Categories
Sport

NBPA government director desires NBA to ban Phoenix Suns proprietor Robert Sarver for all times

4:48 p.m. ET

  • Baxter Holmes

    CloseESPN Senior Writer

      Baxter Holmes (@Baxter) is a Senior Writer for ESPN Digital and Print, focusing on the NBA. He has covered the Lakers and the Celtics and previously worked for The Boston Globe and Los Angeles Times.
  • Malika Andreas

    CloseESPN Author

    • Staff writer
    • Joined ESPN in 2018
    • Appears regularly on ESPN Chicago 1000

NBPA executive director Tamika Tremaglio said she speaks on behalf of NBA players and on Friday called for a lifetime ban on Phoenix Suns majority owner Robert Sarver, who was suspended by the league for a year for making racist and misogynistic comments.

“We expressly demand that [lifetime ban]’ Tremaglio said in an interview on ESPN’s NBA Today. “We don’t want him to be in a position where he’s managing people or working with people who come into contact with our players or the players themselves. It is clear from the report’s findings that we do not want him in this position.”

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Tremaglio confirmed she is speaking on behalf of the players, with her comments coming after Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James and Suns point guard Chris Paul tweeted their disappointment at the NBA’s punishment of Sarver earlier this week.

“It’s what our players want, that while we understand there’s been a thorough investigation, and while we’re very pleased that the NBA was able to pull this off – because that’s clearly something we want to see – we’d like to.” also make it very clear that we don’t want him to be in a position again where he’s going to influence our players and those who serve our players on a day-to-day basis,” Tremaglio said.

In addition to the year-long ban, Sarver was fined $10 million after the NBA on Tuesday released its findings of a 10-month independent investigation into allegations of workplace abuse during Sarver’s tenure as managing partner of the Suns, which turned over spanned nearly two decades.

The NBA commissioned an investigation following an ESPN story in November 2021 detailing allegations of racism and misogyny during Sarver’s 17 years as owner.

Tremaglio told ESPN that she has voiced her views to NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, although it remains unclear whether the league’s punishment against Sarver will change.

“I don’t know how open [Silver] is in relation to the desire to make the change,” said Tremaglio. “I think it’s our hope that it will be very clear that Mr Sarver should not be able to come back and take a managerial position. We heard from other owners. We heard from sponsors etc. I think it’s pretty clear there’s no expectation of him returning.

Tremaglio was asked if there had been talks with players about boycotting games as training camp approaches.

“We haven’t had those talks yet,” Tremaglio said. “We are all preparing for a season. … But I think it’s very clear that our players are incredibly upset about what happened. Their hearts go out to the families and individuals who have actually endured this for such a long period of time. But at the same time, they realize they have a job to do and they’re really looking forward to moving forward with the season.

Tremaglio added: “Honestly, I know that we never want our players to be in a position where they are unsafe, or for people they are around to be unsafe. Mr. Sarver had the ability to call the shots at the top. And for us, having people in a leadership role influencing the game in this way is detrimental to our players’ success and our players’ safety, and it will not be tolerated.”

Categories
Science

Perseverance has collected samples from probably the greatest locations on Mars to search for historical life

Scientists at NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover said today the rover collected several “tempting” organic rock samples from an ancient river delta on the red planet. Those samples have now been stowed away for a planned future mission that hopes to recover the samples and bring them back to Earth from Mars for the first-ever sample return.

“The rocks we have examined in the delta have the highest concentration of organic material that we have found on the mission so far,” said Ken Farley, Perseverance project scientist, during a press conference on Thursday, September 15. “And of course, organic molecules are the building blocks of life, so it’s very interesting that we have rocks deposited in a lake in a habitable environment that contain organic matter.”

With the four samples collected in the delta, the rover has now collected a total of 12 samples. More details on each sample can be found on this NASA website.

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The Jezero crater delta, whose sediments contain clays, carbonates and possibly organic matter. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

The rover’s landing site, Jezero Crater, is home to this fan-shaped delta that formed about 3.5 billion years ago where a Martian river and lake appear to converge. Perseverance is currently studying the delta’s sedimentary rocks, formed when particles of different sizes were deposited in the once-watery environment. During its first scientific campaign, the rover explored the crater floor and found igneous rocks that form from magma deep underground or during volcanic activity on the surface.

Now, in its second scientific campaign, the rover is studying the delta where it found organic material. While both Perseverance and the Curiosity rover have already found organic matter on Mars, this latest discovery was made in an area where, in the distant past, sediment and salts were deposited in a lake under conditions where life may have existed.

Farley said they found, for example, a sandstone bearing grains and rock fragments that originated far from Jezero Crater — and a mudstone containing intriguing organic compounds.

NASA’s Perseverance rover collected rock samples for a possible future return to Earth from two locations seen in this image of Jezero Crater on Mars: Wildcat Ridge (bottom left) and Skinner Ridge ( top right). Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS

“Wildcat Ridge” is the name of a rock about 1 meter wide that was probably formed billions of years ago when mud and fine sand settled in an evaporating saltwater lake. On July 20, the rover abraded part of the surface of Wildcat Ridge to analyze the area using the Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman & Luminescence for Organics & Chemicals, or SHERLOC, instrument.

Analysis by SHERLOC revealed that the samples contain a class of organic molecules that correlates with those of sulfate minerals. Sulfate minerals found in sedimentary rock strata can provide important information about the aqueous environments in which they formed.

“This correlation suggests that both sulfates and organic matter were deposited, conserved and concentrated in this area during the evaporation of the lake,” said SHERLOC scientist Sunanda Sharma during the press conference. “Personally, I find these results so moving because it feels like we’re in the right place with the right tools at a very pivotal moment.”

NASA said organic molecules are made up of a variety of compounds, mostly made of carbon and usually containing hydrogen and oxygen atoms. They can also contain other elements such as nitrogen, phosphorus and sulphur. While there are chemical processes that produce these molecules that don’t require life, some of these compounds are the chemical building blocks of life. The presence of these specific molecules is considered a potential biosignature — a substance or structure that could be evidence of past life, but could also have been produced without the presence of life.

“We chose Jezero crater for Perseverance to explore because we thought it had the best chance of providing scientifically excellent samples – and now we know we sent the rover to the right place,” said Thomas Zurbuchen , NASA Assistant Administrator for Science in Washington. in a press release. “These first two scientific campaigns have produced an amazing variety of samples to be returned to Earth from the Mars Sample Return campaign.”

NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) are collaborating to plan paths to bring the first samples of Martian material back to Earth for detailed study. The current plan is for a Sample Return Lander to land near or in Jezero Crater and bring with it a small rocket onto which the samples collected by Perseverance will be loaded. Two Ingenuity-like helicopters would provide a secondary way to take samples on the Martian surface. Once the Probe Cache was launched from the Red Planet, another spacecraft would capture it in Mars orbit and then bring it back to Earth, perhaps in the early to mid-2030s. These first samples collected and returned could answer a key question: Was there ever life on Mars?

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Categories
Health

17 million in Europe lengthy contracted Covid in first two years of pandemic: WHO

New research suggests at least 17 million people across Europe and Central Asia suffered from long-term Covid within the first two years of the pandemic.

Filadendron | E+ | Getty Images

At least 17 million people in Europe suffered from “long Covid” in the first two years of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new study published by the World Health Organization on Tuesday.

About 10% to 20% of all Covid-19 cases reported across the region in 2020 and 2021 resulted in lasting effects that lasted at least three months, with symptoms ranging from chronic fatigue to brain fog and shortness of breath, it said the report.

Women were also twice as likely as men to have long-term illnesses from Covid. Among the severe cases that led to hospitalization, one in three women developed long-term symptoms.

The study, conducted by the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington School of Medicine, covers the WHO Europe region, which is home to nearly 900 million people in 53 countries in Europe and Central Asia.

“Debilitating Symptoms”

Long Covid refers to a range of medium and long-term effects that can occur after a Covid infection. These can include fatigue, shortness of breath, and cognitive dysfunction such as confusion and forgetfulness.

The mental health of some people can also be directly or indirectly affected.

While the majority of people fully recover from Covid, Dr. Hans Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, said the findings underscore the urgent need for more analysis and investment in monitoring the long-lasting effects of the disease.

“Millions of people in our region, which stretches across Europe and Central Asia, are suffering from debilitating symptoms many months after their first Covid-19 infection,” Kluge said.

“You can’t go on suffering in silence,” he continued. “Governments and health partners need to work together to find solutions based on research and evidence.”

Cases of long Covid rose more than 300% in 2021 compared to 2020, consistent with the protracted nature of the disease, the study says.

An estimated 145 million people worldwide developed Long Covid in 2020 and 2021, according to IHME data.

The Director of IHME, Dr. Christopher Murray said the findings should also raise awareness of the impact of long Covid on mental health and well-being in the workplace.

“Knowing how many people are affected and for how long is important for health systems and government agencies to develop rehabilitation and support services,” Murray said.

Categories
Technology

If you cannot bear in mind your final good day at work, it is time to cease

Are you starting to get itchy feet? Well, you’re not the only one. In the past two years, we’ve seen a record number of people quit their roles in a phenomenon called The Great Resignation, or more recently The Big Quit.

This mass exodus was fueled by many different factors. First, the Covid-19 pandemic has caused many workers to reconsider what they want out of their careers. Months of lockdown have all given us time to reflect on our goals and how to achieve them. Many workers faced the harsh reality that their current role was not really serving them.

Second, the rise of remote work. Working from home is a bit like Marmite, love it or hate it. As of 2020, most technicians have experienced it in one form or another. It has helped us understand where we work best, be it in the office, at home or perhaps a hybrid approach. As we emerged from the pandemic, many people chose to switch roles to better suit their preferences.

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Finally, we have the cost of living crisis. The Eurozone is now undoubtedly headed for a recession, but in the meantime people are struggling to make ends meet. Over the past six months, inflation has soared across most of the bloc (German inflation hit a 40-year high in August), with prices of everything from petrol to milk soaring. Of course, this encourages workers to look for higher salaries and more impressive benefit packages, and who can blame them?

So if you’re considering a career change, you’re not the only one. In fact, according to a Personio survey in the UK and Ireland, 38% of employees are considering changing roles in the next six to 12 months. But how do you know you’re not just following the crowd?

That’s how you know it’s actually time to quit your job.

1. It’s too easy

Your work should be challenging. Not necessarily in the “Monday mornings give me the crippling anxiety” kind of way, but you should be constantly learning and evolving. Otherwise, really – what’s the point?

It’s great to feel comfortable at work, but if you find yourself doing the same work day in and day out with no prospect of career advancement or variety, then you’ll get bored and probably a little lazy, too. They need to move to a higher position and better salary, Stat.

2. You can’t remember your last good day

Listen, no matter it’s gonna be sunshine and rainbows all the time. It’s normal to have weeks or even months when work feels like a grind, especially when you’re working towards a large project or campaign.

But there should always be happy moments. Maybe when you’ve landed a big account, finally fixed that pesky bug, or smashed your big presentation. If you can’t remember the last time you had a really good day at the office, then maybe it’s time to start looking for a new role.

3. You “quietly stop”

The term “silently quitting” has been making the rounds on social media, particularly TikTok, over the past few weeks. But really it’s not a new concept, people have been doing it for years – older workers will know it as “walk slowly”.

This is when an employee limits their duties to those that are strictly in their job description to avoid longer hours. Basically, they do whatever it takes to keep their role.

It sounds fair enough, doesn’t it? Theoretically yes. But if you have absolutely no passion or interest in your role outside of the 9-5, then that could be a sign you’re not in the right job. Work shouldn’t rule your life, but if you’re not enthusiastic enough to work an extra 20 minutes here and there, something is wrong.

Now ready for a new challenge? We have three reels below that are worth checking out.

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If you are up for a new challenge, DL Software, a French leader in ERP software publishing, is hiring a cloud architect – AWS in Paris. You will take part in an innovative project and support group companies in the transformation to the public cloud.

This frontend developer opportunity at Blip will be offered at the company’s Porto office. Blip develops software, mobile apps, web platforms and retail applications for betting and gaming. If you have professional experience building JavaScript applications, are familiar with packaging/building tools, and have experience writing clean code, we encourage you to check out all the great perks and benefits here.

Interested in a career move? If you answered yes to 1, 2 or 3 above, then check out even more great jobs on the House of Talent Job Board today

Categories
Entertainment

Deliver It On’s subsequent sequel, Cheer or Die, is about to develop into a slasher

18. Most of the routines performed by the Toros and the Clovers involved stunts that are considered illegal in high school competitions.

“There are illegal moves,” Reed confirmed in an interview with HuffPost. “There are some college moves that aren’t high school moves…that would probably be disqualified. At the time we were shooting the film, if any of those things came up, we strayed to the side of what works dramatically or what worked best for us visually.” That’s okay, that’s okay for us!

19. The ending of the film was a point of contention among filmmakers due to differing opinions as to which Cheer Squad Nationals should win. Spoiler alert: The Clovers would take home the trophy.

“I remember there was a whole debate about who was going to win, and there were people in the mix who were like, ‘Well, Kirsten is the lead, the Toros have to win,'” Reed recalled to MTV. “Well, no, that’s not the story…they did a great job. But they finished second behind the other team and it was a life lesson for them.”

Categories
Science

Rescue of 66,000 Sheets of Actual Rainfall Observations in UK Dismisses Alarmist Claims of Extra Drought – Watts With It?

From the NoTricksZone

By P Gosselin

Europe experienced a dry summer this year and global climate alarmists claimed droughts were becoming more frequent. This is the new normal, they like to claim.

However, a body of hard data completely refutes this. A recent paper by the Royal Meteorological Society by Hawkins et al. provides amazing results tabulated from over 300 years of old, meticulously handwritten observations.

Hat-tip: The cold sun is here.

What follows is the abstract of the paper. The key statements are highlighted:

The recovery of additional historical weather observations from known archival sources will improve understanding of how the climate is changing and allow detailed examination of unusual events within the historical record.

The UK National Meteorological Archive recently more than scanned 66,000 sheets of paper containing 5.28 million handwritten monthly precipitation observations taken between 1677 and 1960 across Britain and Ireland.

Only a small fraction of these observations were previously available digitally for climate scientists to analyze. More than 16,000 volunteer Citizen Scientists completed the transcription of these observation sheets in early 2020 using the RainfallRescue.org website built with the Zooniverse platform. A total of 3.34 million observations from more than 6000 locations have been quality checked and made publicly accessible so far. This has increased the total number of monthly precipitation observations available for this period and region by a factor of six. The newly rescued observations will enable longer and much improved reconstructions of past rainfall variability across the British and Irish Isles, including for periods of significant flooding and drought. In particular, these data should allow the official gridded monthly precipitation reconstructions to be extended to 1836 for the UK, and even earlier for some regions.”

It is truly amazing that such a body of valuable data has been ignored for so long by research institutes that are publicly funded tens of millions of dollars a year to reconstruct the historical climate.

Now that it took 16,000 volunteers to do this work, we have since gained a much clearer picture of Britain’s past climate. Some of the results are interesting if not surprising, especially given all the doomsday drought claims that have been made lately.

The driest year on record was not recently, but in 1855. Additionally, as the graph above shows, the trend has been wetter, not drier. Rainfall averaged 10% more than recently, compared to the mid-19th century.

The drought years since 1950 are proving to be nothing out of the ordinary.

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Sport

Miami soccer and Mario Cristobal stay an ideal pairing

7:00 AM ET

  • Paolo UggettiESPN

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — In the middle of the toughest professional decision of his life, Mario Cristobal dialed a familiar phone number.

Over 3,000 miles from Eugene, Oregon, in Stuart, Florida, Dennis Lavelle picked up. Cristobal wanted to know what his former high school coach at Christopher Columbus High thought of the move that, at that point, Lavelle had only heard rumors about: Cristobal’s potential return to Miami as the Hurricanes’ new head coach.

“You’re 51 years old now,” Lavelle told Cristobal. “And you got a chance to go home. … You got to go.”

Lavelle’s voice was more affirmation than anything. From an institutional standpoint, everything had to be right at Miami for Cristobal to come back to the place he grew up and won national championships in 1989 and 1991. But outside of the white lines, the gravitational pull of family, culture, tradition and history carried a significance that has only become more evident as Cristobal has settled into his new digs.

“He’s got his Cuban coffee, his arroz con pollo and flan, and all that stuff,” Lavelle said. “He’s in heaven.”

It’s true that Cristobal wanted this. He even once told former Hurricanes coach Butch Davis that his ultimate goal was to have the job Davis had. But the reality still feels surreal for a kid of Cuban exiles who made an effort to send him and his brother Luis to a private school like Columbus. There, he spent his time after practice driving or biking to Miami practices with his friend and now fellow coach Alex Mirabal. Back then, the two envisioned a path stitched together by childhood dreams. Now, the duo hatch game plans together inside buildings that commemorate the players who drew them to those practices in the first place.

“You remember the simplicity of things,” Mirabal said. “Now there’s just excitement of someone who has embraced the city, and the city has embraced him because it raised him.”

It will take a whole lot more than nostalgia, culture and connection to bring the U back to its glory days, but spend some time talking to people in the city, around the program and who know Cristobal best, and it’s already clear that any future success will carry more than just the traditional weight of winning at a program with high expectations.

“I think it is a source of pride for the community,” Luis said. “Not just that he’s Cuban American, but that he was born here, raised here, that he speaks Spanish, that he played high school here and won [national] titles here.”

As current Columbus High head coach Dave Dunn put it: “The prodigal son that returns is more popular than the prodigal son that never left.”

Mario Cristobal’s return to Miami has “created a buzz within the Cuban community.” Photo by Doug Murray/Icon Sportswire

CLARA CRISTOBAL WAS known as the soul of the Cristobal family. She was the sweet, but tough, old-school Cuban mom who would cook in droves to feed linemen at her house, the one whose ropa vieja would make Mirabal prefer having dinner at the Cristobal house over his, and the glue that held the Cristobal family together. It’s why her son Luis Cristobal called the period when she was fighting through health issues that worsened last year after she suffered a fall “the most difficult time in our lives.”

It was after that fall in November that Cristobal took a short trip back to Miami following Oregon’s win over Oregon State to be with his mom and the rest of the family. As Luis explained, Mario made the trip on a week when Oregon had to prepare for the Pac-12 title game because the family thought she didn’t have much time left.

“She managed to hang on,” Luis said through tears. “It wasn’t her time, and that gave us some hope.”

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As the possibility of Mario coming home to be the head coach at Miami gathered steam, the family back home tried to balance that with the reality of Clara’s health. The circumstances had added more weight to the ensuing opportunity Mario had, but it also required some difficult choices.

“When you go away, you tuck [the connection to home] away, because it’s still about the vocation of being a football coach,” Cristobal said. “And I just did not ever think it would really be a reality. So when it became a reality, it hit like a ton of bricks.”

“It was hard given the relationships that he and we built [at Oregon],” said Luis, who played at both Columbus and Miami and is a retired police officer. “But at the same time, come on. It was his dream job, it was a no-brainer. Upon reflecting on it by myself, I was like, Wow, yeah, of course.”

After taking the job at Miami, Cristobal was able to do something he wasn’t able to in Eugene. Following long days of practice, meetings and work, he’d head home and make a stop at Kindred Hospital down the road from campus to see his mom.

“She was always worried about him being so far away,” Mirabal said. “She was happy that he was doing well, but it was good that he was able to be here for the last few months. That was big for him.”

Clara remained stable, according to Luis, until one day in March when she peacefully died.

“I know it was very hard on all of us,” Luis said. “Mario was here, which was special, but he did what we’ve been taught to do: Do your job.”

Even through Clara’s wake, memorial and burial, those around Cristobal never noticed a chance in their head coach nor any absences.

“People were taken aback by that,” Luis said. “But no, no, you don’t understand, that’s how we’re wired, that’s how we grew up and that’s what she would have wanted.”

By now, the Cristobals’ story is well-known. Mario’s dad, Luis Sr., was a political prisoner in Cuba who made his way to South Florida where he met Clara, also a Cuban exile. The two started a family and made Miami a temporary home.

“That first wave of Cubans kind of built Miami,” said Joaquin Gonzalez, a Cuban American who was a lineman at Columbus and at Miami when Mario was a graduate assistant. “But the difference between them and immigrants is they thought they were going to go back, so that’s how they raised their kids. Sacrifice and hard work was instilled in that generation.”

Mirabal is quick to point out, however, that even though family is everything in Cuban American culture, his and Mario’s move to Miami was about more than that. Being close to family and to the place where they grew up is just “icing on top of the cake.”

“Those things are important,” Mario said regarding what role the family, and his mom, played in the move. “But the real factor, the real, the No. 1 determining factor was that I wore this helmet, and I wore this uniform … and that’s different. And that will always be different.”

Mario Cristobal won national championships with the Hurricanes in 1989 and 1991. USA TODAY Sports

ONCE EVERY FEW weeks, Gonzalez will take out his phone and send a text to a group chat that includes his closest football friends, some of whom played at Miami or Columbus High, including Mario’s older brother Luis.

“By the way, did you guys realize that Mario is the head coach of the University of Miami?”

For Gonzalez, the reality still hasn’t fully set in. He played at the U when Mario first returned as a grad assistant to help coach the offensive line, but knew the Cristobal family going back to the early 1980s, when his older brother and Luis struck up a friendship that extended to their families. Gonzalez was among the former players who made a point to meet with Miami leadership, including president Julio Frenk, to implore them to not only hire Cristobal, but ensure that he was provided the resources to succeed.

“We always thought that this could happen but we doubted whether it ever would,” Gonzalez said, overlooking the practice field at Columbus, where his son now plays quarterback for the JV team. “It is a f—ing dream come true for him.”

While his parents may have thought they would one day go back to Cuba, Miami became the place Mario boomeranged back to throughout his early coaching career. After being a grad assistant at Miami from 1998 to 2000, he became the offensive line coach at Rutgers from 2001 to 2003, only to return to Miami as the tight ends and offensive line coach from 2004 to 2006. Florida International University gave him his first head-coaching job in 2007 but fired him in 2012 after going 27-47. That led to Mario ending up at Alabama, where he was an associate head coach and coached tight ends. There, he learned under Nick Saban until 2016, when Oregon gave him his second shot at running a program. Cristobal went 35-13 and rebuilt the Ducks program, proving his bona fides as a head coach.

“This guy, his dad wasn’t a head coach, he wasn’t born with a silver spoon,” Gonzalez said. “His story is Cuban. It wasn’t like he walked into being an offensive line coach, he had to cut his teeth, and I’m not saying that Miami is gonna be easy. But I will tell you his work ethic, man, it’s exactly what this program needs.”

Both Gonzalez and his former teammate Brett Romberg remember Mario as the intense grad assistant who would get on their cases for how out of shape they were, make fun of them in Spanish and crush protein bars, shakes and film on a daily basis while applying judo and martial arts techniques to offensive line play. To them, it was evident back then that Mario had the intensity and drive to one day be a head coach.

“It’s almost like embedded in [Cuban] families and that culture of ‘we’re going to make you stronger, both mentally and physically, not only by pushing your buttons, but also by seeing how far we can take you in the insult category,'” said Romberg, whose wife is Cuban American. “I’m always surprised about how everything is so geared towards the culture here in this city. It makes it very special. So Mario, obviously being a Cuban American, that’s huge.”

For former Hurricanes wide receiver Randal Hill, the cultural connection is secondary to the fact that he was in a huddle with Mario and trusts him to lead the program back to the top. The culture that resonates with Hill, as he puts it, isn’t about Mario or any coach being Cuban, Black or white, but rather what they can do to return Miami to the kind of success he experienced and the program came to embody in its glory days.

“He brings a passion to the table,” said Hill, who played on the 1987 and ’89 national title teams. “Mario picked up the phone after he got the job and called me, ‘Where are you at? I need you back out here [at practice]. We need to let people know that you’re still here, that you helped build this and we’re going to do it again.'”

Hill subscribes to the belief that when Miami football is thriving, so does the local community. Despite whatever differences, opinions and conflicts Miami may be dealing with, Hill was a firsthand witness to the effect a successful Hurricanes team had on bringing everyone together. Now, Mario will be tasked with trying to do the same.

“I think that there’s an extra energy and a certain sense of more responsibility on top of him to get this job done,” Gonzalez said. “But it’s not like he needs it.”

“It feels like a huge cultural force that is behind us,” sophomore linebacker Corey Flagg Jr. said of Cristobal. Sam Navarro-USA TODAY Sports

THE MIAMI AIR is thick with humidity on a late August morning just one week before Miami kicks off its first season under Cristobal. It’s the time of the year in South Florida when sweating quickly turns from a verb into a constant state of being. For players having to concern themselves with coverages and drills as they swelter underneath layers of pads and jerseys, this has become the norm. For Cristobal, this, among many other things he has experienced since his arrival in Coral Gables, feels like home.

Going to pick up food at Chicken Kitchen, a local restaurant, feels like home. Running into old friends, including his little league coach, makes it feel like home. Not having to use a GPS to get around the city because he knows all the routes and shortcuts feels like home. Perfecting Cuban coffee with his in-office machine and introducing it to coaches and others who are not from Miami, it all feels like home — even if Luis worries about the lack of sleep and amount of cafecitos he drinks.

“I was concerned that he wasn’t sleeping when he first got here,” Luis said. “He still isn’t, just fueled by Cuban coffee.”

“Cafecito is in his blood,” Mirabal adds.

After practice is over, Mario heads over to the corner store near campus to show what goes into a proper cafecito. After ordering the Cuban coffee inside the store along with tostadas (toasted bread and butter) to dip, Mario points the cafecito toward the camera.

“If you see someone and they can’t get Cuban coffee to froth like that, you have to call them out on it,” Cristobal says. “Then come see me in Miami and I’ll put you on the right spots.”

“Is that Coach Cristobal?” one patron asks. A few others stop in their tracks to take pictures. The apparel store next door has a bright orange sign that reads, “Welcome home, Coach Cristobal. We’re all in,” in all caps.

“It has created a buzz within the Cuban community,” Dunn said, adding that the first time Cristobal came to visit Columbus after taking the job was like the pope walking in. “He’s one of their own, he grew up in the streets, went to the school in the neighborhood and went to school right down the street. Now he’s head coach at that school right down the street.”

Players have taken notice too. Wide receiver Xavier Restrepo, whose family is from the South Florida area, said he’s constantly seeing fans on Twitter riding for Cristobal in Spanish.

“It feels like a huge cultural force that is behind us,” sophomore linebacker Corey Flagg Jr. said.

It may be a small detail, but the fact that Cristobal can dip in and out of Spanish as easily as most Cuban Americans in Miami means something too. When Gonzalez first met Cristobal’s predecessor, it was notable to Gonzalez that he didn’t speak Spanish. “That was strike one,” Gonzalez said.

Walk around Miami and you’ll soon realize Spanish is the default. The language you hear more often than not on the streets, in cars and in restaurants underlines the kind of community Miami is. Even Columbus’ motto is “Adelante,” which means “forward.”

“I don’t think I’ve heard many coaches speak Spanish,” Cristobal said. “That’s one thing I take pride in. I’m one of those coaches that actually speaks Spanish, that was my first language.”

So it wasn’t a surprise when, at his opening news conference, not only did Cristobal speak Spanish, but, as Romberg put it, several of the Cuban American families and Latino families connected to Cristobal, and the university showed up in support.

“I’ve never seen so many Latinos at a football press conference,” Romberg said with a laugh. “Or that much linen.”

There’s a belief among those who have seen or been a part of the glory days of Hurricanes football that the team, at its best, is able to bind the city and all its cultures together in support of Miami. And while Mario and Co. are aiming to do that this season and beyond, it can’t be ignored how significant it is for both the Cuban community and former Miami players that one of their own is leading the charge.

“In Miami, Cuban is the dominant culture,” Lavelle said. “And he’s coming back in the prime of his working life, to be the central figure in that culture. I mean, that’s got value. To me, that’s got value that you can’t put a price on.”

Cristobal once told former Hurricanes coach Butch Davis that his ultimate goal was to have the job Davis had. AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

ON A NIGHT some time after Cristobal’s hiring, Lavelle was home when he got another call. This one was a FaceTime from Cristobal and Alonzo Highsmith, a Columbus and Miami alum who was hired as the team’s general manager in May. They were both in Cristobal’s office and he wanted to check in with their former coach.

“They just called to tease me,” Lavelle said with a chuckle. “No, it was fun, it was very cool to see them both there.”

The three shared laughs as they remembered the past and marveled at the present. To this day, Cristobal credits Lavelle first and foremost for setting up his future in football and modeling what a head coach should be for him.

Now, here Cristobal was, at the ultimate stop of his long journey, the head coach of the University of Miami, showing Lavelle the school’s latest investment into the program since his arrival: preliminary renderings of the Hurricanes new practice facility.

“It felt like the right time for him to come back to Miami,” Lavelle said. “I told my wife the other day, ‘If Mario wins at Miami at that level in his home, it’ll be like a storybook.'”

Categories
Technology

10 feminine inventors who modified the world perpetually

March is Women’s History Month and to celebrate we’re highlighting some of the brilliant and fascinating women who have had a huge impact on society and daily life. Beginning in 1978 as a local festival week, the idea of ​​celebrating women’s achievements grew and grew until it became a month-long national celebration. Now, as a society, we are beginning to understand more and more why certain groups have not always been so smooth on the road to equality, particularly in the workplace.

It’s a bit more common these days to see a female CEO or entrepreneur, but it wasn’t always like this. If we go back to the mid-20th century, the labor force was predominantly male. In fact, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that in 1950 fewer than 30% of the labor force were women. Although 57.4% of women were employed in 2019, these women still faced wage inequality and fewer opportunities for leadership and advancement. According to a report by Leanin.org and McKinsey & Company, for every 100 men promoted to first-level leadership, only 86 women were promoted in 2020. A quick look at the Fortune 500 list is also very revealing and shows just how male-dominated leadership really is.

The women on this list have risen above inequality and created products and services that have truly changed the world.

1. Hedy Lamarr, 1914-2000

The mother of WiFi

Hedy Lemarr was known for her acting and striking beauty, but it wasn’t until years later that she received the recognition she deserved for her groundbreaking invention. Lemarr, along with another inventor named George Antheil, developed a radio wave frequency hopping system for guiding torpedoes, allowing torpedoes to find their target while avoiding interception. Although their patent expired decades ago, Lemarr and Antheil’s technology is now used in many of our essential technologies: Wi-Fi, GPS and more.

In 2014, Hedy Lemarr and George Antheil were inducted into the National Inventor’s Hall of Fame.

2. Ada Lovelace, 1815-1852

A painting by Ada Lovelace.Donaldson Collections/Getty Images

The first computer algorithm

In the mid-19th century, when it was fairly unusual for a woman to study mathematics and science, Ada Lovelace made a huge impact in the field of computing. Lovelace has even been called the first female computer programmer, as she translated and added extensive annotations to a paper on an analysis engine (written by another author). In her notes, she included an algorithm that allowed the engine to compute Bernoulli numbers. This is considered to be the very first published algorithm.

3.Margaret A Wilcox

car heater

In 1893, Margaret Wilcox received a patent for a car heater that used heat from the engine to warm the interior of the car. It took some time for the system to be commercially successful, but Wilcox heating technology was finally implemented in vehicles in the late 1920s. Today’s car heaters are more advanced, but Wilcox’s ingenious idea certainly helped pave the way.

4.Mary Anderson, 1866-1953

Mary Anderson's illustration patented by her in 1903 The United States Patent and Trademark Office

windshield wipers

Mary Anderson, another pioneer of automotive innovation, developed the modern windshield wiper. Their 1903 patent was for a device the driver could operate from inside the vehicle: a lever that caused a spring-loaded arm with a rubber blade to swing across the windshield.

Before windshield wipers, motorists would have to manually clear rain off their windshield or find another way to deal with inclement weather while driving. Thanks to Anderson’s innovation, today’s roads are much safer in the rain and snow.

Anderson was inducted into the National Inventor’s Hall of Fame in 2011.

5. Gertrude Belle Elion, 1918-1999

American biochemist and pharmacologist Gertrude Belle Elion.Derek Hudson/Getty Images

Anti-leukemia drug, other medical innovations

Gertrude Belle Elion, along with George H. Hitchings, received US Patent No. 2,884,667 for 2-amino-6-mercaptopurine: a compound that helps treat leukemia. According to the patent, “The compounds are active in this respect for the inhibition of lactic acid bacteria and because of their bacteriostatic effect. Compounds of this type are also valuable for their anti-leukemic activity and in treating other forms of neoplastic growth.” Elion was also part of the team that developed other drugs, including allopurinol to treat gout and aciclovir, used to relieve herpes infections.

Along with George Hitchings and Sir James Black, Elion received a Nobel Prize in 1988 and was inducted into the National Inventor’s Hall of Fame in 1991.

6. dr. Ann Tsukamoto, since 1952

A headshot by Dr.  Ann Tsukamoto.

Advances in stem cells

As an inventor and stem cell researcher, Dr. Tsukamoto holds several patents in the field of stem cell research. One of their most significant discoveries was finding a way to isolate stem cells.

As a microbiologist and immunologist with a PhD, Dr. Tsukamoto’s research was instrumental in cancer research and helped find treatments for a number of other conditions.

7. Letitia Geer, 1853-1935

The one-hand syringe

Letitia Geer patented the one-handed syringe in 1899, making it easier for medical professionals to draw blood and administer life-saving drugs. Geer’s invention, which was an evolution of Franic Rynd’s hollow needle and Charles Pravaz and Alexander Wood’s hypodermic syringe, enabled safer and more efficient operations in the medical field. This design became the standard in medicine and changed the way we administered vaccines and medicines.

8.Marie Curie, 1867-1934

Madame Curie in her laboratory ca. 1905. From a rare photographBettman/Getty Images

Radium, polodium and radiation in medicine

Marie Curie was the first woman to receive the Nobel Prize in 1903 for her research on “radiation phenomena”. In 1911, Curie received another Nobel Prize for isolating radium. Together with her husband Pierre Curie, she discovered that radium destroys diseased cells faster than healthy cells. This led them to research applications in medicine (e.g. tumors).

Marie Curie eventually began bringing portable X-ray machines to front-line doctors during World War I. In 1920 she suffered from health problems – probably from exposure to radioactive material – and died in 1934. However, her legacy lives on. as their contributions changed science and medicine forever.

9.Stephanie Kwolek, 1923-2014

DuPont Textile Fibers pioneering research laboratory.  From left to right: dr.  Paul Morgan, Dr.  Herbert Blades and Stephanie Kwolek.  Courtesy of DuPont.DuPont

kevlar

Stephanie Kwolek, a chemist and researcher at DuPont, is credited with developing the ultra-strong fabric now used in bulletproof gear that would eventually become known as Kevlar.

She made the discovery in 1965 when she observed how “polyamide molecules string together to form liquid-crystalline polymer solutions of exceptional strength and stiffness,” according to the American Chemical Society. “This discovery paved the way for Kwolek’s invention of industrial fibers that protect and save thousands of lives today. Most notable among these is Kevlar, a heat-resistant material that is five times stronger than steel but lighter than fiberglass,” adds ACS.

You can now find Kevlar in a range of products including bulletproof vests, tires, military gear and a range of other commercial products.

Stephanie Kwolek was inducted into the National Inventor’s Hall of Fame in 1994 and has received a number of other awards.

10. Patricia Bath, 1942-2019

Doctor Patricia Bath seen at UCLA in 1984.Wikimedia Commons

Laser Cataract Surgery

dr Bath holds five patents in all, but her most notable contribution is with the laser phaco probe. When Patricia Bath invented the laser phaco probe in 1986, it was a life-changing invention for people suffering from cataracts, allowing them to live reasonably normal lives and finally see clearly again.

Cataracts occur when the clear lenses in your eye become blurry and foggy, making it difficult to see. The condition can eventually even lead to blindness.

The laser phaco probe uses laser and irrigation to remove the diseased lens and replace that lens with an artificial lens. According to an MIT publication, the Laserphaco probe “uses a laser to vaporize cataracts by inserting just 1 millimeter into a patient’s eye. After using the laser phaco probe to remove a cataract, the patient’s lens can be removed and a replacement lens placed.”

Thanks to Bath, thousands of people around the world can see clearly.

Editor’s Recommendations



Categories
Health

US monkeypox outbreak is slowing, says CDC director

Monkeypox continues to spread across the United States, but the pace of new cases has slowed in recent weeks, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told lawmakers on Wednesday.

While the virus is still spreading rapidly in certain regions of the U.S., the rise in new monkeypox cases across the country and globally has slowed in recent weeks, she told the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Wednesday.

“We approach this news with cautious optimism,” she said at a hearing.

The US is working to contain the world’s largest monkeypox outbreak, with more than 22,600 cases in all 50 states, Washington DC and Puerto Rico, according to CDC data.

The disease is rarely fatal but causes painful lesions that resemble pimples or blisters. According to Walensky, there has been one confirmed death in the United States as a result of the disease.

The Jynneos vaccine, manufactured by Danish biotech company Bavarian Nordic, is the only approved monkeypox vaccine in the United States. Two doses are given 28 days apart, and CDC officials say getting the second shot is crucial for those at risk. After the second dose, it takes two weeks for the immune system to reach its maximum response.

People with monkeypox should stay home until the rash has healed and a new layer of skin has formed, maintain a safe distance from other people, and not share objects or materials with others, CDC guidelines say.

CNBC Health & Science

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Categories
Science

Meet the brand new Vaonis Vespera telescope

The Vespera telescope offers performance and portability in a small deep sky imaging package.

A great new telescope just got smaller and more portable. France-based company Vaonis this week released its newest member of its “Smartscope” family: the Vespera telescope. Complementing the Stellina and (coming soon) Hyperia lines, the small pill-shaped instrument offers lower price and backpack portability without compromising on quality.

What’s new at Vespera

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At just 40 cm (15″) tall and weighing 5 kg (11 lbs), the Vespera is an Alt-Az system mounted on a single swing arm. Like the Stellina, the Vespera is supported by the new and improved Singularity App by Vaonis, which is available for both iPhone and Android. The app allows users to plan their observing session, control the telescope and take and share images. The user can also load coordinates manually, which is handy for adding new ones Add novae or comets to the database.

Screenshots of the Vespera app in action. Photo credit: Dave Dickinson

The Vespera can accommodate a small hygrometer (dew) sensor, which must be installed by the user after delivery, and a light pollution filter (both sold separately). The company plans to offer a solar filter for the Vespera by the end of 2022.

Using the Vespera in the field is an easy (albeit a bit slow) process; After connecting the scope to the phone’s WiFi and initializing the station, Vespera begins searching for known star patterns in the sky. Using satellite GPS and a method known as “plate solving,” the system compares star patterns in the sky to its memory database.

Note that the WiFi connection will also temporarily cut the mobile data connection for the phone. Our field test suggests that the WiFi is good up to a distance of about 25 feet and the Vespera can be paired with multiple devices (phones, tablets, etc.).

Vespera, unpacked and ready to use. Photo credit: Dave Dickinson.

Portability makes the Vespera a joy to use. The rifle scope is light enough for a simple mountain hike and can be set up quickly. The telescope has around four hours of continuous battery life, although it uses its own dedicated magnetic clutch charger, which is often seen on many smartwatches these days…actually, I’m surprised the Vespera uses this type of charging connector, given that the European Union has mandates that all chargers be USB-C by the end of 2024.

Specifications – The Vespera is built around a 50mm quadruplet achromatic refractor telescope coupled with a two megapixel imager and 100 gigabytes of memory. After alignment and target acquisition, the image slowly builds up on the smartphone screen; The longer it stares at an object, the more signal versus noise is collected and the sharper the image appears.

The Andromeda Galaxy (Messier 31) with Vespera. Photo credit: Dave Dickinson

What we like: The real strength of Vespera and other smartscopes is that they put deep-sky imaging in the hands of suburban amateur astronomers. I could track bright Messier bullets and targets from the blurry downtown skies that I probably wouldn’t otherwise attempt. But under really dark skies, the Vespera shines. I can easily capture dark lanes in the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) after just a few minutes of exposure, and the Veil Nebula in Cygnus was a worthy target. We even had the opportunity to use Vespera to follow a frigid invader of the inner solar system, comet C/2017 K2 PanSTARRS, this summer. In fact, we’d go so far as to say that the diminutive Vespera is almost as good at astrophotography as its much larger sister Stellina.

A segment of the Veil Nebula through Cygnus captured by Vespera. Photo credit: Dave Dickinson.

What we don’t like- As mentioned, the Vespera is extremely slow in terms of initialization, fine-focusing, targeting, and imaging; all this is automatic but a bit tedious; A live view function would be great. I found that the initial images were occasionally just a touch blurry (most likely due to the optics cooling to ambient temperature) and it required going through the initialization process to achieve fine focus. Also, the blue-rimmed power button, while elegant, also tended to turn on with the slightest touch or touch, potentially causing the telescope to stay on in storage and consuming valuable battery power.

A stunning view of the Trifid Nebula captured by the Vespera telescope. Photo credit: Dave Dickinson.

The rise of smartscopes like Vespera and their ilk represents the future of amateur astronomy; I look forward to the day we can live stream the view from the remote Moroccan desert via Smartscope and Starlink connection. At $2,499 retail, the Vespera is still a bit high-end… but the price is definitely moving in the right direction.

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