Former CCSD teacher opens preschool in Las Vegas – FOX5 Las Vegas

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Former CCSD teacher opens preschool in Las Vegas - FOX5 Las Vegas

Fall high school sports in Nevada are pushed to the spring – Las Vegas Sun

By Justin Emerson (contact)

Thursday, July 23, 2020 | 5:50 p.m.

High school sports wont be contested in 2020 in Nevada out of coronavirus concerns. And when they do return, it will only be on an abbreviated schedule without a state tournament.

The Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association released its plans for the 2020-21 school year this afternoon, moving the beginning of all sports to after the new year. The fall season was scheduled to start in the middle of next month.

Clark County School Districts decision to go all-online for the start of the school year essentially wiped out the chances of having fall sports. The new NIAA plan moves fall sports to the second semester, with football practices scheduled to begin Feb. 13 ahead of a six-game season.

I think a lot of the kids really thought we were going to have a season because it was looking like that for a while, Liberty football coach Rich Muraco said. Something is better than nothing, so well take it and hopefully well be out of distance education by the second semester so this can happen.

Winter sports will come first, with practices scheduled for Jan. 2 and the season running through Feb. 20. Non-football fall sports may begin Feb. 20 and all fall sports including football are scheduled to run until April 10. Spring sports will now begin on April 3 and go through May 22.

The NIAA said these are the dates that sports will be offered, and that participation is at schools' discretion. The plans are also tentative and are still subject to government directives.

NIAA co-assistant director Donnie Nelson said in a statement that the calendar is aligned with winter sports first to give the best opportunity for each sport to be conducted as effectively and efficiently as possible.

Nelson also said the dates were decided with as little overlap in the seasons as possible so that students can participate in multiple sports.

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Fall high school sports in Nevada are pushed to the spring - Las Vegas Sun

Experts say go-to personal finance rules younger generations hear from well-intentioned parents may no longer apply – iNFOnews

In this Thursday, Jan. 28, 2016, file photo, a couple pauses to watch a colorful sunset while walking their dog in a park, in Portland, Maine. Start saving for retirement in a Registered Retirement Savings Plan as soon as possible. Make sure you're saving at least 10 per cent of your income. Don't spend more than a third of each pay check on housing but don't rent forever either. Those well-known maxims may have worked for previous generations, but many of them don't make sense for young people today, experts say.

Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Robert F. Bukaty

July 23, 2020 - 9:05 PM

Start saving for retirement in a Registered Retirement Savings Plan as soon as possible. Make sure you're saving at least 10 per cent of your income. Don't spend more than a third of each pay check on housing but don't rent forever either.

Those are some of the financial maxims younger generations hear from well-intentioned parents and other figures in their lives, but experts say that many of those go-to personal finance rules no longer apply.

"I think the biggest issue is that there was more, maybe, similarity in the experiences of previous generations ... (the) housing market was mostly affordable, people graduated with mostly not too much debt, jobs tended to be stable, many of them had pensions," said Liz Schieck, a certified financial planner with Toronto-based The New School of Finance, an advice-only financial planning and coaching firm.

That means that 30 years ago, there was a higher likelihood it would work out well when one friend gave another advice.

"The experiences are so diverse in the generations now," Schieck said, noting that financial advice from someone unfamiliar with the recipient's complete money situation should always be taken with a grain of salt.

One of the most common pieces of advice is to start saving for retirement with an RRSP, she said.

However, that vehicle may not be the best choice for them, she said, instead suggesting a Tax-Free Savings Account.

The federal government introduced the TFSA in 2009 for people 18 and over to save money without receiving a tax deduction or paying tax on money earned in the account through capital gains or other means. There's a yearly limit on deposits, and the lifetime contribution limit to date totals $58,000.

Unlike the RRSP, withdrawals don't incur a tax penalty, making it more flexible for millennials and Gen Z who may need to access some of their savings before their golden years, she said, whether for a home down payment, to go back to school ahead of a career change or even save for a vacation.

It can be more beneficial for people to save in a TFSA until they're in a higher tax bracket, she said.

"I think it's 100 per cent that most people from previous generations, they didn't have the TFSA," Schieck said, noting it has only existed for a little over a decade and many people in older generations weren't able to use it as part of their retirement planning in the long run.

The outdated "rules" can be interpreted afresh.

"I actually think that what most people mean is: start saving for the long term as soon as you can. And that's great advice."

Often though, the advice to save early and often comes along with other famous golden rules of personal finance: to tuck away 10 per cent of pay cheques and always take advantage of an employer-matched retirement savings plan.

"The 10 per cent is aspirational," said Janet Gray, a certified financial planner with Money Coaches Canada, an advice only financial planning and money coaching service.

"I don't think it's always fitting."

Younger generations may have more constraints within their budget than those before them, said Gray, including larger housing costs, monthly student debt repayments and more.

It's a good idea to find a sum of money to start tucking away regularly for the future to get into the habit, she said, but that can be as small as $25 a month to start.

When it comes to employer match programs where the employer matches what an employee saves for retirement up to a certain amount the advice is often not to leave so-called free money on the table, said Schieck.

However, that may not make sense for employees right away, she said, adding she's seen clients who save for retirement, but don't have enough left over for their monthly expenses and rack up thousands in credit card debt.

"It's not always possible," she said of utilizing such incentives, especially if, for example, new parents are paying some $2,000 a month for daycare costs. In those cases, it's OK to wait until those high-expense years pass and then start taking advantage of matching programs.

Older generations also like to bestow advice about housing. Many younger people are told to work towards home ownership over renting, and never to spend more than a third of their income on housing but neither of those is a realistic move these days, particularly for those living in big cities.

One often cited rule is a 50/30/20 split for how to spend income, said Schieck, with a 50 per cent cap on bills, 20 on savings and 30 for wants.

The New School of Finance raised the 50 per cent for bills, including housing, to 55 per cent when working with its clients, she said, as so many people struggle to keep their necessities under half of their income, especially in high-cost cities like Toronto.

Both women advise against buying a house at all costs, especially in expensive cities where a down payment can be tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars.

"I think it's a good goal if it's workable for you... If someone can afford to buy a house and pay off their mortgage by the time they retire and they're not house poor during their life? Great," said Schieck.

"But I would rather somebody rent forever than be house poor," she said, because people who take on too much in housing costs tend to forgo retirement savings or accumulate consumer debt.

Renting can still be a good financial decision, so long as people save for retirement as they won't accrue equity in their housing, she said.

Still, there's some advice that's held up from one generation to the next.

"Don't spend more than what you earn," said Gray, citing the dangers of carrying consumer debt. That piece of advice is especially important for millennials, who may have access to more debt instruments than their parents did.

Everyone should also work towards having a rainy day fund that can cover a very bare bones budget should any emergencies arise, she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 23, 2020.

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Experts say go-to personal finance rules younger generations hear from well-intentioned parents may no longer apply - iNFOnews

The Futility of the Masked Life – Splice Today

The Argentine writer, Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) never wrote anything long, yet he was one of the most prolific writers who composed thousands of pages that covered many subjects and genres.

When Orson Welles first feature-length and studio produced film came out, Borges wrote a typically short review of it. Citizen Kane (1941) made an indelible mark on the American consciousness and has elicited both praise and criticism. Borges review of Citizen Kane is anything but typical. Hes not a critic or a film reviewer that we understand by todays standards. In almost everything Borges has written, there are traces of philosophy, particularly metaphysics. Commenting on Welles film, we experience the great sensation of Borges continuous philosophical and theological endeavor.

Borges called Citizen Kane an overwhelming film, but we have to be careful not to assume that Borges means this negatively. An overwhelming feeling might signal a moment of revelation and unraveling of our interior being.

Although he considered some parts of the film pointlessly banal, namely the simplistic plot that involves Charles Foster Kanes appetite for possessing everything and everyone, Borges finds metaphysical depth in it. Its the second plot, as Borges puts it, that reveals something incredibly superior and superb about the film and Welles himself. He writes that Citizen Kane links Koheleth to the memory of another nihilist, Franz Kafka. A kind of metaphysical detective story, its subject (both psychological and allegorical) is the investigation of a mans inner self, through the works he has wrought, the words he has spoken, the many lives he has ruined.

This is an intriguing and unusual description of Welles cinematic endeavor, yet completely true and authentic. Borges is referring to Koheleth, one of the books of the Hebrew Bible, also known as Ecclesiastes. Its a depressing book. The author or authors are unknown, and the book doesnt offer any practical advice on life. Rather, the author reflects on the futility of life. As the Biblical scholar, Robert Alter, points out, the author invites us to contemplate the cyclical nature of reality and of human experience, the fleeting duration of all that we cherish, the brevity of life, and the inexorability of death, which levels all things.

The very first verses of this Hebrew book immediately alerts us to what will follow:

Merest breath, said Qohelet, merest breath. All is mere breath.

What gain is there for man in all his toil that he toils under the sun.

A generation goes and a generation comes, but the earth endures forever.

That which was is that which will be, and that which was done is that which will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun.

Borges may not have been a theologian by profession but his writing is imbued by mans search for God and meaning. Welles was certainly not a theologian either but his films are infused with philosophical reflections on our quest for meaning and happiness. This is a theme that continues to develop in Welles oeuvre and Borges is correct to describe Citizen Kane in such a way. After all, what is Charles Foster Kane running toward or away from? Does he not understand that no matter how large and opulent Xanadu may have become, he will face the inevitability of death?

Theres a second component to this characterization that Borges offers, linking Kafka to Welles (in 1962, Welles filmed a loose adaptation of Kafkas novel, The Trial). This is a curious description but once again, not so far-fetched. The futility and a constant rush to become the man he doesnt want to be, Kane is the embodiment of Kafkas world. He enters the realm of absurdity time and time again, proving that his actions, no matter how large, shocking, and other-worldly are empty attempts at control, that life is nothing but an illusion, and that we will rest uneasy in that illusion if we keep avoiding gazing at our face in the mirror.

Borges calls Citizen Kane a metaphysical detective story, and he s correct to make such an assertion. Welles begins the film with Kanes death, and because of this it would appear that we are moving backwards in time only. But this is an illusion. Welles also presents the film in continuous fragments, broken up by Kanes own impending personal doom and brokenness. We struggle to reconstruct these parts of Kane because we want to solve the mystery of his public and private self, yet were also driven by an intense dislike of this man whos overly ambitious (a seemingly good quality) but unwilling to search for his own interiority.

Does the mystery ever get solved? On the surface, (something, which Borges recognizes and acknowledges), the mystery of Kane lies in that first and final word, Rosebud. Certainly, it relates to the forgotten depths of a child thats no longer there. The man and the child shall never meet, even though the yearning for such a chance encounter never ceases.

On a deeper level, this reconstruction of Kanes character is a thankless task. Its futile (as Qohelet tells us) precisely because of the fragmentary absurdity and nihilism (as Kafka tells us) of Kanes existence. Borges points out that there are forms of multiplicity and that the fragments are not governed by any secret unity: the detested Charles Foster Kane is a simulacrum, a chaos of appearances. Theres no difference between Kanes personhood and persona because he never allows himself to be vulnerable to himself or others. Welles shows this superbly in every frame: the larger the persona of Kane is, the smaller his interiority becomes. As the metaphysical masks duplicate, Kanes face is entirely disappearing. Looking in the mirror brings only anguish and self-hatred. As Borges writes, The hero observes that nothing is so frightening as a labyrinth with no center. This film is precisely that labyrinth.

Its hardly surprising that Borges saw these elements in Citizen Kane with such clarity of a writer and a philosopher. Throughout most of his fiction, hes obsessed with mirrors and labyrinths. They represent the ever-present tension inherent in every human being that rarely gets resolved. In his story, The Draped Mirrors, he writes:

As a child, I felt before large mirrors that same horror of a spectral duplication or multiplication of reality. Their infallible and continuous functioning, their pursuit of myactions, their cosmic pantomime, were uncanny then, whenever it began to grow dark. One of my persistent prayers to God and my guardian angel was that I not dream about mirrors. I know I watched them with misgivings. Sometimes I feared that they might begin to deviate from reality; other times I was afraid of seeing there my own face, disfigured by strange calamities.

Welles was not explicitly a philosophical filmmaker. Nevertheless, the themes in his films always deal with moral and ethical problems, as well as reality and illusion, and certainly with labyrinthine mirrors, the clearest examples are Citizen Kane and The Lady from Shanghai (1947). Ever the magician, Welles presents both appearances and reality with an artists certainty, yet our certainty of whats real and whats fake diminishes in our minds. Continuously, and at times, unbearably, Welles thrusts the mirror in front of our faces in order to confront the labyrinths of our own minds.

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The Futility of the Masked Life - Splice Today

The Covid-19 Pandemic and The Theft of Life – Sri Lanka Guardian

The bottom line is, life is sacred to the person who has it. Therefore no one has a right to take it away without that persons consent with a fecklessly insouciant action.

by Ruwantissa Abeyratne

writing from Montreal

Human progress isn't measured by industry; it's measured by the value you put on a life.

Abhijit Naskar, Time to Save Medicine

Once upon a time, a wise young man - Seth Adam Smith said every life has immense value. Another valuable saying is by Thich Nhat Hanh: Life is precious as it is. All the elements for your happiness are already here. There is no need to run, strive, search, or struggle. Just be.

With these profound and incontrovertible truths have I pondered over life in these pandemic times. As a result, I have made a futile attempt at trying to mesh these sage truisms with the fact that as of 23 July 2020, according to global figures, 623,897 had died from the Covid-19 virus. Polemically, one could argue that the fundamental platitude that, if one is born, one has to die one day, is rendered destitute of meaning on the ground that these deaths have been caused by exogenous causes where, if not for the devastating and deadly effect of the virus, all of the aforesaid deceased could still be alive. They are gone forever, for no fault of their own: they who wanted to live. Life was just stolen from them.

Many of those now dead (if not all would have had the zest to dance; to party with their friends; to study and join learned professions and lead exemplary lives. Others would have looked forward to their childrens graduation, their grandchildren. Whatever it might have been, it follows that all these people who lost their lives lost the most precious thing they had their life. Or did they?

The first stop in the conundrum is the fusion between religion and philosophy. The Holy Quran says: whoever kills a person not in retaliation for a person killed, nor (as a punishment) for spreading disorder on the earth, is as if he has killed the whole of humankind, and whoever saves the life of a person is as if he has saved the life of the whole of humankind (5:32). On this basis, the learned Mawln Muhammad Saleem Dhorat says: As Muslims, we value human life irrespective of geography, race and gender . We do not distinguish between the poor and the wealthy, women from men, the less able from the able bodied, as a life is a life, hence sacred and precious. Therefore, a loss of life in any corner of the world is a cause of grief and sorrow for every true Muslim.

In the Gospel of St. Mathew (10.31) Jesus says: Fear not, therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows. Along similar lines The Buddha said several centuries before Christ Life is very precious. Those who want to destroy it should know that once it is destroyed, it is gone forever. Turning to theoretical philosophy, one is struck by what Plato said: Life is a gift: wake up, everyday, and realize that.

On the other side of the coin were those who espoused nihilism or a nuanced concept of nihilism. Friedrich Nietzsche (1854-1900) arguably the most admired and followed philosopher of the 19th century said: To live is to suffer; to survive is to find some meaning in the suffering. In his Twilight of the Idols he goes on to say: Every belief in the value and dignity of life rests on false thinking; it is possible only through the fact that empathy with the universal life and suffering of mankind is very feebly developed in the individual. Even those rarer men who think beyond themselves at all have an eye, not for this universal life, but for fenced-off portions of it thus for the ordinary, everyday man the value of life rests solely on the fact that regards himself more highly than he does the world. The great lack of imagination from which he suffers means he is unable to feel his way into other beings and thus he participates as little as possible in their fortunes and sufferings. He, on the other hand, who really could participate in them would have to despair of the value of life; if he succeeded in encompassing and feeling within himself the total consciousness of mankind he would collapse with a curse on existence - for mankind has as a whole no goal, and the individual man when he regards its total course cannot derive from it any support or comfort, but must be reduced to despair.

Jacques Derrida (1930-2004) argued that it is death that makes life possible. In a bizarre ontological sense, this has some legal legitimacy. With all this philosophical theorization and moral relativism, the law remains clear and unequivocal. The 623,897 who died had their lives taken from them. The legal definition of theft is that when a thing that one possesses is taken away from them without their consent such an act constitutes theft. This brings to bear the issue of whether life is a thing and a tangible possession of the person who enjoys life. This can be answered deductively when we refer to a person dying as having lost his life. Of course, one has to commit the theft and in the Covid-19 context the culprit if there is one, has not been identified yet. However, this does not detract from the fact that absence of the miscreant or identity does not presuppose the fact that there has been no theft.

The bottom line is, life is sacred to the person who has it. Therefore no one has a right to take it away without that persons consent with a fecklessly insouciant action. This boils down to the fundamental question as to whether a person (or persons) was responsible for introducing the virus to the world. The multifarious conspiracy theories that abound aside, one cannot deny that life is sacred. I would conclude with fictional wisdom. Fyodor Dostoyevsky in his monumental work The Brothers Karamazov cites the instance where one brother (Ivan) asks the other (Alyosha) whether the latter would, if it were in his power, build an edifice of human destiny that brings happiness to all mankind, but for that he must inevitably and unavoidably torture just one tiny creature, a child and build the edifice upon the unrequited tears of that child. Alyosha vehemently says he will not agree to such a condition. The right to life is sacrosanct and those 623,897 people were unjustly denied that basic human right.

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The Covid-19 Pandemic and The Theft of Life - Sri Lanka Guardian

Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Microsoft, Tesla, Chipotle and more – CNBC

Pedestrians wearing protective masks walk past a Microsoft Technology Center in New York, on Wednesday, July 22, 2020.

Jeenah Moon | Bloomberg via Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines after the bell:

Microsoft Shares of Microsoft dropped 2% in after hours after the company's fourth-quarter earnings beat estimates. The technology company reported earnings of $1.46 per share on revenues of $38.03 billion. Analysts had expected earnings per share of $1.34 on revenues of $36.5 billion, according to Refinitiv. Revenue grew 13% even amid the coronavirus crisis. Earlier today, Slack accused the technology company of anticompetitive practices in an EU complaint.

Las Vegas Sands The resort developer's stock fell 1% in extended trading after the company released financial results from the second quarter. The company missed estimates, reporting a loss of $1.05 per share excluding some items on revenues of $98 million. Refinitiv analysts had expected a loss per share of 74 cents on revenues of $564 million. The company said it will continue capital expenditure programs in both Macao and Singapore.

Tesla The automaker's stock climbed 5% after the market closed. Tesla released second-quarter earnings of$2.18 per share excluding some items on revenues of $6.04 billion while Refinitiv analysts had expected earnings per share of 3 cents on revenues of $5.37 billion. Tesla also reported its first full year of profitability based on GAAP, so the company can now be considered to join the S&P 500 index. Shares of electric vehicle maker NIO also jumped 3% in extended trading.

Whirlpool Shares of Whirlpool rose 3% after the closing bell. The company beat Refinitiv analysts' estimates, posting second-quarter earnings of $2.15 per share excluding some items on revenues of $4.04 billion compared to estimates of earnings per share of $1 on revenues of $3.57 billion.

ChipotleMexican Grill Shares of Chipotle fell 1% in extended trading after the company posted second-quarter earnings. Beating Refinitiv analysts' expectations, Chipotle reported second-quarter earnings of 40 centsper share excluding some items on revenues of $1.36 billion. Analysts had expected earnings per share of 35 cents on revenues of $1.34 billion. The company's reported quarterly adjusted earnings were down 90% from the period a year ago as coronavirus closed restaurant dining rooms. Meanwhile, Chipotle's digital sales more than tripled during the second quarter.

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Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Microsoft, Tesla, Chipotle and more - CNBC

Expert Insights on the Asian Crypto Market Amidst Pandemic – Yahoo Finance

The first virtual edition of Trescon's World Blockchain Summit (WBS) digitally connected over 1000 global crypto-blockchain experts & Crypto Asset Entrepreneurs who shared their thoughts on the ongoing Covid-19 crises and its impact on the Asian crypto market. Top speakers at the conference included Changpeng Zhao, CEO of Binance; Don Tapscott, CEO of The Tapscott Group Inc and Co-Founder of The Blockchain Research Institute; David Chaum, Founder of xx network and Roger Ver, CEO of Bitcoin.com; among others.

SINGAPORE, July 23, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Trescon hosted its first virtual edition of the popular World Blockchain Summit (WBS) series on Thursday, 16th July. Amidst the pandemic crisis, WBS was set in an interactive online environment with a special focus on the Asian blockchain and crypto market. The summit convened over 1000 participants that included HNIs, Hedge Funds and Crypto Investors alongside blockchain experts, influencers & gurus from global enterprises to discuss how Asia can thrive in the global blockchain & crypto race.

World Blockchain Summit, Asia

The Asia edition of WBS featured keynotes, panel discussions, tech talks, private consultation rooms, private networking rooms and more on a digital platform.

Key takeaways from World Blockchain Summit

Don Tapscott, co-founder and Executive Chairman of the Blockchain Research Institute and one of the world's leading authorities on the impact of technology on business and society, opened the conference on Thursday morning. Don's opening address centred on blockchain and the transformation of public health, in which he outlined the profound changes that Covid-19 pandemic will cause to the economy, social behaviour, and society. "The pandemic will reveal deep problems in our systems for innovation, commerce, data and technology infrastructure. So, this conference happened at a very appropriate time. The spread of the virus and our ineptitude to deal with the consequences had a lot to do with the lack of data."

The Blockchain Research Institute is the largest think-tank in the world that is leading in research about blockchain opportunities, strategies and issues for different industries. While talking about blockchain for public health, he added, "We need to reinvent public health. At The Blockchain Research Institute, we are trying to bridge the gap between the enormous potential of blockchain technology and the actual deployment. Imagine if each had our own self-sovereign health record. In a crisis like this, the state can mandate availability of anonymised data about critical health information. You can have the real-time health data of an entire population. This is possible now because of blockchain."

David Chaum,Founder of xx network who is widely recognized as the inventor of digital cash and other fundamental innovations in cryptography and privacy-preserving technologies delivered a keynote on the role of true digital cash and privacy-protecting platform in supporting decentralized and democratic life, along with CMO and CFO of xx network Jim Dolbear. On voting for complex issues and for scale-like blockchain, David quoted, "In a decentralized life, you need metadata shredding of communication, digital cash that can't be taken down so it can also be a secured store of value and a kind of governance that scales with the complexity and size of the electorate and issue space." He also added "We have built the real blockchain technology. We've been parsimonious and careful and built some very well constructed software that we are rolling out soon! I am excited to offer this to the world!"

Story continues

The conference also featured a comprehensive interview between Changpeng Zhao (CZ), CEO of Binance, Singapore and Joon Ian Wong, Managing Director for Content Products at CoinDesk, U.K. When asked about global hotspots for crypto trading, CZ commented, "India is a very interesting market. We're seeing a very large uptake in terms of user adoption. The number of users is growing quickly. Indonesia is also an interesting market with a large population. We recently partnered with Tokocrypto to launch the stablecoin."

In a tech talk on the policy environment for blockchain innovation and adoption, Peteris Zilgalvis, Head of Unit for Digital Innovation and Blockchain at the European Commission, Belgium said, "There is a great interest for international collaboration, mainly for Asia. The governmental advisory board of the International Association of Trusted Blockchain Applications(INATBA) is bringing together blockchain stakeholders, companies and users and encouraging Asian companies to join the association."

Some of the other featured speakers for the summit included Dr Ben Goertzel, CEO of SingularityNET, Hong Kong;Brian Behelendorf, Executive Director for Hyperledger; Alex Nascimento, Co-Founder of Blockchain and Managing Director of 7CC - Blockchain Investments, USA; Max Kantelia, Co-Founder of Zilliqa, UK; Dr Marwan Alzarouni, CEO for Dubai Blockchain Center;Pavel Bains, CEO for Bluzelle, Singapore; Tea Jazz, Founder of CoinKeeper World, Singapore; Sahil Arora, CEO of ZPAE, UAE; Joshua P Hawley, Managing Director of Satoshi Ltd, Mauritius; Chanaki De Costa, CEO - Director, Future CX Pty Ltd and Matthew Niemerg, Co-Founder and President for Aleph Zero, USA; to name a few.

The cohesive agenda for WBS highlighted key areas such as the state of crypto and blockchain companies post-pandemic; the future of cross-industry blockchain technologies; the future of fundraising; what 2020 holds for IEOs, STOs and ICOs and re-imagining the foundation of commerce with blockchain-based contracting and more.

World Blockchain Summit - Asia 2020 was officially sponsored by - Platinum Sponsors - Satoshi Ltd, CoinKeeper Pte Ltd and Future1Exchange; Gold Sponsor - ZPAYee; Silver Sponsors - Future CX Pty Ltd and Aleph Zero Foundation; Exhibitors at the summit included Tokenation and Bitcrore; PR Partner - PR Newswire

About World Blockchain Summit

World Blockchain Summit is a global series of elite gatherings that takes place in 10+ destinations across the world. It connects global blockchain gurus and technology players in this space including emerging startups with regional businesses, government authorities, IT leaders, tech entrepreneurs, investors, and blockchain developers. For latest updates, visit http://www.worldblockchainsummit.com.

For further details about the announcement, please contact

Rahul HarindraCorporate Communications Managermarketing@tresconglobal.com

Photo - https://photos.prnasia.com/prnh/20200722/2864611-1

SOURCE Trescon

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Expert Insights on the Asian Crypto Market Amidst Pandemic - Yahoo Finance

It’s like cricket was never locked down … West Sussex clubs enjoying their July friendlies – West Sussex County Times

A 2020-style cricket line-up - Chichester Priory park fourths keep their distance

Chichester Priory Park 3rd v Bognor 4th

As rain fell on Old Trafford, the sun shone on Priory Park.

Priory batted first and Parker and Price got into a good rhythm. Bognor snaffled Parkers wicket (13) with a great catch at point, but Price took up the mantle.

It is quite an achievement to lose a ball at Priory Park but Price (51) and Graham-Wood (35) made some good attempts, keeping the socially distanced sunbathers on their toes.

Tom Baily (43no) waited patiently and took his chances. He was accompanied in the final overs by Roger Smith (53no) - leaving a target of 226 for Bognor to chase.

The pick of the bowlers was Richard Lindsay (2-29). Harry Lindsay, John Hooker and Lulu Millen all chipped in.

The pick of the Bognor batsmen were Jim Saunders (19) and Mike Delaney (10). The Chi opening bowlers Pitman (1-6) and Gee (2-14) were tight, and Theo Bachelors 2-22) proved vital. Extraordinary figures of 3-0 by young right-armer Tom Baily ensured that Priory bowled out Bognor for 59.

Get involved ... send your cricket reports to sport.sussex@jpimedia.co.uk - but please keep them to 200 words or less. We will endeavour to publish as many as can in our papers and online. We'd particularly like to see your Sussex Slam and August Cup reports.

Aldwick v Middleton Academy

After more than ten months away, Aldwick started their season against Middletons academy.

Liam Hicks got a jaffa for the first ball of the season to record the first golden goose (as it was the first ball of the teams season). But Liam Tinson scored 44 from 33 overs. Olli Duffin came all the way from London to get a duck, being run-out from a free hit.

Jamie Murphy added a quick 50 but it was left to Ian Guppy to stride to the wicket with his Mongoose. Five sixes & eight fours later he was well caught on the boundary for 74.

Aldwick were all out for 225 with Kiran Srisarvend taking 3-37 and there were two wickets for Cameron King and Harry Lever,

Middletons opening pair of Murray Carter (43) and Steven Rishman (41) got them off to a perfect start. D Howell scored a quick 46 and Ozzy Rishman (41*) saw them home to win by six wickets. There was a wicket each for Jake Merrett, Jamie Murphy, Liam Hicks and Rob Taylor.

Although finishing on the losing side, the day was enjoyed by both teams under strict Covid-19 conditions.

With the start time already delayed it was at one point unlikely any cricket would be played. Eventually it was decided a 30 -ver game would take place.

Petworth won the toss and elected to bat. After two quick wickets from Ben Simpson (3-11) Petworth steadied the ship with Adam Downing (34) and Drew Clark (34). Kirdford eventually made wickets fell, via Jamie Rountree (3-18) and Patrick Haywood (2-3), but a gritty batting performance from David Hambridge (20no) meant Petworth finished on 138.

For Kirdford two quick wickets fell before Gus Fletcher (42) and Patrick Haywood (41) put on 87. Once they were out it was up to Jamie Rountree (24no) and Benedict Jeffery (13) to try to get Kirdford over the line.

It took a four off the last ball from Rountree to win it for Kirdford.

Lavant batted first at Hawkley in a match reduced to 30 overs as the rain cleared.

Danny Berkley scored quickly but was caught for 22. James Stemp clattered the Hawkley attack making a fine 70 in a 112-run partnership with Lee Russell.

Steve Brooker joined Russell and kept the momentum going with 42. Russell with 38 and Brooker departed to leave Phil Allen with 15 and Dave Burford with 14 to take the Lavant total to 216-4.

Hawkley replied with purpose punishing any short deliveries despite a fine spell from Berkley. James Stemps pace and accuracy troubled the batsmen and a sharp caught-and-bowled removed Maltby for 49. But Lavant could not gain control as Aaron Stewart struck 85 and Hawkley passed the Lavant total.

Selsey were asked to field on a glorious day and on a great wicket.

Tom Cripps and Charlie constable couldnt break through against two strong hitters. De Silva (44) was caught and bowled by Will Smith 2-22 and Stone (55) was caught by Freddie Collins.

With constable 3-37 keeping it tight and picking up three late wickets Selsey kept Broadwater under 190.

In reply James Amis (25) and Will Smith (76) batted superbly. Smiths five huge sixes set up the game for selsey to push on, 102 for 1 quickly became 102/2 with rob rishman falling second ball, this brought. Horner hit anything loose and Brad Rose was bowled for 11.

With Tom Cripps 31* and Tig Hoare at the creaseten was needed off the last over.

A four from Hoare then a six over mid-wicket by Cripps won it to the delight of the crowd.

West Wittering Academy v Old Barn

The West Wittering innings started in a slight drizzle. Mark Taylor was in good form but he lost his opening partner Joe Pink early for two and Alex Fitzgerald, who played some good shots before being bowled for 15.

Dom Daplyn and Taylor shared a good partnership until Taylor was bowled for 42. Enter Andy Priest, who quickened the run rate and his team followed his lead with Zach Stewart making a quickfire 16 helping to get Wittering to 156 off their 30 overs.

Old Barn took to the crease and Joe Sissons soon picked up the first wicket with a catch at slip from Priest. Wittering began asserting their dominance with a great spell from Steve Clunie who finished with 2-29.

Daplyn picked up three wickets and Old Barn finished on 135 off their 30 overs, with young gun Ozzy top scoring with 43 not out. It was fantastic to have cricket back at the Millennium Meadow.

Goodwood v Sussex Martlets

Led by tJohnny Heaven, Sussex Martlets outfit arrived at Goodwood on Sundayin drizzle but this eased and the game began in relatively dry conditions.

Martlets chose to bat first. Carter and Lamb started well. Their display ended in the 13th over with the score on 58 as Lamb (46) played on to a Matt Geffen delivery. Geffen also removed Rebbetts cheaply finishing with figures of 2-19. What followed was a steady procession of Martlets batsmen.

Only Warinder (23) made a contribution outside of this norm. Stanley Mayne bowled well enough to take 4-30. James Mayne took 1-40, Graeme Bennison 2-11.

Martlets were all out by the 33rd over for 127.

Goodwood openers Carver and Matt Bennison strode outand knocked off the required runs in 22 overs. Both reached their 50s (Carver 65 and Bennison 58) with some glorious shots.

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It's like cricket was never locked down ... West Sussex clubs enjoying their July friendlies - West Sussex County Times

Coronavirus: Fifa gives Safa the power to extend the 2019-20 PSL season – Yahoo Sports

The South African Football Association (Safa) has received a response from Fifa advising them that they have the powers to extend the date of completion of the 2019-20 PSL season.

In a statement releasedon Wednesday, Safa said the season can be extended in terms of the Transfer Management System (TMS).

This means the suspended season can go beyond theAugust 31 deadline set by the PSL.

"The world football governing body, Fifahas written to the South African Football Association (Safa) advising them that they can extend the completion of the current Premier Soccer League season in terms of the Transfer Management System (TMS)," reads the statement.

Furthermore, Fifa mandatedSafa to amend the start of the upcoming season as well as the registration of new players.

"In the same context, Fifahas given Safathe mandate to amend the start of the PSL next season (2020/2021) and this may require the Association to amend the registration periods provided in the TMS."

Safa published part of the statement as sent to them by Fifa, and it reads as follows:

"As such, the association concerned should extend the end date of the ongoing season in the TMS, to reflect the match schedule. This may also require the association to amend the registration periods provided in the TMS."

Safa acting CEO Tebogo Motlanthe said the association was pleased with the clarification from Fifa and assured the country that the referees will be ready come August 1.

"We are glad with the clarification we got from Fifaand we have already started preparation of the referees. They will arrive at the camp in batches and I want to assure everyone that the match officials will be ready, come 1 August 2020 when the PSL kicks off,"said Motlanthe.

Last week, Safa rejected PSL's proposed return date of July 18, stating that the match officials were not ready and fit enough to complete the season.

The country's FA further resolved that referees be mandated to a 14-day fitnessand medical tests, a compromise on their side as Fifa requires match officials to undergo a three-week intense training programme before they can be deemed ready to resume work.

Safa offered to cover the costs of the 110 match officials which includeaccommodation, transportation and the conducting of tests.

It is unclear at this stage if the PSL will accept Safa's proposed return date of August 1 but the league said in its response that Dr Irvin Khoza would re-engage all the stakeholders on the association's position.

Weekendreports suggested the PSL was considering cancelling the campaign as it feels it would not have enough time to playthe remainingof the matches.

The league is expected to hold a board of governors meeting this week to plot the way forward for the current season which has been suspended since mid-March.

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Your Healthy Family: The reason so many people are stressed out right now – KOAA.com Colorado Springs and Pueblo News

COLORADO SPRINGS Are you feeling more stressed out than usual these days? If youre not, chances are someone close to you is. Do you believe wearing a mask is important? Do you think government leaders are making the right decisions for your best interest? Should we be sheltering in place or getting back to normal? No matter how you feel about any of these questions, chances are we are all facing one common emotion.

Dr. John Fleming, MD, is a Board Certified Psychiatrist and a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association with Southern Colorado TMS Center in Colorado Springs.

Dr. Fleming says he and his practice are keeping busy these days. I have seen both more people having depression and anxiety, and I'm seeing patients I have been working with for some time, having more intense symptoms that they're trying to manage.

The push and pull of the pandemic is creating so many challenges, says Dr. Fleming. How do I put food on my table? Do I choose to send my kids to school? Do I choose to keep my kids at home.?

During the early stages of the shutdown, Dr. Fleming says he joked with close friends that in some ways, the COVID-19 pandemic was worse than a zombie apocalypse. You can't tell who's got what. You can't tell who is sick, or how sick they'll be, you can't tell how much of a personal risk you have. Is it safe to be around my grandchildren? Could I see them at the end of the driveway? Are they welcome to come into my home, should I hug them?

No matter how you feel about any of the current issues, Dr. Fleming says we should all know that no one knows when life will get back to normal. We can look at experts, but we all know that none of the experts - whether their economic experts or public health experts - they all have a point of view but we all know none of them have a crystal ball, we all know they're guessing. Not random guesses, they're guessing based on what they know, but where does that leave us? Uncertain.

As the old saying goes, not knowing is the worst part. Uncertainty is really hard for us as human beings and right now things are uncertain, economically, politically, socially. What are we supposed to do to protect our health, to protect our children? There are school thoughts - everything is uncertain, and there are no easy answers right now.

And that uncertainty opens many of us open to deeper waters says Dr. Fleming. This is a recipe for making any of us anxious, depressed, upset, and angry.

If that mix of feelings and emotions are ignored or left to simmer, Dr. Fleming says, It's worse if we don't acknowledge the uncertainty and the fear. If we're trying to avoid uncertainty, that's when we get into conflict and that is what can make people so angry.

If you're having trouble facing or processing your own emotions right now, Dr. Fleming says the first place to start is acknowledging them - even if its simply to yourself. If you embrace the uncertainty, and say, I'm uncertain, you're uncertain let's make the best of this we can. I'm scared if you do that - that'll impact me this way. If you have that attitude, you're less likely to snap. If on the other hand, you're spending all your time and energy saying, this is right, that is wrong, this is scary and this one's safe - if we divide from each other then when something else happens things can escalate very quickly. It'll be a snap - and then a blaze - and then a fire.

In our next story, Dr. Fleming will talk about specific things we can do to recognize we are more stressed out, and things we can all do that may sound simple but if you take the time to implement them in your life - can bring a new measure of peace to your life.

Southern Colorado TMS Center is a proud sponsor of Your Healthy Family

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Premeds: Capitalize on gap years before applying to medical school – American Medical Association

For most students, the route to a career as a physician is an indirect one, in that they take time between completing their undergraduate studies and applying to medical school.

According to a 2019surveyof incoming medical students conducted by the Association of American Medical Colleges, 43.9% students who enrolled in medical school took one to two gap years. Of the students surveyed, 13.4% also took three to four gap years and 7.9% took five or more gap years.

If you are taking time off between undergrad and applying to medical schoolor if you are considering that option after undergradhow can you make the most of it?

The COVID-19 pandemic has thrown a wrench into many best-laid plans. For some undergrads, the pandemic has cost them the chance to build up their medical school credentials with volunteer and shadowing experience. For others, it may be a time to look at the national landscape and put deeper thought into what a career in medicine entails.

That may be of particular importance to potential applicants who have limited experience in clinical settings, according to John D. Schriner, PhD. He is associate dean for admissions and student affairs at Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, one of 37 member schools of theAMAs Accelerating Change in Medicine Consortium.

Its not necessarily what you see on TV, Schriner said. Getting out there and gaining experience beforehand is the whole point [of volunteering and shadowing], so you know whether or not this is a profession you want to commit to.

In terms of taking a year off, if somebody is unsure they want to commit their life to medicine, a career you have to go into it with your eyes wide open, if it takes a gap year or growth year, maybe two years, thats what you should do. Make sure you have the experience and insight you need to be able to commit to this career path.

Learn how COVID-19 is affecting medical school admissions.

When asked how they spent time off between undergrad and medical school, incoming medical students offered numerous answers on the AAMC survey. The most popular oneswith respondents allowed multiple answerswere:

Theres a couple ways to look at it, said Carol A. Terregino, MD, senior associate dean for education and academic affairs at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. Some people think its important to have a break. Some people didnt have enough volunteer experience or enough clinical experience, and they wanted to develop a track record. Its a thoughtful reflection on what are the strengths and weaknesses of my application and how can it help me.

Learn about the most heavily weighted factors in the medical school admissions process.

The reasons for taking a gap year are less important than how productive you are with that time. Making money or taking a break arent necessarily frowned upon, but if you didnt stay connected through some form of community service, it may be questioned during the application process.

Some people will put themselves through school and say Im going to work at something unrelated for a year and make a lot of money, Dr. Terregino said. But, if they arent remaining connected to medicine and service in some meaningful way, if they are just working, it raises an eyebrow. Is this really a commitment for them?

The ability of a physician to connect with a patient is in many ways related to the number and types of experiences a physician has had. Just taking the time to grow and be more of a person is going to make someone a better physician. Thats a valuable piece to having a gap year.

Medicine can be a career that is both challenging and highly rewarding but figuring out a medical schools prerequisites and navigating the application process can be a challenge into itself. TheAMA premed glossary guidehas the answers to frequently asked questions about medical school, the application process, the MCAT and more.

Have peace of mind andget everything you need tostart med school off strongwith the AMA.

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Premeds: Capitalize on gap years before applying to medical school - American Medical Association

Check Out This Amazing Mother-And-Daughter Duo Who Graduated from Medical School Together – AmoMama

Cynthia Kudji Sylvester has just proved it's never too late to follow your dreams, graduating from medical school on the same day as her daughter.

Dr. Cynthia Kudji Sylvester and Dr. Jasmine Kudji have just graduated from med school and started their residencies, but the two stunners aren't sisters -- they are mother and daughter.

Cynthia had always dreamed of becoming a doctor, but her formal education was sidelined when she welcomed her daughter, Jasmine. When Jasmine decided to go to medical school, her mother went along, as a fellow student.

MOTHER AND DAUGHTER DOCTORS

The mother and daughter duo hit the headlines when it was revealed that they had graduated from medical school at the same time, Cynthia at 49, and Jasmine at 26.

Cynthia, who became a nurse, and then a nurse practitioner, had put her dream of medical school aside in order to raise her daughter as a single mother. She revealed:

Medical school at that time was out of the question.

CLINGING TO THE DREAM

Cynthia never gave up her dream and inspired her daughter to follow in her footsteps, and so, in 2013, the two entered medical school. Seven years later, they graduated, and it is shared to belive that Jasmine and Cynthia are mother and daughter, and not sisters.

DOCTORS AND RESIDENTS

The two women are now starting their residency at Louisiana State University Health, Jasmine in general surgery, and Cynthia as a GP. The mother and daughter are entering the medical profession at a challenging time, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

But Cynthia has revealed that the current crisisonly strengthens her resolve to servethe community as a doctor, at a time when they are most needed. She said:

This is a time when physicians can be leaders, show that we contribute, we make a difference in peoples lives. This is where we get the opportunity to serve.

Jasmine shared a post on Instagram stating that of the countries1,085,783 physicians, only2% are African American women. Thanks to Jasmine and Cynthia'sexample, many more African American women will hopefully be inspired and follow in their footsteps to serve their communities as doctors.

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Check Out This Amazing Mother-And-Daughter Duo Who Graduated from Medical School Together - AmoMama

For her next feat, Stonington softball great Mallory Kane will head to medical school – theday.com

Her father would preach to Mallory Kane and her siblings. Don't be ordinary. Do something extraordinary.

There were times the only frame of reference Kane, a 2016 Stonington High School graduate, had for that goal was softball. She practiced four and a half hours per day with her travel ball team sometimes, all defense, so that she could track down any fly ball hit to the outfield from any angle. She earned an opportunity to play at Division I Lafayette College in Easton, Pa.

And then her sophomore year in college she suffered a career-ending injury, a broken sesamoid bone in her foot. She couldn't run for a year and a half.

It was then, without softball, that Kane, already on a pre-med track at Lafayette with a major in neuroscience, became perhaps her most extraordinary.

Aside from her classwork and labs, she volunteered at the Lehigh Valley chapter of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. She undertook 30 hours of training as a crisis counselor, volunteering on a crisis text line. She became an emergency medical technician. She wrote her senior thesis on pediatric epilepsy. She studied tirelessly for her Medical College Admission Test (MCAT). She interviewed for admittance to medical school at seven different programs.

She got admitted to medical school at three universities, including UConn, where she will begin Aug. 12.

The exhilaration in her voice is palpable.

"It's so exciting," the 22-year-old Kane, a 2020 Lafayette grad, said in a telephone interview this week. "I feel like I've been working for as long as I can remember to achieve this goal. I feel like I'm the luckiest person ever. I feel like everything is coming together. Being in medical school will be such a special feeling.

"... They say you should have at least one interview by Oct. 15 and it was Dec. 20 that I got my first interview. After that, they just kept coming. The first was (New York University), which is crazy; it was the highest-ranked institution I interviewed at. I had read books on how to prepare yourself how to interview. I hadn't actually experienced the stress ... being interviewed by physicians is a very stressful experience. It's a very special experience."

Afterward, she called her dad and mom, Bill and Sue Kane, back in Mystic.

"I told them how special it felt," she said. "I felt like I was on a different mission and now there were all these people I related to. It was very motivating."

***

When Stoningtonsoftball coach Ann-Marie Houle first met Kane, she was the little sister of all-state pitcher-outfielder Theresa Kane, a member of theClass of 2014, with Mallory not yet in high school.

"We met her as Theresa's sister," Houle said. "She had streaks of pink in her hair. I thought, 'This is not Theresa.' That was funny. (Mallory will) be so mad at me for saying this. I thought, 'This one's a little bit spunky."

Theresa, now Houle's assistant coach, went on to playat Division I Georgetown. Mallory went on to hit lead-off for Stonington, earning Class M all-state honors for three consecutive seasons as the Bears' center fielder.

A left-handed slap-hitter, Mallory batted .620 as a senior with a single-season program record 57 hits and 36 runs scored. She hit .555 for her career with an astounding 181 hits and 141 runs scored. And yet Houle attests to the fact that Kane was never pretentious.

"When I coach, they're people," Houle said. "That's probably why I loved Mallory. My love and respect for her had nothing to do with statistics. She's kind, so funny.

"When I think about (my son) Josh's doctors, what you like about them, they're nurturing and yet they have the backbone to be a doctor. Mallory makes the hard choices when she has to. She hasn't made easy choices. She's made the hard choices and made it look easy."

When Kane found out in April she was accepted at medical school, she FaceTimed Houle to tell her.

"It's so fun as a coach," said Houle, whose17th season this spring never happened due to theCOVID-19 crisis. "These are the moments that make you so proud. She's kicking butt. She's just the whole package."

Kane started 19 games in left field as a freshman at Lafayette, batting .293. She hit .500 with runners in scoring position. She didn't make an error.

Kane said she still dreams about softball. Her dad taught her everything she knows about the game. Her travel team, the Rhode Island Thunder Gold under coach Dave Lotti, afforded her opportunities to showcase her talent in tournaments across the country.

She believes that background is part of what brought her from a timid Little Leaguer to a confident young woman who knows what to say to individuals as young as 12 and 13 who text her on the crisis hotline.

Kane will soon be honored in a white coat ceremony as she begins medical school, a rite of passage meant to welcome students to the practice of healthcare.

"I wanted to be the one up at the plate," Kane said. "I wanted to be the one diving into home or catching a fly ball. I craved that pressure. I wasn't someone who shied away from that.

"I think there's something to be said for people who want to be the ones. We're on a battlefield right now with COVID and hospitals. Somebody has to do it. Somebody has to step up. I didn't always know what I wanted to do but I knew I wanted to make a difference. I just kind of found myself in science. This is how I can make a difference."

***

Kane describes the arduous process of studying for and taking the MCAT, a 9-hour exam needed for admittance to medical school. It's broken up into four sections: chemistry and physics, critical analysis and reasoning, biology and biochemistry and, finally, psychology and sociology. There is a10-minute break between each discipline.

"Oh, my goodness," Kane said by way of an opening to her explanation. "It's absolutely crazy what they expect. The MCAT, it's extremely intense. I took it in Warwick, R.I., at a testing center. I spent from 8-5 staring at the computer. I studied so long, for months."

Her first practice score wasn't want she expected, which motivated her, she said. By the time she took the actual test, she scored a 516, which Kane said placed her between the 94th and 95th percentile.

"I took the test and then I had to wait a month and a half to get my results," she said. "After the test I came home and I thought, 'It was awful. It was so much harder than the practice test.' I was so nervous. When I found out my score, we were all just crying; there were so many tears."

Just like the hours she spent sprinting after fly balls, studying for entry into medical school required the same level of preparation, Kane said. For example, the critical analysis portion of the MCAT proved to be her most difficult challenge.

"It was all passage-based with tons of background information. To understand anything the passage says ... that was my worst score on the practice one. Like, 'How am I ever going to figure this out?' she said. "That's what I did every single night, force myself to read history articles.

"I got 99th percentile on that section, one point away from a perfect score. It was from the practice. ... Preparation is what leads to good performance, being willing to out-prepare people. I was 5-foot-nothing, 102 pounds at our first weigh-in (freshman year for softball). I was the smallest person in the Patriot League.

"I wasn't going to make it unless I out-prepared."

Kane chose UConn because of its proximity to home, as well as for what she calls a "personality fit."

She is interested in narrative medicine, in which she could use her background as an English minor to help be more attuned to her patients, but she won't need to decide her specialty at UConn for a few more years.

All Kane knows is she's embarking on something that's out of the ordinary.

"They changed the Stonington softball program forever. That can never be disputed ... not for any fame, they never cared about that," Houle said of Mallory, as well as older sister Theresa. "(Bill) wanted them to be great and I agree with that.

"You're only in this life one time; you want to be extraordinary. That puts her on the path to where she is now."

v.fulkerson@theday.com

Editor's note: This is the seventh and finalstory in an occasional series about former local athletes who went on to be part of the medical profession.

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For her next feat, Stonington softball great Mallory Kane will head to medical school - theday.com

Kokomo cardiologist honored with gift to Ivy Tech – Kokomo Tribune

This was a birthday surprise unlike any other a unique party with a rather unusual surprise gift honoring Jim Scheffler, better known by many in Kokomo as cardiologist Dr. Scheffler. Thanks to wife Kathy, and her generous donation, the Anatomy/Physiology Laboratory in Ivy Tech Kokomos new Health Professions Center will be named in his honor.

The gift was unveiled earlier this month with a surprise celebration at the conclusion of a private tour of the new center for healthcare education. Kathy talked about why Ivy Tech, and its students, have such an important spot in their hearts; it all goes back to their own experiences.

Jim and Kathy met while students at the University of California Santa Barbara and both worked while completing their educations. Kathy completed hers at Marymount College in Tarrytown, N.Y., a member of the first graduating class of Marymounts Weekend College program, while she worked for Merrill Lynch. After working for IBM for a number of years, Jim decided to go to medical school at the age of 35. Then, after graduating from New York Medical College, he completed an internship at Dartmouth and fellowships in critical care at Massachusetts General and cardiology at University of Chicago.

We both worked and went to school at the same time, like so many Ivy Tech students do, Kathy Scheffler said. We understand that getting an education is extremely important and the sacrifices are worth it. This is why we believe in Ivy Tech. It provides a support structure for students to get an education and work at the same time.

The Schefflers came to Kokomo in July 1994 when Jim joined Northside Cardiology, which later became part of the Care Group now known as Ascension Heart Care. Kathy Scheffler has been active in the Kokomo community, sharing her talents and enthusiasm as a volunteer for Samaritan Caregivers, Kokomo Community Concerts, Kokomo Symphony, Symposium, and P.E.O. Sisterhood.

Kathy Scheffler was happy to bring some of their closest friends Dr. Kareem and Deina Abbasi and Rodney and Anamaria Shrock to Ivy Tech to help celebrate Jim Schefflers birthday and share their love of Ivy Tech.

The Ivy Tech project provides the best education and support for students of the community, she said. At graduation, a student has the opportunity for a good career and/or the opportunity to continue on to a better career. Education allows our community and businesses to have a viable workforce as well as a better, community-conscious population.

When Ivy Tech announced the campaign to help fund the transformation of the Kokomo Campus, Kathy Scheffler knew she wanted to contribute. I chose the anatomy/physiology room because Jim Scheffler loved physiology in medical school, she said. These studies are the backbone of all medicine. Without that knowledge, nothing makes sense.

The anatomy/physiology room was so perfectly him, she continued. Its hard to find birthday presents for him so the two just came together!

At the birthday party, Ivy Tech Kokomo Chancellor Dean McCurdy extended words of appreciation.

The support from community members like Dr. Jim and Kathy Scheffler has been critical in realizing the dreams of so many people to provide great education in a quality environment, he said. The Dr. James M. Scheffler and Katherine L. Scheffler Anatomy/Physiology Laboratory will be an incredibly important asset in the education of generations of healthcare workers in the Kokomo Service Area.

Ivy Tech lab includes Anatomage dissecting table

Every birthday party needs a little fun and Jim Schefflers birthday party was no exception. But instead of flailing at a pinata or pinning a tail on a donkey, he got some hands-on experience with one of Ivy Techs high-tech educational tools. Guided by Ivy Tech science professor Dr. Gauri Pitale, he navigated some of the many offerings of the Anatomage table.

Ivy Tech Kokomo has three of these computerized anatomy tables to offer life-size digital interactive human bodies that students can dissect and reassemble on a tablet-like surface.

With Dr. Pitales help, Dr. Jim Scheffler examined the heart of one patient, moving digitally down, around, and through the organ he has devoted his life to. He and fellow surgeon Dr. Kareem Abbasi were fascinated by the ability to virtually inspect the patients organs and tissues using the $100,000 machine without the downsides of a real human cadaver.

The Anatomage program is created using detailed images taken in three-millimeter increments from real human bodies. Students can remove layers, such as skin, muscles, and veins, to work with the digital bodies in different ways. Faculty members say that aside from the feel, the digital cadavers offer virtually everything real cadavers do.

The Anatomage allows students to go from studying gross anatomy to even studying minute structures in the body within a matter of seconds, Pitale said. It comes loaded with case studies that show pathologies, enabling students to view the pathology on an actual body instead of having to imagine it.

Pitale, who earned a Ph.D. in Medical Anthropology from Southern Illinois University Carbondale, brought more than 10 years experience teaching at the college level when she joined Ivy Tech Kokomo as an assistant professor last July. She finds the Anatomage table a great benefit to her teaching.

The hands-on learning experience allows students to engage in conversations with themselves and ask me further questions, she said. In terms of pedagogy, that is vital because by engaging students using this tool, they are able to better understand the concepts that I am introducing in class.

The digital dissection table even allows students to view certain body processes in real time.

For example, you can select a blood vessel and choose to have the Anatomage show where the blood flows to and from that vessel, she said. That is incredible, and something students cannot see in an actual cadaver. I really enjoy using it as a tool to teach students.

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Kokomo cardiologist honored with gift to Ivy Tech - Kokomo Tribune

July 24, 1941: Governor expanded medical education in Augusta – The Augusta Chronicle

Bill Kirby

ThursdayJul23,2020at11:30PM

This date in regional history.

JULY 24, 1941

Fulfilling a pledge made the month before, Georgia Gov. Eugene Talmadge announced he would immediately make funds available to expand the medical school in Augusta.

The expansion would mean that 75 freshmen students would be admitted in the fall instead of the customary 48, The Augusta Chronicle reported.

Professors, staff and equipment would also be added, and the plan would be carried out through the combined efforts of the city of Augusta, Richmond County, University Hospital and the Board of Regents, it was announced by W.S. Morris, of the Board of Regents, and Dean Lombard Kelly of the medical school.

Kelly said the governor was "delighted" by the expansion plan because he was keenly interested in training doctors to return to their home communities and to rural sections of the state.

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July 24, 1941: Governor expanded medical education in Augusta - The Augusta Chronicle

MRHS welcomes third year medical students | Gallery | menastar.com – The Mena Star

Mena Regional Health System welcomes third year medical students Sooji Beck and Joseph JJ Williams, NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine, Jonesboro, AR campus of Arkansas State University. The two will soon begin clinical rotations at Mena Regional Health System.

Sooji Beck (pictured left) was born in Seoul, South Korea. At 12 years of age, she and her family moved to Fayetteville, Arkansas. She received a Bachelor of Nursing degree from NWACC in Bentonville, Arkansas and accepted into medical school at NYIT in 2018. When asked about her inspiration to enter the field of medicine, she mentioned a high school science teacher who had encouraged her to believe in herself and always pursue her dreams. She is currently interested in geriatric medicine since that is where the majority of her nursing experience lies, but she is very excited about the opportunity for hands-on exposure involving a wide range of healthcare career options. Sooji and her husband will reside in Mena during her year of clerkship. The couple is looking forward to spending time in the rural area and hope to make their future home in the beautiful state of Arkansas.

Joseph J.J. Willimas was born in Kansas City, Missouri but raised in Northwest Arkansas for most of his life. After high school, J.J. joined the military and served in the Air Force Para Rescue Unit for nine years. He received a Bachelors degree from the University of West Florida in Pensacola, Florida where he served six months as a paramedic with a Level II Trauma Center. During that period, he made the decision to pursue a career as a doctor. His initial inspiration came from his father, a Family Practice and Emergency Department Physician. I remember a specific time at 12 years of age when my father was called into the hospital Emergency Department. Due to certain circumstances that particular evening, I had to travel along on the call. The patient had been involved in a traumatic accident involving a drunk driver. I vividly remember watching my dad as he heroically cared for and sutured the patients wounds. That moment defined my desire to enter the field of medicine and care for patients, shared J.J. Williams.

Currently, J.J. is interested in Family Practice or Trauma Medicine, but looks forward to exploring all areas of health care. He and his family will reside in Mena during his year of clerkship.

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MRHS welcomes third year medical students | Gallery | menastar.com - The Mena Star

NIH selects Dr. Michael Chiang as director of the National Eye Institute – National Institutes of Health

News Release

Friday, July 24, 2020

National Institutes of Health Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., has chosen Michael F. Chiang, M.D., as director of NIHs National Eye Institute (NEI). A practicing ophthalmologist, Dr. Chiang is currently the Knowles Professor of Ophthalmology & Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland, and is associate director of the OHSU Casey Eye Institute. He is expected to begin his new role as the NEI director in late 2020. NEI conducts and supports research and training into blinding eye diseases, visual disorders, mechanisms of visual function, preservation of sight and the special health problems and requirements of the visually impaired.

Dr. Chiang brings extensive experience as a clinician, researcherand educator to NIH. His work in biomedical informatics and telehealth research are particularly important for the future of vision research, said Dr. Collins. I look forward to having him join the NIH leadership team later this year. I also want to recognize Santa J. Tumminia, Ph.D., for her dedicated leadership in serving as the acting director of NEI since October 2019.

As director, Dr. Chiang will oversee NEIs annual budget of nearly $824 million, the large majority of which supports vision research through approximately 1,600 research grants and training awards made to scientists at more than 250 medical centers, universitiesand other institutions across the country and around the world. NEI research leads to sight-saving treatments, reduces visual impairment and blindness and improves the quality of life for people of all ages. The institute also conducts laboratory and patient-oriented research at its own facilities on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland.

Dr. Chiangs own research involves telemedicine and artificial intelligence for diagnosis of retinopathy of prematurity and other ophthalmic diseases, implementation and evaluation of electronic health record systems, modeling of clinical workflow and data analytics. He has been a principal investigator on multiple NIH grants since 2003, and he and his research group have published more than 200 peer-reviewed journal papers. Dr. Chiangs clinical practice focuses on pediatric ophthalmology and adult strabismus.

Dr. Chiang has mentored over 50 postdoctoral fellows, medical students and graduate students. He co-directs an OHSU-wide, NIH-funded vision science training program for pre-doctoral and post-doctoral students, and co-directs an NIH-funded, mentored clinician-scientist program in ophthalmology.

Dr. Chiang is past chair of the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) Medical Information Technology Committee and has served as an at-large member of the AAO Board of Trustees. He is a member of the AAO IRIS (Intelligent Research in Sight) Registry Executive Committee and chair of the AAO IRIS Registry Data Analytics Committee. He serves as Associate Editor for the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association and has served as an Associate Editor for theJournal of the American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus. He serves on the editorial boards for the journals Ophthalmology, Asia-Pacific Journal of Ophthalmology and EyeNet.

Dr. Chiang earned his bachelors in electrical engineering and biology from Stanford University, Stanford, California; his masters degree in biomedical informatics from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City; and his M.D. and masters in medical science from Harvard Medical School and Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Boston.

About the National Eye Institute (NEI):NEI leads the federal governments research on the visual system and eye diseases. NEI supports basic and clinical science programs to develop sight-saving treatments and address special needs of people with vision loss. For more information, visit https://www.nei.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

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NIH selects Dr. Michael Chiang as director of the National Eye Institute - National Institutes of Health

South Korea to train hundreds of doctors to battle future epidemics – Reuters

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea will add 4,000 medical students over the next 10 years to swell the number of its doctors and strengthen the response to future public health crises, government and ruling party officials say.

FILE PHOTO: Medical workers in protective gears walk into a hospital facility to treat coronavirus patients amid the rise in confirmed cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Daegu, South Korea, March 8, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

Authorities flagged the need to train doctors for potential outbreaks of infectious disease worse than COVID-19, which is caused by the coronavirus, pointing to the risk of more frequent epidemics and limited numbers of beds for the sick.

To fill the gap, officials said they plan to step up admissions to medical schools using a combination of new quotas, incentives for students in less lucrative specialities and those who complete a decade of public health work in rural areas.

We will increase the quota for medical students to add more personnel in specialized fields, Kim Tae-nyeon, a lawmaker of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea, said at a policy meeting on Thursday.

The plan is to boost medical school admissions by about 400 a year for the next decade, before returning to a quota of 3,058, which has stayed fixed since 2006.

The government said it would waive tuition and offer full scholarships to about 300 students in areas such as epidemiology, gynaecology or surgery, widely seen as unpopular in contrast with more lucrative plastic surgery and dermatology.

Authorities said South Koreas 2018 ratio of 2.4 doctors for every 1,000 people fell short of an average of 3.5 for nations of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

The Korean Medical Association (KMA) called the governments plan unnecessary, however, saying it was a distraction from real problems in the public health system.

A survey of 27,000 of its members showed 95% opposed the plan, it said, since South Korea has no shortage of doctors. It also aired concern that the rural service requirement would violate students rights.

The National University Hospital Association welcomed the idea of more doctors, but expressed concern about the skewed distribution of doctors and medical facilities, with most hospitals centred on Seoul, the capital.

This week, health authorities warned that virus infections among arrivals from abroad could push new cases on Friday beyond 100 for the first daily tally in three digits since April.

(Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: open tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7 in an external browser.)

Reporting by Sangmi Cha; Editing by Josh Smith and Clarence Fernandez

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South Korea to train hundreds of doctors to battle future epidemics - Reuters

How Adam Nessim Built a 6-Figure Education Consulting Business While in Medical School – LA Progressive

Nessim was born in Manhasset, NY and is currently a 4th-year medical student at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Growing up, Nessim was always in and out of the orthopedists offices or operating rooms. This was my first real exposure to the healthcare field as no one in my family is a healthcare professional. Once I started looking further into the profession, the pieces really just started to fit together. As he gained interest in the field of sports medicine, all he had to do was equip himself with knowledge. So far, his plans were predictable join college, get into medical school, start practicing, and help patients. However, when starting medical school, Nessim saw a need to develop an all-encompassing advising program that helped develop and guide pre-medical students from early on in their careers. So he started an educational consulting company called The Premed Consultants that would help students across the country get into medical school. The program is meant to not only make better students but better people. Noble and well-received, his companys success encouraged Nessim to pen an e-book titled My Premed Advisor Told Me I Couldnt Do It, So I Did It Anyway. The book was an instant success and he has also garnered over 50,000 followers on Instagram and 70,000+ followers on TikTok.

Nessim is a hard-working individual and left himself no choice. As a medical student, he had to spend numerous hours studying, working on research, and taking exams.

Nessim is a hard-working individual and left himself no choice. As a medical student, he had to spend numerous hours studying, working on research, and taking exams. To be a successful entrepreneur along with that requires strategies that arent for the weak of heart. And Nessim is anything but that. To keep his work-life-study balance, he had to make some uncomfortable decisions. He says, The best habit I ever picked up is waking up early. I think youd be shocked at the amount of work you can get done by waking up at 5 am and hustling for three straight hours before the rest of the world wakes up. Also, weirdly being an entrepreneur is what keeps me balanced.

Although he runs a 6-figure education consultancy business, his goal wasnt to make money. According to him, If you have plans to start a business while also earning a doctorate, it cant be about the money. You need to be so passionate about building your business, that this is where you should want to spend all of your free time.

What we do with our time is what we do with our life. Nessim, says he wants to make the most of his time, and his mission is to help his students to do the same while achieving their dreams.

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How Adam Nessim Built a 6-Figure Education Consulting Business While in Medical School - LA Progressive

Advanced Heart & Vascular Institute – The Boca Raton Observer

Special Expertise: Interventional Cardiology

Specialties: Interventional And Clinical Cardiology; Endovascular Surgery; Heart FailureAnd Transplant; Advanced Cardiovascular Imaging

Medical School: Ross University School Of Medicine

Internship And Residency: Internal Medicine, UCLA School Of Medicine

Fellowships: Advanced Cardiac Imaging, Yale University School Of Medicine; Cardiology With Emphasis On Heart Failure And Transplant, University Of Colorado Denver School Of Medicine; Interventional Cardiology And Endovascular Surgery, LSU School Of Medicine, New Orleans

Triple board certified cardiologist Eli S. Levine, M.D., handles all matters of the heart, including stenting coronary and vascular blockages, cardiac imaging, congestive heart failure, valvular heart disease and more. He has one mission: to save lives.

Dr. Levine is the founder of the Advanced Heart & Vascular Institute in Boca Raton. He is one of the highest-volume cardiac interventional operators in the country, performing a widearray of complex coronary and endovascular interventions. He is also involved in teaching residents and students at Florida Atlantic Universitys Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine and actively conducts original research through Excel Clinical Medical Trials.

As interventional cardiologists, we are lucky to be in a unique position: We can diagnose cardiovascular problems, medically treat the disease and surgically intervene, if needed, he says.

Caring for patients hearts is very personal for him. He was inspired to be a cardiologist after he witnessed his father having a heart attack.

My father nearly died in front of me, Dr. Levine says. Within an hour, he received a stent in his coronary artery, saving his life. Thats when I became certain I would do interventional cardiology as my specialty.

After years of prestigious education and multiple subspecialty fellowships, including an advanced cardiac-imaging fellowship at Yale University, where he trained with pioneers of nuclear cardiac imaging, Dr. Levine decided to start his own practice in order to provide highly individualized care without the worries that come with being employed by large corporations.

Most procedures can be done in-house with state-of-the-art equipment, including 3-D echocardiography, nuclear stress testing, loop recorder implantation, arterial and venous ultrasounds, and venous ablations. Cardiac and endovascular interventions are done at Boca Raton Regional Hospital and Delray Medical Center.

Patients come to the Advanced Heart & Vascular Institute with chest pains, unexplained shortness of breath, arrhythmias, palpitations and fatigue as well as for early heart disease detection and prevention.

What I like about the heart is that its a very complex yet simple organ, Dr. Levine says. That, along with perpetually evolving technology, makes the specialty fascinating and worthwhile.

Location: 951 N.W. 13th St., Ste. 5B, Boca Raton, FL 33486, 561-235-5621, advancedhvi.com

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Castle Connolly Doctor ID: 128CC154955

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Advanced Heart & Vascular Institute - The Boca Raton Observer