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    11-year-old tag sheds light on the story of Hatton angler’s 31-inch Devils Lake walleye – Grand Forks Herald

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Especially when the fish was tagged more than 11 years ago.

    Scott "Sugar Lips" Phipps of Hatton, N.D., found that out shortly before 3 p.m. Wednesday, June 10, when he landed a 31-inch walleye on Creel Bay of Devils Lake that had a small tag attached near the back of its dorsal fin.

    Just like shooting a banded duck or goose is a memorable occurrence for waterfowl hunters, so it is for anglers who catch a tagged fish.

    I can tell you that fish made our trip, said Phipps fishing buddy, Scott Hall of Grand Forks, who was there to share in the excitement of the memorable catch.

    Hall said hed caught a 29-inch walleye the previous week while fishing near Spirit Lake Casino with another friend.

    That had been the biggest walleye either of us had firsthand witnessed caught from the lake until his, Hall said of Phipps walleye. Both his and my big fish were caught bottom bouncing spinners with leeches in 14 to 17 feet of water.

    A close-up highlighted by an orange circle shows the location of a tag in the 31-inch walleye Scott Phipps of Hatton, N.D., caught and released Wednesday, June 10, on Devils Lake. The fish had been tagged May 5, 2009, at the north end of Six-Mile Bay during the final year of a three-year tagging study the Game and Fish Department conducted on Devils Lake.

    Phipps already has a 30-inch fat walleye on his wall, and so he decided to release the fish, said Hall, who wanted this story to be a surprise in advance of Phipps upcoming birthday July 6.

    Other birthday surprises also are in the works, Hall says.

    A newspaper clipping or online story would be an added bonus, Hall said. If he hears or sees your story from another friend before then, that'll be just as cool!

    Before Phipps released the big walleye, they wrote down the tag number (5-2810) and reported the catch using the online form for reporting tagged fish on the North Dakota Game and Fish Department website.

    Monday, June 15, Phipps got word from Game and Fish that the walleye had been tagged May 5, 2009, at the north end of Six-Mile Bay and was about 23 inches long at the time.

    According to Randy Hiltner, northeast district fisheries supervisor for Game and Fish in Devils Lake, the department tagged 1,000 walleyes for three consecutive years from 2007 through 2009 at various sites around Devils Lake to learn more about walleye mortality and movements of the fish within and out of the big lake.

    Given that amount of time, many of those fish likely either have been caught by anglers or died from natural causes. Based on previous aging data from Devils Lake, a 31-inch walleye would be at least 17 years old, according to Game and Fish Department estimates.

    We have gotten very few tag returns in the past few years, Hiltner told the Herald. In 2017, we got nine returns. In 2018 there were two, in 2019, just one and in 2020, there has been one so far.

    And quite a fish it was.

    Being tagged just added to the Wow factor as neither of us had seen or caught one before, Hall said.

    Dokken reports on outdoors. Call him at (701) 780-1148, (800) 477-6572 ext. 1148 or send email to bdokken@gfherald.com.

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    11-year-old tag sheds light on the story of Hatton angler's 31-inch Devils Lake walleye - Grand Forks Herald

    Analysis as Bolton sheds light on Trump presidency – Yahoo News

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    President Donald Trump pleaded with Chinas Xi Jinping during a 2019 summit to help his reelection prospects, according to a scathing new book by former Trump adviser John Bolton. (June 17)

    ZEKE MILLER: What is, you know, obvious from reading the book is the detailed notes that he kept, the first-person contemporaneous account of the inner workings of the Trump administration through a number of known and unknown scandals that he is-- that he's writing about. So it's a-- you know, in one sense, he is just providing an inside account, a contemporaneous account of the things we've all watched play out over the last two or three years. And the other, he's revealing and making allegations of some other unknown claims-- charges against the president that could be something that, whether it be congressional investigators would look at but also certainly could be a factor in this year's presidential election.

    Well, one of the most significant allegations in the book comes-- stems from the president's meeting with Chinese Leader Xi Jinping last June in Osaka, Japan and alongside the G20 meeting where Bolton, then National Security Advisor, recounts how he watched the president, in his words, plead with Xi to cut a deal with the United States on trade-- this is at a time when the two nations were in the middle of a trade war that was taking a toll on both their economies-- and encouraging the Chinese government to buy more US farm products with the explicit purpose of helping his own re-election campaign. And he called that a stunning revelation.

    So far, we haven't heard much from the White House on the substantive allegations brought to bear by Bolton so far. White House officials have tried to impugn Bolton's credibility, in one case sending out an email to reporters listing all the times Democrats said that Bolton wasn't necessarily the most credible.

    The rest is here:
    Analysis as Bolton sheds light on Trump presidency - Yahoo News

    The Great Lakes Recovery Center Hosts Free Event to Shed Light on Substance Abuse – 9&10 News

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    There are countless kinds of addictions. You may be battling one yourself, or know someone else who is. The Great Lakes Recovery Center (GLRC) in Sault Ste. Marie, along with the Sault and Bay Mills Tribes, is hosting a free event Saturday, June 20 to shed light on substance abuse.

    The organizations are holding their first Peer NSimple event at 1416 Easterday Avenue across from the recycling center. There will be informational tables, trivia, free food, and games.

    With the recent COVID-19 restrictions being lifted, organizers are looking forward to this event.

    Its kind of feels like a celebration because we all miss each other, said GLRC Recovery Coach, Andrea Kokko. And all those relationships you build with other people in recovery are so important. There is going to be someone here from GLRC thats actually going to be giving tours to show the community what we are doing here.

    Its nothing but open arms. Its doesnt matter what your view is or walk of life, all we ask for is respect for your fellow person, expressed Sault Tribe Recovery Coach, Joseph Gravelle. You can come whether you are an addict in need, or a parent of an addict, or a person who is curious about whats going on with addictionmaybe looking for a little more insight or resources in the community.

    For more information about the Peer NSimple event on June 20th from 1 4 PM, at 1416 West Easterday Ave. in Sault Ste. Marie, email akokko@greatlakesrecovery.org or click here.

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    The Great Lakes Recovery Center Hosts Free Event to Shed Light on Substance Abuse - 9&10 News

    Is this North Texas school district finally ready to shed its Confederate imagery? – The Dallas Morning News

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Birdville school trustees will hold a special board meeting on Juneteenth to consider removing long-held Confederate imagery from one of its high schools.

    The move comes after hundreds of students from Richland High School marched last week to call for the end of their schools Rebel mascot.

    The virtual board meeting, set for 4 p.m. Friday, includes an action item to remove the mascot and related imagery and begin the process of naming a new mascot.

    The discussion comes on Juneteenth, which commemorates the day in 1865 when slaves in Texas learned of their emancipation at the end of the Civil War.

    Recent graduate Makayla Klie, who started a petition to do away with the Confederate branding, is hopeful that the board will take action where previous efforts to completely remove the imagery failed.

    The first thing youre told as a freshman is to go look up Johnny Rebel on Google, she said referring to the personification of Confederate soldiers that has been used in music, literature and propaganda. The school has a spirit club called the Johnny Rebs. Its so blatantly racist. Its always bothered me, Klie said.

    In 1993, Birdville completely did away with the Stars and Bars Confederate flag that used to be flown at Richland High events and had once been painted on the gym floor. The current Rebel flag is red and blue, with colors similar to those on the Confederate flag, with five stars to represent each letter in Rebel and RR written across it.

    Various earlier efforts to eliminate the remaining Confederate imagery failed, including one in 2015.

    Current efforts to do away with the Rebel mascot came after nationwide protests over the mistreatment of black people, especially in regards to police brutality.

    Richland High had about 2,000 students this past school year, about 45% of them white, 36% Latino, 9% black and 6% Asian.

    A petition to preserve the Rebel mascot has about 3,300 signatures. It says doing away with the mascot would also lead to the abolishment of various associated names, such as the Johnny Rebs and the Dixie Belles drill team.

    Richland High school does not support racism in anyway [sic], wrote the recent graduate who started that petition. Racism will not simply disappear due to the Rebel mascot to change. People who are racist will remain racist even if the mascot changes.

    Students at other schools are also pushing to shed symbols associated with racist history.

    At the University of Texas, for example, dozens of athletes have said they want the school to stop using The Eyes of Texas song, which has been criticized for its connection to minstrel shows that used characters in blackface.

    Other area schools long ago moved away from the Rebel mascot. In the 1970s, Dallas Thomas Jefferson High School changed to the Patriots, while the University of Texas at Arlington took up the Maverick mascot. Fort Worths Southwest High School changed to the Raiders in the 1980s.

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    Is this North Texas school district finally ready to shed its Confederate imagery? - The Dallas Morning News

    New Middle Grade Fantasy Book Sheds Light on the Importance of Love, Community and Australian Wildlife After Bushfire – GlobeNewswire

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    SYDNEY, June 16, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Author Trish Teske takes readers on an adventurous journey of hope set in an Australian bush fantasy world in her debut book, Gruntz: Finding zO. zO is home to Gruntz, human-like creatures inspired by the quintessential Australian animal, the koala. Their ears are furry, their skin is like velvet and they have claws. Readers can experience the universal themes of good versus evil, overcoming adversity and the importance of home and finding a best friend through this very relatable imaginary world.

    The story follows 10-year-old grunt, Flynn, who was orphaned after a devastating bushfire five years earlier. He has been trying to fit in for what seems like forever. Now, just when he has made it onto the under-thirteen Dragons football team, the bully, Spike challenges him to a most despicable dare that could cost him everything. As the story unfolds, however, the two boys backgrounds are more similar than you can imagine.

    Gruntz characters may look different but they experience the very same feelings as many young readers. They share the emotions of fun, happiness, loneliness, sadness and most of all the feeling of belonging. In the town of zO, there are champions and heroes, bullies and a villain.

    Having grown up in regional North Queensland, I have always felt a deep connection to the Australian bush and bush life, says Teske. This was the inspiration for the setting of this story including the personal experiences of drought, bushfires and adversity. Throughout my life, I have always been inspired by those who fought for our country, so I drew on my personal experience and the importance of legacy to build this theme into the story. I wanted to empower young readers to manage situations of bullying by encouraging open communication and by building understanding and compassion between those involved. I made sure to share the emotional journey of both Flynn and his bully, Spike, to show how true resolution can be achieved.

    Gruntz: Finding zO exposes current and contemporary Australian themes including bushfire, exclusion, bullying and war through a less confronting medium enabling young readers to connect with the characters challenges and experiences.

    The book shows that bullying can be turned around if understanding and trust are part of the change. Gruntz: Finding zO presents the importance of planning to protect families, bushland and wildlife from bushfire, which is pivotal to the plot, as well as remembering the bravery and sacrifice of those past and present defending our world. The value of community and intergenerational relationships is also promoted, demonstrating how loving and safeguarding those closest to you helps protect everyone and everything in your community.

    Gruntz: Finding zO

    By Trish Teske

    ISBN: 9781504320016 (softcover); 9781504320023 (electronic)

    Available at the BalboaPress Online Bookstore, Amazon and Barnes & Noble

    About the author

    With Leigh, her husband of over forty years, Teske lives on a leafy hilltop overlooking the lakes in northern New South Wales. She shares her passions of a cappella singing, reading, cooking, house renovating, motor homing, mosaics, costuming, gardening and volunteering with her much-loved family and friends.

    Balboa Press Australia is a division of Hay House, Inc., a leading provider in publishing products that specialise in self-help and the mind, body and spirit genre. Through an alliance with the worldwide self-publishing leader Author Solutions, LLC, authors benefit from the leadership of Hay House Publishing and the speed-to-market advantages of the Author Solutions self-publishing model. For more information or to start publishing today, visit balboapress.com.au/ or call 1800 050 315.

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    New Middle Grade Fantasy Book Sheds Light on the Importance of Love, Community and Australian Wildlife After Bushfire - GlobeNewswire

    Heartbreaking! Twitter Sheds Tears Over ‘World’s Worst Humanitarian Crisis’ as War Tears Yemen – India.com

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Tackling a war and a pandemic ever since the six-week ceasefire due to coronavirus outbreak expired, Yemen has been thrown into a disarrayed health system. Yemen, as Arab worlds poorest country, is lacking food and medicine supplies since even the United Nations is struggling for funds as its humanitarian appeal for the country fell $1 billion short of what aid agencies needed this month. Also Read - Coronavirus in Maharashtra: State Records 3,874 Fresh Cases; Mumbai's Highest 136 Deaths

    With coronavirus surging throughout the country and the conflict between the Iran-aligned Houthi movement and Saudi Arabia, which is backed by the US, UK and France, has pushed the impoverished country to the verge of famine. It has undoubtedly gutted Yemens infrastructure while displacing several families and also resulted in widespread malnourishment while shattering the healthcare system. Also Read - Leander Paes Ready With His 'New Version' But Concerned About Tokyo Olympics Future

    Pained at the sufferings of the innocents, Twitter poured out its grief on the micro-blogging site as heart-wrenching videos and pictures from Yemen flood the Internet. While one user wrote, The ongoing conflict in Yemen has created the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. The malnutrition crisis gets worse with every day that the war continues. Half the total population, around 14 million at risk of famine -says #UN. Please save #Yemen (sic), another tweeted, #Yemen The enormous damage caused by the American Saudi aggression against Yemens right to self determination will remain for generations to come. In Saada, Yemen a Yemeni child is kissing the photos of his siblings taken from him in this unjustifiable and immoral war (sic). Also Read - COVID-19 Weekly Wrap | Over 2 Lakh Cases Recorded in 20 Days; Total Tally Nears 4 Lakh-Mark, Death Toll Soars to 12,948

    Check out Twitters reaction on the news here:

    We pray that Yemen makes it through this political conflict and pandemic without any further loss!

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    Heartbreaking! Twitter Sheds Tears Over 'World's Worst Humanitarian Crisis' as War Tears Yemen - India.com

    Chimpanzees help shed light on origins of human speech, study reveals – Study Finds

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    COVENTRY, England Speech is one of the most uniquely human characteristics. Its origins, however, remain one of the great mysteries of human development. New research now shows that chimpanzees exhibit a characteristic that might reveal some of the first steps in the evolution of human speech.

    Several years ago, researchers noticed that monkeys signaled each other by smacking their lips and using strange open-close mouth patterns. What they found most interesting about this behavior is that the rate at which the monkeys made these mouth movements was very similar to the rate humans move their mouths when speaking: about 5 Hertz, or 5 open-close cycles per second.

    At the time researchers thought this mouth-moving behavior might be related to human speech. They only observed this behavior, however, in primate species like orangutans and gibbons, which arent as closely related to humans as other African ape species.

    In this new study, the research team,led by scientists at the University of Warwick, looked for these mouth signaling patterns in chimpanzees specifically. Of course, chimps are humans closest relatives in the animal kingdom. They looked at four different chimpanzee populations: captive chimpanzees in Edinburgh Zoo and Leipzig Zoo, and wild chimpanzees from the Kanyawara and the Waibira sanctuaries in Uganda.

    Using video recordings taken of the chimps while they groomed each other, researchers say the monkeys made lip-smacks at an average rate of 4.15 Hertz very close to the 5 Hertz rate of human speech. This indicates that evolution relied on primate lip-smacking behavior when forming the vocal system of human speech thats still around today.

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    Our results prove that spoken language was pulled together within our ancestral lineage using ingredients that were already available and in use by other primates and hominids, says senior author Dr Adriano Lameira, a professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Warwick, in a press release.This dispels much of the scientific enigma that language evolution has represented so far.

    He adds that the different chimpanzee populations studied exhibit different lip-smacking behavior. Its almost as if each community has its own mouth-moving language. We found pronounced differences in rhythm between chimpanzee populations, suggesting that these are not the automatic and stereotypical signals so often attributed to our ape cousins, he says. Instead, just like in humans, we should start seriously considering that individual differences, social conventions and environmental factors may play a role in how chimpanzees engage in conversation with one another.

    Lameira points out the need to protect chimpanzee populations so they can continue to be studied. If we continue searching, new clues will certainly unveil themselves, he concludes. Now its a matter of mastering the political and societal power to preserve these precious populations in the wild and continue enabling scientists to look further.

    The study is published in Biology Letters.

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    Chimpanzees help shed light on origins of human speech, study reveals - Study Finds

    Chinese vaccine developers have begun to shed some secrecy around Covid-19 candidates. What do we know? – Endpoints News

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The first time Lyell CEO Rick Klausner looked at what PACT Pharma was trying to accomplish with neoantigens, non-viral T cell engineering and cancer, he felt they couldnt get it done. But in the 3 years since theyve launched, Klausner has become a believer.

    Now, hes a believer and a partner.

    Early Thursday morning, Klausner and PACT CEO Alex Franzusoff announced a plan to jointly pursue one of the Holy Grails of oncology R&D. Blending their technologies and bringing a wide network of leading experts to the table, the two companies are working on a personalized T cell therapy for solid tumors. And an IND is in the offing.

    The collaboration joins the Lyell team, which has been concentrating on overcoming the exhaustion that afflicts the first generation of cell therapies, with a PACT group that has developed tech to identify a patients unique signature of cancer mutations and use a non-viral method to engineer their T cells into cancer therapies.

    I spent some time on Wednesday talking with Klausner and Franzusoff about the deal, which comes with an undisclosed set of financials as Lyell invests in the alliance.

    Unlock this article along with other benefits by subscribing to one of our paid plans.

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    Chinese vaccine developers have begun to shed some secrecy around Covid-19 candidates. What do we know? - Endpoints News

    On Juneteenth, Black People Are Using Protest to Shed Intergenerational Trauma – Teen Vogue

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    In this op-ed, Ignacia Fulcher explains how this Juneteenth, Black people are working to shed intergenerational trauma by protesting for justice.

    Ill never forget my first run-in with the police. It was the summer after I graduated high school. My friends and I went to a popular beach town in New York. Sure, it was after hours, but there were tons of other teenagers hanging out, most of them white. My friends and I were not. After an hour or so of hanging out in the sand and finally talking to my crush (swoon) with our toes in the water, a cop came up to our group telling us to disperse. And so we started to walk towards our cars thinking that the warning would be the end of our encounter. It wasnt.

    The officer asked where we were from, and not believing us, asked for our IDs. The panic started to set in. My friend Kirsten messed up on one of those rules our parents taught us always keep your ID on you. Kirstens ID was in her car and that got this particular officer annoyed. He asked her where she lived and when she answered, he didnt believe her, or the fact that her name was decidedly Irish when she, according to the officer, was obviously not.

    While this was happening, the boy I liked had clammed up and clenched his fists while standing next to me. In that moment I felt the anger and fear he was feeling. As we were reprimanded, the white teens on the beach stayed unbothered. Usually you feel invincible when youre that young like you can do anything and nothing can touch you. That isnt the reality for Black youth. Standing on the beach I went to thousands of times before, I realized being Black was a liability.

    Instances like these are ingrained in the bodies of Black people. For so long, people in positions of power most often white people have directed violence toward us, causing the trauma we experience to be passed down from generation to generation. So, when I first got news of police killing of George Floyd, everything paused in this familiar way. I thought to myself, here we go again. Having to witness video after video of Black people being killed already takes a toll, and in the midst of a pandemic in which Black people are disproportionately dying its a recipe for sheer exhaustion. But this Juneteenth, as people continue to take to the streets to demonstrate against police brutality, to say Black Trans Lives Matter, to call for justice, I can see the hope that we not only inherited trauma from our ancestors, but joy and resilience too.

    I saw the names of the individuals killed as a result of White supremacyGeorge Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arberyand thought, not a damn thing has changed. Im going through what my parents went through, what my grandparents went through, and their parents all the way down the line, over and over again. History repeats itself and the wounds it makes dont heal in one lifetime if at all. And, how could we heal when we keep being killed?

    Intergenerational trauma was originally researched in Holocaust survivors and their family members. Since then, researchers found that other survivors of mass trauma passed down an array of behaviors such as authoritarian parenting styles, lack of community trust, anxiety, and shame. In an article on intergenerational trauma for the American Psychological Association's Monitor on Psychology, Tori DeAngelis wrote that researchers found transgenerational effects, are not only psychological, but familial, social, cultural, neurobiological, and possibly even genetic. Dr. Joy DeGruy coined the term Post Traumatic Slave Disorder, which is a theory that describes the phenomenon of certain survival and stress traits being triggered in the descendants of African slaves passed down generation to generation, resulting in adaptive behaviors for the better or for the worse. Intergenerational trauma is funny like that.

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    On Juneteenth, Black People Are Using Protest to Shed Intergenerational Trauma - Teen Vogue

    Boston-Area Patio Updates, Summer 2020 (Updated Weekly) – Eater Boston

    - June 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Massachusetts allowed restaurants to resume outdoor dining with restrictions on June 8, following nearly three months of takeout and delivery only. During the week of June 8, over 100 restaurants in and around Boston quickly opened up their patios; here are details on many of those. Others are taking a slower approach.

    Each week, well highlight a few more patios that are reopening in the Boston area right here, as well as any other pertinent info and updates regarding outdoor dining. (Note that this will not be a comprehensive list as there are hundreds of patios in the region, with more to come as cities and towns find ways to quicken and ease the permitting process.) Know of a recently opened patio thats especially spacious, comfortable, and following safety protocols well? Hit up the tipline.

    PATIOS NOW OPEN (OR OPENING THIS WEEK)

    OTHER OUTDOOR DINING UPDATES

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    477 Cambridge Street, Allston, MA 02135

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    Boston-Area Patio Updates, Summer 2020 (Updated Weekly) - Eater Boston

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