As part of the celebrations for the International Year of Biodiversity that has just begun
the Biodiversity Foundation is bringing the exhibition “The Writing of Animals” to the Coliseum of Culture in Villaviciosa de Odón (Avenida Príncipe de Asturias
The exhibition aims to clearly communicate the concepts of biodiversity and ecosystem
as well as the need to conserve each species and each space
the language of nature itself: the signs of life
The curator of the exhibition is the disseminator and naturalist Joaquín Araujo
in which he will refer to the diversity of the ecosystems of the Iberian Peninsula
and will propose an approach to the interpretation of the footprints and signs that animals leave in their wake
“The Writing of the Annals” is structured in five large spatial areas: a first
called ‘We are not alone’; three dedicated to the ecosystems of the Iberian Peninsula and a fifth
The exhibition was inaugurated in 2006 at the headquarters of the Biodiversity Foundation in Seville
and since then it has continued to travel to different locations in Spain
[Javier Soriano | AFP | Getty Images]By Washington PostPublished Sept
2016The guest list for a private State Department dinner on higher-education policy was taking shape when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton offered a suggestion
In addition to recommending invitations for leaders from a community college and a church-funded institution
Clinton wanted a representative from a for-profit college company called Laureate International Universities
she explained in an email to her chief of staff that was released last year
was "the fastest growing college network in the world."
There was another reason Clinton favored setting a seat aside for Laureate at the August 2009 event: The company was started by a businessman
"who Bill likes a lot," the secretary wrote
Laureate signed Bill Clinton to a lucrative deal as a consultant and "honorary chancellor," paying him $17.6 million over five years until the contract ended in 2015 as Hillary Clinton launched her campaign for president
RELATED COVERAGE: In Tanzania, Clinton Foundation trades on maize and beans, not its name
"A lot of these private-education guys, they're looking to get into events like this one," said Sam Pitroda, a higher-education expert who was representing a policy commission from India at the State Department dinner. "The discussion itself is irrelevant. ... It gets you very high-level contacts, and it gets you to the right people."
While much of the controversy about Hillary Clinton's State Department tenure has involved donations to her family's charity, the Clinton Foundation, a close examination of the Laureate deal reveals how Bill Clinton leveraged the couple's connections during that time to enhance their personal wealth — potentially providing another avenue for supporters to gain access to the family.
Details of Bill Clinton's compensation are found in the couple's tax returns, which were made public by his wife's presidential campaign and provide an unusual glimpse into the way a former president can make millions in the private sector. Bill Clinton has proved particularly marketable because of his global celebrity, enhanced by his foundation, his continued visibility on the political scene and his wife's stature as a senator, Cabinet official and potential president.
The Laureate arrangement illustrates the extent to which the Clintons mixed their charitable work with their private and political lives. Many of those who paid Bill Clinton to consult or speak were also foundation donors and, in some cases, supporters of political campaigns for one or both Clintons.
"People know that somebody like President Clinton, the most important thing to him is his reputation," Becker said in a 2010 appearance at a Laureate campus in Malaysia. "And to attach himself to an organization that he doesn't believe in, he would never do it. It wouldn't make sense — not just with his own legacy and history but, in his case, being the spouse of the U.S. secretary of state, for example."
When Becker introduced Clinton at an event at the same campus the next year, he read a statement from Malaysia's education minister declaring that "there must be something very special about Laureate that has inspired President Clinton to devote his energy to such an endeavor."
Aides to Clinton and representatives of Laureate characterized the arrangement as one that advanced global access to education.
Angel Urena, a Clinton spokesman, said the former president "engaged with students at Laureate's campuses worldwide and advised Laureate's leadership on social responsibility and increasing access to higher education." Adam Smith, a Laureate spokesman, said Clinton "was paid to advise Laureate, inspire students and visit the campuses and communities they serve, and that's what he did, with great conviction and energy."
Becker declined to be interviewed for this report. Laureate officials said that the Baltimore businessman first met Clinton through Laureate Vice President Joseph Duffey, a former Clinton administration official, at a 2007 Clinton Global Initiative event in Hong Kong.
Clinton became familiar with the company after giving a few unpaid speeches on its international campuses and then grew closer with Becker when they traveled to Haiti together in 2009 to explore education issues in the troubled nation, a Clinton aide said.
Laureate had grown rapidly under Becker, a college dropout who became wealthy in the 1980s after inventing a card that could store personal medical information. He launched Laureate in 2003, transforming an old tutoring company called Sylvan Learning Systems into a network of for-profit college campuses.
The company has been intertwined over the years with the global financial elite. Once publicly traded, it was bought out for $3.8 billion in 2007 with investments from, among others, a private-equity firm founded by liberal philanthropist George Soros, as well as the investment firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts.
Laureate, which is taking steps to become publicly traded again, has in recent years been largely focused on growing internationally. Typically, it has purchased financially struggling colleges and vocational schools and improved management while boosting profits through expanding enrollment. The company has said in regulatory filings that it enrolls more than 1 million students on 87 campuses in 28 countries. It has five U.S. campuses.
Laureate hired Clinton as scrutiny of private colleges was increasing in the United States and internationally. Congress in 2010 launched an investigation into for-profit schools, which critics say profit from needy students while making often grand but unfulfilled promises of valuable degrees.
Laureate has clashed at times with regulators in other countries, such as Chile, where the law forbids for-profit education and Laureate operates by acting as a contractor to local nonprofit institutions.
Clinton at times mingled with foreign government leaders during his appearances on Laureate campuses, such as a 2013 Laureate-hosted conference on youth unemployment in Madrid featuring top European officials.
Urena said the former president "never sought to influence any foreign or U.S. official on Laureate's behalf."
Smith said Clinton played an active role as honorary chancellor, visiting 19 locations, meeting with students and delivering speeches that were broadcast to tens of thousands of students around the world. He said Clinton's role was not related to the company's business prospects.
Clinton's contract with Laureate was approved by the State Department's ethics office, in keeping with an Obama administration agreement with Hillary Clinton that gave the agency the right to review her husband's outside work during her tenure. An ethics official wrote that he saw "no conflict of interest with Laureate or any of their partners," according to a letter recently released by the conservative group Citizens United, which received it through a public-records request.
The contract itself became public through a records request by a different conservative group, Judicial Watch, but descriptions of Clinton's exact consulting role were blacked out in the publicly released document and labeled as trade secrets. Laureate and Clinton aides declined to release an unredacted copy of the contract.
Based on appearances on Laureate's behalf by Clinton and public statements by the company, it seems that part of the strategy in hiring the former president was to bolster Laureate's image by aligning it with the former president's famous charitable efforts — thereby portraying the company as a force for good in the world.
News releases about Clinton's paid campus appearances often invoked his work on education issues with the Clinton Foundation. And every news release during Clinton's time with the company carried his name and his title of honorary chancellor.
In 2013, Clinton recorded a message to Laureate students and, without mentioning his financial ties to the company, said he joined Laureate because he admired its "dedication to helping the next generation of leaders be truly educated and well prepared for your future."
Also that year, Laureate prominently featured its association with Clinton as part of its effort to purchase the Thunderbird School of Global Management, a 70-year old private business school in Arizona that was struggling financially.
Karen Longo, a graduate of the school who was on the board of directors at the time, recalled that Becker specifically referenced the Clinton tie when he pitched the board on the deal. She provided the Washington Post with brochures Laureate gave out at the time, featuring a letter from Clinton praising Laureate students for working to improve the world and declaring himself "proud to be a part of their efforts." Clinton's picture was included on multiple pages.
"His face, his name was in all their brochures," Longo recalled. "It was a very big sell for them."
She and other alumni were concerned that Laureate would lower the school's admissions standards to expand its enrollment in an effort to make more money from the campus.
"The more students they got, the more money they got from student-loan funds," she said. "It would have been a dilution of the Thunderbird brand."
Longo and four other alumni on the school's board protested the purchase to the school's accrediting agency, the Higher Learning Commission. In 2014, the commission refused to sign off on the purchase. Thunderbird has since merged with Arizona State University.
Laureate, meanwhile, pursued close ties with the Clinton Foundation.
The company paid to send a group of international students each year to the Clinton Global Initiative conference in New York, where they conducted video interviews with CGI attendees such as actor Ted Danson and former secretary of state Madeleine Albright for broadcast to fellow Laureate students around the world.
"We're here with one of the most remarkable world leaders. We're here with Chelsea Clinton," said Daniel Rubio Sánchez, a student on a Laureate campus in Madrid, as he began a video interview with the former first daughter at the September 2015 CGI gathering — a few months after Bill Clinton's contract ended — sitting in front of a glass wall inscribed with the logos of Laureate and CGI.
Sánchez, 20, in an interview with the Post, called his CGI experience "really, really enriching" and one that has opened doors for him at European think tanks. "My personal profile changed greatly," he said.
The Clintons' Laureate connection emerged as a campaign issue earlier this summer, when Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump charged that Hillary Clinton "laundered money" to her husband by funneling tens of millions of dollars in federal grants to Laureate while she was secretary of state.
By all accounts, Trump's claim was false, and his campaign did not respond to requests for documentation.
The company says its campuses have received about $1.4 million total over the years in grants from the State Department and its international aid arm, USAID. Of that amount, only $15,000 came while Clinton was secretary of state - student scholarships funded by USAID, Laureate said.
Publicly available grant records are not detailed enough to corroborate Laureate's exact numbers. But the records do show that neither Laureate nor any of its campuses has received any individual grant larger than $25,000 from the State Department or USAID.
Trump appeared to be drawing on — and misrepresenting — a report in the 2015 book Clinton Cash that grants from USAID to a separate charity chaired by Becker, the Laureate founder, increased during the Clinton years.
Though some Republicans tried to draw parallels between Laureate and Trump University, the real estate seminar company founded by Trump that faces multiple fraud investigations, Laureate is a different sort of business.
Still, the company has faced some complaints.
A group of students at Walden, a Minneapolis-based online school, sued Laureate in 2015, arguing the institution unnecessarily dragged out their education so they would have to pay more. Laureate denied the allegation, and the lawsuit was settled out of court.
As of July, three of Laureate's five U.S. schools were included on a government list of 500 schools that receive additional financial oversight after being found out of compliance with the requirements of federal student aid programs.
Outside the State Department, Laureate's ties extended into the world of the Clintons' in other ways. Politico has reported that Laureate and GEMS Education were both clients of Teneo Holdings, a public-relations group founded by longtime Bill Clinton aide Doug Band that also paid Clinton a $100,000 consulting fee in 2011. Band declined to comment, as did Laureate.
The Clintons were also close to Duffey, a top Laureate official who has been friends with Bill and Hillary Clinton since the two worked as young staffers for his unsuccessful campaign for the Senate in Connecticut in 1970.
When Hillary Clinton requested that her staff invite a Laureate official to her 2009 State Department policy dinner, it was Duffey whom she recommended, according to emails released by the State Department.
People who participated in the dinner said they remember a high-level conversation about using education to boost diplomacy, held amid antique furniture in the State Department's elegant James Monroe room. Duffey spoke positively of Laureate's approach to overseas expansion, according to one participant.
Kevin Kinser, who studies for-profit colleges at Pennsylvania State University, said that given Laureate's rapid growth, it was not unreasonable to include a company representative in that setting. But he said Laureate's inclusion just months before Bill Clinton began being paid by the company does not look good.
"They were clearly a legitimate participant in this sort of event," he said. "But knowing what we know now, it does seem unseemly."
.st1{fill-rule:evenodd;clip-rule:evenodd;fill:#2a2a2a}By Elizabeth Gibson | Special to PennLiveColin Zizzi heard the Spanish fans screaming “Gol!” before he ever set foot in Europe
His dream to play soccer in Spain formed at age 4
The 2006 Carlisle High School graduate is a midfielder for the Vallecas Futbol Club in Madrid
there’s always an if-only — even when your dream comes true
He’d have gone straight from high school to the fields of Spain instead of getting his business degree last year at American University
and I now have a degree from a great university
But a lot of people make a good argument that college soccer is bad for the development of professional players
I would never discourage anyone from going to get an education,” Zizzi said
a couple of years don’t seem to be holding him back
Zizzi answered questions about his path to Madrid in a leisurely online chat after Thursday’s win against Villaviciosa of Odon
but I’ve only been playing with the A team now
I started and played the whole game today with the A team at center midfield
His Spanish teammates share jokes and practice their English with Zizzi
“I had a Spanish referee come up to me after a game and say
And of course I get grief from my teammates all the time
nobody told him he was reaching for the impossible
I would ask him now and then what he wanted to be when he grew up
and the answer was always the same: ‘I want to be a soccer player.’ Talk about having career focus at an early age
‘I’m living my dream,’ ” said Zizzi’s father
indulged her son’s drive to play at the highest level
“I was fortunate to have very good youth coaches and a devoted mother who was willing to drive an hour or sometimes two both ways to practice,” Zizzi said
All of these coaches were former professionals or had coached many professionals
so I knew the advice they were giving me was valid
They would always stress what you were doing away from training was just as important or more important than the time spent at training
I used to spend a lot of time training on my own outside of my team
and that’s what it takes to keep making yourself better,” he said
How can an American play for a team in Spain
Colin Zizzi couldn’t play in Spain without citizenship or working papers
He gained Italian citizenship in July through his grandfather Cosmo J
Since Spain and Italy are members of the European Union
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This picturesque town has just published its program of festivities
There will be a celebratory atmosphere for nine days: from September 13 to 22
As is tradition, there will be processions and a session of fireworks to kick off the celebrations, which will continue until Sunday 22 at 21:00 hours. It will be nine days of lively atmosphere that will end the summer in the municipality.
There will also be a tribute band to La Oreja de Van Gogh on Tuesday
September 17 at 22:00 hours; a musical based on The Hunchback of Notre Dame that same day at 19:00 hours; DJ performances the first weekend of festivities and more shows to put soundtrack to the streets of the city
the program covers different types of sports activities
September 15) to gymkhanas for the most adventurous children (Monday 16)
there will be no shortage of football and handball games