MWAURA: Death of a Keroche daughter and headline that mocks rich – nation.co.ke

The reporting of the death of Tecra Wangari Muigai of Keroche Breweries fell short of ethical journalism.

The media gave details of her death that were not necessary to tell or advance the story, just as a graphic and gory picture of a dead or dying person would not be necessary to report a murder. The details, mainly personal information, violated her privacy and dignity.

The details were given by nameless people. If a person wants to say negative things about another person, he or she should not be allowed to do so anonymously.

Storytellers should not have the freedom to scandalise others while hiding behind anonymity.

The media should not have carried, for example, claims by unnamed persons that Tecra lived a lavish lifestyle, including daily drinking and chewing miraa with the boyfriend, although their relationship was rocky, among other unsubstantiated claims.

Citizens should be allowed to die without their dignity and privacy being violated. Personal information shouldnt be unnecessarily revealed, especially when its unproven and is of no public interest, which is not the same as public curiosity.

Journalists have no obligation to pander to morbid or prurient public curiosity.

When publishing personal information, journalists should think of the pain and suffering that would be caused to the family of the victim.

And they should ask themselves: would I like my own daughter, sister or relative to be so reported? Is the information pandering to peoples baser instincts?

In reporting stories of personal tragedy, journalists should follow the Golden Rule principle: Treat others as you would want to be treated.

Now that Ive got that out of the way, let me turn to the headline of the week, Cry me a river When private schools go rogue to exploit filthy rich parents published on page 12 of the Daily Nation on Tuesday.

The headline conveys excessive animus and scorn for parents of private school students.

The actual story, by David Muchunguh, doesnt contain any such derision. The headline is its writers expression of what he approves or disapproves.

He characterises parents who send their children to private schools as filthy rich, that is, stinking rich. He is telling us their wealth is excessive or offensive, and that probably theyre rich because were poor.

The kicker words that further explain a headline describes private schools as fancy. This also has the ring of disapproval, which is not present in the story.

We normally dont describe schools as fancy, no matter how decorative or expensive they might appear. The only things we normally think of as fancy are clothes, wedding cakes, furniture and so on. To call a school fancy is to trivialise or make fun of it.

The headline writer doesnt like filthy rich parents complaining that the private schools in these times of Covid-19 lockdown are charging excessive fees in view of the fact that their children are studying at home.

Thats why he uses the phrase. Hes saying were tired of, or irritated by, the parents grumbling and crying about the fees.

The etymology of the phrase goes back to the lyrics of "Cry Me a River", a song by American singer-songwriter Justin Timberlake, that was popular in the 2000s.

The singer tells his girlfriend, who has cheated on him but now wants to come back, that she can keep crying (cry me a river) but he wont feel sorry for her.

The phrase is used as a sarcastic response to someone whos complaining but for whom we have no sympathy.

The Nation headline writer is, in fact, telling parents who send their children to private schools to shut up and stop moaning about high fees.

Further, in the kicker, Lo and behold, these fancy learning institutions are now struggling to stay afloat, he is pouring scorn on private schools, telling them indirectly to stop moaning.

Creative as it may seem, this is a classic example of a biased headline.

Send your complaints to publiceditor@ke.nationmedia.com. Call or text 0721 989 264

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MWAURA: Death of a Keroche daughter and headline that mocks rich - nation.co.ke

Appreciating the modernist houses of architect Jack Bialosky Sr.: space, light, and the quiet modesty of subu – cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio Architecture is the anonymous art. Aside from the occasional plaque in a lobby, most buildings dont come with tidy labels that describe who designed what and when.

But if you look closely, its easy to spot the differences between, say, houses designed according to a developers template and a bespoke dwelling designed by an architect for a specific client in a specific style.

This is certainly true of modernist-style houses designed by the late Cleveland architect, Jack Bialosky, Sr., who died April 14 at age 94. Bialosky founded the eponymous firm where his son, Jack Bialosky Jr., is senior principal.

Today the firm has 66 employees, with most in Cleveland, and a handful in New York, and is known for a wide-ranging body of work in a variety of architectural styles.

Its portfolio includes the traditional-looking Crocker Park lifestyle and office center in Westlake, the Van Aken shopping, office and apartment district in Shaker Heights, and more modern-leaning designs for the renovated Campus Center at Cuyahoga Community Colleges Metro campus and the new Cleveland Metroparks Edgewater Beach House.

The firm was smaller, with seven or eight employees, when Jack Bialosky Sr. led it from the 1950s to the 1980s.

On his watch, the firm designed significant projects including the 1954 Suburban Temple-Kol Ami in Beachwood, the 1976 headquarters for Progressive Corp. in Mayfield, plus headquarters buildings for Broadview Savings, and Leaseway Corp. (Under Jack Jr.'s leadership, the Bialosky has continued to design offices for the expanding Progressive campuses along I-271).

Nevertheless, Jack Sr. was known primarily for designing more than 60 single-family houses sprinkled across Clevelands East Side suburbs, with a strong concentration in Shaker Heights.

A map prepared by the architecture firm of Bialosky displays addresses for a curated list of 17 houses in Shaker Heights designed by Jack Bialosky, Sr.Bialosky

Theres a trio of big Bialosky houses along the east side of Eaton Road in Shaker Heights between North Park and South Park boulevards. Other examples are located farther east on those boulevards, and along Shelburne Road, Landon Road, Marchmont Road, and Hazelmere Road.

His clients included former U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, and philanthropist Joseph Mandel.

Collectively, the houses speak to the optimistic, utopian side of modernism and American suburbs in the postwar era. Bialoskys designs evoke the America of the Space Race and the bright visions of the 1964 Worlds Fair, not the America of race riots and protests over the Vietnam War.

With their clean lines, open plan floor layouts, abundant floor-to-ceiling windows and gently sloped gable roofs, the houses possess an earth-hugging humility, a serene clarity and a sense of restrained, quiet confidence.

The houses include numerous architectural references to the Prairie Houses of Frank Lloyd Wright, who was a guest speaker at the Yale School of Architecture, where Bialosky earned a bachelors degree in 1949.

Those touches include deep, overhanging eaves and strong horizontal shadow lines created by low-slung, hipped roofs, in which all sides are angled.

The houses also stand out in the subtly inventive push-and-pull of their geometries, and in their sense of building craft.

The Arsham Residence at 2767 Landon Rd. in Shaker Heights is long, lean and low, with hipped roofs recalling the Prairie Houses of Frank Lloyd Wright.Steven Litt, The Plain Dealer

Bialosky was fond of having the vertical joints filled between the long, slender Roman-style bricks he preferred, all the better to emphasize the sweeping horizontality of his designs, as in the Arsham House at 2767 Landon Road (so named, like other Bialosky houses for its original owners). He also enjoyed contrasting the horizontal lines of his houses with upper stories cladded with vertical panels or battens of wood, as in the Siegler Residence, at 2744 Sulgrave Road.

The Kangesser House at 2670 Courtland Boulevard in Shaker Heights features a folded rectangular form, deep overhanging eaves and clerestory windows in gable ends.Steven Litt, The Plain Dealer

He carved clerestories in the gable ends of his Kangesser House at 2670 Courtland Boulevard, admitting daylight from an unexpected part of the house. And, as with many of his designs, the Kangesser House has a folded, rather than a simply rectangular shape.

It is widely observed that after World War II and the rise of suburbia, houses often eliminated porches in favor of backyard patios or decks that gave them an inward focus, turning away from the public realm of the street.

Thats true of Bialoskys houses, many of which are set low on their sites behind landscaped berms or rows of trees whose trunks etch decorative patterns against the smooth planes of his facades.

Neither boastful nor overtly opulent, the houses dont advertise the wealth of their inhabitants, which is exactly how Jack Sr. and his clients wanted it, according to Jack Jr.

The Blumenthal Residence at 2755 Eaton Road has a rambling layout, a ground floor cladded in brick, and a second floor sheathed in gray clapboard siding. Though large and spacious, the house is set behind a berm and screens of trees, emphasizing privacy.Steven Litt, The Plain Dealer

Part of the explanation for the general spirit of restraint was that the early decades after World War II represented a valley between mountainous levels of socioeconomic inequality prevalent during the 1920s and again today.

In the 1920s, Clevelands wealthy lined Shaker Boulevard in Shaker Heights and Fairmount Boulevard in Cleveland Heights with richly ornamented, neo-Tudor or neoclassical mansions that openly flaunt the wealth of their owners.

Bialoskys houses embody an entirely different spirit, even though Shaker Heights was reputed to be the wealthiest suburb in America during the early 1960s.

In addition to the generally lower level of inequality at the time, there was an ethnic twist to the more modest, recondite spirit of Bialoskys houses.

A lot of the clients were Jewish and part of this was a desire for assimilation, Jack Jr. said. It was, in his words, about being quiet.

Jack Jr. described his father as an atheist who was nevertheless proud of being Jewish, and who prized ethics based on the 10 commandments of the Old Testament and the golden rule. He taught Sunday school at the Suburban Temple-Kol Ami, where he and his late wife, Marilyn Bartow Bialosky, where founding members and trustees.

The Spitz Residence at 2681 Wadsworth Rd. in Shaker Heights has a pergola and terrace extending from a ground floor sitting room, framed at the top with a horizontal beam that separates the brick ground floor and the clapboard second floor.Steven Litt, The Plain Dealer

It was part of Jack Sr.s make-up that he never promoted himself or advertised his work, his son said.

He thought other people should put you forward; you shouldnt put yourself forward, Jack Jr. said.

Accordingly, assignments for houses propagated from one satisfied client to another.

What sold them on Bialoskys architecture was that it communicated qualities of spaciousness and light and possibility.

Randy Curtis, a business appraiser who grew up in a 3,800-square-foot Bialosky House on Marchmont Road in Shaker Heights, was so compelled by the architecture of the house that he bought it from his parents in 1991 and lived there with his wife, Beth, until they downsized to a home in Mayfield in 2018.

The Marchmont house faces north toward the street and south toward the 6th green of the Shaker Country Club golf course, a view Bialosky framed with floor to ceiling windows.

It was wonderful, it was wonderful, Curtis said, repeating the thought for emphasis. You had a feeling of wide-open space, of being free, he said.

Yet from the street, the Marchmont house expresses a sense of humility and modesty that Curtis also finds deeply appealing.

Over on Hazelmere Road, Ayesha Bell Hardaway, an assistant law professor at Case Western Reserve University, said she was instantly struck by a 4,000-square-foot Bialosky house when she first saw it while house shopping 15 years ago.

It had an open floor plan, which I still love, she said. When you walk in you dont feel cramped. I feel free and peaceful.

By balancing freedom and restraint in a modernist idiom, the houses of Jack Bialosky Sr. continue to give pleasure to new generations of residents. They also summarize the spirit of an era in a way thats worthy of deep, ongoing appreciation.

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Appreciating the modernist houses of architect Jack Bialosky Sr.: space, light, and the quiet modesty of subu - cleveland.com

Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation is free in the Humble Store Spring Sale – PC Gamer

The Humble Store's Spring Sale is now underway, with discounts of up to 90 percent on more than 4000 gamesand 100 percent on one of them. The sci-fi RTS Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation is free for the taking until Sunday.

To claim your free stuff, point yourself here and click the appropriate button. You'll need to sign up for the Humble Newsletter, if you haven't already; with that taken care of you'll be given a Steam key for your efforts. Note that while the game is free to keep forever after you've claimed it, the keys themselves have a relatively short expiry date of May 14, so be sure to activate it right away.

Even setting aside the fact that it's free, Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation is worth your time. It's a standalone expansion to the 2016 RTS Ashes of the Singularity, which we liked quite a bit, even though the maps and story left us flat. Escalation improves on the original considerably, with new units, interface changes, and a better campaign. In 2017, Stardock "merged" Escalation into Ashes of the Singularity, and discontinued the base game.

Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation is free on the Humble Store until 10 am PT/1 pm ET on May 10. The Humble Store Spring Sale is on until May 21.

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Ashes of the Singularity: Escalation is free in the Humble Store Spring Sale - PC Gamer

Are Team Singularity and Bidz Call of Duty League Ready? – ESTNN Esports

After a dominant start in the Call of Duty Challengers, we take a look at whether Bidz and his team are ready to compete at the pro level.

Luke Bidz Biddle joined Team Singularity back in 2019 when they announced a whole new roster for the Black Ops 4 season. This Singularity team was competitive and although there were roster changes throughout, Bidz was ever present. Placing Top 16 in every Black Ops 4 event, most notably placing 9-12 at the World League Championships.

With the move to a franchised league along came the Call of Duty Challengers; The amateur league which allowed players and teams to prove themselves for a spot on a roster in the Call of Duty League. This has already happened for players such as Blazt, Spart and Vivid. All of whom were picked up by The Los Angeles Guerrillas. And MackMelts, who made it onto The New York Subliners starting roster.

Team Singularity started off the year in Minnesota at the CDL Launch Weekend. Their team consisted of Jed Detain Mulcahy, Jamie Insight Craven, Jack Maple McCartney, Sam Chain Dineley and of course, Bidz. After losing to Renegades 3-0 in Winners Quarter-Finals. Team Singularity managed to bounce back to the Grand Finals, defeating Hybrid Black 3-0 to reset the bracket, and 3-2 to win the tournament and $80k. Singularity went back-to-back at CDL London where they defeated TrainHard Esports in the Grand Final. Singularity were unable to win three in a row; they fell to rivals Team WaR in the grand final 3-2 and 3-0.

After another second place finish in Los Angeles, and a 5-6th in Dallas. Team Singularity returned to winning form at the CDL Challengers Open #1 North American division. As well as The Chicago Huntsmen Home Series; taking another first place spot. On their return to the european division, they fell short against rivals Team WaR in the Winners Finals. Then again in the Grand Finals, both in 3-2 fashion to finish 2nd place. So far there have been eight Challengers events.Team Singularity have finished in the Top 2 at seven of these events winning four of them. Currently their 50% win rate is higher than any other team, solidifying them as the best Challengers team as of today.

We spoke to Bidz to get some more information about their success in the Call of Duty Challengers.

How did you get into Call of Duty and find yourself competing for thousands of dollars?

Bidz: I got into call of duty when my school friends convinced me to buy ghosts and play Gamebattles matches with them, we were horrible but the odd win was satisfying enough to continue playing. Obviously over time I improved from title to title and worked hard to get to the point Im at now, Im still nowhere near the top so the grind continues.

How does the standard of gameplay differ between the CWL and now CDL Challengers?

Bidz: The gameplay from pro teams are not too different. I stand by my words in the dexerto interview at the time of the London event only T2 pro teams would have given us good games. People caught up and we didn't improve for a while.

How do you and the team feel about being in Challengers and not having the chance to play on the Main Stage this year?

Bidz: Not being able to play on the main stage is heartbreaking but it just makes you work harder to get there. Played on it at CoD Champs and it felt incredible, just fuel for us to keep going.

What's your favourite role to play and why?

Bidz: My favourite role on a team is the flex, not really such a role on MW but Im happy with the SMG role this year.

If you had to put yourself on a current CDL roster, which team would it be and why?

Bidz: I feel like I would make any CDL team better just from the passion I bring in game, I want it more than anyone and I always will. Too many CDL players getting complacent and stealing a cheque.

Have you scrimmed against any pro teams?

We scrimmed all pro teams whilst in the states, usually split maps with them.

Bidz sounds very confident in his personal and his team's ability this year. Considering he's placed Top 16 every event during Black Ops 4 and Top 2 in seven out of eight events this year with a 50% win rate, his confidence is understandable. We may have to wait until next year to see Bidz or Team Singularity compete at a professional level; but when they return, their level of gameplay can keep up, and will not disappoint.

To keep up to date with all the latest Call of Duty and esports news follow ESTNN on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram

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Are Team Singularity and Bidz Call of Duty League Ready? - ESTNN Esports

Fans celebrate the anniversary of Singularity, one of Taehyung’s solos – Somag News

Singularity is one of Taehyungs most successful solos and marks 2 years since its release.

BTS has broken several records thanks to their songs and music videos on each comeback, as well as solo releases of singles and mixtapes.

V, is one of those who conquered ARMY thanks to his compositions and for the album Love Yourself: Tear, the idol performed Singularity , a song that was written by Namjoon, his voice and his talent made it one of his most successful solos and today marks its second anniversary.

2 years ago, V starred in Tears comeback trailer with Singularity, the lyrics of which speak of fear of the truth, showing that dark side of yourself, or remembering our past mistakes. Through the dance, V hides behind masks and lies so as not to face reality.

Through the hashtag # 2YearsWithSingularity , ARMY has shared photos and videos of Taes live performances with this song, as they consider it to be one of his best performances.

The success of Singularity is not only limited to performances, V managed to overcome more than 130 million views on YouTube with the official video. On platforms like Spotify, Taehyung has more than 100 million streams.

https://twitter.com/glossyhobi_/status/1258144572686901249

With the new Comeback of BTS and songs written V, ARMY expected to get new records and on the second anniversary of Singularity he sent many messages of support and congratulations.

Taehyung has shown great talent as a singer and songwriter, with songs like Winter Bear , V has fallen in love with ARMY with his lyrics and in this quarantine he has dedicated himself to writing new songs, so the idol could release his first mixtape . Tae has compiled new songs that are sure to be just as successful as Singularity.

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Fans celebrate the anniversary of Singularity, one of Taehyung's solos - Somag News

#2YearsWithSingularity is trending worldwide as fans celebrate the second anniversary of BTS V’s legendary song "Singularity" – allkpop

#2YearsWithSingularity is currently trending worldwide as fans celebrate the second anniversary of BTS V's legendary solo song "Singularity"with its long list of massive achievements .

This evergreen song remains in the top tier as it is known to be one of most critically acclaimed songs of BTS which not only showcases V as a perfect vocalist , but also reflects V's amazing dance skills and unique facial expressions.

As the fans celebrate , "Singularity" has entered into the iTunes chart in many countries once again , including US and UK.

The song also went viral among locals few days back showing V's power as an Ultimate Stan Attractor of K-pop Industry .

Singularity remains a 'Queen' as she's still winning hearts worldwide !! The song has definitely contributed many new fans to the global group BTS.

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#2YearsWithSingularity is trending worldwide as fans celebrate the second anniversary of BTS V's legendary song "Singularity" - allkpop

The Closest Black Hole to Earth Has Been Discovered by Scientists – Newsweek

Astronomers have discovered the closest black hole to our solar system found to date, located "just" 1,000 light-years away.

According to a study published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, the black hole forms part of a triple star system known as HR 6819, which is so close, in astronomical terms, that you can see it without binoculars or telescopes from the southern hemisphere on a dark, clear night.

"We were totally surprised when we realised that this is the first stellar system with a black hole that can be seen with the unaided eye," Petr Hadrava, a co-author of the study from the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, said in a statement.

The previous record holder is a black hole candidate known as V616 Mon that could be as near as 1,200 light-years away, although most astronomers consider a figure of 3,000 light-years to be more realistic.

Black holes are astronomical objects that are so massive and dense that nothing, not even light, can escape their gravitational pull.

First predicted by Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, black holes contain a singularity, a single point of infinite density and gravity where space and time as we understand them break down. Surrounding the singularity is the event horizon, the boundary beyond which nothing can escape.

Stellar-mass black holes, those with masses tens of times that of the sun, form after massive stars die as supernova explosions and collapse into themselves under the influence of gravity. Other black holes meanwhile, can form when incredibly dense star remnants, called neutron stars, collide. Similarly the merger of two black holes, or one neutron star and a black hole, can also generate a new, larger black hole. In addition, there are supermassive black holes, thought to be present at the center of many galaxies, whose origins are more mysterious.

"Stellar-mass black holes must not be confused with the supermassive black holes lurking at the center of most massive galaxies," Dietrich Baade, an author of the study from the European Southern Observatory (ESO), told Newsweek. "For instance, [the one] in the Milky Way has a mass of 4.2 million suns. Supermassive black holes formed early in the universe and probably keep growing through the accretion of stars and mergers with other supermassive black holes."

Astronomers think that there are vast numbers of black holes in the galaxy, but to date, only a couple of dozen have been identified.

"If you take the age of the Milky Way, the number of stars it contains, and the life expectancy of these stars, it is only a back-of-the-envelope effort to realize that there must be very many stellar-mass black holes in the galaxy," Baade said. "More complex models predict between 100,000,000 and 1,000,000,000 of them."

Black holes cannot be observed directly with telescopes that detect X-rays, light, or other forms of electromagnetic radiation. However, scientists can infer their presence by looking for their effects on the matter that surrounds them. Any matter in the immediate vicinity of a black hole will gradually be drawn inwards in a process known as accretion, creating an "accretion disk" of orbiting material. For example, if a star ventures too close, it will be consumed by the black hole, violently ripped apart by its powerful gravitational forces.

Nearly all of the black holes that have been identified so far have revealed themselves due to their strong interactions with their immediate environment. However, the authors of the latest study say that the black hole they identified in HR 6819 is one of the first stellar-mass black holes that does not interact violently with its environment, appearing truly black so to speak. This makes it extremely difficult to detect.

The team only discovered the black hole after observing its two companion stars using a telescope at the ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile. Initially, they were monitoring the pair as a part of a study on double-star systems, but were shocked to uncover the previously hidden black hole while analyzing the data they had collected.

"We found that there was a third object whirling around one of the two luminous stars that weighs in at five suns or more," Baade said. "That fairly massive star's velocity changes with a period of 40 days. However, in spite of the strong gravitational pull exerted on this star, the third object does not emit any appreciable amount of light. Therefore, it can only be a black hole. The exciting thing is that it is one of the firstperhaps even the very firstabsolutely dull black holes that do not make themselves known through the violence in their immediate neighborhood."

"Other black holes were detected because gas that is transferred to them from a companion star heats up to very high temperatures and radiates strongly in X-rays, which are readily observed," Baade said. "The new black hole is really black because it is not fed by its companion. This makes it so much more difficult to discover: instead of a single X-ray image, it takes many observations suitably distributed over a long time to detect periodic velocity changes."

According to Baade, the latest discovery is surprising for two main reasons: Firstly, the fact that the team found possibly the first instance of a true black, or "non-accreting," black hole. And secondly, that it was discovered so nearby, relatively speaking. This indicates that there are many more similar black holes to be found in the future, the researchers say, with this system likely representing just "the tip of the iceberg."

Roberto Saglia, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany, who was not involved in the latest study, told Newsweek that the important aspect of this research is the detection a "non-active" stellar mass black hole.

"Most stellar mass black holes are first discovered because they have a hot accretion disk around them that shines in the X-ray/ultraviolet range and is detected by X-ray satellites. Here there is no X-ray emission and the inference of the presence of a black hole comes just from dynamical measurements," he said.

"This is important, because we expect from stellar evolution that many more stellar mass black holes should be around compared to the number of detected ones," he said. "This system provides an alternative way to probe this 'unseen' family of black holes, as gravitational wave detections can also provide."

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The Closest Black Hole to Earth Has Been Discovered by Scientists - Newsweek

BTS’s V occupies the top three spots on the best-seller list of Amazon (US) with his solo songs. – allkpop

V who is popularly known for snatching hearts, as well as records with his solo music, has bagged another incredible achievement.

It has been reported that V took over the top three spots on the best-seller list of Amazon (US) with his solo tracks: Intro: Singularity, Inner Child, and Sweet Night.

This comes to no surprise as the three solo tracks entitle an astounding list of achievements to their name.

Intro: Singularity released in 2018 is highly regarded as one of the most critically acclaimed solo tracks by BTS. The song was listed on multiple Best of 2018 rankings by the western media/music critics. Singularity is also known as the ultimate stan attractor of BTSs discography due to the various amount of times the song has gone viral among non-fans. However, a majority of the fans have acknowledged Vs remarkable performances as the main reason for the songs success.

Inner Child released earlier this year continues to maintain its title as one of the most acclaimed tracks from BTS's latest album: Map of the Soul: 7. Aside from being a fan-favorite, the anthemic track currently ranks as the B-side song with the second most #1s in BTSs discography. Inner Child also holds multiple first-ever records in the U.K as the only solo track from MOTS: 7 to rank at #4 on iTunes and enter the official single sales chart of the country. Additionally, the song has also marked its debut on popular TV shows worldwide.

Vs most recent release, Sweet Night has claimed the title of the most celebrated soundtrack by a Korean soloist in history. The song remains as the only soundtrack to simultaneously top the iTunes chart of the U.S and U.K as well as thefirst-ever Korean O.S.T to debut at #1 on Worldwide and European iTunes charts in history. Sweet Night also holds the record as the song with the second most #1 on iTunes worldwide. Since the release, V has achieved #1s in 81 countries and ranks behind PSY who holds the top spot with #1s in 86 countries for his viral hit Gangnam Style.

As V continues to write his name in history as one of the most acclaimed multi-talented artists of this generation, fans are looking forward to his next project.

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BTS's V occupies the top three spots on the best-seller list of Amazon (US) with his solo songs. - allkpop

Board of Governors honors professors for scholarly achievements – The South End

Five Wayne State University professors who have distinguished themselves with significant scholarly achievements were recently honored with 2020 WSU Board of Governors Faculty Recognition Awards.

The awards are offered annually to full-time faculty members who make outstanding contributions to scholarship and learning. Each recipient receives a citation from the board, an engraved wall plaque and a monetary award.

This year's recipients are:

Gov. Bryan C. Barnhill II recognized Heng for the publication of Genome Chaos: Rethinking Genetics, Evolution and Molecular Medicine (Academic Press, 2019). Heng introduces new genome-based evolutionary theories that will shape the field of genomic theory for decades to come. He introduces new frameworks of genome-defined system inheritance and genome variation-mediated macroevolution, including hisoriginal and creative genome theory, which re-examines existing theories of cancer emergence.

Heng is a pioneer in visualizing how genome reorganization is central to both microcellular and macrocellular evolution and applying it to cancer development. His book will serve as resource for researchers across a number of fields, including cancer biology, molecular medicine, genomics and evolutionary biology.

Gov. Mark Gaffney recognized Jung for the publication of Balkan Blues: Consumer Politics After State Socialism (Indiana University Press, 2019). In Balkan Blues, Jung draws on 16 years of ethnographic fieldwork in Bulgaria to explore the ways that citizens participate in and experience the making of a consumer society during the transition from a production-oriented, centrally planned economy to a consumption-oriented capitalist market economy.

Consumption, she argues, is not merely a question of individual choice or an expression of cultural identity; rather, through the daily consumption practices of shopping and using utilities, citizens define rights and demand responsibilities in a globalized consumer society. Balkan Blues raises important questions about the role of the state and of citizens in 21st century neoliberal economies.

Gov. Sandra Hughes OBrien recognized Past for the publication of Italian Ecocinema Beyond the Human (Indiana University Press, 2019). The work is an original study of the material dimensions of cinema and its relation to a network of agents that include people and countries, above ground and underground landscapes, living bodies, industry and oil, economic processes, and geopolitical dynamics.

Through an exploration of five films shot in different parts of Italy, Pasts study takes into account what happens to the environment while filming on location and the material traces the film industry leaves behind as well as the impression the natural environment leaves on film. Italian Ecocinema seeks to uncover cinemas ecological footprint and demonstrate cinemas potential to offer alternative outlooks on the human and the nonhuman world.

Gov.Marilyn Kelly recognized Progovac for the publication of A Critical Introduction to Language Evolution:Current Controversies and Future Prospects (Springer, 2019). Progovac offers criteria to evaluate the myriad competing hypotheses that attempt to account for the course of language evolution throughout history.

This book introduces new foundational goals, concepts and definitions of current approaches to the origin, changes and understanding of the biological basis not only of social interactions, but also and more generally of our human nature and existence. Progovacs research is a major contribution to the interdisciplinary study of a field that is now recognized as central for scholars in the social sciences, cultural studies and the humanities.

Gov. Dana Thompson recognized Trimpin for receiving the Biemann Medal from the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (ASMS). The ASMS recognizes significant achievements made in the early stages of a career in basic or applied mass spectrometry. It is the highest honor a mid-career scientist contributing to the advancements of measurements can receive.

In 2019, the ASMS awarded the medal to Trimpin for her discovery and development of novel ionization processes that the ASMS believes will advance mass spectrometry into new applications, with considerable societal benefits in diagnostics, security, environment, and other areas, by providing real-time, information-rich data. Trimpins research accomplishments show levels of creativity that clearly place her among the very best in her field.

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Board of Governors honors professors for scholarly achievements - The South End

Foundation Medicine Receives FDA Approval for FoundationOneCDx as the Companion Diagnostic for Tabrecta (capmatinib), the Only FDA-Approved MET…

Foundation Medicine, Inc. today announced that FoundationOneCDx has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use as the companion diagnostic (CDx) to aid in identifying patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for whom treatment with Tabrecta (capmatinib) may be appropriate. Tabrecta is the first and only therapy approved by the FDA for adult patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer whose tumors have a mutation that leads to MET exon 14 skipping (METex14). This indication is approved under accelerated approval based on overall response rate and duration of response. Continued approval for this indication may be contingent upon verification and description of clinical benefit in confirmatory trial(s). FoundationOne CDx is the only FDA-approved broad comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) test for all solid tumors that incorporates multiple companion diagnostic claims. It is currently approved as the companion diagnostic test for 21 unique therapies.

NSCLC accounts for approximately 85% of lung cancer diagnoses,1 3 to 4% of which have MET exon 14 skipping.2 This milestone marks an important advancement for patients with METex14 mutated metastatic NSCLC, as there have previously been no treatment options available specifically for this diagnosis.

"Because non-small cell lung cancer is a particularly aggressive and difficult to treat form of cancer, taking a comprehensive and validated approach to genomic testing is critical to help guide physicians treatment decisions," stated Foundation Medicines Chief Medical Officer Brian Alexander, M.D., M.P.H. "FoundationOne CDx is a powerful tool for identifying patients with mutations that lead to MET exon 14 skipping who may be eligible for treatment with Tabrecta. This simultaneous therapy and companion diagnostic approval marks an important step forward in the treatment of rare cancer and demonstrates how deep collaboration across industry partners can advance patient care."

As part of the strategic collaboration with Novartis, which now includes two companion diagnostics for the Novartis portfolio of targeted oncology and immuno-oncology therapeutics, a companion diagnostic for Tabrecta is also in development for Foundation Medicines liquid biopsy assay.

About FoundationOne CDx

FoundationOne CDx is a next-generation sequencing based in vitro diagnostic device for detection of substitutions, insertion and deletion alterations (indels), and copy number alterations (CNAs) in 324 genes and select gene rearrangements, as well as genomic signatures including microsatellite instability (MSI) and tumor mutational burden (TMB) using DNA isolated from formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tumor tissue specimens. FoundationOne CDx is for prescription use only and is intended as a companion diagnostic to identify patients who may benefit from treatment with certain targeted therapies in accordance with their approved therapeutic product labeling. Additionally, FoundationOne CDx is intended to provide tumor mutation profiling to be used by qualified health care professionals in accordance with professional guidelines in oncology for patients with solid malignant neoplasms. Use of the test does not guarantee a patient will be matched to a treatment. A negative result does not rule out the presence of an alteration. Some patients may require a biopsy. For a full list of targeted therapies for which FoundationOne CDx is indicated as a companion diagnostic, please visit http://www.foundationmedicine.com/genomic-testing/foundation-one-cdx.

About Foundation Medicine

Foundation Medicine is a molecular information company dedicated to a transformation in cancer care in which treatment is informed by a deep understanding of the genomic changes that contribute to each patient's unique cancer. The company offers a full suite of comprehensive genomic profiling assays to identify the molecular alterations in a patients cancer and match them with relevant targeted therapies, immunotherapies and clinical trials. Foundation Medicines molecular information platform aims to improve day-to-day care for patients by serving the needs of clinicians, academic researchers and drug developers to help advance the science of molecular medicine in cancer. For more information, please visit http://www.FoundationMedicine.com or follow Foundation Medicine on Twitter (@FoundationATCG).

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Foundation Medicine Receives FDA Approval for FoundationOneCDx as the Companion Diagnostic for Tabrecta (capmatinib), the Only FDA-Approved MET...

Patton named CEO of OneOncology – The Cancer Letter

publication date: May. 8, 2020

Jeff Patton was named chief executive officer of OneOncology. Patton has been Acting CEO and president of Physician Services since February.

OneOncology includes five practices throughout the U.S., represents over 400 providers, and cares for approximately 250,000 patients annually at 160 sites of care. OneOncology partner practices deliver integrated oncology care services including screening and diagnosis, clinical trials, therapies, and survivorship or end-of-life care. A main responsibility of OneOncology is to help its partner practices expand services in cancer care.

We formed OneOncology in 2018 with the idea that with physician leadership, common technology platforms, and access to capital, practices could have both the necessary scale and local decision-making authority needed to not only survive but thrive in todays marketplace, Patton said in a statement. Today, as practices grapple with COVID-19 and plan for caring for patients post peak, the ideas that brought us together are exactly what will propel our future growth.

Patton will continue as the executive chairman of the board at Tennessee Oncology.

Blumenthal named VP of Global Oncology Regulatory Affairs at Merck

Gideon Blumenthal was named vice president for Global Oncology Regulatory Affairs at Merck.

He is a former deputy director of the FDA Oncology Center of Excellence.

Haura, Khushalani named clinical science research leaders at Moffitt

Eric B. Haura was named the associate center director of Clinical Science at Moffitt Cancer Center, and Nikhil Khushalani was named assistant center director of Clinical Research Review & Partnerships in a newly created role at Moffitt Cancer Center.

Haura will provide the strategic vision in developing physician-led laboratory science, as well as oversight of Moffitts clinical research operations, which includes more than 600 active clinical interventional trials and over 100 observational studies, including Moffitts Clinical Trials Office and Clinical Research Unit. Additionally, he will facilitate team science and clinical research opportunities with affiliate and consortium partners, and he provide guidance and mentorship to investigators at Moffitt.

Haura joined Moffitt in 2000 and has served in leadership roles in research, including director of the Lung Cancer Center of Excellence and co-leader of the Chemical Biology and Molecular Medicine Program. His research focuses on identifying new vulnerabilities and biomarkers in lung cancer, where his goal is to develop novel therapeutic strategies for his patients. His lab is also heavily involved in proteomics, the large-scale study of proteins, to identify new diagnostic tools for lung cancer. Haura treats patients as a senior member of the Department of Thoracic Oncology.

As assistant center director of Clinical Research Review & Partnerships, Khushalani will oversee Moffitts clinical trial scientific review operations. He will also work closely with Jennifer I. Vidrine, assistant center director of Research Strategic Partnerships, to expand clinical research offerings to affiliates and partners, including a clinical research unit opening in collaboration with AdventHealth in Celebration, Florida. This position also reports to Haura.

Khushalani joined Moffitt in 2015 as an associate member of the Department of Cutaneous Oncology, and became the vice chair and a senior member of the department. His clinical and research interests are in the development of novel therapeutics for patients with melanoma and other skin cancers. He studies the economic impact of new skin cancer therapies on health care, with the goal of devising strategies to reduce costs for patients. Khushalani is the principal investigator on several skin cancer clinical trials at Moffitt.

Bona named director of Benign Hematology at Smilow Cancer Hospital

Robert Bona was named professor of medicine (hematology) and inaugural director of the Benign Hematology Program at Smilow Cancer Hospital. He will also join as Medical Director of the Hemophilia Treatment Center for the Pediatric Hematology & Oncology Program at Smilow Cancer Hospital.

Bona will begin in his roles July 1.

Bona has been serving as a part-time member of the hematology department at Yale Cancer Center for the last three years.

Bona joins Yale from Quinnipiac University where he is a founding faculty member and professor of medical sciences at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine. Bona has led several research studies, clinical trials, and care innovations to advance the treatment of blood diseases.

Prebet, Zeidan named hematology leaders at Yale Cancer Center

Thomas Prebet was named leader of myeloid malignancies on the Disease Aligned Research Team, and Amer Zeidan was named director of the Hematology Early Therapeutics Program at Yale Cancer Center.

In these new roles, Prebet and Zeidan will work closely with Stephanie Halene, interim chief of hematology at YCC.

Prebet is an associate professor of medicine (hematology) and is focused on developing clinical trials for myeloid malignancies and translational advances for patients with acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes. In his new role as DART leader for myeloid malignancies, he will oversee the clinical trial team for myeloid malignancies and work to develop a complete portfolio of trials for our patients.

Zeidan is an associate professor of medicine (hematology) and is the Yale principal investigator for multiple NCI-sponsored and clinical trials in myeloid malignancies. Zeidan is also chairing the steering committee for a large pharma-sponsored randomized trial of myelodysplastic syndromes. As director of the Hematology Early Therapeutics Program, Zeidan will partner closely with Patricia LoRusso, associate cancer center director for Experimental Therapeutics at YCC, to develop a comprehensive phase I clinical trial portfolio for patients with hematologic malignancies.

Hamilton, Danilov join City of Hope

Stanley Hamilton, formerly of MD Anderson Cancer Center, was named chair of the Department of Pathology at City of Hope, and Alexey Danilov was named associate director of City of Hopes Toni Stephenson Lymphoma Center.

Hamilton said his goal is to bring access to state-of-the-art specialized pathology to every patient at every City of Hope satellite center, as well as improving and enhancing the biomarker data used in clinical trials, and further integrating digital pathology into the overall informatics of the institution.

Danilov brought his independently-funded lab to City of Hopes Toni Stephenson Lymphoma Center. Danilov researches treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia and many forms of lymphoma.

Danilov is focused on identifying cell proteinssome that promote cancer growth, some that inhibit itlearning how they deteriorate, and finding drugs that can affect the process.

Tempera named associate professor in the Gene Expression & Regulation Program at Wistar

Italo Tempera was appointed associate professor in the Gene Expression & Regulation Program of The Wistar Institute Cancer Center.

Tempera is a molecular virologist with special expertise in the study of the Epstein Barr virus and how it regulates expression of its genes in the host cell during infection. Although EBV infection is very frequent and asymptomatic in most cases, in some individuals, especially those with a compromised immune system, it has a causative role in development of some types of cancer, including Burkitts lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and Hodgkins and non-Hodgkins lymphomas.

Research in the Tempera laboratory aims to disrupt the natural capacity of EBV to modulate its gene expression pattern as a new approach for treating EBV-associated cancers.

Tempera identified the main cellular factor that regulates the three-dimensional structure of the EBV genome and his laboratory focuses on the role of this factor, named CTCF, in the formation of loops in the virus DNA.

These loops allow distant segments of the genome to be in close proximity and regulate expression of EBV genes that are necessary for its life cycle within the cell. The team is also exploring how EBV chromatin loops are regulated by another cellular factor called PARP1. Given the role played by PARP1 in regulating cell metabolism after DNA damage, these studies could provide an exciting link between host cell metabolism and regulation of EBV chromatin structure.

The Tempera lab specializes in genomics techniques that allow them to study long-range interactions within chromatin, or the genetic material in which DNA and proteins are packed together to form chromosomes.

Tempera comes to Wistar from the Fels Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Biology at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine of Temple University, where he established his lab in 2012 and was promoted to associate professor in 2017.

Bin Tian appointed professor, co-director of the Center for Systems & Computational Biology at Wistar

Bin Tian was appointed professor at the The Wistar Institute Cancer Center.

A molecular biologist by training, Tian focuses on RNA biology and understanding how gene expression is regulated at the post-transcriptional level. His research involves interdisciplinary approaches, including molecular biology, genomics and computational biology, to study RNA biogenesis and metabolism. His lab was among the first to characterize the functional genomics of alternative polyadenylation and has uncovered its role in many diverse cellular processes.

Bins research has led to groundbreaking advances understanding the role of alternative polyadenylation in development and cell differentiation as well as in the context of cancer and cellular stress, Dario C. Altieri, Wistar president and CEO, director of the Cancer Center, and the Robert and Penny Fox Distinguished Professor, said in a statement. Bins work strengthens our RNA biology research and brings expertise in complex computational and genomic methods that will synergize with the work of our scientists across our research programs.

Tian joins Wistar from Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, where he was a professor. In 2003, he established his research group at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School where he became a tenured professor in 2014.

Tsvi Gal named head of infrastructure at MSK

Tsvi Gal has been appointed Head of Infrastructure of MSK.

Gal will lead the hospitals technological and architectural development and make technical recommendations that align with MSKs institutional and digital priorities.

Reporting to MSKs Chief Information Officer, Atefeh Riazi, Gal will work with other leaders in Digital Informatics and Technology Solutions to develop a modernized infrastructure and data environment in support of MSKs digital strategy, set by MSKs Chief Digital Officer Claus Jensen.

Seattle Cancer Care Alliance opens Acute Clinical Evaluation Clinic

Seattle Cancer Care Alliance opened an Acute Clinical Evaluation clinic. The three bed ACE clinic at SCCAs South Lake Union campus serves individuals receiving cancer care at SCCA who experience cancer- and treatment-related pain and symptoms that surpass their ability to manage at home.

Originally planned for summer 2020, the ACE clinic opened ahead of schedule so that cancer patients would not have to visit an urgent care or emergency room for cancer-treatment related issues, especially important during the COVID-19 pandemic.

We are committed to advancing the standard of cancer care, regionally and beyond, and the ACE clinic is a reflection of that commitment, said Nancy Davidson, president and executive director of SCCA. At SCCA, we provide comprehensive care, and the ACE clinic provides our patients with access to care from our highly trained, compassionate staff, specifically for their treatment-related pain and other symptoms.

The ACE clinic is staffed by an oncology advanced practice provider and registered nurses specializing in cancer care. SCCA providers can refer patients to the clinic who need medical oncology care for pain and symptom management for issues including but not limited to gastrointestinal discomfort, fever/chills, dehydration, dizziness/lightheadedness, urinary tract infections, swallowing difficulties, swelling and skin conditions/rashes.

The ACE clinic does not provide emergency care and is limited to patients who are already receiving treatment from SCCA providers.

Robert Peter Gale receives ASJA award for Chernobyl, the HBO miniseries: Fact and Fiction

Robert Peter Gale has won an award in the opinion/op-ed category from the American Society of Journalists and Authors Inc. for his series Chernobyl, the HBO miniseries: Fact and Fiction (The Cancer Letter, May 17-June 21, 2019).

Gale is visiting professor of hematology at the Imperial College London, and executive director of clinical research in hematology and oncology at Celgene Corp.

Gales series is fortified by his firsthand experience with one of mankinds worst calamities, the ASJA judges wrote. He provides unsparing detail, outstanding insight, and intense perspective as he sorts fact from fiction as presented by HBOs 2019 miniseries.

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Patton named CEO of OneOncology - The Cancer Letter

Ventus Launches with $60 Million to Study Diseases of the Innate Immune System – BioSpace

Ventus Therapeutics, with offices in Waltham, Massachusetts and Montreal, closed on a $60 million Series A rounding led by founding investors Versant Ventures. GV, formerly Google Ventures, participated.

Ventus was founded by Harvard Medical School Professor Hao Wu and Yale University Professor Richard Flavell and others, with Marcelo Bigal as chief executive officer and president. Bigal joined Versant as a partner after leaving Purdue Pharma as chief medical officer. Before Purdue, Bigal was with Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and Merck & Co. Wu is Professor, Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at Harvard and Senior Investigator of Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Boston Childrens Hospital. Flavell is Sterling Professor of Immunobiology, Yale University and Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

The monies raised are slotted to be used to advance three pipeline programs and expand Ventuss structural immunology platform. The innate immune systems inflammasome and nucleic acid sensing pathways are notoriously difficult to target, but Ventus believes its structural immunology platform can do so. The companys approach leverages protein engineering capabilities and expertise to create and express stable monomers of known targets.

The know-how and technologies within Ventus provide the opportunity to develop selective small molecule drugs for innate immunity, Bigal stated. These capabilities have enabled us to tackle several challenging and disease-relevant pathways. With the backing from Versant and GV, we can now translate our progress into innovative medicines for autoimmune diseases and oncology.

During the companys stealth period, the founders and the companys Inception Discovery Engine created the structural immunology platform, screened compounds against multiple targets, and moved into lead discovery. Going forward, Ventus plans to advance the internal pipeline while also evaluating discovery-stage partnerships with outside companies.

Although the company has not specified its targets, Bigal told the Boston Business Journal that the company is interested in lupus, osteoarthritis, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), refractory seizures, cancer and severe asthma, which is indeed a wide-ranging group of indications.

Other companies working on the innate immune system include Trillium Therapeutics and IFM Due, as well as Novartis, which acquired IFM Dues sister company, IFM Tre, in 2019.

Bigal clearly has ambitions, telling the Boston Business Journal, Regeneron didnt start big. Regeneron started by actually having a very unique and defining capability. Biogen didnt start big, Amgen didnt start big, Celgene didnt start big. But they all had something that actually, they could call their own. Theres a lot out there, but we do have something that is ours and only ours.

In addition to Wu and Flavel, the companys scientific founders include Judy Lieberman, Endowed Chair in Cellular and Molecular Medicine and Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School; Thomas Tuschl, Professor and head of the laboratory for RNA molecular biology at the Rockefeller University; Feng Shao, Investigator and Deputy Director for Academic Affairs, National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing; Douglas Green, Chair, Immunology and Co-Leader, Cancer Biology Program, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital; and Russell Vance, Professor of Immunology and Pathogenesis at the University of California at Berkeley, and Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Ventus is positioned to open up new territory for developing better medicines that target innate immunity pathways behind many important diseases, said Brendan Bulik-Sullivan, a partner at GV. We are confident in the experienced leadership team and the scientific expertise that is propelling the companys drug development.

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Ventus Launches with $60 Million to Study Diseases of the Innate Immune System - BioSpace

Thomas Lynch obituary: Pharma executive with passion for public health – The Irish Times

Thomas Lynch. Born: July 17th, 1956

Died: April 1st, 2020

A chartered accountant by profession, Thomas Lynch spent a career in biopharmaceuticals specialising in research discovery and clinical trials. He devoted his personal energy and influence to public health and resourcing higher education, specifically in the area of human health.

A man of deep conviction and belief in equality, Lynch was a very active chair of the Mater hospital, acutely conscious that its location in the heart of Dublins north inner city meant it served a severely disadvantaged community while at the same time, as a level-four acute hospital, provided a national centre of excellence.

In his wider role as chair of Ireland East Hospital Group he sought to create a centre of excellence for patient care, health profession education, and translational medical research, matching the best in the world. This model would maximise the strengths of the two major acute hospitals, St Vincents University Hospital and the Mater, the nine other hospitals in the group, and University College Dublin as academic partner, by sharing clinical expertise, systems, academic training and research. The publication of the Governments Slintecare healthcare policy in July 2019 proposed six new regional integrated care organisations and, while embracing the plan to improve integration of community and hospital healthcare, he advocated strongly for the retention of hospital group networks and the need to incorporate an academic health centre model in the developing structures.

Born in Belfast, Lynch attended Queens University and served as president of the students union for two years before graduating with a degree in economics in 1978.

While at Queens he spent his summers working as a volunteer in the Mater Hospital in Belfast and developed an interest which subsequently became a passion for medicine and medical sciences.

Qualifying as an accountant, he worked extensively in the US and Europe for KPMG and when he began to work with lan and ICON his interest in the pharma sector really blossomed.

He became chief financial officer of lan in 1993 and helped its transition into a major biotechnology company. He played a central role in the foundation of Warner Chilcott and went on to pursue a very successful career spanning the boards of biopharmaceutical and clinical research companies including Microbiotica, Stamford Devices, Adherium, Evofem Biosciences, GW Pharma, Profectus Biosciences, Amarin, and ICON. He also served on the board of the IDA from 2000 to 2010.

His knowledge and expertise led to his appointment in 2011 as chair of Molecular Medicine Ireland, now Clinical Research Development Ireland, a collaborative entity involving UCD, RCSI, University College Cork, Trinity College Dublin, and NUI Galway and their associated academic hospitals. This research partnership is designed to accelerate the translation of biomedical research into improved diagnostics and therapies for patients. He was also a member of the advisory board of the Institute for Human Virology in the US.

A man of energy and integrity, he managed not only to put people at their ease but to bring them along in a path of consensus.

He enacted his philosophy that when you have, you have to give back. He chaired the Queens University Belfast Foundation for 12 years and, through his leadership and successful fundraising activities, Queens has become a major cancer centre awarded the Queen Elizabeth prize as the foremost cancer centre in the UK in 2012.

He became involved in UCD and along with his wife, Deirdre, contributed to the major campaign for the UCD Centre for Science. He supported other fundraising campaigns and initiatives such as the Global Virus Network, a group of internationally renowned virologists who come together to respond to new virus diseases such as bird flu, Sars and now, poignantly, Covid-19.

His own release valve was music. Typical of the man, it wasnt enough for him to attend performances and he took his patronage to a whole new level, becoming a trustee of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, between 1998 and 2010; governor of the Royal Ballet Companies, and chair of Opera Ireland until 2011. He was a director of the Dublin Choral Foundation and chaired the cross-Border orchestra, Camerata Ireland. He was a great fan and supporter of UCD Choral Scholars and his quiet generosity even reached the boys of the Palestrina Choir on their most recent tour to the US.

Another example of his quiet benevolence is the fine Robert Ballagh portrait of James Joyce, UCDs most famous alumnus, which hangs in the foyer of OReilly Hall and forms a photo frame for generations of students on their graduation day.

A deeply spiritual man, Lynch was made a member of the Order of Knight of St Gregory by Pope Benedict and was chancellor of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre. He was awarded honorary doctorates by Queens and UCD.

He is survived by his wife Deirdre, and his three children, Jennifer, Rebecca and Mark.

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Thomas Lynch obituary: Pharma executive with passion for public health - The Irish Times

Two New Research Institutes in the Bay Area – WFMZ Allentown

SAN FRANCISCO, May 7, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Gladstone Institutes is launching two new biomedical research institutes to broaden its impact on unsolved diseases. The first is the Gladstone Institute of Virology, led by Melanie Ott, MD, PhD, which will study the current coronavirus, as well as search for novel therapies against future infectious diseases. The second is the result of a close partnership with UC San Francisco (UCSF); the Gladstone-UCSFInstitute of Genomic Immunology, led by Alexander Marson, MD, PhD, will bring together genomics and immunology to develop next-generation cell therapies.

The two institutes are an evolution of the former Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology, which was led by Warner Greene, MD, PhD, since its establishment in 1991 and made significant contributions to the fight against HIV/AIDS.

"As the joint Gladstone-UCSF search committee met with eminent scientists from around the globe to find a new director for the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology, Melanie and Alex stood out as exceptional candidates in terms of their research accomplishments and their scientific vision," says Gladstone President Deepak Srivastava, MD, who chaired the search committee. "We realized they represent complementary, rather than alternative, directions for the future of Gladstone."

"They are both remarkable scientists," he adds. "We are honored to have them join our scientific leadership team and we look forward to the discoveries that will emerge from these new institutes."

The Gladstone Institute of Virology will focus on how viruses interface with human host cells to cause disease and how to intervene in that process. Ott's goal is to identify critical pathways that are common to human pathogenic viruses as a way to develop innovative treatments.

"Contrary to the current strategy of combining several drugs to treat one virus, we want to develop one drug against multiple viruses," says Ott, senior investigator at Gladstone and professor in the UCSF Department of Medicine. "As antibiotic resistance becomes an increasingly urgent problem, we will also delve into how we can use viruses as therapeutics, which involves using viruses against themselves or to fight bacteria."

Ott and her colleagues in the institute are concentrating their immediate efforts on the study of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. This work will continue to contribute important insights into the current pandemic through the development of rapid diagnostic, prevention, and treatment strategies, as well as help be better prepared for future coronavirus outbreaks and other emerging infections.

The Gladstone-UCSF Institute of Genomic Immunology will combine cutting-edge genomic technologies with gene editing and synthetic biology to better understand the genetic control of human immune cells and develop novel cell-based immunotherapies. Manipulation of the immune system holds great promise not only to treat cancer, but also for infectious diseases, autoimmune diseases, and maybe even neurologic conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.

"These rapidly advancing fields are starting to converge in ways that are too big for any single lab to take on," says Marson, senior investigator at Gladstone and associate professor in the Departments of Medicine and Microbiology and Immunology at the UCSF School of Medicine. "The impetus to start a new institute was the realization that we need to create an ecosystem to bring together people with different perspectives to think about transformative opportunities for how patients can be treated in the future."

Marson's institute will have lab space at Gladstone, adjacent to UCSF's Mission Bay campus, as well as at the University's Parnassus Heights campus, creating a unified community across the two campuses.

"The importance of pursuing advances in virology and immunology for human health has never been more clear, and we at UCSF applaud Gladstone's visionary leadership in establishing these two new institutes," says UCSF Chancellor Sam Hawgood, MBBS. "Under Melanie and Alex's excellent leadership, these research institutesincluding the first-ever Gladstone-UCSF institutewill complement and enhance UCSF's strengths in immunology and cell therapy, and will build on Gladstone's established expertise in the host-pathogen interface and gene editing technologies. Our long-standing partnership leverages the best of both institutions."

About the Search Committee

The joint Gladstone-UCSF search committee that recruited Melanie Ott and Alexander Marson was chaired byDeepak Srivastava. Other members included Katerina Akassoglou, Warner Greene, Todd McDevitt, Katherine Pollard, and Leor Weinberger from Gladstone, as well as Max Krummel, Susan Lynch, Tiffany Scharschmidt, Anita Sil, and Julie Zikherman from UCSF.

About Melanie Ott

A native of Germany, Melanie Ott, MD, PhD,is the director of the Gladstone Institute of Virology, a senior investigator at Gladstone Institutes, and a professor of medicine at UCSF.

Ott is passionate about using viruses to find fundamental new biology in host cells. She has made important discoveries about how virusesincluding the hepatitis C virus and Zikahijack human cells, and has contributed to efforts to eradicate HIV by gaining insight into viral transcriptional control. Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, she pivoted the focus of her team and spearheaded the effort to establish a dedicated airborne pathogen BSL-3 lab to enable work on live SARS-CoV-2.

Prior to joining Gladstone in 2002, Ott started her own research group at the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg, Germany, working closely with Nobel laureate Harald zur Hausen. She is a trained neurologist with an MD from the University of Frankfurt/Main in Germany. She transitioned to basic virology research during the AIDS crisis, earning a PhD in molecular medicine from the Elmezzi Graduate School in Manhasset, New York.

Ott has received several honors, including the Young Researcher Award at the European Conference on Experimental AIDS Research and the Hellman Award. She is a member of the Association of American Physicians and a Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology. She is a recipient of the Chancellor's Award for Public Service from UCSF for her work as the founder and co-chair of the student outreach committee at Gladstone. Ott also received the California Life Sciences Association's Biotechnology Educator Pantheon Award for establishing thePUMAS (Promoting Underrepresented Minorities Advancing in the Sciences) internship programat Gladstone, which seeks to increase diversity in STEM.

About Alexander Marson

Alexander Marson, MD, PhD,is the director of the Gladstone-UCSF Institute of Genomic Immunology, a senior investigator at Gladstone Institutes, and an associate professor in the Departments of Medicine and Microbiology and Immunology at UCSF.

Marson is interested in how DNA controls the behavior of cells in the human immune system. He uses the power of CRISPR technology to genetically engineer cells to fight cancer, autoimmune diseases, and infectious diseases.

He completed his undergraduate studies at Harvard University, and earned an MPhil in biological sciencesfromCambridge. He earned his PhD at Whitehead Institute at MIT, where he worked with mentors Rick Young and Rudolf Jaenisch on transcriptional control of regulatory T cells and embryonic stem cells.

After completing his MD at Harvard Medical School and an internship and residency at the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Marson joined UCSF in 2012 to complete clinical work as an infectious diseases fellow. He started his lab as a Sandler Faculty Fellow, before joining the faculty at UCSF and becoming scientific director of biomedicine at the Innovative Genomics Institute. He is also a Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator and member of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy.

About Gladstone Institutes

To ensure our work does the greatest good, Gladstone Institutes focuses on conditions with profound medical, economic, and social impactunsolved diseases. Gladstone is an independent, nonprofit life science research organization that uses visionary science and technology to overcome disease. It has an academic affiliation with the University of California, San Francisco.

About UCSF

The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is exclusively focused on the health sciences and is dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.UCSF Health, which serves as UCSF's primary academic medical center,includestop-ranked specialty hospitalsand other clinical programs, and has affiliations throughout the Bay Area. Learn more atucsf.edu, or see ourFact Sheet.

Sources

Gladstone Institutes: Megan McDevitt | megan.mcdevitt@gladstone.org | 415.734.2019

UCSF: Pete Farley |peter.farley@ucsf.edu | 415.502.4608

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Two New Research Institutes in the Bay Area - WFMZ Allentown

Universal Basic Income: Andrew Yang Was Pushing for It Long Before Coronavirus Pandemic – PopCulture.com

A growing number of representatives in the U.S. Congress are calling for a monthly stimulus check sent to Americans for the duration of the coronavirus pandemic. On Tuesday, it received the added support of former presidential candidate Andrew Yang. Yang is no stranger to the idea, having run his campaign around the promise of Universal Basic Income (UBI) to combat the growing threat automation poses to the job market.

Congress is beginning to seriously consider a measure to approve monthly coronavirus relief payments for at least six months. A fledgling bill called the Emergency Money for the People Act would guarantee $2,000 per month for most taxpayers, ensuring that Americans could safely practice social distancing. On Tuesday, Yang added his support for the idea, which is hardly a surprise given his advocacy for UBI in the past. Now, many of Yang's vehement supporters want to make sure he gets credit for his early adoption of the idea.

Millions of Americans have gotten a single stimulus check worth up to $1,200 under the CARES Act, but for those out of work, that money has probably already gone to pay for food, housing or utilities. "They essentially helped pay last month's bills," said Yang in an appearance on Fox 11. "This month's bills, and next months bills, are right around the corner. We have to put $2,000 a month into everyone's hands for the duration of the crisis because that money doesn't disappear, it goes right back into our local economies, into groceries, rent, fuel, and things that help keep our communities, frankly, functioning."

More and more lawmakers seem to agree. In total, 28 Democratic representatives have now cosponsored the Emergency Money for the People Act, feeling that taking care of basic needs is the best way to ensure that Americans continue social distancing.

For Yang, the idea goes even further than that. Through his background in Silicon Valley, Yang came to believe that the automation of more and more jobs would inevitably leave vast swaths of Americans out of jobs, with no new work to replace it. Through a system of automation taxes, Yang wanted to implement UBI for those people in the United States.

With the coronavirus pandemic upon us, Yang's platform seems closer to reality than ever, and many Americans are now revisiting it. Here's a breakdown of how Yang proposed UBI in the U.S.

Yang grew up in Westchester County, New York, the younger son of two immigrants from Taiwan. He skipped at least one grade in school, attended gifted summer programs, went to an elite boarding school and then graduated from Brown University with a degree in economics and political science. Yang then attended Columbia Law School, graduating in 1999.

Yang worked as a corporate lawyer in New York City for a brief time, but found the work unfulfilling. In a profile for The Washington Post, Yang later said that the job was "a pie-eating contest, and if you won, your prize was more pie," and that he wanted to "build something" instead.

After that, Yang worked in some of the earliest online startups, as well as the health care industry and a standardized test preparation company. He also founded Venture for America, a nonprofit dedicated to helping potential entrepreneurs find the resources they needed to continue pushing the U.S. forward.

Finally, Yang has written two books throughout his career Smart People Should Build Things in 2014 and The War on Normal People in 2018. Both are about his experiences in the world of business, his thoughts on entrepreneurship and his belief in UBI as the future for America.

For those that had heard of Yang, this was the reputation he brought into the 2020 presidential race. He sometimes described his political views as "Human-Center Capitalism." This included the implementation of UBI through a program that Yang called the "Freedom Dividend."

As president, Yang promised, every U.S. citizen over the age of 18 years old would receive $1,000 per month from the U.S. government. He argued that this was necessary to make up for the number of jobs being lost to technological automation, which he projected would increase drastically in the coming years.

To pay for the Freedom Dividend, Yang proposed a value-added tax on large American corporations. He argued that he was qualified to combat corporate tax avoidance thanks to his background as a lawyer. Most other countries in the world have a value-added tax in their laws, though some refer to it as a goods and services tax. Either way, it is a complex method of taxing a product or service at every stage of production and distribution, compensating a community for the environment and infrastructure it provided for the creation of that product.

Yang's plan included other forms of welfare already in place. According to Yang, the Freedom Dividend would replace some extant welfare programs, but others would remain in place, meaning that people could continue collecting aid they already received with an additional $1,000 per month on top of it.

Yang's plan also noted that the Freedom Dividend would operate on an opt-in basis, so Americans who did not want the stipend for one reason or another did not need to refuse it. According to a report by USA Today, he theorized that a society with UBI would produce "healthier people, less stressed-out people, better-educated people, stronger communities, more volunteerism, [and] more civic participation."

While Yang advocated for Universal Basic Income, he was more moderate on other universal programs, such as health care. According to a report by CNN, Yang said in November that he supported "the spirit of Medicare for All" but also said that as president, he would take a gradual approach to it in order to convince the American people. He wanted to leave the option of private insurance available for those who wanted it, and thought that the public would eventually realize "that private insurance is not what [they] need" and that Medicare for All is "superior to [their] current insurance."

Still, Yang's policy proposal during his presidential campaign did not include a public health insurance option, nor did it commit to Medicare for All. He was criticized by some for his commitment to UBI and his apparent hesitation on any form of universal health care.

Yang suspended his presidential campaign on Feb. 11, 2020, and later endorsed Joe Biden for president. However, Yang has continued to advocate for UBI in media appearances since then, and has become a regular media presence. Eight days after suspending his campaign, Yang took a job as a political commentator on CNN.

Yang will soon be launching his own podcast as well, titled Yang Speaks. An audiobook version of his second publication The War on Normal People: The Truth About America's Disappearing Jobs and Why Universal Basic Income Is Our Future, is now available for free on YouTube, sparking more discussion than ever about UBI in the U.S.

In February, Yang mentioned on the air that it was "flattering to be considered for a VP role or any role in someone's campaign," implying that one of the remaining candidates was considering him. He also later said that he was interested in running for Mayor of New York City in 2021.

Yang has popularized UBI for modern Americans, but the idea is by no means his. Yang himself has said that he became an advocate for the idea after reading Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future by Martin Ford.

Before that, however, the idea of UBI goes back as far as 1796, when it was suggested by writer Thomas Paine. Pain called for a tax on heritage used to fund "basic incomes" for people in their 20s. The following year, Thomas Spence wrote out a more official proposal for the idea.

If the trend of support for the Emergency Money for the People Act continues in congress, this long-held idea may soon be a reality. For updates on your stimulus check visit the IRS' Get My Payment website. For the latest information on the coronavirus pandemic, visit the websites of the CDC and the World Health Organization.

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Universal Basic Income: Andrew Yang Was Pushing for It Long Before Coronavirus Pandemic - PopCulture.com

Coronavirus is a crisis for the developing world, but here’s why it needn’t be a catastrophe – The Guardian

While countries in east Asia and Europe are gradually taking steps towards reopening their economies, many in the global south are wondering whether the worst of the pandemic is yet to come. As economists who work on poverty alleviation in developing countries, we are often asked what the effects of coronavirus will be in south Asia and Africa. The truth is, we dont know. Without extensive testing to map the number of cases, its impossible to tell how far the virus has already spread. We dont yet have enough information about how Covid-19 behaves under different conditions such as sunlight, heat and humidity. Developing countries more youthful populations may spare them the worst of the pandemic, but health systems in the global south are poorly equipped to deal with an outbreak, and poverty is linked to co-morbidities that put people at a higher risk of serious illness.

Without the information widespread testing provides, many poorer countries have taken an extremely cautious approach. India imposed a total lockdown on 24 March, by which time the country had about 500 confirmed cases. Countries such as Rwanda, South Africa and Nigeria enforced lockdowns in late March, long before the virus was expected to peak. But these lockdown measures cant last forever. Poorer countries could have used the quarantine to buy time, gather information about how the disease behaves and develop a testing and tracing strategy. Unfortunately, not much of this has happened. And, far from coming to their aid, rich countries have outrun poorer nations in the race for PPE, oxygen and ventilators.

In many places, the human toll of the lockdown is already becoming obvious. Children go without vaccinations and crops are not harvested. As construction projects stall and markets are shuttered, jobs and incomes evaporate. The effects of prolonged quarantine on developing nations could be as harmful as the virus itself. Before Covid-19 rippled across the world, 15,000 children under five died every day in the global south, mostly of preventable diseases associated with poverty. Its likely that many more will die if their families are plunged further into poverty.

What can poor countries do in the face of this pandemic and how can rich countries help them? First, the systematic testing strategies that have been crucial to containing the epidemic and easing lockdown measures in Europe are equally critical in poor countries. In places where public health authorities dont have information about the spread of the virus and resources are limited, the response to coronavirus needs to be targeted at active hotspots. In this way, rather than imposing a universal lockdown, health authorities can identify the clusters where quarantine measures are required.

Second, developing countries must be able to improve the ability of their health systems to cope with a potential sudden influx of sick people.

And third, its crucial that poor countries are able to guarantee people a secure livelihood in the months to come. In the absence of such a guarantee, people will grow tired of quarantine measures and lockdowns will be increasingly difficult to enforce. To protect their economies from a collapse in demand, governments must reassure people that financial support will be available for as long as its needed.

In our recent book, written before coronavirus struck but with a title that is now eerily appropriate Good Economics for Hard Times we recommend that poor countries implement what we call a universal ultra basic income (UUBI), a regular cash transfer that amounts to enough for basic survival. The virtues of a UUBI are its simplicity, transparency, and its assurance that nobody will starve. It avoids the problems of many welfare systems that are designed to exclude the non-deserving, even at a cost to the needy. During a pandemic, when governments need to help as many people as quickly as possible, the simplicity of a UUBI could be lifesaving. Reassuring people that nobody will be excluded from subsistence aid also limits the feeling of existential foreboding that so many individuals in poor (and not so poor) countries are currently experiencing.

These ideas arent mere fantasy. The small west African country of Togo, with its eight million inhabitants and its GDP (purchasing power parity) per capita of $1,538, is working on all these fronts. In addition to testing 7,900 suspected cases, the country is deploying 5,000 test on a random basis to assess prevalence. Health authorities will use the results to determine when and where to restrict peoples mobility. The government has also launched a cash transfer scheme linking an electronic wallet to peoples cellphones; it already has 1.3 million people registered and has sent money to 500,000 in the region of Greater Lom (the capital) alone.

The good news is that many countries, particularly those in Africa, already have the infrastructure to rapidly transfer money across a population using cellphones. Many people already use these systems in private exchanges, so government schemes based on this infrastructure can be up and running in a matter of days. If phone data indicates that some regions are experiencing greater economic distress, the transfer could be more generous in those places.

In fact, the greatest constraint we face isnt the feasibility of these measures its the willpower to finance them. Developing countries will need a substantial amount of help from richer nations if they are to pay for a UUBI. Some fear that their currencies will depreciate if they act aggressively, potentially spurring a debt crisis. Richer nations will need to work with global financial institutions to offer debt relief and additional resources to developing nations. Many developing countries will need to buy food and medical supplies with hard currency, which will become increasingly difficult because of faltering export earnings and collapsing remittances.

Given the unprecedented collapse in earnings that many people face, conventional fiscal prudence is perhaps less important now than it was in the recent past. Now is the time for governments to help citizens and economies by spending more, rather than less. The governments of developing countries may need to accept large budget deficits in order to finance a UUBI, at least in the short term. When countries begin to loosen their lockdowns and resume production, they will face extremely weak demand. Pledging that cash transfers will continue for some time in the future will allow people to go out and spend money when it becomes safe to do so. In turn, this will drive the revival of the economy.

None of this means that governments should simply ignore concerns about macro-economic stability. But a clear spending plan that responds to the immediate shock of coronavirus, in conjunction with a longer term strategy for how the lockdown will end, offers the best hope for preventing the present crisis developing into a future catastrophe.

Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee won the 2019 Nobel prize in economics for their work on poverty alleviation. They are the authors of Good Economics for Hard Times

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Coronavirus is a crisis for the developing world, but here's why it needn't be a catastrophe - The Guardian

Adam Schiff Says Trump’s Cult of the President Has Infected the Republican Party – Mother Jones

For indispensable reporting on the coronavirus crisis and more, subscribe to Mother Jones' newsletters.

How the hell did we get here? Thats what Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) wants to know. The congressman and colleagues have introducedlegislation to set up a commission to investigate and identify how the Trump administration failed in its response to the coronavirus. (Based on our timeline of the first 100 days of Trumps response, theyll have plenty to look into.)

Schiff recently joinedMother JonesEditor-in-Chief and the Commonwealth Club to talk hiring Twitter trolls into top intelligence positions, and chat about his alternative to universal basic income. Real time oversight is vitally important, he says. Even if its hard to do meaningful oversight when youre dealing with bodies that dont particularly want to share the answers. But Schiff believes his experience from the impeachment trial has prepared him for it.

You can watch the full interview here, or read an edited transcript below.

Congressmen, at the end of the impeachment trial, you posed a rhetorical question to the Senate: You may be wondering how much damage the president can do over the next few months before the election. Then you said, A lot, a lot of damage. What were you imagining then and how does that square with whats happening now?

I dont think anyone anticipated that we would very soon lose more lives than we did during the Vietnam War, and its due to the incompetence and maladministration of this president. We grossly underestimated the damage that he could do.

The impeachment proceedings and then-trial centered around the accusation that Trump essentially extorted the president of Ukraine and then covered it up. How is that mentality playing out here?

Those that have been willing to say nice things about him have seen the Trump campaign take those statements and put them into campaign ads. We cant have any confidence that this president or his administration are making those decisions on the basis of science, on the basis of need, on the basis of whats in the best interest of the American people, but as we said during the trial, the one thing you can always count on Donald Trump for is, he will do whats right for Donald Trump, not whats right for the country.

You said its hard to tell if something is of corrupt intent or just incompetence. How are you untangling that right now?

This has been the story of the Trump presidency. You can say, Thats really not in the presidents interest to do politically, but he does it nonetheless because he thinks its good for him personally. He thinks its good for him politicallyits part of the myopia of this extraordinary narcissism we see.

Its certainly not in the national interest for Donald Trump to be out there postulating that maybe people should inject bleach as a way of killing the virus or pushing out untested treatments. The entire prism is not whats best for the country with this president, [its] whats best for him.

Is that in part because his aides and children are unable, or unwilling, to tell him the truth? Or are they living in a bubble of their own creation as well?

One of the points we made during the trial is that youre not going to change the presidents character. He is who he is. In terms of his family, Jared Kushner was asked about this grim milestone we are crossing where more people are dying of the virus and have died of the virus than died during Vietnam, and his answer was, Weve made really good decisions. Were doing a really good job. [That] was equally revealing in terms of this whole familys blind spot.

The most that we can do in Congress is try to mitigate and limit the damage, do vigorous oversight, and insist on accountability. We need to do that in real time.

Do you feel confident that you are getting forthright briefings from the intelligence community?

Well, it grieves me to say that the answer is no, that there has been a tremendous politicization of the intelligence community under Trump.

It has really reached its pinnacle with the appointment of Rick Grenell as the top intel official in the country, someone who has virtually no intelligence experiencehe was essentially a Twitter troll. He did what you do to get a high appointment in the Trump administration: You go on Fox, on social media, and make the most incendiary attacks on the presidents opponents and say the most exaggerated claims on behalf of the president.

I think it came as a surprise to most people that inspectors general who were supposed to be this firewall against intergovernmental corruption, or malfeasance of other sorts, could be so easily dismissed by the very people that they are reporting on. Is that something that happened before and what could Congress do to fortify those rules and laws?

The inspector generals system, which has been really integral to rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse in government and has a great success record, is a post Watergate reform. But like so many of the post Watergate reforms, theyve been obliterated by this president.

In the intelligence bill that were drafting now, we are going to have a provision that provides you cannot fire an inspector general except for good cause. Were going to also have requirements that if you do fire an inspector general, Congress needs to be informed of what they were working on when they were fired. The existing law says that when you fire an inspector general you have to give 30 days notice. Well the president did an end run around that so that they couldnt fulfill that last 30 days. Now that 30 days might have given the opportunity for the inspector general to make sure that investigations that were ongoing were not closed, swept under the rug, or made to disappear.

We are going to be putting in statute protections for the inspector generals going forward, things that we didnt think were going to be necessary, because we thought presidents would never do what this president is doingour own post Watergate reforms. Things that will be necessary when this president has gone to make sure that our democratic norms and institutions are codified, or protections are codified, so that they can never be assaulted the way that this president has.

Have you found any bipartisan support for such line of thinking thus far?

Given the slave like devotion of particular House Republicans, Kevin McCarthy doesnt cross the street without asking Donald Trump. That kind of sycophantic, slavish devotion to the president isnt going to admit of independent reforms.

What kind of accountability can Congress muster now under these circumstances? The oversight committeewhat can it do and not do in the immediate future?

There are two kinds of oversight going on in Congress that are going to be very important in real time. Real time oversight is vitally important. Theres a whole host of other issues thoughits very difficult at a distance to do meaningful oversight when youre dealing with bodies that dont particularly want to share the answers. Much of what we will need to know in the intel committee will be classified and therefore we cannot do it at a distance. We certainly dont have the secure video capability among all of our members around the country right now to be able to conduct such a hearing.

In the meantime, we are doing the kind of oversight that we can by requesting, requiring information by teleconference, by using the budget where necessary to compel answers. For example, an oversight committee looking at the problem with protective gear. They did a bipartisan briefing where administration officials acknowledged that there were shortages of protective gear and tests and that there are shortages in reagents and swabs. Its less visible to the public, which is a problem, because a very important point of the oversight is getting good information out to the country.

When you talked to my colleague David Corn during the impeachment hearings, you were shocked that it was quite obvious that when you started making your arguments to the Senate, that they hadnt watched the house hearing, and not just hadnt watched the full of them, but seemed to have it all kind of mediated through Fox. Do you feel that thats going on with this crisis?

House Republicans have become such a cult of the president that theyre not even capable of acknowledging the facts staring them in the face. We had to operate from the premise, which turned out to be all too accurate, that the senators were really not watching the hearings in the House. They were getting the topline from Fox, which was completely misleading.

Have you seen any conciliatory movement within the California delegation when it comes to the pandemic? Kevin McCarthy, Devin Nunesdo the two of them, and you, and Barbara Lee and Maxine Waters ever come to any agreement about what needs to proceed in terms of representing the state of California?

I will say its been one of the biggest disappointments Ive had of the Trump administration, and that is, I had a much higher view of my Republican colleagues of their commitment to their own ideals, of their commitment to the constitution. They dont represent the Republican party anymore. They represent a cult of personality of the president. And so, I do think when the president is gone, I have to hope that they will return to being Republican once again.

COVIDs taken every inequity in our society and magnified it and increased it. What of any old fights may have a chance of being viewed in a new way by both members of Congress and more conservative constituents?

One thing I will say about what we ought to do right nowI was struck at the approach that European countries were taking, but also Asian countries. Where the government was guaranteeing payroll for businesses, large and small.

That seemed to me much more equitable, much more efficient. You didnt need a separate program for small business and one for large industry. You didnt need to overwhelm unemployment compensation. You didnt need to have so many people unemployed. And when this virus does pass, then who have to now go and find employment because people got to retain the jobs they had, even if they couldnt perform the work right now. That kind of a payroll guarantee is the best approach.

Do you think its via payroll or is it a UBI, a universal basic income, kind of start it up now, lets become Alaska?

Those are two good models for us to explore. Ive been particularly attracted to the payroll model because it has the effect of preserving employment. Theyre not also mutually exclusive. The stimulus checks are a form of universal basic income if you made them monthly. But I particularly think that the payroll guarantee is the right approach. America has made a choice to have millions and millions of its people now going to unemployment rolls.

Do you think election protection will be a part of the next stimulus bill?

Absolutely. I think we have to insist that in the next legislation that we take up, we protect the health of the American people, we protect the health of our economy, and we protect the health of our democracy. The American people have a right not only to be able to vote, but to know where their elected officials stand on the franchise, whether they are willfully trying to obstruct peoples ability to vote in this country.

So if the Republicans are determined to disenfranchise people, it ought to be abundantly clear what theyre doing so that they can be held accountable at the polls.

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Adam Schiff Says Trump's Cult of the President Has Infected the Republican Party - Mother Jones

Starvation in the time of Corona: momentum for the Universal Basic Dividend – DiEM25

The quarantine and cessation of economic activities as a result of this pandemic has put uberised workers on the frontline, and other kinds of precarious workers at even greater risk.

The COVID-19 crisis also has farther-reaching consequences: for example, the revelation of the scale of the underground economy (whether related to legal or illegal activities) in Europe, which some states prefer to ignore, while others include it in the calculation of their GDP. The increase in unemployment, the reduction in benefits to the unemployed and the increasingly restrictive policies for entering the European Union have led a significant part of the European population to fall back on the underground economy.

By definition, the underground economy consists of undeclared (and therefore also not taxable) economic activities that are difficult to measure. Legal underground activities are estimated to account on average for 17% of GDP of, while illegal underground activities are estimated to account for at least 3% of GDP. The COVID-19 quarantine and the resulting halt of the free movement of people and goods at both national and cross-border levels has left a significant part of the population without an income.

Beyond a more or less protective social safety net, European states have hypocritically relied upon humanitarian organisations, local associations and even the goodwill of local authorities to take care of those who have been left behind in the event of a hard blow.

But because of the COVID-19 crisis and its economic repercussions, humanitarian organisations and associations, which are already usually overburdened, are currently overwhelmed. These organisations and associations are themselves already suffering the repercussions of certain ultra-liberal policies. For example, one of the first measures taken by the Macrons government in France, immediately after its election, was to abolish the wealth tax.

In the past, taxpayers who paid this tax could reduce their tax burden by contributing to the budgets of humanitarian organisations. As wealth tax no longer exists, they no longer see any point in doing so, and humanitarian organisations are seeing their budgets significantly reduced. For the first time in its history of 70 years, the Emmaus aid association, for example, is calling for donations.

Schools also used to provide a safety net for vulnerable families that rely on the virtually free school lunch (13 cents per lunch in Paris for the poorest families) to guarantee their children one nutritious meal per day. With schools closed, many families are unable to feed their children, as no meals sold in shops are available at an equivalent price.

In the UK, it is estimated that this could affect 4 million children, i.e. almost 30% of school-age children. The same applies to students throughout Europe who used to eat at university canteens. At the same time, large supermarket chains are taking advantage of the opportunity offered to them by current confinement policies to drastically increase the price of food.

Whether in France, Italy, Spain or elsewhere in the European Union, children are hungry and families can no longer feed themselves. European governments alerted by their respective intelligence services are worried about the repercussions, such as major hunger riots that could explode in southern Italy, in the suburbs of large French or British cities.

These same governments have for decades tolerated the expansion of underground economies by reducing the number of labour inspectors and turning a blind eye to employers not declaring their employees and the trafficking of contraband to avoid social unrest. They have failed to offer lasting solutions such as creating more jobs and legalising immigrants.

Governments now seem to be surprised, or at least worried, about the resulting violence and repercussions of these increasingly ultra-liberal policies of which they were the architects. Worried about hunger riots, some governments are also concerned that criminal organisations may substitute the state in helping citizens and small businesses, and may definitely take roots in large areas of the economy.

DiEM25 has, from the outset, advocated not only the end of ultra-liberal policies, but also the introduction of a Universal Basic Dividend (UBD) that would accompany the foreseeable end of the job market as it was traditionally known after the war. It has to be said that although we at DiEM25 have often been labelled as dreamers, now most of our opponents seem to be coming to this exact conclusion.

Japan has just introduced a minimum income for every resident, national or foreigner, to cope with the crisis. Some mayors in California have also tried it and are now pleading to have it implemented nationwide to avoid the worst. Alaska is already offering it statewide. The Democrat candidate Andrew Yang based his platform on this policy.

The UN assistant Secretary General Kanni Wignaraja and the UNDP AP Chief Economist Balazs Horvath are pleading for a universal basic income within the World Economic Forum on 17 April 2020 declaring: rule number one of crisis management: when you find yourself in a hole, first, stop digging. They argue that social inequalities end up costing more by way of causing social unrest, mass migrations and the increase of extremist groups capitalising on them. The European Central Bank vice president Luis Guindos mentioned it as well. Even the Pope declared in his Easter letter that it might be time to consider universal basic wage.

Two days ago, more than 100 British MPs pleaded for the introduction of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) after 30% of British children have been considered as lacking food; and Spain is taking steps to implement next month a basic income to help citizens weather the economic fallout due to COVID-19. The Spanish minister of economic affairs said we are going to do it as soon as possible. So it can be useful, not just for this extraordinary situation, and it remains forever. Other countries in the European Union are thinking about it, and left-wing parties are pushing them to do so. The major counter-argument is the burden put on the taxpayer to finance it.

For the time being, DiEM25 is the only movement offering a solution to the financing argument: we refuse that the universal basic revenue be financed by the taxpayers. That is why we advocate for a Universal Basic Dividend and not simply a Universal Basic Income, i.e. financed in the form of a dividend paid from a portion of shares of listed companies pursuant to stock market transactions or IPOs. We see this dividend as a fair toll payable to the public on stock exchange transactions, particularly from those companies benefiting from state support shares which would be pooled in a European collective fund that would itself produce a due return.

In the meantime, we would go even a step further in the time of COVID-19: what about helicopter money to be created by the ECB: this is totally realistic as it is estimated to 750 billion , an amount which Lagarde regarded as an amount which can be made available to the banks.

Revolutionary ideas? Not so much at a historical moment when only creativity and thinking outside of the box will allow European states and their citizens to survive this crisis.

Consider donating to a food bank near you, if you are able to. The image used in this article can be found on Twitter.

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Starvation in the time of Corona: momentum for the Universal Basic Dividend - DiEM25

5 Reasons Immortality Would be Worse than Death | Cracked.com

If you're reading this, congratulations on having achieved the primary goal with which we begin each day: You have avoided death.

We're big on this idea of not dying. We love stories of immortal vampires and invincible superheroes, each of us wishing on some level that was us. If we didn't have to worry about death, we could finally get shit done.

But could we? If you take a moment to think about it, you realize immortality is grossly overrated.

Contrary to what many people believe, humans are still evolving. That's not a big deal if you have the kind of immortality that only lasts 1,000 or 2,000 years, but of course real immortality means you'll still be walking the earth, in your current body, a million years from now.

Science has no idea where future mutations might lead us by that point, so it's anyone's guess what your neighbors will look like in the future. You, on the other hand, will be walking around as the future equivalent of this:

Their bodies and brains are going to continue to adapt to an ever-changing world. Yours won't. Will your digestive system be able to handle the same food they eat? Will your brain enjoy the same entertainment? Will your non-evolved tongue even be able to speak the languages they speak in the year one million AD? Would an unfrozen caveman be able to do all of that now?

One thing we do know: You won't be getting any lovin'. It turns out that mother nature hates inter-species breeding, and is such a big cockblocker that science had to come up with a name to describe it: Reproductive Isolation. It's the reason there aren't packs of ligers or centaurs roaming around.

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5 Reasons Immortality Would be Worse than Death | Cracked.com

The Old Guard: Charlize Therons Netflix film gets July 10 release date – Hindustan Times

Hollywood star Charlize Theron's much-awaited Netflix project, The Old Guard will premiere on July 10. The 44-year-old actor shared the news in a post on Twitter, sharing four stills from the movie.

"@oldguardmovie @netflix July 10," she wrote in the caption. Written and directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood, the film is based on the comic book series of the same name by Greg Rucka.

The story is about on a small group of immortal soldiers, led by a woman named Andy, who have been working as mercenaries for centuries. But the group gets a shock when they find a new immortal woman, not long after they discover an evil group has video evidence of their immortality.

Also read: Betaal trailer: Shah Rukh Khans new Netflix series unleashes army of zombies

Besides Theron, The Old Guard also features Kiki Layne, Marwan Kenzari,Luca Marinelli,Harry Melling,Van Veronica Ngo,Matthias Schoenaerts, andChiwetel Ejiofor.

Theron has also produced the project through her company Denver and Delilah, alongside Skydances David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Don Granger.

Follow @htshowbiz for more

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The Old Guard: Charlize Therons Netflix film gets July 10 release date - Hindustan Times