Team develops fast, cheap method to make supercapacitor electrodes for electric cars, high-powered lasers – Phys.Org

July 17, 2017 by James Urton Slice from x-ray computed tomography image of a supercapacitor coin cell assembled with the electrode materials. The thin layers -- just below the coin cell lid -- are layers of electrode materials and a separator. Credit: William Kuykendall

Supercapacitors are an aptly named type of device that can store and deliver energy faster than conventional batteries. They are in high demand for applications including electric cars, wireless telecommunications and high-powered lasers.

But to realize these applications, supercapacitors need better electrodes, which connect the supercapacitor to the devices that depend on their energy. These electrodes need to be both quicker and cheaper to make on a large scale and also able to charge and discharge their electrical load faster. A team of engineers at the University of Washington thinks they've come up with a process for manufacturing supercapacitor electrode materials that will meet these stringent industrial and usage demands.

The researchers, led by UW assistant professor of materials science and engineering Peter Pauzauskie, published a paper on July 17 in the journal Nature Microsystems and Nanoengineering describing their supercapacitor electrode and the fast, inexpensive way they made it. Their novel method starts with carbon-rich materials that have been dried into a low-density matrix called an aerogel. This aerogel on its own can act as a crude electrode, but Pauzauskie's team more than doubled its capacitance, which is its ability to store electric charge.

These inexpensive starting materials, coupled with a streamlined synthesis process, minimize two common barriers to industrial application: cost and speed.

"In industrial applications, time is money," said Pauzauskie. "We can make the starting materials for these electrodes in hours, rather than weeks. And that can significantly drive down the synthesis cost for making high-performance supercapacitor electrodes."

Effective supercapacitor electrodes are synthesized from carbon-rich materials that also have a high surface area. The latter requirement is critical because of the unique way supercapacitors store electric charge. While a conventional battery stores electric charges via the chemical reactions occurring within it, a supercapacitor instead stores and separates positive and negative charges directly on its surface.

"Supercapacitors can act much faster than batteries because they are not limited by the speed of the reaction or byproducts that can form," said co-lead author Matthew Lim, a UW doctoral student in the Department of Materials Science & Engineering. "Supercapacitors can charge and discharge very quickly, which is why they're great at delivering these 'pulses' of power."

"They have great applications in settings where a battery on its own is too slow," said fellow lead author Matthew Crane, a doctoral student in the UW Department of Chemical Engineering. "In moments where a battery is too slow to meet energy demands, a supercapacitor with a high surface area electrode could 'kick' in quickly and make up for the energy deficit."

To get the high surface area for an efficient electrode, the team used aerogels. These are wet, gel-like substances that have gone through a special treatment of drying and heating to replace their liquid components with air or another gas. These methods preserve the gel's 3-D structure, giving it a high surface area and extremely low density. It's like removing all the water out of Jell-O with no shrinking.

"One gram of aerogel contains about as much surface area as one football field," said Pauzauskie.

Crane made aerogels from a gel-like polymer, a material with repeating structural units, created from formaldehyde and other carbon-based molecules. This ensured that their device, like today's supercapacitor electrodes, would consist of carbon-rich materials.

Previously, Lim demonstrated that adding graphenewhich is a sheet of carbon just one atom thickto the gel imbued the resulting aerogel with supercapacitor properties. But, Lim and Crane needed to improve the aerogel's performance, and make the synthesis process cheaper and easier.

In Lim's previous experiments, adding graphene hadn't improved the aerogel's capacitance. So they instead loaded aerogels with thin sheets of either molybdenum disulfide or tungsten disulfide. Both chemicals are used widely today in industrial lubricants.

The researchers treated both materials with high-frequency sound waves to break them up into thin sheets and incorporated them into the carbon-rich gel matrix. They could synthesize a fully-loaded wet gel in less than two hours, while other methods would take many days.

After obtaining the dried, low-density aerogel, they combined it with adhesives and another carbon-rich material to create an industrial "dough," which Lim could simply roll out to sheets just a few thousandths of an inch thick. They cut half-inch discs from the dough and assembled them into simple coin cell battery casings to test the material's effectiveness as a supercapacitor electrode.

Not only were their electrodes fast, simple and easy to synthesize, but they also sported a capacitance at least 127 percent greater than the carbon-rich aerogel alone.

Lim and Crane expect that aerogels loaded with even thinner sheets of molybdenum disulfide or tungsten disulfidetheirs were about 10 to 100 atoms thickwould show an even better performance. But first, they wanted to show that loaded aerogels would be faster and cheaper to synthesize, a necessary step for industrial production. The fine-tuning comes next.

The team believes that these efforts can help advance science even outside the realm of supercapacitor electrodes. Their aerogel-suspended molybdenum disulfide might remain sufficiently stable to catalyze hydrogen production. And their method to trap materials quickly in aerogels could be applied to high capacitance batteries or catalysis.

Explore further: Novel electrode materials have designed pathways for electrons and ions during the charge/discharge cycle

More information: Matthew J. Crane et al, Rapid synthesis of transition metal dichalcogenidecarbon aerogel composites for supercapacitor electrodes, Microsystems & Nanoengineering (2017). DOI: 10.1038/micronano.2017.32

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Team develops fast, cheap method to make supercapacitor electrodes for electric cars, high-powered lasers - Phys.Org

ASML enabling Moore’s law scaling and cost reduction out to 1 to 2 nanometers in mid-2020s – Next Big Future

ASML enabling Moores law scaling and cost reduction out to 1 to 2 nanometers in mid-2020s

Today ASML is selling billions in Extreme Ultraviolet lithography machines. These machines will help deliver chips at the 5 nanometer to 2 nanometer nodes.

ASML (Veldhoven, the Netherlands) sold eight more EUV (next-generation extreme ultraviolet lithography) systems in the second quarter. This brings its EUV backlog to 27 tools valued at about 2.8 billion euro (about $3.26 billion). The firm also announced that it demonstrated the key productivity metric of 125 wafers per hour (125) on an EUV tool at its headquarters.

Second quarter sales increased to 2.1 billion euro (about $244) million, up 8 percent compared to the year ago quarter. The company said it is on track to grow sales about 25 percent this year. Intel, Samsung and TSMC, are hoping to insert oft-delayed EUV lithography into volume production in the next two years.

ASML has a presentation that describes how they see EUV enabling a scaling push with lowering costs out to 2 nanometers.

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ASML enabling Moore's law scaling and cost reduction out to 1 to 2 nanometers in mid-2020s - Next Big Future

Could cows be the vaccine factories of the future? – STAT News – STAT

F

amously, the word vaccine comes from the Latin word for cow a namesake that traces back to the late 1700s.

Now cows are once again at the cutting edge of vaccine science. Thanks to a quirk of how cows make antibodies, they are helping researchers understand human immunity. Someday, cows could serve as testing grounds for whether vaccines are well-designed. And its possible that cow antibodies could treat everything from autoimmunity to infectious disease.

A new study on HIV by scientists at Scripps Research Institute explores these possibilities. Cows dont get HIV, but, when injected with viral proteins, produce antibodies that block HIV infection. The results, which were reported Thursday in Nature, are part of a larger effort to make the first HIV vaccine.

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HIV mutates constantly, creating many strains. Broadly neutralizing antibodies are key to an HIV vaccine because they could protect against these various strains. But theyve proven hard to make in people.

The body in HIV infection either from natural infection or in response to a vaccine does not like to make broadly neutralizing antibodies, said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. It just doesnt do it readily, and it doesnt do it very well.

So scientists are keenly interested in other animals that might do it well. Enter cows: Two separate teams of scientists at Scripps made two parallel discoveries in recent years that broadly neutralizing antibodies for HIV are especially long and gangly, and that cows normal antibodies are also long and gangly.

That was the inspiration for this study. It was an alignment of the stars, where we had veterinarians, cow antibody scientists, and HIV scientists all talking and came up with this relatively simple question to test, said Devin Sok, the studys first author and director for antibody discovery and development at the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative.

The scientists injected four cows with a protein that mimics HIVs surface, known as the envelope. They then drew blood samples over the course of a year and isolated antibodies. The antibodies were tested in a dish for their ability to block HIV from infecting cells.

What they found surprised them. Within two months, all the cows made antibodies that blocked a variety of viral strains much faster than in people. And low doses of antibody were enough to block the virus.

We definitely didnt expect to get the [antibody] response that we did. We didnt expect the extent of the response or how quick the response developed, said Sok. That was kind of mind-blowing.

As to why cows are such good antibody factories, it may have to do with their unique stomachs. Dr. Vaughn Smider, professor of molecular medicine at Scripps, points out that cows four-chambered stomachs hold a whopping 20 gallons of digestive microbes. The cow immune system has to deal with keeping in check all these microorganisms, said Smider. Cows extra-long antibodies can potentially bind into grooves, crevices, or areas where a typical antibody from humans or mice may not be able to bind.

The study is the first to reliably elicit broadly neutralizing antibodies. But Dr. John Mascola, director of vaccine research at NIAID, cautions that there are still obstacles to an effective vaccine in humans.

The study doesnt tell us how to make a vaccine for HIV in people, but it does tell us how the virus evades the human immune response, said Mascola.

Mascola believes that HIV vaccine research is at the end of the beginning. To complete the journey, scientists will need to make a vaccine that accurately mimics HIVs envelope and coaxes the immune system to make the right antibodies. Barton Haynes, director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute, believes cows could help with the first of those two challenges.

There is a debate going on about whether this envelope or that envelope is good, said Haynes. Cows may be a really good model to test that.

Cow HIV antibodies could also be directly given to people. This is not a substitute for a vaccine, which creates long-term immunity to prevent disease. But the antibodies could provide short-term protection or reduce virus levels in those already infected.

To do this, scientists would take antibody-producing cells from cows, isolate their antibody genes, and transfer them into cell lines that grow easily in a lab, such as E. coli or yeast. They would then tinker with the antibodies to make them more human-like. This has already been done with mouse antibodies to create drugs such as alemtuzumab, used to treat leukemia.

Smider hopes that, within five to 10 years, cow antibodies will be used for a variety of diseases. He says that their unusual structures could help treat certain cancers, autoimmune disorders, and infectious diseases such as malaria. Smider is currently working with three different drug companies on this goal.

Another possibility is to milk cows for their antibodies literally. Cows milk is rich in antibodies, and there is evidence that drinking milk from cows immunized against various germs can protect against illness. Immuron, an Australian biotech company, makes a pill prepared with powdered milk from immunized cows to protect against travelers diarrhea. The product is available over-the-counter in multiple countries, including the U.S., Canada, Australia, and China.

AAAS Mass Media Fellow

Jonathan Wosen is STATs 2017 AAAS Mass Media Science & Engineering Fellow.

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5 Essential Tips For Surviving Superhot VR – UploadVR

Superhot VR does not love you. It wants to hurt you, beat you, break you, and grind you down into the hardened combat veteran that youll need to embody to survive. With the hit VR combat game finally arriving on PlayStation VR (PSVR) this week, we thought it was about time to offer some helpful tips for the field. Because the best warriors dont just move fast, they think fast too.

Its true that in Superhot VR time moves only when you do, but when you fire a gun or throw an object things move a little faster than you might realize. Going on the offensive makes your enemies far more dangerous, so its essential that you stop and take a look before launching your attack. Is theres a knife hovering in front of your eye? Then best dodge that before opening fire.

If youre moving only one body part at any time then, quite frankly, youre doing it wrong. Superhot is an active game for both body and mind; you should always be thinking about where the next attack is coming from in conjunction from who to kill next or where your next weapon is located. You need to be doing your best limbo impressions as you reach for that gun on the chair, otherwise theres a good chance youll be getting a bullet in your head in the next few seconds.

Some levels of Superhot VR are trial and error, simple as that. You wont be able to beat every sequence without dying (unless youre Neo), so memorize each fight and prepare for whats coming. If the next area has a low wall to take cover then crouch before you grab the pyramid to proceed. Youll save valuable time and get the drop on the enemy instead of waste space crouching when you first arrive.

This one I cant stress enough. Most objects in Superhot VR have the miraculous ability to stop bullets in their tracks and still not break. That goes for pretty much anything except bottles and glasses. The game expects you to use this mechanic often, but its also too easy to forget its there. A shuriken might be a pain to throw, but it works miracles as a shield. If you find a shotgun in your face dont just duck; find something to take the brunt of the attack too.

Following on from the last point, make sure not to discard any useful items as soon as you arrive in a new scene. It might be tempting to empty that crate of plates at the nearest bad guy, but its actually a much better idea to keep hold of them until youre sure you can make a kill with them. The last thing you want is to end up empty handed in front of a swarm of baddies. Chances are at least one guy with a gun is running towards you, so use those items to block bullets until his weapon is in reach.

Superhot VR is available now on PlayStation VR, Oculus Rift, and HTC Vive.

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5 Essential Tips For Surviving Superhot VR - UploadVR

I’m giving up on Snapchat because it’s way too bloated – Mashable


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I'm giving up on Snapchat because it's way too bloated
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There was a short period when I couldn't wrap my mind around you. You'd delete ... There was no need to download video clips to a computer, edit them on a timeline in a video editor, wait for the video to export, and then find a place to upload it to ...

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I'm giving up on Snapchat because it's way too bloated - Mashable

Inside the rainforest’s medicine cabinet | Euronews – euronews

How can isolated and vulnerable rural communities prepare for catastrophic natural events and become more resilient in the face of climate change? This episode of Aid Zone takes us to Bolivia, where an EU-funded project is helping traditional healers share and enrich their ancestral knowledge.

When floods and other disasters hit isolated rural communities in Bolivia, traditional medicine is often all they have in terms of health care.

Over twenty indigenous communities are regularly flooded in the Amazon basin of Bolivia. Thats the case of Capaina, near San Buenaventura, along the river Beni. About 25 families of the Tacana ethnic group live there. Natural disasters can isolate communities for months, and traditional medicine then turns out to be the most effective first response to diseases.

Doa Juanita and Doa Antonia are curanderas, or local healers: they know how to use plants to look after people.

When we have disasters caused by the river, the wind, theres no money to go to the hospital. So these medicines are quite good to have when all these disasters happen, says Doa Juanita, who started learning about plants when she was a child.

I would go to the jungle with my granny and see how she would take some bark to boil it, she explains. The bark she shows us is said to effectively relieve pain.

Doa Juanita and Doa Antonia work with the NGO Soluciones Prcticas. They live in other villages and meet in Capaina to share their knowledge of traditional medicine.

The NGO is funded by the European Department for Humanitarian Aid, and it gives their traditional methods a modern twist.

This (medicine) has been practised for centuries. What we want is to give it legal and scientific backing, says Victor Yapu, a representative of Soluciones Prcticas. We finalised a study, an inventory of medicinal plants. We found over a hundred, but there are many more in the area that have yet to be identified. So well continue to expand it.

Bolivian law already recognises the role of traditional healers. Now, with this inventory, the NGO is working to protect and disseminate their knowledge.

As part of the project, meetings and exchanges between Doa Juanita, Doa Antonia and Capainas local healer Doa Dilma will become routine. The elderly ladies exchange leaves and roots that theyll each plant in their own gardens. They also share recipes and treatments some of them tastier than others.

Indigenous communities are particularly vulnerable to urbanisation and climate change.

Since 1900, Bolivia has suffered some 40 disasters linked to floods. Extreme events are becoming more frequent and violent. Floods have so far claimed the lives of 140,000 people and affected 3 million.

In 2014, Bolivia experienced the worst floods in 60 years. Entire villages were damaged around here causing landslides and victims. The community of Capaina was isolated for days.

Supporting traditional medicine is part of a wider project funded by the EU to help Bolivian ethnic groups be more resilient. Its estimated there are 36 of these groups, accounting for nearly three million people.

Some indigenous communities are native to these regions, but others come from the highlands and other areas of the country. So its important that newcomers can also benefit from this knowledge, says Pablo Torrealba, the European Commissions humanitarian expert in charge of South America.

With deforestation, medicinal plants are found farther and farther away. So the project promotes the practice of collecting plants and seeds from the forest to plant them closer to communities so that in case of an emergency, you dont need to go deep into the jungle to find them.

One of the goals of the project is to share the knowledge of the healers with younger generations and take it outside the jungle. For example, to Rurrenabaque market about 20 minutes by boat from Capaina.

Doa Juanita and Doa Antonia make the trip together to bring their remedies to the weekly market. Doa Antonia has had a stall here for about ten years. I sell a bit of everything. I bring what people ask me for, she says.

The World Health Organisation says traditional medicine is an important and often underestimated part of health services for which demand is growing and ensuring its quality can help expand access to care.

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Inside the rainforest's medicine cabinet | Euronews - euronews

Euthanasia: New laws could see Victorians get lethal medicine within 10 days – The Age

People with terminal illnesses could access lethal medication within 10 days of asking, under proposed euthanasia laws for Victoria, made public for the first time on Friday, that have been described as the most conservative in the world.

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Advocate Andrew Denton speaks about Australia's role in spreading euthanasia laws around the globe.

Serious disability or dementia would not be grounds for eligibility under the proposed laws.

New criminal offences could also be introduced to prosecute those who "induce" a person to request to die.

Details about Victoria's proposed euthanasia laws are contained in 66 recommendations outlined in the Andrews government's Ministerial Advisory Panel report on voluntary assisted dying.

Anyone who asks to die must go through a three-step request, the advisory panel recommended.

The patient must begin with a verbal request, followed by a formal written request, then a final verbal request.

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A minimum of 10 days must pass between the first and final request, unless the person is assessed as likely to die within 10 days.

It is expected that, at first, about 150 people a year will access assisted dying legislation in Victoria and that this would likely increase.

The proposal document will shape the laws set to come before both houses of Victoria's parliament next month and contains the most detailed information yet on what who will be eligible and the safeguards to be introduced.

Politicians will have a conscience vote and are not expected to vote along party lines, with the exception of the Greens who support voluntary euthanasia.

Professor Brian Owler, chair of the advisory panel and former president of the Australian Medical Association, has described the proposed laws as conservative and "distinctly Victorian".

"If anything we can be criticised for the burden it may place on someone that is dying," Professor Owler said.

Professor Owler said it was conceivable that a person "could obtain a prescription, visit a chemist to get a dose of medication and self-administer on that day".

But he said this was not the usual experience overseas.

People must be able to fulfil seven key eligibility criteria including that they are expected to die within a year, are aged over 18, have an incurable disease that will cause death and have a medical condition that is causing suffering that "cannot be relieved in a manner that is deemed tolerable".

People with dementia will not have access to euthanasia.

Patients with motor neurone disease would have access to physician-assisted euthanasia, and help to physically administer a lethal dose if physically unable to do so.

The panel said while it accepted the loss of cognitive capacity may cause distress to some people "voluntary assisted dying must be 'voluntary' that is, a person must have the decision-making capacity to make an autonomous choice at all stages of the process".

People with a mental illness or a disability would only be able to access euthanasia if they had a terminal illness and fulfil the other criteria.

The panel recommended that only the person who is terminally ill and wants to die can make a request to access lethal medication.

Neither a doctor, nor a carer, can request access and neither can a doctor initiate a discussion about ending one's life.

A person may withdraw their request at any time, and once having done so, must begin the process anew if she or he decides to seek access to lethal medication again.

The panel also addressed the potential for "elder abuse" by a relative or carer, for example, who could conceivably benefit financially from the person's death.

To guard against elder abuse, two independent assessments will be done to ensure a person's request to die is voluntary and properly informed.

Anyone who requests to die will be required to create a written declaration of his or her enduring request, which will also be witnessed by two independent witnesses.

Neither witness can be in a position where they can financially benefit from the person's death.

"It is important that elder abuse is addressed, and the panel is of the view that its recommended framework will identify and manage instances of elder abuse," the ministerial advisory panel's report said.

The panel recommended that all requests to die be independently assessed by two medical practitioners, neither of whom is in a position to benefit from the person's death.

One must be a medical practitioner, such as a GP for example, who has been qualified for at least five years.

The other must be a specialist in the terminal illness or condition the person suffers.

Both assessors must have completed specified training beforehand.

Much unites those on either side of the euthanasia debate. Many agree that palliative care needs to be better funded and available to more Victorians sooner.

But they remain fundamentally divided on what rights should be given to a small number of people for whom even the best medical treatment is not enough to relieve their suffering.

Retired nurse Jane Morris says her mother Elizabeth was one of the minority of people who suffereda "horrific" and "torturous"death.

The 77-year-old, who had motor neurone disease, died in August 2014.

Ms Morris said her family remains traumatised by the last day of her mother's life, as an attempt to terminally sedate Elizabeth was unsuccessful, despite"exemplary" palliative care.

"She had pain, breakthrough pain, because her prescribed dose was unable to adequately palliate her pain at all times," Ms Morris said.

"She managed to express to us her fear and in one of her conscious moments was able to convey to us that she wanted to be fed through her PEG tube. This was so very traumatic for all of us, many staff included.

"However, orders were relayed to us by equally distressed staff that we should inform Mum that she was not to be fed.

"Why should we have been expected to inform our dying mother that we could not fulfil a dying wish?"

Ms Morris said every individual should be given a choice about whether they want to access assisted-dying laws.

"I don't care what way people decide. I have respect for everyone's choice. But I don't think one ideology should trump another," she said.

"The memories of mum's horrific death have been seared into our memories."

Palliative Care Victoria is one of the organisations which have declared it will oppose euthanasia laws, saying it "will lead to a growing sense of a duty to die".

They say those who work daily with the dying, Victoria's palliative care staff, are more likely than the general population to oppose assisted-dying laws (popular support stands at more than 75 per cent).

Palliative Care Victoria chief executive Odette Waanders said some still misunderstood palliative care, which meant some were going without help.

"There is a perception that palliative care means that you're giving up, and you're reaching the end of life and that nothing more can be done.

"But it can be done in tandem with treatment."

The organisation is calling for an extra $65 million to be pumped into the sector by the Victorian government to improve access.

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Euthanasia: New laws could see Victorians get lethal medicine within 10 days - The Age

Corning deal on tougher medicine bottles to bring jobs to South Jersey – NorthJersey.com

As President Donald Trump rings in his first 6 months in office, the reality tv star turned commander in chiefs twitter account has surpassed the 35K tweets mark. Susana Victoria Perez (@susana_vp) has more. Buzz60

President Donald Trump, beside Wendell P. Weeks, right, chairman and CEO of Corning Glass, gets ready to try to crush a Valor Glass protective vial during an event to announce a Merck, Pfizer, and Corning joint partnership at the White House on Thursday.(Photo: Alex Brandon/AP)

Corning Inc. will add 1,000 jobs at plant in Vineland and near its New York headquarters to produce a stronger generation of glass vials and cartridges for pharmaceuticals under an agreement with Merck and Pfizerannounced at a White House ceremony Thursday.

This technology is not only great for American jobs and manufacturing, its great for patients, who now will have access to safer medicines and vaccines, President Donald Trump said before he joined Corning CEO Wendell P. Weeks in a demonstration of the strength of what has been dubbed Valor Glass.

With a conventional pharmaceutical vial and aValor glass vial in side-by-side vise-like devices, Trump pulled a lever to show the conventional product broke easily, then used 10 times as much force without breaking the Valor vial.

At one point, a grimacing Trump pulled down the viselever with both hands, prompting Weeks to joke, Really, come on, its not a test of manhood.

A joint announcement by the three companies said 1,000 jobs would be added initially with a $500 million investment. Corning is also looking to build a new plant at a site to be announced in the Southeast, with a planned investment of $4 billion and 4,000 jobs.

The stronger glass will allow for faster, safer manufacturing, and it is also better designed for new formulations of pharmaceuticals and biologics, said Corning spokeswoman Elizabeth Dann.

Dann said there were no specifics yet about how much production would be increased at the Vineland plant that Corning acquired two years ago from Gerresheimer AG.

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Corning deal on tougher medicine bottles to bring jobs to South Jersey - NorthJersey.com

USC bosses flunk the leadership test amid shocking allegations about former medical school dean – Los Angeles Times

By now you probably know the details.

Dr. Carmen Puliafito, a $1.1-million-a-year professor, doctor, dean and big-bucks rainmaker for the University of Southern California, left plenty of time in his busy schedule for extracurricular activities.

They included drug-fueled parties with a prostitute, convicted criminals and drug addicts. Los Angeles Times sleuths dug up photos of Puliafitos exploits in hotel rooms, apartments and even the deans office at USC, including a shot of him using a butane torch to light a glass pipe while a female companion smoked heroin.

RELATED: An overdose, a young companion, drug-fueled parties: The secret life of USC med school dean

In Mondays bombshell expose in The Times, reporters Paul Pringle, Harriet Ryan, Adam Elmahrek, Matt Hamilton and Sarah Parvini also reported the details of a 911 call from a Pasadena hotel where a woman had overdosed before being hospitalized. She later told reporters that she and Puliafito had been partying together for two days.

But Im not interested in pounding on Puliafito here. The man appears to have serious problems. He needs help and I hope he gets it.

Complex addiction doesnt respect age, income or title, said a USC-trained physician, who added that he thinks USC will survive this episode, but Puliafito and his family may need help to get through it.

The physician, who didnt want his name used, also suggested that, given the private schools endless quest for money, Puliafitos strengths made him like a star quarterback and he was worth keeping in the game if they could keep the incident private, too.

Alex J. Berliner / Associated Press

Dr. Carmen A. Puliafito

Dr. Carmen A. Puliafito (Alex J. Berliner / Associated Press)

And thats the part of the story that interests me most the actions and non-actions of USC administrators and the Pasadena Police Department.

Let me start with the latter.

On March 4, 2016, paramedics and police responded to the call from the hotel where Puliafitos companion had passed out. But the responding officer did not file a report on the incident, even though methamphetamine was found in the room. After dogged questioning by my colleague Paul Pringle, Pasadena officials said a report should have been filed and the officer had been disciplined.

Does anyone think for a minute that if an average Joe had been in that room, he wouldnt have been written up, investigated and possibly charged?

Did someone influential intercede on behalf of Puliafito to protect his reputation and preserve his status as a prodigious USC fundraiser who schmoozed with the likes of billionaire Larry Ellison, Jay Leno, Warren Beatty, Annette Bening, Martin Short and developer Rick Caruso?

If the allegations are true, said Caruso, a USC graduate and member of the schools board of trustees, I'm very disturbed and condemn the illegal use of drugs, especially by someone who holds the highest level of trust and care.

But, like I said, Im less disturbed by what Puliafito might have done, and more disturbed by what his bosses didnt do.

The Times reported that 10 days after the hotel incident, an anonymous complaint about Puliafito was submitted to two employees in the office of USC President C.L. Max Nikias. A week and a half later, Puliafito resigned as dean. He later told The Times by email that he had voluntarily decided to move on and pursue a job in biotech.

That sounded suspicious, given what The Times knew. But a Nikias staffer told our reporters: The president will not be speaking to The Times on this matter.

Maybe thats because Nikias was too busy planning a celebratory, catered wingding for Puliafito. If youre poor and have a drug problem, you land on skid row. If youre rich and connected, its cocktails and kudos.

In June of last year, three months after Puliafitos resignation as dean, he was honored by various USC administrators, including Nikias.

Today, we have one of the, not just the areas, but the nations preeminent medical schools and medical enterprises and, in many ways, thanks to the leadership of Carmen, Nikias gushed.

Are money and prestige all that matter?

Did Puliafitos prolific fundraising and ability to draw top medical talent earn him not just a pass, but a party?

Reporter Pringle sent numerous emails to Nikias and his associates over more than a year, respectfully asking for an interview. He was ignored each time.

Pringle sent Nikias an email with numerous questions about the Pasadena hotel incident and USCs handling of the Puliafito matter, and requested, yet again, an interview with the president.

No interview was granted. (Nor did I get anywhere Wednesday with my requests for an interview with Nikias and Puliafito).

And heres a detail that might make any self-respecting Trojan root for UCLA next year:

Despite having resigned as dean, Puliafito remained on the faculty and continued to see patients for more than a year.

Only after the story hit on Monday did USC release a statement saying Puliafito is currently on leave from his roles at USC, including seeing patients. And then on Tuesday, Nikias sent a letter to the USC community saying we are working to determine how we can best prevent these kinds of circumstances going forward.

Shouldnt that have begun more than a year ago, when The Times first started asking questions?

The mood on campus is one of stunned depression, a USC physician said in an email to me, asking me not to use his name. Students are upset that this was allowed to happen at their medical school, while the faculty are flabbergasted as well as embarrassed. The physician said that in his opinion, Puliafito should have been immediately suspended in March 2016 and an investigation launched.

By allowing him to continue to practice, he said, patients health was put at risk.

Thats consistent with sentiments expressed Wednesday when the dean who replaced Puliafito told a gathering of students that his predecessors alleged actions were horrible and despicable.

Students at that meeting said university officials should have known more about Puliafitos behavior. One woman said it seems shocking that no one has been able to figure anything out.

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USC bosses flunk the leadership test amid shocking allegations about former medical school dean - Los Angeles Times

New UIW medical school in San Antonio celebrates opening – San … – mySanAntonio.com

By Forrest Milburn, Staff Writer

Photo: Marvin Pfeiffer /San Antonio Express-News

New UIW medical school in San Antonio celebrates opening

City leaders and health-care providers gathered Thursday morning for the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the University of the Incarnate Words School of Osteopathic Medicine at Brooks City Base.

Later this month, the school will welcome its inaugural 150-member class, who will be taught by more than 45 faculty members. The campus includes four refurbished buildings on 16 acres.

San Antonio, our eagle has landed, said founding dean Robyn Phillips-Madson, referring to the late President John F. Kennedys 1963 space-age speech made at the same location.

Phillips-Madson frequently mentioned that more than 50 years ago, JFK gave a dedication speech at what was then called the Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine to begin a new age of space exploration research for San Antonio and the rest of the country.

The UIW school is the states second to teach osteopathic medicine and its first private one. Both osteopathic and allopathic students can be certified to practice medicine in Texas, but the philosophy differs. For osteopathic doctors, designated by D.O., theres more of a focus on the person rather than their ailments, Phillips-Madson said.

The school, which was privately funded through donors, cost about $50 million to start, including renovation of the buildings.

It is the second medical school for San Antonio. The University of Texas medical school, known as the Health Science Center, offers doctor of medicine, or M.D., degrees.

When somebody comes to San Antonio and they ask, Where is the medical center? we will respond with which one? said UIW Board of Trustees Chairman Charlie Lutz.

Several of the speakers said the new school would fulfill the need for more primary-care doctors on San Antonios Southeast Side, as well as the state as a whole.

In 2016, there were 20,578 practicing primary-care physicians in Texas, about 73 for every 100,000 residents, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.

fmilburn@express-news.net

The need is a little better in Bexar County, where there are 82.1 primary care physicians for every 100,000 residents, according to the same data.

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Towns, medical school hammer out parking plan – North Jersey – NorthJersey.com

The former Hoffmann-La Roche campus on the border of Clifton and Nutley is being redeveloped by Prism Capital Partners. Owen Proctor/NorthJersey.com

A medical school will anchor the mixed-use redevelopment of the former Hoffmann-La Roche campus.(Photo: Photo courtesy of Prism Capital Partners)

Planning for a medical school in Nutley is starting from the ground up, as its representatives seek parking for the facility.

In January 2016, Seton Hall University and Hackensack Meridian Health announced a medical school for part of the Hoffmann-La Roche campus, closing on the border of Clifton and Nutley. When Bloomfield-based Prism Capital Partners bought the Roche property last October, the parties signed a lease for the medical school in Building 123 and its 123A wing.

The application, which the Nutley Planning Board is considering, represents only the medical school site plan, specifically pertaining to traffic and parking.Prism is marketing the entire redevelopment as On3with an emphasis on life sciences.

At this point, the applicant for the Seton Hall and Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine and Nutley officials arent seeing eye-to-eye on parking proposals.

REDEVELOPMENT:Ex-Roche campus reinvented as 'On3' science center

ONCE BUSTLING:Ex-Roche campus awaits next chapter

BELLEVILLE:Board revisits plan for Roche site

The site plan for the medical school, as well as the partners other entities sharing Building 123 and its wing, calls for 1,387 parking spaces, including 951 in Nutley, according to testimony. However, the school and Nutley officials dispute what should be considered permanent and temporary parking.

Based on redevelopment documents, Nutley Planner Paul Ricci deemed much of the parking as temporary. He interpreted the three parking lots, as presented, would only be used for parking, with no permanent or accessory use.

The applicant disagreed.

At aJuly 12 board meeting, in an effort to ensure permanent parking, Seton Hall and Hackensack Meridians attorney Kevin Coakley offered to reduce the parking spaces from 1,387 to 1,162, but contingent on all 1,162 being permanent. Mayor Joseph Scarpelli, a board member, countered that a draft resolution designate 465 as permanent and the rest temporary.

The planners report is replete with omissions and deficiencies that cannot be relied upon, Coakley contended before the board. There was never an illusion to have temporary parking.

Ninety-nine percent of parking is permanent, especially in this case, when it is an accessory, the attorney told The Record. Who would invest all this money and not have permanent parking?

Temporary parking is a frightening proposition to the user, Coakley said. The municipality would lose too, if limited parking resulted in less building occupancy, he added.

The plans 1,387 spaces seeks to avoid potential overflow parking into Nutley neighborhoods, the attorney said. The applicant's proposed reduction to 1,162 permanent spaces are per ordinance, he said.

Regarding the boards resolution, expected Wednesday, Aug. 16, Coakley said, The board has the discretion to reconsider, and we intend to follow that avenue.

There is a floating consideration for a garage on the redevelopments Clifton side that could help resolve parking concerns. It could possibly move some 400 spots from Nutley land, officials discussed.

While the medical school partners are willing to consider building a parking garage, contingent on finances as well as Cliftons approval of such a plan, the entities are not obligated to do so, Coakley said at the meeting.

Since the building is split between Clifton and Nutley, each towns representatives also expressed concern about a fair split of the parking.

Jaime Placek, special counsel for the City of Clifton, cautioned that the two town governments take a team approach to divvying up parking proportionally.

Meanwhile, Nutley Revenue and Finance Commissioner Thomas Evans suggested, if 40 percent of Nutleys building occupancy is to represent 40 percent of Nutley parking, that would allocate 555 of the 1,387 spaces to Nutley.

Email: proctor@northjersey.com

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Police union examines incident at Pasadena hotel involving a former USC dean after an officer is disciplined – Los Angeles Times

The union that represents the Pasadena police officer who was disciplined for not filing a prompt report on a drug overdose witnessed by the then-dean of USCs medical school is conducting a legal review of the incident, the labor organization said Thursday.

A tip about the March 2016 overdose of a young woman at the Hotel Constance in Pasadena led to a Times investigation that found that Dr. Carmen Puliafito associated with criminals and drug abusers who said they used methamphetamine and other drugs with him while he headed the Keck School of Medicine.

Puliafito, 66, resigned as dean three weeks after the overdose. USC kept the renowned ophthalmologist on faculty and he continued to accept patients at university medical offices, according to a USC website. The overdose suffered by Sarah Warren, who survived after being rushed to a hospital, was not publicly reported until The Times published its findings Monday.

Alleged conduct by former USC dean 'horrible and despicable,' med school head tells angry students

Officer Alfonso Garcia did not write a required report on the overdose until three months after the incident in response to repeated requests by The Times for information about the episode.

Garcia did not respond to an interview request made through the Pasadena city managers office Thursday. He otherwise could not be reached.

The president of the Pasadena Police Officers Assn., Sgt. Roger Roldan, said in emails that attorneys for the union are reviewing the circumstances surrounding the overdose. Roldan declined to provide any details about the review, including whether it was aimed at challenging the discipline of Garcia.

The type of discipline has not been disclosed.

Last year, a Pasadena police spokeswoman said Garcias failure to file the report was a training issue, but offered no details. This week, city spokesman William Boyer said Garcia was disciplined.

City Manager Steve Mermell said in an email Thursday that the Times findings have raised many questions. As it relates to the city, I have made a public commitment to review the facts and circumstances involving city personnel. I expect to have more information in the near future.

Mermell did not elaborate.

Puliafito has not responded to numerous interview requests. In an email shortly after resigning the $1.1-million-a-year deanship, Puliafito told The Times he made the move voluntarily to pursue a biotech job.

In the wake of The Times investigation, USC has said that Puliafito is on leave from the university and is no longer seeing patients. Puliafitos successor as dean, Dr. Rohit Varma, on Wednesday told a gathering of students, many of them angry about the affair, that Puliafitos conduct is the subject of several internal investigations.

Steve Lopez: USC bosses flunk the leadership test amid shocking allegations about former medical school dean

The Medical Board of California has said it is also investigating Puliafito on the basis of The Times reporting.

In the months after the overdose, authorities did not release Warrens name. The Times identified her through interviews, social media and property records.

Now 22, Warren has been in an Orange County drug treatment program since November, and said she no longer has contact with Puliafito. She told The Times in interviews that she and Puliafito had been partying at the hotel for two days. Then she took too much GHB gamma-hydroxybutyrate, the so-called date-rape drug that some users take in lower doses for its euphoric effect. Warren said the drug left her completely incapacitated.

After she awoke in the hospital six hours later, Puliafito picked her up, and we went back to the hotel and got another room and continued the party, she said.

Puliafito and his much younger acquaintance captured many of their exploits together in videos and photos. Sources allowed The Times to review dozens of the images on condition the videos not be published. They were consistent with Warrens account of drug use at the Hotel Constance.

An overdose, a young companion, drug-fueled parties: The secret life of USC med school dean

The police confiscated a little more than a gram of meth in the hotel room. No arrests were made, and Warren said the police never interviewed her.

A week after the March 4, 2016, overdose, a witness filed an anonymous complaint through a city website urging Pasadena authorities to investigate Puliafito and the police handling of the incident, according to a copy of the complaint obtained through the California Public Records Act.

Three days later, the same witness phoned the office of USC President C.L. Max Nikias and told two employees about Puliafitos role in the hotel incident. The witness spoke to The Times on the condition of anonymity.

Phone records confirm that the witness made a six-minute call to Nikias office on March 14, 2016, 10 days after the overdose.

Former USC medical school dean no longer seeing patients; Pasadena police discipline officer

Experience Los Angeles 2049 at the Blade Runner 2049 Experience, only at Comic-Con.

Experience Los Angeles 2049 at the Blade Runner 2049 Experience, only at Comic-Con.

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Police union examines incident at Pasadena hotel involving a former USC dean after an officer is disciplined - Los Angeles Times

Med School Students Make It Official | News Center | University of … – UNLV NewsCenter

Sixty boxes, clad in gray wrapping paper and topped with a scarlet bow, were piled artistically atop a table in the Student Union ballroom Monday.

Inside, the tool of the trade: stethoscopes. The UNLV School of Medicines inaugural Class of 2021 were given their instruments the day before settling in for their first day of classes.

Its still seeping in. Things have happened so suddenly, I actually forgot to invite my parents, said Johnnie Woodson, who did his undergraduate work at Rice University. Im just excited to see what happens. For me personally, I wanted to come home. I didnt realize how much I loved the city until I went away for four years. I had a friend who was part of an inaugural class in Austin, Texas. He was telling me how amazing it is for future medical students. Its a big honor to be a part of a class like that. I wanted to come back home and be part of the first class, be a part of the history of Las Vegas.

UNLVs medical students will put the scopes to use immediately. Their first day of classes includes working in small groups on how to apply the CPR training students have already been receiving. Their student experience will include completing emergency medical technician certification in their first year, projects to immerse them in community issues, and intensive hands-on learning.

It was the first ceremony to welcome the inaugural class made up entirely of students who are from Nevada or have strong ties.

It took a lot of people a decade or more to get to this day, President Len Jessup said. This is an incredibly important occasion in the history of this university, not just for the Top Tier strategic plan, but its important for this community.

The stethoscopes were donated by Dr. Constantine George, a native Las Vegan who went to med school in Reno before returning to Las Vegas to practice. George has served on the community engagement board for UNLVs new medical school since Day 1.

To see (the school) come together is an honor, George said at the event. Its going to take time, but to have these students when they finish residency want to stay in town, hopefully, will help alleviate the doctor shortage.

Nevada is ranked near the bottom in the number of physicians per capita. One of the primary goals of the UNLV medical school is to train specialists committed to serving the region and improving access to high quality health care.

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Utah’s second medical school opens doors in southern Utah – Ironcountytoday

by Holly Coombs

holly@ironcountytoday.com

University of Utah has the first medical school and 112 years later, Rocky Vista University College of Osteopathic Medicine marks the second Utah has a second medical school to open in this state as its grand opening took place last Friday in Ivins, Utah.

The school may have just opened, but was 50 years in the making as Thomas Told, Rocky Vista University College of Osteopathic Medicine dean and Chief academic officer, had big dreams to open the school over the decades. Told grew up in rural Utah and had aspirations of opening a school in an area similar to where he grew up.

I finished up my education in Northern Utah, but my heart was always down here, Told said. People have to go elsewhere to train, and it shouldnt be that way. Every year, 400 students leave Utah to go elsewhere for careers.

In 2006, Rocky Vista University in Parker, Colorado opened, which Told joined and brought his vision to Utah with new campus marking the Universitys second campus.

I had to go to Colorado first to make what I had been wanting for so long here in Utah, Told said.

With the opening of the Ivins campus, Rocky Vista University College of Osteopathic Medicine President and Chief Executive Officer Clinton Adams said the school will open opportunity for students within Utah to stay in their home state to complete their degrees and even remain in the state for their careers.

With school beginning Monday, more than 100 students are enrolled, more than 50 percent of them are from Utah universities, Vice Dean David Park said. The university, which is still under completion, will eventually be equipped to hand 250 students year-round when finished.

We have interviewed nearly 300 top-tier applicants and gone through 2,000 plus applications and I can assure you that the students coming here are truly exceptional, Park said.

He said the students come from 24 different countries and 50 percent of the applicants are from Utah schools including 26 from Brigham Young University, 14 from the University of Utah, 11 from Southern Utah University, 10 from Utah State University, 11 from Utah Valley University and five from Weber State University.

Although this was our vision, this was not our bias in selection, he said. These students were not chosen for their resident state, but by their rigorous academic standings. This is a testament to Utahs quality of students so today is a celebration of Utahs excellence education system.

Park asked those involved in Utah education to stand and be applauded.

The addition of the students, faculty and staff is something Ivins Mayor Chis Hart said hes most excited for, since the move-ins will provide a brightness and forward-thinking mindsets.

Were a population of 10,000, and there are almost no communities of our size that can boast they have a medical school, Hart said. So it gives us some bragging rights.

SUU President Scott L. Wyatt said he is proud to be a partner to the medical school.

This medical school will stand as a monument of possibilities, a place of dreams that just having this located here is a constant reminder to the youth of southern Utah that they can actually go to medical school, Wyatt said. More people will stretch into this difficult profession.

SUU President Scott L. Wyatt speaks to the crowd at the grand opening of the Rocky Vista University College of Osteopathic Medicine this last Friday in Ivins, Utah.

The two-story, 104,000 square-foot school building includes two, 200-seat lecture halls, 36 study rooms, a simulation center, standardized patient rooms and a 9,000 square-foot library. The campus also has two student housing buildings.

Utah Governor Gary Herbert commented on the states milestone via video message.

As our states population continues to grow, the need for physicians continues to grow (with it), Gov. Gary Herbert said And starting today, more Utah students will be able to stay in their home state while pursuing their medical education.

Elder Steven E. Snow, general authority seventy of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, gave the dedicatory prayer blessing the faculty, students and the building that great things would come from the new medical school.

We dedicate this site to be a safe place of learning, Snow said. We bless this place to be safe from the ravages of nature. That these buildings will stand for generations, to bless those who will study here. We dedicate the foundation, the baring walls, all components of this structure to bear up under the pressures of time and external influences.

He dedicated the College of Osteopathic Medicine to be a place of service in the community and to all who visit it.

We pray that this place will serve well the needs of faculty, staff and especially students, who will study and learn here, Snow said. We dedicate this place to the teaching of medicine; may it always be a place of compassionate teaching and learning. We pray this school will bless the medical profession with well-trained and qualified physicians who will provide medical care to patients throughout the country.

He continued to pray that the school would be a blessing to graduates, that they would leave with much knowledge and having hearts full of compassion.

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Utah's second medical school opens doors in southern Utah - Ironcountytoday

ACLU Sues Federal Government for Religious Liberty Documents – NBCNews.com

Trump is flanked by clergy members after signing an executive order on Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty at the White House, on May 4, 2017, in Washington. Mark Wilson / Getty Images file

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, names the Departments of Health and Human Services, Justice, Labor, and Treasury specifically in the records request.

In March, the ACLU submitted

"The administration hasnt been shy in saying it wants to broaden peoples ability to discriminate based on religious beliefs," ACLU attorney Joshua Block told NBC News on Thursday. "Were just trying to find out how its planning to go about that."

Related:

Although the January leak of the draft executive order was never signed by President Trump, it caused widespread panic among LGBTQ advocates. Then-White House Deputy Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham told NBC News in

But even after controversy surrounding the leaked draft died down, the Trump administration continued to state support for increased religious freedom protections. In May, President Trump signed the

Related:

Other actions by the administration have caused LGBTQ advocates to worry that anti-discrimination protections are slowly being dismantled. In March,

Earlier in July,

Related:

"The president has also directed me to issue guidance on how to apply federal religious liberty protections," Sessions said in the July 11 speech. "The department is finalizing this guidance, and I will soon issue it."

For the ACLU, that's warning enough. Now the civil rights group wants the federal administration to show its hand and confirm whether it is planning religious liberty guidance that would impact non-discrimination laws.

"Whats clear in the months since then is the administration is exploring different means of accomplishing the same results the guidance Sessions is promising for the Justice Department, new regulations for the Health Department, across the board," said Block. "The public should be able to know whos driving this."

NBC News requested comments from the departments of Health, Labor, or Treasury and did not receive replies. A Department of Justice spokesperson said they had no updates to provide on the issue.

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Reading is fundamental to American liberty – American Enterprise Institute

Reading is fundamental was a popular slogan when I was an elementary student in Los Angeles during the 1970s. Today, parents, teachers, and tutors stress the importance of literacy to public, private, home, and virtual school students. Reading is not only still fundamental; it is even more profoundly so than it was 40 years ago. Why? Our knowledge economy, economic self-sufficiency, and military soundness require a highly literate population.

To comprehend just how important reading is to American liberty, it is worth a look backward to see what our founding generation believed about literacy. The Founders decision to dissolve their bonds with England was a declaration for the liberty to learn as much as it was a declaration of political independence in 1776. Liberty is hollow without literacy. This is why education was so important. In fact, five legislaturesPennsylvania (1776), North Carolina (1776), Georgia (1777), Massachusetts (1780), and New Hampshire (1784)included education clauses in their constitutions before delegates to the Constitutional Convention approved a federal constitution in 1787.

John Adams etched into the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 that one advantage of education is the preservation of [the peoples] rights and liberties. At the same time, Abigail Adams in a letter dated August 14, 1776, reminded her husband John that If we mean to have Heroes, Statesmen, and Philosophers, we should be learned women. The enslaved Africans of colonial America believed reading was fundamental to freedom. Many of them learned to read in secret, with assistance from educated whites or blacks, or through makeshift schools.

Today, 241 years after our Declaration, we find ourselves living in a nation divided: people with higher-order reading skills and those without them. Unfortunately, too many adults and children live in the second category. This in no way means that people with low or no reading skills are doomed to failure. American history is replete with examples to the contrary. Nevertheless, reading matters. It affects a persons earning potential, marriage prospects, housing options, and choice of school. Not surprisingly, parents matter to the education of children, and as goes the literacy of the individual and the family, so goes the well-being of a nation.

So how are our students doing in reading? According to 2015 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)referred to as The Nations Report Cardthere is much room for growth. Only 36 percent of fourth graders and 34 percent of eighth graders scored proficient or better in reading. Results for subgroups are worse. Scores remained the same or dropped for white students; less than 20 percent of black fourth and eighth graders scored at or above proficient; reading scores rose for Hispanic fourth graders but dropped for eighth graders; and the reading scores for Asians, our nations top performers, rose only slightly for fourth graders and remained stable for eighth graders.

If our elementary and middle school students are doing poorly, what does NAEP tell us about our high school students? Researchers compared NAEP and international reading achievement data for members of the Class of 2015 in the U.S. and 33 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries. Only 33.5 percent of U.S. high school graduates scored proficient in reading. Massachusetts had the top U.S. proficiency score at 46.1 percent, while Louisiana, New Mexico, and Mississippi hovered at the bottom with 21 percent22 percent. Overall, the U.S. ranked 18th among OECD nations; our students reading proficiency is higher than peers in Luxembourg, Italy, and Hungary but lags behind peers in Japan, Canada, and Israel.

Why are our reading proficiency scores so low? It is not because of money. Although money matters in education, federal spending on K12 schools increased between 1970 and 2015, dramatically so during the 1990s, but NAEP reading scores remained relatively flat, as the accompanying graph shows.

Are students from poor or less-educated families the culprits? Scholars compared reading scores of American students living in a household where one parent has a college degreehigh level educationto similarly situated students in OECD nations. They relied on the percentage of students that scored at or above proficiency level in readinga higher threshold than just proficiency. They found that in Poland, 62.6 percent of students reached the higher reading threshold compared to only 41.6 percent of American students. Put another way, 58.4 percent of our students from high level education homes did not score at or above proficiency. Overall, we ranked 22nd among OECD nationsbehind Luxembourg and Hungary, two nations we beat when all students were included in the pool for achieving a lower-level reading threshold. We fared no better in math or science.

Reading is fundamental to maintaining our nations economic self-sufficiency and military soundness. We need more literate people to compete successfully in the knowledge economy. Nearly 75 percent of Americans aged 17 to 24 do not qualify for our military because they did not complete high school, have a criminal record, or have health challenges. Even for high school graduates who took the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery examination between 2004 and 2009, one in five failed to meet minimum academic requirements for enlistment in the Army.

These results are not a recipe for protecting American liberty. Making reading really fundamental is.

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Reading is fundamental to American liberty - American Enterprise Institute

Selflessness the key for Liberty fullback, safety Lantz – The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration)

CLARKSBURG Hes probably our best wide receiver, Liberty coach A.J. Harman commented on returning player Broderick Lantz.

Thats high praise, except Lantz isnt a receiver at all but for when Liberty lines up in the spread. Instead, he plays the role of fullback in the teams Stick-I offense, and he causes headaches from the position that likely remind some of the old Bridgeport iteration of the run-heavy scheme.

But even though Lantzs position traditionally plays the second fiddle to that of the tailback, at least by way of carries, Liberty has shown an inclination for different plans. Last year, Lantz carried the ball 169 times for 1,054 yards, combining with tailback Dalton Westfall for well over 2,000 rushing yards in one backfield.

The nice thing about Broderick is that hes unselfish about his position, Harman said. Hes not a kid thats counting his carries, hes just willing to do what it takes to win. That being said, we have to find a way to get the ball in his hands the way we have in the past.

That declaration seems to make sense. The senior was responsible for 14 rushing touchdowns and 362 receiving yards (a 16.5 yards per catch average), all while finishing sixth in rushing yards in the area.

Hes got a great combination of size, strength and speed, Harman said. I think hes naturally a wide receiver, but hes got the heart of a lion, so it works at fullback for him. Hes a hitter and a team player, and he has no problem making blocks for Dalton when its his time to carry the football.

I just think his selflessness, when you couple that with his athleticism, hes a coachs dream.

Its worthwhile to consider the touchdowns Lantz not only scored himself, but also those that Westfall scored, most with Lantz as lead blocker. Its not hard to say, then, that Lantz may well have had a hand in about 30 of the Mountaineers scores (Westfall scored 17 rushing touchdowns).

I just have to do whats best for the team, Lantz said. If Im called to carry, I have to run as hard as I can, and if the guy behind me is carrying, I have to make a hole.

Versatility isnt the only weapon Lantz brings to the table, however. Hes a four-year starter who began on the defensive side of the ball, where Harman said he continues to play as a safety in the Mountaineers 4-3 scheme and where he earned second team Class AA all-state honors last season.

His dad is the defensive coordinator, so there isnt a kid on this football team that knows what were doing better than Broderick, Harman said. He plays through the pain over there, with all the blocking he does on offense. Hes a very tough kid, physically and mentally, on both sides of the ball.

Four years of experience have paid off for Lantz, freeing him up to play with relative ease in the secondary.

It comes pretty natural now, he said. I just go out there and do it. Its slower now, I can see everything better. I can go after the ball and make hits without having to think first.

That will pay off in another way, as well. As the season approaches, Harman said his senior gives him a significant mental asset on the field.

Hes like having another coach on the field, and he comes into work every day with a great attitude, Harman said. He sets a great example for the younger guys.

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LETTERS: DeSantis claims to know nothing about the attack on the Liberty. – Daytona Beach News-Journal

Where are the wreaths for the known?

U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis recently told constituents of how he participated in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. He told us to remember and give thanks to those who gave their lives in the service of our nation, as they are the indispensable Americans without whom we would not be free.

Ernie Gallo of Palm Coast is the USS Liberty Veterans Associations president. On June 8, 1967, the USS Liberty, stationed in international waters, was attacked for two hours by the Israeli military. That left 34 U.S. sailors and Marines dead, 174 wounded and the Liberty the most decorated ship for a single engagement in U.S. Navy history.

The Navy Board of Inquiry following the attack was a farce and cover-up that included admirals threatening the survivors with court-martial, life imprisonment or worse if they ever spoke of the attack, as detailed in testimony to the commission convened by Adm. Tom Moorer, retired chief of naval operations and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Justice has been denied the men of the Liberty for 50 years. If moved to by his constituents, Rep. DeSantis could initiate a proper congressional investigation into the attack on the Liberty.

Like the men on the Liberty, DeSantis is a Navy man proud of his service as a JAG officer. He knows how a Navy Board of Inquiry is supposed to work. At noon on June 8, Gallo and his shipmates gathered at the tomb for their fallen crew members at Arlington National Cemetery. Although invited, Congressman DeSantis did not attend.

DeSantis claims to know nothing about the attack on the Liberty. We owe the 34 indispensable Americans who gave their lives on the USS Liberty. Its time we Americans let Congressman DeSantis know about it.

Phil Restino and Ernie Gallo

Restino, of Port Orange, is spokesperson for We Are Change Central Florida. For 10 years hes organized USS Liberty Remembrance Day events in Volusia County. Gallo, of Palm Coast, is the Liberty Veteran Associations president. For more info, see http://www.usslibertyveterans.org and http://www.honorlibertyvets.org.

Nation took a turn

Sometime in the past eight years of the Obama administration, our country took a sharp left turn. Liberals, the left and the media savored it while conservatives worried we were headed in the wrong direction. Hillary Clinton had a credibility and email problem. Bernie Sanders wanted a political revolution, but a concerned country elected Donald Trump. President Trump wanted to make America great again, repeal and replace unaffordable Obamacare, improve the economy, cut costly regulations and the size and scope of government, stop illegal immigration, rebuild our military, and reduce our taxes through tax reform. Democrats also have an agenda, which includes: treason, impeachment, Russian collusion, obstruction, tax hikes and single-payer, government-run health care. Republicans inability to agree on a fiscally sustainable fair alternative to the ACA would open the door to socialized medicine, loss of doctors and nurses, rationing of care, long waits, critical health decisions made by government bureaucrats and the death knell to free market insurance.

Margaret Thatcher predicted: Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They always run out of other peoples money. Yet half of all millennials, the largest emerging voter bloc, have a favorable view of socialism. Look at Venezuela with the richest oil supply in the world, collapsing into socialistic chaos while U.S. capitalism has produced the greatest wealth-producing economic system available. Will destroying President Trump and his administration produce economic prosperity and protect our freedoms or undermine and change our country forever?

Madeline Bizette

Port Orange

Excerpt from:

LETTERS: DeSantis claims to know nothing about the attack on the Liberty. - Daytona Beach News-Journal

TRAFFIC: Liberty Bridge, inbound Tunnel closing tonight | Pittsburgh … – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
TRAFFIC: Liberty Bridge, inbound Tunnel closing tonight | Pittsburgh ...
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The Liberty Bridge and inbound Liberty Tunnel will close overnight Thursday to prep for this weekend's construction work. The span will close from 8 p.m. to 5 ...
Weekend Liberty Bridge closure scheduled, but stormy weather ...Tribune-Review
Yet Another Liberty Bridge Closure This Weekend - Dormont, PA PatchPatch.com

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TRAFFIC: Liberty Bridge, inbound Tunnel closing tonight | Pittsburgh ... - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette