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New Delhi: With the improvement in air quality, some of the “air emergency” measures like higher parking charges, halt on construction activities and not allowing trucks have been rolled back. Unlike earlier, no measures were taken in order to reduce the use of private vehicles which are a significant source of pollution that can damage the environment and pose public health issues. “Before discouraging the use of private vehicles, people have to be provided credible alternative in a sustainable way,” said Deepanshu Malviya , co-founder, Shuttl “We believe that encouraging the use of public transportation or shared commute is the way to go as this makes commuting far more sustainable and environment friendly,” added Malviya. Shuttl is a mobile app-based chartered bus service aimed at making daily commute easy for office-goers in Delhi and the NCR region. Almost 10,000 cars have been taken off road by this bus service. A report released early this year revealed that Delhi is leading the list of most polluted cities in the country. Toxic air pollution levels may increase the chances of stroke, heart disease, lung cancer and respiratory diseases, according to health experts. On this Malviya concluded, “Around 10,000 commuters have been distributed masks across Delhi NCR to help protect them from air pollution.
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You’ve reached a place in your life where you’re thinking about your loved ones and what you can do to protect them. A term life insurance policy is one way to help ensure financial security for your loved ones. It can also be an important part of your larger financial plan. Term life insurance is a straightforward and easy-to-understand concept. You pay into a policy for a period of time while you’re alive to ensure your loved ones receive a death benefit if you die during that time period. HOW TERM LIFE INSURANCE WORKS Term life insurance, sometimes called annually renewable term life insurance, may be more flexible within your financial plan than you think. Here’s how term life insurance works. The cost of your coverage will increase as you get older. With term insurance, the cost you pay each year is based on your age. When you’re younger, term life insurance is less expensive. But as you get older, the cost of your insurance will increase. Your coverage will end someday. Unlike permanent life insurance, which never expires, a term life insurance policy will end at some point in the future. You can usually keep your policy for a certain number of years (e.g. 10 years) or until you reach a certain age, like age 80. However, as you get older, it may be expensive to do so. You can convert to permanent insurance in the future. The death benefit of permanent insurance never expires, and a permanent policy has additional benefits that you can use during your lifetime. Because of this, many people use permanent insurance as a stable financial planning tool that can serve many needs. You may be able to convert some, or all, of your term insurance over time without needing to re-qualify for coverage — even if your health has changed. You can make changes in the future. Whether you need to change your beneficiaries or make changes to the amount of coverage you have, your policy can be updated. It’s a good idea to meet with your financial representative on a regular basis to ensure that your policy still suits your current needs. You may receive dividends. At Northwestern Mutual, our premiums are based on certain assumptions, like how many death claims we expect to pay in a year. Whenever the company performs better than we assumed, we may pay a dividend to our policyholders (which we’ve done every year since 1872)1. With term insurance, dividends are used to reduce your premiums. The insurance company may pay your premiums if you become disabled. If you have the optional Waiver of Premium benefit on your term policy, and you become totally disabled, the insurance company will pay the premium for you. In addition, you may be able to convert your term insurance into a permanent policy and the company will pay those premiums during your disability. The permanent policy will build cash value, which you will be able to access throughout your life. WHEN TO REVIEW YOUR TERM LIFE INSURANCE The good news is that your term insurance is likely something you won’t make many changes to over the years. But there are a few times when you may want to reach out to your financial representative to review your policy: Changes in your family situation. When you have a change in your family situation, like a divorce or the birth of a child, you may want to review your policy to make sure the beneficiaries listed are still correct. Changes at work. Over time, there’s a chance that your income will increase, perhaps substantially. As it does, you may want to add to your insurance coverage in the future. Also, if you get some of your life insurance through work, make sure to pay attention to any changes the company makes to your life insurance benefit. As your financial plan changes. When you first get insurance, you may have little savings and a tight budget. Eventually, your savings will grow and your mortgage will shrink. As this happens, you may want to eventually reduce your death benefit or consider converting some of your term insurance to a permanent policy. Your life is hectic and busy enough without the added stress of worrying about your loved ones’ future financial security. With term life insurance in place, you know that your family is protected, which lets you get back to the things that matter most. 1Dividends are not guaranteed.
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Each person has innate flexibility, and that’s why kids easily do splits and put their legs over their heads. As time passes, we lose our natural flexibility and joint mobility. Office work also worsens the situation. Finally, we find that it’s difficult to straighten up our back or impossible to zip up a dress. The HCG diet has been popular for many years. It’s an extreme diet, claimed to cause fast weight loss of up to 1-2 pounds per day. What’s more, you’re not supposed to feel hungry in the process. Fast Escrow Refills is the Leading HCG Pharmacy Which Will Provide Best Hcg Weight loss products. It has got 5star Ratings Due to its effective results. HCG Injections are best as compared to HCG Drops because injection shows faster results. What HCG Does in the Body? HCG is a protein-based hormone produced during pregnancy. What HCG basically does is telling a woman’s body that it’s pregnant. HCG helps maintain the production of important hormones like progesterone and estrogen, which are essential for the development of the embryo and fetus. After the first three months of pregnancy, blood levels of HCG decrease. Does HCG Help You Lose Weight? Proponents of the HCG diet claim that it boosts metabolism and helps you lose large amounts of fat, all without feeling hungry. Various theories attempt to explain the mechanism behind HCG and weight loss. However, multiple studies have concluded that weight loss achieved by the HCG diet is due to the ultra low-calorie diet alone and has absolutely nothing to do with the HCG hormone. These studies compared the effects of HCG injections with placebo injections when given to individuals on a calorie-restricted diet. Weight loss was found to be identical or nearly identical between the two groups. Furthermore, they found that the HCG hormone did not significantly reduce hunger. HCG Injections From Fast Escrow Refills Starts showing its effective result from day one only. Does the HCG Diet Improve Body Composition? One common side effect of weight loss is decreased muscle mass. This is especially common on diets that severely restrict caloric intake, such as the HCG diet. The body may also think it’s starving and reduce the amount of calories it burns in order to conserve energy. However, proponents of the HCG diet claim that it facilitates weight loss resulting from fat loss only, not muscle loss. Most fitness and nutrition experts agree that the right way to lose weight is to aim for a safe, healthy rate of weight loss of 1 to 1½ pounds per week. Losing Weight needs proper dedication and proper diet with injections. Modification of eating habits along with regular exercise is the most effective way to lose weight over the long term. It is also the ideal way to ensure that the weight stays off. They are high in iron and calories. So, if you want to watch your weight, make sure you eat only about 3 dates This fruit has around 114 calories. Consuming grapes once in a week is better than every day. - Coconut : One coconut will help to cleanse your entire digestive system but this high calorie fruit has around 159 percent of fat. If you are on a weight loss programe, maintain the intake of this delicious fruit. - Pears : The itchy pear fruit is yet another high calorie fruit you should avoid if you seriously want to lose weight. One serving of pear contains 96 percent of fat. These yummy purple berries contain 83 percent fat. If you love blueberries and want to keep a track of your weight, it is advisable not to consume too much of it.
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A human virus that causes respiratory disease has been linked to the death of wild mountain gorillas, U.S. and African researchers say. Researchers say the finding confirms that serious diseases can pass from people to these endangered animals, a release from the University of California, Davis reported Monday. “Because there are fewer than 800 living mountain gorillas, each individual is critically important to the survival of their species,” Mike Cranfield of the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project and a UC Davis wildlife veterinarian, said. “But mountain gorillas are surrounded by people, and this discovery makes it clear that living in protected national parks is not a barrier to human diseases.” Humans and gorillas share approximately 98 percent of their DNA, raising concerns that gorillas may be susceptible to many of the infectious diseases that affect people, researchers said. This is of particular concern because mountain gorillas have come into increasing contact with humans during the past 100 years and, in fact, national parks where the gorillas are protected in Rwanda, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo are surrounded by the densest human populations in continental Africa, they said. Gorilla tourism, while helping the gorillas by funding the national parks that shelter them, brings thousands of people into contact with mountain gorillas annually, along with diseases that can prove fatal to gorillas. “The type of infection we see most frequently is respiratory, which can range from mild colds to severe pneumonia,” Linda Lowenstine, a veterinary pathologist with the UC Davis Mountain Gorilla One Health Program, said. A report on the 2009 deaths of two mountain gorillas infected with a human virus was published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, a publication of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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The growing popularity of micro-blogs has drawn an increasing amount of attention from users keen to expand friendship, facilitate information sharing and information seeking. Given the extensive use of micro-blog services, there is a pressing need to understand users’ behavioral intentions in micro-blog services. Although there are some studies exploring the factors explaining micro-blog users’ acceptance, none of research has been reported from both of the technological characteristics and network effects of micro-blog services. This study extended motivational model with socio-technical approach as a theoretical framework to examine the roles of technological factors and network effect factors in determining micro-blog users’ behavioral intentions. This study suggests that interactivity, convenience, accessibility, network size, existing social contacts, performance expectancy, sense of belonging and hedonic expectancy together provide a strong explanation for micro-blog use intention. The results of this study provide directions for system administrators and service providers to achieve higher levels of micro-blog usage by developing multi-faceted strategies. Wang, Tao; Kang, Minghui; and Fu, Bin, "Understanding User Acceptance of Micro-Blog Services in China Using the Extended Motivational Model" (2013). PACIS 2013 Proceedings. 214.
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MBA 530 Project on Adaptive Leadership Order ID 53563633773 Type Essay Writer Level Masters Style APA Sources/References 4 Perfect Number of Pages to Order 5-10 Pages MBA 530 Project on Adaptive Leadership You evaluated input from the employee engagement survey findings in Milestone One, comparing and contrasting the results with the Leadership Circle profile. In your capacity as a director in the business, you completed your individual Leadership Circle profile and produced a personal growth plan in Module Two, which you discussed with your manager, the vice president of leadership and learning. The depth of your assessment pleased the vice president, who sees potential in turning your technique into an adaptable leadership toolkit for use by all people leaders in the organization. The vice president has requested you to create an adaptable leadership toolkit that will serve as a reference guide for the entire organization’s leadership development. After that, the vice president will share the toolbox you’ve created with the top human resources officer (CHRO). Template for an Adaptive Leadership Toolkit in a Hurry The Adaptive Leadership Toolkit Template is available for download. You’ll notice that the toolkit template looks a lot like the GROW model template. Competencies for Leadership Fill in the leadership toolkit template with your recommendations based on your Milestone One submission. Then fill in the blanks with the leadership skills you believe are most important for success. Future State Desired, Current State, Gap Identified, Action Plan Fill in the blanks in the template’s remaining columns: desired future state, existing status, identified gap, and action plan. Consider the behaviors that need to be addressed in underperforming areas mentioned in the employee engagement survey results as you do so. Future State Aspiration: Define the required future positive rating for each survey question mentioned in your prior evaluation. Also provide a two- to three-sentence summary paragraph defining progress in this competency area. Define the current positive rating for each survey question identified in your prior evaluation. Also, include a two- to three-sentence summary paragraph describing how you would characterize organizational leaders’ present behavior that resulted in a less-than-acceptable rating. Gap Identified: Determine one to two possible reasons for the need to address leadership behaviors in order to improve overall organizational performance. Identify one to two activities that will be taken to bridge the gap between the current condition and the intended future state in your action plan. When describing each action, use the SMART method. You must submit the following to complete this milestone: Using the template supplied, create a comprehensive and prepared adaptive leadership toolkit that is ready to be rolled out to the entire organization. An executive summary report, in the form of a 2- to 3-page Word document, for submission to the vice president; the summary report must include the following information: A thesis statement that summarizes the paper’s main points An overview of the adaptive leadership toolkit’s structure and a brief discussion of each section are provided in this introduction. An explanation of the rationale for selecting the leadership behaviors listed in the toolkit, as well as how they connect to the findings of the employee engagement survey. Recommendations for the next stages in distributing the adaptive leadership toolbox to all of the organization’s leaders QUALITY OF RESPONSE NO RESPONSE POOR / UNSATISFACTORY SATISFACTORY GOOD EXCELLENT Content (worth a maximum of 50% of the total points) Zero points: Student failed to submit the final paper. 20 points out of 50: The essay illustrates poor understanding of the relevant material by failing to address or incorrectly addressing the relevant content; failing to identify or inaccurately explaining/defining key concepts/ideas; ignoring or incorrectly explaining key points/claims and the reasoning behind them; and/or incorrectly or inappropriately using terminology; and elements of the response are lacking. 30 points out of 50: The essay illustrates a rudimentary understanding of the relevant material by mentioning but not full explaining the relevant content; identifying some of the key concepts/ideas though failing to fully or accurately explain many of them; using terminology, though sometimes inaccurately or inappropriately; and/or incorporating some key claims/points but failing to explain the reasoning behind them or doing so inaccurately. Elements of the required response may also be lacking. 40 points out of 50: The essay illustrates solid understanding of the relevant material by correctly addressing most of the relevant content; identifying and explaining most of the key concepts/ideas; using correct terminology; explaining the reasoning behind most of the key points/claims; and/or where necessary or useful, substantiating some points with accurate examples. The answer is complete. 50 points: The essay illustrates exemplary understanding of the relevant material by thoroughly and correctly addressing the relevant content; identifying and explaining all of the key concepts/ideas; using correct terminology explaining the reasoning behind key points/claims and substantiating, as necessary/useful, points with several accurate and illuminating examples. No aspects of the required answer are missing. Use of Sources (worth a maximum of 20% of the total points). Zero points: Student failed to include citations and/or references. Or the student failed to submit a final paper. 5 out 20 points: Sources are seldom cited to support statements and/or format of citations are not recognizable as APA 6th Edition format. There are major errors in the formation of the references and citations. And/or there is a major reliance on highly questionable. The Student fails to provide an adequate synthesis of research collected for the paper. 10 out 20 points: References to scholarly sources are occasionally given; many statements seem unsubstantiated. Frequent errors in APA 6th Edition format, leaving the reader confused about the source of the information. There are significant errors of the formation in the references and citations. And/or there is a significant use of highly questionable sources. 15 out 20 points: Credible Scholarly sources are used effectively support claims and are, for the most part, clear and fairly represented. APA 6th Edition is used with only a few minor errors. There are minor errors in reference and/or citations. And/or there is some use of questionable sources. 20 points: Credible scholarly sources are used to give compelling evidence to support claims and are clearly and fairly represented. APA 6th Edition format is used accurately and consistently. The student uses above the maximum required references in the development of the assignment. Grammar (worth maximum of 20% of total points) Zero points: Student failed to submit the final paper. 5 points out of 20: The paper does not communicate ideas/points clearly due to inappropriate use of terminology and vague language; thoughts and sentences are disjointed or incomprehensible; organization lacking; and/or numerous grammatical, spelling/punctuation errors 10 points out 20: The paper is often unclear and difficult to follow due to some inappropriate terminology and/or vague language; ideas may be fragmented, wandering and/or repetitive; poor organization; and/or some grammatical, spelling, punctuation errors 15 points out of 20: The paper is mostly clear as a result of appropriate use of terminology and minimal vagueness; no tangents and no repetition; fairly good organization; almost perfect grammar, spelling, punctuation, and word usage. 20 points: The paper is clear, concise, and a pleasure to read as a result of appropriate and precise use of terminology; total coherence of thoughts and presentation and logical organization; and the essay is error free. Structure of the Paper (worth 10% of total points) Zero points: Student failed to submit the final paper. 3 points out of 10: Student needs to develop better formatting skills. The paper omits significant structural elements required for and APA 6th edition paper. Formatting of the paper has major flaws. The paper does not conform to APA 6th edition requirements whatsoever. 5 points out of 10: Appearance of final paper demonstrates the student’s limited ability to format the paper. There are significant errors in formatting and/or the total omission of major components of an APA 6th edition paper. They can include the omission of the cover page, abstract, and page numbers. Additionally the page has major formatting issues with spacing or paragraph formation. Font size might not conform to size requirements. The student also significantly writes too large or too short of and paper 7 points out of 10: Research paper presents an above-average use of formatting skills. The paper has slight errors within the paper. This can include small errors or omissions with the cover page, abstract, page number, and headers. There could be also slight formatting issues with the document spacing or the font Additionally the paper might slightly exceed or undershoot the specific number of required written pages for the assignment. 10 points: Student provides a high-caliber, formatted paper. This includes an APA 6th edition cover page, abstract, page number, headers and is double spaced in 12’ Times Roman Font. Additionally, the paper conforms to the specific number of required written pages and neither goes over or under the specified length of the paper. GET THIS PROJECT NOW BY CLICKING ON THIS LINK TO PLACE THE ORDER Do You Have Any Other Essay/Assignment/Class Project/Homework Related to this? Click Here Now [CLICK ME] and Have It Done by Our PhD Qualified Writers!! Tired of getting an average grade in all your school assignments, projects, essays, and homework? Try us today for all your academic schoolwork needs. We are among the most trusted and recognized professional writing services in the market. We provide unique, original and plagiarism-free high quality academic, homework, assignments and essay submissions for all our clients. At our company, we capitalize on producing A+ Grades for all our clients and also ensure that you have smooth academic progress in all your school term and semesters. High-quality academic submissions, A 100% plagiarism-free submission, Meet even the most urgent deadlines, Provide our services to you at the most competitive rates in the market, Give you free revisions until you meet your desired grades and Provide you with 24/7 customer support service via calls or live chats.
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JFK, Marilyn Monroe, FDR, Barack Obama, Mark Ronson, Roger Ebert, Al Capone, Andy Warhol, Bill Gates, Stephen Hawkings & others on their favorite song Almost everyone has a favorite song. Often they’re songs that give them strength and hope and help them endure hard times. Sometimes they’re ones attached to the most momentous chapters of their lives, joyful or tragic. People define themselves by favorite songs. It shows us how much power songs have in everyone’s lives. So we delved into the various sources that exists to discover the favorite songs by luminaries across the decades. What follows is an aggregate of these which we’ve discovered in the last month. Most of these are easily verifiable, but there are a few of the older ones which have only one source, and might be faulty. If so, apologies. Feel free to inform us of any erronenousness. Do you have a favorite song? If you would like to share with us for the follow-up piece to this, Favorite Songs of Readers, we invite you to send them. Also, let us know if we can use your name, and also, if you don’t mind, your profession and where you live. Send them please to firstname.lastname@example.org. “Who Cares?” By George and Ira Gershwin. It was Judy Garland’s performance of this song by the Gershwin brothers that was reported to be Marilyn Monroe’s favorite. When going through tough times, especially, she’d play it very loud, over and over. “September Song” by Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson President Kennedy loved this song more than any other. It was Walter Huston’s 1938 record that he played often. Kennedy also sang the song at parties, as he did at the Kennedy mansion in Palm Beach on the Saturday before he took his last trip, to Dallas. His aide Dave Powers said that JFK sang it “better that usual” that night. “Home On The Range.” “You’ve Got To Be Carefully Taught’ by Rodgers and Hammerstein. “It was a crucial time in our country’s history,” said Pacino, “when the racial tension in the south was raging and the play (‘South Pacific’) was a direct reference to it. I thought it had a real passion in it and a relevance to the times we were living in.” “Roses of Picardy,” by Frederick Weatherly and Haydn Wood. “Here Comes That Rainy Day,” by Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke. It was Sinatra’s version that Johnny loved best. On his final night of The Tonight Show, Bette Midler sang it for him. “Smile” by Charlie Chaplin, John Turner and Geoffrey Parsons. For more on this song, see Smile. Dwight D. Eisenhower “Oh, Susannah” by Stephen Foster. “Don’t Fence Me In,” written by Cole Porter, performed by Roy Rogers. “The Navy Hymn [“Eternal Father, Strong To Save”] by William Whiting. “Everlong” by Foo Fighters. [For our full story of Dave, this song and Foo Fighters, see Everlong.] “Somewhere Over The Rainbow” by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg. Wilder died at his Stamford, Connecticut home on August 29, 2016 at 83 as this, his favorite song played, as performed by Ella Fitzgerald. “God Only Knows” by Brian Wilson “`God Only Knows’ is one of the few songs that reduces me to tears every time I hear it,” said McCartney. “It’s really just a love song, but it’s brilliantly done. It shows the genius of Brian. I’ve actually performed it with him and I’m afraid to say that during the sound check I broke down. It was just too much to stand there singing this song that does my head in and to stand there singing it with Brian.” “Have I Told You Lately” by Rod Stewart. In 2015, Hawking answered many questions on Reddit, including what his favorite song is. “Sunday Morning Coming Down” by Kris Kristofferson “All Tomorrow’s Parties” by The Velvet Underground. “’Destination Moon” by Marvin Fisher and Roy Alfred, the version by Dinah Washington. “Under Pressure” by David Bowie and Queen “You’re So Vain” by Carly Simon. “After hearing that,” Taylor said, “it was like a key had just unlocked this forbidden area of storytelling for me. You can say exactly what you feel, even if it’s bitter and brazen!” “Ready or Not” by The Fugees. “Uptown Funk” by Bruno Mars and Mark Ronson “’Fools Gold” from The Stone Roses. “I recall hearing it,” said Ronson, “and it changed my entire musical perspective because it was a combination of New York hip-hop and British pop melody. It had that amazing sampled breakbeat with this haunting, incredible melody delivered by Ian Brown.” “Nancy (With the Laughing Face)” by Jimmy Van Heusen and Phil Silvers “Free Fallin’” by Tom Petty “I’m Your Man,” by Leonard Cohen. Roger said it was the song that saved his life, as he explains in the video below. Dr. Sanjay Gupta “Born To Run” by Bruce Springsteen “I think about motivating music when I exercise,” said Sanjay, “and the song that’s been on my playlist since college is ‘Born to Run’ by Bruce Springsteen, Usually when I’m at the end of my run, and I feel like I can’t go anymore, that’s the song I’ll flip to on my phone. There’s no way I can stop running as long as that song is playing.” “Know Your Rights” by The Clash. “Redemption Song,” by Bob Marley “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere,” by Neil Young “A Whiter Shade of Pale” by Procol Harum. “When I hear that haunting melody on the Hammond organ,” Ozzy said, “I immediately become transfixed.” “Sittin’ On the Dock of the Bay” by Otis Redding “Ave Maria,” by Renee Fleming. “The song itself is extraordinary,” said Blair, “full of poignant emotion. At a time when a close friend was dying, I used to play it and the peace and serenity of it was a source of comfort.” “Unchained Melody” from the Righteous Brothers. “House of the Rising Sun,” by The Animals’ “Strange Fruit” by Billie Holiday “For Once In My Life” by Stevie Wonder. “Every element of the song is amazing,” said Jools. “What the bass plays is fantastic. There’s the drums, the two guitars, then there’s the strings… the whole world musically is in that song. It inspired me as a musician and a songwriter. Sean “Diddy” Combs “It’s Like That’ by Run DMC. “For me,” Diddy said, “it was young, it was strong, it was black, it was powerful. It was hip-hop and it made me feel like I could do anything.” “Lilywhite” by Cat Stevens. “MacArthur Park” by Richard Harris, written by Jimmy Webb “Things Have Changed,” by Bob Dylan. “The fact that I find this song inspiring,” Nighy said, “could indicate that I am not in very good shape, given that it contains some grim observations of how bad things can get. What is uplifting, apart from its general brilliance, is that it is thrilling to know that you are not alone in these matters. “Thunder Road,” by Bruce Springsteen “Buddy Holly” by Weezer. Do you have a favorite song? If you would like to share with us for the follow-up piece to this, Favorite Songs of Readers, we invite you to send them. Let us know if we can use your name, and also, if you don’t mind, please indicate your profession and where you live. Send to email@example.com.
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This week several people died during cruises on ships owned by Carnival Corporation. A young seafarer died on the Carnival-owned Cunard Queen Victoria cruise ship. A crew member from the Carnival Conquest was crushed to death at the port of New Orleans. And most tragically, a 6 year-old boy needlessly drowned on the Carnival Victory in a swimming pool which, incredibly, did not have a life-guard. What do all of these seemingly unrelated incidents have in common? Because of antiquated laws and recent legal developments advanced by the cruise industry, the cruise line will escape virtually all legal accountability for the deaths. Let’s look first at the sad case of little 6 year old Qwentyn Hunter who died on the Carnival Victory last week. He died underwater in a swimming pool that Carnival decided not to supervise with a lifeguard for, what I believe to be, purely financial reasons. A child on vacation dead at age 6. Is it foreseeable that a child may drown in a pool? Of course. We have written recently about a 4 year old boy who is severely brain injured after slipping under the water on a cruise ship Disney which also didn’t bother to assign a lifeguard to the pool. Put aside the debate whether the boy’s death was a lack of personal responsibility of the parents or a lack of corporate responsibility due to the the malfeasance of the cruise line (or both), what is the maximum exposure presented to Carnival? The answer, sadly, is just the child’s burial and burial expenses. How is that possible? There is a law in the U.S. called The Death On The High Seas Act (“DOHSA”). DOHSA is an archaic law enacted in 1920 which provides only “pecuniary” losses to the survivors of someone who dies on the high seas. “Pecuniary” damages means only those financial losses, such as lost wages or medical expenses, suffered by those who are dependent on the dead person. In cases of a dead child or a dead retiree, there are no lost wages and no one dependent on the child or retiree for support. In Qwentyn’s situation, there are obviously no lost wages or medical expenses. So all that the family could possibly receive in compensation after an expensive, long-drawn-out lawsuit is whatever it costs to bury a child these days. If the cruise line is negligent for a child’s death in an unattended pool, it will pay a maximum of $10,000 or so if liability is proven. Big deal. From a financial perspective, the cruise line is ahead of the game by not paying millions to employ lifeguards on over a hundred Carnival cruise ships to keep the kids safe. Carnival’s Micky Arison, worth around 6 billion dollars, gets to keep his bounty. Cruise lines love DOHSA. It exculpates the cruise lines when they act irresponsibly. The cruise industry has lobbied hard against amending the law. Read about that here and here. Don’t miss reading: What Does BP, Al Qaeda and a Cruise Line Have In Common? Crew members who die due to the negligence of the cruise lines face the same hardship of DOHSA. But that’s not all. The cruise lines have also fought tooth & nail to keep the claims of “foreign” crew members outside of the U.S. legal system and deprive injured crew members from having their cases heard by U.S. juries by insisting that they resolve their cases through “arbitration.” Read about this injustice here. The Filipinos face a “schedule” of compensation depending on the injury. A lost finger, or hand, or an arm may result in an award of only $7,500 or $25,000 or $35,000. A death? $50,000, plus only $7,000 per child with a limit of 4 children. One of the worst cases involved a Filipino crew member who received 35% burns on his body in a clear case of the vessel operator’s negligence. At the ship owner’s request, the disabled and disfigured crew member’s case was dismissed from the U.S. legal system and sent to Manila where a Kangaroo Court awarded the burned Filipino just $1,870.00 (US). The cruise lines don’t want you to understand what happens when the nice, smiling Filipino waiters or bartenders who serve your family are subsequently seriously injured or die on cruise ships. It is fundamentally different and absolutely unfair compared to when people are injured or die on land. And this is exactly how the multi-billion dollar cruise industry wants it. Have a thought about this article? Please leave a comment below, or join the discussion on our Facebook page.
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This paper describes Try Gonna Bee, an Android-based mobile app that can be used to aid users who are enthusiastic to start keeping stingless bees (Trigona thorasica and Trigona itama species). Eager but inexperienced beekeepers may mistakenly installed bee hives in inappropriate locations due to the lack of guidance. This results in poor quality honey yield and causes the bee colony to move or die. Also, the hive’s entrance must not be situated under direct sunlight because it may melt the propolis structure and cause heat stress. Novice beekeepers may not understand how frequent harvesting, maintaining and re-queening a hive should be done. The developed app determines whether an area is suitable for a beehive installation by using the Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) information, which retrieves an image of the area through Google Maps API. It calculates the greenery percentage of the location, where higher greenery is more favorable (has better access to vegetation). As the hive’s entrance should not face direct sunlight, and the app uses sensors in the phone (gyroscope, compass, and camera) to capture images from the North, East, South, West, and the luminance detection algorithm calculates the direction with the lowest luminance. The app also has a honey tracker function to remind users of upcoming tasks. The accuracy of the app, the usability and users’ experience when using the app was evaluated in a user study with two stingless bee experts, and thirty non-trained users. Results showed that it could determine the greenery percentage better than humans, and accurately (100%) detect lowest luminance direction, compared to novice users (50%). Most of the respondents were satisfied with the usability and experience of using the application. The app can help cultivate higher interests in individuals to be involved with bee keeping, which indirectly improves food security.
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Males are blue to dark green with numerous dark stripes on the body, white to yellowish belly, orange eyes. The first ray of the dorsal fin is elongated, they have black spots behind the head and on the pectoral fin base. Females dark grey to green on the upper body and have a white underside, divided by a black line from the nose to the tail, they eyes are bright red and white. Juveniles are red to dark red with several white horizontal lines. They live in small groups or solitary. Least concern according to the IUCN Red list. There are some areas where populations are growing, such as in France, and sightings of populations on the West coast of Africa. Further south the species has been replaced by Coris atlantica. There are few threats, so it is listed as “least concern”. They can be found in the Mediterranean, as far as Cape Verde, the Canary Islands and Senegal. Sightings further south are probably C. atlantica. They prefer shallow waters with rubble and/or rocks, weeds and seagrass. Older males can be found be found in deeper waters, and alle rainbow wrasses move deeper in winter. They live in a depth range of 1-50 meters. They spawn in summer. Eggs and larvae are plaktonic. All rainbow wrasses are protogynous, born as females and can change sex later on in life. They are sexually mature after 1 year. All fish bigger than 18cm. are males. Up t0 20cm. They feed on small crustaceans, isopods, sea urchins and worms. They bury in the sand when threatened or at night.
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I have the Java application that can create a PDF file. For example, I create a simple file from my program and I also wrote some code to open the file as soon as it's created correctly. However, if I want to run the code again, I must close the open file before I recreate it. If I don't close the file I have this error: java.io.FileNotFoundException: Archivio_Etichette_12-4-2015.pdf (Impossibile accedere al file. Il file è utilizzato da un altro processo) How can I fixed this problem? You need to close the file. The problem is similar to trying to delete or rename a file that is open: if you're working on Windows, Windows will show this error: "File in use" dialog You are experiencing the exact same problem: in this case, I tried to rename a file called hello.pdf in Windows Explorer. However, this action could not be completed because the file was open in Adobe Acrobat. Tools such as Adobe Reader and Adobe Acrobat need random file access to the file and will therefore lock that file so that no other process can remove, rewrite, rename that file. The solution is also shown in the dialog box: Close the file and try again. You are trying to do something that is impossible (and that is not related or limited to you using iText). When working on an iText project, I experience the same problem you describe very often: I write some code, run it, look at the resulting PDF, change the code, run it, and then get the same exception you get. To avoid this, I often create files that have a timestamp in their name. E.g. hello-20150411163400.pdf, and then when I run the same code 30 seconds later hello-20150411163430.pdf and so on (the filename is created based on the current date and time). This way, I can avoid that exception. Click How to close a PDF file to recreate it? (File in use problem) if you want to see how to answer this question in iText 5.
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Regions have become more prominent in EU policy assessment and evaluation. Their input into the "Fit for Future platform", inter alia, is an essential tool. The Regional Hub network (RegHub) is a recent approach to better integrating the expertise of regional administrations. But how to ensure that the particular expertise of border regions and cross-border entities is also used? What are the latest developments in cross-border evaluations? How could RegHub also include cross-border perspectives? These questions will be discussed during the info session. 13 October 2021, from 16.00 – 17.00 (Brussels time), co-organised with the University of Maastricht's Institute for Transnational and Euregional cross border cooperation and Mobility (ITEM). The event will be held in English. To register for the event, please follow this link: https://eu.app.swapcard.com/event/eu-regions-week/planning/UGxhbm5pbmdfNjMxMjYy
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In the epic Mahabharata, Drona (Sanskrit/Hindi: द्रोण) or Dronacharya (द्रोणाचार्य) (or Guru Drona - गुरु द्रोण) was the Guru or teacher of the Kauravas and Pandavas. He was a Brahmin, the son of sage Bhardwaja and was a master of advanced military arts, including the divine weapons or Astras. Ashwatthama was the son of Drona while Arjuna was his favourite student. Mention by Panini Drona and Drupada For the sake of his wife and son, Drona desired freedom from poverty. Remembering a childhood promise given by King Drupada (his childhood friend), he decided to approach him to ask for help. However, King Drupada refused to even recognize their friendship. Drupada, said friendship, is possible only between persons of equal stature in life. As a child, he said, it was possible for him to have friends with Drona, because at that time they were equals. But now since Drupada had become a king, and Dronacharya remained a luckless indigent, friendship was impossible. However, he said he would satisfy Dronacharya if he asked for alms befitting a Brahmin, rather than claiming his right as a friend. Drona went away silently, but in his heart, he vowed revenge. Drona later went to Hastinapura when Bhishma, with the permission of Dhritrashtra, appointed him Guru of the Kuru princes, training them in advanced military arts. Drona then established his Gurukula near the city, where princes from numerous kingdoms around the country came to study under him. This village came to be known as Guru-Grama ("guru" - teacher, "grama" - village), and has now developed into the city of Gurgaon. There are many stories about Drona - his interaction with Eklavya and Karna, teaching his favourite disciple, Arjuna, war with Drupada along with his disciples leading to defeat of Drupada who vowed to avenge this defeat, Drona's role in battle with Abhimanyu etc. On the 14th day of Kurukshetra War, Drona was slain by Dhrishtdyumna, son of Drupada and brother of Draupadi. Dhrishtdyumna was also the "Maharathi" or the chief commander of Pandavas during the war. This happened because Pandavas spread a rumour in the battlefield that Ashwatthama was killed by Bhima. Drona went to Yudhisthira to confirm the news. When Yudhisthira started speaking, not everything was heard in the noise and Drona thought that Ashwatthama was really killed. He abandoned all his arms and sat down in prayers when Dhristdyumna tore his head with his sword. Awards named after Dronacharya Guru Dronacharya remains a revered figure in history, and a pillar of the Indian tradition of respecting one's teacher as an equal not only of parents, but even of God. The Government of India annually awards the Dronacharya Awards for excellence in sports, to the best sports teachers and coaches in India. विजयेन्द्र कुमार माथुर ने लेख किया है ...दनकौर बुलन्दशहर ज़िला (वर्तमान गौतम बुद्ध नगर), उत्तर प्रदेश का एक ऐतिहासिक नगर है। एक प्राचीन मंदिर तथा सरोवर के लिए दनकौर उल्लेखनीय है। किंवदंती है कि इस नगर को पाण्डवों के गुरु द्रोणाचार्य ने बसाया था। द्रोणाचार्य के नाम से दनकौर में एक प्राचीन मंदिर भी है।
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COLLABORATIVE BLENDED LEARNING IN THE FINE ARTS USING SOCIAL NETWORK PLATFORMS T. Marín García1 , M.P. Marin Garcia2 1Universidad Miguel Hernández, Facultad de Bellas Artes (SPAIN) 2University of Cambridge, Spanish and Portuguese Department (UNITED KINGDOM) This Project shows some collaborative Blended Learning experiences in which the on-line tool for social networks Ning was used as a complement to the presential teaching in Fine Arts. The main topic was the study and experimentation of strategies of collective creation in the two subjects in which these experiences were carried out. The project took place in the Faculty of Fine Arts, University Miguel Hernández, during 2008-09 and 2009-10 academical years. The main aim of these experiences was to work the key aspects in collective creation processes with the students through collaborative methodological strategies. The methodology covers these four aspects: 1. Promoting collaborative learning through the use of a tool that boosts participation and interaction among students, widening the framework of presential teaching. 2. Practising and deepening in the search, selection and analysis of information in the Internet to encourage students critical thinking with regard to the use of new technologies and information management. 3. Creating collective files of information that allow the sharing of text, image, video and sound in order to improve knowledge and points of view. 4. Experimenting and sharing of collective creation processes through sharing ideas, public follow-up of the process of creation of projects within a team work and public exhibition of results. Webs of the Project:
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What is Jentadueto Used For? Jentadueto is available in the form of a tablet and prescribed to a person with type II diabetes whose blood sugar isn’t effectively regulated by the maximum tolerated Metformin dose alone or if a person is taking Linagliptin and Metformin as separate tablets. This medication is a combination of: - Linagliptin – it’s an oral antidiabetic which belongs to a family of drugs known as DPP-4(dipeptidyl 4) inhibitor. It lowers the blood glucose levels by inhibiting the breakdown of two incretin hormones known as glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide and glucagon –like peptide-1. During food consumption, the hormones are produced as a response. The hormones make the beta cells release insulin due to the rising levels of blood glucose. Glucagon production is also reduced. The break-down of the hormone is stopped; hence Linagliptin increases the effects of these hormones in regulating the blood glucose. - Metformin – it’s a biguanide. The liver is an important organ which stores glucose and releases it between meal and at night. But due to the effects of Metformin, it releases reduced amount of glucose. Also, the drug makes body’s cells sensitive to the action of insulin hormone. So, the cells make use of insulin more effectively. Naturally, without the effects of the drug, once the carbs are broken down into their simplest form, they are absorbed quickly along the upper as well as the lower parts of the small intestines. Villi (small finger like projections) absorb the carbs, and then they are transported to the bloodstream and transferred to the muscles as well as the liver; Metformin interferes with part of this process. It delays the absorption of sugar from the intestines and into your bloodstream; hence there is minimal food spike in blood glucose levels. Jentadueto can be used alone or together with other drugs like sulfonylureas. The drug is available under many brand names. The medication comes in the following strengths: - 2.5 mg /500 mg - 2.5 mg/850 mg - 2.5mg/1000 mg How to Take Take the medication exactly as directed by the medical care provider. The recommended starting dose of Jentadueto is individualized; it depends on the doses of the medication you are taking. As earlier mentioned, before the doctor prescribes this medication, you must be taking Metformin alone or with Linagliptin, but as separate tablets. The dose prescribed is taken twice daily (in the morning and evening), but with meals to reduce Jentuadueto side effects. If the doctor has prescribed a different dose from your friend who has type II diabetes and on the medication, take the dose as prescribed; don’t take the drug in larger or smaller quantity or for a longer time than directed. If unclear on the dosage prescribed, contact the health practitioner just to be sure. Low blood sugar can happen to anyone with diabetes, look out for symptoms like a headache, hunger, sweating, confusion, irritability, dizziness. Also, be vigilant for signs of hyperglycemia (high blood sugar), for example, increased thirst and urination, hunger, dry mouth, dry skin, weight loss and blurred vision Monitor blood glucose levels carefully in times of stress, illness or surgery as these may affect blood sugar levels. Contact the physician in such circumstances, since Jentadueto dose needs to be changed. Inform the medical care provider about all the drugs you are taking; If possible, always have a list of all the prescription medicine, supplements, vitamins, herbs and over the counter drugs as you visit the hospital. If it is important to continue taking some drugs which may interact with Jentadueto, the health professional may alter the dose or take the necessary precautions. Quit alcohol consumption during Jentadueto treatment and don’t skip meals as these may trigger low blood sugar. The existence of medical conditions may interfere with the use of the drug. Make sure you inform the physician if you have medical problems like: - Vitamin B12 deficiency - Acute or unstable congestive heart failure - Excessive use of alcohol - A recent history of heart attack - Sepsis (it’s a serious infection) - Weakened physical condition - Diabetic ketoacidosis - Low blood pressure - Infection of any type - High cholesterol in the blood - Kidney disease - A history of pancreas problem Disclaimer: Please note that the contents of this community article are strictly for informational purposes and should not be considered as medical advice. This article, and other community articles, are not written or reviewed for medical validity by Canadian Insulin or its staff. All views and opinions expressed by the contributing authors are not endorsed by Canadian Insulin. Always consult a medical professional for medical advice, diagnosis, and treatment.
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Hello!I firmly believe the new adage that ‘Sitting is the new smoking’ is spot-on. A sedentary lifestyle is becoming more and more prevalent in society today. And it is increasingly important for not only adults to be active, but for children as well. The Bright Pink Organization has a dedicated mission to educate young women on the importance of living a healthy and active lifestyle early-on. Through an active way of life, the chances of falling victim to an innumerable amount of health ailments dramatically decreases.Each day I strive to show my son that we work hard to achieve our goals -- and that we don't ever give up in the face of adversity. We show compassion to others through cheerleading them to the finish. We also maintain a healthy balance between working out, school, church, family time, community vocations and musical practices. I aspire to be an inspiration not only to my son; but also to my friends, family and community members.Everyone has been affected by breast cancer and/or ovarian cancer in some capacity. Please help me in this fight against these diseases!Thank you! Is a page you created? Log in to edit it.
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HMRC have recently started sending out “threatening” text messages (SMS) warnings taxpayers to pay their tax on time or face penalties. The Behavioural Insights Team is part owned by the government and has been looking at ways to get payment from taxpayers in a timely manner. The unit is setup to target taxpayers and the texts are in effect pre-empted strike or warnings of possible penalties and debts that the taxpayer may accrue if they don’t pay their tax on time. As the name of the team suggests it looks at ways to increase payment of taxes and it found that using the word ‘penalty’ in the text message increased the chances of that taxpayer paying his or her tax on time. The number of late payers making the deadline after receiving these types of text messages increased by 50 percent. The SMS campaign signalled an increase on previous campaigns which has seen HMRC change the wording in letters to increase tax repayment rates dramatically. Sending out SMS messages is a much more cost effective way to encourage tax payments and has been seen to be arguably as effective as letters. HMRC claims to have gained an extra £210 million from taxpayers by using the controversial ‘nudge’ tactics that predict how people will react to specific wording within an SMS text. Not surprisingly people are more encouraged to pay on time if the SMS message includes a reference to possible ‘penalties’ that the taxpayer may incur if their tax isn’t paid on time. Of course it is every taxpayers duty to pay their tax on time and small businesses and partnerships should always complete their self assessment forms if they wish to avoid penalties to HMRC and to possibly avoid debts to HMRC. It is true to say that HMRC rank only as an unsecured creditor, this puts them on a level with any unsecured debts such as a credit card debt or a bank loan, or indeed money owed to other people or personal debts. However, although in practice they rank the same as other creditors in reality they act as the ‘bully in the playground’. They will push their weight around in order to get payment on time and have many advantages over other unsecured creditors in obtaining the debt owed to them. The biggest advantage they have is that they do not have to take commercial decisions with regard to recovering their debt. This means they can simply make someone bankrupt and not worry about the cost of incurring that procedure as opposed to recovering the debt. This often means that they may reject a proposal from a debtor such as an Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) which is often offered as an alternative to bankruptcy. The IVA debtor may offer HMRC 50p in the £1 for the debt owed to them. So for example if HMRC are owed £50,000 the IVA proposal may offer HMRC say £25,000.00 as the debtor is insolvent. This does not necessarily mean that HMRC would accept the IVA proposal and HMRC may well be content with seeing that debtor made bankrupt even though they would receive substantially less than £25,000, which is the figure they would have received if they had accepted the IVA. Banks and financial institutions do not have this luxury. They will look upon an IVA as a commercial decision and will frequently accept an IVA proposal from a debtor if it means they are to get a return on the money owed, even if it less than the full amount that the debtor owes them. The moral to the final few paragraphs of this blog is simple. All unsecured creditors rank equally, it’s just that one is more equal than the others! If you’re struggling with debt please don’t hesitate to contact a member of our dedicated team on 00845 287 0939. Alternatively please complete the online enquiry form. Contact Us TodayWe're here to help. Call us on 0845 050 1958
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Kris Ball started writing when she was 6 years old — poetry, song lyrics, short stories. Ball said in the opening of one of her books that, sitting at the foot of her bed, her Aunt Janice — a woman 10 years younger than Ball’s “hands-off” mother — encouraged her to write and “would listen to [her] stupid poems.” “She always said, ‘Well, that’s really good. You’re a really good writer,’” Ball, 2000 Ball State graduate and dining worker at Woodworth Complex, said. “I was this dumb, little kid, and she’d always [say], ‘You need to keep writing. You should keep writing.’” As a first-grader, Ball performed a play she wrote about talking animals for the kindergarten class at her school. Now, she is a published author with a poetry and prose book and two children’s books, the latter featuring a brown-haired bear in a Pendleton sweatshirt, jeans and Nikes as the “author.” Max the Bear was a stuffed animal Ball’s almost 31-year-old son, Adam Lawson, would sleep with as a child. However, after Ball took Max to Pendleton Elementary School during her janitor shift, she and Max were asked by teachers to read for classes. “I was taking Max with his clothes and his wagon, and I was reading to the kindergarteners and the second-graders and the preschoolers and the special needs kids, and they just loved him,” Ball said. “I would read to this class, and teachers in the next class over would hear about it. They’re like, ‘Hey, can you come and read to our class tomorrow?’” After a teacher at Pendleton encouraged her to write a book, Ball wrote, “How To Survive A Stuffed Bear Attack,” through the perspective of Max the Bear. She said this decision came from her experience reading to classes with children who believed Max was alive. However, the book, which she wrote to just make people laugh, began to have a life of its own for one teacher at the school. “[The teacher] goes, ‘No, your book has an important message,’” Ball said. “And I said, ‘It does?’ And she said, ‘Yeah, this book is about love.’” Max the Bear once again came into the spotlight for Ball’s second book, “Bears Against Bullies,” but without the backing of a publishing contract, the glossy and illustrated pages from the first book turned into photographs Ball took herself for the second book — including a park in the town she lived in, a family-used daycare and other locations. Even the name of one of the characters, Froggie Nelsons, came from Ball’s own life. “My nephew would play football with his bears and his frogs … And the star quarterback frog was named Froggie Nelsons,” Ball said. “So, my brother-in-law and my nephew said if I ever wrote a book with a frog in it that the frog had to be Froggie Nelsons.” For her third book, though, the “endearing” qualities of Max the Bear and Froggie Nelsons that had previously encapsulated her pages disappeared. Instead, the first page depicts a bear cast away in the shadows, and the reader is greeted not by childhood innocence but by a woman screaming through cobwebs on the front cover. This was not a children’s book. Ball knew her book would be titled “Screaming in Autopilot” from the beginning and said she wrote the book because “[she] wanted to be heard.” “[The title of the book] is how I feel in my life, like I’m not in control,” Ball said. “Like I’m in autopilot, like you’re screaming, like you can’t say anything. Like you don’t have any control, like somebody else is in control.” Lynn Lamb, the book’s graphic designer, interacted with Ball through social media as they were both part of the virtual writing community. Ball reached out personally to Lamb to be the designer for “Screaming in Autopilot.” "The first thing that caught my attention was that amazing title,” Lamb said, “and my brain just blew up with ideas of what I could do with that title for a cover." The book depicts poetry and prose from Ball’s life, created over the last 20 years, and features a trigger warning for “incest, child abuse and trauma, suicide and/or death, depression and alcoholism,” before some chapters. Ball was abused as a child, and it remained unreported by her family. She said some of the pieces in the book were written when she was still angry, and she wants people to see the freedom in working through anger. In one poem titled, “Letter To My Son,” she wrote that her anger kept her “living as a sibling” to her son as he grew up. “I was 30 years old — I [will] never forget,” Ball said. “I woke up one day, and I was like, ‘You know what? My parents don’t care if I’m angry at them. They don’t care. I’m not hurting them. I’m hurting me, I’m hurting Adam.’” Ball also included some humorous written pieces in “Screaming in Autopilot” because she wanted to lighten the mood of the book and not make it too sad. Skyler Petro, 2018 Ball State graduate and close friend of Ball, said humor is part of Ball’s personality. "[The book] made me cry,” Petro said. “I thought I knew her before, but when I read that, I was like, 'There's things that I didn't know — she shouldn't have had to go through that.’ But then her sense of humor comes out, too, and you're like, 'Yep, this is Kris.'" Ball wants people to believe they can achieve hope and peace in their lives. She thinks the book helps people who are hurting and is relevant because she believes there may be many people who go through situations that aren’t reported, like she did. “I think [the book is] very relatable,” Lamb said. “Many people have been through what she's been through, and she's very brave to put it all out there." Despite publishing her book, Ball said she “feels like [she’s] barely dipping her toes in the pool,” and admires the bravery of the generation of students at Ball State who she serves as a dining worker on campus. “I look around, and I see the kids and nobody's afraid to be themselves,” Ball said. “I’m like, ‘Man, I wish I’d been that brave when I was that age.’ Like, where does it come from? Where does that bravery come from? … If I had been that brave when I was that young, imagine what I could be now.” Contact Elissa Maudlin with comments at firstname.lastname@example.org or on Twitter @ejmaudlin.
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Make math your superpower! Math? No problem! ZuMath is the fast, fun future of learning! Jump into a virtual world to find and rescue your friends, and make math your superpower as you advance. - ZuMath is a powerful, immersive journey of discovery. It’s more than a mission. It’s a life-changing experience. - It's fast-paced. And you can slow down, go back, deep dive or jump ahead if that’s your style. - From number theory to algebra, trig to probability, you’ll easily master everything that matters in middle school and high school math. ZuMath gives you a complete math education for a fraction of what an hour of tutoring might cost. That's more than a year of education for the price of a single Big Mac meal! Reviewers have given ZuMath's enlightened e-learning methods a rapturous reception! We're building the Disney of self-taught education! With ZuMath, we make decentralised education a reality. We provide affordable, quality education remotely, using virtual worlds, compelling characters, storytelling and gamification. The Mindzu universe brings together the most creative talents and the brightest minds in entertainment, education and e-learning. Expect to see our virtual worlds and characters exploding across media – in apps, social, games, merchandising, series and movies! We are a Global Edtech Startup Awards finalist. Leave your contact details here and we’ll keep you updated with our news.
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The dairy industry has grown rapidly across the High Plains region over the last decade. “Dairy numbers and number of cows have likely peaked in Western Kansas due to the limited supply of water,” states Dwight Koops, Crop Quest President. “Due to water allocations and lower output wells, keeping up with forage demands has proven to be a challenge for the dairy industry in this area. Severe drought conditions have not helped either,” Koops adds. Dairy cows require a lot of nutrients in order to produce large quantities of milk. Forage quality is important but quantity is also essential for high-level production, resulting in a constant supply of forage needed for diary operations. Much of the forage produced in Western Kansas is dependent upon irrigation. In the past, there has been sufficient corn and alfalfa grown for silage and sold to the dairies nearby. Local production is important to the success of the dairy operation to maintain reasonable transportation costs. With current grain prices so favorable, many producers are growing crops for grain rather than silage. This provides an additional challenge for dairies to meet their forage requirements. However, with the increase of lower producing irrigation wells, some farmers are looking to alternatives for crop production. If a well can no longer support corn, some may consider a switch to forage crops that may utilize less water. “We are seeing more acres planted to sorghum and triticale for silage production,” Koops says. Because they do not have the water requirements of corn, they are an excellent alternative for dairy forage. “With the water problems facing dairies in our area, more dairies are relying on feed resources other than corn silage since there has been a decrease in the number of acres planted to silage corn across the area,” says Johan Marquardt, Crop Quest Agronomist in the Western Kansas and Eastern Colorado area. “Many of the wells owned by the dairy that are producing below 350 gallons per minute are switching to sorghum sudan instead of corn,” he explains. Marquardt adds that acres are at a maximum amount for triticale and sorghum sudan, so the dairies are facing major issues in securing enough forage for their operations and are being forced to purchase high quality feed such as corn and alfalfa to supplement the sorghum silage to make up for feed quality concerns. Dairies in Marquardt’s area are addressing these issues by reducing cow numbers by immediately culling cows as their milk production declines. Overall herd sizes are also being reduced as well. Dairies are attempting to produce as much forage as possible while remaining good stewards of the land. This is a challenging time for dairies in this region. In the Texas Panhandle, dairies are acquiring enough land to support the amount of feed necessary for their dairy operation. In this way, they do not have to rely on neighbors to produce forage, nor do they have to ship feed in. “The dairy producers around my area prefer corn silage for their milking cows and sorghum silage for their replacement heifers,” says Kyle Aljoe, Crop Quest Senior Agronomist in the Dimmitt, TX area. After harvesting the small grain silage, most producers are then double cropping with either corn or sorghum silage. If there is sufficient water, they grow corn. If water is scarce, they grow sorghum. Aljoe recommends lower plant populations for growing sorghum silage. “They pre-water, use a low population sorghum (about 2 ½ to 3 pounds per acre), and water until the plant reaches a growth stage of 5-6 leaf. At that point, they switch the water to another field and allow the sorghum to stress. They usually average 20-25 tons of sorghum silage per acre,” explains Aljoe. He also emphasizes that the variety of sorghum plays a huge role, because not all varieties can handle that amount of stress. “Another dairy producer grows corn for earlage, which is harvested using a corn header on a silage cutter so only the whole ear is harvested,” says Aljoe. The dairy producers in his area are making it work despite the drought by staying on their own ground and producing their own feed. Water issues and drought conditions are just a few of the challenges that are affecting farmers and livestock producers now, and in the future. Talk to your Crop Quest Agronomist about alternatives for your lower producing wells.
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Please join us in the Wilbur Cross North Reading Room on 9/17 beginning at 4:00 PM for Prof. Pomeranz’s lecture: “Late Imperial Legacies: Land, Water, and Chinese Development in Long-Run Perspective.” The lecture is free and open to the public, with a reception and light refreshments to follow. On 9/18 beginning at 10:00 AM, Prof. Pomeranz will give a morning workshop on a pre-circulated paper: “Domesticating the Frontier in Late Imperial China: Rethinking the Boundaries of Civilization, ca. 1680-1840.” Lunch will follow the paper and discussion. About the speaker: Kenneth Pomeranz is a University Professor of History and in the College; he previously taught at the University of California, Irvine. His work focuses mostly on China, though he is also very interested in comparative and world history. Most of his research is in social, economic, and environmental history, though he has also worked on state formation, imperialism, religion, gender, and other topics. His publications include The Great Divergence: China, Europe, and the Making of the Modern World Economy (2000), which won the John K. Fairbank Prize from the AHA, and shared the World History Association book prize; The Making of a Hinterland: State, Society and Economy in Inland North China, 1853‑1937 (1993), which also won the Fairbank Prize; The World that Trade Created (with Steven Topik, first edition 1999, 3rd edition 2012), and a collection of his essays, recently published in France. He has also edited or co-edited five books, and was one of the founding editors of the Journal of Global History. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Philosophical Society, American Council of Learned Societies, the Institute for Advanced Studies, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and other sources. His current projects include a history of Chinese political economy from the seventeenth century to the present, and a book called Why Is China So Big? which tries to explain, from various perspectives, how and why contemporary China’s huge land mass and population have wound up forming a single political unit.
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Learning how to ride a bike is a rite of passage for many children and adults, and training wheels can be a wonderful teaching tool for learning independence and balance. Many sets of training wheels come with adjustable heights so you can begin raising the wheels off the ground as the rider gets more confident on their bike. Training wheels have a pretty standard design, with bracket attachments (arms) on either side of the rear tire. Most sets are easy to attach and remove, as well as adjustable. We chose a variety of sizes and diameters for new bike riders of all ages. The Best Training Wheels of 2022 1Best OverallTraining Wheels Kit Wald Read More 2Best StabilityHeavy Duty Rear Bicycle Stabilizers Little World Read More 3Best QualityTraining Wheels Specialized Read More 4Best for Little RippersMonster Truck Training Wheels Schwinn Read More 5Best for Shared BikesSpotter Trainer Wheels BELL Read More What to Consider Construction, quality components, and the correct installation are all critical when choosing and installing training wheels. The training wheels should be set slightly higher than the rear tire, for balance training as well as safety, and always double-check your bolts before the rider sets off. Like all bike components, training wheels should be checked for stability and tightness before each ride, and adjusted if something seems off. The bracket/arm length of the training wheels determines the best size bike for each set, and we’ve also listed the appropriate bike sizes in the specs for each set we feature. These training wheel options come in a range of sizes that will work with everything from 12-inch bike wheels to 26-inch bike wheels, and everything in between. Be aware that each bike is different, and some bikes might not work with certain sets of training wheels, even if they appear to be appropriately sized. We’ve highlighted instances where this is the case. How We Selected To recommend the best training wheels, we looked first at safety and construction to make sure there were no red flags for durability or stabilization. Then we curated a list of training wheels sized for various bikes, and with wheels of varying sizes, from 12-inch wheels to 26-inch wheels. Most of these choices are adjustable, and all are highly rated for safety and ease of use.
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Music and Drama departments have been working furiously once again this term towards our performance of ‘Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat’. At the start of our work, many children had not heard the story of Joseph, his brothers and his rise to power in Egypt. Enjoying learning the catchy songs from Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical in singing lessons, some were surprised to find that this was a Bible story! Meanwhile, musicians, actors and dancers were working on their contributions to the final show culminating in the marvellous event in The Mount Theatre on Thursday in which all children enthusiastically performed. Thank you to Mrs. Cameron, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Cotterill, Miss Messham and to all the children for their efforts and contributions to such a memorable event.
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The "danger area" is indicated by shading. The danger area broadly reflects the maximum tropical storm force (34 knot) wind radii forecast by the NHC. The NHC does not warrant that avoiding these danger areas will eliminate the risk of harm from tropical cyclones. Users operating in the vicinity of these systems are advised to continually monitor the latest Forecast/Advisories from the NHC and proceed at their own risk. Areas are also shaded for systems in which NHC forecasters believe there is an adequate chance of tropical cyclone formation within the next 48 hours. About Alternates - E-Mail Advisories - RSS Feeds Latest Advisory - Past Advisories - About Advisories Latest Products - About Marine Products Tools & Data Satellite Imagery - US Weather Radar - Aircraft Recon - Local Data Archive - Forecast Verification - Deadliest/Costliest/Most Intense Learn About Hurricanes Storm Names Wind Scale - Prepare - Climatology - NHC Glossary - NHC Acronyms - Frequently Asked Questions - AOML Hurricane-Research Division About NHC - Mission/Vision - Other NCEP Centers - NHC Staff - Visitor Information - NHC Library National Weather Service National Centers for Environmental Prediction National Hurricane Center 11691 SW 17th Street Miami, Florida, 33165-2149 USA Page last modified: Thursday, 11-Aug-2022 03:23:50 UTC
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Aim: To ascertain the efficacy of neutral electrolysed water (NEW) in reducing Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus and Listeria monocytogenes on glass and stainless steel surfaces. Its effectiveness for that purpose is compared with that of a sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) solution with similar pH, oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) and active chlorine content. Methods and results: First, the bactericidal activity of NEW was evaluated over pure cultures (8.5 log CFU ml-1) of the abovementioned strains: all of them were reduced by more than 7 log CFU ml-1 within 5 min of exposure either to NEW (63 mg l-1 active chlorine) or to NaClO solution (62 mg l-1 active chlorine). Then, stainless steel and glass surfaces were inoculated with the same strains and rinsed for 1 min in either NEW, NaClO solution or deionized water (control). In the first two cases, the populations of all the strains decreased by more than 6 log CFU 50 cm-2. No significant difference (P<or=0.05) was found between the final populations of each strain with regard to the treatment solutions (NEW or NaClO solution) or to the type of surface. Conclusions: NEW was revealed to be as effective as NaClO at significantly reducing the presence of pathogenic and spoilage bacteria (in this study, E. coli, L. monocytogenes, P. aeruginosa and S. aureus) on stainless steel and glass surfaces. Significance and impact of the study: NEW has the advantage of being safer than NaClO and easier to handle. Hence, it represents an advantageous alternative for the disinfection of surfaces in the food industry.
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Thinking through the Effect of Dew on Spray Efficacy The question has been asked of me from time to time about the possible effect of water deposited on the plants by dew on spray efficacy. Spraying after all is using water as a carrier, and having even more water on the plant only adds to the amount being deposited on the field. Does this dilute the spray or cause a bunch of the mix to run off the leaf, and cause a lessened efficacy? To start to get my arms around this problem, last year after a particularly heavy dew, I went out and gathered a sample of 43 leaflets. I am an early riser and this sort of thing is not a problem. These 43 leaflets had a total of 14.7 ml of water on them. Considering that an average strawberry plant has 90 leaflets (30 leaves), this comes out to 31 ml per plant x 21,750 plants per acre = 674,250 ml dew water per acre or 178 gallons. Not insignificant. Now figuring out what to do about all of this water already on the plant is not as straightforward as one might think. This is 178 gallons of water that could dilute the spray or create run off, and so people are thinking maybe we should be concerned about it? The video from Sprayers 101 provided to me by colleague Franz Niederholzer might be helpful in getting our minds in the right frame to understand of what to think about the effect of dew water on spray efficacy: - Courser, bigger spray droplets create more run-off of dew saturated leaves than do fine droplets. - However, the run off, which in the experiment shared on the video caused about 30% loss of product, still didn't end up with lessened efficacy. This could be because of calculated play in the product or the fact that the waxy cuticle of the leaf is well hydrated from the dew and more able to take up product than when dry. - Don't forget that the flat, horizontally oriented leaf surface of the strawberry can aggregate water rather than let it run off as with say a grass, so run off might not actually be as severe as we are thinking. The first picture below is proof positive of the ability of strawberry leaves to hold a lot of water! - We should not forget the role of the surfactant, which will cause mixing of the applied water with the water already on the leaf. This could also induce more run off. The final thought on the video is probably the most important one. Spraying a wet plant is probably not as bad as we think it is, due to the opposing effects of more run off counteracted by great plant absorption because of cuticle hydration. It might be a wash, in other words. Very heavy dew on strawberry leaves on a recent morning. Note the water accumulated in the cupped leaf. More dew deposition on strawberry leaves. Not an insignificant amount of water!
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Enterprise Hall, 318 March 20, 2007, 08:00 PM to 07:00 PM This dissertation examines a crucial but neglected element of constitutional stickiness and maintenance: constitutional culture (defined as the prevalent attitudes and values, explicit and implicit, about the nature, scope and function of constitutional institutions and constraints). Chapter one explores constitutional culture, from the individual through the macro level, studied as a complex emergent phenomenon in the spirit of F.A. Hayek, and builds on existing but incomplete definitions. Chapter two examines the relationship between informal and formal constitutional guardians (i.e. constitutional culture v. constitutional parchment). Specifically, it argues that the formal constitution must match the underlying constitutional culture; if the two are slightly mismatched, compromise will follow; if they are radically mismatched, the informal will reject the formal, i.e. not just the specific constitution, but constitutionalism generally. The dissertation then uses Argentina as a case study: with a constitution copied almost verbatim on the US document, Argentina saw repeated instances of military dictatorship and government failure. Why? If the answer lies not in the formal (after all, the documents were almost identical), it must lie in the informal. Chapter three offers a brief review of Argentine history. Chapter four studies Argentina's constitution and founding in depth, ending with a claim that Argentina simply chose the wrong constitution, as parchment clashed with culture. Chapter five examines contemporary Argentina, and the continuing disconnect between formal and informal institutions, which has led to continued government failure. The chapter reports on the author's qualitative fieldwork, which is complemented by quantitative work existing in the literature. The final chapter concludes, and the envoi proposes an agenda for further research on the emergence of constitutional culture into formal constitutional order.
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Metal on metal hip implants have another premature hip implant failure and metallosis disaster to account for. Recently, another metal hip implant fiasco and recall has hit the airways and garnered the strongest warning/recall from the FDA. The epidemic of premature metal on metal hip implant failure continues surge at an alarming rate. DePuy ASR, DePuy Pinnacle, Biomet Magnum & M2a, Smith and Nephew, Wright Conserve, Zimmer Durom cup and Stryker Rejuvenate and ABG II, are among hip replacements that continue to fail prematurely and require painful and risky revision surgery. 11,000 Affected Profemur Modular Neck Components There are high rates of hip implant fractures has led to the recall of nearly 11,000 Profemur Varus/Valgus modular neck components for artificial hip replacement systems.
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Israeli alternative meat company SavorEat (TASE: SVRT) has unveiled its robot chef - a technological solution to digitally manufacture meat alternatives from plant-based proteins, according to individual customer tastes. The robot chef has been unveiled as part of its collaboration with Israeli hamburger chain BBB. SavorEat's products will be served to customers at designated locations of the chain. Customers will be able to gain a first-hand impression of the solution, which allows the preparation and grilling of personalized burgers that meet individual preferences and are prepared at the fast-food outlet. The first product to hit the market is a meat alternative burger, while SavorEat plans expanding its product range to all meat alternative categories. The meat alternatives produced by the Robot Chef within a few minutes are made in a closed system (without human touch) and are designed to exclude allergens, genetic engineering and gluten ingredients, while preserving high nutritional values and without compromising the familiar eating experience of meat (both in taste and texture). The robot chef has an application that stores data in a secure way on the cloud - a feature that allows great flexibility in updating recipes, remote control of the robot on the one hand, and collecting relevant consumer and business information on the other hand. Among other things, the robot chef allows customers to choose the amount of fat and protein they want, and change the size and cooking preference of the chosen meal. SavorEat was established in 2018, by CEO Racheli Wizman, chief scientist Prof. Oded Shoseyov, and Prof. Ido Braslavsky, and in November 2020 became the first food-tech company to complete an IPO on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. SavorEat CEO and cofounder Racheli Vizman said, "From the beginning we believed that the food industry is in need of significant changes in order to remain relevant. We choose to boldly look at the changes of our future and to challenge the status quo in the food industry. Through the technology we have developed, we will be able to get to know our customers better, respect them and give expression to their changing needs. Now is the time for change, and it is more fitting than ever. With the help of the unique partners we have chosen, we believe we will achieve these goals and reach international commercialization." BBB CEO Ahuva Turgeman said, "The BBB Group's values include innovation, excellence and a business mindset. These values are reflected in the collaboration with SavorEat. The idea that for the first time ever, a costumer can come to a meat-oriented hamburger restaurant, and with a push of a button on an app order a juicy, digitally manufactured, vegan burger is nothing short of revolutionary and creates an extraordinary and unforgettable experience." Published by Globes, Israel business news - en.globes.co.il - on December 28, 2021. © Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2021.
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Covering thousands of square miles in Southern Florida with wetland sawgrass and trees, the Everglades are not a particularly welcoming environment to become lost in. One Ohio family found this out the hard way this week when they became lost while airboating. According to a report from CBS Miami, Scott Schreck and his family took a camouflaged airboat through the Everglades this week and went missing. The Schrecks, who are from Seville, Ohio, took a wrong turn on their journey and were unable to find their way back. The family of five ended up spending the night in the Everglades, with rain pouring down on them. The CBS report states the family were found by authorities who had mobilized a search for them that included airboats, airplanes, and helicopters. The Schrecks were located by helicopter after rescue workers heard them blowing an air horn. Despite their night in the wilderness, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Officer Jorge Pino told CBS that the family is “in good condition.”
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Niketas Stamatelopoulos or ‘Nikitaras’ (1781-1849) was born in modern Nedousa, Messinia. He successively went through the Russian, the English, and finally the French army, acquiring thus a significant military expertise. He was initiated into the Filiki Etairia, and when the Greek Revolution broke he devoted himself totally to the struggle for freedom. At the battle of Doliana the Turks that he killed himself were so many that the simple people started calling his ‘Tourkofagos’. He died poor and overlooked in Athens, and was buried next to his uncle, Th. Kolokotronis.
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How will a looming energy crisis affect Western support for Ukraine? Before the willingness to help crumbles, military expert Masala is in favor of providing the country with sufficient support in the war against Russia. Military expert Carlo Masala has called for quick and energetic support for Ukraine in order to prevent Russia's war of aggression from succeeding. Now is "the time to go 'all in' again, to make a concerted effort to help Ukraine defend its territory," said the politics professor at the Bundeswehr University in Munich in the "Stern" podcast "Ukraine - die Location". Masala warned that solidarity in Western societies could crumble in autumn and winter due to high energy prices. The same applies to the resilience of the Ukrainians directly affected by the war. "We are approaching a situation that may end in public support in the West tipping over, in the support of Ukrainian society for its president possibly changing," said the military expert. "Then we'll have a completely new starting position, which none of us want because it will play into the hands of the Russians in possible peace negotiations that will then be conducted." However, Masala did not take it as an indication of a possible internal power struggle that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyj suspended his intelligence chief and attorney general on Monday. There is no indication that popular support is no longer present to any significant extent. At the same time, the expert pointed to the enormous pressure that the Ukrainians in the occupied territories are under to cooperate with the attackers. "When you are faced with the alternative of being killed or collaborating, many choose to collaborate," Masala said. It would be a problematic situation for the West if Ukrainian society refused to support its leadership "because the costs it has to bear are unacceptably high, even in their view." Then peace negotiations would have to be held, but they shouldn't end in such a way that "Russia gets away with its aggression." From Masala's point of view, it is not clear how this can be achieved. "That's a bit of squaring the circle."
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Interestingly, the question is not whether HR will turn digital or not, but whether HR will remain human or not. New age HR is and has already turned digital, because society around us has turned digital. The key challenge before us is how do we ensure that the new age HR does not lose the ‘human’ touch. ABC. Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, Content This is the triumvirate of the near future. How can we harness these to create more simplicity, more impact and more ‘human-ness’ in our business, and in our society, at large? Here are 5 postulations: a. New Age HR will be able to raise the game of customer service by ensuring consistency and speed of response coupled with accuracy and comprehensiveness. This because an AI enabled ‘bot’ can truly bring together ‘what everyone knows’ into a 24*7 immediate response solution. Intelligent automation of the first mile frees up mind space and bandwidth of the HR generalist to deliver last mile customer delight. b. Driving massive customization. Information on what employees love, their inherent triggers and habits, their consumer preferences abound around us. Data analytics from various channels of social media, spend patterns, online preferences help drive last mile customization leading to the demise of ‘one size fits all’ to mass scale customization for employees, families, partners, networks. New age HR is about customization just as old age HR was about standardization. This can only build on each other. Interestingly, this could also lead to the first step of dissolution of terms like ‘blue collar’, ‘white collar’. c. Intelligent Content. Content that is not driven top-down, but co-created and shared. This is the ‘googlization’ of knowledge and learning — content that is targeted as well as content that is alive and organic. New age HR is less about managing programs and more about leveraging channels and customizing content, and driving content to change behavior; it is all about how to ensure local victory while building on global scale. There is no global consumer and there is no global learning. There is global scale, global networks, global approach, but content finds meaning at an individual level. d. Good new age HR professionals get data; they get analytics; they create people insights. However, successful new age HR professionals get their people. And leverage the ABCs to deliver wow solutions, in scale. This also points to the re-emergence of the complete HR Generalist – who pulls the story together for great people experiences. Good new age leaders understand the importance of people and human resource. Successful new age leaders live in a world of shrinking resources and understand that the only way to succeed is get awesome last mile people experience, led by the line leader from the front. e. The death of Performance Management as we know it. New Age Performance Management is not based on annual targets but possibly a cumulating of monthly deliveries. Feedback is not episodic but online. Assessors are not line managers (only) but customers. Careers are not vertical climbs but dynamic route plans. Structures are not hierarchies but resource maps. Humans are not resources but creators. There are, then, 3 things to watch out for in this New Age upon us: a. How aligned the ABCs are to deliver amazing people experiences, b. How well we can marry the ‘left brain’ with the ‘right brain’, and c. How accurately, we identify and impact key business drivers. New Age HR is happening while you read this. What will be interesting is how much we will deliver through HR folks and how much through other channels. What will also be interesting is how much the new age HR professional uses what is at his disposal to bring the heart back into HR.
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Flow meters can measure many other things as well, such as absolute pressure, differential pressure, viscosity, and temperature. While flow meters are often applied to fluid flows within enclosed systems (e.g. pipes), some of them are able to be applied to open channels. Depending on their specific application, these important devices may be known by alternate names such as flow gauges, flow indicators, or liquid meters. History of Flow Meters Measuring flow measurement has been an important aspect of commercial activity since the earliest times. Ancient Sumerian cities devised crude ways of flow measurement in order to fairly distribute water resources via aqueducts and other irrigation systems. In a similar fashion, ancient Egyptians devised weir rudiments (to assess the Nile and predict the imminent flood and harvest) while the ancient Chinese state of Qin utilized rudimentary flow measurement tools for their governmental irrigation system. Modern forms of flowmeters can be traced back to 1738. In that year, Swiss Daniel was able to successfully judge characteristics of water flow by the use of differential pressure. In 1791, an Italian named Venturi devised the Venturi tube to measure liquid flow. Almost a century later, an American inventor named Hershel improved upon this device and enabled it to measure flows in open channels. Flow meters did not really develop, however, until a surge of industrial production and innovation following World War II. In the 1960s, flow meters were vastly improved by advancements in miniaturization and precision technology. Since an upward commercial surge in the 1990s, the use and spread of flowmeters has only continued to grow. Flow Meter Parts and Configurations Flow meters are made from a variety of materials, including plastic and industrial metals like bronze and iron (e.g. cast, ductile). Some flow meters are built with specially selected materials that will maximize results. Generally speaking, flowmeters possess three main elements known as the primary device, transducer, and transmitter (or pressure transmitter). The transducer and transmitter are heavily interdependent on each other since the transducer senses fluid flow through the primary device and the transmitter translates the information from the transducer into a signal that can be interpreted. It should be noted that flowmeters can be installed and used in a variety of configurations. For example, flowmeters can have several devices attached to them, or they can be incorporated into a larger industrial system. Broadly speaking, flow meters are installed in one of three mounting styles: insertion, in-line, and non-invasive. In-line flow meters integrate within a larger system. In contrast, insertion flow meters take measurements at a single location while non-invasive flow meters take measurements in some remote manner. An example of the former is a flowmeter inserted at a specific location on a pipe and used to infer fluid flow for the entire pipe. An example of the latter is an ultrasonic flow meter that reads shifts in frequency (or more specifically, the Doppler effect) caused by solid or gas suspensions in a fluid flow. Types of Flow Meters Like many industrial instruments, flow meters are marked by a broad range of diversity. Flow meters can be categorized in a number of different ways, including how they operate and what they specifically measure. Common types of flow meter types include water flow meters, flow switches, fuel flow meters, peak flow meters, air flow meters, and ultrasonic flow meters. How They Operate Positive displacement (PD) flow meters are also known as volumetric flow meters because of their ability to directly measure the volume of a fluid flow (in cubic inches or liters). They measure liquid flow by trapping it, rotating parts in it, and measuring the created flow between the meter body and the seals. The output of a PD meter is directly proportional to the volume of the fluid flow through the meter. Some sub-categories under PD or volumetric meters include bi-rotor flow meters (e.g. oval gear or helical gear flow meters), reciprocating piston flow meters, rotary/oscillating piston flow meters, etc. Velocity flowmeters are also used to determine the volume of a fluid flow. As their name suggests, however, they accomplish this task indirectly by measuring the velocity of a fluid flow first. The sub-categories underneath velocity flowmeters are many and include ultrasonic flow meters, time-of-flight meters (which measure flow rate through the use of sound) and turbine flow meters (which have rotors that measure fluid based on the speed of the blades that the fluid passes through.) The vortex flow meter (or vortex shedding flowmeter) is a particularly unique sub-category that measures flow rate by blocking the flow path with an obstruction (or bluff body) and forcing liquids or gases to move around it. When this occurs, two symmetrical vortices form on the opposite side, changing flow pressure. This pressure change is measured by a sensor placed in between the vortices, which then transmits its data to an electronic signal conditioner separate from the meter. In contrast to volumetric flowmeters, mass flowmeters utilize mass flow measurement (measured in kilograms or pounds). On the other hand, mass flowmeters resemble volumetric flowmeters by producing an output signal that directly correlates to the mass of the liquid flowing through the meter. Coriolis mass and thermal flowmeters are some of the best-known flow meters that measure mass. Inferential flowmeters interpret the aforementioned conditions (volume, velocity, and mass) based on their reading of other factors. Some good representatives of this category are differential pressure flowmeters and variable area flowmeters. Magnetic Flow Meters and the Pharmaceutical Industry With the importance of efficient and maintained pipeline networks, the demand for devices that automatically monitor pipe flow has only increased. One such device is the flow meter, which measures the volumetric flow of liquids, from which it can calculate the absolute and differential pressure in the liquid. In 2021, the flow meter market was estimated to be around USD 7.7 billion, with a projected change to USD 10.3 billion in 2026. The primary industries that use flow meters were found to be the water and wastewater industries, as they could be used in numerous parts of water and wastewater treatment, with the requirement of clean discharge of effluents. From market research in 2020, it was found that magnetic flow meters, or magmeters, were the most widely used type of flow meter. Using electromagnetic induction, magmeters were shown to be used in food and beverage industries for their ability to be unaffected by changes in water characteristics such as concentration, density, temperature, viscosity, and electrical conductivity. While other industries have embraced the use of magnetic flow meters, the pharmaceutical industry has been having problems with the usual types of flow meters. Due to their use of ultrapure water, magnetic flow meters were not an option for precise measurement due to the very low conductivity of the liquid. To solve this problem, Bürkert developed a flow meter called FLOWave that uses surface acoustic waves technology. This device has no direct contact with the liquid it is measuring and solves other issues that flow meters encounter, such as system vibrations and conductivity of the liquid, to name a few. Proper knowledge and maintenance of your pipe networks are essential for an efficient workflow. In addition, new advancements in the industrial sector make it best to keep updated on the latest news and technologies. What They Measure Many flowmeters are simply identified by the phenomenon or substance they measure. Water flow meters are made to measure flow rates of water in various bodies, such as tubes, rivers, streams, channels, and partially filled pipes. Air flow meters simply measure the flow of air. Peak flow meters are made especially for use by asthma patients or others with breathing problems, so that doctors can measure their oxygen intake. Fuel flow meters (which may be positive displacement, ultrasonic, or turbine flow meters) take measurements of fuel usage rates from stationary pumps and transportation devices. It is not uncommon for flowmeters to operate in conjunction with useful accessories. Flow switches differ from other meters in that they have a fourth component that controls flow as a switching unit, and they may set off an audible or visual alarm if the flow is too low or too high. Another example of a flow meter accessory is an observation window (sometimes known as a flow indicators) that helps to measure flow by providing a method of visual assessment. Additional Information on Coriolis Flow Meters THE CORIOLIS PRINCIPLE The French mathematician Gustav Coriolis developed the Coriolis Principle in 1835. This principle says an inertial force needs to be taken into account when describing the motion of bodies in a rotating frame. For example, a hypothetical object thrown from the North Pole to the Equator appears to move from its intended path due to Earth’s rotation, and this illustrates the Coriolis Effect. APPLICATIONS OF THE CORIOLIS EFFECT The Coriolis Principle has some interesting natural and industrial applications: METEOROLOGY: The Coriolis Principle is all around us in the world, such as in the rotation of the Earth and its impact on the weather. The Coriolis Effect has a big impact on the large scale dynamics of the oceans and the atmosphere. In oceans, the Coriolis Effect leads to the formation of features like jet streams and western boundary currents. During the formation of hurricanes, if the force from the Coriolis Effect is strong, the wind spins faster, making hurricanes stronger. BALLISTIC TRAJECTORIES: In Ballistics, the Coriolis Force is used for calculating the trajectories of very long range artillery shells. The Coriolis Force minutely changes the trajectory of a bullet, affecting accuracy at extremely long distances. It is adjusted for by long distance shooters, such as snipers. CORIOLIS FLOW METERS: These flow meters use the Coriolis Effect to quantify the amount of fluid passing through tubes or pipes. Coriolis flow measurement is the simultaneous measurement of mass flow, density, temperature, and viscosity. The Coriolis measuring principle is used in different branches of industry, such as the life sciences, chemicals, petrochemicals, oil and gas, food, and in custody transfer applications. CORIOLIS FLOW METERS Most commercially used fluids such as water, oil, gas, fruit juices, and chemicals are transferred using pipelines. Fluids, while inside pipelines, show very different properties. Structural characteristics of the pipeline and atmospheric conditions such as temperature and pressure will influence the fluid properties. Thus, measuring volume might provide inaccurate information. Coriolis flow meters allow the flow of mass to be directly measured rather than the volume. MEASUREMENT OF MASS FLOW RATE Coriolis flow meters can be considered true mass meters since they measure mass and not volume. Since mass does not vary, there is no need to adjust the flow meter for the characteristics of different materials. The U shaped tube on a Coriolis flow meter is the most important part since its movements produce the meter’s readings. When a material enters the tube, it oscillates in an angular harmonic motion; this deforms the tube. The excitor ensures the oscillation and the movement of the tube continue constantly. When there is no flow, the oscillation is uniform. Sensors are located at the inlet and outlet to record the oscillation. Though the oscillation is uniform when there is no flow, it changes with the introduction of a fluid or gas. The liquid’s inertia forces the oscillation of the inlet and outlet sections of the tube to move in different directions. The sensors pick up the change in oscillation in terms of time and space; this change is known as phase shift. The data acquired from the tube fluctuations and phase shift is fed into a flow meter that provides information on the mass, volume, and density of the fluid or gas. Flow Meter Advantages Flow meters form a very important part of the industrial world. On average, they are superior to point sensors, since they are able to gauge characteristics of an entire fluid flow within a system. Since flow meter techniques and designs are so varied, they are used by many different industries, such HVAC, construction, chemical and raw materials, paper/pulp, metallurgy, automotive, gas/petroleum, utility services, medical treatment, pharmaceuticals, and brewing. Specific types of flow meters are often chosen to withstand certain environmental conditions in specific applications. For example, streamlined “gear meters” are ideal for laboratory testing that may involve hazardous conditions; ultrasonic flowmeters are well suited for unhygienic scenarios that typically damage conventional flowmeters; and vortex meters prove particularly useful in high temperature applications or applications that may involve rapid environmental changes. Considerations When Selecting Flow Meters When selecting a flow meter, there are many important factors that should be taken into consideration. However, the single most important factor to remember is that the intended application of a flow meter should outweigh any other considerations. Unfortunately, it is a common industrial practice to apply application-specific flow meters to scenarios for which they were never intended in order to save on initial investment or purchase costs. More often than not, this strategy fails over the long run and ends up costing a flow meter user far more than they would have spent otherwise. To give a single example, “two phase” fluid flows (e.g. a combined liquid/gas flow or liquid/solid flow) are notorious for plugging and disrupting the accuracy of many types of flowmeters. If a (relatively) cheap flowmeter is chosen for this type of application in order to cut upfront costs, it is almost certain that such an investment will backfire. Generally speaking, the following factors should be assessed in the following order: • How information from the flow meter will be obtained and read (e.g. does information need to be continuous or totalized, does it need to be shared remotely, how will it be shared remotely, etc.) • The physical nature/characteristics of the actual fluid being sampled (e.g. viscosity, chemical composition) • The nature of the piping or other infrastructure that will accommodate the fluid flow (e.g. diameter) Some other factors to consider when choosing a flow meter are: maximum and minimum flow ranges (in terms of volume and mass), maximum and minimum operating temperatures and pressures, allowable pressure drops/differentials, and potential hazards in the surrounding environment (e.g. explosive gases). By systematically working through these factors, you can usually arrive at the best flow meter for your application by process of elimination. For example, if the fluid you are sampling has a high level of viscosity, you can automatically eliminate turbine flow meters from your selection list. The in-depth nature of flow meter selection illustrates the worth of a quality flow meter supplier. Finding the right supplier or manufacturer can dramatically expedite and streamline the entire flow meter selection process. Some suppliers provide customized tools (e.g. flow meter evaluation forms) along with professional advice in order to help you make the best possible choice for your application. Suppliers can also significantly help during the installation process (e.g. properly using a wiring diagram). To function properly and give you the most accurate reading, flow meters must be handled using specific guidelines. For example, gas flow, air flow, and liquid flow meters alike, must remain full of their respective element in order to stay accurate. In addition, meter operators must watch for and remove any foreign contaminants from fluid, like gas in liquid flow meters, and must maintain or take into account air, fluid, or gas quality, as well as viscosity. To get the most out of your flow meter, certain practices should be avoided, including downward liquid flow applications or locating flow meters downstream from flow disturbances. (Both scenarios significantly affect flow meter precision and accuracy.) Like most industrial devices, flow meters should be regularly maintained to extend their commercial life. Consider investing in meters without moving parts, since they reduce the need for standard maintenance practices (e.g. lubrication) and eliminate the need for “clearance spaces” that can also affect meter accuracy. A well maintained and carefully monitored flow meter will provide essential information and thereby improve efficiency of operations, application safety, and application accuracy. Flow Meter Informational Video
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“Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted,” said John Wanamaker, the nineteenth-century pioneer, “the trouble is I don’t know which half.” Fast forward to the 21st century and not much has changed. Most marketers are still asking the same questions: What’s my optimal marketing budget and media mix? How effective are my marketing channels? Which touchpoints are pushing my consumers through the purchase funnel? The trouble is, in the past 20 years, purchase journeys have become increasingly complex and nonlinear. Look at travel booking, for instance, an average purchase journey for a single hotel room now takes 36 days, hits no less than 45 touchpoints (distributed among search engines and the sites of intermediaries and suppliers), and involves multiple devices. That’s a lot of cross-channel information to keep track of, and, as cookies become obsolete, and in-app tracking remains only partly mastered, it’s getting harder and harder to manage it. While media mix modelling and A/B testing have provided some constructive workarounds, most marketers are still struggling to connect channel data to develop a more holistic understanding of consumers purchase journeys (online and offline). So, what can they do? Building capabilities for people-based attribution Rather than rely on cookie data, smart marketers are already turning to people-based attribution tools, like Facebook Attribution. Free and easy to use, Facebook’s Attribution tool tracks Facebook pixels across devices and channels, allowing marketers to generate reports from Facebook, Instagram, Audience Network and Messenger campaigns and other digital channels. Within these reports, marketers can see how their Facebook advertising campaigns are influencing actions throughout the customer journey and which channels are directly or indirectly generating the most traffic and conversions according to various attribution models. Like Google’s attribution tool, Facebook’s attribution model uses machine learning to account for incremental conversions generated by ads delivered within its ecosystem. The reports offer cross-device conversion views, purchase information from paid, organic and direct sources, as well as conversion and visit measurements divided by source. While Facebook Attribution is not intended to replace existing tools (it does not offer central site data such as time spent, number of pages viewed and/or page loading time), by using Facebook ID data, it provides marketers with unparalleled insights into an individual’s activity across channels and devices plugged into the Facebook ecosystem. Given that Facebook’s mobile share accounts for anything from 80% to 100% in developed markets (Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, Audience Network), that’s pretty much everyone. In addition to post-click feedback already available to third-party tools, Facebook Attribution also allows marketers to measure their post-impression performance too. This is important, as other third-party attribution models cannot include 100% of the post-impression data from Facebook networks. What’s more, as Facebook is often considered a display/programmatic lever by advertisers, its campaign results are generally compared with the space purchases made in programmatic display. This comparison shows a devalued impact of Facebook on performance, as third-party tools do not have access to full post-impression conversion tracking. But with the availability of Facebook Attribution, this is now possible. For those marketers yet to trial Facebook Attribution, the benefits are obvious. Our team observed that Facebook has four times greater impact on the overall performance of cross-channel campaigns than results reported by third-party measurement tools. Additionally, for nearly three out of four conversions, Facebook’s participation in sales, following impressions or clicks, was not identified. These results are directly related to the improvement of mobile tracking and the complete follow-up of post-printing actions. In times of fast-evolving behaviours and trends, marketers need to be continuously connected to their consumers by analysing the multiple engagement signals that contribute to purchase. With attribution tools like Facebook Attribution, they finally can — and ensure maximum returns from their cross-channel marketing campaigns.
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If You Register and Cannot Attend, You Will Get the Webinar Recording and Slides Join us for this 45-minute FREE Nonprofit Webinar Recording where we will show you, step-by-step, how to create and implement a workable strategic plan for your nonprofit organization. At the end of this Nonprofit training, you will have the knowledge you need to create a strategic plan that will function as a road map to success for your organization. Nonprofits use strategic planning to focus their energy and limited resources on achieving their goals and objectives. Strategic plans are also used to establish agreement among a nonprofit’s board, staff, and stakeholders about what is most important and the intended outcomes and results that should be achieved. A nonprofit that undertakes strategic planning will obtain many important benefits, such as: - Clear understanding of your non-profits’ values and purpose, - Becoming more agile and relevant in an ever-changing environment by understanding your nonprofit's strengths, weaknesses and future opportunities and challenges, and - Creating and using action plans that provide clear benchmarks and organizational accountability. Join John Duffy on this free nonprofit management course to get your organization to the next level. What you will learn in this Free Nonprofit Training: - How to achieve success through strategic planning, - How to create, and implement, a relevant, action-oriented strategic plan, - How to clearly define your nonprofit's purpose and desired outcomes, - How to conduct a SWOT analysis (Strengths, Weakness, Opportunities, Threats), - How to evaluate your progress towards achieving your nonprofit’s major goals, and - How to develop and use action plans to achieve goals and objectives. What Attendees Said about This Nonprofit Webinar for Nonprofit Professionals: “This webinar is wonderfully logical in the presentation of the material. If your organization needs a roadmap to follow on your organization’s journey into new territory of strategic planning, this webinar provides a great one!” “This was a great overview of strategic planning and clarifying how to get started and the overall process.” Jess Wright, City Relief “John Duffy presented an extraordinary amount of information into easy-to-understand and actionable segments. I've worked on strategic planning in the past, but I learned a lot from this presentation that will help make my future efforts more productive. I'll be sharing this information with my fellow board members. Thank you!” “Helpful, informative, and to the point. Thank you.” Peter Mraz, American Pianists Association “I had an upcoming meeting regarding the strategic plan for a new program I have piloted at my organization and am now planning to launch. This webinar provided me with advice and steps that I can take immediately to prepare for my meeting and get organized to begin planning. It couldn't have come at a better time, and I'm so grateful for the opportunity to ask questions and get expert guidance before I dive in!” “This webinar was very insightful and all the questions participants had were answered in a satisfactory, practical manner everyone in attendance can use. I would recommend this webinar to staff of nonprofits who are often stretched to capacity.” Jacqueline Velez, Massachusetts Jobs with Justice “Great overview for Strategic Planning and why it is critically important to organization's health.” “Thank you for the FREE webinars - they are super helpful with just starting out.” Lily Schaub, InFlight Inc “John was very knowledgeable about the strategic planning process and was willing to answer a number of questions afterwards. It was a very informative webinar.” Lorraine Smith van Lin “It explains in a very simple, yet deep presentation the SP process, outlining important issues that are to be considered. Thank you.” Juergen Mordhorst, Fundación Amigos Como Arroz “The open Q&A session was especially useful and enlightening. Thank you!” Kimi Mck, 4 Elements Earth Education Inc “It is always a good refresher to go through the Strategic Planning steps with a new presenter. The Q & A was very helpful. Thank you!” “I attended this webinar knowing my first strategic planning session was coming up quick! It helped me start to realize my ideas, and to reflect on my understandings both of strategic planning itself and its role in guiding my small organization towards its next steps! What a great use of time!” Hayden McGuire, SWITCH clinic “Great information presented clearly and simply.” Patricia Boyce, United Way of Whatcom County “The idea of creating a strategic plan for our non-profit was daunting to me, but Dr. Duffy broke it down into clear, manageable steps. Eager to start planning!” About Your Expert: Dr. John Duffy is especially qualified to teach this webinar because: - He has the practical knowledge of preparing and implementing strategic plans, - He understands nonprofits, due to his work on numerous nonprofit boards, - He has used strategic plans to focus nonprofit organizations to achieve important goals such as fundraising, - He has work with nonprofits, both domestically and internationally, on developing practical and successful strategic plans, - He has practical experience in developing high performance organizations, - He has over 30 years of experience assisting organizations and communities achieve their goals, and - He knows that without a strategic plan, nonprofits fail to realize their full abilities. For more on leadership and management, please check here.
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Lead Poisoning in Bald Eagles Not so many years ago the sighting of a bald eagle was an uncommon to rare occurrence in North Dakota. Now, of course, these magnificent birds are much more frequently observed, even during the winter months. You may have missed it, but eagles have been the news recently, and all is not well with them. The February 17 issue of Science, the weekly scientific journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, published the results of an eight-year study that evaluated lead exposure of over 1,200 bald and golden eagles from 38 states. Forty-six percent of the bald eagles and 47% of golden eagles showed signs of chronic lead poisoning. Twenty-eight percent of the bald eagles has acute lead poisoning. The toxic effects of lead in animals have been known for years and is the main reason it was removed from gasoline and paint, for example. In the eagles it affects motor skills and impairs the bird’s ability to fly and digest food, and can be fatal, directly as well as indirectly. According to the University of Minnesota’s Raptor Center, “The Raptor Center’s clinic admits over 150 injured and ill bald eagles each year with 85-90% showing some level of lead in their blood. On average, 25-30% of these eagles are documented to have lead toxicity.” They go on to state that research has shown that lead toxicity in eagles and other avian scavengers is strongly correlated with deer hunting season. It is well known that bald eagles often feed on the carcasses unclaimed deer (the ones what were shot but got away). They also feed on the gut piles of field dressed deer. In the process they may repeatedly ingest small fragments of lead. Consuming the equivalent of two #6 pellets from a shotgun shell is enough to kill a bald eagle. And it is not just the eagles that are being poisoned. Lead is undoubtedly affecting other animals as well. Non-toxic shot is already in use for waterfowl hunting and is required for all waterfowl hunting in the state. That is also true for waterfowl hunting on all U.S. Fish and Wildlife refuges and waterfowl production areas. And it is interesting to note that no lead sinkers and jigs are now required in Canada’s National Parks and National Wildlife Areas. Non-toxic ammunition is available for rifles, perhaps it is time to make that switch to non-toxic rifle bullets as well. - Demographic implications of lead poisoning for eagles across North America. Science February 12, 2022: Read > - Science article about the study: Read > - Groundbreaking Study Finds Widespread Lead Poisoning in Bald and Golden Eagles (USGS): Read > - University of Minnesota’s Raptor Center’s page on the lead poisoning in bald eagles: Read > - Fact Sheet: Bald Eagles and Lead Poisoning (Iowa Department of Natural Resources): Read >
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Cyber Security is a real and constant threat that has gained more and more traction every year. Small businesses have become prime targets because they have low security budgets and a mindset that it will never happen to them. We can tell you firsthand that you are susceptible to cyber attacks as long as you are connected to the internet. - Monthly or quarterly reports. We compile reports from every system on your network and show you in a simplified document what needs to fixed and/or upgraded to better protect your network from the outside. - Real-time defense against intruders trying to gain access to your network by providing 24/7 reporting on key areas such as user-login, anomalous logins, administrative access to client/personal information and more. - Perimeter firewalls that provide Gateway Anti-virus that filters traffic BEFORE it even gets to your system. They provide Intrusion Detection/Prevention built right into the device. We monitor and maintain the devices, so you are headache/worry-free. - Cyber-awareness training and education to your employees to help explain the dangers of spam, links, ads, phishing attempts and all things evil on the web.
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Date: 23 July 2018; 08:52 UT Summary of Space Weather. The tiny sunspot that emerged on the solar disk after being blank for about 24 straight days has completely decayed in less than 24 hours leaving the sun spotless again. The Local Geomagnetic conditions are quiet at all levels. The solar wind speed is declining. Space Weather parameters / observations; Sunspot Number: 0 10.7cm Flux: 68 sfu Solar wind speed: 447.9 km.s-1 Solar wind density: 6.7 protons.cm3 Bz: -1.4 nT (South) Bt: 3.2 nT Dst: -7 nT
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Considering its international popularity, you should not be surprised that people all over want to know more about soccer. It is important to understand the game before trying to play it. Read this article for tips to help you improve. Each soccer team has two or three play makers. These players are more talented than others and always get the ball since they are able to go past the other team’s defense. They will then score or pass the ball to a player who is ready to score. You can become one of these players if you practice. If you want to be a great soccer mom, you must make it a point to attend your child’s games as often as possible. Simultaneously, you should be certain your child is secure enough to enjoy playing on the occasions when you are not there. A good soccer player plays for the team, him or her self and for supporters, in that order. Make sure you are constantly tracking the ball’s location during the game. Soccer moves at the speed of light, and the soccer ball can be in control of another player in a flash. The opponent may possibly score a goal if you lose sight of who has the ball. In order to become a good soccer player, you need to learn how to dribble. To properly dribble, keep your head down so you can see what you are doing, but still keep an eye on your opponent. Also, keep the ball near your feet at all times. Do this by using the outside and inside of your foot to carry the ball. You can usually make a defender freeze for a few seconds by faking a shot. If you see a defender closing in on you, posture yourself as if you were about to kick the ball and make a long pass. The defender should stop and anticipate the pass you are faking. If you are a beginner and you don’t know much about soccer, the best way to learn a bit more is to watch some players in action. You should go to watch a local game, and if none are available you can watch a few games that air on television. Practice passing by placing two small cones approximately a foot apart. Kick the ball through the obstacles to help you learn to pass between opponents and get it to your teammate. As you get better at this passing technique go for longer passes and move the cones closer together. When shooting the ball, make sure you are not using your toes. Instead, use your laces when shooting the ball. To effectively shoot the ball, point your toes down and strike the ball with the laces on your kicking foot. Be sure that your toes are pointing down, but they are not touching the ground. There are three essential skills all soccer players must master. They are dribbling, shooting and passing. These skills can not be developed overnight. They require many hours of practice. By doing drills from a stationary position, a beginner can begin developing these three must-have skills. As a player becomes more proficient in these drills, add in some motion. Good soccer uniforms are part of any successful team. When choosing soccer uniforms, look for one made of quality materials. Soccer is a contact sport, so you should look for jerseys that will withstand the constant abuse. Always think in terms of what will last along with the comfort level of your players. When trying out for soccer, be very vocal with the coach. If he asks you to play a certain position and you cannot do it very well, be honest and let him know. if he insists that you play it, try your best and do it so you don’t seem argumentative. Work on decreasing your weaknesses instead of increasing your strengths when it comes to soccer. Although this seems counter productive, it will actually help you improve your game. By working on improving your weaknesses, you will learn how to improve your strengths by using the techniques you learned when improving your soccer weaknesses. Great soccer players are not born – they’re made. Being a good soccer player will require hours upon hours of practice on your part. Remind yourself of this when you get discouraged – most people will need to practice for a total of several hundred hours at least before they achieve a high level of competency. Increase your speed. The ability to sprint is crucial in soccer. The speed at which you can cover between 10 and 40 yards is much more important than long distance speed. This will ensure you will be able to quickly get into position to be ready to get the ball. There are many options for shin guards today. Many of them have Velcro. One advantage to this type of attachment is the ability to put on and remove shin guards easily. This also allows for adjustments to the tightness of the shin guard. Don’t doubt yourself. Doubting yourself can ruin your game. If you tell yourself you can’t play soccer, it will become the truth. Always believe that you can achieve anything. You may not be very good at first or you may fail. That doesn’t really matter as long as you learn from your mistakes. Watch a soccer game or two before you play a game. Watch footage of the best players in action. Analyze what these players are doing and what makes them so great. Watching skilled athletes play your favorite game can be a great motivational tool. It could mean the difference between winning and losing. Be supportive of all your other teammates. Do not reign in your efforts because you’re not the one with the ball. That’s the time to step it up. Communicate with others, and it will pay off for you. Stay involved regardless of who is about to score the next goal. There is no other sport that is as popular as soccer around the world. That doesn’t mean it is an easy game, or one that can be understood instinctively. Hopefully, these tips have given you the edge you need.
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President Donald Trump’s trade war has backfired and hurt the industry it was intended to help, according to a Federal Reserve report. Federal Reserve economists Aaron Flaaen and Justin Pierce issued the “first comprehensive estimate” of the effect of Trump’s trade war on American manufacturers and found that it has been a dud. "We find that U.S. manufacturing industries more exposed to tariff increases experience relative reductions in employment as a positive effect from import protection is offset by larger negative effects from rising input costs and retaliatory tariffs," the report said. The economists found that the tariffs gave manufacturers a “small boost” but it was “offset by larger drags from the effects” of China’s retaliatory tariffs and added costs. Consumers hit hard: The report cited extensive existing research showing that “the majority of U.S. tariff increases are absorbed by U.S. retailers” and then passed on to American consumers. The report also showed that while some tariffs helped protect American manufacturers from foreign competitors, those same American firms were hurt by tariffs on materials as well as retaliatory tariffs. The report noted that the effects of the trade war could "explain a shift in voting away from Republican House candidates in the 2018 election.” Study only looked at short-term trends: The report acknowledged that the effects the economists studied were short-term and long-term trends may be different. But the report also concluded that tariffs in general simply do not work in an economy that relies on global supply chains. "Our results suggest that the traditional use of trade policy as a tool for the protection and promotion of domestic manufacturing is complicated by the presence of globally interconnnected supply chains," the report said. "While the potential for both tit-for-tat retaliation on import protection and input-output effects on the domestic economy have long been recognized by trade economists, empirical evidence documenting these channels in the context of an advanced economy has been limited."
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By Deb Silverthorn Jordan Traxler is spinning his wheels, and every push is one toward finding a cure for AIDS. From Sept. 21 to 23 Traxler will hit the road for the 24th Northeast AIDS Ride Cycle for the Cause, with a personal goal to raise $10,000. “AIDS isn’t the death sentence it once was, but there’s no reason for HIV to still be around; it’s not easy. Helping, raising money, raising awareness — that is easy,” said Traxler, now training with his team, Team YL (Young Leaders), beginning with early morning rides. The group is preparing for the September event by participating in smaller charity rides, including New York’s June 10 Pride Ride. “We’ll ride 275 miles from Boston to New York, passing through more than 50 cities, and during every mile I know I’ll be thinking about the people we are helping,” Traxler said about the Northeast ride. “To know that my hometown is behind me again, helping me push through, is absolutely appreciated.” Cycle for the Cause is a program of the New York City-based The Center: The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center, for which Traxler serves on the Young Leadership Council. Funds raised provide HIV testing, programming, care and support to those who are HIV positive. With more than 1.2 million Americans living with HIV and an estimated 50,000 more to be diagnosed this year alone, it is hoped the 2018 ride will raise enough money to prevent more than 78,000 HIV transmissions. Traxler, who joined the ride three years ago as a crew member, took away “best dressed” honors and raised almost $8,000 last year, his first on the road. “I hadn’t been on a bike since I was 10 years old, but I trained for weeks, for hours at a time,” he said. “The experience is physically challenging but emotionally unbelievable.” At the finish line, with arms wide open, was his mother, Steffani Bailin. “Seeing Jordan come in from the ride, especially the 100-plus miles of the second day, was incredibly emotional. You could feel his passion and care and want to help all along, and it was so much more than an activity. His heart is in this fight to end AIDS, and I couldn’t be more proud by his side,” said Bailin, who will return to cheer on her son in September. “This kid, my kid, has cared about people all his life and always wanted to do good, something we started together when he was very young. Now he’s a man, a professional, and it’s awesome to watch the mature Jordan still finding ‘doing good’ a priority. L’dor V’dor.” That generation-to-generation resolution is important to the younger Traxler, “Guncle Jordan,” as he sets the example now for his niece and nephew, Lily Mae and Oliver Lee, children of his sister and best friend, Meghan. Memories flood as both Traxler and his mother recall bringing food to Jewish Family Service’s Food Pantry and serving sandwiches or handing out coats to homeless people in downtown Dallas. On those occasions, the son would remind his mother to “look everyone in the eye, see the people we’re helping,” she said. Traxler credits Congregation Anshai Torah’s Rabbi Stefan Weinberg with a lesson that still rings in his heart and mind. “He taught us that everyone is one decision away from being homeless, and the scary part is the decision might not be our own. I’ve never forgotten those words.” Celebrated as the first bar mitzvah at Anshai Torah’s Parker Road location, where as an Eagle Scout he made it his project to build a retaining wall, resurface a playground and construct park benches, Traxler now makes New York City’s Central Synagogue his place of worship. Traxler is an alumnus of Plano West Senior High School and a former member and president of BBYO’s Eamonn Lacey chapter. He graduated in three years from SMU’s Cox School of Business and made New York home — the “perfect place for me. The city is alive 24-7 and you can taste the energy,” said Traxler, who works in a senior marketing position for the Safilo Group. “Jordan has always been driven to seek out projects and activities that would challenge his leadership skills as well as provide his peers an experience that would prove impactful,” said Traxler’s father, Ron. “I believe in my heart the influences by Jordan’s mom and family unit assisted in making him a fine citizen and a true friend to community. He is a loving, caring, compassionate family man who understands the value of giving of himself to society.” “I’ve met so many people and everyone has a story — a mother, brother, sister, or cousin who has died. Every dollar helps. Bunches of $5, $10, or $50 donations help,” said Traxler. “I want to make a change, and there’s no such thing as a small change in this fight. Every bit makes a big difference.” To support Traxler in his mission, visit support.cycleforthecause.org/jtraxy.
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Apr 12 | 17848 Views | 1 Comment Mar 29 | 12128 Views | 4 Comments Oct 25 | 10644 Views | 1 Comment Apr 16 | 24783 Views | 2 Comments Aug 16 | 32465 Views | 482 Comments May 30 | 42424 Views | 103 Comments May 21 | 30092 Views | 72 Comments Jun 3 | 22810 Views | 46 Comments Nov 11 | 42814 Views | 39 Comments Nov 24 | 21037 Views | 1 Comment Jan 4 | 55446 Views | 8 Comments Aug 3 | 36571 Views | 2 Comments My name is Sohail Riaz, I am an expert level system administrator and worked in several reputed organization. I am currently holding a Senior Support Engineer post at ARAMCO Oil Company Saudi Arabia. I live with Open Source and have contributed several articles / howto’s and softwares. I have deployed several advance technologies including High Availability Clusters, Load Balancers, High End Web Servers, Cloud Computing and currently High Performance Computing Clusters. Sohail Riaz says: @NASIM: It will be better to create single bond out of 4 or more interfaces you are using to create ... MD NASIM AHMAD says: can we make bond0 and bond1 to bond3 where bond3 is combination of bond1 andbond2bond3=bond0+bon... ether mahmud says: Is it possible to create in particular mail address .... plz share doc step by step... Sohail Riaz says: @Albert: Please post your exim.conf. The error show issue with syntax. Regards, Sohail...
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Kenyans should brace themselves for longer days of cold weather and rains in the coming months. The Kenya Meteorological Department days will also be cloudy and it has thus advised people to “wrap up warm. Dress in layers and wear a scarf if possible. Keep the cold out,” according to its official Twitter account which added, “do not miss a cup of hot coffee for Nairobians, Nyeri and Meru.” The Met also says people should expect rains in parts of the Highlands, West of the Rift Valley, Lake Victoria Basin and South and Central Rift Valley. The department’s report in June noted increased cases of respiratory diseases, attributed to the cold weather. There will be thus increased cases of asthma, pneumonia, flu and common cold with the most affected areas being Nairobi, Highlands East of the Rift Valley, Central Rift Valley and parts of the Highlands West of the Rift Valley. People in Nairobi and the Coast will also experience rains besides cool and cloudy conditions which will extend to counties in Central and South Rift Valley namely Baringo, Nakuru, Narok and Laikipia will experience sunny days, with nights being partly cloudy. Strong winds with speeds exceeding 25 knots will be felt in parts of the Coastal region and the South-Eastern Lowlands but mornings will be sunny in the Lake Victoria Basin and the Highlands West of the Rift Valley besides “evening showers over several places during the first half of the forecast period and over a few places thereafter.” Though, occasional afternoon and evening showers are likely to occur in few places, but counties in the Northwest, including Turkana, West Pokot and Samburu, will have morning rains and afternoon showers and thunderstorms, throughout the forecast period. Nairobi, Nyandarua, Nyeri, Kirinyaga, Murang’a, Kiambu, Meru, Embu and Tharaka Nthi will have cloudy mornings, giving intermittent sunny intervals and “afternoon showers are likely to occur over a few places throughout the forecast period.” 4-14 degrees Celsius Range of expected minimum temperatures in most parts of Kenya 15-27 degrees Celsius Range of expected maximum temperatures in most parts of Kenya Credit: Source link
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Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172 (1985), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States limited access to federal court for plaintiffs alleging uncompensated takings of private property under the Fifth Amendment. Famous quotes containing the words williamson, county, planning, commission, hamilton, bank, johnson and/or city: “What do you do for your living? Are you forgiving, giving shelter? Follow your heart; love will find you; truth will unbind you; Sing out a song of the soul.” —Cris Williamson (20th century) “Jack: A politician, huh? Editor: Oh, county treasurer or something like that. Jack: Whats so special about him? Editor: They say hes an honest man.” —Robert Rossen (19081966) “Judge Bedford: Planning on having children? Judge Bedford: Good, then I know what to get you for a wedding present. David: Yeah? Whats that? Judge Bedford: A vasectomy.” —Dale Launer (b. 1953) “It is impossible to calculate the moral mischief, if I may so express it, that mental lying has produced in society. When a man has so far corrupted and prostituted the chastity of his mind as to subscribe his professional belief to things he does not believe he has prepared himself for the commission of every other crime.” —Thomas Paine (17371809) “None but a poet can write a tragedy. For tragedy is nothing less than pain transmuted into exaltation by the alchemy of poetry.” —Edith Hamilton (18671963) “Whats breaking into a bank compared with founding a bank?” —Bertolt Brecht (18981956) “No man is a hypocrite in his pleasures.” —Samuel Johnson (17091784) “A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not studying a profession, for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
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Following in the footsteps of Stockholm, Hamburg and Vitoria-Gasteiz, the capital of the Basque country, Nantes is European Green Capital 2013, preceding Copenhagen in 2014. This award recognises and rewards the work and efforts of Nantes Métropole in the field of environmental protection and planned development of the metropolis over more than twenty years. Institutional players, researchers, businesses, citizens, young people and many more, from every continent, will come together in 2013 in Nantes to share experiences and exchange ideas on the sustainable city. Situated on the Loire River, close to the Atlantic coast, Nantes is a “green wonder” of western France. It is France’s sixth largest city, and has a metropolitan area comprising some 600,000 inhabitants. In 2004, Time Magazine named Nantes ‘the most liveable city in Europe’. Over the past 10 years, Nantes has developed a sustainable transport policy with a focus on public transport and bicycles. Development within the city centre is planned to minimise car transport and to provide pedestrians with optimal conditions. Nantes was the first city in France to successfully re-introduce electric tramways. This effort will continue in the coming years and investments in new tramways, high quality buses service and bicycle infrastructure are foreseen. The European Green Capital Award is presented every year by the European Commission to a city demonstrating exemplary commitment to sustainable urban development which respects the environment. European cities with over 200,000 inhabitants can apply and must meet twelve environmental criteria scrutinised by the jury. This scrutiny focuses on the ability of cities to minimise and reduce their impact on the environment while improving the quality of life of their inhabitants. Cities are also judged on the example they set by their activities at a European level, their involvement in innovative projects and their ability to share ideas with other cities.
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The hiring process can be a rocky journey involving dozens of candidates and weeks of interviews. Although a painstaking process, finding the right employee for the job is crucial, and the choice should never be rushed. Employees are the ambassadors of your brand, not to mention the money your company invests in each new employee. It costs an average of five times their yearly salary just to go through the first year of training and employment. Carefully studying resumes, checking previous job history, and meeting face-to-face to get to know the contenders takes time. Many companies even hold multiple in-person interviews with candidates to decide if they fit the criteria. Once the obvious applicants have been cut because of inexperience or other shortcomings, the hard work starts. Look for these eight red flags to weed out the candidates that may spell trouble for your company. 1. Showing up Unprepared Showing up for an interview unprepared demonstrates that a candidate really just wants a job—any job—and has no interest in finding a best-fit work environment. Applicants should come prepared to discuss the job and how it adds value to the company as a whole. Asking the candidate about basic information that can be found on the company website will quickly reveal if the person has done even the most basic research. If the interview starts with the applicant blanking on questions about the company background, cross them off the list. The candidate knows nothing about your company and lacks the motivation to do the simplest research. This lazy behavior is a big red flag for employers. 2. Arriving Late Showing up on time or early for an interview tells you that the potential employee values your time. They are prepared, researched how to find your office beforehand, and probably even did a practice drive to choose the best route. This planning tells you the applicant understands the importance of the opportunity, and they likely have prepared for the interview in other ways as well. Candidates that arrive late convey that an interview is of little importance to them and show a low level of respect for you and the company. They did not put in the time to consider driving directions, so why would they prepare in other ways? Tardiness happens once in a while, but if it happens on the day of an important interview, it may signal that a candidate does not value punctuality in everyday life. While emergencies happen, a tardy interviewee is never a good sign. If the candidate does not seem to understand the importance of your time, move on to the next one. 3. Wearing Inappropriate Attire Dress for the job you want, not the job you have! We all know the common expression, yet interviewees still make the mistake of showing up in jeans and t-shirts. Job candidates that take pride in their appearance will also take pride in their work. Whether the candidate chooses clothing that is too revealing, too casual, or just plain bizarre, what they wear makes a statement about who they are in general. Sloppy dress and wrinkled or worn clothing could indicate that they will produce sloppy, half-hearted work. This red flag should be an obvious one and will tell you a lot about the applicant even before they open their mouth. Pay attention to these details, and you might avoid making a huge hiring mistake. 4. Poor Body Language Nervousness is common during job interviews, but if the candidate slumps in their chair, fidgets, and mumbles through the interview, you may want to pass. A person who conveys initial weakness rarely shows strength in their future performance. Look for interviewees that possess strong self-confidence and an upbeat attitude. These candidates sit straight, make eye contact, and speak with clear purpose. Self-confidence shines through in daily work. Employees that know how to express that confidence and believe in themselves will produce stronger results for your team. 5. Trash Talking Past Bosses or Sharing Confidential Information Everyone has had that boss or coworker with whom they simply did not get along. People often disagree with processes or attitudes in the workplace, leading to pent-up animosity. An interview is not the place to air past grievances and complain about these issues. A great candidate takes the high road and avoids trash talking in an interview. Instead, they highlight their solutions to problems that arose in the workplace. Any employee can engage in a workplace disagreement, but a great employee finds the root of the issue and then works to resolve it. This is a major red flag that should not be ignored in the interview process. After all, if you hire a trash talker, what's to stop them from turning on you or other employees in the future? 6. Passing the Blame Have you ever asked someone about a work issue only to have everyone but that person blamed? Candidates that cannot take responsibility for mistakes and failures in the past probably won't learn to own up to future errors. This red flag leads to team communication issues and arguments within the office. Admitting mistakes shows maturity and responsibility in a person, while passing the blame reveals major character weakness. There is no reason to waste your time on an applicant that habitually passes the blame to other teammates. This person will break down team bonds and cause rifts within your workplace. If an applicant points out the failures of coworkers more often than they explain how they fixed a problem, cut this interview short. 7. No Work, Just Perks A potential employee that is interested only in the extras probably does not really care about the actual work. This type of employee will punch the clock and end up being flaky when it comes to attendance and work deadlines. While the work/life balance is an important aspect for every employee, candidates that lean heavily to the life side do so at the expense of their work. The best hires know that to get to the fun stuff, the work must get finished first. People that work for the weekend care only about what you can do for them. Their main priority is having fun, not succeeding at the job. Asking repeatedly about office perks instead of focusing on the job description is a red flag in the interview process. 8. Ending the Interview without Questions "Do you have any questions for me?" If you ask this question and the only response you get is a blank look, you should probably reconsider offering the position. Even if the candidate did not come in with a list of prepared questions, or if you answered most during the interview, they should have picked up something during your interaction. Whether they ask a question about the culture of the office or simply clarify an earlier statement, a great candidate wants to know more about the workplace. Most candidates know how to answer interview questions, but if they cannot ask their own questions, they lack the inquisitive mindset that produces great employees. The interview process is time-consuming and can be frustrating, but finding a team member that understands the culture of your workplace is invaluable. While tardiness, ill-fitting clothing, or frowning at the name of an ex-boss may not mean immediate cause for alarm, a mix of these eight red flags typically indicates a bad fit. Take the extra time to hire great candidates that contribute their expertise to the team's overall success. Share this article:
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Almost every small or growing business needs to borrow at one time or another. But if you’re facing a sudden cash flow crisis – bills to pay and no working capital to pay them with – then simply getting a loan isn’t enough. You’ll need money almost immediately – and need a decision within 24 hours. So if you find yourself in this situation, how can you get the cash you need to keep your business from going under? Talk to alternative lenders Review the pros and cons of small business loans and then talk to alternative lenders. There’s no doubt that banks have their uses, and a strong relationship with a bank is a huge asset to any small business. But banks are not known for reaching fast decisions on loans, particularly since they tightened their lending criteria following the financial crash of 2008. Chances are your bank will want to see a ream of paperwork – your articles of incorporation, balance sheet, three years’ profit and loss statements, a cash flow projection, a business plan, maybe even directors’ CVs and three years’ tax returns – and it could take you several days just to assemble this paperwork. It could then be days to weeks before the computer says yes or no, by which time your business will find itself in considerable trouble. In contrast, alternative lenders have quite different acceptance criteria, and are likely to be more interested in where your business is going than where it’s been. There’ll be a lot less paperwork to prepare, a streamlined decision-making process and far less emphasis placed on your credit rating. Seek asset-based finance As the name suggests, asset-based finance involves borrowing against the value of a business asset, such as your premises (assuming you own them), plant or equipment. Because the loan is secured, the lender’s risk is reduced, meaning that you’re more likely to be accepted and your interest rate is likely to be lower. Of course, a word of caution is in order: if you default on your repayments, your lender will be able to seize the asset to repay the debt. This stands in stark contrast to an unsecured loan, whereby your creditor would need a court order to touch any of your assets. Consider invoice factoring and discounting These innovative solutions are ideal if you’re not merely facing a one-off cash flow lacuna but have ongoing problems with late-paying customers. Use invoice factoring and discounting and you can borrow against the value of your invoices (typically up to around 85%) – so it’s like getting paid immediately. No longer will tardy major customers be able to disrupt your cash flow, and you won’t find yourself frantically chasing money when your monthly bills – or, worse, quarterly VAT bill – hit the doormat. As the name “invoice discounting” suggests, the finance company will take a small portion of the invoice value to pay for its services, forwarding you the balance when your customers pay. With factoring, the finance company will assign experienced credit control professionals to secure early payment, which is perfect if you don’t have a dedicated accounts receivable team and don’t wish to divert your people from revenue-generating activities in order to chase debts. In contrast, some companies have highly developed accounts teams and prefer not to have their customers dealing with third parties over debts, and hence opt for invoice discounting. Whichever option suits you best, factoring and invoice discounting can tame a troublesome cash flow forever. Look at a business line of credit A business line of credit acts like an overdraft: your lender will agree a credit limit and an interest rate and you will be able to borrow and repay at will. The flexibility that this offers is unrivalled, and you can use the facility again and again: drawing down when cash flow is tight and repaying when business is booming. The drawbacks? This is a relatively risky form of borrowing for lenders, so your interest rate is likely to be fairly high and you will probably need a strong credit rating to be accepted. Pursue a merchant cash advance Another notoriously expensive but extremely useful method of borrowing is a merchant cash advance, whereby you borrow a fixed sum and repay it via an agreed percentage of your daily credit card sales. The advantage over a traditional loan, where you make fixed monthly repayments, is obvious: your repayments correlate directly to your turnover, meaning you will never find yourself facing an unaffordable payment during a quiet trading period. However, you will pay significantly for this privilege. Secure an emergency loan Of course, if things are truly bad – if you’ve received final demands for tax, rent or bills – a decision within 24 hours may not be enough. In certain circumstances, you may require the actual money within a day. With some alternative lenders, this is entirely achievable. Their accelerated decision-making process can give you a decision on the same day and the cash in your account on the next – and that could mean the difference between continuing to trade and going into liquidation. So what will you need to succeed? As already noted, alternative lenders have quite different application procedures from banks and will generally require far less paperwork. However, less paperwork doesn’t mean no paperwork, and they will need to be convinced that you will be a responsible borrower before they will give you rapid cash. In particular, you should be clear about why you need a loan so urgently, and should be able to demonstrate that your company is profitable and growing – in other words, that you are facing a temporary cash flow crisis or growing pains rather than teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. For this reason, an inspiring business plan and a realistic cash flow forecast can be very useful assets. If you are seeking a secured loan, you should consider carefully what you can offer by way of collateral (and should think long and hard about how your business would cope if it were to lose the asset). If unsecured lending is more appropriate for your needs, then you should be realistic about your chances of acceptance and should talk to a number of lenders to improve the odds. Finally, don’t despair. If your business is facing bills it cannot pay, you might feel as though there’s nowhere to turn and no chance of staying afloat. But the fast-growing alternative lending sector was built on helping companies just like yours – filling the cracks left by banks, with their more archaic structures and much slower decision-making. Be realistic about your prospects, look at all the options above and talk to a number of alternative lenders, and you could very easily find yourself just 24 hours from a solution to your cash flow woes.
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Modernization of the agricultural processes is seen as one of the paths towards addressing the many issues of rice production, which is the major staple crop of people in the Asian Pacific Region. Through the integration and implementation of suitable Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) like smart phones, drones and robotics, precision agriculture can be harnessed and rice farmers will be more informed and empowered. To shed more light on this topic, in 2019, FFTC and the Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute (MARDI) organized an international symposium on “ICTs for Precision Agriculture” and invited 12 rice scientists from eight countries (Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Philippines, Thailand, Taiwan and Malaysia) to present papers on technology packages and country reports on precision agriculture particularly focusing on ICTs. A year later, these papers are now re-edited and published into a book (144 pages) containing three major sections: 1) Understanding Precision Agriculture; 2) Technology Packages for Precision Agriculture; and 3) Precision Agriculture in Asia. Edited by FFTC Deputy Director Dr. Akira Hasbe and the late Zolkafli Bin Aris, Director of the Engineering Research Centre of MARDI, the book is now off the press and is also available online.
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New ‘Size Matters’ guide launched to warn shoppers against buying baby fish Press Release Date: May 10, 2017 Location: Madrid, Spain Spanish Hollywood actor Miguel Angel Silvestre has launched a new digital guide to help consumers avoid buying and eating “baby” fish. The guide, developed by marine conservation organization Oceana, allows shoppers to check if the fish they have bought has a minimum legal size to be caught and if the length matches the fish’s reproduction size. The consumer awareness campaign ultimately seeks to change the existing EU regulation that allows for the fishing and selling of “baby” fish. Currently, only 55 types of fish in the European Union (EU) have minimum legal sizes. For many of these fish, the minimum catch sizes are smaller than the size at which the fish can reproduce. This is the case for popular favorites such as cod, hake, haddock, red mullet, Norway lobster and swordfish. For many others, including monkfish and blue whiting, the EU has not set a minimum size. “Overfishing has led to more and more ‘baby’ fish being caught to face demand. All fish in the EU should have a minimum size that matches its reproduction size or bigger. It makes both economic and environmental sense to allow ‘baby’ fish to grow and reproduce so that there are more fish for both consumers and fishermen in the long run”, said Lasse Gustavsson, executive director of Oceana in Europe. In Europe alone, 64% of fish stocks are overfished. This means that fish populations are caught at a faster rate than what the fish can naturally reproduce, meaning there are fewer and fewer fish in the sea and on our dinner tables. To stop the overfishing of baby fish, minimum sizes should be established for all fish caught and sold in the EU and catch limits should be set according to scientific advice. A scientific study commissioned by Oceana found that if these fisheries management measures were enforced and followed, we could catch almost 60% more fish, sustainably, within 10 years. Silvestre, who launched Oceana’s Fish Size Matters campaign and who is currently cast in U.S. drama Sense8 and set to star in Netflix’s hugely popular crime drama, Narcos, said: “We have to change the way we connect with the sea and with the planet in general. If we take care of them, then we’ll all be winners”. Video featuring Miguel Ángel Silvestre for Fish Size Matters
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Sean Jacobson presented "The Cross at the Straits: Northern Michigan Tourism, Religious Heritage, and Anishinaabeg Perseverance at the Midwestern History Association conference. FacultyDr. Theodore Karamanski will be the keynote speaker at the Phi Alpha Theta Illinois Regional Conference on March 26th. Dr. Tikia Hamilton worked with the LUC Communications Office to produce three short videos for Black History Month. The first is on the founding of Black History Month and Carter Woodson, the second is on impactful Black women from the 19th century (including Maria Stewart, Anna Cooper, Mary Church Turrell, and Ella Baker), and the final video is on Black women in the civil rights movement. Dr. Elizabeth Shermer was quoted in the Fortune article "Is Biden actually going to cancel your student loans? Here's what policy insiders say." Shermer was also quoted in the Teen Vogue article "Student Loan Interest Rates Mean Borrowers End Up Owing Thousands More Dollars." Dr. Michelle Nickerson was featured on the "Know Your Enemy" podcast, speaking on her book Mothers of Conservatism: Women and the Postwar Right. Dr. Nickerson was also featured in an interview on the Metropole Blog from the Urban History Association, where she discussed her book-in-progress and her recent book recommendations. Dr. Jo N. Hays (Professor Emeritus) saw his 2021 book Epidemics and Pandemics: From Ancient Plagues to Modern-Day Threats named to the 2022 Outstanding References Sources List, a list selected by the Collection Development and Evaluation Section of the Reference and User Services Association, a division of the American Library Association. The book was also named a Best Reference Work of 2021 by Library Journal. Current StudentsMadison Givens (MA Student) presented her papers "Female Blackness in an Abyss of Racism, Sexism, and The Black Panther Party: A Hypocritical Society that Fought for Equality but Denied Its Own Members Basic Human Rights" and "Black Reproduction: Slavery, Eugenics, and Birth Control: A History of Control that Bleeds into the Present" at the University of Memphis Graduate Association for African-American History / Department of History Conference. Givens also presented both papers at the HGSA Conference, and presented "Female Blackness in an Abyss of Racism, Sexism, and the Black Panther Party" as part of the Loyola Women's Studies and Gender Studies Program's 2022 Feminist Lecture Series. Nathan Ellstrand (PhD Candidate) successfully defended his dissertation, entitled "Reclaiming the Patria: Sinarquismo in the United States," on February 28th. Ellstrand also presented his paper “Mexican Organization, Not Revolution: Salvador Abascal Infante as Sinarquista President, 1940–41" for the panel “Las Derechas: New Directions in the Study of Lay and Clerical Conservatism in Postrevolutionary Mexico" at the American Historical Association online conference in February. He was also the organizer and chair of the panel "Transnational Mexican Catholic Histories of the 20th Century" at the conference. Hannah Lahti (PhD Student) has been selected as a fellow for the 2022 Auschwitz Jewish Center Foundation Fellows Program. The program is a collaboration between the Museum of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust (New York) and the Auschwitz Jewish Center (Oswiecim, Poland). Last semester's HIST 480 students have authored a number of blog posts for the Women and Leadership Archives Blog. Blog posts by Dariel Chaidez, Caroline Lauber, Shannon Honl, and Caroline Handley are currently available. You can read them here. Check back throughout the semester to read more! AlumniDr. Kelly Schmidt (PhD '21) has joined the WashU & Slavery Project at Washington University in St. Louis as a Postdoctoral Fellow in African and African American Studies. Schmidt also recently won the Council of Graduate Schools Programs' Dissertation of the Year in the Humanities. Ryan Booth (BA '01) has accepted a tenure-track position teaching American Indian History at Washington State University. Jeremy Bucher (MA '18, Collections & Archives Manager at National Hellenic Museum) and Caroline Giannakopoulos (MA '16, Project Archivist at the LUC Women and Leadership Archives) were both featured at the Chicago Collections Consortium's anniversary celebration on March 3rd. Bucher spoke on a panel exploring the role of memory institutions in urban areas, and Giannakopoulos introduced the Consortium's newest exhibit. Erin Witt (MA '21) has started a new position as a contract processing archivist with the Knights of Columbus Supreme Council Archives. Dr. Eleanor Janega (BA '04; PhD University College London) has published her book The Middle Ages: A Graphic Novel. Dr. Frank Biletz will be giving two talks, "Tudor and Stuart London," and "The Occupation: France 1940-1944" at the Newberry Library. Dr. Elizabeth Shermer, author of Indentured Students: How Government-Guaranteed Loans Left Generations Drowning in College Debt, was quoted in the Fortune article "How Biden Might Approach Student Loan Forgiveness in 2022" and the CNBC article "Lawsuit Claims 16 Top Colleges Overcharged over 170,000 Students by 'Hundreds of Millions of Dollars.'" Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría's book In the Vortex of Violence: Lynching, Extralegal Justice, and the State in Post-Revolutionary Mexico won Honorable Mention for the María Elena Martínez Book Prize in Mexican History, awarded at the Conference on Latin American History's recent conference. Dr. Kloppe-Santamaría's article on femicides in Mexico was also included in the International Peace Institute's "2021 Editor's Choice: Global Observatory Must Reads." Dr. Tim Lacy was quoted in a WBEZ article on virtual and in-person learning and the impact of the pandemic on college students. Sean Jacobson (PhD Candidate) received the Arthur J. Schmitt Dissertation Fellowship for the 2022-2023 academic year. Made possible by the generosity of the Arthur J. Schmitt Foundation, this award enables the Graduate School at Loyola University Chicago to offer support to outstanding students as they finish their dissertations while engaging them in an ongoing conversation on ethical leadership. Jacobson also recently published a review of Old Canaan in a New World: Native Americans and the Lost Tribes of Israel by Elizabeth Fenton in Religion. Jacobson also presented his paper entitled "Institutional Memory at University of Notre Dame and Christian Responsibility to the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi" at the American Catholic Historical Association on January 7th. Jacobson also has an upcoming article, "Skokie as Sanctuary: Holocaust Survivor Leadership at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center," in the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. Kyle Mathers (MA Public History '16) has started a new position as Lead Exhibits and Curatorial at the Harley-Davidson Museum. Rachel Boyle (PhD) will present her talk "Lucy Parson's Chicago" on March 9th as a part of the Newberry Seminar Series. Lauren O'Brien (MA History '16) successfully defended her dissertation "Ghosts of the Brick City: The History of Black Dispossession, Public Memory, and Urban Renewal in Newark, New Jersey," on January 24th. She will receive her degree from Rutgers University- Newark. O'Brien also co-presented her talk "Bringing African-American Stories and Perspectives into Public History and Museum Narratives" with Loyola Associate Professor of History Dr. Patricia Mooney-Melvin to the Loyola Retiree Association on January 20th. O'Brien's work with New York's Tenement Museum has also been featured in the New York Times. Dr. Karamanski Named 2021 Recipient of AHA Herbert Feis Award Join us in congratulating Dr. Theodore Karamanski for receiving the Herbert Feis Award from the American Historical Association in recognition for his distinguished contributions to the public history. Dr. Karamanski shares thoughts on his career in the field in an interview. Dr. Steve Schloesser presented "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" on October 26th at the Joan & Bill Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage. Dr. Kim Searcy recently published an article titled “The Ethiopian Civil War in Tigray” in a publication titled “Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective.” Professor Emeritus Dr. Jo N. Hays was featured as the College or Arts and Sciences Faculty Friday Spotlight for his book Epidemics and Pandemics: From Ancient Plagues to Modern-Day that he wrote with economist Joseph Byrne. Check out the faculty spotlight here. Sean Jacobson (PhD Candidate) contributed to an article entitled Choctaw Academy restoration continues in Scott County in the Lexington Herald Leader. He was also awarded a travel grant to the 2022 American Catholic Historic Association meeting for his paper “Institutional Memory at the University of Notre Dame and Christian Responsibility to the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi.” Melina Testin (BA History 2022) is currently serving as an intern at the Pritzker Military Museum where she is creating graphic novels for their Summer 2022 POW Exhibit. Preview the first two in this Google Folder. Nathan Ellstrand (PhD Candidate) presented his paper "Mexican Fifth Columnists: The Unión Nacional Sinarquista in the United States, 1941-1943" at the UC Berkeley Latin American History Workshop in October. His review of Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo, by Jennifer Koshatka Seman was published in Western Historical Quarterly. He also presented his paper "The First Sanctuary Campus: UC Riverside and Sanctuary Organizing in the Mid-1980s” in Portland in October. He presented "The Unión Nacional Sinarquista: A Threat to World War II Pan-Americanism or Not?" and was a panelist on “New Perspectives on Pan-Americanism from the 1930s through the 1960s" at the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association. Katherine Macica's (PhD Candidate) review of Facing the World: Defense Spending and International Trade in the Pacific Northwest since World War II, by Christopher P. Foss was published in Western Historical Quarterly. James Naughton (BA History 2015) has accepted a position as an Assistant State's Attorney in the Cook County State's Office, Criminal Appeals Division. Tim Neary (PhD 2004) was quoted in the New York Times article “A Loyal Catholic’s Mission to Protect the Church From Youth Football." Konstandina (Argyropoulos) Dulu (MAPH 2011) began a new position as the Impactful Grants Management for Patient Centered Outcomes at the American Society of Anesthesiologists. Ve'Amber Miller (MAPH 2021) was interviewed about her work at Pullman National Monument for an article in South Side Weekly. Eleanor Mahoney (MAPH 2007) completed an ESRI story map of the 1966 farmworker march from Delano to Sacramento - A Fight for Bread and Dignity (arcgis.com) as part of a bigger research project, done with the Chavez National Monument - The Road to Sacramento: Marching for Justice in the Fields - Labor History (U.S. National Park Service) (nps.gov). She is currently a Mellon Humanities Post-Doctoral Fellow in the History of Labor and Productivity with National Park Service. Tara Hinkley (MAPH/MLIS 2021) started a new position as an adjunct instructor at Dominican University. Laurel Overstreet (MAPH 2020) accepted a position as an Exhibit Developer at Luci Creative. Dr. Elizabeth Shermer recently presented her book, Indentured Students: How Government-Guaranteed Loans Left Generations Drowning in College Debt at the Washington History Seminar, sponsored by the National History Center and the Woodrow Wilson Center. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría's article "Deadly Rumors: Lynching, Hearsay, and Hierarchies of Credibility in Mexico," has recently been published in the Journal of Social History. Dr. Steve Schloesser recently published an article in Commonweal titled “Things Get Broken,” on Leonard Bernstein’s “MASS: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers Professor Emerita Dr. Barbara Rosenwein published her new book "Love: A History in Five Fantasies" with Polity Press. Dr. Paul Naylor (Part-time Instructor) published his newest book From Rebels to Rulers: Writing Legitimacy in the Early Sokoto State published by Boydell and Brewer (Rochester, NY). Dr. Naylor is Cataloguer of West African Manuscripts at the Hill Museum and Manuscript Library, Saint John’s University, Collegeville, Minnesota. Garrett Gutierrez (History BA '18) recently had an article published entitled, Skateboarding, We Hardly Knew You. Elizabeth Schmidt (Public History MA '21) accepted a new job at the Goodhue County Historical Society in Red Wing, Minnesota, as a Museum Library Manager. Angela Rothman (Public History MA ‘19) has a new position as an architectural historian with an infrastructure firm, HNTB Corporation, in Seattle. Tara (Cajacob) Hinkley (Public History MA/MLIS '21) recently accepted a new position as an Archivist at the Barack Obama Presidential Library. Stephen Petrie (MA Public History '18) accepted a new position as an Educator at the Milwaukee Public Museum. Pam Johnson Davis' (History MA '15) debut solo album, "Call Home ''- a collection of original songs & poems - is out now on all digital streaming platforms. You can find it here. She also gave a talk on poetry at TEDx Chicago on October 14th. Despite the barriers the pandemic continues to cause, students were able to safely engage in a multitude of intern positions this summer. Check out this story for more details! Harvard University Press published Associate Professor Elizabeth Tandy Shermer’s new book, Indentured Students: How Government-Guaranteed Loans Left Generations Drowning in College Debt, under its Belknap Press imprint on August 3. LitHub named her history of the student loan industry one of the summer’s top nonfiction reads. Advanced reviews praised it for “illuminating how bad policy saddled millions with crushing debts” and helping “us envision liberation from the savage inequalities of the system on which higher education now depends.” Additionally Dr. Shermer's book was also reviewed in The Chicago Tribune Column: New books about student loan debt - Chicago Tribune, and on August 18, she wrote an article for the Chronicle of Higher Education on the student loan debt crisis. Dr. Patricia Mooney-Melvin contributed an essay titled “Acceptance” for the catalog of an exhibition titled “Double-Vision: Art from Jesuit University Collections,” which opened August 20 at the Haggerty Museum of Art at Marquette University. Dr. Mooney-Melvin’s piece places exhibition works by Andy Warhol and Daniel Goldstein in dialogue. Drs. Benjamin Johnson and Gema Kloppe-Santamaría are featured in a new edited volume, Reverberations of Racial Violence: Critical Reflections on the History of the Border, published June 2021. History alum and faculty member Dr. Cranston Knight gave a lecture via Zoom on June 20th titled Sanctuary: A Haitian Passport and the Holocaust and on July 22 titled A Promise Kept. On July 28th Dr. Benjamin Johnson wrote an article titled American History Wars for Heidelberg Center for American Studies Graduate Blog. Dr. Theodore Karamanski's Columbus, DuSable and the myth of the “Founder” was published in the June 25th edition of the Chicago Sun Times. Instructor Paul Naylor's new book From Rebels to Rulers: Writing Legitimacy in the Early Sokoto State was recently published in Boydell & Brewer's Religion in Transforming Africa series. Professor Stephen Schloesser, S.J. coordinated an intensive summer course in Jesuit History for the Jesuit novices of the United States and Canada. (The novitiate is the first two-year period of a Jesuit’s typical twelve years of training.) The course was held on Loyola Chicago’s campus for four weeks in June and July. Participants were housed in Regis Hall and classes met daily for three-hour sessions in the IC 4th Floor. (Visitors were predictably awestruck by spectacular views of the lake and east quad.) Guest scholars gave presentations on topics spanning six centuries: Timothy O’Brien, S.J. (Holy Cross College) on early-modern Spain; Antoni Ucerler, S.J. (Japan / Oxford / San Francisco) on early-modern Japan, China, Korea, and New France; Brent Otto, S.J. (Berkeley) and Francis X. Clooney, S.J. (Harvard) on early-modern India; the Rev. Prof. Peter Phan (Georgetown) on early-modern Vietnam; James Bernauer, S.J. (Boston College) on Jesuit-Jewish relations across four centuries; and James Keenan, S.J. (Boston College) on transformations in moral theology from the 16th through 21st centuries. We were especially honored to have the esteemed Italian Renaissance historian John W. O’Malley, S.J. (Georgetown) on hand during all four weeks for occasional comments and interventions as well as for three dedicated presentations. The Jesuit novices were exceptionally fortunate to have guest presentations by two members of the LUC History Department: Prof. Ted Karamanski lectured on Jesuit relations with Native Americans from the 17th through 20th centuries; and Dr. Kelly Schmidt lectured on Jesuit slaveholding in the St. Louis region (the subject of her recently completed dissertation defended with great success). Both presentations, impeccably delivered and enthusiastically received, did the LUC department proud. Throughout the four weeks, Prof. Schloesser wove the narrative thread with lectures on Islamic Iberia, Renaissance and Reformation, Baroque and Enlightenment, and transatlantic late- and post-modernity. Every aspect of the event went flawlessly, and deepest thanks go to LUC’s Conference Services, IT, libraries, and other university divisions who delivered beyond the most ambitious hopes. Finally, profound thanks are also owed to President Jo Ann Rooney–without whose dedication the event would not have been possible. Katie Macica's (PhD candidate) book review of Facing the World: Defense Spending and International Trade in the Pacific Northwest since World War II by Christopher P. Foss was published in Western Historical Quarterly. Nathan Ellstrand's (PhD candidate) profile was featured in the Western Historical Association's Graduate Student Caucus Summer 2021 Newsletter. Nathan presented a workshop on August 27th where he shared a draft currently titled "The Establishment of Sinarquistas in the United States – 1940-1941." Dr. Jaime Pensado provided initial comments. He also presented "Contesting the Post-Revolutionary Mexican State: The Rise of the Unión Nacional Sinquarquista in the United States, 1936-1940," at the Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies Congress in August. Nathan will be a Visiting Student Researcher at UC Berkeley during the 2021-2022 academic year. Mikey Spehn and Adam Yunis (Public History MA), along with Leila Willis presented at the "Dismantle Preservation" conference on the Illinois Black Panthers. Watch their presentation on YouTube. Ina Cox (PhD student) will be a 2021-2022 Rule of Law Fellow with the Loyola Rule of Law Institute. History Undergraduates Will Alcock (Men’s Basketball) and Ayoub El-Ashmawi (Men’s Cross Country/Track) made the 2020-2021 Missouri Valley Conference Honor Roll (along with 201 other LUC Athletes). Ruby Oram's (PhD US History/Public History 2020) article "A Superior Kind of Working Woman: The Contested Meaning of Vocational Education for Girls in Progressive Era Chicago" was published in the July 2021 issue of the The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. Pedro Regalado (History BA 2013), Yale PhD, has joined the History Department at Stanford University as Assistant Professor. Kelley Szany (MA Public History 2002) won a NEH Grant for a Global History of Genocide Exhibit. Greg Ruth’s (PhD 2017) first book, Tennis: A History from American Amateurs to Global Professionals, was published by University of Illinois Press. Alicia Zeimet (MA Public History 2020) is the Program Coordinator for Adult Education Seminars, The Newberry Library. Mary Abroe (PhD 1996) was elected Vice-Chair of Board of Trustee for American Battlefield Trust. Kelly Schmidt (PhD US History/Public History 2021) discussed the Catholic Church’s legacies of slave ownership in the 19th century on National Public Radio’s Morning Edition program on July 19, 2021. Her comments gave context to a news story on how St. Louis residents are wrestling with the revelation that two prominent catholic high schools in St. Louis are named after bishops who owned slaves. Kelly was awarded the New Scholar Essay Prize for Catholic Studies in the Americas from the Curran Center at Fordham University. Read her essay here. Rebecca Johnson (Public History MA 1991) is Director at the Center for Public History and Adjunct Professor at Northern Kentucky University. Miranda Ridener (Public History MA 2021) recently accepted a full-time position as Library Services Assistant at University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh at the Fond du Lac campus. Ramblers Participate in the Midwestern History Conference History faculty, current students, and alumni presented at the the Midwestern History Conference hosted by Grand Valley State University. Dr. D. Bradford Hunt participated in a roundtable panel on May 26, 2021. The roundtable discussed "From Collaboration to Community: The Chicago Collections Consortium." Lucas Bensley (PhD US History candidate) presented on May 27, 2021. The title of his presentation was "Daring Dames and Dirty Deeds: A History of Chicago Burlesque from 1870 to the 1940s." Nathan Ellstrand (Public History and US History PhD candidate) presented "The Mexican Right in WWII Chicagoland" and Jake McAloon (BA/MA History student) presented "Eighty Acres of Hell or A Grand Old-Time?: The War of Words Surrounding Chicago's Camp Douglas and Historical Memory" on May 27, 2021. Jason Stacy (PhD 2006) presented on May 27, 2021. The title of his presentation was " Village on the Couch: Edgar Lee Masters, Carl Van Doren, and the Psychoanalysis of the Small Midwestern Town." Three faculty members recently wrote articles for newspapers that addressed issues in the news. Dr. Michelle Nickerson wrote an article for The Washington Post on May 13, 2021, "Stefanik’s rise and Cheney’s fall mark a new role for GOP women." Dr. Benjamin Johnson co-authored with John Morán González an article in The Washington Post on June, 4, 2021, "The bright side of a bad Texas history bill? It’s too late to whitewash the past." Dr. Elizabeth Tandy Shermer published an article for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on May 22, 2021, "Reforms haven’t fixed college financial aid system." Dr. Elizabeth Tandy Shermer also wrote an article for The Washington Post on May 3,2021, "75 years of reforms have failed to fix our college financial aid system." Dr. Elliott Gorn was interviewed for the WTTW documentary, “Live at Mr. Kelly’s,” which originally aired on June 8, 2021. Dr. Theodore Karamanski has a short reflection, “Institutionalism and Activism in the Evolution of the Public History Movement,” in the May 2021 issue of The Public Historian, 38-40, as part of a larger segment in this issue entitled “Threads of Origin: A Roundtable,” edited by Rebecca Conard. The roundtable was part of the National Council on Public History’s 40th anniversary conference in 2020. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría has been busy publishing and presenting. She and Paul Gillingham participated in a book launch discussion on May 18, 2021 about their new books. The discussion focused on the shared theme of "Lynching, Extralegal Justice, and Authoritarianism in Unrevolutionary Mexico" and was hosted by Northwestern's Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program and the Noria Research. More information on Dr. Kloppe-Santamaría's book can be found here. She was also recently featured in the Faculty Friday Spotlight from Loyola University Chicago's College of Arts and Sciences Dean's Office. Read the spotlight feature here. Additionally, she recently published "Violence in post-revolutionary Mexico," as part of the Work in Progress Series at the Kellogg Institute for International Studies. View the working paper here. Dr. John M. McManamon, S.J. published an article titled "For the Love of the Codices: Paul Oskar Kristeller and the Iter Italicum" in the journal Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 65 (2020): 560-73. The article describes the decades-long work of Kristeller, a 20th century scholar of the Renaissance, to produce a seven-volume index of neglected Renaissance manuscripts. Dr. Kyle Roberts participated in a conversation with Dr. Benjamin Bankhurst on May 27, 2021 about the Maryland Loyalist Project. Listen to the Conversations at the Washington Library podcast here. Two graduate students recently received awards. Cate LiaBraaten (Public History and US History PhD candidate) won two awards this past Spring semester: the King V. Hostick Award from the Illinois State Historical Society and the Graduate Award in American History from the Colonial Dames of America, State of Illinois Chapter. Anthony Stamilio (Public History and US History PhD student) received the 2021 Robert McCluggage Award from the Loyola University Chicago History Department for the best graduate student research essay for his paper: "Divorce and Melodrama in the Civil War Era." Nathan Ellstrand (Public History and US History PhD candidate) published a book review on In Combat: The Life of Lombardo Toledano by Daniela Spenser in the Historical Materialism Series on May 21, 2021. Read it here. Scarlett Andes (Public History MA 2021) started a new position as Administrative Assistant for Academic Programming at the Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership. Ryan Booth (History BA 2001) finished his PhD at Washington State University. His dissertation focused on the role of US Indian scouts for the Army. Tara (Cajacob) Hinkley (Public History MA/MLIS 2021) is the Genealogy and History Librarian at the Algonquin Area Public Library. Julia Lacher (Public History MA 2017) started a new position as Outreach Director for the Chicago Film Archives. Ve'Amber Miller (Public History MA 2021) is a Park Guide for the National Park Service at the Pullman National Monument. She is also engaged in a post-graduate internship as Communications Coordinator Intern with the LGBTQ Religious Archives Network. Lauren O'Brien's (History MA 2016) research with the Tenement Museum in New York City was featured in a recent article in the New York Times. Karen Seiber (Public History MA 2018) discussed her digital project “Visualizing the Red Summer” on a CBS News Special titled “Tulsa 1921: An American Tragedy.” The special aired on May 31 and marked the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Riot and Massacre where whites destroyed Tulsa’s Greenwood District and killed dozens and perhaps hundreds of African Americans. Casey Terry (Public History MA 2021) started a new position as a researcher for the Calumet Heritage Area Project, a project affiliated with Chicago's Field Museum. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría won the Best Article in the Humanities Award from the Mexico section of the Latin American Studies Association. The award was for "The Lynching of the Impious: Violence, Politics, and Religion in Postrevolutionary Mexico (1930s–1950s)," which appeared in volume 77 of The Americas: A Quarterly Review of Latin American History. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría was selected as a Marie S. Curie Visiting Fellow at the Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies at the University of Freiburg in Germany. Two history professors have earned 2021 Sujack Awards from the Loyola College of Arts & Sciences. Congratulations to: - Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría received the 2021 Sujack Family Award for Faculty Research Excellence. - Dr. Marek Suszko received the 2021 Sujack Master Teacher Award. Dr. Robert Bucholz was awarded the 2021 Langerbeck Undergraduate Research Mentoring Award. The award is given "to recognize and reward the exceptional work of Loyola's faculty members who are contributing significant time and effort to the intellectual, ethical, and academic development of Loyola's undergraduate researchers by mentoring their research endeavors." Refusing to Forget, an organization co-founded by Dr. Benjamin Johnson has been honored with the "Friends of History" award, granted annually by the Board of the Organization of American Historians. The organization and its projects have received awards from our work from the Western Historical Association, the American Historical Association, and the American Association for State and Local History, and been covered in the New York Times, Latina Magazine, Mother Jones, the Texas Observer, the Guardian, Slate, and other venues. Click here to view the award presentation from the OAH Annual Meeting. Read more here. Dr. Gemma Kloppe-Santamaría has been named 2021 Mellon Emerging Faculty Leader for her research and authorship of In the Vortex of Violence: Lynching, Extralegal Justice, and the State in Post-Revolutionary Mexico. Read more about her accomplishment in the Faculty Friday Spotlight. Dr. John Pincince moderated "Perspectives on Race and Caste in the U.S. and India," featuring Dr. Suraj Yengde from Harvard University. The panel is part of a webinar series "Speaker Series on Global Racism" facilitated by the College of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Patricia Mooney-Melvin was a panelist on the panel "Rethinking the Significance of the Indian Boundary Marker" co-sponsored by the Rogers Park/West Ridge Historical Society and 49th Alderwoman Maria Hadden's Office on April 19, 2021. Following the death of Prince Phillip on April 9, Dr. Robert Bucholz was interviewed by several media outlets about the life of Phillip, including on WGN, available on YouTube. Dr. Theodore Karamanski's book Mastering the Inland Seas won the "Superior Achievement Award" in the book category at the Illinois State Historical Society's annual meeting in April. Also, on April 27, he published an opinion piece in the Chicago Sun-Times, titled "Get with the modern world, conservatives: 'Infrastructure is more than roads and bridges." He gives historical context to the Biden Administration’s Infrastructure investment plan, reminding us that Congress had often defined “infrastructure” expansively in order to spur economic growth. Harbors, lighthouses, life-saving stations were federally funded in the 19th century around the Great Lakes, and electrification during the New Deal proved economically and socially beneficial. Nathan Ellstrand (United States History PhD Candidate) was an Organizer and Panelist on the virtual Zoom panel "Hope for a New Society - Sinarquista Colonization in the Borderlands - 1941-1944," where he presented his paper, "Race, Nation and Identity at the Intersection of Mexico-US Societies," as a part of the Southeastern Council fo Latin American Studies (SECOLAS) in April 2021. Emily Davis (Public History and United States History PhD Candidate) has been hired as an Assistant Professor of History at Belmont Abbey College in North Carolina. Meghan Flannery (Public History MA) was named the Runner-Up in the 2021 Minnesota State Outstanding Junior Member Contest by the Minnesota State Society Daughters of the American Revolution. The Outstanding Junior Member Contest recognizes DAR members, ages 18-35, for their service to the DAR and their local communities. She received this honor for her work as Historian of the Lake Minnetonka Chapter, Wayzata, MN, where she documented chapter events and activities, digitized chapter records for easier future access, and promoted American history in her local community. James Rubino (History BA), the 2020-2021 recipient of the Polish Resistance (AK) Foundation Scholarship, won first prize ($500) for the original research paper he submitted to the Thirteenth Annual Student Forum on East Central Europe, sponsored by the Polish Studies Program at Loyola. His paper is titled "The Traveler's Perspective: Outsider Perceptions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth n the 16th and 17th Century." He wrote the paper under the supervision of Dr. Leslie Dossey (HIST 397, Fall 2020). Dr. Robert Bucholz was his second mentor. The forum is usually a day-long conference, but this year was changed to an essay contest due to the pandemic. Melina Testin (History BA) won a Provost Research Fellowship from the Center for Engaged Learning, Teaching, and Scholarship (CELTS) and the Loyola Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program. She received the fellowship for her mentored research project, American Military History Illustrated through Graphic Novels. Taha Din (History BA) received a 2021 Building Community Scholarship for Juniors and Seniors from marginalized groups within the Loyola College of Arts and Sciences. These annual scholarships, created in coordination with our University partners, are awarded to students who have had a positive impact at Loyola and/or in other communities through their advancement of diversity and inclusion initiatives. He was one of 12 students from across the College of Arts and Sciences awarded with a scholarship. Rochelle Caruthers (Public History MA 2010) started a new position as DEI Programs Assistant at Saint Louis Art Museum. Andrew Donnelly (PhD 2016) has been hired as an Assistant Professor of History at Texas A&M-Commerce, beginning Fall 2021. Chelsea Denault (PhD 2020) recently shared her research, "We ALL Live Downwind: Trash, Public Health, and Community-Centered Development in Detroit," during a virtual presentation at Albion College in Michigan. H. Bryan Escobar (History MA 2014) received a "Superior Achievement Award" in the digital project category for his project "Waukegan History Society App" at the Illinois State Historical Society's annual meeting in April. Escobar works as Arts and History Specialist at Waukegan Park District in Waukegan, IL. Jason Stacy (PhD 2006) has recently published a new book, Spoon River America: Edgar Lee Masters and the Myth of the American Small Town. “A literary and cultural milestone, Spoon River Anthology captured an idea of the rural Midwest that became a bedrock myth of life in small-town America. Jason Stacy places the book within the atmosphere of its time and follows its progress as the poetry took root and thrived. Published by Edgar Lee Masters in 1915, Spoon River Anthology won praise from modernists while becoming an ongoing touchstone for American popular culture. Stacy charts the ways readers embraced, debated, and reshaped Masters's work in literary controversies and culture war skirmishes; in films and other media that over time saw the small town as idyllic then conflicted then surreal; and as the source of three archetypes—populist, elite, and exile—that endure across the landscape of American culture in the twenty-first century. A wide-ranging reconsideration of a literary landmark, Spoon River America tells the story of how a Midwesterner's poetry helped change a nation's conception of itself.” Dr. Theodore Karamanski recently wrote a reflection on behalf of the Loyola Public History Program accepting the 2021 National Council on Public History's Founders Award on History@Work, the NCPH blog. Read it here. He also serves on the National Council on Public History's Council of Past Presidents. Dr. Patricia Mooney-Melvin served as a discussant on the Public Intellectual, Public History, and the History of the Professional Roundtable at the 2021 National Council on Public History Annual Conference. She also serves on the National Council on Public History's Council of Past Presidents. Dr. Elliot Gorn, along with alumnus Adam Carston (MA 2016), was recently featured in the Chicago Reader for his work with the Mister Kelly's Collection at the Newberry Library. Read more here. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría gave a virtual presentation titled "In the Name of Christ: Lynching and Religion in Post-Revolutionary Mexico" through the Catholic University History Department on March 17th. You can watch a recording of her presentation here. She also discussed her book In the Vortex of Violence: Lynching, Extralegal Justice, and the State in Post-Revolutionary Mexico during an online book discussion with the Janey Program in Latin American Studies at The New School on March 23. Watch the recording here. Dr. Michelle Nickerson was awarded a Mother Theodore Guerin Research Travel Grant in 2020 from the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame for her project "Catholic Resistance: How the Camden 28 Put the Vietnam War on Trial." The Cushwa Center recently interviewed her about her research. Check out the interview here. Elizabeth Schmidt (Public History MA) completed a summer/fall internship at the Frances Willard House Museum and Archives. She designed a long-term digital project titled "Black Women of the WCTU." She developed a project plan which includes mining the holdings in the Archives for names and context, designing a dynamic database to record the information, writing biographical sketches and interpretive essays, and compiling resources for further research. Schmidt's work lays the foundation for an ongoing, interactive project and will help their findings available online. Sean Jacobson (Public History and the United States History PhD Candidate) was awarded a 2021 Research Travel Grant from the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame for his dissertation "Hidden in Plain Sight: Challenges of Remembering Antebellum Indian Missions in the Great Lakes and the South." Read more here. Cate LiaBraaten and Sean Jacobson (Public History and the United States History PhD Candidates) presented a poster on their project Suffrage Sundays at the Frances Willard House Museum at the 2021 National Council on Public History Annual Conference. Public History and the United States History PhD Candidates William Ippen (Co-Chair) and Katherine Macica (Committee Member) just completed their terms on the Environmental Sustainability Committee of the National Council on Public History. Ella Wagner (Public History and the United States History PhD Candidate) chaired the session The 19th and Beyond: Reflecting on the Suffrage Centennial and Women's History in the National Park Service at the 2021 National Council on Public History Annual Conference. June Coyne (United States History PhD Candidate) received The Graduate School's Edward Crown, M.D. Humanities Fellowship for the 2021-2022 academic year. Nathan Elstrand (United States History PhD Candidate) as a chair and panelist presented his paper "The Spread of Sinarquismo in the United States, 1936-1940,” as a part of the panel “Transnational Histories of Mexican Catholic Activism in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries,” by the Rocky Mountain Council for Latin American Studies presented via Zoom in March 2021. He also presented his paper “Hope for a New Society – Sinarquista Colonization in the Borderlands, 1941-1944” at the Latin American and Caribbean Studies Graduate Workshop at Northwestern University via Zoom in March 2021. Dr. Cranston Knight (PhD 2007) has partnered with National Public Housing Museum to produce Silent Voices Among Us: A Montage of Chicago’s West Side. This digital exhibit, launched this month, features Dr. Knight’s photography documenting disinvestment in west side communities, including Garfield Park and Austin. The exhibit also includes oral histories of residents of the former Henry Horner Homes, a public housing development on the west side. Dr. Knight grew up in Horner and thrived in Chicago’s public schools, despite regularly facing racist taunts when he helped racially integrate Theodore Roosevelt High School in 1967. Since earning his PhD at Loyola, he has taught in the City Colleges of Chicago and St. Augustine College. With an interest in diplomatic history, he has actively been involved with the United National Association of Chicago. Congratulations to Dr. Knight on bringing these important stories and voices to a broader audience. Helen Davies (History/Classics BA 2009, Digital Humanities MA 2013) is now Assistant Professor in Digital Humanities in the Department of English at UC Colorado Springs. Rachel Boyle (PhD 2017) participated as a discussant in the working group Developing Best Practices Guidelines for Consulting Historians on the National Council on Public History. She is also a member of the National Council on Public History Board of Directors and the Consultant's Committee. She recently published "Still grinding? How the pandemic is accelerating job precarity in public history," an article on the pandemic's impact on the public history job market, on the National Council on Public History's blog History@Work. Read her article here. Kate Johnson (MA 2018) and Marie Pellisier (MA 2018) are members of the Digital Media Group on the National Council on Public History. Stella Ress (PhD 2014) serves on the Curriculum and Training Committee and the G. Wesley Johnson Award Committee on the National Council on Public History. Hope Shannon (PhD 2020) is a member of the National Council on Public History Board Subcommittee on Gender Discrimination and Sexual Harassment. Dr. David Dennis collaborated with the Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies at San Jose University on a new virtual exhibition commemorating the 250th anniversary of the birth of famed composer Ludwig van Beethoven. Beethoven Beyond Borders: Anniversary Celebrations, Politics, and Global Impact Since 1870 examines Beethoven and his impact on global culture during previous anniversaries from 1870 to 2020. It describes the historical contexts that influenced the celebrations from Germany’s unification in the nineteenth century through the First World War and Weimar eras, the Cold War, and the COVID-19 pandemic. Follow this link for the full article, including directions on how to access the exhibit and watch a video of the launch event. Dr. Elena Valussi recently gave a virtual lecture titled "Place, Space, and Politics in Chinese Religions: A Case of Chunyang Guan (純陽觀) in Sichuan" hosted by Purdue University's Center on Religion and the Global East. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría wrote a policy brief titled "Putting Citizens' Security First: Towards a New Chapter in U.S.-Mexico Security Cooperation" recently published by the Mexico Institute at the Woodrow Wilson Center. The brief examines the challenges and opportunities faced by US-Mexico security cooperation under President Biden and President López Obradorr, and offers specific policy recommendations to strengthen citizens' security and decrease the current levels of violence impacting both countries. The full brief can be found here. Dr. Theodore Karamanski was recently featured in the Faculty Friday Spotlight from Loyola University Chicago's Dean's Office and University Marketing and Communication. Read more here. Jenny Barry (Public History MA) received the Friend of MainStreet Libertyville award at the preservation organization's annual meeting in January. The award recognized her leadership in the creation of an online, self-guided tour of downtown Libertyville (https://www.theclio.com/tour/1501) which was launched by the Libertyville-Mundelein Historical Society as a companion to the annual MainStreet Libertyville Historic House Walk in September. Jenny is the Local History Librarian at the Cook Memorial Public Library and president of the Libertyville-Mundelein Historical Society. Sean Jacobson (Public History and United States History PhD Candidate) wrote a book review on Narratives of Persistence: Indigenous Negotiations of Colonialism in Alta and Baja California. Archaeology and Indigenous-Colonial Interactions in the Americas by Lee M. Panich in the Spring 2021 issue of Western Historical Quarterly. Read it here. Nathan Ellstrand (United States History PhD Candidate) received a 2021 Samuel Flagg Bemis Dissertation Research Grant from The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations for his dissertation "Reclaiming La Patria: Sinarquismo in the United States, 1937-1946" and was awarded an Arthur J. Schmitt Dissertation Fellowship from Loyola University Chicago for 2021-2022. Tim Lacy (PhD 2006) recently participated in a group radio interview "Rise of Anti-Intellectualism" on All Sides with Ann Fisher. The full interview can be found here. Rachel Lewis (Public History MA 2013) started a new position as Exhibit Designer at Prairie du Chien Historical Society. Federico Padrones Salvador (Public History MA 2013) started a new position as Administrative Assistant at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Angela Fritz (PhD 2011) joined the Wisconsin Historical Society as Administrator for the Division of Collections and State Archivist. A press release about her new position can be found here. In December 2020, Congress passed the Smithsonian Women's History Act, the result of a multi-year effort to establish a women's history museum. Dr. Patricia Mooney-Melvin was part of the scholar summit held by the Congressional Commission on a National Commission on a National Women's History Museum and presented "Claiming and Engaging Space: The National Women's History Museum" on January 26, 2016. She was a member of a working group that provided material for the section on the need for such a museum for the Commission as it prepared its report for Congress. Her particular role was to focus on the importance of location and the significance of memorial space. Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría recently won a Harry Frank Guggenheim Research Grant. The foundation provides grants to support research projects that “promise to increase understanding of the causes, manifestations, and control of violence and aggression” in the modern world. The grant will allow Dr. Kloppe-Santamaría to conduct archival research and hire research assistants to help with her latest project on violence in Latin America. Dr. Timothy Gilfoyle published an article in the Fall 2020 issue of Chicago History from the Chicago History Museum titled, "Banking in Chicago: Interviews with Michael Moskow and Rick Waddell." Professor Emeritus Jo N. Hays with Joseph P. Byrne recently published Epidemics and Pandemics: From Ancient Plagues to Modern-Day Threats (ABC-Clio, 2021), a two-volume pandemic reference book that provides readers with a holistic view of the terrifying—and fascinating—topic of epidemics and pandemics. In Volume 1, readers will discover what an epidemic is, how it emerges and spreads, what diseases are most likely to become epidemics, and how disease outbreaks are tracked, prevented, and combated. They will learn about the impacts of such modern factors as global air travel and antibiotic resistance, as well as the roles played by public health agencies and the media. Volume 2 offers detailed case studies that explore the course and lasting significance of individual epidemics and pandemics throughout history. Dr. Theodore Karamanski published an op-ed in the Chicago Tribune on the need to preserve Great Lakes lighthouses, "An SOS for our Great Lakes lighthouses and heritage". The piece draws upon material in his book, Mastering the Inland Seas: How Lighthouses, Navigational Aids, and Harbors Transformed the Great Lakes and America, published in 2020. Professor Emeritus Barbara Rosenwein was interviewed on the Baltimore-based NPR show “Midday” on January 22 about her recent book, Anger: the Conflicted History of an Emotion (Yale University Press, 2020). Professors Tanya Stabler-Miller and Michael Khodarkovsky were recently awarded Loyola Summer Research Stipends. Professor Stabler will be traveling to France (conditions permitting) to work on a project titled “Men, Women, and Religious Networks in Medieval France,” exploring the links between women’s religious communities, clerics and scholars at the early Sorbonne in Paris. Professor Khodarkovsky will be conducting research on his next book project “Empires of the Steppe,” which examines Russian empire-building in the 16th-19th century through the lens of other competing Asian empires. Elizabeth Schmidt (Public History MA) published a blogpost for the Frances Willard House Museum and Archives titled, "The Fruitful History of 'Dry January'". She shares the origins of modern-day efforts at alcohol-free lifestyles - and the connection between Welch’s Grape Juice and the WCTU. The Rev. William Corcoran (PhD 2003) made front-page news to start the new year. The headline of the Chicago Tribune on 17 January 2021 blared “Priest speaks out about Trump. Some parishioners walk out.” Hope Shannon (PhD 2020) is taking over as the American Historical Association's coordinator of Career Diversity for Historians. Kathryn Wilmot (BA 2004) is starting a new position as Manuscripts Librarian at Howard University. November & December 2020 Dr. Tanya Stabler Miller published a historical overview on the beguine movement in Northern Europe from the 13th century to the present for the World Religions and Spirituality Project. She has another recently published article "Work and the Home" in the Middle Ages that appears in A Cultural History of the Home, published by Bloomsbury. It examines the relationship between work and the home as a perspective from which to examine gender, socio-economic status, and historical change. Written before the pandemic, some of its points resonate in new, unexpected ways. Professor Emerita Barbara Rosenwein recently published a new book Anger: The Conflicted History of an Emotion (Yale University Press, 2020). It traces our many conflicting ideas about and expressions of anger, taking the story from the Buddha to our own time, from anger’s complete rejection to its warm reception. Dr. Rosenwein's book shows The book shows that the history of anger can help us grapple with it today. Dr. Betsy Jones Hemenway is finishing up six years of work on the board of the Association for Women in Slavic Studies (two years as VP, two as President, two as Past President). AWSS supports research and teaching in women's and gender studies about Eastern Europe and Eurasia, as well as the work of women scholars working in any field in Slavic and Eurasian Studies. Her responsibilities have included chairing multiple prize committees, organizing the AWSS biennial conference, and rebuilding the organization's website. Dr. Ted Karamanski published an op-ed in the Chicago Sun-Times on Thanksgiving Day "Great Lakes States went big for Joe Biden - and he should go big for the Great Lakes." Loyola is well-represented in a new book about Chicago environmental history. Professor Emeritus Harold Platt, current Professor Theodore Karamanski, and graduate student Katie Macica all have essays in the volume City of Lake and Prairie. Nathan Ellstrand (PhD candidate) recently published an article in the Chicago Jewish History's Annual Book issue. You can find "Links to the Past, Bridges to the Future: The CJHS Digitization Project" here. Melina Testin (BA History) was awarded an ASPIRE Scholarship for her work with Smithsonian Affiliated National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library (NCSML) in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Read more about her work here. Lori Osborne, (MA History 2004) Director of the Frances Willard House Museum, featured on the recent panel Race and Rights: Willard, Wells, and Addams. The program was a partnership between the Frances Willard House Museum, Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, and Northwestern University's History department in commemoration for the 2020 Suffrage Centennial. Sam Smith, (MAPH/MLIS 2014) was recently mentioned Chicago Tribune article for her capstone project work featuring postmortem photography from Helen Sclair's collection at the Newberry Library. Charles Heinrich (MA History 2015), created a new digital exhibit for the Archdiocese of Chicago on Fr. John Beyenka. You can find the exhibit online here. MA Public History Alumna (2014) Courtney Baxter is starting a new position as Early Childhood and Family Programs Manager at Missouri Historical Society. Adam Shprintzen (PhD 2011), Associate Professor of History, Marywood College, published “Protose Cutlets,” in Everything Has a History, American Historical Association, December 17, 2020. Angela Fritz (PhD 2010), Head of the University Archives, Hesburgh Libraries, University of Notre Dame, recently published “Digital Storytelling, Archival Research, and ‘Layers of Practice’: A Critical Pedagogical Approach to Visual Literacy in Special Collections and University Archives,” in Shailoo Bedi and Jenaya Webb, eds., Visualizing the Library: A Primer on Visual Research Methods in Library and Information Sciences (London: Facet Publishing, 2020) and “Sisters of Faith, Stewards of History: Preserving Women Religious Archives,” Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals,14:03 (Spring 2019); Focus Issue: Women & Collections, edited by Juilee Decker, guest edited by Consuelo Sendino, Margo Note, and Janet Ashton. Michelle Donahue (Public History MA 1997), the Executive Director of the DeKalb County History Center has been selected by the DeKalb County Government Board as the new DeKalb County Historian. She has also recently been elected to the Board of Directors of the Illinois Association of Museums. Amber Dushman (Public History MA/MLIS 2010) is starting a new position in Risk Management at Northwestern University. Austin Sundstrom (Public History MA 2020) published “Restrained v. Martial: Masculine Ideals in Civil War Photographs,” in Atavist Restrained vs. Martial (atavist.com). Dr. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría won the 2020 Best Article Prize from the New England Council of Latin American Studies for her piece, "Lynching and the Politics of State Formation in Post-Revolutionary Puebla,” which appeared in the prestigious Journal of Latin American Studies in August 2019. John McManamon, SJ, Professor Emeritus, received two grants (total together of $25,000 for the calendar year 2021) from the George and Ann Bass Endowment and the Frederick H. van Doorninick, Jr., Endowment to support the publication of the final report on the Bozburun Byzantine shipwreck that sank off the Turkish coast around 890. An article to appear in this year’s number of Traditio: “The Lettered Public for the Funeral Orations of Poggio Bracciolini on Francesco Zabarella and Leonardo Giustiniani on Carlo Zeno,” Traditio 75 (2020): 311-84. He also has two articles scheduled to be published next year: “Neither Letters Nor Swimming”: The Rebirth of Swimming and Free-diving (scheduled for publication by E. J. Brill in Brill’s Studies in Maritime History series, 2021) and Archaeology at Lago di Nemi: Caligula’s Ships in Diana’s Sanctuary (scheduled for publication by Texas A&M University Press in 2021). Erin Witt (MA Public History/MLIS) spent the spring semester of 2020 working for WTTW Chicago as a Research Intern. She was responsible for conducting searches of digital archives and WTTW repositories for images to be used in the “Chicago Stories 2020” program on the Chicago Fire of 1871. In addition to the archival research, she also created a management system for the images to log their metadata, conducted research on story arcs, and assisted during one set of interviews. The internship was conducted both in-person and remotely, due to the coronavirus. The hour-long documentary on the Chicago Fire premiered on October 9, 2020, and can be watched here. Hope Shannon, (American history/Public history PhD 2020), joins the AHA as the PhD career outcomes researcher. At Loyola, she was the Career Diversity Fellow for the 2019-2020 year and she will continue this work with the AHA's Where Historians Work database and participate in other data-driven projects on doctoral education. Pam Johnson-Davis, (MA History 2015) won the 2020 Best Urban Poetry Award from American Book Fest for her poetry collection "Seasons (I'll Be Seeing You)". The poetry in Seasons centers on loss, grief, and self-actualization. Using her historical knowledge and studies of critical race theory, she offers a critique of racism in our country by offering a glimpse into the lived experiences of Black Americans. Pedro Regalado (BA History 2013), received his Ph.D. from Yale in 2019. He received the Michael Katz Award for Best Dissertation from the Urban History Association. He is a junior fellow of the Society of Fellows at Harvard University. Dr. Elliot Gorn was featured in the Chicago Sun-Times advocating for a statue to be built in honor of labor advocate Mother Jones. Check out the article here. PhD candidate Nathan Ellstrand presented "Crisis and the Growing Importance of Women in the Partido Liberal Mexicano, 1915-1922" from his seminar in Borderlands and Latino/a Studies at the Newberry Library. Dr. Elliott Gorn is the author of Let the People See: The Story of Emmett Till, just released in paperback by Oxford University Press. View an interview with Dr. Gorn regarding his book here. Dr. Benjamin Johnson was quoted in a Texas Tribune article that examines the controversial history of the Texas Rangers, especially its legacy of state-sanctioned violence against Tejano communities. Dr. Elliot Gorn and Dr. Rosemary Feurer co-authored a Chicago Tribune article on Mother Jones on July 14, 2020. Dr. Michael Khodarkovsky contributed three op-eds to Russia's premier news channel, Ekho Moskvy (Echo of Moscow). All three essays focused on criticizing different aspects of Putin’s regime with one discussing the new, government-sanctioned narrative of Russian history. Ekho Moskvy remains one of the very few semi-independent news channels in Russia. Check these out: “Diktatory vsiakie nuzhny,” in Russian, Ekho Moskvy (Moscow), April 1, 2020; “O Putine i polovtsakh,” in Russian, Ekho Moskvy (Moscow), April 10, 2020; and “Ob istoricheskoi pravde,” (“Of Historical Truth”), in Russian, Ekho Moskvy (Moscow), May 20, 2020. Dr. Khodarkovsky was also interviewed on NPR about Russian presidential term limits, March 10, and his book Russia’s Twentieth Century: A Journey in 100 Histories (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019) was short-listed for the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing. Dr. Michelle Nickerson was interviewed about the historical and ideological roots of Sunbelt politics in the United States. Listen the podcast here, July 7, 2020. Dr. Ellie Shermer shared her thoughts on the deterioration of American leadership, unity, and shared purpose with the Washington Post on July 22, 2020. The article discusses how she will wrestle with these questions in class this Fall. Emeritus Professor Dr. Barbara Rosenwein's new book, Anger: The Conflicted History of an Emotion (Yale University Press), was released July 14, 2020. Kelly L. Schmidt (PhD candidate in Public History/American History) is Research Coordinator for the Jesuits; Slavery, History, and Memory Reconciliation. Check out the project here. Dr. Robert Bucholz was featured on "Queen Anne: The Mother of Great Britain," episode three of Lucy Worsley's Royal Myths and Secrets! Dr. Elena Valussi: “Men Built Religion, Women Made it Superstitious: Gender and Superstition in Republican China”, Journal of Chinese Religions 48.1, 2020 This article was featured in a recent blog post on gender and religion in China. Dr. Theodore Karamanski’s new book, Mastering the Inland Seas: How Lighthouses, Navigational Aids, and Harbors Transformed the Great Lakes and America (University of Wisconsin Press) is featured in an article in the Great Lakes Echo. Read the article here. We look forward Emeritus Professor Barbara Rosenwein’s new book, Anger: The Conflicted History of an Emotion, which Yale University Press will release on July 14. Dr. Theodore Karamanski was elected to the Board of the Midwest History Association. Dr. Michelle Nickerson is the recipient of a Louisville Institute grant and a Cushwa Center Research Travel grant for her study of the Camden 28, Catholic activists who protested the Vietnam War. Dr. Elena Valussi was elected Vice President of the Society for the Study of Chinese Religions. April & May 2020 This year's recipient of the History Department's highest honor for a graduating senior, The Paul S. Lietz Award for Outstanding Historical Scholarship, goes to Kathleen Koehnke! The winners of this year’s Undergraduate Blog competition are Frances Bartolutti, Katie Czajka, Jenna Jeffirs, Maddi Matassarin, Noe Serrano, and Amanda Timlin. The website is called “Pandemics: Past and Present”. It is a collaborative effort by Social Studies teaching majors in Dr. Charlie Tocci’s course Teaching Secondary Social Studies as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic. As teachers all over the country quickly adapted to teaching online, these students likewise stepped up, pulling together resources to teach about the pandemic. Winners of this year's Undergraduate Essay competition are Shelbi Schultz (First Prize), Sarah Butterfield (Second Prize), and Morgan Zygmunt (Third Prize). Read more about the 2020 History Department Awards on the History Department website. Chelsea Denault accepted a position at the Midwest Collaborative for Library Services as the Michigan Digital Preservation Network Coordinator. Meagan McChesney accepted the position of Curator at the Winnetka Historical Society. Ruby Oram accepted a position as Assistant Professor of Practice in Local and Community History at Texas State University. Sean Jacobson, PhD student in the Joint American History/Public History Program, has won the 2020 Robert W. McCluggage Award for the Outstanding Graduate Research Paper for “Boundaries of Authority: Survivor Leadership at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center. Kristin Jacobsen, MA Public History alum and Assistant Archivist at the Frances Willard House Museum and Archives, recently received a scholarship from the Illinois State Historical Records Board for their Digitization for Small Institutions class. The skills Kristen learns in this class will help her move forward in digitizing the WCTU archival collections materials. Read MA Alum Angela Rothman's book review on "Power in the Telling: Grand Ronde, Warm Springs, and Intertribal Relations in the Casino Era. Indigenous Confluences" by Brook Colley. Congratulation to alum Lori Osborne for her publication of "Evanston Women and the Fight for the Vote" in Timelines, Spring 2020, 3-7. The Urban History Association (UHA) Board of Directors announced the appointment of long-time UHA member Hope Shannon to the position of UHA Executive Director effective May 11, 2020. Hope will graduate with her Ph.D. in United States History and Public History from Loyola University Chicago this May. Hannah Lahti has been accepted to the 2020 Auschwitz Jewish Center Fellows Program run by the Museum of Jewish Heritage. Hannah is a first-year Public History Ph.D. student. Hannah Overstreet (M.A. Public History student) accepted a Project Archivist position at the Chicago History Museum for their Chicago Sacred project. Emily-Paige Taylor, Ph.D. candidate, was selected as a student stakeholder for the Society of Architectural Historians Data Project, one of ten selected from across the country. Ph.D. candidate Nathan Ellstrand was awarded the Catarino and Evangelina Hernández Research Fellowship in Latino History from the Texas State Historical Association and was also one of the winners of the Immigration and Ethnic History Society's graduate student blog competition. Also, read Nathan's blog post "The Transnational Sinarquista Movement" on IEHS Online. Commemorating the 100 year anniversary of the ratification of the 19th amendment, more blog posts have been posted on the Suffrage 2020 Illinois website. Read the entries by Lucas Bensley, Casey Terry, Davis Stubblefield, Erin Witt, and Scarlett Andes. The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Urban History, edited by Prof. Timothy J. Gilfoyle, received a review by the Urban History Association. The review called the encyclopedia "...a major achievement testifying to the extraordinary quantity, quality, and diversity of contemporary research on American cities and suburbs". Read the review here. Dr. Stabler-Miller was featured on The Medieval Podcast with Danièle Cybulskie to speak about beguines and what medieval society thought of them. Listen to the episode to learn more. Also, congratulations to Dr. Stabler-Miller on her chapter: "Reviled and Revered: The Importance of Marginality in the Pastoral Care of Beguines" that was included in Rethinking Medieval Margins and Marginality. Kelly Schmidt is a doctoral candidate in US History and Public History. She received a Research Travel Grant from the Cushwa Center in 2019 to support archival research for her dissertation, “‘We heard sometimes their earnest desire to be free in a free country’: Enslaved People, Jesuit Masters, and Negotiations for Freedom on American Borderlands.” The Cushwa Center interviewed her this semester to catch up on her work. Rutgers University Press is offering free ebook downloads of Professor Emeritus J. N. Hays's book Burdens of Disease: Epidemics and Human Response in Western History. Ph.D. candidates Sean Jacobson and Emily-Paige Taylor's National Register nomination for Historic Peterson Farm in McHenry, IL has been accepted at the state level and is now pending in Washington DC! Congratulations! Students in Public History Method and Theory (HIST 480) completed blog posts for the Illinois Suffrage 2020 website! Currently, the blog posts of Hannah Lahti, Rachel Madden, Elizabeth Schmidt, Dana Gordon, and Miranda Ridener are posted on the website! Keep watching the website for more posts! Congratulations to MA alumna Rachel Ramirez for her new job as curator of the Wilmette Historical Museum and PhD alumna Megan McChesney for her new position as curator at the Winnetka Historical Society! Kudos to BA alumna Olga (Athena) Triantafilidis. She is in Taiwan on a scholarship and plans to stay for another two years to master the language. Congratulations to Public History MA alumna Lori Osborne and Ph.D. candidate Ella Wagner for their NCPH honorable mention for their project: Truth Telling: Frances Willard and Ida B. Wells! Ph.D. alumna, Rachel Boyle, has been elected to the Board of Directors of the National Council on Public History! Congratulations! Congratulations to Public History PhD student Hannah Lahti for being accepted into the 2020 Auschwitz Jewish Center Fellows Program run by the Museum of Jewish Heritage! Congratulations to PhD student June Coyne for being selected as a Teaching Scholar (the Teaching Fellows Program) for 2020-2021! Congratulations to our three undergraduate poster presenters at the AHA Conference in NYC this year: Jacob McAloon, Kristin Morrison, and Shelbi Schultz. Read more about their experiences at the conference this year. Professor Gema Kloppe-Santamaría's co-edited volume on human security and chronic violence has now been published in English translation and an article has been published in Foreign Affairs Latinoamérica. Professor (and Chair Emeritus) Robert Bucholz was interviewed on Chicago Tonight about Meghan and Harry's decision to "step back" from royal duties. The well-received exhibit "Staggering Losses: WW1 & the Influenza Pandemic of 1918", curated by alum Micaela Sullivan-Fowler, was extended and will be closing on January 31st. Congratulations to Dr. Marisol Rivera ('17) on publishing "From Radicalism to Representation: Jose 'Cha Cha' Jimenez's Journey into Electoral Politics" in the Journal of African American Studies. Professor Edin Hajdarpasic's delivered the keynote address at the "Situating Ottoman Europe" Workshop" held at Princeton University in early December. Congratulations to doctoral candidate Kelly Schmidt being featured as part of a group of researchers helping Jesuits address their history of slaveholding. Congratulations to alum Amber Dushman who has joined Rotary International as a Processing Archivist. Adam Shprintzen was awarded tenure and promotion at Marywood University. He won the Loyola University of Chicago's Dissertation Award at his graduation, which has since been published as The Vegetarian Crusade. to PhD candidate Ella Wagner on her selection as the Women's History Fellow with the Cultural Resources Office of Interpretation and Education within National Park Service. Loyola University has awarded summer 2020 stipends to Professors Edin Hajdarpasic, Gema Kloppe-Santamaría, and Elizabeth Tandy Shermer for research projects. Undergraduate James Rubino was recently awarded a scholarship from the Center of Experiential Learning for his internship work with Dr. Bucholz providing research on the Database of Court Officers. James describes his internship as "not only a great opportunity to test my organizational skills, but also to improve my ability to analyse and understand primary sources." This financial award will allow James to continue this important work as well as speak on his internship experience at this spring's upcoming Weekend of Excellence. Read more about James' internship and award. Congratulations James! Professor Emerita Susan Hirsch has just published "Florenz Ziegfeld and the Creation of a Cosmopolitan Chicago," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Public History MA alumna, Paige Halpin Smith, was recently promoted to Development Manager at the Lexington Public Library Foundation. Congratulations to alumni Frank Lipo, MA in Public History, and Sarah Doherty, PhD in Public and American History, for recently receiving the Award of Excellence in Exhibition from the Illinois Association of Museums. Lipo and Doherty co-curated, "Open House: The Legacy of Fair Housing" for the Oak Park River Forest Museum. Learn more about the exhibit here. Instructor Jack Binkley recently presented a paper at the Inter-university Seminar on Armed Forces and Society international conference on the military’s attitude toward President Trump: "The Revolt of the Generals 2020.” Anna Claspy, Public History MA alumna, recently accepted a position with EBI Consulting as an Architectural Historian. Congratulations to PhD candidate Kelly Schmidt whose ongoing work with the Slavery, History, Memory and Reconciliation Project has received attention in the press: St. Louis Review, St. Louis American, St. Louis American Op Ed, SLU University News, Raising Equity Podcast , The Belleville Messenger. PhD candidates, Janette Clay and Nathan Ellstrand, presented their project “Voices from Mundelein: Media Portal” at the Chicago Colloquium for Digital Humanities and Computer Science on November 9th. History undergraduate and graduate students received university-wide awards and honors this fall. PhD candidate, Hope Shannon, was selected as the winner of the President's Medallion for the Graduate School. Six history students were also inducted into Alpha Sigma Nu on Oct. 27th. Undergraduates: Elias Crum, Jacob McAloon, Meghan Olson, and Lillian Spikings. Graduates: Cate LiaBraaten and Emily Davis. Congratulations to all on these honors! Read more about the awards here. Beth Loch, Public History MA alumna, has been named a Board Member at Black Metropolis Research Consortium. Congratulations to US and Public History PhD students, Sean Jacobson and Emily-Paige Taylor, on successfully nominating the Historic Petersen Farm in McHenry, IL to the National Register of Historic Places! Their nomination arose from Dr. Karamanski's Spring 2019 Historic Preservation class project. Public History MA alumna, Kelsey Walsh, was recently promoted to Manager of Archives & Records Management at the American Medical Association. Bryan Morey, Public History MA alumnus, recently accepted a Collections Specialist position with the Charles Lindbergh Collection at the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis. Professor Ben Johnson has been selected as one of the winners of this year's AHA Herbert Feis Award for exceptional public history work on the project "Refusing to Forget" On October 3rd, Professor Gema Kloppe-Santamaría presented the recently published co-edited volume on human security and chronic violence, Seguridad Humana y Violencia Crónica en México, in the Mexican Congress (with federal congressmen from all the states of Mexico), and at two of the largest universities of Mexico (ITAM and CIDE) Professor Theodore Karamanski and undergraduate alum, Joseph Karamanski, led a docent training workshop at the Chicago Maritime Museum on October 1st. Public History MA student, Austin Sundstrom, was awarded a scholarship from the Rappahannock Valley Civil War Round Table for his essay on the importance of preserving Civil War battlefields for future generations. History Department Chair, Stephen Schloesser, is featured as the first commentator in an online symposium offering a response on the new work by Catherine Osborne, "American Catholics and the Church of Tomorrow". Professor Michelle Nickerson's April lecture on 1970s and 80s Deindustrialization of the U.S. aired on C-SPAN on September 28th. Loyola University hosted the 66th annual Midwestern Conference on British Studies from September 26-29th. Drs. Bucholz and Forth acted as the local organizers of the conference and alumni Drs. John Krenzke and Steven Catania acted as the Program Chair and Technology Chair, respectively. Read a recap of the conference here. Professor Khodarkovsky's essay, "Putin’s Nightmare: The Ballot Box" was published in the New York Times, just ahead of the publication of his newest book, Russia's 20th Century: A Journey in 100 Histories. Loyola alumna, Karen Sieber, recently published her essay, "Experiential Education and Classrooms on Wheels" in the AHA's Perspectives on History. PhD candidate Ruby Oram received an Arhur J. Schmitt Dissertation Fellowship in Leadership and Service for 2019-2020. PhD candidate Kate Macica received the OAH Graduate Student Award. Recent PhD graduate Meagan McChesney won the Council of Graduate School Programs Dissertation of the Year – Humanities Award for “Exhibiting Sovereignty: Tribal Museums in the Great Lakes Region, 1969-2010.” History BA/MA alumnus and first Ramonat Prize winner, Dan Snow, recently published an article on the French in Chicago in the Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. Professor Elena Valussi has organized a conference on Spirit-Writing in Chinese History which will take place June 25-26, 2019. PhD student Cate LiaBraaten won the Robert W. McCluggage Award for the Outstanding Graduate Research Paper for “Playing Properly: Adult Supervision and Gender in Chicago’s Progressive Era Playgrounds.” PhD student June Coyne has been elected as the 2019-2020 Loyola Graduate Student Advisory Council President. Graduate students Nathan Ellstrand and Kristin Jacobsen presented at Northwestern's Nicholas D. Chabraja Center for Historical Studies Graduate Conference entitled "Walls and Bridges: Migration and it's Histories." PhD candidate Kelly Schmidt, received the 2019 National Society of the Colonial Dames of America –IL award for graduate study in American history. PhD candidate Hope Shannon published an article, "5(+1) Ways Small Cultural Organizations Can Generate Discussions About Voting Rights," in New England Museum Association's New England Museums Now. Oxford University Press published their Oxford Encyclopedia of American Urban History, a two volume, 1712-page scholarly achievement for which Professor Timothy Gilfoyle served as editor in chief. PhD candidate Katie Macica presented at the Organization for American Historians 2019 conference in Philadelphia. PhD candidate Chelsea Denault was awarded the Spirit of Laudato Si Sustainability In Learning Award during this year's weekend of excellence. The "Sustainability in Learning" recognition rewards students for their efforts incorporating sustainability into their academic experience through research, publication, or coursework advancing sustainability knowledge. Public History MA/MLIS student Bianca Barcenas has been awarded a Midwest Archives Conference Louisa Bowen Memorial Scholarship for Graduate Students in Archival Administration. Professor Emerita Barbara Rosenwein's A Short History of the Middle Ages, Fifth Edition (2018) has been awarded a 2019 Textbook Excellence Award from the Textbook & Academic Authors Association. Professor Gema Santamaria published her article, "Lynching and the Politics of State Formation in Post-Revolutionary Puebla 1930-50s" in The Journal of Latin American Studies. Professor Elizabeth Tandy Shermer will be an Obama Fellow at the Obama Institute for Transnational American Studies at the University of Mainz this summer 2019. Professor Shermer has also received a Fellowship at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) at Stanford University for the 2019–20 academic year. PhD candidate Kelly Schmidt received a Research Travel Grant from the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame. Donna M. Neary, one of the first Public History MA graduates from Loyola, has published a chapter in a new book describing her use of public history venues to aid education for English as a second language classes in Jefferson County, Kentucky. Her chapter, “I Saw Wonderfull Things in There”: Reflection on an Art Museum Field Trip for High School English Language Learners," can be found in Knowledge Mobilization in Teaching English as a Second Language (Brill, 2018). Professor Michelle Nickerson has been invited to record an upcoming lecture of her "U.S History from 1865 to Present" course on C-SPAN's Lectures in History podcast series. PhD candidate Kelly Schmidt and recent MA graduate Kate Johnson published a new essay entitled "Digital Paxton: Collaborative Construction with Eighteenth-Century Manuscript Collections" with Will Fenton in the Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy. Alumnus Dr. Timothy Neary published an article entitled “Basketball, Nuns, and Civil Rights: Loyola University Chicago Confronts Race in 1963” in the U.S. Catholic Historian, 36:2 (2018): 101-39. The Omohundro Institute at the College of William & Mary has awarded Professor Kyle Roberts a Lapidus Initiative Fellowship for Digital Collections. He will be working with his fellow award winner, Benjamin Bankhurst (Shepherd University), on “The Maryland Loyalist Project" PhD Candidate, Meagan McChesney, successfully defended her dissertation to become Dr. McChesney. PhD Candidate Ella Wagner was named as a 2019 Humanities Without Walls Predoctoral Fellow. As a fellow, Ella will participate in a summer workshop aimed to help prepare doctoral students for careers both within and outside the academy. Professor Alice Weinreb's book, Modern Hungers, was awarded the inaugural 2017 Waterloo Centre for German Studies Book Prize. PhD Alumna Erin Feichtinger was elected to the Board of Metropolitan Community College in Omaha, Nebraska. Undergraduate alumnus Pedro Regalado published an op-ed in the Washington Post entitled "What the narrative about Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez gets wrong." Professor Aidan Forth's "sophisticated and beautifully written" first book, Barbed-Wire Imperialism, has been awarded the 2018 Stansky Prize for the best book in British Studies since 1800. Learn more about Dr. Forth's work in this interview. History Major Matthew Pajor of the St. Joseph Seminary was a recipient of this year's Presidential Medallion. Pajor is pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in History, Philosophy, and Political Science. The Presidential Medallion is awarded by the University's deans to students "who have exemplified a commitment to leadership, scholarship, and service throughout their time at Loyola." Masters Student Bryan Morey recently completed a wall case exhibit for the University Archives highlighting the life of Loyola’s founder, Fr. Arnold Damen, S.J. The exhibit is on the second floor of Cudahy Library to the right of the elevators, so be sure to check it out next time you're nearby! PhD Candidate Kelly Schmidt presented a poster on “Mapping Kinship in an Enslaved Community" at the Chicago Colloquium on Digital Humanities and Computer Science in Chicago, Illinois. Alumnus Devin Leigh published an article entitled "The origins of a source: Edward Long, Coromantee slave revolts and The History of Jamaica" in the journal Slavery & Abolition. Dr. Ben Johnson recently completed his five-year term as co-editor of The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. Dr. Michelle Nickerson contributed to the new Oxford Handbook of American Women's and Gender History. Graduate students Jenny Clay and Nathan Ellstrand worked with the Women and Leadership Archives to create the Voices from Mundelein: Media Portal. Showcasing images alongside more than 30 interviews, the site shares the stories of women religious, students, staff, and faculty from Mundelein College. PhD Candidate Kelly Schmidt presented on “Digital Pedagogy and the Radical Networks of Common Sense,” at the International Conference of Thomas Paine Studies in New Rochelle, New York. After much planning and organization by students and faculty alike, the History Club became an official Loyola student organization! Much credit goes to Norman Frazier, the club's first President, for his hard work getting this project off the ground. Congratulations are also in order for the club's additional inaugural officers: Matty Lewis (Vice President), Amela Kalezic (Secretary), and Meghan Olson (Treasurer). Alumnae Rachel Boyle, PhD, has curated an online exhibit showcasing fifteen case studies of Chicago protests, spanning nearly 150 years of history, for the Chicago Collections Consortium. View the exhibit, "Place of Protest: Chicago's Legacy of Dissent, Declaration, and Disruption" here. PhD Student Nathan Ellstrand published an article on “Ranchos" and PhD Candidate Kelly Schmidt published an entry on “Mourning Clothes" in The World of Antebellum America: A Daily Life Encyclopedia, Volume 1. Graduate students Nathan Ellstrand, Emily Davis, Lisa Hartman, and Alexandra Gradwohl worked with the Rogers/Park West Ridge Historical Society on the two day Open Houses of Worship event, highlighting the religious diversity of Chicago's Far North Side. Current History MA Candidate Angela Rothman was named as a winner of the Undergraduate Research Awards competition by her alma mater, the University of Oregon. Read Angela's winning paper, "Well-Intentioned but Ineffective: A Legislative History of the California Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 2001," here. Public History MA candidate Bryan Morey completed the Loyola Research Experience for Master's Programs Fellowship for his work on, "Shabbona Woods, Conducting Public History for the Forest Preserves of Cook County." PhD candidate Kate Macica served in the Oregon State University Libraries Resident Scholar Program. PhD Candidate Kelly Schmidt presented on “Insights and Methodologies for Researching Slavery at Religious Archives" at the Association for Catholic Diocesan Archivists Conference in Mundelein, Illinois. Jenny Clay and Nathan Ellstrand created a digital exhibit about the creation of Peace Studies at Loyola University Chicago in June 2018. Created with WLA Director Nancy Freeman and Sociology Professor Kathleen Maas-Weigert, the project uses oral histories to trace the development of the Peace Studies program as part of Mundelein College in 1989. Dr. Theodore Karamanski, Professor of History and Director of the Public History program at Loyola, was awarded the Frederick Jackson Turner Award for Lifetime Achievement in Midwestern History on June 6, 2018. PhD Candidate Kelly Schmidt gave a speech on “Enslaved Experience among the Missouri Jesuits: An Update on Our Findings" at the Province Day of the Jesuits US Central and Southern Province in St. Louis, Missouri. Professor Emerita Dr. Barbara Rosenwein published The Middle Ages in 50 Objects with Elina Gertsman. Professor Emerita Dr. Barbara Rosenwein published a 5th Edition of A Short History of the Middle Ages. Garrett Gutierrez won the Susan Ramonat Award for Scholarly Excellence for his paper "Mission Memory: Analyzing the Public Memory of Mission San Juan Capistrano." 2017 Ramonat Scholar Amanda Malmstrom has been awarded the prestigious Cole fellowship, a one-year, residential fellowship at the Thomas Cole National Historic site. 2017 Ramonat Scholar Matthew Petersen has been accepted into the Meddeas program to teach English as a second language in Spain after graduation. Several graduate and undergraduate students presented at the Weekend of Excellence, including Lisa Hartman and Emily Davis. The event profiled History Major Matthew Henderson. History minor Jessica Talwar was awarded second place in the Loyola University Libraries Undergraduate Research Paper Award. History major Robert Baurley was also a Loyola Experience Engagement Key Recipient. PhD student Ina Cox has been named the inaugural Home Grown Curatorial Fellow for the DuSable Museum for African American History. At the National Council on Public History Annual Meeting, Stephen Petrie, Julia Lacher, and Ella Wagner presented a poster, "Frances Willard and Ida B. Wells: Creating an Interpretive Plan for a Controversial History." Kate Johnson and Marie Pellissier moderated a working group on Crossing the Line: Facilitating Digital Access to Primary Sources", on which Kelly Schmidt served as a panelist. Hope Shannon facilitated a session. Dr. Theodore Karamanski, PhD candidate William Ippen, and alumni Rachel Boyle, Stella Ress, Dan Ott, and Devin Hunter were also part of NCPH committees and working groups. Professor Aidan Forth, as one of the four finalists for the 2018 Sujack Family Award, has been designated a Master Researcher. Dr. Ben Johnson was a recipient of the Autry Public History Prize from the Western History Association for his project “Refusing to Forget.” Dr. Johnson was also awarded a Lloyd Lewis Fellowship at the Newberry Library and was given an honorable mention in the competition for the Presidents' Book Prize from the Society for the History of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era for his recently published book Escaping the Dark, Gray City: Fear and Hope in Progressive-Era Conservation (Yale, 2017). Dr. John Donoghue received the Michael J. Connell Foundation Fellowship at the Huntington Library in San Marino, CA, as well as the The Barbara S. Mosbacher Fellowship at the John Carter Brown Library, Brown University. Dr. Kyle Roberts was also awarded the 2018 Herbert H. Lehman Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in New York History by the New York Academy of History for his book Evangelical Gotham: Religion and the Making of New York City, 1783-1860 (Chicago, 2016) and named as a Fellow of the New York Academy of History. Katherine Macica presented her paper, "Planning for Prosperity, Planning for War: The New Deal and War Mobilization in the Pacific Northwest" at the American Society for Environmental History Conference in Riverside, CA. Angela Rothman won an award for outstanding scholarship from the University of Oregon Libraries for her undergraduate senior thesis Well-Intentioned But Ineffective: A Legislative History of the California Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 2001. The paper will be hosted in Scholars’ Bank, the library’s open access digital archive for UO research. Professors Patricia Mooney-Melvin and Kyle Roberts participated in the 2017-2018 Career Diversity for Historians Faculty Institute, hosted by the American Historical Association. They also submitted a successful application for the AHA's 2018-2020 Career Diversity Implementation Grant. Professor Emeritus Dr. Harold Platt published Sinking Chicago: Climate Change and the Remaking of a Flood-Prone Environment. Professor Alice Weinreb's monograph Modern Hungers: Food and Power in Twentieth-Century Germany (Oxford 2017) was awarded the 2017 Wiener Library Ernst Fraenkel Book Prize. Public History masters student Lisa Hartman received the Loyola Research Experience for Master’s Programs Fellowship for her work on “Race: Are We So Different?” exhibition at Chicago History Museum. Ella Wagner accepted a part-time summer position as Administrative Assistant for the National Collaborative for Women’s History Sites. Nathan Ellstrand published an article, “Resilience amidst Upheaval: Raphael and Mathilda’s Letters, 1872-1878,” in Chicago Jewish History. The following Loyola M.A. and PhD students presented papers at the 13th Annual Loyola University Chicago History Graduate Student Association Conference: Janette Clay, Lucas Coyne, Nathan Ellstrand, Meagan McChesney, Marie Pellissier, Angela Rothman, and Ella Wagner. Nathan Ellstrand presented “Chicago’s St. Augustine College: Education, Language and Race at a Crossroads,” at the Conference on Illinois History in Springfield, Illinois. Katherine Macica presented "'Here are your ships, Uncle Sam': Shipbuilding in the Pacific Northwest during World War II," at the McMullen Naval History Symposium at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD Marie Pellissier and Kelly Schmidt presented a poster on Explore Common Sense at AASLH in Austin, TX. Alumna Rachel Boyle accepted an award and gave a presentation on behalf of the Chrysler Village History Project. Hope Shannon and Marie Pellissier served on the Emerging History Professionals Committee. Chelsea Denault wrote the introduction for the Pritzker Military Presents programs, "Back Over There" and "My Fellow Soldiers" featured on WTTW Prime. Matthew Amyx, Ellen Bushong, and Julia Lacher presented the poster ““The Local Option”: Bringing a Neighborhood Museum into Chicago’s North Side” at the Association of Midwest Museums Annual Meeting and Conference. Gale Researcher, a research database aimed at undergraduate students published several freelance essays written by Ella Wagner. The topics included 18th, 19th, and 20th century U.S. History; Soviet history; and the history of Communism. Dr. Alice Weinreb published Modern Hungers: Food and Power in Twentieth-Century Germany. Chelsea Denault accepted a two-year Fellowship from Loyola's Office of Sustainability. Undergraduate Alexa Lindsley, '17, won the Lietz Award for Outstanding Historical Scholarship. Chelsea Denault accepted a position as Driehaus Preservation Awards Intern at Landmarks Illinois. Katherine Macica presented "Forests or Flying Fortresses? Defining the Public Good in Washington State during World War II," and William Ippen presented "Cotton and the Ecology of Industrial Capitalism in the Indo-Atlantic" at the American Society for Environmental History Conference in Chicago. Chelsea Denault won second place in Loyola’s Three Minute Thesis Competition. Graduate Student Hope Shannon became editor of the Urban History Association Newsletter. The following Loyola M.A. and PhD students presented papers at the 13th Annual Loyola University Chicago History Graduate Student Association Conference: Karen Sieber, Matthew Amyx, Marie Pellissier, Ina Cox, Ruby Oram, Daniel Snow, and Sebastian Wuepper. The following Loyola MA and PhD students presented papers or posters at the 8th Biennial Urban History Association Conference, held at Loyola University Chicago: Charis Caputo, Julia Lacher, Ruby Oram, Kelly Schmidt, Shannon Pimmel, Rachel Boyle, Lucas Coyne, and Hope Shannon. Rachel Boyle, U.S. and Public History PhD candidate, Chelsea Denault and Kelly Schmidt, Public History and U.S. History PhD students, presented "Chrysler Village: From Historic Preservation to Community Engagement" at the American Alliance of State and Local History Annual Meeting. Rachel Boyle, U.S. and Public History PhD candidate, and Nathan Jeremie-Brink, U.S. History PhD candidate, were selected to join the Graduate Scholar-in-Residence Program at the Newberry Library for the 2016-2017 academic year. Keith Gill, public history MA 2005, accepted the position of Director of Exhibits and Museum Programming at Air Zoo - Kalamazoo Aviation History Museum. Kelly Schmidt, U.S. and Public History PhD student, accepted an assistantship with The Hank Center for the Catholic Intellectual Heritage for the 2016-2017 academic year. Megan Baumann, B.A. alumna in history and sociology, won a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. She is pursuing a graduate degree in geography at Penn State University. Matthew Amyx, U.S. History PhD student, presented "The Last Word in Segregation: Jim Crow Cemeteries in Chicago" at the University of Michigan History Graduate Student Conference. Matthew Amyx, U.S. History PhD student, Ellen Bushong, Public History MA student, Julia Lacher, Public History MA student, and Hannah Zuber, Public History MA/MLIS student, created and presented "Legal Limits: A Historic Bar Crawl" in association with the Rogers Park/West Ridge Historical Society once in May and twice in July. Theresa Gross-Diaz, PhD, Associate Professor of History and Director of the Medieval Studies Program, published entries in Roman Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, part of the Art Institute's Online Scholarly Catalogue. Edin Hajdarpasic, PhD, Associate Professor of History, won The Joseph Rothschild Prize in Nationalism and Ethnic Studies for his book, Whose Bosnia? Nationalism and Political Imagination in the Balkans, 1840-1910, published by Cornell University Press in 2015. Andrew Kelly, history undergraduate student, won first place in the Loyola History Department's 2015-2016 Undergraduate Essay Contest for his paper, "Development and Dependency in Burkina Faso, 1983-2014." Alexa Lindsley, history undergraduate student, won second place in the Loyola History Department's 2015-2016 Undergraduate Essay Contest for her paper, "Going Old School: A Spatial Analysis of Ancient Roman Education and its Purposes." Magdalena Jachymiak, history undergraduate student, won third place in the Loyola History Department's 2015-2016 Undergraduate Essay Contest for her paper, "The Unofficial Diplomat: Congressman Dan Rostenkowski's Impact on Polish-American Relations from 1975-1990." Daniel Snow, history B.A./M.A. student, won first place in the Loyola History Department's 2015-2016 Undergraduate Blog Contest for his blog, Dan of Loyola: Perspectives from the Ramonat Seminar. Olivia Raymond, history undergraduate student, won second place in the Loyola History Department's 2015-2016 Undergraduate Blog Contest for her blog, Mustard Seed Catholicism: The Ramonat Seminar 2015-2016. Hector Bryan Escobar, history M.A. 2013, accepted the Cultural Arts- Arts and History Specialist position with the Waukegan History Museum. Suzanne Kaufman, PhD, Associate Professor of History, was named a Master Teacher in the College of Arts and Sciences. David Dennis, PhD, Professor of History, won the Provost's Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Freshman. Lauren O'Brien, history MA student, accepted fall 2016 admission to Rutgers University's American Studies PhD program. Ruby Oram, U.S. and Public History PhD student, won the History Department's McCluggage Award for her paper, "'They Taught Us to be Ladies': The Forgotten History of Flower Tech, 1927-1960." Michael O'Hara, history MA student, received an honorable mention for his essay, "'Roosevelt is My Religion': Mayor Edward Kelly, the New Deal, and Urban Politics in Chicago, 1933-1947." Peter Kotowski, PhD, U.S. History, successfully defended his dissertation, "The Best Poor Man's Country?": William Penn, Quakers, and Unfree Labor in Atlantic Pennsylvania." Chelsea Denault, U.S. and Public History PhD student, accepted a summer archives and oral history internship with the Chicago Archdiocese, as well as the World War I Centennial Marketing summer internship at the Pritzker Military Museum and Library. Hope Shannon, U.S. and Public History PhD student, accepted a summer internship with Next Exit History. Anthony DiLorenzo, PhD, U.S. History, successfully defended his dissertation, "A Higher Law: Transatlantic Revolution and Antislavery Radicalism in Early America, 1760-1800." Thomas Greene, PhD 2012 and Adjunct Professor of History, was appointed to a one year lecturer's position at Texas A&M San Antonio. Erin Feichtinger, PhD, Transnational Urban History, successfully defended her dissertation, "Remains to be Seen: Execution and Embodiment in the Early English Atlantic." Kyle Roberts, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, published "'I have hitherto been entirely upon the borrowing hand': The Acquisition and Circulation of Books in Early Eighteenth-Century Dissenting Academies" in Print Culture Histories Beyond the Metropolis. Timothy Gilfoyle, PhD, Professor of History, was appointed to the Society of American Historians' executive board. Amelia Serafine, U.S. History PhD candidate, published “He Filled My Heart with Doubt: The Southern Belle’s Love and Duty in the Civil War,” in Romance Fiction and American Culture, edited by William Gleason and Eric Selinger and released by Ashgate Press. Katherine Macica, U.S. and Public History PhD candidate, joined the "Environmental Impacts of World War II in the Pacific Northwest" roundtable at the American Society for Environmental History Conference, Seattle, WA. Benjamin Johnson, PhD, was awarded tenure and promoted to Associate Professor of History. Aidan Forth, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, presented “Imperial Internment: Britain’s Empire of Camps, 1871-1914” at the European Social Science History Conference, University of Valencia, Spain. Peter Kotowski, U.S. History PhD candidate, presented "Honest Men and Covetous Men: Gender and William Penn’s ‘Holy Experiment’” at an American Philosophical Society seminar, Philadelphia, PA. Ruby Oram, U.S. and Public History PhD student, presented "They Taught Us To Be Ladies:” The Lucy Flower Technical School for Girls, 1927-1960" at the Women's and Gender History Symposium, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Rachel Boyle, U.S. and Public History PhD candidate, presented “Public Women and Intimate Economy in Working-Class Chicago, 1870-1919” at the Women’s and Gender History Symposium, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Nathan Jeremie-Brink, U.S. History PhD candidate, and Rachel Boyle, U.S. and Public History PhD candidate, each won an Arthur J. Schmitt Dissertation Fellowship In Leadership and Service for the 2016-2017 academic year. Hope Shannon, U.S. and Public History PhD student, was part of the "Standing Up for History in the War on the Humanities" working group at the National Council on Public History annual meeting, Baltimore, MD. Kelly Schmidt, U.S. and Public History PhD student, presented "Using the Element of Surprise to Challenge 'Mythconceptions' about the History of Race and Slavery" with Alexa Wallace at the National Council on Public History annual meeting poster session, Baltimore, MD. Patricia Mooney-Melvin, PhD, Associate Professor of History and Interim Dean of the Graduate School, was part of the "Re-interpreting Relevance: Preservation, Herstory, and the Challenge to the Traditional Narrative" roundtable at the National Council on Public History annual meeting, Baltimore, MD. Rachel Ramirez, public history M.A. 2012, accepted the position of Curator at the Winnetka Historical Society. She also won a Workshop Scholarship from the American Association for State and Local History. William Ippen, U.S. and Public History PhD candidate, won a Pre-Doctoral Teaching Scholars Fellowship for the 2016-2017 academic year. Theodore Karamanski, PhD, Professor of History and Public History Program director, appeared as an on-screen commentator for the WTTW (PBS Chicago) documentary Stephen A. Douglas and the Fate of American Democracy. Siera Heavner Erazo, public history M.A. 2012, accepted the position of Exhibition Developer at The Field Museum. Tanya Stabler Miller, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, presented her paper, “Magistra and Magister: Women and the Intellectual Formation of the Secular Clergy at the Early Sorbonne (1254-1274),” at the Northwestern Medieval Colloquium. Amber Bailey, public history M.A. student, won the Sally Kress Tompkins Fellowship, a competitive award sponsored by the Society of Architectural Historians and the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS). Devin Leigh, M.A. in history, 2015, recently published “Black Caesar’s Klan” in The Journal of History Miami Museum. His article started as a paper written for Dr. Timothy Gilfoyle’s spring 2015 seminar course. Devin is now a history PhD student at the University of California, Davis. Samantha Smith, public history M.A. 2015, accepted the position of Project Archivist at the Newberry Library. Benjamin Johnson, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, and the Refusing to Forget project launched the “Life and Death on the Border 1910-1920” exhibition in partnership with the Bullock Texas State History Museum. Patricia Mooney-Melvin, PhD, Associate Professor of History and Interim Dean of the Graduate School, was selected to serve as a panelist for the Scholar Summit on Women’s History and Public History. The Scholar Summit was convened to assist the Congressional Commission charged with studying the feasibility of a National Women’s History Museum. Michelle Nickerson, PhD, Associate Professor of History and History Graduate Program Director, co-edited “The Feminine Mystique at Fifty,” a journal roundtable for Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies (2:36), January 2016. Hope Shannon, U.S. and Public History PhD student, was appointed to serve as chair of the American Association for State and Local History’s Emerging History Professionals Committee. Theodore Karamanski, PhD, Professor of History and Public History Program director, was interviewed by Chicago Public Radio, WBEZ 91.5, for its Curious City story “Ferry-Tale: Could a Chicago-to-Michigan Ferry Return from Extinction.” Elena Valussi, PhD, Advanced Lecturer in History, presented "Gender as a Useful Category of Analysis in Chinese Religions," at Framing the Study of Religion in Modern China and Taiwan: Concepts, Methods, and New Research Paths, Centre for the Study of Religion and Culture in Asia, University of Groningen. She also presented "Women's Rights, Nationalism, and Religion in Republican China," at the Forum on Gender and Religion in China, Chinese University of Hong Kong. Christopher Manning, PhD, Associate Professor of History and History Undergraduate Program Director, was invited by Loyola University Chicago Interim President John Pelissero to join the President’s Cabinet as a diversity adviser. Timothy Gilfoyle, PhD, Professor of History, published “Wisconsin Roots – Making History Interviews with Richard M. Jaffee and John W. Rowe,” in Chicago History, vol. 40, no. 1 (Winter 2015). Elena Valussi, PhD, Advanced Lecturer in History, published "The Transmission of the Cult of Lu Dongbin to Sichuan in the Nineteenth Century, and the Transformation of the Local Religious Milieu" in Daoism, Religion, History, and Society. She was also appointed to the editorial board of the Journal of the American Academy of Religions. Edin Hajdarpasic, PhD, Associate Professor of History, presented “History Wars: Facing the Past in Bosnia” at the Bosnia Twenty Years After Dayton symposium, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He also served as a panelist at the "Denial and Memory: 100 Years After the Armenian Genocide" Conference at Northwestern University. Mollie Fullerton, public history M.A. 2015, joined the John Wesley Powell River History Museum as Education and Programs Manager. Aidan Forth, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, published "The Empire Through its Cities," a review of Cities of Empire: The British Colonies and the Creation of the Urban World by Tristram Hunt, in Historia. Kelly Schmidt, U.S. and Public History PhD student, presented “Acknowledging a Complicated Past: Race and Slavery at Xavier University, 1830s-1870s,” at the Jesuits and Race Symposium in St. Louis, Missouri. Harold Platt, PhD, Emeritus Professor of History, presented “Sinking Chicago: The Politics of a Flood-Prone Environment in the Age of Climate Change,” at the Chicago History Museum’s Urban History Seminar. The following Loyola M.A. and PhD. students presented papers at the 12th Annual Loyola University Chicago History Graduate Student Association Conference: Matthew Amyx, Katherine Macica, Chelsea Denault, Patrick Fox, Matthew Sawicki, Maggie McClain, and Leah Henning. Rachel Boyle organized the lunch panel and Ruby Oram organized the Public History roundtable. Amelia Serafine and Fazila Kabahita co-chaired this year’s conference committee. Edin Hajdarpasic, PhD, Associate Professor of History, published Whose Bosnia? Nationalism and Political Imagination in the Balkans, 1840-1910 with Cornell University Press. Rachel Boyle, Katherine Macica, and Hope Shannon were inducted into Alpha Sigma Nu, the honor society of Jesuit institutions of higher education. Selection to Alpha Sigma Nu is one of the highest honors that can be given on a Jesuit campus. Anthony DiLorenzo, U.S. History PhD Candidate, was awarded a Research Fellowship with the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History in New York City. Theodore Karamanski, PhD, Professor of History, and Eileen McMahon, PhD, Loyola alumna and Associate Professor of History at Lewis University, discussed their new book, Civil War Chicago: Eyewitness to History, for the Loyola Chicago Friends of the Libraries Speaker Series. Elena Valussi, PhD, Advanced Lecturer in History, presented "Daoism, Nationalism, and Gender in Republican Shanghai," at the Conference on Gender and Religion in Twentieth Century China, Rutgers University. Chelsea Denault, U.S. and Public History PhD student, joined the Urban History Association’s 2016 Conference Local Arrangements Committee as Conference Coordinator. Barbara Rosenwein, Emeritus Professor of History, published Generations of Feeling: A History of Emotions, 600-1700 with Cambridge University Press. Michelle Nickerson, PhD, Associate Professor of History and History Graduate Program Director, delivered the keynote address at the Deep Los Angeles Graduate History Conference, USC/UCLA, in Los Angeles, California. Her address was titled “Seeking Treasures and Finding Transformation in Los Angeles History.” Stephen Schloesser, S.J, PhD, Professor of History, was a panelist on the roundtable “Jason C. Bivins’ Spirits Rejoice! Jazz and American Religion,” at the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, University of Notre Dame. Daniel Ott, U.S. and Public History PhD 2015, accepted the position of Historian at Homestead National Monument of America in Beatrice, Nebraska. Samantha Smith, public history M.A. 2015, accepted the position of Modern Manuscripts Accessioner at the Newberry Library. Maggie McClain, public history M.A. student, began an archives internship at the Evanston History Center. Samantha Chmelik, public history M.A. 2013, published Museum and Historic Site Management: A Case Study Approach with Rowman and Littlefield. Hope Shannon, U.S. and Public History PhD student, presented her paper, “Using the Past: Historical Societies and Civic Engagement in Metropolitan Chicago,” at the Conference on Illinois History in Springfield, IL. She also presented a poster, “Historical Societies in Postwar Chicago,” at the annual meeting of the American Association for State and Local History. Amber Bailey, public history M.A. student, joined the Loyola University Archives and Special Collections as its Oral Historian for the 2015-2016 year. Kyle Mathers, public history M.A. student, began a research internship with the Chicago History Museum. Aidan Forth, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, was a panel commentator for “Tsarist, Soviet, and Post-Soviet Russia” at the “The Carceral Archipelago: Transnational circulations in global perspective, 1415-1960” meeting at the University of Leicester, Leicester, UK. Stephen Schloesser, S.J, PhD, Professor of History, delivered the keynote address, “Biopolitics and What Happened after Vatican II,” at the commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of Vatican II, Joan and Ralph Lane Center for Catholic Studies and Social Thought, University of San Francisco. Elena Valussi, PhD, Advanced Lecturer in History, was named a fellow at the Centre for the Study of Religion and Culture in Asia at the University of Groningen. Tanya Stabler Miller, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, was named a fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies. Lauren O’Brien, history M.A. student, joined the Jane Addams Hull House Museum as the Cities of Peace Education Program Assistant. Devin Hunter, U.S. and Public History PhD 2015, joined the faculty of the University of Illinois at Springfield as Assistant Professor of U.S. and Public History. Matthew Norgard, public history M.A. student, joined the Loyola University Archives and Special Collections as an archives assistant for the 2015-2016 year. Courtney M. Baxter, public history M.A. 2014, joined the St. Louis Art Museum as its 2015-16 Romare Bearden Graduate Minority Fellow. Timothy Gilfoyle, PhD, Professor of History, will serve as President of the Urban History Association for the 2015-2016 year. Michelle Nickerson, PhD, Associate Professor of History and History Graduate Program Director, was awarded a Catholic Center for Intellectual Heritage Fellowship for the 2015-2016 year. Kyle Roberts, PhD, Assistant Professor of Public History and New Media, was awarded the Joan and Bill Hank Center for Catholic Intellectual Heritage Grant for the 2015-2016 year. Anthony DiLorenzo, U.S. History PhD Candidate, was awarded a Arthur J. Schmitt Leadership Fellowship at Loyola University Chicago for the 2015-2016 year. Aidan Forth, PhD, Assistant Professor of History, published "Britain's Archipelago of Camps: Labor and Detention in a Liberal Empire, 1871-1903" in Kritika: Explorations in Russan and Eurasian History, 16(3), summer 2015. First Place: Noah Beissel, "Locke, Racialized Chattel Slavery, and the Problem of Mercantile Freedom: Identifying the Source of Locke’s Contradictory Involvements with Atlantic Slavery” Second Place: Margaret Miller, “Museum Wars: Politicizing the American Past under Ronald Reagan” Third Place: Sarah Carrillo, “Dueling Identities: Religiosity and Theater in Early Modern Clerkenwell” First Place: Matthew Racchini, "Ramonat Reflections" Second Place: Bianca Barcenas, "Mapping Catholics with the Jesuit Libraries Provenance Project"
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Imagen replication helps you to plan for cost, availability, and security. Continue reading to learn about the advantages and the principles of Imagen Storage Replication. What is Imagen Storage Replication? Storage replication can be configured to facilitate the movement of files from one place to another - for logistical or preservation purposes. For example, you may want to add additional copies of your archive media to speed up the delivery of files to audiences in different geographical regions, or perhaps you want to ensure that you have redundancy built into your disaster recovery plan. Replication between storage services can be configured to copy and store specific storage profiles in a different location (i.e., original files with annotations). Two or more storage services with a minimum of one Storage Profile on each Storage Service will be required to configure storage replication. Storage Replication Parameters |Server ID||Specify from which storage service the profiles will be replicated into the new storage service| This parameter configures the storage profiles that are to be replicated. For example, when replicating an image profile with Profile ID '7A' from the original storage service, the Profile ID must match the profile number on the replicating storage service. |Start Time||Replication can be configured to begin and end at specific time intervals.| |Days||Replication can be configured to occur on specific day(s).|
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- Press Release - August 13, 2022 This Week at NASA The Atlas V rocket carrying NASA’s Landsat Data Continuity Mission satellite is set to launch on Monday from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. LDCM, a joint NASA and U.S. Geological Survey mission, will extend the longest continuous data record of Earth’s surface as viewed from space — data critical to many aspects of life here on Earth. Also, Extreme Flyby; Distant Comet; Vacuum Test; Lithium Trails; Collaborating for the Cure; and more.
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Of politics and Sith mind tricks Does the party in power matter for economic performance? Polls in 2004 showed that a large number of voters believed that Saddam Hussein’s government participated in the terrorist attacks of 9/11. How could so many Americans have been so mistaken about such a basic fact? Perhaps the political discourse at the time confused the American public, and the repetition of false or misleading statements managed to convince people that something was true when, in fact, it was false—a sort of mind trick on the electorate, not unlike those performed by the Sith masters of the dark side of the force in Star Wars. It is worth analyzing popular perceptions occasionally to see if they are based on facts or not. As a professor of economics, I recently became curious about whether there was economic evidence supporting two other widely held beliefs: that the Republican Party is better for the economy than the Democratic Party, and that the Democratic Party is more the party of big government than the Republican Party. I found that government statistics demonstrate that both beliefs are simply false. Growth and the economy Since 1949, real Gross Domestic Product has grown significantly faster under Democratic administrations, by 4.2 percent per year on average compared to only 2.9 percent per year under Republican administrations. Adjusting for population growth, the postwar economy grew almost twice as fast under Democratic administrations. This comparison holds true for the Clinton administration versus the current Bush administration, but it also holds true for Democratic and Republican administrations before Clinton, and the differences are statistically significant. Of course, the differences would be even greater if I began the comparison in 1929, but including the Great Depression and the Second World War does not make for a fair comparison. Democrats do better under a variety of other measures of economic performance, as well. Since 1949, unemployment rates rose on average under Republican administrations but fell under Democratic administrations. Productivity grew twice as fast under Democrats. Weekly earnings for workers rose faster, corporate profits were higher under Democrats, and even the stock market did better. In fact, researchers have found a “Democrat anomaly,” in which the stock market does even better under Democrats than can be explained by the better economy. Rhetoric aside, the facts show that the economy has done better under Democrats than Republicans. The party of big government How do Democrats and Republicans compare on the size of government? As it turns out, Republicans have become the party of big government, not Democrats. During the Clinton administration, federal spending fell from 23 percent of GDP in 1992 to 19 percent in 2000, a decline that began before Republicans took control of Congress in 1994. During the first five years of the current Bush administration, the share of federal spending rose at rates not seen since, well, the first Bush administration. For the entire postwar period, federal expenditures as a share of GDP were higher on average under Republicans, and the peaks in federal spending over the last 30 years or more have all come under Republicans (Ford, Reagan, and Bush I). Of course, another way to measure the size of government is tax revenue, and federal tax receipts have indeed generally grown faster under Democrats than Republicans. However, this can be largely attributed not to increases in the tax rate, but rather to the faster growth seen under Democratic administrations. Prior to the tax cuts of the current administration, tax receipts have shown a very close correlation with growth, and Democratic administrations have tended to preside over faster growth. Since 2000, however, we have witnessed the largest drop in tax receipts since the end of the Second World War, even as a share of GDP, and this drop is much more (currently about $600 billion per year more) than can be explained by the lower average growth of the past five years. Because federal expenditures have been higher under Republicans and tax receipts have been lower, Republicans have become the party of fiscal irresponsibility. Since 1949, the federal budget deficit as a share of GDP has been more than four times higher under Republicans, and not because they inherited the problem; the deficit has been much larger at the end of the average Republican term of office than it was at the start, while the deficit has fallen during the average Democratic administration. Under the present Bush administration, the continuing budget deficits have helped to cause a record trade deficit—even as a share of GDP—and massive borrowing from foreigners. The amount the federal government now owes foreign lenders has doubled to more than $2 trillion, and foreigners now hold more than half of the Federal government’s privately held debt. As a government and as a country, we are borrowing from future generations of Americans to pay back future generations of foreigners. If Democrats are the “tax and spend” party, then Republicans have become the “borrow and spend more” party. Why the misconception? It is not clear exactly why this widespread misperception exists or why it persists. Perhaps endless repetition by Republican politicians and some media that Democrats are the tax and spend party, while Republicans are the party of business, has had the effect of doing a Sith mind trick on the American public. But facts are facts, and we should try to set the public straight. I am not sure why the economy has performed better under Democrats than Republicans, and most economists agree that there are many factors at work, but I think it could be in part about basic political attitudes. Republicans are more likely to be economic fundamentalists who believe that government is the problem, and therefore see less reason to craft intelligent solutions to economic problems because they think government’s real objective should be to just get out of the way. With this approach, solutions may be simple to craft and easy to explain to voters, even when they are wrong. In comparison, Democrats are more likely to believe that government, when competently led, can actually fix many problems. While this attitude may be harder to explain to voters, it evidently leads to better economic policies.
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- 1 How much does it cost to start a business in Mississippi? - 2 What do I need to start an online business in Mississippi? - 3 How do I register my business with the state of Mississippi? - 4 How do I start a small business from home? - 5 How long does it take to get an LLC in Mississippi? - 6 How much does it cost to set up an LLC in Mississippi? - 7 How much does it cost to form an LLC in Mississippi? - 8 Does having an LLC help with taxes? - 9 How much should an LLC set aside for taxes? - 10 Can an LLC write off a car purchase? - 11 What if my Llc made no money? - 12 Is owning an LLC considered self employed? - 13 How do I pay myself if I own an LLC? - 14 Does an LLC have to make money? - 15 What is the downside to an LLC? - 16 Is Forming an LLC worth it? - 17 Can I start an LLC while employed? - 18 Do I need to tell my employer if I start a business? - 19 Can an LLC be a w2 employee? How much does it cost to start a business in Mississippi? The cost to start a Mississippi limited liability company (LLC) is $50. This fee is paid to the Mississippi Secretary of State when filing the LLC’s Certificate of Formation. There are two options for forming your LLC: You can hire a professional LLC formation service to set up your LLC (for an additional small fee). What do I need to start an online business in Mississippi? First you will need your sales tax permit. You will need to register with the Mississippi Department of Revenue. Sales taxes will need to be collected for purchases made by customers that live in the state. More information from the Department of Revenue – http://www.dor.ms.gov/Business/Pages/Sales-Use-Taxes.aspx. How do I register my business with the state of Mississippi? To register your Mississippi LLC, you’ll need to file the Certificate of Formation with the Mississippi Secretary of State. You can apply online. Read our Form an LLC in Mississippi guide for details. Or use a professional service like ZenBusiness or LegalZoom to form your LLC for you. How do I start a small business from home? Starting a UK home business - Set out your working from home idea(s) Knowing your product inside-out will give your business a solid starting point. - Put together a home business plan. - Make your home business-ready. - Think about home business insurance. - Registering your home business. How long does it take to get an LLC in Mississippi? Your Mississippi LLC will be approved in 3-5 business days. Once approved, the state will mail you back a stamped and approved copy of your Certificate of Formation, an official Certificate, and a receipt. How much does it cost to set up an LLC in Mississippi? To start an LLC in Mississippi you will need to file the Certificate of Formation with the Mississippi Secretary of State, which costs $50. You can apply online. The Certificate of Formation is the legal document that officially creates your Mississippi Limited Liability Company. How much does it cost to form an LLC in Mississippi? How much does it cost to form an LLC in Mississippi? The Mississippi Secretary of State charges a $50 fee to file the Certificate of Formation. You can reserve your LLC name with the Mississippi Secretary of State for $25. Does having an LLC help with taxes? An LLC can help you avoid double taxation unless you structure the entity as a corporation for tax purposes. Business expenses. LLC members may take tax deductions for legitimate business expenses, including the cost of forming the LLC, on their personal returns. How much should an LLC set aside for taxes? To cover your federal taxes, saving 30% of your business income is a solid rule of thumb. According to John Hewitt, founder of Liberty Tax Service, the total amount you should set aside to cover both federal and state taxes should be 30-40% of what you earn. Can an LLC write off a car purchase? A business can write off the expenses of a business-owned vehicle and take a depreciation deduction to write down the value of the vehicle. Only the portion of the vehicle use that is for business purposes can be counted when determining tax deductions. What if my Llc made no money? But even though an inactive LLC has no income or expenses for a year, it might still be required to file a federal income tax return. LLC tax filing requirements depend on the way the LLC is taxed. An LLC may be disregarded as an entity for tax purposes, or it may be taxed as a partnership or a corporation. Is owning an LLC considered self employed? LLC members are considered self–employed business owners rather than employees of the LLC so they are not subject to tax withholding. Instead, each LLC member is responsible for setting aside enough money to pay taxes on that member’s share of the profits. How do I pay myself if I own an LLC? You pay yourself from your single member LLC by making an owner’s draw. Your single-member LLC is a “disregarded entity.” In this case, that means your company’s profits and your own income are one and the same. At the end of the year, you report them with Schedule C of your personal tax return (IRS Form 1040). Does an LLC have to make money? LLCs aren’t required to have income or post profits, but if a business owner is claiming tax deductions through an LCC without reporting income, the IRS is likely to conduct an audit to determine if the LLC is an actual for-profit business. What is the downside to an LLC? Profits subject to social security and medicare taxes. In some circumstances, owners of an LLC may end up paying more taxes than owners of a corporation. This disadvantage is most significant for owners who take a salary of less than $97,500 for tax year 2007. Owners must immediately recognize profits. Is Forming an LLC worth it? Probably the most obvious advantage to forming an LLC is protecting your personal assets by limiting the liability to the resources of the business itself. In most cases, the LLC will protect your personal assets from claims against the business, including lawsuits. There is also the tax benefit to an LLC. Can I start an LLC while employed? LLC Rules and Regulations Despite common belief, individuals are not forbidden to form an LLC while they are still employed by another company. The legal procedures to do so vary from state to state, but states do not look into employment status when forming an LLC. Do I need to tell my employer if I start a business? Making the decision to tell your employer about a side business needs to be done either before signing your employment contract, so that you enter to your relationship with mutual agreement, or after fully understanding your company’s policy and your employment agreements on operating a side business. Can an LLC be a w2 employee? In general, an active member of an LLC cannot receive what is commonly known as W-2 income. This is due to the fact that an active member is not considered to be an employee of an LLC. The only exception to this is if an LLC has elected, through the IRS, to be treated as a corporation for tax purposes.
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(Continued from Part 1. This concludes the article.) Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) and Lyme disease are two bacterial tick-borne infections of particular concern. The ticks that transmit both of these diseases are found all over the United States. The CDC states that RMSF is most common in Arizona, Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina. After the three- to twelve-day incubation period, the early signs (days 1-4) of RMSF include a high fever, severe headache, gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, anorexia), and edema around the eyes and on the back of the hands. Two to five days after symptoms begin, the rash associated with RMSF first appears. This rash is diagnostic, but not essential. In other words, the small, flat, pink, non-itchy spots that first appear on the wrists, forearms, and ankles do not occur with other illnesses. This rash sometimes spreads to the trunk, palms of the hands, and soles of the feet, but keep in mind that 10% of patients never develop this rash. When the rash color turns from red to purple, it signals severe progression of the disease. Treatment should have begun long ago. Subsequently appearing are altered mental status, cerebral edema, pulmonary edema and respiratory distress, necrosis (tissue death requiring amputation), and kidney failure. If there is any suspicion of RMSF, begin treatment immediately. Delay may be fatal. The CDC also indicates that Lyme disease occurs primarily in the New England states. However, there are numerous anecdotal reports of high numbers of people contracting Lyme disease in Utah and Idaho as well. Diagnosis of Lyme disease is difficult because the symptoms are similar to many other illnesses—rashes, headaches, and muscle and joint aches. An incubation period lasting up to thirty days only complicates matters. While recalling a tick bite would facilitate diagnosis, over 60% of patients don’t remember being bitten. The classic early sign is the characteristic bullseye rash around the site of the bite. Other early common signs are meningitis or inflammation of the heart muscle. Unfortunately, these won’t be easily identified outside a hospital setting. Symptoms of severe arthritis involving multiple joints and chronic meningitis—headaches, problems in thinking clearly, and sleepiness—appear later. Options for treating Lyme disease include doxycycline (100 mg, 2 times per day, 10-14 days) and amoxicillin (500 mg, 3 times per day, 14-28 days). The numerous viral tick-borne diseases are fortunately less common, as we likely won’t be able to identify them without a laboratory. Antibiotics will not work. Treatment for these diseases is supportive care based on the symptoms. Unlike the other pests addressed in this article, bedbugs do not cause disease. But they are definitely demoralizing. Nobody wants them. The eggs are pearly-white and about the size of pinheads, while the adults look like apple seeds in size and appearance. Bedbugs tend to congregate in families and favor mattress seams, books, suitcases, wallpaper, and electrical outlets. A lot of them together may smell like rotting raspberries. They have a distinctive bite pattern, usually targeting exposed skin and biting in a rather straight line. It’s called the breakfast-lunch-dinner pattern, because that’s basically what they do—take a bite for breakfast, walk on a bit to digest, take a bite for lunch, walk, eat dinner. And maybe some dessert. To prevent bringing bedbugs home from hotels, always check the mattresses and store bags and backpacks in the hotel bathtub. If you have been invaded by bedbugs, permethrin may kill them, though some are becoming resistant. Laundry and hot or cold treatments mentioned at the beginning of this article may help. Diatomaceous earth may be sprinkled on mattresses and carpets. Several treatments may be necessary. Natural options for repelling bedbugs include juniper boughs, mint, black cohosh, and bay leaves. A repellent spray can be made using ten drops each of lavender, rosemary, and eucalyptus essential oils in a cup of water. Benadryl and hydrocortisone cream may be used to relieve the itching and inflammation of the bites. Scabies, eight-legged mites related to ticks, burrow into the skin and cause intense itching. While commonly found among the poor, they spread very quickly to all classes of people, even the very most hygienic. Indeed, they’re often transmitted to health care providers, and outbreaks frequently occur in rehab hospitals. But day-care centers, schools, public transportation, and prisons are also affected. And that’s because scabies is so highly contagious. It is transmitted by direct physical contact or through infested linens or clothing. Though not technically an STD, scabies is often found in sexually promiscuous teens and young adults. And because scabies is so contagious, when one individual is affected, the whole household gets treated. And that’s because symptoms of a first-time infection take two to six weeks to appear. During the incubation period, the scabies are spreading to everyone else in the family. The scabies will then incubate in the new hosts and spread for two to six weeks without any symptoms, and so on. When the scabies mites burrow under the skin and bite, they cause itching. This itching is an allergic response to the bites, waste, and eggs being laid. In repeat infestations, because the patient has already been previously sensitized, the allergic reaction is faster, sometimes as little as one day. The scabies’ rash looks like tiny bites, hives, or bumps under the skin. Occasionally, the burrows or tunnels of the mites can actually be observed, especially with a magnifying glass, which may even allow you to see the mites going in and out of their burrows in the skin. The most common areas for scabies to tunnel are where it’s warmer and wetter—the wrist, arm, genitals, armpits, elbows, waist, buttocks, and areas between the fingers. One of the chief complaints of those afflicted with scabies is that physicians do not understand how intense the itching is and that a lot of treatments are ineffective. Basically, the itching is so intense that patients cannot sleep at night. Indeed, this is the number one clue that scabies is the culprit—the itching is worse at night. In addition, the intense scratching of the afflicted areas creates sores which can then become infected (impetigo) and require antibiotics to treat. Pharmaceuticals often prescribed to kill scabies include: - 5% permethrin cream; - 25% benzyl benzoate lotion; - 1% lindane lotion; - 10% sulfur ointment; - 10% crotamiton cream; Sulfur in petroleum jelly is one of the earliest known treatments for scabies. It is not FDA- approved, but it is safe for pregnant women and children. It does not smell good. Although the above treatments will kill the mites, the itching may continue for several weeks afterward. While the itching is due to biting, it is also an allergic reaction to eggs and waste, which do not magically disappear when the mites are killed. The itching often intensifies during the first week after treatment. It then tapers off to no itching within one month of treatment. Physicians prescribe antihistamines to reduce itching and help with sleep. Home remedies for reducing the itching include: - a bath with cool water and oatmeal; - calamine lotion; - paper towels dipped in rubbing alcohol and applied to the skin; - apple cider vinegar bath; - horse ivermectin and 10% permethrin; - diatomaceous earth and baking soda mixed with water into a liquid paste applied all over the body twice, one week between applications; - neem oil bath daily for six weeks; - full-strength apple cider vinegar and salt soak (will burn, but only for a little while) - diatomaceous earth and olive oil paste; - a hot bath with 1-2 cups of salt each night for a week; - witch hazel and tea tree oil; - rosemary essential oil and tea tree oil; - 1:1 tea tree oil and olive oil to dab on affected areas; - Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica) leaves prepared as an infusion and used as an external wash. Any personal items that could harbor the mites need to be laundered in water as hot as possible but at least above 120 degrees. Items that cannot be washed need to be avoided for at least three days. The statistics are that somewhere between forty and eighty million Americans are afflicted with intestinal worms. Not only are they much more common than head lice, one-third of people with worms are totally asymptomatic. So they spread the parasites without even knowing it. None of the medications we commonly stockpile have any efficacy against worms. Worms spread from contact with an infected person or through contaminated food or water. Pinworms spread easily from person to person, especially among young children, and from those who do not wash their hands thoroughly after using the toilet. All close contacts of an infected individual should be treated, mainly because asymptomatic infection and re-infection are common. Pinworms cause anal itching, especially at night. To identify pinworms, wrap tape around a gloved finger. Insert the finger up the patient’s anus at night. The pinworms will adhere to the tape. Roundworms come to us from contaminated food. They usually are not diagnosed until the adult roundworms emerge from the mouth, nose, or anus. Other symptoms of roundworms include abdominal pain, intestinal blockage, and malnutrition. And, just as with pinworms, roundworm infections may be asymptomatic. All close contacts with the patient must be treated. Mebendazole is the drug of choice for eliminating worms. It is available by prescription only in the US; however, overseas pharmacies offer it at a very reasonable price. All Day Chemist sells a bottle of thirty tablets for less than ten dollars, enough for treating fifteen cases of worms. The veterinary option is called albendazole. Though a sheep and cattle dewormer not approved by the FDA for use in people, it appears many physicians wouldn’t hesitate to use it in a crisis. Natural treatments asserted to be effective against worms include sagebrush, garlic, pumpkin seeds, turmeric, and tobacco. Three general practices will significantly reduce the chances of getting bitten and developing vector-borne diseases. The first is absolute cleanliness. Washing clothing, bed linens, and towels in very hot water of at least 140 degrees for 10 minutes will kill all lice, ticks, fleas, and related insect-like vermin. Items that cannot be washed need to be placed in plastic bags wrapped securely and placed in a hot car that reaches temperatures of at least 140 degrees. Bagging and sub-zero temperatures for at least four days will also work for bedbugs. Consider burning the infested items if the other measures are not an option. Social distancing such as may occur when people voluntarily relocate far from society will completely prevent contracting scabies, bedbugs, or lice, assuming that nobody brings these pests with them, and assuming that nobody ventures out into society. Maintaining a distance of several miles from other people will reduce (not eliminate) the incidence of some mosquito-borne diseases and worms. Social distancing will not reduce the threats posed by ticks. Permethrin kills and repels insects and ticks and does so for a long time. The spray can be applied to tents, shoes, clothing, and backpacks to repel insects and to kill those that dare land on you or your things. Permethrin doesn’t kill the eggs, but because it is long-lasting, it will kill the larvae after they hatch. Permethrin-treated clothing can be purchased from sporting goods stores, or you can mix up a permethrin solution to apply to your gear. Permethrin should not be applied to the skin except in extreme situations. While permethrin is available online through Amazon, consider supporting your local businesses and buying it at the feed store. Preparing your defense strategy against these invaders who aren’t after your food or supplies, just you and your family, requires far less training and practice. It does require becoming aware, adopting and vigilantly maintaining strict protocols for water purification and food preparation, and keeping the property clean and free of standing water. It requires dressing well to avoid bites and practicing social distancing as much as possible to reduce contact with potential carriers of vermin and disease. It necessitates acquiring medications to treat possible infections, most of which cost far less than a box of ammo. Make sure you have the means to wash clothing and linens in hot water. Invest in a few bottles of permethrin and enough mosquito netting to cover beds. No, no one’s going to admire your pretty stash of doxycycline, or go ga-ga over your skill in using permethrin. These lethal weapons don’t make for exciting television fare or entertaining dinner discussion. But having several layers of protection and defense against silent and nearly invisible assassins bent on your destruction is always a good idea.
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All through its 321st graduation ceremony, Yale introduced honorary levels to 10 men and women who have reached difference in their fields. “The 10 men and women we honor this morning provide as illustrations to you, our graduates, to motivate you to aspire to excellence and to price all those components of human character that they embody: creativity, curiosity, willpower, integrity, and a enthusiasm for community assistance,” mentioned Yale President Peter Salovey for the duration of the college-broad Graduation ceremony. Caroline Shaw ’07 Caroline Shaw is the youngest recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for songs, which she received at 30 a long time old for her composition “Partita for 8 Voices,” an intricate a cappella piece that features “speech, whispers, sighs, murmurs, wordless melodies and novel vocal effects” (Pulitzer Prize Citation, 2013). She has executed all-around the globe as violin soloist, chamber musician, and vocalist. Current commissions include things like is effective for Renée Fleming, the Baltimore Symphony, Carnegie Hall, the Guggenheim Museum, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Seattle Symphony, amid other folks. Shaw routinely collaborates with Kanye West and coproduced “The Everyday living of Pablo.” She now teaches at New York University and is a innovative associate at the Juilliard School. Krista Tippett ’94 M.Div. Krista Tippett is a Peabody Award-profitable broadcaster, bestselling creator, and National Humanities medalist. Her national weekly radio present “On Being” — formulated to make “intelligent general public dialogue about the religious, spiritual, and ethical factors of human life” — has cultivated a dedicated adhering to, drawing a lot of accolades. Tippett is the CEO of the On Being Task, a media and general public daily life initiative dedicated to the “intersection of non secular inquiry, science, social therapeutic, group, poetry, and the arts.” She is also the curator of the Civil Conversations Project, which generates situations, audio, and guides to foster dialogue and discussion all over difficult subjects. Humane Letters (L.H.D.) (in memoriam) The late Madeleine Albright, who was honored posthumously, served as the U.S. secretary of point out from 1997 to 2001, beneath the Clinton administration. Throughout her tenure, she advocated for humanitarian intervention in Kosovo and sanctions in Iraq, and pressed for NATO’s enlargement into Jap Europe. She was a professor at Georgetown College School of Foreign Support as effectively as the chair of Albright Stonebridge Team, a world wide approach company. She was the creator of seven bestselling textbooks and the recipient of the 2012 Presidential Medal of Independence. Humane Letters (L.H.D.) General public servant James Clyburn is the bulk whip and the third-position Democrat in the United States Property of Representatives. As a nationwide chief, he has championed rural and economic development, historic preservation and restoration packages, environmental policy, and health care equality. In his early many years, he helped manage several civil legal rights marches and demonstrations as a scholar leader. He has obtained about 20 honorary levels and is largely regarded as a “hero of democracy.” Jill Lepore ’92 M.A., ’93 M.Phil., ’95 Ph.D. Jill Lepore is an American historian and prolific author whose guides have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize, the PEN Literary Award, and the Nationwide Book Award. She writes on American historical past, legislation, literature, and politics. Her bestselling book “These Truths: A Historical past of the United States” was printed in 2018, and her 2019 get the job done “This The us: The Case for the Nation” was named a New York Occasions Book Assessment Editors’ Choice Choice. Lepore’s most recent nonfiction do the job “If Then” was longlisted for the Countrywide Guide Award. Myron Thompson ’69 B.A., ’72 J.D. A extended-serving decide for the Middle District of Alabama, Myron Thompson is regarded for his judgments in noteworthy instances relating to desegregation, jail and voting units, and women’s rights. Appointed to his purpose in 1980 by President Jimmy Carter, he later on served as chief decide of the court docket from 1991 to 1998. In 2017 Thompson received the Yale Regulation School’s Award of Advantage. Jean Bennett ’76 B.S. Medical Sciences (D.M.S.) Medical doctor scientist Jean Bennett is a health practitioner, researcher, and gene treatment pioneer. Alongside with her partner, Dr. Albert Maguire, and Dr. Katherine Large, she established the remedy for the RPE65 mutation to reverse hereditary blindness. She noticed the treatment through clinical trials and received the initial Fda approval of gene treatment for a genetic disorder. Physician of Science (Sc.D.) Katalin Karikó is a Hungarian biochemist who specializes in RNA-mediated mechanisms. She co-founded and was CEO of RNARx from 2006 to 2013 and is at this time the senior vice president of BioNTech RNA Prescription drugs. Her work is the cornerstone for the enhancement of the COVID-19 vaccine. She holds U.S. patents for the software of non-immunogenic, nucleoside-modified RNA, the technologies accredited by Pfizer and Moderna to produce their vaccines. Her contributions to struggle the pandemic make her and her collaborator, Drew Weissman, very likely candidates for a Nobel Prize. Richard Dawkins and Derrick Rossi, who assisted discovered Moderna and are highly regarded scientists, have identified as for Kariko to turn into a Nobel laureate. Kariko’s particular tale of perseverance and resilience, which arrived to be broadly acknowledged during the pandemic, has been inspirational to several. Due to the fact the vaccine breakthroughs, Kariko has grow to be a lauded and sought-after figure, showing up in main publications and on the TIME 100 Listing. Medical doctor of Science (Sc.D.) Drew Weissman studies nucleoside-modified mRNA and lipid nanoparticle (LNP) therapeutics. His findings of the security and efficacy of nucleoside-modified mRNA have moved this engineering to the forefront of new therapeutics. Technological know-how made in his lab is applied in the very first two Food and drug administration accepted COVID-19 vaccines. The lab broadly scientific studies two directions of mRNA investigate: 1) vaccines and 2) mRNA protein therapeutics, these types of as monoclonal antibody supply and gene editing. Although interested in developing new therapeutics, the lab’s primary desire is simple science research. Any therapeutic tactic staying studied generally requires intensive primary science investigation to understand mechanisms. Social Science (S.Sc.D.) Orlando Patterson is a historic and cultural sociologist and author of numerous academic papers and textbooks, including “Slavery and Social Loss of life,” “Freedom in the Earning of Western Lifestyle,” “The Ordeal of Integration,” and “The Cultural Matrix: Knowledge Black Youth.” He has published extensively on the society and follow of freedom, slavery and ethno-racial relations, the sociology of underneath-enhancement, the purpose of poverty in shaping society, and the cultural sociology of athletics (primarily cricket). From 1972 to 1979 Patterson served as special advisor for social plan and enhancement to Key Minister Michael Manley of Jamaica. Patterson at present teaches sociology at Harvard and earlier taught at the University of the West Indies and the London Faculty of Economics. His daughter, Rhiannon Patterson, is a graduate of the Yale Faculty Class of 1990.
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This post is part of a draft on South Siberian language homelands and Sprachbünde. The following text contains a description of Yeniseian languages, their dialectal groupings and likely evolution among surrounding ethnolinguistic groups before they were first documented. Special emphasis is placed on ancient Yeniseic formants for water bodies, widely distributed through Western, Southern, and Central Siberia. Finally, the archaeological-archaeogenetic discussion is focused on Early Bronze Age Glazkovo-related and Okunevo-like cultures, due to their patrilineal connection to sampled Yeniseian and ancient Na-Dene populations. Archaeology and population genomics - Yeniseian languages … Read the rest “Proto-Yeniseian Homeland” Another preprint came out at the same time as Wang et al. (2020), from the Jena Lab of the Max Planck Society: A dynamic 6,000-year genetic history of Eurasia’s Eastern Steppe, by Jeong, Warinner, et al. bioRxiv (2020). NOTE. I have now updated the Ancient DNA Dataset, the Prehistory Atlas – with PDF and GIS files including Y-DNA and mtDNA of all newly reported samples (starting with the Neolithic) – as well as the PCA files with those from Wang et al. (2020). The conclusions are similar, but with some interesting twists. Relevant excerpts (emphasis mine), … Read the rest “R1b-rich Proto-Indo-Europeans show genetic continuity in Asia” Recent papers The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia, by Narasimhan, Patterson et al. Science (2019) and An Ancient Harappan Genome Lacks Ancestry from Steppe Pastoralists or Iranian Farmers, by Shinde et al. Cell (2019). NOTE. For direct access to Narasimhan, Patterson et al. (2019), visit this link courtesy of the first author and the Reich Lab. I am currently not on holidays anymore, and the information in the paper is huge, with many complex issues raised by the new samples and analyses rather than solved, so I will stick to the Indo-European question, … Read the rest “Yamnaya replaced Europeans, but admixed heavily as they spread to Asia” A reader commented recently that there is little information about Indo-Europeans from Central and East Asia in this blog. Regardless of the scarce archaeological data compared to European prehistory, I think it is premature to write anything detailed about population movements of Indo-Iranians in Asia, especially now that we are awaiting the updates of Narasimhan et al (2018). Furthermore, there was little hope that Tocharians would be different than neighbouring Andronovo-like populations (see a recent post on my predicted varied admixture of Common Tocharians), so the history of both unrelated Late PIE languages would have had to be … Read the rest “Proto-Tocharians: From Afanasievo to the Tarim Basin through the Tian Shan” Now that it has become evident that Late Repin (i.e. Yamnaya/Afanasevo) ancestry was associated with the migration of R1b-L23-rich Late Proto-Indo-Europeans from the steppe in the second half of the the 4th millennium BC, there’s still the question of how R1a-rich Uralic speakers of Corded Ware ancestry expanded , and how they spread their languages throughout North Eurasia. Modern North Eurasians I have been collecting information from the supplementary data of the latest papers on modern and ancient North Eurasian peoples, including Jeong et al. (2019), Saag et al. (2019), Sikora et al. (2018), or … Read the rest “Corded Ware ancestry in North Eurasia and the Uralic expansion” Open access paper New genetic evidence of affinities and discontinuities between bronze age Siberian populations, by Hollard et al., Am J Phys Anthropol. (2018) 00:1–11. NOTE. This seems to be a peer-reviewed paper based on a more precise re-examination of the samples from Hollard’s PhD thesis, Peuplement du sud de la Sibérie et de l’Altaï à l’âge du Bronze : apport de la paléogénétique (2014). Afanasevo and Yamna The Afanasievo culture is the earliest known archaeological culture of southern Siberia, occupying the Minusinsk-Altai region during the Eneolithic era 3600/3300 BC to 2500 BC (Svyatko et al., 2009; … Read the rest “Yamna/Afanasevo elite males dominated by R1b-L23, Okunevo brings ancient Siberian/Asian population”
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There are more than 91 million school children worldwide now defined as living with obesity — and the UK is in the top 20 countries for obesity levels. In the UK, the obesity rate for children doubles during elementary school years — and then increases again in high school. This is, in part, because teenagers in the UK consume poor-quality diets, low in nutrients and high in processed foods. Indeed, girls in England do not get essential nutrients required for reproductive and overall good health (vitamin A, folate, iron). And young people are also generally low in at least five micro-nutrients needed for development, immunity, mood, and energy levels. Teenagers in the UK also consume the highest amount of added sugars and sugary drinks compared to all other age groups. Teenagers also consume the highest amount of breakfast cereal products (that are also known to be filled with sugar) and confectionery sweets. And only 4% of UK teens meet daily fiber recommendations. This is concerning given that dietary fiber is associated with a decreased risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and cancer. Young people are also only eating around two and half portions of their recommended five a day of fruits and vegetables. Research also shows that teenagers from disadvantaged backgrounds have lower micro-nutrient and fiber intake than their more well-off peers. And findings from the Food Foundation think-tank show that almost 4 million children in the UK live in households that struggle to afford to buy enough fruit, vegetables, fish, and other healthy foods to meet the official nutrition guidelines. These types of dietary patterns can not only have negative consequences on the physical health of teenagers, but they can also impact their mental health. Research shows malnourished teens are less likely to fulfill their potential at school, and more likely to suffer from poor mental health. Why the Poor Choices? But brain changes that occur with puberty coincide with the transition to high school, and these changes can influence attitudes and behaviors in all areas — including healthy eating. The desire to fit in is strong, and liking healthy food can be seen as “uncool” by teens. Young people also place great importance on social time within the school day. And many teenagers describe the school dining hall as an intimidating place with poor food choices and teachers roaming — making it somewhere they would rather avoid. There’s also often long queues and a lack of perceived privacy in school cafeterias — which can lead to teenagers skipping lunch and getting most of their energy intake at morning break or at the end of the school day from local food outlets. There’s also the wider issue that school food policy has failed to sustain quality nutrition — particularly in high schools. Researchers from the Jamie Oliver Foundation were alarmed to find many schools are still serving high fat and sugary foods at breakfast and lunch — including pastries, pizza, doughnuts, muffins, and cookies, often in large portion sizes. This is despite Oliver campaigning tirelessly over the last decade to change the nation’s eating habits after Jamie’s School Dinners aired in 2005 to reveal the terrible standards of school food in the UK. Oliver has since said that his push to improve nutrition for children didn’t work because eating well is still seen as a “posh and middle-class” concern. A lack of continuity between successive governments and poor consistency in the evaluation of school food standards may also be to blame. Indeed, the current school food plan that provides practical and specific guidance on the types of food and drinks schools should and shouldn’t offer — has not been evaluated since 2013. And while it’s a requirement for schools to follow this plan, in reality, there can be a great deal of difference in how schools feed their children. Time to Act Research shows that eating habits people pick up in their youth tend to track into adulthood, which makes the teenage years an important stage to start forming healthy habits. So rather than placing the full responsibility of food choice onto teens, more needs to be done to enable young people to make healthier choices. This can include consulting with pupils to engage them in making decisions about the dining room environment and better food education. Reducing choices and streamlining menus has also been shown to improve healthier food choices. Though to improve teenager health in a sustained way, wider issues such as food advertising and food development also need to be looked at. But of course it isn’t just all down to schools. Parents can also help massively by creating a home environment that supports healthy eating. Here, patience is a must and convenience is key — offer carrots or chopped fruit when they are hungry coming through the door after school. And be the example — have fun trying new fruits or vegetables — and help kids to recognize that fueling with nourishing foods impacts how we all feel, think, look, and perform.
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- Member Since: June 17, 2021 Pre Natal Care and Labour What's really a prenatal massage? A pre natal massage is specifically made to loosen muscles, tendons, ligaments, tendons and tissues, promote natural fetal breathing, and relieve labor pains, and increase the overall well-being of your body and notably the respiratory and nervous processes, and lessen the chance of postpartum hemorrhage. A skilled midwife provides this therapeutic massage as a portion of the regular look after all expectant mothers. If you are considering giving birth or possess already provided birth, then you might be wondering what gains you may expect in the massagetherapy. A pre natal massage can help reduce soreness related to being pregnant coughing, morning sickness, fatigue and other ailments that occur while pregnant. These popular distress can affect both the bodily and mental well-being of a pregnant woman. Moreover, this might help minimize pain associated with the infant's coming, including soreness, soothe redness, and help relieve anxiety throughout the period of delivery. A prenatal massage also boosts greater blood flow and nutrient absorption, so enhancing the grade of oxygen circulating in the mother's blood. This helps a pregnant female to break easy and relaxed, cutting back the sensation of pressure or anxiety which may influence her growing baby. 평택출장 It also encourages women to really feel milder and more comfortable, letting them be anxious about the shifting phases of pregnancy. Most pregnant women say they feel relaxed after a prenatal massage. Aside from its relaxing effect, a prenatal massage therapist can utilize the experience to add insight into a pregnant female's physique. By detecting how a pregnant body has been constructed and functioning, a therapeutic massage therapist is going to be more able to enable a woman throughout her pregnancy. An massage therapist may have a better thought of these changes that are happening within her physique. This knowledge can assist the expectant woman to understand her entire body and that which it really is going right through earlier, throughout, and after her being pregnant. Besides relaxing your mommy, a therapeutic massage session can also help your mother to really experience encouraged all through her being pregnant. Most women discover they start to feel mentally and mentally stronger after they give birth. A therapeutic massage therapist can provide aid for a new mum by giving her stretches and strengthening exercises to improve blood flow. A fantastic massage therapist may also provide encouragement, also encouraging the mother-to-be to consume healthful foods also choose multi vitamins. In addition to emotional support, a naturopathic massage may additionally fortify the pelvic floor muscles, that can be related to the lady's comfort and well-being. Throughout the second trimester, much more crucial than at the first trimester, routine massage is very crucial for preventing blood clots. In order to reduce blood infections, the muscles of your gut has to be maintained supple and elastic. If a woman receives massage-therapy throughout her pregnancy, her pelvic floor muscles will continue being firm along with her ligaments peaceful. This can greatly decrease the incidence of blood clots, that can be sometimes necessary for surgical operation to remove. The 3rd phase, and also the past couple of months of pregnancy, can be a excellent time to look at a pregnancy massagetherapy. When women are worried and worried about their growing infant, they may undergo back pain, leg pain, or throat ache. It isn't uncommon to experience severe pain in these types of areas during that moment. A pre natal massage can help ease a few of the stress gentle stretching. An excellent therapeutic massage therapist will be able to identify certain areas of tension and lightly work them in the body. By the finish of the next phase, it is important to consider a labor and shipping massage too. Women who have delivered babies before are going to be able to comprehend the familiar signs of discomfort. For the first time, a mommy could want to have certain vitamins and minerals during her pregnancy, such as for example vitamin E oil. A talented therapist may gently rub into the abdomen. It's important that your patient is more relaxed and comfortable, as the massage can lead to some tummy upset. By taking enough time to relish this type of healing massage, a mother-to-be can make certain that her own body will be in optimal wellness for delivery.
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Tag: Understanding Children I’m not against kindness. But here’s the problem with #WalkUpNotOut. The kid who’s going to eventually kill a bunch of people is the kind of … While it may be true that parents aren’t put on this earth to make their children happy for most of a child’s life, for the first year and sometimes longer, that is exactly what parents are put on this earth to do. In the current issue of Psychology Today, the author, Dr. Suniya Luthar, describes what she calls, “The problem with rich kids.” These youth have everything they could ever want materially, but they also have higher rates of substance use, depression, anxiety, eating disorders, cheating and stealing than ever.
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There were two new cases of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea Virus (PEDV) in Ontario in April, bringing the total number of confirmations in Ontario this year to nine. There were 12 cases last year. The disease was confirmed in a Wellington County finisher barn on April 4 and in a Perth County finisher farm on April 4. The disease causes watery diarrhea, vomiting and dehydration and can kill 50 to 100 per cent of young pigs. Transmission speeds up in cold weather. These cases bring the total number of Ontario cases to 126 since the disease was first discovered in the province in January, 2014. The disease was also found on a Quebec hog farm in April, the first case in that province in four years.
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by Stephen F. Jencks, M.D., M.P.H. [Also see companion post by Joanne Lynn, M.D.] The Medicare Readmission Reduction Program (MRRP) encourages hospitals to reduce readmissions within 30 days of discharge by imposing substantial financial penalties on hospitals with more readmissions than would be expected if the same patients were discharged from an average hospital. But some hospitals and communities have succeeded too well and reduced discharges even more than readmissions so that their readmission rates, as currently calculated, do not improve much, which puts them at higher risk for penalties. There are two underlying problems: First, there are two ways of thinking about, and therefore measuring, the rate of readmissions; and they often lead to quite different results and quite different decisions on penalties. One is discharge-based; the other, population-based. The relationship between the two is simple: (readmissions/discharges) X (discharges/(beneficiary population (1,000s) ) ) = readmissions / (beneficiary population (1,000s)) Patients who are admitted but die during hospitalization or are transferred to another hospital are not counted as discharges from the first hospital. Second, effective interventions to reduce 30-day readmissions have an effect on admissions that extends far beyond 30-days after discharge and they reduce a lot of other admissions, especially if implemented in partnership with community providers and services. When Congress created the MRRP, many stakeholders had become aware (and dismayed) that 20% of people enrolled in Medicare fee-for-service and discharged from a hospital were readmitted within 30 days of hospital discharge. Clinical trials had shown that improved processes around hospital discharges could prevent many of these readmissions. The aim of establishing accountability also made a hospital focus desirable. In this view, readmission is a burden resulting from poor hospital discharge processes, whether clinically premature or poorly executed. With that emphasis on discharge processes as cause and cure for readmissions, it was natural for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to choose to estimate each hospital’s expected readmissions as the number of patients whom the hospital discharged and who would be expected to be readmitted after discharge from an average hospital. Most readmission reduction initiatives use this discharge-based readmission rate to measure performance. This discharge-based perspective effectively defines the readmission rate as the percentage of discharges that are followed by a readmission. In this way of thinking, the number of hospital discharges is simply a fact of life, much like the fact that a year has 365.24 days. This view does not see that hospital actions might reduce the number of patients they discharge, and this blind spot causes trouble. Hospitals actually have a great deal of influence on how many patients they admit and discharge because so many of their discharges are admitted through their emergency department or by hospital-affiliated physicians and because they can collaborate with community services and providers who can forestall patients even coming to the hospital. Population-based hospital discharge rates vary substantially across regions, and they can change over time. Some policy makers worried that the discharge-based rate could behave in unexpected ways if hospitals took steps that reduced total discharges by more than the reduction in 30-day readmissions. As a result, several programs, such as the Partnership for Patients and the Quality Improvement Organizations’ (QIOs) Care Transitions Program, were designed using a population-based readmission rate or converted to such a rate after evaluating early findings. The population-based rate is the number of readmissions for every 1,000 fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries in the hospital’s service area. This view sees readmissions as a community health problem, a burden on a population of beneficiaries and the Medicare trust funds that is associated with that population’s use of hospitals just as hospital-acquired infections are associated with use of hospitals. From this perspective, preventing hospitalizations, improving discharge transitions, and improving post-discharge care are equally valid ways to reduce readmissions. Whether the hospital reduced hospitalizations in order to reduce readmissions is less important than being sure that we do not penalize hospitals for taking such steps. Population-based rates are closely aligned with the three-part aim of the National Quality Strategy (individual care, population health, and affordability), not only because they are population-based but also because they reflect the close relationship between care in the community and a hospital’s apparent performance. Thus, a program can reduce burdens on beneficiaries and Medicare through significant reductions in the population-based discharge and readmission rates but see much smaller reductions in the discharge-based readmission rate. In a companion blog to this piece, Joanne Lynn presents evidence that this attenuation of changes in discharge-based rates has happened repeatedly in community-based readmissions programs. We do not know, at this point, whether attenuation of changes translate into financial penalties but it seems very likely to increase a hospital’s risk. We also do yet fully understand what specific changes produce these decreases in the population-based discharge rate, but the most parsimonious explanation is that the causes are pretty much the causes of reduced readmissions: Provide urgent care with support for keeping the patient in the community, and you are likely to reduce all admissions, not just readmissions. Enroll more patients in medical homes, and the benefits will not disappear 30 days after hospital discharge. Improve nursing home communications with emergency rooms, and the benefits will not be limited to patients within 30 days after hospital discharge. What we can foresee is that hospitals, already wary of readmissions reduction because it directly reduces revenue, will become doubly wary if they conclude that reducing discharges may also cause or increase the MRRP penalty. If CMS is penalizing hospitals and communities for succeeding at improving care and reducing costs, the reaction may threaten a very successful set of initiatives. The examples we report are for community-based efforts to reduce readmissions. Hospital-level calculations are generally beyond our capability. CMS can, however, easily determine whether, all else being equal, penalties are more likely or larger in areas where the population-based hospital discharge rate is declining substantially than elsewhere. That information is urgently needed. What to do. The purpose of the MRRP is to reduce the burden of readmissions on Medicare beneficiaries and the Medicare trust funds, so the important indicator of progress is the number of readmissions, not the percentage of discharged patients that are readmitted. Healthcare quality measurement needs to catch up with the National Quality Strategy and add measures of the impact of care on the health of the population that will complement measures of the quality of individual episodes of care such as hospitalizations. In the case of readmission measurement for the MRRP, this need is substantially more urgent because there is good reason to fear that a hospital that engages with its community and does exactly what the MRRP hopes for is more liable to financial penalties under the current, discharge-based measure than it would be under a population-based measure. The first step is to assess the degree of urgency by examining national evidence on actual penalties. If unreasonable penalties are at all frequent then the problem is far more urgent. This will be complex, because Epstein has already shown in cross-sectional studies that population-based hospitalization rates and readmission rates are positively correlated. At the same time it will be important to develop population-based measures of readmissions and compare their impact on penalties with the impact of discharge-based measures. The obstacles are bureaucratic, technical, and political. Bureaucratically, the most important obstacle has been a widespread belief that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requires calculating discharge-based rates. In fact, the Act says only that penalties are to be determined from the ratio of observed to expected numbers of readmissions and is silent on how the expected number is to be calculated. The other bureaucratic problem is less tractable: Under current procedures, the steps laid out for implementing a new measure, both at CMS and at the National Quality Forum (NQF) would likely take several years. The process should be expedited if the analysis of current penalties indicates that hospitals are being penalized for success in reducing admissions. The technical challenges of creating a population-based readmission measure for hospitals are substantial. First, the procedure must find a way to measure each hospital’s population-based hospitalization rate. Second, a method of risk adjustment must be developed and applied so that population-based readmission rates for each hospital and community can be compared. Although these methods are still evolving, adjustments for factors such as neighborhood deprivation are actually easier at the population level. These are difficult tasks, but a first step good enough to improve on the existing model should be possible within a year. Politically, hospitals will be concerned about accountability for the community hospitalization rate. They will recognize that if hospitals in areas with low hospitalization rates are protected, then hospitals in areas with high hospitalization rates will be more vulnerable. Some have hoped that traditional risk adjustment could solve this problem, because the most likely scenario is that average risk of readmission increases as the number of discharges decreases. That prospect is not promising, because the most assiduous work on risk adjustment has produced tools of only moderate power. The prospects for solving this problem with improved risk adjustment are not promising., When you find yourself in a hole you should stop digging. It seems prudent for NQF to suspend endorsement of the pending discharge-based readmission measures and for CMS to delay implementing discharge-based measures if NQF endorses them until CMS has studied and reported the extent to which readmission penalties punish hospitals that are actually reducing both admissions and readmissions and has laid out an approach to any problems found. Finally, the problem identified here underlines the importance of placing a population-based foundation under at least some measures of health care system performance. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Readmission reduction program. Retrieved from http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Readmissions-Reduction-Program.html Epstein, A. M., Jha, A. K., & Orav, J. E. (2011 December 15). The relationship between hospital admission rates and rehospitalizations. New England Journal of Medicine 365(24). Kind, A. J. H., Jencks, S., Brock, J., Yu, M., Bartels, C., Ehlenbach, W., & Smith, M. (2014 December 2). Neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage and 30-day rehospitalization: a retrospective cohort study. Annals of Internal Medicine 161(11) 765-775. Yale New Haven Health Services Corporation/Center for Outcomes Research & Evaluation. (2014, July). 2014 measure updates and specifications: Hospital-wide all-cause unplanned readmission – version 3.0. Retrieved from https://altarum.org/sites/default/files/uploaded-publication-files/Rdmsn_Msr_Updts_HWR_0714_0.pdf. Kansagara, D., Englander, H., Salanitro, A., Kagen, D., Theobald, C., Freeman, M., & Kripalani, S. (2011 October 19). Risk prediction models for hospital readmission: A systematic review. Journal of the American Medical Association 306(15) 1688-1698.
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The functions of a Completely happy Marriage There are several characteristics of a completely happy marriage. These attributes are not constantly easy to become aware of because a lot of people are self-centered, unwilling to modify, or reluctant to learn by faults. Nonetheless, you need to understand that many of these qualities are necessary for a long-lasting, happy matrimony. Fortunately, you can study how to make these people a part of your daily life. Listed http://testimport-hope-1feb2021.co.uk/uncategorized/the-secrets-of-actually-finding-asian-women-for-solo-men/ below are some recommendations for a cheerful marriage. Browse them cautiously and you’ll end up being well on the way to a long-lasting romantic relationship. Probably the most important characteristics of a cheerful marriage is certainly shared value. Intimacy implies that both partners support a single another’s dreams and desired goals. Accord is another important attribute of an solid marital life. Commitment means being supporting, in particular when one spouse is enduring a difficult period. Your spouse could be more willing to support you during these difficult times, and it will develop the bond between you. When you reverence each other, you are able to be sure your spouse will be loyal, understanding, and supportive. Commitment. Commitment is easy when ever things are running nicely, but hard times http://order-brides.org/mail-order-bride-sites/ukrainebrides4you will eventually arrive and test your determination. Commitment is not something you should consider lightly. Regardless if it means sticking with your partner through thick and thin, whether it means a happy marriage, it will probably last. Yet , fights may happen. While these types of may be natural, if your partner refuses to apologize, it can cause problems.
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Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are considered by many to be a new form of money. Others wonder if these alternative assets actually meet the definition of money from a practical perspective. “Money” is defined by three pillars: as a store of value; a medium of exchange; and as a unit of account. This last pillar is the point of contention given the volatility associated with cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin. The volatility of cryptocurrencies made it difficult for users to transact in these cryptocurrencies as the price fluctuated wildly from second to second. This has exposed cryptocurrency holders to unacceptable levels of market risk. This concern has been answered by an innovation called the stablecoin. Stablecoins solved this volatility problem by being pegged 1:1 to fiat currencies such as the US dollar, which consequently gave it a stable value that allowed it to be considered a unit of account. Essentially what was created was a cryptocurrency capable of moving across the internet through the use of blockchain technology similar to its peers but without the volatility. Two similar but quite different types of stablecoins were then released. The first was a stablecoin backed by fiat currencies held in the issuer’s bank account. The second was an algorithmic stablecoin that holds, buys and sells various underlying cryptocurrencies and in doing so it mimics the price of the US dollar through this balancing act. However, we recently saw the catastrophic flaw posed by this model, when TerraLuna’s algorithmic stablecoin, known as UST, broke away from the US dollar and ultimately led to the erasure of billions of dollars from the market. crypto in days. Read: Terra didn’t kill crypto, but it was a narrow breakout This raised the question of whether the simpler method of holding fiat as collateral and issuing stablecoins might not be the better option as opposed to these algorithmic stablecoins. Today’s largest US dollar stablecoin, known as USDT and created by Tether, is currently the most traded stablecoin in the world. Tether’s business model is quite simple in that a KYC (Know Your Customer) verified Tether user – be it an exchange, individual trader, trader or trading company – deposits fiat (US dollars) into Tether’s bank account. Tether delivers USDT tokens issued on existing blockchains such as Ethereum to the client. Tether then holds these fiat currencies as collateral, giving primary and secondary holders of the USDT token reassurance that their token is actually worth $1. However, this business model was not without flaws either, as Tether was fined US$41 million in 2021 to settle allegations that they falsely claimed that their digital tokens were entirely backed by currencies. real world trustees. So many people might well ask – what then is the solution based on what we have learned from these historical events? My point of view favors a triple solution that combines independence, transparency and clear segregation. This solution addresses another potential weakness that has yet to materialize: what if a company issuing these stablecoins is sued, which gives the plaintiff equal rights to the collateral alongside the holders tokens? If the company were to declare bankruptcy or go into liquidation following a claim, this would lead to a discounted and de-indexed token, as the company’s assets would not exceed the liabilities that should have been secured. It is for this reason that fiat currency reserves should be segregated from the entire business to mitigate the risk posed by the day-to-day operations of the token issuer. Ideally, the issuer of the stablecoin would create a separate legal entity such as a trust in which the beneficiaries of the trust would be the token holders. There would be a mandate that the trust is required to maintain a diversified interest-bearing portfolio of trust-backed funds from various commercial banks in order to diversify company-specific risk. Interest earned should then be used to pay the token issuer a management fee, maintain a pre-determined reserve of fiat to cover expected credit losses of these commercial banks as well as for an independent auditor to issue audited financial statements annual and/or intermediate. monthly or quarterly proof of reserve statements and/or reports that are publicly available. Such a separate and transparent structure with independent confirmation will provide holders of these stablecoins with the security and transparency necessary to trust the issuer and be assured that their stablecoin will not be detached from the underlying fiat currency. . Wiehann Olivier, Head of Digital Assets and Partner at Mazars in South Africa.
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The Physical Properties of Argon Argon is a colorless, odorless, and non-toxic gas; it has the characteristics of UV stability and does not affect visible light transmission; the air content is 1%, which is the most economical inert gas; the air density: 1.7836 kg/m3, T=0°C (at the same temperature, the density of air is 1.2928 kg/m3). The Thermal Performance of Argon Because the density of argon is higher than that of ordinary air, the insulating glass filled with argon can slow down the heat convection in the insulating glass, thereby reducing the thermal conductivity of the gas. Thereby, the time of non-condensing and frosting of the insulating glass is extended, the glass is drier, and the energy-saving effect is very good. Argan gas filling 1 (1) The K value is the best at 16mm (inflection point). From 6-16mm, the K value improves with the increase of the air layer. The heat transfer coefficient does not change beyond this inflection point, only the amount of material used is increased. Therefore, by adjusting the space distance, It can improve energy saving (6-16mm), or save material (>16mm). (2) The combined use of gas-filled and low-E glass can improve the energy-saving ratio and has a better effect with gas-filled transparent insulating glass. The former can be as high as 15%, while the latter is only 2-5%. Hollow glass is 4+12+4mm, and the three curves respectively represent the air-filled transparent glass hollow air-filled Low-E hollow glass 1, and the air-filled Low-E hollow glass 2 (the two have different e values), and the gas concentration is 90%. (1) There is a linear relationship between the concentration of argon and the heat transfer coefficient of insulating glass. The greater the concentration, the lower the K value; (2) The initial charging concentration should be as high as possible, but it does not mean that the higher the better, such as 100% compared to 90 or 95%, the improvement is not particularly obvious; from the white glass, the 100% concentration is clearer than the air (argon gas) 0% The improvement is nearly 5%, from 90%-100%, the improvement is less than 1%; the argon concentration is from 70% to 90%, for Low-E glass, the heat transfer coefficient is increased by nearly 12%. <1%; (3) In theory, the concentration of 100% inert gas is always better than the concentration of 90%, or even better than 95%, but in time, it is very difficult to reach the concentration of 100%, let alone In terms of time-consuming, from the point of view of the degree of improvement in the heat transfer coefficient it brings, it is very small compared to the increase from 70% to 90%. Therefore, it is not necessary to pursue an initial concentration of 100% in practice, as long as it reaches 90%. Besides, it should be emphasized that the inflation of insulating glass can only improve the insulation of the insulating glass, that is, the heat transfer coefficient, but has nothing to do with improving the insulating ability of the insulating glass.
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| by Jonathan Goodman Research Associate at the Council on Hemispheric Affairs To download a PDF of this article, please click here. The legacy of one of Peru’s cruelest presidents, Alberto Fujimori, has continued to afflict the political careers of succeeding Peruvian presidents and even his own children: Keiko and Kenji. Although it is naive to assert that Fujimori’s legacy and downfall have directly contributed to the environment of malfeasance in Peru’s legislature and executive office, his actions exacerbate the corruption nightmare that has plagued the Peruvian people for too long. On March 21, 2018, former Peruvian president Pedro Pablo Kuczynski (PPK) resigned from office, just four months shy of his two-year anniversary as president. With the current Peruvian constitution imposing five-year term limits for its presidents, PPK is the first Peruvian president in the 21st century to fall short of that five-year benchmark. Even so, all elected Peruvian presidents since Alberto Fujimori have been investigated for corruption, with many being indicted. [i] What are the implications of this corruption streak? During the 1992 auto-coup Fujimori dissolved the former bicameral congress, and then in his subsequent rule, he replaced it with a unicameral Congress. Excluding former president Alan Garcia (2006-2011), each president since 1990 — Fujimori (1990-2000), Alejandro Toledo (2001-2006), and Ollanta Humala (2011-2016) — has been convicted, jailed, or forced to resign mostly because of corruption scandals. Be that as it may, five years before his second presidential term, Garcia narrowly escaped conviction for money laundering, solely due to the statute of limitations running out. [ii] In March of 2018, Peruvians saw what has become a tragic recurring theme in the highest levels of their government, corrupt practices and vying for power. Pedro Pablo Kuczynski’s Legacy In the last few months of his presidency, PPK was caught in a whirlwind of corruption allegations and obstructions from a Congress that consisted mostly of his opposition. Kuczynski found himself in the persisting headlines of a scandal involving Odebrecht — a Brazilian firm —, which has precipitated the crisis of Latin American corruption scandals in previous years. In December 2017, spearheaded by two major Peruvian political parties — right-wing Fuerza Popular [Popular Force] and left-wing Frente Amplio [Broad Front]—, the Peruvian Congress sought to impeach Kuczynski for accepting, as BBC stated, “illegal payments” from Odebrecht. [iii] According to the congregistas in question, his company — Westfield Capital Ltd — had received suspicious “advisory fees” from Odebrecht. [iv] While Kuczynski may not have guided any of those illicit interactions, at the very least he had a conflict of interest in this arrangement, which resulted in threats of impeachment from Peruvian congressman. The impeachment proposal only needed 87 members out of 130 voting in its favor to pass. With support from both Popular Force and Broad Front, which would have led to 93 votes between the two, PPK’s impeachment was a very real possibility. The grave reality that the impeachment could pass through Peru’s Congress prompted PPK to seek out a last-ditch deal with the devil to save his political career. Even though Kenji Fujimori was a prominent figure in Popular Force, a rival party to Kuczynski’s Peruanos Por el Kambio [Peruvians for Change], Kuczynski made a bargain with Kenji. Kenji’s bloc would vote against the impeachment, and in return, Kuczynski would pardon Alberto Fujimori for corruption and major human rights violations. Upholding his end of the bargain, Kenji, with a handful of stalwart members from Congress, splintered off from the Popular Force in an errant fashion, subsequently voting against the impeachment of Kuczynski. [v] Narrowly surviving December’s impeachment proceedings, PPK’s presidency finally met its demise in March when he reluctantly resigned in the face of renewed congressional impeachment threats. These threats occurred after fresh accusations of wrongdoing and a video of Kenji Fujimori trying to bribe a legislator to vote against the December impeachment. Peruvian media outlets coined this clandestine interaction Kenjivideos or Fujivideos. In the Kenjivideos, possibly taking a page out of the sunk-cost fallacy, Kenji put the nail in his coffin when he exhorted to a legislator: “¿Qué es lo que tú quieres: ¿obras para tu región, desarrollo, progreso?” (What is it that you want: projects for your region, development, progress?). [vi] The Japanese-Peruvian fire drill tactic could not save PPK’s presidential career this time. With Kenji’s resignation from the Popular Force and the negative publicity surrounding the Kenjivideos, PPK seemed to understand that he was backed into a corner; and with that, he formally resigned. [vii] Sinking their Claws into Peruvian Politics: The Fujimori Family The Fujimori family has been at the center of the Kuczynski corruption scandals. Keiko and Kenji Fujimori have either directly participated in or indirectly contributed to the environment of the uncovered corruption that encircled Kuczynski’s last four months of presidency. The siblings were both prominent figures in Popular Force (with Keiko as its leader since 2011), until Kenji’s resignation in March 2018 due to a rift with his sister vis-à-vis contentions over their father’s fate, among some policy differences. Popular Force has dominated the Peruvian legislature, acting as a seemingly unmovable force to other political parties. While he was in office, Kuczynski’s Peruvians for Change proved a formidable opponent to Keiko’s Popular Force. However, following Kuczynski’s resignation, and with the president Martín Vizcarra unaffiliated with any political party, Keiko and her Popular Force have consolidated power. Keiko’s motivations extend beyond simple ideological differences. Her Game of Thrones approach is evidence of her aspiration to a higher office, and in that aspiration remains secrets that Keiko would prefer to hide from the public eye. The corruption allegations against Keiko are abundant, and consist of: suspect revenue flows intended to fund her presidential campaign in 2011, a swift rise to a powerful congressional position despite her lack of experience in public administration, and peppering her political team with individuals formerly or later convicted of corruption. [viii] In February 2018, Jorge Barata, an ex-representative of Odebrecht, disclosed key information from illicit meetings between Odebrecht and multiple high-level Peruvian officials, including Toledo, Garcia, Humala, PPK, and… Keiko Fujimori. [ix] According to Barata, each of these five high-ranking officials received illegal campaign finances from Odebrecht. If the accusations against the former presidents are considered credible, then who is not to say that Keiko is indeed culpable of this campaign finance? While Keiko has managed to escape indictment and jail time so far, her political career is rife with controversy and loyalties to shady characters. In light of her career and allegiances, is it a reach to presume that she is everything that Kuczynski and Kenji claim her to be? Conflict within the powerful political clan has contributed to the degradation of honest, transparent governance in Peru. Pedro Pablo Kuczynski played an integral role in this degradation; as this miscreant was no puppet on a string for the Fujimoris. He proved his autonomous decision-making in the Fujivideos and with the questionable history between Westfield Capital and Odebrecht. At the very least, Kuczynski is guilty of a conflict of interest concerning the advisory fees that Odebrecht paid to Westfield, but he is likely guilty of even more. Nonetheless, the Fujimori family has muddied their hands in corruption scandals, some of which have involved Kuczynski. Although this is not solely a Fujimori family issue, they have apparent ties to the corruption epidemic. With little room for ambiguities, Kenji has done much to justify his recent suspension from Congress in the eyes of many congresistas. Also, in the words of Peruvian journalist Enrique Castillo, Kenji faces an uphill battle with winning the favor of the Peruvian people due to the Kenjivideos, a lack of support from his own political party, and a series of unwise political decisions that have marred his reputation thus far. [x] As of June 6, 2018, the Peruvian legislature has suspended Kenji Fujimori from his congressional seat. In the proclamation of his defense, Kenji stated: “We have been victims of a parliamentary dictatorship. We have been victims of Fuerza Popular’s overwhelming majority.” [xi] There is some verisimilitude in Kenji’s address to Congress, considering that Popular Force holds an unwavering majority. Nonetheless, video evidence is ample proof to suspend, and even eject, Kenji from Congress, unless the video was edited as Kuczynski declared on national television. [xii] Even if Kuczynski ’s accusations are true, after more than ten years of dealing with unscrupulous government leaders, the Peruvian people are exhausted and preconditioned to believe accusations of corruption. Recalling the inherent limitations of a unicameral legislature, as shown from the Popular Force’s virtual domination of the legislature, there is some credibility to the claims of Kenji, Kuczynski, and their sympathizers. If Keiko had assumed the presidential office instead of PPK, Popular Force would have complete hegemony over the executive and legislative office, leaving little room for effective protest and no checks and balances at all. Looking Ahead: In the current political environment, can Martín Vizcarra lead La República de Perú to success? After such a turbulent year in Peruvian politics, President Martín Vizcarra must assert his policy goals and demonstrate a high moral capacity so that he can bolster the democratic institutions of the Peruvian presidential office. Vizcarra does not fit the archetype of former presidents; he is an engineer and former governor from the Moquegua region, and never aspired to hold this office. While serving as Ambassador to Canada, Vizcarra even went as far as to say that “his [former] role as first vice president was ‘more about protocol than about executive action.’” [xiii] In addition to his maverick outlook on elitist politics, Vizcarra is currently serving as president without any party affiliation. This peculiarity has three possible outcomes: either Vizcarra’s reluctance to affiliate himself with a party will overcome the looming Popular Force and Keiko; the Popular Force will bully Vizcarra into submitting to the will of their party and policies; or, more likely, Vizcarra will merely encounter roadblock after roadblock in Congress, such as in the case of PPK. Kenji’s suspension from Congress makes him unlikely to be meddlesome in the new presidency; however, that will be subject to change in the future. According to Peruvian analyst Fernando Tuesta, “The drive to ban Fujimori from politics was in fact aimed at keeping him out of that presidential race.” [xiv] It is possible that Kenji’s resignation from the Popular Force in March was caused by his intention to run against Keiko in the upcoming 2021 presidential election. Taking into account Kenji’s history of political tricks, he could try to finagle the 2021 presidency, either directly or indirectly, through Vizcarra. Vizcarra presents an opportunity for the Peruvian government to atone for the sins of some of its former members, and potentially promote a more capable, honest, and transparent government. Vizcarra’s presidency is perhaps the final chance for Keiko to save face for having obstructed government, engaging in reportedly illegal activities, and simply having family connections to suspect characters. Fujimori involvement in politics was make or break for Kuczynski being that Keiko controlled the dominant political party and Kenji was playing political games. Likewise, for Vizcarra, the Fujimoris are likely to influence the direction of Vizcarra’s presidency. If Keiko can put her petty politics aside and stand behind Vizcarra to promote effective government, then his presidency is all the more likely to succeed. It seems likely, however, that the ouster of her opposition — i.e., Kuczynski and Kenji —, and the subsequent consolidation of her party’s power in the legislature was for a specific political end. That is to say, this end consists of Keiko increasing her odds of winning the 2021 presidency and shielding herself from any future efforts from the Peruvian Congress to impeach her on account of corruption. Keiko is running a house of cards, and if she continues, then not only will she fall but also the democratic institutions of the Peruvian government. The future of more honest democratic governance in Peru, unfortunately, rests a great deal on the relationship and actions of Keiko, Vizcarra, and potentially Kenji. Additional editorial support provided by Research Associate Devin Lee, Research Associate Rachel Rosenberg, Extramural Contributor Katherine Lenehan, Extramural Contributor Zoë Abrahm, Senior Research Fellow Cynthia McClintock. COHA is a non-profit organization. We depend on the support of our readers to help us keep our organization strong and independent. Please consider supporting our work with a subscription to our Washington Report on the Hemisphere or by making a donation. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Image: Martín Vizcarra dio indultos a boliviano y holandés, y redujo pena a mexicano. [i] “Peru Political Turmoil: President Martín Vizcarra Sworn in.” BBC News. March 23, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-43523076 [ii] Hollar, Sherman. “Alan García.” Encyclopædia Britannica. June 21, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Alan-Garcia. [iii] “Peru Odebrecht Scandal: President Kuczynski Faces Impeachment.” BBC News. December 15, 2017. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42374771. [v] Cisneros, Luis Jaime. “Peru’s Powerful Fujimori Siblings Head for a Split.” Yahoo! News. May 26, 1970. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://au.news.yahoo.com/perus-powerful-fujimori-siblings-head-split-091040398–spt.html. [vi] Agencia AFP. “Fujivideos O Vladivideos: La Corrupción Como Espectáculo En Perú.” Gestion. March 22, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://gestion.pe/peru/politica/fujivideos-o-vladivideos-corrupcion-espectaculo-peru-229992. [vii] Fujimori, Kenji, Twitter Post, March 1, 2018, 12:58 PM, https://twitter.com/KenjiFujimoriH/status/969315918764535809 [viii] “Keiko Fujimori: Las Denuncias Que El Fujimorismo Quiere Que Olvides.” LaRepublica.pe. October 12, 2015. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://larepublica.pe/politica/434293-keiko-fujimori-las-denuncias-que-cualquier-fujimorista-quiere-que-olvides. [ix] Álvarez, María Isabel. “Jorge Barata: “Me Reuní Unas Cuatro Veces Con Keiko Fujimori”.” LaRepublica.pe. March 17, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://larepublica.pe/politica/1212863-barata-me-reuni-unas-cuatro-veces-con-keiko-fujimori. [x] Fonken, Gustavo Kanashiro. “Kenji Fujimori: Su Futuro Político Tras Su Suspensión [Análisis].” El Comercio. June 07, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://elcomercio.pe/politica/kenji-fujimori-futuro-politico-suspension-analisis-noticia-525712. [xi] “Peru: Congress Suspends Kenji Fujimori Over Corruption Charges.” Noticias | TeleSUR. June 07, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Peru-Congress-Suspends-Kenji-Fujimori-Over-Corruption-Charges-20180607-0012.html. [xii] “Pedro Pablo Kuczynski: Under Fire Peru President Resigns.” BBC News. March 22, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-43492421. [xiii] Rochabrún, Marcelo and Andrea Zarate. “‘We’ve Had Enough,’ Says Peru’s New President.” The New York Times. March 23, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/23/world/americas/peru-kuczynski-vizcarra.html. [xiv] AFP. “Peru Congress Suspends Fujimori but Leaves Him Alive Politically.” Bangkok Post. June 7, 2018. Accessed July 10, 2018. https://www.bangkokpost.com/news/world/1480521/peru-congress-suspends-fujimori-but-leaves-him-alive-politically.
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In all children’s student life, Class is a temporary house from where the students acquire knowledge and make themselves capable for tomorrow’s world, to walk with the world, to do something for the tomorrow’s world’, and In all these, his temporary house means that class plays the duty of his primary house. The classroom is not just a source of education, but along with education, different types of relationships are formed between students in the class, Class teaches students to stay in discipline, in the same way, class is used for different purposes. What is Class The classroom is a special kind of room or hall that is designed for a variety of study purposes. All students’ classrooms are designed, then it can be a class of young children and also of higher class, college, Classrooms are also prepared for the students of University. Coaching centers also have their own designed classrooms in which the knowledge of various subjects is given to the students, the purpose of the class is not just from studies but also the classroom can be used for various purposes such as training purpose, meeting etc. The facilities of the classroom depend on many things which have a direct impact on the fees of the students. Some of the classrooms of the schools and colleges in rural areas are very low furnished which are not used at all in the cities. There are many things such as thatch classroom, cladding classroom, soil, etc. In urban areas, Classrooms are fully furnished with the best quality chairs, tables, fan, light. While most of the classrooms in the rural areas are much weaker, although there is an improvement over time in all things everywhere, in the same way, classrooms of schools in rural areas are also being improved but still, their quality is quite weak. Many times during the rainy season the lights prove to be much more beneficial for the students due to very bad weather because in that season the day becomes very dark even during the day and the presence of light proves helpful. Although the structure of classrooms is only square, but their size can be small or big and it depends on the number of students of that class, Seats are the most important part of the classroom because without seats, the class will be completely empty and there will be no means for the students to sit, different types of seats are used by different types of schools, colleges, mainly used seats are multi seater benches. Single-seater benches are used in many schools and colleges. Such benches have the advantage of maximum in exam time because it makes it very easy for all students to maintain distance. Classroom use for exams Although students are taught in classrooms, on different types of occasions these rooms are used for different purposes such as for exams, at the time of exams the benches of classrooms are adjusted and the exams are prepared. And after the exam is over, it is again converted into a normal classroom and the study continues. In many schools in rural areas, classes are also conducted in the open, this is very common in rural areas, whether it is a private school or government school, and mat (sack, mat) is used for seating, and As far as the board is concerned, the blackboard is present when it is in the classroom, but when the class is run in the open, the support of triple sticks was taken for it and the blackboard was fixed on it. That is, there is a portable blackboard for running classes in the open, however, they are declining over time and now fixed blackboard is used in classrooms by all schools. Once the classroom is ready to be used, continuous use causes a lot of problems in the room, such as the breaking of the tables, the breaking of the wall color, the damage to the floor, it also needs to be repaired from time to time. It is the responsibility of the school, college to get it repaired, otherwise, the classroom will be more damaged. Normally only 1 door is used for homerooms, but in most classrooms multiple (2 doors) is used, which is very important because the single door is not enough for the movement of so many students, multiple doors are very helpful in the untoward situation because the students can in and out easily. Blackboard is an important part of all classrooms because students are taught through the board, different types of instruction are given, the board is present in the front-middle of the classroom so that the board is completely clear to all the students. Arrangement for Boys, Girls In almost all the schools, colleges rooms are part divide and accordingly benches are also arranged on one side for boys arrangement and on the other side for girls while at the time of exams it is mixed In this article you learned What is class and class meaning in english We hope this information will be useful for you.
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Results for the keyword secularism A book filled with Iannis Roder’s experiences, including many portraits of students and stories that tell us a lot about the reality of schools in the banlieues. ‘Laïcité’ has been at the heart of numerous debates in France. The author argues here for a multifaceted, open secularism. Laïcité: a long history of confrontation
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- Born December 9, 1929 in Bordertown South Australia. - A decade later his family moved to Perth, following the death of older brother Neil. - Attended Perth Modern School before studying law at the University of Western Australia. - Almost died in a motorbike accident. - Took up a Rhodes scholarship but was only able to after his fiancee Hazel Masterton had an abortion, as it was only open to single men. - While his research focused on wage determination, he became better known at Oxford for making the Guinness Book of Records for downing two and a half pints of beer in 12 seconds. - After returning to Australia and marrying Hazel, he joined the Australian Council of Trade Unions. - By 1969 he was ACTU president and the nation's best known politician outside parliament. MP TO PM - First attempted to enter parliament in 1963, losing to Liberal Hubert Opperman. - Elected federal president of the Labor Party in 1973, while also ACTU president. - He was prominent in protests in Canberra after the governor-general dismissed the Labor Whitlam government in 1975. - Entered federal parliament at the 1980 election as MP for the Victorian seat of Wills. - Became leader of the Labor Party February 1983, less than a month before the Liberal Fraser government called the election. - Led the ALP to victory and became prime minister with the campaign slogan Bringing Australia Together. ACHIEVEMENTS AS PM - Opened the economy by floating the dollar and deregulating the financial system. - Cut tariffs and reformed the tax system. - Established Medicare in 1984. - Led international efforts to protect Antarctica from mining and to save Tasmania's Franklin Dam. - Increased the old-age pension, doubled public housing funds and the number of childcare places. - Established the Asia-Pacific Economic Corporation. - Campaigned against apartheid in South Africa. DOWNFALL AS PM - In late 1998 Hawke and treasurer Paul Keating signed the Kirribilli House pact, where he promises to hand over to Mr Keating after the 1990 election. - He reneged on the deal. - After one failed attempt, Mr Keating toppled him in December 1991. It was the first time Labor voted out a serving prime minister. - Married Hazel Masterson in Perth in 1956 and they divorced in 1995. - The couple had four children: Susan, Stephen, Roslyn and Robert. - He remarried in 1995 to Blanche d'Alpuget, the author of his 1982 biography. © AAP 2022
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JOHANNESBURG – President Cyril Ramaphosa yesterday announced a bold plan to stimulate employment that will see a partnership between corporations, labour, government and communities unlocking growth. Ramaphosa, who unveiled a R50 billion stimulus package last month, estimated that an additional 275 000 jobs a year were likely to be created annually if the plan was implemented. He told the two-day jobs summit held in Midrand, Johannesburg, that the 275 000 jobs were over and above the jobs that would have been created without these interventions, which was on average about 300 000 a year over the past four years. Ramaphosa said that among the measures contained in the framework agreement signed by business, communities and labour yesterday was the need to mobilise finance on a far greater scale in a bid to build the country’s manufacturing capacity. “The financial sector, as part of its transformation code, will invest R100 billion over five years in black-owned industrial enterprises. The government will work with the financial sector to develop facilities for financing at preferential rates and extended repayment terms,” said Ramaphosa. He also said that, in addition to the government initiatives of R600 million, Agbiz and the Banking Association of South Africa had developed a blended finance model aimed at making additional funds available for beneficiaries. The establishment of a new union-owned clothing factory in the Eastern Cape is also in the pipeline within the next two years. “This innovative and welcome initiative will create around 100 jobs initially and aims to contribute to the re-industrialisation of a province which suffers from widespread poverty and unemployment,” he said. Ramaphosa admitted that the National Development Plan’s target of a six percent unemployment rate by 2030 was impossible unless action was taken. He said that business and the government had agreed to establish rapid response teams of experts to assist businesses in crisis. “There is agreement that all possible alternatives and opportunities need to be explored before retrenchment is considered, including executive salary sacrifices and the forgoing of dividends,” said Ramaphosa. South Africa is facing a jobs bloodbath that has seen increased retrenchments, with the StatsSA quarterly report revealing that employment fell by 69 000 to 9 748 000 in the second quarter of 2018. Around 13 000 of those lost jobs were in the crucial manufacturing sector. The framework agreement is also pushing for a drive in domestic demand. “This means that South African companies, the government and consumers must buy local,” said Ramaphosa, adding that a number of companies including Adcock Ingram, AngloGold Ashanti, Clientele, Coca-Cola SA, Edcon and First Rand had agreed to buy local as part of their operational strategies. He said the jobs summit was not a once-off event, but the first phase of an extensive process in which all partners would work closely together to improve growth and create new jobs.
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The Lightning Network, Bitcoin’s layer 2 scaling solution for fast and cheap bitcoin payments, now houses over 3,000 BTC in its more than 77,000 channels, according to data from TXStats.com. The network’s bitcoin capacity has more than doubled since June when it crossed the 1,500 BTC milestone. Lightning has experienced a dramatic increase in bitcoin capacity and channel numbers due to growing awareness following El Salvador’s adoption of the Bitcoin legal tender laws. Lightning channels have seen almost a threefold increase in BTC holdings since the start of the year. Lightning is a decentralized scaling solution built on top of the Bitcoin blockchain — hence the “layer 2”Or “second-layer” naming — thereby making small and frequent transactions economically viable for users. Lightning Network’s power lies in its ability not only to follow the same rules that Bitcoin transactions but also to make payments fast and cheap. Lightning channels can be created by creating multisignature addresses within the network. The two parties each have a key that allows them to move funds. This scheme allows the two channel users to transact, while also preventing one from stealing funds. Lightning, while there are many improvements, is still a powerful technology that allows Bitcoin to scale. It also debunks the common but flawed arguments of mainstream media. More importantly, Lightning makes it economically viable for human rights activists and citizens of developing countries to transact value daily in the best form of money humanity has ever known — bitcoin.
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The “International Laboratory for Mental Space Research” (ILMSR) was founded in 2003. Its aim is to bring together some recent insights from cognitive linguistics, psychotherapeutic practice and cultural history studies in order to provide: - a sound theoretical underpinning of psychotherapeutic change work, - a deepened understanding of individual, social and cultural phenomena from a sensory-based viewpoint of subjective experience and - innovative models for intervention-oriented change work in the realms of personal development, psychotherapy and socio-cultural processes. Lucas A. C. Derks is a social psychologist living in Nijmegen (Netherlands) who defines his clinical work as field experimentation. He aims to discover patterns in social experience and the mechanisms of unconscious social cognition. From 1993 onwards this resulted in the so-called Social Panorama model: a tool to analyze and change human relationships on the basis of their imagined spatial characteristics. This work is summarized by the formula: Relation = Location. This means that the experienced emotional quality of a relationship is governed by the position in mental space where the image of a person or a group is sensed. Changes are brought about with suggestive NLP-like techniques. The model works for improving social attitudes, dealing with power, intergroup conflicts, intimate relations and issues with self-confidence and identity. Links exist to social cognition theory, hypnotherapy and NLP. For Derks the connection between subjective experience and neurological processes constantly underlies his work. Wolfgang Walker is a clinical psychologist working in Berlin (Germany). He has wide-ranging experience in psychotherapeutic work with psychiatric clients. He develops process-oriented and sensory-based diagnostics models (symptom modelling) that are designed to explain both normal and deviant modes of subjective experience. These diagnostic tools also integrate fundamental insights from developmental psychology, attachment theory and paranormal research. He is engaged in generating advanced methods of sensory-based change work that can be stringently deduced from those models. His goal is to streamline psychotherapeutic practice into a coherent system of sensory-based diagnostics and change work and to expand the scope of NLP-based psychotherapy to severe psychiatric conditions. Walter Otto Oetsch is a professor for economics and cultural history at the Johannes Kepler University of Linz (Austria). He explores the cultural history of basic categories like space, time, object and subject in Western history, ranging from ancient Greece over the Middle Ages up to the present. During those periods these fundamental categories of organizing perception and thought underwent significant changes that also altered the modes of subjective experience of individuals. Three millennia of cultural development have led to profound shifts in the border between what is perceived as the inner and the outer world. Phenomena that were generally regarded as stemming from the outer world (e.g. being possessed by an „outer“ demon) later became collectively understood as something happening within a person (e.g. as a psychodynamic process). Beside these primordial categories of organizing experience, Oetsch also tries to unravel modern concepts in politics and economy. Recently he showed how the concept of “the market“ – falsely understood as an uncontrollable force – has led us into the current economic crisis. Our shared interests are: - We are studying structural patterns of subjective experience on a sensory-based level. - We explore the underlying – usually subconscious – mental processes that govern human perception, thought and emotion. - Deriving from that we, try to enhance our insight into the psychology of individuals and groups as well as into the historical development of cultures. - Our goal is to enhance the concepts and tools that can help to improve the well-being of individuals (e.g. overcoming undesired experiences) and society at large (e.g. getting out of the current economic crisis). Our basic assumption: Nearly all perceptive, cognitive and emotional processes are performed in what we have come to know as mental space. The spatial configuration of generalizing mental representations has a dominant impact on perception, emotion, thought and behavior. Modifying these spatial structures turns out to be the key to profound change. Our most explored examples for that hypothesis are the spatial structures underlying the representation of time, self and social relations. Our mode of collaboration ILMSR research projects are conducted beyond the needs of both the academic world and the commercialized market of trainings. Besides the basic need to earn our living, we choose to cross-fertilize and share our knowledge for the good of mankind. We invite you to join us on our journey!
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Flotation is at the heart of your mineral processing business. Trust it to someone who is committed to achieving the best performance at the lowest cost. Nalco Water offers a diverse portfolio of flotation programs, all of which are developed to overcome flotation process challenges encountered in a variety of metals and mineral operations.POTASH ORE PROCESSING Meeting the needs of an exacting market The production of marketable potash from the basic ore may comprise a series of processes, including crushing and pre-screening, milling, flotation, salt leaching from the flotation concentrate, drying, granulation and refining. Developments in potash processing technology are described. Jul 01, 2008 In froth flotation separation process, the collector molecular design has a crucial effect on potash processing to ensure sustainable production of potassium fertilizer (KCl) that is important to. The primary methods of potash ore processing are flotation (mechanical method) and hot leaching (chemical method). JSC Belaruskali uses both methods Productions Units 1, 2 and 3 process the potash ore by flotation and Production Unit 4 uses the hot leaching method. 201435- Borate mining process, borate processing plant borax for India borate mining. We take stationary jaw crusher, hammer crusher, large scal. flotation process of beneficiation of muriate of potash - . 201328- and a flotation process separated the potassium . Potash,Soda Ash,and Borates Mining and ., potash beneficiation plant, potash. The next step in the process is flotation whereby flotation reagents are added to the mixture of potash, salt and brine. The flotation reagents introduce air bubbles to which the potash can attach and rise to the surface for collection. The correct selection of flotation reagents is critical for successfully maximizing both the amount of potash. This process is carried out in a rotary drum referred to as a process mined potash. Desliming Potash With Rotary Scrubbers. Also in preparation of froth flotation, deslimining potash is often necessary to remove fine clay particles that would otherwise hinder effective flotation. Differance between in flotation process. Froth flotation is a very important mineral concentration process that is used to recover a vast array of different minerals containing valuable commodities such as copper, lead, zinc, nickel, molybdenum, tungsten, silver, gold, phosphate and potash. Potash feldspar single stage hammer crusher 1. Stone Mill Potash Feldspar Mill Manufacturer Low Cost Quartz Potash Feldspar Iron Ore Limestone Stone Powder Ygm90 Raymond Mill Equipment. US 18001-20610 Set. 1 Set High crushing ratio single-stage hammer crusher for lime stone for sale Indonesia. Up to 5 years warranty. Flotation separation of potash feldspar and albite The separation of potash feldspar (orthoclase and microcline) and albite is a challenging issue because they are mostly mixed in feldspar deposits and these minerals have similar chemical structures and similar physical chemistry properties. As a trusted partner with operations in the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, we provide innovative chemical solutions to our customers. Today, Arkema-ArrMaz is leveraging its combined expertise to innovate superior chemical solutions designed to optimize your process performance, production efficiency and product quality. Therefore, the results presented are consistent with the discussion of the bubble particle attachment and detachment under sonication according to the size fraction reported in 3.2.1 Influence of size fraction on potash ore flotation, 3.2.2 Influence of ultrasonic treatment on the flotation of salts from the 0.5–1.0 mm size fraction, 3.2.3. Aug 31, 2020 The C1, C2 and C3 as presented in Fig. 7 are the products thus obtained after such type of stage-wise flotation process. The rougher tailing material is also subjected to cleaning steps to recover the additional desired minerals. A list of commonly used collectors for the potash flotation process is presented in Table 6. Jul 18, 2013 Mechanical flotation tests were carried out using coal and potash samples. Process parameters investigated included slurry solids percentage, impeller rotation speed, binder dosage, etc. Flotation results show that the use of GP reagents significantly enhanced flotation efficiency under different conditions. The flotation of potash ores is carried out in NaCl–KCl saturated brine (6–7 mol L of NaCl and KCl) with the use of long-chain primary amines. Such a high electrolyte concentration changes dramatically the amine Krafft point making the collector insoluble in brine its mode of action entirely differs from that in conventional flotation. We claim 1. An improved potash froth flotation process comprising grinding the potash ore, mixing the ground ore with water to form an ore pulp, aerating the pulp to form a froth and collecting and processing the froth wherein the improvement comprises adding to the ore pulp during said flotation process, but prior to frothing, a water-soluble, high molecular weight, diallyl dialkyl quaternary.
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Trailblazing gallery Tang Contemporary Art ushers the most dynamic exhibitions to the Creative District in Bangkok.Read more Notice: Due to current government regulations, the exhibition will be presented mostly online via their Facebook page (@TangContemporaryArtBangkok). Dip a well-baked ceramic donut into glossy cream made of luster glaze, and decorate it with fancy Swarovski crystals to add a sense of volume. This will result in the unique donut of Jae Yong Kim. Don’t worry about not finding a donut of your taste. Hanging on the walls, a variety of donuts in different shapes, patterns, colors and crystals will be waiting for you, each expressing its distinctive character. Looking at the fully crowded cluster of donuts, it seems as if they are expressing the inner sides of contemporary people, themselves composed of various donuts. Viewers will therefore find single donuts of their tastes from all those hanging. One may find love, and another may find happiness — should they so desire — by looking at the numerous donuts. It is possible to wonder why Kim created so many donuts. It all has to do with the exhibition title: DONUT FEAR, born from the similarity in pronunciation to DO NOT FEAR and encompassing the directivity of Kim’s art activities. Kim is red–green color blind and would often deliberately use dark colors, avoiding vibrancy in his works. He even had to go to the US to study art because it was difficult for him to enter an art college in Korea due to his condition. Kim views each and every donut like an entry in a journal, “In whatever form troubles or opportunities show up in one’s life, his/her body, mind and work should be prepared to seize it. The most important elements in the process are amusing work, empathy and communication.” For Kim, his donuts carry his preparations and aspirations to overcome fear and move forward with a smile and loving heart. Celebrating his special exhibition in Thailand, Kim plans to premiere new yellow donuts that took their motifs from the Leelawadee, a flower that resembles Thailand’s bright colors, and the golden rain tree, Thailand’s national flower. In addition, he also expressed Thailand’s burning passion and climate in his two new works titled Devil Donut is Hot!! and Bubble Donut is Hot! by including fire patterns on cold stainless-steel surfaces. Together with these new works, it is hoped that the exhibition will allow viewers to feel the desires of contemporary people through Kim’s art and his ambition as an artist to move forward from the works themselves.
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ASF to MPEG - Convert video online |#||Output File||Source File||Action| How to convert ASF to MPEG: 1. Click "Choose Files" button to select multiple files on your computer or click the dropdown button to choose online file from URL, Google Drive or Dropbox. The source file can also be audio format. Video and audio file size can be up to 200M. You can use file analyzer to get source video's detailed information such as video codec, duration and bitrate. 2. Set target video format, bitrate, aspect ratio, frame size and frame rate. All audio streams will be removed if "Mute" option is checked. The target video format can be MP4, AVI, FLV, MPG, MKV, WMV, M2TS, WEBM, ASF, MOV, M4V, RM, VOB, OGV or GIF. 3. Click "Convert Now!" button to start batch conversion. It will automatically retry another server if one failed, please be patient while converting. The output files will be listed in the "Conversion Results" section. Click icon to show file QR code or save file to online storage services such as Google Drive or Dropbox. ASF vs MPEG: |Full name||Advanced Systems Format||Motion Picture Experts Group File Interchange Format| |File extension||.asf||.mpg, .mpeg, .mp1, .mp2, .m1v, .mpv| |Developed by||Microsoft||ISO, IEC| |Type of format||Digital container format||Video, container| |Introduction||Advanced Systems Format (formerly Advanced Streaming Format, Active Streaming Format) is Microsoft's proprietary digital audio/digital video container format, especially meant for streaming media. ASF is part of the Media Foundation framework.||MPEG-1 is a standard for lossy compression of video and audio. It is designed to compress VHS-quality raw digital video and CD audio down to 1.5 Mbit/s (26:1 and 6:1 compression ratios respectively) without excessive quality loss, making video CDs, digital cable/satellite TV and digital audio broadcasting (DAB) possible.| |Technical details||The format does not specify how the video or audio should be encoded; it just specifies the structure of the video/audio stream. This is similar to the function performed by the QuickTime, AVI, or Ogg container formats. One of the objectives of ASF was to support playback from digital media servers, HTTP servers, and local storage devices such as hard disk drives.||MPEG-1 Video exploits perceptual compression methods to significantly reduce the data rate required by a video stream. It reduces or completely discards information in certain frequencies and areas of the picture that the human eye has limited ability to fully perceive. It also exploits temporal and spatial redundancy common in video to achieve better data compression than would be possible otherwise.| |Associated programs||Windows Media Player||Windows Media Player, MPlayer, Media Player Classic, VLC Media Player, K-Multimedia Player| |Wikipedia||ASF on Wikipedia||MPEG on Wikipedia|
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President Obama commemorated Memorial Day today at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. After laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unkowns, Obama addressed the assembled to honor the men and women who have given their lives in service of the nation. "On this day, we remember our sacred obligation to those who laid down their lives so we could live ours: to finish the job these men and women started by keeping our promise to those who wear America’s uniform -- to give our troops the resources they need; to keep faith with our veterans and their families, now and always; to never stop searching for those who have gone missing or who are held as prisoners of war," Obama stated. "As we go about our daily lives, we must remember that our countrymen are still serving, still fighting, still putting their lives on the line for all of us. " Watch Obama's address here: Here is the full text of the president's address at Arlington. THE PRESIDENT: Good morning, everybody. I want to thank Secretary Chuck Hagel, not only for the introduction but, Chuck, for your lifetime of service -- from sergeant in the Army to Secretary of Defense, but always a man who carries with you the memory of friends and fallen heroes from Vietnam. We’re grateful to you. I want to thank General Dempsey, Major General Linnington, Kathryn Condon, who has served Arlington with extraordinary dedication and grace and who will be leaving us, but we are so grateful for the work that she’s done; for Chaplain Brainerd, Secretary Shinseki, all our guests. And most of all, to members of our armed services and our veterans; to the families and friends of the fallen who we honor today; to Americans from all across the country who have come to pay your respects: I have to say it is always a great honor to spend this Memorial Day with you at this sacred place where we honor our fallen heroes -- those who we remember fondly in our memories, and those known only to God. Beyond these quiet hills, across that special bridge, is a city of monuments dedicated to visionary leaders and singular moments in the life of our Republic. But it is here, on this hallowed ground, where we choose to build a monument to a constant thread in the American character -- the truth that our nation endures because it has always been home to men and women who are willing to give their all, and lay down their very lives, to preserve and protect this land that we love. That character -- that selflessness -- beats in the hearts of the very first patriots who died for a democracy they had never known and would never see. It lived on in the men and women who fought to hold our union together, and in those who fought to defend it abroad -- from the beaches of Europe to the mountains and jungles of Asia. This year, as we mark the 60th anniversary of the end of fighting in Korea, we offer a special salute to all those who served and gave their lives in the Korean War. And over the last decade, we’ve seen the character of our country again -- in the nearly 7,000 Americans who have made the ultimate sacrifice on battlefields and city streets half a world away. Last Memorial Day, I stood here and spoke about how, for the first time in nine years, Americans were no longer fighting and dying in Iraq. Today, a transition is underway in Afghanistan, and our troops are coming home. Fewer Americans are making the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan, and that’s progress for which we are profoundly grateful. And this time next year, we will mark the final Memorial Day of our war in Afghanistan. And so, as I said last week, America stands at a crossroads. But even as we turn the page on a decade of conflict, even as we look forward, let us never forget, as we gather here today, that our nation is still at war. It should be self-evident. And in generations past, it was. And during World War II, millions of Americans contributed to the war effort -- soldiers like my own grandfather; women like my grandmother, who worked the assembly lines. During the Vietnam War, just about everybody knew somebody -- a brother, a son, a friend -- who served in harm’s way. Today, it’s different. Perhaps it’s a tribute to our remarkable all-volunteer force, made up of men and women who step forward to serve and do so with extraordinary skill and valor. Perhaps it’s a testament to our advanced technologies, which allow smaller numbers of troops to wield greater and greater power. But regardless of the reason, this truth cannot be ignored that today most Americans are not directly touched by war. As a consequence, not all Americans may always see or fully grasp the depth of sacrifice, the profound costs that are made in our name -- right now, as we speak, every day. Our troops and our military families understand this, and they mention to me their concern about whether the country fully appreciates what’s happening. I think about a letter I received from a Naval officer, a reservist who had just returned from a deployment to Afghanistan. And he wrote me, “I’m concerned that our work in Afghanistan is fading from memory.” And he went on to ask that we do more to keep this conflict “alive and focused in the hearts and minds of our own people.” And he’s right. As we gather here today, at this very moment, more than 60,000 of our fellow Americans still serve far from home in Afghanistan. They’re still going out on patrol, still living in spartan forward operating bases, still risking their lives to carry out their mission. And when they give their lives, they are still being laid to rest in cemeteries in the quiet corners across our country, including here in Arlington. Captain Sara Cullen had a smile that could light up a room and a love of country that led her to West Point. And after graduation, Sara became a Black Hawk pilot -- and married a former Black Hawk pilot. She was just 27 years old when she and four other soldiers were killed in a helicopter crash during a training mission near Kandahar. This past April, Sara was laid to rest here, in Section 60. Today, Sara is remembered by her mother, Lynn, who says she is “proud of her daughter’s life, proud of her faith and proud of her service to our country.” (Applause.) Staff Sergeant Frankie Phillips came from a military family and was as tough as they come. A combat medic, Frankie was on patrol in Afghanistan three weeks ago when his vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb. He was so humble that his parents never knew how many lives he had saved until soldiers started showing up at his funeral from thousands of miles away. And last week, Frankie was laid to rest just a few rows over from Sara. Staff Sergeant Eric Christian was a born leader. A member of the Marine Corps Special Operations Command, Eric had served five tours of duty, but kept going back because he felt responsible for his teammates and was determined to finish the mission. On May 4th, Eric gave his life after escorting a high-ranking U.S. official to meet with Afghan leaders. Later, his family got a letter from a Marine who had served two tours with Eric. In it, the Marine wrote, “There were people who measured their success based on how many enemies they killed or how many missions they led to conquer a foe. Eric based his success on how many of his friends he brought home, and he brought home many -- including me.” Eric was laid to rest here at Arlington, just six days ago. So today, we remember their service. Today, just steps from where these brave Americans lie in eternal peace, we declare, as a proud and grateful nation, that their sacrifice will never be forgotten. And just as we honor them, we hold their families close. Because for the parents who lose a child; for the husbands and wives who lose a partner; for the children who lose a parent, every loss is devastating. And for those of us who bear the solemn responsibility of sending these men and women into harm’s way, we know the consequences all too well. I feel it every time I meet a wounded warrior, every time I visit Walter Reed, and every time I grieve with a Gold Star family. And that’s why, on this day, we remember our sacred obligation to those who laid down their lives so we could live ours: to finish the job these men and women started by keeping our promise to those who wear America’s uniform -- to give our troops the resources they need; to keep faith with our veterans and their families, now and always; to never stop searching for those who have gone missing or who are held as prisoners of war. But on a more basic level, every American can do something even simpler. As we go about our daily lives, we must remember that our countrymen are still serving, still fighting, still putting their lives on the line for all of us. Last fall, I received a letter from Candie Averette, of Charlotte, North Carolina. Both of her sons are Marines. Her oldest served two tours in Iraq. Her youngest was in Afghanistan at the time. He was, in her words, “100 percent devoted to his deployment and wouldn’t have had it any other way.” Reading Candie’s letter, it was clear she was extraordinarily proud of the life her boys had chosen. But she also had a request on behalf of all the mothers just like her. She said, “Please don’t forget about my child and every other Marine and soldier over there who proudly choose to defend their country.” A mother’s plea -- please don’t forget. On this Memorial Day, and every day, let us be true and meet that promise. Let it be our task, every single one of us, to honor the strength and the resolve and the love these brave Americans felt for each other and for our country. Let us never forget to always remember and to be worthy of the sacrifice they make in our name. May God bless the fallen and all those who serve. And may God continue to bless the United States of America.
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The muscles of our head and neck control almost all of our everyday activities like, talking, our expressions, chewing, swallowing, movement of our eyes, etc… which is why we must take care of our neck. Here is how to keep your neck pain proof. Let’s first try and figure out why does our neck pain. Frankly speaking it is because of our poor posture that our neck tends to be paining almost every week. Most of us have the habit of checking our phones when we’re free or working on our laptops or desktops with the wrong postures. The most important instruction is to always try and keep our neck straight to avoid pain and pressure on the neck. When we slouch, the shoulder blades that are supposed to stay still slide away from our spine causing on overstretch which weakens the muscles all around our neck causing pain. To fix this problem, you must know how to keep you neck pain proof. - Improve your posture– Like I mentioned earlier, it is very important to keep your posture right, because that is the root cause of your neck and shoulder pains. - Use your devices correctly– Try to keep your devices right in front of your eyes so that you don’t have to bend your neck downwards to look at it. While using a laptop or desktop computer at work make sure that your posture is set right. - Walking– You must try to walk after every 20 minutes to make a good balance for the neck and shoulder without any device around you to distract you. - Exercising– Usually it is better to only get in touch with your doctor or therapists or physicians to exercise for the neck and shoulders, it is really risky to exercise all by yourself without proper guidance and knowledge. These are the best ways how to keep your neck pain proof. Hope this helps. Read More Articles: 1. Yoga for Back Pain. 2. How to relieve stress naturally and quickly. For more updates, do Subscribe to our newsletter and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google+. Disclaimer: This article is solely for informational purposes. Do not self-diagnose or self-medicate, and in all cases consult a certified healthcare professional before using any information presented in the article. The editorial board does not guarantee any results and does not bear any responsibility for any harm that may result from using the information provided in the article.
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QuickBooks App Configuration From Spiffy Stores Knowledge Base QuickBooks (https://quickbooks.intuit.com/au) is an accounting software package developed and marketed by Intuit. QuickBooks products are geared mainly toward small and medium-sized businesses with cloud-based versions that accept business payments, manage and pay bills, and payroll functions. - 1 Installing the App - 2 Logging On - 3 Authenticating with your QuickBooks Account - 4 Confirm QuickBooks Account Access - 5 Setting up Company Data - 6 Initial Configuration - 7 Items and Inventory Management - 8 Manual Exports - 9 Automatic Exports - 10 Limitations - 11 Further Reference Installing the App You can access your installed Apps or install new Apps from the apps tab in your main toolbar. When you log in for the first time, you will need to provide your QuickBooks account credentials. When you install the app for the first time, you will be prompted to approve the permissions that the app is requesting. Authenticating with your QuickBooks Account After approving the permissions that the app requires, you will need to connect to QuickBooks to authorize the installation. This authorization will give the app access to your Company data so that it can import the order data. At this point, you need to enter your QuickBooks: - Email Address or Userid Confirm QuickBooks Account Access Finally, you will need to confirm that you wish to proceed with the access and allow Spiffy Stores to access your company data. Setting up Company Data Once you have successfully authenticated with your QuickBooks account, the app will load the account data it needs from your Company data. The QuickBooks App must be configured before it can be used, in order to map the QuickBooks accounts to the exported data. The Settings page consists of a number of sections. - QuickBooks Accounts - Map QuickBooks Accounts to your store data - Tax Settings - Select correct tax setting for your sales - Customer Export Settings - Choose whether to export customer data - Export Settings - Email Notifications and Automatic Daily Export You should probably ask your Accountant about the account mappings. You may need to add new accounts to QuickBooks, but your Accountant will be able to advise you about this. Similarly, your Accountant will make sure that all of the correct Tax Codes have been defined for you, and will be able to assist you to choose the correct mappings for your store. You can choose to include individual customer data with each order as it is exported to QuickBooks. Alternatively, you can choose to export all orders under a single generic customer if you don't want to include this data in your accounting software. By default, the app will export your paid orders to QuickBooks and create a paid Invoice for the order. Furthermore, an option for posting order data in real-time is also available. If you choose to send order data to QuickBooks immediately, then whenever an order is marked as paid, it is immediately posted to QuickBooks as a Paid Invoice. Finally, if you provide an email address, you can be sent an export summary after each export run. You can also specify that an automatic export will take place every day after midnight to export the previous day's orders. Finally, click Save to save your settings. Items and Inventory Management If an order includes a product that has an SKU recorded, then that SKU will be used to find an associated Product or Service that has a matching SKU. If the Product has Inventory Management feature enabled, then the stock level of the item will be reduced by the amount that has been ordered. In addition, the revenue for each item in the order will be posted to the QuickBooks account associated with the matching Product or Service. If an item does not have an SKU recorded, or the SKU cannot be found, then all items will be matched with a default item, Online Sales. If this item has not been already created in your QuickBooks account, then the item will be created when the app is connected for the first time. Similarly, all revenues associated with Shipping charges will be posted to the default item, Online Shipping. You can choose to manually export all paid orders to QuickBooks by clicking on each of the date fields to select a date range and then click on the Export button. All orders that have been paid within this date range will be selected for export. Test orders will not be exported. Please note that the order will only be exported if the payment date for the order falls within the nominated date range. The date that the order was created is not relevant. The export job may take a short time to complete, and a progress bar is displayed so that you can track the completion of the export job. Once the export job has finished, a link will appear at the bottom that can be used to view the completed status of the export job. Additionally, if you have enabled email notifications, you will be sent a summary of the export job. If you enable the Automatically Export Daily option in your App settings, then an export job will be run every day at some time after midnight in your local time zone. The job will automatically export all paid orders from the date of the last export job up until the day previous to the export job being run. QuickBooks calculates the tax on all taxed items using the net item price as the basis for its calculations. This practice derives from the fact that the software has been built by a US company, and this is standard for US tax calculations which generally add a sales tax to the published prices. For non-US companies, GST and VAT prices are included in the published prices, so the calculated tax is derived from the tax included price. These differences in approach mean that there will inevitably be a rounding error on some invoices. For this reason, you will sometimes find an additional line on the invoice for a rounding error adjustment to make sure that the invoice total and tax match the amounts that the customer has paid. QuickBooks does not have a built-in method of easily dealing with payments from payment processing services where the merchant fee is deducted from each payment before it is deposited into your bank account. When a payment is processed through a payment service such as PayPal or Stripe, for example, the net amount (less merchant fee) is deposited to your PayPal or nominated bank account. If your accounting software can deal with included merchant fees, then this fee can be recorded as part of the payment details, leaving you with a net amount to be reconciled with your Bank statements. Of course, this dramatically decreases the amount of time that you need to spend reconciling all your payments with the corresponding bank deposits. Unfortunately, QuickBooks does not deal with this automatically, so will been to set up some sort of clearing account for your merchant fees, as all payments will be recorded as a gross value, whereas your bank deposits will all be net amounts. Please refer to the QuickBooks documentation or your Accountant for advice on how to deal with Merchant Fees.
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Q. My boyfriend is a businessman making more than $250,000 a year. Despite his success, he takes towels from his health club to use at home, stretches the truth about his employment to his dentist so that insurance will cover his dental claims, watches two or three movies at a theater but pays for only one, has stolen a vase from a public place because he liked it, and on weekends uses the exercise room in the apartment building where he used to live. This dishonesty bothers me and goes against my values. My boyfriend says everybody does this type of thing. His mother is the same way, but his father is not into such “stealing.” This causes me great concern about our future together and has chipped away at the image I had of him. What should I do? A. You should think long and hard about whether you want a man this dishonest as a permanent part of your future. Furthermore, you may find yourself at some point implicated in his dishonesty, possibly with legal consequences. It sounds as though his underhanded behavior is not a one-shot deal. You have observed it on multiple occasions. No doubt there is more of this kind of behavior that isn’t visible to you. Some people have a strict moral compass; others have a lax one. It is difficult to be with a partner whose values are so different from your own. While we don’t know how much of moral development comes from nature and how much from nurture, it’s likely some of both. So it’s not surprising that his mother is like this, too, and has conveyed her loose moral philosophy to him. Once a superego is formed, it takes much work to change it. Therefore, it’s not likely he will change without a serious threat to his well-being — like losing his job or being thrown in jail, with the added insult of his name being published in the local papers. His claim that everybody behaves like him is both untrue and defensive. In some cases, he is not just bending the rules — he is breaking the law. This all leads to several problems for you if you further your involvement with him. You will always wonder whether you can trust him. It’s unlikely he feels any greater moral obligation to you than he does to the rest of the world. He clearly gets a thrill from breaking rules. This could easily extend to involvement with another woman or stealing from you. If you have children, there will be further problems. Will they be taught that only idiots don’t take the so-called five-finger discount? This will only generate further conflict and cause you great pain if your children develop the same corrupt moral character. You might be implicated in his crimes, as well. For example, if he cheats on taxes you file jointly or if he launders money using your bank account, you could be held criminally responsible.If you really feel set on trying to change his behavior, you could start by asking yourself whether you are enabling his shady behavior by looking the other way and giving him feedback that indicates you don’t feel it is all that terribly wrong. Still, I wouldn’t have high hopes for changing him. The fact that your boyfriend doesn’t have financial problems is a real red flag. This man is not taking things he desperately needs or stealing food to feed starving children. He gets a thrill from flouting authority and pulling the wool over other people’s eyes, seemingly for very little reason. Who even wants to sit through three movies in a row? It seems he is doing these things because he can. This is a man who gets his kicks from taking things that are not his. People like this often insist things go their way and have no empathy for others. You should reflect on whether he is truly a good boyfriend, or if you are taken in by the fact that he is a charming and manipulative type who does things only when they suit his interest. The fact you are even asking about his behavior shows you are willing to examine his flaws. If this behavior sits badly with you now, it will almost certainly get worse down the line. Dr. Gail’s Bottom Line: If you are bothered by indications that your partner’s moral compass is askew, think twice before getting further involved. Dr. Gail Saltz is a psychiatrist with New York Presbyterian Hospital and a regular contributor to TODAY. Her latest book is “Anatomy of a Secret Life: The Psychology of Living a Lie,” by Dr. Gail Saltz. She is also the author of “Amazing You! Getting Smart About Your Private Parts,” which helps parents deal with preschoolers’ questions about sex and reproduction. Her first book, “Becoming Real: Overcoming the Stories We Tell Ourselves That Hold Us Back,” was published in 2004 by Riverhead Books. It is now available in a paperback version. For more information, you can visit her Web site, .
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Sossusvlei Safari Guide Star dunes with up to five crests rise 300m into the air and rank among the biggest in the world; the dune valleys are marked by vast clay pans where the Tsauchab River gave up its fight to reach the seam more than 60,000 years ago. Besides the dunes and pans of Sossusvlei and Sesriem Canyon, a sideshow of activities and sights has developed around the region and there are plenty of game lodges that provide additional desert-adapted activities. Sossusvlei is one of four pans in among the towering dunes, the others being Dead Vlei - so named because of the petrified camel thorn trees that survived for a few hundred years after the dunes blocked the river; !Nara Vlei - which has a number of endemic !Nara bushes eking an existence from the scarce water that occasionally makes it down from the Naukluft Mountains; and Hidden Vlei which is a barren amphitheatre some distance beyond Dead vlei. To protect the fragile wilderness, only day trips are allowed into Sossusvlei. You can drive the 60km road lined with enormous iron-oxide dunes, precious gemsbok and gnarled acacia to within a few km of the pans and dunes in a 2WD. If you don't fancy the extra hike you can get to within a short walk from the pans in a 4x4 and some judicious sand-track manoeuvres; or you can use the shuttle service. Beat the haze and the people by getting there at sunrise when the dunes are burnt sienna and the sky is almost too blue for your polariser. Give yourself an hour at sunset to climb Elim Dune, which is about 5km from Sesriem and you'll probably want to stop and get some postcard shots along the way. Sesriem Canyon is a narrow gorge 30m deep that is evidence of shallow seas and wet periods of days gone by with layers of round eroded pebbles embedded in the calcrete strata. The canyon is usually filled with pools of water good for a refreshing dip after the exhausting dunes. Ballooning over the Great Sand Sea gives an excellent perspective of the expanse of dunes and the total silence - between flame-blasts - lends an eerie touch to this exhilarating experience. Sossusvlei brings out the creative photographer in everyone - provided you beat the mid-day haze. Surreal shapes, colours, textures and landscapes are accentuated by the ancient trees and desert-adapted wildlife like gemsbok, springbok and ostrich. The place where time stands still Scratch the surface of the the world's oldest desert and you may find little more than an endless expanse of parched plains and dunes with a few dry river beds and rocky mountain ranges cutting up the horizon. Delve into the details of this 15-million-year-old wilderness area and you will find a fascinating world of plants, insects, animals and birds that have adapted and thrive in the only true desert biome in southern Africa. At just under 50,000sq km, the Namib-Naukluft Park is one of the largest conservancies in Africa. The park is an amalgamation of several reserves and the landscape and habitats change dramatically from north to south and east to west. Sossusvlei and Sesriem Canyon are synonymous with the park but there's a lot more to see and do that rewards a slow meander from one end to the other. The Namib Desert supports a total of 650 plant species - a quarter of all Namibian flora - and a tenth of these are endemic to the desert. The welwitschia is an ancient tree that is a family, genus and species combined. Discover beetles with drain pipes, dancing lizards with double tanks, burrowing geckos, desert adders, pure-bred wild ostriches, water-carrying Namaqua sand grouse and meditating moles. Namib specials include Barlow's lark, Benguela long-billed lark, Damara tern, Dune lark, Gray's lark and Rüppell's korhaan. Mammals in the park include Hartmann's mountain zebra, gemsbok, klipspringer, duiker, steenbok, leopard, baboon, black-backed jackal, bat-eared fox, African wild cat, caracal and aardwolf. All have adapted to the desert conditions. The NamibRand in the south is one of the largest private reserves in Africa. Stretching south-west from Sesriem towards Betta the park covers 2,100sq km of desert dunes, vegetated valleys, vast plains and towering mountains. Sossusvlei and Sesriem Canyon are the focal point of the park and there are many lodges and camping options in the area. The 60km drive into Sossusvlei from Sesriem takes you through towering dunes and grassy plains and ends on the edge of the Great Sand Sea with spectacular scenery and some of the world's tallest dunes. Pros & Cons Stunning desert scenery including red dunes at Sossusvlei Encounters with desert-adapted wildlife in a pristine setting Good walking options in the Naukluft mountains Very hot and dry Low animal densities and little variety Wildlife & Animals Namib-Naukluft is not really a wildlife destination. Visitors come here to see the desert environment. There are a variety of creatures present, although not all of them are easily seen. Oryx and springbok are most conspicuous; these desert-adapted antelope even inhabit the driest areas of the park. Closer to the rivers you can find klipspringer, steenbok and troops of desert-adapted baboons. The Naukluft Mountains is a less visited section of the park. This area is more lush and home to additional species including the endemic Hartmann's mountain zebra. Smaller creatures include meerkat, yellow mongoose and Cape ground squirrel. Both spotted and brown hyena are present and you might well come across their distinctive white droppings. Namib-Naukluft NP is a great birding destination with over 200 species recorded. The popular area of Sossusvlei is extremely dry and although there are some interesting species to be found, such as the dune lark, this is not a prime birding area. For excellent birding, head for the Naukluft Mountains where more species are present and easier to spot. Sandwich lagoon on the coast is great for Palearctic waders in the Wet season. Migrants are present from November to April. Best Time to Visit The Namib-Naukluft is one of Africa’s largest parks. It is home to the Sossusvlei area – an ocean of enormous red dunes and one of Namibia's main tourist attractions.The best time to visit Sossusvlei is autumn from March until May or spring from August to October. The cool air offers clearer skies and ideal photography conditions and temperatures are milder both day and night. While autumn and spring may be the best times to visit Sossusvlei, the difference between the seasons in the Namib Desert is less pronounced than in the rest of the region. The area receives almost no rainfall for a start, the days are always clear and dry and the desert scenery, wildlife and activities retain their appeal all year round. With less dramatic seasonal changes, the decision of when to visit Sossusvlei is often settled by deciding what else you want to do in Namibia or southern Africa. If you want to combine your Sossusvlei holiday with a safari in Etosha for example, you can safely choose the best time to visit Etosha and still get the most out of your Sossusveli holiday. The trick to making the most of Sossusvlei regardless of season is an early morning. Rising early to get to the dunes gives you the clearest light, fewer visitors and the rest of the day to relax or enjoy other activities in the Namib like walking, nature drives, scenic sundowner outings or hot air ballooning. If the desert has had rain the year you visit and Sossusvlei is your priority for your Namibia tour, then March and April are the best months. Even a brief spell of rain can transform the desert from a multitude of browns to a multitude of browns and greens. The result is something really spectacular. While rain is unlikely to affect your Sossusvlei and Namib Desert experience, high temperatures in summer and hot dusty winds in winter might. May to October – Dry Season It is less hot in the middle of the day (except for October) Best time for hiking in the Naukluft Mountains Sossusvlei area gets quite busy at times It is cold in the early morning It is very dry and dusty and the sky can be hazy November to April – Wet Season The rain comes as a relief after a long dry period Flowers brighten the desert scenery and the views tend to be clearer after rain Excellent time for birding with migratory birds present It tends to be oppressively hot Occasional flash floods can restrict access to some areas If visiting both Namib-Naukluft and Etosha; wildlife viewing in Etosha isn't as productive Weather & Climate Namib-Naukluft has a hot and extremely dry climate with very little rainfall. Temperatures can peak well above 38°C/100°F during summer (November to April), but nights can drop below freezing point in winter (October to April). The altitude in the park varies widely; Sossusvlei is located at a low altitude and temperatures get very hot. The higher altitudes are mostly in the Naukluft Mountains section where it tends to be a bit cooler. Dry Season – May to October These are the coolest months bringing relief from the oppressive heat at other times of the year. There is almost no rain at all and it gets drier as the winter progresses. May, June, July & August – It is sunny and totally dry. These are the coolest months and the average afternoon temperature is 23°C/73°F. Areas at lower altitude (such as Sossusvlei) can be substantially hotter. It is cold in the early morning, with temperatures of around 9°C/48°F. September & October – It is still dry and sunny. This is the end of winter and temperatures increase to an average of 25°C/77°F, but can reach a peak of 38°C/100°F and above in low-altitude areas. Early mornings are less cold, at around 11°C/52°F. Wet Season – November to April The summer months are hot. Although daytime temperatures average 27°C/81°F, they frequently rise to 38°C/100°F and above in low-altitude areas of the park, including Sossusvlei. Early mornings average around 14°C/57°F. Summer corresponds with the Wet season, but rainfall is low. November & December – It is very dry. When the first rain falls, it comes as a relief after a long dry winter. Afternoon temperatures are around 27°C/81°F. Areas at lower altitude (such as Sossusvlei) will be substantially hotter. January, February & March – The only months with regular rain. It is still mostly dry and sunny. People need to be careful for flash floods in dry riverbeds during occasional storms. It usually cools down after rain and average daytime temperatures are around 28°C/82°F. April – Rain decreases rapidly in April; there are less and less days with precipitation. The weather cools with average temperatures around 26°C/79°F. Namib-Naukluft National Park consists of different sections with different entry points. The park can be visited on an organized tour or independently, on a self-drive safari. The main routes to and within the park are open to normal 2WD cars. Permits are required for minor roads and a 4x4 vehicle is recommended. Most people who visit the park come to see the Sossusvlei area, which is located about 360km/223mi from Windhoek by car and accessed through the Sesriem entry point. The main point of entry into Namibia is Hosea Kutako International Airport (WDH) located 40km/25mi east of Windhoek. Both self-drive visitors and people who’ve booked an organized safari will usually start their trip by 4x4 in Windhoek.
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American Ethnic Studies About Our Program The United States, California and the Santa Barbara area have a great variety of peoples of different ethnic, racial and cultural backgrounds. All of these groups make up the American mosaic. The American Ethnic Studies Department examines the heritage, contributions and problems of these communities. Current emphasis is placed on the Asian-American, African-American, Mexican-American, Native American and other communities of color. It is the department’s belief that, through an examination of the heritage of others, one can appreciate one’s own heritage. Degrees in Ethnic Studies can be for social work, community agency work, teaching, etc. The department is committed to providing students the knowledge, personal attributes and skills to successfully live and work in a diverse world. As a result, students are prepared to operate competently, confidently and comfortably within a multicultural setting and with the tools to adapt to a rapidly changing multicultural environment. The department also offers courses which fulfill the Multicultural/Gender Equity requirement and General Education requirements in the Social Sciences and Humanities. Program Student Learning Outcomes 1. Analyze the role of the state in maintaining social inequality through institutions.2. Explain how race, class and gender roles create and sustain society within institutions.3. Explain how social forces influence the life experience of individuals.4. Explain the major theoretical perspectives in American Ethnic Studies. - Black Studies — Associate in Arts - Chicano Studies — Associate in Arts - Ethnic Studies — Associate in Arts - Native American Studies — Associate in Arts In these studies students will critically examines the interlocking forces of race, gender, class, sexuality, and other forms of social differentiation that shape the histories and experiences of marginalized groups. Career choices for all four of these degrees include the areas of teaching, prelaw, law, community services, cultural arts, museums and local, state and federal governmental agencies. Division: Social Sciences Division Dean: Dr. Priscilla Mora, (BC-217, ext. 2354) Department Assistant: Sarianna Fry (BC 217, ext. 2354) Faculty & Offices - Chair: Dr. Thomas Carrasco, Chair (IDC-361, ext. 4350) - Prof. Craig M. Cook, (IDC-357 ext. 4742) - Dina Castillo, (H-309, ext. 2408) - Magdalena Torres, (ECOC Building 1, Room 7, 730-4003) - Tina Foss, (A217, ext. 2724) - Dr. Jamece Brown, (ext. 3960) - Dr. David Malvinni, (ECC 23 Room 1, ext. 2495) - Melinda Gandara firstname.lastname@example.org - Ambi Harsha email@example.com - John Eggler, Professor Emeritus - Dr. Dan Moreno, Professor Emeritus - Manuel Unzueta, Emeritus What Can I Do with a Degree in American Ethnic Studies or Related Field (Asian American, Black, Chicano/a, Native American Studies)? When choosing a major, you should think about your interests, passion and strengths. Many students declare an Ethnic Studies major because they care about social justice, want to be able to talk knowledgeably about the experiences, contributions and histories of communities of color, and wish to learn how to work effectively for racial, gender, economic and environmental justice. You should also think about how your degree will prepare you for life after SBCC. In a liberal arts context, most majors do not translate directly into a specific career path. Rather they impart marketable skills that are important in a range of career paths and graduate programs. An Ethnic Studies degree will equip you with the following transferable skills: strong written and oral communication skills, critical thinking and analysis, knowledge about human behavior and institutions, cultural competency, ability to work effectively with diverse populations, capacity to analyze racial impacts of law and public policy, excellent research skills, team-building and group-centered leadership skills. Students who graduate with a degree in Ethnic Studies often obtain employment in the fields of city and urban planning, communications, community arts, community development, education policy, environmental justice, film, media and artistic performance, human resources, immigrant rights advocacy, K-12 and higher education, journalism, legal advocacy, marketing, museum curating, non-profit management, public health, policy analysis, union organizing and youth work. In addition, a degree in Ethnic Studies provides excellent preparation for a graduate professional degree in business and non-profit administration, teacher education, law, medicine, public health and other health professions, public policy and social work. How Does Ethnic Studies Relate to other Fields of Study? As a major spanning the social sciences and humanities, Ethnic Studies prepares students for graduate study in a range of disciplines. There are a number of minors that are excellent complements for a major in Ethnic Studies. Sociology, family studies, political science, history, communications, women studies, and anthropology are some of the more popular minors chosen by our majors. A combination of any of these fields with Ethnic Studies provides strong preparation for graduate or professional programs in Law, Sociology, Criminal Justice, Ethnic Studies, Education, and Cultural Studies. Students in other colleges, notably Business, Agriculture, Home Economics and Education are increasingly finding the field of Ethnic Studies an exciting complement to their primary concentration and declaring minors or second majors in Ethnic Studies or related fields. 2014 Outstanding Student Awards recipients Alex Cala (Black Studies), Aysha Reyes (Asian Studies), Maria (Chican@ Studies) and Jacqueline Olympius (Ethnic Studies) Ethnic Studies Club In order to promote a more unified society of peoples living together in harmony and with appreciation and acceptance of the people’s cultures, we unite to bridge the gaps that exist in our neighborhoods, our schools, our cities, our states and our countries. We are hereby committed to practicing and advocating cultural, ethnical, racial and sexual equality and justice by supporting all efforts, programs and means by which the theme of harmony may be promoted with the goal of living peacefully side-by-side with all peoples of our world. Students in the Club help organize a variety of activities that showcase and celebrate the contributions of people of color, including Latina/o Heritage Month; Native American Heritage Month; Black History Month; in addition to many other events to bring awareness to the students, college and community we serve. It is the Club's belief that, through an examination of the heritage and contributions of the heritage of others, one can appreciate one’s own heritage. For more information please email Craig M. Cook, Advisor, Ethnic Studies Club firstname.lastname@example.org Find us on Facebook The National Association for Ethnic Studies was founded in 1972. It provides an interdisciplinary forum for scholars and activists concerned with the national and international dimensions of ethnicity. The Association welcomes scholars and teachers at all educational levels, students, libraries, civic and governmental organizations, and all persons interested in ethnicity, ethnic groups, intergroup relations, and the cultural life of ethnic minorities. As a non-profit corporation, NAES provides a vehicle for interested members and donors to promote responsible scholarship and advocacy in the diverse fields of enquiry which constitute ethnic studies.
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Publication Date: September 01, 1988 Managers in companies selling multiple products are making strategic decisions about pricing and product mix with distorted cost information, detecting the problem only after their competitiveness and profitability have deteriorated. An alternative is activity-based costing. Virtually all of a company's activities exist to support the production and delivery of today's goods and services. Companies need not scrap their official cost systems to use activity-based methods. The two can exist simultaneously.
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Do you ever find yourself having a conversation with someone, and when you leave you find you have been completely misunderstood? Or maybe you left the conversation only to find you really don’t know what just happened? It’s not only what you say, but how you say it that can help get your message across, or cause it to fall flat leading to disagreement, disengagement, and misunderstanding. Tips to Enhance Your Communication Style: Use the Right Words Word choice is important to communicate clearly and keep the conversation from becoming inflamed. Think about the words you use when communicating. Do you use wishy-washy words like “maybe” that can be misinterpreted. For example, when you say “maybe” the listener may hear “yes” or “no” instead of “maybe.” So, be very clear and direct in your communication. Think about the word “you.” Have you been involved in a disagreement or heated discussion and someone used the word “you,” and it felt as if they were pointing a finger and blaming you? Replace the word “you” with words that focus on the issue or problem. Pay Attention to Your Vocal Tone It’s not “what she said” but “how she said it.” You say good morning to a coworker, and they mumble back good morning in what you interpret as a mad tone. Or your coworker places an inordinate emphasis on a particular word (think back to the tip about the word “you”)? Have you ever been involved in that conversation? Now think about yourself. Are there times when your tone gets in the way of your message? Look and Listen, Really Listen When talking with someone, focus on the person you’re talking with and not the things going on around you. Show you’re paying attention by looking at them and repeating back what you hear. Remember to flip it, ask the person you’re talking with to repeat back what they hear. This minimizes misunderstandings and allows for instant clarification if something is misinterpreted. Watch Your Body Language Pay attention to your body language while interacting with people. Rolling your eyes, fiddling with your hair or fingertips, and checking your phone are signs you are disinterested. Remember, your actions speak louder than words. Incorporate these tips into your daily routine and you’ll be on your way to improving your communication with others. Check your online library for help in communication with courses such as: - Search and add to my training: Applications of Nonverbal Communication - Search and add to my training: Active Learning Techniques
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Call for action29 December 2020 Appointed director-general of Airports Council International – World in June 2020, Luis Felipe de Oliveira couldn’t be said to have had a honeymoon period in the job, getting to grips with running the industry’s pre-eminent trade body at a time when hardly any aircraft were in the sky. Six months on, Greg Noone talks to Oliveira about what key steps need to be taken by both national governments and operators to restore passenger confidence in air travel. It was all going so well. According to a recent study by Airports Council International (ACI), the number of passengers travelling by air exceeded 9.1 billion at the end of 2019, 3.5% more than the previous year. And the wealth was being shared. While Europe and North America saw the number of passengers passing through their airports soar, this increase paled in comparison to that of developing countries. In Latin America, the number of travellers flying by air shot up by over 4%; in Africa, meanwhile, it was 6%. What happened next will be a familiar story. The outbreak of Covid-19 in China in December 2019, and its subsequent spread along international flight paths to Europe and the rest of the world in the following months, led governments around the world to impose stringent travel restrictions. Air traffic plummeted. That same study from ACI reveals that in the first half of 2020, airport passenger numbers dropped by an estimated 58.4% compared with the previous year, with overall aircraft movements cut by 41.6%. In a matter of months, the airlines and airports industry had become a shadow of its former self, drained of its vitality and effectively dependent on the charity of national governments for its survival. In Europe and North America, generous state subsidies have succeeded in holding up the basic corporate framework of the industry. Even so, with travel restrictions still in force across much of the world, this support has failed to prevent many job losses – with significant pain yet to come. According to a recent report by the Air Transport Action Group, 46 million jobs supported by aviation could eventually be lost as a result of the pandemic. Although it is increasingly likely that the international roll-out of a workable Covid-19 vaccine will begin to take place by early 2021, Luis Felipe de Oliveira is under no illusion that the airports industry will easily bounce back from the events of this year. Appointed in June as ACI World’s new director-general, Oliveira is a veteran of the cargo business, having previously served as chief executive of the Latin American and Caribbean Air Transport Association, in addition to roles with the International Air Transport Association (IATA) and Shell. According to this consummate industry insider, what the airports industry needs is stalwart support from outside stakeholders – first and foremost, national governments. This, he says, had been sorely lacking in the previous months. “We are not receiving any support, except from certain specific countries,” says Oliveira. “We lost around 60% of the passengers in our terminals and we are set to lose around $1.4bn this year.” In November, news emerged that several workable vaccines had been tested, with large-scale immunisation programmes planned for early next year and into spring. Although Oliveira believes that this will ultimately lead to a wholesale recovery of the airports industry, the damage done during the pandemic means that any return to normality won’t be easy. “We are now expecting the recovery in 2023,” he says – a prediction that heavily relies on state-sponsored travel restrictions easing in relatively short order. “Tough times are ahead.” Raining on the parade Founded in 1991 as the effective voice of the sector, the ACI aspires to foster cooperation between its member airports, and represents their interests in the halls of national governments and international organisations. As such, Oliveira’s appointment as director-general in June 2020 put him in an unenviable position as one of the few figures in the industry not only capable of formulating a strategy for its recovery, but also with a big enough bully pulpit to ensure that his ideas were heard. “We will always be an airport association focused on delivering advocacy, products and services to our members,” says Oliveira. “However, I truly believe that we could be much more than that – we can lead the whole industry in certain areas. Why am I saying this? Because 60% of the jobs in the aviation industry are linked [to] airports.” As such, he believes that his job is one of the most important collaborative roles in global aviation – albeit one that has changed markedly in recent months. Like so many others around the world, Oliveira was suddenly forced to work from home. A self-described ‘people person’, he naturally chafed against the restrictions, and found the learning curve for the job steeper as he was forced to manage the airport industry’s leading advocacy group almost exclusively through video calls. Oliveira was also required to travel back and forth a number of times to Switzerland for business and personal reasons. By the time Future Airport first spoke with him in September, Oliveira estimated he’d spent half his time on the job in some form of travel-related quarantine. “I realised that, for people who are travelling around the world, it’s not acceptable and not useful to have the quarantines,” he says. This goes beyond the living situation of one man and his family. Oliveira firmly believes that the need to stop the spread of Covid-19 across international travel routes ultimately has to be balanced against the interests of a once-vibrant economic ecosystem supported by aviation that has now been brought to a standstill. From pilots and ground crew, to aircraft part suppliers and hotel staff, millions of jobs around the world are now in the balance. With a more nuanced approach and the right application of technology, Oliveira is hopeful that some semblance of normality can be restored to the sector. Jobs supported by aviation could eventually be lost as a result of the pandemic. Airports signed up to ACI’s Airport Health Accreditation initiative so far. What’s standing in the way, however, is a patchwork of ever-changing border restrictions and quarantine regimes across multiple countries, which make air travel too unpredictable and costly for the average passenger. “We still have airports in lockdown and we still have countries that are in lockdown,” says Oliveira. “We’re still [seeing] a lot of restrictions on travel, and unfortunately we see a lot of governments taking tough decisions, but in certain ways, these decisions are not based on medical evidence.” Oliveira singles out the UK’s approach for criticism. The country maintains a list of nations from which travellers do not have to self-isolate for two weeks upon their return, based on their percentage of Covid-19 cases. Shortly before our first conversation in September, its government had taken Portugal – a popular destination for UK holidaymakers – off that list of countries, just weeks after it was deemed safe to visit. Notice of the decision was given just days in advance, forcing thousands of people to rush home earlier than expected to avoid mandatory quarantine. “Putting countries on a blacklist and taking them out of a blacklist is not really a very efficient [way] to allow people to travel with confidence,” says Oliveira. Bridge to prosperity Any recovery for the travel sector, ACI’s directorgeneral argues, will have to be underpinned by a grand spirit of collaboration between airports, nation states and international organisations. It isn’t good enough, Oliveira says, for countries to continue unilaterally imposing strict controls on movement. And now that several workable vaccines have been discovered, nations around the world have a rare opportunity to work together and restore passenger confidence in travelling by air. “A consistent approach to testing should be implemented now to promote travel and do away with restrictive quarantine measures,” Oliveira argues – one that utilises a multilateral, risk-based approach to combining testing and vaccination. “Tests and vaccines together will play a key role in the industry’s recovery, providing passengers with a safe travel environment and foster[ing] confidence in air travel.” This is not to say that any vaccine will serve as a panacea for the industry’s woes. Far from it. “2021, in my personal view, will be the difficult year,” says Oliveira. “Airlines, airports, we won’t have enough cash to continue the high expenditure that we have seen this year, as we wait for the final decision from governments and for the [conditions] on how they open their borders.” Patently, says Oliveira, the airports industry cannot afford to wait for several months for largescale immunisation programmes to begin. To build a solid foundation for its recovery, the sector has to take action now to boost passenger confidence. He believes that should start with the harmonisation of airport procedures on Covid-19. ACI has been busy championing several initiatives aimed at promoting greater inter-airport alignment, starting with its Airport Health Accreditation programme. The scheme, which builds on existing recommendations from the trade body and the International Civil Aviation Organisation, aims to monitor the compliance of operators with established rules on hygiene and social distancing. So far, 146 airports have been accredited. ACI has also been lobbying hard for the harmonisation of Covid-19 testing regimes within airports themselves. “We are working very hard with ICAO and with IATA, discussing the protocols,” explains Oliveira. Not all the initiatives ACI have been championing have been specific to Covid-19. Oliveira also recognises the need for airports to use the opportunity afforded by low passenger numbers to strengthen the fundamentals of their operations for when the industry returns to normal. In November, ACI World called for an international harmonisation in slot allocation rules as the traffic numbers begin their slow recovery in 2021. A resolution passed by the organisation’s World Annual General Assembly also called for the industry to become carbon neutral by the middle of this century, in addition to implementing sophisticated risk mitigation plans to shield critical infrastructure from the effects of climate change. Measures such as these, Oliveira hopes, will leave a positive legacy from a terrible year. Gradually, the visual manifestations of the industry’s caution – social distancing, mask wearing – will fade away as the majority of the world’s population are inoculated against Covid-19. Even so, ACI’s director-general believes that the sector’s renewed embrace of harmonised practices will remain – and provide a stronger defence against the next emergency it faces. “In certain ways,” says Oliveira, “I believe that we are more prepared now than we were before.”
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A Flash of art, Action photographers in Rome 1953-1973 A Flash of Art is a group exhibition featuring a rare selection of vintage prints illustrating the original chases, brawls, betrayals and scandals of la Dolce Vita in Rome, Italy, a time when photographers such a Tazio Secchiaroli, Marcello Geppetti, Pierluigi Pratulon, Velio Cioni, Lino Nanni, Elio Sorci, would direct their shameless cameras at international jet-set stars, such as Brigitte Bardot, Sophia Loren, Aristotele Onassis, Omar Sharif, Anita Ekberg, Gina Lollobrigida, Liz Taylor, Richard Burton, Federico Fellini, Marcello Mastroianni, John Wayne, Claudia Cardinale and many more. The exhibition is made of more than 300 original vintage prints originally coming from about 30 photographers’ archives or their estates. The show A Flash of Art – Action Photography in Rome 1953-1973, is curated by Achille Bonito Oliva and features other critical apparatus such as original audio interviews with photographers, a video project realized in collaboration with Istituto Luce Cinecittà and video installations within the exhibition space by Alessandro Amaducci. Photology has been travelling this show for the first time in 2003 to the Moscow House of Photography and in 2004 to Palazzo Venezia in Rome. The catalogue A Flash Of Art – Action Photography in Rome 1953-1973, published in 2004, contains extensive texts by Bonito Oliva and Davide Faccioli.
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Reasons for women's underrepresentation in math-heavy science careers other than a lack of mathematical ability were uncovered by a study conducted by Cornell University researchers. The study identifies a preference for less math-intensive science fields or the need for the flexibility to raise children as underlying factors, according to lead author Stephen J. Ceci. "Many women choose to have children, and the timing of childrearing coincides with the most demanding periods of their career, such as trying to get tenure or working exorbitant hours to get promoted," he says. Women currently constitute about 50 percent of medical school classes, but the study authors note that women who enter academic medicine have less chance than men of being promoted or serving in leadership positions. "Even though institutional barriers and discrimination exist, these influences still cannot explain why women are not entering or staying in [science, technology, engineering, and math] careers," Ceci says. "The evidence did not show that removal of these barriers would equalize the sexes in these fields, especially given that women's career preferences and lifestyle choices tilt them towards other careers such as medicine and biology over mathematics, computer science, physics, and engineering." Ceci says that if math skill was solely a function of gender, then about twice as many women would be in math-intensive careers than there are now. A number of studies indicated that although women are well represented in less math-intensive fields, they are still underrepresented in the top positions of these fields, with the researchers finding that they are either not on tenure track, drop off tenure track, or choose part-time posts until their children get older. From American Psychological Association View Full Article No entries found
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Canada: Potential opportunities for individual taxpayers for 2020 Canada: Potential opportunities, individual taxpayers Individual taxpayers need to consider their tax position as 2020 draws to a close, and in particular to evaluate important tax issues, deadlines, and planning opportunities for 2020. - The government did not release a federal budget in 2020 due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, but is expected to issue an economic statement on 30 November 2020 that could contain tax measures. - The government announced many emergency COVID-19 support measures in 2020, some of which may affect a person’s tax liability for 2020. - The government has signaled that it intends to identify additional ways to tax “extreme wealth inequality” such as finalizing changes to limit the stock option deduction for high-income individuals. It is not yet known whether these measures may be included in the fall economic statement expected 30 November 2020. Read a November 2020 report [PDF 465 KB] prepared by the KPMG member firm in Canada (an appendix outlines the 2020 top marginal income tax rates for individuals in each province) © 2022 KPMG LLP, a Delaware limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG global organization of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Limited, a private English company limited by guarantee. All rights reserved. For more detail about the structure of the KPMG global organization please visit https://home.kpmg/governance. The KPMG name and logo are trademarks used under license by the independent member firms of the KPMG global organization. KPMG International Limited is a private English company limited by guarantee and does not provide services to clients. No member firm has any authority to obligate or bind KPMG International or any other member firm vis-à-vis third parties, nor does KPMG International have any such authority to obligate or bind any member firm. The information contained herein is of a general nature and is not intended to address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Although we endeavor to provide accurate and timely information, there can be no guarantee that such information is accurate as of the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future. No one should act on such information without appropriate professional advice after a thorough examination of the particular situation. For more information, contact KPMG's Federal Tax Legislative and Regulatory Services Group at: + 1 202 533 4366, 1801 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20006.
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Thinking, Fast and Slow. By Daniel Kahneman. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011. 512 pp. The popular American television series Mad Men depicts a stereotypical workplace dynamic that never seems to go out of style: the brilliant manager who takes all the credit for closing the deals while delegating “the details” to his assistant. The bosses can come in late and take leisurely lunches, but the assistants are the ones who know where the clients’ files are and make sure their bosses show up to pitch meetings on time. I kept thinking about Mad Men as I read Thinking, Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman’s treatise on what influences human behavior. The TV characters may be clichés, but they are part of the everyday patterns of behavior that Kahneman, the recipient of a Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002, explores and explains with brilliant observation and insight. The book tells a story that captures the states of both the art and science of human nature, as chronicled by the prophets of experimental cognitive psychology over the past half-century. The story is about two likeable but flawed characters, who Kahneman calls System 1 and System 2. System 1 is the under-appreciated administrative assistant of our mental life, the one who is constantly vigilant for any signs of danger or opportunity and “thinks fast.” System 2 is the “slow-thinking” rational manager who shows up at the last moment and yet truly believes he or she deserves all the credit. System 1 handles routine day-to-day matters using highly efficient filing systems and makes quick judgments with impressive accuracy. However, System 1 is also prone to certain systematic errors, such as assuming that the information at hand is the sum of all the relevant information to be gained, or assigning causal relationships to unrelated events. System 2 is capable of more refined, critical thinking, but is also lazy and prefers to allow System 1 to handle as much as possible, even when a given task is probably above the assistant’s pay grade. By allowing these characters to emerge through pithy descriptions of key psychological experiments, Kahneman gives meaning to a vast range of real world experiences. For example, why do people tend to buy insurance right after a disaster? One of the quirks of System 1 is that, in order to make judgments rapidly and constantly, we have a tendency to substitute easy questions in place of hard questions, without even realizing that we are doing so. So, instead of asking about the overall likelihood of earthquakes, tornadoes, and floods, we ask how recently one of these disasters occurred. We use that answer to determine whether we need insurance. Or why can it be advantageous to be the first person to name a figure when negotiating a salary, the price of a new car, or a divorce settlement? If we aren’t sure the exact worth of something, our System 1 will accept any suggested figure as a starting point—even a number tossed out at random—and tweak it upward or downward until it lands on a number that feels right. The upshot is that if you start out with a high anchor number, the final figure is likely to be much higher than if you start out with a low anchor number. And why do we assume a nerdy, anti-social guy is more likely to be a computer science major than an English major, even though we know that English majors dramatically outnumber computer science majors? Because, once we have information that seems to correspond to a stereotype, System 1 values that association more than any statistical information it would pass on to System 2. Kahneman concludes that System 2 is who we all like to think we are—the rational manager making conscious judgments based on all the relevant information. And System 1 is who we really are—the highly-efficient assistant making countless snap decisions based on mental shortcuts that work most of the time, i.e. except when they don’t. System 1 gets blamed for all the mistakes, and System 2 takes credit for the all the successes, but in reality, System 2 is responsible for letting the mistakes slip in, and also for making some errors of his own. Kahneman observes wryly that, in principle, it’s easy to avoid mistakes—simply slow down and put in more effort. Unfortunately, in practice, it’s precisely when we should slow down and reflect that we’re most likely to forge ahead on instinct alone. Why does it make sense when Julia Roberts’ character, Shelby, in Steel Magnolias explains to her mother, played by Sally Field, “I’d rather have five minutes of wonderful than a lifetime of nothing special?” Here, Roberts’ character has a choice between a comfortable, happy life with a husband who loves her but no children, or the risk of carrying a child but damaging her fragile health. System 1 doesn’t track the duration of events but is more interested in the peak of an experience and the way things turn out in the end. System 2 constructs a life story based on major events and moments, so the two systems together favor choices that will produce more intensely positive outcomes. In this case, Shelby chooses to risk the health consequences of pregnancy in order to have the peak experience of motherhood, though she knows that the duration of that experience may be tragically short. Kahneman dedicates this book to Amos Tversky, his longtime collaborator and good friend. The story of their friendship, which is inextricably linked to the breakthroughs they made together, is a rich, human narrative of the scientific method at work. No one jumps out of a tub shouting “Eureka!” Rather, two friends take long walks, talk about their observations, and discuss hunches about why people make the decisions they do. They figure out ways to test these hunches, proving some and rejecting others along the way. Sometimes, they get caught in intellectual dead ends, held up by related concepts that haven’t been thoroughly explained, or innovative research methods that haven’t yet been developed. In a few moving instances, Kahneman describes how their students, or their students’ students (that is, their intellectual children and grandchildren in academic parlance) overcome these limitations. Thinking, Fast and Slow is not merely a résumé of Kahneman’s work with Tversky. He also gives credit and attention to the contributions of many scholars who came both before, during, and after his most productive years with Tversky. One particularly interesting section in this vein weighs the relative merits of expert versus public perceptions of risk, and the real-life implications of policies based on each. For example, he writes, “terrorism speaks directly to System 1.” Deaths from terrorism, even in places like Israel, rarely approach the number of deaths in traffic accidents in any given week. The novelty of terrorist attacks, coupled with their powerful narrative and visual impact, guarantee media coverage that make these events loom larger than their statistical likelihood of occurrence would seem to warrant. That accessibility to System 1 makes the public demand protective policies even if the more rational System 2 response would allow experts to make a more judicious response. Kahneman claims that as he was writing, his imaginary audience consisted of office workers gathering around the water cooler to share opinions and rumors. His ambition was to enhance their understanding of how the objects of their gossip affected their decision-making, and to give them a better vocabulary to talk about it. Despite this deceptively humble objective, Thinking, Fast and Slow is profound in its result. Sheila Peuchaud is an assistant professor in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication at the American University in Cairo. Subscribe to Our Newsletter
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Soccer Workouts To Strengthen Your Game Some of the biggest issues that we have come across when training soccer players deals with coaches who are still stuck in the past. They are telling their athletes not to lift weights, fearing the players will get bulky, big, and showing up on the pitch looking like a bodybuilder. This is a big misconception. Soccer coaches that are shying away from resistance-based training and strength training are missing out. Going into the weightroom does not mean training like a bodybuilder. That isn’t the case. In the weight room, soccer athletes can perform resistance training that will make them faster, more explosive, a little bit stronger, and enhance their capabilities on the field. If you are new to strength training, whether you play soccer, field hockey, lacrosse, or another field based sport, the following principals will apply for your resistance based training. The first element behind becoming a dominant player is to have excellent speed. Soccer athletes have to be fast. This boils down to what phase of running athletes will be utilizing within the sport. For instance, on the soccer field, how often are athletes running at absolute, full speed? How often are they having to go from a full stop to a full start into acceleration? How often are they coming out of acceleration and having to gear shift into a drive phase through a cut? Soccer players typically are going to be starting and stopping and working through acceleration. It is very minimal when soccer players are running full tilt or running at the maximal mechanics phase. This means we need soccer players to be training with a focus on improving the starting positions and acceleration. This might mean we are working on various cuts, jump cuts, starting positions from a unilateral and bilateral perspective, and any other body positional needs that will transfer to the direct speed needed out on the soccer field. 2. DTC For Cutting Dynamic Trunk Control, or DTC, is the ability to coordinate the trunk to stay vertical, upright, and rigid while the legs, hips, glutes, quads, and hamstrings are doing agile movements at a high speed with forceful production in and out of cuts. From a soccer perspective, we want to think of an athlete who can make better moves through dynamic trunk control. Dynamic trunk control allows the body to add stealth to agility. It creates the ability to create advantageous positions through footwork, putting opponents in precarious positions to be dominated. For instance, we can work dynamic trunk control in the weight room in multiple ways. Examples include snatching, dumbbell snatching, plate overhead walking lunges, or skipping with a very light barbell overhead. We can also do sliding ab movements, a walrus, or other movements like that to train dynamic trunk control to help athletes become more agile out on the soccer field to make better moves and dominate opponents. 3. High-Speed Coordination What does this mean? We can think of HSC in a plethora of ways. From a gymnastics perspective, we see elite gymnasts do flips with multiple twists. Or a shot-putter rotating and launching a sphere great distances; a weightlifter hitting a huge snatch. These are all examples of HSC. But is that the type of HSC needed for soccer? Yes, these movements can transfer well, but what we are talking about is a soccer player running at full speed having coordination with their footwork. Soccer does involve the soccer ball. Soccer players have to be able to run quickly with a ball. Compare this to ice hockey. Speed skaters are fast on the ice, but what is their coordination like with a puck? Having speed is a must. We just need to understand that within the sport, there are specific demands that require an element of coordination, thus the HSC is necessary to handle the object within the athleticism. We can do agility drills with a soccer ball. We can do cutting drills with a soccer ball. We can even do plyometrics followed by technical skill work to help the body become more explosive, more capable of rapidly coordinating while still training the skills to become an elite, world-class soccer player. 4. Strength Endurance Soccer is a game that can last longer than ninety minutes. The game takes place over a long period of time. There is a lot of starting and stopping over that duration. Soccer players have to have strength endurance to help prevent injury. Strength endurance can be trained in the weight room. It can also be trained on the soccer field while out doing technical work. Think about 800 m runners. They are really, really fast. Extremely fast. They also have really solid strength endurance. Soccer players might benefit from training in manners that are similar to the way 800 m runners train. For instance, some of the stuff we can do for soccer in the weight room that is similar is doing single-leg squats with lighter weight for sets of fifteen to twenty reps to be under stress for a longer period of time. We can even do sled pushes for time frames of five minutes. We can even do long-duration isometrics. All of these movements will drastically increase strength endurance. Strength coaches often lack the understanding of the game of soccer to figure out how to train specific positions to optimize athletic performance. We need to train positions in a manner that exemplifies the skills required on the pitch from that position. United States strength coaches do tend to know football pretty well. For instance, we see parallels between training soccer forwards in a manner similar to wide receivers. Training mid-fielders in a manner similar to defensive safeties--we want people with great ground coverage, crazy lateral speed, extremely athletic, good endurance, and really fast. We can train defensive soccer players similar to outside linebackers--still need to be fast, but a bit more a bruiser, more aggressive, and tremendously explosive. Goalies are similar to inside linebackers--goalies have a lot of lateral movement and a lot of lateral movement that leads to moving forward; they also have to be extremely explosive with incredibly fast reactions. As strength coaches, we have to understand when to put the four elements into play. We have to know in our periodization when we will be focusing on speed and how we can focus on DTC in tandem. At the same time, we have to manage when to focus on HSC and strength endurance to create soccer players that demonstrate explosive, aggressive, and fast movements throughout the game, not having them tiring out late in the game. We don’t need to run soccer players into the ground. We can look at other sports and use them as examples to teach athletes how to be more explosive while still maintaining strength endurance. Lower Body Exercises It is incredibly important to lift weights to improve lower body strength for soccer. Athletes who are more explosive and more coordinated can accelerate quicker and get out of cuts faster. Athletes who are lifting consistently in other sports like Rugby, American Football, are freakishly fast and agile. These are the most important lower body exercises to develop leg strength for soccer. Soccer players out on the pitch who want to dominate need to do full cleans for multiple different reasons. DTC (dynamic trunk control) is imperative to being agile on the soccer field, just as the ability to accelerate and be explosive out of cuts. Full cleans address all of these issues. One reason why we love full cleans for soccer players is because athletes tend to be extremely weak in the full range of motion. This weakness leads to ankle injuries, knee problems, and lower back pain. If we can get soccer players to go in and complete full cleans for four or five sets of three to five reps, real simple sets and reps, will improve their explosiveness. They will make good hip extension, have an explosive finish, absorbing force in the full clean through a full range of motion, improving the strength of the lower back as well as the dorsiflexion of the ankle. Improved dorsiflexion goes a long way to improving steeper cuts and benefits acceleration because the knee tracts forward more out of specific cuts. This can be done once or twice a week. We recommend starting with doing the movement twice a week. One day go heavy and the second day work on technique and speed out of the bottom position. 2. Single-Leg Squat This movement incorporates the XTP machine. A great and tremendous piece of gym equipment that we love to incorporate into athletes’ workouts to improve their strength. Think of the XTP machine like a Smith Machine on steroids. The XTP is so much cooler. The reason why we love using this machine is it makes it easier to put a larger load on the bar while doing higher reps. We need to remember that when talking about soccer, a key concept is strength endurance. When we think about speed-based training, it is important to do unilateral work, especially when targeting the glutes, quads, and hamstrings. The XPT, a versatile piece of equipment when doing unilateral work, makes it nice and easy. The single-leg squat for two to three sets of five to ten reps on each leg does wonders for unilateral strength. The movement helps to address instabilities and greatly strengthens the weaker side. Unilateral movements help minimize asymmetries that occur with coordinating the muscles in the body. Now if the XPT is unavailable, we can still perform the single-leg squat by putting the back leg up on the back of a bench and perform the movement in a squat rack. 3. Overhead Walking Lunges This is another movement that we have soccer players do to target DTC. We can target DTC with unilateral strength, mobility, and strength endurance. With the arms extended and a plate held overhead, we can have soccer players perform three sets of sixteen to twenty alternating reps of walking lunges. The walking lunge can be performed walking forward or backward or a combination of both. We want to focus on squeezing the trunk, obliques, and upper back to coincide with all the muscles throughout the body. The overhead plate, especially walking backward, forces more stability and awareness of the body’s position. The DTC developed will lead to greater speed. In addition, the large sets do wonders for strength endurance development. 4. Sliding Cossack Squat Sliding Cossack squats can be done using furniture sliders, a towel, or socks on a slippery surface. If these methods are unavailable, normal Cossack squats will suffice. We like to have our athletes put the heel on the slider with the foot’s toes pointing up. We want to squeeze in the groin and get nice and deep in the squat. We also want to try and keep the heel of the squatting leg down on the ground. We want to do both sides as well. Perform three to four sets of seven reps on each leg. The reason why we love this movement is that it does a great job of mobilizing the hips and ankles. If we can plant and track our knee forward over the toes, we can accelerate out of a cut quicker. If we are training multi-plane, we will get stronger, become more mobile, and have a greater capacity for more powerful acceleration out of a cut. Hammer full cleans for some great bilateral work that develops strength. Use the single-leg squat to develop unilateral strength and explosiveness. From there, the overhead walking lunges super-setted with sliding Cossack squats will develop strength endurance as well as enhance mobility for superior capabilities to accelerate out of cuts. The best part is the lower body exercises we are championing are training for multi-plane athletic performance--we need to go in the directions of X, Y, and Z, not just straight, not just to the side, and not just up in the air, but diagonal, side-to-side, in-and-out of cuts, and various changes of direction. Implement these four exercises into a workout for lower body strength training and let us know how it goes. Dane Miller is the owner and founder of Garage Strength Sports Performance. He works with a select handful of clients on building comprehensive programs for fitness and nutrition. Several times a year he leads a workshop for coaches, trainers, and fitness enthusiasts.
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Family & Children’s Place receives $3,000 grant from the Gilbert Foundation July 25, 2016 Funds will support out of school programming for Meyzeek Middle School students LOUISVILLE, Ky. (July 25, 2016) – Family & Children’s Place has received a $3,000 grant from the Gilbert Foundation. The funds will support at-risk students at Louisville’s Meyzeek Middle School through the agency’s Family & School Services (FSS) program. Family & Children’s Place is the leading agency in the Greater Louisville area providing preventive and corrective solutions through six program areas – Child & Family Services, Child Advocacy Center, Family & School Services, Family Stabilization Program, HANDS and the PAL Initiative –to the complex issues surrounding children who have been witness or subject to violence, neglect and abuse. A magnet school, Meyzeek draws outside students to its excellent math, science and technology programs, but it’s also a neighborhood school, serving young people living in poverty in the Smoketown and Shelby Park communities, where more than 52 percent of students qualify for free or reduced lunch. The out of school experience provides highly structured activities to help students develop positive values, social competencies and identities. Activities include homework help, life skills development, enrichment activities and service learning projects. During the summer, students cultivate and maintain a Community Garden. Students plan, plant and harvest the garden, and learn the science of botany by doing, watching the seeds turn into plants and plants produce “fruit” and finding the seeds within. Students harvest tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, broccoli and other vegetables, which they enjoy for lunch. The program also helps students learn to manage anger, to avoid alcohol and drugs, relate with peers, and critical thinking skills that help them reduce risk-taking behaviors and make better choices. # # # About Family & Children’s Place Family & Children’s Place protects Kentuckiana children, families and communities from abuse, neglect and exploitation, and helps move them from hurting to healing. We serve nearly 5,000 children and families annually through trauma-informed and impact-evident services. For more information about Family and Children’s Place, visit www.famchildplace.org or call 502-893-3900.
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Dry ski slopes can be great places to learn new techniques, practice your skills or just to see if you like skiing for the first time! These are slightly different to indoor ski slopes as they can be either indoor or outdoors and don’t feature any snow. This can mean that dry ski slopes provide a great alternative if you don’t live near the slopes or an indoor ski slope, or simply want a really fun day out! When heading to a dry ski slope for the first time, lots of people wonder what they should wear and how best to prepare. There are lots of factors you need to know about the specific slope you are going to before deciding this, and then some different options about what is advisable to wear, so keep reading for everything you need to know! Dry Ski Slope Clothing Dry ski slopes can be indoors and outdoors, so plan your clothing depending on the weather. Waterproofs may be advisable in cold or wet conditions. Wear clothing that will protect you if you fall, like thick gloves/mittens, a helmet and clothing to protect your skin. Conditions at a Dry Ski Slope The conditions at a dry ski slope mainly depend on if the slope is indoors or outdoors. This will hugely impact the temperatures you are likely to encounter, if you will be affected by variable weather and what might be best for you to wear! Indoor Dry Ski Slopes Indoor dry ski slopes will likely be sheltered from varying weather conditions, meaning they can be easier to plan for in terms of what to wear! However, an important thing to note is if the dry ski slope is also in the same building as an indoor ski slope with snow. This will mean that the whole building may be kept colder than usual in order to maintain the snow and indoor ski slope, even if it is not on the dry ski slope itself. Outdoor Dry Ski Slopes If you are planning to go to an outdoor dry ski slope, your clothing choice will be largely dependent on the weather and conditions where you are! Outdoor dry ski slopes mean that you will be most likely exposed to the elements, be in rain, sun, wind or snow! Therefore, make sure you dress appropriately for the weather to make sure you are safe and comfortable. If it is likely to rain or be cold, this may mean waterproof clothing and extra layers for example! Before heading to a dry ski slope, it is essential you check what equipment you will need, as well as what you are able to hire when you get there so you can take or buy everything that you need in advance! Here is a list of equipment (NOT INCLUDING CLOTHING!) you might need to take or hire when going to a dry ski slope: - Ski Boots - Ski Poles - Eye protection (eg. googles) Clothing for a Dry Ski Slope Whether your dry ski slope of choice is indoors or outdoors, they may still be colder than you might expect! Therefore, the best thing you can do it to LAYER. This can be much more effective at keeping you warm than a single coat or jacket, and also means that you can remove or put on extra layers during your ski depending on how cold you are. The accessories you need may depend again on the weather you are likely to encounter on the day you plan to ski. On sunny days, sunglasses or goggles might be advised by the slope if they allow these. These can help you to see better if there is particular sun glare. Similarly, if the weather is cold and wet, you might need extra accessories to keep you warm. This could include a neck gaiter for example. In terms of accessories, gloves are a must. Even if it isn’t particularly cold, ski gloves or ski mittens are always great to wear. These will help to protect your hands from injury if you fall over at all, and also help to keep you warm if the weather changes. Thick ski socks are usually recommended as a good idea, even to a dry ski slope where you might not be encountering snow. This is because ski socks are generally slightly thicker and more padded compared to regular socks. This will likely make your ski boots much more comfortable, especially if this is your first time skiing. This will also give you a more accurate idea of how your skis will feel on a real ski slope where you are likely to be in colder conditions too. Dry ski slopes can be variable- mainly depending on if they are indoors or outdoors. While there is certain equipment and clothing you will always need regardless for safety reasons, other such as the number of layers you are likely to need will depend on the weather if you are outdoors, and the conditions if you are indoors, so make sure to check these in advance and prepare what you need to take with you.
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Complete, ready-to-use, mobile units to generate high vacuums with an extremely high pumping speed in the fore-vacuum range. The turbomolecular pump, the controller and the vacuum gauges are mounted on the central aluminum profile pillar at an optimum working height. The fore-vacuum pump is solidly mounted on a mobile base plate, to which the profile pillar is also attached. The vacuum apparatus (receptacle) may be either flange-mounted directly to the suction port of the turbomolecular pump, or the turbomolecular pump can be removed from its holder on the profile pillar and connected to the receptacle. The mobility of the pillar pump systems enables them to be positioned as near as possible to the receptacles, which means that only short vacuum lines are needed. A short vacuum line guarantees low flow losses and subsequently a high pumping speed from the receptacle. The SST turbomolecular pump is equipped with dry-running, solid-lubricated hybrid rolling bearings (ceramic balls) which prevent the vacuum being contaminated by greases, oils or their decomposition products. This means that the design excludes residual hydrocarbon gas spectra. All STP/D turbomolecular pump systems have an automatic switch off device for the fore-vacuum diaphragm pump. The fore-vacuum combination is switched off as soon as the ultimate pressure has been reached in the receptacle. The solenoid valve in the fore-vacuum piping to the turbomolecular pump is closed simultaneously. This prevents reverse venting of the turbomolecular pump and receptacle. The major advantages of this automatic switch off are: Applications: Molecular distillation/sublimation, Tube furnace, Mass spectrometer, Leak detection
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If you’re looking for a safe and welcoming “home away from home” for your child, we have created a nurturing, creative world designed especially for developing minds. We understand that being separated from your child is difficult and at Ivy Kids® Early Learning Center, our directors, staff and teachers will stay in close touch with you to help make the transition as easy as possible. Our Early Infants (6 weeks – 12 month) program includes: - Language and Baby Sign Language Development - Fine and Gross Motor Skill Development - Multi-sensory art activities - Close alignment with baby’s home rhythm for feeding, sleeping and play - Daily feedback sheets for parents and caretakers Our Older Infants (12 month – 18 month) program includes: - Fine Motor Development through structured play - Outdoor play and Gross Motor Skill Development - First words and language development - Advanced Baby Sign Language - Introduction to basic color, shapes, and numbers By 18 months, you will notice your child self-feeding, communicating through words and sign, and feeling more independent! Our infant program prepares your child for a successful transition into our Toddler Program.
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October 1, 2011 marks the date for the 2011 ARRL Simulated Emergency Test (SET). The SET is a readiness exercise to test the capabilities of ARES/RACES emergency communications groups. Unlike Field Day which is more points based and social, the SET drill is usually based around a scenario. This year our local ARES/RACES group chose to test our capabilities by assembling a HF, VHF/UHF station in the parking lot of one of our served agencies, the Marathon County Red Cross. Our ARES group designed our SET scenario to test a few different capabilities: Use ICS forms to plan the operation, assemble the station in a wild location, be a regional resource for the state’s ARES/RACES communication network. Despite a few hiccups, we achieved our objectives that we outlined in the plan. The ICS forms worked well for our purposes and all future ARES activities will include filling out an ICS-202 prior to starting the activity. If your ARES team is ICS-100 and IS-700 trained, there is no reason why you shouldn’t utilize these resources. As a side note, we used a KB9VBR 440 MHz UHF J-Pole to connect to a wide are net and a KB9VBR 2 meter J-Pole to run our Winlink station. HF antenna was a home brew 120 foot dipole with open wire feed.
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This Tutorial Explains The Requirements, Salary, And Experience Needed For Video Game Tester Job: Video game tester seems to be a dream job for many people, especially for those who have grown up being immersed in the video entertainment medium. The job role not only allows you to indulge in hours of fun but also earn an income. By becoming a game tester, you will gain access to the latest pre-released games. This is a great career for those who love playing video games. The video game industry is growing, and a report by Statista found that the industry will be worth $138 billion by 2021. The image below shows the growth of the industry. The job of game testers is tied to the demand for video games. High demand for the games means that the demand for game testers will rise in the coming years. In this blog post, you will learn what exactly a video game tester job is. In addition, we will answer some frequently asked questions regarding the role of a game tester and how to successfully apply for this job. Lastly, we will review some of the best game testing jobs that are available right now which you can apply for in the US. What You Will Learn: - Video Game Tester: An Introduction - Game Testing Process Explained - Steps to Become a Video Game Tester - Tips To Become A Successful Game Tester - Other Careers Related to Video Game Testing Video Game Tester: An Introduction In a way, video game testers are quality control experts. Game testers play video games for hours on end and report bugs to the game developers. They test the user experience to ensure that games are interactive and fun for the players. You need to find glitches and problems in the games that could result in a negative gaming experience. The main responsibility of a tester is to ensure that every aspect of the game performs according to plan. They need to make sure that the game contains, ideally, no errors before the final release. You can watch this video to know more about the game tester job option. Frequently Asked Questions About Becoming a Video Game Tester Q #1) What is required to apply for game tester jobs? Answer: The actual requirements for the game tester jobs vary. You can get into this field without a college degree. A survey carried out by Game Developer Magazine had found that game testers with a GED or high school diploma generally make more when compared to those with a formal degree. However, some game developing companies require a degree or a certificate in the computer field. Some companies also prefer candidates with a certification in quality control or game development. Q #2) What do game testers actually do? Answer: Game testers are required to play video games for hours with little breaks. During the end of the development time, testers may be required to play the game for 24 hours to check for any problems before the release. Companies may also ask testers to do certain repetitive tasks to test the performance of the game. For instance, they may be required to switch the game on and off a hundred times to know the average time it takes to load a game. They may also be required to carry on multi-tasking such as downloading games or movies or chatting with others while playing games. The testers may also be required to play one level multiple times to detect bugs in the game. These tasks are usually performed by entry-level game testers. Q #3) How much money does a video game tester make? Answer: The salary of game testers vary from one company to another. The basic salary of a beginner game testers is around $37,522 per year. Experienced game testers with four to five years of experience make up to $45,769 per year. Game testers also receive benefits such as retirement, medical & dental plans, and annual bonuses. The additional benefits are above and beyond the basic salary given to the game testers. Q #4) What skills are required to become a game tester? Answer: Game testers need keen observation to detect problems in the game. They should also be able to clearly communicate the problems to the website designers. Other things that are required to become a good tester include patience, persistence, stamina, and above all passion for video games. Q #5) Is video game testing a good long term career? Answer: Most game testing jobs are contract jobs with little long-term security. However, experience in game testing can open the doors to other lucrative careers such as video game developers and graphic designers. Q #6) Do video game testers have to play games in-house or remotely? Answer: Most gaming companies require game testers to work in-house. This allows them to meet the developers face-to-face to identify issues. However, an increasing number of companies now allow remote game testing. Testers play games at home and share notes with the developers through video conferencing. Q #7) Can a game tester tell his/her friends about the details of a game that is not released to the public? Answer: You are not allowed to talk to anyone about a game that you are testing. Companies generally force game testers to sign a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) with the entire game development team. Violating the terms of the agreement will result in a fine or a lawsuit. Q #8) Do you need to buy systems for testing games or the company provides the required hardware? Answer: Game testers are not required to buy their own equipment. The game developing company will provide everything that is required to test games. You will be provided a game development kit and the gaming system to test the game. The game development kit is a special version of the game that allows the game developers to debug and identify issues in a game. The kits are usually provided to the game development team even before the games are announced to the public. So, only the persons associated with the development of the game have access to the kit. Benefits of Game Testing as a Career Game testers have a flexible career path that they can choose according to their career needs. Game testers often go on to become game developers. One thing that sets game developers with quality assurance experience from others is that they are able to see a game as a whole object instead of a part of a final product. This allows them to think holistically and focus on the integrated object while developing a game. Creative game testers can also go on to become graphic designers. The professionals design the game using graphic designing software focusing on the appearance of the game. Experience in the game testing field can also help in transitioning to a quality assurance engineering position. With some experience in game testing, you can easily apply for a project manager or director of a game’s quality assurance team. Advancement in a game testing career largely depends on the skills of the game tester to detect issues in the game. Testers with technical knowledge are more likely to progress in the career as they are able to better explain the issue to game programmers and designers. Game testers with adequate experience are usually promoted to lead testers or senior testers who supervise and guide a team of inexperienced testers. Testers with about 7-10 years of professional experience often get promoted to a managerial position if they have the required degree. Suggested reading =>> How to run Windows 7 Games on Windows 10 The outlook for game testers looks bright as the gaming industry is thriving. Gaming revenues have nearly quadrupled between 2008 and 2018 increase from $10.7 billion to $43 billion. With the gaming industry to about $300 billion by 2025, the demand for game testers will increase manifold. Game Testing Process Explained Game testing involves playing games to look for any glitches and bugs in the game. Testing is carried out when most of the codes and artwork have been completed. Game testing is carried out in a number of phases that are briefly described below. #1) Plan the Test: Game testers first have to create a plan that contains the features that will be tested in the game. Some of the features that could be included in the plan include whether the game is fun or monotonous, glitches or bugs, difficulty level, spelling or grammatical mistakes, and error codes during gameplay. #2) Test the Game: Once you create a blueprint of what must be tested in a game, the next phase includes actually play the game to test the features. The gamers need to play the games from the start till the end and look for any errors in the game. The game testing is carried out in two phases. During the initial phase of the game testing, major bugs and defects are identified and corrected. The next phase involves hardcore testing where each and every aspect of the game is tested to look for major and minor errors. #3) Report the Outcome: The game tester should record all the bugs and then communicate the issues to the game design and development team. The report needs to be in a format that is specified by the company. Typically the report contains an introduction containing the summary, actual test results, expected result, steps to replicate the problem, and severity of the problem. Steps to Become a Video Game Tester Anyone with a passion for games can become a game tester. You can enter this field even with a high school diploma or GED. What’s more important is the love for playing video games. You need to love the process of exploring new worlds with an eye for detail. However, as the jobs are few, the competition for the post is high. Strategic thinking and knowledge of game testing tools are important to create a successful career. Tips To Become A Successful Game Tester Here are some other tips that will help you set apart from the others and increase your chances of successfully applying for a game testing position. #1) Gain Technical Knowledge Getting a certification from the American Software Testing Qualification Board (ASTQB) can give you an edge over the other prospective candidates. While most companies accept high school graduates, you can improve your career prospects by getting a degree or certificate in computer programming, graphic designing, or game development. #2) Participate in Public Beta Testing A lot of companies offer public testing of games. You should participate in the game beta testing to gain the first-hand experience in testing games and crafting bug reports. The more game testing experience you have the better are the prospects of being successful in a game testing position. #3) Develop Game Testing Skills Game development companies look for prospects to be both skillful and passionate about playing video games. You should get to know all the gaming terminologies by reading blogs and even starting your own gaming blog. Companies prefer well-rounded candidates who have diverse relevant skills. You should get as much knowledge as possible about games. In addition, you should develop the following traits that are critical for a game tester. - Focus: Testing games require focus. You will have to play games with a complete focus for eight or more hours in a day. This can get boring once you are testing games for a long time. Modern games have a development cycle of about five years. Make sure that you are mentally preparing yourself for countless testing sessions to detect bugs. - Attention to detail: Another important skill that you need to be a game tester is attention to detail. You need to have a keen eye to spot problems in the game. In addition, you should exactly explain the steps that are required to locate the glitches. Nothing should slip the cracks as every bug in the game will result in a negative impression on gamers. - Technical writing: You will be writing a lot during the game testing stage. You will have to communicate the issues with the game developing team. This requires that you learn to hone your communication skills. You need to be able to clearly articulate the bugs to the development team. Learning technical writing skills require more than just writing blogs or commenting on social media. You can start by signing up for Gotham Writers’ Video Game Writing course to develop your game technical writing skills. In addition, various online references explain the art of writing game bug report in detail. #4) Build a Good Resume Building a good resume is critical for game testing jobs. You should highlight the skills that match the requirements of the game testing position. Consider searching for game testing jobs online and look for skills that are required for the position. You should read the “core skills required” section to know what is required for the game testing post. Here are some examples of game tester job descriptions with the required skills. Make sure that you proofread your resume before posting. Any grammar or spelling mistake could result in the rejection of your application. Companies look for candidates who are detail-oriented. The first thing that employers will literally check is your resume. #5) Look for a Full-Time Position Most of the openings for game testers are on a contract or part-time basis. Some also require work from home. But full-time jobs that are posted usually require more experience in the field. You should look for a full-time game testing position at a large, reputable game development company. Companies that hire full-time employees are legally required to offer retirement, medical, and other benefits to the employees. However, if you are not able to get a permanent job, you should look for a part-time job to get some experience as it will increase the chances of landing in a dream job. #6) Know where to Find Video Game Tester Jobs In addition, you should visit the sites of gaming studios like Square Enix, EA, and Ubisoft, directly to look for game tester positions. Lastly, you should also read the Land a Job as a Video Game Tester written by Jason W. Bay. The book contains tips on how to apply for a game testing job. In this book, you will find tips on how to prepare for the interview for the game tester position. Other Careers Related to Video Game Testing Experience in ‘game testing’ can also open doors to other careers. Here is a list of the career opportunities that you can enter after completing a degree in computer science. - Video game programming - Video game design - Software design - Software quality assurance - Software testing Suggested reading =>> Best Video Game Consoles The demand for video game quality control testers is rising. It’s not only the large development companies such as Electronic Arts, Sony, or Ubisoft that offer a game testing position but small mobile phone game companies also frequently offer game testing jobs. In the end, you may not want to stick to the game testing position for a long time. After getting suitable experience as a game tester, you should consider moving to QA manager, game programming, graphic designing, or game technical writing position for a bright career in the gaming industry. Also read =>> How to get Free Coin Master Spins Do you aspire to become a Video Game Tester? Kick start your career today!!!
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Are slides the next architectural trend? Okay, so this sounds kind of odd, but apparently slides are becoming more and more popular with architects. Touted as fun and healthy, they encourage users of a building to skip the elevator in favour of the faster trip they provide when one is only going down a few floors. That is if there isn't a line up. I get the sense that there could be some significant waiting going during peak hours like lunch time. But, as a post on Tree Hugger notes, theses things are becoming quite the little trend. There's one at the Tate Modern, Technische Universit채t in Munich, and Google's has a few spread around their various offices. Even Toronto has gotten into the mix. The new Corus Entertainment complex on Queen's Quay features a slide that covers three floors and that sounds like its been pretty regularly used. And, well, it looks pretty awesome. But, as cool as it is to "take the slide" instead of the elevator or stairs, one wonders if these will have a long life span. Of course a slide in an office or school building is exciting and well-used when it's new -- everyone wants to engage in the novelty. But what happens after you've gone down it a few times and you notice that you look like a bit of an idiot getting into and out of the thing? Photo by ponderossa in the blogTO Flickr pool. Join the conversation Load comments
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How Do Freelancers Deal With Inflation Inflation devalues freelance labor like any other one. But this economic phenomenon frequently occurs in today’s world and affects budget and business. For example, the USA has risen to 5.4 %, and the percentage is even higher in other countries. Nevertheless, you can easily stay afloat if you know how to deal with inflation and include it into your business model. Thus, this article focuses on valuable methods of raising your rates due to inflation. Why to Match Inflation And the first thing needed to point out here before getting to the question of increasing the cost of your services is why you need to match inflation. The fact of the matter is that you, as a freelancer, are the one who decides to raise rates. You don’t have a boss to do it for you. And your hard-earned clients aren’t likely to do it either. So for many freelancers, talking about a raise is a pretty challenging task. Then you have to pose the question: work for free or hard talk. Hopefully, you will favor the second option. However, if you doubt your abilities and seek some support, you can get the help of top writing services to get a quality paper on any topic you are interested in. For example, choose a service that suits you and order an essay on handling difficult dialogues and coping with the anxiety. How to Raise Rates Now it’s time for the heavy artillery. Here you’ll learn how to justify price increases to customers while remaining on good terms with them. # 1 Determine the Price Increase So, the first thing you need to do is determine the price increase. The generally accepted rule for rate increases is that you should add 5-10% to your initial salary. Your pay should be slightly above the rate of inflation. In addition, it’s worth considering the amount of income that corresponds to life in your area. At this point, the main thing to remember is that you should put your best interests first to get paid decently for your work. # 2 Warn About Price Increases in Advance If you don’t want to lose a client, avoid unpleasant surprises. By increasing the cost of services drastically without warning, you put the customer in an uncomfortable position and show your disrespect. Instead, discuss price increases in advance. To do this, make a schedule and write down when and how much you plan to raise the cost. It’s best to do this at the end of the year when companies are budgeting. In this case, marketers can calculate additional costs and allocate the necessary amount of money in advance to work on joint projects. # 3 Raise Prices Gradually When planning your budget, include a schedule of price increases. It’s better to raise prices gradually, for example, every three months, increasing the cost of services by 5-10%. It will be easier for the client to accept a gradual price increase than to take a 25-30% jump, even if you haven’t raised the price tag in two years. # 4 Focus on Service Value If you confront your clients with the fact that your services now cost more, they are unlikely to agree to the new terms of work. So when asking for higher fees, focus on the value of your work. A regular report on the work done will help you with this. But, first, fix the completed tasks and qualitative and quantitative indicators you managed to achieve. Include in your report a list of the courses you’ve completed during this time. Describe the knowledge you gained and how you will apply it to your company’s growth. Talk about the new services you added to your portfolio. It helps justify your position to the client and convince them of the need to increase your fee. # 5 Diversify Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. This well-known proverb fits perfectly with the organization of freelance work. Increasing prices is much easier if you have an established and diversified client base. Even if one client leaves, you won’t be broke since increasing the cost of services for the remaining customers will not allow you to lose money and buy time to find a new client. # 6 Be Prepared for Rejection There’s no denying the fact that clients may refuse your services due to an increase in rates. Some may insist on the former rates, arguing that they have worked with you for a long time and can’t pay you more because of the same inflation. But you’re still better off claiming your case to the end. After all, inflation affects absolutely everyone, so you should not make concessions. Instead, you must realize your value as a specialist and convince the toughest clients that new ones will be willing to pay what your work is worth. If they do decide to leave, take it easy. Value your time. # 7 Include New Rates in Your Profile Don’t forget to include your new rates in all your profiles. If you have your site, update your rates there, too. Take a helpful tip: update your rates the day before they go into effect so as not to rush on adjustment day. To avoid cursing the day you went freelance, take the issue of personal well-being into your own hands. And it’s not even just about inflation. What’s important is that you value yourself as a highly-skilled professional. Make a plan for professional development and supplement it with a schedule of service price increases. If you are a reliable professional, clients will stay with you, even if they have to pay twice as much. The main thing is to treat your customers with respect and follow simple rules: ✔️ Negotiate all financial issues before the start of the project. ✔️ Give them advance notice of price increases. ✔️ Raise prices gradually. ✔️ When raising prices, emphasize the value of your services. ✔️ Develop a loyal customer base. Every price has its buyer. The main thing is that your services are of high quality and meet customer expectations.
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A new, easier method for detecting Covid in kids is in development. It works like a breathalyzer used to perform field sobriety tests — no nasal swab necessary. Just blow out and this version will look for signs of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid. The emerging technology may change how kids are screened at school. It is science rooted in another infectious disease. At Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Chief of Infectious Diseases, Dr Audrey John had already identified specific biomarkers — actual smells in the breath — linked to malaria. “There’s two places that these VOC’s or smells can come from,” she said. “They can come from the bug itself, the bacteria or the parasite that is causing the infection. Or they can come from the body’s response. In our malaria work, we think some of the volatiles are being made by the parasite and making it out of the lungs.” That’s not the case in Covid. “When you get infected, then your body’s immune response is dramatic, and it changes the metabolism, the kinds of things your body is making,” John said. “And then we can see that in your breath.” The tool they currently use is a mass spectrometer. But the hope is to refine the technology to the size of a breathalyzer used to detect alcohol in field sobriety tests. “We have the child blow into the bag, collect the air onto something we can shoot onto a machine, and the machine gives us a readout of everything present,” John said. They collected breath samples from both infected and non-infected children. In kids with Covid, they identified six specific elevated biomarkers. Dogs helped sniff them out in the lab. “The dogs had already shown us that they could sniff out the difference between children with and without COVID,” John said. “They just do it in their noses.” In her study, John found the six biomarkers could predict infection with 91% sensitivity and 75% specificity. “Just using six of the things that are different we get a very high sensitivity that is we’re really quite easily able to detect the children that are infected,” John said. “Our specificity is not as great as current tests. So, what we see is that some of the kids that we think are positive a couple of them turn out not to be positive.” PCR tests have more overall accuracy but ultimately, John hopes to see the technology deployed in schools and at home. No lab needed. “I think there will be a real need for a while to be able to tell when your kid has a runny nose and cough, is it something boring or is this a reason everybody needs to stay home for a week?” John said. Right now the researchers are testing the breathalyzer in other respiratory viruses that have emerged this summer, including RSV. They hope to secure more funding to bring their technology to the masses.
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This week will be the Mid-Term Examination. You will have the entire week to review the Essay and write a well-thought out response to the prompt. Be sure use historical thinking skills and take a stand on the prompt. In addition your essay should include a discernible and defensible thesis statement. Directions: Using the documents in the attached file answer the following question in a well-thought (6-8 paragraphs) out historical essay. Question: Evaluate the extent of change in ideas about American Independence from 1763-1783 Make sure your essay has the following components: – Thesis Statement – Argument Development – Use of the Documents – Outside Evidence
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