Miss Change
CLICK HERE >>>>> https://urlca.com/2tkXKU
Please download the fillable form to your computer desktop and use the Adobe Reader (version XI, DC, or later) to open it. Then fill out the form, save it, and send it to libartsadvising@olemiss.edu as an attachment. If you do not have the Adobe Reader, it can be downloaded for free at Mac users need to use Adobe Reader rather than the built-in Preview application.
Once you have submitted your completed form to our office, we will evaluate your previous course work on a checklist of the current requirements for your new degree and officially change your major in the computer system. We will send you an e-mail notifying you when this has been done (within 48 hours). At that time, if you need to be advised, you may contact your new department to set up an advising appointment.
\"The University of Mississippi community came to the realization years ago that the confederate battle flag did not represent many of our core values such as civility and respect for others. Since that time, we have become a stronger and better university. We join other leaders in our state who are calling for a change in the state flag.\"
Kate Linebaugh: That's Anne Jakrajutatip. She owns a media conglomerate in Thailand. Her company recently bought Miss Universe at a time when viewership has been dropping as pageants have come under attack for objectifying women. Anne says she's making changes, changes that are being rolled out. This week in the latest pageant.
Kate Linebaugh: Welcome to the journal. Our show about money, business, and power. I'm Kate Linebaugh. It's Thursday, January 12th. Coming up on the show, Miss Universe is now owned by a woman, but will the pageant change Do you remember watching beauty pageants when you were a kid
Anne Jakrajutatip: The media conglomerate group that I have, I own Peacock in Thailand. It's called CNBC Thailand. I own Terrestrial TV in Thailand. I own altogether 15 companies, from the beverage company, nutrition, skincare, cosmetic, everything, and fashion apparel coming up. When I have more than 20 million followers on my social media, whatever that I say, I am one of the most influential persons in Thailand. God gave me the mission here, and I often say this all the time. You need to know your passion and develop into the profession, and you need to use your own personality on the purpose of your life to serve the true calling of your soul.
Kate Linebaugh: Beauty pageants are criticized for promoting one way of looking beautiful, and that many young girls feel that these pageants make them feel bad about themselves and their bodies. What can you do to change that
Kate Linebaugh: Some of the capes carried messages like, \"Arab women should be represented,\" and \"Be brave like Ukraine.\" Others had drawings of things like butterflies, trees, and flowers. And Anne is excited about the change allowing married, pregnant, and divorced women to enter future contests.
Legislators in the state of Mississippi voted Sunday to formally change the official state flag after mounting pressure amid nationwide protests fighting injustice and demanding racial equality. The bill passed in the Mississippi House of Representatives and Senate on Sunday, one day after it made it through procedural votes that required two-thirds majorities in both chambers.
The resolution says that a nine-person commission will be created to approve a new design by September. A special election to approve or reject the new flag will be held in November. The new flag design will include the phrase \"In God We Trust,\" according to Mississippi Today. If the resolution doesn't pass, a new flag option will be presented during the 2021 legislative session.
Pressure mounted on the state to change the flag after SEC commissioner Greg Sankey issued a statement earlier this month that the conference would not hold official championship events in the state until it is changed. The NCAA followed suit, saying that it would not hold championship events in states with flags in which the Confederate flag had \"prominent presence.\"
\"I am proud of our universities' leadership, and the engagement of student-athletes and coaches in the efforts to change the State of Mississippi flag,\" Sankey said. \"The agreement to remove the Confederate battle emblem from the flag is a positive and appropriate action, and I applaud the Mississippi House of Representatives and Senate for today's action. I am also grateful for Governor Reeves' openness to sign a bill to change the flag. As I have frequently said, our students deserve the opportunity to learn and compete in welcoming environments. Today's action is welcomed in the spirit of this goal.\"
Mississippi State running back Kylin Hill, the SEC's top returning ball carrier, tweeted on June 22 that he \"won't represent the state\" until the flag changed. Hill -- a native of Columbus, Mississippi, largely credited with kicking this process into high gear -- tweeted his approval of the resolution shortly after the procedural votes on Sunday.
In 2017, the Ole Miss student body government held a referendum on whether to change the mascot from the Black Bear to the Landshark.[22] A reference to a Saturday Night Live skit,[23] the Landshark was originated in 2008 by senior linebacker Tony Fein and adopted by the Ole Miss football team's defensive unit.[24] From September 26 through September 29, students cast more than 4,100 votes; 81% supported the change.[25] On October 6, university chancellor Jeffrey S. Vitter announced that the university was switching its official mascot to the Landshark.[26]
A modification of the Elvis Presley song \"An American Trilogy\", now known as \"From Dixie with Love\"[45] or \"Slow Dixie\", was also played during football games, both home and away. The song was first played during the halftime performance at the Ole Miss/LSU game of 1980 in Tiger Stadium. Upon its completion, the band received a standing ovation from more than 70,000 people on hand that day. It soon became a staple of the band for many years. During Ole Miss's winning streak of 2003,[48] audiences began chanting \"The South will rise again\" in place of \"His truth is marching on\" at the end of the song. The chant remained a staple for the next several years. In 2009, with Ole Miss in the national spotlight for football success, political pressure mounted to do away with the chant. The Student Body Government proposed to call for the chant to be changed to \"To Hell with LSU\". When this proposal was not enacted, the university asked the band to quit playing the song.[49]
The subjective responses associated with personal life space and mobility status were explored. Thirty individuals participated in focus groups based on self-rated disability status, current places visited, and availability. Qualitative analyses revealed that most participants equated personal mobility with driving a vehicle. Attitudes concerning mobility status and preparedness for change varied based on disability level and personal experience. Fear of dependence from future mobility loss was prominent in all groups. Few participants acknowledged significant planning for future retirement from driving or other mobility challenges. An understanding of common attitudes, perceptions and meanings can inform professionals who intervene and support older adults experiencing mobility changes.
The risks of climate change are enormous, threatening the lives and livelihoods of millions to billions of people. The economic consequences of many of the complex risks associated with climate change cannot, however, currently be quantified. Here we argue that these unquantified, poorly understood and often deeply uncertain risks can and should be included in economic evaluations and decision-making processes. We present an overview of these unquantified risks and an ontology of them founded on the reasons behind their lack of robust evaluation. These consist of risks missing owing to delays in sharing knowledge and expertise across disciplines, spatial and temporal variations of climate impacts, feedbacks and interactions between risks, deep uncertainty in our knowledge, and currently unidentified risks. We highlight collaboration needs within and between the natural and social science communities to address these gaps. We also provide an approach for integrating assessments or speculations of these risks in a way that accounts for interdependencies, avoids double counting and makes assumptions clear. Multiple paths exist for engaging with these missing risks, with both model-based quantification and non-model-based qualitative assessments playing crucial roles. A wide range of climate impacts are understudied or challenging to quantify, and are missing from current evaluations of the climate risks to lives and livelihoods. Strong interdisciplinary collaboration and deeper engagement with uncertainty is needed to properly inform policymakers and the public about climate risks.
The interplay within and between different physical and social systems plays a crucial role in defining when and where impacts will manifest themselves, and these interactions are often only poorly understood. This leads to large and growing uncertainty estimates and a wide range of incompletely understood and underestimated risks3. For example, the potential for climate change impacts to drive social discontent, dislocation and relocation, and instability and conflict, are all deeply uncertain, but potentially crippling.
Excluding these risks from economic assessments is equivalent to placing a probability of zero on their occurrence. This, clearly, is not the case. Similarly, the common practice of engaging with only the expected levels of impacts and reporting central confidence bounds can undermine the ability of decision-makers to engage with the actual range of risks. The overall consequence is an underestimation of the total risks of climate change. This Perspective aims to identify, classify and suggest ways to engage with some of the most significant risks that are not currently captured by socioeconomic evaluations of climate change, from both a natural perspective and a social perspective. As an example of how this can be achieved, we present a demonstration of how diverse impact estimates or assumptions can be coherently combined. 59ce067264
https://www.osloworks.com/forum/deisukatusiyon/fullmetal-alchemist-episode-13