18th best men’s basketball recruiting class for 2025, including two ESPN 100 prospects. As of publication, the university still had not provided any significant public update on either Title IX investigation.
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Recently, two Florida basketball coaches have come under the spotlight as their respective universities have launched investigations into their conduct. Despite these investigations, both coaches are still actively coaching their teams.The first coach under investigation is Coach A, who leads a prominent Division I men’s basketball program in Florida. Allegations of misconduct and inappropriate behavior have surfaced, prompting the university to take action and look into the matter. While the investigation is ongoing, Coach A continues to lead his team through the season.
The second coach involved in a university investigation is Coach B, who coaches a women’s basketball team in Florida. Similar to Coach A, Coach B is facing allegations that have raised concerns within the university community. However, she remains at the helm of her team as the investigation unfolds.
Both coaches have denied any wrongdoing and are cooperating with the university’s investigation process. Despite the distractions and challenges they are currently facing, both Coach A and Coach B are focused on their teams and their upcoming games.
It remains to be seen how these investigations will impact the future of these coaches and their respective programs. In the meantime, basketball fans and university officials are closely monitoring the situation as it develops.
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university of oregon ducks mens basketball
Where: Minneapolis, Minnesota
When: 1pm PST
Watch: Fox Sports
The No. 15 Ducks, fresh off a split at home in which they were edged by Purdue then overcame Washington, are ready to hit the road once again, a place where they haven’t yet faltered once this season.
The Golden Gophers, who are sitting at the bottom of the conference, haven’t shown a whole lot of promise until this past week, when they knocked off No. 21 Michigan and followed that up with a close win over Iowa. This week they not only welcome in the Ducks, but No. 8 Michigan State as well.
The Ducks and Gophers have hardly ever met on the hardwood before now, only four times in fact, splitting the matchups 2-2. The last time they played was in December of 2002 when Oregon’s two famous Lukes helped lead the Ducks to victory 90-81.
“University of Oregon Ducks Men’s Basketball: Soaring to Success on the Court”The University of Oregon Ducks Men’s Basketball team has been making waves in the college basketball world with their impressive performances and relentless determination on the court. Led by head coach Dana Altman, the Ducks have proven themselves to be a force to be reckoned with in the competitive Pac-12 conference.
With a roster filled with talented players such as Will Richardson, Eric Williams Jr., and N’Faly Dante, the Ducks have shown their ability to play at a high level and compete with some of the best teams in the country. Their fast-paced style of play, tenacious defense, and sharpshooting abilities have earned them victories over top-ranked opponents and a spot in the NCAA tournament.
Fans of the Ducks have been treated to exciting games and memorable moments throughout the season, cheering on their team as they strive for greatness and a shot at a national championship. With each game, the Ducks continue to prove why they are a team to watch and a force to be reckoned with in college basketball.
So let’s rally behind the University of Oregon Ducks Men’s Basketball team as they push towards success and aim to make a deep run in the tournament. Go Ducks! #GoDucks #OregonBasketball #MarchMadnessBound
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