Swimmers Rejoice With the Return of Reef & Run Ocean Swim Series noozhawk.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from noozhawk.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Eighty-two-year-old Bill Pollock came in 20th out of 28 finishers in 31:02.
The event starts at the South Coast Railway Museum on Los Carneros Road, winds through Goleta and finishes at Dos Pueblos High.
Results from April 12 MNTT
1. Brandon Baker 29, 22.09
2. Tom Anhalt 58, 24.57
3. Steven Hunt 37, 25.42
4. Raoul Martin 42, 26.19
5. Kyle McNair 31, 26.41
6. Lee Carter 64, 27.01
7. Pjot Vander Meulen 53, 27.06
8. Matt Struckmeyer 51, 27.11
9. Steve Boelter 60, 27.18
10. Dave Parker 60, 27.39
11. James Ballantine 57, 27.50
12. Dave Larsen 51, 28.15
13. Darren Potter 53, 28.50
14. Rick Hummel 65, 29.38
15. Joe Howell 73, 29.44
16. Bill Barrett 60, 29.50
17. Kristen Holbrook 36, 29.56
18. Cindy Abrami 52, 30.22
19. Rock Rockenback 51, 30.43
20. Bill Pollock 82, 31.02
21. Fernando Espinosa 65, 31.03
22. Chris Grant 52, 31.23
23. Jemma Sanders 43, 31.34
24. George Bifano 75, 32.58
25. Bill Po
AP3 – Swedish national pensions buffer fund
AP3 has appointed
ö
rklund as its new head of alternative investments. Björklund is being promoted to the role from her current position as portfolio manager for international real estate and infrastructure at the pension fund. Björklund will replace
Bengt Hellstr
ö
m, who is stepping down from the managerial role after 20 years in the position. However, AP3 said Hellström would continue to work within the organisation until further notice.
Björklund came to AP3 in 2018 having previously worked for one of Sweden’s largest pensions providers AMF as portfolio manager within alternative investments – primarily working with infrastructure, according to AP3. The Stockholm-based buffer fund said she would take up her new role on 1 February.
Kempen's asset allocation chief takes sustainable equities role citywireselector.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from citywireselector.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
While humans continue to confront the COVID-19 pandemic, campus scientists have discovered a way for plants to fight off agricultural pandemics, according to a recently published study.
Printed Friday in Science Magazine, the study outlines how a team of researchers discovered the functionalities and structural components of a plant immune receptor called the ROQ1 resistosome, which can recognize and effectively attack invasive pathogens. According to a press release by campus Innovative Genomics Institute, these findings will play an important role in prohibiting disease spread across many plant species and crops.
“Surprisingly, the mechanism of binding to the pathogen is similar to how antibodies, which plants lack, recognize an antigen,” said Raoul Martin, a UC Berkeley biophysics graduate student who worked on the study, in an email.