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English writer and playwright Agatha Christie once said that âthe science of tomorrow is the supernatural of today.â Like many institutions and places, Angelo State University has been the home of a metaphysical legend that has created believers and skeptics out of the ASU community for nearly four and a half decades.
On April 27, 1978, yearbook photographer Robert Mark Wagner murdered freshman Leandra Morales with a pair of scissors in what is now the Hardeman Student Services Center building.
According to a 1978 Ram Page article, the two Air Force ROTC students were in the photo development room when Wagner began to kiss Morales. According to San Angelo Standard-Times archives, Morales spurned his advances and attempted to force him away before she was killed by her fellow student. Wagner then proceeded to drag the body of Morales throughout the halls and rapped up the bloody scissors in a copy of the campus newspaper in an effort to hide his deed. The article the
Bowling Green State University opens a new business facility designed for the ways students learn in the 21st century.
The brick Business Administration Building at Bowling Green State University in Ohio was built in 1972 to support the traditional style of faculty-centered teaching. As in other higher educational institutions of the 1970s, BGSU faculty used lectures to disseminate their materials, wrote on blackboards to highlight main points, and assessed student learning through rote memorization tests. Teachers imparted their expertise to students through a one-way flow of knowledge.
All that changed in the 21st century, when evidence-based research proved that a student-centered approach to education leads to deeper, more impactful learning. Organizations like AACSB recognized this trend by developing new standards that measure learning outcomes and effective teaching practices. To meet revised AACSB standards and upgrade their own teaching, BGSU’s Allen W.
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Wichita County is presenting a face-to-face program on dealing with tree and shrub issues and how to manage them to recover from the February arctic blast, according to a media release.
The program will be Tuesday at the Dillard College of Business Administration Building in room 101 at Midwestern State University.
Registration begins at 5:30 p.m., and the program will be from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Dr. David Appel, AgriLife Extension specialist from College Station, will address the group.
Topics include making decisions on saving or replacing plants, management tips on helping plants recover and recommendations for replacing trees and shrubs.
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