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Donation to Council Rock Education Foundation to be used for embryology project – Bucks County Courier Times

COUNCIL ROCK SCHOOLS The Council Rock Education Foundation will use a recent $12,000 donation from Customers Bank to fund a district-wide embryology project, CREF officials said.

The project is part of Council Rock's science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics emphasis, school district officials said. It will give more than 800 fourth-graders across the district the opportunity to learn about the stages of embryonic development as they incubate, observe, record data and hatch avian eggs, they added.

This interactive learning project enhances the fourth-grade curriculum, school district officials said.

"Contributions from Customers Bank and others are key sources of funding for student initiatives not covered by the annual school budget," said Council Rock Superintendent Robert Fraser. "We are most fortunate to have a very vibrant and robust education foundation and dedicated local businesses that support innovative programs to enhance our students' learning experiences."

Since 2007, the foundation has awarded more than $200,000 in grants to fund educational initiatives across the school district not possible under the regular budget, CREF officials said.

"Customers Bank is dedicated to supporting local partners like CREF that are working to grow innovative programs that ignite our children's passion for learning," said Customers Bank Vice President Kevin Beaupariant.

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Donation to Council Rock Education Foundation to be used for embryology project - Bucks County Courier Times

Blood stem cells produced in the lab for the first time – BioNews

In two different studies, US scientists have succeeded in creating the stem cells which produce blood.

Both studies published in Nature are concerned with making haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which are found inside the bone marrow and can divide to generate each of the many types of blood cell.

In the first study, a team at the Daley laboratory at Boston Childrens Hospital, Massachusetts, took human embryonic stem cells or iPS(induced pluripotent stem) cells. They exposed these cells to developmental chemicals called cytokines, and also identified seven transcription factor genes associated with HSCs and introduced them into these stem cells using a viral vector. The resulting cells were not identical to natural HSCs, but appeared to perform the same function: mice injected into the leg bone with the cells, subsequently developed human blood cells of various types in the bone marrow and circulation.

In the second study, the team led by scientistsat Weill Cornell Medical College in New York bypassed the iPSCs stage entirely. They isolated cells from the blood vessel lining of adult mice and inserted four transcription factor genes, again using a virus. They grew these cells on material derived from the human umbilical cord which provided factors to guide development into HSCs.

Again, the cells produced once transplanted into mouse recipients were able to produce mature blood cells, including in mice which were genetically modified to lack an immune system.

Generating replacement HSCs from a patient's own cells, through either method, could allow a therapy to be tailored to an individual. Dr Ryohichi Sugimura at the Daley Lab, a lead author of the first paper, said: 'This step opens up an opportunity to take cells from patients with genetic blood disorders, use gene editing to correct their genetic defect and make functional blood cells. This also gives us the potential to have a limitless supply of blood stem cells and blood by taking cells from universal donors. This could potentially augment the blood supply for patients who need transfusions.'

An article in Nature, co-written by Dr Carolina Guibentif at the Wellcome Trust and MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute in Cambridge, discussed the findings, referring to the production of HSCs in the laboratory as a 'long-sought goal of stem-cell biology'. Dr Guibentif, who was not involved in either study, toldThe Independent:'People have been trying to do this for 20 years unsuccessfully. This is the first time they have got cells that can self-renew and give rise to all sorts of blood cells, so of course its a big step towards the goal, but we are not quite there yet.'

But she also cautioned that such generated cells could be a cancer risk:'Many of the transcription factors used in the current studies have also been implicated in the initiation of leukaemia.'

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Blood stem cells produced in the lab for the first time - BioNews

Study identifies RNA molecule that shields breast cancer stem cells from immune system – Princeton University

Researchers from Princeton Universitys Department of Molecular Biology have identified a small RNA molecule that helps maintain the activity of stem cells in both healthy and cancerous breast tissue. The study, which will be published in the June issue of Nature Cell Biology, suggests that this "microRNA" promotes particularly deadly forms of breast cancer and that inhibiting the effects of this molecule could improve the efficacy of existing breast cancer therapies.

Stem cells give rise to the different cell types in adult tissues but, in order to maintain these tissues throughout adulthood, stem cells must retain their activity for decades. They do this by "self-renewing" dividing to form additional stem cells and resisting the effects of environmental signals that would otherwise cause them to prematurely differentiate into other cell types.

Many tumors also contain so-called "cancer stem cells" that can drive tumor formation. Some tumors, such as triple-negative breast cancers, are particularly deadly because they contain large numbers of cancer stem cells that self-renew and resist differentiation.

To identify factors that help non-cancerous mammary gland stem cells (MaSCs) resist differentiation and retain their capacity to self-renew, Yibin Kang, the Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis Professor of Molecular Biology, and colleagues searched for short RNA molecules called microRNAs that can bind and inhibit protein-coding messenger RNAs to reduce the levels of specific proteins. The researchers identified one microRNA, called miR-199a, that helps MaSCs retain their stem-cell activity by suppressing the production of a protein called LCOR, which binds DNA to regulate gene expression. The team showed that when they boosted miR-199a levels in mouse MaSCs, they suppressed LCOR and increased normal stem cell function. Conversely, when they increased LCOR levels, they could curtail mammary gland stem cell activity.

Kang and colleagues found that miR-199a was also expressed in human and mouse breast cancer stem cells. Just as boosting miR-199a levels helped normal mammary gland stem cells retain their activity, the researchers showed that miR-199a enhanced the ability of cancer stem cells to form tumors. By increasing LCOR levels, in contrast, they could reduce the tumor-forming capacity of the cancer stem cells. In collaboration with researchers led by Zhi-Ming Shao, a professor at Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center in China, Kang's team found that breast cancer patients whose tumors expressed large amounts of miR-199a showed poor survival rates, whereas tumors with high levels of LCOR had a better prognosis.

Kang and colleagues found that LCOR sensitizes cells to the effects of interferon-signaling molecules released from epithelial and immune cells, particularly macrophages, in the mammary gland. During normal mammary gland development, these cells secrete interferon-alpha to promote cell differentiation and inhibit cell division, the researchers discovered. By suppressing LCOR, miR-199a protects MaSCs from interferon signaling, allowing MaSCs to remain undifferentiated and capable of self-renewal.

The microRNA plays a similar role during tumorigenesis, protecting breast cancer stem cells from the effects of interferons secreted by immune cells present in the tumor. "This is a very nice study linking a normal and malignant mammary gland stem cell program to protection from immune modulators," said Michael Clarke, the Karel H. and Avice N. Beekhuis Professor in Cancer Biology at Stanford School of Medicine, Institute of Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, who first discovered breast cancer stem cells but was not involved in this study. "It clearly has therapeutic implications for designing strategies to rationally target the breast cancer stem cells with immune modulators."

Toni Celi-Terrassa, an associate research scholar in the Kang lab and the first author of the study, said, "This study unveils a new property of breast cancer stem cells that give them advantages in their interactions with the immune system, and therefore it represents an excellent opportunity to exploit for improving immunotherapy of cancer."

"Interferons have been widely used for the treatment of multiple cancer types, Kang said. "These treatments might become more effective if the interferon-resistant cancer stem cells can be rendered sensitive by targeting the miR-199a-LCOR pathway."

Other authors on the paper were Daniel Liu, Abrar Choudhury, Xiang Hang, Yong Wei, Raymundo Alfaro-Aco, Rumela Chakrabarti, Christina DeCoste, Bong Ihn Koh and Heath Smith of the Department of Molecular Biology at Princeton University; Jose Zamalloa of the Department of Molecular Biology and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics at Princeton University; and Yi-Zhou Jiang, Jun-Jing Li and Zhi-Ming Shao of the Department of Breast Surgery at Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center and the Department of Oncology at Shanghai Medical College, Fudan University.

This work was supported by a Susan G. Komen Fellowship to Toni Celi-Terrassa (PDF15332075) and grants from the Brewster Foundation, the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, the U.S. Department of Defense (BC123187) and the National Institutes of Health (R01CA141062) to Kang's laboratory.

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Study identifies RNA molecule that shields breast cancer stem cells from immune system - Princeton University

Could Humans Ever Regenerate a Limb? – Live Science

From just a bit of genetic information, a human embryo develops into a complete person. So humans have a limited ability to regrow body parts.

If you cut the leg off a salamander, it grows back. Humans, however, can't manage the trick. The reasons are far from simple, and to some extent are still a bit of a mystery.

"We actually regenerate really well; our epidermis, for example," David Gardiner, professor of developmental and cell biology at the University of California, Irvine, told Live Science, referring to the top layer of skin. "Our gut lining, we can regenerate bits and pieces. But we don't regenerate these more complex structures."

Gardiner has studied salamander regeneration for decades, seeking the underlying mechanism of the superpower. Human regeneration, he said, is likely still in the future, but not too far off it's possible one of his current graduate students or postdoctoral researchers will crack it, and limb regeneration will be a part of the medical toolkit. [11 Body Parts Grown in the Lab]

That's because, in theory, regrowing a human limb should be possible. In skin, for instance, if the cuts aren't deep, there will be no scarring due to the healing process that regenerates skin cells. It's also possible for humans to regenerate the very tips of the fingers if the cells under the fingernails are still intact. Bones will knit together if you rejoin the pieces, say, with a screw or a cast. Human livers can also grow to fill the space and rebuild some of the structure that was damaged.

But limb regeneration (of the kind salamanders do) is more than just replacing tissue. For a limb to regenerate, you need bone, muscle, blood vessels and nerves. There are adult stem cells, a kind of undifferentiated cell that can become specialized, that regenerate muscle, but they don't seem to activate. "You can regenerate blood vessels and even nerves," Gardiner said. "But the whole arm can't [regrow]."

Stphane Roy, director of the laboratory for tissue regeneration in vertebrates at the University of Montreal, noted that skin, liver and bone don't regenerate in the same sense that salamanders do it.

"Humans can only replace the superficial layer of skin, (which is, in fact, a continuous process referred to as homeostasis)," he said in an email. "Most of the dust in a house is dead skin cells that we lost."

"Liver is also quite different than limb regeneration in salamanders," Roy said. "Liver regeneration is really compensatory hyperplasia, which means that what is left will grow in size to compensate for what is lost." So the liver tissue that is there will grow larger, but if the entire liver were lost, it couldn't regenerate.

"What has been lost will not regrow, and hence you cannot re-amputate the liver, as opposed to limbs in a salamander, which can be amputated multiple times and each time a new limb will regenerate." [11 Surprising Facts About the Skeletal System]

Gardiner, however, said humans build entire organ systems in the womb; from just some genetic information a human embryo develops into a complete person in nine months. So there is a limited ability to regrow things, and that makes evolutionary sense humans have to be able to heal, he said.

On top of that, the underlying genetic machinery in a human and a salamander is not that different, even though our last common ancestor diverged during the Devonian period, some 360 million years ago. "There's no special genes for regeneration," Gardiner said. "There are these steps they go through and at least one of those steps doesn't work in humans."

To regrow a limb, the cells need to know where they are are they at the very tip of a limb by the fingers, or are they at the elbow joint? and they need to build the right structures in the right order. Salamanders do have certain genes that are "turned off" in humans, Gardiner said. Perhaps those genes enable regeneration, or at least help control the process. Something in humans' evolutionary past selected against expressing those genes the way salamanders do. Nobody knows what that something was, he said.

In 2013, an Australian scientist, James Godwin, at Monash University may have solved part of that mystery. He found that cells, called macrophages, seem to prevent the buildup of scar tissue in salamanders. Macrophages exist in other animals, including humans, and are part of the immune system. Their function is to stop infections and cause inflammation, which is the signal to the rest of the body that repair is needed. Salamanders lacking macrophages failed to regenerate their limbs, and instead formed scars.

Gardiner said Godwin's work was a step toward understanding limb regeneration. Ordinarily salamanders don't develop scar tissue at all. When a human tears a muscle or gets a deep-enough cut, damaging connective tissue, scar tissue forms. This scar tissue doesn't offer the same functionality as the original stuff.

"If I could get a salamander to scar that would really be something," Gardiner said, because that would shed light on the mechanism that makes humans unable to regrow a limb or organ. So macrophages might be part of the story, but not all of it.

The ability to "stay young" may add another insight into the mystery of limb regeneration. Mexican salamanders, called axolotls, or Ambystoma mexicanum, are neotenic, meaning they retain juvenile features into adulthood. This is why axolotls retain gills as they mature, whereas other salamander species don't.

Humans possess neoteny, too, which is why adults look more like our baby selves than is the case with other primates, and why we take longer to mature than, say, chimps do. There's some connection, perhaps, with neoteny and regeneration. Gardiner notes that younger people seem better able to heal than older ones.

In addition, researchers at Harvard Medical School found that a gene called Lin28a, which is active in immature animals (and humans), but shuts down with maturity, has a hand in enabling mice to regenerate tissue or at least to regrow the tips of their toes and ears. Once the animals were more than 5 weeks old, they weren't able to regrow those parts, even when Lin28a function was stimulated. Lin28a is part of the animal's control system for metabolism when stimulated, it can make an animal generate more energy, as though it were younger.

But the exact nature of the connection isn't understood yet. Whereas all salamanders can regenerate limbs, only axolotls are neotenic, Roy noted.

Salamanders, especially axolotls, can recruit stem cells to start regrowing limbs, and the kinds of cells that react to a wound site also appear connected to whether limbs can grow again. Gardiner was able to get salamanders to grow extra limbs by stimulating the growth of nerve cells in a wound site.

"It may have to do with a strong immune response, or the specific release of some growth factors, or a combination of both. It could be partly a question of biophysics: Salamander limbs are much smaller than humans; however, frogs cannot regenerate their limbs, so it may not be just a question of size," Roy said.

This mystery remains one at least for now.

Original article on Live Science.

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Could Humans Ever Regenerate a Limb? - Live Science

Anatomy of a Goal: Ola Kamara’s New England Golazo – Massive Report

Welcome to the Anatomy of a Goal, where each week we dissect one goal (or near goal) from Columbus Crew SCs previous match.

For match 13 of the 2017 MLS Season, we take a look at Ola Kamaras 20th minute half volley that put Crew SC up 1-0 as part of the 2-1 loss to the New England Revolution on Sunday.

Here is a look at the finish from the Crew SC striker.

The Black & Gold had a fast start to Sundays match against New England, using a high press to disrupt the Revolution and getting the fullbacks involved in the attack. On defense, Columbus employed the typically rigid banks of four, as you can just see breaking up in the image below.

On first glance, Olas goal looks like the result of two moments of brilliance: an incredible pass by midfielder Wil Trapp and an incredible strike by the Crew SC striker. However, this goal provides us with an opportunity to dissect how the Black & Gold can successfully pass out of a high press.

In the image above, and the next few images, I have placed a triangle around the three Crew SC players involved in passing out of a press. The passing triangle is one of the quintessential techniques taught and employed by every coach at almost every level of the game. The concept teaches players to quickly pass and move in space, in order to work out of a congested area. In practice, this drill typically employs one or two more offensive players than defensive players, and is often called a rondo. The focus of a rondo, and a passing triangle, is to move the ball around the defensive players until one of the offensive players sees an opportunity to move into a new space, opening up an attack or another triangle.

Above, Crew SC left back Waylon Francis wins an errant New England pass, heading the ball toward teammate and winger Justin Meram. Trapp forms the third point of the triangle. In the middle is New England attacker Femi Hollinger-Janzen. Revs right back Andrew Farrell stays just outside this triangle, perhaps wary of giving Meram the space to move into the New England attacking end.

Meram, barely bothered by Farrell, makes a quick pass to Trapp. Femi, still in the middle of the rondo, is forced to defend all three Columbys players as Farrell opts to protect his defensive end rather than get involved in the triangle.

As Femi over commits to the Trapp-Meram combination, the central midfielder makes a quick pass back to Francis. Trapp will then have to make a decision to move based off of Femis positioning. If Femi moves back to cover Francis, the New England attacker will then leave space for Trapp to run into, breaking up the triangle and opening up an attacking lane. If Femi stays centrally, Trapp and Francis will have a new passing triangle with center-back Jonathan Mensah.

As Femi heads directly toward Francis, Farrell focuses his attention on Meram. Femis decision to defend Francis opens the field for Trapp, who immediately makes a run into the now open space ahead of him. As the ball arrives, Francis must decide if he will pass the ball back to Trapp in an attacking position, or if he will make a pass to the defended Meram.

Francis hits an excellent pass into space to Trapp, giving the Crew SC captain the opportunity to view his surroundings before receiving the pass. As the ball travels, you can see Trapp looking directly at teammate Federico Higuain, who is marked by the just off-screen Xavier Kouassi.

Less than a half-second later, Trapp shifts his gaze from Higuain to the rest of the pitch, where he likely sees Crew SC striker Ola Kamara defended by only one player downfield. Notice the time in this image and the previous image. Trapp is able to identify multiple passing options in the less than one second before he receives the pass from Francis.

Seeing Higuain covered by Kouassi, Trapp decides to move up the field. As Trapp drives forward, Kouassi leaves Higuain. Trapp now has three options: a deep pass to Kamara, continue his dribble and force Kouassi to defend him or Higuain or a quick pass to his playmaker.

Trapp decides to continue his dribble and Kouassi engages the Crew SC captain. As Kouassi closes in on Trapp, the Columbus midfielder now has two options: a deep pass to Kamara or a slotted ball to Higuain. A pass to Higuain is obviously the safe choice, but Trapp is one of the best long-pass deliverers in MLS.

Trapp opts for the home-run pass to Kamara, and his ball is inch-perfect.

The above video shows just how perfect this Trapp pass was. With minimal effort, Trapp sends the ball about to Kamara, who is about 60 yards away. The ball drops directly between Kamara and New England center-back Antonio Delamea, right at the feet of the Crew SC striker.

Kamara, aware of Trapps ability to deliver a perfect long pass, sees the ball arrive and must quickly decide whether to take a touch or to let the ball bounce in front of him. Delamea is the last defender between Kamara and the goal.

The Crew SC striker lets the ball take one bounce, and is faced with another decision. Kamara can either hit the ball on a half-volleyed shot from a difficult angle or he can take a touch on the ball and attempt to beat Delamea on the dribble.

As with Trapp, Kamara opts for the home-run option, and fires an outside-the-foot shot from around 20 yards out. Because Kamara uses the outside of his boot, the ball rotates clockwise, curving back in toward the goal...

...and into the back of the net for the Crew SC goal of the season thus far.

This shot has to be seen in video to appreciate how difficult it actually is to make this shot, and Kamara makes it look almost effortless.

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Anatomy of a Goal: Ola Kamara's New England Golazo - Massive Report

Sixers – Celtics, No. 1 and Markelle Fultz: Anatomy of an NBA Draft rumor – Billy Penn

James Snook-USA TODAY Sports

Will a trade happen? Maybe. Is there a trade rumor? No. Well, yes. Now.

May 22 2017 11:15 am

Despite the rampant speculation over the weekend, the Sixers have shown little to no indication they are in the process of trading up to No. 1 in the NBA Draft to select Washington point guard Markelle Fultz. At least not yet. The Sixers have a ton of valuable trade pieces both in picks and players so for the next month every basketball pundit and fan and talk show host worth a damn is going to spend more time on this potential trade than the Sixers and Celtics probably will. (That includes us.)

This isnt about a trade as much as its about how one sports guy speculating about a trade on his popular podcast can turn into a full-fledged rumor. Lets be clear: This is not a rumor. A rumor is something overheard (or leaked) by one of the teams involved (or one the agent of a player that could be involved in a deal) that is spread through unnamed reports, off-the-record verifications and good ol fashioned sleuthing.

Bill Simmons saying the Sixers should trade up for Fultz, and speculating what the Celtics a team he unabashedly roots for should ask for in return, is not a rumor. Its wishful thinking.

Heres what Simmons said on his podcast, via Crossing Broad:

Philly is the team I keep looking at. So Phillys three. Philly moves up to one and they get Fultz or Lonzo. Probably Fultz. You put Fultz with Ben Simmons and Embiid and thats it if you keep Embiid and Simmons healthy, those are your three guys for the next 10 years. So if they love Fultz, and I dont know if they do, would you offer the number three pick, Saric, who you dont need because you have Ben Simmons coming, and the Lakers pick next year to move up two spots? That Lakers pick might not be a great pick, because theyre gonna try to get better this summer. Is that too much for that pick?

This is important: That is SPECULATION. Even Simmons, himself, said is that too much for that pick.The conversation continued on with how Saric would fit into the Celtics, and if Sixers GM Bryan Colangelo is that sold on Fultz to give up two first-round picks and a guy who could win Rookie of the Year for him.

Simmons, for what its worth, thinks DeAaron Fox of Kentucky doesnt go lower than three, and pegged the Sixers with taking what could be the third-rated point guard in the draft behind Fultz and Lonzo Ball, over a forward like Josh Jackson or Jayson Tatum. Again, its all speculation, and yet NJ.com (and other nationally-platformed Sixers blogs hoping to tap into some of that sweet Sixers trade rumors SEO juice) think Simmons saying it is the same thing as one of the teams saying it. Look:

Thats NJ.com starting a rumor they think they are reporting on. Only, the author of that post didnt even call it a rumor:

Bill Simmons thinks the Sixers could trade up to No. 1 for Markelle Fultz is NOT the same thing as NBA Draft trade rumors: Sixers moving up to Celtics No. 1 pick for Markelle Fultz?

The question mark doesnt soften it either. So now its a rumor, because one headline writer made it a rumor. But lets not put this on one local SEO-focused content farm. Sixers insiders, fans and even those who have steadfastly refused to trust the Process all these years will make this rumor grow because they want it to happen. Fultz would be a phenomenal addition to the young players the Sixers currently have, so it stands to reason that at No. 3, with some additional things worth dealing, the next few weeks will make this speculation become that full-on rumor its destined to become.

A deeply-connected local TV reporter spelling out the options for a trade? There may be no stronger way to monger a rumor in this city.

A Sixers beat writer responding to the trending topic with validation for one of his fan followers? Let that rumor grow.

Naysayers coming out of the social media woodwork to use the speculation-turned-rumor into a reason to rip Saric? Say nay, naysayers. Its all part of the process. (Lowercase p in that process, btw.)

Fultz to Sixers is great for business. No, not the business of basketball (though it would be that), but the speculation or rumor or innuendo or suggestion or anything that keeps the conversation going other than absolute fact is great for local media business (waves politely), with all of us trying to figure out if the deal is worth making for both sides, and if the city would get behind the deal, and how much attention we can get for ourselves when we talk about the deal.

Facts: We know that everyone in town would want the Sixers to trade up to No. 1 for Fultz and we know the Celtics may entertain offers.

Weve heard the Celtics are high on Tatum so much so that CBS Sports put out an attention-grabbing mock draft where Boston stays at No. 1 and takes Tatum, which will NOT happen when there are teams willing to trade up to get Fultz. Alas, those are the things we know, and actual rumors and reports. The rest is just hammering out the details.

Do you want to trade Saric? Do you think he fits with Simmons or not? Do you want to give up the Lakers 2018 pick or not? The 2019 Kings pick?

Would the Celtics make any or all of those deals, or would they not?

This is the game, and its giving the talking heads hours of conversation and tens of thousands of words (hello again, friends) on what the Sixers would have to give up to get Fultz.

Nowhere is this as obvious as sports talk radio, sojust imagine how easy the next month will be to talk Sixers.

Everything is fair game, from if the Sixers should take Fultz based mostly on YouTube clips, mind you to if trading up is worth it, to Sarics value on the team moving forward (gotta love giving callers a chance to rip on a guy who might win an NBA award this year) to whether building through the draft is even the right path at this point.

Not all of those topics are without merit. Sixers principle owner Joshua Harris said this week he thinks the Sixers roster is stacked with young talent and is eager to add some veteran presence to it.

By the way, we now are stacked for the future, Harris told Keith Pompey of the Inquirer. We have a young team already. So that leaves some slots for some vets to put around our young guys and teach them about what its like to be in the NBA. So it staggers it very nicely for us. And by the way, we are going to get a stud in this draft.

If by stud he means top veteran in the NBA via trade that can help the Sixers win now, lets get that speculation-turned-rumor going!

The Sixers reportedly an actual report tried to get George at the deadline, offering either Jahlil Okafor or Nerlens Noel, plus Robert Covington plus two picks and the Pacers said no.

So thats an actual rumor. So, according to Adrian Wojnarowskis The Vertical at Yahoo, is the rumor the Sixers could trade down, maybe with Sacramento again, and take Malik Monk and acquire even more picks. Or maybe that was just speculation too. Its hard to keep track.

The thing is, the Sixers dont need anymore picks. They have No. 3 and three second rounders this year, two first rounders next year their pick and the Lakers pick two first rounders in 2019 their pick and Sacramentos pick and six second-round picks over those two years. Plus 2016 NBA first round pick Furkan Korkmaz has indicated he wants to come over soon.

So, sure, lets speculate about the Sixers making a trade for Fultz and giving up two picks and a player. Even three picks. The only problem? The one team that needs draft picks less than the Sixers is the Celtics.

Boston has the top pick and three second rounders this year, two first rounders next year their pick and Brooklyns, which again should be awesome potentially three first rounders in 2019 theirs, the Clippers top-14 protected for two years and the Grizzlies top-8 protected in 2019 and top-6 in 2020 and a couple of second rounders in 2019.

The last thing the Celtics need is another draft pick. They need current NBA talent. Any more rumors about the Sixers trading up to No. 1 should start and end there.

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Sixers - Celtics, No. 1 and Markelle Fultz: Anatomy of an NBA Draft rumor - Billy Penn

Cheap Eats: The Anatomy of a Happy Hour – Richmond magazine (blog)

Lets state the obvious: Food specials and happy hours are a great deal for diners, but what about the restaurateurs? Do discount nights actually do anything for their bottom line? According to a few food fixtures in town, the answer is yes, but you need to play the long game.

Normally, there isnt a ton of sales volume from 5 to 6, says Jay Bayer, co-owner of Saison. The Jackson Ward restaurant offers $2 off drafts, cocktails and small plates from 5 to 7 p.m., Tuesday through Friday. If you can generate any sort of revenue that didnt already exist through discounted pricing, it gets people in the door, and hopefully they can stay a little longer to buy some more food.

Kendra Feather adopted a date-night strategy at Garnetts Cafe in The Fan to gain traction. Garnetts is so tiny, it has always been a bit of a secret squirrel. And it took years for it to break even because so many people just blinked and missed it, she says. So the main reason we started doing Date Night was to attract customers in the evenings.

Often, discounted food and drink cuts into businesses overhead, with several restaurant workers saying off the record that charging pennies for a taco or selling buckets of beer for the lint in your pocket isnt exactly the most lucrative business strategy. In the end, they hope that patrons will stay for another round of drinks, order a full meal with the normal markups or simply return when specials arent running.

Ultimately, cheap-eats specials are at their best for both customers and proprietors when they dont reinvent the wheel. I like the idea of sharing a sandwich and some wine with a friend, says Feather. Going out doesnt always have to be so expensive. And wine doesnt have to be formal to be enjoyable.

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Cheap Eats: The Anatomy of a Happy Hour - Richmond magazine (blog)

Local dairy farms find success using genetics – The Saratogian

NORTHUMBERLAND, N.Y. >> Nearly 200 people from 26 countries toured Saratoga County recently as part of a high-tech conference that has nothing to do with computer chip manufacturing or the semiconductor industry.

The group was comprised of dairy genetic consultants who visited local dairies to get a first-hand look at some of the industrys best animals.

The four-day event was hosted by Ohio-based Select Sires Inc., North Americas largest artificial insemination firm, and included stops at more than a dozen Capital Region farms including four in Saratoga County, recognized internationally as a hotbed for dairy genetics.

The goal of such efforts is healthier, higher producing, more profitable animals.

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We work at having extremely elite genetics, said Jeff King, co-owner of Kings Ransom Farm in Northumberland. Less than 1 percent of dairy farms are as in tune as we are with their genetics. Its become part of our business model.

The group also visited Welcome Stock and Clear Echo farms in Bacon Hill, and Eildon Tweed Farm in Charlton.

We are all good friends, but theres also friendly competition, which makes us more successful, King said. Because were so concentrated here, it makes it easier for tour groups to visit, which is a big benefit for us.

Genetics has really been a passion of mine since I was a young kid, he said. Its a challenge to try to improve these animals with each successive generation. Its a joy for me to have a hand in making these decisions and producing a higher quality.

Each calf thats born has a genomic makeup, which identifies various traits. One animal might be a better milk producer, while another is more disease resistant or perhaps extra fertile.

The goal, when breeding, is studying the genomic traits of each animal, and pairing bulls and cows that are most apt to produce high-quality offspring, King said.

Visitors were on hand from places such as Mexico, Brazil, China, Australia, New Zealand and several European nations including Italy, Germany and France.

We sent them back home with information that can be used to improve cattle and dairy programs in their countries, said Rick Ver Beek, Select Sires dairy sire analyst.

His company buys high-quality bulls from farms and sells their semen to dairies around the world.

The industrys number one proven sire, based on milk production from its offspring, is a bull named Montross that came from Welcome Stock Farm. It now lives in Plain City, Ohio, where Select Sires is headquartered.

The breeding power of this bull is across all breeds, Ver Beek said. Its offspring have extremely high milk production and improved protein content; just really efficient, profitable, trouble-free animals.

In the face of domestic and global political turmoil, Ver Beek said it was refreshing to see people from so many countries come together, working for a common goal.

I think with agriculture in general theres tremendous camaraderie, he said. That common goal of feeding the world just kind of rings true.

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Local dairy farms find success using genetics - The Saratogian

Carlos Gonzalez: Anatomy of a slump and why Rockies’ slugger thinks he’ll bust out of it – The Denver Post

CINCINNATI Carlos Gonzalez sat at his locker, flashing his bright CarGo smile.

It seemed a bit out of place considering the topic at hand: a hitting slump that began with a 2-for-17 start and remained in place deep into May.

Gonzalez, however, refuses to dwell on his ugly numbers.

When you are going bad, its easy to get negative, but I just dont let myself go there, the three-time all-star right fielder said. You have to remind yourself that you can do damage at any time. And every time you come to the plate, you have to think, Im one step closer to getting hot.

But when the Rockies arrived at Great American Ball Park Friday for a weekend series against the Reds, Gonzalez wasnt even lukewarm. He was hitting .210 with a .279 on-base percentage and just two home runs in 138 at-bats. Though hes hit mostly from the third or fourth spot until getting dropped to fifth in recent games, he had just 11 RBIs to show for it. Thats what happens when you hit .182 with runners in scoring position.

But the Rockies, ever mindful of Gonzalezs ability to break out at any moment, are keeping the faith.

When you have been good for as long as CarGo, you have to believe that after game No. 162, hes going to be hitting .290-something, with 30 homers and 90 RBIs, assistant hitting coach Jeff Salazar said. So CarGo can truthfully tell himself, Im hitting .180 right now, so there is a good chance Im about to hit .340 for the next stretch.

That takes a lot of confidence, trust in yourself and trust in the organization. And trust from the organization, too.

When Gonzalezs swing is on, its one of the prettiest in baseball, drawing comparisons to Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. But when its not, Gonzalez flails at breaking pitches and frequently hits weak grounders to second base.

Gonzalezs strikeouts, contrary to conventional wisdom, dont risesubstantially when hes in a slump. His strikeout rate is 25.4 percent this season, compared to 24.2 percent for his career. He is, after all, a slugger. Perhaps his whiffs are just more noticeable when they arent offset by second-deck moon shots.

Its also a misnomer that Gonzalez always starts in a funk. This is Gonzalezs eighth season with Colorado and hes had really three poor Aprils: 2011 when he hit .228 with one homer; 2015, with a .200 average and two homers; and this season, .216 with two homers.

But in 2012 (.303 average, four homers) and 2013 (.306, five homers), he came out of the gate slugging. Gonzalezs ebbs and flows are more about being in sync at the plate than about the calendar.

Gonzalezs swing is all about timing, and when his timing gets a few ticks off, he gets out of whack.

With CarGo, the leg kick is his timing mechanism, manager Bud Black said. When hes off, hes going to be out way out front on breaking balls and behind on the fastball.

But I see that gap narrowing, where hes becoming on time for both pitches. Youll know hes back when hes on top of fastballs and his hands are sitting back enough to handle the off-speed pitch.

Thats why Black was encouraged to see Gonzalez rip a double down the right-field line Tuesday night in Colorados 7-3 victory at Minnesota.

CarGo hit a low breaking ball, Black said. He was out in front of it, but he stayed back enough to be able to drive it.

A 95 mph fastball takes aboutfour-tenths of a second to travel the 60 feet, 6 inches from the pitchers mound to home plate. At the big-league level, pitch recognition is paramount, and right now, Gonzalezs is still off.

With CarGos swing with the leg kick, the timing there is a lot that can go wrong, Salazar said. When your body moves the wrong way at the wrong time, it can make any pitch look desirable. So its easy to find yourself chasing pitches or becoming vulnerable to other pitches.

That leads to bad habits and the slump deepens.

Thats when you start to tinker with it and start questioning, and then it becomes a mental thing, Salazar continued. Thats when guys will switch batting gloves or do something to break the routine.

Gonzalez is, unquestionably, a streaky hitter.

When youre going good, its easy because you dont think about anything, not even executing, Gonzalez said. Youre just having fun. Youre going 3-for-4 and hitting homers and doubles and making diving plays and its so easy, because you are clean up here.

He pointed to his head when he said up here, knowing that his battle to produce is as much mental and emotional as it is physical.

There is a lot of psychology in baseball, said veteran first baseman Mark Reynolds, whos off to a terrific start, batting .319 with 12 homers and a 1.007 OPS (on-base percentage, plus slugging). Ive been through a lot of slumps before, so I know you have to be able to take a deep breath and know you will come out of it. If you are zero for your last 10 but you get a hit, then youre 1-for-1. Thats the way you have to look at it.

Gonzalez, 31, is in the final year ofa seven-year, $80 million contract. Hes the teams highest-paid player, collecting a $20 million salary, plus $428,571 as the final installment of a $3 million bonus. Hes playing for a new contract and chances are he wont be back with the Rockies in 2018.

But those who know Gonzalez dont think the pressure of a contract year has gotten to him.

I have seen guys in a similar situation and I would expect bad body language or attitude in this situation, Salazar said. Im not getting that from CarGo. Its been a pleasure to see the leader hes been, his work ethic and the way hes communicated through this.

He knows himself better than anybody else, so if he thinks hes about to starting hitting, then I might as well get on the train right now because I believe him.

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Carlos Gonzalez: Anatomy of a slump and why Rockies' slugger thinks he'll bust out of it - The Denver Post