Monthly Archives: May 2022

Who is the Israeli army censor protecting? – Haaretz

Posted: May 20, 2022 at 2:14 am

In the wake of the death of the Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh and the images of Israeli police officers beating pallbearers at her funeral, the discussion over the past week has focused primarily on the question of the damage to Israels international reputation and not the fear that a life was taken due to an error the responsibility for which has not yet been determined, whether that of an Israel Defense Forces soldier or a Palestinian gunman. The violence of the police officers during the funeral procession also drew little attention from most Israelis and Israeli media outlets. To many people, appearances are everything.

Against the backdrop of this public atmosphere, it is easy to understand how it is that the IDF Military Censor which operates by dint of emergency regulations that have been in effect since the country's establishment, in the name of national security got up on its hind legs in order to prevent a different publication with the potential to affect Israels image: the purpose for which, according to defense sources, then-Mossad chief Yossi Cohen traveled to the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2019 (see story, page 1).

Cohen visited Congo three times during that year with the Israeli billionaire businessman Dan Gertler, without coordinating with the authorities and while concealing his identity. During at least two of these trips he met with Congos former president, Joseph Kabila, a matter that aroused the suspicion of President Felix Tshisekedi. Cohens relationship with Kabila and his uncoordinated visits triggered apprehension in people close to Tshisekedi, and in a rare move he expelled the Mossad director from the country at the end of the third visit. Cohens odd conduct, which led to his expulsion and the exposure of his activity in Congo, is the part of the story that was not censored.

The purpose of these visits is in itself a Pandoras box, but the censor is not permitting publication of those details. It appears that Cohens mission in Congo had only a tangential connection to Israels national security, and his employment of the Mossad in dealing with it raises difficult questions regarding the judgment of Cohen and of the state.

It can be said with a great degree of certainty that the Military Censor is preventing publication for considerations having to do with the image of the state that do not necessarily have direct bearing on its security. Although publication of the details of the affair has the potential to generate an international storm, it is difficult to imagine that their disclosure could do concrete damage to national security.

Just as the Military Censor does not have a mandate to prevent publication of the images from Abu Aklehs funeral even though they are harmful to Israels image it is similarly exceeding its mandate when it prevents publication of Cohens reasons for traveling to Congo. The censor must immediately lift the blackout on details of the affair. A state whose military censor operates out of considerations of the optics does not deserve to be called a democracy.

The above article is Haaretz's lead editorial, as published in the Hebrew and English newspapers in Israel.

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Work in Progress: May 19, 2022 The Sopris Sun – soprissun.com

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Bunky CatBy Sheila MarkowitzGlenwood Springs

Whos that? I asked as I passed by a very large black and white cat looking straight at me from

inside a cage at the Midvalley Animal Shelter. I was there looking for a female kitten to adopt, but this cat caught my eye. I stopped to take a second look.

Oh, thats Bridger, the employee said. Hes been here for about six weeks.

He was found under a bridge in Eagle, hence his name. It was 1997. We had been without a cat for several years. My husband and I thought it was time to have one in our home. I felt something and couldnt just pass this cat by. I asked her to open the cage, which she did.

I kneeled down and immediately Bridger jumped into my lap and sat down. That was that. This was the animal I would be taking home. So, instead of a female kitten, I ended up adopting an 18-pound male cat estimated to be about four to six years old.

A surprise for my husband, but there was something about that cat that endeared us both to him. We didnt care for the name Bridger and remembered a movie we had seen recently entitled The Pope of Greenwich Village. The mother of one of the characters said her deceased son was named Walter, but everyone called him Bunky. We thought that was funny, and so we told everyone who wondered what we named our new cat, that his real name was Walter, but we call him Bunky.

It didnt take long for Bunky to become part of our family. My past experience with cats was that you could leave a dish of dry food out and they would only eat some when hungry. Well, probably because of Bunkys time being alone under the bridge, he was always hungry. After being in our home a few days, he started waddling and had difficulty walking, so we took him to our vet.

The vet said his x-ray showed he was loaded with undigested dry food and we should leave him overnight to be cleaned out. She suggested that we only leave him a small dish of food at home each day, limiting his supply, so this would not happen again. We were starting to learn about our new companion.

If we didnt give him some attention in the morning, Bunky would jump in our bed and whack us on the head with his paw.

He was allowed outdoors and loved to roam around close to home and got to know our neighbors. We later found out that he would visit some, entering their homes, if allowed, even taking a nap on their bed, and of course, eating any food they kindly put out for him!

Twice, he made the front page of the Post Independent, the local newspaper, as they saw him walking through the flowers growing in our front yard.

Bunky was an integral part of our family for over 10 years. We shared many happy times together. He started to show signs of kidney failure and because he was having trouble using the cat box, we sadly decided to keep him in the two rooms in the back part of our house instead of letting him roam around everywhere as he always had. It was a big decision for us, but we were not ready to put him down, as the vet had suggested we do.

We knew during the coming spring, summer and fall months, he would enjoy being out much of the time, and he did. As winter approached, he was inside more and we knew he missed sharing more of our home with us.

I felt sad about this, also knowing that some time in the near future we would need to put him down.

One afternoon, as I was in the kitchen having just returned home from work, I heard Bunky meowing loudly at me from the back room. I called to him, saying I would be there shortly to spend some time with him. As I was removing my shoes, I heard a loud moan from the room and rushed in to see that Bunky was in pain. I sat down by him, put him in my lap and held on to him.

He moaned and died in my arms several minutes later. Im thankful I was with him, able to hold him and comfort him before he died. It always reminds me of the first time we got together at the shelter, more than 10 years before, when I knew he would be coming home with me.

Just in Time By Peter BoltonSaint Stephens Catholic School

As I walk down the stairs, I begin to repeat my presentation and get ready for today at school. As my mother calls, food is ready! I walk into the kitchen and eat my scrambled eggs with cereal. Afterwards, I get my school clothes on, brush my teeth and check my phone when I realize Im already late for school!

I grab my backpack and run out the door. My hair is all wet and my shirt isnt buttoned, but I dont care. I need to get to school before I miss my presentation Ive been preparing for for a week.

I start buttoning my shirt and brushing my hair with my nails as I run up to the front door. I go to turn the handle, but its locked. I start to panic and wonder how am I going to get in for my presentation it starts in six minutes.

I look around for someone to open the door but no one comes. I glance and see an opened window up high. I walk up to see if I can reach it but I cant. I see someone inside the room and I yell through the window. Its my best friend, Devin. He yells back, Hey bud, need some help there?

Yes, I need you to open the front door for me. I need to get inside! I shout.

No-can-do, amigo. I need a key to open the front door, but I might be able to do something else, he says.

What can you do? I ask. He runs out of the classroom.

Im in shock. Did he just leave me outside? I start to panic again and wonder how I am going to get inside my presentation is in four minutes. I try to climb through the window, but I cant because its almost 12 feet high. I see Devin coming back into the room with a ladder. I wonder how hes going to get that through the window

Youve got to trust me, man, he says. He sets up the ladder and climbs onto it, then he reaches through the window to me.

Its my only hope, I think to myself. I jump up and grab his hands, he pulls me up and through the window, scraping my back on the window.

Thank you so much, Devin! Hey, how did you get a ladder in the first place? I ask.

The janitors closet, he replies.

I laugh, Dont you need a key for the janitors closet too? I inquire.

It was left unlocked because the janitor doesnt think he needs to lock it, he said.

We try to make it down to the first floor where the stage is. We head to the door to the staircase. When we pull the handle, it is open thankfully. As we head downstairs, we get confronted by the school security guard, what were you kids doing upstairs?

We were just grabbing our books from our locker and heading back down, I say.

You kids are going straight to the office! he harshly replies.

Devin and I suddenly bolt past him and around a corner. I think we lost him, Devin says. But we have a bigger issue. We have to get past him to get into the stage entrance. Ill distract him while you get past, Devin says.

Just dont get caught and meet me behind the stage after the presentation, I say.

Devin yells, Okay! while he runs down the hall leading the security guard away from the stage and towards him. I sneak past into the stage entrance. As I am about to get on stage, I look at the clock and see that Im right on time.

I walk through the curtains and see everyone cheering me on. I put on the mic and pull out my Bible to spread the word of God

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European Parliament accused of censoring press freedom report that criticised Greek suppression – The Telegraph

Posted: at 2:14 am

A press freedom report criticising Greece for suppressing coverage of migrant pushbacks was censored by the European Parliament, it has been revealed.

Reporters Without Borders issued a report saying Greek police regularly resort to violence to stop journalists covering the refugee crisis, as well as demonstrations against Covid measures.

Greece tumbled from 70th place to 108th in its latest press freedom league table as a result, lower than any other EU country and lower even than Albania.

But despite regularly voicing support for both media freedom and Reporters Without Borders, the European Parliament deleted the report from its website on the grounds that it was "not in line with the editorial guidelines".

Jaume Duch Guillot, a spokesman for the European Parliament, said it was because the report made no mention of "the parliaments activities and agenda".

But the deletion of the report followed a virulent reaction from the Greek governments supporters. A lawmaker from the ruling New Democracy party labelled Reporters Without Border a leftist NGO and losers from abroad.

There has been some suggestion that the decision to delete the report was made by Roberta Metsola, president of the European Parliament.

Both Ms Metsola and New Democracy belong to the centre-right European Peoples Party (EPP), the parliaments largest political group.

Metsolas effort to protect the last strong EPP government in Europe can be partly understood, said Sarantis Michalopouloss, a columnist with Brussels-based website Euractiv. What cannot be understood and tolerated is the lies of an EU institution which gets paid by EU taxpayers money, who are suffering from soaring prices across the bloc.

Ms Metsola's office did not respond to requests for comment.

Amendments to Greeces criminal code "passed under the pretext of fighting the Covid-19 pandemic" have harmed press freedom, the report stated.

The spreading of false information is now punishable by five years imprisonment, which Reporters Without Borders said represents a serious threat to journalists right to publish information in the public interest, and increases the risk of self-censorship.

The police regularly resort to violence and arbitrary bans to hamper journalistic coverage of demonstrations and the refugee crisis on the islands, the report reads.

One Dutch journalist had to leave the country for her own security after she was attacked in the street following a smear campaign by the pro-government media over her heated exchange with the prime minister about migrant pushbacks.

The Greek government was also criticised for dragging its feet after promising a probe into the murder of Giorgos Karaivaz, a veteran crime reporter who was gunned down outside his Athens home in broad daylight.

The UK rose nine places in the reports ranking, to 24, although media freedoms were said to be "worrisome".

Report authors pointed to an alarming proposal for reforms to official secrets laws that could see journalists jailed for espionage.

Journalists in the UK faced extensive freedom of information restrictions, with reports surfacing of a secretive government clearing house for freedom of information requests.

The report also mentioned alleged governmental interference surrounding the failed appointment of Paul Dacre as chair of Ofcom, the UKs communications regulator.

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Viola Davis Reveals a Director Called Her by His Maids Name, Speaks Out on Hollywoods Slow Race Progress (EXCLUSIVE) – Variety

Posted: at 2:14 am

Viola Davis joined Variety and Kering at the Cannes Film Festival for a powerful Women In Motion conversation in which she revealed a director once called her by his maids name. The Oscar and Emmy-winning actor was talking about Hollywoods perception of Black actors and how the amount of roles she can play remains limited due to her skin color, even at her A-list stature.

I had a director who did that to me. He said, Louise! I knew him for 10 years and he called me Louise and I find out that its because his maids name is Louise, Davis said. I was maybe around 30 at the time, so it was a while ago. But what you have to realize is that those micro-aggressions happen all the time.

Davis won an Emmy for her leading role in How to Get Away With Murder, which was one of the only series fronted by a dark-skinned Black woman on television during its six-season run. How to Get Away With Murder from Shonda Rhimes broke down barriers for representation on network TV, but Davis admitted the show didnt necessarily open the door for more TV opportunities for women who look like her.

I know that when I left How to Get Away With Murder that I dont see a lot of dark skin women in lead roles on TV and not even in streaming services, Davis said, in conversation at Cannes with Varietys chief correspondent Elizabeth Wagmeister. And that ties into ideology and ethos and mentality, and thats speaking in the abstract. Why arent you hiring a dark skin woman when she walks in the room and you say she blows you away? Create space and storytelling for her so when she thrives shes not thriving despite of her circumstance but thriving because of her circumstance.

Davis stressed that opportunities in Hollywood are still limited. Through her production company JuVee Productions, which she founded with her husband Julius Tennon, Davis is trying to expand the scope of the stories being told in Hollywood (see her upcoming warrior epic The Woman King as an example).

If I wanted to play a mother whose family lives in a low income neighborhood and my son was a gang member who died in a drive by shooting, I could get that made, Davis said. If I played a woman who was looking to recreate herself by flying to Nice and sleeping with five men at the age of 56 looking like me, Im going to have a hard time pushing that one, even as Viola Davis.

Davis once played a supporting role in the Julia Roberts starrer Eat Pray Love, but it sounds like making a version of that story with her in the lead role wouldnt be of interest in Hollywood. The actor said the reason is that people cant reconcile the Blackness with the spiritual awakening and the sexuality. Its too much for them.

While speaking about being rejected for roles in the past, Davis said a lot of the times she was passed over because of her race or because Hollywood talent did not find her pretty enough. The latter reason really gets on my damn nerves, Davis said. It breaks my heart and it makes me angry.

A lot of it is based in race. It really is, Davis added of being rejected. Lets be honest. If I had my same features and I were five shades lighter, it would just be a little bit different. And if I had blonde hair, blue eyes and even a wide nose, it would be even a little bit different than what it is now. We could talk about colorism, we could talk about race. It pisses me off, and it has broken my heart on a number of projects, which I wont name.

Watch Davis full conversation at Kerings Women In Motion talk with Variety in the video below:

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USDOT: Nation seeing signs of progress in supply chain as historic level of goods flow in – TheTrucker.com – The Trucker

Posted: at 2:14 am

WASHINGTON Despite challenges in recent months, there are some positive signs that the nations supply chain is becoming a bit less stressed, according to a recent report by the U.S. Department of Transportations (USDOT) Supply Chain Indicators Tracker.

The tracker is part of President Bidens Supply Chain Disruptions Task Force.

Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have seen stressed supply chains, as historic levels of goods coming into the U.S., aging infrastructure, the pandemic and geopolitical disruptions continue to cause bottlenecks, congestion and challenges in global markets, a USDOT news release stated.

The total number of container ships waiting for berths at U.S. ports has dropped by 47% since peaking in early February, even as containerized imports increased sharply in March for most U.S. ports, according to the USDOT.

The Ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach and New York/New Jersey, collectively the top three for container volume to the U.S., imported 260,000 more containers in March versus February a 12% increase and the all-time highest month for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

Overall, U.S. ports imported nearly a half-percent more in the first quarter of 2022 than during the first three months of last year.

Early indications are this strength continued in April, as the Port of Los Angeles announced last week it estimates the port had its second-best April on record.

And real retail inventories excluding autos are at their highest levels in history and more than 8% above pre-pandemic levels.

We remain focused on ensuring U.S. exporters are able to get their goods to market, the news release stated. Our attention continues to be on maintaining lower levels of long-dwelling containers at ports, particularly empty ones that could be re-loaded with U.S. products that are ready for export.

USDOT officials said they are also closely monitoring what they call precarious situations abroad, including in China, where lockdowns could potentially reduce imports and affect our supply chains.

The State Department is providing the Biden administration updates from China and the Commerce Department is closely monitoring impacts to companies and American consumers, according to the USDOT.

Despite the lockdown, the Port of Shanghai remains open and the latest data show that exports from major Chinese ports were down only slightly in April compared to the previous year. Nevertheless, factory shutdowns and trucking delays in China could impact the U.S. supply chain, especially for autos and consumer electronics.

Finally, the task force recognizes industry is paying attention to the West Coast labor negotiations, which are expected to begin this week.

Both parties have recently expressed optimism about getting a deal as West Coast longshore worker union president Willie Adams has said, Weve been doing this over 85 years, and we will sit down, we will get an agreement.

TRACKER BACKGROUND

Over the course of the past year, as part of the presidents Supply Chain Disruptions Task Force, the USDOT and the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture have been part of an administration-wide effort to improve the flow of goods, make the countrys supply chains more resilient and lower prices for Americans, according to the Biden administration.

Freight and logistics supply chains are largely operated by the private sector.

To support greater transparency about the state of the nations transportation supply chains, last fall, the Task Force released a dashboard tracking real-time challenges and progress across four key metrics.

USDOT is continuing to track those four metrics and others to help depict a more complete picture of the current logistics and transportation state-of-play.

USDOTs Transportation Supply Chain Indicators Tracker provides updates on key supply chain data including measures and indicators of intermodal throughput such as volumes of U.S. imports and exports, transportation labor numbers, the number of container ships anchored and loitering near U.S. ports, and more.

IMPORTS AND EXPORTS

SHIPS AND CONTAINERS

WORKFORCE

RAIL

NON-TRANSPORTATION SUPPLY CHAIN INDICATORS

The Trucker News Staff produces engaging content for not only TheTrucker.com, but also The Trucker Newspaper, which has been serving the trucking industry for more than 30 years. With a focus on drivers, the Trucker News Staff aims to provide relevant, objective content pertaining to the trucking segment of the transportation industry. The Trucker News Staff is based in Little Rock, Arkansas.

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Top CTV Buyers ‘frustrated’ By Slow Progress Of Ad Measurement Projects – The Drum

Posted: at 2:14 am

Top Havas Media Group TV planner Jon Waite has expressed frustration that ad measurement in the burgeoning CTV space is being slowed down by an industry insistence on a single currency that works across multiple platforms.

Speaking at Advertising Week Europes Future of TV Measurement panel, Waite dismissed the need for a consensus on measurement currencies something some in the business have said is vital for its prosperity. He said he is massively frustrated by the industry standards bodies blocking progress.

I dont understand why everyone needs to agree on one methodology and one approach, said Waite. We are all aware that new data and tech is possible but there is a frustration at the industry standards bodies that they havent been quicker to let us do some of these things.

Hinting to trade body-led projects such as Barbs Dovetail, Thinkbox and broadcaster-led C-Flight, as well as Isba-backed Origin, Waite said these projects are slow-moving and likened it to turning a huge cruise ship it all takes so long.

Waite, who heads up Havas Media Groups global activation, said: All the cool stuff that could be easily achieved feels a bit further away and the frustration is you can see it, its right there, but the reality of actually being able to do it feels like hard work.

According to Waite, agencies and brands should just go to independent measurement firms for different needs. Youve always got to be able to say, I paid for a unit of media and therefore there is a currency and I need to pay for that, but how you value that unit of media is very different, he said.

Gareth George, group head of media at RVU, owner of Confused.com, Uswitch and Zoopla, also said it was incredibly frustrating waiting on the bodies. Barb sort of moved in the right direction, but Dovetail is a bit of a joke and it has been for the last decade. Origin is still a couple of years away, C-Flight seems like the best one at the moment, but what is the level of independence within it? he said.

George said brands are asking for the same thing from the bodies theyve asked for years, which is: Who am I reaching and who am I not reaching?

What a lot of people in the industry dont understand is the amount of pressure put on in-house media teams who are accountable to the C-suite, who ask very basic questions like, why are hundreds of millions of pounds being spent in a way that is not accountable? he said.

Elsewhere in the session David Barker, senior vice-president of global commercial partnerships at the TV measurement and adtech group Samba TV, said the competition between currency providers differs in the US to Europe. Because Nielsen is a commercial company, a lot of people can come into the space and jockey for position, Barker explained.

Its a different picture in Europe, where many of the measurement companies, like Barb in the UK, are funded by the broadcasters. In these cases, Samba wants to complement their data and not displace them. Barker claims in the UK Samba has access to more households than Barb, but Barb can offer deeper data. We see it as a collaboration.

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Fire crews stop forward progress of Evita Fire, evacuation warning downgraded – Action News Now

Posted: at 2:14 am

BUTTE COUNTY, Calif. - The forward progress of the Evita Fire has been stopped and is 100% contained, CAL FIRE Butte County says. The fire was over 17 acres.

CAL FIRE said the fire burned three outbuildings. All threatened homes were saved.

The Butte County Sheriffs Office lifted theevacuationwarning for Eastern Palermo Zone 891 at 4:31 p.m. on Wednesday.

This warning included Wyandotte Creek, east to Railbridge Road and Crestmont Avenue, Mackintosh Avenue and south to south of Nora Way. The warning was issued at 3:50 p.m. on Wednesday.

CAL FIRE Butte County says the fire was located at Railbridge Road and Evita Way.

Crews had dozers, aircraft, crews and engines at the scene. CAL FIRE told Action News Now an additional aircraft out of Sacramento was requested but was sent back shortly after the request.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

Follow Action News Now on Facebook and Twitter for the latest news, weather and sports in Northern California.

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Third Round Bound Progress Times – Progresstimes

Posted: at 2:14 am

Diamondbacks, Coyotes reach Regional Quarterfinals

Pioneer seniors have a lot going on. End of year celebrations, banquets and prom. Oh yeah, and Diamondback baseball is back in the third round of the Class 5A state playoffs.

The regional quarterfinal round against Corpus Christi Veterans takes place Thursday, Friday and Saturday if necessary. Todays Game 2 is at UTRGV Baseball Stadium in Edinburg, while Game 3, if necessary, will shift to Hebbronville.

This round is a familiar spot for the program but youd have to go back to 2019, the freshman year of the senior class, to match a run this deep.

Pioneer Diamondbacks catcher David Benitez cuts down an extra run against Corpus Christi Moody with a perfect catchy from the outfield. Progress Times photo by Joe Vela.

Us seniors, we know that this year were never going to get back and we cant let any circumstances take that away from us, senior shortstop Juan Rivera said. Being a Diamondback, being a part of the baseball program is awesome. You get to learn a lot about the game and also outside of the game, life lessons, and how to be respectful.

It was a season that had some adversity with a coaching change during the district campaign. But interim head coach Shawn Shack Moes has the team humming along with a big Game 3 win in the Area round.

Were all excited to be playing, Moes said. There are only 32 teams playing in 5A right now, its exciting. We have a lot of seniors and juniors which helps us out a bunch. It is just another game, but its not. The teams do get tougher, everyone thats still in it is good. The guys attitude is trying to stay even keel and preparing like we would for any other week.

Rivera is keeping his composure as well but cant ignore the excitement of facing a strong test.

We know were going to compete with the best in the state, Rivera said. We just want to go out there and show that to be the best you have to beat the best. Were pumped to compete against a really good ball club.

CC Veterans is 4-0 in the playoffs scoring a combined 41 runs in rounds against Mission Veterans and Weslaco East. Pioneer has best of three series wins over Brownsville Porter and Corpus Christi Moody so far.

Pioneer is on a hot streak of its own. Since an April 8 loss to McAllen Rowe, the Diamondbacks have won every game except last weeks Game 2 in the Area round against Moody. How did the Diamondbacks respond? With 10 runs and a strong pitching performance from senior Abel Anzauldua in Game 3.

We have awesome pitchers. We know 4 or 5 of the guys that we have are going to come out throwing strikes, our defense just needs to work behind them, Rivera said. With these pitchers on our mound, I feel confident in every game that we play in.

One of those pitchers is Angel Larranaga, another senior with plenty of experience in pressure situations.

Weve been working hard since the beginning and lately its been more intense, Larranaga said. We have three aces. Everyone is making all the effort to win. My team has been supporting me even when I was on the injured list and Im in again. I love everyone on this team, every senior, every teammate, all of them.

The senior shortstop says his group is cool, calm and collected no matter where the team is playing. Game 1 was played last night at Whataburger Field, home of the Double-A Corpus Christi Hooks, while game two is back in the RGV at the UTRGV baseball stadium. First pitch for this game will be tonight at 7 p.m.

The bigger venues, we see it the same, Rivera said. The mounds still 60 feet, the bases are still 90 feet. What matters is whats inside the lines. Weve manifested being in those situations, winning ball games, being in close ball games and it really helps. We can visualize that and be calm in those situations.

Coyotes still standing

Coyote baseball started their Regional Quarterfinal round best of three series against Edinburg Vela last night and will continue with Game 2 tonight and Game 3 (if necessary) tomorrow. La Joya knocked off San Antonio Stevens in their one game winner take all Area round matchup, following a two-game win over Weslaco High in bi-district.

La Joya coach Mario Flores says seeing a district opponent in round three is proof of a challenging district.

It shows how tough our district is, Edinburg Vela is a good program, theyre deep in the playoffs almost every year, Coach Flores said. Our kids feel relaxed, they know Vela is tough but we have to make the routine plays and hit the ball when we have runners on.

Experience is all over the field for the Coyotes, theyll lean on that to try to advance past the foes from nearby.

Theyve played all around, theyve played a lot of big games, a lot of returners who have been here before, Flores said. Our kids know what tradition La Joya holds and thats something they always keep in mind. They always try to compete with our teams in the past to go further [into the playoffs] thats what keeps us up there with the big names.

Game 2 of this series is tonight at 7 p.m. at PSJA Southwest High School and Game 3 (if necessary) is scheduled to be played tomorrow at UTRGV Baseball Stadium at 5 p.m.

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Ten years leading the Seychelles economy – University of Leeds

Posted: at 2:13 am

As Governor of the Central Bank of Seychelles (CBS), Caroline Abel (Economics Studies 1999) is one of the most influential figures in a country navigating extraordinary global events.

What began as a childhood love for mathematics has culminated in the Global Women Achievers Award at the 2022 World Women Leadership Congress Awards in Mumbai.

Covid-19 has been our biggest challenge since the Bank was established four decades ago, Caroline says. The shutdown of the tourism sector, which has a direct contribution of around 30% of our gross domestic product, caused the economy to come a standstill.

I dont see challenges as negatives, though. I see them as opportunities to do new and different things each day.

This mind-set, adopted during Carolines time at Leeds, has proven effective ever since as well as the recent accolade, Caroline was presented with the Africa's Woman Leaders Award and named Central Bank Governor of the Year in 2020.

Most importantly for her, however, is that Seychelles has emerged from the pandemic in a healthier financial position than anticipated.

Caroline traces her approach back to her upbringing and lessons taught by her father, Antoine Abel a man described as the Father of Seychelles Literature for bringing his countrys culture and language to the world stage. Whenever I had a problem, he never gave me an answer, but he asked more questions. He wanted me to understand that you have to look at problems from different angles.

This principle still helps me every day I have to make a lot of decisions and I have to look at all the policy implications.

Where Antoine found his calling in words, Caroline was drawn to numbers: I loved mathematics and my father thought I should become an accountant, but the career didnt appeal to me. I decided to go straight into work from school to gain experience, and thats where it all started for me to eventually become a central banker.

Caroline worked at the Social Security Fund for four months before joining CBS in 1994 quickly realising she enjoyed the challenge and variety. I spent two years working in various departments and was fortunate enough to gain a place at Leeds through our CBS scholarship programme.

That was really critical for me. I wouldnt be where I am now without that time at Leeds.

It was my first time outside of Seychelles, so of course I was a bit apprehensive, but when I got to Leeds I discovered a friendly community both at the University and in the city. Everywhere you went, people would welcome and help you. In fact, I even stayed in Leeds during the holidays to enjoy the countryside and other parts of the UK.

The teaching was excellent. The University community was so diverse, a place where cultures converged and learned from one another, and that was very special.

Following in Carolines footsteps, CBS continues to sponsor young professionals to study at Leeds University Business School. Education, for Caroline, is the key area that aspiring finance students cannot neglect: Training is the most important thing. You need a good grounding, then you must continue to develop because the world of finance is very competitive and its always changing.

Its getting even more diverse and requires expertise beyond people with financial backgrounds to tackle emerging issues, such as climate change. We didnt speak about it in the world of finance when I started, but now environmentalists play a big role.

Her growing experience and expertise saw Caroline appointed Deputy Governor in 2010, and in 2012 she was called on by the President of Seychelles to become the first female Governor in the countrys history. It was a great honour, she says although where others mentioned it, gender didnt really cross her mind. I think CBS leads on that front. We dont look at gender, we look at ability and performance.

That doesnt mean there werent challenges given the global nature of her work, where the gender gap was more notable. In international meetings I was often the only woman in the room, and thats still the case. More can be done at CBS, for example, we knew that family commitments were often compromising womens progression. Weve provided more flexible working for employees, so we were home-working long before Covid-19. We help to ensure women can go as far as they want to go.

Caroline was re-appointed after her first six-year term and has worked under three presidents of Seychelles. Her responsibilities keeping the cost of living stable, monitoring the financial system and ensuring banks are run well became more challenging during Covid-19, but the recent awards acknowledge her success. In particular, she is credited with developing transparency, supporting digitisation and collaborating across ministries.

We improved communication. We are talking more to the public and particularly during the pandemic, we helped the population understand what was going on and how they would be impacted. Its helped us to understand concerns much better, which helps us to improve. We designed new policies to support the private sector, and thankfully now tourism has quickly recovered.

Now we move onto the next challenge: the increase in the cost of living.

Caroline acknowledges the hard work and long hours involved in the job, but it is a role she relishes and for which she has been duly recognised. Every day there is something new to get to grips with.

I walk around the building once a week and talk to staff to understand issues, then we make decisions. The awards are for their work and the work of CBS. This is a team effort.

For further details, contact Ed Newbould, Digital Communications Officer, University of Leeds at e.w.newbould@leeds.ac.uk.

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Ten years leading the Seychelles economy - University of Leeds

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Boulder residents some of the first to return to Peace Corps service – Boulder Daily Camera

Posted: at 2:13 am

Boulder residents Lisa and Peter Waugh are among the first people to return to service with the Peace Corps.

Later this month, the couple are set to leave for Peru more than two years after they originally planned to leave the country. They applied in 2019 and were all set to leave in March 2020, until the pandemic happened.

The Peace Corps suspended global operations and evacuated almost 7,000 volunteers from more than 60 countries at the beginning of the pandemic.

The extra time to prepare has helped, but its not the first time the Waughs have embarked on such a mission.

They traveled to the Seychelles, an island country in East Africa, to serve in the Peace Corps in 1986. Peter worked as a roadway engineer, and Lisa was a community health nurse in the small country.

The island of Mahe in the Seychelles is about 18 miles long and 6 miles wide, Peter said.

When the Waughs decided to apply for service in the Peace Corps more than three decades ago, it felt like a good opportunity.

For Peter, it was a chance to put his engineering skills to use at a grassroots level. Lisa could use her nursing degree as a means of providing health care and support in the developing world.

At the time, neither realized the trip would lead to a lifetime of service.

After the first trip in the late 1980s, Lisa worked in public and global health. Peter worked on international water projects through Engineers Without Borders.

During the pandemic, the Waughs volunteered with the New Mexico Medical Reserve Corps, administering COVID-19 vaccinations in rural New Mexico.

The world is at a critical juncture. The largest global vaccination effort in history is underway while other widespread health, social, political, and environmental issues continue to erode the foundation of our global society. Actions taken in the next few years have the potential to fundamentally impact development trajectories for decades to come, Peace Corps CEO Carol Spahn stated in a news release. Peace Corps volunteers returning to Peru will work alongside community members to support urgent development efforts and build critical connections.

The Waughs remember Seychelles for its indescribable natural beauty and the kind people who live there.

There are many countries where it takes time for Peace Corps volunteers to build relationships with local residents, Peter noted.

In the Seychelles, that was not the case. It was almost immediate, he said. And so thats what sticks out the most for me.

After their initial two-year stint in the Seychelles, the Waughs returned to Boulder. Both are from the area and wanted to raise their family in the city.

But returning to Peace Corps service was always in the back of their minds.

Lisa worked in various global health jobs over the years, all of which were impactful. But she said it often felt like something was missing.

I didnt feel like I was closely linked to the local communities, she said. I wanted to get back to community-based work.

In Peru, they will help with community economic development and on a water, sanitation and hygiene project.

With a previous experience in the Peace Corps and the extra time to prepare, the Waughs are ready for two years of service in Peru.

Its a pretty special opportunity to get to know another culture other than your own, Peter said. It is important for me and I anticipate loving it as much as I did last time.

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Boulder residents some of the first to return to Peace Corps service - Boulder Daily Camera

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