Why Walking Might Be One of the Best Exercises For Health – Discover Magazine

To walk is to be human. Were the only species that gets around by standing up and putting one foot in front of the other. In the 6 million years humans have been bipedal, our ability to walk upright has allowed humankind to travel great distances and survive changing climates, environments and landscapes.

But walking is more than just transportation it also happens to be really good for us. Countless scientific studies have found that this simple act of moving our feet can provide a number of health benefits and help people live longer. In fact, a walking routine if done properly might be the only aerobic exercise people need.

Many people have taken up strolls around the neighborhood and in nature to pass the time during the pandemic and there are many reasons to keep it up, says Emmanuel Stamatakis, a professor of physical activity, lifestyle and population health at the University of Sydney.

Regular walking has all the standard benefits of aerobic exercise, such as improvements in the heart and circulatory systems, better blood glucose control, normalization of blood pressure and reduction of anxiety and depression, Stamatakis says.

The beauty of walking is that its free, it doesnt require a lot of special equipment and can be done almost anywhere. Most people can maintain a walking practice throughout their lifetime. Yet, in the age of CrossFit and high-intensity cardio, walking is perhaps an under-appreciated way to get the heart pumping and muscles working.It also happens to be one of the most studied forms of exercise there is.

In general, walking is good exercise because it puts our large muscle groups to work, and has apositive effect on most bodily systems, Stamatakis says.

But for the sake of efficiency how much walking should one aim for? Public health experts have drilled into us the idea that we need 10,000 steps a day or about five miles. But contrary to popular belief, this recommendation doesnt come from science. Instead, it stems from a 1960s advertising campaign to promote a pedometer in Japan. Perhaps because its a round number and easy to remember, it stuck. Countries like the U.S. began to include it in broader public health recommendations. Today, its often a default step count to reach on walking apps on smartphones and fitness trackers.

Since the 1960s, researchers have studied the 10,000-steps-a day standard and have turned up mixed results. Although clocking 10,000 steps or more a day is certainly a healthy and worthwhile goal its not a one-size-fits-all fitness recommendation.

Several studies have consistently shown that significant health benefits accrue well below 10,000 steps per day, Stamatakis says.

For instance, a recent Harvard study involving more than 16,000 older women found that those who got at least 4,400 steps a day greatly reduced their risk of dying prematurely when compared with less active women. The study also noted that the longevity benefits continued up to 7,500 steps but leveled off after that number. Put simply, 7,500 is also an ideal daily goal with comparable benefits to 10,000 steps.

Stamatakis notes that 7,500 steps also tend to be in line with common public health recommendations, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions recommendation of 150 minutes of moderate physical activity a week for adults.

But picking up the pace might be a good idea. As with any exercise, the physical benefits one gains from walking depends on three things: duration, intensity and frequency. Put simply: walk often, walk fast and walk long. The goal is to walk fast enough to raise your heart rate even if just for a short burst.

Any pace is OK, but the faster the walking pace the better, Stamatakis says. Its ideal for 3,000 to 3,500 [of those steps] to be completed at a brisk or fast pace.

In a recent review study involving around 50,000 walkers, Stamatakis and his colleagues linked faster walking speeds to a reduced risk of dying from almost everything except cancer. How much you walk, rather than how fast you walk, might be more important for reducing cancer mortality, the review noted.

Similar boosts to longevity have been found in other studies. Recent work published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings analyzed the life expectancy of nearly 475,000 men and women who self-reported as slow or brisk walkers. The faster walkers around a speed of 3 miles per hour (or, a 20-minute mile) could expect to live roughly 15 to 20 years longer than slower walkers, or those who clocked 2 mph (a 30-minute mile.)

Participants who considered themselves brisk walkers had an average life expectancy of nearly 87 years for men and 88 years for women. Increases in lifespan were observed across all weight groups the study included.

Whats considered a quick pace is relative to an individuals fitness level, but it generally falls somewhere between 3 and 5 mph. A cadence of 100 steps per minute or greater is a commonly accepted threshold for turning a walk into a moderately intense exercise.

While we know walking is good for the body, research is also beginning to reveal how it impacts brain function. Particularly, walking might be an effective way to slow or decrease the cognitive declines that come with growing older.

A study of older, sedentary adults found that walking for six months improved executive functioning, or the ability to plan and organize. Studies also have found that that walking and other aerobic exercises can increase the size of the hippocampus, the brain area involved in memory and learning.

Researchers think exercises like brisk walking might improve brain plasticity, or the ability to grow new neurons and form new synaptic connections.

If walking can help you live healthier and longer, can it also help you shed excess pounds? Not exactly. A common misconception is that working out in and of itself can help someone lose weight. Diet is a far more important piece of the weight-loss equation, research suggests.

At least one study illustrates that daily walks make little difference in weight management. Weight gain is common among first-year college students. Researchers wanted to determine if walking could ward off the pounds. Their study, published in the Journal of Obesity, monitored 120 freshman women over six months. Over the course of 24 weeks, the students walked either 10,000, 12,500 or 15,000 steps a day, six days a week. Researchers tracked their caloric intake and weight and found that step count didnt seem to influence the number on the scale. Even students who walked the most still gained around the same amount of weight.

Often, when someone increases physical activity, some of the bodys normal physiological responses kick in to make up for the calories burned. One might start getting hungry more often and may eat more, without realizing it.

Even if with a tight control on daily caloric intake, it takes a lot of walking to accumulate a meaningful deficit. To put this in perspective, a 155-pound person would burn roughly 500 calories walking for 90 minutes at a rate of 4.5 mph.

However, walking does seem to influence a persons body composition. Where a person carries fat might be a more importantindicator of disease risk than body mass index. Avid walkers tend to have smaller waist circumferences. Waist measurements that are more than 35 inches for women and 40 inches for men have been linked with a higher risk for heart disease and Type 2 diabetes.

So a walk in the park maybe wont make you ripped" but it sure beats sitting.

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Why Walking Might Be One of the Best Exercises For Health - Discover Magazine

Longevity And Anti-Senescence Therapy Market Value Chain and Forecast COVID-19 2023 – Kentucky Journal 24

The global longevity and anti-senescence therapies market should grow from $329.8 million in 2018 to $644.4 million by 2023 with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14.3% during 2018-2023.

Report Scope:

The scope of this report is broad and covers various therapies currently under trials in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market. The market estimation has been performed with consideration for revenue generation in the forecast years 2018-2023 after the expected availability of products in the market by 2023. The global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market has been segmented by the following therapies: Senolytic drug therapy, Gene therapy, Immunotherapy and Other therapies which includes stem cell-based therapies, etc.

Request for Report Sample:https://www.trendsmarketresearch.com/report/sample/11698

Revenue forecasts from 2028 to 2023 are given for each therapy and application, with estimated values derived from the expected revenue generation in the first year of launch.

The report also includes a discussion of the major players performing research or the potential players across each regional longevity and anti-senescence therapy market. Further, it explains the major drivers and regional dynamics of the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market and current trends within the industry.

The report concludes with a special focus on the vendor landscape and includes detailed profiles of the major vendors and potential entrants in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market.

Report Includes:

71 data tables and 40 additional tables An overview of the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market Analyses of global market trends, with data from 2017 and 2018, and projections of compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) through 2023 Country specific data and analysis for the United States, Canada, Japan, China, India, U.K., France, Germany, Spain, Australia, Middle East and Africa Detailed description of various anti-senescence therapies, such as senolytic drug therapy, gene therapy, immunotherapy and other stem cell therapies, and their influence in slowing down aging or reverse aging process Coverage of various therapeutic drugs, devices and technologies and information on compounds used for the development of anti-ageing therapeutics A look at the clinical trials and expected launch of anti-senescence products Detailed profiles of the market leading companies and potential entrants in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market, including AgeX Therapeutics, CohBar Inc., PowerVision Inc., T.A. Sciences and Unity Biotechnology

Summary

Global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market deals in the adoption of different therapies and treatment options used to extend human longevity and lifespan. Human longevity is typically used to describe the length of an individuals lifetime and is sometimes used as a synonym for life expectancy in the demography. Anti-senescence is the process by which cells stop dividing irreversibly and enter a stage of permanent growth arrest, eliminating cell death. Anti-senescence therapy is used in the treatment of senescence induced through unrepaired DNA damage or other cellular stresses.

Global longevity and anti-senescence market will witness rapid growth over the forecast period (2018-2023) owing to an increasing emphasis on Stem Cell Research and an increasing demand for cell-based assays in research and development.

An increasing geriatric population across the globe and a rising awareness of antiaging products among generation Y and later generations are the major factors expected to promote the growth of global longevity and anti-senescence market. Factors such as a surging level of disposable income and increasing advancements in anti-senescence technologies are also providing traction to the global longevity and anti-senescence market growth over the forecast period (2018-2023).

According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the total geriatric population across the globe in 2016 was over REDACTED. By 2022, the global geriatric population (65 years and above) is anticipated to reach over REDACTED. An increasing geriatric population across the globe will generate huge growth prospectus to the market.

Senolytics, placenta stem cells and blood transfusions are some of the hot technologies picking up pace in the longevity and anti-anti-senescence market. Companies and start-ups across the globe such as Unity Biotechnology, Human Longevity Inc., Calico Life Sciences, Acorda Therapeutics, etc. are working extensively in this field for the extension of human longevity by focusing on study of genomics, microbiome, bioinformatics and stem cell therapies, etc. These factors are poised to drive market growth over the forecast period.

Global longevity and anti-senescence market is projected to rise at a CAGR of REDACTED during the forecast period of 2018 through 2023. In 2023, total revenues are expected to reach REDACTED, registering REDACTED in growth from REDACTED in 2018.

The report provides analysis based on each market segment including therapies and application. The therapies segment is further sub-segmented into Senolytic drug therapy, Gene therapy, Immunotherapy and Others. Senolytic drug therapy held the largest market revenue share of REDACTED in 2017. By 2023, total revenue from senolytic drug therapy is expected to reach REDACTED. Gene therapy segment is estimated to rise at the highest CAGR of REDACTED till 2023. The fastest growth of the gene therapy segment is due to the Large investments in genomics. For Instance; The National Human Genome Research Institute (U.S.) had a budget grant of REDACTED for REDACTED research projects in 2015, thus increasing funding to REDACTED for approximately REDACTED projects in 2016.

More Info of Impact Covid19@https://www.trendsmarketresearch.com/report/covid-19-analysis/11698

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Longevity And Anti-Senescence Therapy Market Value Chain and Forecast COVID-19 2023 - Kentucky Journal 24

StemSation Expands into Mexico with Completion of Wholly Owned Subsidiary – Stockhouse

Revenues Expected to Commence in Q4 2020

BOCA RATON, FL / ACCESSWIRE / July 21, 2020 / StemSation International, Inc. (OTC PINK:STSN) - a pioneer in the emerging category of dietary supplements called Stem Cell Nutrition, announces that it is expanding into Mexico and has just completed the incorporation process for a new wholly-owned subsidiary in Mexico named StemSation Mexico S.A. de C.V.

According to the World Federation of Direct Selling Associations (WFDSA), Mexico ranks 8th in the world in sales through this distribution channel. It is also a market that is very synergistic in growing the very lucrative U.S. Hispanic market. https://wfdsa.org/global-statistics/

Ray Carter, StemSation's President and CEO commented, "Mexico is a strong market for our industry, and we're excited to be offering our products and entrepreneurial business model there in the near future. We expect the next step of product registration to be completed shortly".

StemSation's all-natural products focus on supporting the two most recently discovered biological systems of the human body, the stem cell system of renewal and repair, and the endocannabinoid system of regulating physiological functions in both the central and peripheral nervous system and in peripheral organs. https://www.stemsation.global/www/en/us/about/

David Casanova, StemSation's Vice President of Global Sales & Marketing commented, "Mexico is a big market that I know very well, and it is also our stepping-stone into all of Latin America as we continue to execute our global expansion plans".

StemSation markets and sells its products online through its growing team of Independent Wellness Advocates in the United States and Europe, who each receive a StemSation replicated website in four languages and currencies. http://www.stemsation.global

StemSation is a company with a long-term health mission', ambitious research goals, and innovative, holistic approaches to health & wellness, and healthy longevity. Our product line shows a new pathway to wellness.

ABOUT STEMSATION INTERNATIONAL, INC.

StemSation International, Inc. (OTC "STSN") develops, manufactures and distributes natural wellness products that support the stem cell and endocannabinoid systems in the human body through using a direct selling model in which Independent Wellness Advocates ("IWAs") advertise and sell its products directly to consumers. StemSation is headquartered in Boca Raton, Florida and its website can be located at http://www.stemsation.global.

SAFE HARBOR STATEMENT

This press release contains forward-looking statements that can be identified by terminology such as "believes," "expects," "potential," "plans," "suggests," "may," "should," "could," "intends," or similar expressions. Many forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from any future results implied by such statements. These factors include, but are not limited to, our ability to continue to enhance our products and systems to address industry changes, our ability to expand our customer base and retain existing customers, our ability to effectively compete in our market segment, the lack of public information on our company, our ability to raise sufficient capital to fund our business, operations, our ability to continue as a going concern, and a limited public market for our common stock, among other risks. Many factors are difficult to predict accurately and are generally beyond the company's control. Forward-looking statements speak only as to the date they are made, and we do not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date the forward-looking statements are made.

FOR INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Nicholas B. Panza, Vice-President Stemsation International, Inc. 7777 Glades Road Suite 203 Boca Raton, FL 33434 npanza@stemsationusa.com (561) 245-7454

SOURCE: StemSation International, Inc.

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StemSation Expands into Mexico with Completion of Wholly Owned Subsidiary - Stockhouse

When it comes to longevity, any exercise is good exercise – Newswise

Newswise It turns out that the social aspect of exercising may be just as important as its physical benefits.

Connor Sheehan, an assistant professor at ASUsT. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics, is sharing these findings in a new paper recently published in the journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. Curious to know which, if any, of the more socially oriented exercises, such as team sports, contribute to longevity, Sheehan and family and human development graduate student Longfeng Li found that any exercise is beneficial, but stretching, volleyball and fitness exercises (i.e., walking, aerobics, cycling, etc.) in particular were associated with lower rates of mortality.

In their study, Sheehan and Li used data collected by the National Health Interview Survey of 26,727 American adults ages 18 to 84 to examine the effect of 15 different exercises on mortality rates. The survey participants were asked once in 1998 what type of exercise they engaged in, then followed for all-cause mortality through the end of 2015.

During 17 years of follow-up, 4,955 deaths occurred. After adjusting for such factors as demographics, socioeconomic status and health behaviors, researchers found that walking, aerobics, stretching, weight lifting and stair climbing were related to lower risks of mortality. When adjusting for engagement in all exercise types, stretching and volleyball were found to be uniquely associated with lower risks of mortality.

Their findings suggest that some types of exercise have unique benefits for longevity, but most are indistinguishable in relation to longevity.

What that means, Sheehan said, is that if you're doing any exercise, that's better than if youre doing nothing. So I think what's best is to just keep doing what you can consistently do, what you consistently enjoy doing. I wouldn't go out of your way to adjust your lifestyle to the results of this study, because it might be harder for you to stretch than to play volleyball, for instance.

One exercise they found to have a negative effect on longevity was baseball, which they presume is due to the culture of chewing tobacco associated with the sport. And surprisingly, in spite of its association with the neurodegenerative disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), they did not find that football was associated with increased mortality.

In addition, Sheehan and Li found that the benefits ofexercise did not vary across different types of social groups, meaning any type of exercise is good for everyone.

Sheehan, who has conductedresearch on sleepin the past, is interested in expanding on these most recent findings to see how different types of exercise affect sleep quality.

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When it comes to longevity, any exercise is good exercise - Newswise

Conversations: Two Screenwriters Talk About Their New NovelsUtopia Avenue and Antkind – thirdcoastreview.com

Screenshot, Madeline Miller and David Mitchell in conversation.

It was just serendipity that the Chicago Humanities Festival scheduled two screenwriters with hot new novels two weeks in a row for their livestream show. Well, serendipity and the fact that the release dates were a week apart (July 7 and 14).

Last week, it was Charlie Kaufman (Anomalisa; Synecdoche, New York; andBeing JohnMalkovich) with his first novel,Antkind. This week, it was David Mitchell (Cloud Atlas,The Bone Clocksand eight novels) with his latest novel,Utopia Avenue.

This article is not a book review, but a report on the hosts conversations with two talented and idiosyncratic authors.

David Mitchells conversation with author Madeline Miller (her novels areSong of AchillesandCirce) turned out to be a mutual admiration fest.Miller did succeed in turning the conversation to Utopia Avenue and Mitchells other writings, but he came armed with a long list of questions, he said, about Millers two novels drawn from classic mythology; he flourished copies of both books to the video camera as he talked. Mitchell said hes a big admirer of Millers novels and so there was a lot of conversation about how Miller got interested in the classics (her mother read her The Iliad when she was 5 or 6), the longevity of myth, and the power of poetry in Homers writing.

Utopia Avenue is about a fictional British band in the 1960s (named Utopia Avenue after they decide against naming themselves The Way Out), and the four musicians who come together to make music and money. The band is formed under the guidance of a manager, Levon Frankland, who is a decent guy, not the stereotype evil dealer. Theres Elf (Elizabeth Frances), the keys player, vocalist and songwriter, who comes from the folk scene. Griff, the drummer, is a jazzer. Jasper is a virtuoso guitarist and songwriter and Dean is a talented, self-taught bassist and songwriter and former member of a band named Battleship Potemkin. (Jasper and Griff were with a sub-subpar band named Archie Kinnocks Blues Cadillac and Elf just broke up with her duo partner/boyfriend.)

The 60s were the early days of rock and roll and there were plenty of eclectic influences as bands began. The Stones were already well-established and enviably rich.

Mitchell, Lancashire-born and now living in County Cork, Ireland, has written a book larded with musical references, musical jargon, famous bands and track titles. Jasper meets a still-unknown David Bowie while leaving the bands management office. There are cameo appearances by famous musicians like Syd Barrett, Jimi Hendrix and Leonard Cohen.

When Miller asks Mitchell about works that influenced this book, he names the Canadian band Rush because of their high register vocabulary, Dr. Who and Isaac Asimovs Foundationseries .And one more thing: the childrens book series, Flat Stanley. As Flat Stanley found, upon becoming flat, a curse is a blessing and a blessing is a curse.

Mitchell isnt a musician but he admires the instant feedback loop that musicians have in live performance. Im jealous of that, he said, and commented that music is important to us from the womb on (when we are conscious of the bass track of our mothers heartbeat) and then in adolescence, when music is a tribal identifier. We have a primal relationship with music throughout our lives.

The musicians intention is changed by the listener, who adds personal meaning to the musicians work. And a novel cant make the reader hear the music, Mitchell acknowledged, but it can show its effect on human beings.

His descriptions of the bands early gigs are realistic, with the musicians terrified and their audiences in turn bored or insultingand later their audiences become adoring fans. The band members play off each other; they are strangers at first and become a unit. They start by playing in grungy, mostly empty college halls and rural bars. They travel in a decrepit van they call the Beast. It barely runs but it carries all their gear, amps and Griffs drum kit.

Miller commented on the interconnectedness of Mitchells novels: characters or incidents in one novel appear in others. He does that, he says, because it pleases me to do it. My characters get away and may have a future in another book. Im sometimes thinking three books ahead, he said.

Screenshot. Greta Johnsen and Charlie Kaufman discuss his book.

Antkind, the quirky, circuitous story of a film critic, and Kaufmans other writing was the subject of his conversation with Greta Johnsen (WBEZ and the Nerdette podcast) last week.

In Antkind, B. Rosenberger Rosenberg, the not-Jewish film critic, drives through Florida, trying to keep his windshield bugfree and stopping at a Slammys for a biggy cola and paper towels. He has an African American girlfriend (you would know her name), a relationship of which hes inordinately proud. Hes headed for the St. Augustine Film History building, the architecture of which recreates the head of The Creature from the Black Lagoon,filmed nearby.. (The vault is in the chin; the screening room is in the left gill.) B. is there to do research for a monograph on a Black filmmaker.

The film critic serves partly as Kaufmans opportunity to lampoon film critics (they can write about you but you cant write about them). B. is a jerk, Kaufman says, has a deep need for approval, and hates the work of Charlie Kaufman. The book is often self-referential and in current argot, meta.

Mitchell explains the musicians intention being completed by the listeners experience and emotional state. Kaufman says a piece of work is completed by the readerit goes into your brain.

The main plot line of Antkind concerns the ancient outsider filmmaker that B. meets who has been working for 90 years on a stop-motion animation film with an army of puppets. Watching the film takes three months. B. decides this masterpiece could be the greatest discovery in the history of cinema plus it could save his foundering career. His attempt to bring the film to cinema royalty is the main story thread among many.

Kaufman is being interviewed from his temporary New York apartment. Johnsen asks him if he knew where he was going when he started writing the book, which, by the way, runs 720 pages. Not at the beginning, he says. I like to explore, sort of free form.I didnt know if it would be funny or something else. I tried writing in third person, then first person. (Its written from B.s perspective, in B.s voice.)

Johnsen asks him when he knew he was done. He worked on the book for five-and-a-half years, Kaufman said, and after about five years, he knew where he was goingbut thats by design. Everything is anxiety-inducing for me, he says, so I just add that to it (the anxiety).

Are there books that Antkind is in conversation with? Johnsen asks. Like Kafka, David Foster Wallace, Pynchon. He acknowledges that Kafka has been a big influence on his life and on his thinking. And I used to read a lot of Philip K. Dick, but not recently. Everything feels very of the moment.

Do you ever have writers block? Johnsen asks the standard issue question to a writer. Well, if I do, therere always things percolating even when you dont know they are. (So we might think of writers block as a different form of creativity.)

Charlie Kaufman has a thing for hirsuteness. He begins Antkind with a first-person homage by B. to his beard.

My beard is a wonder. It is the beard of Whitman, of Rasputin, of Darwin, yet it is uniquely mine. Its a salt-and-pepper, steel-wool, cotton-candy confection, much too long, wispy, and unruly to be fashionable. And it is this, its very unfashionability, that makes the strongeststatement. It says, I dont care a whit (a Whitman) about fashion. I dont care about attractiveness. This beard is too big for my narrow face. This beard is too wide. This beard is too bottom-heavy for my bald head. And on and on. Its what he calls his beard monologue.

In a 2015 photo of Kaufman from some film festival, his beard is thick, longish (not a goatee) and dark although not unruly. Hes also definitely not bald. Thick dark curly hair. So Im a little surprised when he Zooms onscreen to converse with Greta Johnsen. His hair is moderately cropped and ruly and hes beardless, but has a big old porn-star mustache.

As to the books themselves, Ive read the first 100 pages of Utopia Avenue and a little less of Antkind (in e-galley versions from the publisher). Utopia Avenue is immediately engrossing, as Mitchell introduces the band members and the London music setting of the late 1960s. I can tell by the smart and funny dialogue among the musicians, as well as hints of whats to come, that Im going to love Utopia Avenue. I know that its at least partly because Im smitten with the pop/rock music scene that UA immediately appeals to me.

Antkind feels as if it will be a novelized version of some of Kaufmans quirky films like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Being John Malkovich. I didnt find the first section that I read as appealing as the other book, but Ive always felt you should read 100 pages of a book before deciding if you want to finish it or not.

Finally, I just want to say something about longggggg books. Mitchells is 574 pages and Kaufmans is 720 pages in print. Now Ive always been a devoted reader and Ive read my share of 700-page doorstops. Im looking at you Ron Chernow with your eye-opening Hamilton biography and David McCulloughs John Adamsor Simon Schamas glorious Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution at 900 pages! But those are all nonfiction. Of course, theres Ulysses (no, Ive never finished it) and Tom Wolfes Bonfire of the Vanities, which I devoured every word of. But whats wrong with a nice 300-page novel? I like a book that fits in my bag when Im commuting or traveling and that doesnt turn my arm numb when Im reading in bed. (Yes, I do read on a Kindle, but I prefer a real book.)

Maybe the pandemic is the time to finally read Ulysses from cover to cover.

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Categories: Events, Lit, Live Lit, Stages

Tagged as: Antkind, Charlie Kaufman, CHF, Chicago Humanities Festival, David Mitchell, Greta Johnsen, Madeline Miller, PenguinRandomHouse, Utopia Avenue

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Conversations: Two Screenwriters Talk About Their New NovelsUtopia Avenue and Antkind - thirdcoastreview.com

Masters Degree in Sports Nutrition and Management at JSS – Star of Mysore

Mysore/Mysuru: Nutrition is the cornerstone for a good physical and mental health and general well-being. In recent times, the subject of Nutrition and Dietetics seems to have caught the attention of students and public alike.

Sports Nutrition is yet another transdisciplinary subject which is focused on increasing awareness among health conscious and sports persons. In India, there is a huge gap between the need for sports Dietitian / Nutritionist and availability of one. This opens a great opportunity for students who are passionate in making their career in the field of Sports Nutrition.

Keeping in mind the ever- growing need of Sports Nutritionist in India and abroad, JSS Academy of Higher Education and Research, Mysuru, is starting a two-year Masters Degree programme in Sports Nutrition and Management from this academic year (September 2020-2021). The course will cover subjects like Sports Physiology, Sports Specific Diets, Nutritional Biochemistry, Human Nutrition, Basic Management subjects, among others.

With the knowledge that physical activity promotes good health and disease-free longevity and sports becoming a lucrative career choice, this course will benefit students who want to make a career as Sports Dietitian/ Nutritionist.

For information on the course, contact Dr. Vanitha Reddy on Mob: 95904-81932 or Dr. Shwetha on Mob: 78290-39578 or JSS AHER on Ph: 0821-2548400, according to a press release.

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Masters Degree in Sports Nutrition and Management at JSS - Star of Mysore

New Study Now Reveals Whether Longevity Genes Influence Aging – Newswire

Some natural ingredients have been found to be potentially beneficial for ageing and longevity. One is resveratrol that has long been gaining increasing attention in the scientific community.

(Newswire.net -- July 14, 2020) Orlando, FL -- There are many people nowadays who suffer from the undesirable signs of aging. This is why more and more scientists are investigating the link between longevity genes and aging.

A report was published inGENETICS,and carried out byde Magalheset al.

In this research, the scientists tried to reanalyze a certain set of genes that were formerly connected to aging in mice.

They calculated the demographic rate of aging in the corresponding mutants, which indicates age-dependent mortality.

It is worth mentioning that TheGompertz-Makeham law of mortality says that there are age-dependent factors and age independent-factors that make up effective human death rate.

An example of age-dependent factors is heart disease and age independent-factors is lightning strokes.

The equation reveals the exponential increase in mortality rate with age. It was applied to data from former mouse studies, and this allowed the authors to see which genes influence the demographic rate of aging.

A majority of the genes analyzed by the authors have been found to affect the longevity of the subjects in an age-independent manner.

Out of 30 genes, only two increased lifespan and this happened through a reduction in the demographic rate of aging. Five out of twenty four genes that shorten the lives of mice increased the demographic rate of aging.

Some natural ingredients have been found to be potentially beneficial for ageing and longevity. One is resveratrol that has long been gaining increasing attention in the scientific community.

According to medical research, resveratrol has a remarkable ability to delay the ageing process. It has even demonstrated its ability to enhance the lifespans of a number of living organisms, which include fruit flies, mice, and fish.

Scientists from Harvard University carried out a study. In this research, it has been found that mice treated with resveratrol had a life expectancy 25 percent greater than average.

Daily consumption of resveratrol has further been found to inhibit weight gain in mice. This was despite the mice having a high calorie and fat diet

In recent scientific research, investigators suggest that it was also able to increase the lifespan of human cells. It seemed to slow the effects of ageing down, and it did so due to its ability to activate a gene called sirtuin.

This enzyme called sirtuin can increase stress resistance and even the ability to survive.

While more studies are still underway to validate the therapeutic benefits of resveratrol. However, its use is undeniably recommended and even widespread.

To experience its remarkable healing benefits, it may be helpful to consider the use of Divine Bounty Resveratrol (http://www.amazon.com/Resveratrol-Supplement-Strength-Extract-capsules/dp/B019C0UU5S).

Divine Bounty is a family-owned brand that manufactures high-quality turmeric curcumin supplements. Passionate about the potential health benefits of turmeric, the team behind Divine Bounty have carefully researched and sourced only the best ingredients to create the ideal blend of turmeric curcumin. More details are available at http://www.DivineBounty.com.

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New Study Now Reveals Whether Longevity Genes Influence Aging - Newswire

Precision Medicine Software Market Is Expected To Grow Tremendously By 2025 – Owned

Global Precision Medicine Software Market Size study report with COVID-19 effect is considered to be an extremely knowledgeable and in-depth evaluation of the present industrial conditions along with the overall size of the Precision Medicine Software industry, estimated from 2020 to 2025. The research report also provides a detailed overview of leading industry initiatives, potential market share of Precision Medicine Software, and business-oriented planning, etc. The study discusses favorable factors related to current industrial conditions, levels of growth of the Precision Medicine Software industry, demands, differentiable business-oriented approaches used by the manufacturers of the Precision Medicine Software industry in brief about distinct tactics and futuristic prospects.

Major Players Covered in this Report are:Gene42, Inc. (Canada), AstraZeneca plc(US), Sunquest Information Systems Inc. (US), Qiagen(Germany), PierianDx, Inc. (US), SOPHiA GENETICS SA (Switzerland), Abbott Laboratories(US), 2bPrecise LLC (Israel), Fabric Genomics (US), Tempus Labs, Inc. (US), Allscripts(US), Foundation Medicine, Inc. (US), IBM Watson Group (US), Sanofi S.A.(France), GlaxoSmithKline plc(UK), LifeOmic Health, LLC (US), Syapse, Inc. (US), Roper Technologies(US), Koninklijke Philips N.V. (Netherlands), NantHealth, Inc. (US), Flatiron Health, Inc. (US), Human Longevity, Inc. (US), Pfizer, Inc., Merck & Co., Inc.(US), N-of-One, Inc. (US), Translational Software, Inc. (US)

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Regional Insights:

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In this study, the years considered to estimate the market size of Precision Medicine Software are as follows:

Research Objectives

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Precision Medicine Software Market Is Expected To Grow Tremendously By 2025 - Owned

Dietary Supplement Sales Projected to Double Over Next 3 Years; COVID-19 Stay-At-Home Orders Drive New Loyal Consumers – Stockhouse

BOCA RATON, FL / ACCESSWIRE / July 14, 2020 / StemSation International, Inc. (OTC PINK:STSN) - a pioneer in the emerging category of dietary supplements called Stem Cell Nutrition, announces strong industry trends should favorably impact its growth. https://www.newhope.com/market-data-and-analysis/analysts-take-online-supplement-sales-projected-double-between-2019-and

According to the Nutrition Business Journal, online dietary supplement sales are projected to grow from $5 billion in 2019 to over $10 billion in 2022. Sales in 2020 are projected to grow 61.4% as stay-at-home orders drive more people to e-commerce and many are then expected to remain loyal to this channel.

Ray Carter, StemSation's President and CEO commented, "it appears that current dynamics related to the pandemic are accelerating the positive trends towards dietary supplement purchasing. Our unique products are positioned to capture consumer attention and the efficacy of our formulations will keep them coming back for more". https://www.stemsation.global/www/en/us/products/category#categories=all

StemSation's all-natural products focus on supporting the two most recently discovered biological systems of the human body, the stem cell system of renewal and repair, and the endocannabinoid system of regulating physiological functions in both the central and peripheral nervous system and in peripheral organs. https://www.stemsation.global/www/en/us/about/

StemSation markets and sells its products online through its growing team of Independent Wellness Advocates in the United States and Europe, who each receive a StemSation replicated website in four languages and currencies. http://www.stemsation.global

StemSation is a company with a long-term health mission', ambitious research goals, and innovative, holistic approaches to health & wellness, and healthy longevity. Our product line shows a new pathway to wellness.

ABOUT STEMSATION INTERNATIONAL, INC.

StemSation International, Inc. (OTC PINK:STSN) develops, manufactures and distributes natural wellness products that support the stem cell and endocannabinoid systems in the human body through using a direct selling model in which Independent Wellness Advocates ("IWAs") advertise and sell its products directly to consumers. StemSation is headquartered in Boca Raton, Florida and its website can be located at http://www.stemsation.global.

SAFE HARBOR STATEMENT

This press release contains forward-looking statements that can be identified by terminology such as "believes," "expects," "potential," "plans," "suggests," "may," "should," "could," "intends," or similar expressions. Many forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from any future results implied by such statements. These factors include, but are not limited to, our ability to continue to enhance our products and systems to address industry changes, our ability to expand our customer base and retain existing customers, our ability to effectively compete in our market segment, the lack of public information on our company, our ability to raise sufficient capital to fund our business, operations, our ability to continue as a going concern, and a limited public market for our common stock, among other risks. Many factors are difficult to predict accurately and are generally beyond the company's control. Forward-looking statements speak only as to the date they are made, and we do not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date the forward-looking statements are made.

FOR INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Nicholas B. Panza, Vice-President StemSation International, Inc. 7777 Glades Road Suite 203 Boca Raton, FL 33434 npanza@stemsationusa.com (561) 245-7454

SOURCE: StemSation International, Inc.

View source version on accesswire.com: https://www.accesswire.com/597328/Dietary-Supplement-Sales-Projected-to-Double-Over-Next-3-Years-COVID-19-Stay-At-Home-Orders-Drive-New-Loyal-Consumers

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Dietary Supplement Sales Projected to Double Over Next 3 Years; COVID-19 Stay-At-Home Orders Drive New Loyal Consumers - Stockhouse

Opinion | CUDDY SHARK: Hockey Renegades jump in early on name-game revolution – yorkregion.com

Resuming play risky

"Skeptimiticissm."

Its a made-up term for the perception many people surely have of the potential return of professional sports. Or, more fittingly, how long they will last before shutting it all down for a second time due to COVID-19.

Rarely do medical degrees hang above the desks of sports journalists. Nor are crystal balls on the corner of scribes desks, any more than paperweights.

But it is a feeling of doubt that has crept over not the resumption of sports at pro levels, but the longevity before something goes badly.

Athletes are testing positive because, after all, they are human beings, too. And some are indicating that returning to work is not in their playbook at all and opting out.

For now, in the case of the National Hockey League, Edmonton and Toronto are hub centres for the West and East Conferences, respectively. Florida, of all places, is hosting the National Basketball Association. Major League Baseball? What a mess.

Confusing times? You know it.

As noted here a few weeks back, it is difficult to imagine athletes, whose bodies are their livelihood and paycheques, risking their careers for what could be interrupted restarts to seasons. Will champions even be determined for 2020?

Given the recklessness displayed daily in the United States, would it be any surprise if COVID-19 once again brings the sports world to its knees?

Branding for money

Since we're on the topic of branding, certain things really stand out when watching those vintage hockey games on Sportsnet.

You realize how the game has evolved over the decades, particularly in the goaltending and style of play, but also in the handful of penalties ignored each and every shift.

And its hard to remember there was once a two-line offside pass rule or touch icing.

Remarkably, even well into the 1980s, it is noticeable how few fans attended games decked out in team apparel.

Somebody, at some point, hit on a ka-ching idea that T-shirts, jerseys and caps would be popular sells. That realization turned on a tap that has since earned teams gazillions of revenue dollars.

John Cudmore is a longtime, award-winning reporter. His Cuddy Shark column appears regularly.

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Opinion | CUDDY SHARK: Hockey Renegades jump in early on name-game revolution - yorkregion.com

For Fine Art Shippers, the Path Forward Is Both Fraught and Filled With Potential – Observer

On March 17, the coronavirus pandemic had just been declared a national emergency in the United States, and multidisciplinary artist Rachel Klinghoffer was taking stock of her new reality. Some of her rainbow-hued, alien-like sculptural work was on display in a solo exhibition at The Skirt, a site-specific installation space run by Ortega y Gasset Projects in Gowanus, Brooklyn, and Klinghoffer wasnt sure whether her show would be closed. I know Im going to have to pick up the work at some point, but I dont know if its going to be the date that we planned, Klinghoffer told Observer, adding that she also had multiple sales of her artwork in progress, and was uncertain about whether the transactions would still take place. On top of her professional concerns, Klinghoffer, who has asthma, was battling intense anxiety about her familys health and her own.

In normal times, the multiplicitous global dance that makes exhibiting art possible is fraught with innumerable complications and essential details that are generally left up to the industrys logistics experts to sort out: those in charge of the safekeeping and transport of works of art. In the midst of a deadly pandemic, fine art logistics experts found they suddenly didnt have the answers to the questions they were hearing from galleries, museums and artists like Klinghoffer: could work be deinstalled and returned, should work hanging in empty galleries be stored, could sold work be transported to its new owner? An industry was suddenly forced to throw out the playbook and make up new rules.

SEE ALSO:Behind the Scenes at 5 New York City Galleries Preparing to Reopen

Things came grinding to a halt essentially overnight. In February, amid fresh fear in response to the emergence of the virus that had already spread dangerously in China, Art Basel Hong Kong was called off. Galleries that had been planning to exhibit at the fair were offered a refund of 75 percent on their booth fees, which can often amount to $125,000 for large spaces, but the abruptness of the cancellation still sent art transporters into a tailspin. The New York Times reported that two shipping containers carrying artwork being offered by five different dealers were still at sea and en route to Hong Kong when the fair was cancelled, forcing the galleries to pay around $15,000 to get their art shipped back.

At the initial shock wore off and the virus continued to spread globally, museums began to close, while staffers threw all their energy into putting together digital content. Auction houses postponed or cancelled their live events and started hosting new rosters of digital sales. Galleries closed up shop and began launching online exhibitions. In the midst of all this, the question of what would happen to artwork itself had yet to be fully answered.

Jonathan Schwartz, CEO of Atelier 4, a North American fine art shipping and logistics company headquartered in New York City, told Observer that before the pandemic hit, We were a company that spread its services between domestic transport, climate storage, custom casework and international forwarding. After the March 22 shutdown, we became a storage company. In-process shipments were called off, ongoing transactions were suspended and panicked European dealers called in last-minute favors in the hopes of satisfying skittish yet demanding clients.

In a moment when only the shipment of certain commodities was considered to be essential, fine art handlers were operating in a grey area; not entirely certain about how to move forward and questioning whether they even should. Schwartz described an incident wherein an overseas client demanded that a work being held in a New York Atelier 4 facility be shipped to them after the states March 22nd PAUSE shutdown took effect, which the company refused to do. However, around the same time,the company went ahead with shipping a work of art from one of their storage facilities in Florida to a client in Switzerland because COVID-19 laws and restrictions differed from state to state, and continue to do so.

Professional art shippers have also had to rush to come up with new social distancing and customer-interaction protocols for their employees and clients. At Atelier 4, customers are now asked to place items in a single pre-designated location where distancing protocols can be maintained when shippers arrive to pick them up. But the extreme variety of materials used in different artworks introduces a host of new questions for every job. How long does the virus last on alloy? What about marble? Should wooden crates be wiped down with something alcohol-based? What about cardboard containers? And so on.

Additionally, its become essential for art shipping businesses to ensure that their various facilities are safe to navigate, and these types of necessary undertakings can get very expensive. We spent tens of thousands of dollars trying to secure masks and sanitizers, Paul Cannon, the Managing Director at Gander & White Shipping Incorporated, told Observer. Theyre a bit more readily available now, but there was one point where I came into the office every day just trying to source all that. It was really difficult. In preparation for the art market to reopen somewhat, Gander & White, which has American locations in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Palm Beach and San Francisco, has been preparing a handful of viewing rooms for galleries or private clients who may want to make use of them.

Each location is following either state mandate or government mandated guidelines, Cannon said. Visitors whore coming for a view will have to complete a form with various obvious questions. Have you had any COVID-19 symptoms? Have you been around anybody whos had symptoms? Have you travelled abroad? Were all wearing masks, weve got hand sanitizing stations and wipes in each viewing room. Weve got all types of new gadgets to try to keep people safe.

For employees and management, maintaining the cleanliness of art storage facilities is just as essential as ensuring that client-facing spaces are safe to navigate. Anything in your warehouse thats a fixture like a light switch or doorknob is being disinfected regularly, Schwartz said. At the interior loading dock, we treat everything like its contaminated and focus on wiping down everything. Every time we address a task, when the task is over, we disinfect ourselves. We dont relax until were in a designated safe zone.

Of course, long before these new precautions were put in place, many institutions in the art world found it necessary to lay off or furlough huge swaths of staffers. When the pandemic first hit, we furloughed the majority of our staff, which enabled us to continue paying their benefits which was really important for us, Cannon said. In the last four to five weeks weve been bringing staff back, and I think were probably at around 90 percent at the moment, and the layoffs were less than 5 percent or so. According to Schwartz, Atelier 4 initially furloughed 75 percent of the company, or 65 employees, but has since brought half of them back. In and of itself, the return process can be extremely fraught for furloughed fine art shippers.

With Paul Cannons employees, its a spectrum from Im so glad to be back at work, to Im not leaving my house, I cant come back, Cannon said, and you get everything in between. But what I find is that once theyre back in the environment for at least a week, they are genuinely beginning to relax and seeing that the world is still continuing. I think they see that management is trying to take them extremely seriously because were people too, with families who need that kind of reassurance.

Although art shipping employees are now tentatively coming back to work, theres much thats still unclear about how global art transportation will sustainably function going forward. The pandemic has severely reduced the amount of flights being made by commercial and cargo airplanes, meaning that international shipment rates have become much more expensive. Similarly, social distancing protocols have necessitated that shipment businesses incur the cost of additional vehicular ground transport. Before, there might be three people on a truck; we cant send three out now, Cannon said. Two will go on the truck, and then well get a van or a car for the third person to meet them.

For another example, traditionally, museums loaning out fine art for exhibitions will insist on the supervision of a courier, or a person who stays with a work of art through every step of its transport from point A to point B. Because of the degree to which the pandemic has made person-to-person interaction more dangerous, members of the fine art shipping community have begun exploring the possibility of using virtual couriers (an apparatus that could track the location and status of a work of art) so that art could potentially be moved largely without human intervention. The sudden absence of art fairs is also a huge concern in the shipping industry: without those events, the volume of work simply wont be there at the capacity it had been.

The one fact that everyone seems to agree upon is that no matter what happens, art collectors will continue to want to purchase art. Knowing this, the challenge for the art shipment industry becomes adjusting to the new needs of their customers. Weve seen, for example, Sothebys and the other galleries open up pop-up shops in the Hamptons, because thats where a lot of the New York wealthy have disappeared to, Cannon said. How do we keep up with that? What new services can we come up with to serve galleries and clients and auction houses?

In the foreground of all this uncertainty is the fact that the United States is being hit harder by COVID-19 than any other country in the world. Due to a toxic combination of a woefully insufficient federal response and the corrosive effects of American individualism, its highly likely that infection rates will continue to spike and fluctuate all across the country until a vaccine is developed. In the midst of a crisis thats very much still unfolding, art world professionals from every corner of the industry are taking things day by day, and counting their small victories.

During the last week of June, which she described as a very intense art moving week, the artist Rachel Klinghoffer finally began to feel optimistic. I literally have just acquired back most of my work, and most of one other show that I was in that opened but no one ever physically got in there; theres just images of it, Klinghoffer said. That show is coming back, theyre bringing it back up at the end of August. Even better, the sales that Klinghoffer had been uncertain about in March ultimately went though.

It makes me feel hopeful that there are collectors buying and supporting artists out there, said Klinghoffer, who added that shes discovered renewed liberation in her artistic practice. Ive reached a whole other level of appreciation, enjoyment and longevity in a different type of way that Id never even thought about before. I dont want to be doing anything the same way; everythings completely reevaluated. The disparities in this world are too great not to recognize that if you are human.

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For Fine Art Shippers, the Path Forward Is Both Fraught and Filled With Potential - Observer

Readers Write: Racist letters have no place in this paper – Opinions – The Island Now

Lifelong Great Neck resident here, one among many who was disappointed to read yesterdays editorial essentially defending your publication of the nonsense (your words) and salacious (my words) opinion piece by Joan Swirsky. Where does one begin?

While I sympathize with your point about not having the resources to properly fact-checkknowing how under-funded and under-staffed media, especially local ones, are these daysI simply have to question your editorial judgment. What part of Ms. Swirksys piece did you think was fit to print? Was it her disparagement of public education, in the newspaper of a town that prides itself on having one of the top public school systems in the country? Or was it the tantalizing title that drew you in, obvious clickbait that would bring more readers to your site? Anyone in any editorial position would take one look at that title alone and surmise that its only purpose was to stir division.

Dont know what camp you fall into but in my book, racial justiceand quite frankly, all areas of human rightsisnotand should not be a partisan issue. If these last six weeks have revealed anything, it is that everyone, regardless of their background or political affiliation, is responsible for both the longevity and thus the dismantling of the corrosive systems that divide us; anything less, neutral, or to the contrary reinforces those power structures that doomed this nation from the start. Running a well-argued piece about how Republican policies may help Black Americans? I may be intrigued! Running a piece that leans on overt racist stereotypes about Black Americans to further a conservative agenda? Part of the problem.

To that point, Id also like to call your attention to the piece of this editorial that identified Ms. Swirskys piece as at least not explicitly racist. This is, first, categorically untrue, apropos the aforementioned reliance on racial stereotypes (e.g., the welfare queen). But it also makes me wonder: What do you consider to be explicit racism? Is implicit racism alright with you, and does it fit with the ideals of the publication you run? Are you unaware of the lasting psychological harmthat racial stereotypes and microaggressions can leave on Black Americans and other Americans of color? What is less harmful about allowing a white resident to wield inane stereotypes about Blackness to bolster her claim to know anything about the plight of Black Americans compared to our Embarrassment of a President retweeting a video of white supremacists chanting All Lives Matter? Did you ever once consider how somealready-alienatedBlack residents of Great Neck might feel reading a piece like Ms. Swirskys? These arent rhetorical questions, I am genuinely curious to know.

But the most confusion piece of your editorial came in the concluding paragraphs:

Perhaps after the construction of Confederate statutes, the naming of military bases after traitors who attacked the United States government to protect slavery and decades of race-baiting politicians a letter in our papers would make a difference in the promotion of racism. But we dont think censoring bad ideas serves democracy best.

It is lost on me why you would think to compare journalism to the erection of Confederatestatues(which, by the way, is the correct term for a constructed monument;statutesrefer to written laws passed by a legislative body). Im actually not even sure what you are trying to say here, given the general lack of coherence, but I have read this in two ways. Either one, you have only now just begun to consider the possibility that giving voice to hateful ideas (and poorly argued ones at that) in your publication continues our countrys long and painful tradition of glorifying racist people and power structures. This would make your publication of pieces like Ms. Swirskys, at best, a pitiful lapse in editorial judgment.

But I cannot help but read this tone as being somewhat tongue-in-cheek, a confession that you do not believe the contents of your own paper make a difference. It is baffling that a newspaper editor would undermine the efficacy of its own publication in an editorial that, on the whole, makes a claim for the protection of the First Amendment right to free speech of all kinds, an amendment that allows publications like this one to exist. By this interpretation, your statement makes it painfully clear how you allowed such an egregiously offensive piece to run: Even you do not think the contents of your own newspaper matter.

Most of all, I am struggling to understand the logic behind your argument that in order to defend democracy, we must make space for ideas and thoughts that are not only antithetical to that ideal, but that directly undermine it. I love words; I believe in words. But I also believe the word democracy has become somewhat empty: yes, an ideal on which this country was founded, but one that has become abstracted to absurdity by conservatives and members of the far-right, under the guise of upholding systems under which democracy has failed.

It is not that I think democracy as an idealone that advocates for liberty and justice for allis a pipe dream; it is just that, as it stands now, it is still just an ideal, a distant hope that has yet to be realized. Remember that when our founding fathers founded this government as a democracy, its definition was limited to white men of property; still today, it is a word behind which our leadersgenerally similarly privileged cisgender heterosexual white menhave hidden in order to stall progress. And while people like Ms. Swirsky may believe we have achieved equality, everything from the last six weekshell, the last four yearshas proven otherwise. So please forgive me if I think wielding democracy as a defense in support of your failures on the job a weak debate tactic.

Simple request: the next time you think of publishing a navel-gazing piece about the purpose of journalism todefend your inability to properly do your job, please just do your job instead.

Nicole Biton

Great Neck

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Readers Write: Racist letters have no place in this paper - Opinions - The Island Now

Architecture grads from National University of Singapore future-proof their city – Dezeen

An eGaming stadium and a post-pandemic housing typology for Singapore's migrant workers are among the student projects from the National University of Singaporespotlighted in this VDF school show.

Under the title Vision 2020, NUS is exhibiting 12 thesis works from this year's Master of Architecture graduates, which "provoke, inspire and question" where the industry is headed.

The projects fall into five broad themes, which crystallised themselves as the most pressing for students Atmosphere and Agency, Conservation and Heritage, Urban Commons and Wellness, Speculative Environments and Performative Design.

The remaining projects from the class of 2020 are also being showcased as part of NUS's virtual MArch Grad Show.

University: National University of SingaporeCourse: Masters of ArchitectureVirtual Exhibition: nusmarchgradshow.comInstagram: @nusm.archgradshow

Course statement:

"The NUS Architecture school positions itself as a design and research think-tank, tackling topics such as the environment and climate change, economic and cultural changes as well as technological advancement through the lens of architecture andurban development.

"Students explore design research through mixed modes of inquiry across a core set of speciality areas history and theory criticism, design technologies, urbanism and landscape studies. Design is pursued through multiple avenues by students and supervisors across a wide range of topics.

"As the NUS masters programme has evolved over the decades, these aspirations have forged an investigative approach that utilises architecture as an agent of change. They culminate in a collection of questions on nature the dichotomy between the collective and the individual and the conflict between human habitation and natural ecology in light of climate change.

"This small sampling of work links to a wider collection of critical design investigations in architecture by the graduating class of 2020 at NUS."

City as Ecosystems, Architecture as Scaffold by Candice ChenProject cluster: Urban Commons and Wellness

"Cities are often perceived as harsh, man-made environments that are antithetical to nature and her abundant biodiversity. This thesis aims to challenge this preconception and show how cities can be amendable to natural ecosystems.

"City as Ecosystem, Architecture as Scaffold advances a new paradigm for homeostatic living in the future, urban neighbourhoods of Singapore. Here, architecture acts as a scaffolding for sustaining natural ecosystems through biophilic design while fostering a sense of stewardship within the community to achieve social and urban resilience towards climate change."

Site:Greater Southern Waterfront, SingaporeThesis supervisor:Fung John ChyeProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/chentingyancandice

Project Metamorphosis by Fawwaz AzharProject cluster: Urban Commons and Wellness

"The resilience of the neighbourhoods that house our multicultural community will be affected when climate change alters our environment and when the technology of the fourth industrial revolution disrupts the way we work, live and play. While we are on the verge of the fourth revolution of cyber-physical systems, climate change also threatens our way of life here in Singapore.

"High-tech infrastructure advancements and climate change interventions have paved the way for a sustainable, future-ready typology for coastal city neighbourhoods. Called Project Metamorphosis, it thrives on a mobile and connected lifestyle."

Site:Tanjong Pagar Port, SingaporeThesis supervisor: Fung John ChyeWebsite: wazworks.net

Championing Fukushima by William Tin Wai LeungProject cluster: Urban Commons and Wellness

"The fallout from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in March 2011 still haunts and affects locals until this day. The daily lives of victims continue to be disrupted, as many lost their homes, jobs, communities.

"This proposal uses the event of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics as an opportunity to rejuvenate the affected towns and addresses the lingering stigma surrounding the nuclear fallout. This is achieved by empowering the remaining residents in Hirono-cho and inspiring the evacuees to return to their former lives."

Site:Hirono-cho, Fukushima Prefecture, JapanThesis supervisor: Dr Zhang YeProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/williamtinwaileung

Play! A Guide to Architecture for Resilience by Tan Xin YuanProject cluster: Speculative Environments

"This thesis posits that housing landscapes, as a spatial and physical construct, play a pivotal role in shaping the core identity of Singapore's residents. It also calls on the state's Housing & Development Board (HDB) to fulfil its role of shaping a resilient future generation.

"This project distils the sense of identity and the memories that can be created in everyday neighbourhoods and acts as a vehicle that is reactionary to the longevity and permanence of one's psychoanalytic id. Ultimately, Play! is a guide to creating a housing typology that builds meaningful identities based on permanent qualities and values beyond the traditional pedagogy of what a school can teach."

Site:Tanglin Halt, SingaporeThesis supervisor:Tiah Nan ChyuanWebsite: xinyuantan.com

Totem: An Evolution of Spectatorship and Play by Glenn LohProject cluster: Speculative Environments

"Set in New York City, Totem represents a new standard for gaming spaces. The project proposes an 'urban event' that draws on the escapism that can be achieved through the act of play.

"This novel, large-scale stadium typology serves as a point of convergence for difference industry agents creators, publishers, gamers and spectators in a celebration of the making, playing, watching and living of games. With its distinct focus on screen and projection technology, this new hub illuminates the way forward in our increasingly digitised society."

Site:New York CityThesis supervisor: Dr Joseph LimProject cluster: Speculative EnvironmentsProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/glennloh

Frontlines (Backalleyways) by Khoo Hui En VanessaProject cluster: Speculative Environments

"The Covid-19 pandemic has brought attention to the vulnerability of migrant workers in Singapore and their relegation to the city's margins.

"Through adapting Walter Segal's self build approach to construction, this new tenancy scheme aims to provide them with a comfortable ratio of private living quarters to shared common spaces. This new township typology forms a hierarchy of shared common spaces with varying levels of flexibility in layout and configuration, in order to return spatial autonomy to the migrant tenants and build social capital among them."

Site:Lor 13/15 GeylangThesis supervisor: Dr. Swinal SamantProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/vanessakhoo

Weaving the Complex by Wang ChangrenProject cluster: Performative Design

"BaishiZhou, the largest urban village in China, is facing demolition. The village has witnessed drastic urbanisation and serves as a low-cost housing enclave for migrant workers. This proposal aims to find an alternative to the current tabula rasa, or blank slate, planning mode while activating the area's commercial potential.

"First, an evolutionary algorithm is used to establish iterative, simulation-driven methodologies for bottom-up urban regeneration strategies. A palimpsest was cleared out for further design before choosing an urban fabric as a testbed for further, detailed design adaptations, which could eventually be implemented across the whole urban village."

Site:Bai Shi Zhou, ChinaThesis supervisor: Dr. Rudi StuoffsProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/wangchangren

Return of the Amphibious by Gary KwekProject cluster: Conservation and Heritage

" (yu) not only describes a terrain that disappears at high tide and temporarily emerges at low tide but also the cultural activities and spiritual fascination that humans have projected onto this phenomenon of impermanence. The Malay Archipelago contains many of these small, fragmented islets, but their 'amphibious' quality as an island has been lost through the reclamation and gentrification that accompanied the arrival of western modernity."This architectural intervention takes the form of a neo-vernacular village, where people can continue to define what constitutes 'vernacular' and reconnect with the amphibious identity that was a crucial part of our ancestors."

Site:Southern Islands, SingaporeThesis supervisor: Dr. Johannes WidodoProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/garykwek

The Sanctuary by Joanne Tiaw Zuo EngProject cluster: Conservation and Heritage

"Kuantan is highly regarded as one of Malaysia's most significant, biodiverse coastal areas. And yet it is also one of its most contaminated. Over the last decade of industrial occupation, the topography of this fragile environment has radically transformed. Kuantan Port, shipyards and water-bound infrastructure now define a highly modified and dilapidated shoreline.

"The ongoing conflict between people power and state-backed corporate power has shed a light on the world's largest rare earth extraction plant Lynas. Tapping into an established tourism platform, this thesis rethinks the rehabilitation of post-industrial ecology through the means of eco-tourism."

Project site: Gebeng Industrial Estate, Kuantan, MalaysiaThesis supervisor: Ho Weng HinProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/joannetiawzuoeng

Breeding Resilience: Thriving in Orange Air by Viany SustinaProject cluster: Atmosphere and Agency

"The project explores the process of oxygen production through a symbiotic relationship between humans and a kind of microalgae called Chlorella vulgaris. This idea is then translated into a form that aligns with the cultural and human context of the indigenous peoples of Kalimantan, Indonesia, who are plagued by raging fires and pungent haze.

"The thesis explores the site's mechanical and aesthetic opportunities, using village engineering and adhocism as a construction logic. It also maximises the silhouetted visuals created through the haze as an emerging aesthetic of resilience and adaptation, allowing them to thrive in their very own way."

Site:Desa Gohong (Central Kalimantan, Indonesia)Thesis supervisor: Tsuto SakamotoProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/vianysutisna

: An Architecture of Immensity by Goh Teck Kuang CliffordProject cluster: Atmosphere and Agency

" speculates about the changing role of cultural institutions in today's increasingly flattened, mediated network society. Through a study of works by esteemed Chinese artists, this thesis argues that Chinese art and cultural products are defined by the common characteristic of 'immensity' of large-scale productions that span across time and space.

"Referencing the Koolhasian notion of Bigness, this thesis speculates how cultural spaces may change in the near future to accommodate novel cultural formats. It proposes a series of underground and street-level spaces along Middle Road as part of a speculative expansion of the China Cultural Centre, Singapore."

Site:Middle Road, SingaporeThesis supervisor: Bobby WongProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/cliffordgoh

The Ethereal City of Pink by Ian MunProject cluster: Atmosphere and Agency

"The Ethereal City revives native Botswanan myths, fables and folklore in its practices. It capitalises on the natural shades of pink that can be found in the Sua Salt Pans, so that these ecological constructs become embedded into an architectural narrative and experience.

"In opposition to the effects of mass industrialisation, this thesis imagines an architecture, a landscape and a culture that is both constructed and organic. Pink is a shorthand for Botswanan identity and its architecture speaks of deference, independence, return and renewal."

Site: Sua Salt Pans, Sowa District, Botswana, AfricaThesis supervisor: Dr. Lilian CheeTeaching assistant: Wong ZihaoProject showcase: nusmarchgradshow.com/ianmun

Virtual Design Festival's student and schools initiativeoffers a simple and affordable platform for student and graduate groups to present their work during the coronavirus pandemic.Click here for more details.

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Architecture grads from National University of Singapore future-proof their city - Dezeen

Advanced Packaging Technologies Market Projected to Gain Significant Value by COVID-19 Crisis 2018 2026 – 3rd Watch News

Every manufacturing line up ends with packaging line followed by labelling. As the manufacturing process are being automated the packaging line have also evolved from manual one to sophisticated fully automated packaging systems that requires minimum human interference. This is where advanced packaging technologies, systems and solutions providers offers their products and services. The products include the material handling, aliquoting and disposals in the containers with strict monitoring through computer-controlled systems. The technologies used has been further extended towards increasing the shelf life of the products packed that modifies the atmosphere and put right ingredients in the neck space that enhances the longevity and hence extends the best before date. These systems are highly used in the FMCG and packaged food sector where the mass consumer products are produced.

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Rising household incomes and the growing middle-class population have led to an increase in demand for packaged food products, which is increasing the demand for packaging technologies and equipment in this region. This is an emerging market, and hence provides opportunities for the growth of the food packaging technology and equipment market.

High cost of these technologies limits the uses in the packaged products whose selling prices are low especially in the food products. In many cases the cost of packaging eats away the profit margins and the cost cant be easily transferred to the retail prices when the end market is highly competitive. The opportunities lies in development of the low cost technology that embraces the advanced technologies through R&D.

On the basis of Technology, the market is segmented as Active Packaging (Active Packaging Systems: Oxygen Scavengers, Moisture Scavengers/Absorbers, Ethylene Absorbers; Active Releasing Systems: Antioxidant Releasers, Carbon Dioxide Emitters; Modified Atmosphere Packaging; Temperature Control Packaging; Anti-Corrosion Films and Smart and Intelligent Packaging which includes TTI Tags & Labels, Freshness Indicators, Oxygen and CO2 Indicators, RFID and Others

On the basis of end use, the advanced packaging technologies market is segmented into Food, Beverages, Pharmaceuticals, Industrial & Chemicals, Cosmetics & Personal Care, Agriculture, and Others. Food segment in the advanced packaging technologies market is further sub-segmented into Meat, Poultry, and Seafood, Fruits & Vegetables, Ready-to-Eat Meals, Dairy Foods, Bakery & Confectionary, Frozen Foods, and Cereals.

The global demand for advanced packaging technologies is largely fulfilled by the manufacturers present in major countries of Europe and North America regions. Here the higher disposable income covers the high cost of the products packaged with these advanced packaging technologies. The largest segment where it is used in the RTE segment and dairy as the shelf life of these products are very short.

Some of the key players in the global advanced packaging technologies market are PakSense, Inc, Landec Corporation, Sealed Air Corporation, Bemis Company, Inc, Crown Holdings, Inc., Amcor Limited, 3M Company, Timestrip UK Ltd., Cryolog S.A., Vitsab International AB, Varcode, Ltd., LCR Hallcrest LLC.:, Thin Film Electronics ASA, CCL Industries Inc., Temptime Corporation, Multisorb Technologies, Inc., Coveris Holdings S.A., and others.

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Advanced Packaging Technologies Market Projected to Gain Significant Value by COVID-19 Crisis 2018 2026 - 3rd Watch News

Global Precision Medicine Software Market Analysis and Forecast 2027- including drivers, constraints, intimidation, challenges, opportunities, and…

Global Precision Medicine Software Market presents insights into the present and upcoming industry trends, enabling the readers to identify the products and services, hence driving the enlargement and effectiveness. The research report provides a comprehensive breakdown of all the major factors impacting the market on a global and regional scale, including drivers, constraints, intimidation, challenges, opportunities, and industry-specific trends. Further, the report cites global certainties and endorsements along with downstream and upstream analysis of leading players.

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Major Players:

Abbott Laboratories(US)Syapse, Inc. (US)Roper Technologies(US)Sunquest Information Systems Inc. (US)Pfizer, Inc., Merck & Co., Inc.(US)N-of-One, Inc. (US)NantHealth, Inc. (US)LifeOmic Health, LLC (US)Fabric Genomics (US)Allscripts(US)GlaxoSmithKline plc(UK)Gene42, Inc. (Canada)Foundation Medicine, Inc. (US)Koninklijke Philips N.V. (Netherlands)PierianDx, Inc. (US)Translational Software, Inc. (US)Flatiron Health, Inc. (US)IBM Watson Group (US)Sanofi S.A.(France)Tempus Labs, Inc. (US)AstraZeneca plc(US)2bPrecise LLC (Israel)Qiagen(Germany)SOPHiA GENETICS SA (Switzerland)Human Longevity, Inc. (US)

Global Precision Medicine Software Market research reports enlargement rates and the market value based on market dynamics, growth factors. Complete knowledge is based on the newest innovation in business, opportunities, and trends. In addition to SWOT examination by key suppliers, the report contains an all-inclusive market analysis and major players landscape.

The regional segmentation covers:

Segmentation by Type:

Cloud-basedOn-premise

Segmentation by Application:

Healthcare providersResearch centers & Government institutesPharmaceutical & Biotechnology companiesOther end users

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Report Objectives

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Table of Content:

The Global Precision Medicine Software Market

Chapter 1: Precision Medicine Software Market Overview, Drivers, Restraints and Opportunities

Chapter 2: Precision Medicine Software Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 3: Precision Medicine Software Production by Regions

Chapter 4: Production, By Types, Market share by Types

Chapter 5: Consumption, By Applications

Chapter 6: Comprehensive profiling and analysis of Manufacturers

Chapter 7: Manufacturing cost analysis

Chapter 8: Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Chapter 9: Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Chapter 10: Precision Medicine Software Market Effect Factors Analysis

Chapter 11: Precision Medicine Software Market Forecast

Chapter 12: Conclusion of Precision Medicine Software Market

The Report has Tables and Figures Browse The Report Description and TOC @ https://www.globalmarketers.biz/report/others/2015-2027-global-precision-medicine-software-industry-market-research-report,-segment-by-player,-type,-application,-marketing-channel,-and-region/146709#table_of_contents

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Can the Czech and Slovak automotive industries power through the pandemic? – Emerging Europe

Czechia and Slovakia have a long history of leadership in the automotive industry. The two countries make up a significant bedrock of the European industry as a whole, and are the 15th and 19th largest producers of vehicles in the world. Per capita, only Germany, Spain and France make more cars in Europe.

The two countries have much to offer. Strategic locations, seamless integration with European markets, a skilled labour force, political stability and highly developed supply systems all mean that both Czechia and Slovakia are well placed for automotive success.

But are they now about to fall victim to that success, with car sales plummeting around the world, not least in Europe?

Cars and spare parts make up a massive 20 per cent of Czech exports. Its flagship brand, koda Auto, is one of the oldest automobile makers in the world. In Slovakia, the industry is even more significant for the economy, accounting for 30 per cent of exports. It is clear that maintaining a healthy automotive industry is vital to the health of the economies in both countries.

The automotive industry has been facing significant challenges for some time, as public perceptions of mobility change. Covid-19 has brought these challenges into far sharper focus, while also bringing the market to a halt.

According to Jn Pribula, the secretary general of the automotive industry association in Slovakia, this is only exasperated by a disparity between the current economic situation and EU outdated legislation. Due to the pandemic, climate targets cannot be met, and the testing and marketing of new technology cannot take place as rapidly as originally planned. More specifically, the EUs policy of demanding emissions reductions creates unrealistic expectations for an industry that is now struggling.

Such an approach by the European Commission could result in large fines for vehicle manufacturers, further cutbacks in production, and even the scrapping of already vehicles which have already some off the production lines, he says.

Vojtch Severn, a spokesperson for the automotive industry in Czechia, believes that state and EU support will be required to help the industry through this difficult period.

At the moment, all companies can do is reduce investment, cut costs and do the best they can to keep their employees on board, he tells Emerging Europe.

Due to the multiplicity of the automotive industry, the downturn in production expected this year to be around 20 per cent in Czechia and 30 per cent in Slovakia has a multiplier effect on the broader economy. Upstream businesses such as steel, chemicals and textiles, as well as downstream industries such as ICT, repair and mobility services all feel the impact of stunted demand and market paralysis, making the need for support even more crucial.

As with so many industries, automotive is only expected to return to pre-crisis levels in the second half of 2021. Full recovery could even come as late as 2022. And while the Czech and Slovak governments have both introduced emergency legislation to prevent unemployment, this might not be enough in the long term.

In this sense, government cooperation and communication are crucial to ensuring appropriate support that is effectively tailored to the needs of the industry. And yet while EU leaders are currently fighting over the terms of the blocs Covid-19 recovery fund, delaying its implementation, this support cannot come soon enough.

However, both the Czech and Slovak auto sectors have proven to be highly adaptable, and it is this adaptability that may save them from the worst effects of the downturn. Both countries have been at the forefront of the recent shift towards electrification and automated technology.

Kia, one of Slovakias largest automotive producers, has announced a strategy to transition to electric vehicles and aims to produce one million environmentally-friendly vehicles by 2026, company spokesperson Jan Zgravcak tells Emerging Europe.

koda meanwhile has similar plans for electromobility, autonomous driving and digitalisation.

Automation is part of an ongoing process of improving efficiency, productivity, and eliminating the human factor either from operations hazardous to health or operations where human error could cause serious shortcomings of the product, Mr Pribula tells Emerging Europe.

Inherently, this shift towards automation also means a shift in labour usage, although Mr Pribula ascertains that, this is not reflected in a reduction of employees but in their qualification structure.

Czechia has seen an increased demand for highly qualified IT workers, suggesting that the hardest hit will be the least skilled. One of our common goals, together with the government, is creating re-skilling or up-skilling programmes for the re-qualification of people and changing the approach to education, says Mr Severn.

Despite these efforts, the industry is not likely to be spared job losses. Last year 3,000 workers were laid off at a plant in Slovakia that produces Volkswagens Touareg and Porsches Cayenne models, sending shockwaves through the industry. Covid-19 has left workers even more vulnerable.

A recent increase in research and development investment within the industry does offer hope for the future, however. In Czechia, last year saw research and development account for almost one third of industry investment, totaling 500 million euros. Yet while this is key to the industrys longevity, it does not help to mitigate the major shifts that will be felt among the most unskilled in the aftermath of Covid-19. Ensuring a continuation of government co-operation will be key to managing the current crisis, where these impacts on the labour market will be magnified.

As Mr Pribula explains, economic measures taken to help firms in Slovakia during the crisis were complicated, and at the beginning not suited for the support of large companies. Yet through initiative and communication,greater transparency was achieved, but only after a change in government at the end of March.

Communication with the government is currently intensive and we are helping to prepare legislative standards which will systemically address the measures that can be activated at times of economic imbalance, says Mr Pribula.

Similarly, Mr Severn says that, our cooperation with the Czech government is proper. In 2017 we signed the Memorandum on the Future of the Automotive Industry in the Czech Republic and together we are gradually implementing the action plan for clean mobility.

However, some of this cooperation is falling short of expectations, particularly in regards to preparation for autonomous driving. We would also welcome faster construction of a suitable infrastructure for clean mobility and other operational and administrative changes that would facilitate the implementation of clean mobility in the Czech Republic.

He adds that the pandemic has somewhat reduced the urgency of these issues, but that they nevertheless remain at the core of the industry, and are inextricably linked with how the sector progresses as a whole.

Whats certain is that the automotive industrys proven adaptability is about to be put to the ultimate test. It is vital to health of both the Czech and Slovak economies that it passes.

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Can the Czech and Slovak automotive industries power through the pandemic? - Emerging Europe

Morgan Stanley’s CEO Said He Is ‘Committed’ to Diversity. A Lawsuit Filed by the Firm’s Former Diversity Head Alleges Otherwise. – Institutional…

Earlier this month, Morgan Stanleys chief executive officer James Gorman shared a planon LinkedInto improve diversity at the bank.It included promotions for certain Black employees, the creation of an Institute of Inclusion and a $5 million donation to the NAACP.

On Tuesday, less than two weeks later, the firms former diversity head, Marilyn Booker, filed a lawsuit against Morgan Stanley alleging racial discrimination. The suit was filed on behalf of herself and her former Black female colleagues in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of New York.

Booker is suing Morgan Stanley, her former supervisor Barry Krouk, and Gorman for alleged discrimination and retaliation in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, alleged discrimination and retaliation in violation of the New York State Human Rights Law, and alleged violations of both the Equal Pay Act and the New York Equal Pay Law. Booker has also filed an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint, according to her lawsuit.

We strongly reject the allegations made in this claim and intend to vigorously defend ourselves in the appropriate forum, a Morgan Stanley spokesperson said. We are steadfast in our commitment to improve the diversity of our employees and have made steady progress while recognizing that we have further progress to make. We will continue to advance our high priority efforts to achieve a more diverse and inclusive firm.

Booker, who was fired from the firm in December, had worked at Morgan Stanley for 26 years, according to her complaint.

She spent about 16 years as the firms global head of diversity before allegedly being shuffled around through different departments. In 2010, she was moved to the office of development, which was eliminated in 2011. That year, she was selected to lead the firms urban markets group, overseeing minority financial advisors.

Booker alleged in the lawsuit that her salary was essentially held flat in that role as the firm slashed its budget for the program year after year.

According to Bookers complaint, she tried to create a plan to internally address the firms racial biases in 2019. Her plan, called Project Genesis was created with the goal of addressing Morgan Stanleys Black employees constant feelings of isolation and lack of support.

This included addressing their alleged inability to join financial advisory teams and barriers to partnering with white financial advisors on new business opportunities, including unfair commission splits and exclusion from new client meetings. According to the lawsuit, less than one percent of the firms financial advisors are Black.

Krouk, her supervisor, allegedly helped Booker identify analysts and executives who could help Booker on the project last year.

However, Krouk allegedly later told Booker not to tell her colleagues about the project, and allegedly stalled when she asked to present the project to senior management.

A meeting Booker allegedly expected to cover the project was scheduled in December 2019. During it, though, Booker was fired from the firm, the complaint said.

Despite her longevity, loyalty and stellar performance record, Morgan Stanley offered no explanation for her expulsion other than to vaguely say that her position which is one that primarily helps Black people and people of color gain financial literacy and acumen had to be eliminated, the lawsuit said.

[II Deep Dive: The Story Behind Shundrawn Thomass Open Letter to Asset Management]

Gormans plan to improve diversity at the firm, shared on June 4, includes the creation of a similar initiative: the Institute of Inclusion. This group will set up policies and metrics to track diversity and will oversee mentoring, development, and promotion of the firms diverse employees. The announcement said that Morgan Stanley will set aside $25 million for the initiative.

This is the second discrimination lawsuit filed against Morgan Stanley this year. In late April, a female former financial advisor at the firm alleged in a lawsuit that she missed out on pay and was harassed by co-workers because she is a woman,Institutional Investorssister publicationRIA Intelreported at the time.

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Morgan Stanley's CEO Said He Is 'Committed' to Diversity. A Lawsuit Filed by the Firm's Former Diversity Head Alleges Otherwise. - Institutional...

Mifepristone Increases Lifespan in Flies and Worms…Can It Improve Longevity in Humans? – MedicalResearch.com

MedicalResearch.com Interview with:

John Gerard TowerProfessor of biological sciencesUniversity of Southern California

MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study?

Response: Mifepristone is a synthetic steroid drug that is used in humans for birth control and as a treatment for Cushings disease, and is currently in clinical trials as an anti-cancer treatment.

We have previously shown that mifepristone dramatically increases the life span of mated female Drosophila flies.

MedicalResearch.com: What are the main findings?

Response: In the present study, we find that mifepristone increases fly life span by altering genes and metabolic pathways that are shared with humans, including interactions with the microbiome.

In addition, we find that mifepristone increases the life span of mated C. elegans worms.

MedicalResearch.com: What should readers take away from your report?

Response: It is striking how conserved the regulation of life span appears to be across species. The metabolism associated with a long, healthy life in humans is similar to the metabolism associated with a long, healthy life in flies, and this is promoted by mifepristone. The finding that mifepristone can increase life span in species as different as fly and worm suggests the possibility that mifepristone might also be able to increase life span in humans.

MedicalResearch.com: What recommendations do you have for future research as a result of this work?

Response: It will be important to identify the exact molecular target of mifepristone in the fly, as this remains unknown, and identifying this target may be useful for designing further anti-aging interventions. It may also be of interest to design human clinical trials to test for possible life span effects of mifepristone.

Nothing to disclose.

Citation:

John Tower, Sean P Curran, Daniel E L Promislow, Jie Shen, Mina Abdelmesieh, Shinwoo Lee, Palak Patel, Jimmy Wu, Tianyi Wang, Jonah Vroegop, Ina Wang, Yang Fan, Lu Wang, Chia-An Yen, Devon V Doherty, Gary N Landis.Metabolic Signatures of Life Span Regulated by Mating, Sex Peptide and Mifepristone/RU486 in Female Drosophila melanogaster.The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, 2020; DOI:10.1093/gerona/glaa164

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The information on MedicalResearch.com is provided for educational purposes only, and is in no way intended to diagnose, cure, or treat any medical or other condition. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health and ask your doctor any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. In addition to all other limitations and disclaimers in this agreement, service provider and its third party providers disclaim any liability or loss in connection with the content provided on this website.

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Mifepristone Increases Lifespan in Flies and Worms...Can It Improve Longevity in Humans? - MedicalResearch.com

Just .1% US winemakers are Black. Heres how to start changing that – Seattle Times

Wine has always been one of our planets great social connectors, as well as a symbol of generosity, pleasure, and celebration.

This spring, however, while the COVID-19 pandemic has reminded us how important human connection is, and the global Black Lives Matter protests have shown how far we have to go in creating a more equitable society, theres renewed energy toward making the wine world more inclusive.

Although there are more than 8,000 wineries in the United States, about one-tenth of 1% of the winemakers and brand owners are Black, estimates Phil Long, president of the Association of African-American Vintners and owner of the Longevity winery in the California Bay Areas Livermore Valley.

Which is why, Long says, the real goal of our organization is promoting awareness letting people know we exist, and we make great wine.

Its true. Many of the wines are absolutely delicious, and range from big, bold reds with savory flavors to refreshing whites, as well as unusual, experimental sparkling wines made from hybrid grapes.

I didnt know winemaking was a career choice, says Long, who has a degree in architecture and spent years as a creative director in the Bay Area. For Italian-Americans, wine is part of their culture and heritage. Most Black winemakers dont have that.

Getting attention hasnt been so easy. The only Black-owned labels that most people are aware of are celebrity brands such as singer-songwriter John Legends LVE collection, made by Napas Raymond Winery, and NBA star Dwyane Wades D. Wade Cellars, made by Napas Pahlmeyer.

Theodora Lee, owner of Theopolis winery in Mendocino, California, is starting to see some change, though. While acknowledging that the injustices and killings of Black men by the police is driving the Black Lives Matter protests, Lee says the movement has helped spotlight Black wines, causing a surge in sales.

Lee, a shareholder, partner, and trial lawyer at Littler Mendelson, says sales have doubled from January to June, and shes signed up many more wine club numbers.

Lee grew up in Texas as the daughter of educators. She learned to love wine via visits to law firm mentors in Napa, California, and thought: I could be a grape farmer and still keep my job. She took viticulture courses at University of California at Davis, hired soil experts to help her decide what grapes to plant, and ended up with five acres of petite sirah in Mendocino County. In 2006, she sold her first harvest and six years later started bottling her own wine.

COVID-19, she says, has encouraged direct-to-consumer sales, which has also helped support Black business owners. Shed like to see bigger wineries partner with Black wineries to help them with distribution.

Thats what happened to the AAVs Long, who launched a national distribution deal with giant Bronco Wine Co. for his two entry-level wines just before the coronavirus hit. After the Black Lives Matter protests, he saw more online sales in the first two weeks of June than in all of 2019. The question, he says, is how we keep that going.

In South Africa, the path to becoming a Black winemaker hasnt been easy either, despite empowerment efforts. The country now has about 60 Black-owned brands, according to Wines of South Africa. Ten are imported into the U.S.

Ntsiki Byela, the countrys first Black female winemaker, says, Wine is not part of our history. A collaboration with Napas Helen Keplinger, set up by Mika Bulmash of U.S. importer Wine for the World, gave her the funds to start her own winery, Aslina.

Its great that people are publishing lists of Black winemakers, says Krista Scruggs, owner of Zafa Wines, based in Burlington, Vermont. But we need to go way beyond that. She is pushing boundaries by making cider and wine blends and using hybrid grapes to make natural sparkling wines.

Julia Coney, a Black wine and travel writer in Washington, explains, One of the problems is that most wine is not marketed to people who look like us. We have to change the perception of what a wine drinker looks like.

Coney just launched Black Wine Professionals to help address the diversity problem in the wine industry. Meanwhile, AAAV sponsors scholarships to encourage others to work in wine and nonprofit organization Wine Empowered is offering tuition-free wine classes to women and minorities in the hospitality industry.

All are worth supporting but hey, dont miss out on the wines. Here are nine to look out for.

2018 Maison Noir OPP (Other Peoples Pinot)

Andre Hueston Mack, a former sommelier at New Yorks Per Se restaurant, is owner and winemaker at this McMinnville, Oregon winery. Think of this bright, juicy wine as an everyday pinot. $17

2019 La Fete du Ros

The first Black-owned ros brand from Saint-Tropez was released last fall by Donae Burston. Its soft textured and fruity, with bright cherryish flavors. $2 from every bottle sold via the website goes to racial justice organization Color of Change. $25

2019 Longevity Pink Pinot Grigio

This floral-scented wine from Californias Livermore Valley is made in the Northern Italian ramato style, in which juice from pinot grigio grapes sit on the pink-toned skins to pick up color. Its fresh and lively, with fruity citrus hints. $26

2017 Aslina Umsasane

Rich, savory, earthy, and sophisticated, this cabernet-based blend is filled with plummy, full-bodied fruit. Umsasane was Byelas grandmothers nickname. $32

2017 Theopolis Petite Sirah

This intense, peppery, deep-colored red comes from the Yorkville Highlands area of Mendocino. Its big and bold but has plenty of brightness and polish. $39

2018 Brown Estate Zinfandel

The only Black-owned winery in the Napa Valley, founded in the 1980s, specializes in zinfandel. This one is bright, spicy, dark-fruited and juicy and very elegant. $45

2019 Tesselaarsdal Pinot Noir

Winemaker Berene Sauls makes this stunning wine at Hamilton Russell vineyards in South Africa. Perfectly balanced, it brims with crushed strawberry and cinnamon aromas and flavors of bright red fruit and minerals. $45

2019 Zafa Wines Visions of Gideon Mea Culpa

This sparkling wine is made as traditional Champagne is, but its a blend of two hybrid grapes, frontenac blanc and frontenac gris. Delicate and soft, yet zingy with acidity, it will change your mind about hybrid grapes. $47

2015 Il Palazzone Brunello di Montalcino

Richard Parsons, former chief executive officer of Time Warner, bought this estate in 2000. This great vintage, released earlier this year, is floral and ripe, with sweet licorice notes and a subtle cherry crispness. $90

2020 Bloomberg News

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Just .1% US winemakers are Black. Heres how to start changing that - Seattle Times

Reasons to be cheerful? Optimists live longer than pessimists – Independent.ie

Optimists live longer than pessimists. Considerably longer, according to research by the Boston University School of Medicine. And we're not just talking about a few extra days or weeks. In a study that involved 69,744 women and 1,429 men, researchers found that those with the highest levels of optimism had a life span that was 11 to 15pc longer than those with the lowest optimism scores. Those same high-scoring optimists also had a 50 to 70pc greater chance of achieving "exceptional longevity" - which is getting to 85 years of age.

While research has identified many risk factors for disease and premature death, we know relatively less about positive psychological factors that can promote healthy ageing," said Lewina Lee, assistant professor of psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine, when the results were published. "This study has strong public health relevance because it suggests that optimism is one such psychological asset that has the potential to extend the human lifespan."

Being optimistic means living your life in the belief that, in general, more good things will happen than bad. It's definitely a positive way to live, but can it really help you live longer?

Well, it seems that being optimistic can reduce the chances of getting many of the conditions that normally end lives early.

In a 2015 study, researchers at the University of Illinois examined the association between optimism and heart health in 5,100 adults aged between 45 and 84. Each participant's heart health was established by measuring their blood pressure, BMI, blood sugar and cholesterol levels, and by assessing their diet, level of physical activity and tobacco use. Each of these criteria were then given a score of 0, 1 or 2 - with higher scores indicating an ideal - which were then added together to give an overall heart health score.

Alongside this, each participant completed a survey to measure their mental health, including how optimistic they were.

The researchers found that those with the highest optimism levels were twice as likely of "being in ideal cardiovascular health" as those with the lowest levels of optimism. The optimists had better cholesterol and blood sugar levels, healthier BMIs, and were more likely to be physically active and less likely to smoke.

A few years earlier, in 2011, a study by the University of Michigan found that optimism can greatly reduce the risk of stroke. By devising a scale to measure the optimism levels of 6,044 adults over 50 years old, then monitoring their health over the next two years, the researchers discovered that every one-point increase in their optimism scale equated to a 9pc reduction in stroke risk.

Optimism also reduces the risk of diabetes. An American Menopause Society study that followed the health of 140,000 post-menopause women for 14 years found that women with high levels of optimism were 12pc less likely to develop type 2 diabetes.

But in addition to reducing the chances of having a serious illness, optimism also appears to reduce the severity of some illnesses and increases the chances of recovery.

In a small-scale study carried out by the University of Texas Health Science Centre at Houston, researchers found that, in a sample of 49 stroke survivors, those with the highest levels of optimism suffered less severe strokes, had lower inflammation levels - post-stroke inflammation can further damage the brain and hamper recovery - and were less physically disabled by the stroke than those with low optimism levels.

"Our results suggest that optimistic people have a better disease outcome, thus boosting morale may be an ideal way to improve mental health and recovery after a stroke," said Yun-Ju Lai, the study's lead author.

In fact, 30 years of research have shown that optimism can positively affect our health in a multitude of ways. Optimists have better immune function. They sleep better. They heal quicker. They enjoy greater IVF success. The list goes on.

But why is this?

While the exact mechanism behind optimism's effect on our health is not known, a number of important factors have been identified.

One of those is behaviour. In general, optimists tend to adopt behaviours that make it less likely that they will have a serious illness. Take exercise, for example. A US study of 73,485 women found that those with high levels of optimism were more likely to take part in vigorous physical activity, which helps reduce the risk of heart disease. And while those same women reported a drop-off in this activity in their 50s, they still had higher levels of vigorous physical activity compared to similarly aged women with low levels of optimism.

Optimists are also better at dealing with the stressors in their lives. While pessimists have a tendency to avoid dealing with their problems directly and employ harmful coping strategies - such as excessive drinking, optimists are more likely to make plans and confront their problems head on. And if they don't succeed, they'll try again.

Optimists are also less prone to rumination and worry, which is why they rarely suffer from insomnia, and they usually sleep for six to nine hours a night, according to research by the University of Illinois.

These differences in how optimists and pessimists deal with life's stressors lead to important changes in how their bodies react to those stressors. For example, studies have found that pessimists, who tend to have higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure anyway, "tend to have larger blood pressure responses to stressors." Optimists, however, have less severe physiological reactions to the same stressful situations.

Despite all the years of research, psychologists are still not in agreement about the nature of optimism. Some believe that it's a personality trait, which they call dispositional optimism. And that, bar some fluctuations, this personality trait remains relatively stable over an individual's life course. They know this because dispositional optimism is quite easily measured, often by using a simple 10-question survey called the Revised Life Orientation Test.

But there are some psychologists who believe that optimism is a thinking style. And one of the interesting things about thinking styles is that they can be learnt.

Does that mean that pessimists could improve their health by learning to think like optimists?

"You can definitely learn optimism," says positive psychologist Dr Jolanta Burke of Maynooth University. "We have a lot of evidence suggesting this. And once you have taught someone the skills, their optimism level will keep improving.

"It's just a different way of looking at things. We can all change the way we think about things. And the great thing is, by changing your thinking you also change your physiological reactions. You change your emotions. You change your actions."

A good way of illustrating the differences in optimistic and pessimistic thinking styles is to look at how optimists and pessimists react to failure in their lives.

"Pessimists tend to blame themselves for bad things," says Jolanta. "For example, if they don't do well on a driving test they'll say, 'Oh, I'm absolutely useless at this!'

"And when you say this, that you as a person are useless at something, the chances of even trying it again are significantly reduced."

Optimists, explains Jolanta, are more likely to recognise the different factors that contributed to the test failure - such as lack of practice - and then take the steps needed to get it right next time.

Optimists also believe that every failure, every bad situation, is temporary. "And this is really important," explains Dr Burke. "If you don't think it's temporary, you don't have hope for change. And we require hope to make things happen.

"Something we've seen consistently in our research is that people with optimism keep trying. They don't give in as quickly. Pessimists, on the other hand, when they're in a bad situation, they think it's going to be like this forever, getting them so down that they're less likely to re-engage with things."

Optimists are also able to compartmentalise the bad things in their lives. "Let's say an optimist failed a test. They'll say, 'Okay, it's just a test. I'm not a failure. It's just one small aspect of my life that did not go well. Look at all the good things I have. I have friends. I have a family. I have a good job.'

"They're able to look at things from a different perspective - a larger perspective."

The good news is that there are very few complete pessimists in the world. Most of us are pretty optimistic, even when faced with a serious illness. But sometimes, we need a little help in believing that good things will happen.

"The people we surround ourselves with have a huge influence on us," says Dr Burke. "In difficult times you need other people to get you out of your thinking. It's terribly important.

"Optimism needs to be viewed as taking control of your life. Pessimism creates a lot of inertia. It's better to be optimistic."

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Reasons to be cheerful? Optimists live longer than pessimists - Independent.ie