2017 Solar Eclipse Science Will Star Planes, Radio Waves and Citizen Help – Space.com

This view of a 2010 total solar eclipse combines ground-based views (gray and white) taken from the South Pacific and space-based images from the SOHO spacecraft, which used a coronagraph to block out the sun and thus can't view as close to its surface.

With the2017 total solar eclipseonly one month away, scientists from several science organizations highlighted how studying the sun during an eclipse will help improve understanding of the behavior of Earth's closest stellar neighbor.

The Aug. 21 eclipse's totality path will span 14 different states coast to coast, taking roughly 91 minutes to cross the country. While the location of greatest eclipse is Hopkinsville, Kentucky, the time of totality will average about 2.5 minutes across all locations.

Officials from NASA, the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) came together yesterday (July 21 to discuss their plans during a press conference in Boulder, Colorado. [The Best ISO-Certified Gear to See the 2017 Solar Eclipse]

"The neat thing about this as a scientist, and is someone who has kids is the whole lower 48 [states] will be in shadow," said Scott McIntosh, director of NCAR's High Altitude Observatory. Some states will see only partial eclipses, while others will see the sun totally disappear. The event will provide opportunities for millions of amateurs to get involved with the science alongside professional astronomers, McIntosh added. (Make sure to observe proper eye safety during the eclipse.)

Because millions of people will be rushing to the small band of totality, however, the Department of Transportation has a special website available for the best routes. That's something people should check ahead of eclipse day, said Madhulika "Lika" Guhathakurta, the NASA lead scientist for the 2017 eclipse. "Traffic is going to be a nightmare," she said.

The eclipse is also well-timed, as the science community gears up for some major science projects that will focus on the sun. The Parker Solar Plus Probe will launch in 2018 to provide an unprecedented close-up view of the sun's corona, its superhot outer atmosphere. And in 2020, the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope will act like a "microscope of the sun," as the 4-meter telescope begins gathering high-resolution imagery of Earth's closest stellar neighbor.

Astronomers can easily create an artificial eclipse for a particular observer using a device called a coronagraph, which blocks most of the sun except for its corona, its superheated outer atmosphere. Scientists want to study this feature of the star to better understand how energy is transmitted from the sun into space.

The corona "is a fairly blustery environment," McIntosh said, pointing out that the Earth is affected by the "space weather" that the corona's changes generate. The strongest solar flares can induce outages in satellites and power lines, which is another reason NASA and other organizations are interested in learning about the connection between the sun and the Earth's environment, he said.

The moon will provide an advantage, however, over a coronagraph when the eclipse occurs, the researchers said. The moon is 400 times smaller than the sun and, coincidentally, about 400 times closer to Earth meaning it can cover the surface of the sun perfectly if the two bodies are aligned. A coronagraph, however, needs to be a bit larger than the sun's surface to avoid damage to the telescope.

"The moon is a perfect occulter. It blocks the surface of the sun just perfectly, so you can see very low into the solar atmosphere," said Carrie Black, the NSF's associate program director in the Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences.

In particular, scientists will be interested in studying the "low corona," where most of the sun's activity is generated. Black said this zone which is also where space weather originates is of particular interest to the federal government, which is "investing a lot of money and organizing folks" to protect communications links and the power grid from space weather event.

Additional information about the sun's behavior comes from NASA's missions across the solar system, said Guhathakurta. NASA's many orbital missions at Mars and the New Horizons mission that flew by Pluto in 2015, for instance, can provide a new perspective because they can measure how its particles have changed energy or direction as they travel further out than Earth. This provides additional information to help forecast the sun's activity, Guhathakurta said.

Incidentally, the moon's topography will also influence which regions on the Earth experience totality during the eclipse, as the moon is not a flat surface; it is full of craters and mountains that affect the shadow passing across the Earth's surface. Data from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter is available to help people predict where they should be standing in the United States to get the best view.

Here is a partial list of science observations going on (a full list from today's discussion is at https://www2.hao.ucar.edu/eclipse-science-showcase-attendees-experiments):

There also are crowdsourcing projects available, such as:

Editor's note: Space.com has teamed up with Simulation Curriculum to offer this awesome Eclipse Safari app to help you enjoy your eclipse experience. The free app is available for Apple and Android, and you can view it on the web.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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2017 Solar Eclipse Science Will Star Planes, Radio Waves and Citizen Help - Space.com

Karuna Pande Joshi and Tim Finin – Singularity Hub

Karuna P. Joshi is an associate research professor at University of Maryland, Baltimore County, whose primary research area is Cloud Computing, Data Science, and Healthcare IT. She is working on projects related to secure and oblivious cloud storage and automating legal cloud documents. She has developed a framework to automate the acquisition and consumption of cloud based services. She has also worked in collaboration with NIST to develop standards for cloud usability. She received her MS and PhD in Computer Science from UMBC, where she was twice awarded the IBM PhD Fellowship.

Tim Finin is a professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). He has over 35 years of experience in applications of artificial intelligence to problems in information systems and language understanding. His current research is focused on the semantic web, mobile computing, analyzing and extracting information from text and online social media, and on enhancing security and privacy in information systems.

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Karuna Pande Joshi and Tim Finin - Singularity Hub

Ascension 4-H’ers "Out of This World" at 4-H U – Donaldsonville Chief – Donaldsonville Chief

Over 1,300 4-Hers from across Louisiana traveled to the LSU campus in Baton Rouge, June 20-23, for an Out of This World experience at 4-H University. During 4-H University, 4-Hers can choose to compete in one of over 40 different competitions or attend the non-competitive clover college, run for a 4-H State Office position or 4-H State Board, serve as a voting delegate, and attend educational programs.

In addition to learning and competing, youth get an inside view of the college experience. 4-Hers get to stay on the LSU campus in the dorms, learn the campus by traveling to different locations for contests and educational programs, and attend assemblies in the Pete Maravich Assembly Center.

This years 4-H University theme was 4-H is Out of this World and Ascension Parish 4-H was well represented with 18 4-Hers participating in a wide range of contests and educational programs.

In addition to contest winners, several 4-Hers were selected to serve on a 4-H State Board after submitting a written application and going through a rigorous interview process. James Daigle was selected to serve on that State 4-H Shooting Sports Board for a two year term, Stacey Kloosterman was selected to serve on the State 4-H Fashion Board for a second one year term, Caitlin Marquis and Kinslei Scroggs were both selected to serve on the State 4-H Citizenship board for a one year term. Each of these 4-Hers will assist their fellow board members in planning and conducting state 4-H Activities in their respective board areas.

Two 4-Hers from each parish served as voting delegates to participate in the business activities of 4-H University. Ascension 4-Hs delegates, Charles Sanchez and Makenna Babin, assisted in the democratic process of electing the State 4-H Officers, Regional Representatives and conducting the yearly business of the 4-H organization.

2017 Ascension Parish 4-H Results:

ATV Safety: Blue Ribbon Winner - Paige Zeringue

Fashion Review- Creative Choice: Fourth Place- Stacey Kloosterman

Fishing Sports Team: Fourth Place- James Daigle, Alex Milazzo, and Noah Stafford

Fishing Sports Individual Awards: Blue Ribbon - James Daigle; Blue Ribbon - Alex Milazzo

Horticulture Demonstration (team): Fourth Place Allie Daigle and Maci Schexnayder

Insect Identification: Blue Ribbon Winner Zoe Schwaller

Louisiana Chef (team): Blue Ribbon Winners Charles Sanchez and Zack Zeringue

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Ascension 4-H'ers "Out of This World" at 4-H U - Donaldsonville Chief - Donaldsonville Chief

With more growth headed to southern Ascension, DOTD considers plans to widen La. 44, add roundabout – The Advocate

GONZALES State highway officials will unveil plans next month to improve traffic flow through the La. 44 corridor south of Interstate 10 in Ascension Parish where major housing projects have sproutedover the past two decades and more are on the way.

Many residents say the traffic is already oppressive and fear new projects under development will only make the problem worse.

The state Department of Transportation and Development has been working on studies of La. 73 in the Dutchtown area and La. 44 in Gonzales and the Burnside area as these two highway corridors have continued to feel the brunt of the population growth in Ascension, highway officials said.

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While the La. 73 "corridor study" is still under review, DOTD's corridor analysis for La. 44 between I-10 and La. 22 has led to plans to combine funds from the state, the city of Gonzales, subdivision developers and possibly parish government to see through the first phase of the concept, officials said. But there won't be enough money to extend the work all the way down to La. 22.

DOTD and other officials briefly described the first phase of improvements in advance of the public open house in Gonzales on Aug. 7 from 4 to 6 p.m.Two roundabouts would be added to La. 44 roughly between I-10 and just south of Loosemore Road. In addition, La. 44 would be widened from two to four lanes between I-10 and the first of the roundabouts planned north of Loosemore.

Even as DOTD pulls together its plans for the meeting next month, earth work is underway for the massive mixed-use Conway project in Gonzales and the 163-home Oak Lake subdivision in unincorporated Ascension across La. 44 from Conway.

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GONZALES State highway officials are conducting or planning corridor studies to see how

The area south of I-10, which is partially in Gonzales and partially in unincorporated Ascension, is already home to large subdivisions like Pelican Point, Pelican Crossing and River Ridge. More are on the drawing board, including the 951-home Conway, Oak Lake and the 780-home Riverton subdivision along nearby La. 22. Conway will also have apartments and retail and be next to a proposed public high school.

The bumper-to-bumper traffic on two-lane La. 44 became a major theme in recent years when Conway, Riverton, Oak Lake and other projects moved through local planning review.

Residents critical of those residential developments frequently spoke at the time about being unable to get onto La. 44 from Loosemore during peak travel times because of the continuous stream of traffic.

The highway is the only nearby route to I-10 from the burgeoning area that was once cane fields and cow pasture. La. 44 also serves traffic to plants along the Mississippi River.

GONZALES As Ascension political leaders consider a temporary halt on new development, the

State highway officials said they will have plans and want comments for the entire La. 44 corridor, but Rodney Mallet, DOTD spokesman, said there aren't funds to do more improvements farther south on La. 44 toward La. 22. Details on additional phases were not immediately available.

Mallett said the total cost for the first round of improvements isn't yet available. DOTD is counting on state safety funds and general obligation bond revenue to help pay for that first phase. But additional money is also expected from a variety of other sources, local officials and developers said, as developers and local governments are expected to chip in to tackle pieces and parts of the first phase of upgrades along La. 44.

For instance, the developers of Conway are expected to build a roundabout in front of their project on La. 44 and pay for part of a second northbound lane on the state highway, said Jackie Baumann, Gonzales' city engineer. The highway section would extend from the future Conway roundabout to the development's property line. The cost for the lane and roundabout are expected to be about $4.5 million.

Gonzales is contributing another $1.3 million to finish the remainder of the second northbound lane on La. 44 from Conway's north property line to I-10, Baumann said.

That cash is coming from DOTD as part of a road exchange between the city and the highway department. Gonzales is taking over long-term responsibility for another section of La. 44 for the $1.3 million and for improvements to that other section of La. 44, which runs through the heart of the city, City Clerk Clay Stafford said.

Also known as Burnside Avenue, the highway section in the center of town recently received DOTD-fundedroad, sidewalk, curb and other improvements between the Kansas City Southern railroad tracks and Cornerview Road, Stafford said.

Also, the developers of Oak Lake, which is across La. 44 from Conway and in the parish, are planning to contribute to the cost of building the second southbound lane on La. 44.

Deric Murphy, the engineering representative for that developer, said Friday that the contribution remains a subject of negotiation since Oak Lake must pay more than $300,000 in road impact fees to the parish government.

Parish government officials also said they are considering contributing to the cost of the second roundabout south of Loosemore Road if the state needs additional money.

DOTD officials said oral and written comments about plans for the La. 44 corridor can be submitted at the meeting Aug. 7 or mailed by Aug. 21 to DOTD.

The open house will be in the large conference room inside the Ascension Parish Governmental Complex, 615 E. Worthey Road, Gonzales.

Follow David J. Mitchell on Twitter, @NewsieDave.

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With more growth headed to southern Ascension, DOTD considers plans to widen La. 44, add roundabout - The Advocate

Ascension ESPY’s – News – Donaldsonville Chief – Donaldsonville, LA – Donaldsonville Chief

I can't hand them shiny trophies or whisk them away to Hollywood for the glamorous red-carpet treatment, but I've written this column to honor these parish athletes for their terrific play throughout the season.

All of the biggest stars in entertainment and in sports showed up for the ESPY Awards last week.

There, professional and collegiate athletes were honored for their great achievements during the sports year.

Well, I thought Ascension high-school athletes deserved the same recognition.

I cant hand them shiny trophies or whisk them away to Hollywood for the glamorous red-carpet treatment, but Ive written this column to honor these parish athletes for their terrific play throughout the season.

The first award is for Breakthrough Athlete of the Year. There are many players that could have earned this distinction.

Off of the top of my head, I can think of two freshmen softball players in St. Amants Alyssa Romano and Dutchtowns Paige Patterson.

Ultimately, I decided to go with East Ascension football player Cameron Wire.

Prior to last season, Wire was strictly known for his exploits on the basketball court. As a football player, he was still a work in progress.

However, Wire seemed to flip the switch in 2016. He came out of nowhere to earn a starting job on the Spartans offensive line.

In addition to making the all-district and All-Parish teams, Wire became one of the hottest prospects in the area and received scholarship offers from powerhouses like Alabama and Florida State. He ultimately chose to make his verbal commitment to LSU over the summer.

He now heads into his senior season as one of the top offensive linemen in the state.

For Best Game, look no further than the classic the Ascension Catholic baseball team had against Central Catholic in the state semifinals.

The Bulldogs took a 4-0 lead against the defending Class 1A state champions, just to see Central Catholic storm back to tie the game.

The contest remained deadlocked after seven innings, creating bonus baseball.

After 11 tension-filled innings, the game finally came to a close when Central Catholics Mitchell Lemoine came up with a walkoff RBI single to punch their ticket to the title game.

The nod for Best Coach goes to St. Amant footballs David Oliver.

Oliver was one of the many residents of St. Amant that had their house flooded last August. Many players on his team suffered the same fate.

Despite dealing with the personal hardships, he was able to get his squad ready for the 2016 season, and they had the best year of any team in the parish.

The Gators went 9-1 during the regular season, finished as runner-up in District 5-5A and reached the state quarterfinals.

Best Comeback Athlete goes to Dutchtown football player Kyle Sarrazin.

Sarrazin came into 2016 hungry after being forced to miss almost all of 2015 with a serious knee injury.

He recovered beautifully, becoming a great anchor for the Griffins defensive line, on his way to being named all-district and All-Parish. He signed with Louisiana College.

Best Female Athlete goes to St. Amants Taylor Tidwell. Tidwell was the driving force behind both the Lady Gators volleyball and softball teamsboth of which reached the state quarterfinals.

In volleyball, she was named All-State and the districts MVP. In softball (where shes committed to LSU) she made first-team All-District, All-Parish and All-State.

Best Male Athlete goes to St. Amants Briggs Bourgeois. Bourgeois was a standout in three sports for the Gators.

In football, he was All-State and district MVP. He also signed with Southern Miss.

In soccer, he was district MVP for the fourth straight season and the states Offensive MVP, and in baseball, he was a starter on a Gator squad that reached the second round of the playoffs.

The Best Moment would have to be when the St. Amant football team played their first home game at The Pit on Sept. 9. Just a few weeks earlier, the stadium was under water.

It was a great moment for the St. Amant community as they were able to come together and experience a little bit of normalcy in the face of so much strife and heartache.

The Best Upset was during the boys basketball regular season when Donaldsonville made a road trip to face two-time defending 3A champion University.

The Tigers were huge underdogs, but they werent intimidated. Ladarius Jackson hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer that gave them a scintillating 81-78 victory.

University went on to finish the season as Division II runner-up.

The distinction of Best Team goes to the Ascension Catholic baseball squad.

The Bulldogs had a terrific regular season, and in the first two rounds of the playoffs, they dominatedwinning by a combined score of 17-3.

This pushed them through to the state semifinals for the first time since 2005.

There, they played defending champion Central Catholic in the 11-inning marathon, falling just short of the championship game.

Nine of their players made the All-District 6-1A team.

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Ascension ESPY's - News - Donaldsonville Chief - Donaldsonville, LA - Donaldsonville Chief

Harrisville’s Ascension Lutheran Church welcomes new pastor – Standard-Examiner

EDITORS NOTE:This story was updated after a previous version, due to a source error, incorrectly stated that another church had lost its building.

HARRISVILLE The new pastor of Ascension Lutheran Church believes he has come to a place of love.

Pastor Richard Brenton arrived June 15 and was installed July 16.

The new pastor arrived to find a very warm and hospitable small congregation.

They amaze me at how big of a heart they have, he said.This congregation has got a lot of love.

Among the ways hes been inspired was seeing his congregation take care of the homeless population associated with Family Promise of Ogden for the last two weeks. The nonprofit Family Promise is part of a national organization that teams with Ogden-area churches to help homeless families get on their feet.

The peace Brenton feels as he sees love in Ogden is a stark difference to his last assignment.

As a new minister in his second career, Brenton was assigned to Zion Lutheran Church in Ferguson, Missouri, shortly after his 2010 ordination to theEvangelical Lutheran Church inAmerica.

RELATED:Michael Brown's parents settle wrongful death lawsuit against Ferguson

Brenton said he had a front-row seat to racial contentions that arose in that area following the 2014 police shooting ofMichael Brown.

There was unrest and burnings and a lot of protests, he said. The whole Black Lives Matter took off.

Although Brenton said he had studied specifically to be an inner-city minister and he enjoyed being a part of the scene, the work was trying and educational.

St. Louis has had a history of civil rights issues over the last 150 years, he said.

Leaving the church in March 2016, Brenton worked as a substance abuse counselor in Kansas City, Missouri, until he was invited to Ogden by the Ascension congregation.

Story continues after the photo.

The pastor believes his Ogden assignment will be quieter.It is always hard to tell. You never know going in, he said. I will leave that up to the boss, he said referring to God.

I want to serve God and Gods people in this community and share the love of Christ Jesus in a way that spreads the good news, Brenton said.

With 80 to 100 who attend each week for worship, Brenton said the smaller size of the congregation also brings him excitement.

It makes it easier for the pastor to get to know people and have more of a personal contact with them, Brenton said. It gives the chance for the pastor to really get involved and get to know the people and serve the people personally.

Several pastors, including Bishop JimGonia, of the Rocky Mountain Synod (ELCA) inDenver, Colorado, participated in last weekends installation ceremony.

Brentons qualifications include a master of divinity degree fromWartburg Theological Seminary in Dubuque, Iowa, according to his biography.

Those interested in worshiping with Brenton may attend Sunday worship services 9:30 a.m. Adult Bible class and Sunday School begin at 10:45 a.m. Sundays.

The church is at1105 North Washington Blvd.

For information, call the church at801-782-2810.

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Harrisville's Ascension Lutheran Church welcomes new pastor - Standard-Examiner

Ascension Parish Arrests – Donaldsonville Chief – Donaldsonville Chief

June 13

Whittington, Brinald Andre, 23, 8214 Dennis St., St. James, Criminal Mischief/Giving of any false report or complaint to a sheriff, or his deputies, or to any officer of the law.

McQuiston, Joshua Neal, 29, 42035 Ficklin Wells Road, Gonzales, Probation Violation.

Carpenter, Lamonte J., 52, 156 E. 26st. Reserve, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Surety.

Jackson, Megan, 34, 1976 Stafford, Baton Rouge, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Theft of Goods under $500.

Scott, Shaquiel O., 24, 2228 S. Burnside Ave., Gonzales, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

Grisaffe, John Joseph, 53, 3215 La. 1 S., Donaldsonville, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

June 14

King, William, 23, 43311 Riverside Drive, Prairieville, Driving on Roadway Laned for Traffic, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

Joseph, Randy Terrell , 32, 508 Veterans Blvd., Donaldsonville, Driving on Roadway Laned for Traffic, Possession of Alcoholic Beverages in Motor Vehicles, Theft of a Motor Vehicle over $1500 (Felony), Theft of a Firearm, Possession of Firearm by Person Convicted of Certain Felonies.

Mitchell, Nicholas, 30, 18100 Conthia St., Prairieville, Three Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

Holtz, William, 27, 18100 Conthia St., Prairieville, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

Reed, Matthew Christian, 36, 108 E. Railroad St., Gonzales, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

Emmanuelle, Dreama, 38, 1170 Oakstown Road, Ontario, Theft less than $750 (Misdemeanor), Fugitive-Other State Jurisdiction, Illegal Carry of Weapons;Crime or CDS (Felony), Prohibited acts; Drug Paraphernalia, Possession of Schedule II CDS (Methamphetamine).

Youmans, John E., 53, 205 Country Estates Drive, Houma, Theft $5000 but less than $25k (Felony).

Magee, Grace, 29, 40262 La Rochelle Road, Prairieville, Credit Card Fraud by Persons Authorized to Provide Goods and Services.

Roberts, Ashley, 29, 17310 Copperfield Drive, Baton Rouge, Careless Operation, Operating while Intoxicated; Second (Misdemeanor).

Raven, Darry L., 53, 6140 Panama Road, Sorrento, Bond Revocation, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Theft of a Motor Vehicle $500 to $1500 (Felony).

Lewis, Lester Dewayne, 24, 15485 Palmetto Lane, Prairieville, Stopping, standing, or parking outside business or residence districts, Resisting an Officer, Prohibited acts; Drug Paraphernalia, Possession of Marijuana, or synthetic cannabinoids, Distribution/Possession with the Intent to Distribute Marijuana, or synthetic cannabinoids.

White, Kenneth Ray, 43, 43395 Moody Dixon Road, Prairieville, Illegal use of Weapons or Dangerous Instrumentalities, Resisting an Officer, Disturbing the peace / Drunkenness.

Crawford, Amber, 30, 11182 River Highlands Drive, St. Amant, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction.

June 15

Robinson, Brandon M., 37, 8235 La. 112, Glenmora, No Drivers License on Person, Careless Operation, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

Staub, Marcus G., 58, 1208 Magnolia Alley, Mandeville, Careless Operation, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

Leblanc, Jarrod, 24, 130 Elaine St., Larose, Driving on Roadway Laned for Traffic, Operating while Intoxicated; Second (Misdemeanor).

Amador, Dany Josue, 20, 18186 Little Prairie Road, Prairieville, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Domestic Abuse Battery.

Lawhorne, Henry A., 41, 537 Esplanade St., Laplace, Disturbing the peace / Language/ Disorderly Conduct, Entry on or Remaining in Places or on Land after being Forbidden.

June 16

Landry, Dustin Rene, 34, 12033 Niece Road, St. Amant, Domestic Abuse Battery.

Diaz, Lauro U., 24, 5129 Silver Oaks, Prairieville, Fugitive-Other State Jurisdiction, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor), Driver must be Licensed, Driving on Roadway Laned for Traffic.

Villa, Christopher, 36, 3825 Kings Drive, Chalmette, Prohibited acts; Drug Paraphernalia, Distribution/Possession with the Intent to Distribute Schedule I CDS, Careless Operation, Operating while Intoxicated; Second (Misdemeanor).

Bourgeois, Tiffany Fay, 36, 18393 Robert Denham Road, Prairieville, Violations of Protective Orders.

Broussard, Daniel, 21, 14353 Hillside Drive, Prairieville, Domestic Abuse Battery.

Brandon, Chatonya, 33, 919 St Vincent St., Donaldsonville, Domestic Abuse Battery.

Gibbs, Viltris Benjamin Autin, 24, 8504 Pertuis Road, St. Amant, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, No Drivers License on Person.

June 17

Thompson, Kajuan Jondell, 19, 709 S. Pleasant Ave., Gonzales, Illegal Possession of Stolen Firearms, Illegal use of Weapons or Dangerous Instrumentalities/ Weapons Law Violation.

Abrams, Matthew Douglas, 34, 12427 Percival St., Baton Rouge, Five Counts Criminal Trespass/ All Other Offenses, Five Counts Theft less than $750 (Misdemeanor).

Hardin, Damien, 23, 913 Quiett, Gonzales, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Domestic Abuse Battery; Strangulation (Felony).

Duffy, Clinton A., 36, 314 W. Michigan Ave., McComb, Miss., Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Theft of Goods under $500.

Cohen, Steven Francis Higgins, 18, 13934 Chalmette Ave., Baton Rouge, Possession of Marijuana, or synthetic cannabinoids, Simple Assault.

Lane, Shannon D., 41, 3512 Dalton St., Baton Rouge, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

Blancaneaux, Carlos, 55, 2553 Court Street 22, Port Allen, Fugitive-Other State Jurisdiction, Driver must be Licensed, Driving on Roadway Laned for Traffic, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

June 18

Joseph, Jaleel, 22, 1126 S. Lexington Ave., Gonzales, Simple Criminal Damage to Property $500 to $50,000 (Felony), Expired Drivers License, Headlamps on Motor Vehicles, Battery of a Police Officer (Misdemeanor), Distribution/Possession with the Intent to Distribute Marijuana, or synthetic cannabinoids, Resisting an Officer, Resisting an Officer by Violence, Resistance, or Opposition.

Ebey, Guthrie, 20, Leo Lambert Road, St. Amant, Prohibited acts; Drug Paraphernalia, Possession of Schedule II CDS (Methamphetamine).

Dauzat, Tyler D., 23, 41214 Courtney Road, Gonzales, Surety, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Headlamps on Motor Vehicles, Driver must be Licensed.

Conway, Richard L., 35, 343 Nall Road, Krotz Springs, Careless Operation, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

Farlow, Shaqullie, 23, 6120 Villa Ashley Drive, Baton Rouge, Two Counts Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Violation Of Probation/Parole.

Nicholas, Anthony Davis, 50, 806 Orange St., Donaldsonville, Three Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Resisting an Officer, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Domestic Abuse Battery.

Yousef, Khalid, 18, 39283 David Drive, Prairieville, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Operating while Intoxicated; Second (Misdemeanor), Careless Operation, Use of Certain Wireless Telecommunications Devices for Text Messaging Prohibited.

Williams, Clarence, Jr., 40, 2503 Acosta Road, Donaldsonville, Simple Battery.

Lee, Ricky Don, Jr., 39, 28680 James Chapel South, Holden, Theft less than $750 (Misdemeanor).

Kinchen, Lorenzo M., 41, 208 East St., Denham Springs, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction.

Mandoza, Raul, 37, 14281 Oak Meadow St., Gonzales, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Theft of Goods under $500.

Rome, Alvin Joseph, Jr., 34, 102 River Oaks Drive, Donaldsonville, Simple Criminal Damage to Property less than $500 (Misdemeanor), Domestic Abuse Battery.

June 19

Cabrera, Ana L., 38, 15440 Palmetto Lane, Prairieville, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Operating Vehicle while License is Suspended, Hit and Run Driving.

Trox, Alexander, 21, 219 Richland Drive E., Mandeville, Licensee Must Give Notice of Change of Address, Possession of Alcoholic Beverages in Motor Vehicles, Reckless Operation, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

Clark, Joseph, Jr., 54, 2810 Ralph St., Baton Rouge, Surety, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

Odom, Brian, 35, 41031 Busy Needles Road, Gonzales, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Domestic Abuse Battery.

Daniels, Kidal Leon, 42, 1214 S. Hempshire Ave., Gonzales, Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction, Theft less than $750 (Misdemeanor).

Alkadi, Ihssan Salim, 54, 18203 River Landing Drive, Prairieville, Fugitive-Other Louisiana Jurisdiction.

June 20

Moses, Brett Thomas, 35, 1104 S. Sanctuary Ave., Gonzales, Driving on Roadway Laned for Traffic, Operating while Intoxicated; First (Misdemeanor).

Glover, Fred, 38, 3596 Walker Ave. Apt 5, Memphis, Tenn., Two Counts Domestic abuse aggravated assault.

Burl, Charles Ross, 37, 4407 Marchand School Road, Darrow, Two Counts Failure to Appear-Bench Warrant.

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Ascension Parish Arrests - Donaldsonville Chief - Donaldsonville Chief

Memorial Hermann’s Craig Cordola Tapped For Ascension Gig In Central Texas – Patch.com


Patch.com
Memorial Hermann's Craig Cordola Tapped For Ascension Gig In Central Texas
Patch.com
CLEAR LAKE, TX Craig Cordola, who serves senior vice president of the Memorial Hermann Health System, has been tapped to lead Ascension in Central Texas, and will replace Jesus Garza as senior vice president of Ascension Healthcare, and Ministry ...
Health care executive Craig Cordola to lead Ascension TexasState of Reform
Up the Ladder - MyStatesman.comMyStatesman.com

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Memorial Hermann's Craig Cordola Tapped For Ascension Gig In Central Texas - Patch.com

Fisker Ends Tie Up With Breakthrough Battery Maker Nanotech – InsideEVs

Fisker says EMotion battery pack will be the highest energy densityin partnership with LG.

When Henrik Fisker announced the EMotion electric car nine months ago, one of the stronger points of the promised specs was a 400 miles range via:

a new battery technology using graphene, with battery packs produced by Fisker Nanotech, a joint venture between Fisker Inc. and Nanotech Energy Inc.

Fisker eMotion

But as it turns out, Fisker will be using what it calls its proprietaryUltraPack with LG Chem battery cells inside(seeminglylike just about everybody else).

So the question is: what happened with the breakthrough technology?

This cell from LG Chem, its their latest new cell and we have done our own testing of that cell and verified that it will give us the power we need and the capability of fast charging, Fisker said.

And so, theFisker Nanotech joint venture has come to an end.

The official version of the split is that Nanotech Energy doesnt want to focus solely on single project, which would be required FiskersEMotion timeframe.

In order to meet the timetable for Henrik Fisker, we would have had to just focus on that and that alone, Jack Kavanaugh, chairman and acting CEO of Nanotech Energy, who had been named to lead the joint venture, told Automotive News. It wasnt right for us as a company to just focus on one thing.

Kavanaugh said Nanotech is speaking with several companies both inside and outside automotive about bringing its battery technology to market, following independent testing beginning at the end of the summer.

Were focusing on auto, computer, cell phone, solar, aerospace and other things having to do Internet, medical and power tool, he said. They all have slightly different requirements.

Fisker EMotion

Fisker and Nanotech apparently will stay in touch to do business together in the future, but thatwould be now years away, as no new mass-market Fisker models have even been sketched, andthe EMotion is planned for 2019.

There is yet a third chapter toFiskers battery approach; and that is the internal development of a solid state-type battery, but those are still 5-7 years away according to Henrik Fisker:

We are enhancing and expediting our efforts in solid-state technology and will be announcing our recent developments and partnerships on the near future, Fisker said in a follow-up email after a recent phone interview.

The bottom line is that LG Chem can do it now, and they do it the cheapest so fancier tech and radical solutions (for current projects) have been put on hiatus by most everyone in the industry.

source: Automotive News

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Fisker Ends Tie Up With Breakthrough Battery Maker Nanotech - InsideEVs

Fight Or Recruit Superpowered Street Gangs In Cyberpunk Action/Adventure Game Neon City Riders – Siliconera

By Joel Couture . July 22, 2017 . 11:00am

Neon City Ridersis a cyberpunk action/adventure game, one where players must explore a ruined cityscape and track down the four superpowered gang leaders whove forced the citys people to fight in their gangs.

Neon City Riders lets players take their masked hero wherever they like in the city, following their own leads and desires in whatever direction they choose. While moving through the burnt-out buildings, players will find new powers and weapons, useful items, and making their way through bases that will test their reflexes with traps and their minds with puzzles. Even though the people have been forced into gangs, players will still have to beat them up in top-down melee combat.

Despite trying to break up the gangs, players can start their own by recruiting some of the people they help, or other fighters they meet in the city. These members will stick around the players own hideout, giving them new options, items, and other handy features that will make freeing the city that much easier.

Players will need whatever help they can get against the games superpowered gang leaders. From possessing psychic abilities, mutated strength, electrical powers, and mechanical endurance, players will want to have an array of allies and abilities to use against them.

Neon City Riders is raising funding on Kickstarter, and a demo is available through the campaign as well.

Video game stories from other sites on the web. These links leave Siliconera.

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Fight Or Recruit Superpowered Street Gangs In Cyberpunk Action/Adventure Game Neon City Riders - Siliconera

Stryker Expands Its Interventional Spine Segment – Market Realist

Strykers Recent Developments Strengthen Its Market Position PART 3 OF 7

Stryker (SYK) registered strong growth inrecent years. In 1Q17, Stryker reported YoY (year-over-year) growth of ~18.5%. The Neurotechnology & Spine segment contributes the least to Strykers revenues out of all the companys business segments. However, the segment presents immense growth potential for the company. The spine side of the segment has seen a weak performance in recent quarters due to some supply issues in the US.

The company expects strong spine sales in 2Q17 and the rest of the year due to easing supply issues as well as new product launches in its interventional spine and 3D printing and titanium platform. Medtronic (MDT), Nuvasive (NUVA), and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) are some of the other leading companies in the neurotechnology and spine market. Investors get diversified exposure to Stryker by investing in theVanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI).Stryker accounts for ~0.20% of VTIs total holdings.

On July 11, 2017, Stryker announced that it received the FDA 510(k) clearance for its MultiGen 2 RF (radio frequency) generator. The company claims that the next generation of radio-frequency ablation procedure arrived when the device launched. The product is expected to help physicians perform radiofrequency ablation, which is a minimally invasive procedure for facet joint pain, more efficiently with higher reliability and control.

Facet joint pain is the pain at the joint between the two vertebrae in the spine that enables bending and twisting. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, lower back pain impacts around 70 million Americans at any given time.

The MultiGen 2 RF generator provides a customizable procedure platform based on the physicians preference and patients needs. It has flexible stimulation controls. The product is powered with double the industry standard. The target temperature is achieved faster with minimal errors. The product allows physicians to start a procedure by pushing a single button. Physicians can create strip lesions without removing electrodes and simultaneously resolve errors without stopping the procedure. These abilities shorten the time it takes to complete procedures.

Next, well look at the companys recent product launch in the orthopedics segment.

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Stryker Expands Its Interventional Spine Segment - Market Realist

Sing Different: Steve Jobs’ Life Becomes An Opera – NPR

Edward Parks, who plays Steve Jobs, and the Santa Fe Opera Chorus in The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs. Ken Howard/Courtesy of the Santa Fe Opera hide caption

Edward Parks, who plays Steve Jobs, and the Santa Fe Opera Chorus in The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.

Mark Campbell is one of the most prolific and celebrated librettists in contemporary American opera. But, as he recently told an audience at the Guggenheim Museum, not everyone thought his latest project was a good idea.

"I've had a number of socialist friends of mine saying, 'Why would you write an opera about Steve Jobs? He was the worst capitalist!' " he said.

Campbell's response to those naysayers? " 'Reach in your pocket you probably have an iPhone there.' "

Jobs has been the subject of movies and books, and now the Apple co-founder's life has also become the stuff of opera. A decade after Apple released its first smartphone, The (R)evolution Of Steve Jobs premieres Saturday on the stage of the Santa Fe Opera.

Even Campbell was initially skeptical of the idea, which came from 40-year-old composer Mason Bates. Bates was convinced that in Jobs' "complicated and messy" life, he'd found the right subject for his very first opera.

"He had a daughter he didn't acknowledge for many years; he had cancer you can't control that," Bates says. "He was, while a very charismatic figure, quite a hard-driving boss. And his collisions with the fact that he wanted to make everything sleek and controllable yet life is not controllable is a fascinating topic for an opera."

The (R)evolution Of Steve Jobs shifts back and forth in time over the course of 18 scenes. Its fragmented, non-linear narrative was a deliberate choice by Campbell and Bates, who wanted to reflect Jobs' personality and psyche. "Steve Jobs did have a mind that just jumped from idea to idea to idea it was very quick," Campbell says.

Bates also created a different "sound world" to match each character. Jobs, for instance, played guitar and spent much of his life dealing with electronics, and so he "has this kind of busy, frenetic, quicksilver world of acoustic guitar and electronica," Bates explains. On the other hand, he says, Jobs' wife, Laurene Powell, inhabits a "completely different space, of these kind of oceanic, soulful strings."

Other characters include Steve Wozniak, Jobs' business partner, and the Japanese-born Zen priest Kobun Chino Otogawa, who led Jobs to convert to Buddhism and served as a mentor for much of his life. Otogawa's "almost purely electronic" sound world makes use of prayer bowls and processed Thai gongs.

As often happens when his compositions premiere, Bates will be seated among the orchestra musicians, triggering sounds and playing rhythms from two laptops. And before you ask: Yes, they are Mac computers. (Bates is quick to note he's not sponsored.)

Even the set echoes Jobs' creations. After a prologue in the iconic garage where Jobs' ideas first took shape, the garage walls explode into six moving cubes with screens that look a lot like iPhones. "We're doing something called projection mapping, where all of the scenic units have little sensors, so the video actually moves with them," opera director Kevin Newbury explains. "We wanted to integrate it seamlessly into the design because that's what Steve Jobs and Apple did with the products themselves."

Jobs's design sensibilities were enormously influenced by Japanese calligraphy including the ens, a circle that depicts the mind being free to let the body create. Bates says that also figures in the opera's title: The (R)evolution Of Steve Jobs, with the capital "R" in parentheses.

"Of course, there's the revolution of Steve Jobs in his creations and his devices. There's also the evolution from a countercultural hippie to a mogul of the world's most valuable company," Bates points out. "And there's the revolution in a circle of Steve Jobs as he looks at the ens, this piece of Japanese calligraphy, and finds that when he can kind of come full circle, he reaches the kind of completion that he sought so long in his life."

That's the side of Jobs this new opera explores: the way his life was marked by the struggle to find the balance between life's imperfections and his drive to create the perfect thing.

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Sing Different: Steve Jobs' Life Becomes An Opera - NPR

Link identified between continental breakup, volcanic carbon … – Phys.Org

July 21, 2017 Eruption of Cleveland Volcano, Aleutian Islands, Alaska is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition 13 crewmember on the International Space Station. Credit: Image courtesy of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA Johnson Space Center

Researchers have found that the formation and breakup of supercontinents over hundreds of millions of years controls volcanic carbon emissions. The results, reported in the journal Science, could lead to a reinterpretation of how the carbon cycle has evolved over Earth's history, and how this has impacted the evolution of Earth's habitability.

The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, used existing measurements of carbon and helium from more than 80 volcanoes around the world in order to determine its origin. Carbon and helium coming out of volcanoes can either come from deep within the Earth or be recycled near the surface, and measuring the chemical fingerprint of these elements can pinpoint their source. When the team analysed the data, they found that most of the carbon coming out of volcanoes is recycled near the surface, in contrast with earlier assumptions that the carbon came from deep in the Earth's interior. "This is an essential piece of geological carbon cycle puzzle," said Dr Marie Edmonds, the senior author of the study.

Over millions of years, carbon cycles back and forth between Earth's deep interior and its surface. Carbon is removed from the surface from processes such as the formation of limestone and the burial and decay of plants and animals, which allows atmospheric oxygen to grow at the surface. Volcanoes are one way that carbon is returned to the surface, although the amount they produce is less than a hundredth of the amount of carbon emissions caused by human activity. Today, the majority of carbon from volcanoes is recycled near the surface, but it is unlikely that this was always the case.

Volcanoes form along large island or continental arcs where tectonic plates collide and one plate slides under the other, such as the Aleutian Islands between Alaska and Russia, the Andes of South America, the volcanoes throughout Italy, and the Mariana Islands in the western Pacific. These volcanoes have different chemical fingerprints: the 'island arc' volcanoes emit less carbon which comes from deep in the mantle, while the 'continental arc' volcanoes emit far more carbon which comes from closer to the surface.

Over hundreds of millions of years, the Earth has cycled between periods of continents coming together and breaking apart. During periods when continents come together, volcanic activity was dominated by island arc volcanoes; and when continents break apart, continental volcano arcs dominate. This back and forth changes the chemical fingerprint of carbon coming to Earth's surface systematically over geological time, and can be measured through the different isotopes of carbon and helium.

Variations in the isotope ratio, or chemical fingerprint, of carbon are commonly measured in limestone. Researchers had previously thought that the only thing that could change the carbon fingerprint in limestone was the production of atmospheric oxygen. As such, the carbon isotope fingerprint in limestone was used to interpret the evolution of habitability of Earth's surface. The results of the Cambridge team suggest that volcanoes played a larger role in the carbon cycle than had previously been understood, and that earlier assumptions need to be reconsidered.

"This makes us fundamentally re-evaluate the evolution of the carbon cycle," said Edmonds. "Our results suggest that the limestone record must be completely reinterpreted if the volcanic carbon coming to the surface can change its carbon isotope composition."

A great example of this is in the Cretaceous Period, 144 to 65 million years ago. During this time period there was a major increase in the carbon isotope ratio found in limestone, which has been interpreted as an increase in atmospheric oxygen concentration. This increase in atmospheric oxygen was causally linked to the proliferation of mammals in the late Cretaceous. However, the results of the Cambridge team suggest that the increase in the carbon isotope ratio in the limestones could be almost entirely due to changes in the types of volcanoes at the surface.

"The link between oxygen levels and the burial of organic material allowed life on Earth as we know it to evolve, but our geological record of this link needs to be re-evaluated," said co-author Dr Alexandra Turchyn, also from the Department of Earth Sciences.

Explore further: Limestone assimilation under volcanoes helps understand Earth's carbon cycle

More information: Emily Mason et al. Remobilization of crustal carbon may dominate volcanic arc emissions, Science (2017). DOI: 10.1126/science.aan5049

Journal reference: Science

Provided by: University of Cambridge

In a new study researchers from Sweden and Italy show what happens when magma meets limestone on its way up to the surface. Magma-limestone interaction might help explain why volcanoes like Vesuvius in Italy and Merapi in ...

The long-standing mystery of why there are so few volcanoes on Venus has been solved by a team of researchers led by the University of St Andrews.

Over billions of years, the total carbon content of the outer part of the Earthin its upper mantle, crust, oceans, and atmosphereshas gradually increased, scientistsreported this monthin the journal Proceedings ...

Rice University petrologists who recreated hot, high-pressure conditions from 60 miles below Earth's surface have found a new clue about a crucial event in the planet's deep past.

A new study in the April 22 edition of Science reveals that volcanic activity associated with the plate-tectonic movement of continents may be responsible for climatic shifts from hot to cold over tens and hundreds of millions ...

Sulfur dioxide (SO2) may have played a key role in the climate and geochemistry of early Mars, geoscientists at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology suggest in the Dec. 21 issue of the journal ...

(Phys.org)Scientists looking at alternative approaches to staving off global warming have published two Perspective pieces in the journal Science. In the first, Ulrike Niemeier and Simone Tilmes with the Max Planck Institute ...

The first in-car measurements of exposure to pollutants that cause oxidative stress during rush hour commutes has turned up potentially alarming results. The levels of some forms of harmful particulate matter inside car cabins ...

Researchers have found that the formation and breakup of supercontinents over hundreds of millions of years controls volcanic carbon emissions. The results, reported in the journal Science, could lead to a reinterpretation ...

Small mountain glaciers play a big role in recharging vital aquifers and in keeping rivers flowing during the winter, according to a new study published in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical ...

University of Calgary geoscientists have developed new technology that measures, at an extremely fine scale, the interaction between water and other fluids and rock from an unconventional oil reservoir.

Coral reefs are our most diverse marine habitat. They provide over US$30 billion to the world economy every year and directly support over 500 million people. However, they are vulnerable with climate change impact models ...

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The headline entirely misses the point ... or is that the point? Climate science is beginning to grow up.

The Moon broke Pangaea to pieces when it impacted 13kya at the YDB, a comet split Greenland off of north America 10.5kya, and a meteor, from C/1811F1, reshaped the Mississippi river valley on Dec.16, 1811... [can you verify these findings?]- https://www.linke...ony-hood

thanks guys ;-]

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Link identified between continental breakup, volcanic carbon ... - Phys.Org

Helping students transition from the laboratory to robotics startup – TechCrunch

Watch the first trailer for Steven Spielbergs adaptation of Ready PlayerOne

A student walked up to me at an event following Mondays TC Sessions: Robotics event in Cambridge. I have a question for you, he said, adding that he was a few months away from becoming a college senior. How do I launch a successful startup?

I explained that I might not be the person at the show best equipped to answer, but I offered some simple advice nonetheless: find a problem that needs solving, address a need that already exists, and dont go offering up solutions in search of problems.

Oh, and get a day job.

Learn the industry and the ins and outs of running a business from someone whos already in it. Work on your passion on the weekends and after work, while youre young and still have the energy to invest. Be bold and be excited, but temper that with pragmatism. Theres a reason that one of the most successful robotics companies at the event is the one that sells robotic vacuums. Its not universal advise, but its a model thats worked for countless startups before.

The student seemed unimpressed.

It wasnt difficult to come up with an answer. It was something Id been thinking about quite a bit in the lead up to the event. Moderating multiple panels gave me the opportunity to put the questions to a number of people far smarter and with far more direct industry experience. It was the one question I had on my index cards for multiple conversations: Are universities doing a good enough job preparing students to make the jump from the research lab to real-world commercial endeavors?

At MIT, were very excited about taking ideas that matter today and making them real, Daniela Rus, the head of MITs massive CSAIL interdisciplinary laboratory told me toward the close of the days first panel. In general, we are focused on long-term research. We want to invest in the future of computing and a future enabled by computing. But we are also very interested in how our ideas can matter today.

Universities and startups are very different beasts, built around very different models. Schools have their own pressures getting grants/sponsorships, publishing papers, applying for awards. But any researcher interviewed about their work by a member of the media will invariably get the same question: what are the commercial applications for this work? That topic isnt always at the top of students and professors minds when theyre doing the sort of long-term research to which Rus refers.

But there does seem to be an increasing interest in helping researchers make the transition to real-world product. Certainly theres a lot to be said for seeing the work on which youve spent months or years laboring have a direct impact on the lives of real people. Earlier this week, I spoke to ReWalk Robotics CEO Larry Jasinski about the companys relationship with Harvards Wyss Institute.

Turning research into product is one of the institutes key components, working to leverage [its] internal business development team, intellectual property experts, and entrepreneurs-in-residence to drive commercialization, throughindustrial partnershipsand the creation ofstartups, according to its mission statement.

In the case of ReWalk, the company gets to commercialize the research of Biodesign Lab head Conor Walsh, in exchange for help with FCC red tape, market considerations and royalties on sales. Theyre trying to develop the institute as something that has more of an application mindset, Jasinski told me. We are a bit of an experiment, as part of their attempted business model.

Its a commendable model, particularly in the case of the Restore soft exosuit the partnership has created to assist stroke patients. But that particular model doesnt address those students looking to transition out of the research lab and into the world of commercial robotics.

In a conversation with our own Ron Miller, Sami Atiya, the president of Robotics and Motion at industrial automation giant ABB, did a good job succinctly contrasting the two worlds. In academia, we focus on proving a hypothesis works, he explained. If you look at the industry, if we did that, we wouldnt be able to survive. We have to feed solutions to our customers that are highly repetitive, precise and accurate. The customer wants to have 99 percent uptime that is repeatable, at a cost that is affordable.

Expectations shift dramatically when research becomes product. No one knows this better than iRobot CEO Colin Angle. The companys first dozen years were a struggle to create a truly profitable robotics company. Its a decade lined with space rovers, baby dolls and movie licensing attempts before finally creating the Roomba in 2002, a product that has disrupted the vacuum industry and become the first and arguably still only mainstream home robot.

Angle laughingly explains that he didnt find success as a roboticist until he became a vacuum salesman. Its a funny statement, but the sentiment is important. The key to launching a successful robotics startup is focusing on the practical ways in which technology can positively augment our lives and, to some degree, getting lucky.

The idea that you launch with, youll either be very, very lucky or wrong, Angle told me during our interview. Youll need to stay open to learning how the rest of the world reacts to your idea and be flexible. Patience is also critically important, and its best not to do it alone. At iRobot, if we had been alone, instead of the three of us, it would have been a very different experience. We arranged that no one would be allowed to have crushing despair while another was having crushing despair.

Its true that the robots that are having the most immediate impact on our lives lack the sort of bleeding-edge excitement outsiders are hoping for from the field. Theyre the industrial pick-and-place arms from companies like ABB and the wheeled robots being used in Amazon warehouses. And the realities of running a business can be equally mundane, from the government regulation to payroll.

But universities do seem to be taking a more aggressive approach toward helping students make the transition. Carnegie Mellon has Swartz Center for Entrepreneurship, which serves as a sort of on-campus incubator, helping to launch companies and, hopefully, fostering the startup community in and around Pittsburgh.

MIT, for its part, is being more progressive on that front, as well. During our interview, Rus described the schools technical entrepreneurship course, along with a new initiative. MIT has also started a big incubator called The Engine, which is extraordinarily exciting, she explained. It was just kicked off a few months ago, and there is already so much energy and buzz and so many companies that are taking advantage of it. We have a lot of opportunities for students. We want to train them to become entrepreneurs, just like we trained to become academic or industry researchers.

Theres no simple answer to the question, how do I launch a successful startup? Its long and frustrating and almost invariably paved with failures. But with a good idea, the right guidance and knowledge of the market, a student can turn a great bit of research into a successful product and if theyre lucky, it wont take 12 years to get there.

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Helping students transition from the laboratory to robotics startup - TechCrunch

What Really Happened At That Robotics Competition You’ve Heard … – NPR

For a few days, DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., was transformed into a competitive robotics arena, where teenagers from 157 countries gathered for the First Global Challenge. Liam James Doyle/NPR hide caption

For a few days, DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., was transformed into a competitive robotics arena, where teenagers from 157 countries gathered for the First Global Challenge.

This week, the First Global Challenge, a highly anticipated robotics competition for 15- to 18-year-olds from 157 countries, ended the way it began with controversy.

On Wednesday, members of the team from the violence-torn east African country of Burundi went missing. And well before the competition even began, the teams from Gambia and Afghanistan made headlines after the U.S. State Department denied the members visas. Eventually, they were allowed to compete.

Team Honduras preps for the competition. The members, who come from a remote village, may have lacked resources, but they know that the "world today demands that we understand technology," said one participant. Liam James Doyle/NPR hide caption

Team Honduras preps for the competition. The members, who come from a remote village, may have lacked resources, but they know that the "world today demands that we understand technology," said one participant.

The drama marred an otherwise upbeat event focused on kids and robots.

Every team arrived with a robot in tow, each built with the exact same components, but designed, engineered and programmed differently. The goal: to gobble up and sort blue and orange plastic balls representing clean water and contaminated water.

For three days, teenagers rich and poor, male and female competed on a level playing field.

In addition to robotic innovation, the competition brought out national pride. This included Brendan Alinquant of Ireland (clockwise from top left), Andrea Tern of Mexico, Helder Mendonca of Mozambique, Anis Eljorni of Libya, Sarah Lockyer of Australia and twins Rinat and Shir Hadad of Israel. Liam James Doyle/NPR hide caption

In addition to robotic innovation, the competition brought out national pride. This included Brendan Alinquant of Ireland (clockwise from top left), Andrea Tern of Mexico, Helder Mendonca of Mozambique, Anis Eljorni of Libya, Sarah Lockyer of Australia and twins Rinat and Shir Hadad of Israel.

But there were reminders that in some parts of the world, there is no such thing as a level playing field. And no team understood that better than Team Hope, made up of Syrian refugees who had fled to Lebanon.

As Fadil Harabi, the team's mentor, pointed out, "more than 90 percent of Syrian refugees in Lebanon don't have legal status. They don't have passports."

Getting passports for the team, Harabi said, turned out to be a lot more complicated than building a robot.

The competition theme was providing access to clean water. The robots had to gobble up and sort blue and orange plastic balls, representing clean water and contaminated water, respectively. Liam James Doyle/NPR hide caption

The competition theme was providing access to clean water. The robots had to gobble up and sort blue and orange plastic balls, representing clean water and contaminated water, respectively.

Team Hope's robot didn't do very well, but every time the Syrian teens competed, they attracted a crowd that would clap and chant, "Team Hope, Team Hope!"

For Colleen Johnson, 18, a member of the all-girl U.S. team, that was what this event was all about.

"Everybody here is working together, loaning each other batteries, tools, helping each other fix programming issues to lift each other up," she said.

Still, the technology gap between poor and rich nations was evident. For team Honduras though, that gap is due to the lack of opportunity, not just the lack of resources.

Competitors from Team Hope (center in black) test their robot in a designated practice area. The team of Syrian refugees who had fled to Lebanon drew cheers from the crowd. Liam James Doyle/NPR hide caption

Competitors from Team Hope (center in black) test their robot in a designated practice area. The team of Syrian refugees who had fled to Lebanon drew cheers from the crowd.

"Honduras is a country where there aren't many opportunities," explained the team's leader, 17-year-old Daniel Marquez.

Marquez and his teammates all come from a tiny village that is a seven-hour drive and a world away from Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital. Not a single member of the team had ever handled a remote control, let alone built a robot.

"But the world today demands that we understand technology," said Melissa Lemus, one of two girls on the Honduran team.

As the competition entered its third and final day, I checked in on Afghanistan's all-girl team. It seemed the competitors had grown weary of the media frenzy around them.

Speaking through an interpreter, 15-year-old Lida Azizi said she was disappointed that her teammates' skills, and the robot they built, had gotten a lot less attention than the team's visa problems, which nearly kept them out of the competition.

The Afghan team's consolation prize: a medal for "courageous achievement" and knowing that they placed much higher than countries like Canada, the United Kingdom and the U.S.

Top honors went to Teams Europe, Poland and Armenia.

The all-girls team from Afghanistan had garnered attention even before the competition began, when the U.S. State Department initially denied the members visas. They were awarded a medal for "courageous achievement." Liam James Doyle/NPR hide caption

The all-girls team from Afghanistan had garnered attention even before the competition began, when the U.S. State Department initially denied the members visas. They were awarded a medal for "courageous achievement."

The awards ceremony and closing ceremony felt like one big party, not so much a goodbye. It was a celebration with a hopeful message delivered by World Bank President Jim Yong Kim.

"You are the first generation in human history that can end extreme poverty in the world," Kim said. "And from what I saw of these robots, I know you can do it."

His message was not lost: Intelligence and talent with a moral vision have no race, nationality, religion or gender.

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What Really Happened At That Robotics Competition You've Heard ... - NPR

He brought Burundi’s first robotics team to the US to inspire his country. Then, the teens disappeared. – Washington Post

Outside Bujumbura International Airport in the capital city of Burundi, six teenagers bound for Washington D.C. to compete in an international robotics competitions locked hands with parents and relatives to pray one last time before boarding their flight. In Kirundi, their native language, Coach Canesius Bindaba asked God to bless their journey to the United States.

I prayed that God may keep us safe on this trip, Bindaba said.

When Bindaba uttered those words, he said he had no idea that the teens likely with the help of their families had orchestrated a secret bid to stay behind and possibly seek asylum in the U.S. and Canada.The squad two girls and four boys who range in ages from 16 to 18 went missingon Tuesday from theFIRST Global Challenge robotics after it ended at DAR Constitution Hall, and their disappearance set off a panicked search for them at Trinity University in Washington, D.C., where they were staying in dorms.

By Thursday morning, D.C. police said two of the teens Don Charu Ingabire, 16, and Audrey Mwamikazi, 17 crossed in to Canada and were with friends or relatives. Police on Thursday said the other four Richard Irakoze, 18, Kevin Sabumukiza, 17, Nice Munezero, 17 and Aristide Irambona, 18 were not yet with relatives but were still safe.

[Two of six African teens who went missing from robotics competition are in Canada, D.C. police say]

The teens, who did not respond to Facebook messages, have left anger, disappointment and questions about their intentions for staying in the United States and Canada. Burundi has been seized by intermittent political violence for years that has driven hundreds of thousands of people out of the country.

I am disappointed that the students chose not to return home, even though I have a very clear understanding of the challenging circumstances they face in their nation, said FIRST Global President Joe Sestak, a former Congressman and Navy Admiral, in a statement. He said that the State Department and his organization, which brought in young people from 157 nations, had stringent review protocols for the visa process.

This year was the first for FIRST Global to host an international competition, and it featured an impressive array of competitors. But there were complications: Gambias team faced hurdles getting visas to come to the U.S., but eventually obtained them. An all-girls squad from Afghanistan was also initially denied visas, but after an international outcry, President Trump intervened so they could come to the U.S.

[For Afghan girls team, a trip to Washington was about more than the robotics]

If the teens plan to stay behind, it would be antithetical to the purpose of FIRST Global, which aims to help countries like Burundi build the ranks of skilled engineers by getting young people interested in engineering through its robotics competitions. Its founder, inventor Dean Kamen, hopes these robotics competitions can build the kind of networks and friendships that will help countries tackle global problems like water shortages and climate change together.

If we can get kids from around the world to deal with the same issues we could compete on the same team, Kamen said lastSunday, in remarks at the opening ceremony. You dont have to have self-inflicted wounds created by arbitrary differences and politics.

[At a global robotics competition, teens put aside grown-up conflicts to form unlikely alliances]

Bindaba had never coached a robotics team before and the students, who hailed from public and private schools around Bujumbura, had never built a robot. They adopted the motto Ugushaka Nugushobura a Kirundi proverb that means Where theres a will, theres a way.

They began in early April, putting in 3-4 hours after their high school classes, working out of a classroom at a technical institute owned by Audreys mother. FIRST Global connected the novices withRichard and Isabelle Marchand, a couple who have led robotics squads in Christiansburg, Va. The pair became virtual mentors, coaching them via Skype amid regular power outages.

Once the students landed in the United States, the Marchands would become their caretakers, ensuring that the teens, who were unfamiliar with American cuisine, were fed, Bindaba said. Reached at their home, Isabelle Marchand declined to comment, referring questions to Sestak.

From Friday to Tuesday, the teens spent hours at DAR Constitution Hall, arriving shortly after 7 a.m. to work on and practice with their robot. On Sunday evening, the teens strode onto the floor of DAR Constitution Hall for opening ceremonies, proudly waving the red, white and green Burundian flag, beaming and waving to the crowd. After, Bindaba said, Dons uncle took the team out to eat. Bindaba stayed behind.

Bindaba said he saw few signs that the teens had hatched a secret bid for possible asylum in the U.S. or Canada. They appeared nervous, Bindaba said, but he chalked that up to the competition and their new surroundings.

Before, I thought they were acting a bit strangely, Bindaba said, speaking from Bujumbura. I thought maybe it was their first time to be there, to see the big buildings that we dont have here.

Before closing ceremonies, Bindaba saw the teens onto the floor of the auditorium once more. They carried tiny flags and joined the throng of other competitors whistling and whooping, the ecstatic close to an exhilarating three-day competition. From the highest seats, Bindaba said, it was impossible to see the teens. He said he planned to decompress with the team over pizza and coke after the competition, a reward for the hard work that earned them a 73rd place finish out of about 160 teams. The following morning, the Marchands planned to give them a tour of the monuments. They had an interview scheduled with Voice of America.

Police said this is when at least some of the team members slipped away, taking advantage of the noise and the chaos surrounding the competitions end to disappear. At least one team member, Aristide, stayed behind. He helped Bindaba load the teams robot onto a school bus that would take them back to their dorms at Trinity University. Then, Aristide carried the robot to Bindabas room and told the coach that he was going to take a shower.

As Bindaba unloaded his bag, he noticed something peculiar: the other five team members had apparently secreted their name tags and room keys in to Bindabas bag. For the coach, it was a deeply unsettling discovery.

I knew something nasty was happening, Bindaba said. I felt it from within.

He then rushed to Aristides room: he was not there, and he had left behind a mess of pizza boxes and snacks. He checked the other rooms, too: the teens had still not returned.

I cannot really describe what I felt over there, but it was really scary for me, Bindaba said.

Bindaba also began sending panicked messages to the teens parents back in Burundi. But their replies made Bindaba suspicious: one childs uncle told the coachthat perhaps the children were nearby; anothers mother told him to cool down, that perhaps the team was out having fun.

I am not seeing the kids, Bindaba said. How can I cool down?

Around 5 a.m. Wednesday, about 12 hours before the teens were set to depart from Dulles Airport, Sestak called police to file a missing persons report. Their sober passport portraits went up on the D.C. police Twitter account, under the banner MISSING PERSONS.

Bindaba, who was unable to afford another plane ticket and had been assured the students were safe, headed home. The following morning, when Bindaba was still en route, police would announce two of the teens had made it to Canada.

The coach said he sympathizes with their desire to stay in the United States and Canada. But he said he wishes they understood what their skills and their potential could mean to the future of their own country. Burundi suffers from brain drain, with many of its brightest young people leaving to get education abroad and never returning. For me, they were some kind of hope for the future of this project in Burundi, Bindaba said. Its an opportunity for my entire country.

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He brought Burundi's first robotics team to the US to inspire his country. Then, the teens disappeared. - Washington Post

8 Industries Being Disrupted by Virtual Reality – Entrepreneur

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For the past several years weve been told that the age of virtual reality is upon us. Tech companies have introduced new hardware and updated systems to much fanfare, but so far have not been able to turn widespread interest into practice.

Virtual reality, and now augmented reality, are often seen as novelties: cool to play with in a store or at that one tech-obsessed friends house, but most of us are not putting on clunky headsets or Googles cardboard system and walking out the door.

However, its finally looking like the VR and AR industries are on the cusp of going mainstream, as industries start to figure out how to implement transformative technology in the user experience. These 10 industries are pioneering ways to integrate VR and AR tech and offer customers more opportunities to explore products and services.

Looking for a new home or apartment can feel like taking on a second job. Between endlessly checking listing updates to taking time to visit every open house on the market, buying (or renting) a new place can be a daunting and tiresome task.

But what if you could experience all that a house has to offer without leaving your home? Real estate companies are toying with VR solutions that offer prospective buyers the chance to walk through a property and survey every room, hallway, nook and cranny without actually leaving their own homes.

Related:Real Estate, Movies, Retail: VR Is Exploding. The Opportunities for Entrepreneurs Are Huge.

Going to zoos gives people the opportunity to experience wildlife up close, albeit behind a sturdy partition. However, zoo trips often spark more questions than they answer. Most zoo experiences consist of visitors wandering from exhibit to exhibit and reading about the species on small placards and in outdated pamphlets.

Guru is an app that is seeking to redefine the zoo experience by bringing the animals and their habitats to (virtual) life. The app allows users to choose customized audio experiences that share facts about specific animals, as well as behind-the-scenes videos and augmented-reality portals into the actual habitats and lifestyles of animals in the wild.

Related:12 Amazing Uses ofVirtual Reality

Every millennial woman remembers the first time she saw Cher Horowitzs closet in Clueless -- it was a magical moment. The idea of being able to test clothes and match outfits without actually having to try them on resonated with an entire generation.

Now, over 20 years since Clueless sparked an obsession, Chers closet, or at least the idea behind it, has become reality. Gap recently unveiled a VR solution that enables customers to digitally try on pieces within its collection. Other retailers are bringing VR headsets into stores to allow visitors to feel as though theyre sitting in the front row at the designers latest fashion-week presentation.

Related:Virtual RealityIs About to Change Your Business

The internet has made the world a smaller place. Thanks to programs like Google Earth, people can walk pathways in Santorini one minute and find themselves at a busy Sydney intersection the next. More travel organizations are tapping into consumers love for virtual exploration.

Expedia recently announced a new VR-based initiative that will allow travelers to step inside hotel-room listings before making their destination decisions.

Related:Why This Restaurant Chain Has Started Using VR to Train Employees

The world of medicine is exploring several avenues and uses for VR to help doctors and patients. Some doctors are now wearingVR headsets in the operating room to give medical students a more in-depth look at the surgical procedures.

Additionally, hospitals are experimenting with VR as a means of making patients feel more comfortable. For example, VisitU, an emerging Dutch company, has created virtual glasses to give children at hospitals the chance to experience life at home or in the classroom, even though they are bedridden.

Related:VRcade: Be the First to Open One in Your Town

Since Hollywoods inception, film studios and production companies have been searching for new ways to make their projects more engaging and lifelike. Now, with virtual technology, film studios have the opportunity to transform the viewing experience from passive to participatory.

Companies like Within are gaining the attention and support of major studios because their technology creates fully immersive viewer experiences that, until recently, Hollywood could only dream of.

Related:Google: 180-Degree Video Is the Future of VR

Many people have a hard time self-motivating when it comes to fitness. It can also be difficult to carve out the time to travel to a gym or fitness studio to take a class. Thanks to emerging VR programs, those wanting to get in shape no longer have to sacrifice their time.

Startups like Icaros are creating fitness solutions that take the boredom out of getting fit. These systems allow users to feel as though theyre actually climbing a rock wall or boxing an opponent, when in fact they havent left their living rooms.

Historically, the automotive industry has needed a physical shopping experience to stay afloat. Before people are willing to make huge investments in new vehicles, they usually want to test the car out for themselves. For this reason, the automotive industry has struggled to find ways to connect with younger generations. Not only are millennials and Gen Zers supporters of the ride-sharing economy; theyre also digitally driven shoppers.

Now, automobile makers like Ford are introducing VR experiences intended to give shoppers a real sense of a cars interior and create a strong enough virtual experience to encourage them to visit a dealership and test drive the real thing.

Deep Patel is the author of A Paperboy's Fable: The 11 Principles of Success. The book was dubbed the #1 best business book in 2016 by Success Magazine and named the best book for entrepreneurs in 2016 by Entrepreneur Magazine.

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8 Industries Being Disrupted by Virtual Reality - Entrepreneur

The Observer view on Jane Austen’s immortality – The Guardian

Jane Austen fans admire the new 10 note at its launch at Winchester cathedral. Photograph: Chris J Ratcliffe/AFP/Getty Images

Jane Austen, who died 200 years ago last Tuesday, has been enjoying an impressively vigorous afterlife. First, as an icon of her gender, there has been her controversial debut on the new 10 note, an appearance that sent some indignant Jane-ites into a tizzy about her image. Airbrushed, they cried; inauthentic, they snorted.

Worse was to follow. The banks misguided choice of Austen quote from Pride and Prejudice I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading had been uttered by Caroline Bingley, a hypocritical crawler with zero interest in books, who was simply sucking up to Mr Darcy. Three days later, in a scene that would have given Miss Austen exquisite moments of immoderate joy, the leader of the Commons, Andrea Leadsom, a foot-in-mouth politician not renowned for her grasp of the English canon, described her as one of our greatest living authors. Cue howls of parliamentary mirth and a social media feeding frenzy.

Photoshopped, misquoted and brought back from the dead by a Tory minister, the author of Persuasion and Emma, who once observed that a woman, especially if she have the misfortune of knowing anything, should conceal it as well as she can, would surely have relished this roller-coaster of publicity. And yet the accident-prone Leadsoms delicious slip does point to some greater truths about our literature, not least that all our finest writers are indeed immortal. This is especially true of those, such as Austen, who wrote immortal characters. Shakespeare, Dickens, Wodehouse, Conan Doyle and Le Carr flourish among the reading public through the lives of Falstaff, Scrooge, Jeeves, Sherlock Holmes and Smiley. As the creator of Mrs Bennet and Emma Woodhouse, Austen lives on.

Leadsoms brief moment of shame might also hint at the banks long-term vindication. While Austen suffers the indignity of airbrushing, her words and characters linger in the English imagination. Most novelists are condemned to oblivion, sometimes in their own lifetimes. To be caricatured and misquoted is a supreme accolade. Besides, at this altitude on Parnassus, the words and phrases of great books become strangely braided into the national conversation.

Shakespeare never wrote lead on Macduff, or methinks the lady doth protest too much. A living culture mashes up books and quotes, giving Holmes a line he never uttered: Elementary, my dear Watson. Great writers, living or dead, such as Austen, get reinterpreted in ways beyond their control. Theres a manga Sense & Sensibility as well as the Observers favourite, Emma and the Werewolves.

Play it again, Jane.

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The Observer view on Jane Austen's immortality - The Guardian

Laws and Policies Governing Performance Enhancing Supplements – Heber Springs Sun-Times

Jacque Martin

Editors Note: This is the second in a series of articles regarding the use of supplements in high school football programs.

The FDA exists to protect the public health by regulating human/animal drugs and biologics, medical devices, tobacco products, food, cosmetics, and electronic products that emit radiation. FDA enforcement usually occurs after a product is already on the market and safety issues become apparent. The FDA doesnt review the effectiveness or safety of dietary supplements unless a supplement may contain a new ingredient not marketed in the United States. A notification must be filed with the FDA 75 days prior to the marketing of the ingredient and include information that the manufacturer or distributor of the new ingredient is reasonably safe. If safety issues occur with the new ingredient, then the FDA evaluates product safety through research and adverse event monitoring. FDA regulations require that food labels be present on most foods, including dietary supplements. Any claims on food products are required to be truthful and not misleading. Manufacturers must list the serving size and the nutrients contained in each serving in the Nutrition Panel or the Supplement Facts for dietary supplements. Nor does the FDA approve structure-function claims on dietary supplements and other foods. An example of a structure-function claim is the statement, Protein builds muscle mass. Dietary supplements must provide a disclaimer regarding structure-function claims that the claim hasnt been reviewed by the FDA. The product label must also state that the product isnt intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The Arkansas School Board Association (ASBA) provides updated school policies that are generated from educational laws passed by the Arkansas General Assembly after every legislative session so that policies are consistent across the state. School districts are required by law to electronically post all school district policies and student handbooks or to make them available in a hard copy format. Heber Springs School District Policy 4.35 Student Medications states, Unless authorized to self-administer, students are not allowed to carry any medications including over-the-counter medications or any perceived health remedy not regulated by the US Food and Drug Administration while at school. This statement occurs on page 54 of the student handbook. Last December a girls volleyball coach, Deborah Clark, resigned her position from the Westside Consolidated School District when she learned that Superintendent Scott Guantt recommended termination because she sent a group text to volleyball players instructing them to mix C4 in a water bottle and consume it before the game without the knowledge of the head coach or consent from the parents. C4 contains caffeine. The documents that the Bryant News obtained from the school district state that some of the players felt shaky, unwell, and jittery and even reported their vision was effected by the drink not to mention crashing as the caffeine wore off. C4 is banned by the National Federation of State High Schools Association (NFHS) and the Arkansas Athletics Association (AAA). According to a DHS investigative report provided to The Sun Times, Dusty Combs admitted to providing a non-FDA regulated product, BCAA EnergyTM, to a student. Like C4, BCAA EnergyTM contains caffeine, a substance banned not only by the NFSHSA and AAA, but also by the NCAA and the NFL. Coach Combs was recommended by Superintendent Alan Stauffacher for promotion to Junior High Head Football Coach and Senior Assistant Football Coach. The School Board approved the promotion 4 to 1 with the one opposing vote coming from Judy Crowder. All members of the school board knew that DHS was investigating the allegations against Combs. In the same DHS report, the investigator wrote, Brad Reese stated that the coaches were selling the supplementsIt would appear that the school is providing work out supplements without consent of the childrens parents based on these statements. Calls were placed and messages left for Brad Reese and Dusty Combs requesting interviews and to give them an opportunity to explain the school district football program. There was no return phone call from either as of the publishing of this article. The Arkansas Athletics Association website links to the NFHS position statement on dietary supplements, which states, The NFHS SMAC strongly opposes the use of supplements by high school athletes for performance enhancement, due to the lack of published, reproducible scientific research documenting the benefits of their use and confirming no potential long-term adverse health effects with their use, particularly in the adolescent age groupIn order to discourage dietary supplement use for athletic performance: school personnel, coaches, and parents should allow for open discussion about dietary supplement use, and strongly encourage obtaining optimal nutrition through a well-balanced diet; remind athletes that no supplement is harmless or free from consequences and that there are no short cuts to improve athletic performance; and, because they are not strictly regulated, dietary supplements may contain impurities and banned substances not listed on the label. The NCAA Nutritional/Dietary Supplements Warning states: Before consuming any nutritional/dietary supplement product, review the product with the appropriate or designated athletics department staff! Dietary supplements, including vitamins and minerals, are not well regulated and may cause a positive drug test result. Student-athletes have tested positive and lost their eligibility using dietary supplements. Many dietary supplements are contaminated with banned drugs not listed on the label. Any product containing a dietary supplement ingredient is taken at your own risk [in bold]. The NFL Policy on Performance-Enhancing Substances, Appendix D, Use of Supplements, states: Over the past several years, we have made a special effort to educate and warn Players about the risks involved in the use of nutritional supplements. Despite these efforts, several Players have been suspended though their positive test result may have been due to the use of a supplementAs the Policy clearly warns, supplements are not regulated or monitored by the government. This means that, even if they are bought over-the-counter from a known establishment, there is currently no way to be sure that they: (a) contain the ingredients listed on the packaging; (b) have not been tainted with prohibited substances; or (c) have the properties or effects claimed by the manufacturer or salesperson.For your own health and success in the League, we strongly encourage you to avoid the use of supplements altogether, or at the very least to be extremely careful about what you choose to take. States are beginning to regulate and ban performance enhancing drugs and supplements in the public-school systems as well. Michigan was the first to initiate this legislation in 1999 when Act 187 prohibited public school employees and volunteers from promoting or supplying dietary supplements which carry claims of enhanced athletic performance. In October 2005, then Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed into law SB37, which required any person interested in competing in high school sports to sign a pledge that they would not use performance enhancing supplements. It also banned any supplement manufacturer from sponsoring any school events. The bill established the high school coach education and training program as well as prohibiting the marketing, sale and distribution of prohibited dietary substances. Michigan passed Act 216 in 2006 in which the law requires all public school districts and academies to include in their local codes of conduct that possession or use of any National Collegiate Athletic Association banned drug is not permitted. Any student found with banned substances suffer the same penalties established by Michigan school districts for the possession/use of tobacco, alcoholic beverages and illegal drugs. In July 2007, Governor Rick Perry of Texas signed into law a bill that required random steroid testing of public school athletes. Any athlete who tested positive for anabolic steroids could be suspended and permanently banned from participating in athletics. Besides Texas, New Jersey and Florida also mandate steroid testing. Eight other states have passed laws for testing, but didnt mandate it, and seventeen other states have testing policies at the state or local level. There is no law in Arkansas mandating anabolic steroid testing. As the NCAA and the NFL performance enhancing policies have warned, dietary supplements may be contaminated with banned substances, putting athletes health and sports eligibility at risk.

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Laws and Policies Governing Performance Enhancing Supplements - Heber Springs Sun-Times

Doctor Began to Understand the Role of Racism In Organ Transplants After She Donated a Kidney to Then Boyfriend – Atlanta Black Star

Vanessa Grubbss 2017 book, Hundreds of Interlaced Fingers, discusses racial disparities in organ transplants.

Earlier this month, professor Vanessa Grubbs, M.D. visited Seattle, Wash., on the promotional tour for her new book, Hundreds of Interlaced Fingers: A Kidney Doctors Search for the Perfect Match. Grubbs details the romance with her now-husband, Robert, and his life-threatening battle with kidney failure. The book uses their courtship, they are both Black, to illustrate how racial bias prohibits Black people from getting equal access to life-saving organ transplants.

During the question-and-answer session, the doctor was askedto relate Interlaced Fingers to previous scholarship on medical racism such as the work of Harriet A. Washington and Rebecca Skloot, who both documented centuries of deliberate exploitation of Black bodies.

Gingerly, Grubbs told the mostly white onlookers that witnessing her husbands ordeal radically shifted her understanding of how Black patients experience health care. She referenced her 2007 report, Good For The Harvest, Bad For The Planting which provides a systemic explanation for why Blacks, like Robert, who are one in three of the candidates awaiting a kidney transplant, receive only one in five of donated kidneys. She contrasted this to whites, who represent a third of the kidney transplant waiting list, but receive every other donated kidney. White patients also enjoy half the wait time of Black patients in need of a transplant.

Statistics like this in the organ transplant industry bring to light the historic and current racism Blacks face in receiving equal medical treatment in America.

Earlier this year, Oprah Winfrey was the executive producer and star of the HBO drama, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. The film, based on the book of the same title, is Skloots 2010 bestseller, which explains how white health officials at Marylands Johns Hopkins University stole tissue samples from a Black cancer patient, Lacks, and used her genetic material to make countless advances in medical science.

Providing context for the exploitation of Lacks, Skloot incorporates the history of the white-dominated medical industrys relationship to Black citizens. This includes exposing celebrated scientists like French surgeon and Nobel Prize winner Alexis Carrel, who pioneered early 20th-century ideas on transplanting organs. Skloot writes that Carrel praised Hitler and was a eugenicist: organ transplantation and life extension were ways to preserve what he saw as the superior white race, which he believed was being polluted by less intelligent and inferior stock, namely the poor, uneducated and nonwhite.

Washingtons 2006 masterpiece, Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present, reveals that racist health professionals like Carrel saturated the U.S. medical industry at one point in history and, to an extent, still do to this day.

In fact, Washington begins with a conversation between herself and a nephrologist, a kidney doctor. When Washington struggled to accept the history and scope of medical abuse against Black people, her colleague looked at her as if she were not too bright and minced no words. Girl, Black people dont get organs; they give organs.

The remainder of Washingtons work unearths how, before and after death, Black people have had organs and other body parts stolen by the white-dominated medical industry. After describing the lucrative industry and longstanding practice of harvesting Black corpses for medical research, she pivots to the organ transplant enterprise. Washington writes, The troubling disproportionate prevalence of Black body parts such as organs, corneas and other tissues is suggestive that Blacks also make up a greatly disproportionate number of the entire bodies that are used in research, research that infrequently benefits Black people like Henrietta Lacks.

In Seattle, Grubbs attributed these disparities to conscious and unconscious bias that require policy changes and training to help health care professionals practice medicine in a socially just manner. This analysis may, however, fall short of curing the bias of medical professionals and the industry itself.

Historian Daina Ramey Berrys 2017 gem, The Price for Their Pound of Flesh: The Value of the Enslaved from Womb to Grave in the Building of a Nation, makes whites willful consumption of Black bodies a central theme and explains how anti-Blackness and the theft of Black organs became a normalized part of our vocabulary.

Berry writes that in 1763, an African-American male became one of the first recorded cases of a dissection in the colonial territory. This marked the beginning of medical education, particularly the dissection of the dead. It also spurred the clandestine business of sending bodies and body parts to physicians and colleges, creating a traffic in human remains that still exists today in the form of an underground organ trade.

Sugarcoating centuries of white pathology masquerading as medical science maintains racism and is a central theme of John Hobermans 2012 book, Black and Blue: The Origins and Consequences of Medical Racism. He too resists the pattern of ignoring or downplaying centuries of racists wearing nurses caps and stethoscopes. Hoberman writes that many recoil at the charge that Blacks suffer disproportionate health problems because racism taints American medicine. Doctors and nurses are among the least likely candidates upon whom to pin the label of bigotry. Because of generations of racist doctors and nurses, Hoberman writes, Mainstream medicine devised racial interpretations that have been applied to every organ system of the human body.

Tellingly, near the end of her Seattle visit, Grubbs admitted that honestly addressing these issues does get hard, and that she often takes flak for illuminating how the medical industry fails Black patients. In a monumental display of courage and love, Grubbs donated a kidney to save then-boyfriend Robert. The two celebrated the 12-year anniversary of the surgery this past April and will enjoy a dozen years married next month. The bravery that helped Grubbss share a life-saving organ must also inspire us discuss and call out racism as the primary obstacle to Black health and prosperity.

Gus T. Renegade hosts The Context of White Supremacy radio program, a platform designed to dissect and counter racism. For nearly a decade, he has interviewed and studied authors, filmmakers and scholars from around the globe.

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Doctor Began to Understand the Role of Racism In Organ Transplants After She Donated a Kidney to Then Boyfriend - Atlanta Black Star