Category: Universities

  • MIL-OSI Russia: NSU students become finalists of the student TEFI

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University – On Tuesday atofficial telegram channel TEFIpublished a list of finalists. It included the documentary film “Circumstances” by fourth-year students direction “Journalism”Humanitarian InstituteNSU – Ekaterina Sidorina and Daria Ushanova.

    — My partner Dasha and I are simply shocked! Our film about homelessness in Novosibirsk won the prestigious TEFI award. Our film “Circumstances” shows something very important: behind the statistics of more than two million people living without a roof over their heads, there are real people with their fates. We met these people at events to help those in need, where they told us how they ended up on the street.

    This is an incredible achievement for us and recognition of the importance of the topic we raised. So much effort and time was invested in this project – sleepless nights of editing, difficult filming, emotional interviews with the characters. It is especially valuable that the jury paid attention to social issues and the stories of real people. Now we are looking forward to the final stage of the competition and hope that our work will help change society’s attitude to the problem of homelessness, – Ekaterina Sidorina shared her first impressions.

    — I think the reason for the success of the work was our emotional immersion with Katya in the characters and the situation of homelessness. We sincerely wanted to know people, their fates and the reasons for this situation. Everything turned out to be not as simple as everyone is used to thinking about the reasons for homelessness. In our documentary, we showed how it really happens in life, — said Daria Ushanova.

    Congratulations to the girls and good luck at the awards ceremony!

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Open Day at the State University of Management: A Step Towards a Future Manager

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On April 27, the State University of Management will host an Open Day.

    Guests will have a unique opportunity to immerse themselves in the atmosphere of the State University of Management, meet teachers, students and, of course, appreciate all the advantages of studying at one of the leading universities in Russia.

    The event program includes:

    Introduction to the Institutes and areas of study. You will be able to personally communicate with representatives of the Institutes and learn about popular professions in all areas of management. Detailed consultations will help you understand the features of each program and employment prospects. Campus tour. A walk around the university is a chance to feel the atmosphere of student life, see classrooms, dormitories, cozy cafes and sports grounds. You will see everything with your own eyes, feel the scale and capabilities of SUM. Meetings with students. An opportunity to ask all your questions directly to SUM students. They will share their experience, tell you about student life, help you dispel doubts and make the right choice. Admission consultations. Admissions committee specialists will answer all your questions about admission rules, required documents and benefits. They will help you prepare for admission and choose the best strategy.

    We are waiting for all interested persons on April 27 at 11:00 in the Information Technology Center of the State University of Management. Pre-registration is required to enter the university territory.

    We are confident that the Open Day of the State University of Management will be a bright and memorable event for you!

    Subscribe to the tg channel “Our State University” Announcement date: 04/27/2025

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: New development opportunities: GUU and TIU signed a cooperation agreement

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    The State University of Management and Tyumen Industrial University have signed a cooperation agreement. The document was signed by the rector of GUU Vladimir Stroyev and the acting rector of TIU Yuri Klochkov.

    The decision to work together was documented during a visit to Tyumen by a delegation from our university, which included Rector Vladimir Stroyev and Vice-Rectors Dmitry Bryukhanov and Maria Karelina.

    “The cooperation agreement is the first step in our joint work. TIU is one of the leaders in engineering training in the country. We are ready to share our management experience and in return receive experience in the practical training of students. We must grow not only specialists for the labor market, but also young scientists who will strengthen the technological leadership of our country,” said Vladimir Vitalievich.

    It is planned to open a joint dissertation council for the scientific specialty 2.3.4. “Management in organizational systems”, where managerial and technical knowledge is needed. The work of a design bureau, the opening of network programs and student scientific communities will also be organized.

    “We are pleased to welcome our colleagues to Tyumen land, who are visiting our city for the first time. Strengthening partnership relations with the leading Moscow university is a big step in development. I believe that we will be very useful to each other. The State University of Management has accumulated extensive experience in project management, interaction with international companies, as well as in solving cross-functional problems, from developing design documentation to training senior managers. For us, this experience is important in the development of the oil and construction industries,” noted Yuri Sergeevich.

    At the end of the visit, the guests visited the laboratory and research center of TIU, where more than 20 modern laboratories are presented.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 10.04.2025

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-Evening Report: This chart explains why Trump backflipped on tariffs. The economic damage would have been huge

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By James Giesecke, Professor, Centre of Policy Studies and the Impact Project, Victoria University

    The Trump administration has announced a 90-day pause on its plan to impose so-called “reciprocal” tariffs on nearly all US imports. But the pause does not extend to China, where import duties will rise to around 125%.

    The move signals a partial retreat from what had been shaping up as a broad and aggressive trade war. For most countries, the US will now apply a 10% baseline tariff for the next three months. But the White House made clear that its tariffs on Chinese imports will remain in place.

    So why did President Trump back away from the broader tariff push? The answer is simple: the economic cost to the US was too high.

    Our economic model shows the fallout, even after the ‘pause’

    Using a global economic model, we have been estimating the macroeconomic consequences of the Trump administration’s tariff plans as they have developed.

    The following table shows two versions of the economic effects of the tariff plan:

    • “pre-pause” – as the plan stood immediately before Wednesday’s 90-day pause, under a scenario in which all countries retaliate except Australia, Japan and South Korea (which said they would not retaliate)
    • “post-pause” after reciprocal tariffs were withdrawn.


    As is clear, the US would have faced steep and immediate losses in employment, investment, growth, and most importantly, real consumption, the best measure of household living standards.

    Heavy costs of the tariff war

    Under the pre-pause scenario, the US would have seen real consumption fall by 2.4% in 2025 alone. Real gross domestic product (GDP) would have declined by 2.6%, while employment falls by 2.7% and real investment (after inflation) plunges 6.6%.

    These are not trivial adjustments. They represent significant contractions that would be felt in everyday life, from job losses to price increases to reduced household purchasing power. Since the current US unemployment rate is 4.2%, these results suggest that for every three currently unemployed Americans, two more would join their ranks.

    Our modelling shows the damage would not just be short-term. Across the 2025–2040 projection period, US real consumption losses would have averaged 1.2%, with persistent investment weakness and a long-term decline in real GDP.

    It is likely that internal economic advice reflected this kind of outlook. The decision to pause most of the tariff increases may well be an acknowledgement that the policy was economically unsustainable and would result in a permanent reduction in US global economic power. Financial markets were also rattled.

    The scaled-back plan: still aggressive on China

    The new arrangement announced on April 9 scales the higher tariff regime back to a flat 10% for about 70 countries, but keeps the full weight of tariffs on Chinese goods at around 125%. Rates on Canadian and Mexican imports remain at 25%.

    In response, China has announced an 84% tariff on US goods.

    The table’s “post-pause” column summarises the results of the scaled-back plan if the pause becomes permanent. For consistency, we assume all countries except Australia, Japan and Korea retaliate with tariffs equal to those imposed by the US.

    As is clear from the “post-pause” results, lower US tariffs, together with lower retaliatory tariffs, equal less damage for the US economy.

    Tariffs applied uniformly are less distortionary, and significant retaliation from just one major partner (China) is easier to absorb than a broad global response.

    However, the costs will still be high. The US is projected to experience a 1.9% drop in real consumption in 2025, driven by lower employment and reduced efficiency in production. Real investment is projected to fall by 4.8%, and employment by 2.1%.

    Perhaps we should not be surprised that the costs are still so high. In 2022, China, Canada and Mexico accounted for almost 45% of all US goods imports, and many countries were already facing 10% reciprocal tariffs in the “pre-pause” scenario. Trump’s tariff pause has not changed duty rates for these countries.

    US President Donald Trump discusses the 90-day pause.

    What does this mean for Australia?

    Much of the domestic commentary in Australia has focused on the risk of collateral damage from a US-China trade war. Given Australia’s economic ties to both countries, it is a reasonable concern.

    But our modelling suggests that Australia may actually benefit modestly. Under both scenarios, Australia’s real consumption rises slightly, driven by stronger investment, improved terms of trade (a measure of our export prices relative to import prices), and redirection of trade flows.

    One mechanism is what economists call trade diversion: if Chinese or European exporters find the US market less attractive, they may redirect goods to Australia and other open markets.

    At the same time, reduced global demand for capital, especially in the US and China, means lower interest rates globally. That stimulates investment elsewhere, including in Australia. In our model, Australian real investment rises under both scenarios, leading to small but sustained gains in GDP and household consumption.

    These results suggest that, at least under current policy settings, Australia is unlikely to suffer significant direct effects from the tariff increases.

    However, rising investor uncertainty is a risk for both the global and Australian economies, and this is not factored into our modelling. In the space of a single week, the Trump administration has whipsawed global investor confidence through three major tariff announcements.

    A temporary reprieve

    Tariffs appear to be central to the administration’s economic program. So Trump’s decision to pause his broader tariff agenda may not signal a shift in philosophy: just a tactical retreat.

    The updated strategy, high tariffs on China and lower ones elsewhere, might reflect an attempt to refocus on where the administration sees its main strategic concern, while avoiding unnecessary blowback from allies and neutral partners.

    Whether this narrower approach proves durable remains to be seen. The sharpest economic pain has been deferred. Whether it returns depends on how the next 90 days play out.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. This chart explains why Trump backflipped on tariffs. The economic damage would have been huge – https://theconversation.com/this-chart-explains-why-trump-backflipped-on-tariffs-the-economic-damage-would-have-been-huge-253632

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: Kenvue increases support in Healthy China Initiative

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Kenvue Inc, a United States-based consumer health company, will deploy more resources to support medical associations and professionals to foster the management of minor ailments in China over the long term, said a senior executive.

    To advance this goal, the New Jersey-headquartered company signed a strategic cooperation memorandum in mid-March with the Self-Care Branch of the Beijing-based China Association of Health Promotion and Education. The partnership aims to support the association in enhancing public health literacy and self-care capabilities, contributing to the development of the Healthy China 2030 Initiative.

    This move also follows the recent release of the Expert Consensus on Minor Ailment Management (2025) in early April. This document was jointly compiled by professional branches of the China Medical Association, the Chinese Medicine Education Association and the China Association of Health Promotion and Education.

    Ellie Xie, Kenvue’s group president of Asia-Pacific, said that as a large multinational corporation, Kenvue holds a profound understanding of the value of managing minor ailments for the health and well-being of individuals, their families, their communities, the healthcare system and society as a whole.

    “We are delighted to see the release of China’s first expert consensus on the management of minor ailments. It is a great step forward under the Healthy China 2030 Initiative, by integrating global perspectives, cutting-edge academic findings, and extensive clinical experience from credible academic institutions and well-known experts,” said Xie.

    “This Consensus brings greater inspiration for the development of the big health industry, offering a clearer path for us to drive innovation and unlock market potential,” she added.

    According to experts, the consensus draws on expert insights and authoritative literature from a wide range of medical disciplines, including general practice, pharmacy, respiratory medicine, gastroenterology, dermatology, pediatrics, otolaryngology, pain management, and dentistry.

    Its goal is to define and delineate the scope of minor ailments more clearly, enhance the ability of primary healthcare providers, pharmacies and patients to recognize and manage these conditions, and support the optimization of the healthcare system to elevate overall public health outcomes.

    Chi Chunhua, chairperson of the Chinese Medical Association’s general practice branch, and director of the department of general practice at Peking University First Hospital, said this marks the first time an academic framework for minor ailments has been established in our country. The release of this consensus represents a significant milestone in advancing the goal of “joint contribution and shared benefits for universal health,” as outlined in the Healthy China 2030 Initiative.

    With a history spanning 135 years, Kenvue offers a comprehensive product portfolio that covers areas such as coughs and colds, fever, pain relief, allergies, smoking cessation, oral health and skin health.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Countdown to the 2025 Bendigo Easter Festival

    Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

    Make the most of the 2025 Bendigo Easter Festival with traditional cultural activities, entertainment, family fun and community events.

    City of Greater Bendigo Manager Economy & Experience James Myatt said the final preparations were underway for the homegrown community event over the long weekend from Good Friday April 18 to Easter Monday April 21.

    “The festival is a major highlight in the events calendar for residents and visitors with something for everyone to enjoy and experience,” Mr Myatt said.

    “With the Bendigo Easter Festival just over a week away, now’s the time to start planning your time at the festival, particularly if you are hosting visiting family and friends during the school holidays.

    “I encourage you to check out our extensive online program which features many cultural performances celebrating Bendigo’s Chinese heritage and plenty of fun attractions and activities.

    “This year will see an extended format for the Awakening of the Dragon which will bring together a traditional celebration of lion and dragon dance, including contemporary elements presented by the Bendigo Chinese Association and visiting lion teams. It will take place from 11am to 4pm on Easter Saturday, April 19 at Dai Gum San Precinct.

    “Firecrackers will be used as part of the ceremony to wake up Dai Gum Loong from his slumber, but please note the Imperial dragon’s only public appearance will be at the Sherridon Homes Gala Parade on Easter Sunday.

    “The La Trobe University Torchlight Procession – Commemorating the service of Rod Fyffe OAM will be on Easter Saturday April 19 evening starting at 7pm until approximately 8.30pm. The procession finale will be a dynamic fireworks display with the best viewing locations in Rosalind Park (near the Rotunda), the Dai Gum San precinct, View Street, Queen Elizabeth Oval and Barnard Street.”

    Other highlights

    This year’s festival has a new program addition with the Bendigo Chinese Association launching its Dragon Passport, featuring seven activities for primary school-aged child, including dragon-scale stamping, a scavenger hunt and mask-making. Booking is required for the hour-long sessions on Good Friday from 10am to 2pm at the Dai Gum San Precinct.

    Rosalind Park will be a vibrant precinct bursting with family-friendly entertainment, stage shows, hands-on activities, live music, roving performers, and some tickets are still available for the traditional Easter Egg Hunt with 85,000 eggs nestled in straw.

    The award-winning Arena Theatre Company will present a Hidden Creature Gallery combining magical adventure and amazing digital art. Using a free Arena free app on a mobile phone, families will love spotting the animated creatures hiding in plain sight in Rosalind Park.

    Other highlights include The Mik Maks, The Blurbs, Djaara workshops, the Easter Bunny Stage Show, dragon craft and sand art workshop, Fosterville Gold Mine panning for gold, Farmer Darryl’s Animal Farm, Sonic the Hedgehog, Bendigo Bricks and much more. The lively atmosphere at Carnival Central on Mundy Street comes alive with lights, rides, and a sideshow alley. The CFA Kids Amusement Rides is at William Vahland Place for younger thrill seekers.

    The Rotary Club Market returns on Good Friday (Pall Mall and Easter Fair Way) and Easter Sunday (Easter Fair Way) with a range arts and craft, handmade goodies, unique treasures, collectables, tasty produce and more.

    Hargreaves Mall will host the Moonlight Easter Market from 10am to 4pm on Easter Saturday.

    Pall Mall will host activities from 10am to 3pm on Easter Saturday including the Bendigo Braves basketball, Bendigo Strikers netball, Little Builders by Sherridon Homes and an Army Reserve exhibition.

    Smaller community events during the long weekend also have a wide appeal (please check the full program for dates and times). Events include the 38th Annual Easter Model Train Exhibition, the Bendigo Foodshare Easter Bookfair, Steam to the Bendigo Easter Festival, the Rotary Club of Bendigo Easter Art Exhibition at Bendigo Town Hall and the Photographic Print and Digital Image Exhibition at Dudley House.

    For live music entertainment, the Bull Street Festival will highlight the best of local and regional talent.

    The City would like to take this opportunity to thank the festival’s premium sponsor Agnico Eagle Fosterville Gold Mine, a dedicated team of City staff who ensure the major event runs smoothly, the Bendigo Chinese Association, the Bendigo Easter Fair Society, and the many volunteers and community groups.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Problem-based learning helps students stay in school

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