 You need a financial advisor with the freedom to focus on your specific needs. Whatever your goals, Reeve Potter can create a game plan tailored to you. Call Reeve at 432-0777 at Pikeville, Kentucky to learn more. The University of Kentucky is training the next generation of cancer researchers and healthcare providers. The Markey Cancer Center Program Appalachian Center Training and Oncology, otherwise known as ACTION, is set to take on East Kentucky's cancer crisis. Mountain Top News spoke with the program director Nathan Vandiverd to learn more. This program, ACTION, recruits students from the area, any of the counties in eastern Kentucky that are in the Appalachian region, so that's 54 counties, we recruit high school students and undergraduates and we provide them cancer training, cancer research, cancer education, some clinical shadowing opportunities, career development opportunities. With the idea that we're going to prepare them, motivate them to pursue cancer careers and then stay in Kentucky and help us battle this issue, either as healthcare providers, researchers, people who can be out in the community helping raise awareness about the issues and how to prevent cancer or detect it early so that we can have better outcomes of the disease. The program is funded by the National Cancer Institute. UK is focused on preparing college and high school students to stay in the area and fight cancer. We've had 136, I believe it is alumni now, people that we've engaged, students we've engaged and just of our undergraduates, 33 of those now are in graduate or professional school and those are all people who are in biomedical training programs. The majority of the high school students that have been in the program have moved from high school into college. The majority of them are in a science-related field and continuing to pursue the next level. They're interested in med school, grad school also. So far, I think we're doing a pretty good job. Reporting from Mountain Top News, I'm Nick Colum.