UVM announces commencement speaker, two other honorary degree recipients: Who are they?
The University of Vermont has announced James Betts as the 2025 Commencement speaker. The former Olympic doctor, pediatric surgeon and firefighter will address UVM's newest graduates at the University Commencement Ceremony Sunday, May 18.
The UVM alumnus is one of three individuals receiving a 2025 UVM honorary degree. The university will also present its highest honor to former UVM board chair David A. Daigle, whose leadership provided STEM facilities for UVM faculty and students; and Roy V. Hill II, for contributions to Vermont's faith-based, educational and community institutions.
'In their distinctiveways, JamesBetts, David Daigle and Roy Hill reflect UVM's commitment to people and planet - each of them has made UVM a better place through their vision, leadership and dedication to our shared values," UVM Interim President Patricia Prelock said.
Born and raised in Bennington, Betts graduated from UVM in 1969 and became a Doctor of Medicine in 1973.
His career took him to pediatric surgery and urology at the University of California San Francisco Benioff Children's Hospital, where he became the founding director of the hospital's pediatric trauma program.
He responded to multiple crises in California including the 1989 Bay Area earthquake and 1991 Oakland Hills Fire, rendering urgent medical treatment to victims.
He found himself drawn to the challenge of responding to needs of patients caught up in natural emergencies. He began serving the Big Sur Fire Department as a volunteer firefighter, the department's medical director and a member of their search and rescue team. In 2015 he received the Department's Firefighter of the Year honor. He currently serves as a duty officer with the fire department on the weekends when he is not on trauma call at the hospital.
Betts was one of the volunteer United States Olympic Commitee physicians in Colorado Springs between 1979 and 1983. He was a founding member of the USOC Anti-Doping Commitee and served on it from 1984 to 2000.
Through his illustrious career, he has maintained connection with UVM and the Larner School of Medicine, serving in multiple roles, including President of the Larner College Medical Alumni Executive Committee, the Board of Trustees and the Dean's Advisory Board.
UVM honorary degree recipients are recognized for "outstanding achievement or service for the benefit of the University of Vermont, the state of Vermont, the nation and beyond."
Each of the 2025 recipients either attended the university as a student or made significant contributions to UVM as a volunteer or employee.
Daigle, a Burlington native, became a first-generation college graduate when he earned a degree in business administration in 1989. He went on to earn an MBA from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. He currently works as a partner and fixed income portfolio manager with Capital Group in New York City.
Daigle served on UVM's Board of Trustees from 2010 to 2020 and chaired the Board from 2016 to 2020. He is described by colleagues as 'one of the most impactful alumni in UVM history.' Daigle played a leadership role in the "Move Mountains: The Campaign for the University of Vermont," which raised over $581 million. Daigle presided over construction of buildings that reshaped campus life, including the Central Campus Residence Hall, and Discovery and Innovation Halls, which provide state-of-the art facilities for students and researchers in the STEM fields.
Hill, a Tennessee native, earned a bachelor's degree from Talladega College and a master's degree from Washington University before moving to Vermont.
Prior to that move to the Green Mountain State, Hill held leadership positions at Washington University, Dartmouth College and Brown University, and the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education before he was recruited as director of corporate and foundation relations at UVM.
He spearheaded UVM's educational, research and cultural partnership with Jackson State University, a historically Black institution in Mississippi.
Hill has supported many Vermont community, faith-based and educational institutions. He is a charter member of the Burlington Vermont Area Chapter of the NAACP, past president of the Vermont Ecumenical Council and Bible Society and former program director for Spectrum Youth and Family Services in Vermont. In addition, he was asked to serve as the Vermont Governor's representative to the National Black Leadership Summit in Washington, DC.
Sydney P. Hakes is the Burlington city reporter. Contact her at SHakes@gannett.com.
This article originally appeared on Burlington Free Press: UVM announces commencement speaker, honorary degree recipients
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New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Doctor explains why you're making ‘old people' noises — even if you're not elderly
Welcome to Ask Doctor Zac, a weekly column from This week, Dr. Zac Turner explores a common issue impacting millions of Australians. QUESTION: Dear Dr. Zac, I don't know what is happening to me but in the last 12 months I've started to make what my partner is describing as old people noises. Why is it every time I bend over to put my shoes on I groan? And why is it whenever I get up from the couch, I make a noise? Why is it when I get out of the bed? I make a noise? It's really annoying. I don't need to make these noises, and if I concentrate I can do the activity without the noise -but they creep back in later uncontrollably. Why don't I have the same energy that I used to have? What options are there for me to have more energy as I approach my 50s? – Justin, 46, Woy Woy, NSW ANSWER: Dear Justin, Ah yes, the bitter symphony of middle age – the creaks, the cracks, the groans. You wanted a silent retreat, but your body booked you front row seats to the percussion-heavy matinee of 'Man vs. Gravity'. Many people experience 'old people noises' when getting up or putting on their shoes. PRPicturesProduction – Let me reassure you: you're not falling apart, you're just … audibly adapting. And you're not alone. Millions of us hit our mid-40s and suddenly discover that bending down to tie a shoelace now comes with a full soundscape. It's like your spine has joined a garage band and didn't tell you. So why do we suddenly sound like a haunted rocking chair? Let's break it down. The vocal noises: Groans, grunts, sighs These are your internal sound effects. They're caused by diaphragmatic bracing, which is your body's natural way of stabilizing your core when it anticipates effort – like standing up, sitting down, or lifting anything heavier than your dignity. As we age, key postural muscles like the diaphragm, pelvic floor, and deep abdominals weaken. That means the body has to try harder to stabilise, and that extra effort escapes as noise – especially if you're not regularly training those muscles. Think of it like a rusty hinge: it still works, but it's going to let everyone in the room know about it. Add to that reduced joint mobility, less efficient breathing, and the fact that your brain's motor coordination is no longer at Olympic levels – and boom! Every movement gets its own acoustic commentary. And here's the kicker: sometimes we start making these noises even when we don't need to. Why? Because your brain's picked it up as a learned behaviour. It's the same reason tennis players grunt – except yours is involuntary, and usually accompanied by socks and a bit of swearing. The mechanical noises: Clicks, cracks, and creaks This is the rhythm section of the band you didn't audition for. Clicks and pops? That's usually gas bubbles in your joints collapsing. It's called 'cavitation', and while it sounds like something that needs antibiotics, it's mostly harmless. The noises are caused by diaphragmatic bracing, which is your body's natural way of stabilizing your core when it anticipates effort. Volodymyr – Creaks? That's known as crepitus, and it happens when the cartilage in your joints thins out with age. Snapping and shifting? That's your tendons and ligaments becoming a little less stretchy, like an old pair of Speedos. None of this means your body's falling apart – but it is asking you (rather loudly) to pay more attention. What to do: Quiet the chorus You don't have to accept this as your new normal. You can get your groove (and silence) back with a few smart moves: 1. Move daily Motion is lotion. Gentle but consistent movement keeps joints lubricated and tissues elastic. Squats, lunges, shoulder rolls – whatever gets your body grooving again. 2. Breathe like a boss Your diaphragm isn't just for sighing dramatically – it's your secret stabilizer. Singing, swimming, even doing planks will train it to hold strong without screaming for help. 3. Strength & mobility Add 15–20 minutes of strength work into your routine a few times a week. Resistance bands are your friend. And don't forget to stretch. Flexibility is your anti-creak. Final thoughts: You're not breaking down – you're getting feedback These groans and cracks aren't signs of doom. They're your body's way of saying: 'Hey mate, a little maintenance down here please?' It's a myth that we move less because we age. In truth, we age because we move less. Staying active – or even increasing your activity – is one of the most powerful things you can do for your energy, joints, and general vibe. If you need inspiration, look up Professor Belinda Beck right here in Australia. Her work proves that heavy resistance training (yes, even lifting!) is not only safe for people in their 50s and beyond – it's essential for reversing things like osteoporosis and keeping you strong and upright. So next time your partner rolls their eyes at your getting-up grunt, tell them: 'That's elite performance bracing, thank you very much.' You've got this. – Dr. Zac
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
From 'nude parades' to Imane Khelif: The problematic history of gender verification at the Olympics
Algeria's Imane Khelif celebrates during a medals ceremony after winning gold in the women's 66 kg final boxing match at the 2024 Summer Olympics. Less than a week before Imane Khelif was poised to return to competitive women's boxing, the sport's new global governing body set up a potential roadblock. World Boxing announced last Friday that Khelif cannot participate in any future women's events unless the Olympic champion takes a gender verification test to prove that Khelif is biologically female. Advertisement The International Olympic Committee ignited global outcry in Paris last summer when it allowed Khelif to march to a gold medal in the women's welterweight division. Only a year earlier, Khelif was disqualified before the gold-medal bout of the International Boxing Association's world championships. The IBA, then recognized as amateur boxing's global governing body, claimed that a sex test showed the presence of Y chromosome and ruled Khelif ineligible to compete against women. Three months later, the IOC stripped the IBA of its governing status for multiple reasons, after which IOC leaders chose to overlook Khelif's alleged failed gender test because they had questions about the fairness of the IBA's process. That turned the IOC into a piñata for critics at last summer's Olympic Games as Khelif pummeled an overmatched Italian fighter into quitting in 46 seconds, then toyed with her remaining opponents while displaying superior reach and punching power. In February, the IOC recognized World Boxing as its new governing body for the sport — and assessing how to be fair to Khelif and her potential female opponents instantly moved atop World Boxing's to-do list. The solution that World Boxing chose was making sex testing mandatory for all boxers who compete in events it sanctions. 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Helen Stephens smiles for the cameraman after setting a world record in the 100 meter finals at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. (Getty Images) (Bettmann via Getty Images) 'The nude parade' The desire to define who counts as a woman for the purpose of sports dates back to Hitler's Olympics. On the night of Aug. 4, 1936, 18-year-old Helen Stephens of Fulton, Missouri, went to bed the newly crowned fastest woman in the world. The next morning, Stephens awoke to an international firestorm. A Polish newspaper correspondent could not accept that Stephens had defeated famed Polish sprinter Stella Walsh to win Olympic gold in the 100-meter dash. He published a story discrediting Stephens' world record performance by alleging that the tall, muscular American with an unusually deep voice was really a man masquerading as a woman. Advertisement Rather than dismissing the Polish sportswriter's accusation as sour grapes, Olympic officials responded by revealing that they had anticipated such a controversy. They told reporters they had Stephens examined before the Olympics and cleared her to compete after confirming she was female. At least one U.S. media outlet reached out to Stephens' mother seeking her response to the speculation about her daughter's gender. 'Helen is absolutely a girl,' Bertie May Stephens told the reporter by telephone from Missouri, adding that she better not say what she thinks of 'anyone who would charge that she is anything else.' The scandal reflected the growing unease at the time over the physical appearance of female athletes enjoying success in sports once deemed too strenuous for women. They were often perceived as suspiciously masculine because they didn't conform to the era's notion of femininity. Advertisement In early 1936, American Olympic Committee chairman Avery Brundage wrote to IOC colleagues expressing concern about 'various female (?) athletes in several sports' who seemed to possess 'apparent characteristics of the opposite sex.' 'Perhaps some action has already been taken on this subject,' Brundage added. 'If not, it might be well to insist on a medical examination before participation in the Olympic Games.' The first known gender verification rule in women's sports took effect less than a week after Stephens' gold medal win in Berlin. Track and field's international governing body implemented a policy requiring female athletes to submit to physical examination should any protest be filed regarding their sex. When the Olympics first became a stage for Cold War tensions in the 1950s, familiar concerns about female athletes deemed too man-like suddenly were seen through a geopolitical lens. 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Other athletes gritted their teeth and endured the humiliation. In an interview with NPR's 'Tested' podcast last year, Canadian discus thrower Carol Martin described being taken into a large room underneath the stands and having 'to pull my pants down in front of this woman so she could see I had a vagina.' 'I remember thinking, 'What the [expletive] is this?'' Martin told the podcast. 'And I was a nice person. I never said that at the time, but I remember thinking, 'Whoa, this seems a little invasive. This seems a little inappropriate. I mean, can't you see I'm a girl?'' Advertisement Nude parades, unsurprisingly, proved deeply unpopular. Athletes successfully campaigned to abolish the practice after only two years. Algeria's Imane Khelif, right, defeated Italy's Angela Carini in their women's 66 kg preliminary boxing match at the 2024 Summer Olympics. Carini abandoned the fight after just 46 seconds. (AP Photo/John Locher, File) (ASSOCIATED PRESS) 'There's definitely not an easy solution' Modern methods of sex testing may only require a swab to the cheek or a few drops of blood, but critics contend they're still traumatic. Athletes rights advocate and Humans of Sport founder Payoshni Mitra has worked on behalf of numerous high-profile athletes revealed to have unusually high testosterone levels. Some battled through severe depression, Mitra said. One family even lost their daughter to suicide. About a decade and a half ago, Caster Semenya became the unwilling face of a complex, emotionally charged debate over what to do with athletes who don't fit neatly in the 'male' or 'female' category. The muscular South African middle-distance star blew away the women's 800 meters field at the 2009 World Championships, but she couldn't outrun the whispers and innuendo that followed. Advertisement 'For me she is not a woman,' said one beaten fellow finalist, Italy's Elisa Cusma Piccione. Another overmatched rival, Russia's Mariya Savinova, sneered, 'Just look at her.' At the request of track and field's governing body, Semenya submitted to a gender verification test and found out along with the rest of the world that she was different. While Semenya was born with a vagina and assigned female at birth, her test results showed XY chromosomes, no uterus and unusually high testosterone levels. Stunned and devastated, Semenya weighed her options. Either she had to quit track at age 18 on the heels of winning World Championship gold or consent to hormone treatment to lower her testosterone to a predetermined level. Advertisement The hormones felt like 'poison,' Semenya wrote in her 2023 memoir 'The Race To Be Myself,' but she fought through panic attacks, night sweats and nausea to keep flourishing. Second place finishes at the 2011 World Championships and the 2012 Olympics were later upgraded to gold medals when Savinova was found guilty of doping. Semenya also led a podium sweep by DSD runners at the 2016 Olympics after the Court of Arbitration for Sport temporarily forced World Athletics to suspend its testosterone regulations. On the eve of the 2016 Olympic final in the women's 800, Yahoo Sports asked American 800-meter runner Ajee' Wilson how she felt about Semenya. Should Semenya be free to compete without being forced to take testosterone suppressants? Or should her basic rights be infringed on to avoid unfairly disadvantaging the other female competitors? 'There's definitely not an easy solution,' Wilson conceded. 'There's a saying that says you shouldn't really come hard at a problem unless you have a solution. I don't have one at this point, so I have to go with the flow of things.' While World Athletics now administers gender tests to all female athletes, from 1999 to 2024, track and field's governing body tested only targets of suspicion. Human Rights Watch condemned that approach in 2020, pointing out that the athletes being ensnared by sex testing were 'overwhelmingly women of color from the Global South.' Advertisement Among those is Annet Negesa, a promising Ugandan middle-distance runner targeted under sex testing regulations and found to have unusually high testosterone levels. Negesa agreed to undergo what she was told was minor surgery in late 2012 in hopes of altering her body and saving her career. When she awoke in a hospital bed, she told Human Rights Watch in 2020 that she had scars on her belly and discharge papers mentioning an orchiectomy — a procedure to remove testicles. The recovery from the surgery was long and painful. Never again did Negesa regain her previous fitness levels. Her manager dropped her and her university yanked away her scholarship. Today Negesa lives in Germany, where she was granted asylum in 1999. The athlete ambassador to Humans of Sport shares her story as often as possible in hopes that it can help others. She has been following Imane Khelif's story from afar. 'I am extremely disappointed to see how another athlete from a different sport is being made to face such a public trial,' Negesa said this week in a statement to Yahoo Sports. 'It is devastating for the athlete. Federations must act responsibly. They have played with our lives for too long.' Both IOC president Thomas Bach (R) and IOC spokesman Mark Adams defended the IOC's decision to allow Imane Khelif to participate in the Paris Olympics, calling tests that showed Khelif has a male karyotype not legitimate. (Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images) (FABRICE COFFRINI via Getty Images) IOC has egg on its face Thirty-six hours after World Boxing ruled that Khelif would need to pass a gender verification test to be eligible to fight against women again, the document at the heart of this entire saga may have surfaced. Advertisement American sportswriter Alan Abrahamson, formerly of the Los Angeles Times, published to his website what appears to be a leaked image of Khelif's sex-test results from the 2023 IBA world championships in New Delhi. The chromosome analysis says that Khelif has a 'male karyotype' (an individual's complete set of chromosomes). IBA officials had previously alleged without offering proof that Khelif was XY. It's unclear how Abrahamson attained the apparent leaked document or whether it is legitimate. Neither Khelif nor anyone with the Algerian Boxing Federation have publicly addressed the report or World Boxing's mandatory sex testing policy. The test results carry the letterhead of Dr. Lal Path Labs in New Delhi, accredited by the American College of Pathologists and certified by the Swiss-based International Organisation for Standardisation. That appears to fly in the face of claims made last August by IOC spokesman Mark Adams, who during a news conference at the Paris Olympics took the stance that any test administered by the IBA was essentially fruit from a poison tree. Advertisement 'The tests themselves, the process of the tests, the ad hoc nature of the tests, are not legitimate,' Adams said. Also left with egg on his face is IOC president Thomas Bach, who several times insinuated that the Khelif test results were part of a Russian disinformation campaign. The IBA is run by Umar Kremlev, a Russian businessman with close ties to the Kremlin. "This was part of the many, many fake news campaigns we had to face from Russia before Paris and after Paris," Bach told Reuters last March. If the leaked test results put pressure on IOC officials to explain why they believe they're illegitimate, they also increase the burden on Khelif to make a public comment. Advertisement When speaking to reporters in Paris after her gold-medal match victory last summer, Khelif brushed aside questions about her gender. "I am a woman, like any other woman,' Khelif said. 'I was born a woman. I have lived as a woman. I compete as a woman.' Khelif has previously said she wants to win a second gold medal at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. For now, the notion of her receiving clearance to fight against women again at a future Olympics is becoming more difficult to envision.

Associated Press
3 days ago
- Associated Press
Olympic champ Imane Khelif skips Eindhoven event after World Boxing introduces mandatory sex testing
EINDHOVEN, Netherlands (AP) — Olympic champion Imane Khelif is skipping the Eindhoven Box Cup in the Netherlands less than a week after World Boxing announced mandatory sex testing for all athletes. The Algerian boxer, who won gold at the Paris Games last summer amid scrutiny over her eligibility, did not register in time for the event before applications closed on Thursday. 'The decision of Imane's exclusion is not ours. We regret it,' tournament media director Dirk Renders told The Associated Press. Khelif had intended to return to international competition at the tournament in Hotel Eindhoven before World Boxing announced its new sex testing policy last Friday. Eindhoven mayor Jeroen Dijsselbloem criticized World Boxing's decision. 'As far as we are concerned, all athletes are welcome in Eindhoven. Excluding athletes based on controversial 'gender tests' certainly does not fit in with that,' Dijsselbloem wrote in a letter addressed to the Dutch Boxing Federation and International Boxing Federation. 'We are expressing our disapproval of this decision today and are calling on the organization to admit Imane Khelif after all.' Khelif won a gold medal at the Paris Olympics last summer amid international scrutiny on her and Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting, another gold medal winner. The previous governing body for Olympic boxing, the Russian-dominated International Boxing Association, had disqualified both fighters from its 2023 world championships after claiming they failed unspecified eligibility tests. But the IBA was banished for decades of misdeeds and controversy. The IOC ran the past two Olympic boxing tournaments in its place and it applied the sex eligibility rules used in previous Olympics. Khelif and Lin were eligible to compete under those standards. World Boxing has since been provisionally approved as the boxing organizer at the 2028 Los Angeles Games and has faced pressure from boxers and their federations to create sex eligibility standards. Its president, Boris van der Vorst, apologized after Khelif was singled out in the governing body's announcement last week. Khelif planned to defend her gold medal at the LA Games, but some boxers and their federations have already spoken out against her inclusion. ___ AP boxing: