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Category: Universities

  • MIL-OSI USA: Art Exhibition No ‘Joke’ in Asking Hard Questions

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Sure, in her spare time growing up Krista Mitchell did what any only child might do to keep busy – doodle in a notebook, design a maze like the one in her coloring book, devote hours to reading.

    But Mitchell ’25 (SFA, CLAS) says she often took those projects to the nth degree.

    “I actually made a household newspaper in which I wrote the articles and drew pictures to go with them. I even used to go crazy sending thank you cards to my family. I would do these elaborate drawings on the envelopes to the point that the post office would send them back because they couldn’t read the addresses,” she says. “So, yeah, I’ve always been very creative.”

    There should be no surprise then when, as a high school senior, she used an assignment to make an animal mask as an opportunity to build giant luna moth wings large enough for an adult to wear.

    And that final project for a basic photography class at UConn, of course it became the basis for a presentation at the Humanities Undergraduate Research Symposium last year and the reason she was asked to talk during a Humanities Institute conversation on the loneliness epidemic in the fall.

    You bet, it even got her an on-air interview with Connecticut Public Radio.

    “All of this was absolutely meant to be,” she says. “It all just happened, honestly.”

    In the same way, she sort of fell into her latest project, “Joker Stardust,” an art exhibition on display this week that she says started as a critique of consumerism inspired by the 1980s but eventually morphed into a multilayered project focused on the 1960s and 1970s that asks the question, “Who am I?”

    Well, who is Krista Mitchell?

    Mitchell, a double major in English and art who’ll graduate in December, says she started at UConn planning to exclusively major in English and eventually embark on a career as a journalist or teacher. After all, in high school, she’d had success in various writing contests and people always told her she was a good writer.

    Krista Mitchell ’25 (SFA, CLAS) is a double major in art and English. Her solo art exhibition, “Joker Stardust,” opens March 27 and runs through March 30. (Branaugh Morton/Nutmeg Magazine)

    But that first year in college, she found herself drowning in the largeness of the University and escaped in the safety of her art minor.

    “I took my first art class, Drawing I, and noticed it gave me something I could channel my energy into,” she says. “I felt safe in the small classes where everybody knew who I was, and the teacher actually cared about me. She was the one who said, ‘Krista, there’s something about your artwork that is special. I don’t know what it is, but you have something, and I think you should keep going with it.’ That’s pretty high praise for someone who was just starting.”

    That’s the thing about art, she notes, “People think they can’t do it, but everyone has it in them. You just have to slow down and study your surroundings.”

    A passion for art started to grow inside her, so elevating it to a second major was a no-brainer. She elected the Bachelor of Arts track in the art and art history department over the Bachelor of Fine Arts because it allowed her to generalize her courses, rather than pick a specific concentration.

    If she had to pick, she says, she would have opted for animation and illustration – you might have seen her regular comics and illustrations in The Daily Campus – and that would have been the wrong choice, knowing what she knows now.

    “Doing this project, ‘Joker Stardust,’ has shown me that I would be a painting and drawing major because animation and illustration is more about communicating something for an editorial purpose or storytelling and making characters. My mind doesn’t work like that. I’m more of a conceptual person,” she says.

    She likes the bright colors of pop art, and things another person might describe as being “off” or just a little bit “creepy,” like those baby dolls whose eyelids open when upright and close when reclined.

    She absolutely loves liminal spaces like empty parking lots at night with only the overhead lights illuminated, giving an eerie glow to a familiar place. Candles also are a favorite, if only for the impermanence they represent.

    And, vaporwave, oh vaporwave, the aesthetic that pulls from the 1980s and 1990s is close to her heart, along with fashions from the 1960s and 1970s that she finds at thrift shops and wears around campus: cloth hairbands, chunky-heeled shoes, blazers with pinstriped lapels, and miniskirts.

    “I know what my vision is as an artist, and I’m able to apply it to a lot of different mediums,” she says. “I say that now, but I know in a couple years, I’ll again say, ‘I don’t know who I am,’ because that’s part of being an artist. You go through these phases of ‘Who am I?’ Fortunately, right now, I’m in a phase where I feel confident.”

    But is everything by chance?

    In coming to UConn, Mitchell received the Presidential Scholars Enrichment Award, giving her $2,500 for a project of her choosing. But one must choose carefully, and Mitchell mulled ideas for three years. Publishing a book seemed most logical. Then, she saw an art exhibition last spring from Irene Pham ’24 (SFA), a solo show that included paintings about Pham’s family, immigration, and the mixed feelings she had about the two.

    Mitchell had taken Art 1010, “Foundation: Studio Concepts,” with associate professor John O’Donnell early on in her studies and liked his teaching style. Plus, they share an affinity for vaporwave.

    “I sent him an email with an independent study proposal, explaining I wanted to do an exhibition. It was one of the longest emails I ever wrote, and amazingly he agreed. He hardly knew me, but he did remember me,” she says. “I’m so grateful to him because this has changed my life.”

    O’Donnell suggested she make a series of collages and use her time over the summer of 2024 to purchase panels of varying sizes and rummage second-hand stores for magazines, books, and other items.

    Krista Mitchell ’25 (SFA, CLAS) made this 3-by-3-foot collage for her upcoming art exhibition, “Joker Stardust.” The piece includes doilies that her grandmother made. (Krista Mitchell)

    Mitchell was close with her maternal grandmother, Catherine “Kay” Holloway, who left behind a treasure trove of collections and her own art creations when she died in 2015. Holloway didn’t have any formal art training, but was artistic, and Mitchell says she inherited things like her fondness for antiques and oddities from her.

    With O’Donnell’s advice in mind, Mitchell poured through her grandparents’ home, taking handmade doilies, handwritten sewing patterns, hand drawn five-point stars, among other things like Kewpie dolls, stained curtains, a half-drained Snoopy snow globe, and pink graph paper.

    “The thing with collages,” Mitchell explains, “it’s kind of like you’re going through an archive and taking the history of these objects and putting them in a new story. You’re almost recontextualizing them.”

    She spent at least a hundred hours cutting out pictures from magazines like Ladies’ Home Journal and Reader’s Digest and sorting images of Hummel figurines, angels, and Barbie dolls.

    That way, when winter break came early this year, she could start creating, again with O’Donnell’s words in mind reminding her to choose items intentionally, as if to tell a story, and not just for decoration.

    As she did, questions started swirling in her head: Why am I so much like my grandmother? Why am I like this? Why do I dress like this? Why do I like this stuff? The theme of consumerism muted to make room for concepts like individual creativity, religion, the meaning of life, and what happens after death.

    “I started to think about what this all could mean and what I landed on was one idea,” she says. “Could the belief that there is some sort of greater meaning to life or higher power give people an incentive to create with intention?

    “That’s when I realized I love a lot of this stuff because of the history behind it. My grandmother was very careful about building her collection of seemingly random things. She had her own artistic vision, and she was very intentional with how she did things and how they reflected the story she was trying to tell.

    “Like, I don’t know who owned this, but somebody did before I did,” Mitchell says, tugging at her second-hand jacket. “That’s kind of mysterious and interesting, right? There is something greater that connects me to my grandmother, that connects me to these interests I have, the way I dress, and the aesthetics of these previous time periods.”

    None of the 25 collages are titled, Mitchell says, and that’s intentional because they’re supposed to resemble things one might find at an antique store. As for the title of the show, “Joker Stardust,” that was purposeful, based on a joker card she found at her grandparents’.

    “Is everything around us by chance? Is it a joke or is there some sort of divine power making the world as it is or is it random,” Mitchell asks, adding that “stardust” hearkens to the 1970s David Bowie character Ziggy Stardust.

    As part of the project, she ended up publishing a book, putting her writing skills to use as she penned thoughts on each collage. She has 20 copies of “Joker Stardust” in her possession, some of which will be for sale during the show’s opening Thursday, March 27.

    “My parents have always been very supportive, all through school, helping me with stuff like this project. They’ve always been there, which I’m very grateful for,” she says.

    In the show, Mitchell says she’s placed a mirror, with the idea that you see not just your reflection but also those family members who came before you. How did these people find each other, she asks, because without them there wouldn’t be you.

    And without stardust, there wouldn’t be anything.

    “Joker Stardust” will open Thursday, March 27, in the VAIS Gallery, Room 109, in the Art Building on the Storrs campus. A reception will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. The show will be open Friday, March 28, through Sunday, March 30, from noon to 4 p.m.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Connecticut’s 2025 Letters About Literature Contest Winners Named

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    UConn’s Neag School of Education, Department of English, and Connecticut Writing Project (CWP), co-sponsors of the 32nd annual Letters About Literature contest, are proud to announce Connecticut’s winners for the 2024-25 academic year.

    Each year, students in grades four through 12 are invited to read a text, broadly defined, and write a letter to the author (living or dead) about how the text affected them personally. Submissions are grouped according to grade level (grades four to six; grades seven and eight; and grades nine to 12).

    All submissions were read and scored by Neag School alumni teacher-volunteers. Of the 679 submissions from Connecticut students this year, 64 were recognized as semi-finalists and received letters of recognition.

    A second set of judges, all pre-service teachers, then read and scored the 64 semi-finalists — twice for each submission — and selected a total of nine winners, three per grade level. Then one student per grade level was named Top Prize. Each of the nine winners will receive a $100 gift card, while the three top prize winners will also be invited to read their letter out loud at a recognition ceremony later in the spring.

    Neag School associate professor Doug Kaufman, CWP interim-director Jane Cook, and Department of English graduate assistant Emmanuel Fasipe served as the contest’s representatives for the state of Connecticut.

    The following are the contest finalists, listed with their respective school’s and teacher’s names, as well as the work of literature that is the focus of their essay, with access to their winning submissions in PDF format.

    Level I (Grades 4-6)

    • Top Prize and Invited Reader: Cam Lansing, Kimberly Harrell (teacher), King Philip Middle School (West Hartford), The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise by Dan Gemeinhart
    • Winner: AJ Salerno, Kimberly Harrell (teacher), King Philip Middle School (West Hartford), Impossible Creatures by Katherine Rundell
    • Winner: Ben Camacho, Eva Pandiscia (teacher), Sedgwick Middle School (West Hartford), Storm Runner by J.C. Cervantes

    Level II (Grades 7-8)

    • Top Prize and Invited Reader: Cora Chenier, Sara Green (teacher), Portland Middle School (Portland), Harry Potter Series, J.K. Rowling
    • Winner: Aaron Shamshtein, Rachel Drouin (teacher), King Philip Middle School (West Hartford), The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo
    • Winner: Evie Allgood, Olivia Hamaoui (teacher), Hamden Hall Country Day School (Hamden), Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo

    Level III (Grades 9-12)

    • Top Prize and Invited Reader: Colin Monahan, Jessica Sobieralski (teacher), Cromwell High School (Cromwell), Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom
    • Winner: Hunter Lebun-Luo, Katherine Gabbay (teacher), Ridgefield High School (Ridgefield), The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
    • Winner: Carrington Long, Tara Ceresa (teacher), Ridgefield High School (Ridgefield), The Help by Kathryn Stockett

    Letters About Literature Contest Judges

    Alumni, students, and friends of the Neag School of Education and the University of Connecticut judged the Letters About Literature contest submissions earlier this year. The judges selected semi-finalists at each of the three competition levels. Thank you to the first-round contest judges:

    • Aidan Srb
    • Alice Jones
    • Allison Stroili
    • Anna Muharem
    • Christy Rybczyk
    • Daniel Giovinazzo
    • Danielle Pieratti
    • Dorothy Tolchin
    • Emmanuel Fasipe
    • Jane Cook
    • Jennifer DeRagon
    • Jill Kneisl
    • Jill Slayton
    • Joan Muller
    • Joanne Peluso
    • Kelly Andrews-Babcock
    • Laura Milligan
    • Leah Baranauskas
    • Marc Zimmerman
    • Migdalia Gonsalves
    • Mirelinda Dema
    • Natalie Hubert
    • Sonia Ahmed
    • Tara Carlin

    Students in the Neag School and Department of English judged the Letters About Literature semifinalist essays this past month. Thank you to the semifinalist contest judges, who are current students in the Neag School of Education Integrated Bachelor’s/Master’s program with a second major or concentration in English or UConn students majoring in English:

    • Adam Ezedine
    • Alyssa Slamin
    • Ava Peschell
    • Jake Cacace
    • Joseph Miles
    • Kammi Zheng
    • Karen He
    • Kylie Watson
    • Natalia Rojas
    • Shivam Viroja
    • Taylor Rae
    • Vanessa Guerra
    • Yadiel Melendez
    • Yamilet Zavala
    • Yaxi He

    In honor of Jason Courtmanche’s passing, we honor his hard work, dedication, and legacy for many years as the former director of CWP.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Development of education and mentoring discussed at Polytechnic

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    One of the discussion platforms of the international conference on the development of modern education was organized at the Polytechnic University.

    The conference “Education of the Future and the Future of Education” is currently taking place in different cities across the country, where important issues of Russian education development are being discussed at several discussion platforms. The meeting of the Polytechnic student body with vice-rectors Lyudmila Pankova and Maxim Pasholikov was devoted to the topic “A New Era of Higher Education: Towards Technological Leadership”.

    The meeting participants discussed whether engineering education will be transformed into an innovative one through mass participation of students in research and engineering work; how the engineering education system will be integrated into science and production; touched upon the topic of developing mentoring in higher education; the use of tools for assessing and preparing graduates in accordance with the personnel requirements of the university’s partners, and much more.

    Vice-Rector for Educational Activities of the University Lyudmila Pankova made a presentation on the topic of “Strategic Educational Initiatives in the SPbPU Development Program for 2025/2036.” Lyudmila Vladimirovna recalled that last week the Polytechnic University successfully defended its comprehensive development program andentered the first group of universities to receive grants from the Priority 2030 program, which is now focused on technological leadership. The Vice-Rector explained what strategic goals the university sets for itself, what strategic initiatives it proposes to achieve them, including in the field of education. For example, this is the construction of a flexible system for assessing educational results based on the individual achievements of students or students receiving several qualifications during their studies.

    “The big advantage of the Polytechnic is its interdisciplinary nature,” noted Lyudmila Pankova. “When a university has many different competencies, they are well combined and a synergistic effect occurs.”

    Vice-Rector for Youth Policy and Communication Technologies Maxim Pasholikov spoke about a multi-level mentoring system as a tool for working with young people, focusing on a new idea related to the development of mentoring. In the year of the 60th anniversary of the Trade Union of University Students and the 10th anniversary of the creation of the Public Institute “Adapters”, Maxim Aleksandrovich proposed to restart the Association of Polytechnic Graduates, created back in 2012, to unite on its basis adapters who graduated from the university, trade union activists and student brigade fighters.

    “This will be a new stage in the development of youth policy at the university,” the vice-rector believes. “While we are studying, we are constantly immersed in this environment, but after graduation, connections are lost. And we, graduates, who were on the same wavelength during our years of study, need such social communication. This could be a permanent club in which horizontal connections would develop, and people would receive new opportunities for self-realization, including employment.”

    After the presentations, the participants in the discussion were able to speak out on the proposed topics and receive answers to their questions.

    Photo archive

    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 –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Aspida Life Re Ltd. Appoints Elinor Friedman to its Board of Directors

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HAMILTON, Bermuda, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Aspida Life Re Ltd. (“Aspida Re”), a reinsurance company focused on providing life and annuity reinsurance solutions to companies globally, announced today the recent appointment of Elinor Friedman, FSA, MAAA to its Board of Directors (“the Board”). Ms. Friedman’s extensive product development and pricing knowledge will complement and add broader insight to Aspida Re’s board composition.

    Ms. Friedman is a seasoned actuary with vast experience in the life insurance and reinsurance space. From 2013 to 2024, she served as Managing Director at Willis Towers Watson where she provided consulting services to large and mid-size insurers and reinsurers including sell-side appraisal, buy-side due diligence, product development, and pricing.

    “Elinor’s deep capabilities in actuarial science, risk management, and insurance analytics, combined with her proven leadership in insurance consulting, make her a valuable addition to our board,” said David Florian, Chief Executive Officer of Aspida Re. “Her insights and operational acumen will be instrumental in helping Aspida Re continue to deliver ongoing value for our partners and clients.”

    During her time as Managing Director at Willis Towers Watson, Ms. Friedman also served as Life Division Leader and Sales and Practice Leader for the Americas leadership team for the Insurance Consulting and Technology (ICT) line of business. Prior to joining the firm, she served as Product Actuary at General American Life Insurance Company, coordinating life product development and pricing, and as Assistant Actuary at RGA/Swiss Financial Group, focused on reinsurance transactions, actuarial pricing, and risk analysis.

    “I am excited to join Aspida Re’s board and contribute to the company’s mission of providing innovative and secure reinsurance solutions,” said Elinor Friedman. “Aspida Re’s focus on risk management excellence and forward-thinking strategies aligns with my experience in actuarial science and insurance consulting. I look forward to leveraging my background to support Aspida Re’s growth, helping to refine reinsurance structures and strengthen partnerships that drive long-term financial security.”

    Ms. Friedman received her Bachelor of Science in Applied Mathematics from Concordia University (with distinction) and her Master of Science in Applied Mathematics from the University of Ottawa (magna cum laude). She is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries (FSA) and a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries (MAAA). Ms. Friedman is also active in the industry, having previously served as Chair of the Society of Actuaries Product Development Section Council and on the planning committee for several industry meetings. She has been a frequent speaker, lending her knowledge and expertise to the industry.

    About Aspida Re
    Aspida Life Re Ltd (“Aspida Re”), a Bermuda-based reinsurance platform, is focused on providing efficient and secure life and annuity reinsurance solutions to its global clients. Aspida Re seeks to be a trusted partner in its clients’ long-term financial growth by delivering creative, customized solutions while driving business by doing good for the communities it serves. Aspida Re is part of Aspida Holdings Ltd, with over $21bn in total assets as of December 31, 2024. A subsidiary of Ares Management Corporation (NYSE: ARES) acts as the dedicated investment manager, capital solutions and corporate development partner to Aspida Re. For more information on Aspida Re, please visit www.aspidare.bm or follow them on LinkedIn.

    Media Contact:
    Blaire Swayze
    Blaire.swayze@aspida.com
    +1-919-246-3108

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c8c0180c-cfc6-4036-bde7-bd8c9365073f

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Students and graduates of SPbGASU distinguished themselves at the 10th Architectural and Urban Planning Foresight RBC

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – From left to right: Egor Starshov, Daniil Koskov, Ekaterina Zorina, Lyudmila Morshchakova, Gleb Rosin, Ivan Zabavin, Veronika Petrenko, Elena Vorobyova, Anastasia Dedyurina, Yana Golubeva

    Students and graduates of SPbGASU were among the authors of the winning project of the 10th RBC Architectural and Urban Planning Foresight.

    The team included: captain Anastasia Dyadurina (SPbGASU); SPbGASU bachelor’s degree graduates Elena Vorobyova (ITMO University), Ivan Zabavin (ITMO University), Veronika Petrenko (I.E. Repin St. Petersburg Academy of Arts); as well as Ekaterina Zorina (Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU)), Daniil Koskov (European University at St. Petersburg), Lyudmila Morshchakova (SPbPU), Gleb Rosin (Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration), curators Yana Golubeva (MLA architectural bureau) and Egor Starshov (Graduate School of Management of St. Petersburg State University).

    Architectural and urban planning foresight is a research and media project of RBC Petersburg. It is aimed at finding optimal ways to develop urban areas; organizing competent discussions of urban planning issues among leading architects, developers, economists, representatives of the city’s authorities and public organizations; promoting progressive solutions using modern visualization tools.

    The theme of the tenth foresight was “The Petersburg project. A city of the new era with a Petersburg identity.” Six teams participated. Their curators were leading architects and urbanists of Petersburg. The jury also included representatives of universities and development companies. The partners were the RBI Group, Formula City, PSK Group, Bau City Development and L.Buro studio.

    Anastasia Dyadurina is a second-year Master’s student at the Faculty of Architecture. She took part in the RBC 2023–24 foresight on the topic of “Residential agglomeration of the future” – she led the team that won with the project “Neurogarden. Where nature creates the future”. The RBC 2024–25 foresight really interested the student in its topic. “I love St. Petersburg with all my heart, and the opportunity to talk about its identity, present and future, inspired me,” said Anastasia.

    The winning project was called “Capillar City”. It is an ambitious idea to save the Northern capital from the threat of flooding in the context of global warming. The authors suggested looking at the city as a living organism, where each channel and river becomes part of a single life support system; imagine a city where a new network of artificial channels works like a circulatory system, evenly distributing and utilizing excess water.

    The network of artificial canals being created will connect historical reservoirs, turning them into transport arteries. Year-round water trams will run along these “capillaries” – real “blood corpuscles” that ensure uninterrupted movement along three rings: the Small Water Ring around the historical center, the Middle Ring through residential areas, and the Highway Ring around the Ring Road.

    Every corner of the city – from the historical center to new buildings – will receive its share of water and greenery. These canals will give St. Petersburg a new identity, combining history and future into a single harmonious organism.

    The authors are sure that the capillary city is not just an engineering solution. It is a chance to give Petersburg a new impulse to life, protect its unique architecture and ensure a future for generations.

    “I regularly participate in architectural competitions, but the format of foresight is unique: participants are given maximum freedom within the framework of the designated topic. Foresight lasts for six months, teams of students and young specialists from various fields are recruited, from architecture and urban planning to sociology and economics. Each team is assigned a curator, most often a famous architect. In addition, lectures and discussions are held during the competition, including with the participation of top officials of development companies. The competition is aimed at creating a multidisciplinary professional community, where different specialists can look into the future together.

    This year the theme was especially free, there was not even a designated area for design. Our team went through a change of curator, and in the end we managed to collaborate with the founder of the MLA bureau, Yana Golubeva. The team, which initially consisted of 20 people, was reduced to eight by the final. As the captain, I had the task of defining the general vector of the project, developing a concept together with the guys, breaking it down into tasks, distributing them among the participants and preserving the integrity of the project from the idea to the implementation. I am especially glad that I managed to organize the work so that each of the team members revealed their best sides.

    The team and I understood that taking on the task of digging 205 kilometers of canals in St. Petersburg to save it from flooding and to define a new identity for the city was a very ambitious task. We took all the risks and were able to successfully create a project that was highly appreciated by the jury and the public,” said Anastasia Dyadurina. We congratulate the team on their victory and wish them further professional success!

    Project presentation

    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 –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA’s Webb Captures Neptune’s Auroras For First Time

    Source: NASA

    Long-sought auroral glow finally emerges under Webb’s powerful gaze
    For the first time, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has captured bright auroral activity on Neptune. Auroras occur when energetic particles, often originating from the Sun, become trapped in a planet’s magnetic field and eventually strike the upper atmosphere. The energy released during these collisions creates the signature glow.
    In the past, astronomers have seen tantalizing hints of auroral activity on Neptune, for example, in the flyby of NASA’s Voyager 2 in 1989. However, imaging and confirming the auroras on Neptune has long evaded astronomers despite successful detections on Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus. Neptune was the missing piece of the puzzle when it came to detecting auroras on the giant planets of our solar system.
    “Turns out, actually imaging the auroral activity on Neptune was only possible with Webb’s near-infrared sensitivity,” said lead author Henrik Melin of Northumbria University, who conducted the research while at the University of Leicester. “It was so stunning to not just see the auroras, but the detail and clarity of the signature really shocked me.”
    The data was obtained in June 2023 using Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph. In addition to the image of the planet, astronomers obtained a spectrum to characterize the composition and measure the temperature of the planet’s upper atmosphere (the ionosphere). For the first time, they found an extremely prominent emission line signifying the presence of the trihydrogen cation (H3+), which can be created in auroras. In the Webb images of Neptune, the glowing aurora appears as splotches represented in cyan.

    “H3+ has a been a clear signifier on all the gas giants — Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus — of auroral activity, and we expected to see the same on Neptune as we investigated the planet over the years with the best ground-based facilities available,” explained Heidi Hammel of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Webb interdisciplinary scientist and leader of the Guaranteed Time Observation program for the Solar System in which the data were obtained. “Only with a machine like Webb have we finally gotten that confirmation.”
    The auroral activity seen on Neptune is also noticeably different from what we are accustomed to seeing here on Earth, or even Jupiter or Saturn. Instead of being confined to the planet’s northern and southern poles, Neptune’s auroras are located at the planet’s geographic mid-latitudes — think where South America is located on Earth.
    This is due to the strange nature of Neptune’s magnetic field, originally discovered by Voyager 2 in 1989 which is tilted by 47 degrees from the planet’s rotation axis. Since auroral activity is based where the magnetic fields converge into the planet’s atmosphere, Neptune’s auroras are far from its rotational poles.
    The ground-breaking detection of Neptune’s auroras will help us understand how Neptune’s magnetic field interacts with particles that stream out from the Sun to the distant reaches of our solar system, a totally new window in ice giant atmospheric science.
    From the Webb observations, the team also measured the temperature of the top of Neptune’s atmosphere for the first time since Voyager 2’s flyby. The results hint at why Neptune’s auroras remained hidden from astronomers for so long.
    “I was astonished — Neptune’s upper atmosphere has cooled by several hundreds of degrees,” Melin said. “In fact, the temperature in 2023 was just over half of that in 1989.” 
    Through the years, astronomers have predicted the intensity of Neptune’s auroras based on the temperature recorded by Voyager 2. A substantially colder temperature would result in much fainter auroras. This cold temperature is likely the reason that Neptune’s auroras have remained undetected for so long. The dramatic cooling also suggests that this region of the atmosphere can change greatly even though the planet sits over 30 times farther from the Sun compared to Earth.Equipped with these new findings, astronomers now hope to study Neptune with Webb over a full solar cycle, an 11-year period of activity driven by the Sun’s magnetic field. Results could provide insights into the origin of Neptune’s bizarre magnetic field, and even explain why it’s so tilted.
    “As we look ahead and dream of future missions to Uranus and Neptune, we now know how important it will be to have instruments tuned to the wavelengths of infrared light to continue to study the auroras,” added Leigh Fletcher of Leicester University, co-author on the paper. “This observatory has finally opened the window onto this last, previously hidden ionosphere of the giant planets.”
    These observations, led by Fletcher, were taken as part of Hammel’s Guaranteed Time Observation program 1249. The team’s results have been published in Nature Astronomy.
    The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
    Downloads
    Click any image to open a larger version.
    View/Download all image products at all resolutions for this article from the Space Telescope Science Institute.
    Read the research results published in Nature Astronomy.

    Laura Betz – laura.e.betz@nasa.govNASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
    Hannah Braun- hbraun@stsci.eduSpace Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
    Christine Pulliam – cpulliam@stsci.eduSpace Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.

    Henrik Melin (Northumbria University)

    View more: Webb images of Neptune
    Watch: Visualization of Neptune’s tilted magnetic axis
    Learn more : about Neptune
    More Webb News
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    Webb Mission Page

    About Neptune
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    SpacePlace for Kids
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    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA Statement on Nomination of Greg Autry for Agency CFO

    Source: NASA

    The following is a statement from NASA acting Administrator Janet Petro regarding the nomination by President Donald Trump of Greg Autry on March 24 to serve as the agency’s chief financial officer (CFO):
    “The NASA CFO is responsible for executing more than $25 billion in agency funding across a variety of missions, including the Moon and Mars, for the benefit of humanity. With his previous experience as the White House liaison during President Trump’s first administration, as well as his extensive experience in space policy, I look forward to welcoming Greg as our next CFO. If confirmed, we will work together with the current Trump Administration to ensure NASA’s success in maximizing efficiencies, refining our processes, and remaining effective stewards of every tax dollar invested in our agency.”
    In addition to his previous experience on the agency review team and as White House liaison at NASA, he also has served on the Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee (COMSTAC) at the FAA and is the vice president of the National Space Society.
    Autry is the associate provost for Space Commercialization and Strategy at the University of Central Florida, a published author, and entrepreneur. He also serves as a visiting professor at Imperial College London. He formerly served as the director of Space Leadership, Policy, and Business in the Thunderbird School of Global Management and a professor at Arizona State University. He also has taught technology entrepreneurship at the University of Southern California and macroeconomics at the University of California, Irvine.
    For more about NASA’s mission, visit:

    Home Page

    -end-
    Bethany Stevens/Amber JacobsonHeadquarters, Washington202-358-1600bethany.c.stevens@nasa.gov / amber.c.jacobson@nasa.gov

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Peter Dutton promises $6 billion 12-month halving of petrol and diesel excise

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    Opposition leader Peter Dutton will promise in his Thursday budget reply that a Coalition government would immediately halve the fuel excise on petrol and diesel.

    The cut, which would take the excise from 50.8 cents a litre to 25.4 cents, would be for a year, at a cost of A$6 billion.

    The opposition says the measure would mean a household with one vehicle filling up once a week would save about $14 weekly, on average. This would amount to about $700 to $750 over the year, based on a 55 litre tank.

    A two-car household would save about $28 a week on average – nearly $1500 over the year.

    Legislation for the excise cut would be introduced on the first parliamentary sitting day after the election so it could come into effect “as quickly as possible”.

    Dutton contrasted the immediate relief with the longer time frame before people received the tax cuts announced in the budget.

    Under the tax changes, taxpayers will receive a tax cut of up to $268 from July 1 next year and up to $536 every year from July 1 2027.

    The $17.1 billion income tax package was being rushed through the Senate on Wednesday night, as the parliament readies to rise for the election, that could be called as early as Friday for May 3.

    The government wanted to pass the legislation immediately to put the Coalition, which opposed the bill and voted against it in parliament, on the spot.

    Also, having the tax cuts in law gives greater certainty to them, as Labor promotes them in the coming campaign.

    Dutton said of his proposed excise cut: “If elected, we will deliver this cost of living relief immediately – whereas people have to wait 15 months for Labor’s 70 cent a day tax tweak.”

    “This cost of living relief will make a real difference to families and small businesses – everyone from tradies, to mums and dads, to older Australians, and to transport delivery workers,” he said.

    “The commute to work, taking the kids to school or sport, the family drive, or the trip to the shops will all cost less under the Coalition. Our plan will save many hundreds of dollars for families across Australia.

    “Lowering costs to small businesses, means lower costs for goods and services at the checkout.”

    The Morrison government introduced a six-month cut to fuel excise in 2022. The Albanese government declined to extend it when it expired.

    Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. Peter Dutton promises $6 billion 12-month halving of petrol and diesel excise – https://theconversation.com/peter-dutton-promises-6-billion-12-month-halving-of-petrol-and-diesel-excise-250896

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Academic Council of the State University of Management discussed the development strategy and the future of education

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    On March 25, 2025, the next meeting of the Academic Council of the State University of Management was held.

    Traditionally, we started with the congratulatory part. Rector Vladimir Stroyev presented letters of gratitude from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education for their contribution to the development of practice-oriented education, the development of the federation within the framework of the “Service Learning” program to Vice-Rector Dmitry Bryukhanov and Associate Professor of the Department of Management in International Business and Tourism Industry Svetlana Grishaeva.

    Vladimir Vitalyevich also congratulated the birthday boys of the month and thanked Elena Shtyreva, an employee of the Institute of Distance Education of the State University of Management, for 55 years of continuous work at the State University of Management.

    “I also want to join in the congratulations and say “thank you” on behalf of all the institute’s employees for their daily work and contribution to the development of the institute. I know where she gets this character from, her grandfather was the deputy commander of Vasily Chapaev’s division,” Sergei Lenshin, director of the Fine Arts Department of the State University of Management, congratulated Elena Arkadyevna.

    After the completion of the formal part, those gathered moved on to considering the issues on the agenda.

    Deputy Director of the Department of Academic Policy and Implementation of Educational Programs Olga Zhuravleva presented a summary report on the self-assessment of the main areas of the university’s activities for 2024.

    “For the first time, we worked on the report together with the Center for Prospective Development, which allowed us to better present the overall picture. The indicators have mostly increased and are impressive. The University is successfully developing in most indicators. However, there are also growth points and challenges of modern society that we need to work with more actively,” Olga Zhuravleva noted.

    Director of the Center for Prospective Development Tatyana Gordeeva spoke about the results of the implementation of the State University of Management Development Program for 2024.

    “2024 has become a fundamental year in the formation of the organizational foundations of the development program. At the same time, today we are already working on its implementation in the context of the emerging new system of higher education. What it will be like is still unknown, but we must keep this in mind. In addition, there are risks of reducing off-budget admission to humanitarian programs, which are key for the State University of Management today. Therefore, today it is important to focus on the effective implementation of the development tasks that we have defined for ourselves in order to form the necessary reserve for participation in new national projects and the implementation of our ambitious goals,” Tatyana Gordeeva emphasized.

    Vladimir Stroev noted the importance of not only taking into account indicators in areas, but also making proposals for their improvement, which he expects from every employee.

    “The issue of the development program is not simple, it is connected with many indicators that are used in different systems and different issues. And all our reports must be treated responsibly, not only noting positive results, but also expressing criticism in case of their failure. These data are a reason to think about what we are doing now and what will happen to us tomorrow. It would be good not just to fulfill the indicators, but also to exceed them, or be close to this,” concluded Vladimir Vitalyevich.

    Director of the Institute of Economics and Finance Galina Sorokina reported on the results of the institute’s work for 2024.

    “The institute has shown growth in almost all areas, so it is especially pleasant to make a report. The number of not only admitted students has grown, but also those who transferred from other universities. The number of foreign students has also grown, with Vietnamese students predominating. The number of educational programs implemented by the institute is also growing. A program on behavioral economics is being developed, which will be carried out jointly with the Central Bank and Rosfinmonitoring,” Galina Petrovna noted.

    Vice-Rector Pavel Pavlovsky informed those gathered about the implementation of the Youth Policy Strategy at the State University of Management.

    “The State University of Management is undoubtedly one of the leading universities in the implementation of youth policy. We became the first university in Moscow for educational work, and in Russia we took 3rd place among universities with a population of 5 to 10 thousand people. In 2024, 47 federal projects were held on the basis of the State University of Management. This year, we initiated the All-Russian student competition “Family History. Immortal Memory”, expanded the geography of the All-Russian project “Course for Business and Entrepreneurship” that we are implementing, which will be held not only in the International Children’s Center “Artek” and the All-Russian Children’s Center “Ocean”, but also in the All-Russian Children’s Centers “Smena” and “Orlyonok”. And, of course, the All-Russian KVN School, “University Shifts” and other important events await us,” Pavel Vladimirovich shared.

    Vice-Rector Dmitry Bryukhanov proposed creating a Preparatory Department for Foreign Citizens, which was unanimously supported by the council members.

    At the end of the meeting, Vladimir Stroyev called on those gathered to prepare not only for the 2025 admissions campaign, but also to think about admissions in 2026 and make their proposals.

    “This year, the admission campaign is still under the old system, but next year a new model will be adopted, and we must be ready. It is time to prepare proposals for our areas in a given situation, including in the event of a stressful situation. We must have specific solutions for each issue,” the rector of the State University of Management concluded.

    In addition, the meeting discussed the nomination of GUU employees to participate in the All-Russian competition “Golden Names of Higher Education”, approval of new DPO programs, tuition fees and other work issues.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 03/26/2025

    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 –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Bitfarms Appoints James Bond as Senior Vice President of High-Performance Computing

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitfarms Ltd. (NASDAQ/TSX: BITF), a global Bitcoin and vertically integrated data center company, today announced that it has appointed James Bond as Senior Vice President of High-Performance Computing (“HPC”).

    Mr. Bond is a subject matter expert in HPC/AI with a proven record of launching new cloud and service provider offerings for large scale data centers across the U.S. He has over 20 years’ experience in public sector solution architecture and IT infrastructure design and implementation, including 15 years at Hewlett Packard Enterprise (“HPE”) where he most recently led their North America HPC/AI infrastructure platforms category. Under his leadership, the business grew to $2 billion in 2024, representing annual growth of 160%. At HPE North America, Mr. Bond was responsible for all HPC/AI go-to-market activities including the creation of new customer offerings, designing sales and pricing programs, managing partners, including NVIDIA, Intel and others, and managing net new logo sales and business development teams.

    Prior to HPE, Mr. Bond led all product development, engineering, marketing, operations, and pre-sales business development for Apptix, the largest (at the time) Application Service Provider for Microsoft Exchange, SharePoint, and Unified Communications. Prior to Apptix, Mr. Bond served as the Chief Technology Officer and Co-Founder of IceWEB, where he created one of the first fully automated software-as-a-service (SaaS) cloud offerings, before cloud and SaaS terms were coined.

    Mr. Bond is also the author of “The Enterprise Cloud” and a keynote speaker at industry events nation-wide, covering topics, such as the benefits of on-premise and hybrid cloud, AI/GenAI use cases, and how to build and deploy AI infrastructure including GPUs, HPC storage, and power/cooling specifically tuned for AI workloads. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer and Information Science from the University of Maryland.

    CEO Ben Gagnon stated, “We are thrilled to welcome James into this critically important role for Bitfarms. James, and the team he builds around him, will spearhead the development and implementation of our long-term HPC/AI strategy. With our Pennsylvania pipeline of 1.1GW of secured power, we are in a strong position to develop an HPC/AI business geared for scale in the U.S. James’ impressive track record of implementing HPC solutions at scale and driving exponential growth for HPE’s HPC business makes him the ideal candidate to lead this new growth chapter at Bitfarms.”

    James Bond stated, “I am excited to join the talented team at Bitfarms at such a pivotal time in their growth trajectory. I look forward to leveraging their premium Pennsylvania properties, existing data centers, and power capacity to deploy a world-class high-performance computing infrastructure to host state-of-the-art artificial intelligence solutions for future customers.”

    About Bitfarms Ltd.

    Founded in 2017, Bitfarms is a global Bitcoin and vertically integrated data center company that sells its computational power to one or more mining pools from which it receives payment in Bitcoin. Bitfarms develops, owns, and operates vertically integrated mining facilities with in-house management and company-owned electrical engineering, installation service, and multiple onsite technical repair centers.

    Bitfarms currently has 15 operating Bitcoin data centers in four countries: the United States, Canada, Paraguay, and Argentina. Powered predominantly by environmentally friendly hydro-electric and long-term power contracts, Bitfarms is committed to using sustainable and often underutilized energy infrastructure.

    To learn more about Bitfarms’ events, developments, and online communities:

    www.bitfarms.com
    https://www.facebook.com/bitfarms/
    https://x.com/Bitfarms_io
    https://www.instagram.com/bitfarms/
    https://www.linkedin.com/company/bitfarms/

    Glossary of Terms

    • HPC/AI = High Performance Computing / Artificial Intelligence
    • GW = Gigawatt

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This news release contains certain “forward-looking information” and “forward-looking statements” (collectively, “forward-looking information”) that are based on expectations, estimates and projections as at the date of this news release and are covered by safe harbors under Canadian and United States securities laws. The statements and information in this release regarding the ability to enhance the business of the Company through adding additional human resources to HPC/AI strategies, opportunities relating to the potential of the Company’s data centers for HPC/AI opportunities, the merits and ability to secure long-term contracts associated with HPC/AI customers, the North American energy and compute infrastructure strategy, projected growth, target hashrate, and other statements regarding future growth, plans and objectives of the Company are forward-looking information. Any statements that involve discussions with respect to predictions, expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, assumptions, future events or performance (often but not always using phrases such as “expects”, or “does not expect”, “is expected”, “anticipates” or “does not anticipate”, “plans”, “budget”, “scheduled”, “forecasts”, “estimates”, “prospects”, “believes” or “intends” or variations of such words and phrases or stating that certain actions, events or results “may” or “could”, “would”, “might” or “will” be taken to occur or be achieved) are not statements of historical fact and may be forward-looking information and are intended to identify forward-looking information.

    This forward-looking information is based on assumptions and estimates of management of the Company at the time they were made, and involves known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance, or achievements of the Company to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking information. Such factors include, among others, risks relating to: the anticipated benefits of the rebalancing of operations to North America and the North American energy and compute infrastructure strategy may not be realized; an inability to apply the Company’s data centers to HPC/AI opportunities on a profitable basis; a failure to secure long-term contracts associated with HPC/AI customers on terms which are economic or at all; the construction and operation of the Company’s facilities may not occur as currently planned, or at all; expansion may not materialize as currently anticipated, or at all; the digital currency market; the ability to successfully mine digital currency; revenue may not increase as currently anticipated, or at all; it may not be possible to profitably liquidate the current digital currency inventory, or at all; a decline in digital currency prices may have a significant negative impact on operations; an increase in network difficulty may have a significant negative impact on operations; the volatility of digital currency prices; the anticipated growth and sustainability of hydroelectricity for the purposes of cryptocurrency mining in the applicable jurisdictions; the inability to maintain reliable and economical sources of power for the Company to operate cryptocurrency mining assets; the risks of an increase in the Company’s electricity costs, cost of natural gas, changes in currency exchange rates, energy curtailment or regulatory changes in the energy regimes in the jurisdictions in which the Company operates and the adverse impact on the Company’s profitability; future capital needs and the ability to complete current and future financings, including Bitfarms’ ability to utilize an at-the-market offering program ( “ATM Program”) and the prices at which securities may be sold in such ATM Program, as well as capital market conditions in general; share dilution resulting from an ATM Program and from other equity issuances; the risk that a material weakness in internal control over financial reporting could result in a misstatement of the Company’s financial position that may lead to a material misstatement of the annual or interim consolidated financial statements if not prevented or detected on a timely basis; any regulations or laws that will prevent Bitfarms from operating its business; historical prices of digital currencies and the ability to mine digital currencies that will be consistent with historical prices; and the adoption or expansion of any regulation or law that will prevent Bitfarms from operating its business, or make it more costly to do so. For further information concerning these and other risks and uncertainties, refer to the Company’s filings on www.sedarplus.ca (which are also available on the website of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission at www.sec.gov), including the restated MD&A for the year-ended December 31, 2023, filed on December 9, 2024. Although the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in forward-looking statements, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended, including factors that are currently unknown to or deemed immaterial by the Company. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate as actual results, and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking information. The Company undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking information other than as required by law. Trading in the securities of the Company should be considered highly speculative. No stock exchange, securities commission or other regulatory authority has approved or disapproved the information contained herein. Neither the Toronto Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, or any other securities exchange or regulatory authority accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

    Investor Relations Contacts:

    Tracy Krumme
    SVP, Head of IR & Corp. Comms.
    +1 786-671-5638
    tkrumme@bitfarms.com

    Media Contacts:

    Caroline Brady Baker
    Director, Communications
    cbaker@bitfarms.com

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Polytechnic hosted a forum of student dormitory councils

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    At the end of March, more than 200 people gathered at the student council forum, the largest and most significant event for all activists of the student self-government of SPbPU dormitories. The event was held in the Student Club. The forum was organized by United Student Council of SPbPU Dormitories.

    The forum is not just an event within the walls of the Polytechnic University, it is a platform that has been uniting hundreds of people, dozens of student councils of dormitories and several universities for the fourth year. The forum is aimed at improving the quality of the results of our self-government, interaction and exchange of experience, increasing legal literacy, as well as creating connections between members of our organization, – noted the chairman of the United Student Council of the Polytechnic Dormitories Thomas Shochenmayer.

    This year the event was held on four tracks.

    Track one was a student council competition, where teams demonstrated their experience in self-government and developed competencies.

    Track two is a competition for class leaders, in which the students presented their projects to improve the quality of life of students in dormitories.

    Track three is the SPbPU OSS award. Its goal is to stimulate the work of student councils, identify and encourage best practices in 11 nominations (Leisure, Comfort, Adaptation, Rights, Self-realization, Health, Ecology, Safety, Work with foreign students, Information work, Corporate culture).

    Track 4 – “Lead with your heart”. A track aimed at improving the communication skills of potential leaders to improve their effectiveness in interacting with administrative bodies and other student organizations, as well as providing participants with effective tools for managing in dormitories.

    The training covered the most relevant topics for activists.

    “Values and motivation” (Anna Kalugina, director of the psychological support center “Tochka Opory”). “Teamwork and healthy communication” (Angelina Kulanova, acting director of the Student Club). “Grants without panic, or how to win from A to Z” (Maxim Ruzakov, head of the cultural and mass department of the OSS). “The art of negotiations” (Thomas Shochenmayer, chairman of the OSS SPbPU).

    The guys learned about team building, values and motivation for their activities. In practice, they solved cases, learned to negotiate, and also experienced the entire life cycle of the Dormitory Council.

    The forum has become larger. More strong teams, real leaders have appeared. It is now much more difficult to determine the best. New nominations have been added. The interest from universities in St. Petersburg and other cities has grown, – said Galina Melekhova, Deputy Director of the SPbPU Student City for Educational Work.

    The event was attended by over 30 guests from other universities: SPbGLTU, NovSU, SPSU and VShTE. They took part in the training track, and the chairmen of the student councils of the Mining University and the Higher School of Technology and Energy became experts of the competition.

    Director of the SPbPU Student City Vyacheslav Olshevsky emphasized: From year to year, the level of the forum is noticeably growing, gaining momentum, being brighter, more powerful, stronger. The guys get the necessary skills, pump up their competencies in various areas, especially in student self-government.

    All teams tried very hard to win, their performances were very bright, memorable. The jury had a difficult task: to determine the best among the best.

    Winners of the student council competition.

    1st place – hostel #3 2nd place – hostel #19 3rd place – hostel #6

    The team of foreign students from Dormitory No. 13 has been an active participant in the forum for the second year. Their projects were recognized as the best in three award nominations at once. The other winners were the teams from Dormitories No. 6 and No. 16.

    Svetlana Bakhtina from dormitory #6 won the competition among the seniors. Felix Zhumaliev from dormitory #11 came in second, and Karina Mokerova from dormitory #5 came in third.

    Link to the SSO forum group

    Photo: SPbPU Youth News Service

    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 –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Schoolchildren solved real engineering problems at the Polytechnic Olympiad

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The final stage of the Polytechnic Olympiad took place on March 23. On this day, more than one hundred schoolchildren took part in the in-person round, which took place simultaneously at three educational sites – at Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University, at the AMTEK Lyceum (Cherepovets), and at the specialized educational and scientific center of the North Caucasus Federal University (Stavropol).

    The Polytechnic Olympiad has been held since 2010. Over the years, it has become a platform for testing the knowledge and skills of thousands of students in subjects such as mathematics, chemistry, physics and computer science. The Olympiad has long established itself as one of the main competitions among high school students seeking to connect their lives with technical professions. However, in 2025, the concept of the event underwent significant changes. Polytechnic, being one of the leading engineering universities in the country, decided to focus on engineering sciences. This is due to the desire to prepare future engineers to solve real production problems that they will face after graduation.

    At the selection stage, the participants received an unusual task – they had to pass an interview at PolyTechCorp. To get to the final, the guys had to demonstrate knowledge in various areas of modern engineering. They researched the properties of complex materials, studied the features of modern alloys and composite materials, understood the operation of circuits and circuits, analyzed their characteristics and looked for optimal solutions. One of the tasks was the design of mechanisms and calculation of motion trajectories, which allowed the participants to immerse themselves in the real atmosphere of an engineer’s work.

    The finalists have already become part of a large engineering team, where they faced specific tasks similar to those that real engineers solve when creating and manufacturing products. One of the key tasks was to detect errors in the interns’ drawings. This allowed them not only to test their theoretical knowledge, but also to develop practical skills in analyzing and finding solutions under limited time.

    The tasks of the final stage tested not only the level of theoretical preparation of schoolchildren, but also the ability to apply the acquired knowledge in practice. That is why the organizers allowed the participants to use any available sources of information, which made the competition even closer to real engineering activities.

    The Olympiad tasks seemed difficult but interesting to me. It was exciting to try myself in the role of a real engineer and take part in the production stages. Thanks to this experience, I feel more confident in technical disciplines and understand where I want to move on, – shared his impressions a participant in the final stage.

    The results of the Olympiad will be known in April. The winners and prize winners will be invited to a ceremonial award ceremony, where they will receive gifts and diplomas. A prize place in the Olympiad allows schoolchildren to receive 10 additional points when entering the Polytechnic University, which significantly increases the chances of successful enrollment.

    We are glad to see how the children show interest in engineering. Our goal is to create conditions in which schoolchildren can apply their knowledge in practice and feel like real professionals. It is important that the Olympiad tasks are based on real engineering problems that students will face in the future. Such events help to form a new generation of engineers ready for the challenges of the modern world, – noted the organizer of the Polytechnic Olympiad Evgeniya Lyzlova.

    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 –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Scientists from the National Research University Higher School of Economics – Saint Petersburg will begin to teach artificial intelligence emotions

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    In 2025, the Natural Language Laboratory of the National Research University Higher School of Economics — St. Petersburg, under the leadership of Dmitry Ryumin, a candidate of technical sciences, will develop technologies that will allow AI not only to understand words, but also to recognize emotions, gestures, and personal characteristics of a person. Initially, the department focused exclusively on the analysis of text data. However, according to Dmitry Ryumin, now only one modality is of little interest to anyone. “Look at the current developments — everyone wants to record something with their voice, and upload a picture, and analyze a video, and work with text,” the scientist comments.

    Dmitry Ryumin came to the HSE in St. Petersburg from the St. Petersburg Federal Research Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences, where he holds the position of senior research fellow at the Laboratory of Speech and Multimodal Interfaces. “I was invited for the SP4 project (strategic projects), and then offered to head the Natural Language Laboratory. Today, ten people work in the laboratory – from undergraduate students to candidates of science. I would like to expand the team to 20-30 people, so that the laboratory could be divided into related groups. For example, one group deals with avatars, another – with emotions, and then they can be combined to create emotional avatars,” the head shares his plans.

    Why do neural networks need emotions?

    Under the leadership of Dmitry Ryumin, the HSE-St. Petersburg laboratory will focus on several promising areas related to multimodal technologies.

    “Imagine a system that simultaneously analyzes a person’s voice, facial expressions, and gestures. Assessing a person’s personal qualities and recognizing emotions can be useful, for example, when hiring,” the scientist explains. The technology allows determining how well a job seeker fits the job. “We record an interview with a candidate and analyze not only the content of the answers, but also how they speak, what emotions they show, how they gesture. This gives a more complete picture of a person. For example, openness, sociability, and resistance to stress are important for a manager. The system can analyze whether a candidate’s voice trembles, how clearly they express their thoughts, and provide a description to help HR in recruiting personnel,” comments Dmitry Ryumin.

    Another promising area is personalized advertising. The neural network will be able to evaluate the user’s emotional state and tailor contextual ads to him. If he is sad, it will show one type of content, if he is happy, another.

    Emotional avatar technologies will find application in virtual spaces and conferences. “Last year, large international conferences created virtual spaces where participants who could not come physically entered virtual rooms through their avatars. If these avatars are made more emotional, with realistic facial expressions and gestures, the interaction experience will be much better,” the scientist notes. There is also an entertainment direction – movement transfer. “Imagine: I upload a short video in which I am simply in a room and make ordinary movements. The system analyzes and creates a digital model of me. Then I upload another video, where, for example, a professional dancer performs a break dance. The technology replaces the dancer with me, and the result is a realistic video where I masterfully dance a break dance. Similar technologies are actively developing around the world. Large research centers and companies offer various approaches to solving this problem,” explains Dmitry Ryumin.

    There is potential for using multimodal artificial intelligence in the field of psychological support. “We can try to recognize not only short-term emotions, but also long-term conditions, such as anxiety disorders, emotional burnout, or cognitive impairment. Of course, there are ethical issues and problems with obtaining data for training systems, but the direction is very promising,” says Dmitry Ryumin.

    Another area of development is voice assistants for smart homes. According to the scientist, bimodal recognition is most relevant in this case, since many people would prefer to maintain the privacy of their living space and would not want to connect cameras. “The analysis will be carried out mainly based on speech, which we can convert into text. This approach allows us to work with two modalities simultaneously. I have several voice assistants installed at home. And I regularly encounter a problem: the system does not always correctly interpret speech commands. Sometimes, in one minute, the assistant can change its “mood” or manner of response several times, which, frankly speaking, is irritating,” the head of the laboratory summarizes.

    The task of researchers who train large language and generative models is to make the decision-making process of a neural network transparent. According to the head of the laboratory, explainable artificial intelligence is a direction that has been actively developing in recent years.

    By receiving a decoding of the model’s “train of thought”, any professional can critically evaluate the result obtained: agree with something, question something. This creates an opportunity for feedback and objectivity in decision-making.

    How to teach a neural network to recognize emotions?

    Modern research into multimodal models requires powerful technology, cross-disciplinary specialists and large amounts of data.

    Computing base. Dmitry Ryumin has been working with neural networks for more than eight years. According to him, the main emphasis used to be on RAM and the processor, but today the central role is played by graphic accelerators (GPU). The power and number of available video cards directly determine the speed of training neural network models, the number of possible experiments and the volume of processed data.

    “Therefore, it is important not only to conduct research, but also to develop the computing base. For example, supercomputer of the Higher School of Economics we see how these resources affect the quality of scientific experiments. It is especially valuable to involve students, starting from the undergraduate level, in working with such systems — to teach them how to interact with high-performance computing clusters, to give them the opportunity to train models of varying complexity. This creates a continuous educational chain: students who have mastered working with advanced equipment can subsequently be involved in research work in laboratories.”

    Working with databases. Teaching large language models to recognize and reproduce emotions is a complex, multi-stage process. And neural networks are now taking part in it. For example, open AIs help automate data collection and annotation: they quickly collect texts with a given emotional coloring. “This radically reduces labor costs compared to traditional manual tagging, when you had to hire people for painstaking work. A general trend is noticeable: many research teams are trying to adapt models to work with emotions. Despite the fact that such attempts are not yet ideal and the models continue to make mistakes, the direction is actively developing,” says Dmitry Ryumin.

    Cross-disciplinary research. Modern research in the field of multimodal models involves interdisciplinarity. Thus, Dmitry Ryumin is now launching a joint project within the framework of the “Fundamental Research Program” with Laboratory of Social and Cognitive Informatics in modeling cognitive and affective processes and human states. “By combining our departments and laboratories, we are creating a strong interdisciplinary platform for the development of affective technologies. Such cooperation is extremely valuable: our fellow sociologists, although not specializing directly in training neural network models, including large language and generative models, bring deep theoretical expertise. Their knowledge becomes a fundamental basis for training our models,” says the head of the Natural Language Laboratory.

    The Natural Language Laboratory welcomes undergraduate and graduate students who are knowledgeable in programming, linguistics, psychology, and sociology.

    Natural Language Laboratory is an interdisciplinary researcher in machine learning and natural language processing, studying fundamental properties of language, computation, and learning that can contribute to a better understanding of language in general.

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Politics with Michelle Grattan: Jim Chalmers and Angus Taylor on tax top-ups and budget bottom lines

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    As the election starter’s gun is about to be fired, Tuesday’s budget announced modest income tax cuts as the government’s latest cost-of-living measure. The Coalition has opposed the tax relief, with Peter Dutton’s Thursday budget reply to put forward his policy counters on the cost of living.

    Meanwhile, the domestic economic debate is being conducted as President Donald Trump prepares to unveil more tariffs, which are likely to produce further uncertainty in the world economy.

    On this podcast we are joined by Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor.

    Chalmers says the government is making every last-minute effort to argue against Australia being hit with more US tariffs. He’s ready to make personal representations if that’s thought useful.

    I’ve been discussing that with Don Farrell, the minister for trade, whether or not that would be helpful to some of the efforts that he’s currently engaged in. So we’re working as a team on it. We’re working out the best [and] most effective ways to engage with the Americans. Again, speaking up for and standing up for our national interest.

    We’re not uniquely impacted by the tariffs either already imposed or proposed. But we’ve got a lot of skin in the game here. We’re a trading nation, we generate a lot of prosperity on global markets.

    A criticism from some about the budget was that climate change wasn’t mentioned explicitly. Chalmers takes issue with that.

    I would have thought that an extra A$3 billion for green metals, which is about leveraging our traditional strengths and resources, our developing industries and the energy transformation to create something that the world needs, I think that’s a climate change policy.

    And also the Innovation Fund, another $1.5 billion or so for the Innovation Fund in terms of sustainable aviation fuels, that’s a climate policy and also we’re recapitalising another couple of billion for the Clean Energy Finance Corporation.

    So in every budget, we’ve made new investments in climate change and in energy and this week’s budget was no different in that regard.

    Angus Taylor is scathing about Labor’s “top-up” tax cuts, which were the budget’s centrepiece, saying:

    A government that has overseen an unprecedented collapse in our living standards, unrivalled by any other country in the world, and they’re trying to tell Australians that 70 cents a day, more than a year from now, is a solution to that problem?

    It’s laughable, it is not even going to touch the sides, it’s Band-Aid on a bullet wound. It’s a cruel hoax. And frankly, the idea that this is good government is absolutely laughable.

    On what change of approach a Coalition government would take, Angus Taylor points to the “fiscal rules that we adhered to when we were last in government”.

    They were on the back of the rules that were established in the Charter of Budget Honesty that was established by Peter Costello in the 1990s to make sure your economy grows faster than your spending. That doesn’t mean spending doesn’t grow, it just means your economy grows faster.

    So both of those things matter, a faster growing economy and managing your spending so that it’s not growing faster. Jim Chalmers doesn’t get that.

    Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. Politics with Michelle Grattan: Jim Chalmers and Angus Taylor on tax top-ups and budget bottom lines – https://theconversation.com/politics-with-michelle-grattan-jim-chalmers-and-angus-taylor-on-tax-top-ups-and-budget-bottom-lines-253112

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Students of the Faculty of Economics and Management learned about ways to digitize military events and their heroes

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering –

    Dmitry Kutovoy with a portrait of a SVO participant in 3D

    As part of patriotic education for students of the Faculty of Economics and Management, a seminar “Heroes” was held, during which students listened to a lecture by Dmitry Kutovoy, a specialist in working with youth in the section “Theory and Practice of Search Work” of the teenage and youth club “Unconquered Frontier” of the Krasnoselsky District of St. Petersburg. He is the founder of the Civic-Patriotic Center “Victory”, the commander of the youth search squad “Ligovsky”, a deputy of the seventh convocation of the Uritsk municipal district, the winner of the grant project for the preservation of the historical heritage of Russia “That which is impossible to forget” and the project “Through the Ages”, a competition for the provision of a subsidy from the Committee on Youth Policy, the winner and prize-winner of the regional stage of the Professional Skills Competition. He was awarded the badge of distinction “For contribution to the perpetuation of the memory of those who died defending the Fatherland.”

    “Our club has been involved in the patriotic direction, including educational activities in educational institutions and search work, for ten years now. Over these years, we have seen that many methods of perpetuating memory have become outdated, so we decided to diversify them in order to keep up with the times and achieve greater understanding and interest among the younger generation. To this end, the club members have developed digital projects that have been well received by young people,” said Dmitry Kutovoy.

    “About the War” is one of such projects. Its essence lies in the preparation and digitalization of information about exhibits transferred by search engines to patriotic museums of educational institutions. Thus, museums receive labels with a QR code, by clicking on which you can read informative articles about the exhibits.

    Another project is “What is Impossible to Forget”. It is about perpetuating memorials, which are now presented in the digital environment. The lecturer recalled that in 1941, the German army planned to capture Leningrad through the Krasnoselsky District, and the district was on the front line of the city’s defense until the blockade was lifted. Fierce battles took place here. This explains the large number of memorials in these places. However, today many representatives of the younger generation do not know who they are for. This project helps to educate them in this direction.

    “Each memorial is presented in a 3D model and has its own authentic tragic story. For example, in Polezhaevsky Park there is a mass grave known as the grave with children. Three unknown soldiers and two children are buried there – residents of the village of Klinovo, who died on September 18, 1941, during the battle for this village. These are 16-year-old Kolya Tikhomirov and 14-year-old Sonya Lyashkevich. They ran out to meet our soldiers and immediately came under fire: the Red Army soldiers and Kolya died on the spot, his brother Tolya was seriously wounded and was treated in the hospital until 1944. Sonya died in the evening of the same day from her wounds. This project is a clear example of perpetuating the memory of events and people,” Dmitry Kutovoy emphasized.

    The “Through the Ages” project was initially dedicated to presenting military uniforms from different eras in 3D models. The authors of the project put them on, they were scanned and brought into the digital environment. Now the project has been expanded with SVO fighters: club members travel to new regions and scan them. This is how a digital 3D model of a person of real size is obtained. The model can be reduced and printed, including on a 3D printer. The soldier statues presented by the lecturer are printed digital copies of real people.

    Another project is called “No Statute of Limitations”. It is being implemented in cooperation with the Investigative Committee. Its goal is to identify new facts of the genocide of the Soviet people during the war, in particular, the shooting of civilians in Pavlovsk in 1942. Due to technical reasons, their remains have not yet been found, but the remains of nine Red Army defenders of the city have been raised. One of them has a living daughter, she is 100 years old. For further study, the remains are scanned to clarify the causes of death, the places where the bullets hit. Based on this knowledge, it is possible to partially recreate their appearance.

    “All projects are a good method of studying historical facts with explanations. Sponsors, deputies, grants and state subsidies help us create them. This once again emphasizes the understanding of the importance of our work at all levels,” the lecturer concluded.

    First-year student Daniil Li believes that the lecture was interesting and informative. “We were shown new ways of perpetuating the memory of those killed during the Great Patriotic War and history in general using new technologies and digital solutions. I learned how and why historical information, memorials, and soldiers’ uniforms are digitized: using a barcode, you can find comprehensive information on a topic of interest at any time. This is important for all generations of our country,” he noted.

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: We invite you to the creative competition Brand Education

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    The Institute of Marketing invites you to participate in the traditional student competition Brand Education.

    The competition has become a reflection of the global and domestic economy’s aspirations for responsible consumption and sustainable development. It brings together creative students and high school students interested in developing professional competencies in the field of creating and promoting sustainable brands.

    To participate in the first stage of the competition, you must register before April 7 and send your project work to brandeducation@yandex.ru.

    Competition directions and nominations:

    University brand promotion: media activity – promoting the university in the digital environment (posting press releases, maintaining social media pages, etc.); television activity – videos about the university, department, etc.; advertising activity – posting posters, distributing leaflets, leaflets and other advertising materials; PR activity – positioning the university in online and offline media, strengthening its reputation, interacting with target audiences. Social entrepreneurship: civic initiatives, socially significant projects, development of volunteerism and volunteer work; environmental projects; Internet startups aimed at developing universities; sustainable business development projects. Initiatives of the year: green technologies in the organization’s infrastructure; sustainable packaging in the culture of responsible consumption; sustainable design and environmental responsibility; creative poster for social advertising.

    Participants of the competition can indicate one or several nominations when registering. The jury will evaluate the projects and publish a list of the lucky ones who made it to the finals on April 17.

    The second stage (final) of the competition will be held from April 18 to 30 in person at the Department of Services Marketing and Brand Management of the Institute of Marketing.

    Details about the competition are available on the Brand Education Telegram channel https://t.me/brand_education.

    The competition is organized by the Department of Services Marketing and Brand Management of the Institute of Marketing, which traditionally studies the problems of forming and developing sustainable brands, and trains specialists in the field of their design and capitalization.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 03/26/2025

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK-Southeast Asia Tech Week 2025 in Manila

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    UK-Southeast Asia Tech Week 2025 in Manila

    The UK Government recently hosted UK-Southeast Asia Tech Week in Manila, driving innovation, collaboration and investment.

    His Majesty’s Ambassador Laure Beaufils (second from right) and His Majesty’s Trade Commissioner Martin Kent (rightmost) sign a Strategic Partnership with Fintech Alliance Philippines, represented by Martha Borja and Lito Villanueva, to enhance UK-Philippines cooperation in the fintech sector, driving financial inclusion and technological advancement.

    Under the theme “Bridging Boundaries, Building a Resilient, Innovative, and Inclusive Tech Ecosystem,” the event held from 24 to 25 March 2025 showcased British cutting-edge technology and expertise while fostering partnerships to strengthen the region’s tech landscape.

    His Majesty’s Trade Commissioner for Asia Pacific, Martin Kent led the delegation of 12 pioneering British artificial intelligence (AI) and data companies, exploring opportunities for collaboration with Philippine partners in the tech ecosystem. He stated:

    The UK is a global leader in science and technology, with our tech ecosystem worth US$1.2 trillion – the 3rd largest in the world after the US and China.

    I am delighted to lead this delegation of cutting-edge companies to Manila for UK-Southeast Asia Tech Week to represent the UK’s tech prowess. The UK is committed to building opportunities for mutual prosperity with the Philippines, and I look forward to the innovation and new partnerships that will unfold from this week.

    Companies including NCC Group, iProov and Revolut took centre stage during the UK Tech Showcase, demonstrating their latest innovations in cybersecurity, biometric authentication, and digital banking.

    Panel discussions on AI and cybersecurity were conducted, providing insights on latest trends, emerging threats and best practices. The discussions also underscored the need for collaboration to address common challenges.

    Furthering the UK and Philippine tech partnership, His Majesty’s Ambassador Laure Beaufils signed a Strategic Partnership with Fintech Alliance Philippines to enhance cooperation in the fintech sector, driving financial inclusion and technological advancement across the industry. She shared:

    The UK is proud to be a long-standing partner in the Philippines’ digital journey, supporting initiatives that foster innovation, improve cybersecurity resilience and develop a skilled tech workforce.

    British Embassy Manila and Kickstart Ventures, the Philippines’ largest corporate venture capital firm, also launched the UK Tech Growth Programme. This new collaboration is designed to match UK startups to receive potential investment from Kickstart Ventures through The Ayala Corporation Technology Innovation Venture Fund (ACTIVE Fund), the largest venture capital fund to come out of the Philippines.

    Kickstart Ventures Managing Partner and Co-Founder Minette Navarrete said:

    We recognise the vital role of forging partnerships beyond borders in fuelling innovation that benefits all– a commitment we take to heart at Kickstart. Our collaboration with the British Embassy is integral to this commitment, allowing us to lead transformative investments with UK startups and bring in tech-driven solutions that ensure mutual growth.

    Ambassador Beaufils added:

    Technology is not just about infrastructure—it’s about partnerships, trust, and shared progress. The UK is working hand in hand with the Philippines on this, supporting it to expand its tech ecosystem.

    UK-Southeast Asia Tech Week 2025 reaffirms the UK’s commitment to driving innovation, strengthening partnerships, and shaping a resilient and inclusive tech ecosystem across the region.

    The delegation includes British Companies Content Guru, CyberQ Group, Encompass, Intelligent AI Solutions, Kraken IM, Newcastle University, Open Data Institute, Smart Pension, Summatic, Sumsub, Synectics and Veracity Trust Network APAC.

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    Published 26 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: With the support of the State University of Management: “School in Nekrasovka” becomes a forge of banking personnel

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    GUU and “School in Nekrasovka” will create entrepreneurship and environmental classes. Agreements on this were reached during a meeting held on March 25, 2025 at the State University of Management between Rector Vladimir Stroyev and the school director, Deputy Chairperson of the Commission on Education and Youth Policy of the Moscow City Duma Maya Bulaeva.

    Also present at the meeting from the GUU side were Vice-Rector Dmitry Bryukhanov and Advisor to the Rectorate Nikolay Mikhailov, Director of the Career Guidance Center Elena Likhatskikh and her deputy Andrey Kolchin. And from the guests side – Deputy Director of the school for maintenance Olga Shuvanova and partner-employer, representative of Alfa-Bank Dmitry Belyavsky.

    At the beginning of the meeting, welcoming the guests, the rector called the State University of Management a “district-forming university” since residents and enterprises of Vykhino-Zhulebino use the university’s infrastructure, its swimming pool, sports complex, assembly hall, and the former prefect of the South-Eastern Administrative District Vladimir Zotov still actively works at the Department of State and Municipal Management.

    Director of the School in Nekrasovka Maya Bulaeva shared that she has been trying to build a school-university-enterprise line for a long time, but has not been able to establish connections with the middle management. The school actively cooperates with Alfa-Bank within the framework of the Moscow Department of Education and Science project “Entrepreneurial Class”. “The school works, the bank invests, but ultimately does not receive results in the form of young specialists. We ask for help to fill this gap,” Maya Valeryevna addressed the management of the State University of Management.

    Vladimir Stroyev agreed that today there is a noticeable shortage of personnel even in the most prestigious banks. Modern youth should be prepared in advance for a serious attitude towards their career, build personal connections, otherwise graduates will be immediately “taken apart” by competitors. “Our option of training specialists from school is very effective, it is almost an ideal scheme, especially since we are also geographically close,” the rector noted.

    Maya Bulaeva also suggested creating environmental classes, especially since the rector’s advisor Nikolai Mikhailov is the head of the department of “Ecology and Nature Management” and a member of the Russian Geographical Society. The university has a solid scientific foundation, and the “School in Nekrasovka” has excellent teachers who prepare winners of environmental Olympiads. In addition, there is already a partner in mind that is ready for cooperation – the Moscow Zoo.

    Vladimir Stroyev expressed readiness for any cooperation options, provided that the planned initiatives are worked out in detail. In addition, he, together with the vice-rector of the State University of Management Dmitry Bryukhanov, spoke about the unique system of project-based learning at our university, which allows employers to select potential employees starting from the first year without financial investments.

    During the further conversation it became clear that the School in Nekrasovka has developed the teaching of Chinese, which is useful for future specialists given Russia’s current orientation toward Eastern markets. Continuing this topic, Vladimir Stroyev told the guests about cooperation with the Ministry of Economic Development, in particular about foreign internships and the All-Russian competition of socially responsible initiatives of entrepreneurs and NPOs “My Good Business”, the third season of which is nearing completion. Maya Bulaeva was especially interested in the competition of social entrepreneurs and received an invitation from the rector to take part in the award ceremony for the winners.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 03/26/2025

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: A creative meeting with Alexander Zhigalkin will be held at the State University of Management

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

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

    On April 2, 2025, as part of the VI All-Russian Festival of Student Short Films “Kinosfera”, a creative meeting in the format of a public talk and an autograph session with Alexander Zhigalkin will take place at the State University of Management.

    Aleksandr Zhigalkin is a theater, film and dubbing actor, TV presenter, screenwriter, producer, director of such humorous projects as “6 frames” and “Thank God, you came!”, as well as the well-known television sitcoms “Daddy’s Daughters”, “Daddy’s Daughters. New” and “Voronins”. Winner of the Russian national television award “TEFI-2011” in the nomination “Director of a television program” for the sketch show “6 frames”.

    We are waiting for everyone to discuss the specifics of the production process in the film industry and ask questions of interest on April 2 at 15:00 in PA-215.

    Subscribe to the tg channel “Our State University” Announcement date: 03/26/2025

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Nine Polytechnicians Receive Potanin Foundation Grants

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    Nine teachers of Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University received grants from the Vladimir Potanin Foundation Scholarship Program. In total, the foundation supported 150 projects for redesigning and transforming master’s degree programs proposed by representatives of universities participating in the Scholarship Program.

    The competition received 574 applications from 68 universities. The supported initiatives of teachers are aimed at changing master’s degree programs. The projects pay special attention to student-centeredness, interdisciplinarity, updating of content and flexible management of educational content.

    The winners of the grant competition will receive 500 thousand rubles each. The projects must be implemented within a year.

    The winners of the competition from Polytechnic University were:

    Assistant of the Higher School of Project Activities and Innovations in the IMIT industry Salbek Beketov (project “Redizin course“ Mathematical models of technical management facilities ”due to the creation and integration of the adaptive module according to optimization methods”);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Public Administration, IPMEIT Andrei Burmistrov (project “Digital transformation of the training course“ Strategic personnel management in IT organization ””);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Project Activities and Innovations in the IMMIT industry Alexei Gintsyak (project “Comprehensive improvement of the course on digital modeling of production processes as a configured educational product”);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Project Activities and Innovations in the IMIT industry Tatyana ITS (project “Redizin program of the master’s program by re-taxing training courses into independent modules that form universal and general professional competencies using a new design-oriented training model”);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Production Management of IPMEIT Anastasius Klimin (project “Redizin discipline of the training of masters“ Digital marketing ””);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Business Engineing Ipmeit Nikolai Paklin (project “Analytics of self-service and artificial intelligence: redesigning course on machine learning”);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Production Management of IPMEIT INGA Skvortsova (the project “Improving the practice-orientation and redesign of the master’s program“ Energy Management ””);
    Associate Professor of the Higher Engineering and Economic School, Head of the System Dynamics Nile Ipmeite Angi Schvediani (project “Multi-dimensional statistical analysis”);
    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Linguistics and Pedagogy of the GI Evgeny Tsimerman (project “Digital redesign of the master’s program“ English language in the context of international education ””).

    “Our university traditionally participates and wins in the Potanin Foundation’s Master’s program support competition. Last year, grants received four teachers, this year – nine, – said Vice-Rector for Educational Activities Lyudmila Pankova. – The winning projects are aimed at developing new courses within the framework of existing master’s programs, online components and online tools for taught courses, as well as introducing new teaching methods: project tasks, business games, cases, inclusion of project and production approaches, including with the participation of partner organizations and the industrial sector.”

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: New stops to appear in 12 districts of the capital

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    From March 29, 11 new stops will appear in the capital. Thanks to this, seven bus and electric bus routes will be adjusted. Transport will come closer to residential buildings, metro stations, the Moscow Central Circle, Moscow Central Diameters (MCD) and social facilities.

    “On the instructions of Sergei Sobyanin, we are placing stops near residential buildings, social facilities, rail frame stations and places of attraction. From March 29, we will add 11 new stops in 12 districts of the capital, buses and electric buses of 22 routes will stop at them. We will continue to develop the network of ground transport routes and introduce new stops where necessary,” said the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Transport and Industry

    Maxim Liksutov.

    Where will the new stops appear?

    New stops will appear on the following routes:

    — routes No. 16 and 32k in Zelenograd will be extended to the stop “Serednikovskaya Street”;

    — a stop will be added near the Bibirevo metro station on Prishvina Street for buses of route No. 284. They will stop in the same place as buses No. 282, 353, 503, 587, 618, 705, 771 and H9;

    — stops will appear near the Timiryazevskaya metro station — buses No. 519, 539 and C532 will arrive closer to exit No. 5 of the metro;

    — routes #764 and C768 will be extended to a new stop at Kuryanovo MCD-2 station. At the same time, route #646 will start operating under a new number — #764. It will be more convenient for Maryino residents to get to the MCD;

    — a stop called “Severny Bulvar, 6” will be added for routes No. 23, 380 and M54 when traveling towards the Otradnoye metro station. Instead of the “Dental Clinic” stop, residents will use the new stop;

    — a stop called “Yakovlevskoye” will be added in the center of the settlement of the same name for routes No. 868, 1002 and C117. The old stop “Yakovlevskoye” on Dorognaya Street will receive a new name “Dorognaya Street”;

    — for routes No. 153, 553, E12, M16 and H11, stops will be added at exits No. 7 and 8 from the Novatorskaya metro station.

    In addition, new oncoming stops will appear:

    — “Institute of Epidemiology” — next to route No. 570;

    — “Turn to Voronovo” — next to route No. 1004;

    — “Peoples’ Friendship University” metro station — next to route C976.

    Where new stops have already appeared

    Since the beginning of the year, about 40 new stops have appeared in the capital on more than 70 bus and electric bus routes. In total, more than 50 routes were adjusted and improved last winter, and new ground transport stops were added. Thanks to this, buses and electric buses began to approach closer to important social and transport facilities.

    Since January 18, 14 new stops have been introduced on the following routes:

    — No. 357, 359, 362, 400, 851, 865, 865k in North-West Administrative District;

    — No. 911a, 889 in TiNAO;

    — No. 512 in the North-Eastern Administrative District;

    — No. 838, 887, 864, C797, C827 in the Southern Administrative District.

    On February 1, 10 stops were introduced in different districts:

    — on routes No. 188, 172, 769, 262, 639, C17 in the South-West Administrative District;

    — on routes No. 438, 624, 690, 695, S679, M6 in the South-Eastern Administrative District;

    — on route No. 570 in the Northern Administrative District;

    — on routes No. 925, 940, 956, 969, 969k, 998, C949 in TiNAO;

    — on route No. 587 in the North-Eastern Administrative District;

    — on route No. 732 in ZAO;

    — on routes No. 48, 294, 291 in North-West Administrative District;

    — on routes E66, No. 265, 78, 975 in the Eastern Administrative District.

    Since March 1, nine new stops have been introduced on 24 routes:

    — No. 324, 358 in the North-West Administrative District;

    — No. 145, 226, 250, 261, 404, 752, 196, 699, 816 and C13 in the South-Western Administrative District;

    — No. 446, 504 in TiNAO;

    — No. 862, 32, 366, 470, 116, C369 in ZAO;

    – No. 503, 282, 353, 618 in NEAD.

    In accordance with the objectives of the national project “Infrastructure for life” In Moscow, much attention is paid to the modernization of social and municipal infrastructure, including increasing the number of convenient public transport routes and updating the rolling stock. In addition, within the framework of the national project, Moscow has begun developing the Central Transport Hub. It will become a single circuit with regular suburban rail transport for more than 30 million residents of 11 regions of Russia.

    Since the beginning of the year, 29 ground transportation routes have been adjusted in Moscow and two new ones have been opened

    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.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151720073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Applications are now being accepted for the children’s competition “Create a new Muscovite card”

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The capital has begun accepting applications for the children’s drawing competition “Create a New Muscovite Card.” This was reported byDepartment of Information Technology. Participants will have to draw the heroes of famous Russian fairy tales and epics on the streets of Moscow. The author of the best work will go toStroganov Children’s Academy of Design, and his drawing will appear on Muscovite cards.

    Moscow schoolchildren aged seven to 14 years can take part in the competition. Applications are accepted until April 13 on a special page.

    “The last time the design of the Muscovite card changed was in 2018. Today, young city residents can create their own card design with their favorite fairy-tale characters. There is nothing more sincere than children’s drawings. We invite Moscow schoolchildren to show their creative talents and compete for the main prizes of the competition, and all voters to look at their hometown through the eyes of children,” said Ivan Buturlin, General Director of the State Unitary Enterprise “Moscow Social Register”.

    A parent or legal representative can apply for a child to participate in the competition. To do this, you need to log in to the competition page via Mos ID and fill out the form. You can send up to three drawings.

    The selection of competition entries will take place in several stages. First, the expert jury will select 30 drawings for the shortlist in each of two age groups: from seven to 10 years old and from 11 to 14 years old. Then, on the competition page and in the Active Citizen project, Muscovites will select 15 works in each age category that will make it to the final. Young Muscovites will also be able to vote for their favorites in the Active Citizen for Children project.

    The final stage will be voting, which will determine one Grand Prix winner, as well as winners of first, second and third places in each age group. Voting will take place in the Active Citizen project and on the Active Citizen for Children platform.

    The winners of the competition will have the opportunity to attend a tour and master classes inRussian State University of Art and Industry named after S.G. Stroganov, as well as memorable gifts from the art supply store. The winner of the Grand Prix will be able to study at the Stroganov Children’s Academy of Design, and a limited edition Muscovite card will be designed based on his/her competition illustration.

    The announcement of the results and the awarding of the winners will take place on June 1 in the Smart City pavilion at VDNKh. An exhibition of the finalists’ drawings will also open there. All the winners’ works will be published on the competition website and the Active Citizen project services.

    The Muscovite card with a unique design selected based on the results of the competition will be issued during the 2025/2026 academic year. It will be available for registration from August 1 on the mos.ru portal. It will be available to children up to and including 14 years of age who are receiving the card for the first time or are participants in the competition.

    The competition is being held by the Department of Information Technology with the support of the capital Department of Culture and the State Institution “New Management Technologies”.

    Muscovite card — one of the main social projects of the capital. It is issued to residents of Moscow and provides them with personal access to the city infrastructure. It can be obtained students schools and colleges, students, pensioners, people with disabilities, children and parents from large families andother categories of citizens.

    You can find out more about the map at telegram channel project, as well as from the mini-series “Moscow in digital”.

    How to get a Muscovite card

    You can apply for a Muscovite card on the mos.ru portal. This requires a standard or full account. Children over 14 can do this on their own, but for children under 14, a parent or other legal guardian must apply for the service.

    You can check the status of the card production in your personal account on the mos.ru portal in the “Applications and notifications” section, using the service “Checking the manufacturing status of the Muscovite card”, as well as by calling the hotline: 7 495 539⁠-55⁠-55 and in official groups on social networks “VKontakte” And“Classmates”.

    The card will be ready within 30 days from the date of application. Notification about the possibility of receiving it will be sent to your personal account on the mos.ru portal and by e-mail. Preschoolers over seven years old, school and college students can pick up the ready card at the educational institution. Those who are studying in private schools or outside Moscow, as well as other preferential categories of citizens – at the selected center of state services “My Documents”.

    Receipt of a Muscovite card for a student must be confirmed in the personal account on mos.ru within 90 days. In other cases, this is not required.

    The creation, development and operation of the e-government infrastructure, including the provision of mass socially significant services, as well as other services in electronic form, corresponds to the objectives of the national project “Data Economy and Digital Transformation of the State” and the regional project of the city of Moscow “Digital Public Administration”.

    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.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151801073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The conference “Reconstruction and restoration of architectural heritage” has started at SPbGASU

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Conference Opening

    On March 24, the V National (All-Russian) Scientific and Practical Conference with International Participation “Reconstruction and Restoration of Architectural Heritage” (RRAN-2025) started at SPbGASU.

    The partners of the conference are the Government of St. Petersburg, the Committee for State Control, Use and Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments of St. Petersburg, the Non-Commercial Partnership “Russian Association of Restorers (Rosregionrestavratsiya)” with the participation of the companies “Friedlander Paints”, REMMERS LLC and RUNIT LLC.

    Nadezhda Akulova, member of the conference organizing committee, associate professor of the Department of Architectural and Urban Heritage of SPbGASU, reported that these conferences have been held within the walls of our university for more than 10 years. For the last five years, they have been held with international participation and are called “Reconstruction and Restoration of Architectural Heritage”, which corresponds to the official names of the federal state educational standards, according to which specialists in the restoration industry are trained. Professionals from St. Petersburg, Moscow, Baku, Tashkent, Kazan, Vladivostok, Nizhny Novgorod, Rostov-on-Don, Pskov, Vladimir, Tomsk, Astrakhan, Karelia, Irkutsk, Crimea and many other cities and regions of Russia and abroad have participated and are participating in the conferences.

    “I am glad to see specialists of various restoration specialties, representatives of state protection agencies, restoration architects, restoration process managers, restoration work producers, managers of restoration materials organizations and managers who train personnel at the level of higher and secondary education. Such symbiosis has a beneficial effect on the preservation of our restoration industry,” said Nadezhda Akulova.

    At the plenary session on March 25, Svetlana Golovina, First Vice-Rector of SPbGASU, addressed the participants with a greeting. Svetlana Gennadyevna outlined a wide range of topical issues that will be at the center of discussion for five days: monumental restoration, engineering aspects of restoration, construction restoration materials, preservation of cultural heritage sites, as well as training of specialists – both in basic and additional professional programs, retraining and advanced training programs.

    Andrey Ermakov, Head of the Department of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation for the Northwestern Federal District, shared his point of view that restoration is a branch of culture, and the preservation of cultural heritage sites is a necessary component of self-identity.

    Vladimir Tsoi, Deputy Chairman of the Leningrad Region Government and Chairman of the Committee for the Preservation of Cultural Heritage, made a welcoming video address. Vladimir Olegovich wished the conference participants fruitful work and acquaintance with the monuments of the Leningrad Region and St. Petersburg.

    The welcoming message from Alexey Mikhailov, Chairman of KGIOP, was read by Yulia Bogacheva, Deputy Chairman of the Committee. Alexey Vladimirovich noted the high level of involvement of SPbGASU in current issues of urban development and adaptation of cultural heritage sites and the importance of exchanging practical experience.

    Tatyana Chernyaeva, Chairperson of the Russian Association of Restorers, Acting Director of the State Autonomous Cultural Institution of the Leningrad Region “International Restoration Center”, emphasized the need to involve the scientific community in the development of legislative initiatives. Events such as the conference are necessary to develop a common consolidated opinion and promote it to the state level.

    Sergey Semenov, professor of the Department of Urban Development at SPbGASU, expressed confidence that at least two thousand architect-restorers need to be graduated annually for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region, and another thousand for the rest of the North-West. Sergey Vladimirovich also reminded that the professional standard “Architect-restorer” expires in 2028, and it is time to start preparing its new version.

    Ekaterina Voznyak, Dean of the Faculty of Architecture at SPbGASU, invited colleagues from Russian universities and representatives of the professional community to collaborate.

    Rufat Guliyev, a practicing architect and lecturer at the Department of Restoration of Architectural Monuments of the Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Civil Engineering, shared his joy that he could not only participate in the conference, but also admire the unique beauty of St. Petersburg.

    Mikhail Mamoshin, chief architect and project manager of OOO Architectural Workshop Mamoshin, called for not differentiating between restoration, reconstruction and new construction. In his opinion, this is a single process, and graduates of architectural specialties need to have restoration skills.

    The conference will last until March 28. The program includes sections, round tables, master classes, and excursions.

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: ‘The bush calls us’: the defiant women who demanded a place on the walking track

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ruby Ekkel, PhD student in Australian History, Australian National University

    Fairfax Corporation (1932)

    ➡️ View the full interactive version of this article here.

    Ruby Ekkel does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. ‘The bush calls us’: the defiant women who demanded a place on the walking track – https://theconversation.com/the-bush-calls-us-the-defiant-women-who-demanded-a-place-on-the-walking-track-241126

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Regional Ministerial Budget Statement 2025-26

    Source: Workplace Gender Equality Agency

    On behalf of the Albanese Labor Government, I’m proud to deliver our fourth Regional Ministerial Budget Statement.

    I’d like to acknowledge the traditional custodians of where we are today, and pay my respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.

    Mr Speaker, across our first term in Government, our message to regional Australians has been loud and clear – your postcode shouldn’t be a barrier.

    Just because you grow up in Bega on the NSW Far South Coast, or in Gladstone in Central Queensland, and just because you live at Mount Gambier in regional South Australia, or in the Pilbara Region in outback WA – doesn’t mean that the services, and the opportunities available to you should be second best.

    I say this as a proud regional Member of this place, and on behalf of my fantastic regional colleagues here with me today. 

    I say this as someone that’s always lived in our regions – from Traralgon in regional Victoria, to Merimbula on the NSW Far South Coast – where I watched my parents work hard every day to build a small business, and to provide our family with a better life.

    A regional community where I myself now run a small business with my husband, and where we’re raising our kids.

    And I say this as someone that’s had the privilege of spending a lot of time talking to regional people across Australia – both as the Member for the Mighty Eden-Monaro, and as Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories.

    From the Hunter region in NSW, Caboolture in regional Queensland, Devonport in Tasmania – to communities across the 42,000 square kilometres in my electorate.

    Regional Australia is a great place to live, work, study, visit and invest – and I wouldn’t live anywhere else.

    Our regions generate a third of the nation’s economic output, and there’s so many opportunities that our Government wants to take advantage of.

    But you’d be living under a rock if you said life outside of our big cities doesn’t come without its unique challenges – it absolutely does. 

    Unlike those opposite though, on this side of the House we’re not shying away from that.

    I’m proud to be part of a Government that across its first term, has delivered record investments to improve the reliability and the accessibility of critical services that regional people rely on.

    To support more regional people to work and train closer to home – because you shouldn’t have to pack your bags to build your career. 

    To build more things in our own backyard, investing in the hard-work and know-how of regional people.

    To give regional Australians more support to buy or rent a home.

    To support local businesses and local economies to grow – with small businesses in particular the backbone of our regions.

    To ensure the local roads we drive every day to drop the kids off at school and to get to work, are safe, and keep pace with growing communities.

    To improve our major highways linking our cities to our regions, so more visitors support our local businesses, and experience everything we have to offer.

    To keep our regions connected and better prepared for natural disasters – something many regional communities, including across Eden-Monaro, have needed to rebuild from.

    And most importantly, to relieve immediate pressures on regional families and businesses.

    Which let’s not forget, those opposite talk a big game on – despite opposing every single cost of living measure to date, and committing to tearing apart every measure that’ll support regional Australians into the future.

    Because while we’re delivering record investments to Build Regional Australia’s Future, the wreckers opposite are determined to leave regional communities which aren’t the right colour on their spreadsheets behind.

    The Albanese Government is delivering better outcomes for every regional community – because we’re addressing the challenges, harnessing the opportunities, and taking the needs of our regions seriously. 

    Through our Regional Investment Framework, we’re ensuring targeted investments support regional people, the places they live, the services they need, and the industries that stimulate local economies.

    With investments through the 2025-26 Budget building on everything we’ve delivered across our first term. 

    Our number one priority has been easing pressures faced by regional families and businesses today, while supporting more work, training and economic opportunities outside of our big cites. 

    We’ve delivered tax cuts for every regional taxpayer – a huge impact for taxpayers in my own electorate of Eden-Monaro, putting an average of $1,633 back into their pockets, with another two tax cuts on the way – something those opposite just voted against.

    We’ve delivered $300 in Energy Bill Relief to millions of households and $325 to small businesses, along with cheaper childcare and cheaper medicines.

    We’ve cut $3 billion in student debt, with a further 20 per cent to be cut if we’re re-elected.

    And we’ve supported over 127,000 free TAFE places in our regions – from construction courses to childcare.

    We’re getting more people into industries screaming out for workers, after those opposite gutted the vocational education system during their failed decade.

    We’ve introduced legislation to make free TAFE permanent – something those opposite have said they’ll repeal, because as the Deputy Leader of the Opposition said in this very chamber – “if you don’t pay for it, you don’t value it.”

    But I want my kids and every regional person to know – your postcode and your bank balance shouldn’t limit your potential.

    Through this Budget we’ll provide additional cost-of-living relief, along with increased investments to remove study barriers.

    $1.8 billion to provide all households, and around one million small businesses, with an additional $150 in Energy Bill Relief.

    $800 million to expand our Help to Buy scheme to support more people get into their own home – including in our regions.

    This builds on the 32,000 regional Australians we’ve already helped into home ownership, through the Regional Home Guarantee.

    $626.9 million to support $10,000 incentive payments for construction sector apprentices – with $7.0 million to increase the Living Away from Home Allowance for apprentices.

    As an operator of a small plumbing business that hires apprentices, and having recently spent time with bricklaying apprentices at Queanbeyan – I know that every cent counts when you’re starting out, especially when you’re living away from home.

    That’s why we’re boosting apprentice wages and easing cost-of-living pressures – because we value their hard work, and we know that building this workforce is essential to delivering more regional homes.

    My mum, dad, brother, sister and husband all went to TAFE, which is why I’m incredibly proud to be part of a Government that’s strengthening the sector – and ensuring more regional people can build a better future. 

    Through this Budget, we’re delivering $407.5 million to states and territories, as part of the Better and Fairer Schools Agreement.

    Record funding to give our teachers, including in our regional schools, more support – to lift education standards, and to better support students from kindergarten through to year 12. 

    And if you want to go onto further study, existing investments like the 56 Regional University Study Hubs we’re delivering – from Port Augusta in South Australia, to Goulburn in my own electorate – will mean you don’t have to leave the region you love.

    A further $33.6 million will also flow to the Clontarf Foundation to support up to 12,500 First Nations boys and young men access better education support.

    We’re delivering record investments to continue improving the affordability and accessibility of regional healthcare – because when you need to see the doctor, and when you need to buy your script, your street address and wallet shouldn’t stop you. 

    We’ve already delivered $3.5 billion to triple the bulk billing incentive, supporting over 2.4 million additional claims across regional Australia.

    Through this Budget, we’re investing an additional $7.9 billion to deliver more bulk billing to all Australians, including in our regions.

    Having delivered the largest cut to the cost of medicines in the history of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, we’re now making cheaper medicines even cheaper.

    $689 million to bring a PBS script down to $25, keeping more money in the hip pockets of regional Australians – with our pensioners and concession cardholders to continue paying $7.70 for PBS medicines until 2030.

    $792.9 million to deliver more choice, lower costs and better health care for women – including the first PBS listing for new oral contraceptive pills in more than 30 years.

    Along with more bulk billing for long-term contraceptives, more endometriosis and pelvic pain clinics to treat more conditions, and more Medicare support for women experiencing menopause. 

    Regional health and aged care were left in crisis under those opposite – a mess the Albanese Government has been cleaning up from day one.

    We’ve delivered $17.7 billion to fund increases to the minimum award wage for aged care workers – to not only support and retain these critical workers – but to ensure that our loved ones get the care they need, as they get older.

    We’re delivering an additional $1.8 billion to strengthen our public hospitals and to reduce waiting times across Australia, bringing our hospital funding to a record $33.9 billion in 2025-26.

    We’ve also increased the number of regional GP training places, along with waiving HECS for doctors and nurses that work in our regions – getting more skilled workers where we need them most.

    Through this Budget, we’re investing $662.6 million to grow our health workforce.

    There will be hundreds more GP and rural generalist training places to grow the pipeline of future GPs – with fairer salary incentives for junior doctors who choose general practice as their specialty.

    100 more Commonwealth Supported Places for medical students a year from 2026, increasing to 150 more a year by 2028 – with a focus on encouraging students to pursue general practice in our regions.

    And hundreds of scholarships for nurses and midwives, to help meet our current and future demands.

    A re-elected Albanese Government will deliver another 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics across Australia, from Burnie in Tasmania, to Bega in my own electorate – with our $644.3 million investment.

    This builds on the 87 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics we’ve already delivered, which are making a huge difference.

    With 48 of these 137 clinics to be in our regions– from Broome in Western Australia, Townsville in Queensland, to Tamworth in New South Wales.

    The Urgent Care Clinic we delivered in Queanbeyan has already supported over 7,000 fully bulk billed presentations.

    Rusty, a local constituent of mine told me about the huge difference it made for him, when he had an infection.

    He walked right into the clinic and received the help he needed, for free – a service that’s also supported his children and grandchildren.

    As Rusty said, this type of clinic is critical to taking pressure off our hospitals – as we continue to rebuild the health sector.

    But regional services like this will cease to exist under those opposite, because you only have to look at the billions cut from Medicare by the Leader of the Opposition when he was Health Minister, to know their only plan for Medicare is cuts.

    No government has done more for regional services than the Albanese Government – but healthcare wasn’t the only service completely abandoned during the wasted decade by those opposite.

    We’re already investing $2.2 billion to strengthen regional communications, particularly in disaster-prone areas – after programs like the Mobile Black Spot Program were pork-barrelled by those opposite.

    Through our record investments in the NBN, we’ve fixed half of some streets being stuck on the unreliable copper network they rolled out, including just 15 minutes down the road at Jerrabomberra.

    Because it actually takes a little bit more than a string and a can to run a small business, and to work and study from home.

    In this Budget, we’re providing an additional $3.0 billion in equity funding to NBN Co to complete upgrades for all remaining Fibre to the Node premises, including connecting an additional 334,000 regional premises to high speed internet.

    A service that we can’t forget, would be sold off to the highest bidder under those opposite.

    We’re also introducing a Universal Outdoor Mobile Obligation – requiring telcos to provide access to mobile voice and SMS almost everywhere across Australia – which will have huge benefits for regional and remote communities, particularly during emergencies and disasters. 

    Natural disasters are something my own electorate of Eden-Monaro has felt deeply, which is why I’m proud the National Emergency Management Agency that we launched continues to support regional communities – most recently in Queensland and NSW during Ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred.

    That’s on top of our $1 billion Disaster Ready Fund continuing to support regional communities to be better prepared.

    And our additional $35 million investment to boost our national aerial fleet – giving regional communities more emergency support when they need it most.

    But it’s not just during disasters when our regions need reliable aviation.

    Despite the Leader of the Nationals in the Senate telling Sky News just last week that the Opposition had been fighting for a more competitive aviation sector – the reality is they’ve sat idle at the departure gate. 

    Those opposite did nothing with the Sydney Airports Slot Review handed to them in 2021 – something we’ve responded to with our Aviation White Paper.

    And they’ve said that keeping Rex Airlines’ regional routes operating during the voluntary administration process is sabotaging the sale process.

    I’m proud the Albanese Government has kept Rex’s regional flights in the air, with an $80 million loan facility to Rex Administrators, and additional support to reduce the debt Rex owes.

    Because for regional communities like mine, these flights are critical to our local economy, accessing important health services, and for getting around.

    The reality of living in our regions is we need to travel longer for some services, which is why we’ll continue standing up for a strong regional aviation sector.

    But travelling by car is generally how we get around, which is why we’ve already increased local road funding for every council.

    Roads to Recovery funding is going up from $500 million to $1 billion per year, road Black Spot funding increasing to $150 million per year, we’ve launched our $200 million per year Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program – and we’ve continued investing in major transport projects.

    Because every local community should have confidence in the roads they’re driving on.

    In his Budget reply last year, the Leader of the Nationals said those opposite would deliver the strong infrastructure funding pipeline that our regional communities need. 

    But let’s not forget, they were responsible for an infrastructure pipeline that below out from 150 projects to 800 projects, without a single dollar extra being added to the Budget, and without the delivery. 

    Regional communities deserve better than promises in press release with no follow through, which is why we continue to deliver critical projects to Build Regional Australia’s Future.

    Funding through this Budget includes $7.2 billion for Bruce Highway safety upgrades in Queensland, $200 million towards duplicating the Stuart Highway from Darwin to Katherine.

    $40 million for the Main South Road Upgrade in South Australia, and $1.1 billion towards upgrades along the Western Freeway in Victoria.

    After colour-coded spreadsheets from those opposite, we’ve delivered on our commitment to establish transparent grant programs that every postcode can apply for.

    Our $600 million Growing Regions Program is already supporting 112 projects, with 29 projects supported under our $400 million Regional Precincts and Partnerships Program so far. 

    I had the pleasure of visiting Wagga’s Lake Albert – one of this region’s most popular recreational sites, which will be completely transformed thanks to $4.4 million in Growing Regions Funding.

    Projects like this are making our regions better places to live, to work and to invest – but having more housing to attract and retain workers is something every community tells me they need.

    We’ve already committed $32 billion in housing measures, including over 13,000 homes nationally under the first round of our Housing Australia Future Fund – many of these in our regions.

    That’s more than those opposite delivered in an entire decade – when they had no plan for building, and their only idea for turning more keys was letting people raid their super for a deposit. 

    To their credit, they’ve now said they’ll fund enabling infrastructure – labelling this a fantastic idea.

    So fantastic, we’re already doing it – through our $1.5 billion Housing Support Program.

    Including $27.2 million to support upgrading Marulan’s sewage treatment in the Mighty Eden-Monaro – laying the foundations for more housing.

    Through this Budget, we’re delivering $54 million to turbocharge advanced manufacturing of prefabricated and modular homes, getting more homes into our regions where we need them most – lifting our total housing commitments to $33 billion. 

    More housing is a key part of how we’re Building Regional Australia’s Future, as is supporting our regional businesses and regional economies to grow.

    Under those opposite, car manufacturers left our shores, leaving our regional people behind. 

    But Labor has always had the back of regional manufacturing, and we’ve shown that again with our new investment of $2.4 billion with the South Australian Government to save the Whyalla Steelworks.

    Supporting 1,100 direct workers, and encouraging more investment into Australian made steel. 

    This builds on our existing $22.7 billion Future Made in Australia agenda, ensuring we build more in our own backyard – which includes over $500 million to boost Australia’s battery manufacturing capabilities, and $1 billion to supercharge the production of solar panels in our regions.

    Our investments are putting regional communities at the centre of industries of the future – unlocking more secure and well-paid regional jobs, and ensuring that we train and retrain regional workforces.

    This includes $38.2 million to boost the diversity of our STEM workforce, with a focus on supporting more women secure jobs in these critical industries.

    Through this Budget, we’re delivering further investments to Build Regional Australia’s Future – by leveraging the competitive advantages that come with our vast energy resources, world-leading agricultural sector, and regional innovation.

    $250.0 million to accelerate the pace of Australia’s growing domestic Low Carbon Liquid Fuels industry – helping to drive economic growth and jobs in regional areas.

    $1.0 billion under our Green Iron Investment Fund to boost green iron manufacturing in our regions.

    This builds on our existing commitment of $2.0 billion to support aluminium smelters transition to renewables – in places like Portland in Victoria, Tomago in NSW, and in Queensland’s Gladstone region.

    From our factories to our fields, we’re backing our regions – with $11.0 million to tackle established pests and weeds in our agriculture and forestry sectors – keeping them productive

    An additional $20 million for a new round of the On Farm Connectivity Program so farmers can use the latest technology to make their work more efficient.  

    And $20.0 million to encourage more Australians to buy Australian-made products, which will have huge benefits for regional economies – because so much of what we love and rely on comes from our regions.

    In his Budget reply last year, the Leader of the Nationals said the Opposition will take decisive action to give regional Australians a fair go.

    But all we’ve seen since then is those opposite continue to vote against every single cost of living measure, while petrifying regional communities with their Nuclear thought bubble.

    An idea that was announced with zero consultation, and most importantly – one that will deliver zero savings for regional Australians and their power bills. 

    Since my last Regional Budget Statement, the Albanese Government has continued to relieve pressures on regional families and businesses, while improving access to the services and support regional people rely on – regardless of their postcode.

    Through our 2025-26 Budget we’re delivering more energy bill relief, making cheaper medicines even cheaper, and providing extra support to get more regional Australians into their own home.

    We’re strengthening Medicare and expanding regional health services, delivering further investments to boost regional connectivity, and investing in more support to help build workforces in our in-demand sectors.

    That’s because only the Albanese Government is serious about Building Regional Australia’s Future.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: High-level dialogue held during Boao Forum for Asia

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    High-level dialogue held during Boao Forum for Asia

    Updated: March 26, 2025 13:38 Xinhua
    This photo taken on March 25, 2025 shows a scene at a high-level dialogue themed “China’s Reform and Economic Prospect” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Wu Xiaoqiu, president of China Capital Market Research Institute and dean of the National Finance Research Institute of Renmin University of China, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed “China’s Reform and Economic Prospect” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province on March 25, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Peng Sen, president of the China Society of Economic Reform, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed “China’s Reform and Economic Prospect” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province on March 25, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Huang Qifan, academic advisor of the China Finance 40 Forum, speaks at a high-level dialogue themed “China’s Reform and Economic Prospect” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province on March 25, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Guests attend a high-level dialogue themed “China’s Reform and Economic Prospect” during the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2025 in Boao, south China’s Hainan Province on March 25, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Press conference – Rockhampton, Queensland

    Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

    JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks very much for coming along. It’s great to be back in Rocky, and it’s particularly fantastic to be here with my friend JP. We were together only a couple of days ago in Canberra.

    On Monday we made a really big announcement worth $2.8 billion of extra Commonwealth funding for public schools right across Queensland, an agreement that was struck by the Prime Minister and the Queensland Premier as well as the two of us, working together in the interests of kids right across Queensland. And that investment over the next decade is going to make sure that all public schools right across Queensland are fully funded. 

    It’s the last piece in the puzzle to make sure that all public schools right across the nation are fully funded. And it’s going to change lives. It’s a classic example of two Governments working together. And that’s what today is all about as well. We got a great opportunity just a minute ago to meet the doctors of the future – young people that are studying medicine right now that are going to be doctors in Rocky in the years ahead.

    And what we’re announcing today is that the Australian Government will provide $80 million to help build the health sciences school that Rockhampton needs. It’s a health sciences academy for Year 10 to 12. The Premier made this commitment in the election campaign. I’m glad that the Commonwealth Government can contribute to help make this a reality. It’s a great example of two Governments working together – Commonwealth Government chipping in, State Government chipping in – to help make sure that young people in regional Australia get the skills they need to produce the doctors and the nurses and the ambos and the health science professionals that we need now and that we’re going to need in the years ahead. 

    And as we all know, if you study local, you’re more likely to stay local. If you become a doctor in Rocky – if you study medicine in Rocky, you’re more likely to become a doctor who works in Rocky. And that’s why this is so important. Young people while they’re still at high school, getting the skills they need to go and study a university degree in health sciences, and help make sure that we’ve got more doctors and nurses and ambos here in Rocky and across regional Queensland.

    I’ll hand over to you, mate.

    JOHN-PAUL LANGBROEK, QUEENSLAND MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks, Jason. Well, thanks, everyone, for being here today. And I want to thank Jason Clare, our Federal Minister, as well for the partnership that we’ve had over the last couple of months working on that public school funding scheme that we were able to finalise on Monday. But importantly today is another piece of the puzzle about the election commitment that we made about the new health sciences academy that we want to bring to central Queensland and Rockhampton specifically. 

    So, we really want to thank the Federal Government for the $80 million commitment. It’s an $80 million commitment by the Federal Government that’s going to be a big help in us delivering our election commitment. So, it’s great to be here with the vice-chancellor and two of our local MPs as well.

    But as Jason Clare has just mentioned, seeing the students in action and hearing their stories – many of them here from the local community – and it’s a very, very important partnership between the Federal Government, the State Government, our local health services and schools and, of course, the university.

    So, we’re very appreciative, and we know it’s going to lead to better outcomes. I was here just a month ago, here at the university and also at local high schools. And we know there are over 30 different jobs in health that young people can aspire to. And as Jason Clare has mentioned, if they study here, they’re more likely to stay here.

    We don’t expect everyone to stay here forever necessarily. We want them to travel and go see other places but come back to where your roots are and build a growing state that’s got increasing needs into the future. So, we’ll be working with Health Minister Tim Nicholls as well about delivering that increased workforce that we know we’re going to need over the next few years.

    I’ll hand over to Nick Klomp now, the Vice-Chancellor. Thanks for having us here, Nick.

    NICK KLOMP: Thanks. Thank you, I’m Nick Klomp, Vice-Chancellor and President of CQ University. CQ University is delighted about this cross-government announcement today of locating the Queensland Academy of Health Sciences here in Rockhampton. And, you know, almost on behalf of the community I want to congratulate Jason and JP and our local members here, Donna and Glen, for recognising the importance of workforce in the regions. It’s one of the things that is top of mind for everyone that lives here. It’s top of mind for businesses and communities, and no discipline is more important perhaps than the health disciplines.

    CQ University, we provide graduates, we train graduates in a whole range of health disciplines, from the regional medical pathway, nurses, doctors, psychologists, oral health, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, paramedics, and I could keep on going. We can’t produce enough graduates. That’s how important it is in the region. And this announcement of the Queensland Academy of Health Sciences helps build aspiration for people that are thinking they would like to get a head start in their studies, they’d like a career in health sciences. And CQ University just stands ready to work in partnership with the schools, with the state on what can we do to use this academy to really prioritise the potential of health careers in the region.

    It’s really exciting. We need all the graduates in health science we can get, and, of course, CQ University recognises our obligation to help produce those graduates. So, a great day for health sciences. 

    DONNA KIRKLAND: Thank you. So, what we see today is the coming together of a number of stakeholders, different levels of Government, and that in itself speaks to the need for regional health services in our area. So very excited about this announcement today. And I want to continue to just reiterate that 70 per cent of the people who study in the regions stay in the regions. And that’s what we are wanting out of this. We’ve just been next door speaking to some of our doctors to be – four of those from Rockhampton, another from Gladstone – all with aspirations to continue to stay here in the regions to be of service to our community. 

    And so it will be that Grades 10, 11 and 12 right across Central Queensland will be able to access the Health Services Academy. This is a great outcome, and as the Member for Rockhampton and certainly Assistant Minister for Central Queensland I welcome this funding here today.

    GLEN KELLY: Glen Kelly, Member for Mirani. Well today what an announcement. I’m a great believer in education and keeping people in the bush from where they grow up. And just visiting in next door here and seeing the students of the future, our doctors of the future who have to study for seven years – seven years to become a doctor – that’s dedication for you. That really shows that these young people – teenagers coming into adults – are so focused on helping people with health issues and other things that might appear in their life.

    Today it’s a great honour to have Jason Clare, our Federal Education Minister. And obviously we’ve got Nick here, which we’ve seen so many times of late, and we have JP and obviously Donna Kirkland. It’s a great honour this for regional Queensland because if just keeps us focused on how important we are. And the doctors of the next generation, they’re just next door here, and with this announcement of $80 million to support these ones just next door and the coming on is so important to us. Thank you.

    JOURNALIST: So just on the funding, will that carry through regardless of the outcome of the federal election? 

    CLARE: Certainly, if the Albanese Government is returned that money will be delivered, and we’ll work with JP and the team to make sure that this school is built over the course of the first term, I think it is, of your Government. I can’t speak for if we’re not returned.

    JOURNALIST: And so, the $80 million, was that just Federal funding?

    CLARE: That’s a Federal contribution. The State Government will make an important contribution as well. We’re going to work really closely with Nick and the team at the University. There’s the potential for co-location here at the University. We’ve just got to go through the details of that to see what might be possible. If that’s possible, that’s great because young people going to school on university grounds get a chance to see what life is like once you go to university before you even get there.

    The other thing that makes this special is that there’s the potential to earn credits while you’re doing your studies at high school for the degree or for the diploma that you do once you leave high school and start a health science course, whether it’s a TAFE course or whether it’s a university degree.

    JOURNALIST: And why did the Government see this as a priority, and was there a lot of legwork bring this to fruition? 

    CLARE: Well, JP’s a former dentist – he’s good at pulling teeth! This is honestly a classic example of great teamwork. To get things done in this country it requires Australian Governments to work together – Commonwealth Governments and State Governments. Forget political parties; it’s about the people, it’s about what does a community need. This community needs more doctors, it needs more nurses, it needs more ambos, it needs more health professionals. And if we work together, we can get this done.

    JOURNALIST: And will this benefit students as well as the teachers and, if so, how so?

    CLARE: Will it benefit the students? 

    JOURNALIST: Will it benefit the community as well sorry?

    CLARE: I think it benefits the community. The ultimate goal here is that Rockhampton has more health professionals so that people who live in Rocky and call it home – my grandmother was born and raised in Rocky – have the health services they need and the health services that they deserve.

    Do you want to jump in?

    LANGBROEK: Well, look, I think there’s no doubt that it’s going to benefit teachers as well. It comes up with the university. When it comes to university and rankings, the more that you can have offerings at a university with local students it’s going to benefit lecturers, tutors and enhance the reputation of one of our finest universities. We’ve got nine in Queensland out of 40 nationally, and we want our universities to be seen as amongst the best in the country. And this is only going to help CQU as well as the students who are going to be here to benefit, as well as the local community. 

    ENDS

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: April Astronomical Events in Review: Moon and Pleiades Star Cluster Approach, Micromoon, and Lyrid Meteor Shower

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    Alfiya Nesterenko, head of the Vega observatory at NSU, spoke about objects that can be observed near the Moon in April 2025:

    Since the position of the Moon in the sky is known, finding objects near which the Moon passes in the sky becomes a simple task for anyone who takes the time to look at the evening sky.

    On April 1, Uranus will be near the crescent Moon, the distance at the moment of maximum approach: 4°40′. But only those in the central regions of the country will be able to see such an approach. In Novosibirsk, it will be morning. The time of approach: 02:47 GMT, and the time zone of Novosibirsk is GMT 7 hours.

    Uranus is a small and distant planet in the Solar System, with a magnitude of 5.8. Uranus can be observed with binoculars or a telescope in the constellation Aries.

    Around 4am on April 1st, there will be a very beautiful star cluster called the Pleiades near the Moon. If you look at the Pleiades through binoculars, you can see the outline of a small ladle with a short handle. The light from the crescent Moon will be small, so you can choose the shutter speed for photography so that both the Pleiades and the crescent Moon are distinguishable.

    This is the star cluster M52, one of a large number of open clusters in the sky, but quite bright and compact. Many star clusters are interesting because new stars are born in their depths. And this haze-veil that covers the stars of the Pleiades is the “material” from which stars are born.

    The photo of the Pleiades cluster, taken in 2023 by Mikhail Maslov, an engineer at our observatory, was taken using a lens with a focal length of 77 mm, which gave an increase of about 2.3 times. This is a summary image of the object, assembled from 54 shots, with an exposure of 15 seconds.

    The time of the closest approach of the Moon and the Pleiades constellation is 20:28 GMT, the minimum separation is 0°36′, the Pleiades (magnitude 1.2) are visible without binoculars with good vision, and with binoculars the cluster is distinguishable for any observer. The Pleiades are located in the constellation Taurus, not far from them you can easily find Alpha Tauri, the brightest star of the constellation, which is called Aldebaran, which in Arabic means “follower”: the star in the night sky makes its way after the Pleiades.

    On April 5, the Moon will be close to Mars, time of closest approach: 19:04-19:49 GMT, minimum separation – 2°12′.

    The brightness of Mars will be 0.5 magnitude, it will be visible in the sky with the naked eye in the constellation Gemini, next to two stars on the same line – Castor and Pollux.

    During the few days before and after April 10, there will be a conjunction of Mercury (1.0 star) and Saturn (1.2 star), which will approach to a minimum distance at 12:00 GMT (in Novosibirsk it will be 7 am), the distance at the moment of approach: 2°06′. Saturn will be in the constellation Aquarius, and Mercury – in the constellation Pisces. At the latitude of Novosibirsk, this conjunction will not be visible.

    On April 13, there will be a full moon, during which the moon will be at its smallest disk size, so this full moon will be a “micro moon.” The moon will appear 5.1% smaller and 11% dimmer than during a normal full moon. This is because the moon will be at the farthest point in its orbit, called apogee.

    Also in April, it will be possible to observe the Lyrid meteor shower, which reaches its maximum annually on April 22-23. Mikhail Maslov, an engineer at the Vega observatory of NSU, spoke about this in more detail:

    The Lyrid meteor shower is associated with comet C/1861 G1 (Thatcher), which orbits the Sun every 422 years. The comet’s orbit is close enough to Earth’s orbit that the material it ejects produces meteor activity each year, with a maximum of about 15-20 meteors per hour.

    The average annual zenith hourly number of Lyrid meteors at maximum, according to the International Meteor Organization IMO, is 18 meteors. At the same time, the solar longitude of the moment of maximum varies slightly from year to year, and for 2025 it falls on the period from 10:30 to 18:00 UT on April 22 (for Novosibirsk time this is from 17:30 on April 22 to 1:00 on April 23).

    The Lyrid shower is known for its bursts of activity in some years. The most recent such burst occurred in 1982, when hourly activity briefly reached 90 meteors. Also in the 20th century, bursts of activity up to about 100 meteors per hour were noted in 1922 and 1945. The results of calculations by Finnish researcher Esko Lyytinen show that these bursts are associated with the Earth passing through fresh cometary material ejected by the comet one revolution back (with a trail of one revolution). The same calculations indicate that the next bursts of the shower’s activity are likely in 2039 and 2040.

    Thus, no unusual manifestations of Lyrid activity are predicted for 2025 and typical activity for this stream is expected.

    The coordinates of the Lyrid radiant are α = 271°, δ = 34°, it is located in the sky between the constellations Lyra and Hercules, somewhat closer to the constellation Lyra, after which the stream got its name Lyrids. The radiant of the stream rises highest in the sky during the dark time of day towards morning, although at the end of April at the latitude of Novosibirsk the nights are already quite short, therefore even in the evening it is already quite high in the sky, at an altitude of approximately 25-30°, therefore the Lyrids can be observed as soon as it becomes dark enough, starting at approximately 11 pm and then throughout the night.

    The speed of entry of Lyrid meteors into the Earth’s atmosphere is 49 km/s, i.e. meteors of this stream can be classified as medium-speed. The Moon will be in the waning phase and will rise only at about 5 am, so it will create practically no interference for observations. At the same time, to ensure better conditions for observations, it is necessary to move away from large settlements and other sources of light pollution by a distance of 50-100 km; under a dark country sky, the number of meteors observed will be several times greater.

    Although the Lyrids are not the most active meteor shower, their active time is in the spring, when there are practically no other significant meteor showers, so for meteor watchers they are a good target and a rare opportunity to see quite a large number of meteors in the first half of the year.

    Photo of the Pleiades cluster, taken in 2023 by Mikhail Maslov, an engineer at the Vega Observatory of NSU.

    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 –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Going to the dentist is expensive. Here are 3 things you can do to protect your oral health – and 3 things to avoid

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dileep Sharma, Professor and Head of Discipline – Oral Health, University of Newcastle

    Jiri Hera/Shutterstock

    Around one in three Australians delayed their visit to a dentist in the last financial year – or didn’t go at all – due to cost.

    Given it doesn’t look like dental treatment is being added to Medicare any time soon, what can you do?

    Most oral and dental diseases are preventable, if you take care of your teeth and mouth. In-between visits to the dentist, here’s what you can do to avoid preventable issues – and blow-out costs.

    What causes diseases in your mouth?

    More than 1,000 species of microbes live in the mouth. Most dental and oral diseases are due to an imbalance or overgrowth in these microbes within the plaque (or “biofilm”).

    Plaque gathers on the hard surfaces inside the mouth (your teeth), as well as soft surfaces (such as your tongue). Removing plaque manually with brushing and flossing is the most effective way to maintain oral health.

    Plaque starts to form immediately after brushing, which is why you should remove it regularly.

    Things to do

    1. Brush twice a day

    Use a toothbrush with soft bristles (either electric or manual). Soft bristles remove plaque without damaging the teeth or gums. A fluoridated toothpaste will help strengthen the teeth.

    Brush for at least two minutes, using a sweeping and scrubbing motion, away from the gums. It’s a good idea to start at the back teeth and work your way through to the front teeth. Don’t forget to scrub the biting surface of the teeth.

    2. Floss

    Don’t skip this step – it’s crucial to clean in-between the teeth where a toothbrush can’t reach. Once a day should be enough.

    Whether you use floss, a pick, a bottle brush or other devices may depend on the space between your teeth.

    3. Clean your tongue

    To completely remove the microbes, it’s also important to clean your tongue regularly (twice daily). You can use a toothbrush while you’re already brushing, or a special tongue scraper – just don’t brush or scrape too hard.

    Brushing twice a day is important to remove bacteria in the mouth and on the teeth.
    PeopleImages.com – Yuri A/Shutterstock

    Things to avoid

    1. Sugary drinks and refined food

    What we eat and drink can affect the mouth’s pH.

    When bacteria in the mouth break down sugars, they produce acids. The acidity can dissolve minerals in the teeth and lead to decay.

    Refined foods – such as white bread, cakes and pastries – can easily be broken down by the mouth’s bacteria. So, having a lot of them, as well as sugary drinks, can damage the teeth and cause cavities.

    Water is the best choice to drink with your meals. Sparkling and soda water are acidic and can lead to mineral loss from the teeth, even when they are unflavoured. There is evidence flavoured sparkling water can be as harmful as orange juice.

    2. Tobacco and vaping

    Smoking or using smokeless tobacco (such as chewed tobacco or snuff pouches) is linked to oral cancer.

    Nicotine is also known to increase the severity of gum diseases – even when inflammation isn’t visible.

    This is true for both smoking and smokeless tobacco (such as chewed tobacco or snuff pouches).

    Vaping also increases your risk of developing cavities and gum disease.

    3. Too much alcohol, tea and coffee

    Drinking a lot of coffee, tea or red wine can stain your teeth. So if you’re concerned about your teeth appearing yellow or brown, it’s best to limit your intake.

    Drinking alcohol is also linked to an increased risk of developing oral cancers, which most commonly affect the tongue, floor of the mouth, cheek and palate.

    Drinks that are fizzy and sugary can damage the teeth.
    Svetlana Foote/Shutterstock

    Your mouth’s health is linked to your overall health

    Leaving oral diseases untreated (such as gum disease) has been linked to developing other conditions, such as liver disease, and pre-existing conditions getting worse.

    This is particularly evident if you have diabetes. Evidence shows it’s easier to manage blood sugar levels when gum diseases are properly treated.

    You can keep an eye on symptoms, such as bleeding gums which may be an early sign of gum disease. If symptoms that worry you, talk to your GP or diabetes educator. They may be able to refer you to a dentist if needed.

    Dileep Sharma receives funding from Dental Council of NSW, International Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research, Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, International College of Dentists and Tropical Australian Academic Health Centre for his dental research projects. He is affiliated with The International Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research and Australian Dental Association.

    – ref. Going to the dentist is expensive. Here are 3 things you can do to protect your oral health – and 3 things to avoid – https://theconversation.com/going-to-the-dentist-is-expensive-here-are-3-things-you-can-do-to-protect-your-oral-health-and-3-things-to-avoid-250786

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Non-compete clauses make it too hard to change jobs. Banning them for millions of Australians is a good move

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By William van Caenegem, Professor of Law, Bond University

    Zivica Kerkez/Shutterstock

    The Labor government used this week’s budget to announce it plans to ban non-compete agreements for employees on less than A$175,000 per year, a move that will affect about 3 million Australian workers.

    Describing them as “unfair”, a media release by federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers said non‑compete clauses “are holding back Australian workers from switching to better, higher‑paying jobs”. Banning non-compete clauses could lift the wages of affected workers by up to 4%, the government has said.

    The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry quickly called the measure “heavy-handed”, arguing that very few employees, according to businesses, turn down employment due to non-compete clauses.

    However, research I did with colleagues from Melbourne and Monash universities showed very few employees signing a new job contract ever think about the end of the relationship and what might happen after.

    Workers often accept non-compete clauses with little understanding or regard for their practical implications.

    What the law currently says

    The current law says contractual clauses that stop departing workers from taking a new job in their preferred line of work, often for long periods of time, are – in principle – unenforceable.

    That is, however, unless a court says a particular non-compete clause is “reasonably required” to protect a “legitimate interest”.

    Therein lies the problem: it is hard to predict when, where or under what circumstances a court will find a particular clause is “reasonably required”.

    Our research concluded this uncertainty favoured employers with greater nous and resources.

    These employers have the advantage over employees, who are rarely willing or able to go to court arguing their non-compete clause is invalid.

    This has a chilling effect on the mobility of employees. In other words, these clauses make it harder for workers to change jobs.

    That’s detrimental to labour market competition and can hold back knowledge-sharing and economic growth.

    Global efforts to ban non-compete clauses

    In California, non-compete clauses have long been banned. Many economists have identified this as among the key reasons for the success of the Californian knowledge economy. This example also featured in a submission I made (with researcher Caitlyn Douglas) to a 2024 Treasury review into non-compete clauses in Australia.

    US research from 2021 also found non-compete clauses can hinder labour mobility. They can impede fundamental freedoms such as freedom of employment and freedom of general competition.

    In 2024, under President Biden, the US Federal Trade Commission banned non-competes clauses across the US.

    However, the ban has been blocked due to legal challenges in the US Federal Court. It’s also been reported the Trump administration may kill off these reforms altogether.

    The UK government proposed in 2023 limiting non-competes to a maximum of three months.

    Holding employees back

    Unlike in some countries, Australian law does not require employers to compensate their ex-employee for loss of income during their non-compete period.

    This means that if workers comply and do not work in the field they’re most skilled for, they will take a serious financial hit for months or more.

    This is another detrimental effect of non-compete clauses. They really hurt if the worker in question is lower paid and has very specific skills (such as hairdressers or dental assistants).

    In that respect, Labor’s mooted ban on such clauses for employees on less than $175,000 is well conceived.

    Courts will usually only enforce a non-compete clause if its terms are reasonable to protect a legitimate interest, such as trade secrets an employee has learned during their employment.

    However, it’s mostly higher-ranked employees that have access to really significant trade secrets, such as technical information, confidential business plans or pricing structures.

    Higher paid employees are also more often the “public face of the business”. A court might decide it’s fair to say such workers can’t leave and the next day turn up as the main face of a competing business.

    And the new government proposal won’t leave employers without any recourse against employees who take their genuine trade secrets and pass them on to their new employers. They will still be able to sue for breach of confidence.

    Non-competes really hurt if the worker in question is lower paid and has very specific skills (such as hairdressers or dental assistants).
    Dorde Krstic/Shutterstock

    Challenges for reform

    The proposed reforms are well supported by authoritative legal and economic research.

    The federal government will have to consider carefully how to make sure the prohibition cannot be easily circumvented.

    And they’ll have to ensure these reforms don’t make it more likely judges will find restraints valid for those on more than A$175,000. Labour and knowledge mobility remain crucially important for them too.

    Another key challenge will be ensuring a ban doesn’t encourage practices or clauses restricting competition to emerge or become too prevalent.

    That could include “garden leave” clauses. These give a departing employee a long notice period, during which they are paid but do not work and are isolated from their employment (and instead “doing the gardening” at home).

    The risk is that if employers can no longer include non-compete clauses in contracts, they might use long garden leave provisions more often.

    Although it is good that “garden leave” employees get paid during that period (unlike during a non-compete term), they are still isolated from their work, stagnating in their skills and unable to move to new employment.

    William van Caenegem received funding from the Australian Research Council a decade ago for some of the research referred to in this article.

    – ref. Non-compete clauses make it too hard to change jobs. Banning them for millions of Australians is a good move – https://theconversation.com/non-compete-clauses-make-it-too-hard-to-change-jobs-banning-them-for-millions-of-australians-is-a-good-move-253101

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 26, 2025
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