NASA just unveiled something absolutely shocking – Morning Ticker


Morning Ticker
NASA just unveiled something absolutely shocking
Morning Ticker
An incredible new piece of equipment was just unveiled down in Florida by NASA, and it's a concept that could forever change man's mission to Mars. The space agency unveiled a Mars rover concept that will serve as an intermediary step toward an actual ...
NASA Finds Evidence of Diverse Environments in Curiosity SamplesAstrobiology Magazine (registration)
NASA's new Mars rover could be the future of space transportKomando
NASA Unveils Mars Rover ConceptCitizen TV (press release)
Times Now -Newstalk 106-108 fm -ScienceAlert
all 17 news articles »

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NASA just unveiled something absolutely shocking - Morning Ticker

Nanotechnology Reveals Hidden Depths of Bacterial ‘Machines’ – Controlled Environments Magazine

New research from the University of Liverpool, published in the journal Nanoscale, has probed the structure and material properties of protein machines in bacteria, which have the capacity to convert carbon dioxide into sugar through photosynthesis.

Cyanobacteria are a phylum of bacteria that produce oxygen and energy during photosynthesis, similar to green plants. They are among the most abundant organisms in oceans and fresh water. Unique internal 'machines' in cyanobacteria, called carboxysomes, allow the organisms to convert carbon dioxide to sugar and provide impacts on global biomass production and our environment.

Carboxysomes are nanoscale polyhedral structures that are made of several types of proteins and enzymes. So far, little is known about how these 'machines' are constructed and maintain their organisation to perform carbon fixation activity.

Researchers from the University's Institute of Integrative Biology, led by Royal Society University Research Fellow Dr. Luning Liu, examined in depth the native structure and mechanical stiffness of carboxysomes using advanced microscopes and biochemical approaches.

For the first time, the researchers were able to biochemically purify active carboxysomes from cyanobacteria and characterize their carbon fixation activity and protein composition. They then used electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy to visualise the morphology and internal protein organization of these bacterial machines.

Furthermore, the intrinsic mechanical properties of the three-dimensional structures were determined for the first time. Though structurally resembling polyhedral viruses, carboxysomes were revealed to be much softer and structurally flexible, which is correlated to their formation dynamics and regulation in bacteria.

Liu, said: "It's exciting that we can make the first 'contact' with these nano-structures and understand how they are self-organised and shaped using state-of-the-art techniques available at the University. Our findings provide new clues about the relationship between the structure and functionality of native carboxysomes."

The self-assembly and modularity features of carboxysomes make them interesting systems for nanoscientists, synthetic biologists and bioengineers, who hope to find ways to design new nanomaterials and nano-bioreactors.

"We're now just starting to understand how these bacterial machines are built and work in nature. Our long-term vision is to harness the knowledge to make further steps towards better design and engineering of bio-inspired machines," added Liu, "The knowledge and techniques can be extended to other biological machines."

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Philips highlights the value of advanced molecular imaging at SNMMI 2017 – PR Newswire (press release)

"Molecular imaging today allows physicians to make decisions with greater insight, precision and confidence, bringing healthcare one step closer to personalized care," said Kirill Shalyaev, Ph.D., Business Leader, Advanced Molecular Imaging, Philips. "Philips has made a lasting impact in nuclear medicine by providing clinicians with innovations such as Time-of-Flight PET and digital PET/CT, and we remain dedicated to developing solutions that simplify the path to clinical decision making for more confident diagnosis and a faster path to treatment."

Even with its significant growth in past years, the opportunity for further innovation and growth in nuclear medicine remains, continuing to maximize its value and impact. Philips' SNMMI exhibit (booth 657) will feature the company's latest solutions and technologies driving the future of nuclear medicine:

Innovation Talks This year, Philips will host a number of talks and presentations at its booth (#657) at SNMMI. In addition, Philips' academic partners will present 19 scientific presentations and posters demonstrating the value Philips' digital PET/CT system is bringing to molecular imaging advancing knowledge and application using features such as lesion detection and quantitative imaging.

For more information on Philips' molecular imaging solutions, and to learn more about the company's presence at SNMMI 2017, visit booth 657, http://www.philips.com/snmmi and follow the conversation on@PhilipsLiveFrom.

For further information, please contact: Alicia CafardiPhilips Group CommunicationsTel: + 1 412-523-9616E-mail: alicia.cafardi@philips.com

About Royal PhilipsRoyal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA) is a leading health technology company focused on improving people's health and enabling better outcomes across the health continuum from healthy living and prevention, to diagnosis, treatment and home care. Philips leverages advanced technology and deep clinical and consumer insights to deliver integrated solutions. Headquartered in the Netherlands, the company is a leader in diagnostic imaging, image-guided therapy, patient monitoring and health informatics, as well as in consumer health and home care. Philips' health technology portfolio generated 2016 sales of EUR 17.4 billion and employs approximately 70,000 employees with sales and services in more than 100 countries. News about Philips can be found at http://www.philips.comnewscenter.

[1] Nguyen NC,Image Quality and Diagnostic Performance of a Digital PET Prototype in Patients with Oncologic Diseases: Initial Experience and Comparison with Analog PET, J Nucl Med 2015; 56:13781385.[2] Liu X et al, Impact of FDG Dose Reduction on Lesion Quantification in Dynamic PET: A Simulation Study Based on Clinical Trial Data, SNMMI 2016.[3] Zhang J., Evaluation of speed of PET acquisition: How fast can we go? - A validation of list mode PET simulation approach with true acquisitions, SNMMI 2017.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/philips-highlights-the-value-of-advanced-molecular-imaging-at-snmmi-2017-300472014.html

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Philips highlights the value of advanced molecular imaging at SNMMI 2017 - PR Newswire (press release)

How To Create A Perfect Wedding Snapchat Filter With WeddingWire – International Business Times

When it comes to planning a wedding, no detail is too small to perfect. But that doesnt mean anything should be more stressful than necessary. So Snapchat teamed up with WeddingWire to offer strung out brides and grooms an easy way to make the perfect geofilter for every piece of the wedding, from engagement announcement to walking down the aisle.

While Snapchat already offered custom geofilters on its website, the templates werent specificallydesigned with the big day in mind. Users could upload their own designs, but not everyone has the time, skill or technology to design and create exactly what they have in mind.

Read: How To Make A Custom Snapchat Filter

One of the wedding Snapchat filters available on WeddingWire designed by Domino's. Photo: WeddingWire

WeddingWires partnership with Snap changes that. Now users who want a Dominos Pizza, Paper Source or Lily Pulitzer wedding themed filter can get it easily. WeddingWire has a variety of designsfrom different brands to commemorate the wedding, bachelor or bachelorette parties, engagement party or honeymoon.

The Domino's design options for Snapchat filters from WeddingWire. Photo: WeddingWire

WeddingWire is a site used for wedding planning and added the Snapchat filters as the next step in integrating technology into the planning process. "Social media is an essential component for couples celebrating their big day with friends and family. Our wedding-themed Snapchat geofilters templates are a leading example for how to personalize social sharing at specific wedding locations across the country,"Sonny Ganguly, chief marketing officer, saidin a press release from WeddingWire.

The process of making a custom filter with WeddingWire is very similar to making a custom filter on Snapchats site except WeddingWire only offers templates that you can tweak, and not the option to upload your own design. If you have a design youd like to upload yourself and turn into a filter, you can do that on Snapchats website. But remember, Snapchat doesnt allow hash tags in their custom filters so be sure to leave the # symbol out of it. Both sites allow users to design from a template and set time and location restraints for the geofilters.

Read: Snapchat Custom Stories Update: How To Use New Feature

You can access the homepage for the wedding filters here. Once youre on that page you can filter the wide range of filter templates by brand, event or season. Once you do that, scroll through until you see one you like. If you want to see a preview of one just click it and it will appear on the photo to the left side of the screen, you can click through these to see the filter in a few different variations.

An example of one of the Domino's Snapchat filter templates for wedding celebrations. Photo: WeddingWire

Once you think you have the one you want, click Next at the bottom. This will bring you to a page where you can customize the text on the screen with different fonts, text sizes and colors. Once you have that chosen you can choose the location, square footage you want the filter to cover and the dates and duration for which you want the filter available.

Then you pay and submit and youre all set. To improve the chance that your filter will be approved on time you may want to submit it a few days in advance even though Snapchat says it only takes one business day for the filters to be approved.

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How To Create A Perfect Wedding Snapchat Filter With WeddingWire - International Business Times

Leveraging science, technology helps farmers thrive – Las Cruces Sun-News

Paula Heikell, For the Sun-News 8:45 a.m. MT June 11, 2017

Wes Richins, right, owner of SCALE Ag Services, talks with his team and Garrett Salopek,left, about the different application for the Phytech dendrometer,system, which help monitor the micro-variations of trunk radius with in there microns, helping farmers gauge water usage in orchards. Wednesday Mary 24, 2017.(Photo: Josh Bachman/Sun-News)Buy Photo

LAS CRUCES -Imagine being able to individually monitor every single plant across many fields of crops to determine its specific water and nutrient needs on a given day; or recycling thousands of gallons of agricultural waste water back into 100 percent pure drinking water. These are the things that Wes Richins, owner of SCALE Ag Services of Las Cruces, thinks about as hes developing products to help his agricultural customers be successful.

Richins has spent his life in agriculture. After growing up on a farm, he earned an agricultural business degree at New Mexico State University, worked at WR Grace, and spent 18 years at Agriliance (now WinField) before launching his own agricultural supply business. Eleven years later, hes built a thriving company that sells macro- and micro-nutrients, soil amendments, seeds and other products to farms throughout the western U.S. and internationally.

However, Richins focus is not limited to supplies. Hes also on the constant lookout to find next-generation techniques and tools to help his customers address emerging trends that can impact their business.

A Phytech dendrometer, set up by SCALE Ag Services, is pictured here in on of the pecan orchards owned by Frank Paul Salopek and Sons Farms. The hardware helps monitor the micro-variations of trunk radius within there microns, helping farmers gauge water usage in orchards. Wednesday May 24, 2017.(Photo: Josh Bachman/Sun-News)

Most recently, Richins has added crop stress monitoring technology to the SCALE Ags product line, partly inspired by his own farming experience. Wed planted some seed and when the yield didnt turn out as expected, the supplier told us it was because of water management, he said. That aggravated me; from everything I could see, we had good water management. I got to thinking there had to be a better way to view and manage whats happening in the field.

After doing some research, he found and became a distributor for PhyTech, a plant monitoring system that uses sensors to capture individual plant data and upload it in a real-time data stream to the farmer. The data helps to determine how much water, nutrition and light is needed for specific plants, if theyre stressed, and what they need for the best growing conditions. The system even has a component that will predict the next weeks weather conditions, said Heather Bedale, SCALE Ags PhyTech product manager.

SCALE Ag began selling the PhyTech system in Februaryto customers in the southwest U.S. and Mexico.

Heather Bedale, with SCALE Ag Services, explains how the Phytech system collects data from the dendrometer sensors on the pecan trees in the Frank Paul Salopek and Sons farms orchard and sends it to a cloud database system where the Salopeks can review how much moister is in the soil and trees. Wednesday May 23, 2017.(Photo: Josh Bachman/Sun-News)

Richins also believes that water management is going to become one, if not the most crucial element that farmers will be dealing with in the future, and hes already investing resources to understand what that will specifically mean to his customers and their community. Water management tools that help plant utilization of water and nutrients are going to be ever more important as time goes on, he said.

With this in mind, he is working closely with Enviro Water Minerals Company, an El Paso-based firm that has developed new technology to reclaim agricultural waste water and turn it into drinking water. EWCs first plant, which is about to go online, will return 2.2 million gallons of drinking water to the city that they didnt have, he said. and with PhyTech, we will be to enhance the utilization of the water assets we have today.

Wes Richins, owner of Scale Ag Services, holds a Phytech dendrometer, a water monitoring system. Wednesday May 24, 2017.(Photo: Josh Bachman/Sun-News)

Another benefit of the reclamation process is that it extracts elements such as high-grade gypsum out of the reclaimed waste water that can be reused in farming. The process is yielding nearly 99.9 percent pure gypsum, which can be used as a fertilizer and a salt mitigation product in the fields, said Richins. So were taking a product that was being disposed of and reclaiming it, so it can be applied to the soil to make it healthier.

He is also working to bring humic acid, another product used for salt mitigation and increasing micro-nutrient availability in soil, to his customers. We also have a sugar alcohol system developed by Brandt, he said, Its like taking a hypodermic needle and sticking it into a leaf so the nutrients are rapidly metabolized in the plant with no energy loss.

Richins takes a farmers first focus in everything he considers. He wants his customers to know that they wont get cookie cutter answers when they call SCALE Ag for help. He has built a team of agricultural specialists who have in-depth knowledge to address a range of issues. One such expert is Beland, who brings a masters degree in agricultural biology and statistics, and considerable research experience to the company. Another is Derek Davidson, who grew up on Silver Farms in San Miguel and earned an agriculture degree at NMSU before joining Scale Ag.

We spend a lot of time talking to individual farmers, Richins said. We want them to know that were here to do the research and help them find the right solution for their specific needs.

Paula Heikell is a freelance writer who can be reached at paula@wordwell.net.

For more information:

SCALE Ag Services, LLC 961 Sand Castle Avenue Las Cruces, NM 88012

Contact: Heather Bedale

Phone: 575-382-1642

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Little Mix’s Jesy Nelson debuts most extreme new look yet – Entertainment Daily

Once upon a time, itwas 80s/90s superstar Madonna who was the queen of transformations.

Oneweek she'd look like a virgin, the next, er, she wouldn't.

But now in 2017, it would appear that Little Mix star Jesy Nelson is the pop songstress who is constantly surprising us with her amazing new looks.

If it's not her sassy attire, it's her immaculately applied make up that sends us and her fans into a spinof delight.

Week in week out, Jesy manages to pull off a different look that sends her fans wold (Credit: Instagram)

And over the weekend, it was no differentas the stylish young miss was happily flaunting her most extremelook yet that had us all talking.

The svelte starlet was appearingwith her bandmates at Capital's Summertime Ball and caused a sensation in a stunning outfit (below).

At first glance her high-waisted jeans and white lace-up top combo might notlook all that spectacular.

But when you peek a little closer, you'll see that she has pulled off a masterpiece.

This image had fas in a dither - just look at loose those jeans are! (Credit: Instagram)

Yes, look at that toned waistand you can see that herjeans are literally hanging off her!

She's either getting slimmer by the minute or she's slipped onher boyfriend's jeans by mistake, because they look like they are a size too large.

But the one question on our mind is,how on earth has she managed to keep them up?

Has she stapled them to her body? Is she wearing some kind of sticky tape that keeps them from hitting the floor?

Who knows? All we can say is she looks utterly stunning.

But that wasn't all. The Little Mixeralso used the Summertime Ball to showcase yet another stunning new hair colour.

Jesy also showcased yet another new hair colour - this time candy floss pin (Credit: Instagram)

This time - a week after she went blonde at Radio 1's Big Weekend - she debuted ahead full of pastel pink locks.

And as you can imagineher fans were beside themselves with joy!

Alone one minute, red the next - now it's pink! It's amazing she still has hair. (Credit: Instagram)

"Your hair is amazing," one fan gushed.

"The pink hair is slaying me," another giddily added.

Meanwhile, concern has grown over a mysteryblack smudge Jesy was seen sporting on her pancake flat tum in a recent upload.

Can you see it? Fans were concerned about the odd black blemish (Credit: Instagram)

Fans noticed the strange blemish on a pic on Instagram last month and asked Jesy what it was- though Jesy is yetto put her concerned fans' minds at ease.

However, many think it couldjust be a trick of the light.

Of course, Jesy is no stranger to posting pictures of herself and - as vain as it may seem -youcan see why she is hooked.

No sooner has she posted a stunner of a picof herself and her fans will hurriedly reassure her that she is one fine looking lady.

When she posted the image belowat the Radio 1 Big Weekend last weekfans couldn't contain themselves.

One fan gasped, I AM IN LOVE WITH YOUR HAIR JESY!!!!!! while another squealed,Honestly what look does Jesy not suit?

Jesy loves posting pics and why wouldn't you when you have thousands of fans telling you how good you look (Credit: Instagram)

When she was in Vienna and posted a pic of herself in a bra top and snug-fitting jeans, fans went off the scale about her stunning looks.

HOW DO YOU EVEN GET TO THIS LEVEL OF BEAUTY?!?!?!?" one fan squealed before, no doubt, having a lie down in a dark room.

Jesy in a snugger pair of jeans (Credit: Instagram)

What a lucky girlJesy is. A fan base whospend all their waking hours telling herhow gorgeous sheis.

Maybe we can borrow them.

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Little Mix's Jesy Nelson debuts most extreme new look yet - Entertainment Daily

Take all steps for fair auction: Amarinder to mining dept – Daily News & Analysis

After the cancellation of the mining e-auction slated for June 11, Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh has directed the mining department to take all steps to ensure fair and transparent sale of the 56 mines in question.

The fresh bidding will now be conducted in the first week of July.

The mining department yesterday announced cancellation of the June 11 e-auction of 56 sand mines due to failure of some bidders to upload necessary documents.

A fresh notification for the e-auction of these mines would be issued next week, with a stringent check list to be provided online for strict compliance by the prospective bidders, an official spokesperson said today.

The check list has been formulated keeping in mind all the relevant conditions necessary to ensure impartial dealing through the entire auction process, said the spokesperson, adding that the chief minister had made it clear that any deviation from norms would be dealt with strictly.

The chief minister is himself keeping a close watch on the auction related activities, which will be monitored, as in the earlier case, by neutral and independent officials, from the judiciary and other departments.

Reiterating his government's commitment to total transparency in the progressive bidding for the mines, which will further augment the supply of sand and stabilise its prices in the state, he has asked the concerned officials to keep a tight control on the auction process.

No laxity in this regard would be tolerated, the chief minister has warned, underlining his zero tolerance to corruption and his commitment to completely eliminating sand mafia from the state.

While registering for the participation in e-auction, the bidder will have to ensure that all the conditions in the tender document are strictly adhered to, the spokesperson said.

The bidders have been asked to upload their documents as per the requirement of tender document in future.

In case of any confusion or doubt, the tender document can be referred to on the website http://www.investpunjab.gov.in or the prospective bidder may contact the help desk number, the spokesperson said.

The department has already initiated the steps for refund of the Earnest Money Deposit (EMD) of the bidders who had applied for the June 11 auction and the same shall be completed by June 13.

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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Take all steps for fair auction: Amarinder to mining dept - Daily News & Analysis

Republican Congressman: Socialized medicine is knocking on the door, America – Fox News

The ObamaCare status quo is unacceptable.

Its become so obvious that politicians on both sides of the aisle are acknowledging it and proposing solutions to fix it.

The majority of House Republicans voted to pass the American Health Care Act in May, which currently awaits debate in the Senate.

In America, we value choice, competition, and access to care. In socialized medicine, those luxuries would be gone.

The majority of House Democrats have proposed an alternative fix called the Expanded & Improved Medicare for All Act, otherwise known as "single payer." This should send shivers down the spine of any tax-paying, Constitution-loving American.

Socialized medicine in America is no longer a hypothetical. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) won 12 million votes in the 2016 Democratic primaries with a single payer platform, and the DNC is encouraging Democrats to campaign on the issue in 2018.

But what would the single payer reality look like?

First, the cost. The nonpartisan Urban Institute studied Sanders plan, determining it would cost taxpayers an additional $32 trillion over the next decade. Essentially the federal government would have to double the $3.2 trillion in tax receipts it collected in 2016 each year to pay for it.

The Democrats' single payer dream would double the taxes of every American to pay Washington bureaucrats to manage government-run hospitals.

Doubling the size of the federal government would take massive tax increases. An across the board doubling of rates would drive the top bracket from 39.6 percent to a whopping 79.2 percent tax of their income. Individuals making $38,000 a year would see their marginal rate grow to 50 percent from the current 25 percent.

In return, every American would be forced onto a socialized health care system to receive insurance from central planners in Washington. Every single American who has a private health insurance policy - some 178 million Americans - would immediately be forced off of their current insurance.

In America, we value choice, competition, and access to care. In socialized medicine, those luxuries would be gone.

For a real world example, look to Great Britain, where think tanks, universities, and government officials say its National Health Service (NHS) is at its breaking point. Financial strain, staff shortages, and unprecedented demand are leading to rationing of care.

Under a similar system, our wait times for routine surgeries like knee replacements would surpass 14 weeks, far longer than the 11 days it is now.

Long wait times would worsen our already existing emergency room overcrowding because Medicaid patients cant find primary care doctors who will accept their insurance.

Eventually, our emergency rooms could face a 50 percent doctor shortage.

In addition to the overcrowding, severe doctor shortages would be exacerbated as doctors would flee the system rather than be forced to take inadequate reimbursements for their services as set by the government.

Eventually, a two-tiered system based on wealth status would emerge here as it has in other socialized systems.

Private doctors would allow wealthy patients to jump the line for same-day appointments for a price. The rest of us would be forced to wait months for a visit with the government.

The Democrats' single payer dream would double the taxes of every American to pay Washington bureaucrats to manage government-run hospitals. Wait times would increase exponentially and access to life-saving care would shrink. It would be a nightmare for the American people.

Thankfully, its not too late.

To stop socialized medicine from becoming reality, Congress must continue its rescue mission. We must bring insurers back to the marketplace so we can lower costs and increase access to care.

The House has laid out one pathway to save American health care. As the Senate appears poised to vote on a bill soon, one thing remains true: our country must unite in our opposition to the nightmare of socialized medicine.

Republican Kevin Yoder is a United States Congressman, representing Kansas' 3rd District.

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Republican Congressman: Socialized medicine is knocking on the door, America - Fox News

Kamen predicts Millyard will be a hotbed of regenerative medicine … – The Union Leader

Manchester inventor and DEKA founder Dean Kamen is heading the new Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing Institute in the Manchester Millyard. He gave a tour of some of the spaces Wednesday.(DAVID LANE/UNION LEADER) Manchester inventor and DEKA and ARMI founder Dean Kamen gives a tour of the new entry area at DEKA headquarters at Manchester on Wednesday.(DAVID LANE/UNION LEADER) MANCHESTER --Inventor Dean Kamen hopes Manchester can become the Silicon Valley for regenerative medicine, attracting researchers and companies to collaborate and make human skin, blood and organs.

Some ideas "almost seem like science fiction," Kamen said during an interview at his company, DEKA Research & Development Corp., in the Millyard.

More than 80 companies, universities and other organizations have signed on to the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing Institute that Kamen is heading at 400 Commercial St.

"ARMI wants to connect all the research, the billions of dollars that's already been spent to create these miracles and the billions that's going to need to be spent to bring them to the public that needs them to offer the public what will be trillions of dollars of medical care value," Kamen said last week. "ARMI just wants to accelerate all those connections to happen."

"Imagine all of these researchers have these miracles in their laboratories," Kamen said, but getting their discoveries into production may be beyond their capabilities.

ARMI has received $80 million in federal funding and another $214 million in cash and in-kind donations from the various partners.

Changing lives

"Literally, probably every family in America is ultimately touched by some medical problem that regenerative medicine can fix," Kamen said.

Kamen's inventions have included the Segway Human Transporter and the first wearable insulin pump for diabetics.

"If ARMI works, it will overshadow any one of the individual inventions I've worked on," said Kamen, who will be appearing Tuesday at the New Hampshire High Tech Council's Entrepreneur of the Year event at Southern New Hampshire University to talk about the project.

Retiring Dartmouth-Hitchcock Health CEO and President James Weinstein, who has joined the ARMI effort, said the institute's successes could bring widespread benefits.

"It has the potential to alter the lives of hundreds of thousands of people around the world and most importantly, to improve the quality of those lives," said Weinstein, who will continue to practice as an orthopedic surgeon. "Not just the patients, but their family members, who will no longer have to see them suffer and struggle."

Companies signing on

Kamen said it's difficult to predict how many jobs will be created, but he envisions companies sending workers to the Millyard and startup companies springing up.

"If a substantial number of them end up clustering around this Millyard and this area the same way the semiconductor industry clustered around what became known as Silicon Valley, it could be lots and lots of people," Kamen said.

"I think if it goes as I expect, what you're going to see is a couple of giant companies, big pharma companies that everyone's heard of, companies like Merck and Pfizer, that want to be at the table," Kamen said. "Then you're going to see a cottage industry around them of companies that need each other, that have some piece but not the whole piece to get to scale (to production)."

Milwaukee-based Rockwell Automation, which describes itself as the world's largest company dedicated to industrial automation and information, has committed $10 million over five years.

"This is literally a life-changing approach and adds a new chapter to medicine," Blake Moret, CEO of Rockwell Automation, said in a statement announcing his company's participation. "Our contribution is to integrate biomanufacturing science with production techniques that increase the capacity, speed, modularity and consistent quality of new tissue and organ production."

Kamen said he thinks ARMI participants will develop a manufacturing process in the Millyard and "they'll actually make stuff there to prove that it's makable." But it's still too early to know whether materials to be put into humans will be made in Manchester or elsewhere.

Potential projects

Kamen said he promised the Department of Defense that within five years ARMI would be self-sustaining financially. The institute is compiling a matrix of project ideas, considering factors such as cost, lowest risk and what would help the most people. No obvious project candidate has emerged.

"We're looking at maybe a couple of parallel paths, quick-start paths which will allow us to demonstrate industrial scale on something quickly over the next couple of years at the same time we start down the road to make some of the really big wins to happen within five years, but it's too early to know which ones are going to be at the top of those lists," Kamen said.

He said a couple of researchers are "on the cusp" of making blood cells, perhaps leading to mass-producing blood and lessening the danger of contaminated blood.

"We're sitting there saying, 'What would prevent us from building essentially a modern version of a bioreactor, some cross between a still or a brewery system ... that could make blood at a scale that we no longer need blood drives?'" Kamen said. "I think that's a possibility."

ARMI is working with the University of New Hampshire-Manchester to set up a program to train workers in biotech research.

"So I think what's going to happen is ARMI will build a little lab that can show that these kinds of things work, and then some group is going to say, 'Well, I can use that to make skin or bone or pieces of cardiac tissue for people or retinas,'" Kamen said.

"And based on their knowledge and their expertise and their individual passion, they'll set up a place around here that will leverage these skill sets and hire the people that are coming out of the university with the skills to run these machines."

mcousineau@unionleader.com

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Kamen predicts Millyard will be a hotbed of regenerative medicine ... - The Union Leader

Nebraska Medicine Holds Reunion for Nurses and Former NICU … – KMTV – 3 News Now

OMAHA, Neb. (KMTV) - -

Theyre the hospitals most vulnerable patients - premature babies, some born as early as 24 weeks along, and now they are growing strong thanks to their dedicated Neonatal Intensive Care team.

Saturday, the nurses and families reunited at Nebraska Medicine.

I didnt even know I was in labor. I thought they were going to send me home, put me on bed rest, recalled Allyson Storoy.

A few days after Christmas of 2015, Storoy went to the Bellevue Medical Center complaining of cramps. She was 24 weeks pregnant.

They were like, The babies are here. Like, theyre coming right now, she Storoy.

She gave birth to twins at Bellevue Medical and was taken by ambulance in the middle of a snowstorm to Nebraska Medicine where the NICU facilities were better equipped.

Her baby girl died 5 days later, but baby Samuel survived.

He was just so tiny. He just still need[ed] to develop. He came out and he was 1 lb. 11 oz. He was bright pink, one eye open, she described Samuel.

Allyson and her husband Hans spent 89 days in the NICU, but said their nurses made them feel at home.

Such a traumatizing experience and theyre there to lift your spirits and help you feel better day to day. So, we definitely appreciate everything they did, said Storoy.

Saturday, over 200 former patients and family members came back to Nebraska Medicine to reunite with the nurses and doctors that saved their lives.

Its just great to see these babies from when they were teeny, teeny tiny to now theyre one, two, three even up to 10 years old. To see how well theyve matured and grown, said nurse Sara Milliken.

Milliken says preemies need help breathing and learning to eat, and even experienced parents need help learning to care for someone so small.

We take care of the babies and the parents will be on the other side and will help change diapers and take temperatures,

All these babies are now growing strong thanks to their extended family at Nebraska Medicine.

It makes you tear up when you see these babies and youre like, Oh, my gosh, look how good you guys look! said Milliken.

Nebraska medicines NICU has been caring for newborns and preemies since 1968. They hold the reunion annually and many families attend year after year.

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Nebraska Medicine Holds Reunion for Nurses and Former NICU ... - KMTV - 3 News Now

AMA’s vigor, vision spread across all areas of medicine: AMA CEO … – American Medical Association (blog)

The AMA, founded 170 years ago, is not showing its age as it moves energetically to develop critical resources and policies for medicine, guide lifelong professional development and physician growth, improve the nations health and marshal changes that touch virtually every corner of the country, the Associations Executive Vice President and CEO James L. Madara, MD, said during Saturdays opening session of the 2017 AMA Annual Meeting.

The Associations three major initiativesto improve professional satisfaction and practice sustainability, create the medical school of the future and improve health outcomes for patients with prediabetes and hypertensionhave gained traction and national attention, Dr. Madara said. They also have begun to interconnect and broaden, incorporating critical advocacy work and organically linking to other initiatives.

In the area of professional satisfaction, initial work on the STEPS Forward collection of practice-improvement modules has expanded to the MACRA Action Kit, the Payment Model Evaluator, and the organizations ongoing efforts to expand the innovation ecosystem and take a leadership role in digital medicine.

Creating tools and policies to promote satisfaction also extends to our recent work defining principles for better electronic health record usability, Dr. Madara said, adding that efforts in this area also created the principles to reform prior authorizationprinciples that are now supported by more than 100 organizations and are aimed at correcting deep flaws in prior authorization.

The AMAs focus on physician development and growth began with encouraging medical education innovation and now extends to the redesign of our Education Center, our initiatives to combat physician burnout, and of course to the JAMA Network, he said.

When it comes to improving health outcomes, an effort that first saw partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has expanded to include work with other organization leaders such as the American Heart Association to help change patient behavior by integrating prevention into care settings in a way that does not further burden practicing physicians. In this area too, the scope has widened to include vital roles in advancing personalized medicine and health equity while reducing the opioid epidemic.

Conceiving of the Associations essential work in this way tells a more complete story of the AMAand that is a story of leadership, Dr. Madara said. And it is leadership that spreads far, deep and wide, extending to:

Before concluding, Dr. Madara touched on something really big and incredibly, incredibly importantthe Associations leadership effort on health-system reform.

The AMAs aim, he said, is to ensure that the 20 million-plus Americans who have gained insurance coverage in recent years do not lose it and to encourage lawmakers to view health care from the shoes of the patient, to encourage them, as our campaign states, to put patients before politics.

The AMA is working broadly with others to promote a comprehensive vision for health reform that seeks to expand affordable and meaningful coverage, protect funding for safety-net programs, strengthens the individual insurance market and creates cost transparency, he said.

We all have to acknowledge the challenging political environment were working in. We are truly in unchartered waters, Dr. Madara added. Yet, we will push forward with mission, advocacy and leadership three words that have defined the AMA over these last 170 years.

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Dr. David Katz, Preventative Medicine: Do we dare to eat lectins – New Haven Register

Lectins are a family of proteins found in many plants, dairy, yeast, eggs, and seafood that can bind to other molecules, notably sugar and carbohydrate molecules, that are present both in foods, and in the membranes of our cells. The case made in the The Plant Paradox, a current best-seller, is that the binding of lectins from plant foods to our cells is a major cause of ill health, and thus we must all fear and avoid lectins, and the rather dire foods, such as berries and beans, that sinisterly serve as their delivery vehicles. This, of course, is utter nonsense.

For starters, the reality of lectins is far more nuanced than the sound bites, scapegoats, and silver bullets of formulaic best sellers in the diet category. The scientific literature raises theoretical concerns about the potential toxicity of lectins in certain contexts, but also suggests the possibility of unique health benefits related to cancer prevention, and gastrointestinal metabolism. Lectins are far more active in binding to our cells when consumed at high concentration and in isolation, as they are in experiments, than when consumed in food as they generally are by actual humans. Cooking often attenuates the binding action of lectins, or causes them to bind to other compounds in food.

This is not the first time we have been warned away from fruits and vegetables, beans and legumes, nuts and grains. Both low-carb and gluten-free diet advocacy foreswear whole grains, despite overwhelming evidence of the health benefits they consistently confer on all but the constitutionally intolerant. Both low-GI and fructose-is-toxic dietary platforms have caused people, intentionally in the first case and perhaps unintentionally in the second, to abandon fruit, despite overwhelming evidence of its role in defending us even against the very concerns associated with high-glycemic foods and excess fructose, notably type 2 diabetes. We abandoned nuts in the throes of misguided applications of advice to reduce dietary fat intake, somehow reaching the conclusion that Snackwells were good for us, while almonds were not.

This decades-long parade of dietary fads and fashions, an incessant sequence of nutritional misadventures demonstrate one thing above all others: there is more than one way to eat badly, and we the people of the United States seem committed to exploring them all. If you have a new version of dietary nonsense to sell, put it in a book and we will buy it.

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The new contention that we should avoid all of the most nutritious plant foods, including many vegetables, nearly all fruits, all beans, and all legumes because they contain lectins, takes nutritional nonsense to a whole new level. Following this advice will decimate the quality of your diet, and for anyone who actually sticks with such silliness over time (an unlikely eventuality with any diet) your health.

The case being made against most of the foods most reliably linked to vitality and longevity suffers from several fallacies common to all manner of nutritional nonsense. One is to prioritize a theoretical concern (or hope) over the prevailing pattern of outcomes among actual people. As I recently noted to a colleague, oxygen is not a theoretical toxin with theoretical harms in people; it is a known toxic with established harms. The atmosphere of our planet is thus analogous to the dietary sources of lectins: both contain compounds with potentially toxic effects, but net benefit is overwhelming both from eating plants, and breathing.

Another is the conflation of a change in the dialogue about some threat with a change in the threat itself. In 2015, for instance, the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a subsidiary of the World Health Organization, declared processed meat, bacon, pepperoni, and such, a class I carcinogen. There was widespread media coverage, the customary hyperbole, and something nearing panic among the I have never met a slice of bacon I didnt like crowd.

But, of course, such a response made no real sense. Yes, processed meat is bad for you, and yes, youd be better off not eating it. And yes, eating it is rather bad for our fellow creatures and the planet, too.

But the risk from one day to the next changed not at all. Whatever your risk for cancer had been all along, it remained exactly the same the day after the IARC determination was announced. All that had changed was the official position on the matter of that risk. Similarly, the lectins that are in your hummus this week were there last week, too.

So, do you need to fear lectins now? Dr. Steven Gundry, the author, who reportedly will be happy to sell you supplements to replace the nutrients present in the foods he is telling you not to eat, says: yes. I say: hold your breath, and count to a thousand while contemplating the theoretical toxicities of oxygen. Long before you finish, the truth will surely come to you in a gasp.

Dr. David L. Katz; http://www.davidkatzmd.com; founder, True Health Initiative

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Dr. David Katz, Preventative Medicine: Do we dare to eat lectins - New Haven Register

Boko Haram Terrorists Raid Adamawa Village For Food, Medicine – SaharaReporters.com

Boko Haram insurgents on Saturday night raided Kuda-kaya village in Madagali, Adamawa State to steal food and medical supplies, residents and officials said.

The sources said scores of fighters stormed the village, two kilometres from Gulak, the administrative headquarters of Madagali, for the attack.

They came in numbers and just started shooting sporadically into the air with their guns; and there was pandemonium as people started fleeing for their lives, a fleeing resident said.

Our local hunters engaged them in a fierce battle. Presently we are hiding somewhere in a nearby village, the resident, who sought anonymity for security reasons, stated.

A local hunter in the area, who pleaded anonymity, added that, They (Boko Haram) came at about 8 p.m. and wanted to take over the village which is just a stone thrown to Gulak.

But we engaged them, he added; saying soldiers later arrived.

The Chairman of Madagali Local Government Area, Yusuf Muhammad, confirmed that the attack was repelled by the hunters and the soldiers who arrived promptly.

Mr. Muhammad lauded the efforts of security agencies and local vigilantes, and urged for more support to secure the area.

Boko Haram raided Kuda-kaya, in the latest rampage to steal food and medical supplies, but our gallant soldiers and hunters had engaged them to a fierce battle.

They were on rampage to steal food and medical supplies; even on Friday the raided my fathers village Humbli, he said.

He said calm had returned to the area with soldiers on permanent guard.

The Army is yet to react to the attack. Akintoye Badare, a major and spokesperson of the 28 Task-Force Battalion, Mubi, could not be reached as at the time of filing this report.

But an officer in the battalion confirmed the incident.

All I can confirm to you now is that there was an attack on Kuda-kaya and Humbli villages; but we successfully repelled; no casualty on our side, the source said.

The attack on Kuda-Kaya came less than 24 hours after a similar attack in Humbli, forcing residents to flee. The attack also occurs about two days after a daring Boko Haram onslaught on Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

The recent attacks indicate the group is still able to carry out major attacks and has not been defeated despite the successes achieved by Nigerian soldiers in the war.

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First UNLV medical school class full of enthusiasm – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Liz Groesbeck is following her one true love the brain to medical school. But shes open to developing a new relationship.

I dont have much experience with things that arent brains, said Groesbeck, who graduated in May from the University of Nevada, Reno, with a masters degree in neuroscience. But I might fall in love with another organ system.

Groesbeck, 24, of Henderson, is one of 60 students who will be part of the first class at UNLVs new medical school. Like her classmates, she was selected both for academic excellence and the fact that she has close ties to Nevada.

Administrators boast about the first classs competitive Medical College Admission Test scores (508, compared with the national average of 500) and impressive GPAs (3.6 for premed coursework).

But they are equally proud of its diversity: 20 percent of the first class are Latino and 8 percent are African-American both groups considered underrepresented in the field of medicine.

Its an incredible class of diversity, said Maureen Schafer, the medical schools chief of staff. There werent special accommodations given for anyone. These kids performed.

Medical School Dean Barbara Atkinson said other schools work hard to achieve a target of 10 percent underrepresented students.

Im so pleased and so excited, Atkinson said. Theyre a really outstanding group. It was really hard picking them.

Lauren Hollifield, 26, of Las Vegas, said UNLVs reputation for having a diverse undergraduate class motivated her to apply to be part of the inaugural medical class.

To be surrounded by other people who are diverse, not only in ethnicity, but religion, viewpoints, everything I was excited to apply because of that, said Hollifield, who is African-American.

She also said she hopes to work with underserved populations after graduation, a desire fueled by a medical internship in Nicaragua.

There are parts of Las Vegas that arent getting the health care they need right now, she said.

A blind process

According to Schafer, the school employed a blind admissions process, where a number was assigned to each of the 909 applications that administrators received. After winnowing the list, they zeroed in on students who are Nevada residents or those with close ties to the state.

Our strategy is to educate and train students who will become future Nevada doctors, she said. If a future trained physician feels embedded in our community, and they want to stay and practice here, weve accomplished our goal.

According to the 2015 State Physician Workforce Data Book by the Association of American Medical Colleges, Nevada ranks No. 47 in the number of active physicians per 100,000 population, with only Wyoming, Idaho and Mississippi trailing behind in the bottom three.

Groesbeck, whose father Robert Groesbeck served as mayor of Henderson from 1993 to 1997, said her fathers strong ties to Henderson influenced her loyalty to Southern Nevada.

He has always wanted to help the area, and that inspired the passion inside me to help the area, just in a different way, she said.

Sarah Grimley, who is originally from Kenosha, Wisconsin, but is currently living in Las Vegas with her grandparents, said she thinks its incredibly important to stay in Nevada so she can help address the states physician shortage.

I love it out here, she said. Its an amazing place full of amazing people.

However, Grimley is also keeping an eye on 2021, and the possibility that she might need to live and practice where her residency program is.

Theres no question we need to expand our residency opportunities, Schafer said of Nevada. Its a conversation we need to have with physicians. We need to listen to our current partners. We need to understand what their ideas are.

Multiple acceptances

William Fang of Las Vegas a graduate of Johns Hopkins University, who spent two years in the Teach for America program turned down offers from two other medical schools to attend UNLV. Schafer said another student chose UNLV over Duke University.

Johns Hopkins is a fully developed hospital system, Fang said. Its world-renowned. There, what I see, is a developed community where health is prevalent.

Fang, however, said he was inspired to choose UNLV to provide a solution for his mother, who also lives in Las Vegas and suffers from an unknown autoimmune disorder.

I wanted to stay close to her to promote a health care system that she can rely on in her time of need, he said. Theres so much potential, so much optimism here. Its about jumping in to see what you can grow, create and change thats what Im all about.

Others accepted to multiple schools might have been swayed to come to UNLV because of the full-ride scholarship given to each student in the initial class.

Of course that played a role, said Monica Arebalos, a first-generation college student and a 2016 graduate of UNR. But in a way that makes you more motivated. It makes you want to make those donors proud and see where their money went.

Arebalos said she is already is facing $40,000 in undergraduate student loans.

For private donors to invest their own money into future physicians and us is humbling, she said. Its incredible.

Calculated risk

Although bolstered with their full-ride scholarships, the students are entering into a double dose of uncharted territory. Medical school is not only a new venture for them, but its a new undertaking for UNLV, which earned preliminary accreditation just eight months ago.

It takes a special student, Atkinson acknowledged, someone whos willing to take a chance on building a better curriculum to help students that follow them have a better curriculum than theirs.

Most students interviewed by the Las Vegas Review-Journal said they were concerned whether a UNLV degree would be seen as second-rate, but said those worries largely evaporated after early interactions with the schools leaders.

Hollifield called it a calculated risk.

That was a big concern for me, she said. But after seeing all the faculty and their past experiences with other medical schools that are accredited, it makes me think that UNLV will be successful.

Schafer said administrators will be looking for constant feedback from the students.

You have to constantly ask the customer, What did you think? How did we do? And the students are our customers, she said.

The charter class seems up for the challenge.

Arebalos, for example, is in the process of establishing a UNLV chapter of Phi Delta Epsilon, a medical fraternity.

The administration has always portrayed to us that well have the power, and that well be actively making the decisions, she said. Our opinions will matter, our voices will matter.

Contact Natalie Bruzda at nbruzda@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3897. Follow @NatalieBruzda on Twitter.

How does Nevada rank?

There are 5,604 active physicians in Nevada, ranking the state No. 47 in physicians per 100,000 population, according to the 2015 State Physician Workforce Data Book by the Association of American Medical Colleges. Nevada ranks even lower No. 49 in the number of active general surgeons per 100,000 population.

Creating a medical school

July 1: Faculty physicians, residents officially transfer to UNLV School of Medicine from UNRs Southern Nevada practice plan.

July 17: First day of school. Students will begin with a six-week EMT certification class.

Aug. 25: White coat ceremony for charter class.

Spring 2018: UNLV to submit self-study to Liaison Committee on Medical Education as part of ongoing accreditation process.

December 2018: LCME determines if sufficient progress has made toward program implementation and compliance with standards, according to UNLV.

February 2019: LCME makes a provisional accreditation decision.

Early 2020: UNLV submits another self-study.

Fall 2020: The LCME makes a site visit.

Spring 2021: Charter class graduates. LCME evaluates all submitted information in advance of decision on full accreditation, which is renewed every eight years.

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First UNLV medical school class full of enthusiasm - Las Vegas Review-Journal

MU medical school growing clinical, research programs amid cuts – Columbia Daily Tribune

Rudi Keller @CDTCivilWar

When the University of Missouri faced a decision of whether to impose immediate, deep cuts or tap reserves for $20 million when Gov. Eric Greitens announced mid-year restrictions on state support, the School of Medicine chipped in $3.1 million for use by other campus divisions.

MU Health Care, the university-owned hospital and clinic system, alsoprovided $3 million. MU Health Care shows a healthy bottom line and patient fees pay the salaries of clinical faculty in the school.

And as MU undergoes changesbecause ofcontinued funding deficits and directives to find money for reallocation, the School of Medicine will be one of the major beneficiaries of those reallocated dollars. To meet the required cuts in general fund spending, the school cut 7.2 faculty positions, saving $773,825, and six staff positions, saving $455,514.

On the addition side, the hiring plan includes 59 new faculty, at a cost of $13.3 million, and another $1.25 million for tools and support to put those faculty to work. Many of the new faculty will be clinical appointments without tenure, but a significant number will be researchers.

Along with closing deficits, the budget plan announced June 2 by UM System President Mun Choi sets aside $47 million for investments in research and academics on the four system campuses. The Columbia campus will have $22.9 million as its share.

One priority building project is the planned Translational Precision Medicine Complex, a lab for interdisciplinary work conducted by 44 teams of researchers. Interdisciplinary work under the umbrella of the One Health/One Medicine initiative is already occurring but the school sees the building as a way to enhance the campus reputation with a space designed for the purpose. When first proposed in 2015, the building had a $120 million price tag.

The medical school increased its National Institutes of Health grant funding 18 percent in fiscal year 2016, Dean Patrice Delafontaine said. Finding money to build the lab is in the early stages, he said, but he wants to complete it within five years.

It is the wave of the future, he said. It is the assembly of research teams from complementary schools to tackle the big health problems. I think having a new facility like that really helps attract top level researchers. Top level researchers generally come with grant funding already and are in an optimal position.

The 59 new faculty in the medical school are the largest for any school of the 161 new faculty positions included in the budget plan. The campus total includes 58 faculty who will contribute to priority research fields and 34 will fill other tenured positions. The medical schools hires will be about 80 percent non-tenured faculty for clinical positions, Delafontaine said.

The new faculty will staff expanding clinical programs and earn their salary through patient fees, he said.

Clinical faculty play a key academic role because they are training the next generation of medical students, Delafontaine said. They train the students in the residency program and train more advance residents in fellowships. They also contribute to the research mission both through clinical research as well as collaboration with basic researchers.

The university calls its priority research areas the Mizzou Advantage and for the School of Medicine, that is the One Health/One Medicine initiative. The university is looking for 29 faculty for the program.

Today we are interviewing a candidate for our faculty and this candidate happens to be a bio-engineer, Edward Yeh, chair of the schools Department of Medicine said Friday. He is interviewing with us in the medical school but also interviewing in the school of engineering. We use engineering concepts in using biological materials to help cardiologists rebuild a heart after heart attack or nanotechnology to deliver cancer drug. This is a very valuable interaction between disciplines.

Yeh took his post in December after 16 years with M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. His specialty is onco-cardiology, itself an interdisciplinary field of medicine concerned with the effect of cancer treatment on heart function.

An example, he said, is the drug sold under the brand name Herceptin. It helps women with late-stage breast cancer live longer and helps prevent the return of cancer after surgery in early stage cases. But in clinical trials, Yeh said, up to 28 percent of patients developed heart failure and died.

It had become quite alarming and the initial clinical trial was almost stopped, he said. They worked with cardiologists to monitor patients, find out what went wrong, and now it is widely used to help breast cancer patients.

Yeh has an aggressive goal of tripling grant awards to School of Medicine researchers over the next two years.

I think we are actively trying to build this program, he said. I am very positive good results will come.

The future of medicine is technology that seems like science fiction.

If you want to develop a new kidney, you can print it using biomaterials and different cells, Yeh said.

The interdisciplinary lab will have the equipment, such as 3-D printers, that can tap that potential, he said. The recruiting efforts are designed to bring people to turn potential into reality, he said.

To have a vision is not enough, Yeh said. We need to have the right people. I believe our leaders are putting together teams of visionary scientist who can make that happen.

While the campus overall suffers from enrollment woes, the School of Medicine isnt having any difficulty filling its 128 annual slots for medical degree candidates and the other slots for academic students, Delafontaine said.

We are in a good situation to progress, he said. We have made some administrative changes that are increasing efficiencies and we are working smarter. We are very much on track to achieve continued growth in education, research and clinical programs.

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Civil Liberty Groups Decry North Carolina’s Restrictive Laws Push – NBCNews.com

Rachel Jordan protests outside the House gallery during a special session of the North Carolina General Assembly at the Legislative Building in Raleigh, Dec. 16, 2016. Ethan Hyman / AP

But civil liberty experts say North Carolina has been unique in the breadth and scope of what they call its restrictive legislation.

"North Carolina Republicans, I think its fair to say, have gone further than their counterparts in any other state in using their total control over state government to manipulate election rules in such a way as to advantage their own party," says Zachary Roth, former national correspondent for MSNBC.com and author of "The Great Suppression: Voting Rights, Corporate Cash, and the Conservative Assault on Democracy." "Weve seen that in a number of states, but North Carolina Republicans have been the most brazen and aggressive about it."

Despite being rebuffed by the courts on legislation ranging from

Republicans still hold all the cards, said Bob Phillips, executive director of the nonpartisan group Common Cause North Carolina. These court decisions are not deterring them at all, theyre just pivoting.

With a supermajority in the legislature, Republicans can pass laws without a single Democratic vote. Because of this, substantial and consequential laws are being decided not on the assembly floor, but in the courtroom.

And as the state wages these lengthy court battles, the taxpayers are left footing this ever-rising bill.

As of November 2016, North Carolina Republican lawmakers had spent more than $10.5 million litigating controversial laws since coming to power in 2011,

Almost half that money $4.9 million went to defend the states sweeping voter law, which was overturned by a panel of federal of judges. On May 15, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the states appeal. Lawmakers spent an additional $3.7 million defending the redistricting plans that were also overturned by the courts.

As the legislature proposes

For those of us that live in the state, this is sad because thats money that might have gone to public education or other things that are important to the citizens of North Carolina, says Michael Gerhardt, a constitutional law professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. But the state legislature obviously doesnt seem to care. Theyre continuing to try and press their claims, or defend against their claims, and the cost just doesnt seem to be a factor.

Advocacy groups worry that North Carolina could set a dangerous precedent for rest of the country if this rule-until-the-courts-intervene style of governance continues.

I fear that once we start going down that path of allowing temporary legislative majorities to change the rules to entrench their power and benefit themselves in a variety of ways, regardless of what the people want, that it will snowball, Weiser said.

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Girls Tennis Players of the Year: County champs Brecker, Izadi led Liberty to another dominant spring – Carroll County Times

When your tennis team hasn't lost a match in more than four seasons, picking out the strongest players can be challenging.

Liberty's girls squad is that team, winners of 51 consecutive matches dating back to April 2013. The Lions cruised through another unbeaten regular season this spring and won their 10th county championship in as many years.

Their lineup is loaded, but two players stand out. And when you have Abby Brecker and Lili Izadi leading the way, success is bound to come.

The Times Girls Tennis Co-Players of the Year helped maintain Liberty's court dominance by going undefeated at their singles positions, then adding postseason accolades to their already impressive resumes.

Izadi went 12-0 against county competition before cruising to her third consecutive girls singles crown. She reached the finals of the Region VII tournament and placed second, and bowed out in the state tourney's first round (she drew the No. 16 seed, meaning she faced eventual state champ Ayana Akli of Wheaton).

Brecker matched her teammate's regular-season record as Liberty's No. 2 singles player, but her postseason plan to play mixed doubles with Steven Goetz was hatched before the season. Brecker and Goetz won county and regional titles, and reached the state tournament semifinals before placing fourth.

The seniors leave Liberty's tennis program with a combined record of 158-18, but perhaps they're more proud of being part of the Lions' overall winning ways.

"It's definitely the team aspect," Izadi said. "Freshman year, when we won every single match, it was like, 'OK, this is definitely the expectation.' I think since then, both of us, we both wanted to continue that throughout all four years."

Brecker's link to Liberty tennis goes back to when she was barely bigger than a racket.

Tim Brecker has been coaching the Lions for more than two decades, and this spring he had the chance to have both of his daughters on varsity (freshman Emily Brecker played doubles this spring). But he also had an inkling of which girls were to become the team's leaders.

"They love the game," the coach said. "That's what has really been a pleasure to coach. ... They're going to continue to play. They just love the game, and as a coach that's what you want."

Brecker pointed to Liberty's record while Izadi and his oldest daughter were there the coach said only once did Liberty play to a 3-2 team score.

"We couldn't ask for them to have turned out better," he said. "Sometimes it wasn't easy. You're dealing with a lot of good players, and personalities, and trying to keep everybody humble and motivated and in unison. They did a phenomenal job with that."

Abby Brecker played singles, doubles and mixed doubles during her high school career, while Izadi stuck with singles and gave Liberty one of the top players in the region for three straight seasons. Both players worked on fine-tuning their games over the years, but they also credited their practice sessions as a true source of inspiration.

"We were really competitive during our matches," Izadi said of facing Brecker. "We were pushing each other. It wasn't like we were fooling around or anything. We were trying to beat each other every single time."

Izadi said Liberty graduates Caroline Dangel and Megan Soderlund, herself a two-time Times Player of the Year, were the ones leading the charge in practice when she and Brecker were underclassmen. So Izadi and Brecker knew what to expect when they became the veterans.

"You have to defend your spot and be ready every single practice," she said. "I knew going into every single practice since Megan left that I'd have to be on my best game and try hard every single practice."

Izadi went 18-2 this spring while Brecker added a second county title in as many seasons she won a girls doubles crown with Elle Shatto in 2016 and advanced to the state finals.

Now it's on to college for both girls.

Izadi is bound for American University and plans to play club tennis. Brecker is headed to the Culinary Institute of America, looking to major in baking and pastries, while playing for the school's competitive tennis team.

The recent Lions graduates have their share of fond high school memories to take with them.

"I'm really happy because me and Lili and [fellow senior Olivia Oakley] were the first three to go all four years without losing a match," Brecker said. "I'm really proud that we were the first ones to do that. I set out to achieve a certain set of goals and feel like I have achieved all of those in my four years. I couldn't be happier with the results."

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FIRST TEAM

SECOND TEAM

Century: Jessica Conway, Anna Parrish, Grace Psenicska, Sarah Riggin. Francis Scott Key: Elena Rippeon. Liberty: Sofia Corona, Hannah Steier. Westminster: Laniya Davidson. Winters Mill: Heather Fettke von Koeckritz.

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Liberty tractor driver killed when SUV lands on top of him – myfox8.com


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Liberty tractor driver killed when SUV lands on top of him
myfox8.com
LIBERTY, N.C. A Liberty man died Saturday after a crash involving a tractor and an SUV. The wreck happened at about 1 p.m. on U.S. 421 near Liberty. A KIA SUV rear-ended the tractor causing both vehicles to run off the road. The tractor driver was ...

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Liberty tractor driver killed when SUV lands on top of him - myfox8.com

Liberty Christian jumps on Hanover baseball team in 4A state final – Richmond.com

SALEM When Hanover took the field against Liberty Christian their second straight meeting in the 4A state championship game and the third meeting the past two years the Hawks knew the Bulldogs were coming out for Hawk blood.

Unfortunately for Hanover, Liberty Christian got a lot of it.

The Bulldogs took advantage of an uncharacteristically shaky outing for Hanover starting pitcher Antonio Balducci, tagging him for eight runs in 1 innings and coasting to an 8-5 victory over the defending champions.

It was Liberty Christians first win over the Hawks in three tries.

The big deficit 8-1 after two innings put Hanover off its game.

We just put ourselves in a hole getting down a two- and a six-spot there in the first two [innings]. Thats baseball, Hanover coach Charlie Dragum said. It was tough to play our game because we couldnt run as much, couldnt bunt as much. It just took us out of our stuff. When youre down that many, you dont want to get thrown out on the bases and give them outs. It just makes it really difficult.

Balducci left in the second inning with one out, one runner Liberty Christians Kyle Horton on and the Hawks down 7-1. Nick Zona was called in for relief and became one of the bright spots on the Hawks day. While he walked the first two batters he faced and gave up a sacrifice fly that scored Horton, that run credited to Balducci was the last run the Bulldogs would score in the game.

Zona gave up four hits and three walks, striking out three while getting Liberty Christian to hit into three groundouts and three flyouts.

I was just trying to put zeros on the board all day, just trying to give us a chance, Zona said. The only way I could win out there today was to put up zeros.

He kept it simple on the mound.

SALEM, Va. -- Hanover third baseman Camden Grimes (11) celebrates hitting a double in the second inning of the Hawks' 8-5 loss to Liberty Christian in the VHSL Group 4A championship game at Salem Memorial Ballpark on Saturday, June 10, 2017. Grimes went on to score Hanover's first run of the game.

Its just you versus the batter, and you try to get him out, he said. Its the only way to dumb it down. If you get him out, its good for your guys. If he gets a hit, its bad for your guys.

Getting the Hawks out of the second inning without any more runs, and then getting them through the third without allowing Liberty Christian to score gave the Hawks some momentum, but there was still a lot of work to do.

Youve got to get the job done offensively, too, and stop the bleeding somehow, Zona said.

He did his part, going 2-for-3 with two runs scored.

Third baseman Camden Grimes also played a big role in helping Hanover mount a comeback. In the fourth inning, he caught a pitch off Liberty Christian starter Austin Roach and drove it over the left field fence to score himself and Parker Chenault, a courtesy runner for catcher Michael Warley who had walked.

Hanover will lose a number of starters to graduation, but Dragum feels good about what hell be getting back.

I think next year were going to be really tough, he said. I think were going to be legit on the mound. I think were going to have a bunch of arms and a lot of our offense back. I think we could have a really nice year next year.

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Liberty Christian jumps on Hanover baseball team in 4A state final - Richmond.com