| DAILY NEWSLETTER
JULY 23, 2025
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Good morning! The original wills of Thomas Green and Anna Calhoun Clemson will be on exhibit and open to the public for viewing starting July 28. Researchers are developing a system to help secure wireless messages; learn how a group of students discovered a football inside an alligator's stomach.
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The original wills of Thomas Green and Anna Calhoun Clemson — documents that led to the founding of Clemson University — will be on exhibit and open to the public for viewing starting Monday, July 28. Unveiled at a special event during the University’s quarterly Board of Trustees meeting last week, both wills and other estate documents were previously housed in Oconee County Probate Court in Walhalla, S.C.
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A group of Clemson researchers including Ph.D. students Gen Li (left) and Chun-Chih Lin (center) in the lab of Linke Guo (right), is developing a transformer-based system to ensure the security of wireless messages and has the potential for various uses in combating hackers.
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During a lab analysis, doctoral student Miriam Boucher, Ph.D. ’27 and a group of undergraduate students discovered a football inside the stomach of an alligator from Alabama. The discovery was part of research conducted by students in a Creative Inquiry (CI) course studying ecotoxicology, the study of toxic pollutants and how they affect the environment and its inhabitants.
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