2020 will be the beginning of the tech industry’s radical revisioning of the physical world – TechCrunch

These days its easy to bemoan the state of innovation and the dynamism coming from Americas cradle of technological development in Silicon Valley.

The same companies that were praised for reimagining how people organized and accessed knowledge, interacted publicly, shopped for goods and services, conducted business, and even the devices on which all of these things are done, now find themselves criticized for the ways in which theyve abused the tools theyve created to become some of the most profitable and wealthiest ventures in human history.

Before the decade was even half over, the concern over the poverty of purpose inherent in Silicon Valleys inventions were given voice by Peter Thiel a man who has made billions financing the creation of the technologies whose paucity he then bemoaned.

We are no longer living in a technologically accelerating world, Thiel told an audience at Yale University in 2013. There is an incredible sense of deceleration.

In the six years since Thiel spoke to that audience, the only acceleration has been the pace of technologys contribution to the worlds decline.

However, there are some investors who think that the next wave of big technological breakthroughs are just around the corner and that 2020 will be the year that they enter the public consciousness in a real way.

These are the venture capitalists who invest in companies that develop so-called frontier technologies (or deep tech) things like computational biology, artificial intelligence or machine learning, robotics, the space industry, advanced manufacturing using 3D printing, and quantum computing.

Continued advancements in computational power, data management, imaging and sensing technologies, and materials science are bridging researchers ability to observe and understand phenomena with the potential to manipulate them in commercially viable ways.

As a result increasing numbers of technology investors are seeing less risk and more rewards in the formerly arcane areas of investing in innovations.

Established funds will spin up deep tech teams and more funds will be founded to address this market, especially where deep tech meets sustainability, according to Fifty Years investor, Seth Bannon. This shift will be driven from the bottom up (its where the best founder talent is heading) and also from the top down (as more and more institutional LPs want to allocate capital to this space).

In some ways, these investments are going to be driven by political necessity as much as technological advancement, according to Matt Ocko, a managing partner at the venture firm DCVC.

Earlier this year, DCVC closed on $725 million for two investment funds focused on deep technology investing. For Ocko, the geopolitical reality of continuing tensions with China will drive adoption of new technologies that will remake the American industrial economy.

Whether we like it or not, US-government-driven scrutiny of China-based technology will continue in 2020. Less of it will be allowed to be deployed in the US, especially in areas of security, networking, autonomous transportation and space intelligence, writes Ocko, in an email. At the same time, US DoD efforts to streamline procurement processes will result in increasingly tighter partnerships between the DoD and tech sector. The need to bring complex manufacturing, comms, and semiconductor technology home to the US will support a renaissance in distributed manufacturing/advanced manufacturing tech and a strong wave of semiconductor and robotic innovation.

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2020 will be the beginning of the tech industry's radical revisioning of the physical world - TechCrunch

Don’t Believe in Ankara’s Hoax about its Romance with NATO Allies – Modern Diplomacy

In the course of many visits to Iran over the years I have come torealise that no country is the subject of such fascination and mistrust in Iranas the United Kingdom. So my friends at Tehran Times are interested to hearmy thoughts in relation to Anglo-Iranian relations following the recent UKelection.

This election was fought and won by Johnsons Conservative party inorder to Get Brexit Done so that the UK will now definitively after threeyears of political paralysis leave the European Union. I believe this resultto be positive for Iran for two reasons, the first being Prime Minister Johnsonas a person, and the second being the new role and responsibilities ofJohnsons office as UK Prime Minister in international diplomacy and commercefor an independent UK.

Johnson as a Person

Those are my principles, and if you dont like them.well, I haveothers.. Groucho Marx.

As with President Trump it is a mistake to view Prime Minister Johnsonthrough the lens of rational statecraft. Johnson combines intelligence,idleness and pure expedience in equal measure. He owes his success to hiscapacity to delegate strategy and responsibility to capable and diligentsubordinates such as Dominic Cummings, the Grand Vizier to Johnsons ByzantineCaliph.

Perhaps the most important point for Irans decision-makers to bear inmind with PM Johnson is that, like his father Stanley before him, he genuinelylikes and respects Iran and Iranians, and the countrys great culture, historyand heritage. So, all things being equal, the accession to power of Johnson asa person is positive for Iran.

Johnson as UK Prime Minister

Unfortunately, all things are very far from equal for Iran in terms ofaccess to the global economy, and the question is to what extent Irans accessmay improve after UKs imminent Brexit departure from the European Union underJohnsons leadership.

While much is made of the UKs special relationship with the US, thishas been poisoned by a unilateralist Trump administration which is thoroughlydespised by the UK ruling class from which PM Johnson springs. Despite agreat deal of pro-American and anti-European rhetoric from within Johnsonsparty, the reality is that, not least for geographic reasons, two thirds of UKtrade is with EU members and this is unlikely to change soon.

PM Johnson is pragmatic enough, and has a big enough parliamentarymajority for the next five years, to allow his more anti-European & pro-USelements to say what they like while he does what he likes. So what practicalsteps could be taken to improve UK/Iranian relationship?

Trade Clearing

That PM Johnson is willing to engage with Iran was clear from his visitto Tehran two years ago in December 2017. Unfortunately for him, hispredecessor PM Theresa May, under instructions from the US, killed the releaseto Iran via the banking system of long outstanding funds which could open theway to further trust-building measures.

New financial technology (Fintech) presents new options for innovativeUK trade clearing which enable bank payment channels to be transcended. In theenergy field, the UK may go beyond the political EU Energy Union project whichaimed to both create a pan-European market in energy as a commodity and supportthe Euro as a currency by securing denominated debt on energy.

The fundamental flaw of the INSTEX mechanism is that it is reliant onbanks as payment channels, and no major bank wishing to clear dollars isprepared to participate in INSTEX even for trade permitted under US sanctions.The UK may now transcend the INSTEX Euro trade clearing mechanism by creating acomplementary trade clearing system in London.

So a new UK/Iran trade clearing system may directly connect businesseswishing to supply for use in Iran permissible technologies such as desalinationand renewable energy in particular.

How may this be achieved?

Petro Fintech

Financial Technology is the combination of law & accounting withinformation and communications technology (ICT). A new generation of onlinebusinesses emerged around 2001 from the Internet Bubble of complex and crazyventures. A similar new wave of Fintech is now emerging from the initial waveof Blockchain secure shared databases and Coin financial instruments withcomplex and vulnerable connections to the conventional financial system.

In the field of energy fintech Venezuelas Petro instrument is anexcellent case study. The first problem with this Petro is that it istechnically backed, not by (say) gasoline or diesel fuel which the averageVenezuelan can use, but by heavy grades of crude oil useful only to a fewcomplex refineries. Secondly, this technical oil backing is useless even tocomplex refineries because Venezuela will not accept the Petro from theminstead of dollars or even Euros in payment for oil.

In October 2008, the global banking system froze and the oil pricecollapsed, which OPEC mistook for lack of demand, but was simply due to theinability of oil buyers to clear payments using bank channels. Meanwhile, inTehran I proposed, at a major conference chaired by H E Nematzadeh, a simpleprepay instrument (Petro) returnable in payment for fuel supply.

As an energy prepay (credit) instrument Irans reality-based Petrowill be issued by fuel producers or refiners, not by Irans banks orgovernment. The NewClear combination of transparent issuance, professionalsystem management and mutual assurance by a Protection and Indemnity (P&I)club agreement will enable a Petro Clearing Union.

Proofs of Concept

Every network is founded by its first connection. There is no reason whyIrans frozen assets in the UK, whether long outstanding debts, or ongoing gasproduction, cannot be mobilised using simple effective energy credit clearing.In this way, projects may be mobilised in Iran exempt from US sanctions and withsuppliers and contractors willing and able to implement them, but unable toaccess conventional payment via banking channels.

Moreover, in Iran itself, all of the elements now exist to rapidlyintroduce the Petro domestically in order to reduce the initial frictions fromreducing subsidies.

My colleagues and I stand ready, as we have since 2004, to at lastcommence the implementation of a new generation of financial technology bothdomestically and in bilateral UK/Iran trade clearing: in this way Iran may advancefrom nuclear to NewClear agreements.

From ourpartner TehranTimes

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Don't Believe in Ankara's Hoax about its Romance with NATO Allies - Modern Diplomacy

The World This Year: Return of the leaderless protest, NATO’s ‘brain death’, the Greta effect – The world this week – FRANCE 24

Issued on: 27/12/2019 - 16:51Modified: 27/12/2019 - 16:51

2019has been a year of protests around the world: from France, with the most recent demonstrations against Macron's pension reform and the leaderless Yellow Vestprotests;to Chile and Hong Kong, with a mix of social and political grievances. It proved contagious: in the Arab world, leaderless movements brought down not one but two longtime strongmen in Algeria and Sudan. In Lebanon,ordinary citizens are rejecting systems built on sectarian power-sharing. They are alsofed up with mismanagement and corruption.

Meanwhile, 2019 wasa year of challengesamongst NATO members. Especially with French President Emmanuel Macron evokingNATO's "brain death" and with the Turkish incursion into northeastern Syria.It was a triumphant Recep Tayyip Erdogan who was welcomed to the White House. Two weeks before a NATO summit in London, Donald Trump had gifted him a partial withdrawal from Syria.

In India,2019 was the year the world's largest democracy re-elected Narendra Modi.In his first term, Modi promised to put toilets before temples and work on development.But a February suicide attack targeting Indian security forces in disputed Kashmir changed the tone.After that, it was identity politics all the way and sincewith parliament approving the Citizenship Amendment Act, which offers a path to citizenship for immigrants from neighbouring states - so long as they are not Muslim.

Finally, our panel of journalists tell us who they think is their "person of the year", afterclimate activist Greta Thunberg was named Time Person of the Year 2019.

Produced by Alessandro Xenos, Juliette Laurain and Ariana Mozafari.

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The World This Year: Return of the leaderless protest, NATO's 'brain death', the Greta effect - The world this week - FRANCE 24

NATO Was Never Only About Russia – Modern Diplomacy

On December20, 2019, US President Donald Trump signed the National Defense AuthorizationAct, creating the newest military service since the US Air Force wasestablished in 1947. Although the United States Space Force is intended tobolster this countrys overall power in an expanding geostrategic competitionwith Russia the usual or orthodox sort of national response amidst our structuralglobal anarchy its plausible effects will likely be destabilizing. At itscore, the critical US policy error committed here is both conceptual andhistoric; that is, it consists of failing to recognize that literally millenniaof Realpolitik-generated competitionshave ended in more-or-less catastrophic forms of war. In essence, therefore, bycreating Space Force, Donald Trump will merely have passed Americas most basicmilitary posture from one untenable position to another. Apropos of this flawed transmittal, thisarticle by Professor Louis Rene Beres will further clarify certain assorteddetails and informed expectations.

What is the good ofpassing from one untenable position to another, of seeking justification alwayson the same plane?-Samuel Beckett, Endgame

Significantly,US President Donald Trumps newly announced Space Force represents an ironicreaffirmation of past policy failures. More precisely, when understood as a wittingextrapolation from core Trump policies of America First, the operational roleof this newest US armed service will be to extend Realpolitik[1] or power politics vertically, intospace. Prima facie, at best, the predictableresult will be the same as it has always been here on earth. At worst, this result could be utterly banefuland uniquely catastrophic.

Space Forcewill be founded upon certain conspicuous failures of the past. It will projectentire centuries of intellectually vacant policy expectations into still anotherdimension. Accordingly, Americans should now be inquiring: What conceivable goodcan be expected from such a persistently injurious military posture?

The answeris plain. Instead of America First or any of its prematurely celebrated derivatives,a rational and well-intentioned American president should reject all zero-sumderivatives or corollaries of classical belligerent nationalism. Any Americanpolicy that intentionally seeks to maximize its own national well-being at theexpense of others will be acting against certain peremptory norms ofinternational law[2] and against its own dominant securityinterests. By definition, any such policy especially in the midst of ColdWar II [3] could prove incoherent, indefensibleor even altogether irrational.

Nothingcould be more apparent to anyone who bothers to take the trouble to thinklogically and historically about such serious matters.[4] In candor, the requisite analysesare by no means dense or esoteric. Indeed, on such long-documented matters ofpolicy, history is unambiguous.

To clarifyfurther, the world is a system. Always, everything is interrelated. Interalia, no American foreign policy success can ever be achieved at the sacrificialexpense of other countries and peoples. And absolutely no such presumptivesuccess is sustainable if the rest of the planet must thereby expect a consistentlymore violent and explosive future.[5]

Here, on earth, the basic story is always thesame; it is always about certain inane and self-destructive inter-statecompetitions.

Here, onthis irremediably interdependent planet, the national tribe, in one belligerent manifestation or another, has long underminedall needed opportunities for creating a durable and authentic world order.

Still, itis exactly this latest expression of corrosive national tribalism that is championedby Mr. Trumps Space Force. When all cumulative policy impacts are taken into carefulaccount, this soulless[6] derivative of America Firstwill inevitably emerge as anything but patriotic. What else should we reasonably conclude about a planned militaryposture that injures this country and various others abjectly, and at the sametime?[7]

Thoughcounter-intuitive, Space Force represents a US security posture that is badly misconceivedand prospectively lethal. Left unchallenged, it will further exacerbate thedeliberate Presidential choice of endless belligerence as a favored medium of Americanmilitary well-being. What is required, instead, is the readily decipherable opposite of Space Force. What is needed,immediately, is a markedly broadened US awareness of human and societal interconnectedness.

Always, history is instructive. From the 1648 Peaceof Westphalia to the present fragmenting moment, world politics has been shapedby a continuously shifting balance of power and by variously relentless correlatesof war, terror and genocide.[8] Ideally, of course, hope shouldcontinue to exist. To be sure, there is no rational alternative. But now itshould sing much more softly, unobtrusively, in an aptly prudent undertone.

For Americans increasingly endangered byseat-of-the-pants Trump foreign policies, however, more will be required than sotto voce modulations. Merely tosurvive on this imperiled planet, all of us, together, will have to rediscoveran individual human life, one consciouslydetached from ritualistic patterns of conformance, mindless entertainments, shallowoptimism, or any other disingenuously contrived expressions of someretrospectively imagined tribal happiness. At a minimum, such survival willdemand a prompt and full-scale retreat from what Donald Trump has termedAmerica First and from all of its rapidly dissembling correlates. In thisregard, Trumps Space Force is the foreseeable result of a much deeper societalpathology, a know-nothing American populism that drives out intellect andreason in favor of deliberate mystifications and a collective self-delusion.

Jefferson and Americas other Founding Fathershad already understood: There is always a necessary and respectable place forserious erudition. Learning fromhistory, Americans may yet learn something from America First that is useful toopposing any actual iterations of a planned Space Force. They may learn, evenduring this national declension Time ofTrump, that a ubiquitous mortality is far more consequential than anyglittering administration promises of supremacy, advantage or victory.[9]

In The Decline of the West, first publishedduring World War I, Oswald Spengler asked: Can a desperate faith inknowledge free us from the nightmare of the grand questions? Assuredly, thisremains a vital query, but one that will never be adequately raised in our universities,on Wall Street or anywhere in the Trump White House. Still, we may learnsomething productive about these indispensable grand questions by moreclosely studying American roles and responsibilities in a changing worldpolitics.

At thatpoint we might finally come to understand that the most suffocatinginsecurities of life on earth can never be undone by further militarizing spaceand abrogating pertinent international treaties.

In the end,even in American foreign policy decision-making, truth is exculpatory. In whatamounts to a uniquely promising paradox, Space Force can help illuminate a blatantlie that may still help us see the underlying truth. This peremptory truth is notreally mysterious or unfathomable. Americans require, after all, a substantiallywider consciousness of unity and relatedness between individual human beingsand (correspondingly) between adversarial nation-states.

There is nomore urgent requirement.

None.

Thoughseemingly oriented toward greater American power and security, building anAmerican Space Force would merely propel this countrys military strategy fromone untenable posture of belligerent nationalism to another. What theproponents of Space Force ignore, interalia, is that all national security options should be examined from thestandpoint of their cumulative impact.Accordingly, if the credible effect of this new America First policy initiativewill be to spawn various reciprocal postures of belligerent nationalism among principalfoes (e.g., Russia and potentially China) the net effect will prove sorely andcomprehensively negative.[10]

Far betterfor President Trump to consider the relevant insight of Pierre Teilhard deChardin offered in his masterwork, ThePhenomenon of Man: No element can move and grow except with and by all theothers with itself. While not conceived with any particular reference to globalchaos[11] or national military strategies,this elucidating fragment of the French Jesuit philosophers wisdom applieshere with substantial purpose and an altogether exquisite perfection. Summingup, Space Force, in all its apparent detachment from historical experience, representsa move in the wrong direction, a determinative step forward into anotherdimension of prospective international conflict, but a consequentiallyretrograde step nonetheless.

[1] See, by this author, Louis Ren Beres, Reason and Realpolitik: US Foreign Policyand World Order, Lexington Books, 1984; and Louis RenBeres, Mimicking Sisyphus: AmericasCountervailing Nuclear Strategy, Lexington Books, 1983. Regardingphilosophical foundations of Realpoliitk:Right is the interest of thestronger, says Thrasymachus in Bk. I, Sec. 338 of Plato, THE REPUBLIC (B.Jowett tr., 1875). Justice is acontract neither to do nor to suffer wrong, says Glaucon, id., Bk. II, Sec. 359. See also, Philus in Bk III, Sec. 5 of Cicero,DE REPUBLICA.

[2] Accordingto Article 53 of the Vienna Convention onthe Law of Treaties: a peremptory norm of general international law is anorm accepted and recognized by the international community of states as awhole as a norm from which no derogation is permitted and which can be modifiedonly by a subsequent norm of general international law having the same character.See: Vienna Convention on the Law ofTreaties, Done at Vienna, May 23, 1969. Entered into force, Jan. 27, 1980.U.N. Doc. A/CONF. 39/27 at 289 (1969), 1155 U.N.T.S. 331, reprinted in 8 I.L.M. 679(1969).

[3] In expresslypolitical science terms, positing the influence of Cold War II meansexpecting that the world system is becoming increasingly bipolar. Forearly writings, by this author, on the global security implications of justsuch an expanding bipolarity, see: Louis Ren Beres, Bipolarity, Multipolarity,and the Reliability of Alliance Commitments, Western Political Quarterly,Vol. 25, No.4., December 1972, pp. 702-710; Louis Ren Beres, Bipolarity,Multipolarity, and the Tragedy of the Commons, Western Political Quarterly,Vol. 26, No.4., December 1973, pp, 649-658; and Louis Ren Beres, Guerillas,Terrorists, and Polarity: New Structural Models of World Politics, WesternPolitical Quarterly, Vol. 27, No.4., December 1974, pp. 624-636.

[4] Butone should be reminded here of Bertrand Russells trenchant observation in Principles of Social Reconstruction (1916):Men fear thought more than they fear anything else on earth more thanruin, more even than death.

[5] To the extent that anysuch American foreign policy violates international law, it would alsorepresent a corollary violation of US law. In the sober words of Mr. JusticeGray, delivering the judgment of the US Supreme Court in Paquete Habana (1900): International law is part of our law,and must be ascertained and administered by the courts of justice ofappropriate jurisdiction. (175 U.S. 677(1900)) See also: Opinion in Tel-Oren vs. Libyan Arab Republic (726F. 2d 774 (1984)).The specificincorporation of treaty law into US municipal law is most expressly codified atArt. 6 of the US Constitution, theso-called Supremacy Clause.

[6] Both Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung thought ofsoul (in German, Seele)as the intangible essence of a human being. Neither Freud nor Jung everprovided any precise definition of the term, but it was not intended by eitherin some ordinary religious sense. For both, it was a still-recognizable andcritical seat of both mind and passions in this life. Interesting, too, in thepresent context, is that Freud explained his already-predicted decline of Americaby various express references to soul. Freud was plainly disgustedby any civilization so apparently unmoved by considerations of trueconsciousness (e.g., awareness of intellect, literature and history),and even thought that the crude American commitment to perpetually shallowoptimism and material accomplishment at any cost would occasion sweepingpsychological misery.

[7] From the standpointof classical political and legal philosophy, such a national policy would bethe diametric opposite of the statement by Emmerich de Vattel in The Law of Nations (1758): The firstgeneral law which is to be found in the very end of the society of Nations isthat each Nation should contribute as far as it can to the happiness and advancementof other Nations.

[8] International law remains avigilante system, or Westphalian. This latter referenceis to the Peace of Westphalia (1648),which concluded the Thirty Years War, and created the now still-existingdecentralized, or self-help, state system. See: Treaty of Peace of Munster, Oct. 1648, 1 Consol. T.S. 271; and Treaty of Peace of Osnabruck, Oct. 1648,1., Consol. T.S. 119, Together, these two treaties comprise the Peace of Westphalia.

[9] Seeby this author, at Oxford University Press:https://blog.oup.com/2016/04/war-political-victories/

[10] Included in thisassessment must be the expanding risks of US Presidential nucleardecision-making. By this writer, see Louis Ren Beres, The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientistshttps://thebulletin.onuclearrg/2016/08/what-if-you-dont-trust-the-judgment-of-the-president-whose-finger-is-over-the-nuclear-button/

[11] Although composed inthe seventeenth century, Thomas Hobbes Leviathan still offers anilluminating vision of chaos in world politics. Says the English philosopher inChapter XIII, Of the Natural Condition of Mankind, as concerning theirFelicity, and Misery: During chaos, a condition which Hobbes identifiesas a time of War, it is a time where every man is Enemy toevery man and where the life of man is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, andshort. At the time of writing, Hobbes believed that the condition ofnature in world politics was less chaotic than that same conditionexisting among individual human beings -because of what he called thedreadful equality of individual men in nature being able to killothers but this once-relevant differentiation has effectively disappearedwith the spread of nuclear weapons.

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How Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum have found balance, complement each other, and propel the Boston Celtics – MassLive.com

This season has been one, long, Ron Paul ITS HAPPENING gif for Boston Celtics fans. After years of internet snark over Danny Ainges refusal to trade Jaylen Brown or Jayson Tatum, fans are relishing the opportunity to pull receipts and expose every old take they can find.

Brown and Tatum have validated Ainges patience and are seemingly on the dual path to stardom that was always the backup plan to the Kyrie Irving win-now Celtics. Both have a strong chance at being All-Stars this year, and both are still on their rookie contracts.

Its been an interesting journey to this place. Danny Ainge can certainly take some credit for drafting well. Brad Stevens can run a victory lap for helping to develop them. Obviously each of them has put in incredible hours on their own to take that guidance and build on it. And theres even an element of applying lessons learned last season to avoid repeating mistakes this year.

The combination of foresight, guidance, effort, and luck is culminating in what we see on the court.

When we drafted Jayson we thought having those two versatile wings that could guard a number of different positions and do a number of different things, Brad Stevens said after the win over Cleveland. But also werent exactly the same players, but would be good complements for each other.

This is where the two really do shine, and why two young, 67-ish wings can coexist. Yes, defensively, they are similar. Each can switch and make life hell for opponents with their strength and length. Offensively, though, their games have evolved to fit each others.

I guess we feed off each other, Brown said earlier this season. Kind of different games, kind of opposite, but it makes sense, like Fire and Ice.

Yesterdays game against Cleveland is a great microcosm of this. On the surface, they played very similarly. Both took 20 shots and were 5-for-10 on 3-pointers. Each made three free throws and had two assists.

Look closer and youll see its how they scored those points that highlights how they complement each other.

NBA tracking data, imperfect as it is, shows Tatum taking and making more contested shots than any other Celtic. Brown, meanwhile, was the team leader in uncontested shots and made baskets.

Its part of an overall trend. Tatum tends to take tougher shots. With his length and shot-making ability, hes built for that type of shot profile. Brown, the better athlete of the two, uses his speed and quickness to create separation and space. You can see it in how each approached the mismatches against Cleveland.

Jayson Tatum saw Larry Nance on him and decided he was going to go to the step-back 3-pointer.

Jayson Tatum hits a 3 on Larry Nance

Jaylen Brown got Tristan Thompson on the switch and decided he was going to put it on the floor and attack.

Jaylen Brown drives on Tristan Thompson

Tatum loves isolation scoring. Hes 22nd in the NBA in frequency of isolation attempts. His development is focused on honing those skills, while Browns is understanding how to take advantage. Like Brown said, its fire and ice. Yin and yang.

Two stats sum this up.

The first is how they get their 3-pointers. Brown has made 57 this year, and 52 have come off of assists from others. Tatum has made 74, 47 of which are assisted. Brown almost exclusively relies on spotting up to get his 3s while about a third of Tatums are pull-up shots he creates for himself.

Maximizing these catch-and-shoot opportunities has been a huge reason why Brown is thriving. Kemba Walkers 3s are split just about 50-50, so he, along with Tatum, are creating a lot of offense for themselves. That means defenses are going to focus a lot on them and leave other guys open. Brown is one of the beneficiaries, which brings us to the second statistic.

Walker and Tatum are the two players who assist the most on Browns makes. Walker has fed Brown 37 times, while Tatum has assisted on 25. However, Brown has only assisted on six of Tatums made baskets.

Brown has mastered swimming in the wake of Walker and Tatum, but this isnt a one-way relationship. Browns ability to score when Walker or Tatum are blitzed is part of why teams cant blitz them as often as theyd like. With Brown (and also Gordon Hayward when hes been healthy) on the floor, teams arent really able to send double teams at the hot hand. Until a gravity stat is invented, there wont be a statistical assist for Brown in these situations, but Brown is immensely important here.

Removing the ability for defenses to double team players enhances the abilities of the players who would get double teamed. At the same time, its the willingness of those players to pass it when they do get doubled that helps enhance the abilities of the other players on the floor.

Tatum and Brown are excelling right now because of this dynamic. They are on this roll because they fit this way. As long as they keep this kind of balance, theres no telling how far it can take them.

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How Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum have found balance, complement each other, and propel the Boston Celtics - MassLive.com

Recreational bowling scoreboard – The Times Herald

Scott Badley, For the Times Herald Published 7:00 a.m. ET Dec. 28, 2019

Bowling scoreboard(Photo: Stock)

LEAGUE HIGHS

BOWL O DROME

Original Sunday Funtimers

Tom Morris 671(235); Jim Wagar 658(268); Brad Ashton 613(244); Jennifer Klein 558(215); Bonnie Harris 529(201); Melissa Winiarski 509(191)

PH Hospital AM

Vic Gregowski 634(232); Andrew Jackson 544; Gary LaVere 526; Kate Hodgins 500(216); Marie Belkiewicz 497(182); Fely Nurenberg 480(180)

Service

Dave Barnum 256

COLONY BOWL

Wednesday Night

John Galvin 752(276); Shane Geer 686(242); Eddie Crampton 659(233); Terry Crampton 547(189); Margy Christy 507(181); Pat Barker 501(220)

PORT HURON LANES

3 B4 1

Cliff Crawford 781(278); Henry Sullivan 733(257); Adam Laming 722(268); Tom Morris 719(276); Dom Cocco 717(268); Kevin Renno 709; Rich Crawford 262; Gary Weiss 258; Jon Crawford 257; Stephanie Freeman 566(211); Rosann Brachel 557(203)

Cowboys & Indians

Jesse Hojnacki 782(290); Cliff Crawford 759; Ray LaVere 749; Blake Symon 733; Chuck Ouellette 726(269); Rodney Reeves 723; Jim Hazelton 719; Jeff Meldrum 712(266); Matt Langolf 687; Bob Pihaylic 684; Matt Gossman 680(266); Jim Creasor 266; Jed Johnston 266; Jaclyn Meldrum 609(235); Jill Friis 590(226); Shawna Lentner 588(215)

Don McIvor Memorial

Mike Gossman 753(259); Chuck Ouellette 750(278); Matt Galanos 716(269); Dale Camphausen 677; Caremy Snellenberger 673(247); Steve Glombowski 672(246); Jerry Beery 246

Friday AM Seniors

DJ Gombos 466(168); Lee Reaume 446(167); Robyn Rossow 421(150); Jim Cristick 553(194); John Szczygiel 531(183); Roger Allen 521(194); Marv Benthem 190; Mark Arnett 182

Friday PM Seniors

Linda Dane 563(232); Nadine LaGruth 495(193); Sharon Bailey 478(191); Veronica Yorke 193; Paul Collins 650(237); Vic Gregowski 639(245); Scott Wagar 634(242); Gordon Harvey 233; Karl Livingston 232

Friday Wanna Bees

Jose Ganhs 755(279); Michael Ganhs 701(268); Mike Basnaw 682; Anthony Thomason 250; Audrey Beery 522(189); Brenda Bruehan 512(213); Annette Thompson 509

Inter City Ladies

Amanda Long 604(215); Shirley Stevens 497(194); Lori Reeves 494(190); Kathleen Smith 493(189)

Monday AM Seniors

Jan Allington 545(176); Maxine Brown 433(149); Eleanor Sweeney 399(141); Jim Cristick 527; John Szczygiel 524; Rich Stone 501(201); Dave Dykstra 191; Otis Watson 190

Monday PM Seniors

Paul Collins 697(248); Rick St Onge 653(239); Vince Sudomir 564(205); Sharon Bailey 505(188); Barb Brown 496(179); Linda Dane 485(195)

Saturday Nite Bridge

Chase Hollis 711(298); Bruce Arnett 678(278); Jim Creasor 667(248); Tammy Forstner 590(221); Samantha Creasor 527(203); Nikki Hollis 520; Jennifer Reynolds 205

Sunday Outcast

Matt Pawlak 775(287); Scott Badley 755(277); Rich Mansfield 641(237); Bob Pihaylic 246; Jim Reid 224; Jessica Badley 598(246); Cindy Badley 530(194); Dawn Judd 487(181); Shirley Stevens 473; Jean Pihaylic 182

Viking 3 Man

Steve Jakubowski 708(248); Mark Chesney 676(253); David Cox 673(277); Ron Fowler 226

Wednesday Night Ladies

Jess Heilig 604(235); Michelle Pelletier 558(201); Sharon Pappas 547(194); Tammy Forstner 192; Kelly Larsen 190

Wednesday PM Seniors

Marie Belkiewicz 553(206); Karen Watzek 544(191); Debbie Alderson 526(190); Jim Hepting 626(226); Terry Mundy 589; Paul Collins 580; Ron Kristick 217; Steve Munerantz 210

STRIKERS ENT CENTER

Monday Night Mixed

Ruth Bauman 580(205); Sherry Pellegrom 548(207); Sue Hill 538(190); Kim Ludwig 190; Ken Swartz 655(239); Pete Serra 650(243); Jon Hartway 562(220)

Saturday Night Live

Ryan Smith 692(243); Scott Whiting 677(247); Chuck Pointer 661; Roger Cunningham 234; Brian Harmon 234; Elayne Gale 558(201); Laurynn Ball 542(204); Amanda Roose 535(202)

Thursday Seniors

Peg Vanantwerp 508(183); Candi Emmi 471; Janet Hope 465(169); Suzanne McCoy 465(180); Ken Swartz 579(225); Mike Marshall 574(212); Phil Dehring 542(219)

Tuesday Seniors

Dave Emmi 676(256); Dave Clay 573(235); Bill Markiewicz 569; Mike Marshall 212; Ray Chappus 212; Candi Emmi 535(188); Peg Vanantwerp 500; Karen Harmon 476(188); Joyce Degrande 193; Rosemary Vandaele 190

Tuesday Night Classic

Adam Digon 750; Tim Firchau 717(279); John Essenmacher 710; Jim Carl 299; Bobby Ritchey 279

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Recreational bowling scoreboard - The Times Herald

The 2019 Wypipo Awards: End of the Decade Edition – The Root

Image: Elena Scotti (The Root/G-O)

Wed like to welcome you to the fifth annual Wypipo Awards.

After years of whining that the BET Awards, the NAACP Awards and The Root 100 are inherently racist because they are limited to black people, we created these awards. Our founder, Mr. Y.P. Pullwho made his fortune building desalinization plants that take the salt out of white tears and then use them to irrigate kale farmsstarted this annual festival of accolades to honor the fragile and unheralded race of people who barely manage to win the majority of Oscars, Grammys, Emmys, Nobel Prizes and Darwin Awards.

White people hate being left out.

According to them, all exclusively black events are racist. They forget why HBCUs, black Greek-letter organizations and cookouts were invented in the first placebecause white people excluded us. But, in an effort to appease our unsalted brethren and sisters, we impaneled a group of experts on white people that includes:

Instead of focusing on 2019, this years awards will honor the best and whitest from 2010-2019. And no, this is not racist...

Were rooting for everybody white.

Here are the nominees and winners:

White men are now alleging that they are being oppressed because they are white men, even alleging that straight white male has become this centurys n-word. I know it sounds stupid but I refuse to disparage this downtrodden group until I walk a mile in their boat shoes. I humbly offer myself as a victim of the system that allows them to control all three branches of the federal government, 95 percent of Fortune 500 companies, media, finance, school funding, and the criminal justice system. No matter what happens during this harrowing experiment...

I promise not to cry.

Reggie Bushs knee, Pepsis All Colas Matter campaign, Tristan Thompsons reputation, Kris Humphries career, Lamar Odoms Viagra and crack cocktail recipe, black designers creations, Kanyes sanity, and the anonymity of Ray Js penis all suffered from the Kardashian curse.

Ive been trying to hook Khloe up with Stephen A. Smiths larynx, to no avail.

OComeon Mahalia Sarafina Laquisha Dolezal is the child of poor black sharecroppers who marched with Martin Luther Vandross during the Civil War movement of the 1960s. After attending a predominately white college, NBecca began a career in activism by simply declaring she was black, which is the greatest white woman move of all time. Like Angela Davis, Assata Shakur and other black women who fought the system, Dolezal was unjustly jailed for tax fraud.

As she famously said: I freed a thousand slaves. I couldve freed a thousand more if only I had known white people werent slaves.

*Unless, of course, your wife and kids have completed middle school, in which case, youre fine.

Attorney General Bill Barr heads the Department of Justice, despite displaying a clear disdain for justice. And departments. Barr has subverted any and all attempts at holding Trump responsible for breaking the law, just as he did during his previous cabinet position as Master of Whisperers in the Targaryen administration.

This was a great decade for white women. They helped elect a president and then helped stage the largest demonstration in history to protest that election. They criticized Beyoncfor her blackness and not cleaning up behind them but praised Nazi mascot Taylor Swift for saving democracy.

They fought against vaccinations, illegal cookouts and black people lingering in coffee shops. They advocated for their own safety while simultaneously siccing the cops on black people. They yelled the n-word at children and adults alike.

White women have always been the second biggest threat to freedom and equality. If they werent so complicit in upholding the institutions of white supremacy, we could easily dismantle it.

After eight years of an intelligent, scandal-free, capable president who spoke in complete sentences and knew how weather maps work, white people decided that they wanted another person of color in the White House, so they elected the first tangerine president.

But it wasnt just the election that wins, its that white people were genuinely shocked when Donald Trump banned Muslims, kicked out immigrants, spewed hate and ripped the Constitution to shreds after he campaigned on a platform of banning Muslims, kicking out immigrants, hate and ripping the Constitution to shreds

There are no available statistics on whether white people are starting to call the police more often or if they are just caught on camera more frequently. Anecdotal evidence suggests that this was the best year for police calls since the telegraph became popular in the 1830s and police departments across America started receiving morse code text messages about runaway slaves.

Here is every conversation from a black conservative:

The Democratic party has black people fooled and keeps you on the plantation waiting for handouts while your black leaders profit from race-baiting and aborting your babies, unlike white Republicans who race-bait and give handouts to corporations. If only black people would pull up their pants, stop using the n-word, educate themselves and pull themselves up by the bootstraps I bought when I was not listening to rap music and spending my money on Jordans, they could succeed just like the mediocre white boys who listen to rap, bought their way into college and pulled themselves up by their great grandparents bootstraps.

These people arent thinking for themselves. Theyre just infected with so much internalized self-loathing that they believe white people really know whats best for black people and every black person in the world is too dumb to comprehend our needs.

The problem with free thinkers is that, for them, free means white.

Remember when they used to get stitches? This dumpster fire of a presidential administration now has everyone cheering for whistleblowers, anonymous Trump administration officials, wiretaps, porn stars who kiss and tell, Special Counsel investigators, the former head of the FBI, Trumps co-conspirator Michael Cohen and secretly recorded phone calls.

We still dont fuck with Omarosa, though.

The party of Lincoln is now the party of corporate greed, xenophobia, homophobia, inequality and white supremacy.

The vast majority of Asian Americans, Hispanics and black people lean toward the Democratic Party. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) is the only black Republican in the Senate, and Will Hurd, the only black Republican in the House of Representatives announced that he will not seek re-election.

GOP members remain silent on hate crimes, gun violence, income inequality, right-wing extremism, global warming, emoluments and foreign interference in our elections. They have chosen the side of corruption, voter suppression, greed, corporations, pollution and the slow dismantling of the Constitution. They dont give a damn what anyone does to America...

Until someone kneels during the national anthem.

That just burns their Nikes.

Was there even a question?

As I said before:

Like this country, Donald Trump is a mirage. His greatness is a figment of a collective white imagination that envisions a bright, shining star where there is only a dumpster fire.

He is a first-rate con artist. He is a counterfeit, autocratic dullard impersonating a commander in chief. He is every white foot that has ever been placed on a black neck. He is hate personified and incompetence exemplified. He is the imbecilic farce of a white man convinced of his own supremacy.

Yet, he remains.

Like racial resentment. Like the electoral college. Like the two-party system. Like the 53 percent. Like white supremacy and black oppression. Like hate. Like injustice. Like apathy. Like rage. Like us.

Like the masses unrelenting adoration for this beloved, blessed, once-great thing called America.

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The 2019 Wypipo Awards: End of the Decade Edition - The Root

What it’s like to shoot Cher, Anna Wintour and others at Met Gala – Page Six

At a time when celebrity photography tended to be heavily controlled by studios and handlers, Ron Galella (right) shook up the genre by snapping candid shots of stars out of the spotlight. Essentially, he brought the Italian art of paparazzi portraiture to the US way before TMZ and Stars theyre just like us! were a thing.

Sometimes it got the Bronx native in hot water. Like when Marlon Brando punched him because Galella had been pursuing the actor in Chinatown. The lensman lost a few teeth but got $40,000 in a settlement. Richard Burtons bodyguard also knocked out one of Galellas teeth (he lost that suit), while Elvis Presleys security slashed Rons tires.

When Galella started photographing the Met Gala the annual fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Arts Costume Institute in 1967, he wasnt welcome there, either. Sometimes they barred me from going in and I sneaked into the employee entrance, Galella, 88, told The Post.Nowadays, hes legit. His new book, Costume Galas and Parties, 1967- 2019 The Metropolitan Museum of Art, shares five decades of his outsiders insider perspective. Here are some of his favorite fashion-party photos and the stories behind them.

CHER

Although cigarettes and selfies are now banned inside the Met Gala, Galella caught Cher (far left) puffing away in 1974, while fashion photographer Francesco Scavullo was lighting a smoke for the singer-actress sister, Georganne LaPiere.

Cher is so nice, Galella remembered. A publication in 1976 asked him to get a photo of the performer and her new baby, Elijah Blue, by second husband Gregg Allman. Once again, Galellas fearlessness prevailed.I knew where she lived, Galella said. I buzzed and she said, Come back tomorrow at 5. And I got the picture.

VICTORIA BECKHAM

The former Spice Girl-turned-clothing designer has long played it blas saying she didnt smile in photos for years because she thought fashion people wouldnt take her seriously if she did. It worked on Galella.

I like her because she pouts and hardly ever smiles. Its unusual, said Galella, who shot this photo at the 2006 Met Gala. But Beckham is cooperative. She does like to pose and look into the camera.

DIANE VON FURSTENBURG

Some celebrities chafed at Galellas persistent style. But legendary fashion designer von Furstenberg seen here at a Revlon party in 1990 is a longtime fan.

She told me she loves the photos I have taken of her. I had a book party in 2002 and an exhibit at the Paul Kasmin Gallery and she wanted a picture of herself but wasnt willing to pay for it. I didnt give it to her, said Galella, whose photos can cost up to $2,500.

ANNA WINTOUR AND DIANA VREELAND

Galella says its impossible to compare the two Vogue editors-in-chief, as theyre like apples and oranges. He snapped Wintour (above left), the current editor, at the 1990 Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) awards and caught a rare moment of her letting down her guard. She saw somebody with an outlandish outfit, he said of her sly laugh. I think Anna is glamorous. She is mysterious and aloof.

As for Vreeland, who helmed the magazine from 1963 to 71 and is seen (above right) at the 1976 Met Gala, Diana was the best of all the celebrities. She was so expressive with her hands and gestures, he added.

JACKIE KENNEDY ONASSIS

Galellas most famous obsession was Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, whom he pursued throughout New York City for years leading to a 1972 free-speech trial in which the paparazzo was slapped with a restraining order.

Jackie was my favorite subject. I had to keep 25 feet from her but in the museum I did break it, he recalled of this 1979 shot.

For all of the former first ladys frustration with Galella, he said that she only once covered her face with a bouquet of flowers while he was snapping her.

After four times being caught breaking the restraining order, Galella was fined and ordered not to photograph Jackie or her children any more.

To this day I cannot shoot Caroline, he said. Actually I could, but its a risk. The injunction still is in effect.

DONALD & MELANIA TRUMP

The future president introduced his wife to Galella at the 2010 Met Gala by saying, Hes the photographer who went to court with Jackie [Kennedy Onassis], the lensman recalled.

Now Galella believes that Melania is, without a doubt, the most beautiful first lady ever. Even more beautiful than Jackie, he said. Galella clarifies that Kennedy Onassis appeal, for him, lay largely in her mystique those dark glasses where she could see the outside but you couldnt see her.

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What it's like to shoot Cher, Anna Wintour and others at Met Gala - Page Six

No progress visible at the blighted Buddy Bolden house, but work may begin soon – NOLA.com

Despite stiff fines leveled by the city and promises from a prominent local musician, the historic Central City home of legendary jazz pioneer Buddy Bolden continues to molder though restoration work may finally begin soon.

On Thursday, the city issued a construction permit for repairs to the house at 2309-11 First St. Work could begin this coming week, according to Brandin Campbell, a spokesman for the Buddys House Foundation, an organization founded to preserve the historic site.

The permit for the modest double shotgun house with peeling paint calls for repairs to the siding, window trim and stucco, the replacement of missing roof shingles and the demolition of a sagging laundry room that may have been a later addition to the 19th century building.

A little more than a century ago, the house was occupied by Bolden, a hugely talented though troubled trumpeter. Born in 1877, he was a star of the Crescent City music scene, and his fiery style of playing influenced a generation of horn men.

Some consider him the first bona fide jazz musician, yet he remains a mysterious figure, with only two remaining images and no known audio recordings. Boldens career was cut short in 1907 due to apparent mental illness. He died in 1931.

The recent history of the house has been contentious.

Since 2008, the property has belonged to the Greater St. Stephen Full Gospel Baptist Church. Among jazz fans and New Orleans history buffs, the house is a landmark, but according to a previous interview with executive pastor Donna Williams, the leadership of St. Stephen had no idea that Bolden grew up there when the church acquired the property.

On March 23, City Hall cited Greater St. Stephen for allowing the house to become so rundown that it was in jeopardy of demolition by neglect. According to a city spokesperson, the church was fined $2,705 on March 26.

Repairs made in the following months were apparently insufficient, because on Nov. 18 the city leveled a $100-a-day fine on the church to compel it to begin repairs within 30 days.

Devon Hulbert, one of the citys code violation case specialists, said the owners may have put some lipstick on the front of the house but had failed to begin the substantial repairs required by the city.

The modest Buddy Bolden house may have been the home of the world's first bona fide jazz musician.

Despite a month of daily fines, as of Dec. 19 the boarded-up, unoccupied house hadnt undergone any noticeable work. A city spokesman said that the owners had been assessed $3,205 for continued code violations, in addition to the original $2,705 fine. Those charges remain unpaid, according to the city.

In an email, a city representative explained that if repairs arent begun, the next step in the process could be the forced sale of the house following a one-month period during which the church can appeal. The sheriff sale process generally takes six months to a year, the representative wrote.

An official city notice posted on the house alerted the owner to another administrative hearing called for Dec. 18 by the citys watchdog Historic District Landmarks Commission, at which further fines could be imposed. The hearing was later canceled, according to a city representative.

The Buddy Bolden house is visible from Simon Bolivar Avenue in Central City, Dec. 19, 2019

Despite an outcry from preservationists fearful the house will be lost, renovation of the boarded-up property has never been a priority for Greater St. Stephen. The former church building on nearby South Liberty Street was ruined by a catastrophic fire in the same year that the church acquired the Bolden property. The church has two other locations in Uptown New Orleans and New Orleans East.

For the past several months, the churchs plans for the Bolden house have rested with Grammy-winning pianist PJ Morton. In addition to his solo career, Morton is the keyboardist for the nationally known band Maroon 5. He is also the son of St. Stephens senior pastors, Bishop Paul S. Morton and Dr. Debra B. Morton.

Though the house was still the property of the church, in March, PJ Morton announced plans to form the Buddys House Foundation to begin an extensive renovation, with advice from the nonprofit Preservation Resource Center. Morton has said he hopes the house, and a similar house beside it, will become a museum to Boldens memory, with a replica of Boldens home as it might have looked in the early 20th century and a community-access recording studio.

New Orleans-born Grammy winner PJ Morton invites you to join him at a block party from 4 to 7 p.m. at 2309 First St. on Thursday (May 2). The

Campbell, the Buddys House Foundation spokesman, said that Morton has applied for federal tax-exempt status for the foundation, which was registered with the state in March. He said hes unsure of the budget for the remediation or ultimate restoration of the First Street properties.

Campbell said that since the houses are of historic significance, planning the construction took longer than it might have with ordinary properties. He said he hopes that when repairs are made, the city will consider forgiving the fines.

The sagging laundry room at the rear of the Buddy Bolden house, Dec. 19, 2019

Nathan Lott, the Preservation Resource Centers public policy research director, said that, based on a tour of the inside of the Bolden house in October, the old shotgun is not in any danger of collapse. The floors were solid, he said, and the oldest part of the house seemed reasonably stable. However, he said, the newest part of the house the rear laundry room, which was probably added when indoor plumbing became available is in worse shape.

Lott said the empty house is always in jeopardy from fire and maybe termites, but otherwise its not going to blow down in a strong wind.

Continued here:

No progress visible at the blighted Buddy Bolden house, but work may begin soon - NOLA.com

Efforts to boost after-school activity participation see progress – KYW Newsradio 1060

PHILADELPHIA (KYW Newsradio) A year and a half ago, a youth sports task force found that only one in five Philadelphia middle schoolers was getting the recommended 60 minutes of physical activity a day. That launched an effort that's increased participation, at least a little bit.

"Two years ago, there was nothing happening at this school after school," said Salvatore Sandone as he watched four fourth and fifth grade girls showing off their martial arts skills at an after-school program at Locke Elementary, in West Philadelphia, with a sense of pride. His martial arts studio, Zhang Sah, brought the program there but, also, as a founding member of the Philadelphia Youth Sports Collaborative, he believes it's teaching them so much more than the physical moves.

"Sport can be utilized to have a different place in the lives of children and youth," Sandone explained. "They're something that can transform a child physically, cognitively that ultimately can help them out in a lot of different trajectories in their life."

The girls didn't quite see that. "I thought it was going to be fun and I could defend myself when I have a problem," said London. Angel said she liked fighting, and Assata shared how she felt more confident, while Layla talked about learning new kicks and punches. Did she see herself having to use them?

"Maybe on self-defense," she answered. "You never know when someone's going to come out of nowhere.

Locke students also have access to classes in tennis and hip-hop, and sometimes Zumba and soccer.

The Collaborative sponsors programs in three other schools too, and the city's Out of School Time initiative is in others. The ultimate goal is to provide the opportunity for every child in the city.

That is obviously a long-term goal, and it takes a lot of partners, but Sandone says the success at Locke shows it can be done. "For the past two years, there's been a lot of good things happening here at Locke," he said. "And we're happy to be part of it."

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Efforts to boost after-school activity participation see progress - KYW Newsradio 1060

Attorney General Josh Kaul weighs in on progress made in 2019 – WDJT

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WISCONSIN (CBS 58) -- Attorney General Josh Kaul's first year in office has been marked by fighting lame duck laws affecting his office, as well as issues facing Wisconsin for years.

Looking back on 2019, he has both areas of pride and areas of disappointment.

"Unfortunately,, it's played out like a lot of us expected it would," he said.

Before Kaul took office, he was facing hurdles in the form of lame duck laws that limited the powers of the Attorney General, something that he says has complicated matters unnecessarily.

"It's led to expensive litigation, it's been a waste of state resources and it's pretty clear the process isn't working."

Another battle Kaul has faced with the Republican-controlled legislature is on the topic of gun safety proposals -- including those that he has advocated for but haven't been taken up for a vote or even a debate.

"I think these measures can make our communities safer and they're ones that can respect people's second amendment rights, so I'd like to see us move forward with it," he said.

But despite challenges in his first year, Kaul also believes progress has been made in important areas, including a backlog of sexual assault kits.

"We had announced that we had completed testing of the kits from the backlog. It shows the importance of continuing to pursue justice in these cases. Wisconsin is one of five states that has filed against Purdue pharma entities."

Kaul has also continued the fight against the opioid epidemic plaguing the state, including legal action against pharmaceutical manufacturers.

"Getting accountability to the extent that companies contributed to the epidemic through unlawful conduct is important -- bust most fundamental is getting resources to communities across the state to help address the epidemic," Kaul said.

While much of the focus for the Department of Justice is on opioids, Kaul says he's concerned about another issue -- the growing meth problem in Wisconsin.

The Attorney General says it has his western and northern Wisconsin particularly hard, but southeastern Wisconsin is not immune to the issue that he believes needs more attention.

"This year Milwaukee County is the third highest in terms of case submissions to the crime labs through the end of September in meth cases, so it's impacting a lot of communities."

In 2020, Kaul wants to continue gaining ground on the challenges facing the state.

Other areas that Kaul wants to see progress in is in recruitment and retention of officers at the local level throughout the state as well as addressing emergency detention issues affecting the state.

More here:

Attorney General Josh Kaul weighs in on progress made in 2019 - WDJT

Elon Musk Shares Video Of Starship Tank Dome Progress After Pulling All Nighter With SpaceX Team – Newsweek

Private space flight pioneer Elon Musk shared a video Friday of the tangible progress being made on SpaceX's newest craft, the Starship.

"Was up all night with SpaceX team working on Starship tank dome production (most difficult part of primary structure)," Musk tweeted. "Dawn arrives...."

"Still going," Musk can be heard to say as the video shows workers putting together the shiny dome at the construction site in Boca Chica, Texas. SpaceX is also building spacecraft in Cocoa, Florida.

Progress is being made on the Starship despite recent setbacks, such as the top of the Starship exploding during a November cryogenics test in Texas. Fire also destroyed a welding shed in Cocoa in July, although SpaceX claims neither accident delayed its production schedule.

"Starship will be the world's most powerful launch vehicle ever developed, with the ability to carry in excess of 100 metric tonnes to Earth orbit," according to the SpaceX website. "Drawing on an extensive history of launch vehicle and engine development programs, SpaceX has been rapidly iterating on the design of Starship with orbital-flight targeted for 2020."

"Part of [SpaceX's] appeal and success has been in not having a big standing army like we're used to with government programs. They're lean, they're agile, they work their people very hard." Space Florida executive Dale Ketcham told WOFL. "And they actually do stuff. They don't talk about [how] they're going to build stuff in five years. They start building."

"They clearly over the last decade have been the most disruptive force in space flight for a generation, if not ever," Ketcham added.

SpaceX was founded in 2002 with the stated purpose of enabling "humans to become a spacefaring civilization and a multi-planet species by building a self-sustaining city on Mars."

Since then the company has made tremendous strides in the field of reusable rockets, landing three of its Falcon Heavy booster rockets back on earth in one piece after its first commercial launch in April 2019. SpaceX has also placed 60 Starlink satellites into low-Earth orbit, designed to provide worldwide internet service.

During its maiden voyage, the Falcon Heavy delivered a payload consisting of a red Tesla Roadster with a spacesuit-clad dummy named Starman behind the wheel.

SpaceX founder Musk was also the co-founder of PayPal and the mapping service Zip2. He is also the co-founder and CEO of the electric products manufacturing company Tesla.

Tesla recently unveiled its Cybertruck, an electric pickup fitted with "armor glass" designed to resist breakage. However, during a live-streamed demonstration, lead designer Franz von Holzhausen was able to fracture both the driver's side and rear passenger side windows by throwing a steel ball.

"[The ball] didn't go through," Musk said. "Ah, not bad. A little room for improvement."

Read the original:

Elon Musk Shares Video Of Starship Tank Dome Progress After Pulling All Nighter With SpaceX Team - Newsweek

Tradition is the key to progress for these Native storytellers – KUOW News and Information

Cultural and familial traditions are as numerous as they are diverse. Sometimes, the longer the practice of a tradition, questions about its relevance begin to emerge.

In an age of technology and speedy progress, traditions can even be seen as a roadblock towards change and societal growth.

But according to the speakers of this talk, traditional storytelling is a key asset to forward, progressive thinking.

In this episode, Native artists from around the Pacific Northwest not only share tales of folklore, but their thoughts on how storytelling is another "information tool" for the modern world. They also inform a Seattle audience on how traditional stories are truly relevant when promoting practical wisdom, community building tactics and future progress.

The artists present a cross-generational collection of spoken tales featuring the creation of humankind, mischievous talking animals, shape-shifting forest creatures and more. The storytellers also discuss the usage of myths and folklore to bridge cultural understanding gaps of indigenous identity, community and culture.

This event was presented by the Town Hall Seattles Short Stories Live series titled "Ancient Voices, Modern World."

The events speakers were:

This event took place at Town Hall Seattle on November 17.

Read the original post:

Tradition is the key to progress for these Native storytellers - KUOW News and Information

Making Progress on the Global Threat of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: A Growing Armamentarium – Pharmacy Times

Making Progress on the Global Threat of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: A Growing Armamentarium

Many audience members were aware of risk factors (hepatitis B, hepatitis C, alcohol consumption, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, and aflatoxin exposure) and this cancers pathophysiology. Dr Sessions presented a concise treatment overview using a flowchart, separating patients by those who are potentially curable and those who probably will not be cured by current therapy. She also presented a timeline of FDAwith sorafenib and have drastically expanded in the past 2 years, emphasizing that there has been significant progress made in both the number and type of available agents.

She went on to emphasize the novel targeted therapies that have proven efficacy in HCC, including agents targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and the programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) inhibitors. She reviewed the evidence behind first-line agents, sorafenib and lenvatinib, administration pearls for their use, and also emphasized monitoring considerations. For example, patients being treated with any of the VEGF inhibitors should avoid strong CYP3A4 inducers, and the oncology team should recommend holding administration of these agents if a patient needs a major surgical procedure. She also presented a list of conditions under which these agents need to be temporarily or permanently discontinued (cardiac ischemia, myocardial infarction, hemorrhage, persistent hypertension, gastrointestinal perforation, QTC prolongation, drug-induced liver injury).

Next, using a case-based presentation, she discussed second-line options for patients with advanced HCC. These options consist of oral and infusion therapies. In the former category are regorafenib, cabozantinib, and sorafenib (if the patient received lenvatinib as first-line treatment). In the latter category are the VEGF inhibitor ramucirumab and the PD-1 inhibitors nivolumab and pembrolizumab.

Here, too, she described the evidence behind each of these agents, and talked about some unique concerns. She shared specific considerations for selection of second-line options. For example, patients who are taking regorafenib need to consume low-fat meals, and she explained that this means that the meal needs to have fewer than 600 calories and less than 30% fat. She also stressed that the PD-1 inhibitors should not be used in patients who have had a liver transplant.Dr Sessions provided an education checklist that walked audience participants through significant items that need to be covered. In addition to the drug-specific items and adherence and persistence planning that all pharmacists educate patients about, patients with cancer need to understand how to dispose of their medication, what their monitoring plan is, and have contact numbers so they can reach an oncology clinician at all times. She shared specific details on how to help patients receiving VEGF inhibitors manage hand-foot skin reaction, diarrhea, and hypertension.

Dr Sessions summed up the presentation by indicating that pharmacists who use systematic approaches can provide effective education and monitoring that improve medication adherence, effectiveness, and tolerance.

Read the original:

Making Progress on the Global Threat of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: A Growing Armamentarium - Pharmacy Times

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers says he’s a work in progress entering second year – Minneapolis Star Tribune

MADISON, Wis. Former school teacher and state education education secretary Tony Evers isn't ready to give himself a grade on his first year as Wisconsin's governor.

Incomplete, Evers said during a wide-ranging interview that looked back at his first year in office and ahead to 2020. After four years, I'll be glad to offer A through F, but at this point it's incomplete.

Evers' first year was marked by partisan disagreements with Republicans who control the Legislature, and although he and his fellow Democrats have registered some victories, little headway was made on many substantive issues.

I think we made good progress where we're poised to do better things in the future," he said.

Evers took office in January after defeating two-term Republican incumbent Scott Walker. But Republicans maintained their majorities in the Legislature, creating a recipe for gridlock that proved largely to be true. Republicans started by cutting Evers' powers during a lame duck legislative session before he even took office. Most major Democratic proposals have been stymied, and Republicans have described themselves as serving as a goalkeeper to block Evers' agenda.

Still, Evers did sign a budget that hit many of his top priorities and campaign promises. He increased funding for schools and the University of Wisconsin, and put more money into roads and health care, but far less than what he wanted. He also cut middle class taxes by 10%, which Republicans strongly supported.

He cited the enactment of the budget as a highlight, calling it a down payment on the future.

We set a high bar, Evers said. We had some success in getting there.

Many other issues are going nowhere.

Bipartisan bills that would legalize medical marijuana have stalled, as have Democratic efforts to expand Medicaid, address the dark store loophole, a property tax issue that's important to local governments, and institute new gun control measures. Evers tried to force Republicans to debate universal gun background checks and a red flag law that would give judges the power to take guns from people determined to be a risk to themselves or others, but Republicans didn't even debate the measures before adjourning a special session Evers called.

Their discord also showed up in the usually routine matter of confirming Cabinet secretaries, those who lead state agencies and work closely with the governor. Republicans rejected Evers' choice for the state agriculture department, in part because of his push to institute divisive, tougher siting rules designed to protect farmers' neighbors from the stench of manure. It was the first time the Senate had rejected a Cabinet pick since at least the 1980s.

Republican Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald said it's possible the Senate may adjourn for the year without voting on some of Ever's Cabinet picks.

The Senate fired Evers' agriculture secretary the same week it took no action on the gun bills during the special session. Evers showed his anger, lashing out at Republicans in comments to reporters laced with four-letter words.

Evers tried to force Republicans to release money to combat homelessness in December, but they refused.

While Evers refused to give himself a grade on his first year, legislative leaders were happy to.

Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos gave him a C, while he said the budget was worthy of an A-minus.

C is average, right? Vos said. You know, in many ways I feel like it's incomplete because I haven't seen a whole lot of proposals from him. But I would say average.

Fitzgerald declined to give Evers a grade, but he was critical of how the governor worked with lawmakers.

It's been kind of a rocky road, he said.

Not surprisingly, Democrats were more generous.

Democratic Senate Minority Leader Jennifer Shilling gave Evers a B. Democratic Assembly Minority Leader Gordon Hintz gave Evers an A-minus, although he said many of Evers' victories like flying a gay pride flag over the Capitol for the first time were symbolic.

Hintz praised Evers for trying to govern from the center. That's a break from Walker, who Hintz said was political 24-7."

I think it comes across as authentic, Hintz said of Evers. Some of the victories have been symbolic, but I've appreciated his willingness to speak out on issues.

Evers rejected the notion his victories were symbolic, specifically citing funding increases for schools, roads and health care included in the state budget as substantial.

Those would not have happened if I wasn't sitting in this office, Evers said. And all you do is you have to do is walk down the street and walk around the state and talk to people in the schools and ask them if they got a better deal under me than Scott Walker.

See the article here:

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers says he's a work in progress entering second year - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Local couple shares history of The Progress’ famous pair – Clearfield Progress

Progresslands most famous holiday duo Rudolph and his cousin Little Rudy have returned to the North Pole to await a return for the Christmas 2020 season.

Jim and Holly Frame Brown shared some details about the well-known pair in a recent interview with The Progress.

Holly Browns father, Gil Frame, a former employee in The Progress display advertising department, served as their escort from the first day they came to Clearfield in 1964 a job he held through 1968.

According to a previously published article, The Progress publisher and owner W.K. Ulerich and Frame were looking for an action plan to get war-weary and dispirited county residents exited about the upcoming holiday season. The tale states the pair consulted with long-time ally, S. Claus of the North Pole for assistance, with the strategy to return Christmas cheer.

After dismissing sending elves to Clearfield, Claus suggested reindeer, in keeping with a reindeer piloting program he was testing out, with none other than Rudolph.

Holly Brown portrayed Rudolph during the time her father served as the escort. She said it was not a job she necessarily wanted but said she was encouraged by her father to do so. She said as she recalls, only Rudolph made the trip to Clearfield the first year and cousin, Little Rudy, played by her brother, Gilbert II, accompanied Rudolph the following year.

Jim Brown said his father-in-law told him he accompanied the reindeer through the streets of Clearfield on Friday and Saturday evenings when residents were about their holiday errands, greeting shoppers and passing out candy canes from a newspaper delivery bag.

Holly Brown remembered having a sweet tooth and the minty-sweet treat often proved too much for her to resist.

There were always plenty of candy canes in the bag, and I just had to have one or two, she explained.

Holly Brown said she recalls underneath the fur costume, her hair was done up in rollers so her tresses would look their best for the Friday night dance. She would attend after she was released from duty at the Clearfield YMCA.

I always felt kind of goofy playing Rudolph. My Dad wanted me to do it, so I did. I just wanted to go to the dance at the Y. My brother, he was pumped about it. He enjoyed it, she said.

Friday and Saturday nights used to be the big shopping nights in Clearfield. The town would be packed, she said. Shoppers looked forward to seeing the furry pair making their way up and down the downtowns sidewalks.

During the offseason, the costumes were stored for several years in a closet in the Frame home, Holly Brown said.

Jim Brown said he met Holly in 1968 and she never revealed to him she was the one behind the famous persona.

She kept it a secret from me. he said. He recalled he found out one evening when he was at his mothers place of employment, Jacobson and Etzweiler, and Gil Frame and the reindeer strolled in. I said Hi Gil and looked at Rudolph and knew it was Holly. I said Hi Holly she just kept right on walking like she hadnt even heard me.

He went on to say they eventually married, had two children and now have four grandchildren.

Gil Frame left The Progress in 1969 to sell Prudential insurance.

Holly Brown said for a while, The Progress also had an Easter rabbit costume with a similar mission.

I was the rabbit and my friend Susan Lowell handed out candy, she said.

When asked if she ever thought in 1964 Rudolph would go on to be the local celebrity he is, Holly Brown said, I never thought it would last. Whenever I see Rudolph and Little Rudy in The Progress I think, Wow, thats still going on. Its really neat to think that is has continued all these years. Obviously people still get a lot of joy out of it.

Link:

Local couple shares history of The Progress' famous pair - Clearfield Progress

A year of progress – Brookings Register

Families across South Dakota have started taking down Christmas trees and kids are getting ready to start a new semester at school. With another holiday season nearly behind us, I want to take a moment to reflect on the many things weve accomplished this year.

In 2019, we expanded internet connection to 4,800 households and more than 100 businesses. Progress in this area means producers can access cutting-edge technology that requires high-speed broadband capabilities, students can quickly upload and download assignments for advanced online courses, and folks in remote areas can pursue online business opportunities, allowing them to hire locally while selling globally.

We also launched a new meth campaign that has sparked thousands of conversations about meth around our state and nation. Ive heard story after story of families who say that because of our ads, theyve been able to talk with their kids about the dangers of meth for the first time. Since we started the campaign, nearly 100 people have called or texted our hotline and more than a dozen have been referred to treatment through the hotline.

This year, we saw more families getting outside together to learn about our outdoor traditions. One area of growth that we were pleased to see was an increase in trapping numbers. People are recognizing the need to protect our strong outdoor heritage, participating in our efforts to create wildlife habitat, providing public access, and introducing kids to the adventure of the outdoors.

In 2019, we also focused more attention on mental health. I allocated roughly $500,000 to mental health initiatives, some of which will be used to increase care coordination services available to local school districts. Were also moving forward to fund a mental health court in southeastern South Dakota, which will focus on clients with mental health needs, providing them both treatment and care coordination services. My hope is to get to the root of mental health issues early on so youth and adults can transition out of the justice system.

On these issues and many others, I relied on your input and am so grateful for those who have called, written, or emailed me with their thoughts. In an effort to be the most connected and transparent governor South Dakota has ever had, my office has made thousands of phone calls and written countless emails and letters to South Dakotans this year.

It truly has been an honor to serve you in 2019, and I look forward to tackling new challenges in the year to come.

On behalf of my entire family, I wish you all the best in 2020!

Read more:

A year of progress - Brookings Register

Wrestling: Defending Class M champion Killingly is a work in progress – Norwich Bulletin

KILLINGLY Rich Bowen has been at this for a long time.

This season marks the 35th for the veteran Killingly wrestling coach.

He smiles when he says that it has got a little easier as the years progress and the athletes are suddenly the sons and daughters of previous athletes that he has coached and the support system is not completely reliant upon him.

But, its still not a piece of cake.

Kids are kids.

Its challenging, Bowen said. Each year is a whole different personality. I didnt know what I was getting when we didnt start out well last year.

That team produced a Class M state championship.

This year?

Who knows.

This team has pretty good personalities, good kids for the most part, and its just molding them into what are we going to be this year, he added.

Its a work in progress.

Killingly (1-0, 1-0 Eastern Connecticut Conference Division II) easily picked up its first dual win of the season on Friday, 63-9, over Bacon Academy but there are still plenty of questions for the defending state champs.

The wrestling room was pretty barren until after the football season ended which for Killingly was not until Dec. 14.

I only had two or three days of practice and that was the same for everyone who was on the football team. We probably had only six or seven guys in the wrestling room before the football team came down, said senior captain Jon Creswell.

And just as the football team was coming in, two wrestlers were on their way out.

One wrestler decided not to remain with the team and another suffered what is likely a season-ending injury.

It means Creswell has been busy in the hallways of Killingly High.

Im trying to recruit some of the football players and we have some new faces out here. Theyre going to come and win some matches for us and its going to be huge for the end-of-year tournaments, Creswell said.

He has managed to convince junior linebacker Evan DeRonsie to try the sport as well as sophomore Alex White and freshman Terrance Allen who could blossom as a heavyweight.

Still, Killingly has only about 20 wrestlers out and on Friday, had to forfeit bouts at 106 and 195 pounds.

But Killingly does have some experience back beginning with David Charron.

The senior is the last of the Charron brothers in a Killingly singlet as his brothers Danny and Mike, who, like him, were Class M state champs last year, have both graduated.

Its definitely different, definitely a little tougher without Danny and Mike here but I just have to worry about improving myself and improving the team, Charron said.

Charron had his work cut out for him Friday.

He had to battle Bacon Academys Braeden OBrien at 132 pounds. OBrien, a two-time state champ and only a junior, was last years 120-pound Class M champ, while Charron took the 126-pound title.

I knew it was going to be a close match, OBrien said. He rode tough on top. We both worked hard and did our best.

It was Charron who pulled out the narrowest of wins, getting to neutral with 1:16 left in the match, for a 1-0 victory.

I lost to him as a sophomore. I havent faced him since. I got a little revenge but he is a really good wrestler, Charron said.

The fastest pin came from Connor LeDuc. The Killingly senior won his heavyweight match in 15 seconds.

Asim Samuel (113), Jack Richardson (120), Cooper Morissette (126), Isaac Bean (138), Ben Richardson (145) and Creswell (182) also recorded pins for Killingly.

We will certainly be good in the lower (weights). Its how our heavies progress and if they get a little better as they go. That will be the tell-tale of how good this team will be, Bowen said.

The one-sided loss didnt faze Bobcats coach Rob Czaplicki who only has 15 wrestlers out for the team.

I think we can do well. If we dont get hit with injuries, like we seemingly do every year, I think I can get six guys into the (State) Open, Czaplicki said. We gave up four weight classes today so were starting 18-to-24 points down. The duals are going to be tough, but we took sixth place last week (at the Wethersfield Invitational) with just seven guys in my lineup. Every single kid took a top four except for one. The potential is there.

Both teams have another change this season.

Killingly and Bacon Academy(0-1, 0-1) have dropped down from Class M to Class S.

Im not so sure if it will be easier, Bowen said. Ledyard is down there, Windham and Montville. Its going to be an ECC battle royal again. I dont think its ever easy. You never know with injuries how things will come out. Were not a big team. Everything has to go right.

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Wrestling: Defending Class M champion Killingly is a work in progress - Norwich Bulletin

For Carlsbad’s Trevor Rogers 2019 was a year of significant progress – Carlsbad Current Argus

Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp pitcher Trevor Rogers throws against the Mississippi Braves on Aug. 11, 2019. Rogers started the season with the A-Advanced Hammerheads and was promoted to Double-A Jacksonville after being named to the FSL All-Star team midway through the season.(Photo: Danielle Bleau/TwigPics Photography)

Current Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp pitcher Trevor Rogers appears to be on the fast track to The Show after his sophomore season in professional baseball saw him named to an All-Star team before being promoted up a league mid-season.

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Rogers was the opening day pitcher for the Hammerheads and was the starter for 18 games. Rogers went 5-8 with a 2.53 ERA, pitching in 110.1 innings, allowing 97 hits, 45 runs (31 earned). He gave up seven home runs and hit six batters. Rogers walked 24 batters and struck out 122.

Jupiter Hammerheads starting pitcher Trevor Rogers throws against the during a game against the Palm Beach Cardinals on Opening Day, April 4, 2019. Through 11 games for the Jupiter Hammerheads, Rogers is 2-6 with an ERA of 3.03. He's pitched in 62.2 innings and has 65 strikeouts.(Photo: Tom DiPace)

Rogers pitched the second-most innings of any Hammerhead, had the fourth-most starts and had the lowest ERA of any pitcher with more than 12 starts.

The previous year Rogers pitched with Single-A Greensboro for 17 games and he showed improvement across the board. His ERA dropped from 5.82 to 2.53 even though he pitched in 40 additional innings in Jupiter. Rogers also allowed three fewer runs, 16 fewer earned runs and struck out 37 additional batters.

Hammerheads pitching coach Reid Cornelius attributed the improved stats to Rogers making a lot of tiny changes.

"His breaking ball got better," Cornelius said. "He started using a cutter so he can add and subtract from his breaking ball. His slider got a little lower so he could add depth. His change-up made steps, too.

"I just think him being on the mound and healthy for a full year helped. You could see his steady progress. He kept getting better and better. By the time June and July rolled around he was probably as good as a pitcher could be in the league."

Trevor Rogers pitches as a member of the South Division in the Florida State League All-Star Game on Saturday, June 15, 2019. Rogers came in for one inning of work, struck out two batters and didn't allow a hit or run scored. The South won, 2-0.(Photo: Chet Peterman/Palm Beach Post)

That hard work earned Rogers a selection to the Florida South League All-Star Game. Rogers threw one inning of work, allowed no runs and struck out two of the four batters he faced.

Rogers himself didn't know if he was going to get called up after the FSL All-Star outing and was okay with the possibility that he'd be in Jupiter the rest of the season.

"Everything was going great," Rogers said. "Everything was clicking and I was having good outing after good outing. I was thinking that I'm two years removed from high school and thought (the organization) was going to take it slow so I was planning on enjoying the rest of the season (in Jupiter)."

Cornelius wasn't surprised by the promotion mid-season.

"It was a situation where he came up pretty quick," he said. "We weren't sure exactly what day he was moving so I didn't get to say goodbye in person. As these guys progress I tell them their (pitching) is good and to trust themselves and continue to do what they're doing.

"The hitters above will let you know if something needs to be adjusted. I don't think you need to change your game when you move up the ladder. I say keep doing what you're doing. A big step for Trevor will be more power to his slider. He's been trying to increase that and get more depth."

Trevor Rogers pitches against the Mississippi Braves on Aug. 11, 2019. Rogers started the season with the A-Advanced Hammerheads and was promoted to Double-A Jacksonville after being named to the FSL All-Star team midway through the season.(Photo: Danielle Bleau/TwigPics Photography)

The Marlins organization was happy with all the progress and decided a mid-season promotion was in order.

The official announcement of Rogers' promotion took place Aug. 3, 2019, just when Rogers was going to play in front of some old friends and family before having to drop everything and get ready to move.

"My high school coach (Cody May), his wife, my girlfriend and her parents all flew out to Florida to see me pitch," Rogers said. "They haven't seen me pitch since high school. The game ended up getting rained out so we went out to eat.

"We were getting ready to buy tickets to a movie when my trainer (Gregory Bourne) calls me and asks if the manager (Todd Pratt) has called me yet. When I said no he said I should probably call him. I call him and he doesn't answer. So for about 30 minutes I'm wondering what is going on."

The hitters above will let you know if something needs to be adjusted. I don't think you need to change your game when you move up the ladder. I say keep doing what you're doing.

Still waiting for the callback from Pratt, Rogers gets another call from Bourne. When Rogers said he hadn't heard back, he was told to act surprised when Pratt did call him back and Bourne sent Rogers his itinerary.

"I get the itinerary at 7 p.m. and my flight leaves at 5 a.m. the next day," Rogers said. "I had to go back and pack everything up. Jacksonville's four hours away from Jupiter but the team was in Mississippi so I had to fly out there."

Rogers packed up everything in his condo and had his girlfriend and girlfriend's parents drive his vehicle to Jacksonville so his stuff would be waiting for him when he came back from the road trip.

"This was definitely a goal of mine," Rogers said. "Early in spring training I wanted to play the majority of the year at FSL High-A. I wanted to get about five starts in Double-A and if I didn't, it would have been okay. I'd just start early the next season."

Just like he wanted at the beginning of the season, Rogers came to Jacksonville in the final month of the season and did get five starts for the Marlins AA affiliate. He made his time there count. Rogers went 1-2, this time only needing three starts to notch his first win in a new division.

The Aug. 17 game against the Tennessee Smokies was his best game in AA. He pitched seven complete innings, striking out 10 batters, allowing just two hits and one walk. Rogers threw 94 pitches had had 67 percent of them go for strikes. Jacksonville won the game, 2-0.

Rogers said it was a little bit of an adjustment, he had to get rid of a lot of adrenaline after the move and then started working with his new pitching coach, Bruce Walton, and finished the season well.

Rogers said it was the confidence of his time in Jupiter that helped him avoid serious growing pains in Jacksonville.

"The hitters are more polished the higher up you go," Cornelius said. "That shows Trevor's still improving. He's only 21 so he's still learning his body and his mechanics."

Cornelius believes once Rogers finishes growing and puts on a little more weight he'll be able to solely focus on his mechanics rather than having to adjust while he still fills into his 6-foot 6-inch frame.

Rogers does not have to return to Jacksonville until the middle of February. He's staying in shape, but spending more time with family and not worrying about baseball itself. Rogers spends every Monday working on his lower body, Tuesday his upper body and Wednesday is core day.

Through November Rogers was more focused on building strength than anything else and since December Rogers added cardio into his workouts.

More: Carlsbad's Trevor Rogers promoted to AA Jacksonville

More: Trevor Rogers says All-Star performance was a confidence booster

More: Trevor Rogers, now an All-Star, continues to improve with Hammerheads

More: Carlsbad's Trevor Rogers finishes first year of professional baseball

More: Trevor Rogers gets first pro win

Rogers still hasn't picked up a baseball to throw since his final game of the season and has been able to enjoy the fruits of his labor with a few vacations. He enjoyed watching other sporting events in the state of Florida during the season and admitted he didn't know the NHL team Florida Panthers were located in Miami when we went to see a game.

"I worked hard so I spoil myself a little bit," he said. "We went to Las Vegas last year. I got to see a George Straight concert when the rodeo was in Vegas. It was the first time I had been there and it was really fun."

With the pitching position being one of the most expensive positions in the MLB, teams usually make sure their draft picks and prospects are ready to be called up to The Show before signing them a large contract. This means spending multiple seasons in the various minor leagues to make sure players are physically and mentally able to handle the strain of playing under the bright lights.

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That may not be the case for Rogers if he stays with the Miami Marlins organization, which finished last year 57-104, the worst record in the National League.

"Everyone knows Miami is rebuilding," Rogers said. "It was at instructs last year (Fall Instructional League) where we had one-on-one camps. I didn't have enough innings last year so I went there to spend more one-on-one time with the pitching coach to fix up some stuff.

"(Miami Marlins part-owner) Derek Jeter came by and explained to us that (the Marlins season) was a horrible one and we've got to do better and all that jazz. He said the best players will be playing in Miami. It doesn't matter how long or how short you've been here. So if we keep performing they'll make room on the roster and find space.

"That was lucky I was drafted by the Marlins. They're going to be a good organization for many years to come, especially now that they want all the young guys up there as soon as possible."

The Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp begin the 2020 season on the road against the Mississippi Braves on April 9. The first home game for the CrustaceanNation takes place April 15 against theBiloxi Shuckers.

Matthew Asher can be reached at 575-628-5524, masher@currentargus.com or @Caveman_Masher on Twitter.

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For Carlsbad's Trevor Rogers 2019 was a year of significant progress - Carlsbad Current Argus

Oversight panel reports Kansas making progress on juvenile justice reform – Salina Journal

The panel monitoring juvenile justice reform in Kansas released a new report Thursday that documented progress in the third year of a transition to consistent methods of handling offenders within their communities, while acknowledging challenges with reinvesting millions of dollars of savings into proven interventions.

The 2016 Legislature ordered overhaul of the state's approach amid criticism that youths were too frequently removed from the home and sent to residential facilities or correctional institutions. Reformers pressed for adoption of standard practices capable of avoiding geographically inconsistent outcomes. Others insisted on evidence-based programs backed by enough money to address troubled youths early and cut recidivism.

The Juvenile Justice Oversight Committee, which includes legislative, judicial and executive branch representatives as well as people from outside state government, reported progress establishing statewide standards, imposing a prohibition on out-of-home placement for low-risk youths and directing resources to young people at highest risk of committing new crimes.

The report outlined recommendations to double annual spending to more than $21 million in the fiscal year starting in July 2020, but "acknowledges that there are and have been challenges with the implementation and outcomes" of the juvenile justice bill passed three years ago. While the report noted a decline in youths moving into the correctional system, the document didn't explore complications of more youths entering other state programs, including foster care, handled by the Kansas Department for Children and Families.

Hope Cooper, a member of the oversight panel and a deputy secretary of the Kansas Department of Corrections, said the state's system of juvenile justice was moving in the right direction.

"Of the many improvements to our states juvenile justice system, I am most encouraged to see the continuum of resources that now focus on serving kids and their families in the community, instead of removing them from the home and hoping the family can change," she said.

The annual report for the fiscal year that ended in July was forwarded to Gov. Laura Kelly, Senate President Susan Wagle, House Speaker Ron Ryckman and the chief justice of the Kansas Supreme Court.

The document indicated the number of youths placed in the Juvenile Correctional Facility had dropped from 237 in the 2015 fiscal year to 179 in the last fiscal year, a decline of 24% reduction. The number of low-level offenders at the lone correctional facility fell from 34 in fiscal 2015 to zero in fiscal 2019. The length of time juveniles were under community corrections probation supervision dipped from 20.2 months in fiscal 2015 to 15.5 months in fiscal 2019.

Greg Smith, chairman of the oversight committee and a former state senator from Johnson County, said reducing out-of-home placement among lower-risk youths and caring for them in their communities was a core objective of the reform bill.

"As we learned from the research, this is what is effective for seeing long-term behavior changes in youth," Smith said.

The committee debated how to target $17 million in annual savings set aside by lawmakers to finance improvements in the juvenile justice system. The state earmarks $9.1 million annually on programs for juveniles, but the report outlined a plan for broadening allocations to $21.8 million.

Authors of the report said the reinvestment plan "adheres to best practices" and could be sustained for a minimum of six years. The document pointed to a desire for reliance on a scientific approach to "guide decision-making well into the future."

"Courts, local juvenile justice agencies, defense attorneys, prosecutors, law enforcement, educators, service providers, child welfare and KDOC have been steadfast in their work to ensure that Kansas improves the effectiveness of the juvenile justice system, and this report reflects successes in that effort," said Jeff Zmuda, secretary of the state Department of Corrections.

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Oversight panel reports Kansas making progress on juvenile justice reform - Salina Journal