Connecticut man’s arrest on armed-robbery charges in Jamaica Plain actually a homecoming of sorts – Universal Hub

A Connecticut man arrested early Sunday on charges he robbed a man of his scooter in Jamaica Plain is actually a Roxbury native who only last week won early cancellation of his probation on a federal cocaine-distribution conviction stemming from a search of his Roxbury room in 2009 during a murder investigation, court records show.

Just this past Thursday, US District Court Judge F. Dennis Saylor cut Christopher Jamison, 35, free from the remaining 2 1/2 years of his federal "supervised release" after both Jamison's attorney and the US Attorney's office in Boston agreed he had not gotten into any trouble since his release from prison in November, 2017, had never tested positive for narcotics and had a "stable living condition" that included a full-time job as a maintenance worker for a property-management firm just outside Bridgeport, where he had lived since his release.

The original five years of supervised release was a condition of his plea deal in 2011 on the coke charge, which also included a ten-year federal prison sentence, less time he had served in state custody following his initial arrest in January, 2009.

As part of the deal, federal prosecutors agreed to drop a charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition for the gun loaded with one bullet police found during the search of his room in his mother's apartment in an investigation into the shooting murder of Anthony Perry on Centre Street in Jackson Square in January, 2009.

The Suffolk County District Attorney's office, in fact, had originally charged Jamison with Perry's murder just a couple days after Perry''s death, but dropped all its charges in January, 2011 - about two months after federal prosecutors formally charged him as a felon in possession of a handgun for the gun found in his room.

Federal prosecutors later added a second charge - possession of cocaine with intent to distribute - before reaching the plea deal with his attorney in June, 2011. Had he gone to trial, he was facing up to 20 years in prison if convicted for the gun loaded with a single bullet and 18 bags of cocaine police say they found in his room.

According to an affidavit by an ATF agent who worked on the case, Jamison was convicted on a state cocaine-distribution charge and resisting arrest in Roxbury District Court in 2006.

Prosecutors almost weren't able to use the gun and cocaine because two BPD cops assigned to guard the apartment Jamison shared with his mother didn't stay outside while a detective obtained a search warrant but instead went inside and made themselves comfortable. A state judge ruled that was a serious enough Constitutional violation to toss out the evidence - but then ruled that because the detective who sought the search warrant developed her information independently, with no connection to the two couch sitters, the evidence was not tainted and so could be used against Jamison.

At the time of his arrest in 2009, police described Jamison as a member of the H Block Gang, which had a long running feud with the Heath Street Gang, based at what was then the Bromley-Heath Apartments, outside of which Perry was gunned down.

In 2006, Jamison's testimony before a Suffolk County grand jury led to the conviction of a Heath Street member, Lamory Gray, for the murder of an H Street member on Humboldt Avenue in the heart of H Street territory. Jamison refused to testify at Gray's trial, citing the Fifth Amendment, but the prosecutor relied heavily on his grand-jury statements and the judge refused to let Gray's attorney point out that during the grand-jury proceedings Jamison pointed to the wrong person when shown an array of photos of possible suspects.

In 2012, the Supreme Judicial Court threw out the conviction, saying the judge should not have allowed Jamison's grand-jury statements to be used because Gray's attorney had no effective way to try to rebut them through cross examination.

Innocent, etc.

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Connecticut man's arrest on armed-robbery charges in Jamaica Plain actually a homecoming of sorts - Universal Hub

County executive wants cities to drop opposition to revised officer-involved shooting… – Renton Reporter

The cities of Renton, Kent, Federal Way and Auburn need to drop their legal opposition to inquests of officer-involved deaths, says King County Executive Dow Constantine.

Now is the time for action and accountability, Constantine said in a Monday news release. We want the governments that have filed litigation to block inquests to step aside so we can move forward and get to the truth.

But the mayors of each city, including Mayor Armondo Pavone, responded Monday that they plan to continue the lawsuit and want Constantine to restore an inquest process that is fair, transparent, just and legally acceptable within his authority.

While we strongly advocate for accountability and transparency, these actions by the King County Executive clearly indicate that he is overreaching his authority, said Pavone.

Six inquests have been on hold in King County for two years, frustrating families and making it harder for witnesses to recall details, Constantine said. The Kent, Federal Way and Auburn police departments each have a inquest case on hold. One of the two Seattle police cases on hold includes the death of a Kent man.

The city of Renton also is part of the suit against the new inquest format, but have no inquest cases on hold.

State law authorizes, and the King County Charter mandates, the investigation of any death involving a member of law enforcement in the course of their duties.

Inquests are fact-finding hearings conducted before a six-member jury. Inquests are designed to provide transparency into law enforcement actions so the public may have all the facts established in a court of law. Inquest jurors answer a series of questions to determine the significant factual issues involved in the case, and it is not their purpose to determine whether any person or agency is civilly or criminally liable. State law requires a jury of no more than six, and no less than four.

It is unfortunate that Executive Constantine has chosen to portray the intent of our cities in this light, Auburn Mayor Nancy Backus said. In truth, we believe that his executive overreach jeopardizes a full and transparent process for the public, cities and families involved and as such, we will fight its implementation.

Federal Way Mayor Jim Ferrell also opposes the changes.

We believe police accountability is more important now than ever, but the inquest process is an imperfect tool for this, and the new rules are unfair, Ferrell said. We believe it is unconstitutional.

After a spike of such deaths in 2017, residents expressed serious concerns about the inquest process in the county and the seeming lack of transparency and accountability, according to the news release.

Sonia Joseph is among the residents who complained about the process after a inquest jury in December 2017 found a Kent police officer feared for his life when he shot her son Giovonn Joseph-McDade, 20, in June 2017. Joseph-McDade died from multiple gunshot wounds after he reportedly tried to use his vehicle to run over an officer after a short pursuit on the East Hill.

In response to the complaints, Constantine put all inquests on hold in 2018, then convened a community group to examine the process and suggest reforms. Many of those reforms were included in an Executive Order that went into effect in October 2018 but has not yet been used with all inquests still on hold because of the lawsuits.

Executive Order includes the following major changes:

Old system: District Court judge presided over hearing

New system: A pool of retired judges serves Inquest Administrators to oversee the process.

Old system: King County Prosecuting Attorneys Office facilitated the proceedings, presents evidence.

New system: Prosecuting Attorneys Office will not participate in the hearing, but will continue administrative functions.

Old system: Limited only to facts and circumstances surrounding death.

New system: Expands the interpretation of facts and circumstances to include questions about department policy and training.

Old system: Jurors were often asked whether the officer feared for his or her life at the incident.

New system: Jurors may be asked whether officers actions were consistent with department training and policies. Jurors will no longer be asked whether officers feared for their lives.

Old system: County did not provide attorneys for families.

New system: Attorneys are provided by the Department of Public Defense, if wanted.

Old system: Involved officer could voluntarily testify or be subpoenaed to testify (officer maintains Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination).

New system: Lead investigator of incident will testify, and chief law enforcement officer (or designee) will answer questions about training and policy. Involved officer can voluntarily testify, but not be subpoenaed. However, if the subpoenaed officer does not testify, may not be represented by legal counsel.

Revised June 15 order: Involved officer may voluntarily testify or be subpoenaed to testify (officer maintains Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination), and officer may be represented by counsel throughout the proceeding regardless of whether they actually testify.

Constantine said the creation and issuance of the 2018 Executive Order was supported by:

Andre Taylor, founder of Not This Time, a community organization focused on reducing fatal police shootings, changing the laws that govern the use of force and rebuilding trust between our communities and the police who are sworn to protect and serve us. His brother Che Taylor was fatally shot by Seattle Police in 2016

Fae Brooks, co-chair of the King County Inquest Process and Review Committee and retired chief of the criminal investigations division of the King County Sheriffs Office

James Schrimpsher, Lodge 27 President of the Washington Fraternal Order of Police

Diane Narasaki, executive director, Asian Counseling and Referral Services

Almost immediately, several cities including the city of Seattle, King County Sheriff, and individual Seattle police officers filed lawsuits challenging various aspects of the inquest process, Constantine said. Three families of the deceased also filed litigation.

The Obet, Lyle and Butts families lawsuits include several items, such as making inquests include potential criminal charges against officers, and giving attorneys the ability to subpoena officers.

The litigation by the cities of Seattle, Kent, Auburn, Federal Way and King County Sheriffs challenge almost every aspect of the inquest system, including: police policies and training should not be part of inquests, disciplinary history of officers should not be allowed, expert testimony should be limited, and inquests should not be presided over by administrators (retired judges). The King County Sheriff contends that the King County Charter exempts it from inquests.

The city of Kent is utilizing the proper legal channels in order to have an impartial court of law settle a significant dispute regarding the interpretation of law, City communications manager Bailey Stober said in a statement. It is clear to us that the county executive is politicizing and attempting to bully South County cities into dropping a suit which highlights significant legal shortcoming of his new inquest process. The process was so out of line that the city of Seattle first filed the lawsuit and was joined by the King County Sheriff, the executives own county law enforcement agency.

On June 9, the Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes announced his intent to withdraw the city of Seattle from legal challenges to the inquest process.

Seeking to find compromise, Constantine this week issued a revised Executive Order to allow involved officers to be subpoenaed to testify, and to allow the officer to have an attorney present during the inquest.

King County will defer to the courts on whether inquests, after 50 years of case law stating otherwise, should now consider criminal culpability as part of the process.

The inquest process created by my 2018 Executive Order puts new emphasis on law enforcement training and lethal use-of-force policies so that departments can be held accountable for creating better, safer ways of policing, Constantine said.

Today (Monday) I am revising my Executive Order to remove objections that some departments and some families raised, Constantine said. My new order will allow the involved officer or officers to be subpoenaed to testify, and will allow officers to be represented by counsel throughout the proceeding regardless of whether they actually testify, he said.

The changes arent enough for Kent city leaders.

Our county executive has attempted to create a system of police accountability utilizing a statutory structure created in 1854, before police departments even existed in Washington, Stober said in a city statement. The executive has used imagination and a false sense of authority, not granted to him by state law, to try and create oversight authority over city police departments in 38 cities, none of which he has the authority of oversee. We firmly believe in police oversight and accountability, but that should be a conversation with the community here in Kent, not made unilaterally from a politician in downtown Seattle. Kent residents know what is best for Kent. King County is the only county in Washington that systematically uses the inquest process for this purpose. Inquests in other counties are extremely rare if not ever used, and for good reason they are not an effective tool for police oversight.

Stober continued.

It is absurd that the executive complains that cities are delaying the process of inquests, Stober said. Because of his rush to change the rules with minimal input, he has caused significant delays in the resolution of inquests. Because of the lack of thoughtfulness, it took his office almost two years to produce the rules once he decided to convene his community work group.

Residents speak out

Taylor, founder of Not This Time, said the cities need to change their stance.

I worked with very hard with Executive Constantine and other community partners to draft a new inquest process that was vastly superior, and focused appropriate attention on police policies and trainings in a way that was fair to everyone, Taylor said in the statement released by Constantine. The fact that certain cities were cowed by their police departments into filing lawsuits against the inquest shows just how far we have to go in creating a society that values and protects people of color. The political leaders of these cities have heard our protests. Now they need to act.

Katrina Johnson, the cousin of Charleena Lyles who was fatally shot by Seattle Police in June 2017, spoke at the Kent protest march on June 11 and delivered a message to Kent Police Chief Rafael Padilla shortly after he spoke about how he will listen to the protesters and the need for the department to do better.

If Kent Police Department wants to stand in solidarity with families and black lives, I need you guys to drop the lawsuit that you have forbidding the inquest from going forward, Johnson said. If you guys want to stand in solidarity with black lives, I need you guys to apologize to Sonia Joseph for killing Giovann Joseph-McDade, for killing Eugene Nelson and many others lives that you guys have taken.

Six King County victims with inquest hearings on hold

Damarius Butts

Seattle Police Department

Date of Incident: April 20, 2017

Butts, of Kent, died from multiple gunshot wounds after a reported shootout with Seattle Police on April 20 when he fled after allegedly robbing a 7-Eleven store, 627 First Ave., in downtown Seattle.

Isaiah Obet

Auburn Police Department

Date of Incident: June 10, 2017

Police say the officer shot Obet after the 25-year-old man entered a home armed with a knife and later tried to carjack an occupied vehicle.

Charleena Lyles

Seattle Police Department

Date of Incident: June 18, 2017

Lyles, 30, was shot seven times in her Seattle apartment by two Seattle Police officers. Officers fired after they said Lyles threatened them with a knife.

Eugene Nelson

Kent Police Department

Date of Incident: Aug. 9, 2017

Nelson, 20, died from multiple gunshot wounds after he allegedly tried to flee in a vehicle while dragging an officer in the 23600 block of 104th Avenue Southeast.

Robert Lightfeather

Federal Way Police Department

Date of Incident: Oct. 30, 2017

Lightfeather, 33, died of multiple gun shot wounds from a shooting at South 316th Street and Pacific Highway South outside the Elephant Car Wash. Federal Way police responded to a 911 caller who reported seeing a man pointing a gun at two men.

Curtis Elroy Tade

Kirkland Police Department

Date of Incident: Dec. 19, 2017

Federal Way Mirror reporter Olivia Sullivan contributed to this article.

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County executive wants cities to drop opposition to revised officer-involved shooting... - Renton Reporter

7 Prominent LGBTQ+ Technologists, Past and Present – Dice Insights

As we celebrate Pride Month, its worth taking some time to think about some of the prominent members of the LGBTQ+ community who have not only made great strides in technology, but also advocated for recognition and equality. From the mid-20th century to today, LGBTQ+ technologists continue to push the industry forward in new and exciting ways. The following is just a small sampling of these technologists:

An English mathematician helped pioneer computer science and artificial intelligence (A.I.)., Turing is perhaps most famous for his work at Bletchley Park, the center of the U.K.s code-breaking efforts during World War II, where he figured out the statistical techniques that allowed the Allies to break Nazi cryptography.

For his wartime efforts, Turing was appointed an officer of the Order of the British Empire. Following the War, he designed an Automatic Computing Engine, basically a computer with electronic memory (a fully functioning example of the ACE wasnt actually something built in his lifetime, however). He also theorized quite a bit about artificial intelligence (one of his core concepts,the Turing test, is still regarded as a benchmark for testing a machines intelligent behavior).

Turing was prosecuted by the British government for his sexual relationship with another man, Arnold Murray. Found guilty, he was chemically castrated and stripped of his security clearance, which prevented him from working for Britains signals-intelligence efforts. A little over two years later, in 1954, he was found dead of cyanide poisoning, and whether it was suicide or an accident has preoccupied historians for decades.

In 1999,Timelisted Turing among the100 Most Important People of the 20thCentury. Five years later, the British government officially pardoned his conviction.

A technology manager for IBM as well as an LGBTQ+ activist, Edith Edie Windsor was lead plaintiff inUnited States v. Windsor(550 U.S. 744), a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case that found that a crucial portion of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) violated the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. The ruling helped legalize same-sex marriage (along with a later case,Obergefell v. Hodges).

At IBM, Windsor worked on projects related to operating systems and natural-language processing. After leaving IBM in 1975, she started a consulting firm. In 2016, Lesbians Who Tech, an organization for lesbian and queer women in tech,set up the Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship, with 40 people selected for its inaugural year of giving.

As a computer scientist at IBM in the 1960s, Lynn Conway helped make pioneering advances in computer architecture. One of her projects, ACS (Advanced Computing Systems), essentially became the foundation of the modern high-performance microprocessor. However, IBM fired her when it discovered that she was undergoing gender transition.

Undeterred, Conway moved on to Xerox PARC, where she worked on still more innovative projects, including the ability to put multiple circuit designs on one chip. She was also key in advancing chip design and fabrication. After her stint at Xerox, she moved to DARPA, and from there to the University of Michigan, where she became a professor of electrical engineering and computer science.

At the turn of the century, Conway began to work more in transgender activism. In addition coming out to friends and colleagues, she also used her webpage to describeher personal history(followed up, much later, by a memoir published in 2012). In 2014, she also successfully pushed for the prominent Institute of Electrical and Electronics (IEEE) Board of Directors toinclude trans-specific protections in its Code of Ethics.

Jon maddog Hall has been the Board Chair of the Linux Professional Institute (the certification body for free and open-source software professionals) since 2015. In addition, hes executive director of the industry group Linux International, as well as an author with Linux Pro Magazine.

In a 2012 column in Linux Magazine, Hall came out as gay, citing Alan Turing as a hero and an inspiration.In fact, computer science was a haven for homosexuals, trans-sexuals and a lot of other sexuals, mostly because the history of the science called for fairly intelligent, modern-thinking people, he wrote. Many computer companies were the first to enact diversity programs, and the USENIX organization had a special interest group that was made up of LGBT people. He also became an advocate of marriage equality.

In 2012, Leanne Pittsford founded Lesbians Who Tech, which claims its the largest LGBTQ community of technologists in the world (with 40+ city chapters and 60,000 members). Lesbians Who Tech hosts an annual San Francisco Summit attended by as many as 5,000 women and non-binary people, and it provides mentoring and leadership programs as well as the aforementioned Edie Windsor Coding Scholarship Fund.

Pittsford is also the founder of include.io, which connects underrepresented technologists with companies and technical mentors. In 2016, she also organizedthe third annual LGBTQ Tech and Innovation Summit at the White House.

The third Chief Technology Officer of the United States (U.S. CTO) under President Barack Obama, Megan Smith also served as a vice president at Google. As U.S. CTO, she spearheaded a number of initiatives, including the recruitment of tech talent for national service. She also recognized the need to build up the governments capabilities in data science, open data, and digital policy.

Smith is currently the CEO and co-founder of shift7, which works collaboratively on systemic social, environmental and economic problems. She is also a life member of the board of MIT, as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the National Academy of Engineering.

Widely considered the first chief executive officer of a Fortune 500 company to come out as gay, Apple CEO Tim Cooktold CNNback in 2014 that he went public in order to show gay children that they could be gay and still go on and do some big jobs in life.

Cook, who once said that being gay is Gods greatest gift to me, joined Apple as a senior vice president in 1998, during some of its leanest years. He quickly solidified his reputation as a peerless operations executive, refining the companys supply and manufacturing chains. As Apple rose to new corporate heights on the strength of its iPod, iPhone, and iPad sales, this supply-chain refinement ensured that millions of devices reached users hands.Cook was promoted to chief operating officer, and stepped in to temporarily head the company when CEO Steve Jobs fell sick with cancer.

Following the death of Jobs in 2011, Cook took the CEO reins and restructured the executive team, with a renewed focus on creating a culture of teamwork and collaboration. He oversaw the launch of the Apple Watch and the AirPods, moving Apple in the long-predicted direction of wearables, and began to shift the companys focus from hardware to cloud-based services such as music and gaming.

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7 Prominent LGBTQ+ Technologists, Past and Present - Dice Insights

The UN is going to consider the Vitaspace Declaration on Radical Life Extension – PR Web

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (PRWEB) June 18, 2020

The Vitaspace project was founded by the famous Russian entrepreneur Andrey Fomenko in 2018. Its goal is to join forces to radically prolong life and find a way (medicine or technology) that will help to preserve youth, restore health, and significantly postpone the aging period. This project was supported by various scientists from all over the world, doctors, and all people who care.

The other day, Vitaspace members published a petition at http://www.change.org calling for the acception of their Declaration on Radical Life Extension to ensure that all people and nations respect its foundations and promote its initiatives. The founders of Vitaspace have also sent an official letter to the UN to consider and support this document.

The Declaration on Radical Extension of Life consists of two parts: the first - Human Rights - proclaims the right to a long, healthy life as the most important value to be respected and protected; the second - Activities - is a practical strategy to overcome the challenges to a long, active life.

As Vitaspace citizens believe, radical prolongation of life and youth is a real opportunity, not an unattainable goal. In their opinion, people and governments of all countries should unite in the fight against the two worst enemies of humanity - aging and death.

Vitaspace is looking forward to the support of all interested people in the distribution of the Declaration, as well as the participation of the UN in the implementation of its ideas.

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The 10 Best Zinc Supplements of 2020 – Healthline

We include products we think are useful for our readers. If you buy through links on this page, we may earn a small commission. Heres our process.

Zinc is an essential micronutrient thats needed for numerous functions in your body. Its also important for a strong immune system and helps keep your skin, eyes, and heart healthy (1, 2, 3, 4).

While there are many food sources of zinc, including meat and shellfish, some people may be at a higher risk of not getting enough zinc in their diets (5).

For example, those with inadequate access to food, pregnant or breastfeeding women, vegetarians and vegans, people with gastrointestinal disorders, and individuals taking certain medications like diuretics and anticonvulsants may benefit from a zinc supplement (5, 6, 7).

The zinc supplements in this review are all manufactured by reputable companies that follow Good Manufacturing Processes (GMP), use high quality ingredients, and test for purity and quality.

Here are the 10 best zinc supplements to help you meet your nutritional needs.

Price: $

Thorne Research is a supplement company that has its own dedicated scientists, labs, and research facilities for nutrition supplements.

All of their products are made in a lab that meets regulations and standards set by NSF International and the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), which is a regulatory body in Australia thats responsible for assessing the safety of supplements.

Furthermore, their products are NSF Certified for Sport. This means that the products are tested to ensure the absence of more than 200 substances banned by many major athletic organizations.

Thorne Researchs Zinc Picolinate is one of the best zinc supplements on the market due to the companys high quality standards, purity of ingredients, and form of zinc used.

Older research suggests that zinc picolinate may be one of the easiest forms of zinc for your body to digest and absorb (8).

One tablet of this supplement provides 30 mg of zinc picolinate. For best results take one tablet per day, or as recommended by your healthcare provider.

Shop for Thorne Researchs Zinc Picolinate online.

Price: $

Chelated zinc is a type of zinc supplement that uses a chelating agent to help your body absorb zinc more easily.

While there are several chelated zinc supplements on the market, one of the best options is NOW Foods Zinc Glycinate softgels.

Each softgel contains 30 mg of zinc glycinate a form of zinc that human and animal studies suggest may be better absorbed than other types of zinc. (9, 10).

All NOW Foods supplements are certified by Underwriters Laboratories and follow GMP to ensure the quality and accuracy of their products. Additionally, these supplements tend to be more affordable than many other high quality brands.

Shop for NOW Foods Zinc Glycinate Softgels online.

Natures Way produces high quality supplements that are more affordable than many other brands on the market.

All of their supplements are manufactured in facilities that NSF has certified as meeting GMP requirements, which include a set of guidelines to ensure accuracy, quality, and purity of products.

In addition, their products are non-GMO, organic, and TRU-ID certified. TRU-ID certification is a relatively new independent testing program that uses DNA to verify the authenticity of ingredients in supplements.

For zinc products, Natures Way offers zinc chelate capsules and zinc lozenges, both of which are budget-friendly.

Price: $

These zinc chelate capsules are gluten-free and provide 30 mg per capsule.

For best results, adults and adolescents over the age of 14 should take one capsule daily with food, or as recommended by your healthcare provider.

Shop for Natures Way Zinc Chelate Tablets online.

200

Price: $

For those interested in lozenges, each of Natures Ways Zinc Lozenges provides 23 mg of zinc, as well as 100 mg of vitamin C and 20 mg of Echinacea purpurea.

Although the label suggests that adults can take up to 6 lozenges per day, this would push your daily zinc intake way over the suggested 40-mg tolerable upper intake level (UL) set for zinc (11).

Taking too much zinc can have adverse effects on your health and may interfere with the absorption of other nutrients. Its important that you check with your healthcare provider before taking high dose zinc supplements to ensure safety.

Shop for Natures Way Zinc Lozenges online.

Price: $$

While its not always obvious, some supplements can contain animal-derived ingredients, making the product unsuitable for vegans.

Some commonly used ingredients that arent vegan-friendly include digestive enzymes like lipase, caprylic acid from milk, gelatin, and magnesium stearate, which is often pork-derived.

Garden of Life is a whole-foods-based supplement brand with products that are certified organic and non-GMO verified.

Their Vitamin Code Raw Zinc is a good option for vegans, as its third-party tested to ensure the product is vegan, as well as gluten-free.

In addition to providing 30 mg of plant-based zinc, each serving also contains vitamin C, a raw organic fruit and vegetable blend, and live probiotics and enzymes to support healthy digestion.

Its recommended that adults take one serving of 2 capsules per day with or without meals. For those who have difficulty swallowing pills, the capsules can also be opened to pour the contents into a glass of water or other beverage.

Shop for Garden of Life Vitamin Code Raw Zinc online.

For those who have difficulty swallowing pills, liquid forms of zinc may be better tolerated.

Price: $$$

Metagenics is a supplement company devoted to transparency and quality. Each ingredient and supplement batch is tested for quality, and you can even access a detailed testing report for the specific supplement youre looking to buy.

As part of their quality assurance, all Metagenics supplements are USP-verified and meet NSF and Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) safety and quality regulations.

Their Zinc Drink liquid supplement contains only water and 15 mg of zinc sulfate per serving, making it free of any additives and preservatives.

For best results, take 1 teaspoon (5 mL) per day of the Zinc Drink between meals. While you can take the supplement on its own, it can also be mixed into a glass of water.

Shop for Metagenics Zinc Drink online.

Price: $$$

Peak Performance supplements are made in the United States and developed for busy athletes and professionals.

In addition to being free of major allergens, including soy, dairy, wheat, egg, shellfish, and peanuts, Peak Performances Raw Ionic Liquid Zinc is also vegan-friendly.

By running zinc through a high pressure, low heat process, the zinc particles in this liquid supplement are very small in size, which may make it easier for your body to absorb.

One full dropper provides 15 mg of zinc sulfate a form of zinc that has been shown to help prevent zinc deficiency, reduce symptoms of severe acne, and possibly help slow the progression of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) (6, 12).

All Peak Performance supplements undergo third-party testing for quality and accuracy. Theyre also manufactured following Food and Drug Administration (FDA), GMP, and NSF regulations and standards.

Adults should take one full dropper (1 mL) once a day on an empty stomach, or use as directed by your healthcare provider.

Shop for Peak Performance Raw Ionic Liquid Zinc online.

Price: $$

Zinc lozenges are small tablets that are meant to dissolve slowly in your mouth. Theyre typically taken for short periods to help reduce the symptoms and duration of the common cold.

In fact, one review found that consuming a dose of 8092 mg of zinc from zinc lozenges per day helped reduce the duration of the common cold by up to 33% (13).

Life Extension has been making high quality supplements for over 40 years.

In addition to being manufactured in an NSF-registered GMP facility, each product has a certificate of analysis thats available for consumers to confirm the quality and accuracy of a specific product.

Life Extensions Enhanced Zinc Lozenges contain 18.75 mg of zinc acetate a form of zinc that has been shown to shorten the duration of colds by up to 40% (13).

Adults can take 1 lozenge every 2 hours up to 8 times a day. However, its not recommended to consume these lozenges for more than 3 days in a row. Also, note that taking this supplement 8 times per day will greatly exceed the daily UL of 40 mg.

Shop for Life Extension Enhanced Zinc Lozenges online.

Price: $$

If youre looking for an organic zinc supplement, NutriGolds Zinc Gold is one of the best options out there.

Each capsule contains 15 mg of whole-foods-based zinc thats derived from an organic sprouted blend, which the supplement claims may be gentler on your stomach.

Additionally, NutritGolds supplements are certified organic by SCS Global Services, an official partner of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) that sets sustainability, quality, and organic standards.

Each product is also third-party tested, as well as non-GMO and vegan certified.

Adults should take 1 capsule daily, or as directed by your healthcare provider.

Shop for NutriGold Zinc Gold online.

Price: $

If youre looking for a gluten-free zinc supplement, Pure Encapsulations is one of your best options.

The products are not only made in a facility thats NSF-registered GMP but also certified gluten-free by the Gluten-Free Certification Organization (GFCO). Plus, they contain zinc picolinate to optimize digestion and absorption.

For optimal results, its recommended to take one 30-mg zinc picolinate capsule daily with food.

Shop for Pure Encapsulations Zinc online.

When choosing a zinc supplement, its important to consider the type of zinc, dosage, and supplement form.

There are several types of zinc supplements. Some, such as zinc picolinate, may be better absorbed, while zinc acetate may be more effective at shortening the duration of the common cold (8, 13).

As for dosage, the recommended daily dosage for adults is typically 1530 mg of elemental zinc per day. Elemental zinc is generally the amount listed on the label of your supplement (5, 6).

Due to potential side effects of excess zinc, its best not to exceed 40 mg per day unless under medical supervision (11).

Taking too much zinc can cause adverse side effects, such as decreased immune function, low copper levels, and reduced HDL (good) cholesterol levels.

Regarding the form, zinc supplements are available as capsules, lozenges, and liquids. For those who are unable or prefer not to swallow pills, liquid forms are likely a better option.

Before buying any supplement, its important to research high quality, trustworthy brands to ensure both safety and accuracy.

Look for supplements that are produced by reputable manufactures and free of large amounts of added ingredients like fillers, additives, and preservatives.

A good way to ensure the quality of a product is to look for ones that have been certified by a third-party company, such as NSF International or Underwriters Labs.

Zinc is an essential nutrient that you need to get enough of in your diet. However, as not everyone is able to meet their need through foods alone, supplements can help reduce the risk of a zinc deficiency.

Of course, not all supplements are created equal. Its important to look for high quality products that have been tested to ensure quality and accuracy.

If youre concerned about your zinc intake, its worth speaking with your healthcare provider to see if a zinc supplement is a good option, as well as to determine an optimal dose.

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The 10 Best Zinc Supplements of 2020 - Healthline

National Weather Service announces radar outage during major upgrade in July – UpperMichigansSource.com

MARQUETTE COUNTY, Mich. (WLUC) - Beginning Monday, July 13, the KMQT WSR-88D Radar operated by NOAAs National Weather Service near Marquette, will be down for approximately two weeks for an important upgrade.

Technicians will refurbish and replace the pedestal, one of the most critical components of the radar, which is necessary for antenna rotation and positioning to capture data in all directions. The components are extremely heavy and will require the radome to be removed by crane and replaced when the work is completed.

The radar and pedestal were designed to last 25 years, and this radar has exceeded its life-span. This activity is necessary to keep the radar functioning for another 20 years or more.

The pedestal refurbishment is the third major project of the NEXRAD Service Life Extension Program, a series of upgrades that will keep our nations radars viable into the 2030s. NOAAs National Weather Service, the United States Air Force, and the Federal Aviation Administration are investing $135 million in the eight year program. The first project was the installation of the new signal processor and the second project was the refurbishment of the transmitter. The fourth project will be the refurbishment of the equipment shelters. The Service Life Extension Program will be complete in 2023.

During the downtime, adjacent radars will be available, including: Green Bay (KGRB), Duluth (KDLH), and Gaylord (KAPX). For direct access to any of these surrounding radar sites, visit https://radar.weather.gov/

The KMQT WSR-88D is part of a network of 159 operational radars. The Radar Operations Center in Norman, Oklahoma, provides lifecycle management and support for all WSR-88Ds.

The National Weather Service near Marquette, Michigan can be found on the web at weather.gov/mqt or on social media, NWSMarquette on Facebook or NWSMarquette on Twitter.

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National Weather Service announces radar outage during major upgrade in July - UpperMichigansSource.com

Updates from Stranger Things, Twilight Zone, and More – Gizmodo

Look, they even got that guy from Black Widow!Image: NetflixMorning SpoilersIf theres news about upcoming movies and television youre not supposed to know, youll find it in here.

Oscar Isaac casts doubts on whether or not hed return to the galaxy far, far away. David Koepp teases his still-alive Bride of Frankenstein remake. Warner Bros. is bringing The Halloween Tree to the big screen. Plus, get a look at Studio Ghiblis new CG movie, and Doom Patrol battles the terrifyingly disco Doctor Tyme. Spoilers now!

Deadline reports Warner Bros. is now developing a live-action film adaptation of Ray Bradburys The Halloween Tree with Will Dunn attached to write the screenplay. The original story concerns a group of trick-or-treaters who must rescue their friend, Pip, from The Land of the Dead with help from a mysterious man named Carapace Clavicle Moundshroud.

Appearing as a guest on The Boo! Crew podcast, David Koepp revealed his Bride of Frankenstein remake will deal with themes of life extension and bodily autonomy.

I just gave Universal a new draft about a month ago and they seem to really like it and theyre talking to directors. Its become the story of how are we extending our lives; can we create life, can we cheat death? It only gets more and more relevant over time. The big life extension work right now thats being out in Silicon Valley is overwhelming, impressive and scary, and I feel like a present day version of that is begging to be made.

The other thing is she is a woman who is not created but resurrected, and certain people feel ownership over her, and that almost too relevant today in the era of #metoo. What are her rights as a person, the person that exists, if you were dead? There are a lot of really interesting questions that are raised. Again, its horror effortlessly lending itself to metaphor.

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[Bloody-Disgusting]

In a recent Deadline panel with Paul Schrader, Oscar Isaac stated hed only return to the Star Wars franchise if he needed a new house or something.

If I need another house or something. Its not really what I set out to do. What I set out to do was to make handmade movies, and to work with people that inspire me. Paul [Schrader]s movies, the things that hes made, its in my DNA. Im not alone, obviously. [For] every actor of a certain generation, those are the films that made them who they are, so thats certainly my case. It feels like for me a personal turning point and that, as far as Im concerned, it has nothing to do with the finished product. Its the process of doing this.

/Film has new images from Studio Ghiblis first-ever fully-CG animated feature, Aya and the Witch. Head over there to see the rest.

Reality takes a holiday in the trailer for Parallax (not to be confused with the DC Comics villain), opening July 10 in select theaters.

In a recent interview with Deadline, the Duffer Brothers teased a couple of cool celebrity guest stars in the next season.

We have a couple of cool ones this year. Its a really fun way to meet one of your icons. You know, write a part for them and see if they want to do it.

[Deadline]

Nickelodeon has ordered a CG reboot of The Smurfs from Alvin and the Chipmunks writers Peter Saisselin and Amy Serafin with William Renaud (Caspers Scare School)attached to direct. [TV Line]

Speaking with Comic Book, Geoff Johns shared his thoughts on the yin and yang between Hourman and Doctor Mid-Nite.

If youre going to have Courtney actively recruiting... like Hourman and Doctor Mid-Nite kind of always felt like a yin and yang to me because you have one thats very physical and one thats very intellectual. And I always saw them as The Flash and Green Lantern of the JSA and even when Rick and Beth joined Infinity Inc., they did it in the same issue. They just felt, theyve always felt like they were this interesting pair that, to me, that they look cool together, they were very different, they approach things differently.

Rex was an extrovert and Charles McNider was an introvert. They had these great dynamics between these two and I love the characters for that. And I felt like when we were introducing them both, if Courtney was actively pursuing Rick, well, then wed have Beth, as shes trying to recruit one person, while somebody else is kind of recruiting herself, is getting involved herself.

The 100 gets a backdoor pilot for a prequel series with the synopsis for Anaconda airing July 8.

THE PAST Clarke (Eliza Taylor) confronts a new adversary. A surprising connection takes us back to the past and the nuclear apocalypse that destroyed the Earth. Bob Morley, Marie Avgeropoulos, Lindsey Morgan, Richard Harmon, Tasya Teles, Shannon Kook, JR Bourne, Shelby Flannery and Chuku Modu also star. Ed Fraiman directed the episode written by Jason Rothenberg (#713). Original airdate 7/8/2020.

[Spoiler TV]

KSiteTV has photos from the first two episodes of Doom Patrols second season, Fun Size Patrol and Tyme Patrol. Click on the relevant episode title for more.

The latest promo for the second season of The Twilight Zone includes brief glimpses of new footage.

Finally, a promo for this weeks season finale of Harley Quinn provides no new footage, instead, encouraging fans to catch up on DC Universe.

Banner art by Jim Cooke.

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Updates from Stranger Things, Twilight Zone, and More - Gizmodo

Former Pro Bowl running back Kareem Hunt is hoping to sign a long-term extension with the Browns – CBS Sports

Kareem Hunt considers himself blessed that the Cleveland Browns have given him another opportunity after the former Pro Bowl running back waspulled over in Januarywith an open vodka container and marijuana. Hunt admitted during the traffic stop that it hurt watching the continued success of his former team, the Kansas City Chiefs, who went onto win the Super Bowl at the end of the 2019 season.

Hunt, who signed with the Browns shortly after was released by the Chiefs after a video surfaced of Hunt's domestic incident in February of 2018, expressed his desire to stay with the Browns on a long-term basis during a video meeting with reporters on Monday. In March, the Browns placed a second-round tender on Hunt, who amassed 464 all-purpose yards and three touchdowns in eight games with the Browns in 2019.

"I'd definitely like to be a part of something like this," Hunt said, via Mary Kay Cabot of Cleveland.com. "Everybody is here that I care about. I know everybody in the whole town. I would not mind playing for the Browns for a long time."

Hunt, who grew up less than 20 minutes away from Cleveland, has been working closely this offseason with fellow Browns running back Nick Chubb, who earned Pro Bowl honors last season after rushing for 1,494 yards and eight touchdowns. The duo of Chubb and Hunt in the backfield was one of the things Kyle Stefanski raved about shortly after becoming Cleveland's new head coach back in January.

"Those two guys are jumping off the tape," Stefanski told ESPN 850's Really Big Show. "I could not be more impressed by those two. Nick Chubb, man, wow the tape is so impressive. I can't wait to meet Nick Chubb the person because everyone is raving about him (Hunt) is such a talented player. He's from Ohio, so I know I'm going to get a chance to visit with him at some point."

Hunt, who rushed for a league-high 1,327 yards as a rookie back in 2017, is hoping to be part of a championship team in Cleveland after watching his former teammates in Kansas City hoist the Lombardi Trophy back in February. Hunt added that he has mostly maintained a low profile following January's traffic spot. He said he has also been doing things in the community as it relates to helping people who have suffered significant loss during the COVID-19 pandemic.

"I think we can do something special here," Hunt said of the Browns, who stumbled to a 6-10 last season after many analysts predicted them to compete for the AFC North division title. "I want to get that Super Bowl feeling and I believe we can do it here in my hometown. That would be bigger than anything, for me. That would [be to] bring a championship to Cleveland, especially I have been a fan my whole life. I've been with Cleveland my whole life."

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Former Pro Bowl running back Kareem Hunt is hoping to sign a long-term extension with the Browns - CBS Sports

Riding the Waves of Life: How to Build Resiliency – Antigo Times News

FROM CARRIE C. KUBACKI, POSITIVE YOUTH DEVELOPMENT EXTENSION EDUCATOR, UW-MADISON DIVISION OF EXTENSION

The world continues to be a turbulent and stressful place. With ongoing challenges from COVID-19 and racial division, we may feel our daily lives are out of control. How can we manage the physical, mental and emotional impacts of all of these challenges for ourselves, our families and our communities? One opportunity we all have to face these stressful times is to build our resiliency.

Resiliency is the ability to bounce back from adversity, trauma and threats that we encounter throughout our lives. However, it is not only the ability to survive from these experiencesbut also to thrive. Researchers from Harvard University use the analogy of a balance scale or seesaw. When we are overwhelmed from stress and adversity, the scale will drop to the negative side. However, by increasing our positive experiences and coping skills, we can bring the scale (and our lives) back into balance, and possibly even tilt the scale up to thriving.

What is helpful to know about resiliency is that it can be increased at any age. All of us can learn how to build our coping skills to help strengthen our thoughts, behaviors and overall quality of life. Throughout this summer, UW-Madison Division of Extension will be offering tips and activities on how to strengthen different aspects of resiliency for ourselves and others around us to help build our own capacity for stronger communities. Visit langlade.extension.wisc.edu or Facebook: Langlade County Division of Extension regularly to see new resiliency opportunities in your area. For additional information about resiliency please visit: https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/resilient/index.htm or https://www.mindresilience.org/.

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Riding the Waves of Life: How to Build Resiliency - Antigo Times News

The line between ‘elective’ and ‘essential’ is often hazy – Bryan-College Station Eagle

Late February was the last time I saw Mr. Fields, a man in his sixties with debilitating nausea, bloating and regurgitation. (To protect his privacy, I have changed his name and other identifying details.) His symptoms made it difficult for him to eat, and he was losing weight visibly from one clinic visit to the next. His last upper endoscopy - a procedure to inspect the top of his gastrointestinal tract - was aborted because there was a pile of food sitting in his stomach, despite his having fasted since midnight the day before. We had discussed repeating the endoscopy after a prolonged liquid diet to determine what was holding up his digestion (a tumor, an ulcer, or a general sluggishness of the muscle) and to use this information to guide his treatment.

Then the pandemic hit, and priorities changed. On a Friday afternoon in mid-March, I was asked to cancel the bulk of the procedures I had scheduled for the following Monday. From higher up, we received instructions to review every patient's chart, to separate the emergent from the urgent from routine. Mr. Fields certainly wasn't the only one perched on a borderline - it's the nature of my gastroenterology practice, as it is for most diagnostic proceduralists, not to know what I'll find until I go looking. My colleagues and I turned to each other for guidance. How worried would you be about an 80-year-old with iron-deficiency anemia? How about a 40-year-old with rectal bleeding? A 20-year-old unable to swallow? There was no question that they merited procedures, but when? Could they stand to wait four weeks? Eight? Twelve?

What does "elective" mean, really? It's intuitive to think about illness as varying along a spectrum of urgency: On one end, a hangnail; on the other, a heart attack. The term also implies that treatment can also vary along a spectrum of need, from cosmetic surgery to cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Most of medicine sits in the middle, asking us to balance potential health benefits against potential costs, such as missed diagnoses, procedural complications or, more recently, a covid-19 infection after visiting a medical building.

While the country debates whether to prioritize reopening the economy or minimizing preventable deaths, we face our own complicated trade-offs within the practice of medicine. The pandemic logic of triage - a process, borrowed from wartime, of prioritizing sick individuals according to the severity of their prognosis - exerts novel pressure on a system not used to such resource scarcity. Individual clinicians are grappling with what is truly necessary and urgent.

During my first week back to work in the endoscopy suite last month, I had trouble convincing any of my originally scheduled patients to come in for their procedures.Their episodic abdominal pain, refractory heartburn, and unrelenting diarrhea had seemed pressing just a few months before, but now the threat of infection loomed larger. Alongside clinicians, patients make their own judgments about what constitutes essential health care - about how to value the reassurance of resolving old symptoms against the risk of getting sick with something new and even more uncertain.

The calculus quickly gets complicated. We have to weigh not only the patient's health but that of the physicians, nurses, technicians and custodians who keep a procedural space operational. Concerns about infection also ripple from patients and providers to all their family members who might be affected. The masks and gowns protecting one cohort of health care workers could always be set aside for a needier cohort later. And staff relieved of their nonessential duties in a procedural suite could theoretically be reassigned to other settings where they might be of greater service.

On the other side of the equation, there are certainly diseases that become more dangerous when left unattended. A few of my colleagues in other cities worry vocally about how many gastrointestinal malignancies they'll find once routine practice picks up again. Less vocally, they worry about the legal implications of not having made the diagnosis earlier, wondering if they'll be liable for not having pushed more procedures into hospital settings even as federal or professional society guidance and state executive orders limited elective procedures. The potential hazards of clinical lag time also hold true for other specialty areas - blurry vision can herald impending strokes, and unattended orthopedic injuries can settle into contractures. In the background is the unsettling awareness that interventions deemed essential in one state may be elective in the next, particularly for politically sensitive services like abortion.

The line dividing essential from elective care is always a subjective one, because risk-benefit calculations tend to shift over time. The past few months have occasioned especially dramatic fluidity, but larger-scale changes have also unfolded over the past several decades. In the 1960s, specialties began lobbying for new interventional environments like the ambulatory surgical center, while emergency rooms arose as distinct hospital spaces for managing acute concerns. Meanwhile, chronic disease prevalence and pharmaceutical incentives inspired increasing professional interest in the idea of risk states (like high cholesterol as a precondition for heart disease, or age and gender as preconditions for breast cancer), which in turn entrenched preventive maneuvers (from annual physicals to mammograms to a daily aspirin) as vital elements of routine care. The insurance industry overlaid these developments with thorny questions about medical necessity.

In a sense, it's been remarkable how successfully patients have avoided clinical settings in these first few months of the pandemic. Early anecdotal reporting noted surprising drops in hospital admissions for common medical emergencies like cardiovascular events, appendicitis and strangulated hernias, and international data have begun to confirm these trends. In the United States, emergency catheterization procedures for life-threatening heart attacks were down 38 percent in the early phase of covid-19, despite predictions that those events would be, if anything, more prevalent during a viral pandemic. Fewer cirrhosis patients are being admitted to Veterans Health Administration hospitals, according to a study recently published by my colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania, and those who are admitted have been, on average, measurably sicker than baseline.

Contemporary biomedicine certainly prioritizes procedures financially, but also emotionally and culturally. Objective observations gathered by diagnostic maneuvers like CT scans, tissue biopsies and cardiac catheterizations have become a linchpin of clinical certainty. They are vital to a confident diagnosis and treatment plan and, when edged with the promise of life extension, serve as a kind of salve for the threat of mortality. These assumptions are so foundational to modern medicine that it can be shocking to question their validity.

Well before covid-19, the writer Barbara Ehrenreich detailed her decision to turn away from screening tests like colonoscopies, contending that they delude us into approaching death as a problem to be solved while at the same time invading the body to the point of violation: "if mammography seems like a refined sort of sadism," she notes, "colonoscopies mimic an actual sexual assault." It's a provocative argument, easier to accept in the abstract than when I recall patients with cancers I've found on years-overdue colonoscopies. Our infrastructure of high-tech diagnostic intervention can seem particularly bloated in the context of a pandemic, but patients and clinicians alike are often deeply and justifiably invested in it.

Ultimately, clean distinctions between essential vs. elective care are rhetorically convenient but clinically reductive. Sacrifices are entailed on both sides, and the messy work of negotiating the pros and cons will persist as the pandemic recedes. The same might be said for all-or-nothing debates pitting human life against a solvent economy - a compelling thought exercise, but less relevant in practical terms. Accumulating job losses are leaving more and more people uninsured, for example, forcing them to continue deferring elective medical care once it picks up again. Progressive dreams of radical reform notwithstanding, the medical and financial priorities of our healthcare system are deeply enmeshed, and for now, grappling with either means grappling with both.

Every day provides new data, and with it another opportunity to reweigh our priorities. In Philadelphia, where I work, our projected peak was at the end of April, and the first surge of covid-19 cases appears to have crested. Stocks of personal protective equipment are no longer dangerously depleted, and opportunities exist for systematic testing. These developments will afford us more space to evaluate those uninfected patients with separate, slow-burning complaints.

I recently re-connected with Mr. Fields; I hope he doesn't hold this interruption of his care against me. I'm ready to pick up where we left off, but covid-19 has made it harder to pretend that medicine operates in a vacuum. I marvel at the confidence of our pre-pandemic therapeutic encounters, which so often left implicit all the indelicate questions of financial incentives, workers' well-being, and the capacity of medicine to harm as well as to heal. Once the crisis lifts, it's hard to imagine returning to such thoughtless certainty.

Ahuja is an assistant professor of clinical medicine in the division of gastroenterology and hepatology at the University of Pennsylvania.

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The line between 'elective' and 'essential' is often hazy - Bryan-College Station Eagle

Global Cryonics Technology Market Projected to Reach USD XX.XX billion by 2025- Praxair, Cellulis, Cryologics, Cryotherm, KrioRus, VWR, etc. – Cole of…

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Global Cryonics Technology Market Projected to Reach USD XX.XX billion by 2025- Praxair, Cellulis, Cryologics, Cryotherm, KrioRus, VWR, etc. - Cole of...

New Bridge Program Involves Incoming Students in the Future of Agriculture | Newsroom – UC Merced University News

Incoming first-year and transfer students will have a new resource for success and an introduction to research starting next summer, thanks to a four-year, $400,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Civil and environmental engineering Professor Colleen Naughton is heading up the USDAs Research and Extension Experiential Learning for Undergraduates (REEU) program, which will provide a bridge for incoming students. The Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS) at UC Merced will host the program.

The six-week summer immersion program will connect five undergraduates and five transfer students each year with faculty mentors from all three schools to work on projects related to food security and provide tools, research and a highly educated workforce to benefit the agriculture, natural resources, technology, and human sciences fields.

We want to get students interested and give them a jump-start into university life and research, Naughton said. We are focused on sustainable agriculture and what it will be in 2050, and the challenges of food security for 9 billion people around the world. We are developing technology to meet those challenges. The students can think of this bridge program as pre-training.

Naughton said there is already a lot of important and exciting research happening at UC Merced, and she wants to offer a diverse group of REEU students a variety of research opportunities. Their varied backgrounds and life experiences will bring many different voices to bear on the projects, and they will get practical immersion in food production to fully understand and develop the technology that will address food security needs.

The six-week bridge includes on-campus housing, 30 hours a week of paid research, research supplies, field trips to area farms, workshops and more. Though the program is led by faculty in the School of Engineering, the program offers a diverse array of research projects for students to participate in, including agroecology and food production; nutrition and food security; digital agriculture and spatial analysis; mechatronics and embedded systems; environmental and agricultural economics; soil biogeochemistry, microbiome and soil remediation; integrated pest management; robotics and machine learning; life cycle assessment; and hydrology and water management.

Students are encouraged to follow the CITRIS website for updates, as recruiting for next summer begins soon.

CITRIS is excited to support this endeavor because it not only advances our expertise in ag-food-technology and research in climate-smart practices, but also develops critical skills for our students to give back to our local community, said CITRIS Director Professor Joshua Viers, a co-principal investigator and one of the faculty mentors.

Naughton was a first-generation student herself, and knows incoming students need more than just research and academics, so the program will also offer peer-to-peer mentoring and training in life skills such as budgeting, studying and stress management all needed for success at the university. Additionally, transfer students are often older than their incoming peers, and can feel isolated. The program will help them acclimate to the university and network with others to build community.

This proposal was one of 26 selected for funding across the nation and is part of the National Institute of Food and Agricultures Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Workforce Development.

Our ultimate goal is to train a diverse and competitive agricultural workforce that will increase agricultural productivity and food security for those who need it most, Naughton said.

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New Bridge Program Involves Incoming Students in the Future of Agriculture | Newsroom - UC Merced University News

Life inside Pluto? Hot birth may have created internal ocean on dwarf planet – The Conversation UK

Pluto, along with many other dwarf planets in the outer solar system, is often thought of as dark, icy and barren with a surface temperature of just 230C. But now a new study, published in Nature Geoscience, suggests that the body has had a warm interior ever since it formed, and may still have a liquid, internal ocean under its icy crust.

It could mean that other sizeable icy dwarf planets may have had early internal oceans too, with some possibly persisting today. This is exciting, as where theres warm water, there could be life.

As soon as NASAs New Horizons probe began to send back its haul of pictures and other data from its 2016 flyby of Pluto, it became clear that this is one of the most interesting worlds ever seen. Beneath its haze-layered atmosphere is a frigid, cratered surface of impure water-ice and one major impact basin (Sputnik Planitia) that has been flooded by frozen nitrogen.

The water-ice crust is cut by numerous fractures, all of which appear to be the result of stretching of the surface. Those cracks in the ice provided the first hints that there might be liquid water flowing underneath, in the form of an internal ocean between the icy shell and rocky core. More evidence soon emerged in favour of this, such as hints that the icy shell has been able to re-orient itself, gliding over an essentially frictionless (hence liquid) interior.

If it does have an internal ocean, Pluto is far from unique. Evidence for present-day oceans inside icy moons such as Jupiters Europa, and Saturns Titan and Enceladus is so strong that few scientists doubt the likelihood of an ocean inside Pluto for at least part of its history.

The insight offered by the new study comes from studying maps of Plutos shape and features. The researchers discovered that cracks in its surface are of all ages right back to the most remote times we can see, soon after the surface formed, possibly 4.5 billion years ago.

Scientists have assumed that Pluto grew by slowly accumulating icy material that condensed when the outer solar system was forming. In such a scenario, no internal ocean could have formed until trapped heat generated by radioactive decay in the rocky core had built up sufficiently to melt the overlying ice.

In that situation, the oldest geological faults on the surface would have certain specific characteristics (dubbed compressional features). This is because turning the lower part of the ice into liquid water, which is denser and occupies less volume, would have placed the overlying ice into compression.

Other types of fractures interpreted as extensional cracks could begin to form only when the top of this ocean began to freeze as its heat escaped to space. The pressure of the ice forced the interior to expand slightly, stretching and cracking the surface a little. However, Plutos surface is cut by what appear to be extensional cracks only, right back to the most ancient times.

The authors therefore argue that the young Pluto grew to its present size by accumulating tiny pieces of material in a so-called pebble accretion process that was energetic and rapid enough to cause melting at the base of the ice layer. This is termed a hot start, though all it means is just warm enough for water-ice to melt.

The crust, from the first moment that it became stable, never experienced compression. Instead, its surface suffered extension as liquid water at top of the ocean froze onto the base of the ice shell during Plutos first half billion years.

Ocean freezing may then have paused for about the next billion years because the build-up of radioactive heat was temporarily able to balance the rate of heat escape to space. But ever since then, as Plutos radioactive heat production dwindled over time, the roof of the ocean continued to freeze. The thickness of the ice shell has maybe doubled to about 180km. The surviving ocean is likely a 200km thick layer between the ice and the rock.

Internal oceans are fascinating, not just because of how changes in volume can stretch or compress the surface, but because they are potential habitats for life. It is irrelevant that Plutos surface temperature is extremely low, because any internal ocean would be warm enough for life.

This could not be life depending on sunlight for its energy, like most life on Earth, and it would have to survive on the probably very meagre chemical energy available within Pluto. So while we cant rule out there could be life inside Pluto, Europa and Enceladus are likely to be better contenders, since they have more chemical energy available.

Read more: Stunning, crystal-clear images of Pluto but what do they mean?

Read more: NASA mission brings Pluto into sharp focus but it's still not a planet

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Life inside Pluto? Hot birth may have created internal ocean on dwarf planet - The Conversation UK

With eviction freeze extension, Florida landlords wonder how they’ll recover lost rent – Florida Trend

With eviction freeze extension, Florida landlords wonder how theyll recover lost rent

Gov. DeSantis ordered the statewide stay on evictions April 2 and has twice extended it. The move was to prevent out-of-work renters from becoming homeless, though his office has stressed that it does not cancel rent obligations altogether for tenants. Hundreds of eviction cases have stacked up in Florida courts since then, leaving landlords fretting whether they will be able to recover the thousands they are owed from unemployed tenants who may be unable to pay ballooning back payments. Some also fear their tenants are taking advantage. [Source: Tampa Bay Times]

Orlando is America's top travel destination: How hard has its real estate market been hit?

The loss of jobs portends far-reaching economic impacts on the Orlando area, including the real estate market. Until the coronavirus pandemic, it was one of the fastest-growing metros in the U.S., a southeastern bellwether for housing. Then, as in most parts of the country, home sales fell off a cliff. Now experts are wondering: How quickly will the housing market come backand what will the new normal look like? [Source: Realtor]

Florida Trend Exclusive Villa Del Ray Golf Course makes way for homes

13th Floor Homes is planning 436 residences at the old Villa Del Ray Golf Course in Delray Beach. Miami-based 13th Floor Homes acquired the closed 120-acre Villa Del Ray Golf Course in Delray Beach, where it plans a 436-home, 55-plus development called Delray Trails. 13th Floor, the home-building division of Miami-based 13th Floor Investments, specializes in converting golf courses into home communities. [Source: Florida Trend]

South Florida rents are declining as coronavirus chases tenants away from downtowns

The coronavirus pandemic might be chasing people away from living on top of each other in apartments. Rents are gradually declining, suggesting that tenants are looking elsewhere for room to work at home and stay healthy. In 30 South Florida cities, the rent for 62% of one-bedroom units are either flat or declining, according to Zumper, a national apartment search firm. The percentage increases to 69% for two-bedroom prices. [Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel]

Inside Virgin Hotels $330M vision for South Beach and how it vanished

Virgin Hotels had been looking for the right redevelopment opportunity in South Beach for years, and appeared to have found it a few months ago in HFZ Capital Groups Shore Club. But discussions were sidelined and the timeline abandoned, as the coronavirus began to spread and eventually led to the statewide shutdown of nonessential businesses. A Virgin Hotels spokesperson this week sounded an optimistic note about the future, but with tourism only beginning to creep back and financing opportunities slim for hotel acquisitions, it is unclear whether negotiations will resume. [Source: The Real Deal]

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Land swap brings American Dream Miami mega mall closer to 2021 groundbreaking [Miami Herald]The American Dream mega mall is on track, thanks to a land swap with the Graham Companies. Canadian developer Triple Five Group acquired about 25 acres within the footprint of American Dream Miami after trading 27 acres with Miami Lakes-based Graham Companies.

Disney yet again sues Orange County appraiser over Florida tax assessments [The Real Deal]Its that time of year again. Disney is suing Orange County Property Appraiser Rich Singh. The company filed 12 lawsuits this week against Singh, claiming the countys tax assessment of its Orlando-area properties, including Disney World, were too high. Disney has sued Singh over tax assessments every year since 2016, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Former Kennedy estate sells for $70 million in Palm Beach, deed shows [Northwest Florida Daily News]The former Kennedy family estate in Palm Beach has been sold for a recorded $70 million by a company controlled by asset manager and billionaire Jane Goldman, who extensively renovated the property. The estate known to millions as President John F. Kennedys winter White House faces the beachfront at 1095 N. Ocean Blvd. Palm Beach in the last few years has acquired another winter White House: President Donald Trumps Mar-a-Lago on the other side of town.

Rebirth for Regency Square Mall? Nearly vacant retail center under contract [Jax Daily Record]There could be new life for an old mall and a new beat in the heart of Arlingtons retail center. Regency Square Mall, developed a half-century ago to fanfare as the largest regional enclosed mall, could be redeveloped. Commercial real estate developer Rimrock Devlin said it has a contract to buy the 53-year-old largely vacant Regency Square Mall and redevelop the 77.11-acre property into mixed uses. Its not a done deal, but its on the table.

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With eviction freeze extension, Florida landlords wonder how they'll recover lost rent - Florida Trend

10sBalls Wishes Happy 100th Birthday To Tennis Star Robert Ryland – 10sBalls

Editors note: This special Behind The Racquet with Bob Ryland is from was originally published in June, 2019.

10sBalls thanks Noah Rubin for giving us permission to repost these great stories. We wish him and this endeavor the best of luck. Great seeing Noah wearing K-Swiss and playing Solinco Strings.

#MyBTR- I was the first black professional tennis player & today I turn 99. I say it is no big deal, no cause for celebration, just another year. There are many things I can not do now, but I accept that. I enjoy doing what I can do. I have played tennis all my life: Played on my high school team in Chicago and was a finalist in state singles. Played at Wayne State in Detroit and was one of the first black players to compete in the NCAA Championships and the first to reach the quarterfinals. In college I wasnt allowed to eat in restaurants with my teammates. They would bring me my food on the bus, where I sometimes would sleep. I wasnt bitter, all I wanted was to play tennis.

After winning the American Tennis Association Mens title I was given a wild card to play at the USLTA Nationals (US Open) at Forest Hills in 1955, as one of the first few African Americans to play there. In 1959 I was invited to join Jack Marchs World Pro Tennis Championships, becoming the first black pro player.

When he was a kid, Arthur Ashe said I was his hero and he wanted to be good enough to beat me. I was a teaching pro and coached many young talented players and celebrities all over the world. In 1994 I had the opportunity to coach the Williams sisters a brief time before they became famous. Venus, I believe was 14. I dont play tennis anymore. My balance is bad. I do Yoga. I watch so many new players in person and on TV. At the courts, I enjoy giving pointers to anyone who will listen. There is a Paver at the BIllie Jean King National Tennis Center and it says, Bob Ryland: Coach and Friend. I tell my wife Nancy she can go there to remember me when I am gone. Last week I had a check up on my pacemaker. The doc said the battery is good for another 8 years. It made me feel like I have an eight year life extension. Next year, June 16, 2020, I will be 100. No Big Deal. Robert Ryland

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10sBalls Wishes Happy 100th Birthday To Tennis Star Robert Ryland - 10sBalls

Coronavirus: Sunday opening hours extension to be ditched amid threats of Tory revolt – The Independent

Plans to extend Sunday opening hours to help stores recover from the coronavirus lockdown look set to be ditched amid threats of revolt by Tory backbenchers.

Boris Johnsons official spokesman told reporters that Sunday trading laws were under review.

But with a new Covid bill set to be introduced to parliament before the end of this week, there is not enough time for the result of any review to be incorporated into a new law.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

Reports suggested that as many as 50 Conservative MPs were ready to vote against extended opening on Sundays - enough to defeat Mr Johnson in the House of Commons.

The Prime Ministers official spokesman, when asked whether plans to widen Sunday trading had been ditched, said: We have said we will keep measures such as extending Sunday trading hours under review as they can support shops with social distancing and allow shoppers to buy food and other items more conveniently.

Asked if the suggested plans were now on the back burner, the No 10 spokesman added: There is a Covid Bill which will look at new ways of working as the country recovers from the disruption caused by coronavirus and which is intended to help businesses through the summer months, in particular.

I would expect that Bill to be introduced this week.

He continued: In terms of what is in the Bill, it is right that that will go to Parliament first but, as I say, at the heart of it will be legislation to enable businesses to adjust to new ways of working and to help them to capitalise on the summer months.

It will look to support business to implement safer ways of working to manage the ongoing risks of coronavirus and in particular the need for social distancing.

The legislation, known as the Business and Planning bill, is expected to be introduced by business secretary Alok Sharma and to include relaxation of planning rules to allow innovative methods of maximising the amount of trade venues can carry out, such as expanding pavement cafes and other outdoor dining and drinking areas.

Shopworkers' union Usdaw welcomed the climbdown.

General secretary Paddy Lillis said: We appreciate the desire to help the retail sector, but the proposal to undo a long-held and workable compromise on Sunday trading was misguided and overwhelmingly rejected by shopworkers. We welcome reports that the government has rejected the proposal to make shopworkers work longer on Sundays.

What the retail sector needs now is a tripartite approach of unions, employers and government sitting down talking about what a retail recovery plan will look like. We have long called for an industrial strategy for retail to help a sector that was already struggling before the coronavirus emergency.

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"The government needs to level the playing field on taxation between online and the High Street, as well as enable councils to breathe new life into town centres and make them community hubs."

A letter to the Prime Minister signed by seven Tory MPs including Fiona Bruce, David Amess and Bob Blackman warned Mr Johnson this weekend that over 50 MPs were known to be opposed to the plans.

The group warned: We stand squarely behind your ambition to stimulate economic growth and revitalise British high streets, but removing Sunday trading hours will not achieve this."

Opposition among Tory MPs saw off an earlier attempt by David Cameron to introduce longer Sunday opening hours in 2016.

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Coronavirus: Sunday opening hours extension to be ditched amid threats of Tory revolt - The Independent

What’s the Value of a Virtual Education? | Opinion – Harvard Crimson

Adjusting to the shift to remote education after the campus evacuation in March was difficult for everyone. Professors struggled to adapt to Zoom, club activity wrenched to a standstill, and student engagement essentially fell off a cliff.

Last Monday, Dean of the College Rakesh Khurana and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Claudine Gay offered us a vague promise of a partial return to campus. The plan highlighted by Dean Gay, which is one of three options still under consideration, would leave 60-70 percent of undergraduates fully remote for at least the fall semester. Furthermore, regardless of the decision about residential life, almost all classes will be fully remote, at least for the fall. Before further decisions are made, however, we need to seriously consider what our tuition is paying for and the resources needed to maintain the quality of our education.

There is no denying that online classes are of a lower quality than a traditional college education. A Brookings Institute study comparing the shift to online education at a four-year college concluded that the least-prepared students are disproportionately negatively impacted. On average, the drop in grading for a single course is equivalent to the shift from a B-minus to a C. In the long run, grade point averages in one subject area can drop by as much as 0.42.

Several structural issues remain in place moving into next semester, stemming from a lack of transparency. We know administrators like Registrar of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Michael P. Burke are working hard to address these concerns, but their plans and processes have not been made clear to students.

Theres been no word on how the College plans to address inequitable access to technology and WiFi among students. No one knows how decisions about who is permitted to return to campus will be made, engendering concerns of unfairness. Questions over how international students are to adapt to time-zone issues with live classes still havent been answered. And theres been worryingly little clarity on the remote obligations of academic and thesis advisors.

Besides introducing discrepancies in living and learning environments, online education also deprives us of one of the biggest attractions of a Harvard education: the life-changing relationships we form with our classmates and professors.

Harvard requires students to participate in an unlimited meal plan because the warmth and vibrance of our dining halls foster life-long friendship networks and engender the intimate feeling of family and community. After spending even part of a semester remotely, we agree with Harvard: Its impossible to replicate these substantive relationships that only occur in-person and on-campus.

But those life-long networks begin in the classroom, not the dining hall. And just as our meal plans pay for more than food, our tuition pays for more than classes.

Taking all of this together, its clear that an online education is simply worth less than a traditional one. But dont take our word for it. Take Harvards.

An online undergraduate education looks remarkably similar to the Extension School, which offers an online degree program to students who are living at home and who often have significant career and family obligations. Based on the Undergraduate Councils comparison of Extension School courses to Harvard College courses, there are at least 150 identical or nearly identical courses and at least 95 more that are roughly equivalent. These courses are a good representation of the breadth of Harvards course offerings, ranging from large lectures (Economics 10: Principles of Economics) to intimate seminars (Arrivals: British Literature from 700 to 1700).

For each of these identical classes, a remote Harvard College student paying full tuition last year would have paid over $5,966.25 per class, while students at the Extension School paid just $1,840 per class a mere 31 percent of our tuition.

What does this $4,126.25 per class tuition premium pay for? It cant be resources. Extension School students are offered a number of resources also offered to Harvard College students, including personalized academic and career advising, access to the Writing Center and Harvard libraries, and several clubs that overlap with undergraduate student organizations. Any additional resources offered to undergraduates (House tutoring systems, Counseling and Mental Health Services, Harvard University Health Services, etc.) all come out of the Student Services Fee and various health-related fees separate from our tuition.

So, the $4,126.25 tuition premium can only pay for two intangible things: the brand of Harvard College and the life-changing moments and conversations we have with our peers.

Shifting online might not reduce the value of the Harvard College brand, but it does severely diminish, if not fully impede, our ability to make connections. Though its hard to place a numerical value on these intangibles, if we value both equally, its only ethical for Harvard College to reimburse students approximately $2,000 per class, or $16,000 for the academic year one half of the tuition premium.

Ultimately, if Harvard cannot guarantee the essentials of an equitable, high-quality education a fair and transparent return-to-campus lottery, equal access to classes regardless of students location, a solution to WiFi inequity, accountable and accessible advising, and College-led facilitation of student engagement and interaction we believe that a tuition reimbursement of approximately $16,000 for the upcoming academic year is the next best course of action.

We chose Harvard not just because it has the best education in the world, but also because it has the best people. It is our hope that, even remotely, every undergraduate continues to get the best of both.

Rukmini Ganesh 22, the UC Finance Committee Chair, is a Statistics concentrator living in Eliot House. M. Thorwald Thor Larson 21, the UC Finance Committee Vice Chair, is an Applied Mathematics concentrator living in Lowell House. Fernando Urbina 22, the UC Academic Life Committee Chair, is a Government concentrator living in Currier House. The authors are writing on behalf of the Undergraduate Council. This statement was endorsed and passed unanimously by the Council on Wednesday, June 17, 2020.

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What's the Value of a Virtual Education? | Opinion - Harvard Crimson

Jamal Adams ‘trying’ to force trade to Cowboys, putting Jets in impossible situation – Sporting News

Jamal Adams is dead-set on Dallas.

In an Instagram video posted over the weekend, someone had spotted the All Pro safety (and potentialfuture former Jet) in his car, when the person asked Adams whether he was "coming to Dallas."

Adams' response: "I'm trying, bro."

A move to Dallas won't be easy, as the Cowboys are going to be up against the cap number. And with Dak Prescott and Dallas reportedly negotiating a long-term contract extension, it's unclearwhere Adams is going to get his big payday.

MORE: The inside story on the 'Madden 21' cover

The Jets-Adams breakup has been brewing since late 2018, with Adams openly criticizing the Jets' roster and the powers that be for having a weak roster devoid of "dogs."The team went to great lengths to getAdams those "dogs" in Florham Park, signing C.J. Mosley, Le'Veon Bell and Jamison Crowder before the 2019 season.

The relationship between player and team was further fractured around the trade deadline in 2019, when Jets general manager JoeDouglas reportedly answered trade offers for Adams, but put theprice so high that he wasconsidered virtuallyuntouchable.

Really, to a certain point, you understand Adams' frustrations. He's been a winning player his entire football life, a vocal leader on the front lines of championship-caliber teams through college. Unfortunately, that hasn't been the case with the Jets, as they've finished under .500 for the three seasons he's been on the team. The Jets are a "maybe" playoff contender for the upcoming season, which clearly isn't good enough for Adams, whose desire to be traded to a championship contender is apparent.

While the Jets aren'tcontenders,Douglas has never been short to praise Adams in public when it comes to his talents and has beenadamant that the plan is for Adams to stay a Jet for life.

It certainly seems like Adams hasn't read the situation well. Good NFL general managers answer calls for players all the time. Douglas is in Year 2 of his plan to build a title contender, and the teamhaslittle impetus to rush a contract extension with a less-than-premium defensive position on the field.

Of the 2017 draft class, not even Deshaun Watson or Patrick Mahomes has received a contract extensionyet, and Mahomes just came off a Super-Bowl winning season and is a former league MVP. Only Christian McCaffrey has gotten an extension, and even that was met with some skepticism.

For a player who has often said he loves facing adversity, it's certainly amessage to send when you want to be the first sailor jumping off a sinking ship. Even then, equating the Jets to a sinking ship or a crashingplane, if you want to stay on brand here is inaccurate.

In a 7-9 year, the Jets finished strong, going 6-2 in their last eight games with quarterback Sam Darnold showing flashes of being the answer to the quarterback question the Jets have been asking for decades. Douglas has garnered praise from all corners of the NFL sphere for his approach to roster building, including his handling of the Adams situation. And even Adam Gase who certainly has critics and deserves criticism deserves a small bit of credit for helping navigate a team from a 1-7 start to a 7-9 finish.

So either there's a massive disconnect between the public, front-facing persona that a first-time GM is displaying or Adams justwants to wear a new uniform in 2020.

It's not going to be easy for either side, though: Adams wants to be paid top dollar, upwards of $17 million per year (and some reports have said Adams wants more than $20 million per season), while the Jets have little reason to pay him that money in the immediate. While Adams istwo-time All Pro, he'sunder team control for two more seasons, giving the Jets all the leverage in the world.

To that end, it's apparent that Adamshasput the Jets in an impossible situation: The organization clearly admires, respects and appreciates Adams and his talents, but given the uncertainty of the future salary cap, Adams' reported exorbitant contract demands and his apparent desire to escape from New York, there's no clear flight path for New York moving forward.

Had the Jets truly wanted to trade Adams, he would have been gone by or during 2020 NFL Draft, when the organizationcertainly would have had suitors;that New York held onto Adams after the draft should tell you that the organization has minimal inclination to trade him.

After all, various reports and Douglas himself have said that the team has no plans to trade Adams. Will that mean they'll satiate his contract demands? Or just continue to playhardball? While Adams' camp reportedly said it was expecting a contract offer to come from the Jets early in 2020, it sounds like he's going to have to wait longer.

Adams has made the situation more complicated than it needed to be. Players certainly deserve to find the best situation for themselves, but maybe Adams should showcase as muchawareness at the negotiating table as he does on the football field.

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Jamal Adams 'trying' to force trade to Cowboys, putting Jets in impossible situation - Sporting News

First dragon boat race day ends with conflicting advice on Covid-19 – Macau Daily Times

The first race day of this years Macao International Dragon Boat Races was held yesterday with standard body temperature detection installed, but no space allocated for social distancing in the athlete preparation area. Athletes and onlookers told the Times that the first major event of the year had energized the public after months of reduced social activity.The Nam Van Lake Nautical Center was divided into several sections, namely the business area, the spectator stands and the athlete area. Each area has only one entrance. Upon passing an entrance, all athletes and spectators had to present their Green Macau Health Code and have their body temperature measured.Previously, the Sports Bureau (ID), citing advice from the Health Bureau, announced that all people attending the event, including spectators and athletes, must wear a facemask at all times, except for athletes who are racing.However, viewing the event yesterday, which took place all afternoon, under a baking sun that eclipsed for about an hour, the Times observed that only a few people were following the IDs request.The number of seats has been reduced to about 2,000, half the number from last year. Although spectators were encouraged to keep an arms distance apart, the social distancing was only lightly enforced.The ID seemed to care more about the wellbeing of journalists, as every other seat in the media area was cordoned off, enforcing social distancing for journalists.The ID has also stated that this year fewer teams would be able to participate in the races due to a capping as part of the health measures. The athletes waiting area, however, did not reflect that requirement because the same amount of space was allotted to host waiting athletes. Although less packed than last year, the area was still crowded.Furthermore, at the preparation area, athletes were required to sit shoulder to shoulder as if they were already on the boat.Yesterday, the Novel Coronavirus Response and Coordination Center issued a statement to remind the general public to avoid gathering in groups even when conducting sporting events.Despite the conditions, athletes, spectators and stall operators said they were satisfied with the hosting of the dragon boat races despite the Covid-19 pandemic still being severe in many places. Many have described the reduced social activity of the past four months as demoralizing. Members of the public told the Times yesterday that seeing the races going ahead had energized the city.Linda Chen, Vice Chairperson and Chief Operating Officer of Wynn Macau Ltd., who was present at the athlete rest area to show support to the companys team, shares this view.She said that it was only due to many peoples efforts that this year can see the races go ahead as in previous years, despite the Covid-19 pandemic. It is an unprecedented period, the executive stressed.Discussing the performance of the team, she said she was satisfied with the members diligence amid all the hardship faced. There has been limited time for practice, Chen said. The lake has been cordoned off for months in order to contain Covid-19, so they could not practice hands-on.Despite the challenges, our team members have kept practicing at home, Chen revealed. Some of them have even sacrificed time with their children to do training at home.The same strategy was also used by the University of Macau team, which won the title in the University Group. The teams coach Lei said that members were reminded to practice at home.The Marine and Water Bureau, the Municipal Affairs Bureau and the Macau Red Cross won the top three positions in the Public Entity Group.The Association of Macao Youth Development beat SJM Lotus A in the Womans 200m Category and Baa do Mar Amizade ended third place.Finally, Suncity Legend, SJM Golden Jubilee B and A took the top three places in 200m Open Category, respectively.

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First dragon boat race day ends with conflicting advice on Covid-19 - Macau Daily Times

Government reiterates need for special health measures during events and festivals – Macau News

The Novel Coronavirus Response and Coordination Centre calls on the organisers and participants of festivals, cultural, recreational and sporting activities to strictly control the number of participants to 50 per cent or less of the general capacity of the site and to measure the temperature of all those who enter the venue.

According to information released on Sunday by the centre, all participants in the events have to present the Macao Health Code.

All participants and workers in the activity should, as far as possible, wear a mask during the entire process, removing the mask only when necessary, such as for eating. And when removing the mask, they should keep at least 1 metre away from others, the centre said.

The statement also indicated clearly that if due to the nature of the activity, participants cannot wear a mask, such as in physical exercises, sports competitions, shows, etc., and a minimum distance of 2 metres cannot be maintained during the process, a new nucleic acid test must be performed before collective training or testing.

The Novel Coronavirus Response and Coordination Centre also stressed thatto reduce the risk of transmission of the virus during collective festivals and cultural, recreational and sporting activities, the organising entities and participants must strictly comply with the guidelines of the Health Services, and must not, during the event, let their guard down, but must continue to maintain preventive and control measures such as adequate distance, use of a mask and handwashing.

Organising entities must place notices at the event location reminding participants not to meet and pay attention to personal hygiene, as well as advise them to disperse or leave; reinforce the cleaning and disinfection of equipment and objects at the event, especially in places with easy access to hands and sanitary facilities, and in certain places of the event, especially where there are no sanitary or handwashing facilities, and establish the quantity necessary alcohol disinfectant for public use, the centres statement said.

The statement was published when the Macao International Dragon Boat Races started at the Nam Van Lake Nautical Centre on Sunday which will end on June 25.

(The Macau Post Daily/Macau News)PHOTO Macau Daily Times

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Government reiterates need for special health measures during events and festivals - Macau News