
Walton Heirs To Start A New STEM-Focused University In Arkansas
Steuart and Tom Walton, grandsons of Walmart founder Sam Walton, have announced plans to create a ... More new private university focused on STEM.
Steuart and Tom Walton, grandsons of Walmart founder Sam Walton, have announced that members of their family are planning to create a new private university that will focus on offering a STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) curriculum.
The future school would be located at the location of Walmart's former home office in Bentonville, Arkansas, according to Axios, which first broke the story today. It would be part of a mixed-use development planned for the site.
Development of the new university will be guided by the advice of both local and national education experts. The institution, as of yet unnamed, would offer 'a modern, flexible, and accessible model that is both STEM-focused and business-infused,' according to the announcement.
"Bentonville is the perfect place to spark catalytic change — a community rooted in innovation, entrepreneurship and bold thinking," Steuart Walton said, in a news release. "We have the opportunity to build a new model of higher education, designed for the realities of today's economy and the challenges of tomorrow, and set a new standard for what's possible."
Tom Walton told Axios: "Our grandad, Sam Walton, built Walmart from Bentonville. There's no reason the next great enterprise can't rise from here, too."
The new university would focus on building a skilled STEM workforce, concentrating on globally competitive areas such as automation, logistics, biotech and computing. It would grant stackable credentials in those areas, which could be combined with other degrees a student might earn.
The school expects that its initial class, to be enrolled 'in the coming years,' will consist of about 500 students, with projections that total enrollment could eventually grow to about 1,500 undergraduates and 500 non-degree learners over time. Initial plans call for students' tuition to be fully covered in order to 'attract enterprising candidates with entrepreneurial spirit.'
Today's announcement was made at the Heartland Summit being held this year in Bentonville. The Summit is an annual event organized by Heartland Forward, a non-profit policy think tank that aims to to stimulate economic growth in the central region of the United States.
According to its website, Heartland Forward has a goal of generating $500 million of economic impact for the middle states by 2030 through a focus on four pillars: innovation and entrepreneurship, talent pipelines, health and wellness, and regional competitiveness.
"Universities are among the most important knowledge assets for cities and states, shaping the economic prospects of their regions and the nation overall," said Ross DeVol, Chairman of the Board and CEO of Heartland Forward.
Devol added that creating a new STEM-focused university in Bentonville would represent 'a bold step to strengthen our region's innovation capacity and deepen our workforce. By embedding technology transfer and commercialization into the very fabric of the institution, we can accelerate the movement of ideas from the lab to the marketplace, drive economic growth across the Heartland, and create new opportunities for entrepreneurs and industries of the future."
Individual members of the Walton family and the Walton Family Foundation have been major donors to a number of higher education institutions over the years, including the University of Arkansas, the University of Missouri, Arizona State University, and the University of the Ozarks.

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New York Post
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New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
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CNBC
3 hours ago
- CNBC
Small retailers on 'vacation from hell' as they seek clarity on Trump's China tariffs
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Trump said the deal is subject to approval by his administration and China President Xi Jinping. "President Xi and I are going to work closely to open up China to American Trade," Trump wrote in a post. "This would be a great WIN for both countries!!!" Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC's "Money Movers" on Wednesday that U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports won't change from their current levels, even as a trade deal between Washington and Beijing has yet to be finalized. The White House didn't respond to a request for comment. Like Kubancik, Alfred Mai says his business has mostly been in wait-and-see mode during the trade dispute, despite the 90-day pause announced in May. Mai, co-founder of card game company ASM Games, said he grew increasingly worried last month as he thought about the "huge" inventory order he needed to place in time for the crucial holiday shopping period. He told his manufacturing partners to expedite production and speed shipments to the U.S. as fast as possible. "I have no idea what the situation will look like after the 90-day pause, so I would rather take a gut punch now than to potentially be wiped out in the future by a massive tariff increase," Mai said in an email. The order is slated to arrive just as the short-term agreement between the U.S. and China ends. But if rates increase before his shipment makes it stateside, Mai said he may not be able to afford the tax needed to take ownership of his "vital holiday inventory." Prices are going up regardless. With a tariff on China of 30%, Mai said he'll likely have to raise prices by 10% to 20% and hope that consumers are willing to pay. At Down Under Bedding, which is based just south of Toronto in Canada, Tony Sagar says "everything's on hold." Sagar's company sources some of its goose down pillows and duvets from China and is considering discontinuing some of its lower-margin items because it can no longer to afford to compete with cheaper rivals. "We've basically stopped any kind of importing or planning," Sagar said in an interview. Last month, Sagar said he was forced to refund a customer who purchased a $150 duvet but refused to pay $277 in additional tariff charges. He ran into the same issue last week after a shopper ordered a $595 duvet that came with a tariff bill of almost $1,200. Sagar said he now contacts "every single U.S. customer" after they place an order to make sure they're willing to pay extra duties. In addition to the China levy, the Trump administration placed a 25% tariff on goods from Canada. "Any time I hear that ding from Shopify, I have to worry about where the order is coming from," Sagar said. Greg Shugar, who operates multiple apparel businesses, said the problem with trying to plan for the future is that policy decisions are "all about Trump's ego." "If we understood the true motivation behind the administration we'd know where to go or what to do," said Shugar, co-owner of women's clothing company Carrie Amber Intimates and men's accessory maker Beau Ties Vermont. Shugar said Trump's shifting position on tariffs has left him paralyzed on whether or not to move production out of China. Last month, he joined a group of other small business owners at an event organized by the National Retail Federation, with a plan to bring their concerns to the White House. The group met with a representative from the Trump administration for about 30 minutes. Shugar said he left feeling more pessimistic about the tariff situation than before he walked in the door. "We're not going to eat a 30% tariff and neither is the consumer," Shugar said. "So there's actually no winners, there's only losers with these tariffs." After Walmart warned last month that it will have to raise prices, Trump told the retail giant to "eat the tariffs." Kubancik of Guardian Baseball said his company "got a big break" last year when it signed a deal with Walmart to put its products in 3,000 stores. Now he's delaying inventory orders from China and taking a more conservative approach to coming up with new products, because the company can't afford to take on added risk. "It felt like we finally made it as a brand," Kubancik said. "And now it feels like a plane nosediving."