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Friday, August 2, 2019

11-year-old’s lemonade stand to raise money for college shut down by health officials

An 11-year-old who set up an enterprising lemonade stand with hopes of raising money for college in the near future, got her dreams dashed by Illinois health officials.

Black business owner harassed by police after neighbor says he was breaking into his own lemonade business

Citing concerns that Hayli Martenez’s home in Kankanee doesn’t have running water since her mother is $200 behind on her bill officials shut down her business because of health concerns, CBS 2 reports.

But Martenez and her mother argues that she set up ‘HayliBug Lemonadez’ and sold refreshing drinks to customers from donated bottles of spring water.

While health officials said they might have let them slide selling the lemonade, unfortunately the family, “crossed a line” when they took things further and started using fruit and veggies to sell smoothies.

Iva, the girl’s mother, said she and her daughter have been using bottled water to drink and bath since their water has been shut off.

Iva said she was shocked July 20, when health officials showed up to shut her daughter’s lemonade stand down.

“Are you serious? Are you really serious that we have to stop making lemonade?” she told the outlet.

Video of Will Smith going crazy for little boys lemonade business will make your day

“I really want to go back to selling lemonade,” Hayli said.

“That was my dream and I’ve had a lot of fun selling it.”

But in order to get the stand back up and running, health officials said the family would need to get up to date on their water bill and purchase a permit.

Neighbors are reportedly planning to throw a fundraiser to raise money for the family.

The post 11-year-old’s lemonade stand to raise money for college shut down by health officials appeared first on theGrio.



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Tennis star Cori ‘Coco’ Gauff meets her ‘idol’ Michelle Obama and we can’t stop smiling

Ninja Is Leaving Twitch. What's Next?

The pro gamer is going to Mixer. Also, the tenth season of 'Fortnite' will have giant robots and a classic open-world game finally gets an English version.

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Don't Ask How to Pay for Climate Change. Ask Who

Opinion: Asking presidential candidates *how* they'll pay for the cost of climate change is naive. We should be asking, “*who* is going to pay?” and “how much?”

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Sony Xperia 1 Review: Big, Tall, and Expensive

Sony's latest flagship Android phone is nice—just not nice enough to justify its $950 price tag.

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Gadget Lab Podcast: Charting Our Robocar Future

WIRED writer Alex Davies joins us to discuss the challenges companies face as they race to get self-driving shuttles and delivery vehicles onto streets.

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Police Chief regrets hiring officer who gunned down unarmed Alton Sterling and apologizes to his family

For Baton Rouge Police Chief Murphy Paul hindsight is 20/20 and he reportedly regrets the hiring of officer Blane Salamoni who shot and killed Alton Sterling in 2016.

In the case of Alton Sterling’s death, one officer fired and one officer suspended for three days

“Baton Rouge, we are sorry,” Paul said during a press conference, WAFB-TV, reports.

“I want to apologize to the family of Alton Sterling and his family because [Salamoni] never should have been hired. Although we obviously cannot change the past, it is clear we need to change the future.”

Sterling was shot six times outside of a Louisiana convenience store by Baton Rouge police officers as he was attempting to sell music CDs.  Cellphone video footage of the encounter went viral.

The officers on the scene tased Sterling, wrestled him to the ground, and then shot him.

Officer Blane Salamoni shot Sterling six times as Sterling lay on the ground.

Both officers escaped criminal charges.

As part of Salamoni’s settlement deal he was allowed to resign instead of being fired, after he was terminated from the force in March 2018, Paul said. He will not receive any financial compensation and all his subsequent claims are dismissed, his attorney Leo Hamilton, told the outlet.

Salamoni was also not honest when he applied for a job with the Baton Rouge Police Department and did not reveal that he had previously been arrested for a domestic incident.

Salamoni had also often used unnecessary force before and had issues and skirmishes with other officers.

Carolina Panthers’ Eric Reid says he will continue to kneel on the field in new season

The post Police Chief regrets hiring officer who gunned down unarmed Alton Sterling and apologizes to his family appeared first on theGrio.



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Fox’s Tomi Lahren apologizes for tweet on Kamala Harris saying she slept her way to the top

Fox News personality Tomi Lahren is apologizing for an offensive tweet directed at Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.

Lahren hosts a show on the digital Fox Nation site and is a contributor to the TV network. She wrote on Wednesday about the California senator: “Kamala did you fight for ideals or did you sleep your way to the top with Willie Brown.”

Brown has acknowledged a relationship with Harris in the 1990s when he was speaker of the California Assembly. Harris was California attorney general from 2011 and was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2016.

Lahren on Thursday apologized for “a wrong choice of words.”

The post Fox’s Tomi Lahren apologizes for tweet on Kamala Harris saying she slept her way to the top appeared first on theGrio.



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'A Black Lady Sketch Show' Is a Much-Needed Jolt to TV Comedy

HBO's new series is part of an ongoing, long overdue evolution.

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This Voracious, Unstoppable Bug Is Killing Off Vineyards

Some Pennsylvania wine growers have reported losing 90 percent of their grapes due to damage from the invasive Spotted Lanternfly.

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Libya to close three migrant detention centres

One of the centres was bombed last month and is close to where Libya's rival governments are fighting.

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The Nigerian woman who married her husband after his death

Chinyere joined her husband Ikemefuna's family after his death as part of an Igbo custom in Nigeria.

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Thursday, August 1, 2019

Nicolas Pepe: Arsenal sign Lille winger for club record fee

Arsenal sign Ivory Coast winger Nicolas Pepe from Lille for a club record fee of £72m.

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Model predicts cognitive decline due to Alzheimer’s, up to two years out

A new model developed at MIT can help predict if patients at risk for Alzheimer’s disease will experience clinically significant cognitive decline due to the disease, by predicting their cognition test scores up to two years in the future.

The model could be used to improve the selection of candidate drugs and participant cohorts for clinical trials, which have been notoriously unsuccessful thus far. It would also let patients know they may experience rapid cognitive decline in the coming months and years, so they and their loved ones can prepare.  

Pharmaceutical firms over the past two decades have injected hundreds of billions of dollars into Alzheimer’s research. Yet the field has been plagued with failure: Between 1998 and 2017, there were 146 unsuccessful attempts to develop drugs to treat or prevent the disease, according to a 2018 report from the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. In that time, only four new medicines were approved, and only to treat symptoms. More than 90 drug candidates are currently in development.

Studies suggest greater success in bringing drugs to market could come down to recruiting candidates who are in the disease’s early stages, before symptoms are evident, which is when treatment is most effective. In a paper to be presented next week at the Machine Learning for Health Care conference, MIT Media Lab researchers describe a machine-learning model that can help clinicians zero in on that specific cohort of participants.

They first trained a “population” model on an entire dataset that included clinically significant cognitive test scores and other biometric data from Alzheimer’s patients, and also healthy individuals, collected between biannual doctor’s visits. From the data, the model learns patterns that can help predict how the patients will score on cognitive tests taken between visits. In new participants, a second model, personalized for each patient, continuously updates score predictions based on newly recorded data, such as information collected during the most recent visits.

Experiments indicate accurate predictions can be made looking ahead six, 12, 18, and 24 months. Clinicians could thus use the model to help select at-risk participants for clinical trials, who are likely to demonstrate rapid cognitive decline, possibly even before other clinical symptoms emerge. Treating such patients early on may help clinicians better track which antidementia medicines are and aren’t working.

“Accurate prediction of cognitive decline from six to 24 months is critical to designing clinical trials,” says Oggi Rudovic, a Media Lab researcher. “Being able to accurately predict future cognitive changes can reduce the number of visits the participant has to make, which can be expensive and time-consuming. Apart from helping develop a useful drug, the goal is to help reduce the costs of clinical trials to make them more affordable and done on larger scales.”

Joining Rudovic on the paper are: Yuria Utsumi, an undergraduate student, and Kelly Peterson, a graduate student, both in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; Ricardo Guerrero and Daniel Rueckert, both of Imperial College London; and Rosalind Picard, a professor of media arts and sciences and director of affective computing research in the Media Lab.

Population to personalization

For their work, the researchers leveraged the world’s largest Alzheimer’s disease clinical trial dataset, called Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). The dataset contains data from around 1,700 participants, with and without Alzheimer’s, recorded during semiannual doctor’s visits over 10 years.

Data includes their AD Assessment Scale-cognition sub-scale (ADAS-Cog13) scores, the most widely used cognitive metric for clinical trials of Alzheimer’s disease drugs. The test assesses memory, language, and orientation on a scale of increasing severity up to 85 points. The dataset also includes MRI scans, demographic and genetic information, and cerebrospinal fluid measurements.

In all, the researchers trained and tested their model on a sub-cohort of 100 participants, who made more than 10 visits and had less than 85 percent missing data, each with more than 600 computable features. Of those participants, 48 were diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. But data are sparse, with different combinations of features missing for most of the participants.  

To tackle that, the researchers used the data to train a population model powered by a “nonparametric” probability framework, called Gaussian Processes (GPs), which has flexible parameters to fit various probability distributions and to process uncertainties in data. This technique measures similarities between variables, such as patient data points, to predict a value for an unseen data point — such as a cognitive score. The output also contains an estimate for how certain it is about the prediction. The model works robustly even when analyzing datasets with missing values or lots of noise from different data-collecting formats.

But, in evaluating the model on new patients from a held-out portion of participants, the researchers found the model’s predictions weren’t as accurate as they could be. So, they personalized the population model for each new patient. The system would then progressively fill in data gaps with each new patient visit and update the ADAS-Cog13 score prediction accordingly, by continuously updating the previously unknown distributions of the GPs. After about four visits, the personalized models significantly reduced the error rate in predictions. It also outperformed various traditional machine-learning approaches used for clinical data.

Learning how to learn

But the researchers found the personalized models’ results were still suboptimal. To fix that, they invented a novel “metalearning” scheme that learns to automatically choose which type of model, population or personalized, works best for any given participant at any given time, depending on the data being analyzed. Metalearning has been used before for computer vision and machine translation tasks to learn new skills or adapt to new environments rapidly with a few training examples. But this is the first time it’s been applied to tracking cognitive decline of Alzheimer’s patients, where limited data is a main challenge, Rudovic says.

The scheme essentially simulates how the different models perform on a given task — such as predicting an ADAS-Cog13 score — and learns the best fit. During each visit of a new patient, the scheme assigns the appropriate model, based on the previous data. With patients with noisy, sparse data during early visits, for instance, population models make more accurate predictions. When patients start with more data or collect more through subsequent visits, however, personalized models perform better.

This helped reduce the error rate for predictions by a further 50 percent. “We couldn’t find a single model or fixed combination of models that could give us the best prediction,” Rudovic says. “So, we wanted to learn how to learn with this metalearning scheme. It’s like a model on top of a model that acts as a selector, trained using metaknowledge to decide which model is better to deploy.”

Next, the researchers are hoping to partner with pharmaceutical firms to implement the model into real-world Alzheimer’s clinical trials. Rudovic says the model can also be generalized to predict various metrics for Alzheimer’s and other diseases.



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Gayle King to be Featured Speaker at Jopwell Conference in NYC

Jopwell, a career advancement platform for black, Latinx and Native American students and professionals, is launching Jopwell Talks, a conference the company is holding in New York City. CBS This Morning anchor, Gayle King, is slated to speak at the event.

CEO and co-founder of Jopwell, Porter Brawell says the event is to help students and professionals “thrive in their careers and beyond.”

“Creating moments for our community to connect in-person is an important part of that mission and has been a priority for us from day one,” he further stated via a press release. “We are so excited to build on the success of the smaller-scale events we’ve hosted over the years to host our first summit. We are looking forward to bringing together hundreds of members of our community for an inspirational day of conversation and connection.”

Gayle King is an incredible “get” for Jopwell and speaks to the startup’s weight in the tech and career spaces. King is hot property–she recently negotiated a contract at CBS worth $11 million. Well-known as Oprah’s BFF, King is one of the most powerful women in media. Her fame reached new heights after her interview with Robert Kelly (“R. Kelly)–after she maintained professionalism and calmness while Kelly launched into a tirade about sexual misconduct allegations against him.

Gayle King

Gayle King and R. Kelly (Photo Credit: CBS News)

Other speakers at Jopwell’s event will include Michael Lomax, president and CEO of the United Negro College Fund; Antonio Lucio, global chief marketing officer at Facebook; and Miguel McKelvey, co-founder and chief culture officer at The We Company.

In 2016, Jopwell raised $3.25 million in seed funding. Its investors included Magic Johnson Enterprises, Andreessen Horowitz, Kapor Capital, Omidyar Network, and Valar Ventures .

“Jopwell is in high demand because it fills a critical need,” said Earvin “Magic” Johnson, chairman and CEO of Magic Johnson Enterprises at the time of the fundraising. Johnson said that the Jopwell founders “created Jopwell to give employers access to the best candidates from historically underrepresented minority groups” and “I believe in their vision and am excited to work with them.”

Jopwell Talks will take place at the Brooklyn Museum on Tuesday, October 15 and will focus on diversity and inclusion, mentorship, personal branding and other career-oriented topics.

For additional information on the summit, click here.



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'Aquaman' Director James Wan Is Making Secret Horror Movie

He'll work on it before starting on the sequel to his DC movie.

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Abdirahman Omar Osman: Mogadishu mayor dies after suicide bombing

A female bomber blew herself up inside the mayor's office, killing at least six others.

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Sentenced to life in prison at 16, Cyntoia Brown will be released next week

Cyntoia Brown will leave the Tennessee Prison for Women next week after serving 15 years of a life sentence for the 2004 murder of a Nashville real estate agent when she was 16.

Earlier this year, then-Gov. Bill Haslam took the rare step of commuting her sentence, paving the way for her Aug. 7 release.

Brown is now a 31-year-old woman who shot a man who picked her up reportedly for sex.

Brown’s story has served to rally celebrities and lawmakers, juvenile justice reformers and critics of Tennessee’s harsh life sentences for teens, those working to expose child sex trafficking and others highlighting racial inequities in the justice system.

Netflix has acquired the rights to the Cyntoia Brown’s story, the company announced on last month.

The feature will draw from Me Facing Life: Cyntoia’s Story, the Daniel H. Birmandocumentary, and Birman will serve as director of the Netflix film, according to Rolling Out.

The post Sentenced to life in prison at 16, Cyntoia Brown will be released next week appeared first on theGrio.



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Love & Hip Hop’s Karlie Redd secures $300k sex toy line deal

Sex sells, and Love and Hip Hop star Karlie Redd has sold her private parts to the highest bidder.

Redd has reportedly secured a huge deal with Doc Johnson to create her own sex toy line, complete with a mold of her butt and vagina for a gadget called a “stroker.”

Karlie Redd reveals her real age and shares fertility journey after being dumped by fiance, Mo Fayne

By the name, you can imagine what the sex toy can do.

There’s no shame in Karlie’s game and she secured a $300,000 as the company’s brand ambassador for the sex toy line.

According to TMZ, the vagina and butt molds of Redd took 6 hours to create and will cost about $70 to buy.

KD McNair, Redd’s rep sais she’s also aiming to become a “sexpert” and is gearing up to launch a blog, offering advice on lovemaking and relationships.

Redd’s apparently still got it and recently the LHHA veteran revealed her real age for the first time after years of fans speculating about how old she is.

“I’ve never been afraid to tell my age…I just don’t know what the obsession is with it. Maybe it’s because we look young and beautiful,” she said during a recent appearance on The Real, before confirming she is 45.

Host A.J. Calloway exiting ‘Extra’ after sex assault allegations

Earlier this year, Redd reportedly dumped by her fiance, Maurice “Mo” Fayne, after he received an Instagram Live video of her flirting with rapper, Money Bagg Yo. 

Well it seems like money bags is surely what she’s after.

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Best Sonos Setup: Which Speakers, Soundbars Should You Buy?

We’ve tested every Sonos speaker and Soundbar at WIRED, including the Ikea Symfonisk models. We like them all, but which ones are worth buying?

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