CREAD strengthens MSME sector in Dominica by developing detailed database dominicanewsonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dominicanewsonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
and a man who police later said was half kneeling. officers responding to a call about potential looters at a walgreen. when the audio comes on, the officer says he thought the man was pointing a gun at him. one of the bullets struck a 22-year-old. it was 8 days after george floyd s death and america was lit with outrage. he had been out protesting, his family says, even asked his sisters to sign a petition calling for justice for george floyd. a year after floyd and his deaths, new research shows more than 2600 latinos could have been killed by police or in custody since 2014. according to researchers at cal state san bernardino and a database project, latino deaths by police are severely undercounted, partially because they re not counted in a uniform way. sometimes we are in the right category, we could go in the black, there s afro latinos,
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GATINEAU, QC, May 13, 2021 /CNW/ - Library and Archives Canada (LAC) will provide $1.5 million to support 41 projects (including 26 new projects) by archives, libraries and documentary heritage institutions throughout Canada. Eight projects submitted by organizations located in Ontario will be funded under the Documenary Heritage Communities Program (DHCP).
The following projects will be funded by the DHCP in Ontario in 2021–2022:
CSHS Descriptive Database Project (Canadian Slovenian Historical Society),
Etobicoke, $5,053;
Gananoque, $43,023;
Digitizing and Preserving Historic Images of Canada: CHPF s 20th Anniversary Photographic Retrospective of Founding Members (Canadian Heritage Photography Foundation),
Mississauga, $22,158;
Ottawa, $ 50,000;
Sault Ste. Marie, $45,000;
Digitizing Inuit Artistic Heritage (Inuit Art Foundation),
2School of Public Health, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China
3Henan Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Zhengzhou, China
The structure and diversity of human gut microbiota are directly related to diet, though less is known about the influences of ethnicity and diet-related behaviors, such as fasting (intermittent caloric restriction). In this study, we investigated whether fasting for Ramadan altered the microbiota in Chinese and Pakistani individuals. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing and self-reported dietary intake surveys, we determined that both the microbiota and dietary composition were significantly different with little overlap between ethnic groups. Principal Coordinate Analyses (PCoA) comparison of samples collected from both groups before and after fasting showed partial separation of microbiota related to fasting in the Pakistani group, but not in the Chinese group. Measurement of alpha diversity showed that Ramadan fasting significantly
The Daily Universe
BYU is heightening its efforts to address racism on campus.
Since the protests surrounding the death of George Floyd and the subsequent rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, BYU has sought to follow the admonition of President Russell M. Nelson and leaders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to “review processes, laws, and organizational attitudes regarding racism and root them out once and for all.”
University level
reform
The BYU Committee on Race, Equity & Belonging was formed under the direction of President Kevin J Worthen over the summer. The committee’s mission statement says: