At the time of making this trainer/mod menu, the last game update was: 1.04.5, released on October 18, 2022.

Version: 1.0.17.37984884

MSI Afterburner and RivaTuner overlay will interfere with ImGui menu overlay. so it will not work if MSI Afterburner overlay is on. If you have it on, close these programs and try again. any virus hits are false positives.

For future updates:

so you must already know by now this menu will only work on the Rockstar Games version of the game. we might add player model/skin changer in a future update. Anyway, here's a ImGui menu, now you can activate your cheats without having to Alt+Tab for those who use a single monitor. This was kind of a big trainer to make, fixed lots of bugs while making it, but I might've missed some bugs, that's why I want you (the user) to try the trainer and give feedback. we will try our best to fix any issues.


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I have GTA vice city and I recently tried using the GTA vice city ultimate trainer (both the latest and the older versions one by one). The problem I'm facing is that whenever I use the hot keys to activate the infinite health, infinite armour, bullets, etc, the game crashes and reports an unhandled exception namely c0000005. However, when I use the trainer to spawn cars it works alright. I tried pizzadox +10 trainer but the problem with it is that there's no way to get stuff back to normal (such as infinite car damage) once you have activated it.

If I remember correctly you said this was a Warezed version of the game in your last topic. If that's the case you should try using a legal copy (or simply see if the game has in-game cheats, most games of this type do and those are easier than trainers if you're into that sort of thing).

As a child I loved playing with the CheatDevice and seeing this menu loaded via a simple savefile was like dark magic to me.. So I swore myself to understand and learn how to achieve this myself someday. Over the last years I worked on this little project whenever I had some freetime on & off. I am surely no expert in C or reverse engineering but this project helped and I learned a lot. I never intended to release this initially but why keep it for myself. I bet one or two nostalgic oldtimers might have some fun with this just like me.

Although CheatDevice Remastered should work on all PSP/Vita models, Freakler recommends the following configuration: Vita OLED model + Adrenaline eCFW + GTA Remastered prx + GTANativeRes prx + High Memory Layout + 333mhz Game clock + 60 FPS Cheat

After a couple of months under the radar, the Cleveland Clinic this week is publicizing a mobile app to help sports medicine professionals, including athletic trainers, assess player injuries on the spot.

Sideline Guidelines contains easily accessible medical information and branching logic to help trainers and other medical professionals diagnose sports injuries on the sidelines, plan training schedules and decide when an athlete is medically able to return to play.

Spindler had help building content from specialists in cardiovascular disease, neurology, gastrointestinal medicine, otolaryngology, dermatology, dentistry and emergency medicine Cleveland Clinic and other academic medical centers across the country. Prior to joining Cleveland Clinic in 2014, he spent 23 years as head team physician, director of sports medicine, and vice chairman of orthopaedics at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.

Public consciousness of sustainability has also grown considerably over the years, fueled by changing consumer attitudes. I believe the most assured route for our society to embed sustainability into its culture is for consumers to demand sustainable products and services. If the market calls for it, corporations will respond. Changing attitudes of others takes work, and it starts with education. As consumers become more educated about sustainability and demand sustainable offerings, companies will accelerate creation of sustainable products, cut waste and energy consumption from their operations, and purchase recycled materials from their suppliers, all as they attempt to win market-share in their respective industries. While I recognize the value of sustainability for many non-economic reasons, including its environmental, health, and nutritional benefits, having the strength of an economy based upon sustainable goods, services, and operations will only hasten the speed to which our society adapts a more sustainable future.

Mrs. Perry began her career in 1957 as a secretary with Nichols Investment Corp. in Terre Haute, IN. In 1962 she went with IBM Corp. where she worked until 1967 as a secretary in Terre Haute and then educational representative, Ohio region of the IBM office products division in Indianapolis. From 1968 to 1971, she was director of the National Teacher Corps at the University of Massachusetts School of Education and a doctoral student. In 1971 she became an associate professor of education and associate director of Teacher Corps/Peace Corps, Texas Southern University, in Houston until 1974. From 1974 to 1976, Mrs. Perry was an in-country Peace Corps trainer, Kenya (consultant); lecturer in philosophy at the University of Nairobi; United States Information Service consultant in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zambia. In 1976 she was staff trainer at the United Nations Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and in 1978 became dean of international student affairs and professor of education at Texas Southern University in Houston, TX. From 1982 to present, Mrs. Perry has been Chief, Education and Human Resources Division, Office of Technical Resources, Africa Bureau, Agency for International Development.

Since 1964 Mr. Murphy has been with the RCA Corp., when he became an attorney for RCA Global Communications and later vice president and general counsel, 1969; executive vice president for operations, 1972; president and chief operating officer of RCA Global Communications, 1975; and chief executive officer, 1976. He was elected a group vice president of RCA Corp. in 1981 and has continued to serve as chairman and chief executive officer of RCA Communications, Inc., while in his present position as executive vice president for communications and electronic services which he assumed in 1985.

Mr. Himmelfarb is presently contributing editor of Commentary magazine in New York City. Previously he was director, information and research services for the American Jewish Committee. He has served as a visiting professor at the Jewish Theological Seminary and the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and as a visiting lecturer at Yale College.

Mary Jo Jacobi, of Virginia. She would succeed Emory Williams. Since January 1986 Ms. Jacobi has been corporate vice president for Drexel Burnham Lambert, Inc. Previously she was a Special Assistant to the President for Public Liaison, 1983 - 1985. She graduated from Loyola University (B.A., 1973) and George Washington University (M.B.A., 1976). She resides in New York City and was born December 7, 1951, in Bay St. Louis, MS.

07/31/15

by Kurt Beyers


Seven alumni and friends of Fort Hays State University will be honored at the Alumni Awards and Recognition Banquet Friday, Oct. 2, during Homecoming celebrations.


Four honorees will receive the Alumni Achievement Award, the association's highest honor, established in 1959 to recognize graduates who have made outstanding and unselfish contributions in service to their community, state or nation as citizens, in chosen career fields or through philanthropic work.


This year's recipients are Roger Barta, Smith Center, retired high school football coach and mathematics teacher; James "Jim" Gillen, Aurora, Colo., the associate athletic director for facilities and community engagement for Metropolitan State University, Denver, and a retired head athletic trainer and team travel coordinator for the Denver Nuggets; Pamala (Thurman) Larsen, Ph.D., Fort Collins, Colo., professor emeritus of the Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing, University of Wyoming, Laramie; and Jon Rosell, Ph.D., Eastborough, executive director of the Medical Society of Sedgwick County.


One alumna will receive the Young Alumni Award, which is granted to graduates of 10- through 15-year reunion classes to recognize those early in their career for significant business or professional accomplishments or for service to the university and the Alumni Association. This year's recipient is Lacie (Robinson) Gregory, M.D., Wellington, a physician with the Sumner County Family Care Center.


The Nita M. Landrum Award for alumni or friends who have provided sustained volunteer service for the betterment of the Alumni Association or FHSU, especially in their home communities or at any local level, will go to Don Bickle, Hays, chairman of the board for Warehouse Inc.-S&W Supply.


The Distinguished Service Award, which recognizes a graduate or friend of the university who has demonstrated a continuing concern for humanity on a universal, national, state or community level; who supports spiritual, cultural and educational objectives; and who endorses and exemplifies the highest standards of character and personal attributes will be given to Lyle Dilley, Hays, a retired professor of music at FHSU.



ALUMNI ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS

Roger Barta, Smith Center, graduated from FHSU in 1967 with a B.S. in mathematics. He went on to earn an M.S. in math education in 1971 from the University of Georgia, Athens, where he was also awarded a National Foundation Institute Grant. He is a retired math teacher and football coach and is one of the most renowned high school football coaches in the history of the sport.


Over 34 years as Smith Center's coach, from 1978 until retiring in 2012, his teams won 323 games (against 68 losses) and eight state championships, including five straight from 2004 to 2008. From 2004 until 2009, his teams won 79 straight games.


He began his teaching and coaching career as a math teacher and assistant football and basketball coach with Rawlins County USD 105 from 1967 to 1970. In 1971, he was a math teacher and football coach with Tonganoxie USD 464. From 1972 to 1977, he was a math teacher at Trego Community High School, WaKeeney.


He began his Smith Center career in 1978. In addition to coaching, he was also a math teacher there until 2007.


He was inducted into the National High School Athletic Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2011 and into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2014. In 2008, the U.S. All-American Bowl Selection Committee named him the National High School Football Coach of the Year. His story has been featured in The New York Times and in Reader's Digest. He and his teams were also the subject of the 2009 book, Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains with the Smith Center Redmen, by Joe Drape.


James "Jim" Gillen graduated from FHSU with a B.S. in physical education in 1974 and an M.S. in physical education in 1976. Since 2014, he has been the associate athletic director for facilities and community engagement for Metropolitan State University, Denver.


For 23 years he was the head athletic trainer and team travel coordinator for the Denver Nuggets of the National Basketball Association, responsible for working with the team's medical staff to treat injuries and help players during rehabilitation. He retired from that position in 2014.


Before that, he was the assistant athletic trainer for the Denver Broncos, during which time the Broncos played in three Super Bowls, and was part of a staff which was named the NFL's Athletic Training Staff of the Year in 1987. He was an athletic trainer for the AMI/Denver Broncos Sports Medicine Clinic and was head athletic trainer at Overland High School from 1982 to 1986, and at Aurora Central High School from 1980 to 1982. After graduating from FHSU, he was head athletic trainer at Roosevelt High School in San Antonio.


During his career, he was an athletic trainer at three NBA All-Star games - two of them as head trainer - and, in both 2002 and 2007, he received the Joe O'Toole NBA Athletic Trainer of the Year Award. He was also an athletic trainer in 2002 for U.S.A. basketball at the world championships in Indianapolis.


Pamala (Thurman) Larsen, Ph.D., graduated from FHSU with a B.S. in Nursing in 1969. She is a professor emeritus of the Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing at the University of Wyoming, Laramie. She earned an M.S. in nursing from the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, in 1984 and her Ph.D. in human rehabilitation from the University of Northern Colorado in 1989.


Her career in nursing education began as an LPN clinical instructor and RN refresher course instructor at the Larimer County Vocational-Technical Center, Fort Collins, Colo. She was a staff and charge nurse at Poudre Valley Hospital, Fort Collins, from 1979 to 1983 and a Relief House supervisor for the hospital 1990-1995. She taught at the University of Northern Colorado, Wichita State University and the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, as well as at the University of Wyoming.


While at Wichita State, she won the Rodenberg Teaching Award for the College of Health Professions and was director of the undergraduate nursing program. She was director of the School of Nursing and associate dean of the College of Health and Human Services at UNC Charlotte and was also nominated for UNC's Woman of the Year Award.


She and her co-author, Ilene Lubkin, received The American Journal of Nursing Book Award for the seventh edition of their book, "Chronic Illness: Impact and Intervention." The 9th edition of the graduate nursing textbook was published in November 2014. Larsen is also the author of "Finding a Way through Cancer, Dying and Widowhood: A Memoir," published in December 2013. The memoir chronicles her late husband's, Randall E. Larsen, and her journey through his cancer, his death and ultimately her first year of being a widow.


Jon Rosell, Ph.D., graduated from FHSU in 1977 with a B.S. in elementary education. He went on to earn an M.S. in special education from Kansas State University and a Ph.D. in special education administration from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Since 2006, he has been the executive director of the Medical Society of Sedgwick County.


In his position, he is responsible for a variety of programs and services to the community on behalf of 1,200 physician members of the MSSC. Rosell works extensively with other health care organizations and hospitals in the Wichita metropolitan area in order to improve health and health care.


From 2003 to 2006, he was the owner of Professional Rehabilitation Consultants LLC, Wichita, and was the vocational expert for Social Security Appeal Hearings for the Wichita office of the Social Security Administration. Prior to that, he served as the executive director of the Shaklee Institute for Improving Special Education from 1996 to 2003, and executive vice president for Heartspring, Wichita, from 1993 to 2003.


He was vice president of program services for the Institute of Logopedics, Heartspring, from 1991 to 1993 and assistant director of special education for the Leavenworth County Special Education Cooperative from 1986 to 1991. His career has also included teaching stints at the University of Nebraska, Wichita State and, in 1977, as a special education teacher in Clay Center.


YOUNG ALUMNI AWARD

Lacie (Robinson) Gregory, M.D., Wellington, earned a B.S. in biology from FHSU in 2003. She then earned a medical degree from the University of Kansas School of Medicine, Wichita, in 2007. She is a family practice physician in private practice at the Sumner County Family Care Center. She served her residency at Via Christi, Wichita, where she was selected by her peers as chief resident.


In 2007, she received the P.G. Czarlinsky Family Award, presented to a senior student at the Wichita campus for outstanding performance as a student clinician, recognizing skill in patient care and management and understanding of the scholarship and application of the "principles of clinical science. During her medical school education, she also received the competitive Olive Ann Beech Scholarship, which provides funds for a medical student who promises to serve in an inner-city or rural underserved area of Kansas. In 2009, she received an American Academy of Family Physicians Bristol Meyer Squibb Graduate Medical Education Award. This award is given annually to the 20 top family medicine residents in the nation, out of about 3,000 candidates. And, in 2010, she was also presented with an Award of Excellence in Graduate Medical Education from the Wichita School of Medicine.


After her three-year residency, she was recruited to join the faculty of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the KU School of Medicine-Wichita, but, said the chair of the department, she declined in order to enter private family practice in Wellington. "The entire reason Dr. Gregory went to medical school was to practice medicine in a rural community, so she is living her dream," said Dr. Rick Kellerman, a 1975 FHSU graduate.


Her special interest is maternal healthcare and women's healthcare. Faculty at Wichita during her medical school career noted, "Her strength is her compassion and empathy for patients. She exhibits that old-school special commodity of 'bedside manner.'"


NITA LANDRUM AWARD

Don Bickle, Hays, is the recipient of the Nita M. Landrum Award for alumni or friends who have provided sustained volunteer service for the betterment of the Alumni Association and FHSU.


Bickle is a past president of both Warehouse Inc. and S&W Supply and is the current chairman of the board for both businesses. He has a long and distinguished record of generosity and support for Fort Hays State University, the Hays community and the state and nation.


He holds Platinum membership in the FHSU Alumni Association and received the Association's Distinguished Service Award in 1995. He is a member of the FHSU President's Roundtable, the College of Business and Entrepreneurship Advisory Board and the FHSU President's Club. He is also a member of Tiger Club and a Difference Maker for the university's athletics. In 2010, he was inducted into the Tiger Sports Hall of Fame.


His community service includes membership on the board of directors for the Hays Medical Center Foundation. He is a past member of the Ellis County Historical Society, a past president of the Kansas Association of Realtors and Hays Realtors, and state chair of the Realtors Political Action Committee. The Kansas Realtors named him Realtor of the Year in 1988, and he was twice named Hays Realtor of the Year.

He is a former member of the Commerce Bank Board of Directors and a past member and vice president of the Ellis County Coalition for Economic Development. He has also been a member of the board of directors for the Hays Area Chamber of Commerce.


He and his wife, Chris, have made numerous contributions to the betterment of the university, including financial support for athletic scholarships and the Schmidt/Bickle Indoor Training Facility. Additionally, the Bickles have generously donated to the Beyond Medicine Capital Campaign of HaysMed and are major donors to the Bickle/Schmidt Sports Complex.


DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD

Lyle Dilley, Hays, a retired professor of music at FHSU, is the Distinguished Service Award winner. His music education was at Wichita State University, earning a Bachelor of Music Education in 1948 and a Master of Music Education in 1957. His career as an educator started in 1948 in Belle Plaine, where he taught vocal music for grades 1 through 12 and instrumental music for grades 4 through 12 in addition to teaching world history and supervising a study hall.


By 1951, the Belle Plaine band had increased from 30 to 60 members. He began teaching in Wellington that year, teaching band and orchestra in five grade schools as well as in junior high and senior high schools. He also directed a junior high choir.


He came to FHSU in 1961 as director of bands and instructor of low brass. By 1970, the band had grown from about 50 to 150 members. His other duties came to include conducting the Hays Symphony Orchestra and conducting and supervising student teaching. He became director of the High Plains Band Camp (now High Plains Music Camp) in 1975.


He organized the second Kansas High School Marching Band competition in 1962 and the first Kansas High School Invitational Concert Band workshop in 1963. In 1985, he organized the Hays Symphony Guild to support the work of the Hays Symphony Orchestra. The FHSU Symphonic Band, Hays Symphony Orchestra and Low Brass Choir performed at the Kansas Music Educator's Association state conventions numerous times under his baton. The Symphonic Band also was selected to perform for several regional music conventions across the central United States sponsored by the Music Educator's National Convention.


Music education has not been just a career for him, it has been a cause and a mission. Professionally, this has meant membership and leadership in the Kansas Music Educators Association as president and vice president; president of KMEA District 6; state chair of the College Band Directors National Association; and membership with the American School Band Directors Association.


His musical career also included 11 years as a bass trombonist in the Wichita Symphony Orchestra. 0852c4b9a8

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