36 Burst results for "Bloomington"

The Charlie Kirk Show
A highlight from Why Jews Need to Stop Funding Colleges with Alan Dershowitz
"Turbulent times call for clear -headed insight that's hard to come by these days, especially on TV. That's where we come in. Salem News Channel has the greatest collection of conservative minds all in one place. People you know and trust, like Dennis Prager, Eric Metaxas, Charlie Kirk, and more. Unfiltered, unapologetic truth. Find what you're searching for at snc .tv and on Local Now Channel 525. Hey everybody, then Charlie Kirk Show. Alan Dershowitz joins us for a very clear episode on Israel. Also, are we living through the great divestment? You'll see what I mean throughout this episode. Email us as always, freedom at charliekirk .com and become a member charliekirk .com and click on the members tab charliekirk .com. Click on the members tab to listen to our episodes, advertiser free. That's right, advertiser free charliekirk .com and click on the members tab. Get involved with Turning Point USA today at tpusa .com. That is tpusa .com. It's already a high school or college chapter today at tpusa .com. Buckle up everybody. Here we go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus. I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running the I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy. His spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created. Turning Point USA. We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Brought to you by the loan of college. I wrote an entire book called The College Scam. It's actually right up here. I sold a bunch of copies. You guys should check it out. All proceeds of the book, by the way. Profits go to Turning Point USA. It's pretty good. We talk all about how college has become a scam, 10 count indictment, and one of the chapters in The College Scam is about the hatred that starts on university campuses. When I wrote The College Scam and I was about to publish it, you know, one of our team members said, Charlie, are you sure it's wise to be that blunt and that direct? First of all, we run a college -based organization, but secondly, you know, we have to raise capital from donors that are pretty connected to universities. The way it works is that if you typically, typically, if you have a lot of resources, a lot of money in America, you are probably attached to some university you because feel obligated to give back to the university that gave you so much. You have good memories there. You look at it as a way that potentially maybe for good cultural camaraderie, whatever it is, right? It's almost a one -to -one that if you are in high society, there is some form of a university or college that you sit on a board of that you give generously back to. Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Dartmouth, Stanford, Berkeley, whatever it is. And I learned this as I started to raise money at Turning Point USA. And here I was trying to raise capital to basically launch a counter -narrative against the universities, to organize students to talk about pro -American, pro -liberty, pro -freedom ideas. And as I first got started and I started traveling campuses, I realized that these university campuses are the incubators of anti -Americanism, the worst ideas. We call it wokeism, whatever it is, Marxism, Leninism, Stalinism. The universities are one of the reasons why we're losing our country. Colleges are the place where you send your best and brightest to learn to hate themselves, hate the country, rebel against their parents, be turned into ungrateful activists, to then become moldable AOCs, Rashida Tlaib's, Ilhan Omar's, where they're resentful, bitter, angry, driven by revenge and bad ideology. And I go through in the book, The College Scam, how the trans idea started on university, literally this whole idea of transgender is from the academy. One of the most sick and demented and evil quote -unquote thinkers in the 20th century. Mr Kinsey has an entire center dedicated to him at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. Herbert Marcuse, who wrote One Dimensional Man, is kind of the leader of the new left who discipled Angela Davis universities. Bill Ayres, who was a terrorist university professor, Kimberle Crenshaw, university professor, Ibram X. Kendi, university professor, Robin DiAngelo, university professor, even Anthony Fauci. Where do you think Anthony Fauci has drawn a paycheck from? In addition to all the pharmaceutical companies, Georgetown University right now, Peter Strzok -Struk -Smerk, Peter Strzok, who launched a coup against Donald Trump. Where do you think he is right now? Georgetown University. So higher education, not is just, it's not only the starting point of the worst ideas, movements, ideologies, but it's also a landing pad for some of the most despicable human beings our society and civilization has to offer. Anthony Fauci should be in prison for what he did to this country. Instead, he's lecturing at Georgetown and treated as a hero.

The Dan Bongino Show
Fresh update on "bloomington" discussed on The Dan Bongino Show
"Us wells fargo n a member fdic buying a new car might make you say things like i can't believe it seriously it's ours is this real life yeah yeah it's real life all right but what you really need to say is something that can protect your new ride like a good neighbor state farm is there yep we're here to help you choose the coverage you need so just remember like a good neighbor state farm is there farm state bloomington illinois if you're looking for affordable term life insurance but have type 2 diabetes high blood pressure or have other health issues called term provider at 800 -337 4168 -337 800 -4168 former navy seal mike lind keeps it real on the mike drop podcast ladies and gentlemen welcome to the stage rudy reyes the ethics of arts martial is why i joined the marine corps i never thought i was going to join the military because i'd been around so much gun violence and i wanted to be the antithesis of that i love fighting hand to hand it's fair you don't have to kill your opponent you can beat them with ability and skill mic drop raw unfiltered intellectually sound wherever you listen when your business information is missing or inconsistent across the internet search engines won't find you and customers won't either help ensure customers see you and not your competitors boost your findability cumulus boost dot com c -u -m -u -l hey boost .com just

Northwest Newsradio
"bloomington" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio
"On America in the morning. Here's Robert workman. NBA Monday, the bulls outlasted the 76ers one O 9 one O 5 in double overtime ending Philadelphia's 8 game winning streak. Joel embiid had 37 points and 16 rebounds in a losing effort. Julius Randle scored 57 points for the Knicks, but they lost to the Timberwolves. As a result, driven person even though I try to focus on processing a little bit more and are we taking an necessary steps to get better and build us a team? Dorian prince led Minnesota with 35. Warriors ripped the rockets to snap an 11 game road losing streak. Grizzlies rally past the Mavericks, jazz got by the kings and the hornets poked the pacers. College basketball, the NCAA men's tournament, sweet 16 begins on Thursday. In the women's second round, a second top seed bit the dust. Indiana losing to Miami 70 68, the hurricanes led wire to wire in Bloomington, Stanford Feldman Mississippi on Sunday. The women's sweet 16 games are Friday and Saturday, NIT quarterfinal games tonight and tomorrow, those four winners advanced in New York City next week. CBI's semifinal games tonight in Daytona Beach, Florida, eastern Kentucky against southern Utah, then Radford versus Charlotte. NHL, the avalanche blank the Blackhawks 5 nothing Alexander Georgia have made 27 saves. Panthers clip the red wings for their 6th win in 7, moving into playoff position in the east. Senators trip the penguins Dylan Ferguson stopped 48 shots for Ottawa in his first NHL start. Welcome to the show meet king stuffed out the flames and the oilers slip past the sharks in overtime. And Team USA will meet Japan for the world baseball classic title tonight in Miami. Last night, the sever I got two in the bottom of the 9th to beat Mexico. That's Tuesday sports. Thanks, Robert, 7 till. When we return on America in the morning, the happiest nation

The Charlie Kirk Show
Citizen Kane and Charlie Dare to Talk Sports
"Welcome back, everybody. We have one of my favorite guests. He runs an impressive website. I visit it multiple times a day, citizens free press. We have Citizen Kane on the line. Mister Cain, welcome to the program first and most important question. Do you have Indiana winning at all? And if yes, what is wrong with you? Well, hey, your Evanston boys northwestern. I know. That's right, dude. How great was that? And also prince than the other day, which I hate to cheer for woke schools, but you are a big guy you guy, though, aren't you? Yeah, I grew up. Starting at age four, we had a 6th row seats behind the bench. When we moved to Bloomington. Wow. In the early 70s, bob knight had just taken the job at IU after having come from West Point. And he accumulated this group of four or 5 doctors who were all about night's age. And a weird little side story. So these are doctor surgeons, radiologists, anesthesiologists with full practice with full practices and night would demand that they attend the IU basketball practice every day. I kid you not. For two and a half hours. And yeah, anyway. So yeah, you know, I'm a believer in the hoosiers. All schools are woke, so I don't hold that against Princeton. And that was, that was a heck of a game yesterday, for instance. There was some awesome games. So we're going to get a lot of hate mail because our audience doesn't like it when we talk sports

AP News Radio
Jackson-Davis scores 26, leads No. 14 Indiana past Illinois
"Indiana rallied from 9 down in the second half for a 71 68 win over Illinois. The align I playing without top scorer, Terrence Shannon, had two chances in the final 30 seconds to tie it. Trace Jackson Davis had 26 points and 12 rebounds to lead IU. There without one of their best players and those dudes, those dudes showed a lot of heart here. And so just finding a way down the stretch and getting stops when we needed to. It was big for us. Matthew Meyer finished with 24 points for 17 and 9 Illinois. Tom mccabe Bloomington, Indiana

AP News Radio
Police reveal what led to arrest of suspect in Albuquerque shootings
"A suspect wanted in connection with a deadly shooting at the mall of America doing the height of Christmas shopping was arrested in Georgia yesterday, Bloomington police say that the 17 year old suspect was taken into custody in Decatur, Georgia, by federal and state law enforcement officials, the suspect faces charges of second degree murder and second degree assault. His mother has also been charged with aiding and abetting for allegedly driving him to Georgia 19 year old johnta Hudson was killed in a December 23rd shooting at the mall of America. Three others were previously arrested and charged. They include an 18 year old who faces second degree murder charges while two 17 year olds have been charged with second degree

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bloomington" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"South as Louisiana, Alabama, and northern Florida. Former Republican candidate for governor Carrie Lake says she will appeal a decision handed down by an Arizona judge Saturday. Dismissing her election misconduct suit. The former TV news anchor alleged that election officials in Maricopa County had sabotaged her victory by causing printer malfunctions and violating chain of custody procedures, acclaimed Maricopa County judge Peter Thompson said, the court could find no evidence of. The mega millions jackpot is now past the half $1 billion mark. Lottery officials say no one picked all 6 numbers in last night's drawing. That means Tuesday's jackpot in the multi state lottery game will be worth $565 million. I'm Trey Thomas. One person is dead after a shooting at a Minnesota mall, Bloomington police chief, Booker hanji says, a 19 year old man was killed Friday night following an altercation between two groups inside the mall of America. Hodges said the teenager was shot multiple times inside of Nordstrom's, investigators are reviewing video to identify the suspects. The store where the shooting happened remains closed. President Biden is wishing Americans a peaceful Christmas Eve, built for firo reports. The president took to Twitter Saturday to say that he hopes that everything that divides us fades away this holiday weekend. Biden's message follows a similar one posted on Friday, where he called on people that take a few moments of quiet reflection, not as members of political parties, but as fellow Americans. I'm Bill trevorrow

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bloomington" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Blizzard conditions in many areas. Snow freezing rain and icy conditions knocked out power to more than a million Americans Freeze warnings have been posted as far south as Louisiana, Alabama, and northern Florida. Flight delays and cancellations are worsening on Christmas Eve, flight aware reports nearly 3400 delays and nearly 1900 cancellations within into or out of the U.S. today. One person is dead after a shooting at the mall of America in Minnesota. Jim Forbes has more. Bloomington police chief Booker Hodges vows to catch whoever did it. We're in the process of identifying the suspects, I'm confident that we are going to catch these people. Hodgins confirmed that a 19 year old male was killed Friday night following an altercation between two groups. That's the latest I'm Julie Ryan. And I'm Susanna Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom. Power grid operator PJM, the vast electric grid that stretches from Illinois to New Jersey has requested people conserve electricity. The call for conservation was prompted by continuing frigid weather. PJM is asking consumers to reduce their use of electricity if health permits until 10 a.m. on Christmas Day, demand for electricity is expected to increase in the PJM region and the regions neighboring because of the extremely cold weather. Here's what you can do. Set thermostats lower than usual if your health permits postpone the use of major electric appliances such as stoves, dishwashers, and clothes, dryers until other times and turn off non-essential electric lights equipment and appliances. The storm is causing travel chaos nationwide in Kentucky hundreds of families were stranded after an emergency highway closure. We're exhausted, we're upset. We haven't seen any policeman. We haven't seen anyone. In New York, governor Kathy hochul deployed the National Guard and banned commercial vehicles from some major highways. A large majority of the power outages are in the New England area

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bloomington" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Children. Triple-A says about 113 million people will be traveling this holiday season. If that number comes to fruition, it would be a post pandemic record nearing 2019 totals, which were at all time highs. So we're talking a massive rush of people. NBC's Maggie Vespa reports that number covers people who are going 50 or more miles away from their home between this Friday and January 2nd. A top official said workers on hybrid schedules are able to work remotely and extend their time away from home. A Los Angeles jury says rapper Tony lanez is guilty of shooting fellow musician Megan Thee Stallion. Brian shook has the very latest. She was shot in her feedback in 2020 during an argument at a Hollywood Hills home, lanes whose legal name is day star Peterson was immediately taken into custody. He faces over 20 years in prison. There was chaos in the courtroom Friday as the rapper's father stood up and started yelling at prosecutors. The 30 year old was convicted of assault with a semi-automatic firearm and several other crimes. I'm Brian shook. And one person is dead after a shooting in a Minnesota mall, Bloomington police chief Booker Hodges says, a 19 year old man was killed Friday night following an altercation between two groups inside the mall of America. Police are still looking for the suspects. I'm Jim Forbes. Ukrainian president zelensky is thanking Congress for giving his country more money as it fights back against Russia's invasion on Twitter he specifically thanked leaders including House speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, the massive government funding bill now heading to President Biden's desk includes nearly 45 billion in emergency aid to Ukraine. Passage of the bill comes just days after zelensky visited Washington, there he met with Biden and spoke to a joint meeting of Congress. Residents in Queens are now dealing with the aftermath of flooding this holiday weekend, Natalie migliore has the very latest. Several residents in the waterfront neighborhoods of queens say they tried to prepare for rising tides, but were quickly reminded of super storm sandy. I came up very quick. And damage all they would get in my car, the water was up to the pedals, which is crazy. Something like sandy, you know? Residents in broad channel say most of their homes have been raised since sandy, but it was no match for The Rain and high tide from Jamaica bay, which brought up to 7 feet of water to some areas. The major winter storm sweeping across the country could affect packages getting to their destinations by Christmas Day, both FedEx and UPS delivered that warning FedEx says hubs and Memphis and Indianapolis dealt with substantial disruptions last night. UPS said places in Kentucky and Illinois were affected as well. This is just the latest domino to fall as the storm has ruined travel plans for many trying to get to family and their friends, and a key measure of inflation shows prices may have peaked. The personal consumption expenditures price index rose 5 and a half percent in November from one year ago that's down from October's rate of 6.1%. It's the lowest PCE reading since October of last year. The report also showed consumer spending continued to rise last month, but at a slower rate than October. I'm

Bloomberg Radio New York
"bloomington" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"I'm David Weston The worst fire tragedy in over 30 years hit New York City yesterday with at least 7 people dead 17 people dead and more seriously injured in a high rise blaze in The Bronx The newly minted mayor Eric Adams was on the scene offering consolation but it's just one of many more issues to address in his administration which already faces challenges in keeping the schools open fighting violent crime and getting businesses back to work For report on this latest development we welcome now Bloomberg New York reporter Lori namiya So Laura thank you Welcome first of all to Bloomberg great to have you here Thank you So give us a sense of what this does for mayor Adams Well he is I think currently on the scene of the fire giving his third press conference in a little more than 24 hours So he is definitely demonstrating ubiquity and presence to the people of New York while they try to figure out if this was in any way preventable or just a really tragic act Stark contrast from his predecessor would you say I think that we're only ten days in but definitely a significant stylistic break Former mayor de Blasio showed up at the scenes of tragedies when he was called upon to do so But we've seen Eric Adams be present everywhere across the city in the last ten days and three times on the scene in a day is certainly a significant level of effort and a little bit of a difference from his predecessor one of those times He wasn't alone He had the governor of New York which also the prior governor of New York didn't have a very good relationship with the prior mayor of New York Right So Eric Adams has such significant challenges as mayor of New York City during the COVID crisis and the economic problems that the city faces But one challenge that he doesn't face is not having the support and partnership of the governor of the state of New York Maybe viewers will remember in previous crises like the Ebola outbreak or legionnaires disease or even the beginning of the COVID pandemic We often saw dueling press conferences with the dueling information from former governor Cuomo and former Washington come out and say this is the way it's going to be and then governor Cuomo come out and say no he doesn't have the authority I'm going to change that decision Disagree publicly Yes and public health experts would say that that was absolutely the worst thing that you could do in a crisis has had different messages coming out of government supposed to work together One thing I'm particularly interested in is the schools because we see such a stark contrast that appears right now in Chicago where they're really at war almost with the teachers union but somehow it appears to mirror Adams has gotten the teachers union to go along with keeping the schools open Absolutely And the UFT president the president of the New York City teachers union Michael mulgrew is not a person who is afraid to be combative with mayors But we've seen him show a certain degree of deference to Eric Adams granted it's early yet We're less than two weeks in but he publicly has been very willing to work with Adams and has not insisted on an all remote option or the delay of return to in person school Well so far what a difference ten days make Thank you so much Laura really great to have you with us Miss Laura and now I ask reporting on New York check out the balance of power newsletter on the turtle and online coming up balance of power continues on Bloomberg radio and our second half second hour we're going to talk with Megan green from Kroll and this is Bloomberg This is a Bloomberg pursuit Look at luxury a 2005 Porsche Carrera GT has sold for $1.9 million on the car auction website bring a trailer setting a world record for the V ten supercar and the used car site Car insurer hagerty says of the sale that driver focused analog exotic cars are in higher than ever demand everywhere Hagrid values the typical 2005 career GT and about 1 million but with ultra low mileage just 780 miles and an elusive guards red color.

podcast – Lawyers, Guns & Money
"bloomington" Discussed on podcast – Lawyers, Guns & Money
"So when we I think the only way to start this is, oh, by the way, oh yeah, rob wanted me to introduce our beverages. I am having a talks muscaria, double double dry hopped double IPA. So that's like quadruple or what? Which is I think I had a new London Connecticut, but this is like a special beer that is brewed for this 12% placing north haven Connecticut that I was after this weekend. And it is a very tasty beer. Rob, what how many fingers of whisky do you have about 12? Well, so, you know, I mean, I think this is a 12 ounce glass and when I started, it was pretty close to the top. That's a midst of whisky. So this is a 100. Yeah. What is it? 100. Very quite fine. Doctor Muir, are you having this? So a little later and it's a teaching day. So yes, so I'm having a nothing noble from the fine folks at von ebert brewing in lovely downtown Portland. Not really something you can get very easily in Seattle, but it's like quality quality establishment. Good food too. Yeah, and if you're at Powell's is like kind of three blocks away on 13th. So, I mean, if you're in Portland, you probably know it already. It's not exactly obscure, but but anyway, very very, very nice. Double IPA well balanced neighbors. Added to shoots glass, so it kind of continuing the Portland theme. So in the lovely rose city this week for a conference, which is always good, so I tried to find one of the 5 remaining restaurants still open in the city and I was a lovely Bloomington Indiana. I'm not sure those two words I've ever connected before. But I was there for a conference this last weekend. I have never been to Bloomington. Or do I care? What I will say is that the campus is, you know, really has some interesting sort of modified faux brutalist architecture. Right. I mean, there are really a lot of interesting buildings that are like, yeah, I know that really look like they were made by a really seriously talented Sylvia designer. That's great. I actually like Indiana's license plate, you know, the crossroads of America, you know, because, you know, the only thing the state has going for it is you have to travel through it to go somewhere else..

AP News Radio
Ridder Helps No. 8 Bearcats Rally for 38-24 Win at Indiana
"Cincinnati forced for Indiana turnovers into thirty eight to twenty four win the number eight Bearcats trailed fourteen to nothing in the second quarter but grabbed the lead for good early in the fourth two plays stood out for three on Cincinnati a ninety nine yard kickoff return by tree talker and a Hoosier fumble on the Bearcats two in the fourth quarter Cincinnati cornerback Desmond Ridder passed for two hundred ten yards going to have time or or even were down fourteen on the wasn't loan faces there wasn't you know heads down or anything I use single caller Michael Penix was picked off three times as the un ranked Hoosiers fall to one in two Tom McCabe Bloomington Indiana

AP News Radio
Militia Leader Gets 53 Years in Minnesota Mosque Bombing
"Hi Mike Rossi are reporting a militia leader gets fifty three years in prison in a Minnesota mosque bombing Emeli clear Harry the leader of an Illinois anti government militia group was sentenced Monday to fifty three years in prison for masterminding the twenty seventeen bombing of a mosque in Bloomington Minnesota the fifty year old Harry previously known as Michael Hary recently said she is trans gender no one was hurt in the bombing but more than a dozen members of the dar al Farooq Islamic center community gave impact statements about the trauma they suffered Harry a former sheriff's deputy who led a group called the white rabbits was convicted in December on five counts hi Mike Crossey up

AP News
"bloomington" Discussed on AP News
"Push more than 200 million people to leave their homes in the next 30 years. That's according to the World Bank about a million New York City public school students are back at school this morning, actually in school. There's a vaccine mandate for teachers. This is a P news. The leader convicted in a bombing and this is a P news. The leader convicted in a bombing at a mosque in Minnesota in 2017 will be sentenced today. Emily Claire Harry. He was previously known as Michael Harry, the leader of an Illinois anti government militia group, who authorities say was the mastermind behind the 2017 bombing of a mosque in Bloomington. Minnesota, faces a mandatory minimum of 30 years in prison for the attack on the Dar al Farouq Islamic Center. Harry is attorney Shannon Elkins is asking U. S District Judge Donovan Frank for no more than the minimum 30 year sentence and says the gender Dysphoria and misinformation fueled theories inner conflict that led to the bombing. Prosecutors are seeking a life sentence well, no one was physically hurt in the attack. Prosecutors say the bomb was an act of terror. I'm Jennifer King. Five people died in a fire in Akron, Ohio, this morning and four were injured. The cause of the fire is under investigation. Firefighters arrived to find relatives and neighbors trying to help the family members of a home there. Get out. I'm Rita Foley. AP News And in 2000 and 17 bombing at a mosque in Minnesota faces sentencing today the leader of an Illinois anti government militia group who authorities say was the mastermind behind the 2017 bombing of a mosque in Bloomington, Minnesota, Emily Claire Harry. He was previously known as Michael Harry, and recently said she is transgender faces a mandatory minimum of 30 years in prison for the attack on the Dar al Farouq Islamic Center. Several worshippers were gathered at the center to pray when a pipe bomb was thrown through the window and Mom's office co defendants said that Harry lead The group. And came up with the plan to attack the mosque motivated by a hatred for Muslims cited in a manifesto known as the White Rabbit Handbook. Harry's attorney Shannon Elkins, is asking U. S District Judge Donovan Frank for no more than the minimum 30 year sentence and says the gender dysphoria and misinformation fueled here his inner conflict that led to the bombing. Prosecutors are seeking a life sentence well, no one was physically hurt in the attack. Prosecutors say the bomb was an act of terror. I'm Jennifer King. Pope Francis has opened his first full day in Slovakia by meeting with the country's president ahead of an encounter with the Jewish community to honor its Holocaust dead and atone for Catholic complicity in World War two era racial laws.

AP News Radio
Militia Leader To Be Sentenced in Minnesota Mosque Bombing
"The leader convicted in two thousand seventeen bombing at a mosque in Minnesota faces sentencing today the leader of an Illinois anti government militia group who thirty say was the mastermind behind the two thousand seventeen bombing of a mosque in Bloomington Minnesota Emily clear hair he was previously known as Michael Hary and recently said she is transgender faces a mandatory minimum of thirty years in prison for the attack on the dar al Farooq Islamic center several worshippers were gathered at the center to pray when a pipe bomb was thrown through the window open imam's office co defendants said that Harry let the group and came up with the plan to attack the mosque motivated by a hatred for Muslims cited in the manifesto known as the White Rabbit handbook Kerry's attorney Shannon Elkins is asking U. S. district judge Donovan Frank for no more than the minimum thirty year sentence and says the gender dysphoria and misinformation fueled Aries inner conflict that led to the bombing prosecutors are seeking a life sentence well no one was physically hurt in the attack prosecutors say the bomb was an act of terror I'm Jennifer king

Health and Wealth Podcast with Carter & Tim
"bloomington" Discussed on Health and Wealth Podcast with Carter & Tim
"What's up in richards. Tim here with car. We've got ted purdy in the house Pga golf tour winner and insurance agent. And he's rap wrangling up a whole lot of food to help feed people. So let's why don't we get into this You wanna talk about the food bank first or do that. That's an interesting story. There's a really great so my dad's a good cushion guy and In his best friend so they at the end of the year they look at the top ten christian organizations that they can donate at the end of the year and number one. Was this food. Bank called midwest food foodbank based at bloomington illinois that they had seven locations around the country and they have one in haiti and africa. A food bank. So eric shelled all my dance buddy donates to midwest food bank. They the founder gets his. You know it was like five thousand dollars check so it wasn't a huge donation but it was you know it was wasn't chump change and the founder david keyser's his name. David calls eric and says thank you and eric's like i don't make money all the time and never had a founder call me and thank me so they started talking while the next year they look. At the top ten christian charities and number one again is the midwest food bank and it's based off their expense ratios and the money that they are goods and services that they provide the community donates again. David keyser causing again just so impressed. He said you know what. How do we get food bank to phoenix arizona. And david said you just you just just do it. So my dad and eric put aboard together. They raised the initial funds. They bought a warehouse and gilbert arizona and they started bringing food through the through the network of the midwest food bank and that happened just over three years ago they came to and last year gave twenty million dollars a food away and this year. We're gonna give away. Just in the phoenix phoenix arizona The whole state of arizona. We support cleaning the reservations. They're gonna give over sixty million dollars for the food way this year in during this pandemic just phenomenal. But the story me going food bank in helping out They've lost their their executive director. I needed help. And i had called my dad. Eric gonna sit. Hey and i want to buy a golf course called cold water and in phoenix. Will you guys helped me. Put up the data by this golf course so they would drive out and they meet me at the golf course and they look at it and i go. Yeah this is great. You know we'll help you but you know what we need somebody to run the food bank for us so we're gonna lose money. Run on a golf course. We might as well just lose money hiring it around the food bank south. Wasn't you know what i was intending to do. It wasn't what i wanted to do with the first day. I'm coming to the food bank kicking and screaming. Like what am i doing here. Like i don't know how to run a food bank really I get there and And just fell in love from the first second i got there. I the first patient. I i go load out the this. The charities come every fifteen minutes that come through the warehouse. We on their vehicles vans their tracks their their cars. Whatever they've got. We feel our cars at the ends up a food and then fifteen minutes later. There's another cherry coming through. So i show up the first day in every fifteen minutes. I'm filling up these cars. And i'm asking these amazing people you know. What are they doing and like the first lady says well. I ran a home for teenage mothers so we basically are raising the mother and the baby. ya we support them with food and and then the next guy comes to them and he goes well. I have a a church inside the prison in rocky point and i support the i built this church inside the prison iraqi point nicer part them with food. We filled up his trailer. Just every fifteen minutes or somebody doing some amazing things for people and i was just hooked. I went home and woke up the next day. And i felt like a hangover like felt horrible and i and i went to work. Then you know. The energy came back. And i felt great again and i was talking to one of the guys who is a recovery guy. It was volunteer banking says. Yeah he goes. Ted serving is just like doing. Cocaine dislike doing drugs or alcohol because you get that high when you serve and the next morning year you know you feel burned out so the only way you can get that high back is you gotta go serve again. So i use that a lot and But you know so the recovery. That's you know. And that's why the recovery guys really en- gals loved volunteer. Eric urged volunteer. Because it is it does lift. Your spirits does make you feel good sipc anyway ad. I was under six months. I started in november nineteen. And i had a six month contract until we found it proper executive director and then kobe hip and i went to hit. It was all hands on deck. I mean that the need for food was astronomical and like there was no food in the grocery stores. There is no toilet paper there was. I mean i don't know if you remember i Endemic it was crazy. Well the demand on the food bank was exponential and we were trying to help so many people we'd have distributions and there would be three mile long lines of cars one by one coming through to get a couple of boxes of food distributions and There's the need still there. This pandemic has really hurt people economically So there's still working hard to to get through it's been life changing for me. They they hired a proper executive director from Van guard a gal name merrily. She came over from vanguard. She's very successful leaders over there. And i think she was making you know a good mid six figure salary nash. She's not at the food bank but she's having more fun too so it's just a it's been life changing for me to.

Another Mother Runner
Optimal Training Path for Success on Difficult Hikes
"Talk a little bit about our training. I mean so. I basically modified the program. That i gave that i gave you guys for the grand canyon and i will say that we have at about if you're listening and you're like the indian or i wanna do yosemite or another big hike is about seventy percents away there for prime time in our training programs as just one of those things that it's just kind of been stalled by life in the pandemic and everything else so maybe this'll finally podcastone finally per spur us to get it up but talk a little bit about the training and stuff you guys did. Yeah so the train you said. It's not really well so we foy there was up. I look back at what we did. And i feel like we entered. I entered this training round in a better place. I think. Then the grand canyon had a train to start treating for the grand canyon But misplace. I felt pretty good spat with strength training. Three times a week And you set up with gradually increasing longer aches hikes and you know specific distances. We had to hinch elevation gains. We had to hitch A lot of the. I did supplement my strength training with some of your exercises more around the pre stuff that mobility work which i think is super helpful because of the impact and being on your feet so much Was super helpful You know the max hike that we did we had on our schedule was fifteen. Miles was a target and three thousand feet of elevation so in minnesota at natch Which we did is we started. Actually are training going to highland hills in bloomington and just going up and down. The ski hills and that is my ground zero through other hikers. Were training for other an epic events. We bumped into someone there who had done half dome sober. He was trained in for sunday. Hideout washington And so just part of me that part of the train alone and bumping into people's super inspiring and gain a little bit in sight in their experiences. So you know we did so back to the training routine it. Was you know strength three times. A week Just narrow able to keep going our classes or we could drop in on yours as well. you know. There was some run walking mixed in there one day a week or two days a week and then a big hike on the weekend

KQED Radio
"bloomington" Discussed on KQED Radio
"Lumpy juice. Meat is so expensive. Prices actually started creeping up in the mid sixties, when the federal government was spending heavily on both the Vietnam War and the Great Society. Nixon froze prices in the early seventies, but that just postpone the pain once controls were lifted. Prices bounced even higher by 1978. Jimmy Carter was calling inflation America's most pressing domestic problem. Fighting inflation will be a central preoccupation of mine during the months ahead. And I want to arouse our nation to join me in this effort. Despite the tough talk from Nixon, Ford and Carter prices kept climbing. Economist Blinder, who later served as vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, says psychology was partly to blame. In the seventies, Americans came to believe that high inflation was here to stay. And that expectation became a kind of self fulfilling prophecy. If your business and you expect the inflation rate to be 5% you likely when it comes time to set the prices for the next year, go up 5%. On the other hand, if you think inflation is gonna be 1% from you more likely to go up 1%. Ultimately it took a crackdown by cigar chomping Fed Chairman Paul Volcker to break that cycle. Loker Slam the brakes on the economy by raising interest rates to 20%. He told the MacNeil Lehrer News Hour. Tough medicine was necessary to prove he was serious about getting inflation under control. There. Some point to stand was gonna break and the psychology is going to change. It was a painful correction with nearly four million jobs lost. But it worked by 1983 inflation had retreated to just over 3%, and it stayed low for the last four decades. Now, though, with pandemic supply shocks and prospects for red hot demand, fueled in part by government spending, some see echoes of the 19 seventies inflation last month hit 4.2%. But both the administration and the Federal Reserve think that's temporary and their banking in part on changed expectations. We've now had decades of stable prices, and Blinder says that should help to prevent another inflationary spiral. I think the generation that we're adults in that high inflation period will always remember it. But they're a lot of Americans that never lived with inflation at all. So naturally, they don't expect it. Both White House and the central bank are on the lookout for any alarming shift and expectations, but for now, they see a return of runaway inflation. Is about as likely as a comeback for move rings and bell bottom jeans. Scott Horsley. NPR NEWS Washington Scott County, Indiana, had what's been called rural America's worst HIV outbreak in 2015. Because his I V drug abuse, and the county fought it by accepting a needle exchange program now. With HIV cases dropping dramatically. Scott counties, commissioners were likely to close the exchange for member station. W F I u Mitch Ligon reports the small manufacturing county found itself in the national spotlight when I V drug use like the hundreds of new cases of HIV. Mike Pence was Indiana's governor, then and approved Scot counties. Needle exchange as an emergency measure, I will tell you that I do not support needle exchanges, anti drug policy But this is a public health emergency. Since then, Health Administrator Michele My turn has been trying to help residents get comfortable with the needle exchange. I think a lot of people forgot kind of what 2015 was like and what we went through as a community at the outbreaks Worst, the county saw 22 new HIV cases in a week. It had one in all of last year. Health officials Credit the needle exchange, But two of three county commissioners say it's leading toe overdoses and enables drug use. Neither would grant interviews to NPR. But here's Mike Jones at a recent meeting, one of the things that I really struggle with is that There's no accountability. I don't know where How do you get for somebody to say enough's enough? Those who work at the county's Needle exchange say it's been difficult when many see the exchange as a starter kit for drug users. Kelly Hahn's was struggling with addiction before the outbreak and now works as an HIV test her for the county. These are cottons, and that's used for injection you know, to filter through as they're trying to pull up a lot of people back in the back In my day, you cut off a cigarette filter and you put in there and pulled through the cigarette filter about 170 drug users use the needle exchange each month, Han says It may be their only access to testing healthcare and recovery services. I don't know what any resource is. We're in 2015. And if I walked in and said, I'm struggling, I'm inactive addiction. Somebody help me like I was scared of that judgment. There are over 300 needle exchanges operating across the country. Research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows they help reduce the spread of infectious diseases like HIV and can help people overcome substance abuse. Jericho Hall says that's exactly what the program did for her. It's not just about the needle exchange Is also about people treating you like a human name. Former U. S. Surgeon general Dr Jerome Adams attended that same meeting and praised God counties Needle Exchange as the gold standard at the inferential reprogrammed all over the nation have been the Canada and finality went over there and the way you're doing, you're here is the way it's supposed to be done, but the commissioners say there are treatments for HIV. Are frustrated. They don't seem or people in recovery, and it's aggravated for Ray first responder to mark and somebody and they walk out the ER. There's no there's no Nothing happens. Health officials have warned of what's happening in West Virginia, HIV cases are spiking their as elected officials crackdown on needle exchanges. In Scott County, Indiana. Mathurin says they can transition to a harm reduction program without needles, but she doubts it will be as effective. She expects rising HIV cases to follow suit. For NPR news. I'm Mitch Legan in Bloomington. Wait..

Scoops with Danny Mac
"bloomington" Discussed on Scoops with Danny Mac
"We will plenty of time to decompress talk about the blues where they go moving forward cardinals. Drop two out of three including last night's extra innings. Gamed zand there now. Headed to chicago to take on the white sox. Let's talk a little baseball. I david caplan joins us on the show cardinals coming off the series against the cubs. Chicago white sox cap of course seven to ten. Am on espn one. Thousand chicago nbc. Sports chicago's well capital. What's up man. It's all cardinals all the time in chicago this week yes it is cubs just got done ticket to a three could swept that series and knowledge cardinals will meet up with tony larussa guys. I'll be at the game on monday. Night i'm excited to watch. It and i think stocks are pretty good team. I think the cardinals are pretty good team. I think that last night in over the weekend and saint louis great series and an example of how i think the next couple of months will impact What happens at the deadline. This is such a unique year anyway. Cap but especially in the national league central The cubs for instance. Do you think Regardless of of the storylines regardless of our fans field. Do you think the front office the organization is evaluating almost in real time. How this team continues to play and what that means leading up to the deadline. I do think so. I really believe if you look at jed hoyer position. It's been look you guys want me to keep this thing together. You better prove to me that you belong there that it it should be kept together because while as great as twenty six teen was in. Yes they've gone to the playoffs. Since then climbed back to the top of the mountain. haven't even gotten to a world series and said it in two thousand eighteen and twenty nineteen. Our offense is broken so if these guys truly think they deserve you know massive contracts than better go out they better prove it and so far the last five sticks weeks they don't wanna the better offense teams in baseball. You really good. So we'll see. I thought last night was so great from pitching standpoint. And i know some folks and i guess carl fans i guess it's a bit results oriented right like Can say last night's in example of why you shouldn't have the extra inning role. I don't have a problem with it again last night. Whoever whoever lost. I feel like the way the schedule plays out. You save maybe some transactions you save some bullpen arms. What happened in the extra inning. Rule doesn't for me diminish anything that happen in that game leading up to that. What's your take. yeah. I think you're probably talking about the derek gould's column ben frederickson frederickson gould's report. Google reporter garrick. Google that the saint louis post dispatch..

MyTalk 107.1
"bloomington" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1
"To the Bloomington Very rich. Can Marla's five eyewitness news forecast human today showers and a high near 78 degrees. Showers and 64 continue overnight and then more showers and 78 tomorrow It's a steam he's 63 right now get you to give me the update. This is in my top dirt alert. Update A quick look at what's happening in entertainment. Want the dirt on my talk my talk. Did you want to tell him something something? What if Paul chose group enterprises being sued after a customer claimed a candle bought from the brand exploded? The customer purchased a candle. Who? Well, it's the smells like my vagina Candle. Um, the customer claims that the candle exploded after being lit for three hours and filled his room with smoke. Uh, did he cut the week down? Did he leave it on? Too long? Come on. Now. That is exactly right. You know how to work a candle, a representative. Go ahead, Kenny. Yes. Well, ironically, that's what her real vagina does, too. Yeah, exactly. You perv. Why'd you buy it anyway? A representative for group told TMZ were confident this claim is frivolous and an attempt to secure an outsize payout. From a press heavy product. We stand behind the brand we carry and the safety of the products we sell here. Heritage. The brand that supplies the candle has substantiated the products, performance and safety through industry. Standard testing. When I first read this here, heretic, I thought they were speaking to the band's here. Heritage. Yes, here here, and I'm like, Oh, my God, We got old timey real quick. Now is the heritage. Yeah. Vagina. Candle. Yeah, I smite thee all right, In case you missed it. A few weeks ago, Morgan Wallen fans purchased ads on six billboards in Nashville showing their support for the artist who was caught on video using a racial slur. The ads were purchased on display just before the ACM awards, which banned him from attending. And the same group of fans have now purchased a billboard in Los Angeles to support his to him just ahead of the Billboard Music Awards, which have also decided to exclude him from the ceremony. I just You know, the billboard is gonna be up through May 24th if you love him, and you support him. Buys albums. I mean, don't spend your money on billboards that's just make sure looks like operation. I'm sorry. I mean, it does. It's like what it says to me is that that is an important to you and you're so outraged. By this person not getting their chance in music. Whatever he is ultra rich, you guys. It doesn't matter. His album is selling like hotcakes. He's fine, Probably because of this. Yeah, That's what I'm saying. So, yeah. I mean, I don't know what they think it's going to do, But, yeah. All right. That's the latest or you can find more stories like this In my talk when I was 71 dot com or by downloading our app Thanks for letting everyone know dirt alert. Updates at the top of every hour plus.

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast
A Stroll Through Racing History: Louis Quatorze
"He was a handsome bay. Grandson of northern dancer often described this regal and majestic it was appropriate. Given that he was named for a former king of france and twenty five years ago this weekend he won the one hundred twenty first running of the preakness stakes his name. Was louis tours. Fold on march thirteen. Nineteen ninety-three in kentucky. Lewis tours was offered by breeder. Georgia hoffman at the one thousand nine hundred ninety four keeneland july yearling sale but was bought back for two hundred twenty five thousand dollars off eventually sold an interest in the son of sovereign dancer to william cornacchia. And tell us contract with future hall of famer. Nick zito chosen the colts trainer. Bloomington doors whose name refers to the architecture stylings of the reign of king. Louis the fourteenth of france showed promise as a juvenile he robbed by five lengths and breaking his maiden at saratoga and he finished runner-up and both the hopeful stakes saratoga and the futurity at belmont park both of which were great one races early in his three-year-old campaign. Lacouture tour's want a pair of allowance races. At gulfstream park he was fourth in the florida derby unbridled song and runner-up beaten six skip away in the blue grass stakes at keeneland and a difficult journey the kentucky derby would relegate him to a sixteenth place. Finish some twenty two lakes behind winner. Grindstone still zito saw an opportunity in the preakness stakes with the colts. Blood work xrays following the derby reveals. No issues at the fact that neither grindstone nor beaten derby favourite song would be going to the preakness and z. Tow began believing that his horse would not only have an opportunity but also a legitimate shot at winning the second leg of the triple crown

KTLK 1130 AM
"bloomington" Discussed on KTLK 1130 AM
"Hashtag t CME t. Yeah. Or you can call in and 6519895855 and be like Rick in Bloomington. Good morning, Rick. Good morning. Thank you. For the Mulligan. Three Quick points to really what? Andrew Language. Same Donald Trump actually advocated an accomplished what the Mitt Romney's and John Case, six have been advocating all their life. Because he was an outsider, Erica to bolster They summarily rejected that. But they're not the face The Republican Party. I don't remember any of them speak. A few packs number two. I have instructed my family should ever go into a coma. Or faint or passed out, or maybe in on my deathbed to take any recording of you guys talking to don and burn fail. It'll perk me right up to three hours to finish any unfinished business number three. I know. John often uses movies. T O make this point. And you don't in the movie American wife. I'm sure both of you have seen. It was one minute left in the game, and Kurt Russell playing her book. Turned his coach after he looked at the Russian coach. He said he doesn't know what to do. Kamala Harris does not know what to do. She isn't competent, and I know Rush Limbaugh I used to say with Donald Trump. What Green is it looks like this is what pushing back looks like Um, what in confidence looks like and maybe it's a good thing. She doesn't go down there because any policy she might put in place with simply accentuate the problem. Worse, tentative. Have a good morning. Guys can't argue with that one. No on and it is, it is incompetence. And, you know, John likes to use the phrase you know, style over substance when it comes to Democrats very often, and it is very appropriate. You know, they run on all these grand ideas They run on playing off of your emotions. They make you feel certain ways in order to get you to vote for him. But then when they get in office, they're like the dog who finally caught the car. They they don't know what the hell to do. Don't know how to govern and governing is not really in the Democrats playbook. They don't really care that much about good governance. They care about winning the elections and getting the power if Democrats cared about good governance than these areas that have been under Democratic control for generations would not be in such awful shape and it is literally across the board. It is a nationwide problem and these thieves major metropolitan areas that Democrats have had a stranglehold on for decades. The education system is usually terrible. The inequities between communities of color and everybody else is, are some of the worst in the nation. The achievement gaps between students of color and everybody else is usually some of the worst in the nation. Crime is out of control. Democrats simply do not care about good governance. No, you know what? Andrew Langer made a point. He said this several times talking about his his for lack of a better word trepidation about President Donald Trump when he got elected, and and I've said before that, when going to the primary process I was I didn't support it and vote for Trump. And then I ended up Getting on board a little bit a little bit later on, But to the point of what your of what you're saying Drew. It really does underscore one of the big reasons. The left has such an issue with Trump of many You know, Trump wasn't a politician, regardless of how you feel about how he got there, right? Um Donald Trump created an empire. It was a good businessman. He just woz. He wouldn't. He had a lot behind him. Regardless of how you feel with the night he got Daddy's money to get there, however, you got that money. He took it. He used it, and he built an empire over it. And when he became president, he was treating the country like a business man. You didn't have the savvy of the politician didn't speak the way when the speak right. They didn't like the way that he used Twitter, But he knew what he was doing in terms of running a good business, and that's how we ran the country and the cunt and it showed. It showed in what he was able to accomplish for the past four years that Ricks right, Kamila Harris, she's in over her head. She doesn't know what she doesn't know what she's doing. And the president himself is a shell of a human being. Who's just taking his orders from either Barack or Susan rice or the people around him, And this is why we are where we are right now we're kind of a rudderless ship in a country that's filled with rudderless rage. Bob inshore of you. Go ahead, Bob. Good morning. I'm a retired metro transit bus driver who worked in Brooklyn Center for 30 years from 1988 on not retired a couple years ago. And I don't know. Are you familiar with the Brookdale Mall and the demise of Brookdale? Not intimately. OK, they used to be a thriving mall there, you know, like ridge Dale or grows stale. And gradually over the years. It started emptying out and I used to go in there on my layover break and I talked to the store owners and they told me about the You know the crime that was occurring in there. The Threats and yelling and shouting and a drove all the customers away the mean the neighborhood Broken center had a lot of climate and they drove Brookdale more out of business. They finally demolished it. And I've personally seen a lot of crime going to work, you know, just driving to work over there. And, uh, you know, the Met counsel. I don't know if they still do it, but they used to like to distribute people throughout the suburbs. They take him the inner city on Yes, And when people see how North Minneapolis has expanded and moved out into Brooklyn center and cause a lot of crime there, they're not gonna want that in their neighborhoods. Is that reasonable or not? Sure sounds reasonable to me. Yeah. I mean, I don't know if any people are aware of it, though, but I saw and I talked to the shop owners who got driven out of business and broke them because they were just kids in there, you know, on its screaming and Has been murders. Even on my way to work. There was a murder there. We'll drink. Drew. You found this. And thanks for the call Bob, But we can get into a little bit more of this later on a couple of different articles, articles by this Michael Tracey on guy Haven't I hadn't seen this person before, but writing about local issues. On talking about media activist do not care about the historic nationwide to surgeon homicides, and he has a subsequent piece talking about our murder where murder Apple is again, you know, and they're right, and there's very little addressing of all of this all of the negative, fall out. From what has taken place with the various controversies doesn't get Tommy. Tommy, Can we talk about it? We cover it on this show. All of the all of the harm that comes to individuals that aren't attached to either, Dante. Right? And we'll get into this order. What happened with George Floyd? But there is just a complete dismissal of of any of of any of that. You know, we have the shooting over the weekend of Sam's top five you, Mister, Listen on the I Heart radio up with some Seven people shot in ST Paul. And what did they do? They get together, the leadership gets together, the faithful, you just get together and we all must come together to stop all of this. It's like when you're not addressing the root cause of the problem here. You're not addressing the root cause the problem, nor are you proposing any effective solutions. The problem, and the fact of the matter is that I know a lot of people out there on the left dark who don't like hearing this and they don't want to see their elected leaders do it, but until you commit To stopping crime with more cops, better trained cops and a justice system that doesn't have a revolving door on the front that spits him right back out on the street. These problems are not going to go away. In the article on The Star Tribune in Operation Safety net in the chemical weapons pose a mystery couple of just quick things in their old quick the state patrol had more than 100 documented cases of troopers being struck by objects thrown by protesters exposure the bear spray used by protesters or being spat on according to expose person. Look, there's no mystery here, right? The law enforcement had adopted and has adopted less lethal means of going and dealing when it comes to two riots. But what do we get now? You know, we don't get Looking at supporting law enforcement to stop the spread of violence of the shootings taking place. Now we get the Star Tribune, you know, pushing out articles like this and it cracks me up because all they do is they wanna peddle in fear Tear gas was created during World War One World War. One tear gas has been around for trench warfare.

Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast
"bloomington" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast
"Collection makes your Teague one offer to UNC Asheville when he came out of high school. So again, there's I would say this month, I think Archie Miller again getting back to him was a good coach, but he he does not fit Bloomington. He fit Ohio State. He didn't want to be in a fishbowl. He didn't wash Just want to coach ball. So Moser has has a personality Rob that fits Bloomington. He's upbeat. He's social everybody likes Porter Moser who who talks to so I would go port a voice-over Mike Woodson 101 days out of a hundred person. Like it's a no-brainer. I would go Chris. I would go sculpture. I would go all over my quota. I don't think Mike Woodson is Juwan Howard. I think that would be a disastrous higher unless unless unless unless he hires some phenomenal staff. Like if he could pull off like Dane Fife and my glue is to former, Indiana guys who were at Michigan State and UCLA and bring them back with a veteran head coach then okay, I'm in town, but I wouldn't have faith that he'd be able to do that. Yeah, now I told him with you don't you think though that if Indiana hired Porter Moser that it would be like here we go. Again. We just tried this with Archie Miller a Dayton and against different personality different personality talking about the Indiana fan base in general. When you look at average about the press conference. Now, this conference is garbage. You're right. You're right, but I do feel like there is like when you make a higher you want it to make a splash you want it to be like a brad Stevens comes to Indiana all of a sudden but who else who else you're not getting Tony Bennett, you're not getting more for you. You try those years ago. That didn't work, you know, like who are you getting off? You know for me Chris beer would be the other guy would probably give a blank check to and a lot of people would say. Well you just lost in the first round the tournament in the second round tournament to Arkansas. Yeah, but I mean the ink auche he actually fits Bloomington in a lot of ways, you know, like Lubbock to Bloomington isn't is is crazy as is a lot of moves to be made back. So I don't know I mean again beard Scott through guys like that. I would I would make a run at Porter Moser certainly, you know, I hope Scott Dolson is doing his due diligence here and and really work in the see who he can get. Like, maybe there's somebody else who's unhappy if they're spot. I mean I got no problem with him taking a swing at Brad Stevens. No problem whatsoever and Again Brad the best quote he gave. Did you hear his quote to me when I asked him off? Was so good. He was like he's like listen, you know as a kid, it's different when I'm a kid, you know, he eventually said I'm not a kid anymore. You know, when I was a kid, I was a big Indiana fan and things have changed now. I'm a former four-year-old masshole who drives swerve all over the road. I drink, you know, I go to Dunkin Donuts and root for the Patriots. I did see that. Okay, there's pretty good. Yeah, I'll turn this out of you off hands that Dawson gives Rick Pitino a call. Is that a is that even in the stratosphere? Is that like so insane that I know?.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
Houston Cougars Earn No. 2 Seed, Face Cleveland State
"News. Houston against cleveland stakes. Those of you. That may or may not remember. Calvin sampson was the head coach. In indiana calvin samson got fired in two thousand eight because of doing i dunno recruiting violations. Phone calls all this kind of stuff. Gas where houston is playing cleveland. State in the nc double a. tournament guesswork bloomington assembly hall. Baby there's your breaking news. It just came out acts now. We have got. I got houston. I'm a big houston fan. I didn't calvin a great job. But here's the deal. They're only allowing five hundred total fans in the building other places. Twenty five percent up in marion county indianapolis in tippecanoe where where purdue is so. He's not going to be a lot of fans not going to be a lot of hack lights. But i'm taking houston. Houston damn good basketball team

WIBC 93.1FM
"bloomington" Discussed on WIBC 93.1FM
"Their scores outside the state of Indiana but still having major dividends for each school number. 50 Ohio State rebounds After that lost to produce they beat number 10, Wisconsin 74 62. Kentucky gets an important win the end the end the SEC meeting l s u 80 to 69. And Louisville defeats Duke 72 65. Coach. K's team is five and five on the year the Cardinals and prove to 10 in three Looking elsewhere in high school basketball around the state. It was parked tutor defeating Indianapolis. Shortridge 38 29. They only 49 Christian Academy 40. It was Orleans topping Mitchell 50 to 37 Northeastern all over Blue River 86 to 46. Northeast of Boys. They beat Springs Valley 59 46 north Putnam, 74 Brown County, 37 North Harrison Defeat Salem, 73. 32. I'm running gang with network Indiana. Welcome back everybody about level with Star College basketball. The Hoosiers are in Bloomington tomorrow, taking on Rutgers and picked in action. It's a new start. Sports Illustrated Indiana's Tom Brew the man he is absolutely killing it out there. And if you haven't read He was great work and the work of his colleagues. There's something wrong with you. You need Tomo, Get on that site and get smarter, Tom. Thanks for your time. We'll, you know good to be on with you two and talking about the Hoosiers, who seem to be playing reasonably well right now. Well, I mean it to go to Iowa and beat the number four ranked team in the country on the road, right is huge for this program because there is a huge difference between being formed four and being three and five. It's just you know it it they went there and They had actually no business winning that game. I mean, Iowa is is a very good team. Even after watching them get me I still think their final 14 and they've got a guy inside Lucas Garza, who's almost unstoppable..

MyTalk 107.1
"bloomington" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1
"Me. That didn't when I watched that as a child grant, you're born and raised in Minnesota. So you may know this. I think that the Hawks In the movie. They go against the mighty Ducks. They're they're big arch nemesis, Donna. Okay. They're a very elite team, The mighty Ducks or a rag tag group of ne'er do Wells happy? Yeah, Kind of like the sandlot. Don. I think about the sandwich that that group of kids playing hockey instead? Okay and They go against the Hawks, Now Gordon Bombay, played by Emilio Estevez. He was a part of the Hawks when he was a kid. He missed the shootout goal in his punk coach. Never let him live it down, and that coach is still there coaching for the Hawks. And then I heard the kids from the mighty Ducks started to call the Hawks. Take eaters. And for the first time in my life, I thought, uh oh, no. Are the hawks supposed to be e? Dina? You're going to say yes. Listen, I'm not trying to pick a fight with anybody from the diner. I love Dina. I brought up hockey stuff once on twin cities live another producer. Jump in my ear like yeah. Maybe we should just move on because you're charging, you know people, their rivalries that people have here and it's stuff that you're gonna make somebody happy and somebody angry at you. But it had to do with where they drew lines in the city and what players should be on what teams and they found out Donna player that was on the Hawks. Was supposed to be on the mighty ducks with how the city lines were drawn. Yeah, they're calling cake eaters, and I was like, Whoa, This just got a lot more hot topic. You didn't say you Dina hawks in the movie, But when they made that line, and they reference him being from me, Dinah being cake eater, you knew that that was The order the cake here. You knew that? That was being reference to a Dina hockey? Absolutely. She What does that term actually mean? Thank you. Yeah, Like I mean, there are better words. Yeah, I think it just means rich, you know, like, Oh, you just always having cake. Everything so fancy for you. Was always like for the rest of us. We have cake on our birthdays, Right? And you're just eating cake all the time. Right? Grand is that actor done and iron from Minister says the cake eater. Actually, first we dine in Minnesota, saying the people are so rich that they can have their cake and eat. It, too, could also refer to rich white suburban kids in general, but it's been made famous from the movie. Mightiest Mighty Ducks. Didn't know could be looked into that right. Great 5% Come from there. Yeah, minutes talking parts of it. We have mount where I'm actually from its zesty just was blooming daughters from we blow West Bloomington. She always delineates that you live in Bloomington, West Bloomington, where there are no paved streets because our horse and carriages don't separate So that do they specifically mentioned he, Dina in the movie. I don't think they say the name. He doesn't know. You're right now. Just say cake eaters multiple times. Yes, And then I looked it up. And you know it. Dina is right next to the city of Minneapolis. Right on a map. Yeah. So technically how you would draw those city lines as they were as a plot point in Mighty ducks. It would be separating Minneapolis from Dina. Where's if you lived? You know, maybe I don't know. Let's say west of Cirque sees that now you are technically Minneapolis. That's a made up geography. OK, alright. You know what I'm saying? Yes. He could have been on the Richfield side of the Dyna, which is more towards the Minneapolis side by look the house and reach field when I moved here, right? He's just said the word, right? I did was fun. He meant to say nice. And I just said right, So I thought I had to eat the cake eaters. No, so confused. But if you isolate that audio, please try right, Tony. I love lamp. All right. Can I say one more thing? Our Facebook question today is when has a movie or a TV show inspired you to actually, you know, change something in your own life. We went out and got ice skates this weekend knowing you know, and then we'll I don't know if the horse the chicken came before the egg, the horse ahead of the character. I don't know, but we got ice skates and went out on the pond after watching Mighty ducks. Last night for the first time, and I shoveled off a little circle for the kids to just skate around. And it was really, really fun. Oh, that's really funny, Eh? So you have your own pawned? Well, yeah, Jascha way do they're a couple points in our neighborhood and there and people put up lights and everything. We don't have lights in our pond. But I want to go get some because being out there with the kids last night on this frozen pond, which was already a great leap when you move to Minnesota, you think that's where people go to die, right? It doesn't make sense. Nobody does this anywhere else in the country going out on frozen lakes, right, Donna? Sure. We overcame that we went out there and ended up just being really, really lovely. And the kids are so pumped to do it again. You gotta get lights. My on my neighbor. My neighbors Kevin and Diana, their kids play hockey. So they make a rink in their yard every year, and they've got lights all around it. They got a little warming house that he built. Whoa s so it's It's just, you know, especially now embrace it. Yeah, you know, it's an outdoor activity you can do good to get fresh air. You got it. We got to go. Nice. I've got to study. Mm. That any good? Well, it poses a question. Would you rather get a 10% raise? For an extra day off per month. I think I know how you're gonna answer this, Steve and we'll see if you are with the majority or the minority charity when we come right back already. My talk one of 71 shot another lorry and Julia moment Hey, bought Kim five Mercedes may box, but she bought him several.

WIBC 93.1FM
"bloomington" Discussed on WIBC 93.1FM
"In Bloomington. You know, you think about college towns that have been hit So hard as well, Um, you know, throughout this past year, at times the end to is very low hanging fruit, and we love to hit that, But they got this one right. This is pretty easy decision for May and hopefully some fans will be able to attend here in a couple of months, but very, very excited for the month of March and glad that will be happening in our backyard Lucas Oil Stadium. Bankers Life the Coliseum. Hinkle, a zoo, You mentioned Mackey Arena Assembly Hall all part of this Now we just gotta get some Indiana teams to be involved in it. KB, and that's what I'm concerned about. We'll talk about that. Another time, though, because I know your time is limited. Let's get into what happened yesterday with the Indianapolis Colts. I'm not gonna lie to you. There was a time where I was angry Tweeting yesterday fourth quarter Jags have the ball the opportunity to take the lead Multiple times. I was mean tweeting. I was angry, texting. There was no way the cult. We're going to blow this by getting swept to the Jags. They held on that man. It wasn't pretty well, I think the bubbles are tightening a little bit. To be honest with you hammer inside of Lucas. So stadium there If you had told me the start of the day that the Jags Would have four straight possessions with the ball to take the lead in the second half. I would have been like, Wait, What? I mean, they had, like you said several opportunities to potentially take the lead. And, you know, maybe even put you on your couch permanently, You know, for the rest of the rest of the season Had that score ended up holding up there, but the culture able to get enough stops. And then Johnson Taylor was a man possessed and it looks like that, really. About the past month and a half outside of their Kendari. He's the hottest running back in the NFL. And guess what gives the Colts and hope that, you know, maybe you could pull off an upset in Buffalo or Kansas City, but, yeah, it was not the prettiest 60 minutes of football. Surprise. Jacksonville hung in there. I thought the cold, you know, took the pedal. Take your foot off the pedal a little bit there about man. Rookie running back certain You certainly bailed you out and set a franchise record with 253 rushing yards. What do you see? That's different in the second half of these Colts game's compared to the first half, Because it kind of looks like that Pittsburgh game all over again call to build up a big lead, and then slowly do everything in their power to kind of crap it away. You know, I think sensibly when you get away from the scripted nature of the first quarter, you know they've been so good on opening drives. You're also gets exposed a little bit. I don't think there's a great talent at mainly the receiver position, and I don't think you're about yesterday's a shaky increasing Philip Rivers really in quite some time. And so I think you get a little bit exposed. Know anything. Kasongo doesn't help the situation there And then on the on the defensive side. I just think you're kind of regressing a little bit more to the main, You know, I felt like it times you're overachieving. On that side of the ball throughout the season. And you know this is a team that making the playoffs is a very good accomplishment. Certainly, but this is also the seventh best team in the A F. C. So I think you're gonna see inconsistencies you are going to see You know, I came to see your buffaloes type performances week in and week out, So I just think it's come the nature of where the football team is in 2020, both sides of the mall Kevin Bowen covers the Colts and all things sports at one of 752 fan. He joins us here on the hammer in Nigel Show, so Colt are at Buffalo. It's a one o'clock kick off on Saturday gets all the playoff games going. Last time I checked cults were around a touchdown underdog to the bills. Handicapped is for us. What are we looking at? Well, you're you're looking at a very explosive bills often shots Alan, their young quarterback. He's on some sort of n v P list. He probably won't win it, but he's certainly on it was the year that he had. Upon dig their top white out is, I think led the NFL in receiving yards and receptions this season as well. The very innovative offense and Alan is a big arm quarterback that can make plays out of the pocket. So defending that has been an issue for the Colts this season, and it's probably outside of Green Bay. It's probably the most explosive offense they faced all year. Defensively. Buffalo won't wow, you and a lot of areas and honestly, I'd say the biggest weakness might be stopping the run, which certainly plays in the Colts. And what you have a Johnson Taylor. I know about you hammer. I'm actually keeping.

WJR 760
"bloomington" Discussed on WJR 760
"Going to Bloomington won't be as hard As it used to be. You can just think of yourself on a basketball court anywhere is kind of the feeling these players are having right now. So you mentioned a tournament. All I could think about when you talked about it was Let's just hope we have one. You know, it's still 16 games ago. It's a few months away. But, you know, it also reminded me that the one thing we don't hear about right now, In a lot of big any of the big 10 basketball schools is cases and I hope I don't jinx it by saying that, but I think every team and every program has been very diligent and doing a fantastic job of taking care of themselves and being safe so that potentially hopefully we can have a postseason and, you know, I think that's a great things thus far and you know I'm really glad we're playing in the conference. We're not playing out of conference. Does the big 10 is taking this way Serious and in the tell people at home out fragile. Every game is Before every game. Everybody gets one more test. Think about this if one person Whether it's a coach, broadcaster player, Whatever manager One person. Doesn't test correctly on either team. Game off. Yeah, one person And so for all these teams and all the administrators and all the people involved to continually, you know, test clean. Well, you got to be a little lucky, but the other thing is, you gotta want to have it. No doubt about where we're now being joined by head Coach Tom Izzo. In time.

The Mason Minute
800 Miles (MM #3560)
"The with kevin mason ovid has been tough on everyone. And it's tough when you've got elderly parents especially when you're not nearby i've talked to my parents more during the pandemic than i normally would. We still hear from every week and my mom's letter but we want to make sure to check into that they're doing okay because we're not so close eight hundred miles away right now. And what's funny is eight hundred. Miles is like what eleven hours by car a little over eleven hours by car. It's actually the second closest. I've ever lived my parents since i graduated college. I've always lived far away from my parents. It's just the way our lives worked closest. We ever lived three hundred seventy five miles and that was for the two years i lived in bloomington illinois when they were still living in springfield missouri. They've been in florida for most of the nineties during that time. I was in indiana and ohio. Now tennessee some about eight hundred miles away right now. Hopefully i won't have to worry about putting that into action. They're doing good and today mom celebrates birthday number. Eighty one special day. And i'll check in again as i always do checking in just a couple of times month just to make sure they're okay especially when you're not nearby.

The Mason Minute
800 Miles (MM #3560)
"The with kevin mason ovid has been tough on everyone. And it's tough when you've got elderly parents especially when you're not nearby i've talked to my parents more during the pandemic than i normally would. We still hear from every week and my mom's letter but we want to make sure to check into that they're doing okay because we're not so close eight hundred miles away right now. And what's funny is eight hundred. Miles is like what eleven hours by car a little over eleven hours by car. It's actually the second closest. I've ever lived my parents since i graduated college. I've always lived far away from my parents. It's just the way our lives worked closest. We ever lived three hundred seventy five miles and that was for the two years i lived in bloomington illinois when they were still living in springfield missouri. They've been in florida for most of the nineties during that time. I was in indiana and ohio. Now tennessee some about eight hundred miles away right now. Hopefully i won't have to worry about putting that into action. They're doing good and today mom celebrates birthday number. Eighty one special day. And i'll check in again as i always do checking in just a couple of times month just to make sure they're okay especially when you're not nearby.

The Mason Minute
800 Miles (MM #3560)
"The with kevin mason ovid has been tough on everyone. And it's tough when you've got elderly parents especially when you're not nearby i've talked to my parents more during the pandemic than i normally would. We still hear from every week and my mom's letter but we want to make sure to check into that they're doing okay because we're not so close eight hundred miles away right now. And what's funny is eight hundred. Miles is like what eleven hours by car a little over eleven hours by car. It's actually the second closest. I've ever lived my parents since i graduated college. I've always lived far away from my parents. It's just the way our lives worked closest. We ever lived three hundred seventy five miles and that was for the two years i lived in bloomington illinois when they were still living in springfield missouri. They've been in florida for most of the nineties during that time. I was in indiana and ohio. Now tennessee some about eight hundred miles away right now. Hopefully i won't have to worry about putting that into action. They're doing good and today mom celebrates birthday number. Eighty one special day. And i'll check in again as i always do checking in just a couple of times month just to make sure they're okay especially when you're not

Morning Edition
Trial to begin for man accused in Minnesota mosque bombing
"Way today in Minnesota in the trial of a man charged with firebombing a twin Cities mosque three years ago, prosecutors say 49 year old Michael Harry is an anti government militia leader. Who drove more than 500 miles from his home in Illinois to carry out the attack. Matt Septic with Minnesota public radio reports, the £10 pipe bomb caused heavy damage to the Darl Faruk Islamic Center near the Mall of America in suburban Bloomington. Mosque. Executive director Mohammed Omar was in the room next to the blast. He and four others inside the building did not suffer physical injuries. But Omar says the attack left the congregation shaken. What I'm expecting from this trial is to bring a closure tow tow. This guy's took at least say why they did it. 31 year old Michael MC Border and 25 year old Joe Morris pleaded guilty to hate crime and explosives charges last year and are expected to testify against Harry during the three week trial. For NPR

Latino USA
Trial to begin for man accused in Minnesota mosque bombing
"In Minnesota. Jury selection starts tomorrow in the trial of the leader of an Illinois anti government group who's accused of being the mastermind behind the 2017 bombing of a suburban Minnesota or Minneapolis rather mosque. 49 year old Michael Hari has pleaded not guilty to multiple civil rights and hate crimes stemming from the pipe bombing of Darryl Farouk Islamic Center in Bloomington. No one was injured, but the mosque was damaged. His alleged accomplices who have pleaded guilty, say the bombing was meant to scare Muslims into leaving the U. S for his trial is expected to last about three weeks.

Healthcare Triage Podcast
Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration
"Let's start with. Sharon who has not been here before we usually like to struck these podcasts by talking to our guests about specifically what they do and how did they get their sort of talking to the public about how does one become professor of medicine or a division director of nephrology or interested in the research that you do. So I started in research when I was in a froggy fellow at the University of Chicago. I was motivated to be honest by a patient on dialysis who kept having bleeding into their shoulder joint that I had to actually remove the blood for her to be able to use her arm on a weekly basis, and this was due to a rare disease that patients on dialysis get that deposits in the bone called amyloidosis. So that made me start doing research on bone learning about bone I worked in someone's. Lab and then when I came to. INDIANA. University in thousand hundred two I came really because of the strength of the Bone Research Group at Indiana University? Not Necessarily in the nephrology division from there I have held a lot of different administrative positions. I am kind of an organizer and get things done type person. So it comes pretty naturally to be able to put all that together. I could say I've been truly doing. Translational, research since my fellowship, as I hadn't during my fellowship, a clinical research paper and a basic science lab paper published in one year. So sometimes I feel like the word translational isn't really new and novel, but I'm happy that people are finally understanding that when you do something in the lab, you ought to be thinking about who the patient is. That would benefit from this at least some point in their life. So can I get you talk a little bit more about that like what do you? What do you think translational research is because I'd agree with you it it does seem like one of those things that people are treating soften is it's a new thing but it is it. So how what does it mean to you? So it should mean that there ought to be a potential and the back of your head. As to where this was going to go at some point in the future I truly believe there is an important area for research just to do research to understand, for example, and identify new and novel gene, and what does that gene do on the other hand translational means that you actually go from a patient and you work backwards to try to figure out what makes that patient tick? What makes them have this? Disease, what makes them prone to this disease? Both of those kind of approaches from science perspective are absolutely needed. But the whole emphasis of the he sl is really to actually take discoveries into humans and overtake humans back to bench discovery so that we improve their health to see this as something that doesn't do that. There needs to be a focus or we just sort of doing more no I think the difference between. That and very focused research is that in order to really cover that spectrum, you have to have collaboration you have to actually have other people who can work on different pieces of that Longitudinal plan again from patient back to bencher bench to patient, and so it is hard for someone to do all of those facets and so you have to have this ability or desire to get there and you need to collaborate. And that's really what the chess is all about. It creates an infrastructure that people can go to so that they can understand how to take that part that they're doing in that trajectory and make it happen. Can you give me some hard examples of some of the work for structure talking about? Yeah, I mean this is I. It is absolutely fabulous and I give talks and visit places all around the country and. We are truly one of the best and most advanced CPS I in my book from start to finish, you have an idea you think might actually be a drug down the road. We are working to try to figure out how we can actually benefit people who are not sure if it's going to be good. So connecting them with the right people to understand drug discovery, we then want to know if you're doing. An animal work is that gene that you're studying that protein actually present in humans because there's a lot of discrepancy in animal models of human disease, and so we have a giant bio bank samples that people can gain access to to actually measure the DNA and try to understand the Hamas between an animal and human, and then if you do have something and you have an idea and you want to implement a Clinical Research Study, do you need to know how many patients you have? So we have a connection where the Reagan streep data set to help to feasibilities. Do these people that you think exist really exist? Is there something unique about them that you need to know who the people are that you want to study, and then we have a pool of trained research coordinators and infrastructure setup to actually conduct clinical research and? Then from there, we have an ability to help people learn how to communicate how to publish how to write a grant. Harman's all these other things through our professional education opportunities the whole beauty and the fun of research is that it's never a dull moment. So every day you think you're going to be studying this and something send you to a tangent and you go wait a minute maybe I should be doing that. And that's how you end up needing collaborators and resources and methods and infrastructure to learn how to do it. Otherwise, you lose those tangents and discoveries are errors initially and someone takes a different look at it from a different viewpoint and they turn it into something really positive. So the CY is an effort that involves just more than Indiana University School of Medicine Right? Absolutely. So it's really Notre Dame purdue IU Bloomington. And many other hospital systems as well as the medical student campuses. So it it really integrates everything and it's very fun to actually learn what people are doing at different institutions and to actually get people excited and have a pathway forward to maybe something that isn't at their institution. Bring it back to what the research is that they're doing. So Sarah I'm not gonNA ask for full introduction. I think you may be the. Frequent. Guests on our podcast dates. So if the audience is familiar with anyone, it would be you but I would love to hear a little bit about how you became involved in community and translational research as well as what you see is the distinction between say clinical and translational sciences and community in Translational Sciences my research has always focused on vulnerable populations and health equity related issues and started with geospatial concentrations of poor health outcomes among adolescence and I was doing a project that was enrolling team girls on the West Side of Indianapolis and tracking them, and when we recruited from the clinic for the study just to give you an idea, we were using blackberry pearls. So that dates long ago this was. One hundred percent of the girls we had approached agreed to participate so much so that the I R. B thought perhaps the protocol was coercive because we were offering free cell phone service while we attract their locations and they were wondering if even after our main criticism with this grant to the NIH, which was like this grant isn't possible no never is going to let you track them Things have changed since I started asking those questions in any case my point is, is that when we brought it into the community because we didn't want a clinical sample because it can be quite biased for an adolescent population, those who are seeking healthcare, we were not meeting our enrollment targets and so what I learned after a lot of errors that engagement with the community in this case our target population of teen girls on the West Side we realized they weren't seeing sort of the Ir be approved flyers. replastering everywhere. That, there were all kinds of things that we needed to reconsider and it had nothing to do with the protocol itself. So the science was valid. There wasn't anything that was sort of keeping them necessarily from participating in terms of the incentives or what we're asking them to do. It was that we were not effectively engaging with them and as part of that as well as some I think innovative at least at the time collaboration with a faculty member from Herron. School of. Art and design in Santa Matsu we sort of employed this human center design research approaches sort of our how community engagement in any case because of that sort of experience for me personally as a researcher I learned the value of engagement and really beyond just meeting recruitment targets to getting to something much more meaningful from the participant's perspective, and it's just grown from there. So it has taken a lot of different trajectories for me and my own research relating to data, sharing partnerships to what's. Now Research Sham the patient engagement core to various community engagement in between but I guess where my role now as associate Dean as well as CO director of the CSI, plays in Israeli extending that translational spectrum in with the community and back rights as a bidirectional relationship, and so it's extending those collaborations to stakeholders in the community. My definition of team science and sort of that collaborative space is not restricted to individuals within the academy and really absolutely needs to include community folks at all. Levels of the translational spectrum. So this is not just from like clinical to community in my book it's you know community engagement even within the basic science from.

Healthcare Triage Podcast
Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration
"Let's start with. Sharon who has not been here before we usually like to struck these podcasts by talking to our guests about specifically what they do and how did they get their sort of talking to the public about how does one become professor of medicine or a division director of nephrology or interested in the research that you do. So I started in research when I was in a froggy fellow at the University of Chicago. I was motivated to be honest by a patient on dialysis who kept having bleeding into their shoulder joint that I had to actually remove the blood for her to be able to use her arm on a weekly basis, and this was due to a rare disease that patients on dialysis get that deposits in the bone called amyloidosis. So that made me start doing research on bone learning about bone I worked in someone's. Lab and then when I came to. INDIANA. University in thousand hundred two I came really because of the strength of the Bone Research Group at Indiana University? Not Necessarily in the nephrology division from there I have held a lot of different administrative positions. I am kind of an organizer and get things done type person. So it comes pretty naturally to be able to put all that together. I could say I've been truly doing. Translational, research since my fellowship, as I hadn't during my fellowship, a clinical research paper and a basic science lab paper published in one year. So sometimes I feel like the word translational isn't really new and novel, but I'm happy that people are finally understanding that when you do something in the lab, you ought to be thinking about who the patient is. That would benefit from this at least some point in their life. So can I get you talk a little bit more about that like what do you? What do you think translational research is because I'd agree with you it it does seem like one of those things that people are treating soften is it's a new thing but it is it. So how what does it mean to you? So it should mean that there ought to be a potential and the back of your head. As to where this was going to go at some point in the future I truly believe there is an important area for research just to do research to understand, for example, and identify new and novel gene, and what does that gene do on the other hand translational means that you actually go from a patient and you work backwards to try to figure out what makes that patient tick? What makes them have this? Disease, what makes them prone to this disease? Both of those kind of approaches from science perspective are absolutely needed. But the whole emphasis of the he sl is really to actually take discoveries into humans and overtake humans back to bench discovery so that we improve their health to see this as something that doesn't do that. There needs to be a focus or we just sort of doing more no I think the difference between. That and very focused research is that in order to really cover that spectrum, you have to have collaboration you have to actually have other people who can work on different pieces of that Longitudinal plan again from patient back to bencher bench to patient, and so it is hard for someone to do all of those facets and so you have to have this ability or desire to get there and you need to collaborate. And that's really what the chess is all about. It creates an infrastructure that people can go to so that they can understand how to take that part that they're doing in that trajectory and make it happen. Can you give me some hard examples of some of the work for structure talking about? Yeah, I mean this is I. It is absolutely fabulous and I give talks and visit places all around the country and. We are truly one of the best and most advanced CPS I in my book from start to finish, you have an idea you think might actually be a drug down the road. We are working to try to figure out how we can actually benefit people who are not sure if it's going to be good. So connecting them with the right people to understand drug discovery, we then want to know if you're doing. An animal work is that gene that you're studying that protein actually present in humans because there's a lot of discrepancy in animal models of human disease, and so we have a giant bio bank samples that people can gain access to to actually measure the DNA and try to understand the Hamas between an animal and human, and then if you do have something and you have an idea and you want to implement a Clinical Research Study, do you need to know how many patients you have? So we have a connection where the Reagan streep data set to help to feasibilities. Do these people that you think exist really exist? Is there something unique about them that you need to know who the people are that you want to study, and then we have a pool of trained research coordinators and infrastructure setup to actually conduct clinical research and? Then from there, we have an ability to help people learn how to communicate how to publish how to write a grant. Harman's all these other things through our professional education opportunities the whole beauty and the fun of research is that it's never a dull moment. So every day you think you're going to be studying this and something send you to a tangent and you go wait a minute maybe I should be doing that. And that's how you end up needing collaborators and resources and methods and infrastructure to learn how to do it. Otherwise, you lose those tangents and discoveries are errors initially and someone takes a different look at it from a different viewpoint and they turn it into something really positive. So the CY is an effort that involves just more than Indiana University School of Medicine Right? Absolutely. So it's really Notre Dame purdue IU Bloomington. And many other hospital systems as well as the medical student campuses. So it it really integrates everything and it's very fun to actually learn what people are doing at different institutions and to actually get people excited and have a pathway forward to maybe something that isn't at their institution. Bring it back to what the research is that they're doing.

Dana Loesch
66-year-old woman accused of driving into Bloomington protesters arrested
"Of the red car that ran over protestors in Bloomington has been arrested. Christie Bennett was taken into the Monroe County Jail Wednesday night. The Herald Times says she was the driver that was seen in a social media video driving over protesters who are supporting box Booker. She's charged with criminal recklessness and leaving the scene of an accident. One protests, protestors suffered cuts and bruises. Another was taken to the hospital with head injuries.