Paris throws off mask to party like the virus never was – Macau Business

Social distancing and face masks were largely forgotten as thousands of French people danced and partied well into Monday in the first big blow out since the coronavirus lockdown.

The annual midsummer Festival of Music usually brings millions of people out onto the streets across the country for impromptu concerts in cafes and on street corners that go on long into the night.

And despite emergency measures which ban gatherings of more than 10 people, thousands thronged the trendy Canal Saint Martin and the Marais districts of Paris late Sunday to dance and sing along to bands and DJs.

Not even heavy showers could dampen spirits, with few beyond those serving spicey merguez sausages from street stalls bothering to wear masks.

The Festival of Music is important, its a national event, 28-year-old reveller Violette told AFP as she boogied to a band in northern Paris.

And she laughed at the idea that people would be strictly respecting social distancing.

Not at all, she said.

But many who watched the crowds on the streets were horrified, taking to social media to voice fears of a second wave of infections.

What a brilliant idea! A Festival of Music just as we are going out of a major health emergency, one Twitter user commented.

Although none of the usual big set-piece extravaganzas were held beyond what French electronic music legend Jean-Michel Jarre had billed as the worlds first live virtual avatar concert, many felt the authorities had been too lax.

A senior doctor atthe Pitie-Salpetriere hospital in Paris, where many COVID-19 sufferers are still being treated, criticised the decision to let the festival go ahead.

This is not what a gradual end to the lockdown looks like, said Dr Gilbert Deray.

I understand that the Festival of Music is something of a liberation, but did we really have to have it this year?

Cinemas also reopened in France on Monday for the first time since the lockdown began in March.

The 5 Caumartin cinema in Paris opened one minute after midnight for a red-carpet champagne and popcorn sneak preview of the upcoming French comedy, Les Parfums (The Perfumes), about a prima donna perfume nose, who comes up with new fragrances.

There are no words to describe what I feel. I have been waiting for this for 99 days, cinema manager Louis Merle told the 120 people who had queued up for their first big-screen experience since March 17.

Watching series on Netflix is one thing, but the cinema is something else, said the films star Emmanuelle Devos.

Even though cinemas have reopened, they are far from back to normal.

The authorities insist that screenings can never be more than half full with a free seat either side of each filmgoer.

And everyone must wear masks as they queue for tickets and in the corridors.

Even so, pollsters estimate that 18.7 million French people almost a third of the population plan to go see a film in the next month.

by Fiachra GIBBONS

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Paris throws off mask to party like the virus never was - Macau Business

Local consumption incentive plan to inject up to MOP2.4 bln into the economy – Macau Business

The Macau consumption incentive plan will inject up to MOP2.4 billion (US$300.6 million) into the local economy, estimates released today (Monday) by local authorities reveal.

The creation of an electronic consumer card was one of the measures taken by the Government of Macau to relaunch the economy and help residents face the Covid-19 pandemic.

Between May, June and July, each resident of Macau is entitled to MOP3,000 patacas to spend on local businesses. With this measure, the Macau government injected MOP1.8 billion into the local economy.

In a press conference that served to present the interim report of the consumption subsidy plan, the authorities of the territory indicated that, until June 15, the 600,171 residents who joined the program had spent a total of MOP1.46 billion by using the consumer card.

Until June 15, each resident had spent an average of MOP2,481 patacas on the card, which has a total credit limit of MOP3,000.

The Government estimated that this consumption incentive plan could benefit the local economy in an amount between MOP1.8 million and MOP2.4 billion.

Stabilizing the consumer environment, increasing business confidence, relieving pressure from residents, further generalizing, even more, the use of electronic payment instruments, thus improving future development by commercial establishments, was the assessment made by the Government on the use of consumer cards.

According to the report, of the total amount provided by the Macau Government, 24 per cent was spent on the food and beverage sector, while 70 per cent was spent on retail trade.

On the same occasion, the director of the Economic Services Bureau (DSE), Tai Kin Ip, stated that more than 60 per cent of the total amount of transactions was placed in SMEs [small and medium-sized companies].

The results of the questionnaire survey show that more than 60 per cent of retailers and more than 40 per cent of retailers indicated that half or more than half of their turnover came from consumer cards, the government stated in the same press conference.

The Macau Government also noted that the consumer subsidies plan also served to change the habits of payment methods by residents, with a substantial increase in the use of mobile payments.

Since the announcement of the plan, in February, up to May, more than 14,000 mobile payment devices and QR codes were installed in commercial establishments.

In May alone, the authorities stressed, mobile payments rose by 25 per cent and their amount increased by 54 per cent, in relation to the previous period of the epidemic.

This year, starting in August, each resident will also benefit from another MOP5,000 patacas to be credited from the electronic consumption card.

Macau was one of the first territories to identify cases of infection with Covid-19 in late January. The territory then registered a first wave of ten cases, and another of 35, from March.

The city has had no new cases since April 9 and currently has no active cases, after the last patient was discharged on April 19.

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Local consumption incentive plan to inject up to MOP2.4 bln into the economy - Macau Business

UK looks to ‘right the wrongs’ of ‘Windrush’ scandal – Macau Business

The British government said Monday it was determined to right the wrongs of its treatment of Britons of Caribbean origin who were detained or deported as illegal immigrants.

Interior minister Priti Patel and Derek Webley, a senior church leader, will chair a cross-government working group to address the scandal involving the Windrush generation.

They were targeted despite moving to Britain legally in the 1950s and 1960s.

The move comes after an official report published in March found successive governments pushing a hard line on illegal immigration showed a complete disregard for their plight.

It also follows widespread anti-racism protests, sparked by the killing of George Floyd in the United States, which have focused renewed attention on Britains colonial past.

National Windrush Day is being marked for the second year running on Monday, to pay tribute to the contribution of the Windrush generation.

It commemorates the day in 1948 when the Empire Windrush ship first arrived at Tilbury Docks in Essex, southeast England, carrying Caribbean migrants to help fill jobs in Britain.

The government said it gave 500,000 ($621,000, 554,000 euros) to English community groups and local authorities to host events to mark the occasion.

Patel said the new group was crucial to delivering on our promise to right the wrongs experienced by the Windrush generation.

The scandal began to surface in 2017 after it emerged that hundreds and potentially thousands of Britons had been caught up in successive immigration clampdowns.

Their statuses were regularised in 1971 but few were given any official documentation nor were records kept.

The subsequent inquiry found the interior ministry had shown an institutional ignorance and thoughtlessness towards the issue of race and the history of those involved.

Wendy Williams, the reports author, warned Sunday there was a grave risk of similar failures happening again if the government does not implement its dozens of recommendations.

Figures released last month showed fewer than 5.0 percent of claims under the governments Windrush compensation scheme have been paid out so far.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan called on the government to learn from their suffering and end what he said was a hostile environment faced by immigrants in the capital.

It is clear that too many Londoners are still being failed by an immigration system that is prohibitively expensive and simply not fit for purpose, he said.

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UK looks to 'right the wrongs' of 'Windrush' scandal - Macau Business

World Views | When to wear a mask and when you can skip it – Macau Daily Times

Science has a lot to say about the effectiveness of wearing a mask to stop the spread of the coronavirus, but the communication of that science has been corrupted by a combination of partisan divides, sensationalist media stories, distrust, false dichotomies, and letting the perfect be the enemy of the good.The studies on masks arent perfectly definitive, but thats typical of many issues involving health risks from mercury contamination to cancer screenings. Its still better to make decisions based on an incomplete body of evidence than to ignore evidence altogether. In this case, it helps to add a dose of situational awareness and common sense.The public health community got off on the wrong foot with masks by advising against wearing them and then making a sudden flip-flop and telling us not to leave home without them. Further complicating the picture is a mix of peoples individual attitudes. Some members of the public still fear the virus and want to remain safe, and others are at peace with their risk but want some guidance on how to be a good citizen or at least be perceived as one.There have been reasonably convincing studies showing that masks stop some of the particles that might carry the virus out of peoples mouths. That suggests masks potential to protect others. Then there are observational studies, which look at mask use in the real world.Physician and infectious disease specialist Muge Cevik, who has been a prescient guide to relative risks, pointed out to me that mask-wearing should be informed by other studies on how the virus spreads. A consensus is finally starting to form that theres a negligible risk outdoors away from other people, and that very brief encounters pose very little risk, such as people walking, running or cycling past you.Common sense would suggest that if an activity poses negligible risk, then wearing a mask offers only a negligible benefit, and should be optional.On the other extreme are potential super-spreading events anywhere many people are confined indoors, especially if theres close contact. Trumps planned Oklahoma rally is a good example. There, common sense would dictate that such events should not take place at all.Then theres the middle ground. Mask wearing is likely to do the most good in settings where people have little choice but to interact in enclosed spaces grocery shopping, riding public transportation, ride-sharing, getting a haircut, or seeing a doctor.Also in this middle category is gathering outdoors in large groups such as at a protest. If most protestors wear a mask at all times, this will likely reduce transmissions.Cevik, who works at the University of St. Andrews in the U.K., pointed out that the six-foot rule applies best outdoors, while in badly ventilated indoor settings, aerosol particles might accumulate and put people at risk even if they never get that close to others. And length of exposure matters a lot, so bus drivers, haircutters and store clerks face a much higher risk than their customers. Their risk very likely goes down if customers wear masks.Then theres a problematic category of activities, such as eating in restaurants, where masks cant be worn consistently. Would diners be stuck trying to pull masks on and off with every bite? Some experts say such fiddling with masks is only going to spread any viruses the mask has captured. As a compromise, many restaurants are seating people outdoors and allowing them to keep masks off while eating. Gyms and yoga studios pose a similar challenge.The risks associated with close contact and crowds seem obvious and intuitive. And yet Americans have been fixated on the unlikely possibility that infectious doses of virus would fly off cyclists or creep in on packages. In response, some have adopted irrational mask-wearing practices, such as keeping one on while riding or driving, but pulling it down to congregate and chat with groups of people.And its no surprise that politics would infuse the issue, given the moral tone of the mask debate and different messages on mainstream and conservative media. In the U.S., we have some fraction of people wearing a mask all the time, and some fraction never wearing one. It would be better if everyone wore one when it was likely to help. Faye Flam, Bloomberg

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World Views | When to wear a mask and when you can skip it - Macau Daily Times

Difficult to find officials in Macao for senior positions – Macau News

Secretary for Transport and Public Works Raimundo do Rosrio said on Tuesday that he has decided to appointed Cheong Sio Kei, who was acquitted of a power abuse charge by the Court of First Instance (TJB) last week, as the deputy director of the Mapping and Land Registry Bureau (DSCC), after considering that its difficult to find an official in Macao for senior positions.

In Macao, there are not many people who are capable [of assuming a senior government post], the policy secretary told reporters after attending a committee meeting in the Legislative Assembly (AL).

Rosrio pointed out Cheong has recently been acquitted by the court of an alleged criminal offence so that he has decided to reappoint him.

In an executive order published in the Official Gazette (BO) last week, Rosrio appointed Cheong as the deputy director of the Mapping and Land Registry Bureau effective from June 10.

Cheong started to work in the Mapping and Land Registry Bureau as a public servant when he joined the public administration in 1993 when Macao was still under Portuguese administration. Cheong was the bureaus deputy director between November 1998 and December 1999. Cheong had been the acting director of the bureau since the establishment of the Macao Special Administrative Region (MSAR) in December 1999 until June 2009 when the Environmental Protection Bureau (DSPA) was established and he was appointed as its first director.

Cheong returned to the Mapping and Land Registry Bureau in June 2014 when he was appointed as its director.

Cheong resigned from his post as the director of the Mapping and Land Registry Bureau in June last year. This came after the Commission Against Corruption (CCAC) 2018 Annual Report published last year revealed that a then senior official of the Environmental Protection Bureau was alleged to have abused his power by arranging for a female colleague to accompany him on his working visits on multiple occasions, including a trip to Portugal in 2013. Local media outlets identified the senior official as Cheong.

(The Macau Post Daily/Macau News)PHOTO TDM

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Difficult to find officials in Macao for senior positions - Macau News

Surging US virus cases raise fear that progress is slipping – The Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) Alarming surges in coronavirus cases across the South and West raised fears Monday that the outbreak is spiraling out of control and that hard-won progress against the scourge is slipping away because of resistance among many Americans to wearing masks and keeping their distance from others.

Confirming predictions that the easing of state lockdowns over the past month and a half would lead to a comeback by the virus, cases surpassed 100,000 in Florida, hospitalizations are rising dramatically in Houston and Georgia, and a startling 1 in 5 of those tested in Arizona are proving to be infected.

Over the weekend, the virus seemed to be everywhere at once: Several campaign staff members who helped set up President Donald Trumps rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, tested positive, as did 23 Clemson University football players in South Carolina. At least 30 members of the Louisiana State University team were isolated after becoming infected or coming into contact with someone who was. Meatpacking plants were also hit with outbreaks.

It is snowballing. We will most certainly see more people die as a result of this spike, said Dr. Marc Boom, CEO and president of Houston Methodist Hospital, noting that the number of COVID-19 hospital admissions has tripled since Memorial Day to more than 1,400 across eight hospital systems in the Houston metropolitan area.

He warned that hospitals could be overwhelmed in three weeks, and he pleaded with people to cover their faces and practice social distancing.

It is possible to open up at a judicious pace and coexist with the virus, but it requires millions and millions of people to do the right thing, Boom said.

Texas is among a number of states including Arizona, Alabama, Florida and South Carolina whose governors have resisted statewide mask requirements, leaving the matter to local authorities.

The number of new coronavirus cases across the country per day has reached more than 26,000, up from about 21,000 two weeks ago, according to an Associated Press analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Over 120,000 deaths in the U.S. have been blamed on the virus, the highest toll in the world.

In Georgia, the number of people hospitalized because of COVID-19 rose to 1,000, erasing a months worth of progress.

Infections are at their highest level since the outbreak began, nearly two months after Georgia began lifting restrictions on businesses. Gov. Brian Kemp has required face coverings by waiters, barbers and others working face-to-face with customers but has largely let businesses decide whether customers must wear masks.

In Orlando, 152 coronavirus cases were linked to one bar near the University of Central Florida campus, said Dr. Raul Pino, a state health officer in the tourism city.

A lot of transmission happened there, Pino said. People are very close. People are not wearing masks. People are drinking, shouting, dancing, sweating, kissing and hugging, all the things that happen in bars. And all those things that happen are not good for COVID-19.

Although he asked health officials to renew calls for people to wear masks and keep their distance, Gov. Ron DeSantis has not signaled he will retreat from reopening the state after three months of shutdowns that have damaged the economy.

In Louisiana, however, Gov. John Bel Edwards extended restrictions on businesses because of a troubling uptick in cases, following the example set by Utah and Oregon last week. Louisiana has recorded more than 3,000 deaths.

There are a lot of people out there saying they are done with this virus. Well, the virus isnt done with us, Edwards said.

Countries such as Brazil, India and Pakistan are also seeing surging cases.

Dr. Michael Ryan, the World Health Organizations emergencies chief, said the outbreak is definitely accelerating in the U.S. and a number of other countries, dismissing the notion that the record-breaking daily levels of new cases simply reflect more testing. He noted that numerous countries have seen marked increases in hospital admissions and deaths.

The epidemic is now peaking or moving towards a peak in a number of large countries, he warned.

In the U.S., Arizona, in particular, is seeing disturbing trends in several benchmarks, including the percentage of tests that prove positive for the virus. Arizonas is the highest in the nation.

The states positive test rate is at a seven-day average of over 20%, well above the national average of 8.4% and the 10% level that public health officials say is a problem. When the positive test rate rises, it means that an outbreak is worsening not just that more people are getting tested.

At Marylands Fort Washington Medical Center on the outskirts of the nations capital, workers described a scramble to find new beds, heartbreaking encounters with family members of critically ill patients and frustration with Americans who do not believe the coronavirus threat is real.

Everybody is out lounging on the beaches. Just thinking that its over. And its not, respiratory therapist Kevin Cole said. Its far from being over. And unfortunately, its those people that will keep this pandemic going.

Meanwhile, New York City, once the most lethal hot spot in the U.S., lifted more of its restrictions, moving a big step closer to normal. Restaurants can serve diners outdoors, customers can browse through stores and get a haircut, and children can return to playgrounds.

Eve Gonzalez, a 27-year-old food industry worker in New York whose job had not yet resumed, said it is too soon: Im dying to go out, but peoples health is more important.

Worldwide, 9 million people have been confirmed infected by the virus and about 470,000 have died, according to Johns Hopkins, though experts say the true numbers are much higher because of limited testing and cases in which patients had no symptoms.

Amid the global surge, the head of WHO warned that world leaders must not politicize the outbreak but unite to fight it.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has faced criticism from President Donald Trump, said during a videoconference for the Dubai-based World Government Summit that it took over three months for the world to see 1 million confirmed infections, but just eight days to see the most recent 1 million cases.

Tedros did not mention Trump by name but warned: The greatest threat we face now is not the virus itself; its the lack of global solidarity and global leadership.

He added, We cannot defeat this pandemic with a divided world.

Trump has criticized the WHO over its early response to the outbreak and what he considers its excessive praise of China, where the outbreak began. He has threatened to pull the U.S. out of the agency.

Brazil, with over 50,000 deaths, the second-highest toll in the world, registered a record 54,000 new coronavirus cases in its latest single-day count. And nearly 1 in 3 people tested overall have turned up positive, according to the WHOs Ryan, who said that the startlingly high number suggests cases are going either unreported or undetected because of a low rate of testing.

Saudi Arabia said this years pilgrimage, or hajj, to Islams holy sites will not be canceled, but only very limited numbers of people will be allowed to take part. The hajj traditionally draws around 2 million Muslims from around the world for five intense days of worship and rituals in Mecca.

Indias health care system has been slammed by the virus, with the caseload in the country of more than 1.3 billion people climbing by nearly 15,000 Monday to over 425,000. The number of deaths climbed past 13,000.

In Pakistan, infections are accelerating and hospitals turning away patients, with new cases up to 6,800 a day. The government has relaxed its coronavirus restrictions, hoping to salvage a near-collapsed economy in the country of 220 million people.

___

Associated Press journalists from around the world contributed.

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Surging US virus cases raise fear that progress is slipping - The Associated Press

Surge in U.S. virus cases raises fear that progress is slipping – Press Herald

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Coronavirus cases in Florida surpassed 100,000 on Monday, part of an alarming surge across the South and West as states reopen for business and many Americans resist wearing masks or keeping their distance from others.

The disturbing signs in the Sunshine State as well as places like Arizona, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas and South Carolina along with countries such as Brazil, India and Pakistan are raising fears that the progress won after months of lockdowns is slipping away.

It is snowballing. We will most certainly see more people die as a result of this spike, said Dr. Marc Boom, CEO and president of Houston Methodist Hospital, noting that the number of COVID-19 hospital admissions has tripled since Memorial Day to more then 1,400 across eight hospital systems in the Houston metropolitan area.

He predicted that in three weeks hospitals could be overwhelmed, and he pleaded with people to cover their faces and practice social distancing.

It is possible to open up at a judicious pace and coexist with the virus, but it requires millions and millions of people to do the right thing. Right now, we dont have that because people have let their guard down, Boom said.

The number of newly confirmed coronavirus cases across the country per day has reached more than 26,000, up from about 21,000 two weeks ago, according to an Associated Press analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The analysis looked at a seven-day rolling average through Sunday.

Over 120,000 deaths in the U.S. have been blamed on the virus.

Over the weekend, the virus seemed to be everywhere at once: Six staff members helping set up for President Donald Trumps rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, tested positive, as did 23 Clemson University football players in South Carolina. At least 30 members of the Louisiana State University football team were isolated after becoming infected or coming into contact with someone who was. Meatpacking plants were also hit with outbreaks.

In Orlando, 152 coronavirus cases were linked to one bar near the University of Central Florida campus, said Dr. Raul Pino, a state health officer in the resort city.

A lot of transmission happened there, Pino said. People are very close. People are not wearing masks. People are drinking, shouting, dancing, sweating, kissing and hugging, all the things that happen in bars. And all those things that happen are not good for COVID-19.

Although he asked health officials to renew calls for people to wear masks and keep their distance, Gov. Ron DeSantis has not signaled he will retreat from reopening the state after three months of shutdowns that have damaged the economy.

Dr. Michael Ryan, the World Health Organizations emergencies chief, said that the outbreak is definitely accelerating in the U.S. and a number of other countries, dismissing the notion that the record daily levels of new COVID-19 cases simply reflect more testing. He noted that numerous countries have noted marked increases in hospital admissions and deaths.

The epidemic is now peaking or moving towards a peak in a number of large countries, he warned.

Arizona, in particular, is seeing disturbing trends in several benchmarks, including the percentage of tests that prove positive for the virus. Arizonas is the highest in the nation.

The states positive test rate is at a seven-day average of 20.4 percent, well above the national average of 8.4 percent and the 10 percent level that public health officials say is a problem. When the positive test rate rises, it means that an outbreak is worsening not just that more people are getting tested.

At Marylands Fort Washington Medical Center on the outskirts of the nations capital, workers described a scramble to find new beds, heartbreaking interactions with family members of critically ill patients and their frustration with Americans who do not believe the coronavirus threat is real.

Everybody is out lounging on the beaches. Just thinking that its over. And its not, respiratory therapist Kevin Cole said. Its far from being over. And unfortunately, its those people that keep well keep this pandemic going.

Meanwhile, New York City, once the most lethal hot spot in the U.S., lifted more of its restrictions Monday, moving a big step closer to normal.

Eve Gonzalez, a 27-year-old food industry worker in New York whose job had not yet resumed, said it was too soon: Im dying to go out, but peoples health is more important.

Nine million people have been confirmed infected by the virus worldwide and about 470,000 have died, according to Johns Hopkins, though experts say the actual numbers are much higher because of limited testing and cases in which patients had no symptoms.

Amid the global surge, the head of WHO warned that world leaders must not politicize the outbreak but unite to fight it.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has faced criticism from President Trump, said during a videoconference for the Dubai-based World Government Summit that it took over three months for the world to see 1 million confirmed infections, but just eight days to see the most recent 1 million cases.

Tedros did not mention Trump by name or his determination to pull the United States out of the U.N. health agency but warned against politicizing the pandemic.

The greatest threat we face now is not the virus itself, its the lack of global solidarity and global leadership, he said. We cannot defeat this pandemic with a divided world.

Trump has criticized the WHO for its early response to the outbreak and what he considers its excessive praise of China, where the outbreak began, though his own administrations response in the U.S. has come under attack. Trump has threatened to end all U.S. funding for the WHO.

Companies around the world are racing to find a vaccine, and there is fierce debate over how to make sure it is distributed fairly. WHOs special envoy on COVID-19, Dr. David Nabarro, said he believes it will be 2 1/2 years until there will be vaccine for everybody in the world.

Indias health care system has been slammed by the virus. The countrys caseload climbed by nearly 15,000 Monday to over 425,000, with more than 13,000 deaths.

After easing a nationwide lockdown, the Indian government in recent weeks ran special trains to return thousands of migrant workers to their home villages.

In Pakistan, infections are accelerating and hospitals are having to turn away patients, with new cases up to 6,800 a day. The government has relaxed its coronavirus restrictions, hoping to salvage a near-collapsed economy in the country of 220 million people.

Associated Press journalists from around the world contributed.

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Surge in U.S. virus cases raises fear that progress is slipping - Press Herald

AMD’s Top500 Showing Points to Progress and Commitment – HPCwire

AMDs recent return to the upper echelons of HPC was marked by gains on the latest Top500 list announced today in conjunction with ISC 2020, which is has been transformed this year into a digital event with livestreamed and pre-recorded sessions. There are 11 systems using AMD Epyc microprocessors (8 Rome and 2 Naples and a Sugon system using CPU technology licensed from AMD) on the current list that includes four systems in the top 50 and notably Nvidias Selene SuperPOD system which debuted at number seven.

The latest Top500 results show AMDs growing strength in high-end server and supercomputer markets following the launch of its Epyc microprocessor line in June 2017. AMD had walked away from the server market for years.

During the intervening period several legacy HPC systems using AMD Opteron CPUs remained on the Top500 though declining in position. It is interesting to recall AMDs Opteron glory days. It made its first appearance in 2003 with four systems. In 2010 there were 51 Opteron-based systems. By 2018 there were just two systems, including venerable Titan (ORNL) which was the first big supercomputer to bet on GPU accelerators. It was retired last summer. There are no Opteron-based on the current list.

Last November, AMD returned to the list with two systems using Epyc microprocessors. The jump to 11 now is a good sign.Todays showing, along with several big recent wins including two of the planned U.S. exascale systems (Frontier and El Capitan), suggests that systems builders, cloud providers, and the user community are now convinced AMD is in high-end CPUs for the long haul.

Leading HPC institutions are increasingly leveraging the power of 2nd Gen AMD EPYC processors to enable cutting-edge research that addresses the worlds greatest challenges, said Forrest Norrod, senior vice president and general manager, data center and embedded systems group, AMD. Our AMD EPYC CPUs, Radeon Instinct accelerators and open software programming environment are helping to advance the industry towards exascale-class computing, and we are proud to strengthen the global HPC ecosystem through our support of the top supercomputing clusters and cloud computing environments.

Here are the 11 systems using AMD Epyc microprocessors on the most recent Top500:

As the Top500 organizers noted, The x86 continues to be the dominant processor architecture, being present in 481 of the 500 systems. Intel claims 469 of these, with AMD installed in 11 and Hygon in the remaining one. Arm processors are present in just four TOP500 systems, three of which employ the new Fujitsu A64FX processor, with the remaining one powered by Marvells ThunderX2 processor.

Four of the new Epyc-based systems are from Atos. Atos is proud to provide to its customers with cutting edge technology, integrating 2nd Gen AMD Epyc processors as soon as released, and demonstrating increased performance on HPC applications in production environments, said Agns Boudot, group senior vice president, head of HPC and Quantum at Atos.

Coinciding with release of the latest Top500 list AMD reported, Momentum for AMD EPYC processors in advanced science and health research continues to grow with new installations at Indiana University, Purdue University and CERN as well as high-performance computing (HPC) cloud instances from Amazon Web Services, Google and Oracle Cloud.

Link to AMD release, https://www.amd.com/en/press-releases/2020-06-22-amd-epyc-processor-adoption-expands-new-supercomputing-and-high

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AMD's Top500 Showing Points to Progress and Commitment - HPCwire

The Latest: Surge in U.S. virus cases raises fear that progress is slipping – Press Herald

The latest on the coronavirus pandemic around the U.S. and the world.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Coronavirus cases in Florida surpassed 100,000 on Monday, part of an alarming surge across the South and West as states reopen for business and many Americans resist wearing masks or keeping their distance from others.

The disturbing signs in the Sunshine State as well as places like Arizona, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas and South Carolina along with countries such as Brazil, India and Pakistan are raising fears that the progress won after months of lockdowns is slipping away.

It is snowballing. We will most certainly see more people die as a result of this spike, said Dr. Marc Boom, CEO and president of Houston Methodist Hospital, noting that the number of COVID-19 hospital admissions has tripled since Memorial Day to more then 1,400 across eight hospital systems in the Houston metropolitan area.

He predicted that in three weeks hospitals could be overwhelmed, and he pleaded with people to cover their faces and practice social distancing.

It is possible to open up at a judicious pace and coexist with the virus, but it requires millions and millions of people to do the right thing. Right now, we dont have that because people have let their guard down, Boom said.

The number of newly confirmed coronavirus cases across the country per day has reached more than 26,000, up from about 21,000 two weeks ago, according to an Associated Press analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The analysis looked at a seven-day rolling average through Sunday.

Over 120,000 deaths in the U.S. have been blamed on the virus.

Read the full story here.

White House relaxes its own virus screening as D.C. hits phase two

The White House is cutting back on screening visitors for the coronavirus as President Donald Trump pushes to reopen the country.

In conjunction with Washington, D.C., entering Phase Two today, the White House is scaling back complex-wide temperature checks, White House spokesman Judd Deere said in a statement on Monday.

The White House had been conducting temperature checks in a makeshift medical tent at the press entrance since March. The tent was gone on Monday, as Washington entered its second phase of reopening, allowing the businesses such as restaurants and gyms to open under limited conditions.

In addition to social distancing, hand sanitizer, regular deep cleaning of all work spaces, and voluntary facial coverings, every staff member and guest in close proximity to the president and vice president is still being temperature checked, asked symptom histories, and tested for COVID-19, Deere said.

A notice posted in the briefing room lists symptoms of the virus and recommends social distancing.

On Saturday, Trump held his first rally since the pandemic began, drawing a crowd in Tulsa, Oklahoma, far smaller than he and his camaign had touted. Health experts had warned that a large indoor rally would fuel the viruss spread in Oklahoma.

The U.S. reported 33,894 new cases on Saturday, its highest total since May 1. About 120,000 people have died from the virus in the U.S.

Germany works to tame meatpacking outbreak

BERLIN German Chancellor Angela Merkels spokesman said everything needs to be done to contain an outbreak of the coronavirus linked to a large slaughterhouse where over 1,300 people have tested positive for COVID-19.

Steffen Seibert said 20 workers at the Toennies meat plant in the western Guetersloh region have been hospitalized and several are in intensive care.

We very much hope that all those who have fallen ill survive, Seibert told reporters in Berlin on Monday. This is an outbreak that needs to be taken very seriously.

Authorities have scrambled to stop the outbreak from spreading, by ordering mass tests of all workers and putting thousands of people into quarantine. The outbreak at Toennies, where many workers are migrants from Eastern Europe, has pushed up Germanys daily infection rate.

Authorities have dispatched virologists, contact tracing teams and the German army to help contain the outbreak.

Germanys disease control center says the country has seen 190,359 confirmed cases and 8,885 virus-related deaths about five times fewer deaths than in Britain.

Netherlands reports no deaths in last 24 hours

THE HAGUE, Netherlands The Dutch public health institute says that no COVID-19 deaths have been reported in the last 24 hours, the first time since March 12 that no new deaths have been seen.

The institutes Monday death tallies are sometimes lower than other days of the week due to weekend reporting lags.

The official Dutch death toll in the coronavirus pandemic stands at 6,090. The true toll is higher because not all people who have died with suspected COVID-19 were tested.

Tesla delays annual meeting until September

SAN FRANCISCO Due to coronavirus restrictions in Silicon Valley, Tesla Inc. is delaying its annual shareholders meeting from July 7 probably until Sept. 15.

The electric car and solar panel company announced the delay in a regulatory filing Monday after CEO Elon Musk revealed it overnight on Twitter.

The event likely will be combined with what Musk has touted as Battery Day, when the company is supposed to announce new battery technology that will work for 1 million miles and have longer range than current models.

In the filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Tesla said its board believes that stockholders appreciate the interpersonal connection and dynamic of an in-person annual meeting.

It reprinted Musks tweets saying Sept. 15 was a tentative date, and the meeting would be held at the companys factory in Fremont, California.

Croatia bans visits to nursing homes

ZAGREB, Croatia Croatian authorities have banned visits to nursing homes and hospitals in the Croatian coastal town of Zadar following an outbreak of the new coronavirus at an exhibition tennis tournament there.

Tennis players Grigor Dmitrov from Bulgaria, Borna Coric from Croatia and two more people have tested positive after participating in the Adria Tour event organized by top-ranked Novak Djokovic of Serbia.

Authorities said Monday that dozens more tests are underway in Zadar, while Croatias state HRT television reported that Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic also will be tested after visiting the event.

Djokovics team said he has returned to Serbia and was tested there, while the event has been canceled.

Croatia has reopened in hopes of salvaging the summer tourism season along the Adriatic Sea coast. The European Union nation will hold a national election on July 5.

Seouls mayor fears virus resurgence

SEOUL, South Korea The mayor of South Koreas capital fears the country is losing control over a virus resurgence and said Seoul will reimpose stronger social distancing measures if the daily jump in infections doesnt come below an average of 30 over the next three days.

If Seoul gets penetrated (by the virus), the entire Republic of Korea gets penetrated, Park Won-soon said Monday in a televised briefing, referring to South Korea by its formal name.

He also lamented what he described as complacency of citizens in social distancing, citing an increase in public transportation usage that he says has been approaching last years levels in recent weeks.

Citing research by health experts, Park the country could be possibly reporting as much as 800 new cases a day a month from now if it fails to stem current trends in transmissions. He said the basic reproduction number of virus carriers, which measures the number of infections caused by an individual, has reached nearly 1.8 for the period between April 30 and June 11. Any number above 1 indicates a growing epidemic.

In a separate briefing, Jeong Eun-kyeong, director of the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, acknowledged that the country was now going through a second wave of the virus, following a surge in late February and March centered around the southeastern city of Daegu.

The country has been reporting around 40 to 50 new cases per day since late May, mostly from the Seoul metropolitan area, where about half of South Koreas 51 million people live.

South Korea was reported around 500 new case per day in early March but managed to control the outbreak with an active testing and contact tracing campaign.

UN warns pandemic could jeopardize supply of AIDS drugs to developing nations

LONDON The U.N. AIDS agency is warning that the coronavirus pandemic could jeopardize the supply of AIDS drugs in developing countries and could lead to deadly shortages in the next few months.

In a statement Monday, UNAIDS said a survey it recently conducted found that lockdowns and border closures to stop the spread of COVID-19 were affecting both the production and distribution of the medicines, which could result in higher costs and shortages in the next two months.

As of June 2019, UNAIDS estimated that more than 24 million people were on life-saving anti-retroviral drugs and that losing access now could risk their health and the further spread of HIV.

I call on countries and buyers of HIV medicines to act swiftly in order to ensure everyone who is currently on treatment continues to be on it, Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, said in a statement.

UNAIDS said the sharp reduction in air and sea transport was complicating the distribution of raw materials and that social distancing was reducing manufacturing capacity. This could lead to a shortage of medicines or price increases, with some of the treatment courses for children estimated to be those worst affected.

The UNAIDS analysis was based on information collected from eight generic manufacturers of AIDS drugs in India, who account for more than 80% of the generic anti-retroviral drug supply globally. Governments in seven other countries that produce generic AIDS medications were also surveyed.

Beijing officials say they have contained outbreak

BEIJING A Beijing government spokesperson said the city has contained the momentum of a recent coronavirus outbreak that has infected more than 200 people, after the number of daily new cases fell to single digits.

The situation is developing in a good direction but the prevention situation remains grave and complex, Xu Hejian said at a Monday news conference.

Xu spoke after the city reported nine new cases in the previous day, down from more than 20 daily for eight straight days. A massive testing campaign found 236 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 22 more without any symptoms. China does not include the latter in its official case count.

The Transport Ministry said tests of more than 100,000 of the citys ubiquitous delivery drivers were expected to be competed Monday, as authorities expand testing to more groups.

The outbreak took hold in a huge wholesale food market crowded with workers and buyers. Additional cases traced to the same outbreak have been found in neighboring Hebei province and nearby Tianjin city.

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Syverson frustrated with progress on implementing gambling expansion in Illinois – The Center Square

(The Center Square) A leading proponent of last years gambling expansion bill in Illinois said he is frustrated with delays in its implementation.

State Sen. Dave Syverson, R-Rockford, said officials from Rockford submitted that citys proposal, with a casino to be operated by Hard Rock International, to the Illinois Gaming Board nine months ago.

The gaming board is telling us they hope to have the license approved by October, which is 12 months from the time it was submitted, Syverson said. It is just ridiculous that it's taking this long for a group just to review a simple application.

Recent COVID-19 restrictions have left casinos and video gaming facilities shuttered across the state. But Syverson said the COVID-19 pandemic shouldnt be used as an excuse for the delay.

With the casinos closed and the video gaming closed, you have 250 employees that are sitting around doing nothing, Syverson said. The staff that's working on the application, they're still there, they're still being paid. In addition, you have all this other staff with nothing to do who could have been assisting them in getting it done. COVID should not have slowed it down, it should have helped them to expedite their work.

Adding to the frustration is what Syverson says is a restriction on any preparatory work being done on the site of the proposed casino or even at the site of the temporary casino, which would operate while the new facility is being built.

We've asked [the Gaming Board] if the location can, at their own expense, start doing some development, Syverson said. Can they do the land work? Can they work on getting the sewer laid? Can they do that stuff now, while the weather is good, so they can get a jump on it? And the gaming board said, No, you can't. You can't lift a shovel on that property, or we're going to cancel that contract. So it's really ridiculous.

The bill, signed into law one year ago by Gov. J.B. Pritzker, allows for up to six new casinos across the state. Syverson argues says the applications for Rockford and for downstate Williamson County should be the simplest for the board to consider, both having already determined which casino operator will be selected.

They're both desperately waiting, Syverson said. The other applications are more complicated. Why not just take the easy ones that are clean, get those two done and approved and get them up and operating, and then work on the other applications?

Complicating matters for the Rockford site specifically is another proposal for a mega-casino just north of the Wisconsin border in Beloit. That plan now has been approved by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and is waiting for a final sign-off by Gov. Tony Evers.

If Beloit opens up first, you're going to get people that are going to go there and they may be comfortable going there and they may continue to go there even after Rockford opens up, Syverson said. We could have easily beat them to the punch. But, obviously, the gaming board doesn't seem to care.

The law requires the Gaming Board to provide a decision on an application within twelve months of submission. For Rockford, that means an October deadline, but Syverson said he worries that late date could push the start of construction into 2021 and the opening of the casino to 2022.

It's just sad that this is something we could have had opened and generating revenue for local governments, generating revenue for the state, creating jobs, he said. It's like they just don't care about doing things that are going to help us kick-start our economy to get it back going well.

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Brush fire on Progress Ave. in Springfield contained – WESTERNMASSNEWS.com

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St. Clairsville is making progress on water service – Martins Ferry Times Leader

ST. CLAIRSVILLE The future of water service and other long-range future projects were up for discussion among St. Clairsville city leaders Monday.

St. Clairsville is continuing preparations to discontinue the aging water treatment plant according to Ohio Environmental Protection Agency mandates and switch to purchasing Belmont County water through an existing line.

Mayor Kathryn Thalman said she is in the process of scheduling a water audit for August with an Rural Community Assistance Partnership representative and with engineer Jeff Vaughn, who is working on the changeover process and had conducted a report finding it financially feasible.

There will be a kick-off meeting between Belmont County, several other towns in the area, regarding water audits, Thalman said, adding a date has not been set and the COVID-19 pandemic has delayed activity. At this juncture we are planning to have the meeting in our council chambers, but of course it will depend on any COVID protocols.

In addition, Thalman said that now all the city buildings are metered, they have determined St. Clairsvilles water loss is not 57 percent as has been reported, but 28 percent.

Having the buildings metered has been very enlightening already to identify water loss, she said.

In answer to a question from Council President Jim Velas, the Cumberland Trail fire department is metered.

Also, Thalman and other city officials are meeting with the planning company Burgess & Niple to speak about ongoing concerns of traffic tie-ups through downtown St. Clairsville, frequently following accidents and traffic jams on Interstate 70.

Thalman said 55,000 cars pass through I-70 daily and accidents are increasing and undue strain is being placed on the city infrastructure from fracking trucks and 18-wheelers driving on roads not built to support them.

In order to be ready for future development, these planners are reaching out to the state and see what kind of funding might be available to plan alternate accesses, Thalman said.

Also, Councilman Mark Bukmir commented on the ongoing search for a service director and asked if Don Smithberger, supervisor of general services, could be consulted in the search and process, due to his in-depth knowledge of infrastructure needs.

In other matters, a finance and a utility committee meeting will be scheduled. Finance Director Annette Williams suggested an in-person or teleconference meeting, since the 2021 budget is due to the Belmont County auditor by July 15.

Williams will also check and determine if funds from the citys Tax Increment Financing fund for the St. Clair Commons can be used to supplement a payment for a past loan for upgrades to the city reservoir.

I agree, we have to have a finance meeting, Councilman Mike Smith said.

Options include a teleconference, an in-person meeting with the committee and teleconference available for the public, or holding a teleconference meeting immediately before the next council meeting.

Council President Jim Velas said teleconference council meetings would likely continue to the first meeting of July at least, since state regulations regarding social distancing could not be kept otherwise.

Also, Planning and Zoning Director Tom Murphy reminded residents they must obtain permits prior to starting any construction project.

Councilwoman Linda Jordan reported the playground is open, as is the Memorial Park pool.

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Surging coronavirus cases in U.S. raise fear that progress is slipping – Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Coronavirus cases in Florida surpassed 100,000 on Monday, part of an alarming surge across the South and West as states reopen for business and many Americans resist wearing masks or keeping their distance from others.

The disturbing signs in the Sunshine State as well as places like Arizona, Alabama, Texas and South Carolina along with countries such as Brazil, India and Pakistan are raising fears that the progress won after months of lockdowns is slipping away.

It is snowballing, said Dr. Marc Boom, CEO and president of Houston Methodist Hospital, noting that the number of hospitalizations in the Texas Medical Center system that includes the hospital has more than doubled since Memorial Day. If we dont do what we can RIGHT NOW as a community to stop the spread, the virus will take our choices away from us.

The number of newly confirmed coronavirus cases across the country per day has reached more than 26,000, up from about 21,000 two weeks ago, according to an Associated Press analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The analysis looked at a seven-day rolling average through Sunday. Over 120,000 deaths in the U.S. have been blamed on the virus.

In Orlando, 152 coronavirus cases were linked to one bar near the University of Central Florida campus, said Dr. Raul Pino, a state health officer in the resort city.

A lot of transmission happened there, Pino said. People are very close. People are not wearing masks. People are drinking, shouting, dancing, sweating, kissing and hugging, all the things that happen in bars. And all those things that happen are not good for COVID-19.

Although he asked health officials to renew calls for people to wear masks and keep their distance, Gov. Ron DeSantis has not signaled he will retreat from reopening the state after three months of shutdowns that have damaged the economy.

Dr. Michael Ryan, the World Health Organizations emergencies chief, said that the outbreak is definitely accelerating in the U.S. and a number of other countries, dismissing the notion that the record daily levels of new COVID-19 cases simply reflect more testing. He noted that numerous countries have also noted marked increases in hospital admissions and deaths.

The epidemic is now peaking or moving towards a peak in a number of large countries, he warned.

Arizona, in particular, is seeing disturbing trends in several benchmarks, including the percentage of tests that prove positive for the virus. Arizonas is the highest in the nation.

The stats positive test rate is at a seven-day average of 20.4%, well above the national average of 8.4% and the 10% level that public health officials say is a problem. When the positive test rate rises, it means that an outbreak is worsening not just that more people are getting tested.

At Marylands Fort Washington Medical Center on the outskirts of the nations capital, workers described a scramble to find new beds, heartbreaking interactions with family members of critically ill patients and their frustration with Americans who do not believe the coronavirus threat is real.

Everybody is out lounging on the beaches. Just thinking that its over. And its not, respiratory therapist Kevin Cole said. Its far from being over. And unfortunately, its those people that keep well keep this pandemic going.

Nearly 9 million people have been confirmed infected by the virus worldwide and about 470,000 have died, according to Johns Hopkins, though experts say the actual numbers are much higher because of limited testing and cases in which patients had no symptoms.

Amid the global surge, the head of WHO warned that world leaders must not politicize the outbreak but unite to fight it.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has faced criticism from President Donald Trump, said during a videoconference for the Dubai-based World Government Summit that it took over three months for the world to see 1 million confirmed infections, but just eight days to see the most recent 1 million cases.

Tedros did not mention Trump by name or his determination to pull the United States out of the U.N. health agency but warned against politicizing the pandemic.

The greatest threat we face now is not the virus itself, its the lack of global solidarity and global leadership, he said. We cannot defeat this pandemic with a divided world.

Trump has criticized the WHO for its early response to the outbreak and what he considers its excessive praise of China, where the outbreak began, though his own administrations response in the U.S. has come under attack. Trump has threatened to end all U.S. funding for the WHO.

Companies around the world are racing to find a vaccine, and there is fierce debate over how to make sure it is distributed fairly. WHOs special envoy on COVID-19, Dr. David Nabarro, said he believes it will be 2 1/2 years until there will be a vaccine for everybody in the world.

Indias health care system has been slammed by the virus. The countrys caseload climbed by nearly 15,000 Monday to over 425,000, with more than 13,000 deaths.

After easing a nationwide lockdown, the Indian government in recent weeks ran special trains to return thousands of migrant workers to their home villages.

In Pakistan, infections are accelerating and hospitals are having to turn away patients, with new cases up to 6,800 a day. The government has relaxed its coronavirus restrictions, hoping to salvage a near-collapsed economy in the country of 220 million people.

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Racial profiling ban still work in progress in University Heights – The Gazette

UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS More than a year has passed since University Heights adopted what was thought to be the first racial profiling ban in Iowa, but citizens still do not have the means to file a complaint against police should an issue arise.

Nonetheless, community leaders in the small Johnson County enclave say theyve made progress rolling out the ordinance, which they say remains a priority.

Its not as if its stalled or paused, said City Council member Sara OSullivan, chair of the Community Protection committee, whose first term began this year. Some of the actions maybe havent happened in the time frame that was desired initially. Its not for a lack of buy-in. I dont see any road blocks being thrown up.

Enacted in February 2019, the ordinance prohibits the use of explicit or implicit biases by University Heights police officers, calls for a Community Advisory Board to resolve complaints and review enforcement data annually, requires the collection of data for each police interaction with the public and also mandates officers receive implicit bias training.

Members of the Community Advisory Board were selected by the council by the end of 2019. The five-member board consists of three University Heights residents Jessica Bowes, Dorothy Maher and Alejandro Pezzulo Colmenares. The ordinance requires one member associated with the NAACP. David Jackson, an adjunct assistant professor in the University of Iowas African American Studies Program, was put forth by the local chapter of the NAACP. The board also is required to have one member with law enforcement experience, which is filled by retired Coralville police Officer Doug Vance, who currently is director of safety and security at UI Hospitals and Clinics.

University Heights Police Chief Troy Kelsay said the board was set to have its inaugural meeting March 18. That meeting which would have been attended by Kelsay, OSullivan, Iowa City NAACP President Kevin Sullivan and Iowa-Nebraska NAACP President Betty Andrews would have established a citizen complaint process. But that meeting never took place due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Things were just too crazy, Kelsay said.

Kelsay, who served a lengthy career with the Iowa City Police Department before retiring as captain and later joining University Heights as chief in April 2019, said he plans to provide University Heights board with his perspectives on interacting with Iowa Citys Community Police Review Board.

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Established in 1997, Iowa Citys panel was the first of its kind in the state. Black Lives Matter protesters in Iowa City have called for the board to be given more authority and Iowa City Mayor Pro Tem Mazahir Salih, a former member, has called it powerless.

Kelsay said University Heights review board will be more narrowly focused than Iowa Citys, but hed like to see it be more transparent and give board members a bigger role in the complaint process.

I think the board should be much more involved in the process than the community review board in Iowa City, he said. I think theres some frustration there.

Kelsay envisions a complaint process in which he collects all written and video information related to an incident and presents it directly to the review board. Kelsay would be able to answer the boards questions immediately and potentially resolve the complaint right away. If the incident is unclear, Kelsay can follow up at the direction of the board.

They can direct me, Kelsay said. That is going to be my pitch.

Some aspects of the ordinance are in place. Kelsay said University Heights officers are collecting data on their interactions with the public. That data will be reviewed by Chris Barnum, the St. Ambrose University criminal justice professor who also is analyzing Iowa City police data as part of an ongoing study of disproportionate minority contact in traffic stops.

Barnum is analyzing University Heights data at no cost, though Kelsay said he anticipates paying a fee to the professor when he presents his findings to the council.

University Heights officers have yet to receive implicit bias training beyond joint annual training done by area officers countywide. Kelsay said Sanders with the NAACP is envisioning training for officers to familiarize them with Black history and how it feels to be a Black person interacting with law enforcement. That training could take the form of sending officers to the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C.

The goal is for there to be a greater appreciation and understanding, Kelsay said.

Not just that people feel that way, but why do they feel that way, he said.

With coronavirus mitigation restrictions loosening in the state, Kelsay said hes hopeful the review board can have its inaugural meeting some time in July.

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I know theres interest in the community, he said. I think some feel this particular council is less committed to that. That is not the case. That is not the case at all.

Comments: (319) 339-3155; lee.hermiston@thegazette.com

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Racial profiling ban still work in progress in University Heights - The Gazette

"Precautionary evacuations" in progress for fire burning in Lockwood – KSBW Monterey

UPDATE 7:46 pm: The Hunter Fire is now 130 acres and 10% contained.UPDATE 5:11 pm: Evacuations are now in progress for Copperhead Canyon Road and Bryson-Hesperia Road. The Hunter Fire is 100 acres and 0% contained. 20 structures remain threatened. UPDATE 4:56 pm: Evacuation advisories have been issued for Copperhead Canyon and Bryson-Hesperia areas.Original Story 4:37 pm: "Precautionary evacuations" have been issued in Lockwood for a fire burning near the town in South Monterey County.The Hunter Fire is 70 acres and is threatening 20 structures.The fire is burning in the area of River Road and Interlake Road.South Monterey County Fire Protection District and Fort Hunter Liggett Fire Department are responding to the fire.We will update this article with new information as it becomes available.

UPDATE 7:46 pm: The Hunter Fire is now 130 acres and 10% contained.

UPDATE 5:11 pm: Evacuations are now in progress for Copperhead Canyon Road and Bryson-Hesperia Road. The Hunter Fire is 100 acres and 0% contained. 20 structures remain threatened.

UPDATE 4:56 pm: Evacuation advisories have been issued for Copperhead Canyon and Bryson-Hesperia areas.

Original Story 4:37 pm: "Precautionary evacuations" have been issued in Lockwood for a fire burning near the town in South Monterey County.

The Hunter Fire is 70 acres and is threatening 20 structures.

The fire is burning in the area of River Road and Interlake Road.

South Monterey County Fire Protection District and Fort Hunter Liggett Fire Department are responding to the fire.

We will update this article with new information as it becomes available.

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"Precautionary evacuations" in progress for fire burning in Lockwood - KSBW Monterey

Michelle Obama says making progress on race is ‘up to all of us’ – Today.com

Michelle Obama has felt the same confusion, fear and anger that many of us have experienced over the past several weeks, as the country simultaneously grapples with the coronavirus pandemic and racial injustice following George Floyd's death.

In a new interview for Harper's Bazaar magazine, the former first lady spoke with TV producer and writer Shonda Rhimes about the importance of voting this fall. But she also delved into why this moment in American history is giving her hope for the future.

"With everything thats gone on over these past few months, I know a lot of folks out there have been confused, or scared, or angry, or just plain overwhelmed, and Ive got to be honest. I count myself among them. I think weve all been there," the mother of two began.

"Our foundation has been shaken not just by a pandemic that stole more than 100,000 of our loved ones and sent tens of millions into unemployment, but also by the rumbling of the age-old fault lines of race, class, and power that our country was built on," she continued. "The heartache and frustration that boiled over after the losses of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and so many others has caused a lot of us to grapple with the very essence of who we are the kind of people we want to be."

But that new mindset is exactly what makes the "Becoming" author hopeful.

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"I think a lot about the younger generation growing up right now, about how theyre seeing just how fragile even the best-laid plans can be," she said. "In this tumultuous period, theyve been learning something that often took previous generations years, or decades, to understand: that life can be unfair. It can be unjust. And more than anything is always uncertain."

As a result, Obama said, we should "live by foundational truths like honesty, compassion, decency and if you channel your frustration into our democracy with your vote and your voice, you can find your true north even in times of crisis."

She also spoke about generational differences and the responsibility of young people to better society.

"Because of all this upheaval, this generation is learning those lessons faster than folks our age did. Theyre learning it together and making their voices heard," she explained. "So even while theres a lot of pain out there, and that pain is very real, thats something that gives me hope the hope that this generation will not only learn these lessons earlier than ours ever did, but apply them in ways that we never could."

This work must cross cultural and demographic barriers in order to be successful, Obama said.

"Let me be clear. Making progress on these issues isnt just on the shoulders of young people. It isnt just on people of color. Its up to all of us, no matter what we look like or where we come from," she said. "Weve all got to do the honest, uncomfortable work of rooting out racism and fighting for real justice. It starts with self-examination and listening to those whose lives are different from our own."

She added, "I hope we all have the strength to take that first step."

The former first lady has spoken candidly about racism and the challenges the country is facing on her Instagram page. In a recent post about Juneteenth, she praised the Black community for "(finding) something to celebrate."

"Even though the story has never been tidy, and Black folks have had to march and fight for every inch of our freedom, our story is nonetheless one of progress," she wrote Friday. "Both of my grandfathers were the grandchildren of enslaved people. They grew up in the Jim Crow South and migrated north in search of a better life.

"But even then, they were still shut out of jobs and schools and opportunities because of the color of their skin. But they pressed forward with dignity and with purpose, raising good kids, contributing to their communities, and voting in every election," she continued.

In a post in late May, Obama said she was "pained" and "exhausted" following the recent deaths of Floyd, Arbery and Taylor.

"It just goes on, and on, and on," she wrote. "Race and racism is a reality that so many of us grow up learning to just deal with. But if we ever hope to move past it, it cant just be on people of color to deal with it. Its up to all of us Black, white, everyone no matter how well-meaning we think we might be, to do the honest, uncomfortable work of rooting it out."

Maura Hohman

Maura Hohman is a weekend editor for TODAY.com.

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Michelle Obama says making progress on race is 'up to all of us' - Today.com

Progress toward having college football season hit a roadblock over the weekend says Paul Finebaum – Saturday Down South

Michael Wayne Bratton | 7 hours ago

After initial doubt regarding the possibility of holding the upcoming college football season was cast following the start of the coronavirus pandemic, things have been trending in the right direction for months when it comes to those rooting for the fall season to take place.

While the fate of the upcoming season remains unknown at this point, SEC Network host Paul Finebaum believes recent events have at least cast some doubt on the positivity when it comes to the fall season.

During his latest weekly appearance on Birmingham-based WJOX 94.5 FM radio program The Roundtable, Finebaum was asked to share his thoughts on all the positive COVID-19 results showing up around college campuses in recent days.

I think college football is literally at a crossroads right now in trying to get the season underway, Finebaum said on the show. Until now, I would say the last six weeks have been amazingly positive and everything has been geared towards the season and that hit a roadblock over the weekend. It was a grim, dark weekend for college football and by the way, for every other sport, too. I mean its not like anyone has figured this thing out but college football has the most challenging road ahead.

And, I mean, weve all hearing the same things, I mean the numbers are are enormous across the country, even in Alabama. Ive heard double digits at Auburn, double digits at Alabama. Should this be expected? I thought they would be handfuls at every school, I didnt think the numbers would be this big. And this is without anyone on campus. These are fairly controlled environments. And I think the big story, it may not be so much about college football but what are the odds of students getting back on campus if this is the circumstance?

College sports can always control things a lot better than the normal population. The only issue here is, unless you quarantine players, which you cant really do on a college campus, this is not going away.

Athletes testing positive for coronavirus now may not be the end of the world, but it is a sign that some procedures currently in place around the country will need to be reworked to prevent outbreaks moving forward.

Thankfully, all reported positive athletes to this point have been either asymptomatic or not resulted in hospitalization.

The fear, according to Finebaum, will come if and when that changes.

But one thing that I think most people feel really comfortable about, not to sound like any of us are experts because were not, young people normally dont get affected as much but they still do get affected, Finebaum added. And I think the danger is that youre going to get that bad case here that you cannot predict. Weve all covered young college athletes dying. And theres no explanation. You say, how can it happen?

But it can happen I dont need to say what were all hoping for, because its obvious, but its a real concern I think that this thing is that you get a bad outcome and what do you say then?

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Progress toward having college football season hit a roadblock over the weekend says Paul Finebaum - Saturday Down South

Testing the 2018 car ‘shows the progress F1 has made’ – Ricciardo – GPfans

Daniel Ricciardo has said testing Renault's 2018 Formula 1 car demonstrated to him how far the team has come in two-years.

Testing the 2018 car at the Red Bull Ring last week, Ricciardo told the F1 Nation that, despite being disappointed with the 2019 car, he can now see that there had been steps forward from the previous campaign.

It wasnt as good, so there were improvements last year," said Ricciardo.

But obviously, we did get to drive the RS20 in testing before all this started. Its come a long way in two years, Ill say that.

It actually was quite nice driving a two-year-old car, because it shows you the progress the sport makes.

Making his return to a Formula 1 cockpit for the first time since the close of pre-season testing in February, Ricciardo said it didn't take too long to get back into the swing of things.

He added: It was firstly good. Good to get back into it. The first few laps it felt a little foreign, but its also like all things, like when youve been doing something pretty much your whole life, it doesnt take long till you remember the feeling and it all feels very normal, very quickly.Certainly getting in the first time, leaving the pits and the first few laps felt a little strange, but Im really glad we got to do it, because I think just shaking off the cobwebs, even the general body soreness that you get after the first day, I feel like Ive gone through that now.

Before you go...

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Testing the 2018 car 'shows the progress F1 has made' - Ricciardo - GPfans

Insurance and mental health: Progress needed | Insurance Business – Insurance Business ASIA

Mental health has become an increasing concern for people around the world because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The coronavirus has disrupted normality as we know it, causing mass uncertainty which, for some, is a potent cause of distress and anxiety. But the global pandemic is only highlighting and exacerbating an issue that has been top of mind for many organisations, including insurers, for some time. Its in everyones best interest individuals, insurers, governments and communities - when people are as physically and mentally healthy as possible.

While mental health is a large ticket item for insurance organisations, especially within their internal human resources, the industry is less developed when it comes to providing coverage to those who need it most, according to Neil Sprackling (pictured), president of Swiss Res Life & Health US Business and a member of the firms Americas Management Team.

First and foremost, we need to raise the prominence of the role that insurance can play in helping consumers deal with mental health, he told Insurance Business. This is all about awareness and understanding. We need to get consumers to appreciate that insurance can provide them with essential support in managing their condition. There is often a perception that a history of mental health may preclude an individual from being accepted for life or disability insurance. This is not always the case. For life insurance, we can often offer terms to an applicant, albeit with an extra premium loading. For disability insurance, it may be possible to apply an extra premium rather than exclude the condition. I firmly believe that wherever possible insurers/reinsurers should do everything they can to offer terms, just as we do with other medical conditions. This is our fundamental role in making societies more resilient.

Read next: Malaysia lauds insurers coverage for mental health

Assistance from insurers/reinsurers for consumers with mental health conditions should go beyond just providing coverage, according to Sprackling. The industry veteran, who has over 30 years reinsurance experience spanning the UK, Spain, Latin America, Australia and New Zealand, said companies must do a much better job of helping consumers through the application process by looking at information beyond just the diagnosis, for example, looking at how an individual manages their mental condition.

This is particularly important for disability insurance, Sprackling stressed. Lets work together to remove the consumer fear factor of applying for insurance in the first place. At the claims stage Swiss Res approach champions early intervention and holistic health management. This holistic approach is founded on the resounding international evidence base which demonstrates that work is generally health-supportive, and highlights the benefits of early, collaborative and work-focused intervention.

Read more: Theres a huge gap in support for employees mental health AXA Asia CEO

According to Sprackling, theres absolutely no question that outcomes are better with early intervention and treatment when a person is struggling with their mental health. Insurers and reinsurers can play a key role in that early intervention and personal health risk mitigation. Historically, the industry has been more focused on providing support to individuals at the claims stage, or prior to an imminent claim when people are struggling in work.

Mental health issues are extremely common disorders around the world associated with severe morbidity and mortality, he commented. Studies indicate that numerous mental and physical conditions demonstrate a bi-directional relationship; when one has poor physical health, its made far worse by poor mental health.

The mental health landscape presents an opportunity for the insurance industry to support personal health risk mitigation and early intervention by leveraging new tools to identify needs. For example, there are currently 1435 mental health apps available [via popular app stores iTunes and Google Play]. Insurers can work together with digital innovators by enhancing their apps and platforms and by bringing new solutions to populations they are already insuring. There is now a focus on seeing where and how we can offer support to policyholders when theyre well which is where there is potential in the digital support space.

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Insurance and mental health: Progress needed | Insurance Business - Insurance Business ASIA

SIU leaders pledge action, real progress on diversity, inclusion – The Southern

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As the national anthem plays inside Saluki Stadium, SIU cheerleaders Alaysia Brandy (from left), Czarina Tinker and Ariahn Hunt kneel outside of the stadium prior to the 2017 Salukis football game against Youngstown State. SIU leadership, including President Dan Mahony and Athletics Director Liz Jarnigan, are pledging action to make SIU more inclusive.

CARBONDALE Southern Illinois University President Dan Mahony is calling for an exhaustive review of policies, practices and curriculum at all three of the system's campuses in an effort to upend systemic racism and identify new ways to bolster diversity and inclusion.

Further, in a recent letter to the SIU community last week, he said that every student who graduates must leave with an understanding of systemic racism and its impact.

Our graduates must be prepared to have a positive impact on our society and that is not possible without this understanding, he wrote.

Working groups either created or refocused in Carbondale, Edwardsville and the School of Medicine, will be tasked with crafting recommendations to achieve this and numerous other goals. Mahony is asking each campus to ensure ongoing conversations on diversity and inclusion that include feedback from any stakeholder that wishes to participate, he said. They will make recommendations to enhance efforts to recruit and retain minority students, faculty and staff. And a system of accountability, with measurable goals, will be established to ensure follow-through.

Mahony said its common in higher education and other arenas to react to incidences of racism and injustice promising to be more accepting and fair and then we just move on and continue to do things the way weve always done them.

Thats not what Im looking for, he said in an interview with The Southern. I want to change the way we do things.

Entering an era of reflection

Lolita L. Mack, president of SIUs Black Alumni Group, who has been asked to serve as a task force member on the Carbondale campus, said this most recent push for change gives me hope that they do hear our voices and different concerns, and they want to address it.

Mack recently penned a letter to SIU Carbondale campus leaders asking a series of pointed questions after a racist video circulated on social media. The video, made by the baseball teams starting pitcher, who graduated in May, was shared with a few others on Snapchat. It was made and shared presumably on or around Martin Luther King Jr. Day, though only recently surfaced publicly. As it circulated on Facebook and Twitter, SIU Carbondale immediately issued a statement condemning the video replete with the n-word. The university also distanced itself from the student, noting he had graduated and is no longer enrolled.

Mack applauded the swift response disavowing the message in the video. But she and other alumni were concerned the university did not go far enough as the now former student was at SIU on scholarship when the video was made and shared on Snapchat. Mack also questioned whether his behavior speaks to a broader need of the university, and athletic department specifically, to foster an anti-racist culture.

How will the university and Athletic Department ensure that racial sensitivity is covered in the learning environment in the future? she wrote in her letter to SIU administrators. What are officials willing to do to show future and current students and athletes that this is unacceptable behavior?

SIU Edwardsville also recently issued a public statement condemning hate speech after facing backlash for how it was monitoring comments on one of its Facebook posts. The original post highlighted the Rock a large rock on campus that students paint as a tradition bearing the message Black Lives Matter. The post, which was supportive of the statement on the rock, generated more than 500 comments.

Controversy erupted after SIU Edwardsville asked a commenter to edit a post in which he called another individual who had made racially charged and racist comments a racist, saying that direct name-calling violated its social media policy. At least some of the offensive comments were allowed to remain.

In a statement that followed, SIU Edwardwville said that the racist comments made on its public post do not reflect our Universitys values and that it encourages all members of our community to denounce racism, but also stood by its selective censorship policy.

Just as the Rock has allowed for free expression, we recognize, as a public university, we are legally required to uphold the First Amendment to the Constitution and free speech. As much as we disagree with the racist sentiments expressed in those posts, they are protected by the First Amendment.

SIUE spokesman Doug McIlhagga told The Southern on Friday that in the days since the original post and statement, campus leadership has decided to further review its social media guidelines. The university is working on a policy that will give more discretion to monitors to remove offensive content, he said. This may signal that the Edwardsville campus is embarking upon a new era of reflection.

Becoming a 'beacon of diversity and inclusion'

On June 12, a week later, Edwarsville announced an Anti-Racism Task Force, coinciding with Mahonys call for a systemwide undertaking on this front. In a statement to the campus, Chancellor Randy Pembrook and other top leaders said they recognize the fierce urgency of now to do this work. We have heard the pain and frustration among our students, staff and faculty. Emails and town halls will not be enough. Action and urgency are essential, their statement said. This approach must be rooted in humility, truth-telling, critical analysis, reflection, and a willingness to confront structural arrangements and institutional policies and practices that reinforce racism. And certainly, we must all do the work of challenging our individual beliefs.

Daniel Mahony, the new president of the Southern Illinois University System, discusses his vision for the future of the university during an interview in March in Carbondale.

Mahony said that an examination of systemic racism casts a broad net. It includes such things as examining hiring and promotion policies and practices, retention efforts, student recruitment and educational approach.

Teaching students about systemic racism can happen in any number of ways, he said. It could be taught as part of an introductory course or weaved throughout subject areas, or both.

At Winthrop University, in Rock Hill, South Carolina where Mahony served as president before coming to SIU in March incoming freshmen and transfer students received a copy of the book Just Mercy: A story of Justice and Redemption. He said they were asked to read it prior to arriving on campus. It was then discussed in their freshman orientation class and in other conversations in their residence halls. The memoir by acclaimed civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson exposes deep inequities in the justice system that oppress minorities and people who are poor.

Mahony said that the campuses are not starting fresh on the topics of diversity, inclusion and anti-racism he acknowledged past efforts and numerous success stories. But he said its time to take this work further, and go deeper. A short-term step hes planning is making the SIU Systems chief diversity officer position full time. The individual serving in that role now does so in addition to his full-time duties within the SIU School of Medicine. But he wants the most significant changes at the campus levels to be driven by the people who make them up, rather than from the top down.

Incoming Carbondale Chancellor Austin Lane said that one thing that struck him about the Carbondale campus during his interviews is that he was asked numerous questions about his commitment to diversity and inclusion. Before all of the things that were seeing, that is one of the things that impressed me about SIU, he said. His campus interview predated the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody, which has prompted a wave of nationwide protests and calls for racial equity. From that tragedy comes an opportunity to seize on the national push for a more just and inclusive society, and act in a more action-oriented manner locally, Lane said.

Lane is still a few weeks from officially assuming the chancellor position on the Carbondale campus; his contract calls for him to start by July 6. But hes already actively engaged in planning with SIUs leadership team and the broader community.

Lane, who is the first Black chancellor of the SIU Carbondale campus, stressed that this initiative is a genuine effort committed to real progress not just offering surface-level platitudes to diversity and inclusion. This is going to become part of the fabric of what were going to be doing within our strategic planning, he said. Lane said his goal is to create a campus culture that makes all feel welcome, regardless of race, national origin, sexual orientation or disability.

SIU, he said, should be seen as a beacon of diversity and inclusion. He also sees this as an enrollment-building exercise, as it equates to more students wanting to become a Saluki and attend SIU.

Athletic Department tackles racism

Mack, president of the Black Alumni Group, said this feels like a moment that could bring about real systemic change. She was encouraged by the fact that she received responses from the SIU president, incoming chancellor, athletic director and baseball coach all within 24 hours upon sending her letter via email expressing concern about the former baseball players video.

She also has since attended a Zoom meeting with Lane and had lunch with Athletic Director Liz Jarnigan. Mack said shes also since learned that the baseball player did face consequences beyond what the universitys statement detailed. Though he had graduated, NCAA rules permitted him to return in 2021 because the COVID-19 pandemic cut this spring's season short.

Mack said she learned that the opportunity was no longer available to him once SIU was made aware of the video. (An SIU spokeswoman said the university could not confirm the circumstances surrounding his exit from the team, citing student confidentiality laws, other than to say he will not play next year).

I hate to say that it took away opportunity, but sometimes we have to be responsible for the actions we have, Mack said. In this case, the responsibility for his actions was that he lost his last year of eligibility and his post-grad scholarship offer he was approved for.

Mack said shes also sought more information about the universitys position on student-athletes who may choose to kneel during the pre-game national anthem in future sporting events, as a form of peaceful protest. In 2017, three Black cheerleaders who chose to kneel during "The Star-Spangled Banner" prior to the start of a football game faced an onslaught of criticism and even threats the university was also criticized for allowing it.

A few weeks after their first demonstration, the then-athletic director abruptly changed pregame protocol to remove cheerleaders from the field until after the start of the game. At the time, the athletic director said it was to allow members of the spirit teams to instead focus on greeting fans at the gates, but the cheerleaders, and others, felt it was driven by a desire to remove them from public view, and quell the backlash the university was facing.

This was during a time that many Black players across the nation were taking a knee during the national anthem at sports games as a form of political protest against systemic racism and police brutality, following in the footsteps of Colin Kaepernick, then-quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers, who started the practice in 2016.

Jarnigan, who has been SIUs athletic director since September 2019, said the Athletic Department decided more than a year ago that should someone feel that its important for them to kneel theyre going to kneel, and theyre going to be allowed to kneel. The same goes for student-athletes who feel it is important to stand with their hands over their hearts theyre going to be allowed to do that.

We will honor what any of our student-athletes feel they need to do for the important points theyre trying to make, she said.

While the campus as a whole will be having conversations and making changes, Jarnigan said she wants to see the Athletics Department take a leading role, as it has in the past. Saluki Athletics has a rich history of championing diversity. At the dawn of the civil rights movement, Black student-athletes blazed trails at SIU on the court and field, in the classroom and beyond, benefiting countless students that followed them. But the Athletic Department still has more work to do, she said it is not enough to rest on past breakthroughs.

After the baseball players racist video went public, Jarnigan said she felt called to take broader action. But she also wants to ensure that whatever changes her department ushers in are meaningful, and not knee-jerk or simply intended to check off a box. She said her goal is to spend the summer listening to others, with the goal of implementing a plan at the beginning of the fall semester.

Words are really important but theyre not enough. Actions are really important but theyre not enough, she said. We need to figure out how to reach, educate, touch, whatever it is the hearts and souls of our student-athletes, of each other, when it comes to issues of racial justice and caring and kindness and thats what I want our plan to incorporate.

Is this the moment for real change?

Todd Bryson, interim associate chancellor for diversity at SIU Carbondale, said hes encouraged by the energy that Mahony and Lane are committing to this initiative. SIU has historically been a leader in creating a welcome atmosphere for all students, he said, though has also fallen short. When you talk to students, they want action, he said. Bryson said that he believes Mahony and Lane want to get it right and are committed to doing the hard work thats needed.

This might be the catalyst to push us forward, he said. This is a good time to be at SIU. I think we will look back in a few years and say, Wow, SIU is a different university than it was.

Caleb R. McKinley-Portee, a doctoral student studying Communications, with a specialization in Black performing arts, said he wants to have hope that this initiative will bring about the real changes students desire. That includes a commitment to a diverse faculty, and supporting academic programs that specialize in Black history and culture, such as Africana Studies, which has seen its department diminished to only three professors, he said.

McKinley-Portee, who is also a co-graduate advisor for the undergraduate-run Black Affairs Council, has seen and heard commitments for change from the top on and off for years often proclaiming that this time it will be different. Thats why its hard for him to know what to think about it at this stage. Hes spent a combined 10 years on the SIU campus, earning an undergraduate and masters degree, and now completing his doctorate. Hes served on countless committees and had numerous conversations with administrators.

Its really frustrating and its also exhausting to keep having these conversations and these meetings with administrators, and to keep showing up to the table to fight the good fight and not getting any results, he said. So now is the time, I believe, for SIU to show us what SIU is supposed to be about. Dont tell us, show us.

molly.parker@thesouthern.com

618-351-5079

On Twitter: @MollyParkerSI

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SIU leaders pledge action, real progress on diversity, inclusion - The Southern