Reckoning with medicine’s history of racism – American Medical Association

It is a difficult and potentially perilous exercise to examine our past through the lens of 21st century thinking. Each person is a product of the time in which he or she lives, demanding both principled conviction and righteous humility when we make judgments about people who lived centuries earlier.

We wrestle with this whenever we try to better understand those who founded our nation, and when we try to reconcile their actions with the values of equality that our country pledged in the Declaration of Independence. And yet, honest self-examination is a critically important step to better understanding ourselves, to heal old wounds, and to take corrective actions to address ongoing societal harms.

Grappling with our history

In 2008, the AMA concluded a three-year study on the racial divide in organized medicine and publicly apologized for our organizations past discriminatory practices against Black physicians. The AMAs apology was never intended to be the final word on the subject of race for our organization. In fact, the AMA called it a modest first step toward healing and reconciliation. This is a journey of reflection and action that continues.

As we grapple with AMAs 174-year history, we must acknowledge that decisions by AMA leaders contributed to a health care system plagued by inequities and injustices that harmed patients and systemically excluded many from our physician ranks.

In 2018, our AMA House of Delegates adopted policy and a strategic framework for addressing health equity on a national scale, work that led to the creation of our AMA Center for Health Equity the following year.

Already, the center has become a recognized voice nationally on issues of equity and social justice in medicine. It is tasked with embedding the principles of health equity across our AMA and partnering with others to urgently eliminate longstanding barriers and structural inequities in the U.S. To advance this work, our AMA Board of Trustees and AMA House of Delegates last year named racism as a serious threat to public health and advanced concrete steps toward addressing it.

Reconsidering a seminal figure

One critical next step in this journey of reflection and action is evaluating the person commonly thought of as the founder of the AMA, Dr. Nathan Davis.

Dr. Davis was a seminal figure in the early days of the AMA, serving as AMA president and as the founding editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association. As drafter of the 1845 resolution that ultimately led to AMAs founding, he believed he was responsible for holding together the AMA as a national governing body of medicine in the years after the Civil War. He has commonly been referred to as the father of the AMA.

Dr. Davis answer for maintaining the AMA as a national organization was to explicitly exclude women and Black physicians from representation in our House of Delegates, thus appeasing many state and local medical societies who barred all but white men from their membership.

Pursued racist path

Perhaps what is most egregiousa smoking gun as it werewas an event concerning physician groups in the Washington, D.C., area. A physician organization there refused to admit Black physicians resulting in the formation of another organization composed of both Black and white physicians. This second group subsequently appealed to join the AMA House of Delegates.

In considering this proposal, other AMA physiciansled by a physician also involved in the founding of the American Medical Associationsupported membership for this integrated group, a stance that might well have directed the AMA toward a path of integration early in our history.

However, Dr. Davis blocked the acceptance of this integrated group of physicians, doing so largely through parliamentary maneuvers. This historical fact defines Dr. Davis role in blocking integration and promoting and embedding racism in the AMA. Dr. Davis role was highly active, not passive, and his choice for a racist direction was pursued with energy and force.

Thus, in an era when some fought for greater representation within organized medicine and clearly saw the harms caused by racism and sexism, Dr. Davis and some of his contemporaries doubled down on discriminatory policies for AMA membership by leaving admission standards to regional medical societies that, in some cases, banned the participation of women and Black physicians for far too long.

The above actions helped maintain the white, male-dominated power structure in American society. Sadly, this would remain AMA policy for nearly a century, until race- and gender-based discrimination was officially outlawed by the Civil Right Act of 1964.

Dr. Davis made considerable and important contributions to medicine in his long career, but his decisions at the AMA, coming in a crucial period of reconciliation for America, severely limited opportunities for Black and women physicians. The decisions silenced their voices in organized medicine, and led to a host of inequities and injustices in health care that remain today.

Clarifying choices

I recently visited the glassed-in enclosure that honors Dr. Davis at our AMA headquarters in Chicago. Located just a few steps from my office, I have passed this display countless times over the years, but only recently have I begun to reflect on the man and ask myself if his actions represent our newly embraced equity values of the AMA and of organized medicine. The answer is clearly no.

We cant erase history, but we can decide the appropriate way to recognize individuals from our past. For this reason, I had the bust and display of Dr. Davis removed from public view and placed in our archives where they will rightly serve as educational materials. Additionally, the AMA has removed the name of Nathan Davis from an award we give annually to honor individuals for outstanding government service. These are two small but necessary steps toward reconciling the AMAs past and laying the groundwork for our future.

First, do no harm is a guiding ethos in medical ethics, reminding us that at its core the art of care and caring for others seeks to reduce and eliminate harms that our patients and communities are experiencing. By continuing to examine our long history, our AMA is reaffirming medicines commitment to this ethos, and to creating a more just and perfect union for all.

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Reckoning with medicine's history of racism - American Medical Association

‘Jobs and growth’ are the medicine the world needs, Johnson tells G7 – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Group of Seven leaders, who control a little under half of the worlds economy, on Friday sought to look beyond the COVID-19 pandemic towards rebuilding their battered economies with free trade and to countering Chinas non-market oriented policies.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi debuted at the G7 virtual leaders meeting which was chaired by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

The leaders called for stronger defences against a future pandemic, including exploring a global health treaty, but the focus was on a green recovery - on the same day that the United States rejoined the Paris climate agreement.

Jobs and growth is what were going to need after this pandemic, Johnson told the opening of the meeting.

An official communiques said the G7 would champion open economies, data free flow with trust and work on a modernised, freer and fairer rules-based multilateral trading system.

After Facebook cut news feeds in Australia, French President Emmanuel Macron raised the role social media platforms should have in preserving freedom of speech and how to regulate them, a French official said on Friday.

G7 leaders also supported the commitment of Japan to hold the Olympic and Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020 this summer.

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In a clear reference to China, they said they will consult with each other on collective approaches to address non-market oriented policies and practices.

But the tone of the G7 was distinctly cooperative and collective - as Biden tried to project a message of re-engagement with the world and with global institutions after four years of Donald Trumps America First policies.

The COVID-19 pandemic has killed 2.4 million people, tipped the global economy into its worst peacetime slump since the Great Depression and upended normal life for billions.

MUTE ANGELA

Even at the virtual top table of world politics, the mute curse, which has stilted video calls for millions of businesses and families over the past months of COVID-19 lockdown, struck.

As Johnson began the meeting, a German voice suddenly interrupted him.

Can you hear us Angela, Johnson quipped to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, chuckling. I think you need to mute.

Johnson also claimed that Biden had nicked - British slang for stolen - his slogan build back better, though Johnson said that he himself had probably stolen it from somewhere else.

Once the mute problems were over, leaders pledged billions of dollars to COVAX, a coronavirus vaccination programme for poorer countries.

COVID-19 shows that the world needs stronger defences against future risks to global health security, the G7 said. We will continue to support our economies to protect jobs and support a strong, sustainable, balanced and inclusive recovery.

Though Biden has cast China as the most serious competitor of the United States, China was mentioned only once in the communiques.

Johnson said the G7 - as like-minded liberal free-trading democracies - stood together on issues such as condemnation of the coup in Myanmar and the detention of Alexei Navalny in Russia.

The G7 of the United States, Japan, Germany, United Kingdom, France, Italy and Canada has a combined gross domestic product of about $40 trillion - a little less than half of the global economy.

($1 = 0.7155 pounds)

Additional reporting by by Steve Holland and Doina Chiacu in Washington; and Michel Rose in Paris; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Alistair Bell, John Stonestreet and Nick Macfie

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'Jobs and growth' are the medicine the world needs, Johnson tells G7 - Reuters

‘Exercise Is Medicine’ Here’s Why – Baptist Health South Florida

If youve been to the doctor over the last several decades, youve likely been told about the importance of exercise to your heart and overall health. Youve likely also been encouraged by your doctor to exercise regularly. Have you ever wondered why exercise contributes to good health?

Eli Friedman, M.D., medical director of sports cardiology at Miami Cardiac & Vascular Institute, says that exercise is medicine for the mind, body and soul.

Exercise lowers blood pressure, blood glucose, and bad cholesterol, he said. It lowers risk factors for cardiovascular disease across the board. It also improves eating, sleeping, feeling better and ones mental health. There are very few instances where we would advise someone not to exercise.

A study published in 2015 in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports indicated that 26 different chronic diseases could be treated with prescribed exercise. The diseases fall into the following categories:

Also, a global health initiative launched by the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Medical Association in 2007 aims to encourage healthcare providers to assess patients physical activity and prescribe exercise as a key treatment in the clinical management of chronic diseases.

Health Benefits of Exercise

In terms of cardiovascular health, exercise engages the cardiovascular system and improves its efficiency, Dr. Friedman said. When you exercise regularly, your blood pressure decreases, your resting heart rate goes down and your metabolism increases.

Dr. Friedman adds that both aerobic exercise what most people refer to as cardio and resistance, or strength, training contribute to improved health. Cardiovascular exercise, such as running, jumping, swimming and cycling, gets your heart beating, blood pumping, your lungs moving and your brain signals firing. Strength training, such as weightlifting and resistance movement, improves your bone and muscle health, making each more agile and efficient in using the necessary nutrients needed to perform.

How Much Exercise Is Recommended?

Dr. Friedman says the dose of recommended exercise for most adults is 150 minutes per week of moderate aerobic exercise. He defines moderate as being able to carry on a conversation with someone while exercising. He and the American Heart Association say this amount can be replaced by 75 minutes of high-intensity aerobic exercise each week. Dr. Friedman notes that this higher level of intensity makes it difficult to carry on a conversation other than with yes or no answers. The American Heart Association also recommends moderate- to high-intensity muscle-strengthening activity at least twice a week.

If you aim for and hit these numbers, you maximize the benefits of exercise, Dr. Friedman said. In most people, theres really no such thing as too much exercise.

When Is Exercise Too Much?

As a sports cardiologist, though, Dr. Friedman also works closely with elite and professional athletes and sometimes sees issues arise when exercise is pushed to its upper limits. For these individuals, its important to have a physician monitoring their exercise and nutrition to ensure optimal health. But, for most people, exercise within the recommended limits is beneficial.

Still, Dr. Friedman says to be on the lookout for the following symptoms, which can indicate problems, when you exercise:

If you experience these symptoms, contact your doctor, or if the symptoms are severe, call 911 immediately, Dr. Friedman advises.

Exercise After COVID-19

Since studies about the effects of COVID-19 have indicated a possible link between the novel coronavirus and heart damage, Dr. Friedman recommends that people who have recovered from COVID-19 should discuss their gradual return to physical activity and exercise with their primary care physician or cardiologist. In most mild cases of COVID-19 that didnt require any treatment, he says, wait the 10-14 days of recovery recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and slowly return to activity. If symptoms arise seek further evaluation from a healthcare provider.

Some of the effects of COVID-19 noted in these studies include an inflammation of the heart muscle, or myocarditis, which can lead to heart failure and arrhythmias or irregular heartbeats. In some patients, COVID-19 also led to blood clots that affect the lungs, heart attacks and strokes. Still others experienced pericarditis, in which the sac that surrounds the heart becomes inflamed or filled with fluid (pericardial effusion) and puts pressure on the heart, preventing it from functioning properly.

The vast majority of people with mild symptoms from the virus, especially those with symptoms that affected only areas above the chest and did not involve fever, chest pain, shortness of breath or hospitalization, should be able to return to moderate exercise as soon as they feel well enough to do so, he said. But, hospitalization, especially with evidence of heart damage may require a slower return to activity and management by a cardiologist.

Dr. Friedman says that physical activity and exercise that is proportionate to each persons ability can be beneficial. To determine your ability and the level at which you should exercise safely and with maximum heart and health benefits, he recommends talking to your doctor or healthcare provider.

My goal is getting as many people as possible to exercise safely, he said. For most people, the more exercise you do, the better your heart functions and your overall health improves. If you dont exercise, talk to your doctor about how to start, and if you do exercise, dont stop. Take your daily dose of exercise. Its the best medicine.

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'Exercise Is Medicine' Here's Why - Baptist Health South Florida

Cornel West speaks at School of Medicine event shortly after threatening to leave Harvard – University at Buffalo The Spectrum

Cornel West spoke of love, solidarity and spirituality Thursday as the inaugural speaker of the UB Department of Surgerys Beyond the Knife lecture series. The Harvard professor did not touch on his recent threat to depart from his position at the university.

West, 67, is one of the most well-known activists and political authors in the U.S.. West has served as a Harvard professor of law, divinity and African American studies since 2017, according to The Boston Globe.

On Thursday, West told The Boston Globe that his request for tenure had been denied by Harvard and is considering cutting ties with the university.

After being tenured at Yale, Harvard, Princeton and Union Theological Seminary, the recent Harvard denial of a tenure process strikes me as a political decision I reject. Nothing stands in the way of my profound love for and solidarity with oppressed people West said in a statement on Friday.

West claims that his request for tenure was denied for being too controversial of a figure.

What Im told is its too risky. And these are quotes. Its too fraught. And Im too controversial he said

West has drawn criticism in the past for his left-wing critique of Democratic figures such as Barack Obama. In a recent speech for an event hosted by the Western New York Peace Center, West rebuked President-elect Joe Bidens neoliberal policies. West serves as an honorary chair of the Democratic Socialists of America and appeared at rallies supporting Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign.

However, Wests spat with the Harvard administration did not arise during his Thursday lecture. Instead, West tackled topics such as systemic racism, recent social movements and their relation to health care.

Slavery, lynching, Jim Crow, white supremacist lies about Black people all try to tell us were less. Less in intelligence, less worthy of access to education, less worthy of access to healthcare. Thats the barbaric dimension of our precious and fragile experiment with democracy, West said. Brother Martin used to tell us that the worst form of inequality is the very fact that we are the richest nation in the history of the world and still have so many people of all colors, disproportionately black and brown, who dont have access to high-quality healthcare.

Wests speech kicked off a soon-to-be-annual lecture series hosted by the Department of Surgery. The departments initiative, formed in response to the death of George Floyd and the COVID-19 pandemic, seeks to mitigate racism and inequality in healthcare, according to Steven Schwaitzberg, president of UBMD. The event was free and open to the public. Over 1,200 people signed up to watch the event live. A recording was made available on the UB Health Sciences YouTube channel.

West also took aim at the alleged mistrust of the COVID-19 vaccination process among some Black communities.

Weve got to realize that Black people are not stupid. Theyve got a history of insights and theyve got memories of violation, West said. Weve got to unflinchingly and candidly confront those insights and those memories and convince them that out of deep care for them that this vaccine is going to be a force for good in their lives.

The Spectrum has been covering the University at Buffalo since 1950, your donation today could help #SaveStudentNewsrooms. Please consider giving today.

West concluded his speech by answering questions from a panel of three residents and medical students at the Jacobs School of Medicine. West praised the UB students discipline in the field.

I think of what you all do as being like jazz musicians. You have to be so disciplined, you do your homework, youre sharp. Yet at the same time you have cultivated the capacity to listen and learn West said.

Brendan Kelly is the assistant news editor and can be reached at brendan.kelly@ubspectrum.com or on Twitter @bpkelly5

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Cornel West speaks at School of Medicine event shortly after threatening to leave Harvard - University at Buffalo The Spectrum

CU Section of Wilderness and Environmental Medicine Reaches Five-Year Mark for Providing Care in Greenland – CU Anschutz Today

Five years ago, the Section of Wilderness and Environmental Medicine (WEM) at the University of Colorado School of Medicine journeyed to Greenland to provide health care services for researchers at the U.S. National Science Foundations (NSF) Summit Station.

What began as a one-year contract has turned into five years full of learning experiences for Jay Lemery, MD, professor of emergency medicine and section chief of WEM, and the wilderness medicine fellows who have deployed to Summit Station for a once-in-a-lifetime training opportunity.

Since 2016, WEM has deployed three wilderness medicine fellows and paramedics who have split time at the camp during high season between April and August. WEM also provides telemedicine during winter months from the Anschutz Medical Campus. This year, WEM is planning to deploy two wilderness medicine fellows and a paramedic to make up for lost research time due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

We have a decent clinic at Summit Station, but many of the researchers are out deep in the field with a rudimentary medical kit and no medical training, so its our job to help mitigate risk as best we can, says Lemery. Weve improved our emergency capability, been able to send our wilderness medicine fellows to the ice, and have added on-call psychiatric first aid, as well as pre-deployment first aid training programs to researchers.

Photo courtesy of Leslie Brooks.

Before supporting Summit Station, WEM, a section of the CU Department of Emergency Medicine, had provided remote medical services for the U.S. Antarctic Program. That experience helped to hone WEMs skills for the new challenges they would face in Greenland.

In 2018, the WEM team had an encounter with a polar bear that wandered into camp, hundreds of miles away from home. This incident posed an unpredictable situation that brought to the forefront the need for mental health support as part of the teams medical care.

A healthy polar bear walked into the camp hundreds of miles from the sea from its normal habitat, says Lemery. Unfortunately, it had smelled the kitchen and was not going to leave.

Because the polar bear was so far away from the sea, and with no provision like a nearby protected area or national park to move it to, the Greenlandic authorities had to euthanize the polar bear. NSF researchers and staff on the ice, many dedicated to the preservation of biodiversity and protection of the environment, were devastated by the incident and emotionally traumatized.

We quickly identified these stressors and had a team of CU-based psychiatric first aid providers ready to provide support for many weeks after, says Lemery. We felt it was critical to scale up our capacity here and get mental health care providers who understood psychiatric first aid. Luckily, we had people that were really good at it and many of them were CU School of Medicine faculty.

Photo courtesy of Leslie Brooks.

Similar to the rest of the world, the Summit Station could not avoid the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The research season was canceled in 2020 even though there hasnt been a case of the virus at the camp. Researchers and staff are put through rigorous protocols that include numerous tests and extended quarantines before and after arrival.

The WEM team is heavily involved in procuring appropriate personal protective equipment, and working with both U.S. and Greenlandic authorities to comply with quarantine and testing guidelines from multiple jurisdictions.

Knowing that there will be the potential for cases, we are always working to figure out how we safely get people to and from the camp, says Lemery. We are dealing with different circumstances exposure from civilian and military flights, where exposure to COVID is higher. Were looking to safely have hundreds of researchers and staff head to the ice this spring and summer.

Though the team has always provided telemedicine during the winter months via telephone calls and emails, they have added Zoom as a method to connect with researchers and staff. They have always had the bandwidth to provide virtual telemedicine, however, its because of the new Zoom culture that has grown over past year that has made the concept less foreign and easier to provide care.

The WEM team is planning for an extended season this year because last years research was cut short. This means WEM will deploy for the first time two wilderness medicine fellows and a paramedic at various times during the spring and summer season to provide care for researchers and staff. One of the WEM fellows headed to Summit Station this April will be Mia Derstine, MD. She will spend six weeks at the camp and is thrilled for the opportunity to practice in such challenging conditions.

I hope to learn how to address medicine in a truly remote environment with limited diagnostic tools and backup, says Derstine. I am brushing up on reading about austere medicine, reading literature about using portable ultrasound in such conditions, and starting to train for the altitude.

Photo courtesy of Leslie Brooks.

At the height of the pandemic, another critical change occurred. The NSF switched contractors from CH2M Hill to Battelle to provide infrastructure and logistics support for researchers at Summit Station. WEM was a subcontractor for CH2M Hill providing health care services, a contract that was retained by Battelle.

With this new partnership, Lemery who is also the co-director of the Climate & Health Program sees an increased drive to invest more educational and training resources with the Greenlandic communities. Lemery sees this as not only an opportunity to expand the work of WEM, but also to create new learning experiences for medical students interested in climate and health.

Were hoping to have more community engagement with the Greenlandic communities through our wilderness medicine and climate and health education, as well as online offerings, says Lemery. Theres a real educational synergy there. And being able to have our medical students go up there and participate would be phenomenal. You would have the health angle with wilderness medicine and the chance to meet climate scientists conducting research. This could be a fabulous opportunity.

Lemery adds he wants to make it easier for faculty members from the CU School of Medicine to provide care at Summit Station. He is exploring shorter deployment times to make this option more feasible for faculty members.

As the Arctic conditions evolve due to climate change, we may see more sustained human activity there, and we have an expertise in keeping people safe in these very extreme environments, says Lemery.

We think well have more ability to send our faculty to the Summit Station clinic for six months per year, and possibly to other NSF sites as well.

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CU Section of Wilderness and Environmental Medicine Reaches Five-Year Mark for Providing Care in Greenland - CU Anschutz Today

Drier: Laughter really is the best medicine – Huron Daily Tribune

Mary Drier, For the Tribune

Drier: Laughter really is the best medicine

Michigans claim to fame has been upstaged.

The image of our state is one of the most recognizable ones in the continental United States.

Besides Michigan, the states of Maine and Florida are also recognized by their shape when borders on a map are not outlined.

I remember reading somewhere Native Americans believed the left handed mitten was made by the Great Spirit when he started creating the world, and the Great Lakes were made from his sweat from doing that.

Anyway, our iconic image was upstaged during the Jan. 20 presidential inauguration when U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders became an internet sensation after being photographed sitting huddled in a chair wearing a pair of brown and white mittens.

Memes of Bernie and his distinctive mittens started popping up all over Facebook being inserted in a variety of familiar settings. One was of Bernie stilling on a park bench with Forrest Gump, in the movies The Shining, in Star Trek, and sitting in the iconic Game of Thrones chair. Those are just a few of the many Bernie memes that have him inserted in a variety of settings.

For weeks after the inauguration, Bernie memes were everywhere. Bernie and his mittens went viral.

His mittens were unique not only in their pattern but in how they were made. His mittens were a gift from a Vermont elementary school teacher who has a side business of making mittens out of old sweaters.

That sparked the creation of Chairman Sanders merchandise with his huddled inauguration image on them. Some of the merchandise included T-shirts, sweatshirts and stickers on his website. They all quickly sold out.

Sales of that merchandize raised nearly $2 million, which went to charitable organizations in Sanders home state of Vermont.

There was even a crocheted image of Sanders, his mittens, and his brown jacket that was auctioned off.

It amazed me how that simple image of a well-known little old man hugging himself to keep warm morphed into a media craze, and how much good it raised for charities.

The memes at least for me brought a smile, a welcome break from the images of Jan. 6, and dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Drier: Laughter really is the best medicine - Huron Daily Tribune

The power of music: Bethune-Cookman to expand its ‘Music and Medicine’ symposium thanks to grant – Ormond Beach Observer

For a team atBethune-Cookman University, music and wellness have never been more in harmony.

Thanks to a$39,500 grant from the Pabst Steinmetz Foundation, theLa-Doris McClaney School of Performing Arts and Communication of BCU's Department of Music is planning to implement a training model to increase health and wellness in targeted sectors of the community through the integration of music withEastern and Western medicine. It's an effort led by Dr. Rose Grace, Dr. Daniel Hollar and Dr. Diana Lee that grew out of the school's annual "Music and Medicine" symposium, which is now in its third year.

Brittni Cleland, certified dance and movement therapist and mental health clinician, leads a workshop during the second "Music and Medicine" Symposium

The symposium focused on helping musicians deal with the stresses of their profession, both and physical and mental in nature. But in the face of the ongoing pandemic, Grace said they recognized that these coping mechanisms presented to their students and fellow music educators could benefit health care workers and other frontline workers, including classroom teachers. There couldn't have been an urgenttime where their symposium model could be more applicable, she explained.

Thanks to a $39,500 grant from the Pabst SteinMetz Foundation, established in 2018, BCU is hoping to expand its music and wellness training model to help other populations in the community. Courtesy photo

The goal really is to introduce, educate, but most importantly improve everybodys health wellness in both their professional as well as personal lives," said Grace, an associate professor of piano at BCU. She has also served as the founder and director of the BCU music outreach program during the past 12 years.

Grace, of Ormond Beach, first became aware of the Pabst Steinmetz Foundation last year during a conference on arts and wellness programs. At the time, she and her team were planning their second symposium after having received positive feedback from the inaugural event. Little did she know that this year's symposium would be virtual, to be livestreamed on Facebook and YouTube from 8:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 20. This year's theme is "Fighting the COVID Fatigue."

Dr. Rose Grace, said she is grateful that the Pabst Steinmetz Foundation awarded them grant. Courtesy photo

Thanks to the foundation's grant, BCU will be able to expand this training model,made up of workshops featuring clinicians such as chiropractors, musicians, audiologists and tai-chi instructors. They hope to hold a series of comprehensive training workshops throughout the year focusing on holistic approaches to mental health support, stress reduction and efficient body usage, according to a press release.

I really do think we are going to truly revolutionize, I hope, the lives and the state of wellness of our individuals here in this immediate community and I certainly hope within Florida and hoping beyond that," Grace said.

The combination of music andhealing struck a chord with Graceseven years ago.

At the time, Grace, who is a pianist,had been diagnosed with a lung infection. The aftermath of the intense treatment left her in a state where she couldn't play, and she said her cognitive abilities were weakened. But through acupuncture and tai chi, Grace was able to begin playing again.

She started to apply the same concepts of eastern medicine with teaching.

During one exercise, she asked vocal students to sing before and after completing a tai chi routine. The difference was "astounding," Grace said.One student she interviewed afterward said she felt she had better control of her breath and was more focused on her vocals.

If I didnt actually experience it for myself and somebody told me about it, I would have told them, OK, stop telling me those fairy tales," Grace said."But I felt that powerful impact of it, so when I was hearing our students in some sense relating the same thing, where they felt an instantaneous improvement and freedom, and focus it was empowering and thrilling for me to hearthat [Lee]and I could bring something so beneficial to our students, to our campus and beyond that to the community.

The power of the training model lies in bridging medicine, arts and sciences together, a press release states. As one of six grant recipients, and the only university awardee among nonprofit organizations, collaboration between the three team members is essential.

Dr. Hollar, an assistant professor of psychology at BCU. Courtesy photo

Hollar, an assistant professor of psychology at BCU who also serves as the Department Chair of Behavior and Social Sciences Studies, earned his doctorate degree from Florida State University with research interests focusing on suicide, eating disordered behavior and ethnicity among individuals of African descent. He is the project's co-prime investigator alongside Grace.

Lee, of Ormond Beach, is the project's external collaborator, and is theformer director of the Odessa Chambliss Center for Health Equity at BCU. During the past three years, she has worked alongside Grace to bring the symposiums to the community.

Grace said she is eternally grateful for her enthusiasm and dedication to the project.

Dr. Diana Lee has worked alongside Grace in the past three years to bring the music symposiums to the community.Courtesy photo

I dont think I would have been able to do this as well if I didnt have her wonderful support and collaboration," she said.

The project will launch within the Central Florida communities, with the hopes of expanding it across the U.S. in the future.

The skys the limit," Grace said."So well see.

To learn more about the Pabst Steinmetz Foundation, visit pabststeinmetzfoundation.org

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The power of music: Bethune-Cookman to expand its 'Music and Medicine' symposium thanks to grant - Ormond Beach Observer

‘We saved lives’: Texas Jewish communities mobilize to get food, medicine to those in need – JNS.org

(February 19, 2021 / JNS) On any given day, people coming into the Kosher Palate in Dallas do so know they are going to be spending money on groceries or prepared foods. This past week, however, hundreds of people were treated to free hot meals made by the staff of the supermarket/catering company amid a week of brutally cold winter weather.

My husband being the kind of guy he is, he likes to feed people, and he said there are people who are at home and no way to get hot food, so we have to feed them, said Miriam Goldfeder, who along with her husband, Chaim, own Kosher Palate. That was Tuesday night, and we have fed about 1,000 people each night since. I saw people who came in that I have never seen before.

Goldfeder, who also opened their home to family friends who had no heat, explained that we have a full kosher kitchen, so we have the cooking capability, as well as cases full of meats and chicken. Plus, we are preparing for Pesach, so we have more on hand than usual.

A GoFundMe account was established to help offset the costs of the meals. The Jewish Federation of Greater Dallas also contributed funding and arranged for three communal food distribution sites in different parts of the city.

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Both initiatives have allowed the Goldfeders to supply even more foodas of now, the plan is to provide meals at least through Shabbat. The GoFundMe effort proved so successful that the couple has been able to set aside some of the funds to provide Passover items to Jews in need, as well as sending funds to help people in Austin who are in need.

Additionally, a truck filled with additional kosher-food provisions for Shabbat arrived in Dallas on Friday from the Lev Rochel Bikur Cholima Jewish organization in Lakewood, N.J.while a chef friend of Chaim Goldfeder flew down on Thursday morning from his home in New Jersey to help with the on-site cooking.

A truck filled with kosher-food provisions for Shabbat arrived in Dallas from the Lev Rochel Bikur Cholim, a Jewish organization in Lakewood, N.J., Feb. 19, 2021. Credit: Courtesy.

A massive plunge of arctic air and winter storms throughout Texas knocked out power for nearly 4.5 million residents this past week as the states power grid was unable to keep up with demand brought on by the record cold. Power-generation stations and the electric grid in Texasseparate from the rest of the country, and as such, unable to get help from neighboring stateswere not properly winterized to handle the below-freezing temperatures. The precipitation made travel outdoors dangerous while indoors, water pipes froze and then ruptured, sending floods cascading down walls and through ceilings. At least 30 people have died since last Sunday from the cold.

The weather is expected to return to normal in the region by next week, which should reduce the strain on the power grid, and melt the snow and ice. Already, power has been restored to much of the state, although clean water and even food in some areas remain scarce.

A car in Dallas drives through the snow on Feb. 15, 2021. Credit: Matthew T. Rader via Wikimedia Commons.

Plenty of practice when it comes to natural disasters

It was amid these conditionsand despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemicthat members of the Jewish communities throughout the Lone Star State mobilized to help people in need. They opened their doors to friends without power, cooked meals, arranged for medication pickups for those homebound, and, in one extreme case, mobilized to ensure that hundreds of doses of critically needed coronavirus vaccines would not go to waste.

Many members of our community have been without power, said Rabbi Ari Sunshine of Congregation Shearith Israel in Dallas. Weve also heard about a number of folks who had pipes burst, and in some cases, had flooding damage ranging from minor to quite major.

At Shearith Israel, we have been trying to match up congregants in need of resources (hot food, warmth, a warm place to sleep, etc.) with other congregants who have not been affected, said Sunshine, who along with his family, took advantage of a members hospitality as he had no power for two days.

People line up to receive a COVID-19 vaccine outside of Texas synagogue after a freezer lost power. Credit: Rabbi Barry Gelman.

Now back at home, Sunshine said his congregation is continuing to look after others.

We have initiated an emergency fundraising effort tied into the mitzvah of matanot levyonim for Purim to raise money to help those in our Jewish community and larger Dallas community who are in most acute need, he said, with 50 percent of the funds going to Jewish Family Service of Greater Dallas and 50 percent going to the North Texas Food Bank.

In the first 24 hours of the campaign, which runs until Purim starts on Feb. 25, the synagogue had already raised nearly $20,000.

In Houston, the winter weather and resultant issues proved a test of the Jewish Federation of Greater Houstons relatively new Jewish Response and Action Network (JRAN).

One thing about living in Houston is that we have had plenty of practice when it comes to natural disasters, said Jackie Fisherman, director of government relations at the Federation and organizer of JRAN. This is different. Even in Hurricane Harvey, there were areas of Texas that were unaffected and could send aid. This is widespread. But we were prepared, and we have risen to the situation as best we could.

Kosher food to be distributed to those in need throughout Texas. Credit: Courtesy.

Part of JRANs mission was to create a network of Jewish communal leaderssynagogue rabbis, heads of local organizations, etc.who could provide real-time, on-the-ground feedback on emergency conditions and what was most urgently needed. That network was put to the test this week.

For instance, when word came that a senior residence was about to run out of fuel for their generator, Fisherman was able to connect them to the proper authorities to make sure they got what they needed.

Its been so heartwarming to see how the community has come together, she said, pointing out two particularly emotional moments. The first found dozens of volunteers stepping in to deliver kosher meals to homebound seniorsprovided through the Evelyn Rubenstein Jewish Community Centerwhen the regular volunteers couldnt make it in.

Its amazing that people were able to come outeven though we were in the middle of an ice storm, the power was out, there were no street lightsand deliver the food. These deliveries, she continued, also served as a well-check on the homebound seniors, most of whom were OK but cold.

The other particularly inspiring act, said Fisherman, was how a house of worship, United Orthodox Synagogues, mobilized in mere minutes to become a vaccine-distribution center when a freezer at the local health department holding critical doses of the COVID-19 vaccine failed. It made such a big impact. It was open to everyoneJew, non-Jewthey used every last drop of vaccine.

Members of a Jewish family get vaccinated. Credit: Rabbi Barry Gelman.

And they did it not once, but twice.

In recounting the experience on Facebook, Rabbi Barry Gelman of the United Orthodox Synagogues wrote that the synagogue was notified at 9:30 a.m. that hundreds of doses of the Moderna vaccine had to be used, as some of the county freezers malfunctioned.

Knowing they needed to be used within hours of being removed from the freezer, there was no time to waste. The rabbi called the synagogues president to get permission to use the building as a vaccine-distribution site. With 35 minutes of that initial call, members of the synagogue community had established a working distribution site with spaces for check-ins, screenings, vaccinating and the requisite 15-minute, post-vaccination waiting spot.

We distributed over 350 vaccinations. Emails and WhatsApp [messages] were sent, and folks from all walks of life flocked to UOS, said the rabbi. We saved lives today!

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'We saved lives': Texas Jewish communities mobilize to get food, medicine to those in need - JNS.org

Bile duct organoids could be used as cell therapy for regenerative medicine – Drug Target Review

For the first time, scientists have grown bile duct organoids that could repair damaged ducts and livers as a new cell therapy.

Scientists report that they have grown bile duct organoids in the lab and shown that these can be used to repair damaged human livers. The study was conducted at the University of Cambridge, UK.

According to the team, this research paves the way for cell therapies to treat liver disease growing mini-bile ducts in the lab as replacement parts that can be used to restore a patients own liver to health or to repair damaged organ donor livers, so that they can still be used for transplantation. As approaches to increase organ availability or provide an alternative to whole organ transplantation are urgently needed, cell-based therapies could provide an alternative.

In their study, the scientists developed a novel approach that takes advantage of a perfusion system to maintain donated organs outside the body. Using single-cell RNA sequencing and organoid culture, the researchers discovered that, although duct cells differ, biliary cells from the gallbladder, which is usually spared by the disease, could be converted to the cells of the bile ducts usually destroyed in disease (intrahepatic ducts) and vice versa using bile acid. This means that the patients own cells from disease-spared areas could be used to repair destroyed ducts.

They then grafted these gallbladder organoids into mice and found that they were able to repair damaged ducts, opening up avenues for regenerative medicine applications in the context of diseases affecting the biliary system.

As proof-of-principle for their method, they repaired livers deemed unsuitable for transplantation due to bile duct damage. The team then showedfor the first time that it is possible to transplant biliary cells grown in the lab known as cholangiocytes into damaged human livers to repair them.

Professor Ludovic Vallier, joint senior author, said: This is the first time that we have been able to show that a human liver can be enhanced or repaired using cells grown in the lab. We have further work to do to test the safety and viability of this approach, but hope we will be able to transfer this into the clinic in the coming years.

The study was published in Science.

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Bile duct organoids could be used as cell therapy for regenerative medicine - Drug Target Review

The heart of resiliency in veterinary medicine – DVM 360

Resiliencythe ability to recover from setbacks, adapt well to change, and keep going in the face of adversityis a hot topic in veterinary medicine today. Although we need to be cognizant of client emotions, we must also care for ourselves and our team. In a recent survey, more than 70% of veterinarians reported that both they and their staff felt moderate to severe distress when faced with obstacles that prevented them from providing appropriate patient care.1Acknowledging these feelings and discussing them with coworkers, family, or a professional is essential to maintaining well-being and providing the best patient and client care.

A common misconception among veterinary professionals is that if we were truly resilient, we would not experience the intense emotions inherent in this profession. This way of thinking could not be further from the truth. Allowing yourself to feel every emotion and still function daily is at the heart of resiliency in veterinary medicine and vitally important as an individual. Permitting ourselves to feel and process what makes us who we are is the next step in mastering true resiliency.

Regardless of individual roles, the pandemic has pushed everyone in veterinary practices to support patients and communities through creativity and collective problem-solving. In addition to unprecedented caseloads, teams have been navigating new protocols to protect associates, clients, and patients and still provide excellent care. These new approaches to triage, reallocation of staff, and changes in patient care have led to amazing innovation throughout the industry, but doing so has come at the cost of increased burnout.

The initial crisis rally and altruism faded over the course of 2020 due to understandable fatigue. You may have succumbed to the various crises you faced, with varying capacities to adapt and cope. Dont worry; no one was untouched by persistent anxiety or the need to repeatedly adjust their normal routines and ways of thinking.

We are currently operating in survival mode. Our blinders are more likely to be up, making it challenging to see the bigger picture or to have an optimistic perspective. When in this self-protective mode, energy and time can feel scarce. Anger, frustration, and resentment can overshadow our ability to find the positive in situations. Survival mode has become a defense mechanism, creating a protective, insulating barrier between you and the world. Feeling alone and overwhelmed may result in intense feelings of isolation.

Survival mode can also exacerbate preexisting tensions, such as the us versus them phenomenon of the front desk team versus treatment team, emergency clinicians versus specialty clinicians, associates versus leaders, and even more. Compassionate, respectful communication among teammates is paramount to providing high-quality patient and client care. Building a sense of community can also create a more fulfilling work environment. Without it, we may be more likely to self-sabotage and interact negatively with colleagues.

When you feel like you have to just get through it or no one will understand, you might respond negatively to a conversation about building resilience. Veterinary medicine has a longstanding culture of I should be able to handle this, and there are stigmas and fears of being judged and deemed inadequate if we demonstrate that were struggling. This mindset hinders our ability to access the mental health care that we may need.

Practice leadership must take responsibility for creating an environment that promotes well-being and safety. It takes resilient individuals to build a resilient community. This community can only thrive if there is clear evidence that leadership is doing their part to cultivate a less toxic environment and culture.

Are your practice leaders promoting conversation and resource allocation that supports staff well-being? Does your team feel that their well-being is a priority, or do they have the perception that decisions are motivated by profit? If you believe your practice culture to be people-driven, what conversations and initiatives are being actively supported to demonstrate this belief? How do values of respect and care for individual associates show up in the practice?

It is human nature to want any pain to go away quickly. We do not like being uncomfortable physically, emotionally, or psychologically. There is no quick fix that can magically transform our work environments, but there is more inherent wisdom and resilience in each of us than we give ourselves credit for.

So, how do we save ourselves and our profession in the face of so much pessimism and exhaustion? Here are a few ideas you can implement to combat these negative feelings:

Lori Harbert, LCSW, a social worker for more than 20 years, specializes in mental health counseling, trauma-informed care, crisis counseling, grief and bereavement counseling, and leadership building. She developed and launched BluePearls first health and well-being program that provides resources and support to more than 6000 associates.

Sonja Olson, DVM, is a full-time wellness educator with the BluePearl health and well-being team, where she educates EmERge program clinicians, BluePearl associates, and regional social workers about wellness topics. She is also certified as a mental health First Aid instructor and compassion fatigue educator with Green Cross Academy of Traumatology's Figley Institute.

Reference

1. Moses L, Malowney MJ, Wesley Boyd J. Ethical conflict and moral distress in veterinary practice: a survey of North American veterinarians. J Vet Intern Med. 2018;32(6):2115-2122. doi:10.1111/jvim.15315

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The heart of resiliency in veterinary medicine - DVM 360

Axonics to Participate in the Society for Urodynamics, Female Pelvic Medicine & Urogenital Reconstruction 2021 Winter Meeting – BioSpace

Feb. 18, 2021 11:00 UTC

IRVINE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Axonics Modulation Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: AXNX), a medical technology company that has developed and is commercializing novel implantable sacral neuromodulation (SNM) devices for the treatment of urinary and bowel dysfunction, today announced it is participating as a platinum sponsor of the Society for Urodynamics, Female Pelvic Medicine & Urogenital Reconstruction (SUFU) 2021 Winter Meeting, which is being held virtually from February 25-27.

Axonics is sponsoring a symposium on Saturday, February 27, titled A New Era in Sacral Neuromodulation. During the symposium, a panel of physicians will discuss how recent innovations in SNM technology are changing the practice of how physicians treat patients with bladder and bowel dysfunction. The symposium will be available after the meeting for viewing at http://www.axonicswebinars.com.

In addition to participating in the virtual exhibit hall and symposium, the two-year results of the ARTISAN-SNM study will be presented at a plenary session on Saturday, February 27, by Andrea Pezzella, M.D, FPMRS, FACOG, of South Urogynecology and a study investigator of the pivotal study. Additionally, a detailed analysis of patient satisfaction in the ARTISAN-SNM study will be presented on the same day in a poster session by Julia Geynisman-Tan, M.D., FACOG, of Northwestern University.

The SUFU 2021 Winter Meeting provides an opportunity for physicians using the Axonics System to share their positive experience and strong clinical results with their peers, said John Woock, Ph.D., chief marketing officer of Axonics. As a platinum sponsor of the conference, Axonics is providing numerous opportunities for physicians to learn more about the Axonics System. We believe physicians sharing the exceptional experience their patients are having with our new SNM technology will encourage further utilization, drive market expansion and result in Axonics SNM therapy becoming the preferred solution for urinary and bowel dysfunction.

About Axonics Modulation Technologies, Inc.

Axonics, based in Irvine, Calif., has developed and is commercializing novel implantable SNM devices for patients with urinary and bowel dysfunction. These conditions are caused by a miscommunication between the bladder and the brain and significantly impacts quality of life. Overactive bladder affects an estimated 87 million adults in the U.S. and Europe. Another estimated 40 million adults are reported to suffer from fecal incontinence/accidental bowel leakage. Axonics SNM therapy, which has been clinically proven to reduce symptoms and restore pelvic floor function, is now being offered at hundreds of medical centers across the U.S. and in dozens of select hospitals in Western Europe. Reimbursement coverage is well established in the U.S. and is a covered service in most European countries. The Axonics System is the first long-lived rechargeable SNM system approved for sale in the world, and the first to gain full-body MRI conditional labeling. For more information, visit http://www.axonics.com.

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Axonics to Participate in the Society for Urodynamics, Female Pelvic Medicine & Urogenital Reconstruction 2021 Winter Meeting - BioSpace

Global Medicine Decoction and Packing Machines Market is to Witness Significant Growth between 2020-2026 with leading players Shandong Sanming…

According to Zeal Insider, the Medicine Decoction and Packing Machines market was at valued at US$ xx million in 2019 and is anticipated to rise at a CAGR of xx% during the forecast period from 2020 to 2028. The report on the Medicine Decoction and Packing Machines market compromises in-depth analysis covering key regional trends, market dynamics, and provides country-level market size of the Medicine Decoction and Packing Machines industry. Some of the major aspects considered during the course of research included product description, product classification, industry structure, various participants in the Medicine Decoction and Packing Machines market, etc. The report provides actual market values for 2018 and 2019 along with forecasts for the period from 2020 to 2028, and CAGR % measured for individual segments and regional markets.

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DNA Energy Code: Survival of the Fittest Phenomenon Is Only Part of the Evolution Equation – SciTechDaily

Three conformations of the DNA double helix: A (left), B (center) and left-handed Z (right). Credit: David S. Goodsell and RCSB PDB

Darwins theory of evolution should be expanded to include consideration of a DNA stability energy code so-called molecular Darwinism to further account for the long-term survival of species characteristics on Earth, according to Rutgers scientists.

The iconic genetic code can be viewed as an energy code that evolved by following the laws of thermodynamics (flow of energy), causing its evolution to culminate in a nearly singular code for all living species, according to the Rutgers co-authored study in the journal Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics.

These revelations matter because they provide entirely new ways ofanalyzing the human genome and the genome of any living species, the blueprints of life, said senior author Kenneth J. Breslauer, Linus C. Pauling Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology in the School of Arts and Sciences at Rutgers UniversityNew Brunswick. He is also affiliated with the Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey. The origins of the evolution of the DNA genetic code and the evolution of all living species are embedded in the different energy profiles of their molecular DNA blueprints. Under the influence of the laws of thermodynamics, this energy code evolved, out of an astronomical number of alternative possibilities, into a nearly singular code across all living species.

Scientists investigated this so-called universal enigma, probing the origins of the astounding observation that the genetic code evolved into a nearly uniform blueprint that arose from trillions of possibilities.

The scientists expanded the underpinnings of the landmark survival of the fittest Darwinian evolutionary theory to include molecular Darwinism. Darwins revolutionary theory is based on the generational persistence of a species physical features that allow it to survive in a given environment through natural selection. Molecular Darwinism refers to physical characteristics that persist through generations because the regions of the molecular DNA that code for those traits are unusually stable.

Different DNA regions can exhibit differential energy signatures that may favor physical structures in organisms that enable specific biological functions, Breslauer said.

Next steps include recasting and mapping the human genome chemical sequence into an energy genome, so DNA regions with different energy stabilities can be correlated with physical structures and biological functions. That would enable better selection of DNA targets for molecular-based therapeutics.

Reference: Energy mapping of the genetic code and genomic domains: implications for code evolution and molecular Darwinism by Horst H. Klump, Jens Vlker and Kenneth J. Breslauer, 4 November 2020, Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics.DOI: 10.1017/S0033583520000098

Jens Vlker, an associate research professor in RutgersNew Brunswicks Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, co-authored the study, along with first author Horst H. Klump at the University of Cape Town.

Funding: U.S. National Institutes of Health, NRF (Pretoria, RSA).

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DNA Energy Code: Survival of the Fittest Phenomenon Is Only Part of the Evolution Equation - SciTechDaily

Remembering Tom Bethell: Wordsmith of Courage and Controversy – KMJ Now

There was a feeling of excitement and relief from me upon the delivery in June of House of Cards: A Journalists Odyssey Through The Darwin Debates, by Tom Bethell, who died Friday at age 84.

Everyone who saw him at the traditional Latin Mass at St. Thomas the Apostle Church in Washington D.C. knew that faithful worshiper Bethell was ailing. His completion of this final testimony on the controversy that has surrounded Charles Darwin and his theory of evolution and those who questioned it since the 19th Century was in doubt.

But with the devotion of wife Donna and the prayers of his fellow traditional Roman Catholics, Bethell saw his magnum opus come to life as he himself was near death. In his twilight days, he happily signed copies to his legions of friends.

For Tom Bethell, senior editor of the American Spectator and Media Fellow of the Hoover Institution, his clash with Darwinism began with an article he wrote in Harpers Magazine in February 1976. Entitled Darwins Mistake, the article disputed Darwins theory of evolution and concluded it was on the verge of collapse with so many giving it scrutiny and concluding it was in error.

He also said that Darwins theory of natural selection (the survival and reproduction of a species due to characteristics of a particular organism) had been quietly abandoned by erstwhile supporters and that it was in fact a tautology (something subject to varied interpretations).

Strong medicine, all right, especially at a time when Darwins theories were taught as fact in biology classes worldwide. Biologists quickly sought to dispute Bethells claims and paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould wrote a response in Natural History Magazine.

Soon Bethell would find himself engaged in stormy encounters over the issue he had raised with Harvard biologist Richard Lewontin and famed philosopher of science Karl Popper.

But Bethells words and analysis were clearly having an impact.

Although I have been a skeptic about Darwins theory of evolution since taking my high school biology class, his book for Regnery, The Politically Incorrect Guide to Science, was instrumental in transforming me into a Creationist and strong anti-Darwinist, Allan Ryskind, former editor and co-owner of the national conservative weekly Human Events told Newsmax.

Ryskind recalled how he was brought up to believe in evolution, which my great high school biology teacher thought was true. But the textbook we used at Beverly Hills High and then another one at UCLA, made me dubious, even though the textbooks themselves were pro-evolution. But it was Toms book and the intellectual heft he brought to the debate that, for me at least, clinched the case against the Darwinian view. I will be forever grateful for his good works on Planet Earth.

Born and raised in London, England, the young Bethell had studied science and mathematics at Downside School and Trinity College at Oxford. After coming to the United States, he taught math at Woodberry Forest School in Virginia from 1962-65.

But, as Bethells friends liked to say, journalism was his great love after [wife] Donna. He was Washington editor of Harpers and later for the Washington Monthly.

In the 1970s, Bethell took on an unusual side assignment: he was hired as a researcher by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison for his celebrated prosecution of businessman Clay Shaw as a part of a conspiracy in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Bethell, who later wrote about his work on the case, came up with no evidence Shaw was involved and, after an hours deliberation, a jury acquitted Shaw.

Tom Bethell loved ideas, words, and discourse even as it inevitably spawned controversy. While he didnt always change the minds of those to whom he touched, it is inarguable he touched the lives of many and almost surely made them think a little more.

John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax. For more of his reports, Go Here Now.

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What Is Mutual Aid? | How to Get Involved in the Community Movement – MarieClaire.com

Andrew LichtensteinGetty Images

Mutual aid has existed as long as people have been around, says Mariame Kaba, an educator and organizer in New York City who, in March 2020, collaborated with U.S. representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on a mutual-aid workshop and the release of a COVID-19 mutual-aid digital tool kit. But theres a reason youve been seeing pictures of people filling a community refrigerator and videos of folks handing out clothing on the street accompanied by #mutualaid all over your social feeds lately. Were dealing with a disaster of massive proportions, [COVID-19], that most people have never lived through in their lifetime, Kaba says. When you are in this kind of a situation, you figure out ways to relate to other people that allow you to actually survive. Thats why people are paying attention to it; they have no choice.

Its important to be clear on what mutual aid really is (it can loosely be described as caring for others while working to improve our world)and isnt (charity). This is more than the giving or taking of goods or services; its a relationship that youre building. Its called mutual aid, so its not just the [assistance] that matters, says Kaba, its the reciprocity of itthat youre in a community with other people. From that association, you build connections in a way that you dont with a singular feel-good actions. (Not that theres anything wrong with those)

Its to create a new society; its to create a new community.

Its not just You do one thing for me, and then I never talk to you again, continues Kaba. Its to create a new society; its to create a new community. The idea is that once people are interacting in this way, they see more and more ways to work together to help one another, leading to greater transformation.

The key to understanding it is a 1902 essay collection by Peter Kropotkin. In Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, the Russian anarchist philosopher looked at mutually beneficial cooperation in human and animal societies, sort of the opposite of social Darwinism. For a deeper understanding of the modern version, try the primer Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity During This Crisis (and the Next), by Dean Spade (Verso, 2020). Spade outlines how the systems we currently have in place are not set up to meet peoples needsas weve seen highlighted by last years major global disruption.

But its not only worth practicing during a pandemic. Mutual aid is for when wealth is concentrated in one layer of society, when the health-care system is flawed, and when people can work full-time but still be unable to pull their families out of poverty. In other words, mutual aid is timelyand timeless.

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A True Portrait of Tom Bethell – Discovery Institute

Photo: Tom Bethell, by Laszlo Bencze.

Sometimes words can capture, partly, a human personality, or at least give a glimpse. Other times a photo or other portrait speaks eloquently in a way that words cant. Photographer Laszlo Bencze has taken photos of intelligent design proponents and Darwin skeptics, including several portraits of journalist Tom Bethell, whose passing I noted here yesterday. Tom was 84 years old. Bencze sent a beautiful and expressive photo of him, reproduced above with permission, along with this:

I am very saddened to hear of Tom Bethells death. Not only was he pivotal in my turning away from Darwinism due to his 1976 Harpers article, which I clipped from the magazine and still have, but we also became friends during one of his visits to California. He allowed me to do an edit on his book,Darwins House of Cards. It was so well written that my suggestions were rather minor. He was erudite and a true gentleman.

The photo was taken in Laszlos living room in 2013. Im no photographer but it seems to me that what the artist is trying to do is capture an image not just of the subjects body but of his heart, whatever we understand that to mean (personality, will, spirit), maybe even his soul. In my estimation, this portrait succeeds.

This occurs to me, not pertaining to Tom Bethell alone. Take a moment to browse Laszlos other photos. I was struck by his images of Flannery OConnors home, including one of her typewriter and writing desk. The photo is accompanied by this quotation from a letter she wrote:

A story really isnt any good unless it successfully resists paraphrase, unless it hangs on and expands in the mind. Properly, you analyze to enjoy, but its equally true that to analyze with any discrimination, you have to have enjoyed already

The same might be true of photos or of people. Were reminded of this when people die, and at other times.

I was going to say that the way Toms right eye is illuminated, in a penetrating manner, speaks to me. Suggesting a penetrating intellect, or some such thing. But you know what? That falls absurdly flat. When we try to paraphrase summarize, or indicate in words what draws us to someone or something and find that it successfully resists paraphrase, then we know were in the presence of something very good. The more secure the stronghold against paraphrase, the more special the object of our failed praise.

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A True Portrait of Tom Bethell - Discovery Institute

Iconoclast: Farewell to Tom Bethell – Discovery Institute

Photo: Tom Bethell, via Discovery Institute.

As a Darwin skeptic, journalist Tom Bethell preceded almost everyone I know. His groundbreaking attack on evolutionary theory in Harpers Magazine appeared in 1976. It is my sad duty to report that Tom passed away on Friday. We will have more to say about him. As to his gifts as a writer and thinker, I reviewed his wonderful book Darwins House of Cards back in 2017. From, Tom Bethells Rebuke to Fellow Journalists: A Skeptical Look at Evolution IsNotBeyond Your Powers:

Not a religious apologist or a cheerleader for any competing view, but rather an old-fashioned skeptic, Bethell has been doubting Darwin since he was an undergraduate at Oxford University. I admit hes a longtime friendly acquaintance and a contributor to Evolution News, so Im not unbiased. But others who, like me, have followed him for years agree in savoring his work.

That includes some eminent names. Novelist Tom Wolfe has called him one of our most brilliant essayists, and Andrew Ferguson at The Weekly Standard, a great writer himself, says, As a journalist, Tom Bethell is fearless. As a storyteller and stylist he is peerless. All his gifts are on generous display in this fascinating and admirable book.

He has been writing about Darwin (among many other subjects, of course) for forty-plus years, beginning with an article in Harpers in 1976. Wry, unfailingly clear, never technical, yet astonishingly well informed, he has produced what might be the Platonic ideal of an introduction to an often challenging and certainly controversial subject. He covers the waterfront, probing the strength of Darwinian thinking with reference to common descent, natural selection, extinction, homology, convergence, the fossil record, biogeography, cladistics, Lenskis long-term experiment with bacteria, and much more.

He concludes that while confidence in the pillars of Darwinism common descent and innovation through natural selection hit their high-water mark at the celebration of the Origin of Species in 1959, the evidence has steadily and increasingly gone against the theory. The whole edifice rested on a 19th century faith in Progress, propped up by a dogmatic commitment to materialism. As the former falters, the structure is in danger of collapse.

To have won the admiration of Tom Wolfe is no small accomplishment for a journalist. Bethell was a vivid personality and highly independent. He could be entertainingly irascible, as he demonstrated in an email list in which we both participated. He was also loyal. I thought of him recently in connection with another journalist I knew, Joseph Sobran. As some may recall, Joe Sobran self-destructed, in career terms, and was forced out at National Review. By the end of his life, he had reconciled with his former employer, William F. Buckley Jr. But in the years when as far as Im aware, everyone else in the world of conservative journalism had dropped Sobran as too toxic, Tom Bethell, I know, remained his close friend. That struck me as a tribute to Toms character. A gift for loyalty and friendship is undoubtedly even more precious than a gift for thought, analysis, or writing.

I remember having an exchange with Tom about the meaning of his last name, which seems to correspond to the Biblical place name Beth El, meaning House of God. He has gone on now to that House. All his friends at Discovery Institute wish Toms wife Donna much comfort. You can see him below in a video we released, Iconoclast: One Journalists Odyssey through the Darwin Debates.

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Iconoclast: Farewell to Tom Bethell - Discovery Institute

Random Evolution Doesn’t Produce Algorithmic Functions in Animals – Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

In a recent article Evolution and artificial intelligence face the same basic problem, Eric Holloway addressed the conundrum faced by artificial intelligence theorists: How can a random process with no insight into the environment increase information about that environment within evolving DNA sequences and/or artificial intelligence programs. By what mechanism can randomness know anything? Dr. Holloways challenge goes to the heart of the problem with the materialist worldview regarding origins, evolution, and ultimately intelligence.

Imagine you knew absolutely nothing about roller skates. Then you awoke this morning to find your ankles and feet permanently installed into roller skates. Instantly, everything you understood about walking and running is worthless.

Getting onto your feet at all is risky. Standing is your second awful challenge. To move, you cant walk; you must glide. To turn is a mysterious twist-and-lean maneuver. Stopping means grabbing onto something stationary or just falling down a lot. Dont even think about moving backward. When you finally gain some skating skills through endless struggles, you find skates are great for speed on paved surfaces. But they are slow and dangerously ill-suited for gravel, grassy terrain, or staircases. You will certainly miss your feet in their natural state.

This thought experiment captures the fundamental distinction between biological hardware and biological software. We have hardware for locomotion: ankles and feet. We need the know-how, the methods, the sequence of commands the software to operate that hardware. Feet dont walk us, nor do they walk independently of us. Rather, we walk using feet. When the hardware changes, for example, if feet were to become roller skates, the software must change radically too.

If you dont figure out how to move around on skates instead of feet, your chances of surviving and thriving greatly diminish. Having to think specifically about every step or glide would drain your energy, so you need to develop the sort of muscle memory with skates as you previously had with feet.

Bottom line: You must change your software to operate new or modified hardware. In the same way, when an animals biological hardware changes, that animals operating software must also change to match the hardware changes.

Somehow, when we think about evolution, the problem of hardwaresoftware coordination is ignored. Take, for example, the neo-Darwinian claim that modern birds evolved from reptile-like dinosaurs. Discussions of dinosaur-to-bird evolution talk about the hardware changes: scales became feathers, legs became wings, cold-blooded (exothermic) physiology became warm-blooded (endothermic) physiology, tooth-filled mouths became beaks, and so on. All of these monumental changes in hardware present enormous operational challenges that incremental mutations somehow solved over millions of years. But totally missing is any account of the evolution of the necessary software.

Assume for the moment that unguided mutation could actually modify a reptile and install the wing apparatus, including all the muscles and feathers. For the early stubby proto-wing to give the modified reptile the survival advantage necessary to win in natural selection, the reptile must know how to use the proto-wing. A reptile with proto-wings instead of legs is like a human with roller skates instead of feet. The reptile must have the biological software to operate the proto-wings successfully. Whatever software the legged reptile had, it wont operate a proto-wing. The stubby-winged reptile is worse off than his legged brothers and sisters, not better, and wont win the natural selection prize.

So lets generously give a reptile a full set of beautiful wings with feathers and the powerful muscles needed. We have doomed the poor creature. She wakes up to the world, clueless about how to use the wings. She cant walk like her legged siblings. She cant fly because she lacks the software, in the sense of neurological adaptations, to launch, flap, soar, glide, turn, and land.

Operating feet or skates, legs or wings, is algorithmic. Robert Marks, Michael Egnor, and Winston Ewert have all argued that the mind is distinct from the brain, at least in humans, and that consciousness does not arise in the brain alone. William Dembski has suggested that consciousness could potentially be the result of material features that are intelligently designed. It is a fair question whether consciousness, human reason, and subjective preferences are algorithmic or non-algorithmic. But those elements of mind function well above walking or even flying in terms of complexity or comprehensibility; the ordinary operations of movement are algorithmic because they can be programmed into computers.

When walking or skating, we develop muscle memory. Our brains and nervous systems internalize the procedures for these tasks. We dont think about them, we just engage them. The toddler toddles around looking for the kitten he wants to play with and finds it prudently perched on a ledge out of arms reach. The toddler doesnt think about having to walk while trying to carry out that intention. Doubtless, reptiles dont think about walking, and birds dont think about flying. They just expect the subroutines in their brains to carry out the tasks.

According to the materialist view, every feature of life is explainable using cause-and-effect physics and chemistry. Neo-Darwinism (the theory that natural selection acting on random mutation builds complex, functional structures) still seems to be the dominant materialist account of the existence of animal species. To properly claim that throne, however, neo-Darwinism must explain not only how hardware features mutated into existence but also how the biological operating software came into existence and could then be modified successfully in dramatic ways.

Walking and flying are two animal functions that are often called behaviors. I scoured the Encyclopedia of Evolution (2002) a few years ago but found no substantive explanation for the origins and implementation of behaviors.

Computer systems within robots can engage in behaviors and we can see and modify the software code that was designed for the purpose. Ive been reading articles about dinosaur-bird evolution, but none have described where and how the walking and flying software is encoded and stored in the animals bodies or brains. No article Ive seen reveals the mechanism for modifying behavioral software in animals, let alone how the algorithm for walking in two dimensions can be modified by undirected mutation to become the algorithm for flying in three dimensions.

Materialist thinkers contend that every feature of brain, mind, and consciousness arose via cause-effect physics and chemistry accounted for by neo-Darwinism. In that case, they first need to explain how biological software is created and stored in animals, and then how such software can be mutated by accident just in time to operate new biological hardware. Solve those problems first, before claiming human consciousness is mere biochemistry.

Note: See also the detailed presentation about bird flight prepared by Professor Gary Ritchison, Eastern Kentucky University here and here.

Photo credits:

Figure 1: Roller skates is by Ryan McGuire at Pixabay.

Figure 2: Foot by HeelsandFeet is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Figure 3: Feathered Dinosaur: File:Harpymimus steveoc.jpg by Steveoc 86 is licensed under CC BY 2.5

Figure 4: Archaeopteryx closer to a bird by Luna04 at French Wikipedia is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0

You may also enjoy: Evolution and artificial intelligence face the same basic problem. Think of the word ladder game, where we transform one word into another by changing only one letter at a time. (Eric Holloway)

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Random Evolution Doesn't Produce Algorithmic Functions in Animals - Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

One People, One House: The truth about race IS there is no race – masslive.com

The morning after Donald J. Trumps stunning presidential electoral victory in 2016 my very smart lawyer-daughter observed, Abbie, I think we simply underestimated the level of white rage in the country following the Obama years.

I believe she was absolutely correct. My daughter, her husband and their 9-year-old daughter had stumped for Bernie Sanders in their hometown of Worcester and in New Hampshire. Her younger brother, though, a hip-hop artist with a degree in political science, had toured the Tea Party Midwest the year before, noticed a marked, compelling sense of reactionary white alienation in the region and had warned of an upset for the Democrat shoo-in liberals. He, too, was correct, of course.

Past IS prelude. The storming of the nations Capitol on Jan. 6, just like Trumps 2016 storming of our nations historically fickle experiment in democracy, was telegraphed, forewarned. Many Americans of conscience could feel it, they just couldnt see it. Or, they didnt want to.

Like many social upheavals in our nations relatively brief history, the role of white supremacy, that demonic vice originally engineered by the American 1% and their minions to be as destructive as it is deniable by our ardent, white working classes, is seminal.

Denial is racisms heartless enabler, a practiced self-defense to make the uncomfortable comfortable, most often through gross distortions of real life, of reality. Our best chance at national racial redemption is to truthfully tell the stories and histories of American racism and white supremacy.

Kamal Ali, Associate Professor of Ethnic & Gender Studies at Westfield State University, left, organized a rally outside of West Springfield High School Wednesday to protest alleged abuse of Muslim sisters by fellow students over a period of years. They were joined by students from Westfield State University, Holyoke Community College and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. April 30. 2014 (Michael S. Gordon/The Republican) Staff-ShotThe Republican file

If were going to live under one roof as an indivisible American people, with liberty and justice for all of us, it is absolutely essential that we educate ourselves on certain undeniable contradictions and distortions that have, over time, assumed the mantel of truth.

The back story of white racism is part of the apocryphal story of race and our nations ruling class obsession to create a scientific rationale for imperial slavery on one hand, while maintaining the equally dangerous, galling hypocrisy of a totally false Christian respectability on the other.

The truth about race is there IS no race. There are no genetic markers, or visible ones for that matter, that we find in one so-called race that we dont find in another race.

All anatomically modern humans, homo sapiens, are descendants from a common Black biological ancestor from Africa, most likely East Africa. For most of us this truth is like learning the Earth is not flat, so addicted are we to the European illusion that race is science, and a determiner of ability, performance and culture. That belief did not develop by happenstance or coincidence.

The slave system established in the Americas and the Caribbean delivered unimaginable profits in the United States and Europe. Resultantly, the contest to portray enslaved or oppressed people as pagans or subhuman heathens whose subjugation by superior white cultures was not only normal, but the decree of almighty God, began in earnest.

Beginning in the early 18th century highly motivated clergymen, physicians, philosophers, jurists and lay scientists were hard at work attempting to classify what they supposed were different racial groups along a hierarchical ladder, with whites and other western Europeans at the top, and darker races at the bottom. These were men, by the way, who represented the intellectual elite of Europe and America, not a bevy of charlatans and conspiracy theorists of the type we know and love today.

The idea was to prove, empirically, the superiority of whiteness as justification for the continued exploitation, globally, of inferior races. In short, early 18th century anthropologists, as they came to be known, tended to follow a biblical or monogenetic view of humankind that implied all humans were of one species but varied in appearance and capabilities.

But even the Bible thumpers were patently racist, describing folk who looked like my family as not the white mans equal, who were meant to be servants of servants, and who believed slavery is justifiable. Thomas Jefferson, slave holder and father of four surviving children with half-caste Sally Hemmings, the Beyonce of her time, suspicioned Blacks were a distinct race, but was absolutely convinced of their dulltasteless inferiority to white folk.

By the 19th century the science had devolved to the point where blacks and other racial minorities were seen as different species altogether, and were summarily, in their view, written out of the human family. What these anthropologists were really up to, their smoke-and-mirror experiments with cranial capacity, head shape, hair texture and brain color notwithstanding, was affirming their own preconceived prejudices and formally justifying the racial inequality, oppression and immorality of their world.

In 1859, a year or so before the Civil War, Charles Darwin published his work of authentically scientific, biological literature popularly known as The Origin of Species. However, the formal title of his work, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life, is clear in its intent to label a publication that would, in part, underscore and affirm the glaring inequities in the prevailing racial landscape, which it did.

Pseudo-scientists like Herber Spencer and Francis Galton (Darwins British cousin) used Darwins work to usher in a more sophisticated strain of racism known Social Darwinism, which then metastasized into Eugenics a huge tent that offers cover for a variety of the not-so-subtle racist incarnations of today.

This photo from 2018 shows James F. Hennessey Award recipients Kamal H. Ali, left, and John Bracey, right, with their wives, Ayesha Ali and Ingrid Bracey, at the Greater Springfield NAACP Centennial Freedom Fund Banquet. The Hennessey award is the highest honor given by the organization and recognizes individuals for their efforts in eliminating racial discrimination and promoting civil right.The Republican file

The corrupting strands of racism and racial supremacy, bigotry and intolerance braided into American law and governance, public and private policies and practices before and since our nations inception, must be targeted, isolated and done away with. How else can our national home be a comfortable home, an equitable home, a loving home to everyone living there?

The historical complicity of the U.S. Supreme Court and lower courts in the establishment and maintenance of slavery, segregation, voter suppression; the Congressional denial of Black and brown folk access to Social Security, and Black veterans to G.I. Bill grants supporting housing and education; the banks red-lining of urban neighborhoods while exposing Blacks to predatory mortgage practices; the criminal justice systems collusion with state courts to unleash the scourge of mass incarceration on urban poor communities, then deny released inmates civil and legal status: these malevolent practices, among a litany of other abridgments of colored folks human rights are reprehensible. So, too, are the innumerable racist affronts to the ability of Black, white, yellow and brown people to enjoy, with dignity, the full array of opportunities that are integral to the America their labor and extreme sacrifice has produced.

We can and must do better. And, I suggest we do it sooner rather than later. The barbarians arent at the gate, theyre in our House!

Kamal H. Ali, who grew up in Springfield, retired in 2016 from Westfield State University, where he holds the position of professor emeritus in the Department of Ethnic and Gender Studies. He is the former director of the universitys Office of Minority Affairs and the universitys Urban Education and Student Support Services programs. Ali is also a founder and trustee of the Islamic Society of Western Massachusetts and an imam-chaplain for Muslim inmates at the Hampden County House of Correction.

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One People, One House: The truth about race IS there is no race - masslive.com

Diversity Dialogues Raise Issues of Women’s Rights, Sexual Identity and Individual Freedom – University of Arkansas Newswire

Shirin Saeidi, assistant professor of political science serving as University Housing's Faculty in Residence for the north end of campus, will sponsor a series of talks this academic year addressing several social topics.

Saeidi planned a series of dialogues with on-campus residential students on topics that include vaccinations, woman's rights, sexual identity and what freedom means.

The first dialogue of the spring semester had Adam Blehm and Blake Hereth as guest speakers focusing on public health and compulsory vaccinations. Blehm is a doctoral student in philosophy and Hereth is an assistant professor of philosophy. They recently published a paper on the debate surrounding mandatory vaccination.

Students had the opportunity to participate in the discussion and interact with faculty members throughout the presentation.

"My favorite part of the Diversity Dialogue regarding the COVID-19 vaccination was when the differing arguments on mandatory vaccination were presented. Seeing the logic and information behind each side's opinion was rather helpful in formulating my own stance on the subject," said freshman psychology major, Andrew Ruegsegger.

"That's why I think the Diversity Dialogue sessions are so critical for the student community understanding the various reasons by which people arrive at their beliefs allows us to form our own educated, moderate and diverse opinions."

Ruegsegger encourages other students to join the conversation and benefit from the explored areas. Topics he would like to see in future sessionsinclude safety measures for women working in food delivery services, ridesharing, and other jobs where one-on-one interactions are required.

This series is open to students, faculty and staff. The Diversity Dialogues are a hybrid series where participants can join via Zoom or in-person at Morgan Hall room 108. Student participants also have the chance to win an Amazon gift card for their contribution to the discussion.

RSVPs to the Diversity Dialogue Series are done through Living Learning Communities' pages on HogSync.

Saeidi, organizer of the dialogue series, shares that "the purpose of the Diversity Dialogue is to introduce students to the various forms of inequality and discrimination that exists in our world, and how we can address them collectively."

She believes conversations about diversity and inclusion are crucial at this moment in time.

"It is urgent for our students to have access to leading scholars, activists and artists concerned with different aspects of US politics and society. Such conversations will facilitate progressive change and connect us better locally."

This is Saeidi's second semester as a Faculty in Residence and she continues to bring light to the current issues that contribute to the evolving dynamic of society.

During Fall 2020, the Diversity Dialogue Series hosted conversations about cultural competence, public discourse, becoming an ally in the fight against racism and the psycho-historical and socioeconomic development of "Latinx" individuals in the United States.

All events will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday.

About University Housing. University Housing is a department within the Division of Student Affairs serving a residential community of around 6,200 on-campus students. More than 200 students find employment opportunities with University Housing each year. We offer educational programs that support the success of students and services that help students focus on academics at the University of Arkansas. Living on campus starts with a housing contract.

About the Division of Student Affairs. The Division of Student Affairs supports students in pursuing knowledge, earning a degree, finding meaningful careers, exploring diversity, and connecting with the global community. We provide students housing, dining, health care resources, and create innovative programs that educate and inspire. We enhance the University of Arkansas experience and help students succeed, one student at a time.

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Diversity Dialogues Raise Issues of Women's Rights, Sexual Identity and Individual Freedom - University of Arkansas Newswire