Putin is in power forever – The Hofstra Chronicle

Russias recent national referendum approved a change to the countrys constitution that would allow Vladimir Putin, the current president of Russia, to run for another two six-year terms after his current term ends in 2024. If Putin wins, he will be able to hold the position of Russian president until 2036. To put it simply, Putin, who is 67, will presumably be inpower until his death.

Russian plebiscites, or referendums, are a mechanism of direct democracy. Citizens vote directly on policy questions and amendments, unlike in a representative democracy, where elected officials make decisions on citizens behalf. This particular plebiscite lasted from Thursday,June 25, to Wednesday, July 1. The vote was originally scheduled for Wednesday, April 22, but was delayed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Preliminary results counting 50% of voters showed that more than70% of Russian citizensvoted in favor of the amendments, which secure and expand Putins presence in Russian law.

The referendum also included religious amendments, like the assertion of marriage as a heterosexual union and the enshrinement of Christianity. These amendments also allow executive overreach onto the judicial and legislative bodies, permitting Putin to vicariously redirect proposed legislation to the constitutional court, which is completely under his thumb. Other amendments also confirmed that Russias parliamentary rule is above international law and that inter-state actors, presumably corporations, will not face legal consequences for actions legal inside Russia but illegal internationally. Another amendment targeted ethnic minorities in the oblasts, or provinces, of eastern Russia, by establishing that the Russian language was that of nation building and pushing an agenda of prescriptivism to eradicate local cultures.

It is clear that Putin seeks to create a more conservative Russia, based upon a facade of Christianity and his own personal taste in leadership. Ratifying anti-LGBTQ legislation because of tradition is certainly not palatable, but insulating future dictatorships is a much higher degree of totalitarian rule. With these amendments, Putin orchestrates the illusion of judicial review. Under the guise of constitutional legitimacy, Putin now has the ability to supplement the legislative process by appealing legislation to the constitutional court. If the legislation is determined to be constitutional, then Putin will sign it into law. However, if the legislation is not constitutional, it will be sent back to the Duma, the lower house of parliament.

The twist in this situation is that members of the constitutional court are confirmed by the federation council, a body appointed and controlled by you guessed it the federation president, Vladimir Putin. Byshelling outjudicial systems and simultaneously intensely surveilling any legislation put through parliament, Putin has an even moredefinite graspon what is and what is not allowed in Russia.

For Americans, this should be a warning sign.The resemblance between Putinsexecutive overreachand our ownjudiciaryis sobering:While justices on the Supreme Court are confirmed by the Senate, they act outside of democracy once in power. Legislation in Congressional gridlock is sent to the Supreme Court and interpreted by justices who are not obligated to a constituency or concerned about public approval. The cause of this is the failure of the American Congress. By failing to reach consensuses and enact legislation, Congress has allowed the U.S. Supreme Court to assume the role of a legislature, making decisions on our countrys behalf without the restrictions of public approval or any formal public election. Putins courts act as an appendage, consistently ruling in favor of his personal agenda. While one can distinguish between the ideology of Vladimir Putin and the record of the Supreme Court, judicial elitism can be utilized for an autocracy. The theater of the Russian system and the realness of our own should be fuel for change.

America may not have the theatrical propaganda machine that Putins Russia does, but it certainly is not fully committed to the democracy it claims to love.

In the modern day, people view Russia and its affiliates as a global disgrace. In the eyes of most Western liberals, Russia is an authoritarian, oligarchic nation of vodka drinkers too depressed to maintain their populations birth rate.

Of course, the veil of stereotypes never fullyobscures the truth. The Russian Federation is a nation of 146 million, with an economy and industries mostly vested in oil, gas, agriculture and technology. The explosion of Russian neoliberalism following the collapse of the Soviet Union (Russias once-powerful predecessor) gave a mirage of hope to the young, broken country. However, hyper-privatization burdened and drove the populace down into gloomy, vehement nihilism.

What I wish is for people to look not through the lens of overblown Russiagate narratives, but to instead analyze politics for themselves. Russia is a nation of educated and hopeful youths yearning for a better future, much like us. Rumors of future protests inMoscowshow resilience and hope. The Putin dictatorship may seem ridiculous and far from likely to young Americans, but ultra-corporatism, broken legislative bodies and a skyrocketing wealth gap do not seem too outlandish for both the American and Russian futures.

Daniel Cody is a sophomore journalism major from Pennsylvania who writes about politics and culture.

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Putin is in power forever - The Hofstra Chronicle

Nick Cannon and several other Black celebrities attended Farrakhans July 4 speech – Forward

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Louis Farrakhan

Several prominent Black celebrities attended anti-Semitic Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhans July 4 public address, the Anti-Defamation League revealed Wednesday, citing the Nation of Islams own newspaper.

Among those in attendance included actor Nick Cannon and former NBA basketball player Stephen Jackson, both of whom had been criticized in the past week for making anti-Semitic statements, as well as music artists TI, 2Chainz, Rick Ross, Jay Electronica, Stephanie Mills and Syleena Johnson.

Farrakhans Independence Day speech - which he had described as his message to America - had been scheduled to be broadcast on the Fox Soul streaming network until the company cancelled its airing following an online uproar. In his speech, which was still carried on the Nation of Islams various platforms, Farrakhan described Jews as Satan and the enemy of God. The speech has been seen 1.2 million times on YouTube, according to the ADL.

In the days following the speech, Jackson was criticized for supporting Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver DeSean Jackson after the football player posted Instagram messages praising the Farrakhan speech and publicizing an anti-Semitic quote falsely attributed to Adolf Hitler. Cannon, who hosts Wild n Out for VH1, was fired by parent company ViacomCBS on Tuesday after refusing to apologize for having made anti-Semitic statements on an episode of his podcast that was recorded a few days before the Farrakhan speech.

Rapper TI and his wife, singer-songwriter Tiny Harris, praised Farrakhans speech in an interview with The Final Call, the Nation of Islams newspaper. Every time I hear the Minister speak, hes always extremely honest, poignant and his words [are] immensely powerful because of the honesty that he dares to speak from. TI said. I was honored to be here, I was completely honored by the invitation as I always am and the message was necessary.

Farrakhan has long enjoyed the support of Black celebrities, despite his long history of anti-Semitism and homophobia. A 2018 seven-album box set released in 2018 by the Nation of Islam featured Ross, Stevie Wonder, Snoop Dogg, Common, Chaka Khan and Damian Marley.

Aiden Pink is the deputy news editor of the Forward. Contact him at pink@forward.com or follow him on Twitter @aidenpink

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Nick Cannon and several other Black celebrities attended Farrakhans July 4 speech - Forward

Not all the statues need to come down – Forward

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Apotheosis of St. Louis statue of King Louis IX of France, namesake of St. Louis, Missouri in Forest Park, St. Louis, Missouri.

Three monumentsthe statue of Saint Louis in Missouri, the Judah P. Benjamin monument in North Carolina, and buildings named for Woodrow Wilson at Princetonallow us to understand how Jews should think about their place within the American racial order and how antiracists should think about Jews within the struggle to disrupt the legacies of racism.

Although not included in the earlier article on anti-Semitic statues in The Forward, The Apotheosis of St. Louis is attracting attention. A petition started by local activists has called for its removal. Local Catholics and the Archdiocese of Saint Louis, alongside far-right agitators, have rallied to the monuments defense.

Erected in 1906 to honor the namesake of the city, the statue features Louis IX, who was canonized in 1297, only 20 years after his death. There is no doubt about his anti-Jewishness. Stigmatizing Jews as blasphemous usurers, insisting that a layman, as soon as he hears the Christian faith maligned, should defend it only by the sword, with a good thrust in the [Jews] belly, as far as the sword will go, Louis presided over a mass burning of the Talmud. Thousands of Jews were murdered in his crusades even before crusaders left his lands.

Still, the statue of Saint Louis should become a teachable monu-moment rather than be removed. It was not erected to glorify anti-Jewish racism. Monuments, even those that happen to celebrate Judeophobes, do not necessarily extol Judeophobia. Nonetheless, Saint Louis anti-Judaism is central to what made him a revered Christian monarch.

The response to the call for the statues removal indicates that many Christians still do not realize that persecuting Jews was key to defining Christian values and to the development of modern racism. Christians must acknowledge this toxic source of white Christian nationalism that is at the heart of the global rise of authoritarian populism today.

The Judah P. Benjamin monument in Charlotte, North Carolina, on the other hand, demands reckoning on the part of Jews. Born Jewish in 1811, Benjamin became a wealthy slave owner in New Orleans; was elected Senator from Louisiana in 1852; held cabinet positions in the Confederacy; and served as a right-hand man to Jefferson Davis.

Israels Consul General Dani Dayan is leaving after four years. What has he learned? He talked to editors-in-chief Jodi Rudoren and Andrew Silow-Carroll, of the Forward and the Jewish Week, about American Jewrys relationship with Israel. Watch here.

The marker to him in Charlotte was installed in 1948 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Little more than a tombstone but located nearby the recently installed Black Lives Matter art installations, viewers today read, this monument was erected in his honor by Temple Israel and Temple Beth El, the Jewish congregations of Charlotte. Despite the inscription, both synagogues rescinded their support and both want the marker removed.

Like the thousands of Confederate statues that litter the South, the Benjamin marker should be removed. It is time to take down this wall celebrating the Lost Cause narrative, a petrified tale to the glory of white supremacy. These monuments were explicitly built to venerate a cast of characters committed to the racial caste system of the South, martyrs to a supposedly noble cause that Southerners wanted to preserve following the Civil War.

What can no longer be repressed, however, is that Jews, just like other white Southerners, must reckon with their place within slavery and Jim Crow, the foundations of white privilege. For Benjamin was hardly alone. As Bertram Korn concluded in his pioneering study, [Jews] participated in the buying, owning, and selling of slaves, and exploitation of their labor, along with their neighbors. Jews behavior seems to have been indistinguishable from that of their non-Jewish friends. Not one Jewish political figure or writer from the South ever expressed any reservations about the justice of slavery or the rightness of the Southern position. What enabled the success of Jews like Benjamin in a racial state was their passport of whiteness.

How this passport of whiteness functioned for Jews is made clear in the recent article by Jonathan Sarna about the removal of Woodrow Wilsons name from Princetons public policy school and residential college.

As Princetons president, Wilson prevented the enrollment of Black students, believing they were an ignorant and inferior race. As U.S. President, he brought the Lost Cause narrative into the White House by screening The Birth of the Nation. Most significantly, he oversaw the re-segregation of the federal government.

Sarna reminds us, however, that Wilson was a hero to Jews. The first to hire Jewish and Catholic faculty at Princeton, he was a progressive on immigration, he endorsed the Balfour Declaration, and he supported Louis D. Brandeis as the first Jew on the Supreme Court.

Sarnas point is that while Wilson was hardly perfect, he was once lionized for his virtues and we cannot simply start erasing from our public spaces the names of those figures whose views we now hold contemptible. I made the same point about Saint Louis.

But Sarnas conclusion comes from a one-eyed way of looking at the past: Wilson was bad to Blacks and good to Jews. Too often repeated by scholars of Jewish studies, this way of comparing pasts fails to address how racism was institutionalized.

Indeed, as scholars including Sarna have shown, social mobility for Jews in America was directly related to the fact that anti-Jewish bias was often elided by the history of anti-Black, anti-Mexican, anti-Chinese, anti-Catholic (and today by anti-Muslim) discrimination. Wilsons legacy should teach us to think of racism as entangled and relational, relative to other groups, not absolute.

We have to appreciate what Albert Memmi called the relativity of privilege. In The Colonizer and the Colonizer, he explained that privilege is relative to the pyramid of petty tyrants, whereby each one, being socially oppressed by one more powerful than he, always finds a less powerful one on whom to lean, and becomes a tyrant in his turn.

The passport of whiteness has defined the American Jewish experience. Unless we acknowledge this and actively work as antiracists, Jews will continue to be complicit in Americas racial system.

The controversies about these three monuments consequently contain three important lessons about racism and what we can do to dismantle it: (1) Christians must confront the legacy of Christian anti-Judaism in an era of surging white Christian nationalism; (2) Jews need to grapple with our history as benefactors of the passport of whiteness; and (3) we cannot understand anti-Semitism in the United States without simultaneously acknowledging how it is entangled with anti-Black and other racisms.

Jonathan Judaken is the Spence L. Wilson Chair in the Humanities at Rhodes College in Memphis, and currently completing a monograph, Critical Theories of Anti-Semitism: Confronting Modernity and Modern Judeophobia.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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Not all the statues need to come down - Forward

Barbra Streisand classic Yentl returns to big screen at The Drive In – Jewish News

Swapping sheitels and shtetl life for tzitzit and study, Barbra Streisands classic 1983 film, Yentl, is hitting the big screen once more at Edmontons outdoor cinema, The Drive In, this weekend.

Based on Isaac Bashevis Singers short story by the same name, Yentl which Streisand stared in, produced, directed and co-wrote, alongside Jack Rosenthal is set in the early 1900s and revolves around a young Jewish woman who, desperate to study the Talmud, disguises herself as a man.

But while she falls in love with her study partner Avigdor (Mandy Patinkin), the woman he loves, Hadass (Amy Irving), begins to develop feelings for Streisands male persona, Anshel.

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Michel Legrands sweeping score and songs include Papa, Can You Hear Me? and The Way He Makes Me Feel, which earned an Academy Award for best original score.

Among the other accolades the film received, Streisand won best director at the Golden Globes, making her the first and only woman to have won inthat category.

Yentl is showing at The Drive In, Edmonton, on Sunday, 19 July, 2pm, http://www.kxtickets.com/whats-on/yentl

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Barbra Streisand classic Yentl returns to big screen at The Drive In - Jewish News

Death to Jews, swastikas drawn on gravestones in southern France – Forward

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Gruissan municipal cemetery, France.

(JTA) About 20 gravestones in a cemetery in southern France were vandalized with swastikas and the words Death to Jews and Death to the French.

The graffiti was discovered in the Gruissan municipal cemetery in the Aude region on Sunday.

The gravestones appear to have been chosen at random and were not broken or toppled, France 3 television reported.

The cemetery has been closed to the public. No suspects have been identified in the attack.

The National Bureau for Vigilance Against Antisemitism, or BNVCA, in a statement condemned the desecration of the cemetery. The statement noted that the town of Gruissan is usually rather calm, rather peaceful, and this aggression surprises and scandalizes us.

The post Death to Jews and swastikas drawn on gravestones in southern France appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Death to Jews, swastikas drawn on gravestones in southern France - Forward

Focusing on flushes and straights in video poker – Atlantic City Weekly

Given optimal strategy in video poker, youll see full houses just about as often as flushes and flushes just about as often as straights.

Paybacks differ widely. The goal of designers is a game thats fun to play, attractive to players and makes a profit for the house. Reflecting true odds in the pay table takes a back seat to all that.

On the player side, payback differences necessitate strategies that are more aggressive toward more lucrative hands.

Lets set aside full houses for now and focus on flushes and straights.

In 9-6 Jacks or Better, youll see full houses an average of once per 87 hands, flushes once per 91 and straights once per 91. In 9-6 Double Double Bonus Poker, its once per 92 for full houses, once per 88 for flushes and once per 78 for straights.

In both games, flushes pay 6-for-1 and straights 4-for-1. And in both games, we treat a one-card draw for a flush with more respect than a one-card draw for a straight.

Its easy to see the difference when we look at hands that include four cards to a flush as well as a low pair vs. four-cards to an open-ended straight and a low pair.

Imagine youre dealt 3-4-6-9 of hearts along with a 6 of spades. In 9-6 Jacks or Better, your average return is 5.74 coins per five wagered if you hold the hearts and discard the other 6. If you hold the pair instead and discard the other three hearts, the average return drops to 4.12 coins.

In 9-6 DDB, the average return for holding the hearts also is 5.74 coins, but the average on 6-6 drops to 3.66. Thats because the two pair return on DDB is only 1-for-1 vs. the 2-for-1 on JB.

Now imagine youre dealt 5-6-7-8 of mixed suits along with a second 6. In 9-6 Double Double Bonus, the average return for holding 5-6-7-8 is only 3.40 coins. Holding four parts of a straight is not as good a play has holding 6-6, at 3.66.

The difference is wider in 9-6 Jacks or Better. The average return on the mixed-suit 5-6-7-8 remains 3.40 coins per five wagered, but the higher two-pair return sends the average on 6-6 rising to 4.12.

There is a difference in the frequency of successful draws. Starting with four cards in the same suit, there are nine remaining cards that could complete your flush. Starting with four cards toward an open-ended straight, there are eight cards that could result in a straight. In the case of 5-6-7-8, any of the four 4s or four 9s would complete the straight.

Coupled with the gap in paybacks, that makes chasing flushes more lucrative than chasing straights.

Its important to separate strategy for flush draws vs. straight draws when a low pair is involved, but there is no such conundrum when the alternative is a single high card. When either four cards to a flush or four to an open-ended straight is accompanied by a Jack or higher, the better play is to discard the high card.

Average returns on a lone Jack are 2.40 coins in 9-6 DDB and 2.43 in 9-6 JB. Averages remain 5.74 on the four-card flush and 3.40 on the unsuited 5-6-7-8 in either game,

So we hold either four to a flush or open-ended straight over a high card in either game, but theres a separation where low pairs are involved. Hold four to a flush over a low pair, but a low pair over four to a straight.

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PokerStars To Host Online Poker Events for the Mind Sports Olympiad – Pokerfuse

PokerStars will host the poker portion of the Mind Sports Olympiad (MSO) during August for the very first time. MSO, an annual event usually held live in the UK, had to be moved online this year due to the continued disruption caused by coronavirus.

Seven events are scheduled in the PokerStars play money client under the MSO brand, each a play money tournament.

MSO is a month-long international gathering of the best board game players in the world, as they battle it out in their own Olympics-style events. Winners are awarded gold, silver and bronze medals.

This year MSO are taking the battle to the virtual felt, and people across the world will compete to become a champion in their chosen game, or an overall hero, the Pentamind, a PokerStars spokesperson told PRO.

We are delighted to be the poker host for the Mind Sports Olympiad 2020 and look forward to providing the best online poker experience out there for all those who compete.

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PokerStars To Host Online Poker Events for the Mind Sports Olympiad - Pokerfuse

Penn students to host free, virtual pre-med conference in August – The Daily Pennsylvanian

The conference is available to all students who wish to pursue a career in medicine.Credit: Sukhmani Kaur

Penn students are hosting a free, three-day virtual conference in August for people interested in pursuing a career in healthcare.

Featuring professional guest speakers and a research exposition, A Future in Medicine: National Pre-Health Conference will be held over Zoom as a substitute for similar events that have been canceled due to COVID-19, rising College junior and founder of the conference Alejandra Bahena said. The conference will run from Aug. 20 to 22.

The event is available to all students undergraduate and postgraduate who wish to pursue a career in medicine and endeavor to become a competitive candidate for medical school and other medical programs. Bahena said the event will consist of hourly presentations from professionals in the medical field, including Penn Medicine professor Lawrence F. Brass and CURF Senior Associate Director for Undergraduate Research Ann Vernon-Grey.

Students will listen to these presentations as well as share their own work in a research exposition.

Looking at the research symposium, I thought it was really cool, rising Haverford College sophomore Tien Vu, who plans to attend the conference, said. I did guided research with Haverford the summer before my freshman year, but it was super accelerated. I want to do more in-depth research.

Bahena said she started the conference because of the COVID-19 pandemic quarantine period and the ensuing shift to online learning, which limited access to resources she and other pre-med students had available during a normal school year, such as mentors and research opportunities.

Bahena hopes to make up for these losses by giving pre-med students access to professionals in the field and the opportunity to learn about each others research through the conference.

I wanted to use this challenge in my life as an opportunity to help students, said Bahena. For students to feel more prepared and motivated for the school year, and for students to have the opportunity to explore different medical career paths and achieve their professional goals.

Bahena came up with the initial idea of the conference nearly a month ago, and soon reached out to universities, including Haverford and the California Institute of Technology, and medical organizations to find sponsors and guest speakers. The team organizing the conference also includes rising College sophomore Hiba Hamid and rising College junior Jacqueline Friskey.

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Im applying to M.D./Ph.D. programs in May, 2020 CalTech graduate and conference attendee Alexa Lauinger said. I thought [the conference] would be helpful to get more information on the directions that those careers can go in.

Both Bahena and attendees said they hope the conference will continue in the future.

If [the conference] is annual that would be great, said Vu. Every year Id get to meet other people who are pre-health and learn from them."

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Penn students to host free, virtual pre-med conference in August - The Daily Pennsylvanian

Loeb Teaching Fellows announced – Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

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Hagemann, Mian, Miller-Thomas awarded fellowships for 2020-22

The 2020-22 Carol B. and Jerome T. Loeb Teaching Fellows at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have been named. They are (from left) Ali Y. Mian, MD, an assistant professor of radiology; Michelle M. Miller-Thomas, MD, an associate professor of radiology; and Ian S. Hagemann, MD, PhD, an associate professor of pathology and immunology, and of obstetrics and gynecology.

Ian S. Hagemann, MD, PhD, Ali Y. Mian, MD, and Michelle M. Miller-Thomas, MD, have been named the 2020-22 Carol B. and Jerome T. Loeb Teaching Fellows at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

The fellowship program was established in 2004 with a gift from Carol B. and Jerome T. Loeb to advance medical education. The two-year fellowship provides recipients with dedicated time to focus on implementing innovative ideas into teaching and training that enhance the education of medical students and residents.

The dedication and commitment of the Loebs over the years have been an important driver of medical education at Washington University, said Eva Aagaard, MD, senior associate dean for education and the Carol B. and Jerome T. Loeb Professor of Medical Education. Their unwavering support has encouraged and nurtured excellence in modern medical education. The Loebs have played a major role in the medical schools ongoing efforts to revise and update its curriculum.

The new curriculum will begin its rollout this fall with a focus on addressing health inequities locally and globally, integrating basic sciences and clinical experiences throughout all four years of medical school, and increasing professional and mental health support programs for students.

The Loeb Teaching Fellowships support the goals of the new curriculum with projects that emphasize compassionate medicine and innovation, Aagaard said. Not only will the fellows selected have the potential to significantly influence our students and residents, but the Loeb fellows innovative projects will positively impact the field of medicine. I am excited to see the projects develop and take shape.

The fellowship program also is supported by The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital.

Hagemann, an associate professor of pathology and immunology, and of obstetrics and gynecology, will augment the medical schools admission process by creating situational video interviews exploring topics such as cultural humility, ethical reasoning, and resilience. Applicants will be able to complete this part of the interview process remotely. Current medical students will work with faculty and staff to create the interview prompts and evaluate the responses.

This project is particularly timely as the COVID-19 pandemic has increased interest in using technology to communicate remotely, said Hagemann, who serves as a subcommittee chair for admissions.

Its also innovative in that we are focusing on competencies that are essential for success in the medical profession but that have not been a dedicated focus of our admissions process, Hagemann said. Holistic admission practices have the potential to increase diversity in the medical profession. We are excited to have a new way to get to know our applicants better and to share Washington Universitys values as we select tomorrows leaders in biomedicine.

Miller-Thomas, an associate professor of radiology, and Mian, an assistant professor of radiology both in the neuroradiology section of the universitys Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology will collaborate on creating materials aimed at teaching the fundamentals of radiology. This information will be woven into the new curriculum at large.

Revising the medical schools overall curriculum has provided the opportunity to rethink how radiology is taught in our medical school, Miller-Thomas said.Radiology plays a major role in modern medical care.While most of our students will not become radiologists, nearly all will be engaged with medical imaging during the course of their careers.

Added Mian: The Loeb Fellowship will allow us to create an integrated and updated radiology primer that will also serve as a durable online resource for medical students. The project will support the course directors, bridge the preclinical and clinical years, and span across all phases of the new curriculum. We share the universitys goal of propelling our future physicians into practice, in part by gaining a systemwide understanding of radiologys role in patient care.

Washington University School of Medicines 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Childrens hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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Loeb Teaching Fellows announced - Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis

Paired During a Medical Rotation, and Then in Life – The New York Times

Dr. Charles Murphy was one of the first physicians in New York State to treat the initial wave of patients who tested positive for Covid-19.

This was in early March at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center, where Dr. Murphy, a 33-year-old pulmonary and critical care fellow, worked with Dr. Nina Suda, a 33-year-old endocrinology fellow. The two had been dating for three and a half years.

I was so proud of Charlie because I know what a terrific, dedicated doctor he is and just how much he cares about his patients, said Dr. Suda, who met Dr. Murphy in June 2015 during their internal medicine residency at the Montefiore Medical Center / Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx.

Believe me, said Dr. Suda, laughing, whenever I talk about Charlie, I could go on and on and on.

By late March, Dr. Murphy learned he had been exposed to the coronavirus, becoming one of the first physicians in the state to be sent home to quarantine. Dr. Suda began wondering just how long she could go on if the man she loved and was engaged to had contracted the virus.

When Charlie called to tell me what was going on, my heart just dropped to my stomach, she said. My mind just went blank. I had a million questions, and yet I was speechless.

A shortage of Covid-19 tests meant Dr. Murphy would need to isolate for two weeks, watching for symptoms.

Needless to say, I was very worried and very scared, said Dr. Suda, who was working an early-afternoon shift at an outpatient clinic at the hospital when she received Dr. Murphys frightening call. Charlie never called me at that time, she said. I knew something was wrong.

Dr. Murphy, who lived in the nearby Hamilton Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, said he felt helpless in quarantine. It was a scary, uncertain time in my life, he said. It was so odd to be sitting at home and knowing I couldnt help those patients who had been counting on me.

He said his parents were helpful by dropping off food and other supplies at his front door. But, he added, It was really Nina who helped me keep my sanity.

Dr. Suda brought Dr. Murphy dinner most nights during his quarantine, which made me feel quite conflicted, Dr. Murphy said. Despite the fact that I really wanted to see her, I knew, as she did, that her presence put her at great risk of getting sick, or worse, he said. I would have never forgiven myself had anything ever happened to her.

But it didnt matter what I said or what I thought, Dr. Murphy said with a sigh, because she was not taking no, for an answer.

Both took many precautions. Each wore a surgical mask and stayed at least six feet apart. And when Dr. Suda, who lived on Manhattans Upper West Side, turned the knob on Dr. Murphys front door, she used a disinfectant wipe.

Other than following the standard safety procedures, I tried to act as normal as possible whenever I was around him during those two difficult weeks, Dr. Suda said. I didnt want to make him feel like he was radioactive.

But all Dr. Murphy was feeling from his first day of quarantine, until his last, was fine.

During the first five or six days, he had not developed any symptoms of the coronavirus, which was a very good sign, said Dr. Suda, who also was treating Covid-19 patients in April and May. By Day 14, he was emotionally spent but still exhibited no signs that he had contracted the virus.

Suddenly, she said, we felt this great sense of relief come over us, and we were thrilled to be going back to our normal, everyday lives.

Dr. Suda first took notice of Dr. Murphy during their orientation in 2015 at the Montefiore Medical Center / Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He had just returned from a trip to India, and she could just about see the flecks of sunshine still dancing on what she called his beautiful, dark complexion.

He already had the tall and handsome thing going on, Dr. Suda said. He also had this charming glow about him that made me curious about his ethnicity, but we both had very busy jobs ahead of us, so I let it go at that.

Dr. Murphy, who is 6 foot 2, says he is 100 percent Irish, and maybe Im like 10 percent Italian. Dr. Suda, 5-3, is of Indian descent.

The first time Dr. Murphy said he spotted her, I remembered thinking to myself, Man, I wouldnt mind going out with her. She was gorgeous.

They became friends, and both secretly hoped to be paired in the same medical rotation (a two-week span during which they would share the same patients and specific duties). And just maybe when their shifts were over, they could have dinner and drinks.

Incredibly, a whole year went by and we were never paired in the same rotation, Dr. Murphy said. It was hard to believe.

At the beginning of their second year as residents, in July 2016, they were finally paired in an exclusive medical rotation for the first and only time.

Once was all they needed. From a personality standpoint she was very easy to talk to, Dr. Murphy said. She was exceedingly warm and bubbly with a self-deprecating sense of humor, which I found very charming.

On top of everything else, she was so beautiful, he added. It only took a few short months for me to realize that everything I wanted in a woman was there right there in front of me and I knew she was the one I wanted to marry.

They began seeing each other before and after shifts, with plenty of subjects to cover, including education and family.

Dr. Suda graduated cum laude from Columbia, where she played four years of Division I tennis, and was a team captain. She also received a medical degree from Drexel.

Dr. Murphy graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and received a medical degree from Louisiana State University in New Orleans. He also served as a Teach for America Corps member between college and medical school, from June 2009 to June 2011, teaching elementary special education in New Orleans.

Other than his overall intelligence, Charlie was such an interesting person to me, a world traveler with so much of his experiences to share, Dr. Suda said. He often challenged me on an intellectual level, which was very attractive to me.

The couple married on June 13, their originally scheduled date. But the presence of the coronavirus and all the social restrictions attached to it forced them to abandon plans for an elaborate, 250-guest wedding ceremony that was to be followed by a Western reception meaning I was to wear a white wedding dress and he a tuxedo at the Hyatt Regency Jersey City on the Hudson.

The couple decided instead to have a much smaller ceremony and reception on the backyard deck of the brides parents home in Kinnelon, N.J. Fifteen guests, including her parents, Dr. Abhay Suda and Dr. Anjuli Suda, and his, Julia Murphy and George Murphy of Fairfield, Conn., and others via Zoom, watched as the bride and groom stood before Pratap Singhal, a Hindu priest.

Though the couple opted not to exchange vows, the grooms mother read the Thomas Moore poem In the Morning of Life. The bride said it was chosen for its bittersweet sentiments, given Covid.

When June 13, 2020

Where The home of the brides parents in Kinnelon, N.J.

No Scrubs The bride wore a handmade ivory silk bridal lehenga and veil with zardosi, sequin and crystal embroidery. Typically in an Indian wedding the bride wears all red and maroon, but since this was a fusion wedding we wanted both cultures to be represented, the bride said. The groom wore a custom ivory banarasi brocade sherwani, keeping the consistency with maroon accents on the collar and wrist.

The Attendants The grooms best man was his fraternal twin brother, Tom Murphy. The maids of honor were the brides sister, Dr. Nisha Suda, and her cousin, Raveena Suda.

First Dance The couples first dance was to Barfly by Ray LaMontagne.

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Paired During a Medical Rotation, and Then in Life - The New York Times

How the country’s largest school systems, NYC and LA, are planning for the fall amid the pandemic – ABC News

The largest school systems in the country will likely have very different starts to the upcoming school year.

Earlier this week, Los Angeles announced that when classes resume Aug. 18, students will be fully remote indefinitely.

Come September, New York City plans to begin the year with a hybrid model, with students attending school both in-person and online, the city announced last week.

An entrance to Public School 159 is seen locked in the Queens borough of New York City, July 8, 2020.

The updates come amid a nationwide debate over the reopening of schools during the coronavirus pandemic. Teacher unions have pushed back against reopening, particularly in states where COVID-19 cases are on the rise.

The American Academy of Pediatrics has advised that this year's goal should be for students to be "physically present in school" if it is safe for students and staff -- with proper precautions in place and a remote learning backup plan should an outbreak spring up.

Much of the decision-making about whether to reopen schools is likely to come down to the daily positivity rate, or infection rate -- a measure of how prevalent the virus is in a given neighborhood or city. Cities with a low daily positivity rate may be able to reopen schools, with caveats, while those with a high rate of new infections may not be able to resume in-person learning.

New York City and Los Angeles demonstrate how two cities in very different stages of the pandemic are approaching reopening schools.

After peaking in early April, COVID-19 cases, deaths and hospitalizations have been on a steady decline in New York City, which could enter phase 4 of the state's reopening plan as early as next week. Los Angeles County, meanwhile, has reported record cases and deaths in recent days, and has been rolling back some of its reopening plans.

"You can't reopen schools where there is broad community transmission, just because it will only add fuel to the fire," said ABC News contributor Dr. John Brownstein, an infectious disease expert at Boston Children's Hospital and professor at Harvard Medical School. "If you kept case numbers down and the percent positive down, then there are strategies you can put into place to open schools in a safe way."

Dr. Taison Bell, a critical care and infectious disease physician at the University of Virginia, told ABC News he would not feel comfortable with schools opening in communities with high rates of transmission.

"The most important thing is the level of viral activity in the community," he said. "We don't know as much about kids, but we know that there is high transmissibility between adults.

In announcing the plan for New York City's public school system and its 1.1 million students, Mayor Bill de Blasio said the approach "maximizes in-person instruction while protecting health and safety of our students and educators."

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks to the media in New York City.

The preliminary plans have schools forming cohorts of students that will come in-person on set days at a reduced capacity that takes social distancing recommendations from the city's health department and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention into account. That could look like at least half the student population in the classroom five days every two weeks, or one-third of students in person five days every three weeks. The optimum classroom size is between nine and 12 students, Chancellor Richard Carranza said. In 2019-20, the average class size was 26.1 students, according to the city's Department of Education.

Families can opt for all-remote learning -- but most likely will not. According to a city survey of 300,000 parents, 72% prefer sending their children back to school if safety measures are in place. Faculty with underlying medical conditions that might make in-person learning risky can also apply for accommodations, Carranza said.

When schools do reopen, students and staff will be screened upon arrival for symptoms. The city has not elaborated on what that will look like in its reopening plan, only that it will be based on the "latest health guidance." School spaces themselves will be reconfigured to allow for physical distancing and there will be a designated "isolation room" should someone become ill. HVACS and air conditioners will have improved ventilation, everyone will be required to wear face coverings and all rooms will have hand sanitizer. Each night, the buildings will be sprayed with a disinfectant. More information is expected in the coming weeks on diagnostic testing and contact tracing protocols, as well as extracurriculars.

All this is based on whether the city continues to limit community spread of COVID-19. This week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that schools in the state can reopen if the daily coronavirus infection rate in phase 4 regions is under 5% and must close if the rate surpasses 9%. Those percentages are based on World Health Organization recommendations for community transmission, a spokesperson for the governor's office told ABC News.

The positivity rate in the city has held steady recently at around 2%.

"New York can create a more nuanced opening approach based on what happens in a community," Brownstein said. "All the components of that strategy" -- from monitoring for illness, social distancing and mask-wearing to ventilation and the hybrid learning model -- "are core public health activities that we have been thinking about all along."

Clustering -- keeping the same group of students with the same staff and limiting mixing -- is also key, the doctor said, since screening measures may not catch pre-symptomatic transmission.

Social distancing and mask-wearing will pose challenges, especially for younger children, Brownstein noted.

"It is not going to be 100% enforceable, but every little bit that is done can reduce transmission," he said. "The more that we can do, the more that transmissions will be reduced, the more cases will come down, hospitalizations will come down and ultimately deaths."

Hybrid models can provide flexibility, Bell said, but there is a level of uncertainty. For example, if too many parents choose to send their children to school, it could complicate the models.

Since New York City announced its plans, Philadelphia has also said it will start the year with a hybrid approach. Its test positivity rate is around 2%.

The positivity rate in the Los Angeles area was approaching 10% when superintendent Austin Beutner announced that the Los Angeles Unified School District would be starting the school year remotely.

"The health and safety of all in the school community is not something we can compromise," he said. "The news about the spread of the virus continues to be of great concern."

That decision can be at odds with the needs of the district's nearly 700,000 students and their families, Beutner acknowledged. Through surveys, parents have said their children had struggled to learn online after schools closed in March.

LAUSD Superintendent Austin Beutner speaks during a press conference at Western Avenue Elementary School in Los Angeles, June 5, 2019. Mayor Eric Garcetti, school board members and labor leaders gathered to discuss the loss of Measure EE, a parcel tax for school financing, in the polls and how they will fight to find money for the school district.

Weighing the risks of no in-person instruction, a new report from the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine advised that schools prioritize reopening in the fall, especially for students in kindergarten through fifth grade -- for whom distance learning can be a struggle -- and for those with special needs. The study noted that children risk falling behind academically through remote learning, which could "exacerbate" inequities.

At a briefing Wednesday on reopening schools, Dr. Annette Anderson, deputy director of the Center for Safe and Healthy Schools, said the organization knows of more than a dozen states that have not addressed equity within their plans.

Closing schools might mean missed meals and unreliable broadband internet at home could limit academic access. But there are risks to opening too soon as well, experts say.

"By not controlling this pandemic at a high level, you are putting the risk of not even opening altogether," Brownstein said. "And that [will] lead to a bigger impact on low-income populations."

Parents Angelina Hayrapetyan, 38, and Again Nazliyan, 34, participate in a protest highlighting inadequacies in their children's online education outside the Glendale Unified School District Headquarters, amid the outbreak of COVID-19, in Glendale, Calif., July 13, 2020.

One approach may be to prioritize children who need to attend in-person classes the most, Bell said. In New York City's plan, where in-person learning could be just one day a week, there are additional models that could allow for in-person attendance five days a week, and other models for schools serving students with disabilities, the mayor said.

Schools may also look to make up for lost time. Where possible, the Los Angeles school district is looking to add one-on-one tutoring after school and on Saturdays to help students "accelerate their progress," Beutner said.

The Los Angeles school district plans to have final plans on at-school programs by the first week in August. When it does eventually bring students back to the classroom, the district has said it plans to test students and staff regularly and conduct contact tracing, along with other practices such as wearing masks and social distancing, Beutner said, noting that places that have "done the best in responding to the virus" -- such as South Korea, Denmark, Germany and Vietnam -- have followed all of those measures. Beutner estimates it will cost about $300 a year, per student, to test students and staff weekly, as well as family members of those who test positive for the virus.

Cars line up for coronavirus testing at Hansen Dam Recreation Center, July 7, 2020, in Los Angeles.

"Ideally, doing testing on all children and staff before starting school would be best," Bell said, adding that, unfortunately, there may not be the infrastructure to do that.

In addition to Los Angeles, other cities where COVID-19 cases have been increasing have recently announced that the school year will be completely remote to start. These include Houston, Atlanta, San Diego, San Francisco and Nashville.

During this time of crisis, "parents will be less anxious if there is a plan," Bell said.

Still, deciding whether to send your child to school, if you have the option, is also "tough," said Brownstein, who lives in the Boston area and said he plans to send his two children back.

"There is low community transmission in Massachusetts right now. It makes sense to let our kids get the education that is so valuable," he said. "My logic changes dramatically when test positivity is high, hospitalizations are high and mortality data is increasing. It depends what state that parent lives in right now."

A sign states, "We miss our Short Avenue Families," at the closed Short Avenue Elementary School in Mar Vista, Calif., on July 13, 2020. Los Angeles campuses will not reopen for classes on Aug. 18, and the nations second-largest school system will continue with online learning until further notice, because of the worsening coronavirus surge in the state, Supt. of the Los Angeles Unified School District Austin Beutner announced.

Schools could be involving parents in the process, such as bringing them in to see the classroom environment, Anderson said. "Right now, schools must convince parents and teachers that returning to schools is safe," she added.

For now, all eyes will be on the data, especially for cities that plan to follow a hybrid approach.

"Only the future will show us which plans are the most effective," Bell said.

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How the country's largest school systems, NYC and LA, are planning for the fall amid the pandemic - ABC News

No One Has to Get Their Period Anymore – The Atlantic

Few are as passionate as Yen about the possibility of a world with far less cyclical bleeding. Its my crusade, said Yen, who also co-founded and runs Pandia Health, a birth-control delivery company. This is my moonshot. People who have periods spend an average of 2,300 days of their lives menstruating. If more people chose to silence their periodor even just dial down the volumethat would mean a decrease in iron deficiency (which women experience at far higher rates than men), and even fewer plastic tampon applicators littering landfills.

Yen envisions the period of periods soon coming to an end. But even though menstruation is often messy, painful, and expensive, its a meaningful fixture of adulthood for some, and one that can be hard to let go of.

Gabrielle, a 24-year-old who lives in St. Petersburg, Florida, got her first period in fourth grade. (The Atlantic allowed her and others in this story to use their first name only, to protect their privacy.)

It felt incredibly, incredibly unfair, she told me, to have been the first among her friends to menstruate. There were all these little moments where it was embarrassing and bad and painful and weirdsneaking off to the bathroom with bulky pads stuffed in her shirt, swimming while on her period, learning how to use tampons. Then, at 20, Gabrielle got a hormonal IUD (intrauterine device) for birth control and, as a side effect, stopped getting regular periods. It feels really good to not worry about keeping the bathroom well stocked or missing a day of work, she said. I will keep getting an IUD until Im ready to get pregnant.

Read: The tampon: a history

Today, any doctor will tell you there is no medical necessity for periods unless youre trying to conceive. The body preps for pregnancy by thickening the uteruss lining, like a bird building a nest for her eggs; hormonal birth control prevents pregnancy, in part, by keeping the uterine lining from ever building up. Many of the roughly 19 million Americans who rely on the pill, the shot, IUDs, implants, patches, or rings see a change in their periodoften its lighter, but it can also disappear altogether. In clinical trials, more than 40 percent of the Liletta IUDs users no longer menstruated by the end of the products six-year life. More than half of people who get the Depo-Provera shot every three months will become amenorrhoeic within a year, and almost 70 percent in the second year. And anyone using the pill, patch, or ring can safely skip scheduled withdrawal bleeding.

But getting a lighter flow as a side effect of birth control is different from choosing a contraceptive method in the hopes of turning off a period completely, and there are all sorts of reasons someone would want to do so. The cost of so-called feminine products can add up to thousands of dollars over a persons lifetime: A recent study found that nearly two-thirds of low-income women surveyed in St. Louis couldnt afford menstrual-hygiene products during the previous year. (This study, and others cited in this story, did not specify whether participants included trans men or nonbinary people who get periods). Amenorrhea can be a medical necessity for people with certain health conditionssuch as those born without an intact uterus and vagina. Its also a treatment option for heavy bleeding or otherwise painful periods, which afflict about one in five women, and can help relieve symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), which affects 6 to 12 percent of U.S. women of reproductive age. Or, a period simply may be one burden too many, especially during a pandemic: A tweet in March proclaiming that menstrual cycles also need to be suspended until this ordeal is over started racking up hundreds of thousands of likes.

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No One Has to Get Their Period Anymore - The Atlantic

How to find Comet NEOWISE this weekend – The Globe and Mail

Members of the Hamilton Amateur Astronomers club set up at Binbrook Conservation Area to look at Comet NEOWISE and other celestial bodies on July 13.

Carlos Osorio/The Globe and Mail

Comets are like cats, Canadian comet hunter and author David Levy once wrote. They have tails and they do precisely what they want.

Fortunately for backyard stargazers, Comet NEOWISE, a giant ball of ice and gas that is currently hurtling through our planetary neighbourhood, seems to want to put on a show. It is not as easy to spot as some of the great comets of the past. However, it is one of the best in years and makes an easy target for observers with clear, dark skies or even under city lights when helped out with a good pair of binoculars.

The comet was discovered in late March by NASAs Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, an earth-orbiting satellite whose acronym, NEOWISE, gives the comet its name. Since then, the comet has been racing through the inner solar system, reaching its closest point to the sun on July 3. It is now on the outward leg of its brief visit and for the next week or so will be well-placed for viewing at twilight in the Northern Hemisphere.

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Comet NEOWISE, as seen over the Binbrook Conservation Area.

Carlos Osorio/The Globe and Mail

Comets are icy fragments left over from the formation of the solar system. They range from less than a kilometre to tens of kilometres in diameter and spend most of their time far from the sun where they are too small and too faint to observe.

Its only when a comet draws near to the suns warmth that the celestial magic happens. Frozen gasses, including water vapour and carbon dioxide, which make up the bulk of the comets mass, are released, forming a glowing ball, or coma. Dust particles freed up by the vaporizing ice trail away from the comet, catching the sunlight and forming a tail that grows longer and brighter the closer the comet is to the sun.

All of this looks far better in a photo, where a long exposure can reveal the full extent and colour of the tail in all its glory. In most cases, what the eye sees, is only the diffuse glow of the coma, which may appear as a tiny fuzzball in the sky, sometimes with a stubby tail sticking out to one side.

Thats essentially how Comet NEOWISE appears now and this weekend is prime viewing time across most of Canada. The comet is low in the sky, skirting the northwestern horizon at dusk. To find it, start looking about one hour after sunset roughly 10 p.m. You need a good view to the northwest that is free from obstructions and preferably as dark as possible (I found it by observing from my local schoolyard in Toronto.)

The Globe and Mail (Source: Skyandtelescope.org)

For city dwellers, there are no bright stars in this part of the sky, but the familiar pattern of the Big Dipper can be found by looking higher up, where the dippers handle reaches nearly overhead. The dipper can serve as a guide for where to sweep the sky with binoculars.

If youve seen a comet before, youll know exactly when youve found it. If not, be patient. As long at the northwestern sky is cloud free and you are looking where the map indicates, the comets distinct glow should pop into view.

If you are underwhelmed by what you see, consider that Comet NEOWISE will be about 103 million kilometres away when its at its closest to Earth next week. But by the time it reaches the farthest extent of its elongated orbit, it will be more than 100 billion kilometres away. The comet will not be seen in our skies again till sometime around the 89th century.

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How to find Comet NEOWISE this weekend - The Globe and Mail

Teaching Today Requires Transformation and Innovation – Hawaii Business Magazine

Interview with Robert Landau, Founder and Strategist, Two Roads Education

Landau is an education consultant and leader and the former executive director of the Hawaii Association for Independent Schools.

What do you envision for education in the future?

This is the million-dollar question! I think of students sitting at the feet of Socrates or Confucius and draw a straight line to the creator of experiential education, John Dewey, who eloquently stated that If we teach todays students as we taught yesterdays, we rob them of tomorrow.

So why are we still using the factory model from the 1800s to educate our children in 2020? Just think, a child born at the turn of the 21st century will be 21 in a few months. Our first 21st century teachers will be in schools in a few years.

I am a futurist through and through and I believe that educators must be aligned to other sectors like technology, scientific research, medicine and law. These sectors change daily. Change is the only constant. No one in education should ever be complacent.

We need to prepare our children to be competitive in the global economy as the world shifts, automates and disrupts; to that end, I envision a future where colleges will accept students based on the content of their character accomplishments, not their grades or test scores.

I am currently involved in a project where students will work in cohorts focusing on the major problems and challenges of our time. Covid-19 has presented the education sector with tremendous challenges. I look at these challenges and I see an opportunity for major disruption in the education sector that ultimately will benefit students by radically transforming our systems, structures and priorities.

What is the role of Hawaiis business community in helping make such schools a reality at scale?

Collaboration! For too long schools have built a barrier between graduation requirements and relevance in the real world. For years now we have been hearing that 50% of jobs of the future have not yet been created. We know that many college graduates lack the critical thinking and innovation skills needed to work in these environments. We know that internships and apprenticeships expedite the learning process.

As mentioned above, I am currently working on a project that will give students unprecedented amounts of time to join the business community via extended internships and apprenticeships to gain exactly this type of experience and exposure.

Classic work study programs already exist but do so with insufficient amounts of time to make these experiences relevant and transformative. Why? Because students are bound by schedules, courses, credits and lots of extraneous work.

So much time is devoted to unreasonable and unrealistic courses and credit work. Educators need to leverage the business community to create a streamlined link to higher education.

Students spend 13 years in a regimented credit-based program, only to enter college for more credits. From my direct experience in transformational schools, students are ready for more intense work-based experience as early as 4th grade. Just last year, 3rd-5th graders in my former school started a reef-safe sunscreen company that reimbursed investors within three months!

What do Hawaiis education and business leaders need to do together to ensure that our kids succeed in this 21st century?

As progressive educators we love to tell the stories of former students who were hired by tech companies out of high school. We share anecdotes about students who started their own businesses and those who developed their own patents. In fact, at one of my former schools, two high school students invented a portable incubator for premature babies that ran on a chemical reaction that produced heat. These are the true success stories in education!

With the proliferation of technology and the emergence of self-taught entrepreneurs and inventors, why do we continue to think traditional K-12 schools are better than real-world opportunities that young people experience while doing internships and apprenticeships?

I lived in Switzerland for 22 years and a majority of 16-year-olds left formal school to start apprenticeships. They worked in banks, factories, businesses, garages and shops. They moved up the ladder within a real-world environment and enjoyed successful careers. We need to completely blur the lines between schools, businesses and nonprofits. We have early college programs lets create more early career programs as well.

What advice do you have for local working parents?

Right now, our working parents have the same options theyve had for decades: public, public-charter and private schools. During these unprecedented times, many parents are turning to home school networks or forming cooperatives. Before this global pandemic parents assumed their children would be supervised by these institutions, Monday through Friday. Most schools even offer early morning and after school programs. On those unusual days when the child is ill and cannot go to school, working parents faced a dilemma they have now experienced for months and for the foreseeable future.

Unfortunately, the primary focus to get kids back to school is a square peg in a round hole. The numbers dont add up so older students will continue the hybrid models that will keep children home for parts of every week. The much-used phrase, new normal will continue to be abnormal for working parents. Its time to be innovative, creative, and strategic about the way we educate our young people. My advice for working parents is to seek out ideators and futurists who are thinking about alternative models of education.

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Teaching Today Requires Transformation and Innovation - Hawaii Business Magazine

Twitter says 130 people were targeted in hack that hijacked accounts of Elon Musk, Joe Biden – CNBC

Twitter CEO and Co Founder, Jack Dorsey addresses students at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), on November 12, 2018 in New Delhi, India.

Amal KS | Hindustan Times | Getty Images

Twitter said late Thursday that about 130 people were targeted in a cyberattack that took control of high-profile accounts to promote a bitcoin scam.

"Based on what we know right now, we believe approximately 130 accounts were targeted by the attackers in some way as part of the incident," the social media firm tweeted.

"For a small subset of these accounts, the attackers were able to gain control of the accounts and then send Tweets from those accounts."

The hack, which took place on Wednesday, compromised the accounts of several prominent figures in business and politics.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Amazon boss Jeff Bezos, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, U.S. presidential candidate Joe Biden and former president Barack Obama were all affected, as well as the corporate accounts of Apple and Uber.

The accounts were seen posting tweets trying to convince people to send them bitcoin, with the promise of sending back double the funds in return.

Previously, scammers have used the names and profile pictures of people like Musk to lure people into sending them cryptocurrency. But on Wednesday, all of the accounts involved were genuine and belonged to the people targeted.

"These attackers were the equivalent of stealing a McLaren F1, taking it for a joyride and then crashing it into a telephone pole 4 minutes later," Alex Stamos, the former chief security officer of Facebook, told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Thursday.

"There is so much more damage that could have been done."

According to blockchain analysis firm Elliptic, the hackers received $121,000 from over 400 payments to three separate bitcoin addresses. Roughly half of those payments were made from U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchanges, Elliptic added.

Twitter said it believes the hack was what it called a "coordinated social engineering attack" on its employees in other words, insiders at the company were tricked into handing over access to internal systems and tools.

"The biggest area of risk for almost any company is the insider threat," said Stamos. "To operate your business, you have to provide data and access to thousands and thousands of employees."

On Thursday, Twitter said it was "working with impacted account owners and will continue to do so over the next several days."

"We are continuing to assess whether non-public data related to these accounts was compromised, and will provide updates if we determine that occurred," the company said.

It's not clear how much control the hackers had over the profiles they compromised for instance, whether they gained access to users' direct messages and other sensitive information. However, the company said there was no evidence the attackers accessed users' passwords, adding: "Currently, we don't believe resetting your password is necessary."

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is now looking into the attack, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

A Twitter spokesperson said the firm had nothing further to add.

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Twitter says 130 people were targeted in hack that hijacked accounts of Elon Musk, Joe Biden - CNBC

Tesla’s Berlin Gigafactory Will Apparently Have A Rooftop Rave Space – Boss Hunting

Elon Musk has once again taken to Twitter, providing an update on the Tesla Gigafactory in Berlin currently being constructed. The infamously eccentric and absolute meme-lord of a billionaire CEO offered a sunny concept rendering in addition to what are either, a) real clues about the end product, or b) just more shitposting, as per the usual.

The most notable of these clues/shitposts involved a possible indoor/outdoor rave space on the roof. Which sounds like a joke at first but only provokes doubt when you consider Musks tendency to operate on, how shall we put this unconventional cerebral frequencies. That and the fact he publically took it to a poll earlier this year (which yielded an overwhelming 90.2% vote in favour of said Tesla Gigafactory Berlin rave space).

Our prediction? Rave space or not, Musks own tracks RIP Harambe and Dont Doubt ur Vibe, as well as a bit of Rammenstein apparently, will be blasted on repeat. So locals can look forward to that if nothing else, I suppose.

Musk went on to answer a handful of queries, of which the following additional details were revealed:

The Tesla Gigafactory in Berlin is scheduled for completion sometime in July of 2021, with the automaker having previously stated its desire to kick-off production around this time. Incidentally, as noted by Robb Report, this date coincides with the European launch of the Model Y.

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Tesla's Berlin Gigafactory Will Apparently Have A Rooftop Rave Space - Boss Hunting

How were Twitter accounts of Bill Gates, Elon Musk and others hacked? – The New Indian Express

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How were Twitter accounts of Bill Gates, Elon Musk and others hacked? - The New Indian Express

Elon Musk claims mysterious brain chip will be able to cure depression and addiction: Its both great and terrifying – The Independent

Elon Musk has revealed more details about his mysterious brain-computer chip startup Neuralink, claiming that it could be used to help cure addiction and depression.

Mr Musk founded Neuralink in 2016, though few details about how the technology will work have been revealed. After receiving more than $158m (125m) in funding, Neuralink announced in a 2019 presentation that it had developed a sewing machine-like device capable of connecting brains directly to computers.

More information about Neuralink will be revealed on 28 August, Mr Musk said on Thursday, prompting Twitter user Pranay Pathole to ask the billionaire entrepreneur what future capabilities could be expected.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

Can Neuralink be used to retrain the part of the brain which is responsible for causing addiction or depression? Itd be great if Neuralink can be used for something like addiction/ depression, he asked.

Mr Musk replied: For sure. This is both great and terrifying. Everything weve ever sensed or thought has been electrical signals. The early universe was just a soup of quarks and leptons. How did a very small piece of the universe start to think of itself as sentient?

In the short-term, Neuralink will be used to treat brain diseases such as Parkinsons, while the long-term ambitions for the technology is to allow humans to compete with artificial intelligence.

An early version of the system has already been tested on animals, and human trials are expected to begin at some point this year.

Ultimately, Mr Musk hopes to achieve some sort of symbiosis with AI, to a degree that would make human language obsolete.

This could occur within the next five to 10 years, Mr Musk told the Joe Rogan Podcast earlier this year. You wouldnt need to talk, he said. You would be able to communicate very quickly and with far more precision.

Such an eventuality is not entirely far-fetched, according to leading scientists in the field of brain-computer interfaces. A 2019 report by the Royal Society outlined how neural interfaces could allow people to communicate silently by reading each others minds.

A robot designed by Neuralink would insert the 'threads' into the brain using a needle

Neuralink

A fully implantable neural interface connects to the brain through tiny threads

Neuralink

Trials of Neuralink's fully implantable neural interface system will begin in 2021

Neuralink

Neuralink says learning to use the device is 'like learning to touch type or play the piano'

Neuralink

A robot designed by Neuralink would insert the 'threads' into the brain using a needle

Neuralink

A fully implantable neural interface connects to the brain through tiny threads

Neuralink

Trials of Neuralink's fully implantable neural interface system will begin in 2021

Neuralink

Neuralink says learning to use the device is 'like learning to touch type or play the piano'

Neuralink

People could become telepathic to some degree, able to converse not only without speaking but without words through access to each others thoughts at a conceptual level, the report stated.

Not only thoughts, but sensory experiences, could be communicated from brain to brain. Someone on holiday could beam a neural postcard of what they are seeing, hearing or tasting into the mind of a friend back home.

Trials of Neuralinks fully implantable neural interface system will begin in 2020(Neuralink)

There have also been doubts about the technology, with the renowned linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky questioning whether it would be possible to communicate using only thoughts.

Developing methods by which if Im thinking of moving my hand, you might be able to pick up the electrical signals that say hes trying to move his hand, thats conceivable, Mr Chomsky told the website Inverse in 2017, shortly after the project was made public.

But he added: Trying to find out what Im thinking, lets say, theres no way of developing technology because we dont understand how to proceed. The technology... is just nowhere near advanced enough.

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Elon Musk claims mysterious brain chip will be able to cure depression and addiction: Its both great and terrifying - The Independent

Largest cities in Colombia reverse reopening as coronavirus threatens to collapse healthcare – Colombia Reports

Colombias capital Bogota and the countrys second largest city, Medellin, will reinstate partial lockdowns as COVID-19 is threatening to collapse healthcare.

In Bogota, Mayor Claudia Lopez said Saturday that she will reinstate a rotating lockdown starting Monday in the hope that a reduction of people in the street will prevent a collapse of the capitals healthcare system.

The mayor said she will maintain this partial lockdown until after the projected peak in Bogota has passed at the end of August. Residents in areas under lockdown will not be allowed to go to work.

Lopez said she would guarantee a universal basic income and food distribution in the locked down parts of the city.

Medellin Mayor Daniel Quintero said Saturday he will lock down the center of the city and change the so-called pico y cedula system that allows people to go outside based on the last number of their ID card.

Economic activity outside the central 10th District will continue after Monday until further order, according to the mayor.

Both cities have seen alarming increases in COVID-19 infections after the government of President Ivan Duque gradually began reopening the country, spurring an acceleration of the the pandemics spread.

While the hospitals in Colombias third largest city, Cali, are close to collapsing, Mayor Jorge Ivan Ospina ruled out a second lockdown in his city.

His health secretary, Carlos Rojas, said the city hall may impose similar measures as in Bogota and Medellin if necessary.

The reversal of the relaxations of a lockdown that was initially called on March 25 is a setback for Duque who has been trying to reactivate the economy since late April.

The lockdown and the relaxations have increased tensions with Congress that wants the president to implement a universal basic income to prevent widespread hunger.

Colombias largest healthcare organizations have said to have no confidence in Health Minister Fernando Ruiz for failing to provide personal protection equipment to hospital personnel.

The National Health Institute (INS) reported 6,803 infections and 211 deaths on Saturday, the highest numbers since the first infection was confirmed in March.

While the pandemic is projected to reach its peak in Bogota in late August, in other parts of Colombia the peak is expected in September, according to INS director Martha Ospina.

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Largest cities in Colombia reverse reopening as coronavirus threatens to collapse healthcare - Colombia Reports

The plight of Japans Geisha in these times of social distancing – Happytrips

Social distancing during these times of COVID-19 is adversely affecting Japans one of the most fascinating professions. Known for their grace, skills, and beauty, Geishas are now facing hard times with social distancing being on top of every nations priorities.

In Akasaka, located in the city of Tokyo, there used to be about 400 Geishas once upon a time, and now there are barely 20 of them. The chances of having a new Geisha apprentice is also very low. The centuries-old profession is going through a terribly rough time, and it is feared that there may come a time when this will completely cease to exist.

But cant the profession be practiced even while doing social distancing? Not in the real terms, according to Ikuko, who is the big sister of Akasaka geisha district. She says that conversations break down if you are sitting two metres apart, and Geishas are known for their conversation skills. The passion and intimacy is lacking when two people are sitting at a distance in this job. Also, with their big and beautiful wigs, it is quite difficult for them to wear masks.

With the Coronavirus spread across the world, Japans Geisha business saw a decrease in engagements by 95 percent. Geishas are even asked to follow new rules, such as they cannot pour drinks for their customers, there should be no touching or handshakes, and they are required to sit 2 m away from the customers.

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The plight of Japans Geisha in these times of social distancing - Happytrips