The biggest news from Italy in 2019 Italianmedia – Il Globo

What a year its been for Italy, from the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vinicis death to the collapse of the government.

As a new year and decade approaches, lets take a look at the biggest news to come out of Italy in 2019.

Two weeks into January, Italian authorities confirmed that fugitive left-wing militant and convicted murderer Cesare Battisti had been captured in Bolivia after almost three decades on the run.

Battisti (pictured below),who had been sentenced to life in prison for four murders in the 1970s, was arrested on January 14 after an international police squad tracked him tothe Bolivian city of Santa Cruz de La Sierra.

He had been living in Brazil for years, until the nations outgoing president signed a decree ordering his extradition.

Two months after he was brought back to Italy, Battisti confessed to four murders during the 1970s, after decades of denying any involvement in the homicides.

He confessed to killing a policeman and a prison guard, to taking part in the murder of a butcher and to helping plan the killing of a jeweller who died in a shootout which left his 14-year-old son in a wheelchair.

As people settled in to 2019, Italys migrant crisis became an even more pressing issue following the governments decision to block Italian ports to charity rescue ships.

On January 9, a weeks-long standoff came to an end when 49 migrants stranded at sea for weeks aboard two rescue ships arrived in Malta after eight EU member states, including Italy, agreed to take them in.

TheSea-Watch 3 had rescued 32 people from an unsafe boat off the coast of Libya on December 22, while another German charity, Sea-Eye, had rescued 17 others on December 29.

Both ships had been floating in Maltese watersfor weeks after all EU countries refused to offer them a safe port to dock.

This was the first standoff of the year, but certainly not the last.

On January 30, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced that 47 migrants stranded aboard a rescue boat operated by German NGO Sea-Watch could finally disembark after Italy and six other countries had agreed to take them in.

The vessel had been stranded in Sicilian waters for over a week after Italy and other European nations had refused to let it dock.

Sea-Watchhad earlier filed an urgent case at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) against Italy for refusing to allow its ship to dock and the mainly sub-Saharan migrants, including 15 minors, to disembark.

Italys Interior Minister Matteo Salvini was later placed under investigation for alleged false imprisonment after refusing to allow the migrants to disembark.

In February, more than 10 million viewers tuned in to Italian state broadcaster Rai for theopening night of the Sanremo Music Festival.

Famous Italian singer Andrea Bocelli wowed crowds on the night, performing an evocative duet with his son Matteo.

Following five exciting evenings of performances, Mahmood (pictured below)was crowned the winner of the 69th edition of the festival, for his song Soldi (Money).

Born to an Egyptian father and Sardinian mother, Mahmood became a symbol of multiculturalism at a time when the nation was grappling with the anti-immigrant rhetoric of far-right League leader Matteo Salvini.

In Rome, flights were suspended and a terminal was evacuated at Ciampino airport on February 7, when three World War II bombs were discovered during construction work.

The bombs weighed a combined 150 kilograms, including around 75 kilograms of gunpowder.

Less than two weeks later, flights from Ciampino airport were delayed after the departures area was closed due to a fire in the terminal basement.

While the blaze was reportedly put out in less than a minute, it caused crowds and flight cancellations for most of the day.

In February, Pope Francis held alandmark summit on sexual abuse and paedophilia within the Church, calling for an all-out battle against the widespread scandal.

Over four days, 114 senior bishops listened to speeches about the outrage of the people and heard the horror stories of victims.

On the first day of the summit,Pope Francis called for concrete measuresto tackle clerical sexual abuse and paedophilia.

If in the Church there should emerge even a single case of abuse which already in itself represents an atrocity that case will be faced with the utmost seriousness, he said.

Just days before the summit, Pope Francis had defrocked a former archbishop and cardinal over sexual abuse accusations in a first for the Roman Catholic Church.

The Vatican banned AmericanTheodore McCarrick (pictured below)from practising as a priest after he was found guilty in January of sexually abusing a teenager 50 years ago.

He was the first ever cardinal to be defrocked for sexual abuse.

Just this week, the Pope made even more progress, announcing sweeping changes to the way the Roman Catholic Church deals with cases of sexual abuse of children, abolishing the rule of pontifical secrecy that previously covered them.

This is an epochal decision, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, the Vaticans most experienced sexual abuse investigator, told Vatican Radio.

The lifting of pontifical secrecy in sexual abuse investigations was a key demand by church leaders, including Scicluna and the German cardinal Reinhard Marx, at the summit held in February.

March began with the sad news that crews were searching for a missing Italian climber and his British climbing partner stuck on a treacherous peak known as Killer Mountain.

Daniele Nardi (pictured below) and Tom Ballard were attempting the 8126-metre climb in Pakistans Himalayas, one of the hardest mountaineering feats in the world, when they went missing.

The bodies of the two climbers were found almost two weeks after the pair went missing.

The nation was rocked again when eight Italians and several British and Irish UN employees based in Rome were among those killed in the tragic Ethiopian Airlines disaster on March 10.

Ethiopian Airlines flight 302 crashed six minutes after taking off from Addis Ababa, killing all 157 passengers and eight crew on board.

Italy was wrapped up in another international tragedy in March: the Christchurch mosque massacre.

The weapons and ammunition used in the mass shooting of 50 Muslims in the New Zealand city were emblazoned with the names of several violent white supremacists, including Italian mass shooter Luca Traini.

Traini is an Italian neo-Nazi sympathiser who injured six African migrants in a series of racially-motivated drive-by shootings in Macerata on February 3, 2017.

Meanwhile back home, Italians received the news that a bus driver had abducted 51 children and their chaperones outside Milan, ordering the childrens hands to be bound and threatening to kill all those on board before setting fire to the vehicle.

Twelve children and one adult were taken to hospital for low-level smoke inhalation and the hijacker himself was treated for burns.

Ousseynou Sy, the driver who carried out thehijackingto protest againstmigrant deaths at sea, claimed he acted after hearing the voices of children dying in the Mediterranean.

The interior ministry later announced it would speed up granting citizenship to a quick-thinking student who hid and called authorities when the bus was hijacked.

The Carabinieri police of Sandonato Milanese identified the student as 13-year-old Ramy Shehata (pictured below).

Ramy, who has been hailed a hero by classmates and authorities, was born in Italy but is not an Italian citizen.

Speaking of astounding teens, March 15 saw thousands of Italian students walk out of school as part of a global strike to demand action on climate change by world leaders.

The initiative was spearheaded by Swedish teen activist Greta Thunberg, who just this month was name Time magazines Person of the Year.

Thunberg later visited Italy to make her message loud and clear.

We children are not sacrificing our education and our childhood for the adults and politicians to tell us what they consider is politically possible in the society they have created, the 16-year-old told a crowd of around 25,000 demonstrators in Rome in April.

Teenage pedal power was used to charge the stage where Thunberg gave her speech.

Around 128 bicycles were rigged up to a dynamo and generator in Piazza del Popolo.

During her visit, Thunberg also met with the Pope, who encouraged her to carry on with her mission.

April 7 marked 10 years since LAquila was struck by an earthquake which killed 309 people, left at least 80,000 homeless and devastated around 56 villages in the area.

The bells of Santa Maria del Suffragio church in the citys historic centre chimed 309 times at 3:32 am on the day the time the tremor hit a decade ago in memory of the dead.

Italian President Sergio Mattarella and Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte were among those who joined local residents for a candlelit commemoration in the towns central Piazza Duomo.

The wound of a local community is a wound of the national community, Conte said.

We have a duty not to forget, but above all we have a duty to be constantly striving to relaunch this territory.

A few days later, the Stefano Cucchi murder case, which had gripped the country for a decade, had a major breakthrough when a police officer gave an eyewitness account of the events leading up to Cucchis death in 2009.

Francesco Tedesco, one of three military police officers charged with Cucchis murder, told a courtroom in Romethat his colleagueshad kicked and punched the 31-year-old (pictured below) in the face repeatedly, causing his death.

Tedesco also alleged he had been threatened by officials who told him to stay silent and conceal his report about the incident.

In November, Carabinieri officers Alessio di Bernardo and Raffaele dAlessandro were both found guilty of the involuntary manslaughter of 31-year-old Cucchi and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Speaking after the ruling, Cucchis sister Ilaria told local media: Stefano was killed. We knew that and weve been repeating it for 10 years. Now perhaps my brother can rest in peace.

It was an eventful year for Italian football, with Juventus winning a record-extending eighth straight Italian Serie A title with a 2-1 win over Fiorentina.

Juventus forward Cristiano Ronaldo was crowned this years best player in Italys Serie A competition at an awards ceremony in Milan this month.

Ronaldoscored 26 goals in his debut season inItalyand led Juventus towards another domestic title.

But it wasnt all good news.

Italian football saw a surge in racist incidents at matches this season, with Inter Milan strikerRomelu Lukakuhaving been the victim of monkey chants in Cagliari and Brescia starMario Balotelli threatening to walk off the pitch following abuse in Verona.

In September, Fiorentinas Braziliandefender Dalbert Henrique asked the referee to halt play when he was abused byfans.

In October, Roma issued an apology after its supporters racially abused Sampdorias English midfielder Ronaldo Vieira.

Meanwhile, Romas city rivals Lazio received a partial stadium ban from UEFA after racist chanting during a game with French outfit Rennes.

All 20 of Italys Serie A clubs on November 29 signed a joint open letter to fans condemning racism in stadiums.

Just days after the letter was signed, Italian sports daily Corriere dello Sport was accused of fuelling racism and crossing the line of acceptability with the front-page headline Black Friday.

May 2 marked the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vincis death.

Italian President Sergio Mattarella and his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron came together to commemorate the historic event.

Many discoveries were made public during the year to mark the anniversary, including the DNA testing of a hair believed to be Leonardos and the proof the genius was ambidextrous.

On the fashion front, Prada announced in May that it would remove animal fur from its collections starting from their 2020 Spring/Summer Womens collections, becoming the latest brand to join the fur-free alliance.

June had an explosive start, when Mount Etna erupted on the first weekend of the month, spitting molten lava high into the sky and putting on a show for locals and tourists on the southern Italian island.

While no one was injured on that occasion, a hiker was killed the following month when Stromboli erupted(pictured below).

It was like being in hell because of the rain of fire coming from the sky, Italian news agencies quoted local priest Giovanni Longo as saying.

It was a year of wild weather for Italy, from a record-breaking heatwave in June, to severe storms in November which left Venice and many other parts of Italy under water.

One of the biggest stories to come out of Italy rocked the nation in July, when police officer Mario Cerciello Rega (pictured below) was stabbed to death on a street in Rome.

Hundreds of people attended Cerciello Regas funeral, including then deputy prime ministers, Matteo Salvini and Luigi Di Maio.

Two Americans, Gabriel Natale Hjorth, 18, and Finnegan Elder, 19, were charged with aggravated homicide and attempted extortion following the murder in Romes upmarket Prati neighbourhood.

Elder later confessed to stabbing Cerciello Rega with a US Marine partially-serrated, close-quarters combat knife, police said, as they gave a detailed account of what happened on the night of the attack.

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The biggest news from Italy in 2019 Italianmedia - Il Globo

Riots in overcrowded Greek migrant camp on Samos – InfoMigrants

In Vathy, in the overcrowded migrant camp on the Greek island of Samos, news agencies are reporting that riots have broken out. Fires were started and the police were met with stones and protests when they arrived to break up the unrest.

Accordingto the German press agency dpa, local media reported that the Greek police setoff tear gas to try and calm the protests at the Greek island camp of Vathy onThursday morning.

Migrantsare reported to have started fires and thrown stones at the police in protest at the overcrowded conditions in the camp.Schools in a 600-meter radius from the camp were reportedly evacuated becauseof the smoke from the fires.

Dpa saysthat the protests are thought to have come this time from the African community in the camp who have beendemanding for days that they be transferred to the Greek mainland.

Similar clashes in October

InfoMigrants reported that similar clashes broke outin the same camp in October2019. At that point the trouble stemmed from a mass brawl between Afghan andSyrian residents, which forced police to use tear gas to disperse the crowd.

At thattime, the medical charity, Doctors without Borders (MSF) said that almost halfof the camps inhabitants were women and children. In November, the International Presidentof MSF Christos Christou tweeted after visiting Samos that he had seen a protractedstate of human tragedy.

Numbers keep increasing

Accordingto the UNHCRs latest data, more than 71,000 migrants have arrived in Greecethis year alone. Although the Greek government has been making efforts totransfer people from overcrowded accommodation on the islands to the Greekmainland, there are still some 40,500 refugees and migrants residing on theAegean islands. The majority of that population is from Afghanistan (around45%), Syria (20%) and the Democratic Republic of Congo (6%).

Theauthorities have been transferring around 1,000 people every week to themainland but more people continue to arrive. In the week 9-15 December almost2,000 people arrived with a little more than 1,000 on Lesbos and 208 on theisland of Samos.

On December10, MSF Germany posted pictures of a makeshift room in the Vathy camp. They tweeted in German: This is a bathroom.Difficult to believe dont you think? What is even more difficult to believe isthat this bathroom is where three small children have to shower, and thatthis bathroom is in Europe. This is the sad reality of life for around 2,500 childrenliving in the Vathy camp on Samos.

Tense situation

Samosmayor Georgios Stantzos has been speaking out for months about securityproblems related to the overcrowding in the camps, according to the Germanweekly newspaper Die Zeit. On December 18, an English language local websiteGreekReporter posted a video from Samos24.grin which Stantzos was filmed inthe town square chasing migrants and shouting Go the F**k Away. GreekReporter added that his intervention followed a police operation to dispersea demonstration on the square.

The mayorreportedly told Greek Reporter that he regretted using foul language but saidthat it was a knee-jerk response to an incident which could have turned veryviolent. It was a human response to a very tense situation. The mayor addedthat the migrants had been blocked from occupying the square and that on theway to their demonstration they had vandalized at least five cars.

Stantzossaid that his reactions and those of his fellow islanders were not racist andthat he was just against the few migrants who were intent on creating trouble.Stantzos told Greek reporter that the overcrowding had become a human rightsproblem [and] a law and order issue as severe delinquency problems arise.

ManosLogothetis, government commissioner for migration in Greece told the GermanFunke media group on Wednesday: The crisis is happening now, and it is serious.

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Riots in overcrowded Greek migrant camp on Samos - InfoMigrants

Bulls arrive in the Bahamas – UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff – University at Buffalo Reporter

By DAVID J. HILL

NASSAU, BAHAMAS The Bulls touched down in the Bahamas shortly after 1:30 Monday afternoon and were greeted by sunshine, palm trees, 80-degree weather and reggae music at Lynden Pindling International Airport.

The UB football team is trading in the frigid snow of Buffalo for the warmth of the Caribbean this week as they get set to face UNC-Charlotte in the Makers Wanted Bahamas Bowl on Friday. Both teams arrived Monday and will participate in a variety of events throughout the week.

Mondays festivities featured a welcome reception for the teams, which are both staying at the expansive Atlantis Paradise Island Bahamas resort hotel. Im stoked. This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Were really blessed and fortunate to be in this situation, said Jake Fuzak, a junior offensive lineman from Williamsville.

The weeklong Bahamas trip is the Bulls reward for a 7-5 regular season. Its their second straight bowl appearance and fourth in program history. UB is hoping to make history by capturing its first-ever bowl victory later this week.

Until then, its all about experiencing a new destination with teammates. I know theyre going to make memories that will last a lifetime. You could feel the energy on the bus coming here and we could feel it this morning when we met as a team back in Buffalo, said Bulls head coach Lance Leipold.

Its amazing. Its beautiful. All the guys saw Atlantis, and everyone got riled up and excited, added Taylor Riggins, a junior defensive end from Webster, New York. Everyone on the team is really excited to be here and get out of that cold weather up in Buffalo. Lately its been low 30s and snowing every day. To be able to get down here in the sun is really nice for us.

For junior linebacker Kadofi Wright, just about everything will be new and nice this is the first trip outside of Virginia or New York for the Richmond native. This hotel is ridiculous. Ive never seen anything like it, he said.

The Bulls plan on having some fun while theyre here, but make no mistake, theyve got one goal in mind. Its not really a vacation for us. Its a business trip, Wright said. Were looking forward to a win. Once we win, then itll be a fun trip.

UB has already scored one victory over Charlotte since arriving in the Bahamas. Max Michel, a redshirt freshman linebacker from Elizabeth, New Jersey, used his speedy thumbs to guide the Bulls to a win in the pinball competition held during the welcome reception. Not bad for someone who hasnt even played pinball since he was a kid playing it on a computer game.

The Bulls received a championship trophy, and will return to Buffalo with a pinball machine, the grand prize for winning the event.

When asked how he managed to perform so well despite a severe lack of pinball experience, Michel offered this gem: When its all on the line, you have to lock in, and thats what I did.

The teams practice on Tuesday was cancelled. But later in the day, the players will take part in a beach bash and dinner featuring a dance contest and games, including beach bowling and beach golf.

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House Hunting in the Bahamas: Comfort on the Waters of Nassau – The New York Times

The Bahamas is no longer just a vacation destination, he said. Many international high-net-worth individuals are now choosing to make the Bahamas their primary residence.

Mr. Christie noted an uptick in the last 18 months in the amenity-packed luxury condo market, which attracts buyers from New York seeking relief from cold weather in a destination with a direct flight, with units averaging $800 to $1,500 a square foot.

Inventory is tight in the New Providence market, said Paul Carey, the founder and a broker at Realty Team Bahamas. In the wake of Dorian, a lot of people from Freeport and Abaco have moved here, he said. It is more of a sellers market, particularly under $500,000. It is hard to find anything for $350,000 to $375,000. The same goes for rentals under $3,000 a month, he said.

We have a lot of foreign investors coming in, Mr. Carey said. They are buying the high-end stuff.

Many buyers, he said, block off weeks or weekends to use the house and then rent it in between for a minimum $2,000 a night.

New resort hotels, like the high-end Baha Mar on Cable Beach, offer fully furnished turnkey residences (in Baha Mars case, starting at $726,500) that can be put in a rental pool when not being used.

This is the season for second-home buyers, said Christine Wallace-Whitfield, a senior broker at the Bahamas agency Island Living Real Estate and the president of the Bahamas Real Estate Association. Weve seen a steady flow, particularly in Nassau, New Providence and Paradise Island, the sought-after islands, along with Eleuthera, Bimini and the Exumas.

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House Hunting in the Bahamas: Comfort on the Waters of Nassau - The New York Times

Bret Michaels Reunites 9-Year-Old Girl With Family In The Bahamas – ETCanada.com

By Shakiel Mahjouri.11 hours ago

Bret Michaels heart is with the victims of Hurricane Dorian this holiday season.

The lead singer of Poison is teaming up with the Paradise Fund, Moore Charitable Foundation and Operation Airdrop to support those affected by the hurricane. Michaels, 56, is delivering toys, supplies, and meals to families affected. Perhaps most importantly, he helped reunite 9-year-old Emma with her family in the Bahamas.

RELATED: Bret Michaels Daughter Raine Makes Sports Illustrated Top 6

It has been part of my goals since the beginning of my music career, Michaels told People. In fact, even earlier my life, when I helped form one of the first diabetic camps in Pennsylvania.

I do something charitable in every single city I play in around the world and this year, I just really wanted to make an effort of getting toys and much-needed supplies to the islands, he added. I wanted to make sure our friends in the Bahamas, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic and Mexico know we love them and are thinking about them and delivering toys and much-needed supplies.

RELATED: Kidney Stones Force Poisons Bret Michaels To Postpone Concert

It was important to Michaels to show, not just tell:I didnt want to be a guy that just said it, I wanted to get it done and raise not only money but awareness and a true effort of bringing music to these islands Im bringing lots of guitars and music equipment to them as well.

They are our friends and they deserve an amazing MERRY CHRISTMAS, Michaels concluded. I was just glad to be a part of it as I am relentless about making sure its not only said, but gets done.

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Bret Michaels Reunites 9-Year-Old Girl With Family In The Bahamas - ETCanada.com

Sky Bahamas gets interim injunction to block sale of assets in LPIA row – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS Sky Bahamas has secured an interim injunction against AOG Maintenance Company the entity it was renting from at the Lynden Pindling International Airport (LPIA).

The order blocks AOG from selling its assets and from restricting access to those assets, Eyewitness News Online can confirm.

The airline has been grounded since July 8, and ceased operations the following the month when it was also evicted from its head office.

It secured the ex parte interim injunction in the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

However, the order can still be set aside.

Eyewitness News Online understands that Sky Bahamas sought the application on information that AOG, which was subletting its head office, was moving to sell its property.

Captain Randy Butler, the airlines president and chief executivehas repeatedly suggested thathis business had been victimized and intentionally sabotaged.

Those claims have been refuted by the Bahamas Civil Aviation Authority.

Also at the centre of Sky Bahamas woes was its inability to have its air operators certificate renewed by the Bahamas Civil Aviation Authority.

The certificate allows the airline to carry fare paying passengers, and it reportedly failed its safety inspection.Captain Butler and the airline havealso disputed those findings.

It emerged last year that theSky Bahamas owed NAD some $454,000 in passenger facility and security fees.

Those fees are collected from ticket prices on the airport operators behalf.

Butler has previously said the company has been making inroad to address.

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Sky Bahamas gets interim injunction to block sale of assets in LPIA row - EyeWitness News

Running with the Bulls: Sights & Sounds of the Bahamas – WIVB.com – News 4

NASSAU, BAHAMAS (WIVB) Its been a week of fun, football and philanthropy for the Bulls in the Bahamas. From the minute the plane touched down in Nassau, the excitement among the team practically could be felt from miles away.

I mean its awesome, this place is just amazing do you know being here the air is so warm its so exciting, said UB offensive lineman Evin Ksiezarczyk. Being from Buffalo, you know its like 30 there its being here its amazing Im speechless its awesome.

Tuesday morning at the Atlantis featured a pretty epic surprise for the bulls courtesy of head coach lance Leipold.

We all got up very early on our mind that we were going to have practice and coach comes in and shows us our practice schedule and it says the water park and guys just started celebrating and jumping up, running back Jaret Patterson explained. It was pretty fun, its pretty cool that coach did that, giving us the day off to enjoy this experience and I think thats pretty cool.:

Our coaches always tell us to enjoy the vacation, but remember its a business trip so you know, be where your feet are, added Antonio Nunn. Thats what theyre basically telling us so when is practice its practice. When youve got time for yourself, its time for yourself. So were trying to balance that and take away with it.

UB took to the practice field Wednesday underthe scorching sun and high humidity- and then it was time to give back asmembers of the Bulls and Charlotte took to the field with kids in the communityfor a youth football clinic.

Theyre having a blast, said Max Michel. All the kids laughing, racing and competing, and giving their best effort, it just puts a smile on my face because I was in their shoes. I was somebody that wanted to have fun with football and stuff like that. So for us to do that and give back to them feels great.

Every single one of these players thats coaching these young guys had a coach that impacted their lives in ways that none of us can imagine, said Steve Specht. Now theyre giving back, they are impacting these young kids lives. To watch this happen, it really is what makes our game so great.

Giving the kids something like theyve never seen before, they were so amazed at us, said Rich Miller. It felt good to be able to give them this experience, so they had fun, they had a whole Lotta fun competing. I taught them a lot of different things like double reverses and stuff like that. It was real fun.

At the end of the day, the Bulls continue to reiterate that this isnt a vacation, its a business trip. They have a sour taste in their mouths from a season ago, and want to make history and become the first team in program history to win a bowl game.

Kickoff on Friday is set for 2 oclock.

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Running with the Bulls: Sights & Sounds of the Bahamas - WIVB.com - News 4

Atlantis’ Gingerbread Village puts guests and visitors in the Christmas spirit – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMAS Its made of sugar and spice and everything nice, and it took a whopping 14 days to build.

Its an elaborate gingerbread village thats on display at The Royal lobby of the Atlantis Resort on Paradise Island.

The Food and Beverage team at Atlantis used more than 330 lbs. of gingerbread, candies and chocolates to bring this tasty gingerbread village to life.

A team of three to five chefs worked on the project for 14 days. amounting to 168 hours in total.

The village was assembled and decorated in the Neptune Ballroom at the Atlantis Resort before being taken apart and transported by truck to The Royal lobby.

According to a recent press release, the gingerbread village required: 340 pounds of icing sugar; 120 pounds of pasteurized egg whites; 100 pounds of sugar paste; 8 pounds cinnamon cloves, ginger, nutmeg, spices, powder; 40 pounds of white chocolate; 60 pounds of dark chocolate; 24 cans and 8 bags of faux snow; and 100 pounds of candies.

The gingerbread village will remain on display until the new year.

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Atlantis' Gingerbread Village puts guests and visitors in the Christmas spirit - EyeWitness News

Trust issues plague the relationship between Ascension St. Joe’s and the community it serves – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Rick Banks from Black Leaders Organizing for Communities, far left; Nate Gilliam, organizer for the Wisconsin Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals, center left; Melanie McCurtis of the Metcalfe Park Neighborhood Association, center right; and Jack Hansen. a research and policy analyst from Milwaukee Area Service and Hospitality Workers Organization, far right, all spoke at a meeting Oct. 1 to discuss Ascension Wisconsin's St. Joseph campus.(Photo: Talis Shelbourne / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

Three empty chairs at a community meeting epitomized the mistrust between the leaders of Ascension Wisconsin and the St. Joes Accountability Coalition.

The coalition, composed primarily of community leaders from Milwaukees north side, invited Ascension Wisconsin to that Oct. 1 meeting to press the health systemtosigna legal contractbinding it to a list of commitments. The commitmentsincluded keepingAscension St. Josephhospital openand providing an urgent care clinic, affordable housing assistance, local hiring, more employee training and living wages for all employees.

Ascension didnt show.

For one, Ascension Wisconsin officials said they were told they would not be allowedto speak at the event. For another, they said signing a contract was unnecessary because they have promised to keep the hospital open,already hire locally andprovide employee training.

The hospital, which employs about 800 people, is one of the neighborhood's largest employers.

The coalition wants the hospital to sign a community benefits agreement, known as a CBA, which is a contract between community groups and real estate developers or government entities.

Reggie Newson, Ascension Wisconsinsvice president of government and community services, said the health systemis proving its commitment to the community by expanding and adding services to St. Joseph.

For example, two certified nurse-midwives were just hired forthe hospital's new midwifery clinic and a third is being recruited. The hospital is also planning to hire a cardiac nurse practitioner and cardiologist.

But members of the coalition arent convinced, because they say there is no legal penalty if Ascension fails to follow through on its promises.

Nate Gilliam, an organizer with the Wisconsin Federation of Nurses & Health Professionals, advisory board member of the University of Wisconsin Population Health Instituteand coalition spokesman,said the coalition just wants accountability.

Its good that theyre saying all these great things on paper and to the media," he said. "But if they are going to do that, they shouldnt have a problem with signing a CBA.

The lack of trust between the coalition and Ascension Wisconsin started 18 months ago, when hospital administrators citing losses of roughly $30 million a yearproposed cutting some of Ascension St. Joseph's surgical and medical units and other services, such as cardiology support.

RELATED: Ascension Wisconsin cutting services at St. Joseph hospital

The hospital, at 5000 W. Chambers St., serves a majority African American population on the city's north side, an area facingsteep socioeconomic disadvantages. Decades of limited access to health care havecontributed to higher rates of chronic disease. Higher rates of poverty means many residents rely on Medicaid for health insurance.

Residents interpreted Ascensions proposal as a precursor to closing the hospital and in an area where transportation is scarce feared they would have to go farther for health care.

The proposalwas criticized by Mayor Tom Barrett, several aldermen and community leaders, including George Hinton, CEO of the Social Development Commission and former president of Aurora Sinai Medical Center, who wrote an op-edin opposition.

Ascension dropped the proposal.

But that was 18 months ago.

Reggie Newson, Vice President of Government and Community Services, Chief Advocacy Officer, Ascension Wisconsin.(Photo: The Refinery Photo Studio)

Since then, Newsonsaid the hospital surveyed more than 1,000people by telephone and held five community listening sessions. The information was used to develop priorities for the hospital and corresponding programs, such as the midwifery program and heart and vascular community care center.

Similarly, members of the coalition conducted their own survey, knockingon hundreds of doors and collecting 584detailed responses.

When surveyed on non-clinical services, over 40% of residents said housing assistance, local hiring and living wages were their top priorities.From the coalition's survey onclinical services,61.6% said access to urgent care was most important to them.

Kevin Kluesner, Ascension St. Joseph's chief administrative officer, said he and others arewell aware of the health disparities and disadvantages within the community they serve.

He saidAscension Wisconsin's pushto expand services is proof the hospital isnt going anywhere.

RELATED: New Women, Infants, and Children office opens at Ascension St. Joseph through Milwaukee Health Department partnership

Thatcommitment is despite the hospital'shaving lost roughly $150million since the 2012 fiscal year. In the 2018 fiscal year, the most recent for which information is available,Ascension St. Joseph lost $31.6 million.

By comparison,Froedtert Hospital reported $134 million in profits for the 2018 fiscal year, according to information filed with the Wisconsin Hospital Association.Aurora St. Lukes Medical Center reported $166 million in profits in 2018.

Gilliam said that since the hospital is a non-profit venture, lost profits shouldn't matter. He also said that Ascension Wisconsin hasmore profitable locations across the state, that can offset the losses at St. Joseph.

Markasa Tucker, executive director of the African American Roundtable and supporter of the coalition, reads the response from Ascension on her phone.(Photo: Talis Shelbourne / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)

The results from the coalition's survey mirrored what residents at the Oct. 1 community meeting described.

Charles Hawkins said he likes his primary care physicians, but said they keep leaving.

Another resident who lives blocks away from the hospital, Arkesia Jackson, said when her brother-in-law experienced a flare-up of his COPD, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, she was thankful a community hospital was nearby.

"He ran inside the emergency and collapsed, car running," she said. "He is a patient at St. Joe's. They had all his records, they knew who he was, they knew what he was suffering from."

Newson said the goal isto provide consistent, quality care for all patients.

Gilliam acknowledged that details of what the coalition isasking for, such asracially equitable health care and helping with housing assistance, are somewhat vague. However, thats because its members said they want to sit down with Ascension and hammer out an agreement as long as Ascension commits to signing one.

Coalition members argue that other hospitalshave worked withcommunity groups on similarinitiatives.

Robert Silverman, a professor in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Buffalo, said there are some rare examples of CBAs being used in the health care field.

For example, Yale University signed a CBA with the Community Organized for Responsible Development groupin 2006 regarding the construction of a new cancer center.

It still remains unlikely that Ascension, a national organization,would willingly set such a precedent for its hospitals.

Gilliam said he thinks it's important for hospitals to be accountable to the community.

I dont see why they see a community benefits agreement as adversarial off the top," Gilliam said. Whenever theyre ready to come to the table in earnest, well be there.Thats it."

But with the addition and expansion of several new programs, Kluesner said he's not sure what else hospital officials can do to prove they are serious about being a reliable anchor institution on the citys north side.

"We've signed 11 new providers. That's the best proof we could give of our commitment togrowing services here at St. Joseph. If people are wondering what are we doing at Ascension St. Joseph, I think that actions speak louder than words," he said.

Contact Talis Shelbourne at (414) 223-5261 or tshelbourn@jrn.com. Follow her on Twitter at @talisseerand Facebook at @talisseer.

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Trust issues plague the relationship between Ascension St. Joe's and the community it serves - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Vote on Ascension Sewer deal back on for Friday night but suit to block vote pending – The Advocate

GONZALESThe Ascension Parish Council is poised to consider a contested 30-year contract Friday night that would consolidate sewer service in the Dutchtown, Prairieville and Gonzales areas, after a state appellate panel threw out a lower court order that had previouslyblocked any action until next year.

But the Gonzales lawyer who filed the original suit that led to the lower court order said he has already filed another suit to block action. He added that he expects other suits could follow from other plaintiffs.

Jean-Paul Robert's latest suit, known as a temporary restraining order, was pending early Thursday evening, he said, and mirrors what he filed Monday over the lack of adequate public access to the documents behind the deal.

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"It's not gonna be just Sean Dardeau this time. It's gonna be an avalanche," said Robert, who is representing Dardeau, a Geismar-area car salesman fighting council action on the sewer contract.

GONZALES Hours from a final vote Monday by the Ascension Parish Council on a 30-year deal to bring regional sewer service to Ascension Paris

A special meeting of the Parish Council was called Thursday evening for Friday at 6 p.m. and also, for Friday at 7 p.m., a meeting of a special parish utilities district, which is also composed of the council members. The bodies are expected to cast a series votes allowing the sewer proposal to go forward.

Several councilmen leaving another meeting Thursday night said they are prepared to vote Friday if the court doesn't block them again. Some said they would be supporting the deal.

Councilman Daniel "Doc" Satterlee, an outgoing, two-term member who has championed a sewer fix for years but has faced intense criticism over the Ascension Sewer deal, said the proposed agreement is the product of years of work and investigations of other ideas, including having the parish go it alone, that don't work financially without access to the existing private customer base in the parish.

"I think the contract has been worked on and worked on and worked on, so I feel comfortable with it,"added William Daniel, the parish infrastructure director."I think most of the council does. It's just a matter of being able to have a hearing and having people show up to vote."

The deal with Ascension Sewer LLC, a consortium of Bernhard Capital Partners and Ascension Wastewater Treatment, would involve buildingone new regional plant in the Geismar areato replace dozens of small, neighborhood-sized treatment plants in eastern Ascension.

About 19,500 customers of parish government and Ascension Wastewater would fall under the agreement, including 2,800 Ascension Wastewater customers located outside Ascension Parish. The parish contract would give Ascension government control through the consortium over Ascension Wastewater's 16,500 customers and their rates.

Ascension Wastewater is the largest private sewer provider in the parish and relies heavily on these small sewer plants. The new regional plant would dump cleansed wastewater into the Mississippi River and avoid tightened regulatory restrictions on the discharges into polluted ditches and bayous left by the smaller sewer plants.

The Ascension Parish Council's leadership has finished negotiating a 30-year sewer concession and plans a binding vote Monday, over the object

But the customers would see an immediate rate increase if the deal is approved. Rates would start at $57.90 per month for residential customers and more for commercial customers, and the rates would increase by 4% per year for the first 10 years. The first phase of the system is expected to cost $215 million.

Parish officials have emphasized the cost of not acting. Ascension Wastewater is likely to cut its own deal with Bernhard Capital, depriving the parish of an important customer base, they say. Also, costs to run and upgrade the parish's existing systems would drive a $13 million to $27 million shortfall over the next 20 years at a starting rate of about $60 per month.

Following months of talks with the sitting Parish Council and their lawyers, newly elected council members and Parish President-elect Clint Cointment began raising concerns about the deal. He and others aired worries about the speed with which the final versions of the deal were being pushed through the council and about a number of provisions, including termination fees, that Cointment says could bankrupt the parish.

Earlier attempts at a final vote were halted so Cointment could try to negotiate with Ascension Sewer. While both sides suggested some progress was being made, Council Chairwoman Teri Casso cut off those talks Dec. 11 after, she said, the two sides became stuck on some details.

A recent estimate from financial analysts working for the parish says the termination fees could vary greatly, from $15 million near the end of the agreement to $187 million in year five. At that point, the consortium would have spent the most cash and taken out the most debt to build the new system but without much time to collect month sewer fees to start paying off the costs. The termination fees are designed to reimburse the consortium partners for their unreimbursed costs plus their rate of return.

Jeff Jenkins, co-founder of Bernhard Capital,has disputed fears about the termination fees, calling it a red herring. He said that even if either side did pull out and termination fees were due, the parish still would control the customers who could pay off those fees.

As part of the deal, both the council and its utilities district must vote to transfer the sewer assets of Ascension Wastewater to the district, which means the parish would then own them.

Under an agreement also up for a vote Friday, the consortium would pay Ascension Wastewater, an equity partner in Ascension Sewer that will draw profits from ratepayers, an undisclosed sum for that infrastructure. Ratepayers would cover almost all the costs of the partnership, which projects an 8% return on investment.

Meanwhile, an East Baton Rouge Parish city-parish attorney said the city-parish government is working on an agreement to link up about 1,100 to 1,400 of Ascension Wastewater's customers now in the Ascension Sewer deal to the city-parish system.

Ascension Sewer officials had earlier suggested those out-of-parish customers would help defray sewer rates for the deal in Ascension. But Jenkins said that if another agreement is reached with the city-parish for the East Baton Rouge customers, that agreement would be revenue neutral for the Ascension Sewer agreement.

The state Public Service Commission must also ratify the transfer of Ascension Wastewater's sewer assets.

The flurry of activity Thursday evening was prompted by an order midday Thursday from a three-judge panel on the state 1st Circuit Court of Appeal.

The panel rejected Judge Jessie LeBlanc's order Monday enjoining the Parish Council from voting on Ascension Sewer until at least Jan. 7. Cointment and six new members of the 11-person council are expected to be inaugurated Jan. 6.

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Vote on Ascension Sewer deal back on for Friday night but suit to block vote pending - The Advocate

Tech and health care need their own ‘Hippocratic oath’ – STAT – STAT

When a whistleblower revealed the details of Project Nightingale, a collaboration between Google and the Ascension health system, he or she also surfaced critical flaws in the ways that health care and tech work together.

As part of the deal, Ascension, a nonprofit Catholic hospital system that operates in 21 states, gave Google access to millions of patient records, including names and birth dates. The goal of Project Nightingale was to build new tools that help doctors extract key information from patients medical records and deliver more targeted medical treatments. It would also make it possible for doctors to spend more time with patients and less time combing through endless layers of electronic health data.

The problem was that the hospital system gave Google access to this mountain of data without the knowledge of doctors or patients. After the news broke, stories emerged questioning compliance with privacy laws and whether Google had plans to monetize the data it received. Lawmakers have voiced similar concerns.

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This isnt an isolated incident. There have been other hiccups over the years as tech and health care have increasingly gravitated towards one another. Think IBM Watson, Memorial Sloan Ketterings alliance with Paige.AI, and the fall of Outcome Health. These gaffes are exacerbating an already frayed trust between the public and the tech industry.

We must act now, before new regulatory barriers and other problems arise that set digital health back for years. We are calling on those working in our respective industries to change our ways. We must lead by example to fully realize the potential of health care technology partnerships to improve both the outcomes and experience for patients and clinicians.

The cultures of tech and health care are fundamentally different, so its easy to see why collaborations between the two run into trouble. Tech is about working fast, in secrecy, with a small set of designers and engineers. It aims to create buzz, sell a vision, and get a product to market as quickly as possible. It recognizes that even though a product may not be perfect right away, iterative work can make it better.

Health care moves at a more measured pace, mainly because patients lives are at stake. Developing a new medicine requires proving its efficacy and safety, which often takes decades and billions of dollars. It requires exposing the results and data to the scrutiny of peers and regulators. Its about putting patients first and developing something that works and is safe, even if it takes longer.

Despite these fundamental differences, there are opportunities for tech and health companies to develop tools that complement traditional medical care by guiding patients to the right treatment, detecting health problems earlier, and much more. Theres so much to gain if this is done well. And yet, we must overcome the friction that occurs when we work with one another.

This friction is understandable. Tech wants health care to move faster. Health care wants tech to slow down. Tech wants health care to buy its vision. Health care wants that vision backed up by evidence, not hype. This tension is stifling the progress of digital health. There have been too many examples of tech running roughshod over the principles of medicine. Startups like Theranos and uBiome, to name two, crashed and burned after misleading investors, regulators, and customers about their capabilities.

Tech within health care, as a result, has lost credibility with the public, and even companies playing by the rules will be met with skepticism. The resulting trust vacuum has the potential to create additional barriers to progress and stall projects even before they get off the ground.

On the health care side, there are countless examples of an industry that, unless pushed, has been slow to adopt innovations in digitization and information technology. Even with the widespread adoption of electronic health records (which required a governmental mandate to achieve), different health systems still cant effectively share data. As a result, health care is far behind other industries in integrating cutting-edge digital technologies.

We need to compromise. Health care needs to be more willing to partner effectively with tech and embrace a more iterative development style. Developing a digital tool in a rapid, iterative fashion requires a significant change in health cares culture. But thats a good thing. Health care could quickly learn what digital health tools work and get them into patients and clinicians hands.

Tech, on the other hand, needs to appreciate and respect the culture of health care and its mission to help patients achieve better health. Startups must generate evidence that their products improve outcomes. They and their financial backers need to be willing to invest in those studies. And, uncomfortable as it might be, tech companies must be open and honest about what theyre doing. Earning and keeping the publics trust has to be just as important as anything else they do.

The use of data in health care is fundamentally different than it is in other industries, such as retail. Most retail consumers accept that, by signing up for a frequent shopper card at their local supermarket or clothing store and receiving its associated discounts, they will be entered into a database and targeted with personalized ads.

But take this approach to medicine and its an entirely different story. Say a patient sees a doctor and during the visit provides him or her with personal information. If that information is later used to sell the patient new products, it would feel like a moral transgression to both patient and provider. This possibility is one reason for the public outrage over the Google-Ascension deal. After the news broke, Googles assurances that the data were being used only for good werent enough. The damage was done.

Patients arent just consumers. They trust their clinicians and the health care system with their lives. Tech companies need to treat this trust with respect. Tech needs to shed its stereotypical secrecy and be honest even to the point of overcommunicating if the goal is establishing trust. Tech cant confuse the vision for its products with the reality of what they are and what they have (and havent) proven. Tech companies must be upfront with health care providers about a products stage of development and what they hope to achieve. If tech needs to use patient data to make digital health tools, the parties involved have a moral and legal obligation to let patients know what is happening and why.

Patient data is an incredibly valuable asset: It is the fuel for creating intelligent tools that could make health care better and cheaper. There are ways to manage this information safely and ethically. But that message must be explained more clearly going forward, and health and tech companies must do a better job respecting and alleviating the concerns people have even before they have them.

Tech and health companies should be as transparent as possible at all points. If they feel like they cant be, its time to ask, Why not? Stories like the Google-Ascension deal must prod us to redouble efforts toward transparency.

When health and tech companies decide to work together, we should commit to a digital health Hippocratic oath. Lets proactively tell patients, the broader public, and every employee within our own organizations what were doing and why. Lets say to everyone exactly how patient data will be used, how it will be protected, and how our work might benefit people in the long run. And lets promise, publicly, that the data wont be used for any other reason than to benefit patient care.

We dont pretend any of this is easy, but its essential that we persevere to optimize the marriage of health care and technology. Our patients and the public deserve nothing less.

Thomas M. Maddox, M.D., is a cardiologist, professor of medicine, and executive director of the Healthcare Innovation Lab at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and BJC HealthCare. Simon MacGibbon is the CEO and co-founder of Myia Health.

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Tech and health care need their own 'Hippocratic oath' - STAT - STAT

Why Bobby Webre is eyeing expansion of female dorm at Ascension jail – The Advocate

Ascension Parish government and the sheriff have agreed to renovate he parish jail's female wing, addressing the problem of sending female prisoners to north Louisiana jails because there's not enough room in Ascension's.

Under the new funding agreement, Ascension Parish Sheriff Bobby Webreplans to add 16 more beds to the parish jail's 48-bed female wing.

The renovation, which the sheriff hopes to start in early spring, will convert the old facility, built on the parish's west bank in the mid-1970s, from individual cells into an open bay-style dorm, freeing up space for beds.

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"And hopefully, we can control that population for quite a while and not have to ship females out of parish," Webre said.

The dorm is expected to cost $670,000 to $680,000 to renovate and will include new plumbing.

Though the sheriff runs the jail, it is parish government, under state law, that owns the facility and has the responsibility to maintain it. The parish will pay $600,000 for the renovation and the Sheriff's Office will kick in $80,000.

Webre's office has already spent $40,000 toward that bill for architectural plans and other early costs, the agreement says.

Currently, female inmates who don't have a bed in the dorm are being housed in Madison Parish in northeastern Louisiana, costing Ascension a $24 per prisoner daily fee and complicating transportation costs to bring the inmates back and forth for court, Webre said.

The Ascension Parish jail has been routinely seeing about 55 to 58 female inmates per day, with most being held for nonviolent crimes, such as theft, drugs and bad checks, the sheriff said.

Webre was the jail's warden for 16 of his 34 years in the Sheriff's Office, from 1996 to 2011. He said that when he first began overseeing the jail in '96, its maximum population for female inmates was 16 and the dorm then was rarely full.

General population increases in Ascension have contributed to the rise in inmates but Webre said many of the female inmates end up in the jail because they continue to fail to show up for court dates. Judges won't recall bench warrants for their arrest and the inmates are held for court, Webre said.

"By far, this is my largest female population in my 34 years," he said.

Overall, the jail facility has a capacity of 572 inmates.

A $11.5 million expansion in 2008 doubled the jail's capacity to the current level,Webre said, and has left the Sheriff's Office in good shape for housing the male inmates.

Parish government financed its construction in 2007 and will continue to pay off that debt through 2027. The balance on the debt is expected to be $5.5 million by the end of this year, said Martin McConnell, parish spokesman.

Parish Council members and outgoing Parish President Kenny Matassa spoke in support of the funding agreement at the Parish Council meeting Thursday night. The agreement, which Webre said has been discussed for about a year, was approved without opposition.

"We appreciate the sheriff very much and his concerns for being able to secure those inmates here in our parish," Council Chair Teri Casso said.

Though Webre is pushing forward with the female dorm expansion, he said he has no plans to build a new juvenile facility unless it can be a multi-parish operation, to help defray its costs. The sheriff reserves six beds in St. Bernard Parish for the juvenile offenders at a cost of $200 per offender per day.

After new state standards took effect several years ago, the St. James and Assumption sheriff's offices closed multi-parish juvenile detention centers, citing the cost.

The Ascension Parish Council adopted a 1-mill, 20-year tax in 2013 in hopes of one day building a new facility after the St. James facility closed. The fund is being used to pay to house the juveniles out of parish.

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Big plays by White Castle’s Javier Batiste, Ascension Catholic’s Jai Williams help Eagles win Red Stick Bowl – The Advocate

ZACHARYThe Eagles didnt panic after surrendering their lead in the fourth quarter against the Patriots on Saturday afternoon.

Jai Williams sliced through the heart of the Patriots defense to pace the Eagles to a 27-22 win in the 18th annual Red Stick Bowl all-star football game at Zacharys Bronco Stadium.

The Patriots scratched back from a 21-10 halftime deficit and captured a one-point lead with four minutes to play on a 28-yard touchdown reception by Jack Johnson of Silliman.

But the Eagles responded by mounting a furious six-play scoring drive highlighted by a 32-yard reception from Catholic's Jackson Thomas to Derrick Varnado of Ascension Christian and also assisted by a personal foul infraction by the Patriots.

Williams touchdown run with 2:46 made the difference for the Eagles. The Ascension Catholic product finished with 58 yards on eight carries.

The Eagles' Javier Batiste of White Castle was named Most Valuable Player of the event that featured nearly 90 of the top players in the Baton Rouge area.

Batiste was an integral part of the games most electrifying play. Lining up at running back, Batiste took a lateral pass from quarterback Luke Lunsford of Denham Springs and found wide receiver Rodney White of East Feliciana sprinting down the right sideline for a 35-yard touchdown to give the Eagles a two-score lead late in the opening period.

Batiste also scored the games first TD on a 38-yard run and pulled in a 58-yard pass from Dunham quarterback Anthony Safford just before halftime.

It was a different atmosphere compared to a normal game, Batiste said. But we played hard and we were confident we could come back and get the lead after we let it slip away.

The Eagles launched a hurry-up offense and blitzed ahead with scores on their first two possessions. Behind quarterbacks Safford, Lunsford and Thomas, they appeared in control until relinquishing the lead in the fourth quarter.

Coach had us moving off the ball in practice and had us prepared. We thought that was the key to winning the game, Batiste said.

Eagles coach Ron LeJeune of East Iberville said he felt the flea-flicker play early on set the tone for most of the game.

Our coaches called a good game, especially on that double-pass play. The fans want to see the ball in the air, and we tried to make it as entertaining as possible, LeJeune said. We went back and forth at the end, but we finished strong. I was confident, but I was sweating at the same time.

Patriots coach Steven Thomas of Zachary said spotting the opposition two scores early put his squad at a disadvantage.

We just didnt start off well, but we turned it on after that, he said. We finally took the lead but just made a few errors at the end that cost us the game. We had a chance to win in the end, and thats all you can ask for.

Johnson, whose 28-yard catch gave the Patriots their only lead, was named best receiver for his team. He hauled in the pass from Walker's Ethan McMasters on a 50/50 jump ball between two defenders.

Coach just gave us a big pep talk at half time and that pumped us up, Johnson said. We had a lot of confidence in our offense and we never gave up, but things just didnt go our way. I had a blast and it was a fun experience.

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Big plays by White Castle's Javier Batiste, Ascension Catholic's Jai Williams help Eagles win Red Stick Bowl - The Advocate

The Ascension Book More Post-WWE Dates Mick Foley On The Bump Fight Size Update – Fightful

Here is your Fight Size Update for the morning of 12/17/19.

- The main event for Tuesday's NWA Powerrr will be Eli Drake vs. Mr. Anderson in a No DQ match.

- According to Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer, Paul Heyman and Bruce Prichard were in charge of their respective shows at WWE TLC. Vince McMahon and Triple H were not at the show, but did conference call into the production meeting.

- Taz will be leaving CBS Sports Radio.

- The Ascension will be appearing at WrestleFest 2 on Mar. 8 in New York for a signing. They are also booked for Xtreme Wrestling Alliance on Mar. 21 in what's being teased as a "SmackDown rematch."

- Mick Foley will be a guest on Wednesday's WWE's The Bump.

- Watch the cold open for Tuesday's IMPACT. Fightful will have live coverage of the show beginning at 8 p.m. ET.

- Ric Flair told Wrestling INC that Vince McMahon nixed him taking a bump at WWE Crown Jewel.

- Lineup for AEW Dark on Tuesday.

* Vickie Guerrero as guest commentator

* The Best Friends & Orange Cassidy vs. Pac, Jack Evans & Angelico

* Kris Statlander vs. Bea Priestley

* SCU vs. Private Party

* Britt Baker vs. Machiko

- WWE Raw in three minutes.

- Subscribe to Fightful Select, for podcasts, exclusive and early news, and much more. You can also subscribe to my Patreon page where I write about more wrestling, MMA, NBA, NHL, NFL, bad reality television, and much more.

- Also make sure to subscribe to our Youtube channel for interviews, news updates, podcasts, and more!

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Lee turns to defense to turn back East Ascension – The Advocate

The best way to get jump shots to start falling is by attacking the basket.

So when Lee High Schools girls basketball teams jump shots werent going in, its offense moved into the paint, and despite not making a single jump shot, thePatriots made enough layups and free throws to win 53-46 over East Ascension (4-6).

Tonight, we couldnt buy [a jump shot, said Lee coach Valencia Wilson, who credited East Ascensions tough defense as well. As they say, we couldnt hit an elephant with an ironing board.

Lee (8-1) raced out to a 14-8 lead at the end of the first quarter, with 12 points coming in the paint and the other two at the free-throw line.

Much of the same continued for Lee in the second quarter, but East Ascension got some offense going behind seven points by Aja Causey. The Spartans still trailed 28-27 at halftime despite Causeys efforts and six points by Mahogany Landry.

Twenty-two of Lees first-half points came on field goals in the paint, while the other six were at the free-throw line. The scoring for Lee was spread out as five individual players scored in both quarters.

We broke down defensive-wise too many times, East Ascension coach Dennis Chandler said. You look at the layups now some were good offensive execution but we gave up probably about 8-10 points where we did not communicate well and left a girl wide open here and there, and theyre too good to do that too.

In the third quarter, Diamond Hunter scored six of Lees eight points, and the Lady Patriots remained on top 36-34 going into the fourth quarter.

East Ascension tied the score for the first time with a basket to start the fourth quarter, and eventually gathered a 42-40 lead on two free throws by Causey with six minutes, 10 seconds left.

The lead didnt last, however.

Lee forced a string of turnovers and were able to get out in transition for easy fast-break layups.

The two-point lead for East Ascension turned into an 11-point deficit after a 13-0 run on layups and free throws by Lee, who is normally a perimeter-orientated, shooting team.

Lee finished off with another layup and free throw to seal its 53-46 win.

The Patriots ended with nine free throws and 44 points in the paint.

Hunter led Lee with 16 points, while Causey finished with 12 points and Sadie Williams led East Ascension with 16 points.

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Lee turns to defense to turn back East Ascension - The Advocate

Ascension Parish Schools recognizes district and school-level students of the year – The Advocate

The 2019-20 students of the year for the Ascension Parish Schools were recognized at the school board's Dec. 3 meeting. The districtwide students of the year are Hiba Hasan of Dutchtown High School, Grant Guillory of Dutchtown Middle School and Sophia Collins of Galvez Primary School, according to a news release.

The 12th-grade students of the year for their respective schools are:

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The eighth-grade students of the year for their respective schoolsare:

The fifth-grade students of the year for their respective schoolsare:

In order to be considered for student of the year honors, students must maintain a cumulative grade-point average of at least 3.2. The school-level coordinator submits all students in fifth, eighth and 12th grades who meet the initial criteria. Teachers then vote for students on the list based on the child's academics, behavior and leadership qualities. The coordinator then chooses the students with the top votes to enter the actual school-level competition. A small committee of school staff is assembled to score students based on test scores, grades and an interview. The students with the highest committee score are named the school's student of the year.

Those students are now eligible to compete at the district level. The students have to submit a biographical sketch, writing sample, portfolio of their accomplishments and be interviewed by members of the Ascension Parish community who volunteer as judges. The district winners will be entered in the regional competition, which will occur in February. Winners from the state's regional competition will be named in March.

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Ascension Parish Schools recognizes district and school-level students of the year - The Advocate

Jets vs. Steelers: Le’Veon Bell’s chance at revenge, Steelers defensive ascension among things to know – Jets Wire

While the Jets have nothing to play for except pride on Sunday, they still have a chance to put Pittsburghs playoff hopes on the self.

Jets running back LeVeon Bell and offensive assistant Hines Ward will be squaring off against their former team for the first time. Bell has insisted that this is just another game, but Ward wants a Gatorade shower if the Jets are able to pull off the upset.

A win over the Steelers wouldnt be the most surprising thing New York has pulled off this season. However, besides the injuries that continue to afflict Gang Green, the offensive ineptitude has plagued one of the leagues worst units. It might be more of the same against one of the leagues best defensive units on Sunday.

Here are four things you need to know for the Jets Week 16 clash with Pittsburgh.

LeVeon Bell will play his first career game against his former team on Sunday.

While Bell expects a 50/50 reception mixed with cheers and jeers, the Jets running back claims he wont have any added motivation facing the Steelers.

Each and every game I play I try to give it my all. I guess if I can find an extra squeeze in there, Im going to try, Bell said Friday. It is what it is with me. I always try to go out there and give my best.

Whether Bell believes that or not, he is having his worst statistical season to date.He has rushed for just 676 yards on 204 carries with three rushing touchdowns. He also has 57 catches for 404 yards and a score.

The Jets are going to need Bell to run rampant on Sunday to give themselves a fighting chance. A revenge game might not be in the cards for Bell, but hell certainly be looking to eclipse the season-best 87-yard rushing performance that he set last week.

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Jets vs. Steelers: Le'Veon Bell's chance at revenge, Steelers defensive ascension among things to know - Jets Wire

Ascension Fund announces board of directors, officers – The Advocate

During its annual holiday dinner at the Grapevine Caf in Donaldsonville, the Ascension Fund celebrated its mission to reward and inspire excellence in education and announce recently elected board of directors and officers.

The 2019-20 Board of Directors includes: President Sally Diez, Vice President Bret Hughes, Treasurer Brad Walker, Secretary Lisa Dunigan, Michael Buturla, Holly Daigle, Sherrie Despino, Dale Doty, Malcolm Dugas, Jr., Alsie Dunbar, Fritz Englade Sr., Sonny Graugnard, Amy Hathorn-Lambert, Juanita Pearley, Timothy E. Pujol, Paulette Rosamond, Donald Songy, Craig Walling and Buddy Wells.

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The Ascension Fund was established 28 years ago as a project of the Rotary Club of Gonzales. Original pledges of $800,000 for the creation of the Ascension Fund were placed in an endowment, the income from which now funds the grants.

The fund provided its first grant in 1992, and since that time has given over 1,300 grants representing $1.5 million in awards to area public schools and teachers. Fundraising efforts through 41 community supporters have raised the endowment to $1.6 million, which is managed by the Baton Rouge Area Foundation.

Applications for 2020-21 Ascension Fund grants will be available in January. The fund offers teacher grants in the amount of $500 or $1,000 and school impact grants for $2,500 to education professionals in Ascension Public Schools. For more information, visit http://www.ascensionfund.com or call (225) 290-3322.

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Ascension Fund announces board of directors, officers - The Advocate

Psychedelics and Wellness: What’s the Connection? – Psych Congress Network

A conversation between Andrew Penn, MS, PMHNP and Saundra Jain, MA, PsyD, LPC

Many people know Drs. Saundra and Rakesh Jain from their work around wellness in psychiatry, not only at Psych Congress, but around the world. They have published a workbook and have a forthcoming text on the science behind wellness and the implementation of wellness-enhancing practices (called WILD 5 Wellness - Wellness Interventions for Lifes Demands) into clinical practice.

What many people are surprised to learn is that their interests in wellness have intersected with my interests in psychedelic-assisted therapy. Theyve been collecting data about experiences and wellness from people who have used psychedelics. I sat down with Saundra Jain, MA, PsyD, LPC to better understand the connection. A transcript of our conversation is below.

Tell me about the survey you and Rakesh Jain, MD, MPH are conducting.

Id be happy to, Andrew. Wellness is certainly a topic of interest for most of us and our patients. As many of your readers know, we have been conducting research in the area of wellness for many years. To date, weve completed 11 studiesall with positive findings. We are committed to continuing this research, but an interesting thing happened several years ago. Data coming from the world of psychedelics caught our attention and we began wondering about the intersection of psychedelics and wellness.

What got you interested in asking people about their psychedelic experiences?

We are so convinced of the power of wellness as an augmentation strategy in mental health that we couldnt stop wondering if wellness has a role to play in the world of psychedelics. We believed the best way to answer that question was to go straight to those in the psychedelic community and ask them about their experiences via an anonymous, online survey on psychedelic use and the impact on mental health and wellness. So, thats exactly what we did. Were grateful to those who have completed the survey, and to those who will, for guiding us and informing us about the interrelationship between psychedelics and wellness.

What are people telling you about the results of their experiences?

There were many interesting findings from the pilot study. Let me tell you about a few that I think your readers will find of interest.

Pre/post measures of anxiety and depression showed improvements of 56% and 54% respectively.

Using a validated measure of wellness called The HERO Wellness Scale, which looks at self-reported levels of happiness, enthusiasm, resilience, and optimism, we found an overall improvement of 44% in happiness, 36% in enthusiasm, 27% in resilience, and 39% in optimism.

We queried feelings of gratitude, inner peace, connection to nature, sense of awe, and feelings of love, compassion, joy, and empathy. Of the 83 participants, 2% reported some degree of worsening, but the remainder reported improvements ranging from minimally improved to much improved.

98% believe psychedelics should be used to treat certain psychiatric disorders; 99% said they should be legalized for medical use.

We hope these findings pique your readers interest. We were excited to see the improvements specific to depression and anxiety, but finding additional improvements related to wellness was a definite bonus. Based on our wellness research outside of psychedelics and our clinical work, we know that wellness is an effective nonpharmacological augmentation strategy. It only makes sense that an interrelationship between psychedelics and wellness would exist.

So, it sounds like the vast majority of the people surveyed expressed some benefit from their psychedelic experiences. Of course, all medicines have side effects and risks. Did you note any adverse effects from the use of psychedelics in your study?

It was very exciting to see that the benefits outweighed the side-effects/risks associated with their psychedelic experiences. As mentioned earlier, the results showed that 2% of 83 participants reported some degree of worsening, ranging from minimally worse to very much worse.

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Psychedelics and Wellness: What's the Connection? - Psych Congress Network

Psychedelics Were Already Having a Good Year. Then Andrew Yang Tweeted – VICE

Andrew Yang was somewhere around Davenport when the drugs began to take hold.

He had visited that city, as he had much of the rest of Iowa, repeating his most well-known campaign promise: that U.S. citizens 18 years or older would be given a monthly $1,000 "freedom dividend." Still, amid what might have been just another campaign swing, the entrepreneur (or perhaps someone in his orbit) managed to find some time to fire off a series of tweets. One suggested that a lone veteran in Davenport might have given him a fresh perspective on psilocybin, the psychoactive ingredient in "magic mushrooms": Yang went so far as to say, in what appeared to be the most explicit stance of any Democratic presidential contenders, that the country should begin looking into legalizing the drug for medical and therapeutic benefits. (Later, he tweeted a link to a British study about the benefits of using psilocybin for depression.)

Yang may be a second- or even third-tier 2020 candidate, but advocates for legalizing psychedelics have had a good 2019and seeing someone with his platform make noise about their signature issue was gratifying, to say the least. Researchers have been studying how psilocybin (and other psychedelics) could be used to treatamong other national nightmaresdepression, drug addiction, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which has galvanized a contingent of passionate war veterans, as well as other constituencies.

"It's no coincidence that a veteran turned Andrew Yang on the miracle of mushrooms," said Matthew Kahl, the executive director of advocacy group Veterans for Natural Rights. "We are at the forefront of the fight to end the war on drugs."

Drug policy has certainly shifted in recent years, and with the exception of vaping nicotine, the trend has been toward legalization and regulation, with several states and localities opting into recreational cannabis and supporting safe-injection sites and needle-exchange programs. Psychedelics, however, tend to fade into the background of the conversation, in large part due to the fact that possessing themespecially magic mushroomsis less wrapped up in social-justice lapses (like the racial disparity that "Blacks are 3.73 times more likely than whites to be arrested for marijuana," according to the American Civil Liberties Union, or ACLU) and does not often lead to mass incarceration. (Being arrested for possession of psilocybin, at least in cities like Denver where liberalization is afoot, is rare.) Nonetheless, psilocybin is currently a Schedule I drug, meaning that, officially speaking, the government deems it to have no medical benefit and a high likelihood of abuse. (Academics and advocates have been demanding a reclassification.)

News about magic mushrooms and other psychedelics usually comes in waves, as when Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently hinted at introducing legislation to open the door to do more research, for example. That popular (OK, Yang is not a professional politician by trade and is polling at 3.4 percent, but still) Democrats are increasingly willing to wade into this dialogue helps set the stage for the following chapter: actual policy change.

It's been a slow yet steady journey up until this point. Progressive opinions about psychedelics really gained more traction after the publication and subsequent popularity of Michael Pollan's How to Change Your Mind in 2018. The book propelled the subject into the mainstream months before the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave psilocybin a "breakthrough therapy" designation and a new sheen of legitimacy.

Do you know something about drugs, legalization, or the vaping industry that we should? Using a non-work device, you can contact Alex Norcia securely via Signal at 201-429-7024 or email at alex.norcia@protonmail.com.

It was yet another veteran, though, who kicked off the decriminalization trend that has been taking off across the United States this year. Kevin Matthews, who led the Denver Psilocybin Initiative in Colorado, built a coalition of grassroots volunteers who advocated around their city: They were trying to make possessing psilocybin the lowest law enforcement priority. In a nailbiter finish, the measure narrowly passedthe first in a string of similar, successful reform. Oakland did not follow far behind, and Oregon is currently considering two separate proposals.

As Marijuana Moment first reported in late November, Decriminalize Nature, a group that formed in California and has been spearheading local initiatives elsewhere, has said that around 100 cities were seeing signs of campaignsmovements that aim to significantly reduce the penalties for possessing substances like psilocybin, ibogaine, and others. Meanwhile, in the beginning of September, Johns Hopkins University launched a research center exclusively focused on psychedelics, touting it as perhaps the first of its kind in the country and potentially the largest such institution in the world.

A series of institution-building moments are coalescing into something real. The only question is how long it takes to go from someone like Yangwho also has proposed decriminalizing opioids and legalizing recreational weedto an influential, plausible next president.

"Veterans and other victims of trauma are starting to speak up, and were finally getting through," Kahl said. "We are the poster boys for PTSD, but as poster boys, it is our duty to call attention to all the other people living (and dying) with trauma in our nation, and we're doing just that. Trauma isn't a veteran issue; it's not an American issue; it is a human issue."

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Psychedelics Were Already Having a Good Year. Then Andrew Yang Tweeted - VICE