Sanford gets national award in chemistry – The Providence Journal

G. Wayne Miller Journal Staff Writer gwaynemiller

PROVIDENCE, R.I. City native Melanie S. Sanford, a prominent scholar now at the University of Michigan, has been named one of three researchers to receive a $250,000 Blavatnik National Award for Young Scientists.

Starting with a pool of 308 nominees the most promising scientific researchers aged 42 years and younger nominated by Americas top academic and research institutions a distinguished jury first narrowed their selections to 30 finalists, and then to three outstanding laureates, one each from the disciplines of Life Sciences, Chemistry, and Physical Sciences & Engineering, the Blavatnik Family Foundation and New York Academy of Sciences said.

Sanford, 42, is this years Blavatnik national laureate in chemistry. Feng Zhang, of MIT and Harvard, is the national laureate in life sciences. Stanford's Yi Cui, is the national laureate in physical sciences and engineering.

A graduate of Classical High School, Sanford earned her bachelors degree from Yale University and a doctoral degree from the California Institute of Technology. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Princeton University and is a MacArthur genius grant recipient.

One might think of organic chemist Dr. Melanie Sanford as an architect and a builder, the Blavatnik foundation and the New York Academy wrote. Instead of designing and constructing buildings, however, her research team works on building molecules. These molecules have major applications, ranging from carbon dioxide recycling to drug discovery.

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Sanford gets national award in chemistry - The Providence Journal

BATGIRL Writer To Highlight ‘Insane Chemistry’ Between DICK & BABS – Newsarama

Credit: DC Comics

"It's complicated."

Batgirl writer Hope Larson admits that the relationship between Dick Grayson and Barbara Gordon isn't the easiest to re-ignite. But in the upcoming "Summer of Lies" storyline, the writer will be exploring what happened in the couple's "Rebirth" past and whether their "insane chemistry" can help the couple come together to defeat a new villain and maybe more.

The Batgirl title saw Barbara just finishing up a disastrous relationship with Ethan Cobblepot (yes, that family). And in this week's Batgirl #11 and July's #12, the hero will be immersed in one-shot adventures. But starting in Batgirl #13 in August, "Summer of Lies" brings Barbara together with Dick to deal with events from their past that have "come back to haunt them," Larson said.

Newsarama talked to Larson to find out more about the path Barbara has taken so far in the Batgirl series and what readers can expect from her reunion with Dick.

Newsarama: Hope, how do you think Batgirl has grown since you took over her book? And what has she learned?

Hope Larson: Batgirl has developed new ways of manipulating and suspending her eidetic memory, which is useful. And I'd say she's grown a bit as a person, and become more confident in who she is and who wants to be.

Nrama: The Batgirl of the New 52 was positioned as a kind of "hipster" hero. Do you feel like she still fits that description? How would you describe her now?

Larson: I'd say she's still a hipster hero. She's in her 20s. Aren't most urban 20-somethings more or less hipsters?

Nrama: Now that the Cobblepot threat seems tempered at least, who's the next threat for Batgirl? What will we see in June's Batgirl #12?

Larson: Batgirl #12 and Batgirl #13 are both one shots, which were super fun to write. #12 takes place at the Burnside Y, which may or may not be haunted. A lot of the action takes place in the pool itself.

Nrama: Issue #12 features art by Eleanor Carlini. What does she bring to the book?

Larson: Her art has a lovely, manga-inspired flavor to it, and she includes lots of nice character acting moments in her cartooning. I particularly appreciate subtle stuff like that.

Nrama: In Issue #13, you've got Catwoman guest starring. What's the relationship like between Selina and Barbara?

Larson: It's a bit antagonistic. There's some professional respect, but Babs doesn't trust Selina nor should she.

Nrama: Issue #13 features art by Inaki Miranda. What does the style bring to the tale of the Cat and Bat?

Larson: Lots of beautiful, splashy pages with figures that aren't confined by panels.

Nrama: Let's talk about the "Summer of Lies" storyline you've got coming up beginning in August. After the disastrous relationships Barbara has experienced lately, what brings her back to Dick?

Larson: I'm so excited for this arc. We've been working on it for a while and it's gone through several very different versions before arriving where it is now. My editor Rebecca Taylor described it at some point during the process as our "I Know What You Did Last Summer" arc basically, events that took place when Babs and Dick were teenagers are coming back to haunt them.

Nrama: How would you describe the relationship between Dick and Barbara right now?

Larson: It's complicated. They know all of each other's secrets, and they have this insane chemistry, but they've got a lot to lose if either of them makes a move.

Nrama: Can you tease the villain who's featured in the "Summer of Lies" storyline?

Larson: I can! She's called the Red Queen, and she's a new villain. We were all shocked there wasn't already a DCU villain called the Red Queen.

Nrama: What does Christian Wildgoose bring to the story?

Larson: Brilliant, warm art, genius acting, and stunning environments. And he's giving Rafael Albuquerque a run for the Nicest Comic Artist award. I know he's going to shine on this arc!

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BATGIRL Writer To Highlight 'Insane Chemistry' Between DICK & BABS - Newsarama

Brandon Marshall takes chemistry building with Eli Manning to next level – Giants Wire

When the New York Giants signed veteran wide receiver Brandon Marshall earlier this offseason, they knew exactly what they were getting a hard working, high IQ player willing to do whatever it takes to win.

Marshall has lived up to that reputation in his short time with the Giants, going above and beyond to not only learn their offensive system and coach up the young players, but to build chemistry with quarterback Eli Manning.

He sent me a text yesterday and said, Hey, can we get on FaceTime and keep going over some of these signals? I dont want to forget everything that Ive learned in the past two months,' Manning said via NJ Advanced Media.

Thats what its all about having a guy who has a passion and a desire to get better, to keep learning the game of football, to keep having something to prove and were both in that same boat going into Year 12, Year 14. Always want to get better and make improvements and build a championship team, so thats what were working on.

Marshall admits theres still more than a few loose ends to tie up as he adjusts to the teams timing-based offense, but feels increasingly comfortable the more he works with Manning & Co.

I think I dropped every other ball the first two weeks. I was like, These guys probably think they made a bad investment right now,' Marshall said. Im still trying to figure out the timing of the hitch route. I think our last practice Eli just threw it at my feet and said, Im just going to throw it so you get the timing. Im just going to do my job and youve got to do yours.'

Things certainly arent where the Giants would like them to be, but theres also plenty of time between now and the start of the regular season. The good news is that both Manning and Marshall continue to work together and eventually, its all going to click.

I think thats one of the reasons why we have a great opportunity because everyone knows where theyre supposed to be and knows where the ball is going to be and when its coming, Marshall said. Thats something I never had to deal with my entire career. Ive never had a quarterback be so precise in his preparation and also just ball placement and getting the ball out quick. Thats been the biggest adjustment for me.

The willingness even the eagerness to get it all right ahead of training camp is a testament to not only Mannings preparation, but Marshalls. The two realize they need work and are spending every second trying to get things down to the point of situational reaction over thinking.

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Brandon Marshall takes chemistry building with Eli Manning to next level - Giants Wire

Scientists catch plants in the act of changing chemistry thought to be immutable because necessary for life – Phys.Org

June 26, 2017 For the first time scientists have caught the cell machinery that makes a vital molecule in the process of evolving. A key enzyme plants use to make tyrosine, an amino acid necessary for life, was thought to be conserved across the plant kingdom but the scientists found it has mutated to another form in legumes. In cherry tomatoes the canonical form of the enzyme dominates, peanuts can switch hit and some strains of soybeans (lumpy beans to the right) have lost the canonical form. Credit: Jez Lab

Because plants can't get up and run away, they've had to be clever instead. They are the chemists of the living world, producing hundreds of thousands of small molecules that they use as sunscreens, to poison plant eaters, to scent the air, to color flowers, and for much other secret vegetative business.

Historically these chemicals, called "secondary metabolites," have been distinguished from "primary metabolites," which are the building blocks of proteins, fats, sugars and DNA. Secondary metabolites smooth the way in life but the primary metabolites are essential, and the failure to make them correctly and efficiently is fatal.

Secondary metabolism is thought to have evolved to help plant ancestors deal with living on dry land rather than the more hospitable oceans. The idea is that the genes for enzymes in the molecular assembly lines of primary metabolism were duplicated. The duplicates were more tolerant of mutations that might have destabilized the primary pathways because the originals were still on the job. With evolutionary constraints thus relaxed, synthetic machinery was able to accumulate enough mutations to do new chemistry.

Primary metabolism, however, is widely conserved, meaning that it remains unchanged across many different groups of organisms because it has been fine tuned to operate correctly and efficiently and because its products are necessary for life. Or so the textbooks say.

But now a collaborative team of scientists has caught primary metabolism in the act of evolving. In a comprehensive study of a primary-metabolism assembly line in plants, they discovered a key enzyme evolving from a canonical form possessed by most plants, through noncanonical forms in tomatoes, to a switch-hitting form found in peanuts, and finally committing to the novel form in some strains of soybeans.

This feat, comparable to pulling the tablecloth out from under the dishes without any breaking any of them, is described in the June 26 issue of Nature Chemical Biology. It is the work of a collaboration between the Maeda lab at the University of Wisconsin, which has a longstanding interest in this biochemical pathway, and the Jez lab at Washington University in St. Louis, which crystallized the soybean enzyme to reveal how nature changed how the protein works .

"The work captures plants in the process of building a pathway that links the primary to the secondary metabolism," said Joseph Jez, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor in the Department of Biology in Arts & Sciences. "We're finally seeing how evolution creates the machinery to make new molecules."

It may also have practical importance because the old and the new pathways make the amino acid tyrosine, which is a precursor for many secondary metabolites with biological and pharmaceutical activity everything from vitamin E to opioids. But the old pathway makes only tiny amounts of these compounds, in part because they must compete for carbon atoms with the greedy process for making lignin, the tough polymers that let plants stand tall.

The discovery of the new pathway for making tyrosine is much less constrained than the old one. This raises the possibility that carbon flow could be directed away from lignin, increasing the yields of drugs or nutrients to levels that would allow them to be produced in commercial quantities.

A tale of two enzymes

Tyrosine is made on an assembly line called the shikimate pathway, a seven-step metabolic pathway that plants use to make the three amino acids that have aromatic rings. Animals (including people) shed the ability to erect this assembly line deep in the evolutionary past. Because we cannot make these amino acids on our own and they are essential for life, we must instead obtain them by eating plants or fungi.

That aromatic ring is important, said Jez, because it is a distinctive structure that can absorb light or energy. So the aromatic amino acids also are the precursors for many secondary metabolites that capture light, transfer electrons, or color flowers. Moreover, the aromatic amino acids are also precursors for chemicals that poison other plants or plant predators and attract pollinators. Many medicinal drugs include an aromatic ring, Jez commented.

In most plants the shikimate pathway is in the chloroplast, the organelle that does the work of converting the energy of sunlight to energy stored in carbon bonds. Once made, however, tyrosine can be exported out of the cytosol for incorporation or conversion into other compounds.

In the last step of one branch of the pathway an enzyme called arogenate dehydrogenase (ADH), catalyzes a reaction that makes the compound arogenate into tyrosine. The ADH enzyme is considered "regulatory" because it is a bottleneck in tyrosine production. It must compete for the arogenate substrate with the branch of the shikimate pathway that makes a different aromatic amino acid and it is strongly inhibited by the buildup of tyrosine

ADH activity is common in plants, but in the course of studying the shikimate pathway the Maeda lab discovered that the DNA sequences coding for ADH in some flowering plants were significantly different from those in most plants. They called the enzymes produced by these sequences noncanonical ADH. Then, in 2014, they reported that some legumes also make tyrosine with a different enzyme, called prephenate dehydrogenase (PDH).

PDH differs from ADH in many ways. It is active outside the chloroplast, it acts on the substrate prephenate rather than on arogenate, because it is outside the chloroplast it does not have to compete for its substrate with other branches of the shikimate pathway, and it is not inhibited by rising levels of tyrosine.

Why are there two different assembly lines for tyrosine? The scientists believe the PDH enzyme evolved via two gene duplication events and the accumulation of mutations in the "extra" copies of the gene. The first event gave rise to nonstandard ADHs in some flowering plants and the second to PDH in a subset of legumes. But why did this happen?

That's not a question the scientists can answer yet except in general terms, Jez said. What sticks out, however, is that the more recently evolved metabolic pathway is not tightly regulated and could potentially churn out product at a hectic pace. Perhaps the legumes were in dire need of secondary metabolites for some reason. It is certainly suspicious that legumes have an ecology quite different from that of other plants, since they live symbiotically with nitrogen-fixing bacteria.

Fiddling the bits

By this point the scientists knew that the novel enzyme, PDH, bound a different substrate than the original enzyme, ADH. They also knew that PDH, unlike ADH, did not bind tyrosine itself. But what changes in structure led to these differences in chemical activity?

To find out, Craig Schenck, a graduate student in the Maeda lab, compared the gene sequences for the ADH or PDH enzyme in many different plants, carefully chosen to be on the boundaries of the switchover from one enzyme to the other. But they encountered a problem. There were enough differences in the DNA that it was difficult to see what was relevant, Jez said.

Encountering Maeda at a conference, Jez offered to try crystallizing the novel enzymes so that their structure could be reconstructed from X-ray images. His graduate student Cynthia Holland was able to crystallize the soybean PDH and produce detailed images of its three-d
imensional shape.

"Once you looked at the structure you could see that there were only two differences from the typical ADH found in most plants and only one of the differences actually changed things," Jez said. Stunningly that difference was a single amino acid in the active site on the enzyme. At that spot the asparagine had replaced aspartic acid.

Schenck double-checked this structural insight by flipping that amino acid in mutant forms of the enzyme. The ADH mutant turned out to have PDH activity, and the PDH mutant had ADH activity, just as the team had suspected.

"That one difference changes the enzyme's preferred substrate and its ability to be inhibited by tyrosine feedback," Jez said. "And if you look at it, it's literally the difference between a nitrogen atom or an oxygen atom. In these proteins, which are made up of nearly three hundred amino acids or forty-two hundred atoms, one atom makes all the difference. That's just kind of cool."

The work is important because it demonstrates that primary metabolism does evolve. And because it shows how nature steals machinery from primary metabolism and cobbles it together for making novel secondary metabolites. They do this with much more finesse than genetic engineers can yet manage.

"When we want a plant to make a new molecule," Jez said, "we drop in a gene and hope it integrates with existing pathways. We still don't know how to readily connect the wiring between what we drop in and what is already there. So it is interesting to see how nature contrived to connect the wiring and change things without breaking them."

Explore further: Fundamental plant chemicals trace back to bacteria

More information: Molecular basis of the evolution of alternative tyrosine biosynthetic routes in plants, Nature Chemical Biology (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.2414

Journal reference: Nature Chemical Biology

Provided by: Washington University in St. Louis

A fundamental chemical pathway that all plants use to create an essential amino acid needed by all animals to make proteins has now been traced to two groups of ancient bacteria. The pathway is also known for making hundreds ...

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Purdue University scientists have defined a hidden second option plants have for making an essential amino acid that could be the first step in boosting plants' nutritional value and improving biofuel production potential.

(Phys.org)Purdue University researchers have discovered a microbial-like pathway in plants that produces phenylalanine, an amino acid that is a vital component of proteins in all living organisms.

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Because plants can't get up and run away, they've had to be clever instead. They are the chemists of the living world, producing hundreds of thousands of small molecules that they use as sunscreens, to poison plant eaters, ...

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Iron chemistry matters for ocean carbon uptake – Phys.Org

June 26, 2017 by Kristen French Upsala Glacier, Argentina, where scientists collected glacial dust samples. When glaciers move across bedrock, they scrape against it (see glacial grooves in the foreground), and grind it into smaller particles, which may then get blown out to sea, fertilizing phytoplankton. Credit: Michael Kaplan/Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

For many years, scientists have speculated that seeding the ocean with iron might help to stave off climate change. Iron in seawater promotes the growth of phytoplankton, which in turn devours carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. Iron basically allows the ocean to soak up carbon.

But only dissolved iron, not the undissolved particle forms, was thought to stimulate phytoplankton growth, despite iron's low solubility in seawater and the abundance of particulate iron in the ocean. Further, the quantity of iron rather than its chemical signature was thought to determine the rate of phytoplankton growth.

Now an interdisciplinary team of scientists led by Elizabeth M. Shoenfelt and Benjamin Bostick of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory has discovered that particulate iron does stimulate phytoplankton growth, and that the chemical form that particulate iron takes is critical to ocean photosynthesisnot just the quantity of iron available. The team found that the iron in dust and sediment that comes from glaciers is better at promoting phytoplankton growth and photosynthesis than iron found in dust from other sources. This means that glaciers may play a larger role in the carbon cycle than had been thought.

"It's not that soluble iron doesn't matter, but particulates, which are the biggest components of the iron in the ocean, can do quite a bit," said Bostick.

The findings, published in the June 23 edition of the journal Science Advances, show that in lab culture, a well-studied coastal diatom grows equally well with particulate iron versus soluble iron, and up to 2.5 times faster, and with greater photosynthetic efficiency, when fed a form of particulate iron produced by the grinding of glaciers against rock. The authors estimate that the carbon uptake rates of the diatoms consuming glacier-produced iron would be five times higher than those consuming non-glacier iron when enhanced growth and photosynthesis rates are combined.

Earlier research had shown that during glacial periods, ocean concentrations of iron tend to rise. Glaciers grind up iron-rich bedrock that lies beneath the ice when they extend and recede through seasonal cycles. The resulting iron dust is carried on the wind out to sea. But no one had connected the chemical forms of iron found in glacier-produced dust versus other forms to phytoplankton photosynthesis.

"Basically glaciers make fertilizer for the ocean," said Bostick. "We show that it's not just how much dust the glaciers make, but the fact that the glaciers grind up certain kinds of rocks that makes a big difference."

The research team took the so-called glaciogenic dust they used in lab culture from South America's Patagonia region. But they said that the mineralogy of glaciogenic dust is similar around the world. The water they used came from the Southern Ocean.

The team's results set up a number of avenues for future research. These include studying the geological record to identify changes in the chemical forms of iron available in the ocean over time, and matching those to glacial fluctuations, said Bostick. He said further study could use genetics to study how diatoms use iron.

"We'd like to know mechanistically how it's happening," said Bostick. "This allows you to understand how the system can be manipulated, so we can know how the environment would respond."

Explore further: Study finds iron from glacial melting serves as significant source of iron to North Atlantic Ocean

More information: High particulate iron(II) content in glacially sourced dusts enhances productivity of a model diatom Science Advances 23 Jun 2017: DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1700314

Journal reference: Science Advances

Provided by: Earth Institute, Columbia University

This story is republished courtesy of Earth Institute, Columbia University: blogs.ei.columbia.edu .

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Seminar on Combining Theory and Experiment to Develop New Chemical Reactions – Seton Hall University News & Events

Professor Osvaldo Gutierrez

The Rose Mercadante Chemistry and Biochemistry Seminar Series is pleased to present a seminar by Professor Osvaldo Gutierrez from the University of Maryland entitled "Combining Theory and Experiment to Develop Selective C-C Bond Formations via Open-Shell Intermediates."

The seminar will be held from 5:45 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday February 25, 2020 in the Helen Lerner Amphitheater, Science and Technology Center, Seton Hall University. Refreshments are available at 5:30 p.m.

Dr. Gutierrez was born in Mexico and raised in Sacramento, California. He attended Sacramento City College and transferred to UCLA in 2006 where he worked as an undergraduate at the laboratories of Prof. Houk. He obtained his B.S./M.S. in 2009 and completed his Ph.D. in 2012 (UC Davis) under the guidance of Prof. Tantillo. From 2012-2016 he worked as a postdoc with Prof. Kozlowski at the University of Pennsylvania where he used computational and experimental tools to study transition metal-catalyzed processes. He is now at the University of Maryland College Park where his research combines computational and experimental approaches to advance our understanding of iron- and photo-catalyzed reaction mechanisms.

Despite advances in high-throughput screening methods leading to a surge in the discovery of catalytic reactions, our knowledge of the molecular-level interactions in the rate- and selectivity-determining steps of catalytic reactions, especially those involving highly unstable and reactive open-shell intermediates, is rudimentary. These knowledge gaps prevent control, suppression or enhancement, of competing reaction channels that can drive development of unprecedented catalytic reactions. In this talk, Gutierrezwill focus on theuse of high-level quantum mechanical calculations, rigorously calibrated against experimental data, to interrogate the mechanisms and to guide the development of new catalysts and reagents for currently sluggish or unselective reactions. In particular, the talkwill focus on theuse of combined experimental and computational tools to understand and develop new (asymmetric) iron-catalyzed radical cascade/cross-coupling reactions.

The Department of Chemistry and Biochemistryat Seton Hall University offers BS, MS and PhD degrees with specializations in all areas of chemistry. Our unique research environment, including traditional full-time students and part-time students is designed to foster collaborations with industry and colleagues in other disciplines. The Rose Mercadante Seminar Series is named for Rose Mercadante, the departmental secretary for over 40 years, in honor of our alumni, her "boys and girls."

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Seminar on Combining Theory and Experiment to Develop New Chemical Reactions - Seton Hall University News & Events

Personal chemistry key as Trump meets India Prime Minister for first time – Chicago Tribune

President Donald Trump meets for the first time Monday with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and personal chemistry as much as policy could determine the direction of future relations.

The leaders of the world's two largest democracies will convene at the White House. They will look to expand ties on defense and fighting terrorism, but strains are likely on trade.

Trump has so far focused on outreach to China, India's strategic rival, as he looks to Beijing to rein in nuclear-armed North Korea. But Washington and New Delhi share concerns about China's rise as a military power that has underpinned increasingly close relations in the past decade.

The Trump administration says it wants to provide India the kind of defense technology it does to the closest U.S. allies. In a concrete indication of that, the U.S. is set to offer a $2 billion sale of U.S.-made unarmed drones to help in surveillance of the Indian Ocean.

Although Modi's two-day Washington visit, which began Sunday, is lower key than his previous three trips to the U.S. since he took office in 2014, there will be plenty opportunity for face time with Trump.

After their talks, Modi and Trump will make statements in the Rose Garden. Modi will also have dinner with the president and first lady the first dinner Trump has hosted for a foreign dignitary at the White House, although he has hosted the leaders of Japan and China at his resort in Florida.

Before he goes to the White House, Modi will meet separately on Monday with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis.

Trump and Modi share a populist streak and a knack for social media, but their economic nationalist agendas could clash. While Trump champions the idea of "America First" and wants to stop the migration of jobs overseas, Modi has his own drive to boost manufacturing at home, dubbed "Make in India."

India is among the nations singled out by the Trump administration for their trade surpluses with the U.S., and it is also reviewing a visa program used heavily by skilled Indian workers.

Both sides want better market access. U.S. is seeking stronger Indian protection of intellectual property rights, reductions in tariffs and narrowing of the $30 billion trade deficit. India has its own concerns, including over regulatory barriers faced by its producers of generic medicinal drugs.

Michael Kugelman, a South Asia expert at the Wilson Center, predicted that Wednesday's summit would be a "no-frills, let's get acquainted affair" whose outcomes, from their body language to the post-meeting joint statement, will offer clues about the future of U.S.-India relations.

"For Trump, the personal is political," said Atman Trivedi, an Asia specialist at Hills & Company consultancy.

On fighting terrorism, Kugelman said the two leaders have a similar worldview that "it needs to be destroyed wherever it rears its murderous head."

Modi will be hoping that as well as tackling the Islamic State, Trump will step up pressure on militant groups based in Pakistan accused of launching attacks on India. He'll also want to learn about the administration strategy to stabilize Afghanistan, where India has committed $3 billion in aid since 2001.

Climate change could be a contentious issue. New Delhi was irked by Trump's decision to pull out of the Paris accord, and his claim that India had made its participation contingent on receiving billions in foreign aid. India denies that and says it will continue to be part of the accord, regardless of U.S. participation.

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The Giants chemistry is suffering because a guy they all hated is gone – Yahoo Sports

Ive spent years arguing with people about team chemistry. You know the battle lines on all of that now: people who talk a lot about team chemistry tend to attribute winning or losing to good or bad chemistry, respectively. I tend to think that characterizing chemistry is a retroactive exercise in which teams that win are happy and then cite their happiness as the reason and vice versa. Jim Leyland agrees with me, for what its worth, so Im pretty happy with my take.

Not that Ill claim a monopoly on wisdom here. Ive never played on a professional baseball team. I dont know what its like to try to prepare to play baseball while surrounded by jackwagons who dont get along with anyone. I cant imagine that makes life easier. Indeed, based on the testimony of players I have spoken to, I will grant thatthere is at least some intangible yet real benefitif everyone is happy an gelling. I dismiss team chemistry arguments for the most part, but if I ran a team Id at least try to get rid of bad seeds if their bad seeding was not outweighed by seriously outstanding on-the-field play. You want your workers happy, folks.

All of which makes me wonder what the heck to do about this passage from Ken Rosenthals latest column. Its about the reeling San Francisco Giants. They have all kinds of issues their offense is putrid, their pitching isnt much better and theyve been without their ace most of the year but today Rosenthal looks at their team chemistry. Its a quiet and subdued clubhouse, he notes, and it has a lot of people wondering if something is wrong there. What could it be?

Sandoval, who was an often noisy and boisterous presence during his time with the club, departed as a free agent after that season. Pence has suffered a number of injuries in recent years and declined offensively, making it difficult for him to be as vocal as he was in the past. Some with the Giants muse that the team even misses Angel Pagan, who created an odd sort of unity because most of the players disliked him.

Read that last sentence again. And then go on with your talk about how team chemistry is a legitimate explanatory concept regarding what makes teams win or lose as opposed to a post-hoc rationalization of it.

Not that its not a good article overall. Theres some interesting stuff about the Giants bullpen culture. And, of course, we now know why no one signed Pagan last winter.

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The Giants chemistry is suffering because a guy they all hated is gone - Yahoo Sports

Two people taken to hospital, 10 evacuated after chemical reaction at warehouse north of Sydney – 9News

Two people have been taken to hospital suffering from chemical exposure after a workplace incident north of Sydney.

Initial reports suggested up to 40 people have been exposed to a chemical substance, but 10 had to be evacuated from the warehouse on Pile Road, Somersby, west of Gosford.

The reaction caused a large vapour cloud at the facility. Paramedics assessed several patients and three suffered from throat irritation, watery eyes and coughing, NSW Ambulance said.

"The issue with chemical exposure is you have no idea what you are dealing with before arriving at the scene," Inspector Greg Wiggins, Duty Operations Manager, NSW Ambulance said.

"On top of that, when you hear 40 people have been exposed, it can become quite tense and stressful and you start thinking about the best way to manage a scene that can be really chaotic.

"Paramedics moved quickly to get through the crowd and assess as many people as they could - they did a fantastic job.

"Often, it is scary for us as we have the potential to be exposed to the same chemical we have to ensure we are safe and protected to be able to provide the best possible care for those who are exposed.

"Whether you think you need it or not always let us assess you. We have no idea of how much damage is actually being done to your body. It's our job and we want to do everything to help," he said.

The rest is here:
Two people taken to hospital, 10 evacuated after chemical reaction at warehouse north of Sydney - 9News

EPA warns of chemical contamination in the air in part of Olde Towne Bellevue – KETV Omaha

The Environmental Protection Agency reports groundwater near a corner in Olde Towne Bellevue is contaminated by a harmful chemical. Emergency coordinators say that chemical, tetrachloroethylene or PCE, could potentially be in the air of nearby homes and businesses.At a public information session Tuesday, Michael Davis explained that the EPA believes sometime between 1992 and 1995, the groundwater at 21st and Franklin was contaminated by dry cleaning chemicals. Carriage Cleaners used to be located at the site there until 1995."Honestly, I'm so terrified. I get paranoid about that kind of stuff anyway, but it's a serious issue," said Kristian Farland. Farland lives with her family in the area potentially contaminated.Davis said in 2017, samplers discovered the PCE at the site. In 2019, the EPA notified those living and working in the properties near the source.Davis said the EPA has already tested 12 Bellevue properties. Half came back positive for PCE in the air. He said although they were positive, those levels were "extremely low." Those buildings now have vapor mitigation systems installed to keep the chemical out of the indoors."We have not seen thus far with the sampling we've done, that there's levels in indoor air that is a cause for imminent concern for health threats," Davis told KETV.Bellevue Mayor Rusty Hike owns property in the area. Hike said the situation reminded him of radon contamination."I'm not real scared about it, but it's a little bit alarming. At least we found it now then go another 10 years, 20 years," said the mayor.The EPA is asking everyone in the potential contamination zone to fill out access request forms to allow investigators to sample their properties. Any property that tests positive with high enough levels of PCE in the air will receive a vapor mitigation system at the EPA's expense."We want to do that sooner rather than later. It's not necessarily because of a severe, urgent toxicological concern, but it's for the concern of being expeditious in terms of doing our sampling investigations," said Davis.There is another public information meeting at 6 p.m. on Wednesday at the Bellevue Volunteer Firefighters Hall.According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, high levels of PCE may lead to dizziness, drowsiness, headaches and loss of coordination. Long-term exposure can affect your vision and memory. The chemical can also cause cancer.

The Environmental Protection Agency reports groundwater near a corner in Olde Towne Bellevue is contaminated by a harmful chemical. Emergency coordinators say that chemical, tetrachloroethylene or PCE, could potentially be in the air of nearby homes and businesses.

At a public information session Tuesday, Michael Davis explained that the EPA believes sometime between 1992 and 1995, the groundwater at 21st and Franklin was contaminated by dry cleaning chemicals. Carriage Cleaners used to be located at the site there until 1995.

"Honestly, I'm so terrified. I get paranoid about that kind of stuff anyway, but it's a serious issue," said Kristian Farland. Farland lives with her family in the area potentially contaminated.

The blue highlights the properties potentially contaminated by PCE. (Map from the EPA)

Davis said in 2017, samplers discovered the PCE at the site. In 2019, the EPA notified those living and working in the properties near the source.

Davis said the EPA has already tested 12 Bellevue properties. Half came back positive for PCE in the air. He said although they were positive, those levels were "extremely low." Those buildings now have vapor mitigation systems installed to keep the chemical out of the indoors.

"We have not seen thus far with the sampling we've done, that there's levels in indoor air that is a cause for imminent concern for health threats," Davis told KETV.

Bellevue Mayor Rusty Hike owns property in the area. Hike said the situation reminded him of radon contamination.

"I'm not real scared about it, but it's a little bit alarming. At least we found it now then go another 10 years, 20 years," said the mayor.

The EPA is asking everyone in the potential contamination zone to fill out access request forms to allow investigators to sample their properties. Any property that tests positive with high enough levels of PCE in the air will receive a vapor mitigation system at the EPA's expense.

"We want to do that sooner rather than later. It's not necessarily because of a severe, urgent toxicological concern, but it's for the concern of being expeditious in terms of doing our sampling investigations," said Davis.

There is another public information meeting at 6 p.m. on Wednesday at the Bellevue Volunteer Firefighters Hall.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, high levels of PCE may lead to dizziness, drowsiness, headaches and loss of coordination. Long-term exposure can affect your vision and memory. The chemical can also cause cancer.

See the rest here:
EPA warns of chemical contamination in the air in part of Olde Towne Bellevue - KETV Omaha

Chemical weapons watchdog to add Novichok agents to banned list – Chemistry World

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) is to add five additional compound families including the Novichoks to the list of chemicals tightly restricted under the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC).

This decision was reached on 27 November during the annual meeting of the CWCs 193 member states in The Hague. This will be the first time chemicals have been added to the CWC controlled chemicals annex since the treaty came into force in 1997. All five families will become schedule 1 chemicals, meaning theyll join the likes of sarin, VX and the sulfur mustards as chemicals deemed by the convention to have little or no peaceful purposes.These chemicals can still be produced in very limited quantities under strict supervision for the purposes of protective and medical research.

The changes will take effect 180 days after the OPCW director-general Fernando Arias informs the UN secretary-general of the updates. The OPCW was unable to confirm when the notification that triggers the countdown will be made.

The Novichoks are a group of organophosphate nerve agents developed in Russia in the 1970s and 80s. They were not used in anger as far as we know until former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia Skripal were poisoned in the UK city of Salisbury on 4 March 2018.

This incident led to a joint proposal by Canada, the Netherlands and the US to add the Novichoks and another additional chemical family to the CWC. Russia submitted a later proposal to add an additional three families to the same list. Both requests were agreed last week.

This is the first time in its history that the Chemical Weapons Conventions annex on chemicals has been updated. This is an important development that demonstrates the adaptability of the convention to changing threats, said Arias as the amendments were announced.

A point of confusion here is that the use of the Novichok in Salisbury was already a breach of the CWC. As is the use of chlorine also not listed in the CWC annex in Syria. The treaty has catch-all wording that prohibits the use of any chemical for chemical weapons purposes regardless of whether it is specifically noted on the controlled list or not.

But adding these chemicals to the list isnt just a symbolic gesture, it gives the OPCW the right to monitor their use and the acquisition of their precursors. Under the CWC, states are permitted to hold small quantities of schedule 1 chemicals, but these are all monitored down to milligram quantities, explains Alastair Hay, a toxicologist and chemical weapons expert from the University of Leeds, UK. Listing will help to shut down any activity with Novichoks, other than the ability to analyse and perhaps test defences such as gas masks and protective clothing.

Correction: The headline was changed on 3 December 2019 to reflect that the chemical classes added to the schedule 1 list have not been banned outright but that their production and use is very tightly restricted

Read more here:
Chemical weapons watchdog to add Novichok agents to banned list - Chemistry World

My Chemical Romance Reunion Is Almost Here: Our Setlist Wishlist – Variety

When My Chemical Romance teased four cryptic logos and then subsequently announced a one-night-only reunion show on Oct. 31, Killjoys rightfully lost their minds. The band hadnt performed together since 2012 and officially announced its breakup on March 22, 2013. Unanswered questions were aplenty: did it mean new music? Would a full-length tour be announced shortly after? One day out from the show, Varietys resident MCR experts, social media editor Meg Zukin and editorial intern LaTesha Harris, discuss what songs would make their reunion setlist wishlist for Fridays show at L.As Shrine Expo Hall:

Welcome to the Black Parade (from The Black Parade)MZ: From that first piano key, you know s is about to go down. When you hear the acoustic intro into Welcome to the Black Parade, you are transported back to a time when Gerard Way had peroxide white hair.LH: I honestly have nothing to say about this one. Ive angst-cried to this a hundred times. I get anxiety because I feel like I have to lead an army in the name of a cause.MZ: I feel sacrificial because I feel like Im following Gerard himself into battle. I also think the change in tempo is one of the most iconic transitions to ever play on the iPods of middle schoolers, ever.

The End. (from The Black Parade)MZ: This brings me back to Vans Warped Tour in a way that if you havent attended a Vans Warped Tour and werent into Never Shout Never, this specific singing style, I think, isnt as important. I dont love this song, its not one of my favorites, but it prompts such nostalgia for when people had that, like, twangy, talk-y, type of singing style. Do you know what I mean?LH: Its weird to look back at all of these MCR songs and know that theyve inspired so many different musicians because you can hear it. This song is so, whats that one song MZ: [starts singing Trouble by Never Shout Never] If The End. came out today, I would be confused. I think its very symbolic of an era.

Summertime (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: I love Summertime. It always brings me back to sitting on the bus on the ride home from middle school, looking out the window and pining after my best friend. And Id be so emo and so in love, you know? Its cute.MZ: This song has hints of sweetness that arent as evident in a lot of their other tracks and theres an innocence that shines through thats also surface-level missing from their other songs.LH: Its also very Boys Like Girls, Metro Station, but obviously better.MZ: When you listen to this, youre pretending that youre leaving your town forever when your mom is just driving you to the grocery store.

Headfirst for Halos (from I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love)MZ: I dont need them to play this. Sometimes, I feel like a bit of a sellout or a faux fan because I really do feel like the songs that I need from them live are some of the bigger bangers.LH: I hear that. I think this ones very much their early garage stuff, but still with hints of whats to come, so it would be fun to hear it live, but I dont absolutely need it. I really do love this guitar breakdown, so it could be maybe a cute little transition snippet.MZ: Yeah, it could be a more relaxing moment when they want to switch gears.LH: Like screamo? What? Were adults.

Teenagers (from The Black Parade)MZ: Im at a loss for words. This sentiment only increases with every year I age. Im so fascinated by teenagers and I think Im always going to have my teenage self inside of me who hates authority and rolls her eyes and talks back and is a full b-. I think teenagers possess a disregard that nobody else has. Teenagers dont give a f. Even insecure teenagers hate you and are intimidating. My message to teenagers is to hold on to that and harness it for good and in a way that you can access it as an adult. Teenagers do scare the living s out of me!LH: I remember feeling so powerful listening to this song. But I was that teenager whos scared to give a presentation, so whenever Id cry in the bathroom after giving a presentation Id listen to this song and be like, I am a cog in the murder machine. No one can tell me s.MZ: Exactly! Nobody can tell teenagers s; they are always one step ahead. Also, the angst that exists in this song I guess this is why Im a Killjoy, because Ill always have this same level of angst regardless of age.

Planetary (GO!) (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)MZ: This is a cool song. This is losing your innocence in the back of a limo, or, more realistically, sneaking out and driving to a view.LH: Yeah its like, youre getting in your car for the first time and drinking champagne and going out and going crazy. I love that. Its for partying.MZ: This song means youre doing stuff. Youre mobilizing.LH: Youre organizing.MZ: This is a community organizational anthem. Am I wrong?LH: No, youre not.

Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na) (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: Killjoys make some noise! Moshing to this one this ones sexy in a rude, abrasive way.MZ: This song is, Nobody gets me and they never will, but I cant wait to leave this town and find my people.LH: Will you make it there? Were not sure.

The Only Hope for Me Is You (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: Oh remember me [starts singing]. The thing about this one is that I dont absolutely need to hear it live, but itll be nice as a singalong and everyone will know the words. And its a nice bonding moment. Were not going to be able to mosh the entire time.MZ: Were not young like we once were, and thats something we need to remember.

Im Not Okay (I Promise) (from Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge)MZ: Special mention to the parentheses I promise in the title of this song. I need to hear it because, like I said with some of the other songs, this transports me back to my preteen/teen self, for better or worse.LH: Yeah, youre always wearing all black and Vans. Its like, Did you grow up?MZ: I didnt, to tell you the truth.

The Jetset Life Is Gonna Kill You (from Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge)LH: This is another song where I dont absolutely need to hear it live, but that one line when Gerard speaks in Spanish for three seconds? Bilingual king.

Vampire Money (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)MZ: I want to hear this in the first half of the show, I think its a pump-up, good song to start up the crowd. Not necessarily the first song, but LH:The third or fourth. Its very upbeat and lets kill somebody tonight. Honestly, I want to manifest Robert Pattinson coming on stage and dancing to this one. Itd be so fun a little throwback to when Twilight was a thing. Wouldnt that be cute?MZ: Itd be better than cute. It would almost be better than his Actors on Actors interview with Jennifer Lopez.LH: Link here?

Give Em Hell, Kid (from Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge)MZ: The eyeliner is applied. The bangs are flat-ironed.LH: Its so angry. Theyre definitely going to play this because it used to be Mikey and Gerards favorite to perform this.MZ: Is this a banger? Yes. Does listening to this song make me think about my own personal growth? Yes. [Silently stares off into the distance.]

Bulletproof Heart (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: Mozart wishes he could have this piano moment. Do you hear that? Is that a piano?MZ: Coldplay wishes. If they didnt play this live, the crowd would rightfully be pissed.

Party Poison (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: This shouldve been on the Mad Max: Fury Road soundtrack. Its very anti-party, but lets party and thats a little about bringing down the establishment! You know?MZ: This is a type of MCR you could work out to.LH: Ew, thats such an interesting take.

DESTROYA (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: I love this intro, first of all. This song is the best combination of their early garage band sound with the techno-wave newer rock they had going on.MZ: Hearing him say check, check No comment.LH: This so
ng is hornier than Cats.

Thank You For The Venom (from Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge)LH: Ive always loved the fan engagement and interaction MCR is known for, and this song is a nice little like, shout out to you guys. And itll mean a lot to hear at a reunion show.MZ: A little fan service.LH: A little Rise of the Skywalker, if you will.

SING (from Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys)LH: Its crazy how 9/11 started MCR and Glee ended them with this cover.MZ: Hearing this live will bring me to tears or close to it. Huge pangs of nostalgia tears. Note to MCR: End the show with this.

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My Chemical Romance Reunion Is Almost Here: Our Setlist Wishlist - Variety

Evacuation lifted after chemical exposure at senior living apartments – ABC 4

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (ABC4): Salt Lake City Fire Department is investigating a chemical exposure at the Rendon Terrace Apartments.

What were dealing with is a product that isnt labeled according to rules and regulations for United States packaging, said Capt. Tony Stowe of the Salt Lake City Fire Department. Its not something that would be sold in the United States typically.

The exposure happened Sunday around 3 P.M. at the senior living community.

It was after investigators say a fumigant was released in one of the units.

The smoke was so thick it set off fire alarms. Initially, crews responded believing it was a fire. It wasnt until they arrived, they realized they were dealing with a different situation.

We do know that it was used for fumigation of some type, but as to what the ingredient list is is the difficulty, said Stowe. It isnt in English. We do have the 85th Civil Support which is a local resource through the military to test this product for us.

Two tenants were transported to the hospital for respiratory problems. Two firefighters were also transported as a precaution.

As the investigation was underway, the entire building was evacuated.

Some of the tenants were taken to the Sorenson Multi-Cultural Center in Salt Lake City. The evacuation center was set up by the American Red Cross.

Tenants were allowed back into their homes just before 8 P.M. Sunday evening when the ban was lifted.

Investigators are now looking into whether the fumigants release was intentional or accidental as well as what the product was.

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Evacuation lifted after chemical exposure at senior living apartments - ABC 4

Kane believes there’s ‘chemistry to be built’ with Dach, Strome – NBCSports.com

RALEIGH, N.C. Here are four takeaways from the Blackhawks' 4-0 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes at PNC Arena on Saturday:

1. Blackhawks response to work ethic being questioned

After calling out the work ethic in a 4-1 loss to Philadelphia on Thursday, head coach Jeremy Colliton was looking for and expecting a response on Saturday in Carolina.

"It doesn't need to be pretty," Colliton said before the game. "We just need to do what we need to do to get two points."

The Blackhawks responded with a solid effort, but they're still searching for the result to go with it. It's the fourth straight loss (0-3-1) for the Blackhawks, who are now 2-5-2 through their first nine games.

"I thought we did a good job of coming in, being excited to play and having a good attitudeand we just couldn't find a way to score a goal," Patrick Kane said. "It obviously hurts. We need to produce offense in this league and you need to score goals to win games."

2. Winning the possession battle, but not the game

Since the start of the 2017-18 season, the Hurricanes rank first in even-strength shot attempts for per 60 minutes (63.9) and scoring chances for percentage (54.4), according to Natural Stat Trick. They've been one of the league's best possession teams for years while the Blackhawks have given up the fifth-most scoring chances per 60 minutes (29.3) over that span.

The Blackhawks knew this would be a challenging matchup, especially against a team that went to the Eastern Conference Final last season and got even better on paper.

The Blackhawks won the possession battle, leading 58-46 in even-strength shot attempts but the offense is struggling to find the back of the net and the Hurricanes generated 11 scoring chances to the Blackhawks' five in the third period, most of them coming after it turned into a three-goal game.

"We played well for two periods," Colliton. "Disappointed that we didn't get better for that effort. We've just got to keep playing, keep sticking to it. When they got the third goal, we started pressing a little bit and got a little bit loose defensively, they got a lot [of chances] the last 12 minutes, which I didn't love.

"No one's going to lend us a hand out of this. We've just got to keep playing. The idea is that you've got to stick to doing the right things over time and that's how we're going to get out of it, and when we do get out of it, those habits will help us go on a run. But right now, it's difficult for these guys."

3. Scoring drought continues

The Blackhawks shook up all four lines on Saturday, with Colliton and the coaching staff looking for a spark on offense. Most notably, Alex DeBrincat, Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews were put together on the first line and that trio had a strong day.

All four lines had positive 5-on-5 possession numbers, but it didn't translate on the scoresheet. The Blackhawks have now scored only two goals in their past three games and that's simply not good enough.

"Hockey seems to be tough right now," Kane said. "A lot of hard work, a lot of 50-50 battles we're trying to win and it doesn't seem like anything's coming from it. Like I said, that's the message in here, stay with it, hopefully sooner or later those things are going to break and that work you do is going to become easier and get rewarded for it."

4. Losing the special teams battle ... again

The Blackhawks are looking for something to hang on to and they can't right now. Special teams is an area of the game that can help build confidence or offer some sort of momentum, but it hasn't been there on a consistent basis.

After killing off seven straight penalties in their previous two games, the Blackhawks went 0-for-2 on the penalty kill against Carolina and the power play also finished0-for-3, extending thedrought to0-for-16 in their past four games.

"I don't think we've won the special teams battle much this year, and it's difficult to get results," Colliton said. "There's no secrets in there, as far as what we need to do to get some wins."

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Kane believes there's 'chemistry to be built' with Dach, Strome - NBCSports.com

Chemistry improving and helping Oregon prepare for the year – 247Sports

The Oregon men's basketball team has reloaded their roster and features just three returning scholarship players from last season's Sweet 16 team. Even with seven new scholarship players this year, Oregon's two most experienced players say the chemistry on the court and off it is ahead of where the Ducks were in previous years at this point in camp.

"We got some plays where everybody already knows, we all know what we are doing," said sophomore center Francis Okoro. "We don't have anybody that's like trying to set us back. Everybody is moving forward. I think the guys are doing a really good job and trying to understand what coach is trying to say and trying to do, what the team needs. That's very important to me, everybody is coming in and doing what the team needs and understanding that we need a championship."

Last year's team needed nearly two-thirds of the regular season to get into gear and figure out how to play together, and once they did they became one of the best teams in college basketball. The hope is that this year's squad will see find that sweet spot quicker. To help facilitate that, this offseason Altman has changed up how the Ducks train and prepare for the season. At the start of training camp in late September, Altman noted the Ducks would simplify the offense and the defense so that guys would play more free.

Senior and four-year starting point guard Payton Pritchard said instead of stacking plays and schemes on top of each other quicker, Altman has allowed the newcomers to focus on the system's core plays to ensure they fully understand the basics.

"Kind of letting guys get used to what the system is and the system we have in place right now. Not adding on and letting that come later on," said Pritchard.

Okoro was one of the newcomers last season for the Ducks and he said this year's training camp has been much more focused on the basics of Oregon's offense and defense compared to his first year, and it's played a big role in the development of this team.

"At the beginning of last year, I think we had a lot of plays I didn't know," said Okoro. "This year we have less plays and we just have a specific thing we know we are doing. When we get the ball we know what we are doing. We know we got screen plays, we know all the things we're supposed to do.

"It just makes it more easy for players."

While Altman changed the practice routine of the program early on, he also met with the Ducks at the start of the season and challenged them to sacrifice their personal goals for the betterment of the team and to play together.

"Coach demanded that. He called everybody out and explained to everybody what he wants and to make everybody understand that everybody on the team is important. No one is better," said Okoro.

"For us to win, we all have to come together as a team. That's the one thing coach has been saying since day one."

The Ducks held a private scrimmage in Seattle two weeks ago against the University of Seattle and won that basketball game by a close margin. Okoro said the Ducks didn't play as good as they would have liked and there was an adjustment that needed to happen to the pace of the college game. In Oregon's second scrimmage, against a better opponent in New Mexico this past weekend, Okoro and Pritchard both said the Ducks showed marked improvement.

"I felt like we played really good with the guys playing together, running the floor," said Okoro. "To me, I think we played really good. We just got to keep picking it up from there."

"I think these guys, a lot of them are mature enough to take that criticism," said Payton Pritchard. "And I think that's the part of the chemistry that does help."

The Ducks will make their debut for the 2019-20 basketball season Wednesday night at Matthew Knight Arena for the team's Green and Yellow scrimmage. The men tip off at 6 p.m. and will be followed by the women at 7. Then the bright lights come on and the games that count will begin, with the Ducks opening the season on November 5th at home against Fresno State. Pritchard says that's when the Ducks will really get a feel if this year's chemistry and on-court production is truly ahead of last year.

"That's how people base things, off wins or losses," said Pritchard.

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Chemistry improving and helping Oregon prepare for the year - 247Sports

Chemistry in Place – BizTimes.com (Milwaukee)

Chemistry in Place

1712 E. Capitol Drive Neighborhood: Shorewood Founded: 2004 Owner: Patricia Algiers Employees: 10 Industry: Commercial interior design

How do you fit the mood or personality of a business with design?

Algiers: We observe as much about the company as possible. We ask a whole series of questions trying to get at what they do, why theyre different than anyone else, who they are in terms of their personality, who their clients are, how employees interact, how they dressare they casual, are they formal?

Why is location important, and why did you choose Shorewood for your business?

Algiers: Very much a part of a companys brand is where the company is located. Ive got a real estate background as well as a design background, and I use that background to help clients choose a location that really resonates to who and what that client does.

I chose (Shorewood) because I live in this area and because it was easy for everyone who works here to get here, parking was free. We could walk to coffee shops, walk to places for lunch, walk to places after work.

Did Chemistry in Place grow in 2016?

Algiers: We had a 15 percent increase in revenue from 2015 to 2016.

2016 was a year of a great deal of change and what that change has done, it keeps us feeling like we have our finger on the pulse and it keeps us current and relevant and ready to tackle the next problem.

What are your words to live by?

Algiers: Make every day count.

Whats new at your company?

Algiers: We constantly rearrange the furniture and the ingredients for teams in it. What weve done in the last year is we have an English phone booth. So everybody who comes in our office gets their picture taken in the phone booth, we post it to Facebook, and then we print the picture and put it on our wall.

(County Executive) Chris Abele just named May 15, 2017, Pat Algiers day because of my work with the (Shorewood) Ghost Train. Im on the public art committee. Our office does a lot of work pro bono for the village and the ghost train. We want to have a special run every Halloween.

We did a map of existing and proposed locations for placemaking. Were working to come up with a number of ideas and then test the ideas with the donor base to see which one of the ideas would have the most favorable response so we could raise the money again. Shorewood is the most densely populated area of the state. If people walk to all these things, they can walk by and appreciate all the various placemaking installations.

1712 E. Capitol Drive Neighborhood: Shorewood Founded: 2004 Owner: Patricia Algiers Employees: 10 Industry: Commercial interior design

How do you fit the mood or personality of a business with design?

Algiers: We observe as much about the company as possible. We ask a whole series of questions trying to get at what they do, why theyre different than anyone else, who they are in terms of their personality, who their clients are, how employees interact, how they dressare they casual, are they formal?

Why is location important, and why did you choose Shorewood for your business?

Algiers: Very much a part of a companys brand is where the company is located. Ive got a real estate background as well as a design background, and I use that background to help clients choose a location that really resonates to who and what that client does.

I chose (Shorewood) because I live in this area and because it was easy for everyone who works here to get here, parking was free. We could walk to coffee shops, walk to places for lunch, walk to places after work.

Did Chemistry in Place grow in 2016?

Algiers: We had a 15 percent increase in revenue from 2015 to 2016.

2016 was a year of a great deal of change and what that change has done, it keeps us feeling like we have our finger on the pulse and it keeps us current and relevant and ready to tackle the next problem.

What are your words to live by?

Algiers: Make every day count.

Whats new at your company?

Algiers: We constantly rearrange the furniture and the ingredients for teams in it. What weve done in the last year is we have an English phone booth. So everybody who comes in our office gets their picture taken in the phone booth, we post it to Facebook, and then we print the picture and put it on our wall.

(County Executive) Chris Abele just named May 15, 2017, Pat Algiers day because of my work with the (Shorewood) Ghost Train. Im on the public art committee. Our office does a lot of work pro bono for the village and the ghost train. We want to have a special run every Halloween.

We did a map of existing and proposed locations for placemaking. Were working to come up with a number of ideas and then test the ideas with the donor base to see which one of the ideas would have the most favorable response so we could raise the money again. Shorewood is the most densely populated area of the state. If people walk to all these things, they can walk by and appreciate all the various placemaking installations.

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Chemistry in Place - BizTimes.com (Milwaukee)

Bills Today: Sammy and Tyrod pleased with their chemistry – BuffaloBills.com

Heres the Bills news of note for August 4th.

1 - Sammy and Tyrod pleased with their chemistryThey havent made a lot of plays through the first week of training camp, but Sammy Watkins and Tyrod Taylor feel their on-field rapport is solid right now.

I think our communication is way better (than last year), said Taylor. We had a situation (Thursday) where there was a miscommunication. Thats been one of maybe two mistakes. Weve mostly been on the same page. Getting some reps with him this spring definitely helped. I want to keep building out chemistry going forward.

Taylor has always trusted Watkins in almost any kind of matchup in the passing game, but being on the field day after day has them back in a comfort zone with one another.

2 - Logan Thomas recruited to Bills by former Hokie teammateHes done well in his transition to the tight end position in training camp, but the opportunity that Logan Thomas currently has in Buffalo might not have happened were it not for a former college teammates phone call.

Thomas had just been released by the New York Giants last November where he was still trying to make it in the league as a quarterback he made a phone call to the quarterback he succeeded at Virginia Tech, Tyrod Taylor.

I got a call from him last year when he was trying to decide whether to transition into a new position, said Taylor. Logan and I have always had a very good relationship. Since day one, weve spent a lot of time together, especially in the QB room at VT. Were like a family. Hokies always stay in touch. The next day I called him and said we could use him here (in Buffalo). We were able to make that happen, and Im happy for him. He just has to continue to keep working.

At 6-6 and 250 pounds he is one of the tallest offensive players on the roster. Its helping him now, but back at Tech he was ribbed for his unusual size.

Hes always had a size advantage. I think he wears a size seventeen shoe, and he would always trip, and I would tell him those shoes are too big, Taylor joked. Hes a big target going down the middle of the field. He made a strong catch the other day.

3 - Maurice Jones Drew: Taylor ready to take Bills to next levelIts the prognostication season with a month to go before the 2017 NFL campaign, and NFL Networks Maurice Jones-Drew believes Tyrod Taylor is a quarterback capable of lifting the Bills into playoff contention.

I feel like a lot of teams wants Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Jones-Drew said. Well there are only two of those guys. You have to find a guy that fits your system and then develop him and put pieces around him.

Tyrod has been a successful guy in this league. Hes not a high turnover guy. He uses his legs when he needs to. He was able to lead that team last year with all those injuries on offense to 7-9. I know Shady McCoy did a great job running the ball, even though Tyrod helped with that too.

When you dont turn the ball over you have a chance. I got a chance to watch him work out this offseason. Hes dedicated and works out hard. He makes sure he knows everything about the playbook. He was studying that throughout the summer. He is that guy if you allow him to be.

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Bills Today: Sammy and Tyrod pleased with their chemistry - BuffaloBills.com

Riesen likes Pioneer softball’s chemistry, battery – Enid News & Eagle

With a 3-0 record in the first week of the season, Pioneer softball coach Dave Riesen is upbeat about the 2017 season.

"I like our group of kids,'' said Riesen Thursday. "We have good chemistry. That might be the most important thing to have early on.''

The second most important might be having an experienced battery like the Lady Mustangs have in junior returning starters Lexi Booth and Megan Carson.

Booth will be on the mound most of the time, but will move to catcher when Carson goes to the circle.

"That's where you start in fastpitch,'' Riesen said. "The circle and behind the plate are a big part of the game.''

Booth was 25-10 with an 1.01 ERA last season.

"It would be hard for her to improve but she is throwing harder and has more movement on her pitches,'' Riesen said. "Lexi has as good as control as any pitcher that I have had. She can give up more hits than most pitchers, who give up a lot of walks.''

Carson's arm is stronger and is playing with more confidence, Riesen said. aid.

"She does an outstanding job behind the plate,'' Riesen said. "She doesn't have too many passed balls and does a good job of preventing wild pitches. We feel confident in either one either as a pitcher or a catcher."

Lizzy Bennett, who has started the last two years in the outfield, has moved to second, at least temporarily. Madison Postier, who started at third last season, has moved to short for the time being. McKayla Kerger, last year's designated player, is playing third but could end up at second. Macy Alford is set at first.

"The key for us is having our infield play solid defense,'' Riesen said. "I feel comfortable with that. As the season goes, we should get even better.''

Returning starter Cheyann Vaughn is back in center where she is expected to be flanked by Shea Heinlein in left and freshman Haley Panhorst in right.

Sophmore Katey Moore is slated to be the designated player.

"It's still early,'' Riesen said. "We're still doing some experimenting. It's a work in progress."

The Lady Mustangs were 28-11 last season, losing to top-seeded Mooreland twice in extra innings in the regionals.

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Riesen likes Pioneer softball's chemistry, battery - Enid News & Eagle

Together again: Toews, Saad expect chemistry to return quickly – Comcast SportsNet Chicago

Brandon Saad talked to plenty of people after he was traded back to the Blackhawks. Some were now ex-teammates from the Columbus Blue Jackets. Others, soon-to-be-teammates again from the Blackhawks.

One of the first people he talked to on Friday? Jonathan Toews.

Hes someone I talked to shortly after it happened. Hes a guy Ive always kept in touch with, great friend, Saad said. To be reunited, getting that chance to play with him again, hes an incredible player and his resume speaks for itself. I look forward to trying to rekindle that.

The two didnt lose touch the past two years. Now that theyll be reunited on the ice, they hope they didnt lose the chemistry either. Saad and Toews formed a great combination a few years ago, a steadiness thats been missing from the top line, especially at left wing, ever since. With Saads return, however, the Blackhawks are looking to get that top line consistent again.

[MORE: Blackhawks trade back, select Henri Jokiharju at No. 29]

Toews was at the NHL Draft on Friday night, announcing the Blackhawks first-round pick with Patrick Kane. The thought of getting Saad back on his left wing was appealing.

Well theres no doubt getting an old teammate, an old friend back, another guy who shared that same bond, friendship and having the experience of winning a Cup together with Saader. I guess theres some reconciliation because you know what youre getting, Toews said. You know what type of guy he is and how hes going to fit into the locker room and what hes going to bring.

Blackhawks general manager Stan Bowman said via conference call today that, while Toews and Saad had great chemistry the first time around, Saad could fit with others. It all depends on what works best.

Thats up to Joel [Quenneville] on where he wants to use him, Bowman said. No doubt they had tremendous chemistry; he found a home on Jonathans left wing. But the one thing Im trying to stress to everyone, even internally, is we dont want to look backward and replicate some old formula. Hes had great success with Jonathan and if they go back to that, great.

Toews and Saad found their niche together pretty quickly the first time around. Its only been two years since Saad departed, so finding that chemistry again shouldnt take long at all.

I dont think so, Toews said of chemistry taking long to rekindle. You play at that caliber you just worry about your own game. Go out there and have fun. be prepared, be ready to roll and it shouldnt take long for things to happen out there.

Jamal Mayers may have had the most eventful draft night in any sport. Ever.

The former Blackhawks winger told a story on In the Loop Friday evening that puts all other draft stories to shame.

He didn't have to wait several picks like Aaron Rodgers or get his inappropriate tweets discovered like 50 percent of athletes today. No, Mayers actually saved a kid's life back on his big night in 1993.

A 7-year-old was choking on pizza right in front of him, causing Mayers to jump into action.

Mayers performed the Heimlich Maneuver - which he learned because his brother was training to be an ambulance driver - to save the child.

That's some heroic stuff.

Listen to the full story in the video above.

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Together again: Toews, Saad expect chemistry to return quickly - Comcast SportsNet Chicago

MilliporeSigma adds Chemical Products to Reaxys’ Chemistry Database – PR Newswire (press release)

BILLERICA, Mass., June 26, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --MilliporeSigma today announced a collaboration with Elsevier, the information analytics company specializing in science and health, to add its products into Reaxys, Elsevier's chemistry database.

Researchers and chemists who use Reaxys can now access an additional 43,000 MilliporeSigma compounds and chemicals with data provided directly from the supplier. The collaboration means users will have immediate access to MilliporeSigma's product availability as well as standard pricing for U.S.-based customers.

"This integration makes researchers' daily decision-making process much easier as they look for ways to reduce the time it takes to actually buy the compounds that they need," said Udit Batra, CEO, MilliporeSigma. "Together, we're giving customers peace of mind about the quality of the products in development, which is important in such a competitive industry."

The collaboration with Elsevier gives Reaxys users who work in pharmaceutical drug discovery, chemical R&D and other areas a more efficient purchasing process. Customers can quickly compare the cost of purchasing a compound against making it internally, meaning better allocation of resources and saving time.

"MilliporeSigma is recognized as an industry leader, so this collaboration is a great addition to Reaxys," said Christian Boehm, Director of Chemistry Solutions at Elsevier.

Reaxys contains more than 240 years of unparalleled chemistry content, including 105 million organic, inorganic and organometallic compounds, 42 million chemical reactions, 500 million published experimental facts, 16,000 chemistry related periodicals and six indexing sources for a cross-disciplinary view of chemistry.

All Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany news releases are distributed by email at the same time they become available on the EMD Group website. In case you are a resident of the U.S. or Canada please go to http://www.emdgroup.com/subscribe to register again for your online subscription of this service as our newly introduced geo-targeting requires new links in the email. You may later change your selection or discontinue this service.

About the Life Science Business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany

The life science business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, which operates as MilliporeSigma in the U.S. and Canada, has 19,000 employees and 65 manufacturing sites worldwide, with a portfolio of more than 300,000 products enabling scientific discovery. Udit Batra is the global chief executive officer of MilliporeSigma.

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany completed its $17 billion acquisition of Sigma-Aldrich in November 2015, creating a leader in the $125 billion global life science industry.

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany is a leading company for innovative and top-quality high-tech products in healthcare, life science and performance materials. The company has six businesses Biopharmaceuticals, Consumer Health, Allergopharma, Biosimilars, Life Science and Performance Materials and generated sales of 15 billion in 2016. Around 50,000 employees work in 66 countries to improve the quality of life for patients, to foster the success of customers and to help meet global challenges.

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany is the world's oldest pharmaceutical and chemical company since 1668, the company has stood for innovation, business success and responsible entrepreneurship. Holding an approximately 70 percent interest, the founding family remains the majority owner of the company to this day. The company holds the global rights to the name and the trademark "Merck" internationally except for the United States and Canada, where the company operates as EMD Serono, MilliporeSigma and EMD Performance Materials.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/milliporesigma-adds-chemical-products-to-reaxys-chemistry-database-300479007.html

SOURCE MilliporeSigma

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MilliporeSigma adds Chemical Products to Reaxys' Chemistry Database - PR Newswire (press release)