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TWU to present virtual forum on legacy, roots of Capitol violence - News & Events

TWU to present virtual forum on legacy, roots of Capitol violence Mar. 1, 2021 DENTON Texas Woman’s University will host its first virtual Public Affairs Forum, “Capitol Violence: Tracing Legacies of Anti-Black Racism, White Supremacy and Anti-Semitism,” on Zoom 6-7:30 p.m., March 4. The event is free and open to the public. Participants must register in advance and are encouraged to submit questions for the panelists through the registration form. “Since Jan. 6, attention has turned to the political implications, significance and root causes of the events that took place at the U.S. Capitol,” said Wouter Van Erve, forum moderator and assistant professor of political science at TWU. “Faculty from all over Texas with special expertise in racial attitudes, racial violence, white supremacy, fascist movements, religion and anti-semitism will provide context for the insurrection.” In addition to exploring its origins and implications, panelists will discuss expectati

Houston Uni geologists discover powerful river of rocks below Caribbean -- Science & Technology -- Sott net

© Chen, YW., Colli, L., Bird, D.E. et al. An image of the Earth s warped surface of the Caribbean shows its tilted due to the east-flowing mantle underneath the Caribbean that pushes up the western Caribbean. Study finds flows in softer layer under tectonic plates are stronger, faster In this image, the warped amount of the surface is due to the opening of the Central American gateway that allowed hot material to flow through. (a) Before 8.5 million years ago, hot material was upwelling under the Galapagos from deep inside the Earth, but was blocked out of the Caribbean because of a curtain of subducting plate. (b) A gateway opened at 8.5 million years ago allowing the hot material to flow through. (c) Today, the hot material reaches midway between Central America and the Lesser Antilles, tilting up the bottom of the Caribbean sea by about 300 m (1,000 ft).

A Year Into the Pandemic, Students and Recent Grads Try to Stay Positive

A Year Into the Pandemic, Students and Recent Grads Try to Stay Positive After a year of stress and trauma, a bit of reflection reveals changes that encouraged slowing down and focusing on relationships. By Sarah Sedaghatzadeh Published in FrontBurner March 12, 2021 11:41 am It was gloomy and chilly across the unusually quiet SMU campus that Wednesday afternoon. Lockdown had begun and the student body was advised to quarantine. There were already three SMU students who tested positive for the virus. Later that day, the World Health Organization confirmed the coronavirus as a pandemic. Two days earlier, on March 9, I grabbed lunch at the Kroger off Mockingbird. The store was flooded with panicked shoppers who filled their carts with packages of toilet paper, cases of water, and stacks of canned foods. I was thoroughly confused. I made my own salad at the salad bar, grabbing the community tongs without a second thought.

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