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Everspring and Yeshiva University Expand Fully Digital Experience to MBA Program

Everspring and Yeshiva University Expand Fully Digital Experience to MBA Program Innovation and engagement are at the core of the successful online learning platform News provided by Share this article Share this article NEW YORK, May 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/  Everspring Inc., a leading provider of education technology and services to universities seeking to build or expand their online capabilities, announced today it has significantly expanded its relationship with Yeshiva University to include the Sy Syms School of Business. The expansion includes taking the highly respected Sy Syms MBA program fully digital. Sy Syms is the fourth school at Yeshiva to entrust its digital presence to Everspring. The other partner schools include the Wurzweiler School of Social Work, the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, and the Katz School of Science and Health.

Calcutta-origin scientist enters elite US club

A US-based immunologist, with family in Salt Lake, has just been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, a prestigious institution established under a charter signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863. “Only the top scientists get elected here. Nobel winners in the US are all members of this academy. It is a great honour,” Sankar Ghosh tells The Telegraph Salt Lake from New York. “The academy inducts individuals from all fields of science so very few are elected from every department.” Sankar, whose parental home is in EC Block, is a professor and head of the microbiology and immunology department of Columbia University. His research is on the immune system and has been critical in the understanding of and treatment of inflammatory diseases such as arthritis, colitis and dermatitis.

Study: 40% of people who meet obesity criteria not at higher risk for heart disease

Study: 40% of people who meet obesity criteria not at higher risk for heart disease By (0) Waist-to-hip ratio may be a better measure than body mass index for assessing heart health risk in people with obesity, a new study has found. Photo courtesy of pxhere May 7 (UPI) Forty percent of people who meet the standard criteria for obesity are not at increased risk for heart disease or death, according to findings published Friday by JAMA Network Open. People with a body-mass index above 30, the threshold for obesity, but with a relatively low waist-to-hip ratio, normal blood pressure levels and no Type 2 diabetes were found to be at low risk for heart disease-related death, the data showed.

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