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Published on: 03-12-2021
Jessyka and Kiefer Dooley are Seventh-day Adventist Millennial youth leaders who say they grew up with no interest in becoming leaders. Through a winding river of circumstances including being introduced to a lifelong relationship with Jesus they have both developed a passion for summer camp and youth ministries.
Jessyka recalls not having a positive experience in school or church until she met Jesus as a Friend. “I had an incredible chaplain and mentor my senior year in academy,” Jessyca says. “She connected me with a relationship with Jesus that was so much deeper than what the church had offered me in the past.”
RoosterBio Inc. Announces Winners of 2020 hMSC Development Grants
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Each awardee will receive up to $12,000 in requested RoosterBio’s hMSC and bioprocess media products
We are very pleased to support hMSC-based methods and applications in Genetic Engineering by enabling a rapid and efficient path to generate key cellular raw materials and scale up manufacturing, leading to shortened timelines on research and clinical translation. - RoosterBio CEO Margot Connor FREDERICK, Md. (PRWEB) March 11, 2021 RoosterBio, a leading supplier of human mesenchymal stem/stromal cell (hMSC) working cell banks and hMSC bioprocess systems, announced the 2020 Winners of our RoosterBio Development Award. This program empowers investigators who share our common goals in emerging applications of hMSCs and supports their supply chain industrialization for regenerative medicine’s next generation of clinical breakthroughs.
U of A students prove Republicans and Democrats can be friends
U of A students prove Republicans and Democrats can be friends A young Republican and a young Democrat look ahead. Library of Congress
In a time of extreme partisan division, two students at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville prove we can all still get along. Political science majors
Anna Cook, a 22-year-old Republican, and
Elizabeth Kimbrell, a 21-year-old Democrat, forged their close bond while working together in student government.
Tonya Mosley, host of NPR’s Here and Now, interviewed the two women about their friendship and the future of their respective political parties. Both are students of Angie Maxwell, director of the Diane Blair Center of Southern Politics and Society and a highly sought expert on partisan politics. The segment airs today, and you can listen to it here.
Send For Arkansas event planners, the pandemic created opportunities for new ways, born of necessity, of putting on a show.
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