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  • US, Indo-Pacific partners announce minerals initiative as Rubio hosts counterparts – Reuters

    1. US, Indo-Pacific partners announce minerals initiative as Rubio hosts counterparts  Reuters
    2. Shifting to Asia, Rubio Meets Quad and Talks Minerals  The China-Global South Project
    3. Victims, perpetrators of terrorism must never be equated: EAM  Tribune India
    4. Secretary Rubio’s Meeting with the Quad Foreign Ministers  U.S. Department of State (.gov)
    5. Quad meeting: Pahalgam terror attack was economic warfare, says Jaishankar; rules out yielding to nuclear  Times of India

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  • Columbia to pay $9 million to settle lawsuit over US News college ranking

    Columbia to pay $9 million to settle lawsuit over US News college ranking



    Reuters
     — 

    Columbia University agreed to pay $9 million to settle a proposed class action by students who claimed it submitted false data to boost its position in U.S. News & World Report’s influential college rankings.

    A preliminary settlement, which requires a judge’s approval, was filed on Monday in Manhattan federal court.

    Students said Columbia artificially inflated its U.S. News ranking for undergraduate schools, reaching No. 2 in 2022, by consistently reporting false data, including that 83% of its classes had fewer than 20 students.

    They said the misrepresentations enticed them to enroll and allowed Columbia to overcharge them on tuition.

    The settlement covers about 22,000 undergraduate students at Columbia College, Columbia Engineering and Columbia’s School of General Studies from the fall of 2016 to the spring of 2022.

    Lawyers for the students called the accord fair, reasonable and adequate. Columbia denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle.

    The university said in a statement that it “deeply regrets deficiencies in prior reporting,” and now provides prospective students with data reviewed by an independent advisory firm to ensure they receive accurate information about their education.

    The litigation began in July 2022, after Columbia math professor Michael Thaddeus published a report alleging that data underlying the school’s No. 2 ranking were inaccurate or misleading. Columbia’s ranking dropped to No. 18 that September.

    In June 2023, Columbia said its undergraduate schools would stop participating in U.S. News’ rankings.

    It said the rankings appeared to have “outsized influence” with prospective students, and “much is lost” in distilling education quality from a series of data points.

    Some other universities, including Harvard and Yale, also stopped submitting data to U.S. News for various schools. U.S. News also ranks graduate schools.

    Lawyers for the Columbia students plan to seek up to one-third of the settlement for legal fees, leaving about $6 million for the students.


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  • Europe swelters as surprise early summer heatwave spreads

    Europe swelters as surprise early summer heatwave spreads


    PARIS:

    Nearly 2,000 schools were shut in France, monuments closed to tourists, and cities across Europe put on high alert as a record-breaking early summer heatwave spread across the continent Tuesday.

    Withering conditions that have baked southern Europe for days crept northward where such extremes are much rarer, with Paris on “red alert” and warnings issued in Belgium, Switzerland and Germany.

    Tens of thousands of people have died in Europe during past heatwaves, prompting authorities to issue warnings for old and young, the sick, and others vulnerable to what experts call a “silent killer”.

    On Tuesday, police in Spain said a two-year-old died in the country’s northeast after being left in a car in the sun for several hours.

    The EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) warned that millions of Europeans were exposed to high heat stress, and that temperatures would remain “well above average” across most of the continent in coming days.

    “This event is unusual because it’s extreme, because it’s very early on in the summer period, and climate change has almost certainly made it worse than it otherwise would have been,” climate scientist and C3S deputy director Samantha Burgess told AFP.

    Records have already tumbled, with the Netherlands experiencing its hottest opening day of July, France and Portugal their highest-ever single-day temperatures in June, and Spain and England their warmest June months.

    On Sunday, in a case of two extremes, the Mediterranean Sea hit a new June temperature record while Mont Blanc, the highest peak in Europe, went above freezing, a rarity for this time of year.

    The summit of the Eiffel Tower was shut for a second straight day while in Brussels the city’s Atomium monument — famed for its giant stainless steel balls — was exceptionally shut as temperatures reached 37 degrees Celsius (98 degrees Fahrenheit).

    Under scorching skies, Paris imposed its first “red alert” in five years, empowering officials to limit or ban sporting events, festivals and school outings for children.

    The heat is expected to peak on Tuesday, with Paris facing highs of 38C, but authorities have extended the alert into Wednesday.

    “We’re living a bit like moles,” Nicole, 85, told AFP in the stifling air of her apartment in a tower block in Paris.

    Some parks will remain open all night, pools have extended visiting hours, and cooling centres in churches and museums are offering respite from the lack of greenery and concrete surfaces that amplify the heat.

    Nearly 2,000 schools were closed at midday on Tuesday across France, according to the Ministry of Education, with teachers complaining that overheated and unventilated classrooms were making students unwell.

    Authorities are fanning out to check on the elderly, chronically ill and the homeless.

    “When it’s cold, I add blankets and hats. But when it’s hot like this, what can I do?” said Jo, a 55-year-old homeless man in Bordeaux, in southwestern France.

    As far north as the Netherlands, some regions were on the second-highest alert Tuesday, with temperatures forecast to reach 38C.

    “I also live in a rooftop apartment, which means it gets insanely hot during the day, and it’s unbearable,” student Liva Freimane told AFP in The Hague.

    Schools in Rotterdam and across West Brabant province adopted “tropical schedules” to ensure students started and finished earlier to avoid the worst of the day’s heat.

    In Germany, temperatures could peak at 40C on Wednesday.

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  • BHP awards charter contracts for two ammonia dual-fuelled vessels – BHP

    1. BHP awards charter contracts for two ammonia dual-fuelled vessels  BHP
    2. BHP inks charter contracts with COSCO for ammonia dual-fuelled vessels  Yahoo
    3. Ammonia-powered ship completes voyage in Anhui  China Daily
    4. China Launches World’s First Pure-Ammonia-Fueled Ship ‘Anhui’  Sada Elbalad english
    5. World’s first pure ammonia-powered vessel completes maiden voyage in China  news.cgtn.com

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  • Grizzlies center Jaren Jackson Jr. to have surgery for turf toe injury

    Grizzlies center Jaren Jackson Jr. to have surgery for turf toe injury

    Grizzlies center Jaren Jackson Jr. will require surgery to repair a turf toe injury in his right foot sustained playing basketball offsite, the team announced Tuesday.

    An update and preliminary recovery timeline will be provided after the surgical procedure.

    Jackson, 25, averaged 22.2 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.5 blocks last season to earn his second All-Star appearance. He has reportedly agreed to a five-year, $240-million extension with the Grizzlies.

     

     

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  • PBOC sets USD/CNY reference rate at 7.1546 vs. 7.1534 previous

    PBOC sets USD/CNY reference rate at 7.1546 vs. 7.1534 previous

    The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) set the USD/CNY central rate for the trading session ahead on Wednesday at 7.1546 as compared to the previous day’s fix of 7.1534 and 7.1623 Reuters estimate.

    PBOC FAQs

    The primary monetary policy objectives of the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) are to safeguard price stability, including exchange rate stability, and promote economic growth. China’s central bank also aims to implement financial reforms, such as opening and developing the financial market.

    The PBoC is owned by the state of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), so it is not considered an autonomous institution. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Committee Secretary, nominated by the Chairman of the State Council, has a key influence on the PBoC’s management and direction, not the governor. However, Mr. Pan Gongsheng currently holds both of these posts.

    Unlike the Western economies, the PBoC uses a broader set of monetary policy instruments to achieve its objectives. The primary tools include a seven-day Reverse Repo Rate (RRR), Medium-term Lending Facility (MLF), foreign exchange interventions and Reserve Requirement Ratio (RRR). However, The Loan Prime Rate (LPR) is China’s benchmark interest rate. Changes to the LPR directly influence the rates that need to be paid in the market for loans and mortgages and the interest paid on savings. By changing the LPR, China’s central bank can also influence the exchange rates of the Chinese Renminbi.

    Yes, China has 19 private banks – a small fraction of the financial system. The largest private banks are digital lenders WeBank and MYbank, which are backed by tech giants Tencent and Ant Group, per The Straits Times. In 2014, China allowed domestic lenders fully capitalized by private funds to operate in the state-dominated financial sector.

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  • Nurse holding up hands of ‘untouchables’ for decades

    Nurse holding up hands of ‘untouchables’ for decades

    Xing Shaoyun

    The first time Xing Shaoyun reached for a leprosy patient”s disfigured hand, the patient flinched. “Don’t touch me,” she whispered. “I don’t want to make you sick.”

    That moment shattered Xing’s last barrier of fear and redefined her life’s mission.

    Now 49, the head nurse of Hainan Fifth People’s Hospital, also known as Hainan Skin Disease and Plastic Surgery Hospital, has spent three decades eradicating the stigma with radical compassion, earning her China’s highest medical honor, the Norman Bethune Award, on March 31.

    “They weren’t afraid of us, but they were afraid for us,” Xing recalled. “That’s when I understood: dignity hurts worse than disease.”

    When Xing graduated from a health vocational college in 1995 and began working at Hainan’s largest leprosy colony, isolation was the norm. Patients, many with untreated ulcers, lived behind walls and were abandoned by families. Medical staff wore hazmat-like gear.

    Despite her family’s fears about the risks of her work, Xing changed that calculus with science. She adopted masking, gloving and sterilizing protocols so rigorous that direct contact became safe. Then she added what medicine couldn’t measure — sitting for hours listening to life stories and holding hands gnarled by nerve damage.

    “Leprosy steals everything — jobs, marriages, even hugs,” said Xing, scrolling through photos of elderly patients on her phone. One image shows a man grinning as she fits him with custom shoes; another, a woman smiling while Xing dresses her wounds. “What they need most isn’t just treatment. It’s being seen.”

    Her clinical breakthroughs are textbook cases: By combining regenerative wound tech with photon therapy, her team slashed chronic ulcer rates from 28 percent to 5 percent, significantly lowering amputation risks. The innovation now guides leprosy hospitals nationwide.

    Beyond the clinic, Xing ventured into remote regions to conduct hands-on training. In 2019, she led a province-wide survey across 13 leprosy-affected villages, finding ulcer incidence rates as high as 18.9 percent. In response, she launched a mobile treatment campaign and trained 464 local caregivers, building a grassroots network of leprosy care specialists.

    Yet her most fragile patients never leave the geriatric ward. Xing helped establish a tailored geriatric care system that treats both physical disabilities and social stigma.

    “Some patients hadn’t held anyone’s hand in decades,” she said. “We’ve held over 100 hands in their last moments. No one should die remembering only pain.”

    In 2023, Xing was awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the International Red Cross. She has since shared her experience with nearly 4,000 people through lectures, inspiring a new generation of health workers.

    Xing has taken care of over 300 leprosy patients. “The elderly patients often call me ‘daughter’, a sign of their trust and the reason I keep going,” said Xing.

    With China’s leprosy rates plummeting, she believes key challenges remain in early detection, especially in remote areas, and in comprehensive rehabilitation addressing both physical and psychological needs.

    As a Party member for 23 years, Xing views her awards as a recognition of teamwork, not individual achievement. “My oath to serve the people guides everything — ward rounds, emergencies, trips to remote villages,” she said. “These honors are not just for me but they belong to thousands of front-line medical workers and leprosy control staff.”

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  • From reaction to resolution: The future of allergy treatment | Latest | NDWorks

    From reaction to resolution: The future of allergy treatment | Latest | NDWorks

    Twelve-year-old Lauren Eglite was thrilled to attend a Notre Dame football game with her father, Erik, in 2017, even though her acute peanut allergy demands constant vigilance.

    She was even more excited when the stadium’s brand-new video board aired an NBC Fighting For story about Basar Bilgicer’s research into blocking peanut allergens from triggering immune system overreactions. She asked her father, a drug company executive and Notre Dame business school alumnus, if this might be an opportunity to get involved with a solution to a condition that had complicated her life since childhood.

    “I remember to this day her looking at that screen and turning to me,” Dr. Erik Eglite said. “She said, ‘Daddy, can I meet him? I really want to do something about it.’ This kid actually did that.”

    It was a bold request, but Bilgicer didn’t hesitate after Dr. Eglite reached out. The Notre Dame professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering invited the whole Eglite family to his lab and explained his complex research in overwhelming detail.

    The coincidence of that video playing to the right audience of two has led to immense mutual benefits. Nearly eight years later, Bilgicer and Eglite have partnered to form a company called Artin Immunology that aims to turn Bilgicer’s peanut allergy research into a blockbuster drug.

    Read the story

    Originally published by Office of Brand Content at news.nd.edu on July 01, 2025.

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  • 14th polio case of this year emerges

    14th polio case of this year emerges





    14th polio case of this year emerges – Daily Times

































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  • Yamaha Unveils YH-L500A Headphones, Bringing Personal Theater Sound to Bluetooth Devices

    Yamaha Unveils YH-L500A Headphones, Bringing Personal Theater Sound to Bluetooth Devices

    Yamaha today announced the YH-L500A personal theater headphones, offering a new way to enjoy movies and streaming shows at home with immersive, cinema-like sound from virtually any Bluetooth-enabled device. These wireless headphones feature proprietary Yamaha Sound Field technology, creating spacious, three-dimensional listening experiences from any source device and content.

    Designed for extended binge-watching sessions, the all-new YH-L500A headphones provide a gentle clamping pressure, employ newly developed earpads that fit comfortably without causing fatigue, and are remarkably light at just 9.3 ounces. Additionally, they feature Bluetooth Multipoint, enabling users to connect two devices and switch between them effortlessly.

    “When it comes to reproducing cinema-like sound at home, Yamaha has unequaled engineering know-how from our decades of leadership in home theater AV receivers and sound bars,” said Alex Sadeghian, director of consumer audio at Yamaha. “The YH-L500A headphones deliver this experience for personal listening on mobile devices. Now users can watch a movie on their tablet or laptop and still experience sonic immersion that enhances every scene’s realism, excitement, and emotion.”

    The headphones feature two Sound Field modes: Cinema and Music. Cinema mode enhances the spatial arrangement of dialogue, sound effects, and background music while adding spatial volume to replicate the experience of being “at the movies.” Music mode distinguishes vocals, instruments, and ambiance with clarity, recreating the feeling of being at a live music venue.

    Additionally, the YH-L500A headphones offer a range of powerful features, including up to 20 hours of battery life, Google Fast Pair, Qualcomm aptX Adaptive, voice control, gaming mode for low latency, and Yamaha-exclusive Listening Care. A free downloadable app enables control over settings and EQ customization.

    PRICING & AVAILABILITY: $229.95 MSRP, available today on yamaha.io/yhl500apr and at select Yamaha retailers.

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