When the novel coronavirus emerged in the United States early this year, colleges had to act quickly: They closed dorms, canceled sports seasons, and implemented online courses wherever possible.
These steps were imperative in the short term, but when it became clear that efforts to contain the pandemic would be a marathon, not a sprint, colleges had to reassess what a longer-term solution to maintaining enrollment numbers in the midst of a pandemic could look like.
And the question of how to tackle this issue underscores the institutions competing concerns for one, balancing their need for income from tuition with students and their families reservations about paying full price for online or hybrid instruction.
a sustainable cyclical waste management system that would work towards transforming graced into used resources they believe the initiative was long overdue in an indian magazine so i m poor not originated with a very simple idea that everything in nature is cyclic every material has a purpose but. the base management system which we have is a non cyclic one. resources use it and then dump it so it s a non cyclic process so what we wanted to do was to convert this into a cyclic process. is home to more than 18000000 people according to the last census from 2011 to produce up 212000 metric tons of trash single day and the garbage is only likely to increase. in this predicted to jump to more than 42000000 by 2050. the city which houses the 2nd largest dumping ground is