Q&A: Floyd Abrams on the battle for the soul of the First Amendment – Columbia Journalism Review

The facade of the Newseum in Washington, DC, features the First Amendment. Photo via PublicDomainPictures.net.

Attorney Floyd Abrams, who represented The New York Times in the 1971 Pentagon Papers case and went on to become Americas leading First Amendment litigator, talked with CJR about President Trumps unprecedented assault on the press, whether leaks from government officials are appropriate, and how the growing acceptance of speech restrictions is an ominous sign for our democracy. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

CJR: I know youre busy, so lets get straight to it. Shortly after the election, you said Donald Trump may be the greatest threat to the First Amendment since the passage of the Sedition Act of 1798. Why is he a threat?

Abrams: I dont think weve had anyone who ran for the presidency in a manner which suggested the level of hostility to the press than did Donald Trump. And we certainly havent had any president who has made as a central element of his presentation while in office a critique of such venom and threat as weve heard in the last month. Now, we dont know how much is talk and what if anything he may do as president apart from the impact of his words. That in and of itself is important. Any effort to delegitimize the press as a whole and any recitation of statements such the one just a few days ago, saying that the press is the enemy of the American people, itself raises serious issues even if he never took any legal steps against the press. Words matter. And the words of the president matter particularly. So a president that basically tells the people that the press is its enemy is engaged in a seriousand deliberately seriousthreat to the legitimacy of the press and the role it plays in American society.

CJR: How do you see this as unique to Trump as opposed to say the Nixon administration? Is this more of a wholesale condemnation of the press?

Abrams: Yes. This is an across the board denunciation of any and all press organizations that have published or carried stories which have been critical of the president. That goes well beyond anything President Nixon did. That said, its perfectly true to say that throughout American history weve had presidents who disparaged the pressJefferson himself did that more than once, sometimes amusingly, and sometimes not. Teddy Roosevelt authorized a criminal proceeding to be brought against Joseph Pulitzer for certain stories about the construction of the Panama Canal. So, its still earlyvery earlyin the Trump administration, but the signs are troubling, and the repeated effort to delegitimize the press as a whole is something new and extremely disturbing.

CJR: How could Trump, with his executive powers, actually launch an assault on the press that could threaten the First Amendment?

Abrams: He could do some of the things that President Nixon made some efforts at doing. The Internal Revenue Service has confidential information about the press leaders as well as everyone else. The Federal Communications Commission has broad authority over the broadcast medium. The Department of Justice has authority to determine when to bring Espionage Act claims. So, there are areas of governmental power and authority which could be called upon if a president were of a mind to do so and was willing to engage in a still more overheated public debate about the bona fides of any effort to do so.

CJR: Trump and others have denounced the culture of illegal leaks in Washington and called the deep state a threat to our democracy. Im wondering, what do you see as the difference between leaks by Edward Snowden or Daniel Ellsberg and their role in a functioning democracy, and the recent leak about National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, who was forced to resign after information was released about his meeting with Russian agents before Trump took office?

Abrams: First, let me say that Im not in favor of all leaks. I dont think the government should simply be open to anyone who has access to it, and I think that the behavior of WikiLeaksand in my view sometimes the behavior of Edward Snowdenmakes that case. I think there were documents, highly classified documents, made available by Snowden that had nothing to do with domestic surveillance, and a good deal to do with the ordinary and entirely proper efforts of the United States to protect itself in a dangerous world. That said, however, the information provided about former General Flynn seemed to me amongst the most important sort of data that served the public interest in becoming public. I mean here is a situation in which it appears that the very day that President Obama imposed sanctions on Russia that there were conversations, the substance of which we dont yet know, but conversations between General Flynn and a Russian ambassador and perhaps other Russian authorities. So from my perspective the central issue about him is not that he lied about it to the vice president. Vice presidents have been ignored throughout American history, and Im sure theyve been lied to more than once by people who viewed themselves as having more relevant positions. What concerns me is the possibility that General Flynn was essentially saying to a foreign nation that is adverse to our interests: Pay no attention to what the president of the United States is doing, well take care of that down the road. That would be highly improper and perhaps illegal.

CJR: So when people say Snowden was praised for revealing the surveillance of ordinary citizens, which is what people who use this argument say Michael Flynn was at the time, as well as Paul Manafort, Trumps former campaign manager, they are in fact not just ordinary citizens when they are speaking with foreign actors that are known agents, is that correct?

Abrams: Yes. A person who is closely involved with a president-elect is hardly the same as the people that WikiLeaks exposed by printing or making available the Social Security numbers of every sundry employee whose documents happen to come into WikiLeaks possession. So the more important the person and the more the person has a potentially direct impact on American public policy, let alone American national security, the more defensible it is in certain circumstances to find out information about his behavior and to reveal it to the public. And I think thats precisely where the revelations about General Flynn fit.

CJR: This administration has targeted the use of anonymous sources in particular, arguing that they are somehow fake or just a product of leaks with political intent. Do you think the press can do a better job of using anonymous sources?

Abrams: Well, a part of this relates to the manner of presentation. Is there a more revealing way to let the public know why the journalistic organization believes these sources are credible? One way they can do that, The New York Times and other publication routinely do, is use numbers. Six confidential sources said this. Where there is a way to identify why this source is credible, without revealing the identity of the source, or providing too much identity on how to determine who the source is, it should be followed. I dont think this is a fake news problem, this is a credibility problem. And its very important at this time that the press say as much as they possible can justifying their reliance on the sources that they have. Otherwise, you just wind up with White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus or President Trump saying there are no sources, and no one having any basis to judge apart from ones own view as to the credibility of the publisher thats offering this information to the public.

CJR: In that same vein, youve said that the press may need to go on the offensive in terms of using litigation against claims by this administration that certain news stories are lies and certain news organizations progenitors of fake news.

Abrams: What Ive said is that there are situations that I could imagine in which statements made by the president or people high in his administration could give rise to libel litigation. Every other democratic nation that I can think of, all of which provide less First Amendment protection than we do, have some body of libel law, and libel suits are brought under them. I dont believe that its illegitimate for the press to avail itself of libel law in certain extraordinary circumstances. Now no one should know better than the press that we protect under the First Amendment a high levelan extraordinary levelof name calling, of generalizations, and rhetorical hyperbole. We do that on purpose. And I dont think that a general statementfor example, that the news is fakeis anything but that. The president is entitled to First Amendment rights as well as everyone else. And its important for the public to be able to hear and pass judgment on the president, and what hes saying, and what hes thinking. But there are things that might be said about particular journalists or particular news organizations which are false and known to be false by the person saying them. While the press is understandably used to defending libel suits, it ought to bear in mind that it has rights, too. And if the charges against it are clear enough, false enoughobviously known to be falseI think it should not give up the chance to use all the protections that the law affords it.

CJR: You famously represented the plaintiff in Citizens United defending the First Amendment rights of a conservative nonprofit corporation. Do you see the assault on free speech coming not just from Trump but also from speech codes and other speech restrictions on college campuses? Is there some relationship between whats happening with restrictions on speech on the left and whats happening on the right?

Abrams: I dont think one causes the other. But I do think that the farther down the road we go of limiting speech, whether its of the left or the right, the easier it is to use that precedent to limit others speech. So, yes, on campuses one of the main victims, and they are victims, of suppression of speech has been conservative groups. At Fordham University in 2012 here in New York, for example, the Republican Club wanted to invite Ann Coulter to speak and they werent allowed to do it. Basically the school said it would be alright if you had her on a panel. Thats a sort of disgraceful suppression of speech, and its occurred elsewhere at many universities. In 2013, the New York City police commissioner at the time, Ray Kelly, was shouted down at Brown University. Last year, the Israeli mayor of Jerusalem was shouted down at San Francisco State. Weve got a lot of situations in which speech has been limited or suppressed in an unacceptable way. Now I have to say, I dont think that President Trump would behave any differently than he does, or would have any different views than he does, whether or not this campus plague of speech suppression had occurred. But I am concerned that there has been on both sides and in a number of different contexts a willingness to limit speech, punish speakers, and otherwise act in a contrary way to both the law and the spirit of the First Amendment.

CJR: A 2015 survey of some 800 undergraduate students, sponsored by the William F. Buckley Jr. Program at Yale, found that 51 percent of students favor their school having speech codes and trigger warnings. Nearly one-third of the students could not name the constitutional amendment dealing with free speech. And 35 percent said that the First Amendment does not protect hate speech. Does that make it easier for the president and his administration to attack speech they disapprove of and the press in general?

Abrams: Well, yes it does. Ive thought for some time that one of the real contributions of any administration would be to take whatever steps they could to re-impose a requirement of a civics course in junior high schools or high schools in America. We need people who are educated about the Constitution in general and the First Amendment in particular at young ages, not the moment they get into college. But to the extent that we are moving towards living in a nation that simply accepts the notion that speech which is viewed as unhealthy or troubling should not occur, First Amendment norms fall easily. And to be clear, I mean First Amendment norms on the broadest level not just legal violations of the First Amendment but what I referred to earlier as the spirit of the First Amendment; that is an acceptance of the notion that people will have a lot of different views on a lot of different subjects, many of which will be difficult or even impossible to seem to live with, but which we at our best have always protected.

CJR: Its interesting that you bring up that civics course. I was just discussing this with Jeffrey Herbst, president of the Newseum in Washington, DC, which does a lot of outreach to try to teach young people about the First Amendment, but also about how to be a consumer of news, which to me seems extremely important.

Abrams: I couldnt agree more. And this one is not Donald Trumps fault, or one partys fault, or one view of the countrys fault. We really have abandoned our children to a very great degree in terms of teaching them what it is that makes the country so special, including the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the First Amendment. And its something which I think has to be taught while people are young. I dont blame college kids who get in and want people to behave nicely to each other. A lot of bad speech is nice speech. So it asks a lot of them to just pick up the notion that this is the price we have to pay to live in a free country, and that sort of teaching has to start much earlier.

CJR: Final question. Are you hopeful that, as much change as weve gone through in the news industry, the First Amendment will prevail and well continue to see the presss watchdog role played in different forms, through different business models, online and elsewhere?

Abrams: On that I am optimistic. I think the public wants it. I think there will be a market for it. Whether the press will be powerful enough to fend off presidential power is one issue. But on the broader issue of whether were likely to continue to have a press that exists in a meaningful way and does continue to fight the good fight, I think thats more likely than not. Thats one of the big advantages of having written the Bill of Rights down. I start out my latest book, The Soul of the First Amendment, talking about the Framers arguing whether to have a Bill of Rights at all. In Philadelphia, they voted against the Bill of Rightsunanimously. And Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist, why should we write down something which is so unnecessary? We never said Congress could limit the press; why do we have to say it cant? And if the ultimate decision had not been made to have a written First Amendmentwhich is law, not just a political-science essaywe would live in a very different country. Because we have a First Amendment, I think it will continue to protect us against the widest range of challenges.

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Q&A: Floyd Abrams on the battle for the soul of the First Amendment - Columbia Journalism Review

Barring Reporters From Briefings: Does It Cross a Legal Line? – New York Times


Bloomberg
Barring Reporters From Briefings: Does It Cross a Legal Line?
New York Times
The judge said that the New York Police Department may have violated the First Amendment by revoking the press credentials of the journalist, Jason B. Nicholas. The ruling was preliminary, and the Police Department said it had legitimate reasons for ...
Trump's Love-Hate Relationship With the First Amendment ...Bloomberg
9 Top First Amendment Experts React to White House Press Briefing Ban on CNN, NYT, othersJust Security
Did White House exclusion of press violate First Amendment? Norman Siegel says suit should be filedABA Journal
Conservative Review
all 12 news articles »

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Barring Reporters From Briefings: Does It Cross a Legal Line? - New York Times

Goodwins’ fight against land grab and First Amendment violations gaining national attention – Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) (press release) (blog)

The Goodwins

This weekend, Forbes carried an excellent story about PLFs fight on behalf of Edward and Delanie Goodwin. In July, PLF attorneys filed a First Amendment challenge to protect the Goodwins right to speak on their own private property. Walton County banned signs on privately owned beaches last year, hoping to allow the public to trespass on private beaches without having to pay for the use. County officials threatened the Goodwins with large fines for keeping two private property signs and one small sign saying If Walton County Wants My Property, It Must Pay For It U.S. Constitution.

In September, the County agreed to temporarily stop enforcing the sign ban. But then in October, it passed an ordinance declaring that the public has a right of custom to use private beaches across the entire county. PLF responded by challenging the Countys blatant land grab as a violation of the U.S. Constitution.

Today, on National Review, George Leef shares more about the Goodwins case, stating,

I read about lots of cases of governmental villainy, but this one is among the worst.

National Reviews Roger Clegg also gave PLF a special shout-out for representing the Goodwins for free (as we do for all of our clients, thanks to our donors generosity). He said,

The generosity and inclusive spirit of PLF are underscored by the fact that, even though it is named after that West Coast ocean, it is happy to litigate on behalf of the owners of beachfront property in Northwest Florida.

Clegg is right. We have cases from coast to coast, with offices in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida; Arlington, Virginia; Bellevue, Washington; Honolulu, Hawaii; and Sacramento, California. We have cases pending in many more states, because government poses threats to liberty across the nation. As Leef wrote this weekend,

At all levels, government poses constant threats to our rights and only through eternal vigilance, as Thomas Jefferson observed, can we protect them.

Read the rest of Leefs excellent Forbes article about the Goodwin casehere.

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Goodwins' fight against land grab and First Amendment violations gaining national attention - Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) (press release) (blog)

Deletable blockchain might make cryptocurrency more user-friendly – TNW

Thanks to the amount of technical savviness one needs to posses to use them,many cryptocurrencies are rather inaccessible for average users. PascalCoin a new cryptocurrency is ready to change this with deletable blockchains.

The project has made considerable headway since releasing its first beta version in July last year.According to The Merkle, there is a lot of trading activity and buzz aroundthe new altcoin but as of yet there are no merchants or platforms accepting it as a payment option.

PascalCoin is therefore not going to oust bitcoin any time soon, but it does employ interesting new strategies to create a cryptocurrency. Instead of relying on transaction history in blockchains, like most other cryptocurrencies, PascalCoin uses safebox with a safebox hash.

The safebox feature makes it unnecessary for the end user to download a blockchain of historical operations, making PascalCoin the first cryptocurrency to do that. The balance is included in each block of the blockchain so the chain can be deleted without affecting the ability of making transactions.

By saving the balance of the account on each block, thenew altcoin hopes to simplify cryptocurrencies and become moreappealing to the general public. Instead of long hacker-esque series of random numbers and letters, PascalCoin features up to 10-digit account numbers that include the balance and make the experience more similar to regular bank accounts.

The safebox is also meant to avoid the issues that have been detected with bitcoin. One of those issues beingdouble spending, when people attempt to do two transactions with the same funds, which is aknown problem with bitcoins.

When discussing cryptocurrency, the issue of traceability often arises. Many worry that cryptocurrency can aid criminals in their illegal dealing, although that might be changing. Pascal Coin will not be any more untraceable than bitcoin, even though it allows you to delete the blockchain. Deleting the blockchain can make the transaction history more obscure but anybody that possesses the full block chain will be able see it.

Its way too early to tell whether PascalCoins take on cryptocurrency will change anything about the future of cryptocurrency. However, new additions to the world of digital currencies are always interesting, especially if they bring it closer the public.

PascalCoin Is A Cryptocurrency With a Deletable Blockchain on The Merkle

Read next: First Uber, now Tesla: Employee sues over sexism, inappropriate conduct

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Deletable blockchain might make cryptocurrency more user-friendly - TNW

$1,210: Bitcoin Price Hits New All-Time High Amid Sustained … – CoinDesk

Bitcoin is showing no sign of dropping below its all-time highs.

Aftertrading above $1,000 for more than two weeks, the bitcoin price has now provided what analysts believe is ample evidence the digital currency's price has established a floor at this level.

The cryptocurrency has been enjoying its longest stretch above $1,000 in history, a period it began on 14th February.

During this period, bitcoin prices have been pushing steadily higher, reaching a new all-time high of $1,186.33 on 23rd February and then rising to new record levels over the following sessions, according to the USD CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index (BPI).

The digital currency most recently hit a fresh all-time high today, when it reached $1,210.16 at 03:00 UTC, BPI figures show.

At the time of report, bitcoin prices had pulled back slightly from this level, trading at $1,196.38.

Many market observers have emphasized that bitcoin prices could soon enjoy significant upside if the SEC approves the proposed Winklevoss Bitcoin ETF, an investment fund which has an approvaldeadline on 11th March.

Traders have already incorporated this event into bitcoin prices, according to several analysts.

However, many market observers have projected that the proposed fund has low odds of receiving authorization from the government agency.

Investor and serial entrepreneur Vinny Lingham, for example, gave the fund 10-15% odds of being approved in a recent blog post, while Spencer Bogart, former analyst with investment bank Needham & Co LLC, has indicated the ETF's odds of approval are less than 25%.

While acceptance could fuel sharp price gains, a rejection could push bitcoin prices lower,analysts say.

Still, amid this uncertain situation, bitcoin prices have been experiencing little volatility in the last few days, moving largely between $1,170 and $1,210 even as they have enjoyed a steady, upward climb.

Price charts image via Shutterstock

Prices

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$1,210: Bitcoin Price Hits New All-Time High Amid Sustained ... - CoinDesk

NASA study hints at possible change in water ‘fingerprint’ of comet … – ScienceBlog.com (blog)

A trip past the sun may have selectively altered the production of one form of water in a comet an effect not seen by astronomers before, a new NASA study suggests.

Astronomers from NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, observed the Oort cloud comet C/2014 Q2, also called Lovejoy, when it passed near Earth in early 2015. Through NASAs partnership in the W. M. Keck Observatory on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, the team observed the comet at infrared wavelengths a few days after Lovejoy passed its perihelion or closest point to the sun.

The team focused on Lovejoys water, simultaneously measuring the release of H2O along with production of a heavier form of water, HDO. Water molecules consist of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. A hydrogen atom has one proton, but when it also includes a neutron, that heavier hydrogen isotope is called deuterium, or the D in HDO. From these measurements, the researchers calculated the D-to-H ratio a chemical fingerprint that provides clues about exactly where comets (or asteroids) formed within the cloud of material that surrounded the young sun in the early days of the solar system. Researchers also use the D-to-H value to try to understand how much of Earths water may have come from comets versus asteroids.

The scientists compared their findings from the Keck observations with another teams observations made before the comet reached perihelion, using both space- and ground-based telescopes, and found an unexpected difference: After perihelion, the output of HDO was two to three times higher, while the output of H2O remained essentially constant. This meant that the D-to-H ratio was two to three times higher than the values reported earlier.

The change we saw with this comet is surprising, and highlights the need for repeated measurements of D-to-H in comets at different positions in their orbits to understand all the implications, said Lucas Paganini, a researcher with the Goddard Center for Astrobiology and lead author of the study, available online in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Changes in the water production are expected as comets approach the sun, but previous understanding suggested that the release of these different forms of water normally rise or fall more-or-less together, maintaining a consistent D-to-H value. The new findings suggest this may not be the case.

If the D-to-H value changes with time, it would be misleading to assume that comets contributed only a small fraction of Earths water compared to asteroids, Paganini said, especially, if these are based on a single measurement of the D-to-H value in cometary water.

The production of HDO in comets has historically been difficult to measure, because HDO is a much less abundant form of water. Lovejoy, for example, released on the order of 1,500 times more H2O than HDO. Lovejoys brightness made it possible to measure HDO when the comet passed near Earth, and the improved detectors that are being installed in some ground-based telescopes will permit similar measurements in fainter comets in the future.

The apparent change in Lovejoys D-to-H may be caused by the higher levels of energetic processes such as radiation near the sun that might have altered the characteristics of water in surface layers of the comet. In this case, a different D-to-H value might indicate that the comet has aged into a different stage of its lifecycle. Alternatively, prior results might have ignored possible chemical alteration occurring in the comets tenuous atmosphere.

Comets can be quite active and sometimes quite dynamic, especially when they are in the inner solar system, closer to the sun, said Michael Mumma, director of the Goddard Center for Astrobiology and a co-author of the study. The infrared technique provides a snapshot of the comets output by measuring the production of H2O and HDO simultaneously. This is especially important because it eliminates many sources of systematic uncertainty.

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NASA study hints at possible change in water 'fingerprint' of comet ... - ScienceBlog.com (blog)

St. Charles 54, Hannan 45: Jordan Arceneaux leads Comets into Division III quarterfinal round – NOLA.com

(13) ST. CHARLES54, (4) HANNAN 45

At Hannan, Tuesday (Feb. 28), Division III second-roundplayoff game

Records:St. Charles (13-14); Hannan (28-3)

HOW IT WAS WON

Patience was the key as St. Charles was able to stay a few steps ahead of Hannan and move on to the quarterfinals round of the Division III state playoffs.

Early on, the Hawks took momentumwith a three-point play. However,the Comets hit half of their shots in the first quarter, including three 3-pointers and tooka 15-10 lead, despite the fact Hannanhada 9-3 edge in rebounding.

The Comets led 21-20 at halftime, but the Hawks had trouble hitting field goals in the third quarter, while at the same time St. Charles was hot, shooting 75 percent. They also helped their cause with a slim edge in rebounding.

Duringa three-minute stretch, the Comets were able to turna one-point deficit into an eight-point lead as Arceneaux scored eight duringan 11-2 run to put the team ahead, 34-26. As Hannan fell further behind, they had no choice but to foul, and St. Charles took full advantage, hitting six of eight in the last 90 seconds to preserve the victory.

NOTABLE

** Hannan had won 22 straight games before losing Tuesday.

** Hannans previousloss was 84 days ago, to Division III top seed Dunham, 64-49.

SCORE BY QUARTER

End of first: St. Charles 15, Hannan 10

End of second: St. Charles 21, Hannan 20

End of third: St. Charles 37, Hannan 33

Final: St. Charles 54, Hannan 45

INDIVIDUAL SCORING

St. Charles: Jordan Arceneaux, 8-13, 6-7, 20; Tommy Charles, 4-5, 0-0, 10; R.J. Knighton, 3-5, 0-0, 8; Sam Delaney, 2-4, 1-4, 6; Christian Montz, 3-4, 0-0, 6; Owen Bourgeois, 0-0, 4-4, 4

Hannan: Norris Williams, 10-15, 1-1, 21; Pierce Dennis, 3-6, 2-3, 9; Brooks Murrell, 3-6, 0-0, 6; Shawn Beattie, 2-5, 0-0, 5; Nick Daniel, 2-4, 0-0, 4

HE SAID IT

Norris Williams (Hannan) We knew that St. Charles was a good team, but we could have played a lot better. Their offensive sets were a challenge.

Jordan Arceneaux (St. Charles) The game was about who was tougher and who could run their system the best. We ran our stuff well, and not get sped up, and make our shots. Were going to keep working hard and giving it our best.

Mike Senna (Hannan coach) They are an unbelievably, well-coached team. They strategy was to make it a half-court game and move the basketball, and be patient offensively and kind of slow the tempo down. Our strategy was to get it and to, get it and go, creating as many possessions in the game as possible. Our strength is in transition and we wanted to create as many possessions as possible.

Kemper Todd (St. Charles coach) At this point in the season, its not really strategy, but more of who runs their system the best. Were both a man-to-man, motion team, and thats what the game was.

NEXT UP: St. Charles faces fifth-seededEpiscopal in the Division III quarterfinals round.

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St. Charles 54, Hannan 45: Jordan Arceneaux leads Comets into Division III quarterfinal round - NOLA.com

Quick Read: Comets clinch first outright Northern Lakes title since … – Petoskey News-Review

HARBOR SPRINGS The Comets' star duo of seniors Kash O'Brien and Michael Elliott have carried Mackinaw City throughout the past two seasons, so it was only fitting the pair were the stars once again on Monday.

O'Brien scored 34 points, his seventh game this season of 30 or more points, and Michael Elliott chipped in 20 as the Comets clinched their first outright Northern Lakes title since 2008 with a 74-61 win over host Harbor Light.

"Conference titles have been few and far between for the Mackinaw boys, which makes this win, and outright title even better," Mackinaw City coach John Martin said. "It was a very special night for our two seniors, as they have not experienced (a conference title) over their careers."

Mackinaw City (14-4, 13-1 NLC) finishes the season with nonconference games at Engadine today, Tuesday, and at DeTour on Thursday, while Harbor Light (8-11, 7-7) wraps up the season at home against Maplewood Baptist today, Tuesday.

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Quick Read: Comets clinch first outright Northern Lakes title since ... - Petoskey News-Review

Chitwhins or nemesis? Taholah ends Comets’ State hopes – Chinook Observer

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Taholahs Zach Cain drove past multiple Naselle defenders early in Friday nights regional playoff game.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Naselle coach Brian Macy motivated his team during a timeout in Friday nights game with Taholah.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Taholahs Brett Orozco defended Naselles Corey Gregory near the sideline.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Naselles Antonio Nolan tried to get a shot off in the lane against Tahloahs Zach Cain in Friday nights loss.

TUMWATER Taholah was the obstacle that never left the path of the Naselle Comets all season. After dashing Naselles hopes of league and District titles this season, the Chitwhins eliminated the Comets from the playoffs with a 76-47 win at Regionals on Feb. 24.

With a trip to Spokane on the line, Naselle and Taholah were in a tight defensive battle early on, with the Chitwhins leading 13-10 near the end of the first quarter. Chitwhin star Zach Cain had a five-point possession with about 34 seconds left in the period. He zipped down-court, hit a shot while being fouled, and rebounded his own missed free throw. He then scored again while being fouled, this time converting the three-point play for an 18-10 lead.

The high-flying Cain and Tom Anderson, along with other Taholah defenders, kept meeting the Comets at the rim, rebuffing their attacks on the basket. Naselle kept coming, though. Donny Edwards hit a driving layup early in the second quarter, then led a three-on-one break for another basket. Antonio Nolan and Ian Fontanilla buried three-pointers, cutting the lead to 27-20 midway through the second.

Edwards, who scored 14 of his 19 points in the first half, continued to attack, hitting a pair of tough pull-up shots from near the free throw line. However, the Chitwhins were generating much easier shots, and the game got away from Naselle late in the second quarter. Anderson repeatedly got open and caught long outlet passes, getting seven points and an assist on such plays in the final minutes of the quarter. During that same stretch, Brett Orozco hit his third three-pointer of the game. Taholah pulled out to a 45-24 halftime lead.

Theyre quick and athletic, Naselle coach Brian Macy said of Taholah. They took advantage of some of our mistakes, some quick shots, to get out running.

The Comets brought a press in the second half, but the Chitwhins handled it and extended their lead to 28 after three quarters.

The Comets, during a rebuilding year in which they had no seniors, finished the regular season 12-8 and went 2-2 in post-season play, with both losses coming to Taholah. Next year will be the Chitwhins turn to rebuild, as they will return only one starter, Cain.

For Taholah, Anderson and Orozco each scored 18 points, and Cain added 17. Edwards scored 19 points for Naselle, and Antonio Nolan had 10.

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Chitwhins or nemesis? Taholah ends Comets' State hopes - Chinook Observer

Red Devils down Comets 58-39 – Chinook Observer

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Naselles Taylor Gudmundsen looked to the referee after she was called for a travel rather than the foul she received from Neah Bays Starlena Halttunen during Saturdays regional playoff loss.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Naselle seniors Ellie Chapman and Tayler Ford walked off the court for the final time as high school players Saturday after being subbed out late in the fourth quarter.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Naselle senior Ellie Chapman received heavy defensive pressure from Neah Bay defenders during Saturdays game.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Lilli ZImmerman looked to pass inside to a Comet teammate under heavy pressure from Neah Bay defenders.

DAMIAN MULINIX/For the Observer

Naselles Hailey Weston peeked through a bevy of Lady Reds defenders after having the ball stripped from her by multiple players Saturday.

TACOMA Spotty shooting and a physical mismatch led to a regional round exit from the 1B playoffs for the Naselle High School girls basketball team on Feb. 25 in Tacoma.

The Comets had a hard time matching up against the bigger Neah Bay Red Devils, who had a deep bench and seemed willing to play rough if it meant a trip to State, which they got, with a 58-39 win.

Solid defense by the Comets and poor shooting by the Red Devils kept the score to a close 14-9 in the first quarter Saturday morning. But a stretch of nearly two quarters without converting a field goal doomed the Comets. Neah Bay resorted to slapping, grabbing and shoving at both ends of the court, and seemed to frazzle Naselle, who were regularly fouled each time down the court but rarely received the call. From around the six-minute mark in the first quarter until halfway through the third, the Comets only points came on free throws. The Red Devils outscored the Comets 30-13 in the second and third quarters.

Hailey Weston ended the drought with a bucket at 3:37 in the third quarter, followed shortly by a breakaway lay up by Taylor Gudmundsen, who led the Comets with 9 points, followed by Ellie Chapman and Lilli Zimmerman with 7 each. The Comets won the fourth quarter, 18-14.

The Comets finished the season 16-7, and went 12-0 in Coastal League play, where they were the league champs, and placed second at district.

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Red Devils down Comets 58-39 - Chinook Observer

Comets softball off to flying start, exceeds combined win total of past three seasons – Nevada Herald

Comets first-year head softball coach Mark Skapin, has the Comets off to a terrific start. (Photo courtesy of Cottey College)

Enter first-year head coach Mark Skapin, who through the first 10 games of the season has already guided the Comets to four victories.

"At 4-6 we are still not where we want to be, but we are competing extremely hard in every contest," Skapin told the Daily Mail. "The team is young and relatively inexperienced, so the experience in these close games will pay off over the long haul."

Prior to arriving at Cottey, Skapin was an assistant softball coach at Southeastern Community College in Whiteville, N.C. A press release distributed by Cottey said that Skapin "served as the hitting and defense coach leading the team to a strong second half finish. Prior to SCC, he was the head varsity softball coach for Holy Name High School in Ohio."

Skapin said he is embracing the challenges that lie ahead.

"The biggest key in turning the program around is changing the culture to one that embraces making mistakes, and learning from those mistakes to continue to grow daily," he said. "The program now focuses a vast majority of our time on skill-building and enhancing our softball IQ. I feel that it is much easier to have the team compete day in and day out when they can see growth every day."

Skapin emphasized his top priority is changing the culture, as he quickly looks to put his stamp on the Comet softball program.

"I have a completely different approach, and it isn't always easy to get every player to see the value in what we are doing right away," he said. "The first year is always the most challenging year to get everyone on the same page, but we are most definitely moving in the right direction."

Skapin discussed upcoming obstacles he and his squad will likely face.

"Cottey includes a trip to Europe during (students) sophomore year, so about a third of the team will be spending the first week of spring break in Italy," he said. "The rest of the team will take the first week and go home to engage in some active rest and recovery. "

Cottey split a twinbill with Evangel University on Monday, and will now remain idle until they return from spring break March 18 with a road contest against St. Louis Community College.

"When we return for training during the second week of spring break we will be preparing to kick off regional-play," Skapin said. "Our pitching has not nearly been as sharp as we need it to be to compete within the region and, although we are scoring a ton of runs we still need to work on our approach at the plate. The second half of the season will definitely test us as we start to get into the tougher portion of our schedule."

As Skapin noted, Cottey has been torching opposing pitchers to the tune of a .342 team batting average. The Comets have also been nearly flawless on the basepaths, swiping 29 bags in 32 attempts.

"We believe we can score runs with anyone," Skapin asserted. "Our biggest weaknesses have been pitching, and in not playing a more aggressive style of defense. We have moved people all over on defense trying to determine the best fit while promoting competition. We're still trying to gel and learn to play with one another."

Player breakdown

Skapin discussed several of his players who have had the biggest impact through the first 10 games of the season.

"(Starting pitcher) Marisa Jervis has been an incredibly important addition to this team," he said. "She is a stabilizing force in the circle and the team has so much confidence in her. She does a great job of spotting the ball and keeping hitters off-balance while maintaining great composure no matter the circumstances.

Skapin said Izzy Milligan, Michala Coffman, and Hannah Bridges have keyed the Comet offense.

"Izzy is hitting .543 and is on pace to break just about every offensive school record this season," he said. "She is also getting a ton of opportunities in the field and has yet to make an error. Izzy (previously) played at an extremely high level in Texas, and her love for the game stands out on every play."

Coffman, the team's leadoff hitter is out with a concussion.

"She too was on pace to break every offensive school record prior to getting injured," Skapin said. "Michala has already tied the school record for triples and is hitting .478."

Coffman is also the ace of the Comets pitching staff.

"We have sorely missed her pitching over the last four games," Skapin said. She is currently leading the team in ERA and has the ability to keep hitters off-balance with her screw ball, changeup, and drop-curve."

Bridges has also opened the season red-hot at the plate.

"Hannah is having a tremendous impact for us in the batters box," Skapin said, noting Bridges is hitting .333 with two home runs and five extra base hits, to go along with a team-leading 10 RBIs.

"The freshman class in general is buying into what we are doing and they come ready to work hard day in and day out," said the first-year coach. "I'm very proud of what they have accomplished so far."

Skapin continued: "I am extremely excited about the future of this program. The 2016 (recruiting) class is making major strides and the 2017 class coming in looks incredibly strong with recruits from California, Arizona, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Missouri.

"I believe that if this group continues to work as hard as they have and the incoming class comes in hungry that this program can be turned around very quickly."

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Comets softball off to flying start, exceeds combined win total of past three seasons - Nevada Herald

Canucks Recall Bachman, Rendulic from Comets – NHL.com

Vancouver, BC - Vancouver Canucks General Manager Jim Benning announced today that the club has recalled goaltender Richard Bachman and forward Borna Rendulic from the AHL Utica Comets.

Bachman, 29, has appeared in 26 games with the Comets this season, posting a record of 12-11-3 along with a .909 save percentage and 2.60 goals-against average. In the 2015.16 season, Bachman posted a record of 17-12-5 along with a 2.75 goals against average and .900 save percentage with the Comets. He also made his debut with the Canucks last season, registering a win on October 30, 2015 at Arizona. The 5-10, 183-pound goaltender has played in 44 career NHL games, amassing a record of 18-14-2, a 2.93 goals against average and a save percentage of .904.

Bachman was signed by Vancouver as a free agent on July 1, 2015. He was originally selected by Dallas in the fourth round, 120th overall, at the 2006 NHL Entry Draft.

Rendulic, 24, has appeared in 52 games with the Comets this season, recording 9 goals, 5 assists (9-5-14) and 20 penalty minutes. In the 2015.16 he appeared in three games with Colorado and 68 games with San Antonio, where he registered 38 points (16-22-38) and 41 penalty minutes. The 6-2, 200-pound forward has appeared in 14 NHL regular season games over parts of two seasons with Colorado, collecting a goal and an assist (1-1-2) along with six penalty minutes.

A native of Zagreb, Croatia, Rendulic was the first player born in Croatia to sign a contract with an NHL franchise when he was signed by Colorado as a free agent on May 19, 2014.

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Canucks Recall Bachman, Rendulic from Comets - NHL.com

Psoriasis Treatment Options | STELARA (ustekinumab)

STELARA (ustekinumab) is a prescription medicine that affects your immune system. STELARA can increase your chance of having serious side effects including:

STELARA may lower your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections. While taking STELARA, some people have serious infections, which may require hospitalization, including tuberculosis (TB), and infections caused by bacteria, fungi, or viruses.

You should not start taking STELARA if you have any kind of infection unless your doctor says it is okay.

After starting STELARA, call your doctor right away if you have any symptoms of an infection (see above).

STELARA can make you more likely to get infections or make an infection that you have worse. People who have a genetic problem where the body does not make any of the proteins interleukin 12 (IL12) and interleukin 23 (IL23) are at a higher risk for certain serious infections that can spread throughout the body and cause death. People who take STELARA may also be more likely to get these infections.

STELARA may decrease the activity of your immune system and increase your risk for certain types of cancer. Tell your doctor if you have ever had any type of cancer. Some people who had risk factors for skin cancer developed certain types of skin cancers while receiving STELARA. Tell your doctor if you have any new skin growths.

RPLS is a rare condition that affects the brain and can cause death. The cause of RPLS is not known. If RPLS is found early and treated, most people recover. Tell your doctor right away if you have any new or worsening medical problems including: headache, seizures, confusion, and vision problems.

Serious allergic reactions can occur. Stop usingSTELARA and get medical help right away if you have any symptoms such as: feeling faint, swelling of your face, eyelids, tongue, or throat,chest tightness, or skin rash.

Tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, including prescription and overthecounter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Know the medicines you take. Keep a list of them to show your doctor and pharmacist when you get a new medicine.

When prescribed STELARA:

Common side effects of STELARA include: upper respiratory infections, headache, and tiredness in psoriasis patients; joint pain and nausea in psoriatic arthritis patients; and upper respiratory infections, redness at the injection site, vaginal yeast infections, itching, urinary tract infections, and vomiting in Crohns disease patients. These are not all of the possible side effects with STELARA. Tell your doctor about any side effect that you experience. Ask your doctor or pharmacist for more information.

Please read the full Prescribing InformationandMedication Guidefor STELARAand discuss any questions you have with your doctor.

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit http://www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1800FDA1088.

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Psoriasis Treatment Options | STELARA (ustekinumab)

Psoriasis Drugs Market Forecasts 2016-2026 – Yahoo Finance

LONDON, Feb. 28, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --

Details Psoriasis Drugs Your Guide to R&D, Opportunities and Potential Revenues What does the future hold for treating psoriasis? Visiongain's new report gives you multilevel revenue forecasts from 2016, helping you stay ahead in data. There you see financial results, R&D trends, opportunities and potential revenues.

Download the full report: https://www.reportbuyer.com/product/4031803/

In our study you examine predicted sales to 2026 at overall world market, submarket, product and national level. You also assess technologies, competitive forces and expected products. That work's purpose is to help you avoid falling behind in knowledge, missing business or losing influence.

So read on now to explore that industry and discover what its future market could be worth. See how our investigation can benefit your work.

Forecasts from 2016 to 2026 and other analyses to help you harness opportunities Why miss data you need? Why struggle to find it? Instead let our analysis guide you through the psoriasis drug market's present and future. That understanding could bring you quicker, easier results, also benefiting your influence and reputation for business insight.

Besides revenue forecasting to 2026, our new work shows you recent results, growth rates and market shares. There you discover original analysis, seeing commercial outlooks and developments (R&D). In our 169 page study you gain 74 tables and 63 charts to benefit your research, analyses, plans, decisions and presentations.

The following sections outline what you get in our updated investigation.

Sales predictions for the world market and submarkets What is that industry's potential? Discover in our report overall world revenue to 2026 for psoriasis-treating medicines. First you see individual revenue forecasts to 2026 for three main submarkets at world level: - Biological drugs - Topical treatments - Small-molecule systemic therapies.

How will those segments' revenues expand? Which classes of treatment will generate most sales? There you assess prospects for revenue growth, seeing where you can gain, assessing how that industry will compete and develop.

You find revenue predictions by product, too, seeing from 2016 how they can succeed.

Revenue predictions for 13 products to 2026 discover what their futures hold How will individual drugs perform from 2016 to 2026 at world level? Our report forecasts revenues of established brands and medicines expected from 2016.

In our work you assess 13 drugs, including these brands: - Humira (adalimumab) - Stelara (ustekinumab) - Enbrel (etanercept) - Remicade (infliximab) - Otezla (apremilast)

There you discover how high sales can go, to 2026, finding drugs and years with highest predicted growth and revenues. You also examine trends and competition. You see what is happening, understanding challenges, progress, competitors and opportunities.

You find geographical revenue predictions too.

National markets where will highest revenues and growth occur? In developed and developing countries, opportunities in psoriasis treatment will occur from 2016. You see where and how pharma companies can develop and gain.

Our analyses show individual revenue forecasts to 2026 for these 11 national markets: - US and Japan - France, Germany, Italy, Spain and UK - Brazil, Russia, India and China.

There you find countries with highest revenues and potential sales growth. You assess that technology's future, seeing progress and finding what it means, including emerging trends for those skin disorder treatments.

Events affecting developers, producers and sellers issues shaping that industry Our report explains forces affecting that industry and market from 2016, including these influences: - Research and development, including monoclonal antibodies, IL-12, IL-17, IL-23, PDE4, TNF, JAK and T-cell inhibition, and histamine receptor antagonism - Prevalence of that skin disease, as well as issues for patients and healthcare providers assess treatment needs - Competition from generic drugs, biosimilars and new biologics - Companies specialising in dermatology and autoimmune disorders explore capabilities and emerging trends to treat psoriasis - Advances in drug delivery to benefit companies, patients and payers, including lotion, ointment and foam.

In our survey you explore political, economic, social and technological questions, assessing outlooks for business. You also examine that pharmaceutical segment's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats.

That way you discover what the present and future hold, seeing what is possible for those drug developers, producers and marketers. Stay ahead in knowledge.

Companies leading that industry and our overall revenue prediction for 2020 From 2016, treatments for psoriasis hold potential for investments, medical advances and higher revenues. Our work predicts the overall world market for psoriasis medicines will reach $11.4bn in 2020, with further expansion to 2026.

See what is possible there the expected gains. Our report shows you what technologies and firms hold greatest potential. You explore activities of these companies, among others: - Johnson & Johnson - AbbVie - Amgen - Pfizer - Novartis - Celgene - LEO Pharma.

Our analysis shows you participants' results, capabilities, developments and outlooks. R&D in that industry is strong. From 2016 the psoriasis market holds many opportunities for revenue growth. Our work explains that potential, helping you stay ahead in knowledge.

Main ways Psoriasis Drugs Market Forecasts 2016-2026 helps your work In particular our new investigation gives you these advantages to benefit your research, analyses, decisions, proposals and presentations: - Revenues to 2026 at world level, with forecasting of 3 submarkets and 13 products assess prospects for investments and sales growth - Forecasts to 2026 for 11 national markets in the Americas, Europe and Asia investigate leading countries for revenues and expected sales - Forces driving and restraining that industry's expansion discover what influences revenue gain, finding trends, developments and opportunities - Prospects for established competitors and rising companies explore companies' portfolios, results, R&D and outlooks for future success.

Information found nowhere else: see how you can gain why miss out? Our investigation gives you independent analysis. There you gain business intelligence found only in our work, finding where opportunities for revenue expansion exist.

See in our work how you could benefit your research, analysis and decisions. Explore progress and possibilities. Also find how you could save time and benefit your authority on those drugs, helping your reputation for commercial insight.

Medicines for psoriasis get revenue predictions now, seeing what the future holds Our new report is for everyone investigating drugs for inflammation and skin disorders. In our survey you explore revenue forecasts to 2026, with discussions and other data. Avoid missing out in knowledge instead please get our report here now. Download the full report: https://www.reportbuyer.com/product/4031803/

About Reportbuyer Reportbuyer is a leading industry intelligence solution that provides all market research reports from top publishers http://www.reportbuyer.com

For more information: Sarah Smith Research Advisor at Reportbuyer.com Email: query@reportbuyer.com Tel: +44 208 816 85 48 Website: http://www.reportbuyer.com

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/psoriasis-drugs-market-forecasts-2016-2026-300414898.html

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Psoriasis Drugs Market Forecasts 2016-2026 - Yahoo Finance

National Psoriasis Foundation Celebrates 50 Years of Patient Support, Advocacy, Research, Education and Outreach – Yahoo Finance

PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 28, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- This year, the National Psoriasis Foundation (NPF) celebrates 50 years of patient support, advocacy, research funding, education and outreach to the more than 8 million individuals living with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. Originally formed in 1966 as The Psoriasis Society of Oregon, and officially becoming the National Psoriasis Foundation in 1967, its mission is focused on driving efforts to cure psoriatic disease and dramatically improving the lives of those affected.

Throughout its first 50 years, NPF has made significant contributions in advancing the research of life-changing treatments that have helped millions of people. From the tar-based procedures and topical creams to the revolutionary biologic treatments that exist today, NPF has always supported innovative approaches to treating psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. While these achievements are to be celebrated, there is still much work to be done to improve access to treatments and, ultimately, to find a cure.

"We have only scratched the surface of what could be possible in treatingand ultimately curingpsoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. Advancements in psoriatic disease research are happening all the time, and NPF remains committed to funding this research while offering programs and services that support even more patients," said Dr. Colby Evans, M.D., National Psoriasis Foundation board chair. "I am honored to be associated with an organization that has always been at the forefront of driving efforts to find a cure for psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis."

NPF has achieved many milestones over the past 50 years, including securing for the first time ever, line-item funding in a federal budget for skin disease research, successfully lobbying the U.S. Food & Drug Administration for the approval of methotrexate for the treatment of severe psoriasis and opening the world's first support center providing free personalized assistance for people with psoriatic disease. Most recently, members of the NPF Medical Board issued the first paper in the United States that outlines psoriasis treatment targets and goals for individuals and health care providers to work on together to achieve clear skin and ultimately reduce the burden of the disease.

"NPF has been a pioneer in supporting research efforts that have led to the groundbreaking treatments used today," said Randy Beranek, president and CEO of the National Psoriasis Foundation. "During our 50th year, we are excited to recognize the people and milestones that have contributed so much to the psoriatic disease community, and remain committed to supporting research efforts towards finding a cure and dramatically improving the health outcomes of all affected by psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis."

In remaining true to its mission, the theme of the NPF 50th Year Celebration is "Driving Discovery, Creating Community." This allows the Foundation to celebrate the achievements of the past 50 years and to recognize the individuals and milestones that have made significant contributions to the psoriatic disease community. To recognize its 50th year, NPF will be holding events throughout the year, starting with a formal celebration on June 8, 2017, at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, and followed by the National Volunteer Conference and Research Symposium August 4 6, 2017 in Chicago, IL, as well as various TeamNPF events across the country.

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During this year of celebration, NPF is committed to raising $2 million to fund several promising areas of research and programing, specifically early career research. Supporting the NPF 50th year campaign will ensure that researchers studying psoriatic disease will have the resources needed to turn their questions and theories into a cure.

To learn more about the NPF 50th Year Celebration and how to get involved, visit: https://www.psoriasis.org/NPF50th.

Over the last 50 years, the National Psoriasis Foundation (NPF) has become the world's leading nonprofit patient advocacy organization fighting for individuals with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. NPF leads this fight by driving efforts for a cure and improving the lives of the more than 8 million Americans affected by this chronic disease. To date, NPF has funded more than $15 million in research grants and fellowships, and to commemorate 50 years, NPF plans to raise an additional $2 million for early scientific career research programs in 2017 alone. Each year, NPF strives to support, educate and advocate on behalf of more individuals living with or caring for someone with the disease than ever before. As part of that effort, NPF established the Patient Navigation Center to offer personalized assistance to everyone with psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis. Join our community today and help drive discovery and create community for all living with psoriatic disease.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/national-psoriasis-foundation-celebrates-50-years-of-patient-support-advocacy-research-education-and-outreach-300414766.html

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National Psoriasis Foundation Celebrates 50 Years of Patient Support, Advocacy, Research, Education and Outreach - Yahoo Finance

Evaluation of psoriasis patients’ attitudes toward benefitrisk and therapeutic trade-offs in their choice of treatments – Dove Medical Press

Lina Eliasson,1 Anthony P Bewley,2 Farhan Mughal,3 Karissa M Johnston,4 Andreas Kuznik,5 Chloe Patel,1 Andrew J Lloyd1

1Clinical Outcomes Assessment, ICON Clinical Research UK Ltd, 2Department of Dermatology, Whipps Cross University Hospital, Barts Health National Health Service Trust, London, 3Health Economics Outcomes Research, Celgene Ltd, Uxbridge, UK; 4Epidemiology, ICON Commercialisation and Outcomes, Vancouver, BC, Canada; 5Global Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Celgene Corporation, Summit, NJ, USA

Objective: Treatment options for psoriasis offer trade-offs in terms of efficacy, convenience, and risk of adverse events. We evaluated patients preferences with respect to benefitrisk in the treatment of psoriasis. Methods: A discrete choice experiment was conducted in adults from the UK with moderate-to-severe psoriasis using an orthogonal design with 32 hypothetical choice sets. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two surveys with 16 choice sets. Patients preferences were investigated with respect to the following attributes: reduction in body surface area affected by psoriasis, treatment administration (frequency and mode of delivery), short-term diarrhea or nausea risk, and 10-year risk of developing melanoma or nonmelanoma skin cancer, tuberculosis, or serious infections. A mixed effects logistic regression model generated relative preferences between treatment profiles. Results: Participants (N=292) had a strong preference to avoid increased risk of melanoma or nonmelanoma skin cancer (odds ratio [OR]: 0.44 per 5% increased 10-year risk) and increased risks of tuberculosis and serious infections (both ORs: 0.73 per 5% increased 10-year risk) and preferred once-weekly to twice-daily tablets (OR: 0.76) and weekly (OR: 0.56) or fortnightly (OR: 0.65) injections. Participants preferred avoiding treatments that may cause diarrhea or nausea in the first 2 weeks (OR: 0.87 per 5% increase) and preferred treatments that effectively resolved plaque lesions (OR: 0.93 for each palm area still affected). Conclusion: All attributes were significant predictors of choice. Patients preference research complements clinical trial data by providing insight regarding the relative weight of efficacy, tolerability, and other factors for patients when making treatment choices.

Keywords: benefit, discrete choice experiment, patients preferences, psoriasis, risk, treatment

This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited. The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution - Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License. By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. For permission for commercial use of this work, please see paragraphs 4.2 and 5 of our Terms.

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Evaluation of psoriasis patients' attitudes toward benefitrisk and therapeutic trade-offs in their choice of treatments - Dove Medical Press

When to travel to the world’s most popular destinations – Quartz

Want to get a great hotel deal? Pack an umbrella, and maybejust maybea warm coat.

Hotel rates plunge in destinations around the world outside of peak months, rewarding travelers with not just cheap nightly rates, but a city that isnt flooded with fellow travelers, jostling to get into the best restaurants, museums, or beaches.

A night in some of the worlds most popular destinations drop more than 40% outside of peak months for visitors, according to data released Tuesday from online travel agency and review site TripAdvisor.

For example, average hotel rates in Spain averaged $219 in the blistering heat of August, during European vacation season. Brave a few rain showers and cooler temperatures in January and youll pay 43% less, at just $124 a night on average. For warmer temperatures, Spanish hotels averaged $154 for March.

Of course its reasonable to want to avoid the July to September monsoon season in India, or Caribbean destinations during the June to November hurricane season. In that case, shoulder-season deals also offer some savings. Caribbean hotel rates were 20% cheaper at $421 a night in April than in the peak month of February. In India, hotel rates were lowest in May at $101 a night, though its the hottest month of the year. But travelers can always gamble on the weather by purchasing travel insurance that allows them to cancel if adverse weather can spoil the trip.

The travel site analyzed data from 2016 bookings, but at the rate hotels are being built, some deals may be even better this year.

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When to travel to the world's most popular destinations - Quartz

Airports, legal volunteers prepare for new Trump travel ban – Daily Astorian

Airport officials and civil rights lawyers are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, left, a volunteer law student from the University of Washington, sits at a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina was volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, center, a volunteer law student from the University of Washington, works at a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina was volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Pedestrians walk through a skybridge at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport near the international arrivals area, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Port of Seattle workers Aaron Washington, left, and Tracy Jenkins, right, carry a table and snacks into a room near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. The airport is making the room available for lawyers and legal volunteers to meet with family members and others picking up or dropping off international travels to answer questions and assure that they are able to travel with out difficulty. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, right, and Emily McDaniel, left, both volunteer law students, talk to a traveler as they staff a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina and McDaniel were volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, a volunteer law student from the University of Washington, sits at a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina was volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Port of Seattle workers Aaron Washington, right, and Tracy Jenkins, left, set up tables and snacks in a room near where passengers arrive on international flights at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. The airport is making the room available for lawyers and legal volunteers to meet with family members and others picking up or dropping off international travelers to answer questions and assure that they are able to travel with out difficulty. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, left, a volunteer law student from the University of Washington, sits at a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina was volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, left, a volunteer law student from the University of Washington, sits at a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina was volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Port of Seattle workers Aaron Washington, left, and Tracy Jenkins, right, carry a table and snacks into a room near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. The airport is making the room available for lawyers and legal volunteers to meet with family members and others picking up or dropping off international travels to answer questions and assure that they are able to travel with out difficulty. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, right, and Emily McDaniel, left, both volunteer law students, talk to a traveler as they staff a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina and McDaniel were volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The Associated Press

Asti Gallina, center, a volunteer law student from the University of Washington, works at a station near where passengers arrive on international flights at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, in Seattle. Gallina was volunteering with the group Airport Lawyer, which also offers a secure website and mobile phone app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble. Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban, which is expected to be released as soon as Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

SEATTLE (AP) Airport officials and civil rights lawyers around the country are getting ready for President Donald Trump's new travel ban mindful of the chaos that accompanied his initial executive order but hopeful the forthcoming version will be rolled out in a more orderly way.

The new order was expected as soon as Wednesday. A draft suggested it would target people from the same seven predominantly Muslim countries but would exempt travelers who already have visas to come to the U.S.

Since last month's ban, which courts have put on hold, a section of the international arrivals area at Dulles International Airport outside the nation's capital has been transformed into a virtual law firm, with legal volunteers ready to greet travelers from affected countries and ask if they saw anyone being detained.

Similar efforts are underway at other airports, including Seattle-Tacoma International, where officials have drawn up plans for crowd control after thousands crammed the baggage claim area to protest the original ban.

"The plan is to be as ready as possible," said Lindsay Nash, an immigration law professor at Cardozo School of Law in New York who has been helping prepare emergency petitions on behalf of those who might be detained.

Trump's initial action, issued Jan. 27, temporarily barred citizens of Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Sudan and Libya from coming to the U.S. and halted acceptance of all refugees. The president said his administration would review vetting procedures amid concerns about terrorism in those seven nations.

Protesters flooded U.S. airports that weekend, seeking to free travelers detained by customs officials amid confusion about who could enter the country, including U.S. permanent residents known as green-card holders.

Attorneys also challenged the order in court, including officials from Washington state. That lawsuit, which Minnesota joined, resulted in a federal judge temporarily blocking the government from enforcing the travel ban, a decision unanimously upheld by a panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Many civil rights lawyers and activists have said they don't believe a new order would cure all the constitutional problems of the original, including the claim that it was motivated by anti-Muslim discrimination.

Trump has said he singled out the seven countries because they had already been deemed a security concern by the Obama administration.

In his first address to Congress on Tuesday night, Trump said his administration "is taking strong measures to protect our nation from radical Islamic terrorism" and is working on improved vetting procedures.

"And we will shortly take new steps to keep our nation safe and to keep out those who would do us harm," Trump said.

Last week, analysts at the Homeland Security Department's intelligence arm found insufficient evidence that citizens of the seven Muslim-majority countries pose a terror threat to the United States.

"It's not enough to just tweak an order and not change the nature of why it was issued in the first place," said Rula Aoun, director of the Arab American Civil Rights League in Dearborn, Michigan, which sued over the initial ban and is prepared to do the same with the rewrite if necessary.

In New York, American Civil Liberties Union attorney Lee Gelernt said the organization was ready to go to court if the administration tries to immediately enforce its new order.

"The primary focus is being able to respond immediately to any request by the government to lift any of the injunctions, before the courts have had a chance to examine the new order," he said.

Activists and airport officials alike said they hoped it would be phased in to give travelers fair warning, which might preclude any detentions from arriving flights.

"We are prepared and willing," said Rebecca Sharpless, who runs the immigration clinic at the University of Miami School of Law. "But it's unlikely to cause the same kind of chaos of last time."

At Dulles, Sea-Tac, Minneapolis-St. Paul and other airports, legal volunteers have greeted arriving travelers in shifts every day since the initial ban, wearing name tags or posting signs in different languages to identify themselves.

The legal-services nonprofit OneJustice was ready to send email alerts to 3,000 volunteers in California if needed, deploying them to San Francisco and Los Angeles airports for people affected by any new order, chief executive Julia Wilson said.

In Chicago, travelers have been signing up for an assistance program started by the local Council on American-Islamic Relations office to ensure swift legal help if they're detained.

Groups urged those arriving at 17 other airports, including Miami, Atlanta and San Diego, to register with Airport Lawyer , a secure website and free mobile app that alerts volunteer lawyers to ensure travelers make it through customs without trouble.

Asti Gallina, a third-year student at the University of Washington Law School, volunteered at Sea-Tac for the first time Tuesday. It was quiet, she said.

"An essential part of the American narrative is the ability to come to America," Gallina said. "Any infringement of that is something that needs to be resisted."

___

Associated Press writers Tammy Webber and Sophia Tareen in Chicago; Deepti Hajela and Larry Neumeister in New York; Matthew Barakat in Alexandria, Virginia; Adriana Gomez Licon in Miami; and Amy Forliti in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

___

This story has been corrected to show that Cardozo Law School is in New York, not affiliated with New York University

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Airports, legal volunteers prepare for new Trump travel ban - Daily Astorian

This Woman Travels The World Alone On The Back Of A Motorcycle, Inspiring Us All – UPROXX

Rosie Gabrielle

The fact of the matter is this: Travel scares a lot of people. The fear of the unknown keeps many of us from striking out on the road and chasing adventure. It makes us hesitate, waffle, and (all too often) pick the easy route rather than the more fulfilling one.

Were here to break down those fears and show people a world thats worth traveling for. Thats why we share stories like the one youre reading. In fact, its the basis for the whole The Mad Ones series. We want to remind people: You can do this, other people are.

Last week, I sat down with adventurer Rosie Gabrielle to discuss the fear of Islam, traveling with chronic illness, life on the road as solo female traveler, and riding badass motorcycles like well a badass.

The rest is here:

This Woman Travels The World Alone On The Back Of A Motorcycle, Inspiring Us All - UPROXX

New travel ban will exempt current visa holders, sources say – Washington Post

The Trump administration is finalizing a revised travel ban that exempts current visa holders, according to people familiar with the matter.

The revision marks a significant departure from the now- frozen first executive order, which temporarily barred citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries and all refugees from entering the United States and resulted in the State Department revoking tens of thousands of visas. Justice Department lawyers hope the new order will be more likely to withstand legal challenges and will not leave any travelers detained at U.S. airports.

The new order also removes an exception to the refugee prohibition for religious minorities, one person said. Critics of the order had said that that exception proved the order was meant to discriminate on the basis of religion, because it allowed only Christians into the country.

The new order, the details of which were first reported by the Wall Street Journal, is expected to be signed Wednesday, though other news outlets reported that would likely be delayed. The people who described it to The Washington Post did so on the condition of anonymity because the administration had not authorized the release of details. The people said that the situation is fluid and that changes are still possible.

There will be a period between when the order is signed and when it takes effect, in hopes of avoiding the problems that occurred when the last order was implemented. While blocking only the issuance of new visas marks a substantial change, analysts have said that this would not necessarily be enough for the order to pass legal muster.

Spokesmen for the White House, Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security declined to comment for this report.

A federal district judge in Washington state first suspended the travel ban Feb.3, and a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit later upheld that freeze. The Justice Department has since asked the courts to hold off on further litigation while a new executive order was crafted, although the Court of Appeals told the parties to press ahead with the case.

While that has been ongoing, refugees as well as people from the seven affected countries have been able to enter the United States subject to normal individual screenings on arrival.

The president has broad authority to set immigration policy, although Trumps first executive order was implemented in such a way that most judges agreed that the directive or at least aspects of it should be suspended. Judges have yet to weigh whether the ban is constitutional. Trump and his top spokesmen have asserted that they feel they are on strong legal footing, despite short-term losses.

The White House counsel already had clarified that the ban did not apply to legal permanent residents, although courts have said they could not rely on that assertion because it was a separate statement and not part of the executive order. Officials hope the new executive order will allay that concern and also reduce the number of plaintiffs who have the right to sue.

Even that, though, might not go far enough. The 9th Circuit panel that ruled the ban should remain frozen said such a revision would not address claims by citizens who have an interest in specific noncitizens ability to travel to the United States. That, analysts have said, might be referring to the foreign wife of a U.S. citizen who is seeking a visa.

A spokesman for Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who had successfully sued to freeze the ban, said, Our current stance is to wait and see the particulars, which could make all the difference.

Lee Gelernt, the deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Unions national Immigrants Rights Project, who is involved in a separate legal challenge, said, If the new executive order contains a ban, we believe it is unconstitutional religious discrimination and will therefore continue our legal challenges.

The administration must also contend with comments the president and top allies and his advisers have made, which could serve as evidence that the ban was intended to discriminate on religious grounds. On the campaign trail, Trump called for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States. And after the election, former New York City mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani said: So when [Trump] first announced it, he said, Muslim ban. He called me up. He said, Put a commission together. Show me the right way to do it legally.

A federal judge in Virginia referenced those comments in ordering the ban frozen with respect to Virginia residents and institutions, calling it unrebutted evidence that Trumps directive might violate the First Amendment. That is important, because if judges found that even the new order was designed to discriminate against Muslims and not to protect national security they might similarly strike it down.

Justice Department lawyers will have to try to convince judges that there is a national security reason for the ban and that it is not a tool for discrimination. That the new order will not include an exception for religious minorities which had been seen as a way to get only Christians into the country is likely to bolster the governments case, particularly if Justice Department lawyers persuade the judiciary to look mostly at the executive order itself for evidence of the administrations purpose.

But analysts said the new order cannot wash away completely the stains of the old one especially after senior policy adviser Stephen Miller said that the revised version would have mostly minor technical differences and that Americans would see the same basic policy outcome for the country.

And the Department of Homeland Securitys Office of Intelligence and Analysis recently produced a report casting doubt on the need for the executive order, concluding that citizenship of a particular country is an unreliable threat indicator and that people from the seven countries named in the original ban have rarely been implicated in U.S.-based terrorism.

Read more:

New travel ban will exempt current visa holders, sources say - Washington Post