The Central Arkansas Library System spent over $50,000 on a recent promotional campaign featuring University of Arkansas quarterback Taylen Green.
The campaign’s elements included a photo shoot, an in-person signing event with Green in November and digital advertising.
Arkansas
HealthTech Arkansas, MedAxiom Team Up On HeartX
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HealthTech Arkansas of Little Rock and MedAxiom of Neptune Seashore, Florida, consider their partnership on a brand new cardiovascular technology-focused accelerator referred to as HeartX will appeal to extra and higher-quality candidates to this system.
Jeff Stinson, director of HealthTech Arkansas, mentioned the HeartX accelerator’s objectives are:
- To introduce Arkansas hospitals to new applied sciences that enhance medical outcomes, scale back prices and improve affected person and clinician experiences;
- To assist MedAxiom increase its community of trade companions; and
- To supply profitable returns for personal traders within the HeartX fund that HealthTech Arkansas administers. Traders are being sought now, within the third such fund Stinson’s group has administered.
MedAxiom, an American School of Cardiology firm, supplies organizational efficiency services. It represents greater than 450 cardiovascular organizations and has about 40 trade companions.
Joe Sasson, government vp of ventures, mentioned MedAxiom desires HeartX to hurry the adoption of improvements.
Functions for HeartX will probably be accepted via July 31, from early-stage corporations in state and past providing digital well being and software program, medical units and diagnostic platforms involving cardiovascular care.
The businesses will probably be interviewed, then a committee comprising representatives from well being care supplier companions will choose the 2022 program’s 5 contributors by Sept. 30. These companions are Arkansas Coronary heart Hospital, Arkansas Youngsters’s Hospital, Arkansas Urology, Baptist Well being, CHI St. Vincent, Conway Regional, Mercy, Northwest Well being, OrthoArkansas, St. Bernards Healthcare, the College of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Washington Regional Medical Middle.
Every taking part firm will obtain a $150,000 funding from the HeartX fund and be assured two pilot tasks.
HeartX is also supported by a $250,000 one-year grant from the Arkansas Financial Growth Fee.
The largely digital program will kick off with an in-person occasion on the Arkansas Coronary heart Hospital in Little Rock in late November. Members should be within the state solely as typically as is required by the pilot tasks and medical trials they turn into concerned in.
There’s no finish date for HeartX both. “We simply maintain working with corporations so long as they need us to maintain working with them,” Stinson mentioned.
That is HealthTech Arkansas’ fifth 12 months of administering accelerator packages, and HeartX will exchange its earlier cardiovascular-focused accelerator.
Stinson mentioned his group’s partnership with MedAxiom presents it a “big benefit” in attracting candidates.
“They convey nationwide recognition, nationwide credibility, to what they do,” he mentioned. “They’ve tons and plenty of cardiologists that they characterize nationwide. And their identify is synonymous with enhancing cardiovascular care for everybody.
“So it’s a manner for us to raise the stature of our program, to deliver extra folks into this system.”
Sasson, at MedAxiom, mentioned the partnership “permits us to indicate extra of our assist for innovation. And it permits us to interact with corporations at a stage that’s sooner than we usually do.”
He mentioned HealthTech Arkansas has been profitable to date, the cultures of the 2 companions align, and each corporations need to make an affect on early-stage corporations.
He mentioned his firm interacts with as much as 150 corporations per 12 months, a lot of which aren’t but able to be full-fledged companions of MedAxiom and a few of which might be an excellent match for the HeartX program.
HealthTech Arkansas has been internet hosting accelerators since 2019, however final 12 months narrowed its focus for a number of causes, Stinson mentioned, together with a excessive prevalence of coronary heart illness in Arkansas and the truth that the state has many progressive cardiologists.
Arkansas additionally has cardiology practices with many sufferers that make it “very best as a testing floor for a few of these early improvements,” Stinson mentioned.
The change made good enterprise sense, too, he mentioned. “Cardiology has all the time been the one medical space that pulls essentially the most enterprise capital funding and essentially the most [merger and acquisition] exercise,” he mentioned. Stinson mentioned HeartX contributors could have loads of capital backing them that can allow their development — together with the hiring of staff and growth of recent services — that might result in success within the type of being bought.
Arkansas
Promotional campaign featuring Arkansas quarterback Taylen Green cost Central Arkansas Library System over $50,000 | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Arkansas
Shooting concerns reappear for Arkansas basketball after stinging loss to Tennessee
A brilliant stretch of offense to close the nonconference schedule had Arkansas basketball feeling optimistic about the roster’s overall shooting. Entering the SEC opener against No. 1 Tennessee, the Razorbacks ranked fourth nationally in field-goal percentage (50.8%) while hitting 3-pointers at a 36.8% rate.
But preseason concerns appeared to be justified Saturday. The Hogs (11-3, 0-1 SEC) shot a season-low 37.7% from the floor against the Volunteers (14-0, 1-0), going 6 for 29 on 3-pointers and, even worse, 6 for 13 at the free-throw line.
Add it all up, and Arkansas got run out the gym in a 76-52 loss that represented the worst offensive performance of the year.
“Look, you don’t have to make all your 3s, but you can’t miss them all,” Arkansas coach John Calipari said. “You can’t miss 10 in-a-row, or you’re not going to win.”
DJ Wagner and Karter Knox hit on the first two attempts from downtown, but Arkansas then proceeded to miss 19 of its next 21 3-pointers. That drought coincided with a dominant Tennessee run that stretched the lead to double figures, and the Vols led 42-27 at halftime.
The offensive malaise wasn’t a total surprise. Tennessee leads the country in 3-point defense and is second in scoring defense, but it was a giant step back. Arkansas had scored at least 80 points in four straight games.
Boogie Fland and Johnell Davis represented Arkansas’ biggest disappointments from behind the arc. That duo combined to go 2 for 12, with Davis missing all four of his attempts. Davis had missed the Hogs’ previous two games with a wrist injury.
The Razorbacks’ leading 3-point shooter on the season is 7-foot-2 big man Zvonimir Ivisic, who entered Saturday 20 of 44. He went 1 for 2 against Tennessee, but he continues to struggle on the defensive end and has seen his minutes dramatically decrease in recent weeks.
Calipari needs to find a way to keep Ivisic on the floor. His impact stretching opposing defenses is too valuable. The Hogs play most possessions with at least two players who aren’t threats from the outside.
After the game, Calipari said the bad shooting numbers weren’t a product of poor offense. He thought his team generated quality looks, but the shots just would not fall.
However, he didn’t like how the misses negatively affected the Razorbacks in other dimensions.
“If we created a good look, and we miss some of them, I looked at them and said, ‘Guys, you’re not going to make every shot. Just keep playing. Fight.’ You’ve got to learn to fight when you’re not playing well. So this was a great learning experience for this team,” he said.
There are other, more important factors that played into the blowout loss.
Tennessee won the rebounding margin 51-29 and got 29 points from Chaz Lanier. Zakai Zeigler won the battle of New York City point guards against Boogie Fland, and Arkansas couldn’t have asked for a more difficult start to the conference schedule than a road game against the top-ranked team in the country.
Arkansas now has three days to regroup before a home game against No. 23 Ole Miss.
Arkansas
Miss Arkansas wins Miss America’s Teen 2025; Miss Alabama is first runner-up
Peyton Bolling was crowned Miss America’s Teen 2025 on Saturday night in Orlando, Florida.
Bolling, who competed as Miss Arkansas’ Teen, is from Rogers and attends Bentonville High School. She performed a jazz dance in the pageant’s talent competition on Saturday. The teen pageant — which includes talent, evening gown and on-stage question segments — is part of the Miss America organization.
Along with the title of Miss America’s Teen, Bolling will receive $50,000 in scholarship money and a yearlong reign, according to the Miss America organization. During her year as Miss America’s Teen, Bolling will travel across the country and use her platform to raise awareness about her philanthropic effort, known as Simple Acts of Citizenship. She’ll also serve as a role model for young girls and a brand ambassador for the Miss America’s Teen program.
Ali Mims, Miss Alabama’s Teen, was named first-runner up for Miss America’s Teen on Saturday and earned $10,000 in scholarship money. Mims, from Harpersville, was featured throughout the finals event and performed a soprano aria during the talent competition, singing “O Mio Babbino Caro” (“Oh, my Dear Papa”) from Giacomo Puccini’s 1918 opera “Gianni Schicchi.”
Also, Mims was one of three winners in Tuesday’s evening gown preliminary for Miss America’s Teen, earning a $3,000 scholarship.
Mims is a student at Chelsea High School. Her philanthropic platform for Miss Alabama’s Teen is the Joyful Noise Foundation: Music Education for the Special Needs Community, It raises money to put musical instruments in special needs classes.
A total of 51 teens were in the running for 2025, competing in preliminary events this week and the finals on Saturday at the Walt Disney Theater in Orlando. All had previously been crowned at pageants in their home states or Puerto Rico.
Aside from Bolling and Mims, the top five finalists were:
- Brooke Bumgarner, Miss Mississippi’s Teen 2024 (second-runner up)
- Abigail Mignucci, Miss New Jersey’s Teen 2024 (third runner-up)
- Macie Krause, Miss Texas’ Teen 2024 (fourth runner-up)
As runners-up, Bumgarner, Mignucci and Krause each earned $10,000 in scholarship money, according to the Miss America organization. The finals were livestreamed on the Miss America YouTube channel and PageantVision.com.
The top 11 contestants for Miss America’s Teen were:
- Ali Mims, Miss Alabama’s Teen 2024
- Keira Bixler, Miss California’s Teen 2024
- Melissa Le, Miss Louisiana’s Teen 2024
- Peyton Bolling, Miss Arkansas’ Teen 2024
- Nicole McClain, Miss Hawaii’s Teen 2024
- Kynlee Schultheis, Miss Oklahoma’s Teen 2024
- Macie Krause, Miss Texas’ Teen 2024
- Abigail Mignucci, Miss New Jersey’s Teen 2024
- Carrington Manous, Miss Georgia’s Teen 2024
- Avery Bradley, Miss Iowa’s Teen 2024
- Brooke Bumgarner, Miss Mississippi’s Teen 2024
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