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University of Pittsburgh launches new Office of Sustainability WPXI [Video]

PITTSBURGH — University of Pittsburgh officials recently announced the opening of a new Office of Sustainability in the Health Sciences.

With the University of Pittsburgh’s Office of Sustainability and the UPMC Center for Sustainability, the new office will represent both the university and the teaching-hospital system in the National Academy of Medicine’s Climate Collaborative. This reinforces Pitt’s commitments to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and creating climate-resilient infrastructure, while incorporating sustainability into health sciences education.

The new office will oversee sustainability efforts in Pitt’s six schools of the Health Sciences.

Michael Boninger, a physician-scientist who serves as chief medical sustainability officer at UPMC and associate dean for sustainability in the School of Medicine will lead these efforts. The office’s assistant dean is Noe Woods, an obstetrician/gynecologist and chair of Clinicians for Climate Action.

Pitt’s Sustainability and Climate Action Plan includes pursuing carbon neutrality by 2037.

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'I have a crooked judge,' former President Donald Trump says at Waukesha rally about hush money trial [Video]

Donald Trump returned briefly to the campaign trail Wednesday for a stop in Waukesha, a county he needs to do well in if he wants to win Wisconsin.During his speech he called the judge presiding over his hush money trial "crooked" a day after he was held in contempt of court and threatened with jail time for violating a gag order.Trump's remarks at events in the battleground states of Wisconsin and Michigan were being closely watched after he received a $9,000 fine for making public statements about people connected to the criminal case. In imposing the fine for posts on Trump's Truth Social account and campaign website, Judge Juan M. Merchan said that if Trump continued to violate his orders, he would "impose an incarceratory punishment.""There is no crime. I have a crooked judge. He's a totally conflicted judge," Trump said speaking to supporters at an event in Waukesha, Wisconsin, claiming again that this and other cases against him are led by the White House to undermine his campaign. The gag order bars him from making public statements about witnesses, jurors and some others connected to his hush money case. Trump is still free to criticize Merchan. The former president is trying to achieve a balancing act unprecedented in American history by running for a second term as the presumptive Republican nominee while also fighting felony charges in New York. Trump frequently goes after Merchan, prosecutors and potential witnesses at his rallies and on social media, attack lines that play well with his supporters but that have potentially put him in further legal jeopardy. Trump insists he is merely exercising his free speech rights, but the offending posts from his Truth Social account and campaign website were taken down. Merchan is weighing other alleged gag-order violations and will hear arguments on Thursday. Trump has often called this case and other criminal cases against him "election interference," saying they keep him from campaigning for the presidential election in November. Attendees agreed he is being unfairly prosecuted, contending the trial and gag order were designed to distract him ."Its a trial looking for a crime," said Ray Hanson, of Hartford. Hanson said he expected Trumps lawyers would "keep him in line" so he doesnt violate the gag order, as much as he likely wants to talk about the trial.Manhattan prosecutors have argued Trump and his associates took part in an illegal scheme to influence the 2016 presidential campaign by purchasing and then burying negative stories. He has pleaded not guilty.Trump's visits to Wisconsin and Michigan mark his second trip to the swing states in just a month. For the previous rallies, the former president largely focused on immigration, referring to people who are in the U.S. illegally and who are suspected of crimes as "animals."Trump, in a moment he said was unscripted, discussed abortion in an attempt to reach independent women in the suburbs."Now states are deciding, and now some people are not happy because it's too liberal or too conservative, but we brought it back in the state, and over a period of time that works out, and it's taken a lot of controversy out. And you have to remember as a politician, you have to also get elected," Trump said. Meanwhile, Democrats are hoping to remind voters ahead of these visits about Trump's position on abortion, which Trump has been openly concerned about being a political liability for him and Republicans.Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan met on Wednesday with half a dozen women, including a family doctor, and warned that a second Trump term would threaten abortion rights even in her state, which enshrined those rights in its state constitution after the Supreme Court overturned national rights to the procedure.Whitmer appeared with the women at a bookstore in Flint surrounded by signs that read "Stop Trump's Attacks on Health Care" and "Stop Trump's Abortion Ban." She told reporters not to believe Trumps contention in a Time Magazine interview that Republicans would never have enough votes in the U.S. Senate to pass a national abortion ban."We cannot trust anything that Donald Trump says when it comes to abortion. So no one should take any comfort in the fact that, yes, he wants an abortion ban, but he won't get it because he doesnt think well have 60 votes in the Senate. Baloney," she said. No one would have imagined wed be here in this moment."At the Waukesha County Expo Center, Trump also weighed in on the campus protests nationwide. "When you see that video of raging lunatics and Hamas sympathizers at Columbia and other colleges -- but when you look at it -- I say where did these people come from?" Trump said.Wisconsin and Michigan are among a handful of battleground states expected to decide the 2024 election.For Trump to win both states, he must do well in suburban areas like the areas outside of Milwaukee and Saginaw, Michigan, where he will hold Wednesday's events. He underperformed in suburban areas during this year's primary even as he dominated the Republican field overall. Trump has repeatedly falsely said that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Trump's losses in battleground states in 2020 have withstood recounts, audits and reviews by the Justice Department and outside observers.