dina

Berks faculty member coordinates mask donation from Reading Chinese Association

Hongyan “Red” Yuan, an instructional designer at Penn State Berks and member of the board of the Reading Chinese Association (RCA), recently helped to coordinate the donation of 1,500 surgical masks to Penn State Health St. Joseph.




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Longitudinal Growth of Hospitalized Very Low Birth Weight Infants

Richard A. Ehrenkranz
Aug 1, 1999; 104:280-289
ARTICLES




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Cardinal Urosa: Coronavirus makes terrible crisis in Venezuela even worse

CNA Staff, Apr 29, 2020 / 04:30 pm (CNA).- Venezuela’s prolonged social, political and economic crisis has only been compounded by the coronavirus pandemic, the archbishop emeritus of Caracas, Cardinal Jorge Urosa Savino, charged Tuesday.

Even before the coronavirus pandemic, Venezuela has been marred by violence and social upheaval under the socialist administration of Nicolas Maduro, with severe shortages of food and medicine, high unemployment, power outages, and hyperinflation. Some 4.5 million Venezuelans have emigrated since 2015.

In response to the threat of the virus, the government imposed a nationwide stay at home order March 17. According to government statistics, to date there have been 329 cases of COVID-19 with ten deaths. The country is ill prepared to handle the crisis, with chronic shortages of medical supplies, and many doctors have left the country.

“The national reality is terrible,” and the government has no answers, Urosa said in an April 28 statement to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner.

While the cardinal acknowledged the lockdown has prevented the spread of the virus, he pointed out that “the quarantine has hurt a great many people because the economic, social and logistical conditions in the country weren’t taken into account,” including “the extremely serious problem of the gasoline shortage for transport, especially for food.”

In some cases, crops are rotting in farmers’ fields due to lack of fuel to transport them to market.

Especially hard hit, the cardinal said, are “informal” workers who are paid off the books,  and who are now  “barely surviving,” and only with “the help of family members, social organizations and the Church.”

On April 25, Venezuelan vice president Delcy Rodríguez announced state intervention and oversight of several food supply companies in order to control the prices of 27 products for 180 days.

Urosa criticized the intervention, calling it “an extremely serious mistake, since it will probably result in greater shortages. Price controls are acceptable, but intervening in efficient businesses is not. The government can’t even manage to supply gasoline.” “The state-run petroleum industry has collapsed, and now Venezuelans’ food is in danger!” 

 “The current government doesn’t have any answers for such elementary things such as the extremely serious problem of the gasoline shortage” and runaway inflation. “In the last 40 days, the dollar has doubled in value, which is undoubtedly the fundamental cause of the spike in prices,” the cardinal said.

Urosa decried political persecution, which “has gotten worse since March because amid the quarantine, the government has ramped up the repression. During these weeks the government has jailed, even without due process, many political activists, especially from the inner circle of Juan Guaidó, president of the National Assembly and leader of the Venezuelan opposition.”

Guaidó declared himself the nation's interim leader Jan. 23 last year following Maduro’s inauguration for a second term. Maduro won a May 2018 presidential election, which was boycotted by the opposition and has been rejected by much of the international community. The United States was swift to recognize Guaidó as interim president, eventually followed by over 60 countries. Both the National Assembly and the Venezuelan bishops' conference declared Maduro's reelection to be invalid.

With the military firmly in support of Maduro, however, opposition protests calling for his resignation have failed to oust the leader.

On March 30, Guaidó charged that the Maduro regime had unleashed a new wave of harassment against his close collaborators. Andrea Bianchi, the wife of close associate Rafael Rico, was kidnapped, beaten and then left naked on a highway. Two others, Rómulo García and Víctor Silio were also picked up and later charged with possession of marijuana and a handgun.

The NGO Venezuelan Program for Education-Action in Human Rights reported that during the state of emergency, 34 people have been arbitrarily arrested and attacks against politicians, journalists and healthcare workers have increased.

“The bishops have always strongly criticized the political repression by the government and once again I call for the release of all political prisoners. They are even in greater physical danger because of the pandemic situation we’re going through,” Urosa stressed.

On March 26, “the Trump administration unsealed sweeping indictments against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and members of his inner circle on narcoterrorism charges, a dramatic escalation in the U.S. campaign to force the authoritarian socialist from power,” even offering “a $15 million reward for information leading to his capture or conviction,” the Washington Post reported.

In response, the Maduro regime activated a plan against the Venezuelan opposition called “Operation Bolivarian Fury.”

The archbishop emeritus denounced these recent “threats of violence by the government against Venezuelans. Maduro himself has spoken of a supposed ‘Bolivarian fury’ as a threat against members of the Venezuelan opposition in case of international problems. That’s illegal, unconstitutional and unacceptable from every point of view. That threat of violence is intolerable.” 

The cardinal said the government has used the quarantine simply as an opportunity to strengthen its social and political control.

On April 25, the Maduro regime placed shipping containers on the Caracas-La Guaira highway to prevent demonstrators from other cities who have been protesting the shortages of food, water and electricity in other cities from getting to the capital.

“Why restrict the right to free transit?” the cardinal asked.

The Maduro regime also blocked the highway in February 2019 to prevent humanitarian aid from entering the country from Colombia.

Guaidó charged April 24 on Twitter that “a dictatorship of corrupt and incapable people has brought us to a crisis where farmers are losing their crops while families are starving to death in the barrios. They turned the richest country in the region into a hell. They’ll leave here, the sacrifice has been enough already.”

As signs of hope, Urosa pointed to ongoing work of Caritas Venezuela and the creative ways the clergy has reached out to the faithful through social media. “Our message is one of encouragement, trust in God, solidarity and hope in this dark hour,” he said.

 Catholics “have an unshakeable faith in God who is love,” who had died and risen and “has shown us the merciful face of God.” “We’ll come out of this,” the archbishop said, “the suffering we are experiencing has united us closer to God and opens to us the gates of heaven.”

The archbishop encouraged Venezuelans to always stand in solidarity with each other and “to be the face of God to those in need. God is love and is with us. Let us join ourselves to him and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Mercy in this painful hour.”

 

A version of this story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been adapted by CNA.




dina

Ordinary woman, extraordinary journey

God uses Janet to reach people through one-on-one encounters at a bookshop in a closed country.




dina

Ordinary woman, extraordinary journey

God uses Janet to reach people through one-on-one encounters at a bookshop in a closed country.




dina

Ordinary woman, extraordinary journey

God uses Janet to reach people through one-on-one encounters at a bookshop in a closed country.




dina

African cardinal tests positive for coronavirus as pandemic spreads across the continent

Vatican City, Mar 31, 2020 / 10:28 am (CNA).- Cardinal Philippe Ouédraogo of Burkina Faso has tested positive for the coronavirus, his archdiocese announced Tuesday. He is the second cardinal known to have tested positive for the virus, which is now a global pandemic.

Ouédraogo, 75, has been admitted to a medical clinic in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougou.  He is “in good condition and his close collaborators are reported to be self-isolating,” a spokesman for Burkina Faso’s bishops’ conference, Fr. Paul Dah, told ACI Africa on March 31.

The cardinal is president of the African continental bishops’ conference, the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM). He was elected to the post in July 2019. He has been Archbishop of Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso for ten years, and was made a cardinal by Pope Francis in 2014.

Ouédraogo is the second bishop from Burkina Faso known to have contracted COVID-19, as countries across Africa implement lockdowns and restrictions to slow the spread of the virus across the continent.

Another Burkina Faso bishop, Archbishop Emeritus Séraphin François Rouamba of Koupela, tested positive for COVID-19 after being admitted to Our Lady of Peace clinic for urgent treatment on March 19.

The 78-year-old archbishop has since been transferred to another hospital and is reportedly in stable condition, according to a March 25 statement from Bishop Laurent Birfuore Dabire of Dori, Burkina Faso.

Burkina Faso has the largest documented coronavirus outbreak in West Africa, with 249 documented cases as of March 31, according to Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center.

The coronavirus has spread throughout the African continent to 47 countries, according to the Africa Center for Disease Control. In North Africa, Egypt, Algeria, and Morocco each have more than 500 documented cases, and the South African government has reported more than 1,300.

Three Nigerian states began two-week mandatory lockdown this week to combat the spread of the virus, including Lagos, Africa’s most populous city with more than 20 million people.

Zimbabwe and Mauritius have also implemented national shut-downs, and the bishops in South Sudan and Zimbabwe have suspended public Masses.

Cardinal Angelo De Donatis, vicar general of the Diocese of Rome, tested positive for coronavirus on March 30.

Other bishops in Italy, France, China, and the United States have also tested positive for COVID-19, and Bishop Angelo Moreschi, 67, died in the Italian city of Brescia on March 25 after contracting the coronavirus.

 

 



  • Middle East - Africa

dina

Ordinary woman, extraordinary journey

God uses Janet to reach people through one-on-one encounters at a bookshop in a closed country.




dina

Dina - life returns at 30

After suffering a traumatic injury from childbirth at a young age, Dina's life was restored through OM's tailoring skills training.




dina

Ordinary woman, extraordinary journey

God uses Janet to reach people through one-on-one encounters at a bookshop in a closed country.




dina

Fin24.com | No longer so extraordinary

This year our Extraordinary Items table shows some 43 of the top 200 rankings earned more than half of their reported bottom line from an extraordinary item.




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Nikon enters agreement for business transfer of Coordinate Measuring Machines business




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Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination Announces Release of 2015 Strategies for State Policies and Spending

The Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination announces the release of the draft 2015 Strategies for State Policies and Spending Update.




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Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination Launches new website

The Delaware Office of State Planning Coordination (OSPC) is proud to unveil our redesigned website Friday, August 31, 2018. This redesign improves the way information is delivered to citizens, developers and municipal stakeholders. A key objective of the redesigned site is to enable users to access our information from any device (PC, mobile phone, or […]



  • News
  • Office of State Planning Coordination

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Modi Cabinet approves new Ordinance: 7-year jail for attack on health workers

In view of the mounting attacks amid the Coronavirus outbreak, the IMA had been demanding that the government formulate a law to protect health workers.




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Firms get relief from IBC for six months, ordinance soon

While the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has allowed borrowers a three-month repayment holiday for term loans, keeping insolvency proceedings in abeyance would be an additional breather for borrowers who may default on loan repayments thereafter.




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Governor Carney, DHSS announce Statewide COVID-19 Testing Plan in Coordination with Delaware Health Care Systems

DOVER, Del. – Governor John Carney, along with the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS), announced on Friday a coordinated statewide plan to ensure individuals with symptoms consistent with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have access to safe and efficient testing in Delaware. Tests will be administered at no cost to the patients. Through […]




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MPC, RBI must coordinate action amid COVID-19 disruption: MPC minutes

While four of the MPC members voted in favour of the eventual 75-basis point (bps) cut, external members Chetan Ghate and Pami Dua argued for a 50-bps cut, the minutes, released on Monday, showed.




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A life less ordinary: Musings on Indian society and politics

Ananthamurthy was also fascinated by Ram Manohar Lohia’s creative interpretation of Indian myths and politics.




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Iraqi Dinar(IQD)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 69.3146 Iraqi Dinar




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Tunisian Dinar(TND)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 0.1696 Tunisian Dinar




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Serbian Dinar(RSD)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 6.3172 Serbian Dinar




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Kuwaiti Dinar(KWD)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 0.018 Kuwaiti Dinar




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Jordanian Dinar(JOD)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 0.0413 Jordanian Dinar




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Algerian Dinar(DZD)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 7.4753 Algerian Dinar




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Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Bahraini Dinar(BHD)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 0.022 Bahraini Dinar




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Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Iraqi Dinar(IQD)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 176.0988 Iraqi Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Tunisian Dinar(TND)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 0.431 Tunisian Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Serbian Dinar(RSD)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 16.0494 Serbian Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Kuwaiti Dinar(KWD)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 0.0458 Kuwaiti Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Jordanian Dinar(JOD)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 0.105 Jordanian Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Algerian Dinar(DZD)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 18.9914 Algerian Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Bahraini Dinar(BHD)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 0.056 Bahraini Dinar



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Iraqi Dinar(IQD)

1 Swedish Krona = 121.7778 Iraqi Dinar




dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Tunisian Dinar(TND)

1 Swedish Krona = 0.298 Tunisian Dinar




dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Serbian Dinar(RSD)

1 Swedish Krona = 11.0987 Serbian Dinar




dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Kuwaiti Dinar(KWD)

1 Swedish Krona = 0.0317 Kuwaiti Dinar




dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Jordanian Dinar(JOD)

1 Swedish Krona = 0.0726 Jordanian Dinar




dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Algerian Dinar(DZD)

1 Swedish Krona = 13.1332 Algerian Dinar




dina

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Bahraini Dinar(BHD)

1 Swedish Krona = 0.0387 Bahraini Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Iraqi Dinar(IQD)

1 Slovak Koruna = 53.5891 Iraqi Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Tunisian Dinar(TND)

1 Slovak Koruna = 0.1312 Tunisian Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Serbian Dinar(RSD)

1 Slovak Koruna = 4.884 Serbian Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Kuwaiti Dinar(KWD)

1 Slovak Koruna = 0.0139 Kuwaiti Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Jordanian Dinar(JOD)

1 Slovak Koruna = 0.032 Jordanian Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Algerian Dinar(DZD)

1 Slovak Koruna = 5.7793 Algerian Dinar




dina

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Bahraini Dinar(BHD)

1 Slovak Koruna = 0.017 Bahraini Dinar




dina

Serbian Dinar(RSD)/Iraqi Dinar(IQD)

1 Serbian Dinar = 10.9723 Iraqi Dinar




dina

Serbian Dinar(RSD)/Zambian Kwacha(ZMK)

1 Serbian Dinar = 47.8493 Zambian Kwacha




dina

Serbian Dinar(RSD)/South African Rand(ZAR)

1 Serbian Dinar = 0.1692 South African Rand