Montserrat College of Art to welcome four new faculty members
COURTESY OF MONTSERRAT COLLEGE OF ART
Montserrat College of Art has hired four new full-time faculty to assist the college’s continued growth into media arts and other disciplines.
The new faculty will teach in the Animation and Interactive Media Program, the Liberal Arts Department and the college’s first-year Freshman Foundation Program. They are diverse in their educational backgrounds, teaching experience and geography, allowing for a greater breadth of thought and artistic practice to enrich Montserrat’s students’ experience. The college received more than 300 applications for these four faculty positions during our national search. These four new members represent the next generation of faculty for Montserrat. We are pleased that Montserrat s excellent reputation for arts and design education helped us attract such talented individuals to join our community, Kurt T. Steinberg, president, said.
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Red Sea on the Brink of Environmental Catastrophe Mina Nader
Abandoned, rebel-held Yemeni tanker could spill four times as much oil as Exxon Valdez
[CAIRO] The Red Sea has been flirting with environmental disaster for six years, ever since Houthi rebels seized control of the FSO Safer, a floating storage and offloading vessel for petroleum moored north of the Yemeni port city of Hodeidah.
Last year it began to leak.
Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, the de facto president of Yemen, in a tweet congratulating the Egyptian government on the reopening of the Suez Canal last week, warned of a greater crisis if the deteriorating 44-year-old vessel loses hull integrity.
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Scientists anticipate a massive leak of over one million barrels of oil four times greater than the Exxon Valdez tanker spill in 1989 in the Red Sea off the coast of Yemen.
The danger comes from the Safer floating storage and offloading unit, which is in the final stages of decay. The Safer has been stranded and deteriorating since 2015, giving the world the most advanced warning ever of a major oil spill.
Can anything be done to prevent this catastrophe?
In a policy brief published on December 15 in
Frontiers in Marine Science, a team of international researchers from Israel, the United States, Germany and Switzerland warns that the health and livelihoods of millions of people living in half a dozen countries along the Red Sea coast will be devastated if the Safer’s decay is not addressed immediately.
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Scientists Warn Red Sea Could Suffer Disaster Worse Than the Exxon Valdez
Scientists Warn Red Sea Could Suffer Disaster Worse Than the Exxon Valdez
Comments Off on Scientists Warn Red Sea Could Suffer Disaster Worse Than the Exxon Valdez
Scientists anticipate a massive leak of over one million barrels of oil four times greater than the Exxon Valdez tanker spill in 1989 in the Red Sea off the coast of Yemen.
The danger comes from the Safer floating storage and offloading unit, which is in the final stages of decay. The Safer has been stranded and deteriorating since 2015, giving the world the most advanced warning ever of a major oil spill.
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Israel-general
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Germany
Jerusalem
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United-states
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Saudi-arabia
Yemen
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