Perspective: A Sign Of Immortality | WNIJ and WNIU – WNIJ and WNIU

Francisco Solares-Larrave's "Perspective" (September 2, 2020).

Sometimes, I take a walk through a cemetery near my house. There's nothing morbid about it. In fact, I enjoy cemeteries, and during a trip, I insisted on seeing the cemetery of a small French town, and we found the tomb of Marc Chagall. I felt vindicated.

The one near my house has no celebrities that I know of. It looks a bit abandoned, despite some shiny headstones here and there. When I walk through it, I stop to contemplate some groups.

There's an entire family -- they have the same last name -- that makes me think they're together, like sharing an eternal Thanksgiving.

There are also several small headstones with a man's name first, and a woman's below it, with the title "wife" added. Were they stoic? Were they good neighbors? Did they like music?

I also find it mystifying that some headstones have just one name, nothing else, as if that were enough.

Is this immortality? That you may be known by your first name? That your family will be buried around you, in a section of the cemetery? It may seem odd, but to me there is some measure of immortality in their choice of headstone. That's how those Finnish, Swedish, German and British last names tell stories of struggles, success or failure. They left an imprint visible today. If that's not immortality, tell me what is.

I am Francisco Solares-Larrave, and that's my perspective.

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5 reasons why the Incarnations of Immortality books would make a great series – Winter is Coming

Image: On a Pale Horse/ Del Rey Books

Piers Anthonys Incarnations of Immortalityseries may not be for everyone, but as more content creators look for ways to woo viewers, this eight-book saga could give the right network season after season of excellent content.

Incarnations of Immortalityexplores the realms that lie beyond our everyday lives. We cant see them, but theyre where immortal agents engage in an eternal battle between good and evil. Each book covers a different supernatural office, with different mortals being drafted to fulfill these roles over time. The offices are Death, Time, Fate, War, Mother Nature, Satan, God and Night. This is a series that will grip you early and surprise you at the end.

But before we get to why this series work so well on TV, lets find out who these immortals are. Throughout the series, we learn how these beings become immortal.On a Pale Horse, which came out in 1983, tells the story of Death, who roams the world collecting souls and balancing the scales of good and evil to determine their fate in the eternal realms.

Bearing an Hour Glasstells us the story of Time, who lives his life backward, knowing the future but not the past.

With a Tangled Skeinintroduces us to Fate, she who controls the threads of mortal life, and immortal life as well.

Wielding a Red Sword introduces us to War, the incarnation of immortality who feeds souls to Death, and lives to coax men to evil deeds.

Our last Immortal is Mother Nature, whom we meet in Being a Green Mother. The other Immortals trust her, possibly at their peril.

The final two books in the series, For Love of Evil and And Eternity(1990) bring us face to face with Satan and God respectively, but with a twist. (Theres also a final book,Under a Velvet Cloak, which came out in 2007, but it has a different setting probably wouldnt be adapted as part of the main series.)

So those are the basics. Why are these books so ripe for adaptation?

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5 reasons why the Incarnations of Immortality books would make a great series - Winter is Coming

Shelly Aldean: The Measure of a man – Nevada Appeal

In a book he entitled Why Lincoln Matters written prior to and in anticipation of the presidential election of 2004, former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo summoned to the stage for another posthumous bow, a statesman, who perhaps better than anyone before or after him, encompasses the character and indefatigable resourcefulness of a nation he proclaimed to be the last best hope of earth.

As in times past, the name of Lincoln is again being invoked by people from across the political spectrum as they grapple with the challenges of a polarized, violently shifting ideological landscape. This is no surprise since for generations, as Cuomo puts it, politicians have twisted themselves and Lincoln out of shape to make it appear that they are standing next to the 16th president. His achievements make him irresistible and his eloquence makes him easy to quote.

Although Cuomo reasons this philosophical adoption of Lincoln is expected and expedient, he contends there is no political label elastic enough to fit around his magnificent complexity or to do justice to his complicated combination of strengths and vulnerabilities, his genius and insufficiencies, his brilliant boldness and wise pronouncements.

Cuomos contention that Lincoln looms, even today, as one of the most coveted and revered figures of the past, is supported by the wide diversity of people wishing to claim him as part of their political, ideological, experiential, racial, and even lifestyle lineage.

Lincolns humble beginnings, according to Cuomo make him a natural favorite of generations of seekers and strugglers who have built this nation and continue to strengthen it.

In 2008, an anthropologist working for the Institute of Historical Science claimed to have analyzed a lock of Lincolns hair and identified a strong African genetic link in Lincolns DNA; some have inferred that he was gay because he often shared a bed with David Davis, a fellow lawyer, while traveling the 8th Judicial Circuit in central Illinois. It should be pointed out, however, that the alternative to sharing a bed was sleeping on the floor in often primitive accommodations!

Despite all of his admirable qualities, Lincoln, like the rest of us, was not without his faults. He was, after all, human, which by practical definition, made him subject to his own particular assortment of weaknesses and failings. As human beings, our opinions are molded by a lifetime of experiences shaped and formed by unique circumstances and peculiar twists of fate.

As such, Lincolns opinion of slavery evolved over time. While not explicitly advocating for the equality of Blacks as a younger man, it is clear that the practice of slavery offended his sensibilities. In a letter to his friend and colleague Joshua Speed in 1855, he declared that slavery is wrong, morally and politically.

Having witnessed slaves shackled together on a steamboat trip from Louisville to St. Louis in 1841 he confided that the sight was a continual torment to him. Yet, according to author and historian Greg Caggiano, the final transformation of his thinking would not be complete until the waning months of the American Civil War when an embattled Lincoln was able to convince his cabinet to go forward with a 13th Amendment to the Constitution granting slaves their freedom.

Since everyone views the world through a slightly different lens, it is incumbent upon all of us to be sympathetic to the differences among us even though the urgency of the moment or the passion of our emotions may dictate otherwise. Although originally critical of Lincolns perceived indifference to the abolition movement, Fredrick Douglass later recalled that In all my interviews with Mr. Lincoln, I was impressed with his entire freedom from popular prejudice against the colored race. He was the first great man that I talked with in the United States freely who in no single instance reminded me of the difference between himself and myself

In a book entitled Reminiscences of Abraham Lincoln by Distinguished Men of his Time written 21 years after Lincolns death, Donn Piatt, a 19th century journalist, remarked that by our popular process of eliminating all human weakness from our great men, we weaken and, in a measure, destroy their immortality, for we destroy them.

As we debate the worthiness of our Founders and our other historical predecessors, let us focus on their strengths and contributions not on their weaknesses and indiscretions for it is hypocritical to expect perfection in others when we ourselves fall short of that measure.

Shelly Aldean is a Carson City resident.

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Shelly Aldean: The Measure of a man - Nevada Appeal

Goblin & 9 More Of The Best Supernatural K-Dramas | ScreenRant – Screen Rant

For fans of something a little supernatural these horror comedy (and even horror rom-com) K-dramas are perfect binge viewing.

Several South Korean dramas center around supernatural elements like fairies, spirits, and the concepts of immortality and rebirth. Goblin is a prime example of such K-dramas. After attaining a worldwide following, Goblin opened a new world of fantasy series in South Korea, and winning over audiences from all over. Such was its impact that even affected fashion trends and several parodies around the world.

RELATED: 15 Of The Best K-Dramas On Netflix Right Now

These shows are often heartwarming, dramatic while playing around with local histories and folklore and tying this rich past with the country's contemporary times. Here are some of the best supernatural K-dramas with the same elements as Goblin.

Possibly one of the greatest dramas in the pantheon of South Korean fantasy shows, Goblin (also known as Guardian: The Lonely and Great God) tells the story of Kim Shin. He's a decorated military general from the past who is cursed with immortality, in exchange for all the lives he took. At the age of 939 years, he becomes the Goblin, the guardian of souls seeking a bride for himself who can break his spell.

The show generated an immense cult following, becoming a cultural phenomenon in South Korea and one of the country's highest-rated series.

Bring It On, Ghost has a fun premise of an exorcist befriending a spirit. Lonely and disgruntled in his profession, the exorcist befriends a wandering spirit as his roommate and ghost-fighting partner, later sharing a romance with her.

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Filled with moments that can tug viewers' heartstrings, the show much like the webtoon it's inspired from shows the potential of K-dramas to perfectly blend romance and everyday drama with fantasy elements.

A light-hearted take on the supernatural genre, this 2015 show features a timid girl who gets possessed by the ghost of a much bolder young woman. This ghost attempts to fulfill all those desires that she otherwise couldn't in her mortal life. The situation gets complicated further when the ghost wishes to hook up with the girl's boss, a famous womanizing chef.

Oh My Ghost carries on the usual tropes of fantasy K-dramas while adding a heartfelt love triangle in the mix. A Thai remake of the same name premiered three years after its release.

Just like Goblin's aged protagonist, My Love From The Star also stars an extraterrestrial being (Kim Soo-hyun) stranded on Earth for four centuries. Much like the other leads of the shows in this list, the hero Do Min-joon is initially pretty lonely and cynical till he starts spending time with a leading actress (Jun Ji-hyun) of the current era. She changes his overall mindset as his faith in humanity gets restored.

The show was praised for its fast-paced plot and the performances of its two leads. It even went on to inspire a Filipino show of the same name in 2017.

Inspired by South Korean folklore, Legend of the Blue Sea is a visually-appealing, emotional drama dealing with the love story of a mermaid and a con-man. The mermaid belongs to the Joseon period of South Korean history. Hence, like many other fantasy K-dramas, this show too occasionally shifts to an archaic past while connecting it to contemporary times.

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Jun Ji-Hyun, in particular, drew great praise for playing the mermaid Se-hwa with child-like innocence and charm.

Written by noted South Korean screenwriters The Hong Sisters, A Korean Odyssey is a modern retelling of the classic 16th-century Chinese text Journey To The West, set in the year 2017. The world is inhabited with dark forces as the forces of two Kings clash with each other, one is representative of heaven while the other embodies hell.

Very popular at the time of its airing, the show lives up to its epic source material with many likable young characters, each of whom fights for their own circumstances, making the division between the good and evil much less watertight.

Three Korean freedom fighters protest against the Japanese occupation of Korea in the 1930s. However, they get reincarnated to the present day as a best-selling writer, a fan of the writer, and a ghostwriter. The three characters reunite to find the truths behind their 80-year-old past.

Chicago Typewriter has a wildly original and unpredictable plot, moving beyond several cliches of supernatural K-dramas. And then as mentioned, the show also functions as a heartwarming tribute to Korea's history of struggles and revolutions.

Master's Sun is often hailed as one of the most romantic K-dramas is often dubbed as a 'hor-rom-com' (horror romantic comedy). The protagonist Gong-shil is a woman who gains the ability to see ghosts after a mysterious accident. Traumatise by this curse, she finds solace with Joong-won, a rich, handsome CEO of a company (So Ji-sub) around whom the ghosts disappear.

RELATED: 10 Other K-Dramas To Watch For Fans Of Love Alarm

While it seems like a simple love story, Joong-won sticks with Gong-shil for his own motives as he hopes to meet the ghost of his dead ex-girlfriend. How the two characters deal with their tumultuous relationship forms the remainder of the story.

With a binge-worthy season of 16 episodes, W is a classic fantasy K-drama that revolves around a clash of two words, one being the real world and the other being an alternate universe from a digital webtoon called W. In the middle of this, two hopeless souls in their early thirties, belonging to each of these two dimensions end up falling in love.

High on action and romance, the show drew immense praise for its unique concept. It marked a new wave of K-dramas that relied on sci-fi rather than just fantasy and supernatural elements.

The titular hotel in this series is an establishment that caters only to ghosts. Again written by the Hong sisters, the horror-comedy gives a hotelier's perspective of the hotel's history and mysterious founder.

Apart from its light tones, the show also ventures towards emotional territories, especially towards the series finale. Even in terms of world-building, Hotel Del Luna is a pretty unconventional drama drifting away from the common depiction of spirits or allusions to historical periods like the Joseon era.

NEXT: The 10 Highest Rated K-Dramas In 2019 & 2020, Ranked (According To IMDb)

Next Letterkenny: The 10 Funniest Quotes From The Series

Based in Delhi, India, Shaurya Thapa is a Third World boy writing on First World pop culture. He's into freelance journalism, hip-hop, and engaging in critical analyses over films and TV of varied genres.

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Goblin & 9 More Of The Best Supernatural K-Dramas | ScreenRant - Screen Rant

The Nature Corner: Aging – The Coastland Times – The Coastland Times

By Ernie Marshall

Some years ago, I took a walk along a stretch of Reedy Branch, a tributary making its way to the Tar River, with a tree specialist to pick his brain about the trees we encountered. There were a lot of old trees, virgin forest perhaps since the area was once farmland back when farmers didnt attempt to clear and farm the bottomlands or floodplains. We talked about the different look of aging trees, coming near the end of their lifespan of a century or more. Their crowns thin out, less full with fewer branches and less foliage, they often develop some lean, no longer have that straight and tall look and the oaks and hickories no longer bear nuts. They seem to look old, as if imitating our changes with age, a bit bent over and balding. They even seem to get a look of wisdom earned with age. Everything in nature ages just as do we.

Some trees are quite aged, being the oldest living things on Earth. Redwoods get to be at least 2000 years old and sequoias over 3000. Both are topped by the bristle pine, which lives 5000 years or more.

Longevity in nature is a very wide spectrum. Most herbaceous plants live only a few months, then disperse seeds to start anew. Many insects live only a matter of days or weeks. The tiger swallowtail sipping nectar in your garden may be gone tomorrow. At the other extreme, stars go through a cycle from birth to demise that lasts billions of years, when they burn all of their hydrogen and perhaps go out with a bang as a dazzling supernova. (No cause for alarm, our sun should last another five billion years, being about half way through its life span.)

Aging is not to be confused with immortality, the fact that all of us will die at some point. Aging is part of life, death is lifes opposite. We tend to think that we fear our own death. Perhaps what we fear is dying, an end stage of the life process. I think the first century B.C. Roman philosopher Lucretius summed it up by saying we have nothing to fear in our death, because when I am here death is not, and when death is here I am not. Mark Twain puts it this way: The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.

To make more interesting comparisons between the life spans of living things and get closer to home, let us consider what has been called the heartbeat hypothesis that all mammals whose longevity ranges roughly from the pygmy shrew that lives only a year or so to the bowhead whale that may live 200 years live for the duration of about one billion heartbeats.

Consider the following instances:

Pygmy shrew 1.02 billion total heartbeats (1300 bpm, 1.5 year average lifespan)

Mouse 1.31 billion (500 bpm, 5 years)

Cat 1.18 billion (150 bpm, 15 years)

Human 2.24 billion heartbeats (60 bpm, 71 years)

Horse 0.93 billion (44 bpm, 40 years)

Elephant 1.03 billion (28 bpm, 70 years)

Notice that the larger the animal gets, the slower its pulse rate. A cat is roughly 100 times larger than a mouse, but its heart rate is about a third as rapid as that of the mouse. The pygmy shrew, with it very rapid pulse, burns itself out in a year or so.

Note who breaks the one billion heartbeat rule us, humans. We get something like twice what other species get. If we followed the rule, our life expectancy would be 35 years instead of 71 years. (It is commonly thought that human life span has increased through history. It seems not, that the Bible three score and ten is fairly constant, considering only death from old age, not disease, accident, death in tribal warfare, death in childbirth, etc.).

There is a plethora of hypotheses about why our species is an exception to the one billion heartbeat rule. I will leave you to ponder or research this. I would like instead to ponder the one billion heartbeat rule.

Heartbeats seem a better measure of life than years, the pulse of a life sustaining organ in our bodies, rather than Earths annual trip around the sun.All of a sudden we have a yardstick for the lives of us and our fellow mammals.Or do we?

My dog Bullitt ages at about seven times the rate that I do. Does that mean because of his more rapid heartbeat (and metabolism) that he experiences time differently? Does his lifetime feel as long as mine?Does he experience a difference in my wife and I being away for an hour for an errand and our being a way for a weekend?Humans seem hyperconscious of time.We make plans for the future and remember the past (or worry and regret). Does my dog just live in the moment, an ever-repeated present?

Despite our dependence on watches and calendars, the experience of time with humans is largely subjective.An hour spent in a hospital waiting room for news about cancer or a newly arriving baby seems much longer.An hour with a cherished friend seems much briefer.

And since Einstein, there is no longer a cosmic yardstick in physics for the universe at large for measuring time. (The question what time is it on the moon? is totally meaningless.)

Oh my, a stroll along a stream bank looking at trees has led us to bumping into Albert Einstein. Time to conclude thiscolumn. May you have a long life, age well and fill your time with bright and memorable moments.

Ernie Marshall taught at East Carolina College for thirty-two years and had a home in Hyde County near Swan Quarter. He has done extensive volunteer work at the Mattamuskeet, Pocosin Lakes and Swan Quarter refuges and was chief script writer for wildlife documentaries by STRS Productions on the coastal U.S. National Wildlife Refuges, mostly located on the Outer Banks. Questions or comments?Contact the author atmarshalle1922@gmail.com.

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My date with history… and hope | Yosef I. Abramowitz | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

All things are mortal but the Jew, Mark Twain once marveled. What, he wondered, is the secret of his immortality?

The answer, Im happy to say, is sweeter than you think. And it is blossoming on Kibbutz Ketura in the Arava region, 40 minutes north of Eilat. Yes, the New York Times just broke the story of the children of Methuselah and Hannah, biblical date trees (that didnt meet on JDate) with some impressive history and something to teach at this perilous time as a lead up to the Jewish New Year.

Times reporter Isabel Kershner has been to Ketura before and in her article on the budding solar industry in Israel back in 2012 dubbed me Captain Sunshine. Actually, she quoted Dr. Elaine Solowey calling me Captain Sunshine. Anyone who beats the government bureaucracy is a superhero, said Dr. Solowey, a renowned authority on desert agriculture. And since then Ive been wearing a ring with a 2,000 year old coin minted in the temple in Jerusalem with an insignia of the sun, fighting the fossil fuel lobby and working with partners to achieve, finally, the redemptive 100% solar daytime goal for Eilat and the Arava.

Dr. Solowey, along with her partner in bringing ancient history alive, Dr. Sarah Sallon from Hadassah Hospital, are the heroes of the day. Or actually the millenium. Back in 2005, Dr. Sallon got hold of some ancient date seeds found at Masada, the last stand of the Jews against the conquering Romans. The seeds were from the Judean Palm, a variety that is extinct. Could they resurrect these ancient seeds in this, the Third Jewish Commonwealth?

A year after Theodor Herzl convened the first Zionist Congress, in Basel, Twain published Concerning the Jews in Harpers Magazine. The Egyptians, the Babylonians and the Persians rose, filled the planet with sound and splendor, then faded to dream-stuff and passed away; the Greeks and Romans followed and made a vast noise, and they were gone, observed the essayist, but not the Jew. All other forces pass, but he remains.

The place where I go to recharge is Ketura, a kibbutz founded by fellow members of my youth group, Young Judaea, during a lull in the fighting amidst the Yom Kippur War. While a nation was in shock from the surprise attack and the heavy losses, a group of American 20-somethings planted themselves in the third most extreme desert in the world with the hopes of establishing a blossoming community. The kibbutz became famous when, in 2005, Steven Erlanger also of the Times, reported that the first 2,000 year old Masada seed sprouted and was named Methuselah. Methuselah, to the disappointment of Drs. Solowey and Sallon, was male and would not produce any ancient dates.

Undaunted, the researchers continued to push the boundaries of science and our spiritual imaginations and revived more ancient seeds. And just as El Al flight 971 was on its way back from its historic peace mission in the United Arab Emirates, Drs. Solowey and Sallon sat me down at a table of the hotel lobby on Ketura with a questionnaire and a date. I was given Sample #1 to evaluate, the first insider-outsider to taste the fruit of reviving Jewish history and pride. (They, of course, tried some earlier).

With researchers, Dr. Sarah Sallon (L) and Dr. Elaine Solowey. (Courtesy Yosef Abramowitz)

What is the blessing for a moment like this? What does a moment like this really represent? And why was I crying holding this date?

It turns out that the mother plant, appropriately named Hannah, the biblical figure who prayed in the ancient temple in Jerusalem for a child, who became the prophet Samuel, has a secret history of her own pre-dating the father from Masada. Her DNA is Iraqi. Six hundred years before Masada fell to the Romans, Emperor Cyrus the Great allowed the Jews to return to Zion from Babylonia, apparently carrying dates and seeds with them.

The DNA of the date in my hand encompasses both exiles from the land of Israel, about to be consumed 2,000 years later on a kibbutz the birthplace of the solar industry in Israel and Africa and in the sovereign State of Israel.

My date with history. September 2020 (Courtesy Yosef Abramowitz)

We blessed the creator of the universe for the fruit of the trees.

We blessed the creator of the universe for bringing us to his special time, shehechiyanu.

And then Mike Solowey, a founder of the kibbutz who is married to Elaine, recited the line from Psalm 92, The righteous shall flourish like the palm tree.

Amen.

Our tears could have sprouted another dormant seed.

The date, a bit leathery at first taste, is a hybrid of the soft Medjoul and the solid Dekel Noor. And then wait for it a soft lingering taste of honey, not silan, but bee honey flavor. A perfect way to get ready to welcome a New Year. And, for a moment, with all that historic spiritual energy flowing through me, I felt more powerful than a locomotive and able to leap tall buildings in a single bound.

The world feels so bleak lately. Politics and Corona have chipped away at the spirit of optimism and possibilities in many places, including Israel. And yet. Two generations after the ancient Israelites were crushed by the Babylonian destruction of the first Temple in Jerusalem, they returned to the land, dates in hand, to fulfill the prophecy of Ezra and Nehemia. Masada, the location of a mass suicide 2,000 years ago, is today the site where their descendants returned to fly an Israeli flag.

Those ancient seeds have a story to tell and a message to deliver. Hope can spring eternal if nurtured, even against great odds. That is the challenge of our generation. Mark Twain, the secret of the immortality of the Jews is our ability to preserve and nurture hope, which is also our national anthem and our gift to the world.

Shana Tova & Shazam!

Yossi Abramowitz is a Jewish educator, impact investor and activist who deploys solar energy in Israel and Africa. Co-founder of major Jewish initiatives including MyJewishLearning.com, Interfaithfamily.com, birthrightisrael.com and BabagaNewz, he currently serves as CEO of Energiya Global Capital, a Jerusalem-based impact investment platform that provides returns to investors while advancing Israels environmental and humanitarian goals of providing affordable green power to underserved populations as a fundamental human right. Yossi was named by CNN as one of the top six leading Green Pioneers worldwide, as Person of the Year by the Israel National Business and Energy Conference, by PV Tech as one of the most inspiring solar CEOs worldwide and winner of the Green Globe -- Israels highest environmental and climate award. (He volunteers with several NGOs including Hillel Israel, the Association of Ethiopian Jews, Zalul, Heschel Center, Toniic Climate Impact and more) The winner of the Covenant Award for Excellence in Jewish Education, Yossi served on the Israeli negotiating team at the Paris Climate Conference. He was the first private sector and openly pluralistic candidate for President of the State of Israel. Hes lucky to be married to Women of the Walls Rabbi Susan Silverman -- best-selling author of Casting Lots: Raising a Family in a Beautiful, Broken World (De Capo, 2016). They have five children and are active members of Jerusalems Kol Haneshama.

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My date with history... and hope | Yosef I. Abramowitz | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Magic: The Gathering – Who Are the Vampire Conquistadors in the Legion of Dusk? – CBR – Comic Book Resources

The Legion of Dusk is the vampires' conquering fleet on Ixalan, and they hunger for eternal life and the blood of the living.

In Magic: The Gathering, vampires exist on most planes, from Innistrad to Dominaria to Mirrodin. On Ixalan, they are on a ruthless crusade for true immortality.

Vampires are one of the major races on Ixalan, and they are locked in a four-way battle with the pirate coalition, the native Sun Empire and the merfolk. The vampires plan to use their zealous conviction, blood hunger and disciplined military to gain supremacy in this wild land. And they are getting close to victory.

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The vampires of the Legion are native to the Ixalan continent known as Torrezon. It is not depicted in the game, but a few key events are clear. A few centuries ago, the Immortal Sun was held in a mountaintop monastery there, and its influence strengthened the nearby nobles. Eventually, the people of the Torrezon kingdom fought a civil war, and a queen emerged triumphantly. Elenda of Garrano undertook a ritual to become the plane's first-ever vampire, hungry for blood, and her followers did the same.

Elenda's crown and church spread its influence across Torrezon and conquered the other kingdoms out of sheer hunger in a holy crusade, and the other kingdoms fell to the Legion of Dusk. Thos drove off the last free humans, who formed an informal pirate fleet called the Brazen Coalition and fled Torrezon. However,at some point, a great winged beast took away the Immortal Sun and transported it to a continent across the vast ocean. The Legion of Dusk's vampires wanted it badly, so they assembled their own vast fleet made up of many caravels and a handful of massive, cathedral-style galleons.

Related:Wizards of the Coast Announces Magic: The Gathering Release Timeline Through 2021

Hundreds of clerics and knights of the Legion boarded the ships and made the journey to the new land, where the Brazen Coalition had fled earlier. Unlike the opportunistic and self-centered pirates, however, the Legion's members are highly trained, disciplined and zealous, fighting for their queen and church against all enemies. But this crusade has an edge of desperation about it; the vampires can't stand their constant blood hunger, so they crave the Immortal Sun and its powers. The Legion believes that the Immortal Sun, if they can claim it, will give them true immortality, free from the mundane hunger for blood.

The Legion arrived at the new continent and set up their forts and bases in an area known as Miraldanor. It includes fortresses such as Adanto (the first and largest), Leor, Durran and Conquerer's Foothold. The Legion enjoys a number of advantages over the native Sun Empire, the merfolk and the pirates, but they do have their work cut out for them.

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No one is willing to ally with them against the other races, and the Legion's forts and camp walls can't handle the sheer strength of a dinosaur's charge. Worse yet, the merfolk and Sun Empire natives know the land much better than the Legion's troops do, and they can trap, divert or even slay Legion soldiers and clerics with the power of the wilds. Only the Legion's advanced skills, zealotry and vampiric strength will keep them in the game and give them a chance of finding the lost city of gold and the Immortal Sun inside it

The Legion of Dusk is representedwith black and white cards in the Ixalan and Rivals of Ixalan sets, and their most common creature types are Vampire, Cleric, Soldier and Knight. Strategy-wise, the Legion wants to go on the offensive and stay that way, using the white-weenie power of their creatures and effective removal in both colors to push damage turn after turn. These creatures tend to have high power and may have abilities such as first strike, lifelink, deathtouch and the ability to become temporarily indestructible, a replacement for regeneration.

Related: Magic: The Gathering - Zendikar Rising Showcases Exciting Legendary Creatures

Many Legion of Dusk cards like to create 1/1 white Vampire creature tokens with lifelink, and many of these cards can pump up allied creatures either individually, or the entire board at once. Vampire spells may also force opponents to discard card or lose life, and the vampires make modest use of Treasure artifact tokens. These decks can't match the Dinosaurs pound for pound, so they kill off the strongest enemy creatures and attack with its small aggro creatures, gaining life the entire time. In short, these decks are ruthless and precise, and they should be used that way.

A few notable Legion cards have appeared in the Ixalan sets. Twilight Prophet is a 2/4 for 2BB that has flying and Ascend. If its controller has the city's blessing, then they may (on their upkeep) reveal the top card of their library and put it into their hand. Then each opponent loses life equal to its CMC while Twilight Prophet's controller gains life equal to the revealed card's CMC. This is like a stronger version of Dark Confidant: drawing an extra card, but gaining life equal to its CMC while other players lose that much life.

Elenda, the Dusk Rose is a legendary 1/1 Vampire that costs 2WB and has lifelink. Anytime another creature dies, Elenda gets a +1/+1 counter, and when it dies, its controller gets a number of 1/1 white Vampire creature tokens with lifelink equal to however many +1/+1 counters it had. This creature can make for an effective commander in the Commander format with tribal Vampire support.

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I graduated high school in Kansas City in 2009, then earned my Associate's in Arts in 2011 at MCC Longview, then my BA in Creative Writing at UMKC in 2013. I have a passion for creative fiction and I've studied and practiced my craft for over ten years. Currently, I'm expanding my resume and skill set with jobs such as SEO writing and journalism.

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Magic: The Gathering - Who Are the Vampire Conquistadors in the Legion of Dusk? - CBR - Comic Book Resources

CYBERPUNK 2077: CD Projekt RED States That They Will Not Be "Aggressive" In Regards To Microtransactions – GameFragger.com

CD Projekt RED has revealed that the highly anticipatedCyberpunk 2077 will be getting a multiplayer mode down the line, and that this modewill actually be a standalone experience that will not affect the game's single-player mode at all; it will only expand on the experience.

Cyberpunk 2077's multiplayer experience will be featuring microtransactions, but these will not negatively impact the game in any possible way; again, this is a standalone experience. Whatever the case, the word microtransaction has a pretty bad connotation, for all the good reasons, but CD Projekt RED urges players to trust them in this regard.

As revealed by CD Projekt RED PresidentAdam Kicinski, the multiplayer mode for Cyberpunk 2077 will feature microtransactions, but he reveals that they "will not be aggressive" in this particular regard, and that this will likely make players happy.

"Well, we're never aggressive towards our fans!We treat them fairly and we're friendly. So of course not--we won't be aggressive--but you can expect great things to be bought. The goal is to design monetization in a way that makes people happy to spend money. I'm not trying to be cynical or hide something; it's about creating a feeling of value," stated Kicinski in a recent earnings report.

Kicinski also compares their strategy in regards to microtransactions to their single-player titles mentioning that both aim to make players happy, while also giving them a run for their money; microtransactions, in this case, will not be the exception.

"Same as with our single-player games: we want gamers to be happy while spending money on our products," Kicinski then added. "The same is true for microtransactions: you can expect them, of course, and [Cyberpunk 2077] is a great setting for selling things, but it won't be aggressive; it won't upset gamers but it'll make them happy--that's our goal at least."

With all of this said, CD Projekt RED has yet to officially announced this muliplayer experience for the game. Cyberpunk 2077 is expected to release in November, so it may be a while before we hear from the studio and their ideas for this multiplayer mode, but it definitely sounds like they won't be ripping anyone off with these microtransactions.

Even if microtransactions do end up ruining thismultiplayer mode for some, Cyberpunk 2077 will still give players the full video gaming experience they've been looking forward to since the game was announced; multiplayer is optional, expected to release at some point in 2022,and will not ruin the main campaign in the slightest.

In the most dangerous megacity of the future, the real you is not enough. Become V, a cyber-enhanced mercenary outlaw going after a one-of-a-kind implant the key to immortality. Customize your cyberware and skillset, and explore a vast city of the future obsessed with power, glamour and body modification. The choices you make will determine the story and shape the world around you.

Cyberpunk 2077 will be releasing for thePlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC on Thursday the 19th of November; PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X release date to be revealed.

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CYBERPUNK 2077: CD Projekt RED States That They Will Not Be "Aggressive" In Regards To Microtransactions - GameFragger.com

Mercer University Breaks Ground on New Medical School Campus in Columbus – Mercer News

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp speaks during Thursdays ceremony in Columbus celebrating the groundbreaking for an expanded Mercer University School of Medicine campus.

COLUMBUS Mercer University today held a groundbreaking ceremony at the site of its planned medical school campus in Uptown Columbus on the banks of the Chattahoochee River.

The Universitys relocation and expansion of its Columbus campus, first announced in May 2019, will enable the School of Medicine to increase the campus enrollment to 240 Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) students over the next several years, eventually equaling the size of its campuses in Macon and Savannah.

Our colleges and universities throughout the state have been a key resource in fighting COVID-19 through the whole pandemic, said Georgia Gov. Brian P. Kemp, who spoke at the ceremony on Thursday along with Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and House Speaker David Ralston.

This new medical campus is a great example of Mercers ongoing partnership in that fight and its commitment to caring for people not only in this area but all of Southwest Georgia and rural Georgia, in particular. At a time when all lives are looking to our health care system for guidance and support, I, for one, am very grateful for that.

The site at 1701 First Ave., offered to Mercer by Columbus community leaders in March, was owned by TSYS, a Global Payments company, just north of the companys existing Riverfront Campus. This location will allow for construction of a free-built structure to better suit the needs of medical school students, faculty and staff, and will also provide an iconic locale.

Today demonstrates the good that can come when local communities, institutions and government come together to solve a problem, said Mercer President William D. Underwood. It couldnt have happened without the can-do attitude that I see every time I visit this community the can-do attitude that Columbus is known for.

The School of Medicine is currently recruiting and hiring new faculty and scientists, and the inaugural class of first-year M.D. students in Columbus is scheduled to enroll in August 2021.

It is truly wonderful to see this worthy initiative become a reality, said Jean Sumner, M.D., dean of the School of Medicine. We are committed to our mission to educate physicians and health professionals to meet the health care needs of rural and medically underserved areas in Georgia. This new campus will help to increase health care access in West Georgia and strengthen Columbus important role as a regional referral center. Working with a great community like Columbus, visionary state and local leadership, regional hospitals, local physicians and many public servants has been a privilege for Mercer University School of Medicine.

Brasfield & Gorrie will serve as general contractor on the planned 85,000-square-foot, two-story facility, which is expected to be completed in late 2021 or early 2022 and will include classroom and office spaces, as well as simulation, research and cadaver labs and a vivarium.

Our nation has never been more aware of the need to train and grow health care heroes, said Brasfield & Gorrie Vice President and Division Manager Wes Kelley. Brasfield & Gorrie is honored to contribute our expertise in education construction to benefit the doctors who will serve our communities, in Columbus and beyond.

The project is backed by generous support from the local community, which will be matched by the University, as well as operational funding from the state.

Mercers involvement in the Columbus community dates back more than 20 years when the School of Medicine began sending third-year students to do clinical rotations with local physicians and with then Columbus Regional Hospital.

In 2012, Mercer started offering clinical education to third- and fourth-year medical students in Columbus, establishing the Universitys third medical school campus in partnership with Midtown Medical Center (now Piedmont Columbus Regional Hospital) and St. Francis Hospital and admitting a total of 12 students. Currently, the School enrolls 40 students in Columbus.

About Brasfield & Gorrie

Founded in 1964, Brasfield & Gorrie is one of the nations largest privately held construction firms, providing general contracting, design-build, and construction management services for a wide variety of markets. We are skilled in construction best practices, including virtual design and construction, integrated project delivery, and Lean construction, but we are best known for our preconstruction and self-perform expertise and exceptional client service. Brasfield & Gorrie has 12 offices and approximately 3,000 employees. Our 2019 revenues were $3.8 billion. Engineering News-Record ranks Brasfield & Gorrie 22nd among the nations Top 400 Contractors for 2020.

About Mercer University School of Medicine (Macon, Savannah and Columbus)

Mercer Universitys School of Medicine was established in 1982 to educate physicians and health professionals to meet the primary care and health care needs of rural and medically underserved areas of Georgia. Today, more than 60 percent of graduates currently practice in the state of Georgia, and of those, more than 80 percent are practicing in rural or medically underserved areas of Georgia. Mercer medical students benefit from a problem-based medical education program that provides early patient care experiences. Such an academic environment fosters the early development of clinical problem-solving and instills in each student an awareness of the place of the basic medical sciences in medical practice. The School opened a full four-year campus in Savannah in 2008 at Memorial University Medical Center. In 2012, the School began offering clinical education for third- and fourth-year medical students in Columbus. Following their second year, students participate in core clinical clerkships at the Schools primary teaching hospitals: Medical Center, Navicent Health in Macon; Memorial University Medical Center in Savannah; and Piedmont Columbus Regional Hospital and St. Francis Hospital in Columbus. The School also offers masters degrees in family therapy, preclinical sciences and biomedical sciences and a Ph.D. in rural health sciences.

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Mercer University Breaks Ground on New Medical School Campus in Columbus - Mercer News

To deal with the A levels fiasco fallout, medical schools need a cash injection – Times Higher Education (THE)

The UK governments belated decision to reinstate predicted grades for A levels was probably the fairest solution available given that the standardisation of those predictions disproportionately disadvantaged prospective students from low-income backgrounds.

Hopefully all students those who received first acceptances and those with reinstated grades will now have their offers honoured. But the unanticipated increase in the number of students meeting the entry requirements of their first-choice university raises some serious practical issues, especially for medical education.

Crucially, additional places, created through honouring more offers and the subsequent lifting of the cap on medical school places in England, must be funded and supported appropriately without causing adverse impact on existing students and on the welfare of university staff.

Still, this episode, occurring as it does together with Covid-19, will have serious consequences, not only on this years admissions process to medical school, but also on admissions to, and experiences of, undergraduate medical education for subsequent years.

The impact of fluctuations in annual medical student numbers are significant. In the long term, too many students in any one year will lead to more new doctors than there are places on the foundation programme. Too many deferrals will lead to a shortage of places in 2021-2, which will itself be manifestly unfair.

Both these questions relate to the tightly restricted entry numbers for medical courses. Increasing the number of places seems obvious, not least to increase the pool of doctors although it will only begin to have any effect in five to six years, longer than the lifespan of most governments.

But for medicine these number restrictions are practical. There are limits to the number who can be accommodated in teaching environments, laboratories and clinical placements. Too many students will impact adversely on teaching and supervision by current staff and, thus, on the student experience.

This comes at a time when the medical academic workforce is already under-resourced, understaffed and overstretched, and when universities face an impending financial crisis caused by Covid-19 resulting in calls for voluntary redundancies, early retirements and pay cuts.

Both medical academics and medical academic trainees are disproportionally dependent on medical research charities, not only for running costs but for salaries. And those charities, too, warn that they are financially overstretched because of Covid-19. To cope, additional resourcing for medical schools to accommodate additional students, and maintain and enhance staff numbers, is an investment that the UK needs to make now.

We welcome the new task force, led by universities minister Michelle Donelan, to help ensure students can progress to the next stage of their education. However, the particular issues facing medical courses need to be dealt with separately. The medical course is longer than other courses, interlinks with NHS organisations, and involves a distinctive mixture of medical education and clinical placements.

The BMAs Medical Academic Staff Committee and Medical Students Committee wrote to Ofqual and the Office for Students earlier this year to seek assurances that no student should be disadvantaged by the A-levels grades process this year. Regrettably this concern has been vindicated, and the process has proven even more discriminatory against high-performing students from low-income backgrounds than was feared.

There is now a particular obligation to make sure that students from low-income backgrounds do not suffer in any way from the fallout of what has transpired. Deferring entry for some students until 2021, which gives medical schools more time to plan and avoids oversubscription this year, must be non-discriminatory. Resources may need to be provided for students from low-income backgrounds if they are required to undertake a gap year before commencing their studies.

There are clear benefits of improving diversity in medical education and in the medical workforce it allows doctors to be more understanding and representative of the populations they serve and thereby helps ensure better engagement with health services. As a society, the UK has been moving in the right direction it would be a betrayal of trust if current events have a retrogressive impact on the recognition and fulfilment of these important principles.

David Katz is deputy chair of the British Medical Associations medical academic staff committee and emeritus professor of immunopathology at UCL.

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To deal with the A levels fiasco fallout, medical schools need a cash injection - Times Higher Education (THE)

New crop of medical students are headed to the lab – Stanford Medical Center Report

Karen Malacons life plan is to open a neurology research lab perhaps to investigate prenatal brain development, or maybe cognitive decline in aging patients.

My ultimate career goal is to run my own lab, and use its discoveries to help patients, she said. I feel its very important to interact with patients to inform the questions Ill be asking in the lab.

Malacon is one of 10 students who are starting StanfordsMedical Science Training Program, a seven- to eight-year curriculum that awards both a medical degree and a doctorate. But many of the 80 other students entering medical school this year are also intent on research: Twenty-two, far more than the more typical three to five, have committed to spending at least one extra year of medical school in a laboratory.

The school intentionally pursued research-oriented students, saidPJ Utz, MD, associate dean for medical student research, because the number of physicians with research expertise has been dropping nationwide.

That trend has many atStanford Medicineand other academic medical centers concerned, as physicians who conduct research form a crucial link between laboratory exploration and patient care. They are especially suited to direct research toward treatments while also bringing laboratory findings into the clinic.

Some students want to focus on patients, and thats fine, said Utz, a professor of immunology and rheumatology. But we are seeing the extinction of the physician-scientist unless we do something. If anyones going to lead this effort its got to be Stanford.

As a biomedical science hub with laboratories a short walk from Stanford Hospital, Lucile Packard Childrens Hospital Stanford and the medical school, the university is well-positioned to educate physician-scientists.

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New crop of medical students are headed to the lab - Stanford Medical Center Report

COVID-19-induced ‘sophomore medical student syndrome’ | TheHill – The Hill

Coronavirus data has flooded our world for six months. The public is scared. At the same time, physicians continue to work every day and many do not seem frightened at all. Physicians, including me, are most concerned about patients who avoid needed care and fear medical settings, which are actually safe. Physicians know something the public does not. How?

The publics fear of the COVID-19 pandemic reminded me of my early days in medical school. My classmates and I had been inundated with a mass of frightening medical information that we were not yet prepared to deal with. In my sophomore year of medical school, I remember thinking every headache was a brain tumor, every twinge of abdominal discomfort was liver cancer and when I was thirsty, it meant I had developed diabetes.

I was not alone. Everyone in my class seemed to think he or she was dying of something. This is what I refer to as sophomore medical student syndrome.

Fast-forward to today, when you cant turn on the TV without hearing about COVID-19.

From the time we first learned of this novel coronavirus earlier this year, weve been inundated with information and data. For example, you might have heard that the virus can be transmitted through, cytokine storms, in which the body starts fighting itself instead of the coronavirus. Or, you might have come across reports of some of the side effects characterized by a diminished sense of smell and taste. While there is research to back up COVID-19-related olfactory dysfunction, it is rare.

The deluge of developing information might have felt maybe still does overwhelming.

But could these effects really be harbingers of disaster?

Some have referred to this coronavirus as the plague; however, it is not. But with the entire country suffering from sophomore medical student syndrome, it seems to be. The true plague, also known as The Black Death, took place in the Middle Ages and it wiped out entire populations. Sometimes the plague would quickly kill half the people in a large city.

Thats not happening.

The virus has been with us for half a year. You may or may not know someone who has personally died from COVID-19, but more people are recovering from the virus than they are dying. I ask many people that question and almost all say they do not. I personally knew one a 75-year-old man.

Real risk exists, but the fear generated by publicity is much greater. Here in California you would have to know over 3,000 people to know one who died or COVID-19, but one in 150 Californians die of other things every year.

You probably knew several people who have died from something other than COVID-19. I certainly did and, sadly, several of them were my patients.

I am looking forward to everyone getting through this sophomore-like educational year and go onto their junior year much more prepared, just as my medical school colleagues and I did. Thats the year one begins to gain perspective, learns a little about how to treat things and rebuilds psychological defense mechanisms.

Heres to that rebuilding process, next year.

Dr. Thomas W. LaGrelius, M.D., F.A.A.F.P., is a board certified specialist in family medicine and geriatric medicine. He is the founder and president of Skypark Preferred Family Care, a concierge primary care/geriatrics practice based in Torrance, Calif. He is a staff member at Torrance Memorial Medical Center and Providence Little Company of Mary Torrance Hospital.

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COVID-19-induced 'sophomore medical student syndrome' | TheHill - The Hill

U of M Medical School researchers look to beach water for COVID community infection – KARE11.com

Researchers say so far SARS-CoV-2 has not been found in any of the samples, but the research could be used as a tool to monitor community infection among beachgoers.

DULUTH, Minn. Dr. Richard Melvin has made many visits to the beach this summer, but not for the reason most do.

"So, Ill collect 100 millilitres from every beach," he said, while standing knee-deep in Lake Superior and holding a tube filled with lake water.

The assistant professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Minnesota Medical Schools Duluth campus has been taking water samples from eight beaches along Lake Superior every weekend since the Fourth of July.

"Usually during the warm time of the day ... when people are out trying to enjoy themselves on the beach," he said.

He and a team back at the lab then test the water samples SARS-CoV-2, the virus which causes COVID-19.

Melvin says the virus in a person with COVID-19 is shed in their waste for up to a month after they are no longer showing symptoms.

"Its known that beaches can be contaminated by fecal matter due to human activity," said Melvin. "Its also possible that the virus, if people are shedding, that could wind up in the water at the beach [too]."

It's not a pleasant picture, but one worthwhile to study. Melvin said he and associates at Minnesota Sea Grant, which gave him a $10,000 grant for the research, don't know of this type of study being done anywhere else.

Melvin said so far SARS-CoV-2 has not been found in any of the samples, but their research could be used as a tool to monitor community infection among beachgoers.

"It also tells us how the disease spreads. It tells us how we can best fight the disease," he said. "With the information we gather this time, well be able to make a better response in the future to a pandemic. Well know where to look for the virus. Well know what is a risky activity."

Melvin says they will continue taking samples through the end of September. He says while they have not found the virus in the beach water yet, even if they did, they don't think the viral particles would still be infectious.

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U of M Medical School researchers look to beach water for COVID community infection - KARE11.com

When’s the right time to choose a medical specialty? – American Medical Association

Medical school is a launching path to a career as a physician. No decision a medical student makes will affect where that career ends up more than picking a medical specialty.

There are some important questions and criteria surrounding that decision, and those questions are further complicated by medical training taking place during a pandemic. One of those key questions pertains to timing. One medical school faculty member and dean offered advice about when a student should pick a specialty.

The first and second year of medical school, typically the years during which students are doing their preclinical training, are a time to keep your mind open to possibilities, according to Lindia J. Willies-Jacobo, MD, associate dean for admissions and professor at Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine, which welcomed its first class of medical students this fall.

We find that students come into medical school thinking they want to pursue a particular career without having truly explored it, said Dr. Willies-Jacobo, who has been working with medical students for more than a decade. Its really amazing how many students will change their career path as a direct result of doing a much deeper dive into it.

As far as students who dont have a specialty in mind, the majority will come in truly not knowing. Some will come in thinking they know, then there is that five or 10% percent that know they want to be the thing, a pediatrician, a neurosurgeon, and they stay the course.

After months off the wards due tosafety precautions put in place to curb potential exposure during the COVID-19 pandemic, many medical students are returning to patient-facing roles.That means most medical students are resuming or beginning clinical clerkships.

Lasting between four and eight weeks, at most schools, the core clinical clerkships consist of internal medicine, surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, family medicine, psychiatry, neurology and radiology. Those rotations take place in the third year of training at most schools.

They have an opportunity to engage in clinical settings those first two years, but a deeper level of engagement happens during the third year of medical school, said Dr. Willies-Jacobo.

Your clinical clerkship may serve to reinforce your specialty choice, if you happened to be leaning one way, or expose you to something new. One potential pitfall to picking a specialty during your third year is the amount of free time students have.

Core rotations tend to be a busy and stressful time for students, Dr. Willies-Jacobo added. They are being evaluated frequently.

Learn thesix factors that dictate the resumption of clinical training.

With residency applications for most students going out in the fall of year four, most students pick a specialty at the end of their third year of medical school.

For students who are still deciding, subinternships rotations that typically take place at a hospital affiliated with your training institution during your fourth year of medical schooloffer one last chance to get specialty exposure before sending out applications.

Subinternships allow students to work in a more autonomous way, Dr. Willies-Jacobo said. Most subinterns will work similarly to the way an intern would work. They are fairly independent in their engagement with the stations. In that autonomy and being in that role in a pretty intense way is a way in which students can use that fourth year to settle on a specialty.

Learn how residency programs will view applications in 2021.

Some students who are truly undecided will apply to more than one specialty, Dr. Willies-Jacobo advises against that. Instead, she is seeing more students take an extra yearoften to pursue an additional advanced degreewhile they pick their physician career path.

I often will sit in my office with my student and have them put on paper the reasons they are attracted to one specialty versus the other, she said. There are times students decide for themselves they will take an additional year to figure it out.

I dont think theres one approach that every student should utilize. Doing that legwork and putting it on paper can help. Sometimes exploring a field a bit more can be the secret sauce to making a decision, Dr. Willies-Jacobo said.

Avani Patel, MD, is a first-year psychiatry resident at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi. Torn between two specialties during her fourth year of medical school, she decided to withdraw from the Match, delay graduation, and take an interim year to pursue a Masters in Healthcare Administration degree before beginning residency.

I wanted to go through the Match and graduation because thats what everyone in my class was doing, Patel said. But I needed to take this time and learning opportunity for myself to make sure of what I really wanted.

Once the pressure was off, Patel elected to pursue psychiatry as a specialty.

One thing Ive learned is that having this time of being away from patients and clinical care, it made me realize I do want to be a physician more than anything, said Patel, who graduated this past spring and began residency in July. Although this past year has been very fulfilling, none of it matters without the patient care. Im excited about residency, and I know Im in the right mind-set.

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When's the right time to choose a medical specialty? - American Medical Association

Gujarat medical school to carry out autopsies of COVID-19 victims to study effects on body – Republic World – Republic World

A Gujarat medical college will conduct a post-mortem on those who died ofCOVID-19in an attempt to study theinfection's toll on the human body which leads to the patient's demise.

Pandit Dindayal Upadhyay Medical College in Rajkot has been selected to carry out this research. As per reports, the pathological autopsies on bodies of Coronavirusvictims have already been done at All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS), Bhopal.

An official release from the Gujarat government said the forensic medicine department of the college has initiated a research project to study the physiological and biological changes theCOVID-19 infection causes in a human body. For this, a research team, led by Professor Hetal Kyada, the head of the forensic medicine department and additional superintendent of dedicated COVID-19 hospital set up on the campus, will perform autopsies on some who died.

The objective of any post-mortem is to know the cause of death. So, the study will focus on the mechanisms that this viral infection triggers and causes death. It can be the clotting of the blood, inflammation, or any other condition. If we come to know the causes of death, then we can find out ways to prevent it, Professor Gaurav Dhruv, dean of PDU medical college, said.

According to reports, Rajkot Medical College will be the first in the state to perform such autopsies on COVID-19 victims. However, this will require the consent of the family of the deceased patients andthat the identities of such patients will not be revealed.

READ |Gujarat: 8-feet-long Crocodile Rescued From Residential Area In Vadodara

READ |Coronavirus Tests Could Be Picking Up Dead Virus, Study Shows Major Reason For Rising Case

Gujarat on Sunday reported the highest single-day spike of 1,335 new COVID-19 cases, taking the total count of infections in the state to 1,04,341, the health department said. The cumulative death toll went up to 3,108 with 14 people succumbing to the infection, including five in Surat, it said. A total of 1,212 patients were discharged in the day, taking the number of recoveries to 84,758, the department said in a release.

With this, the state's recovery rate now stands at 81%. A total of 72,561 samples were tested in the last 24 hours, which comes at the rate of 1,116.32 tests per day per million population.

(AP photo for representation)

READ |Gujarat's COVID-19 Cases Cross 1.04 Lakh; 14 Die

READ |Gujarat: Migrant Workers' Employers Asked To Follow COVID-19 Norms

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Gujarat medical school to carry out autopsies of COVID-19 victims to study effects on body - Republic World - Republic World

Durham student with dreams of med school wins $100,000 in lottery game – WRAL.com

By N.C. Education Lottery

Raleigh, N.C. On Saturday night, Kaila Moore of Durham had a dream that shed bought a scratch-off ticket. Acting on that dream led her to buy her first lottery ticket and a $100,000 win.

Ive never bought a lottery ticket ever in my entire life, said Moore. I literally had a dream that I bought a scratch-off. So, when I woke up I went and bought one.

She went to the Food Lion on West Main Street in Durham Sunday morning, paid $20 for the $4,000,000 Gold Rush game, then took her ticket home to scratch it.

Her reaction to realizing shed won? Excitement.

I was with my mom, said the East Carolina University student. She was more excited about it than me!

They both knew this money was going to go toward Moores education.

I plan to go to medical school and medical school is not cheap! she said. Im going to invest some of it in a mutual fund and the rest Im just going to save.

Moore claimed her prize Wednesday at lottery headquarters in Raleigh. After required federal and state tax withholdings she took home $70,756 but said she wouldnt celebrate until after her physics class and studying.

The $4,000,000 Gold Rush game launched in August with three top prizes of $4,000,000 and six $100,000. Two $4,000,000 and three $100,000 prizes remain.

Ticket sales from scratch-off games make it possible for the lottery to raise more than $725 million per year for education. For details on how $13.1 million raised by the lottery made a difference in Durham County in 2019, visit http://www.nclottery.com and click on the Impact section.

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Durham student with dreams of med school wins $100,000 in lottery game - WRAL.com

How to help medical students keep tabs on their mental health – American Medical Association

The ongoing pandemic is putting a spotlight on mental health as depression and anxiety continues to affect millions of Americans. But even before COVID-19, concern about the well-being of medical students was on the rise. About one in three medical students report symptoms of depression, and one in nine experiences suicidal ideation.

The University of New Mexico School of Medicine (UNM) recognized the need for some sort of intervention and developed a multilevel approach to help destigmatize mental illness among health care workers and raise awareness about support opportunities. UNM wanted to make it normal for medical students to talk about mental health and make it culturally acceptable to ask for help.

To make that happen, UNM had to start the conversation early. Before the schools formal white coat ceremony, the assistant dean for professional well-being would spend almost an hour talking about mental health with the family members of UNMs incoming students.

During that conversation, family members would receive a booklet about supporting their loved one during medical school. The booklet shares important things to know about medical schoolranging from the expected time commitment to the fact that it will likely be an emotional roller coasteras well as tips for communicating with medical students and suggestions for spouses, partners, or significant others. There is a page on random acts of kindness and support, and two pages breaking down the alphabet soup that is the language of medical training and medicine.

There also is a page titled When Students Should Seek Help. Included in the list of 14 scenarios are more obvious signs such as using alcohol or illicit drugs to self-medicate or having thoughts of self-harm, but also included are subtler signs such as when:

The success of UNMs work is spotlighted in an AMA STEPS Forward module, Normalizing Mental Health Care During Medical Student Training.

During orientation, medical students hear from upper-level students who have accessed the schools health and wellness resources about why they felt they needed help, whether they found the experience helpful and whether they faced any repercussions for seeking assistance.

First-year students have taken part in an annual wellness retreat that features a panel of three or four physicians who are in recovery from addiction. These panelists have been primary care physicians, cardiologists, residents, psychiatrists, anesthesiologists and infectious disease specialists, demonstrating that addiction can strike anyone. The first-year students hear firsthand about the signs and symptoms of substance-use disorder, as well as the recovery process.

In addition, the wellness dean would meet with small groups of students to discuss the adjustment to medical school and remind them of the resources available to all students.

Students also have had the opportunity to meet with the CEO and chief medical officer of the New Mexico Medical Board, as well as with program directors and the associate dean for graduate medical education to discuss concerns over reporting mental health history as well as ongoing issues they face related to mental health. These conversations led the director of graduate medical education to craft a list of frequently asked questions about mental illness and whether there are any subsequent repercussions handed down.

Overall, feedback for the schools wellness work has been positive, and in the past five years, the program has grown from three part-time positions to six part-time rolesfour faculty, one psychiatrist and one psychologistas well as a full-time program coordinator.

TheAMAs STEPS Forward open-access modules offerinnovative strategies that allow physicians and their staff to thrive in the new health care environment. STEPS Forward is part of theAMA Ed Hub,an online platform that brings together allthe high-quality CME, maintenance of certification,and educational contentyou needin one placewith activities relevant to you, automated credit tracking and reporting forsome states and specialty boards.

Learn more aboutAMA CME accreditation.

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How to help medical students keep tabs on their mental health - American Medical Association

Industry VoicesCould less emphasis on the MCAT bring more diversity to medicine? – FierceHealthcare

Were experiencing challenges in 2020 that continue to disrupt our lives, our businesses and how we think about our institutions, practices and beliefs, from the devastating impacts of COVID-19 to engaging conversations about racial equity across our nation.

In healthcare, the COVID-19 pandemic has magnified the inefficiencies, healthcare workforce shortages and access issues that have long taxed our system. Even before COVID-19 pushed our hospitals to their limits, the World Health Organization estimated we were facing a global shortage of 7.2 million healthcare workers.

Yet, many nurses, doctors and other medical specialists have been furloughed or lost their jobs in recent months. Its a paradox that speaks to the healthcare industrys need to innovate how it educates and prepares people to enter its workforce.

The current system simply isnt set up to address the areas of greatest need or provide the access required to create more diversity across the healthcare industry.

RELATED:Mount Sinai launches diversity innovation hub to tackle racism and gender inequity in healthcare

A report issued in June by the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) paints a dire picture of the state of diversity in medicine. According to AAMC, only 5% of active physicians identify as Black or African American and just 5.8% identify as Hispanic. We must do more to open opportunities for diverse talent in medical professions.

The fact is traditional medical education has long relied on measures that are inherently weighted against diverse candidates to gauge future admissions success. An over-reliance on test scores and grades puts many students who have had to work through college, care for family members or take other nontraditional paths to medical school at an extreme disadvantage. These requirements disproportionately affect Black, Hispanic and other Americans from diverse backgrounds and become barriers to entry.

As COVID-19 puts logistical pressure on medical school admissions testing, some schools are extending deadlines and accepting partial applications until students can complete these tests. At the same time, the University of California recently announced its ending SAT and ACT requirements to help ensure a more equitable admissions process.

Many other schools are making the standardized tests optional for admission into undergraduate programs. Pre-COVID-19 research published by the National Association for College Admissions Counselinghas shown that such test-optional policies can increase both the number of undergraduate applications and the number of underrepresented minority students in freshman classes.

This same level of flexibility has not been applied to medical schools, many of which still require prospective students take the Medical College Admission Test, or MCAT, despite numerous cancellations and rescheduling in the wake of the global pandemic.

As a medical educator and physician, I challenge all medical schools to embrace this moment as an opportunity to reevaluate our dependence on the MCAT as a defining value indicator in the admissions process.

Since 1928, medical schools have relied on the MCAT to gauge an applicants potential. Today, applying for medical school, which includes test fees and charges for preparation courses, can cost up to $10,000. And theres no guarantee the investment will lead to school acceptance.

This risk automatically prices out many prospective candidates at a time when healthcare faces a projected shortage of up to 139,000 physicians by 2033 in the U.S. Paired with the medical school applications costs, school fees, tuition and living expenses, the traditional medical system has created a career path that limits the type of students it admits and attracts and, ultimately, the type of doctors it produces.

Theres so much more to a student than their MCAT score. I see this every day in my work.

Many students who may not have performed well on the MCAT have the drive and academic strengths to succeed in medical school.

RELATED:Medical school diversity concerns raised following Trump administration reversal on race consideration

With the right support and mentoring, I have seen these students thrive and know they can achieve their dream to become physicians.

Assessment tools like the MCAT may have made sense in the past, but putting too much emphasis on them is limiting opportunity for too many deserving students today.

The time is right for the medical industry to rethink how it evaluates, educates and advances the healthcare professionals of tomorrow. As the impacts of COVID-19 give rise to new technologies in the classroom, and MCAT exams, clinicals and internships are placed on hold, we have an unprecedented opportunity to transform our antiquated approach to medical education that, for far too long, has denied access to many promising students.

Now is the time for meaningful change.

David Lenihan, Ph.D., is president of Ponce Health Sciences University and co-founder and CEO of Tiber Health, an education technology company offering health-science curricula.

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Industry VoicesCould less emphasis on the MCAT bring more diversity to medicine? - FierceHealthcare

Medical exams postponed amid strike and resurgent virus – University World News

SOUTH KOREA

The plan to expand medical education has led to strikes by medical students and doctors at a time when South Korea is seeing a resurgence of coronavirus cases.

The clinical section of the licensing exam originally scheduled for 1-18 September has been postponed by a week, Korean Vice Health Minister Kim Kang-lip told media on 31 August.

According to the Korean Medical Student Association, just over 93% or 2,832 out of 3,172 final-year students at six-year medical colleges and four-year medical graduate schools who registered for the 2021 medical licensing exams normally held in September and October had cancelled their applications as part of the boycott.

Medical students also refused to attend clinical training and said they would boycott classes as well amid fears that this could impact training for several years. Some 84% of trainee doctors have taken part in strikes that began on 21 August, according to government figures released on 31 August.

Medical students began an indefinite strike after phased walkouts from 21 August over government plans announced in July to increase the number of medical school admissions by 4,000 between 2022 and 2031, a rise of around 400 students a year, in particular to improve rural health care. Current medical places have been restricted to some 3,058 a year since 2006.

The government also announced a new school of public medicine with an intake of 50 students a year, the introduction of telemedicine and proposals to allow medical insurance to cover more traditional medicines.

The Korea Association of Medical Colleges on Monday urged the government to delay the clinical exams for at least two weeks, or until the COVID-19 situation stabilises. The written portion of the exam will normally be held in January 2021.

Some trainee doctors agreed to volunteer their services for COVID-19 treatment during the strikes.

The country has seen three-digit daily increases in COVID-19 cases for the past 20 consecutive days with a total of 20,000 cases in its second wave, which started last month. South Korea had been widely praised for successfully containing the number of cases during its first wave earlier this year as cases subsided in April and early May. Schools had been reopened in May.

On 25 August the authorities ordered the closure again of all schools in the Seoul area, with remote learning continuing until 11 September, the education ministry said. Universities have extended their online classes.

More students for rural areas

The government said that under its plan, which it said would enable it to cope with future epidemics, around 300 of the extra 400 medical trainees a year would be for rural provinces, with tuition fee waivers and scholarships on condition they stay for 10 years.

Another 100 students of the increased intake would be required to specialise in fields such as epidemiology, trauma and biomedical research areas that are currently less popular among medical students due to heavy workloads.

The main reason for promoting this policy is to secure doctors where they are needed, Health Minister Park Neung-hoo said.

Currently only around 10% of registered doctors work in public health due to poor conditions, while doctors are concentrated around Seoul and other cities, increasing competition for hospital jobs.

Students said rather than increasing the numbers, the government should use the money to improve the dire conditions and pay of existing medical students and junior doctors and divert some of the funds intended for training additional students to cash-strapped rural hospitals. They argued the problem is not a shortage of doctors in rural areas but rather a need to tackle underlying issues behind poor healthcare in the regions.

Currently, some students have already been admitted to medical schools with lower grades as regional doctor candidates who must work in a provincial area for 10 years including the training period. Critics say this has led to a two-tier system, while regional doctors complain of working with poorer facilities and conditions in rural areas compared to their city counterparts.

Kim Ki-deok, vice-president of the Korean Medical School Students Association, who is among those boycotting the licensing exam, said the boycott was equivalent to a one-year strike by trainee doctors.

Kim noted the governments plan to open a new public medical school came in less than three years after it forced the closure of Seonam University medical school, which Kim said faced difficulties in hiring professors and establishing a training hospital.

Some 49 Seonam University students were scattered to neighbouring medical schools to attend classes, he said.

Seonam University was also dogged by quality issues and poor management and financial issues, according to government audits.

The proposal to set up a medical school specialising in public medicine is not new. A previous government plan set out in 2016 to build a national university of public health an area that is not lucrative for private hospitals was strongly opposed by the medical community and had to be abandoned.

Pressure as doctors threaten to join strikes

The government has been under significant pressure as the Korean Medical Association (KMA), representing some 130,000 doctors, held a three-day walkout at the end of August protesting at the governments proposals, and have warned of an indefinite strike from 7 September. Doctors have been covering for striking medical students interning in hospitals.

Hospitals have complained about the strain on emergency and intensive care units and concerns as the number of COVID-19 cases were rising.

Professors at university hospitals are also warning of collective action to support striking trainee doctors. At the prestigious Seoul National University (SNU), professors joined striking SNU medical students this week. Around 83% of SNU medical students were on strike on Monday.

Bolstered by surveys that indicated that 58% of the public do not support the medical strikes, Health Minister Park Neung-hoo issued an unprecedented order this week to force all residents (postgraduate medical students) and fellows (graduate specialist medicine trainees) working in Seoul and the neighbouring areas of Gyeonggi and Incheon to return to work immediately.

We tried our best to negotiate to prevent a collective strike by the doctors associations amid the serious possibility of a mass contagion of COVID-19, but the KMA and the Korean Intern Resident Association rejected the governments compromise and went through with the strike, Park said at an emergency press briefing on Wednesday.

Now the government has no choice but to issue a commencement-of-business order and other necessary legal measures for the sake of protecting the peoples lives and safety.

Park warned that violations of the order could be punished with a jail sentence of up to three years, or a fine of up to KRW30 million (US$25,200) and medical licence revocation. The threat has angered doctors who appeared more willing to join the strikes in support of students.

Despite its outward hardline stance, the government appeared to be softening. The government already unconditionally halted forwarding policies on expanding the medical school admissions quota to the education ministry until after the COVID-19 crisis, a senior health ministry official, Yoon Tae-ho, said in a 1 September media briefing.

KMA President Choi Dae-zip said: The government is threatening to accuse us and press charges against us, pushing the medical community into a corner, and added: In this situation, doctors cant have a dialogue with the government.

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Medical exams postponed amid strike and resurgent virus - University World News

TCOM creates office of student success – fortworthbusiness.com

The Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine is taking the next step to create a welcoming environment for all of its students with the creation of the Office of Medical Student Success. The office will be led by Dr. Rynn Ziller, who has been appointed Assistant Dean for Medical Student Success, the college said in a news release.

Melva Landrum, who had been the Assistant Director of Advising and Career Development, will assume the role of Director of Medical Student Success within this office.

I am excited about the opportunity to have a more comprehensive impact on our students success and well-being while they are in medical school, Ziller said. Our goal is to provide the support needed to ensure each student reaches his or her full potential, both personally and professionally.The Office for Medical Student Success was created to provide TCOM students a welcoming environment, timely and accurate advising, and programming designed to enhance their professional development. It will oversee an expansion of its career advising services for current students as well as past graduates.

We are so excited to expand the services for our medical students, Landrum said. As the needs of medical students grow for them to find success in both undergraduate and graduate medical education, the services that our department offers have become more extensive in the areas of advising and career development and through programmatic efforts.The Office for Medical Student Success also will lead TCOMs plans and commitment to increase Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion initiatives, provide strategies to promote medical student well-being and organize those major school events that celebrate the milestones of their medical school careers.The creation of this new office will create additional value within TCOM and provide resources needed by TCOMs medical students to achieve success.

A medical schools success can only be measure through the success, experiences and supportive environment of our students who have entrusted us in guiding them to their ultimate goal, TCOM Dean Dr. Frank Filipetto said. I look forward to the leadership Dr. Ziller will bring in her new role and the team she will lead in support of our students. FWBP Staff

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TCOM creates office of student success - fortworthbusiness.com