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Small Business Lifestyle

US Feds preferred inflation gauge steady as rate cut looms [Video]

The US Federal Reserve’s favored measure of inflation held steady in July according to government data Friday, sustaining expectations that the central bank is on its way to interest rate cuts starting next month. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index edged up on a monthly basis from 0.1 percent in June to 0.2 percent

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Small Business Lifestyle

Shane Beamer previews South Carolina’s season opener [Video]

Great respect for Old Dominion and their program obviously very familiar with them growing up in, in Virginia and, uh, recruiting up there for so long. They’re located in *** hotbed of recruiting in that part of the country. Uh, they’ve got good players. There’s no question about it. You look back at last year, they easily could have been ***, an 11 win team. They had five losses last year by six points or less. So they very easily could be *** team that we’re sitting here talking about, uh, an 11 win team that was in the mix for, um, uh, New Year’s Six bowl game or whatever it was called last year. We as coaches know that it’s still gonna be *** lot on Saturday, but absolutely, with Leno’s demeanor, he gives you ***, *** quiet confidence where the moment’s never too, uh, too big for him. That’s the way he handles himself and, and *** lot of the, you know, really good quarterbacks that I’ve been around. I’m not comparing them to Jalen Hurtz, but Jalen in Oklahoma, Jalen was that way. I mean, he was all the time and, uh, and he, and that’s the way that he, the way that he played Spencer, I mean, showed emotion, but Spencer never got too high, too low. So I think it’s *** great quarterback to have *** great quality to have not just in *** quarterback but any leader in my mind. There’s days, this is year 26 25 26 in coaching for me. And, uh, there have been preseason camps where you could say, ok, we maybe took *** step back today or we didn’t have *** great day today and, and whatnot. I don’t remember ever walking off the field this month and saying, you know what, we didn’t have the day that we needed to. Was it always perfect? No, was it? But the effort was always there, the intensity was there and just the way they, uh the way they handled their business just on and off the field, they’re really, really, really fun group to coach and just, um they don’t, best thing I can say is they just don’t waste days, you know, we had *** mock game week last week and I thought we went out last week and had 34 amazing days of practice. We do *** situational practice on the Friday before the first game or two Fridays before. So Friday afternoon, we went in the stadium about four o’clock and went through just ***, *** script of all the situations that can happen. And we did that at *** faster pace than we ever have in my four years as the head coach, which to me means they’re locked in, they’re focused, they’re paying attention, they’re getting their work done and we’re getting off the field just things like that. Uh.

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Swimmer Ali Truwit makes Paralympics a year after losing lower leg in shark attack while snorkeling [Video]

The first step for swimmer Ali Truwit was overcoming her newfound fear of the one place she had always felt safe the water.Because the sound of water, any sound involving water, instantly triggered flashbacks to the day she swam for her life after being bitten by a shark.She and a friend were snorkeling in the ocean off Turks and Caicos on May 24, 2023, when a shark charged and bit Truwit’s lower left leg. Bleeding and with the shark circling, Truwit went into competitive swim mode and raced 75 yards toward the safety of the boat. Truwit was rushed to the hospital and airlifted to the United States, where she had three surgeries, including one to amputate her leg below the knee.To reclaim her love of the water, she went to the family’s backyard pool. She waded up to her waist, fought off fear and took back control. The plunge not only started her path toward healing but to Paris for the Paralympics.”I love comeback stories,” said the 24-year-old from Darien, Connecticut, who qualified for Paris in the 100 free, 400 free and the 100 back. “I’ve definitely relied on other people’s comeback stories to help me hold on to what feels like a bold and unrealistic hope of fighting off a shark and surviving and losing a limb and making the Paralympics all in a year.”The shark attack ‘we tried to fight back’Her itinerary for that summer involved fun and adventure before starting work at a consulting firm.Truwit had just graduated from Yale after a career in the pool in which she was a four-year letter winner. She kicked things off by running a marathon with her mom on Mother’s Day.Next on the list: joining friends for some sun on the beaches in Turks and Caicos. She went snorkeling with Yale teammate and good friend Sophie Pilkinton in an area not known for sharks.On their way back to the boat, a shark aggressively approached and began bumping them.”We tried to fight back,” Truwit said.What was believed to be a bull shark bit her on the foot and lower leg.”My immediate thought was, ‘Am I crazy or do I not have a foot right now?'” Truwit said. “It was a really hard image for me. But you move immediately into action.”Stay calm. Remain conscious. Just get to the boat. That’s all she focused on as she and Pilkinton sprinted through the water, intensely aware the shark was still there.Once on the boat, Pilkinton applied a tourniquet to slow the bleeding.Truwit was later airlifted to a trauma hospital in Miami for two surgeries to fight infections. She was transported to a hospital in New York, where on her 23rd birthday, she underwent a transtibial below-the-knee amputation.”A lot of dark days,” she said. “But I’m alive and I almost wasn’t.”‘Work works’ becomes the mantra for recoveryThe Truwit family has a mantra “Work works.” That’s why Truwit went to rehab even on days when she didn’t feel good or was sad.”Just put in the work,” she said.First, though, she needed to alter her “Why?”Instead of, “Why did this happen to me?” she centered on, “Why not throw everything into something?”More specifically, why not the Paralympics? After all, she had plenty of time to get ready for the 2028 Summer Paralympics in Los Angeles.”But I’m not someone who waits,” she said.So Paris in 2024 it was, even if the time frame was incredibly tight.She went through prosthetic training and strength exercises. She also worked with trauma therapists, which led to narrative therapy to re-author her life and combat her nightmares.”So that I don’t let fear rule my life,” Truwit explained. “I had lost enough and anything that was on the table for me to regain, I was going to fight to regain it.”I didn’t want to lose a limb and my love of the water, too.”Focus on making Team USA for ParisAbout 3 1/2 months removed from the attack, she was competing again. It was early but necessary to make certain standards to be in contention for a Paralympic spot. To help her, she teamed up with her club coach, Jamie Barone.”I was just really curious how I was going to feel being back on the pool deck and back in a competitive space,” Truwit said. “The more I worked at it, the flashbacks reduced and the pain lessened.”She qualified for nationals in Orlando, Florida, where she swam freestyle and backstroke. In April, she attended an international meet in Portugal her first trip out of the country since the shark attack. Her mom was there as she shined in the 400 free S10 category, in which swimmers have a physical impairment affecting one of their joints.”She’s just basically a workhorse who refuses to give up,” said her mom, Jody. “That’s who she was before the attack and amputation and that’s who she is every single day now.”At U.S. Paralympic trials in Minneapolis in late June, she won the 100 backstroke, 400 free and 100 free. She joins a team that includes Paralympic swimming great Jessica Long and a host of returning medalists from Tokyo.”I think hearing my name on that team was just a reminder to me that I’m stronger than I think,” said Truwit, who launched the “Stronger Than You Think” foundation to help others navigate through the healing process. “That we’re all stronger than we think.”In Paris, she will have the support of about 50 family members and friends.”A year ago, I was just working to get back in the water,” Truwit said. “I now get back in the water and that sense of joy comes back, and the smile comes back. To have that again is something I’m so thankful for. Honestly, it’s one of the moments in my swim career that I’m the proudest of, because I know how much work it took.”___AP video journalist Aron Ranen contributed to this report.

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Small Business Lifestyle

Burlington High School welcomes students back with new cellphone procedure [Video]

STUDENTS ACROSS VERMONT COMPLETED THEIR FIRST DAY OF THE SCHOOL YEAR. FOR KIDS AT BURLINGTON HIGH — THEY’LL HAVE TO FOLLOW NEW CELL PHONE PROCEDURES. STARTING THIS YEAR… THE HANDHELD DEVICES CAN NO LONGER BE USED IN THE CLASSROOM. IF A STUDENT IS CAUGHT USING THEIR PHONE, IT’LL BE HELD AT THE MAIN OFFICE UNTIL THE END OF THE DAY. BURLINGTON’S SUPERINTENDENT SAYS THIS IS MEANT TO HELP STUDENTS LEARN BETTER — WITHOUT THE ADDED DISTRACTION. SOME STUDENTS WE SPOKE WITH SAY THEY AGREE…PHONES CAN HINDER THEIR LEARNING.