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Nathaniel J. Allen has been Inducted into the Prestigious Marquis Who's Who Biographical Registry

Mr. Allen has attained Top Secret Clearance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.




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Answering Critical COVID-19 Questions: Will Hot Weather Eliminate COVID-19? And Which Global Locations Are Not Practicing Social Distancing?

Using Air Quality and Temperature data to answer critical questions.




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Katherine Creelman Skrobela Presented with the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award by Marquis Who's Who

Ms. Skrobela has been endorsed by Marquis Who's Who as a leader in the fields of data processing and music production




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KNIME Learnathon

NuWave Solutions strategic partner KNIME will be hosting a Learnathon on August 7, 2019.




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NuWave Solutions Announces Hackathon Winners

NuWave Solutions employees compete for honors in creating innovative solutions to acquire and profile data.




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Jonathan Reed Celebrated for Dedication to the Fields of Event Production and Brand Communication

Mr. Reed channels years of expertise in his role with CS Global, which serves such high-profile clients as Estée Lauder, Hugo Boss, Tom Ford, Diane von Furstenberg and Tiffany & Co.




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Kathie deNobriga Presented with the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award by Marquis Who's Who

Ms. deNobriga has been endorsed by Marquis Who's Who as a leader in the field of community theatre




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As World Struggles with New Pandemic, College HUNKS ® Honors Ryan White's AIDS Legacy on the 30-Year Anniversary of His Death with 'Hope' Sculpture by Bill Mack

Moving Franchise Displays Newly Discovered Rare Sculpture at World Headquarters to Offer Inspiration to the Community and Recognize the Ongoing Fight Against HIV/AIDS, Discrimination and COVID-19 Pandemic




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Women in Media Celebrates Catherine Hardwicke, Cynthia Pusheck, Kathryn Bostic, and Shawn Holden at Annual Holiday Brunch in Los Angeles

Toastmasters include John Simmons (Cinematographer), Allison Kelly (Cinematographer), Tamika Lamison (Producer / Director / Writer), and Starr Parodi (Composer).




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New Jersey Youth Symphony Hosts Its First Ever Virtual Playathon

With less than two weeks to switch gears from producing a day-long concert event to an afternoon of performances on the video conferencing platform Zoom, NJYS managed to rally its community to come together despite social distancing.




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Antoinette Kathleen O'Connell Presented with the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award by Marquis Who's Who

Ms. O'Connell has been endorsed by Marquis Who's Who as a leader in the fields of business management, consulting and art




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From YouTube Hobby to Business Startup: TOONBO Entertainment, LLC and Its Founders Lead the Digital Path to Global Entrepreneurship

CEO, Frank Lunn and Founder/Animator Jae Chang launch new digital business with roots in YouTube fame.




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Bringing SolePath Into Your Parenting: A Fulfilling, Lasting Way For Moms And Dads To Get The Best Results

Modern parenting can be difficult, but SolePath's Dr. Debra Ford believes that those parents who adopt the SolePath method into their parenting will be able to create a stronger bond between themselves and their child.




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Finding Your Inner Peace In Times Of Chaos: SolePath Offers Group Meditation Classes… Without The Need To Leave Home

As the coronavirus outbreak continues, many people are rightly feeling worried, stressed, depressed, and a little isolated. SolePath is looking to provide respite from all this by launching a free virtual meditation class every Monday, live on Zoom.




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Designer Jonathan Marc Stein Will Debut at Arab Fashion Week in Dubai, October 2019 for S/S2020 RTW

Designer Jonathan Marc Stein announces the debut of his latest collection at Arab Fashion Week in Dubai, October 2019 for S/S2020 RTW




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Edited Transcript of ATHX earnings conference call or presentation 7-May-20 8:30pm GMT




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GTA Consumers Meet with Jonathan T Kam from Roadsport Honda

Roadsport Honda is a 14-year Consumer Choice Award Winner. The company has been in business since 1974 and it is GTA's leading Vehicle Service shop, Vehicle parts sales, Body shop & Automotive Sales & Leasing Service Provider.




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New And Notable: Los Angeles From The Air Then And Now, Makeshift Metropolis & Down The Asphalt Path

Avid readers of local history are usually intrigued by photos of historic sites juxtaposed against contemporary images. This format of visual history has a particularly strong impact when the subject is Los Angeles: a city that grew up -- and outward -- so quickly.

Those seeking pictorial overviews will likely have checked out aerial photography books as well.

Los Angeles From The Air: Then And Now (San Diego: Thunder Bay Press, 2010) is a hybrid of these two types of pictorial books. It presents decades-old photographs of both familiar and lesser-known landmarks along side more current ones.

This takes the reader on a trip through Los Angeles like never before, featuring inspiring, sky-high then-and-now images of some of LA's most famous locations.

Some of the landmarks' origins are well-known, but the authors provide context for both familiar and hidden pieces of Los Angeles history.

Many of the photos feature snow-capped peaks in the distance -- a testament to our clear Winter days being the best for photography.

Unfortunately, the work falls flat in its description of transportation in downtown Los Angeles. The authors write:

"Metrolink [sic] provides service to Union Station in the form of three rail lines -- Red, Purple, Gold..."

While Metro and Metrolink may sound similar to those outside of Los Angeles (the book is, after all, published in San Diego), it gives one pause that other information found here may not be entirely accurate. Ultimately, one can ignore the text entirely, as these beautiful photos speak for themselves.

In Makeshift Metropolis: Ideas About Cities (New York: Scribner, 2010), noted architecture writer Witold Rybczynski offers a glimpse of an urban future that might very well serve as a template for cities around the world.

Rybczynski integrates history and prediction of the development of the American city in a brisk look back that takes us from colonial town planning to the Garden City and City Beautiful initiatives of the early 20th century and on to the "Big Box Era."

He also examines how contemporary urban designers and planners are revisiting and refreshing older urban ideas, such as bringing gardens to a blighted Brooklyn waterfront.

Rybczynski's study is kept relevant by his focus on what the past can teach us about creating the "cities we want" and "cities we need."

The prose is instructive and always engaging, and the author's enthusiasm for the future of cities and his enduring love of urban settings of all kinds is evident.

He not only writes about what people want from their cities, he inspires the reader to imagine the possibilities.

In Down The Asphalt Path: The Automobile And The American City, author Clay McShane examines the uniquely American relationship between "automobility" and urbanization.

Writing at the cutting edge of urban and technological history, he depicts how new technology, namely the private automobile, and the modernization of the American city redefined each other.

The author motors us across the country -- from Boston to New York, from Milwaukee to Los Angeles and the suburbs in between -- chronicling the urban embrace of the automobile.

The New York Times calls this work "A treat to read, loaded with interesting facts...a notable book about urban transportation."

Barron's wrote that "this fascinating, well-researched history of the automobile industry...is written from a social and cultural perspective rarely included in traditional books about the business."

The Whole Earth Review claims "this fascinating treatise is the most credible look yet at how automobiles have changed American society for better or worse."




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Pathways to a Sustainable US-Pakistan Relationship

The Middle East Institute explores "Pathways to a Sustainable US-Pakistan Relationship" in discussion with Ali Jehangir Siddiqui




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Math and Architectures of Deep Learning

This hands-on book bridges the gap between theory and practice, showing you the math of deep learning algorithms side by side with an implementation in PyTorch. You can save 40% off Math and Architectures of Deep Learning until May 13! Just enter the code nlkdarch40 at checkout when you buy from manning.com.




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Beginners Learning Path for Machine Learning

So, you are interested in machine learning? Here is your complete learning path to start your career in the field.




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Top April Stories: Mathematics for Machine Learning: The Free eBook

Also: Introducing MIDAS: A New Baseline for Anomaly Detection in Graphs; The Super Duper NLP Repo: 100 Ready-to-Run Colab Notebooks; Five Cool Python Libraries for Data Science.




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France says total death toll from coronavirus rises by 80 to 26,310

PARIS (Reuters) - The number of people who have died from coronavirus infections in France rose by 80 to 26,310 on Saturday, the health ministry said, a much smaller daily increase than the previous day when it was 243. The ministry said the number of people in intensive care units - a key measure of a health system's ability to deal with the epidemic - fell by 56, or about 2%, to 2,812. That is less than half the peak of 7,148 seen on April 8

The post France says total death toll from coronavirus rises by 80 to 26,310 appeared first on Firstpost.




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India’s COVID-19 tally reaches 59,662, deaths near 2,000; fresh cases among repatriated Indians, paramilitary forces emerges as a major concern

The nationwide tally of confirmed COVID-19 cases reached 59,662 on Saturday and the death toll rose to 1,981 with the country registering an increase of 95 deaths and 3,320 cases in 24 hours till Saturday morning, the Union Health Ministry said

The post India’s COVID-19 tally reaches 59,662, deaths near 2,000; fresh cases among repatriated Indians, paramilitary forces emerges as a major concern appeared first on Firstpost.




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Paths to Power

Anthony Mayo, director of the leadership initiative at Harvard Business School and coauthor of "Paths to Power."




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Should Managers Have a Green Hippocratic Oath?

Rakesh Khurana, Harvard Business School professor.




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Oliver Sacks on Empathy as a Path to Insight

Dr. Oliver Sacks, neurologist and author of "The Mind's Eye."




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Productivity, Multitasking, and the Death of the Phone

Sherry Turkle, MIT professor and author of "Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other."




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Working Fathers Need Balance, Too

Joan C. Williams, Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of California and coauthor of the forthcoming book, "What Works for Women at Work."




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Mental Preparation Secrets of Top Athletes, Entertainers, and Surgeons

Dan McGinn, senior editor at Harvard Business Review, talks about what businesspeople can learn from how top performers and athletes prepare for their big moments. In business, a big sales meeting, presentation, or interview can be pivotal to success. The same goes for pep talks that motivate employees. McGinn talks about both the research and practical applications of mental preparation and motivation. He’s the author of the book, "Psyched Up: How the Science of Mental Preparation Can Help You Succeed." His article, “The Science of Pep Talks,” is in the July-August 2017 issue of Harvard Business Review.




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Real Leaders: Oprah Winfrey and the Power of Empathy

In 1976, broadcast journalist Oprah Winfrey moved to Baltimore to coanchor the evening newscast at a local TV station. But she struggled in that spot and was moved to the morning talk show. That demotion led Winfrey to discover a professional calling that aligned with her personal sensibilities and emerging strengths. In the final episode of a four-part special series on leadership, HBR Editor in Chief Adi Ignatius and Harvard Business School professor and historian Nancy Koehn trace Winfrey’s career as an entrepreneur and leader of a media empire. They discover lessons on how to cultivate self-awareness, cross traditional boundaries, and responsibly wield influence.




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Tax Reform May Bring Bigger Tax Liability for Athletes

With a large salary comes a large tax liability for athletes, and that could be going up following tax reform. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act brought benefits to many individuals, but athletes may notice some negative effects from it.… Read More

The post Tax Reform May Bring Bigger Tax Liability for Athletes appeared first on Anders CPAs.




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The Newest Athletes: eSports Gamers and Video Game Streamers

Most kids spend countless hours playing video games in their free time, but for some this hobby could potentially turn into a career. eSports and video game streaming have become a multibillion-dollar industry, drawing sponsorships from companies like Procter and… Read More

The post The Newest Athletes: eSports Gamers and Video Game Streamers appeared first on Anders CPAs.




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NCAA Passes Initial Steps for Student Athletes to Benefit from their Likeness

California passed legislation to allow college athletes to be compensated for their likeness. Under this new legislation, schools would not compensate student athletes, but athletes would be allowed to profit off their likeness via third party businesses. This law would… Read More

The post NCAA Passes Initial Steps for Student Athletes to Benefit from their Likeness appeared first on Anders CPAs.




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359- Life and Death in Singapore

When Singapore gained its independence they went on a mission to re-house the population from densely-packed thatched roof huts into giant concrete skyscrapers. In 1960, they formed the Housing and Development Board, or HDB, and just five years later they had already housed 400,000 people! In Singapore, where land is scarce, it’s not unlikely for apartment buildings to be built on top of land that was graveyards not too long ago. But building on top of a graveyard has its complications.

Life and Death in Singapore




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392- The Weather Machine

The weather can be a simple word or loaded with meaning depending on the context -- a humdrum subject of everyday small talk or a stark climactic reality full of existential associations with serious disasters. In his book The Weather Machine, author Andrew Blum discusses these extremes and much in between, taking readers back in time to early weather-predicting aspirations and forward with speculation about the future of forecasting, including potentially dark clouds on the horizon.

The Weather Machine




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Hooda Math Provides Educational Math Games

Hooda Math is a provider of free educational math games.The games include Day Trader, Transformation Golf 2 and many more. It is free with ads or you can purchase a membership.

Read more on howtoweb.com




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Capybara Games co-founder Nathan Vella is now at Annapurna Interactive

Nathan Vella has joined up with Annapurna Interactive, taking an unmentioned seat on its executive team and lending his expertise to the company's work with independent game developers. ...




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CMS Creates Pathways to Success for ACOs Starting July 1, 2019

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is taking a new direction with the Medicare Shared Savings Program, established by the Affordable Care Act. The new ruling, called Pathways to Success, is meant to encourage Medicare’s Accountable Care Organizations… Read More

The post CMS Creates Pathways to Success for ACOs Starting July 1, 2019 appeared first on Anders CPAs.




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Semantic Scholar and OpenAthens collaborate to provide access to academic research

Enabling the new login gives access to full text content




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SCCM Pod-85 PCCM: Organ Donation After Cardiac Death - Part 1

Peter C. Laussen, MD, discusses an article published in the May 2007 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, titled "Pediatric Staff Perspectives on Organ Donation After Cardiac Death in Children." Dr. Laussen is director of the cardiac intensive care unit at Children's Hospital Boston. This is the first podcast in a two-part interview. Part two will feature an interview with lead author Martha A.Q. Curley, RN, PhD. (Ped. Crit. Care Med. 2007;8[3]:212).




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SCCM Pod-88 PCCM: Organ Donation After Cardiac Death - Part 2

Martha A.Q. Curley, RN, PhD, associate professor of nursing, anesthesia and critical care medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and nurse scientist at Children’s Hospital in Boston, discusses an article published in the May 2007 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, "Pediatric staff perspectives on organ donation after cardiac death in children." (Ped. Crit. Care Med. 2007;8[3]:212).




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SCCM Pod-143 PCCM: The Effects of Heparin in Infants After Catheter-Related

Alan R. Schroeder, MD, lead author of an article published in the July Pediatric Critical Care Medicine




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SCCM Pod-300 Timing of Death in Children Referred for Intensive Care with Severe Sepsis

Margaret Parker, MD, MCCM, speaks with Mirjana Cvetkovic, FRCA. Dr. Cvetkovic works as a Clinical Fellow at the Children's Acute Transport Service at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London and a Consultant Intensivist in Anesthesia at Leicester Hospital.




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SCCM Pod-355 The Epidemiology of Hospital Death Following Pediatric Severe Sepsis

Margaret Parker, MD, MCCM, speaks with Scott L. Weiss, MD, MSCE, about the article, The Epidemiology of Hospital Death Following Pediatric Severe Sepsis: When, Why, and How Children With Sepsis Die, published in the September 2017 issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine.




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SCCM Pod-394 Polyneuropathy in Critically Ill Mechanically Ventilated Children

Margaret M. Parker, MD, MCCM, speaks with Rakesh Lodha, MD, on his article titled Polyneuropathy in Critically Ill Mechanically Ventilated Children: Experience from Tertiary Care Hospital in North India, published the September issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine




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Covid-19 will have unprecedented effect on migrant economy: Dilip Ratha, World Bank

Millions of migrant workers toiling in the Gulf countries are facing a crisis due to Covid-19 and the fall in oil prices.




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Can you invest like a marathoner?

Olympic Games typically end with the marathon run. It is considered to be a very important event that tests the resolve of the athletes.




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Force majeure clause won't apply to coronavirus death claims in life insurance policies

The Council also confirmed that the clause of ‘Force Majeure’ will not apply in case of COVID-19 death claims. This step was taken to reassure customers who had reached out to individual life insurance companies seeking clarity on this clause.




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Being the world’s best in what you do is the path to wealth. Here's how talent stacking can help

Skill stacking is the most efficient way to multiply your earning ability. Not everyone has the time, ability and resources to single-mindedly pursue one skill to perfection. However, there is a faster way.