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Page 84 - பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் தொழில்நுட்பம் சிட்னி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Alt-right seeks Indigenous help for fight with illegal government

Alt-right seeks Indigenous help for fight with ‘illegal’ government We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Save Normal text size Advertisement Former One Nation senator Rod Culleton’s fledgling right-wing political party has embarked on a recruitment drive in outback Aboriginal communities through an alliance with an Indigenous sovereign citizen movement. Leaked emails reveal Mr Culleton’s Great Australian Party and the Original Sovereign Tribal Federation signed a memorandum of understanding in August last year based on their shared aim to “stand down the illegal corporation [the Australian government] harming us all”. Great Australian Party leader Rod Culleton with a tribal elder in the Northern Territory last year.

The New York Stock Exchange president says the stock market is not a casino Here s what academic research says

The New York Stock Exchange president says the stock market is not a casino. Here’s what academic research says. MarketWatch 2/15/2021 THE TELL With the wild moves in the stocks of GameStop and AMC Entertainment or last week in cannabis makers, it’s not illogical that some think of the stock market as a casino, a description recently used by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the Massachusetts Democrat. In an interview with Axios that was aired on HBO, Stacey Cunningham, the president of the New York Stock Exchange, a unit of the Intercontinental Exchange said she rejected that comparison. Video: Are casino stocks a good long term buy? #AskHalftime (CNBC)

COVID killed the on-campus lecture, but will unis raise it from the dead?

Author: Colin Jones (MENAFN - The Conversation) Throughout the world , COVID-19 health regulations have made the on-campus lecture mostly defunct. And most Australian universities won t be offering on-campus lectures in 2021. The Australasian Council on Open, Distance and e-Learning (ACODE) recently published a white paper on lectures , based on survey responses from 43 member universities (91% response rate). About two-thirds indicated they would not be conducting on-campus lectures this year. University of Southern Queensland (USQ), for example, sent a document to all staff and students announcing on-campus classes, such as tutorials, lab work and small-group seminars, will continue in 2021, with the notable exception of the traditional lecture. At USQ, when didactic content does need to be delivered, it will be done online, in smaller chunks , with student learning activities interspersed.

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