NASA moving ahead with plans for cislunar human outpost – SpaceNews

A Lockheed Martin concept of a cislunar outpost that could support future human missions to the moon or elsewhere. Credit: Lockheed Martin

GREENBELT, Md. Despite uncertainty about potential policy changes, NASA is pressing ahead with plans for a cislunar gateway outpost for future human missions, with decisions about how to develop it expected in the coming months.

Speaking at the American Astronautical Societys Goddard Memorial Symposium here March 8, Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA associate administrator for human exploration and operations, said he was studying concepts for launching the first elements of the proposed outpost as secondary payloads on early flights of the Space Launch System.

Theres starting to be a sense of urgency about selecting what to fly on those initial SLS missions to support development of the cislunar outpost, he said. Weve really got to start making some decisions about what that cargo is.

The outpost will be a collection of habitation, cargo and other modules that could support crews working in lunar orbit or elsewhere in cislunar space for extended periods. Orion spacecraft would ferry astronauts to and from the outpost, where they could test technologies and perform other work needed to support NASAs long-term plans for human missions to Mars in the 2030s.

Gerstenmaier said development of the outpost could begin with the second and third SLS missions, EM-2 and -3, which will be the first flights of the SLS to use the more powerful Exploration Upper Stage (EUS). That version of the SLS will have the ability to carry secondary payloads weighing up to several thousand kilograms within the rockets Universal Stage Adapter, an area between the EUS and Orion spacecraft.

Current schedules call for the launch of EM-2 as soon as 2021, which Gerstenmaier said pushes NASA to make decisions soon on what element of the outpost, if any, to fly on that launch. Weve really got to start making some decisions about what that cargo is, whom we partner with and how we build the equipment, he said. Youre going to see us, over the next several months, starting to make some pretty crisp decisions about what goes on those flights.

EM-1 and the moon

A wild card in those plans is the ongoing study of putting a crew on the first SLS/Orion mission, EM-1. That mission is currently scheduled to launch in late 2018 without a crew, but if NASA does decide to place astronauts on that mission, it would likely slip until 2019, pushing back EM-2 and later missions.

Gerstenmaier, in an interview after his conference presentation, said putting a crew on EM-1 could open up new possibilities for EM-2 and later missions. It makes EM-2 be more of an aggressive mission, and we can do more with the cargo thats behind the Orion capsule on that flight, he said.

Gerstenmaier and others cautioned that no decision had been made about flying crew on EM-1, as the study was ongoing. We realize the challenges associated with that. Thats not an easy task to do, NASA Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot said in remarks at the conference earlier the same day. I expect to hear pretty soon in terms what we could do.

The idea of the study had its roots in the potential for other delays in EM-1. Chris Shank, who led the NASA landing team for the incoming Trump administration late last year, said on a conference panel that Gerstenmaier informed him at a meeting that the service module for that mission, being provided by the European Space Agency, could be delivered several months late.

We asked, if given more time, if there are some additional things that you could do with the mission, Shank said. That led to consideration of flying crew on the mission. As part of the transition, there were no preconceived conclusions. This is genuinely a study on how to get the best bang for the buck.

Whether or not NASA decides to fly a crew on EM-1, theres widespread speculation in the space community that the Trump administration might redirect NASAs human spaceflight efforts towards lunar missions, including a human return to the lunar surface. Industry officials, though, said that a cislunar gateway would still be useful for human missions to the surface of the moon.

I would argue that none of it becomes obsolete. This was intended to be a first step, or an outpost regardless of ultimate destination, said Matt Duggan, exploration manager at Boeing, during a March 9 conference panel.

Boeing is one of six companies that received contracts in August from NASA as part of its Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships, or NextSTEP, program. The contracts call on the companies to develop designs for habitat modules that could be used on future cislunar habitats.

Some of the companies, like Boeing, have also developed more comprehensive cislunar outpost designs, which Duggan said takes into account their potential use supporting lunar landing missions, originally by international partners and not NASA. We may be talking more now about a U.S. trip to the surface of moon, he said, but an international trip to the surface of the moon has always been in the trade space.

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NASA moving ahead with plans for cislunar human outpost - SpaceNews

Meet ‘Europa Clipper’: NASA Mission to Icy Jupiter Moon Officially Named – Space.com

Artist's illustration of NASAs Europa Clipper spacecraft, which will perform multiple flybys of the ocean-harboring Jupiter moon.

NASA's upcoming mission to Jupiter's ocean-harboring moon Europa finally has an official name,and it's the one we've been calling it all along.

The $2 billion mission which will launch in the 2020s to assess Europa's potential to host life is called Europa Clipper, which has long been its informal moniker, NASA officials announced Thursday (March 9).

The name is a nod to the fast, three-masted sailing vessels known as clippers, which delivered a variety of goods around the world in the 19th century, NASA officials said.

"In the grand tradition of these classic ships, the Europa Clipper spacecraft would sail past Europa at a rapid cadence, as frequently as every two weeks, providing many opportunities to investigate the moon up close," they wrote in a statement Thursday. "The prime mission plan includes 40 to 45 flybys, during which the spacecraft would image the moon's icy surface at high resolution and investigate its composition and the structure of its interior and icy shell."

Astrobiologists regard the 1,900-mile-wide (3,100 kilometers) Europa, along with the Saturn satellite Enceladus, as one of the solar system's best bets to host extraterrestrial life. Both moons harbor oceans of liquid water beneath their icy shells. And both of these oceans are thought to be in contact with the rocky mantle below, making possible a lot of interesting chemical reactions, researchers have said.

The solar-powered Europa Clipper probe will set up shop in Jupiter orbit. During the Europa flybys, the spacecraft will use a variety of instruments to study the moon's ice shell and ocean, with the overall aim of assessing Europa's ability to support life as we know it.

In late 2015, Congress ordered NASA to develop a surface component for the Europa mission as well. The space agency is now studying the best ways to do that. The current vision calls for a stationary lander that would launch separately from the Clipper probe. Once it reached Europa, the lander would use three science instruments to search for signs of life in the ice just beneath the surface.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter@michaeldwallandGoogle+.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookor Google+. Originally published onSpace.com.

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NASA stunned by incredible photo near Saturn – Morning Ticker

This astonishing photo of a cosmic body orbiting Saturn is prompting some to call it a "space ravioli."

A new photograph has just been released by researchers using NASAs Cassini spacecraft near Saturn, and its getting the attention of many in the space community. This picture of the tiny, elusive moon Pan orbiting Saturn is prompting some to call it a space ravioli, and its the best picture weve yet gotten of this odd looking moon just 22 miles in diameter.

The images were taken back on March 7 after Cassini zoomed past the moon from a distance of just 15,268 miles. It is one of more than 60 moons that orbit Saturn, with many of them being quite small and irregularly shaped like Pan. Iapetus, for example, has drawn comparisons to a giant walnut because of its equatorial ridge, and Mimas has been likened to the Death Star because of a massive crater.

These many diverse moons are of huge interest to the scientific community. The giant moon Titan, for example, is the only other known cosmic body in our solar system other than Earth with stable bodies of liquid, although hydrocarbons rather than water make up these oceans. And Enceladus has been proposed a possible place where life could exist under because of its oceans underneath an icy crust.

NASA says on its website: Pan, the innermost of Saturns known moons, has a mean radius of 8.8 miles (14.1 km) and orbits 83,000 miles (134,000 km) away from Saturn, within the Encke Gap of Saturns A-ring. As it orbits Saturn every 13.8 hours, it acts as a shepherd moon and is responsible for keeping the Encke Gap open. The gap is a 200 mile (325 km) opening in Saturns A ring.

Pan creates stripes, called wakes, in the ring material on either side of it. Since ring particles closer to Saturn than Pan move faster in their orbits, these particles pass the moon and receive a gravitational kick from Pan as they do. This kick causes waves to develop in the gap and also throughout the ring, extending hundreds of miles into the rings. These waves intersect downstream to create the wakes, places where ring material has bunched up in an orderly manner thanks to Pans gravitational kick.

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NASA stunned by incredible photo near Saturn - Morning Ticker

CVTC Manufacturing Show showcases opportunities, technology – Leader-Telegram

Cole Hill knows what he wants to do in a future career.

I want to build motors V-8s probably, said the Colfax High School junior who spends time racing at the Red Cedar and Jim Falls tracks.

But just what does one study to prepare to build big engines? Hunter Sullivan of Chippewa Falls, a Chippewa Valley Technical College machine tooling technics student, had some ideas for him at CVTCs annual Manufacturing Show on March 2.

He told me about their CNC (computerized numerical control) machines and the careers, said Hill, who thinks he will eventually enroll at CVTC but he is unsure which program he will choose. I havent looked at any other places.

Introducing people like Hill to careers in manufacturing is a big part of CVTCs Manufacturing Show, which attracted about 1,600 people to CVTCs Manufacturing Education Center. Wonders of modern manufacturing were displayed and demonstrated in CVTC programs, including automation engineering technology, industrial mechanical, machine tooling technics, welding/welding fabrication and manufacturing, nano and industrial engineering programs.

About 40 manufacturing companies were also represented, with display tables highlighting their products and job opportunities.

Sullivan, a 2015 Chippewa Falls Senior High School graduate, connected with Hill as another young man who likes to work with his hands. I just like making things, Sullivan said. I took shop classes in high school with manual lathes and I thought that was pretty cool. But what I learn here is way more than they teach you in high school.

Sullivan is already working in manufacturing, doing some part-time laser cutting work at Riverside Machine. Im not doing CNC work, but hopefully when I finish school they will keep me on as a machinist, he said.

Visitors to the Manufacturing Show were able to take part in hands-on activities, such as trying their hand at welding, building a tiny flashlight with the help of manufacturing engineering technologist students, or playing with projects like a billiards game made by automation engineering technology students.

This is an opportunity to show off new technology, said CVTC dean of manufacturing Jeff Sullivan. The Manufacturing Show brings together alumni and people in the area, and shows off student projects. Our manufacturing partners come in and show the things theyre doing.

More opportunity

Several area high schools sent bus loads of students to the event. They toured local manufacturing companies prior to the show. Other students came on their own, or with their parents.

Menomonie resident Tim Frank, a CVTC graduate, attended the event with his wife and son, Nathan.

Hes interested in coming here next year, Frank said of his son. Hes working at a machine shop in Menomonie after school now. He saw this show was available and asked to come.

I really havent decided what program to take, Nathan Frank said. But it will probably be something in the machining area. Its making stuff. Its hands-on.

Dawn Schrankler and her husband brought their daughter, Kelsey, from Neillsville to the show. Were trying to get her interested in more of a selection, said Schrankler. She wants to be a veterinarian assistant, but were trying to broaden her horizons and open her eyes to other areas.

Not all of the people attending the show to explore careers were high school students or even recent high school graduates. Some seeking to change careers found plenty of older CVTC students who have followed a similar path.

This program is fantastic, said Casey Schellhorn, an student in CVTCs automation engineering technology program who graduated from River Falls High School in 2010. I wanted more opportunity than I had working in food service. I was looking for something interesting and found this on the CVTC website.

Schellhorn was stationed where he could explain to visitors how to play a miniature billiards game and also the pneumatics, electronics and sensors that made the game work. Other students were at the event to explain what they do, what they are learning, and the exciting opportunities available to them in manufacturing careers.

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CRSSD Festival Spring 2017 || Livesets – EDM Identity (blog)

CRSSD Festival Spring has kicked off festival season proper, relive the weekend with these epic livesets now!

San Diegos premierhouse and techno festival, CRSSD Festival Spring, has come and gone, but that doesnt mean we cant still enjoy the sick beats and amazing vibes that came with the sets over the weekend! Bringing yet another stacked lineup for this edition, it was hard to catch each act that we wanted to see and decisions had to be made as to who we should miss. With that in mind, we are glad to see some fans, sponsors, and artists themselves upload their sets from the festival. More will be added as soon as they released, so make sure to bookmark the page and check in at a later date!

Check out our full review of CRSSD Festival Spring from the eyes of MyStro HERE!

What was your experience like at the festival this year? Let us know in the comments or our Facebook Group!

SoundCloud | Mixcloud | YouTube

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Featured Photo Credit: Fixation Photography

Grant has been listening to electronic dance music since the early 2000s. Actively involved in the EDM community, Grant is an admin for the EDC & Coachella subreddits and their Facebook groups. Previously he has been part of several EDM startups and promotion companies such as Shamele55, Electric State of Mind and Q-Dance. Originally listening to trance artists such as ATB, Armin Van Buuren and Paul Oakenfold, Grant has expanded his listening experience to include a full set of genres ranging from hardstyle to deep house and has been regularly attending both festivals and club events since 2010.

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CRSSD Festival Spring 2017 || Livesets - EDM Identity (blog)

Collected Wisdom: Dr. Val Gene Iven combines love of sports with medicine – NewsOK.com

Dr. Val Gene Iven goes over some medical issues with Marcus Smart, an OSU basketball star from 2012-14. [PHOTO BY BRUCE WATERFIELD, OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY]

Val Gene Iven grew up in Pond Creek, north of Enid, then graduated from OSU and the OU Health Sciences. In 1993, he became the team doctor for University of Tennessee athletics. In 2007, Iven returned to OSU in the same role. Iven's brother, Van Shea, was the longtime Channel 4 sports reporter who now is on staff with the Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Association.

I was born in Enid. I'd have had to be born at the house if I was born in Pond Creek.

Growing up in Pond Creek, small-town values, to me those are the best days of my life. Just because the community, your work ethic, growing up on a farm, school system, everybody in town knew you. Can't beat that.

I thought at a pretty early age I wanted to be a doctor. Probably somewhere in the junior high years. I loved the farm life but had terrible allergies, just couldn't be around wheat dust. I could be on the tractor, but the wheat dust just ate me up. So I kind of thought, I want to be a doctor. Had a great role model in Enid, my pediatrician, Dr. (Robert) Shuttee. Went to college, and that's the route I went and never wavered.

Got my M.D. from OU Health Sciences Center. Stayed there, did my residency there in family medicine. Then stayed there and did a fellowship in primary care sports medicine. I was the first fellow that they had in primary care sports medicine.

I thought I wanted to go into medicine and probably thought early on, I just liked kids, maybe going into pediatrics. But I loved sports. Grew up around sports. Tried to combine the two worlds.

Right out of my fellowship, '93, there were a couple of openings at Division I, Tennessee and Florida. Interviewed with both. Tennessee, got the call back from them first. Didn't know anybody at Knoxville or anybody affiliated with the university. I remember telling mom and dad, I'm going to go do this for two or three years and I'll be back. Dad reminded me of that when I came back 13 years later.

This job is a lot that you don't learn in med school. There's just so much nowadays, from the NCAA, from the Big 12. It's much more than just being a physician. From all the things we do in regards to training, from rehabilitation, from nutrition, the whole world of drug testing. All of the people that you have to communicate with nowadays, in regards to coaches and administrators and families. So it's grown so much over the years, it's just a full-time job.

The opportunity brought me back to Stillwater. I had kept in contact with people. And Dr. (Mark) Pascale, our orthopedist, called and said the team physician, Dr. Ken Smith, who had replaced Dr. (Donald) Cooper, decided he was just going to fulfill a role in the student health center and they were looking for somebody full time. It was just an opportunity I couldn't pass up. Your folks are back in Oklahoma. My grandmother at the time was nearing 100. Kids having the opportunity to be around their grandparents. Being back at your alma mater.

Great opportunity in the SEC, meet those people. Now back at your alma mater for 10 years. I've just been blessed.

I missed most of Coach (Eddie) Sutton. But yeah, we've had unprecedented times now, in regards to the run we've had in football, in particular. When I first got back in '07, we were in the process of building. I remember (growing up) sitting in the end zone, wasn't bowled in. Dad and I would drive over on a Saturday, just for the game, drive back. Just wasn't near the world it is now, game day or facilities. So we've come a million miles.

Van Shea is six years younger. Mom thought she was pretty clever with our names. Dad's name is Gene. So she started with Val Gene. She'd heard there was a Val Gene's restaurant. I think that was part of it. And once she came up with Val Gene, she couldn't go with Frank. So she had to come up with something. And we've both been called each other's names.

I'm completely just Van Shea's brother. Anywhere I go, anybody I'm introduced to, it's all, Oh, your Van Shea's brother. And I'm proud of that.

Pond Creek is our roots. That's your family. That's what you're always going to remember and go back to in life in regards to kind of where you got your values and knowing people. I credit a lot of things I've learned through the years, dating back to my days from grade school and high school in Pond Creek.

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Trying to ‘change the culture of medicine’ by letting patients decide what gets researched – CBC.ca

A new approach to medical research in Canadalets patients help decide what gets studied, and how.

No longer are scientists toiling away in labsin isolation. Patients and their family members or caregiversare increasingly involved behind the scenes,working alongside researchers, doctorsand decision-makers at all stages of the research process.

"Fairness and justice would say these people have got the disease surely they should have a bit of a say," says Dr. Andreas Laupacis of Toronto's St. Michael's Hospital.

As a health researcher at the Li KaShingKnowledge Institute, he's advocated that patients should be more involved in setting research priorities.

For him, the light bulb went off during a visit to the JamesLindAlliancein the U.K., which works withpatients to establish "top 10" research priorities for a variety of medical conditions.

He's now used the same methods with several groups in Canada. The first one involved patients with chronic kidney disease who were receiving, or approaching the need for, dialysis.

Once patients were brought into the process, they identified that itching was a major problem, an issue that had received practically no research attention. In fact, four of the top 10 priorities they came up with were hardly being studied at all.

Emily Nicholas Angl has helped hospitals, governments and other organizations engage patients in health research. (Emily Nicholas Angl)

Emily Nicholas Anglhas spent the past eight years trying to bridge the gap between researchers and patientsafter her own encounters with the health care system led her to advocate for more patient involvement.

She says working alongside researchers is a new idea for many patients, who are used to participating only as subjects in studies or clinical trials.

"Understanding why it makes a lot of sense [to get involved] isn't always that obvious," she says. "But once they do, everyone feels like this is important and meaningful."

The Canadian government threw its support behind the idea in 2011, when the Canadian Institutes of Health Research launched its Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research,or SPOR. At its heart was a mandate to get patients involved as partners in health research.

SPOR now funds a number of networks that include patients in the research of chronic diseases such as kidney disease, chronic painand diabetes.

Dr. Adeera Levin is one of the principal investigators at the Can-SOLVE network, which received funding to involve patients and Indigenous people in research on chronic kidney disease. A council of more than 30 patients from across the country helps guide all aspects of the research projects.

"What we're trying to do is change the culture of medicine by putting patients in all our activities," she says.

It's hadits challenges. Researchers and patients have had to find a common language free of scientific jargon. Dialysis machines also need to be made accessible at the group's meetings in cities across Canada. But for Levin, involving patients has helped focus the research on what's important.

"Sometimes if you're really trying to change the way you understand a disease or care for a group of patients, having them there is very groundingand makes you much more efficient."

In addition to nationalnetworks like Can-SOLVE, every province now has its own organization to foster patient-oriented research.

Virginia Vandall-Walker leads patient engagement for Alberta's SPOR Support Unit, which was first out of the gate in 2013. Her team communicates with researchers who want to get patients involved in their work, and helps them recruit patients, add patient engagement to theirgrant applicationsand facilitate sessions with patients.

Patients with chronic kidney disease are engaged in all aspects of research projects at the Can-SOLVE CKD network. (Can-SOLVE CKD Network)

She notes that some of the researchers who are getting involved are well regarded in their fields, and she hopes they will help engage other researchers from the province.

And she says that because the initiatives are so new, various groups across the country continue to learn from each other and make improvements. "It's like we're in the test tube," she says.

Health researcher Dr. Donald Redelmeier sees a number of upsides to patient engagement in research, but cautions that there are some drawbacks.

He points out that it can be a time-consuming process for researchers who are already facing a tremendous amount of work in launching a new study.

"Maybe it's worth their time, but that's a bit of an open question," he says.

He also points out that the slow, incremental movement of science, and the inevitable failures, can be disheartening for patients who also must invest a lot of time.

For Emily Nicholas Angl, though, the past eight years havetaught her that patients are often keen to lend their expertise.

"I'm always amazed by how much people want to improve things for others," she says. "The altruism is vast in the patient community."

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Evangelical Acquires Central Penn Interventional Pain Medicine in Williamsport – NorthcentralPa.com

WILLIAMSPORT -- Evangelical Community Hospital has acquired the practice of Central Penn Interventional Pain Medicine (CPIPM) in Williamsport. With the acquisition, Shiyi Abla-Yao, MD, lead practitioner of CPIPM, joins the Evangelical family of physicians.

Dr. Abla-Yao will continue practicing at the CPIPM location as well as at the new Pain Medicine of Evangelical practice at West Branch Medical Center (WBMC), Lewisburg. Construction at Pain Medicine of Evangelical at WBMC is expected to be completed in March with the office opening for patient care in April 2017.

Kendra Aucker, President and CEO of Evangelical, said, The addition of CPIPM and its seasoned professionals to the Evangelical family is another example of the Hospital listening to what the community needsin this case, specialty relief from painand finding the best possible way to make it available to them.

This acquisition represents a perfect fit for both Evangelical and Dr. Abla-Yao, ensuring patients have seamless access to the pain management care theyve received in the past as well as the opportunity to take advantage of Dr. Abla-Yaos expertise at a new location.

Were excited to be part of this venture with Evangelical, said Dr. Abla-Yao. As a physician, there is nothing more rewarding than helping patients be relieved of ailments that hinder them from living life fully.

With over two decades of experience in anesthesiology and pain medicine, Dr. Abla-Yaos expertise is a welcome addition to the new Pain Medicine of Evangelical practice. She received her Bachelor of Science in Nursing Degree in Nursing from Gwynedd Mercy College, Gwynedd Valley, Pa., and went on to receive her Doctor of Medicine Degree from Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. She completed her residency in anesthesia with an emphasis on multidisciplinary pain management and an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medicine Education (ACGME) fellowship in Pain Medicine at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Dr. Abla-Yao is no stranger to Evangelical Community Hospital, in 2000 she was integral in the establishment of a pain clinic at the facility and worked with the Evangelical Surgical Center in treating a wide variety of pain syndromes. She has maintained her relationship as a courtesy staff member at the Hospital from 2011 to present.

Dr. Abla-Yao is board certified by the American Board of Anesthesiology including certification in anesthesiology, pain medicine, and medical acupuncture. She is a professional member of the American Medical Association, the American Society and the Pennsylvania Society of Anesthesiologists, the American Academy of Pain Medicine and of Medical Acupuncture, and the International Spine Injection Society.

For more information about Evangelical Community Hospital and its family of services, visit http://www.evanhospital.com.

Evangelical is a non-profit organization that employs over 1,600 individuals and has more than 170 employed and non-employed physicians on staff. The Hospital is licensed to accommodate 132 overnight patients, 12 acute rehab patients, and 18 bassinets. The Hospital serves residents throughout the Central Susquehanna Valley, including those living in Snyder, Union, Northumberland, and Lycoming counties.

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Evangelical Acquires Central Penn Interventional Pain Medicine in Williamsport - NorthcentralPa.com

New trends and troubles for AI in medicine – SiliconANGLE (blog)

Medicine is a complex field. So complex that any given person cant know more than a fraction of whats going on. Keeping up with the latest discoveries is impossible. Machine learning and other forms of artificial intelligence offer a new way of looking at medicine and a great power to automate medical tasks.

At the South by Southwest conference event in Austin, TX, a panel of experts came together to discuss the state of medical AI and how machine learning can benefit both patients and doctors. The discussion was moderated by Kay Eron, general manager of health and life sciences at Intel.

The conversation opened with a look at how the panelists found themselves in the machine learning field. Naveen Rao, Ph.D., vice president and general manager of artificial intelligence solutions at Intel, answered that his interest came from a realization that machines werent all that different from biological beings. He was also concerned with how skills were so individual.

Its always been strange to me that knowledge is locked away inside a few individuals, he said.

My mission is to put powerful analytic tools in the hands of every decision maker, said Bob Rogers, chief data scientist for analytics and AI solutions at Intel. He stated that we need tools to navigate this very complex world we live in.

When asked about current trends, neural networks came up instantly. John Mattison, MD, assistant medical director and chief health information officer, Southern California region, at Kaiser Permanente, explained that engineers are discovering that neural nets have increasingly evolved toward how living brains work. Because of this, he felt there was a real role for looking at biological examples for technical solutions.

Rao backed up this thought, offering that neural networks represent the world in almost the same way the world is built. All data in the world seems to be hierarchical, and people can break it down.

One of the things thats changed in machine learning, you could use data to make models, but they had limited utility. You had to do a lot of work up front. Whats exciting in this new generation, it can learn from example data without preprogramming, said Rogers.

The world of genetics has also offered incredible new tools to medical practitioners. Machine learning and genetics together show awesome potential. The panel spoke on some of the challenges to overcome before that potential could be realized.

The cost of testing used to be an issue, but that cost has since been dropping. In its place, the threat of data discrimination has become a prime concern. People simply wont share their medical information if theres a chance it could be used against them. Without shared data, it will be hard, if not impossible, to create the massive sample sizes machine learning needs.

Secondly, in medicine, good enough isnt good enough. Trust is an issue. The proof points in the technology are really important to start with, Rao said. He continued, saying the technology must be well beyond the experimental point before people can trust it.

Another concern the panel shared was the response from the Food and Drug Administration. The panel admitted the FDA would love to change its procedures to keep up with the pace of technology, but government, much like medicine, is a conservative creature that moves slowly. On the other side, companies resist opening their research to the kind of transparency the FDA requires.

Even with these hurdles, the combination of medicine and machine learning offered huge business opportunities. Mattison shared his thoughts on the subject, saying that things are changing so fast the real opportunities are in generalized solutions and areas that will last through the change.

What are the kinds of applications that are most impactful? Rogers asked. He mentioned the least-trained person in the medical field was the patient themself. An AI agent could help them navigate their complex healthcare future.

Medical research is mostly a case of accidents, and the systems involved are too complex to model, Rao mentioned. Neural network techniques, however, could make those impossible models possible.

Watchthe complete video interview below, and be sure to check out more of SiliconANGLE and theCUBEs coverage of the South by SouthWest (SXSW). (*Disclosure: Intel sponsors some SXSW segments on SiliconANGLE Medias theCUBE. Neither Intel nor other sponsors have editorial control over content on theCUBE or SiliconANGLE.)

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Liberty Bowl to honor ex-Memphian Tim McCarver – The Commercial Appeal

FILE - In this July 21, 2012, file photo, Tim McCarver greets the crowd before accepting the Ford C. Frick Award for excellence in baseball broadcasting as part of the Baseball Hall of Fame Induction ceremonies at Doubleday Field in Cooperstown, N.Y.(Photo: Heather Ainsworth/AP)

He lives in Sarasota, Florida, and owns a residence in Napa, California, but Tim McCarver, the former major league all-star catcher and broadcaster, says hell always have an affinity for his hometown.

And his hometown continues to reciprocate.

McCarver, 75, will receive the AutoZone Liberty Bowl Distinguished Citizen Award in a ceremony June 25 at the Memphis Hilton. The award has been presented to a wide range of prominent Americans through the years. Past recipients include Elvis Presley, former Ole Miss and NFL quarterback Archie Manning, FedEx founder Fred Smith, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospitalfounder and actor Danny Thomas, Holiday Inn founder Kemmons Wilson, and legendary football coaches Bear Bryant and Lou Holtz.

The honor is very nice, McCarver said. Im very flattered. Any time you receive an honor whose origin is your hometown, its very, very special.

McCarver said he moved from Memphis in 1978, but in reality, I never really left.

My friends that are there people that have been my friends since childhood, or at least after high school they are people that are going to be friends for the rest of my life, he said.

McCarver was a Christian Brothers High standout in football and baseball in the late 1950s and began his pro baseball career as a 17-year-old. His 21-year major league career spanned four decades, the majority of those seasons spent with the St. Louis Cardinals. In 1964, he was named MVP of the World Series after hitting .478 and helpingthe Cardinals beat the New York Yankees in a seven-game series.

Following his playing career, he moved into broadcasting and began a second career that ultimately earned him a place in the broadcasters wing in the Baseball Hall of Fame. McCarver was an analyst for 16 World Series broadcasts and remains in the booth, on a limited basis, doing Cardinals broadcasts on Fox Sports Midwest. He said hell work about 30 games this season.

"He was born and raised in Memphis," said Steve Ehrhart, executive director of the bowl game. "He is perfect for us to recognize."

Ehrhart said McCarver will join a group of a past honorees "who have distinguished themselves" to reach the pinnacles of their respective fields.

Although the Liberty Bowl didnt move to Memphis until the mid-1960s, McCarver has followed the game through the years. He said there was a brief period he got involved with the game as a representative, or bowl scout, when the bowls sent representatives to `scout potential teams.

I traveled for the bowl, I made two trips to the University of Missouri, he said. In fact, the first one was in 1969 and Harry Caray was still doing (play-by-play) for the University of Missouri football games.

McCarver said Caray, the longtime baseball play-by-play announcer for the Cardinals at the time, invited him to be his halftime guest and talk about the Liberty Bowl. Instead, McCarver said, Caray spent someof the interview discussing his and McCarver's recent exits from St. Louis. Caray left to become play-by-play announcer for the Oakland A's (followed by stints with the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Cubs) and McCarver departed in a trade to Philadelphia.

The honor will be the second McCarver has received from his hometown since retiring from full-time broadcasting. He recently was elected into the CBHS Hall of Fame, which gave him another opportunity to rekindle friendships from an earlier era.

Ive never forgotten Memphis, McCarver said. And I never will. Its part of my legacy.

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Liberty Bowl to honor ex-Memphian Tim McCarver - The Commercial Appeal

Liberty County constable recovering from accident – Houston … – Chron.com

By Vanesa Brashier, vbrashier@hcnonline.com

Justin Johnston works on rehabilitation exercises with Gabby Macias ofTIRR Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston.

Justin Johnston works on rehabilitation exercises with Gabby Macias ofTIRR Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston.

Liberty County constable recovering from accident

A Liberty County constable who suffered a traumatic brain injury on Feb. 15 after being hit by a truck is making a rapid recovery.

Pct. 1 Constable Justin Johnston is not ready for marathons just yet but with a little more therapy, he could once again chase fugitives. Just three weeks after the accident that nearly claimed his life, Johnston is walking, talking, playing his guitar and completing exams that test his cognitive abilities.

His recovery is nothing short of remarkable. Johnston has another word for it miraculous.

"It literally was the prayers of God's people that saved my life," the 39-year-old lawman said. "I don't deserve any credit. I am just a guy who went to work to provide for his children and to be a responsible person. I am not a superhero. I got hit by a truck but God showed up and spared my life because His people were crying out for mercy for me."

Johnston cannot recall large chunks of time on the night he was hit. Only small snippets remain, which he has pieced together into a more complete account with the recollections of his fellow peace officers, some of whom witnessed the accident and immediately began performing life-saving procedures on Johnston.

"My memories are fuzzy. I remember certain things, certain sounds. I remember being on the helicopter when it took off and being scared. I remember being in the ambulance," he said. "People who have come to visit me and were on scene after the accident have helped me fill in a few more details, but I don't remember actually being struck."

His doctors at the TIRR at Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston have told him he could be released as early as the end of the month as long as he continues to make progress. He's certainly doing his part. On Friday, as part of his daily therapy, he spent 15 minutes on an elliptical machine and then took three flights of stairs back to his hospital room.

"You took those stairs like a boss," teased his girlfriend, Steffani Erickson. "You just shimmied up the stairs so fast. It's so awesome."

Johnston smiled back at her and then added, "Therapy has been great. I've been working my tail off. I've been doing a lot of core strengthening and a lot of balance exercises. We walk around the whole complex. Yesterday, my therapist walked with me to Starbucks. I got to have some coffee, which was cool."

Erickson and the constable's other loved ones have maintained an around-the-clock vigil at the hospital. A schedule posted on his hospital room wall helps them keep track of who will be with him on any given day. He will need the help for a few more weeks as he must undergo one more surgery to replace the section of skull that was removed immediately after the accident.

"You can tell the whole right side of my head is off. They took that section of my skull out. It's in the freezer somewhere at the hospital. About 90 days after the initial injury, they will put it back," he said.

He knows he has an uphill battle to regain his energy and achieve a sense of normalcy.

"The old normal is a thing of the past. I have to get to a new normal," he said. "Right now my equilibrium is a bit off. My balance is also off at the moment. I know it sounds very dramatic but I kind of feel like I had to learn to walk again."

Johnston will also be sporting a brain-protecting hat for the next few months until the skull fracture is healed. He is optimistic about the future and feels confident he will be able to return to his elected position. He estimates returning to work before summer begins.

"I am expecting to be back at work in the middle of May. I won't be out kicking in doors and taking in bad guys just yet, but I'll get there slowly," he said.

Johnston also is looking forward to acknowledging the people who saved his life.

"I have a lot of 'thank yous' to say and a lot of necks to hug," he said.

He is confident that his life was spared for a reason.

"I have an amazing story to tell. I don't believe the Lord caused the accident or even made it to happen. I don't even know if I would go so far as to say he allowed it to happen, but it happened and just like it says in Job, though he giveth and taketh away, I will still praise him. That's my story," he said. "There is no doubt in my mind that the Lord has a special plan for my life."

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Liberty County constable recovering from accident - Houston ... - Chron.com

Liberty, No. 9 St. John’s split baseball doubleheader – Augusta Free Press

Published Sunday, Mar. 12, 2017, 12:33 am

Front Page Sports Liberty, No. 9 St. Johns split baseball doubleheader

Join AFP's 112,000+ followers on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube Subscribe to sports and news podcasts on iTunes News, press releases, letters to the editor: augustafreepress2@gmail.com Advertising inquiries: crystalabbegraham@gmail.com Phone: 540-949-6574

A sacrifice fly by third baseman Trey McDyre provided the Liberty Flames with a 7-6, walk-off victory over the No. 9 St. Johns Red Storm in game two of a doubleheader, Saturday at Liberty Baseball Stadium.

After Flames relief pitcher Zach Clinton stranded the go-ahead run at third in the top of the ninth inning, first baseman Sammy Taormina opened the home half of the ninth with an opposite field double and moved to third on a single by second baseman Andrew Kowalo. Red Storm reliever Gavin Hollowell then hit left fielder Jake Barbee to load the bases. McDyre followed by lifting a fly ball to right field to plate Taormina and give Liberty the 7-6 victory.

With the win, Liberty splits its doubleheader with St. Johns. The Red Storm took game one, 4-2. Liberty moves to 9-6 on the season, while St. Johns falls to 12-2.

The visiting Red Storm took a short-lived lead in the top of the third. With one out, designated hitter Gui Gingras singled and second baseman Josh Shaw drew a walk. Left fielder Michael Donadio followed with a two-run double for a 2-0 edge.

In the bottom of the inning, the Flames sent 11 men to plate and scored a season-high six runs to take their first lead of the three-game series. McDyre and designated hitter Payton Scarbrough began the uprising with back-to-back singles. St. Johns right-hander Michael LoPresti then walked shortstop Josh Barrick and center fielder D.J. Artis to force in the first run of the frame. Catcher Matt Allen followed with a RBI single to tie the game at 2-2.

An error on Red Storm third baseman Kevin Buckley on a grounder by right fielder Will Shepherd scored Barrick and gave Liberty a 3-2 lead. Taormina then plated Artis with a sacrifice fly to up the Flames advantage to 4-2. Two batters later, Barbee lined an opposite field double into the left field corner to bring home Allen and Shepherd for a 6-2 lead.

St. Johns countered with two runs in its next at bat. First baseman John Valente, who had three hits in the contest, singled with one out and scored on a double by shortstop Jesse Berardi. Later, an infield single by right fielder Mike Antico brought home Berardi, cutting Libertys advantage to 6-4.

The Red Storm tied the contest with single runs in the seventh and the eighth. In the seventh, center fielder Jamie Galazins two-out single scored Donadio, who walked to lead off the inning. In the eighth, Berardi walked to lead off the inning and came around to tie the game at 6-6 on a sacrifice fly by Shaw.

Right-hander Zach Clinton moves to 1-0 on the year. The fourth Liberty pitcher of the contest, the redshirt sophomore pitched two scoreless innings, allowing one hit and walking a batter.

Hollowell drops to 0-1. The reliever gave up one run on two hits over the 2 1/3 innings. He struck out four and walked two.

Liberty collected eight hits in the contest. Taormina had two hits to lead the Flames. St. Johns had 12.

Up Next: Liberty will host the Saint Josephs Hawks, Tuesday at Liberty Baseball Stadium. Game time is scheduled for 3 p.m.

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Liberty, No. 9 St. John's split baseball doubleheader - Augusta Free Press

High school wrestling | Coffman’s Dom Demas, Liberty’s Brakan Mead grab state titles – The Columbus Dispatch

Rob Oller The Columbus Dispatch @rollerCD

Dublin Coffman senior Dom Demas spent Saturday afternoon watching The Hangover, which has a running time of 1 hour, 48 minutes or about 8,700 hours shorter than the sober but sick feeling Demas had to sit through since last March 14.

On that day, Demas failed to repeat as a state champion. After winning a title as a sophomore in 2015, he finished runner-up last year, thus the queasy stomach.

Especially doing worse than I did the year before? The feeling was awful," he said.

Then came Saturday night at the state wrestling tournament at Value City Arena, where Demas found the tonic for his ills by pinning Trey Grenier of Olentangy Liberty in the 145-pound weight class to collect his second title in three years.

Im ecstatic. It feels great to be back on top, especially after last years loss, said Demas, who has signed to wrestle at Oklahoma. Losing last year motivated me to work 10 times harder.

Brakan Mead lost last year, too. And the year before that. The Liberty senior placed second as a sophomore and third as a junior, and was fed up with coming up short. He changed that in a big way Saturday by scoring a 2-0 decision against Bryce Hepner from Lakewood St. Edwards in the championship match at 113 pounds, helping the Patriots secure third place in Division I for the second straight year.

I wanted that win for three years, Mead said. But its not like its just me. Im backed by the community and an amazing coaching staff. Its a pyramid. Im at the top but below that is so much. I know when I go out there its a family.

Liberty coach Mark Marinelli was thrilled for his senior, who he described as a wrestling junkie.

Hes lived the journey and paid the price, Marinelli said. Im so happy he won it.

The Central District picked up a third state champion when Circleville junior Nate Keaton (113) scored a tight 1-0 win against Dominic Carone of Streetsboro.

He was definitely ready for this weekend, said his uncle, Circleville coach Brad Keaton.

Central Ohio also experienced some painful losses, including Central Crossing junior Jaden Mattox, who dropped a 7-1 decision to David Carr of Massillon Perry at 152. Mattox was trying to win his second consecutive title, having won at 132 last year. Now comes the same path Demas faced.

I would say to (Mattox), Remember this moment, because its the worst feeling ever, Demas said.

But winning is the best, he added.

After pinning Grenier 30 seconds into the second period, Demas ran to the stands to celebrate with his family.

I gave my mom a big hug, he said. She had tears, like she did last year. Theyre just a different kind of tears this time.

Davidson junior Gio DiSabato (120) suffered a tough 5-4 loss when Elyrias Brendon Fenton scored a takedown with 42 seconds left. DiSabato was attempting to win the 17th state championship for the DiSabato family, a fixture in the Columbus wrestling community.

Coffman missed out on a second champion when Ben Frye (285) dropped a 5-2 decision to Kevin Vough of Elyria.

Lakewood St. Edwards won its 31st Division I team title, while St. Paris Graham easily walked away with its 17th consecutive championship, and 19th overall, in Division II. Mechanicsburg collected the Division III crown, highlighted by senior Kaleb Romero (170) becoming the 29th wrestler in Ohio High School Athletic Association history to win four titles. Romero, who has committed to Ohio State, led the crowd in an O-H-I-O cheer after pinning Brett Vonderwall of Delphos St. Johns 52 seconds into the Division III match. His four-year prep record is 202-3.

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High school wrestling | Coffman's Dom Demas, Liberty's Brakan Mead grab state titles - The Columbus Dispatch

High school boys hockey | Olentangy Liberty falls in state semifinal – The Columbus Dispatch

By Adam Conn The Columbus Dispatch

How do you stop a train?

It was a question coach that Jack Hoogeveen asked Saturday afternoon after Olentangy Liberty, which went into the third period trailing by a goal, got bulldozed by Toledo St. Francis for five goals in an 8-2 loss in a state tournament semifinal at Nationwide Arena.

Hoogeveen was referring to Kevin Hack (three goals, three assists) and Warren Natyshak (two goals, one assist), who combined for 22 shots and logged a plus-13 rating. The Knights (26-6), who attempted 58 shots on goal, advance to the final for the second time in three seasons.

We knew they had guys that can lug the puck and attack our (defense), Hoogeveen said. We knew their strength and we had trouble with it in the end.

The Patriots (32-8), who were limited to 21 shots on goal, weathered 13 first-period shots before one got past goalie Logan Senhauser. The Patriots tied it with 49 seconds remaining when Kent Stadulis chipped a pass from center ice to James Bursinger, who broke free for a wrist shot past the glove of Jacob Coward.

In the waning seconds of the first, however, Hack stole a clearing pass and snapped one over the glove of Senhauser to reclaim a 2-1 lead for the Knights.

What gets us there is our gray-zone passes, where we're just dumping the puck when we're trying to get it out, said Senhauser, who made 50 saves.

Liberty opened the second with a goal by Ron Ambrosia 38 seconds in. But once again, in the final minute, the Knights answered when Hack's backhander was stopped but settled neatly on Natyshak's stick for the winning goal.

It's deflating, Bursinger said. Like we've got to go out there and start all over again. We were able to do it for a while, just couldn't do it enough.

Natyshak scored his second goal 2:24 into the third, Ben Mitchell added a short-handed goal 5:44 in, and Gabe Barrow scored 90 seconds later. Hack then tallied an empty-netter two minutes later with Liberty on a 6-on-3 advantage, on a shot that sailed three-fourths the length of the ice. He earned the hat trick with three minutes remaining, also short-handed.

We tried to pull the goalie (on a two-man advantage) and steal some 'mo,' but they got the empty-netter. Talk about deflation. Hoogeveen said.

St. Francis outshot Liberty 21-9 in the second period, 22-7 in the third and won 39 of 62 face-offs.

Cleveland St. Ignatius 4, Hunting Valley University School 3, 3OT: Brian Kurtz scored 11 seconds into the third overtime, and St. Ignatius (28-7-2) rallied to defeat University School (28-10-1) in a state semifinal. St. Ignatius scored twice in the third.

aconn@dispatch.com

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High school boys hockey | Olentangy Liberty falls in state semifinal - The Columbus Dispatch

Knights snap Liberty Christian’s postseason streak – The Herald Bulletin

FRANKFORT The tears will dry, and the pain eventually will fade away. Then all that will be left is the legacy.

For the third straight season, Liberty Christian said goodbye to one of the greatest players in program history Saturday night.

Ronny Williams drained a 3-pointer on the final shot of his high school career, then buried his head in his jersey as the buzzer sounded. He walked that way moments later with his teammates to the locker room.

But he was back on the floor after Lafayette Central Catholic celebrated a 69-54 victory at Case Arena that gave Class 1A's top-ranked team its first regional title since 2013.

While the Knights made plans for next week's semistate, Williams greeted friends, family and former teammates on the court where he and his senior teammates have enjoyed so much success.

In the past four seasons, the Lions won 84 games. The loss in the regional final snapped a string of 11 postseason wins overall and seven in a row at Case Arena.

Seniors Williams, Trajan Dixon, Peyton Quinn and Osiris Crumes also helped the program extend its string of sectional titles to six. And, of course, they were a part of the school's first state championship in any sport a year ago.

"These seniors left us a huge gift, and that gift is that the cupboard is not bare for next year," Liberty Christian coach Jason Chappell said. "They care about the program, and they worked really hard to help develop these young guys. So those players are going to be better for it. That's great leadership."

Chappell asked the three seniors on the floor in the final period Williams, Dixon and Quinn if they wanted to come out and receive a final curtain call from the fans. They all declined in favor of playing out their final minutes.

"That just shows their character," Chappell said. "I'm so proud of them."

The championship tilt itself began to turn in the second quarter when the Knights used an efficient inside-out attack to knock down six 3-pointers and outscored Liberty Christian 21-10. That left the Lions with a 34-22 halftime deficit.

Liberty Christian (13-15) twice got within seven points in the third quarter but couldn't make a sustained run.

The Knights (21-6) took a 52-38 advantage into the final period and led by as many as 21 before the final buzzer sounded.

Avery Denhart and Jacob Page scored 19 points each to pace the victors. Ben Tharp and Carson Barrett each added 10 points, with Barrett a 6-foot-3 freshman also pulling down 10 rebounds.

"The first game took something out of us," Chappell said. "But LCC is a great team. They really work the ball around, and they're selfless on offense. It didn't go our way, and we struggled to execute our game plan. That happens.

"LCC's a great team, and they're ranked No. 1 for a reason."

Williams finished his marvelous career with 23 points, 13 rebounds and five assists. That followed up a triple-double of 15 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists in the 65-48 victory against Seton Catholic in the semifinals.

Dixon was the only other Lion in double figures with 16 points.

Long after the fans had left the arena, while a custodian with a leaf blower worked the bleachers, Williams and Dixon waited at one end of the court.

As the victorious Knights left the floor, each stopped and shared mutual congratulations with their opponents.

The final member of the parade was a 2-year-old child who ran as fast as tiny legs would allow in Williams' direction. The point guard bent down to embrace the child.

Then he rejoined Dixon and walked off the court for the final time.

"It's the end of their high school careers, but it's not the end of our relationship," Chappell said. "What will make me proud is to see them become great men of God, be strong in their marriages and strong in their work ethic. And I know these guys are going to do exactly that."

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Knights snap Liberty Christian's postseason streak - The Herald Bulletin

High school wrestling | Title out of reach, Olentangy Liberty still excels – The Columbus Dispatch

By Ray Stein The Columbus Dispatch

Mark Marinelli and his Olentangy Liberty wrestling team came to the state meet with designs on making history by becoming central Ohios first big-school team champion.

That blueprint likely was scrapped on the tournaments first day when four Liberty wrestlers lost their opening matches, putting the Patriots in an early hole that only deepened when three-time champion Kyle Lawson lost in a quarterfinal Friday.

But Marinelli and his crew still were able to make a statement on behalf of Columbus-area wrestling at Value City Arena, becoming the first Central District team to finish with more than 100 points in the big-school team standings.

Led by state champion Brakan Mead and seven other wrestlers who made the podium by finishing among the top eight, Liberty totaled 122 points 27 more than it scored a year ago and good enough for third place, matching the best-ever finish by a central Ohio team in Division I.

As usual, Lakewood St. Edward won the big-school team title, with 151 points. It was the Eagles 31st state title and 19th in the past 21 years. Elyria was second with 128.5, passing Liberty with only four matches remaining.

We came here to win, Marinelli said. We have a 10-year plan, and this year we thought wed have a great chance. A couple of matches got away.

But the Patriots masked any disappointment about missing the big prize by reveling in their resilience and their 27-point improvement from 2016, when they also placed third.

Its a real good team, Marinelli said. I told them, Im going to wake up tomorrow and have a coffee and a doughnut and the suns going to come out whether we win or lose. So why not make it taste a little better?

The Patriots tried to make it as sweet as they could Saturday, which began with them trailing Elyria by 19.5 points.

Worse, the Patriots learned before Saturdays matches that Lawson, who won the 160-pound title for Liberty as a junior and two previous titles for St. Paris Graham, would not wrestle because of an injury suffered in a consolation match Friday.

He hurt his knee on a whip-through, Marinelli said. His meniscus locked up on him. He wanted to wrestle (Saturday) but we wouldnt let him.

So Lawson defaulted to a sixth-place finish, but big performances by his teammates in consolation matches helped the Patriots overtake Elyria by the start of the championship-match session.

We had a real good morning, Marinelli said. Thats when you know your team is focused.

Trevor Lawson, Kyles younger brother, finished third at 170 pounds, and sophomore Connor Brady did the same at 152. Jordan Rosselli (120) and Mike Ezenekwe (220) placed fourth, and Blake Saito (106) was seventh.

Brady was especially key after losing to eventual state champion David Carr of Perry in the second round. Not only did Brady win all four of his consolation matches, but he recorded pins in each of them, racking up valuable bonus points.

I came out there trying to score the most points I could, Brady said. I was hoping to wrestle in the final, but that didnt happen. We wanted to win, too, but that didnt happen, either. So we worked to get the next-best thing.

Meads title at 113 pounds helped keep Liberty in front, but Trey Grenier was beaten in the 145-pound final and three of Elyrias four finalists won titles to pull ahead.

(Friday) I said we cant win them all. And this morning we tried to, Marinelli said. Im proud of them.

rstein@dispatch.com

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High school wrestling | Title out of reach, Olentangy Liberty still excels - The Columbus Dispatch

Humane Libertarianism: A New American Liberalism, a lecture hosted by SLU slated for March 15 – North Country Now

CANTON -- St. Lawrence University will host economist Deirdre McCloskey at 7:30 p.m. on March 15, in Hepburn Hall, room 218.

The event is part of the Department of Economics Visiting Speaker Series in Political Economy and is funded by the Charles Koch Foundation.

McCloskeys lecture, Humane Libertarianism: A New American Liberalism, is free and open to the public.

An economist, historian and rhetorician, McCloskey the author of more than 400 peer-reviewed academic articles and 17 books, including "Economical Writing: A Memoir and most recently Bourgeois Equality: How Ideas, Not Capital or Institutions, Enriched the World, the third volume in the trilogy The Bourgeois Era."

McCloskey earned a bachelors degree and Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University and taught at the University of Chicago, the University of Iowa, and the University of Illinois at Chicago, from where she retired as the distinguished professor of economics, history, English and communications at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

For more information, contact the Department of Economics at 315-229-5430 or visit http://www.stlawu.edu/economics.

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Humane Libertarianism: A New American Liberalism, a lecture hosted by SLU slated for March 15 - North Country Now

UN Declares World’s Greatest Humanitarian Crisis Since 1945 – Being Libertarian

United Nations humanitarian chief Stephen OBrien declared that the world is facing its greatest humanitarian crisis since 1945.

With more than 20 million people facing starvation and famine in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Yemen, OBrien is pleading for help in order to avoid catastrophe.

Without a global humanitarian effort,it is likely that people will simply starve to death, and that many more will suffer and die from disease.

In his statement to the UN Security Council on Friday, OBrien called for a collective global effort to provide aid to the people involved. Below is an excerpt of that statement:

We stand at a critical point in history. Already at the beginning of the year we are facing the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the United Nations. Now, more than 20 million people across four countries face starvation and famine. Without collective and coordinated global efforts, people will simply starve to death. Many more will suffer and die from disease. Children stunted and out of school. Livelihoods, futures and hope will be lost. Communities resilience rapidly wilting away. Development gains reversed. Many will be displaced and will continue to move in search for survival, creating ever more instability across entire regions.

Each country listed above suffers from very different circumstances.

In Yemen, according to BBC, a majority of 14.1 million people are facing famine while the country is simultaneously embroiled in a vicious civil war.

Nigeria has been fighting against the terrorist militant organization Boko Haram, which has killed 15,000, and displaced more than 2 million Nigerians from their homes. The extent of Nigerias famine wasnt known until recently, as studies of its internal problems are difficult to undertake due to the military conflict with Boko Haram.

In South Sudan, the UN believes that 40% of the population 4.9 million people require food and nutritional assistance, with 100,000 of directly facing starvation.

Weather patterns attributed toEl Nio in Somalia have killed off livestock and crops, leaving 6.2 million people in urgent need of assistance. Six years ago the most recent Somalian famine the death toll was almost 260,000 people.

Photo Credit: UNICEF

This post was written by Nicholas Amato.

The views expressed here belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect our views and opinions.

Nicholas Amato is the News Editor at Being Libertarian. Hes an undergraduate student at San Jose State University, majoring in political science and minoring in journalism.

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UN Declares World's Greatest Humanitarian Crisis Since 1945 - Being Libertarian

Thousand Islands goes cold in second half, loses 56-32 to Watkins Glen in Class C regional – Syracuse.com

By Pat Spadafore | pspadafore@syracuse.com on March 11, 2017 9:36 PM, updated March 11, 2017 9:53 PM

The Thousand Islands girls basketball team was able to figure out the Watkins Glen first half press, but had trouble scoring in the second half, losing 56-32 in the girls Class C basketball regional on Saturday at Tompkins Cortland Community College.

The Vikings (21-2) overcame three first quarter 10 second back court violations and trailed just by two points, 12-10 when the first quarter ended. Courtney Evans-Eppolito scored seven of her team-high 22 points in the second quarter as Thousand Islands trailed 28-19.

But the shots failed to fall in the second half for the Vikings, who didn't make a basket until there were four minutes left in the game. Thousand Islands finished with just three buckets in the second half, all from Evans-Eppolito.

Watkins Glen (20-2) was led by Amanda Pike with a game-high 30 points. The Senecas leading scorer converted on 13 of 15 free throws in the game.

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Thousand Islands goes cold in second half, loses 56-32 to Watkins Glen in Class C regional - Syracuse.com

Indonesia declares more outermost islands – Jakarta Post

In an effort to protect the country's border areas against foreign territorial claims, the government has declared 111 outerislands, which include some previously not stated as border areas.

Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti welcomed Presidential Decree No. 6/2017 on outermost islands, the new regulation signed by President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo,which revises a 2005 decree that only named 92 islands.

The newly mentioned islands include Bintan and Berakit in the province of Riau Islands and Nusa Penida in Bali.

The enactment of these [111] islands is to prevent issues of occupation or claims of possession by other nations, said Susion Saturday, as quoted bytribunnews.com.

(Read also:Indonesia to secure ownership of 111 islets)

The latest government move comes after several disputes over peripheral islands with neighboring countries Malaysia and Singapore.

Last year, Indonesia was also involved in a spat with China over fishing activities in waters near Natuna Island.

(Read also:Jokowi inaugurates new airport terminal in Natuna)

The government, according to Susi, will keep close watch over the 111 islands to prevent activities like drug smuggling, human trafficking andillegal fishing.

The minister also expressed her hope that natural resources in the outermost and remote islands could be utilized in the interest of the local people and the government. (mrc/wit)

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Indonesia declares more outermost islands - Jakarta Post