35 Burst results for "Ohio State University"

Telecom Reseller
A highlight from Precision liquid cooling lowers costs by 40%, dramatically reduces data centers environmental impact, Iceotope Podcast
"This is Doug Green and I'm the publisher of Telecom Reseller and I'm very pleased to have with us today Dr. Kelly Mullick who is with iStope. Kelly, thank you for joining us today. Thank you for having me. Well first of all, congratulations on your appointment. You're the Vice President of Technology Advancement and Alliances at iStope and we're going to be talking about that new position and also we're going to get into what you guys do and how you solve problems. But quickly, what is iStope? So thanks for the question. So iStope is a company based in and headquartered in Sheffield, the UK, Sheffield, England and we are the designers for precision liquid cooling which is a type of differentiated liquid cooling in the market and we're able to show with our technology up to 40 % reduction in total operating expenses in the data center. So we think this is really important for the market today. Now Kelly, before we dive into this a little bit further, when you say liquid cooling, what does that mean? Help me understand what that means. Yeah so liquid cooling essentially means the cooling mechanism is with liquid so like a fluid so like you know think water or oil or some something that has a fluid composition as opposed to traditionally most cooling done in the data center is done with air so think like large scale air conditioning units. And by the way, as we just mentioned your new appointment, this matches very perfectly with your educational and professional background. You are in fact a rocket scientist. Well technically yes. My background is extensive in chemical engineering but I did study at the Ohio State University with a very great scientist. Her name is Dr. Barbara Wieschlozel and we studied you know the thesis of my PhD was around fluid flow and supersonic nozzles. So you know as in space but here with especially the growth of AI with 5G and a lot of the other challenges our readers are facing you know how why does cooling now matter more than ever? Well it matters for you know for two primary reasons. One is really sustainability and you know looking to reduce a worldwide energy consumption. So for example global energy consumption on a worldwide scale is expected to be roughly eight percent of total energy usage by 2030. That's pretty significant eight percent of total energy usage and you know we're also being faced with things like climate change. We're seeing those real impacts of climate change. The increased wildfires, increased you know hotter summers and more severe thunderstorms. These are all impacts of climate change. So thinking of sustainable solutions that are going to be needed to support this huge growth in demand for energy usage is really critical and we have to do that to you know leave our planet in a better place for our future generations. The second real reason in terms of sustainability is the water usage. Today when you have an air -cooled technology you know a single data center, a single you know hyperscale data center is using roughly about a little less than a billion liters of water per year for a single data center and that's not something that you often see reported and when you have areas like even in the U .S. that are drought you know faced by drought like in California and in the in the southwest even in parts of Oregon.

Dennis Prager Podcasts
A highlight from Reality Check
"Dennis Prager here. Thanks for listening to the daily Dennis Prager podcast to hear the entire three hours of my radio show Commercial free every single day become a member of Prager topia You'll also get access to 15 years worth of archives as well as the daily show prep subscribe at Prager topia calm Hello, my friends, I'm Dennis Prager great to be with you. I hope the feeling is mutual And I assume to a large extent it is because that's why you're tuning in America has been Divided often there always been people if you will on the left people on the right Certainly, there was a division over slavery. That was dramatic to the point of hundreds of thousands of Americans slaughtered in a civil war What is new in the division today There are a number of things and it's a worthy topic Certainly come to the fore because of the indictments or the charges brought against The leading Republican contender and a former president unprecedented actions in the United States Presidented in virtually every dictatorship What is new is that the two sides have a different perspective Have not just a different perspective that's much that's much too mild The two sides have a different perception that's the word I wanted of reality See the north and south did not differ on facts They differed in values, but not on facts We have today not only Values that are diametrically opposed to one another between left and right We we don't even agree and this this is what is the first on reality If you think it is fair For biological men to compete in women's sports. It's not a matter of values Where where where why is this a values issue? This is a reality issue either. It's fair or It's unfair. That's that's a fact either men have an advantage Whether or not they call themselves women or they don't have an advantage whether or not they call themselves women either men who say their women should be put in women's prisons and women's locker rooms or they shouldn't That is not a difference in values that is a difference in reality We perceive reality differently. I read the New York Times editorial defending Jack Smith We don't agree on on reality. It is not again only an issue of values There is a values issue you better have a massive massive reason unprecedentedly serious reason to arrest a former president and the leading contender of the opposition or you are communists or Fascists or any term you wish to use for people who wish to have dictatorial rule in a country There isn't outside of Alan Dershowitz there isn't a liberal let alone a leftist of whom I am Oh, yeah, there is a Jonathan Turley right Jonathan Turley is another liberal And I say that despite the fact that Jonathan Turley attacked me many years ago Bizarre it just shows you how deep this stuff is because he writes a lot of very good stuff He called me a Judeo -Christian fascist. Did you know that? That that was a new term I've been called everything but Judeo -Christian fascist Because we know the history of Judeo -Christian fascism is so long and dark what It's Yes Anyway another by the way, it's another example of we know what they know and they know they don't know what we don't They don't even read our perspective or hear it or watch it. We we have all we know theirs. I read the New York Times How many New York Times readers read the Wall Street Journal editorial page? This is a terrible a terrible day in America, I Wrote 20 years ago that we're having a civil war and I said and I pray it remains nonviolent I'm not sure that this is not an act of violence isn't isn't every arrest an act of violence Now it as I have I wrote many years ago. There's moral violence and immoral violence So you may say it's moral violence arresting people and it usually is But it is violence and if it's not moral You you have Done something that only the Lord knows what it can lead to It's a very very very very bad thing in American life He told pernicious is that the word what was the adjective for the word lies In the indictment that the headline of the New York Times yesterday We'll find it He was let's see This Is the wrong one I want to get today's Column from the new the or the way the New York Times has reported it There we go You should know by the way, this is very distressing Judges signed to Trump Trump federal case Tanya should come shut Ken Has sometimes handed down sentences tougher than the one sought by prosecutors The woman is a left -wing activist That is who the judges the federal judge The federal judge assigned to former President Donald Trump's latest criminal case Has been publicly critical of January 6th as imposed lengthy sentences on Trump supporters Who went into the Capitol I Know one such John strand who's in not only prison but a particularly Severe prison and all he did is video of him. All he did was enter the Capitol These Most of the the vast majority of the people who went to the Capitol that day went to demonstrate Not to insurrect the day they used insurrection I Realized we're entering The realm of propaganda I He's used the Reichstag fire and I was right The German Parliament was burned in 1933 just as Hitler assumed power in Germany and The Nazis used that fire as an excuse to jail opponents and and rule by Dictatorial decree Ever hear of the term state of emergency Yes, that's what they did Should come a former public defender has shown a scrupulous concern for the rights of criminal defendants During the final years of the Trump administration. She repeatedly frustrated Justice Department efforts to accelerate the execution of federal inmates The Supreme Court reinstated the executions she blocked Supreme Court has overturned her Chitkin would oversee a trial into the case Which she hasn't yet scheduled Trump will make his initial appearance in the case Thursday afternoon. That's today, correct? That hearing is expected to be overseen by US magistrate judge Moxilla Upadhyaya Upadhyaya The indictment unsealed on Tuesday Which accuses Trump of criminal scheme of a criminal scheme to stay in power? after his election defeat the reading from the Wall Street Journal has been randomly assigned to Chutkan a 2014 Obama appointee Who was confirmed by the Senate on a 95 to 0 vote Like to know who the five were Who voted against her? She's not inclined to give people involved the benefit of the doubt Said Douglas Berman a professor of criminal law at the Ohio State University Two worlds in one country Gold dealers are a dime a dozen. They're everywhere what sets these companies apart and whom can you really trust? This is Dennis Prager for am fed coin and bullion my choice for buying precious metals when you buy precious metals It's imperative that you buy from a trustworthy and transparent dealer that protects your best interests So many companies use gimmicks to take advantage of inexperienced gold and silver buyers be cautious of brokers offering Free gold and silver or brokers that want to sell you overpriced collectible coins Claiming they appreciate more than gold and silver What about hidden commissions and huge markups Nick Grovitch and his team at am fed always have your back. I trust this man It's why I mentioned him by name Nick's been in this industry over 42 years and he's proud of providing transparency and fair pricing to build trusted Relationships if you're interested in buying or selling call Nick Grovitch and his team at am fed coin and bullion 800 2 2 1 7 6 9 4 American federal .com American federal .com So the judge that is overseeing the Prosecution and I would say persecution of Donald Trump is a left -wing activist She was part of lawyers for Obama She's the person overseeing the trial she's the judge She is regularly handed down sentences in line with or above what prosecutors recommend That is very rare. By the way making numerous statements concerning the seriousness of the attack on the Capitol and the future threat of political violence driven by Anti -democratic sentiments said John Lewis a research fellow at George Washington University's program on extremism This is all reported in the Wall Street Journal The New York Times is livid with regard to Donald Trump and The his lie that the election was dishonest Let's say it was a lie Do you understand that you're allowed to lie except under oath You're allowed to say a lot of horrible things Nazis demonstrated in front of a Georgia synagogue last month and when the police were asked why they didn't stop them they said because they're exercising their free speech and I am a Jew and I agreed with the police If free speech is allowed it allows for terrible speech it even allows for lies. I Am allowed to say the earth is flat. Is that a lie? Can I be arrested if I get a public forum and say the earth is flat? No First of all, sometimes lie is not clear. Sometimes lie is used as a political weapon We're told that we lie by saying that men and women are basically different. That's a lie It's a lie. We're told by the American Medical Association That it is a lie that men have an advantage in sports Right, these are all lies The stabilizing that's right. Okay, you're allowed a lie, but you can't tell a destabilizing lie to Say that this is not the America I grew up in is like saying that it is cold in the North Pole It is not, you know, I do a podcast with a 23 year old young woman Dennis and Julie it's called and you would love it. It's It's quite remarkable. She's quite remarkable. So I have Philosophized over the following question Who has it worse emotionally? young people Who never saw a free America? Or those of us who are old and did see a free America and are watching it disappear. I Don't have an answer to that question Mm Memories are very powerful and can be a source of comfort and they can be a source of distress if the memories are Over I Don't have an answer to that question. She doesn't either She sort of doesn't understand the America that I grew up in. She believes me. She understands the words When I was a kid, I remember this so vividly I grew up in Brooklyn, New York, we would play stickball in the street So, you know the guys would yell at each other and some guy would say something stupid or mean or whatever and somebody would say shut up and That kid would say Hey, it's a free country That was the answer of the guy who said stupid things are even cursed It's a free country. It was built in you could say anything Even things that are wrong or at least perceived as wrong The president of the United States and the leader of the opposition is going on trial Because he said things that the opposition doesn't believe are true The my favorite is Jack Smith wrote in the indictment That Trump knew that it was a lie that what he was saying was a lie Really then why don't we put Donald Trump on a lie detector There was no doubt in my mind that he is a certain That he was defrauded of the election as you are that Of your name. He is as certain of that as you are of whatever your name is This is what we've come to It has been a revelation to me in my older age You know, you think you know a lot especially if you spend your life thinking and writing and talking I Never realized until the last few years How many people are governed by emotions Trump is the perfect example People I respected voted Democrat because they hate Donald Trump It is better to ruin America then vote for a man. I hate I Feeling is another country where this is happening. Well, we'll talk about that in the next segment But that's it people are emotionally driven One of you wanted a lie, here's a lie. I'm about to tell you a lie that the Enlightenment ushered in the age of reason I Wish we were living in the age of reason If we were living in the age of reason forget a Judeo -christian age just the age of reason Donald Trump would not be on trial It is pure undiluted Passion So here's the question Is there a more powerful force than hatred? Another Question I don't know the answer to People are willing to destroy this country because they hate one man That's fascinating All right, we continue To remind you that August is fundraising month for PragerU. Please make a donation during the break a Meliorate thank you amelia rate. Excellent Sean Sean has a slight OCD problem, but it's very slight If you realize what I've accused Sean of white supremacy OCD My guests are true experts on the Middle East they're in from Israel Felice and Michael Friedson, I've known them for years. They're wonderful human beings and they're honest You know if I didn't ask you personally and I'm not even sure now I know your politics Which is such a credit to you to you both So Israel has been wracked with unprecedentedly large Demonstrations, so I'm curious you heard me you were in the studio and I said, oh Maybe you didn't might have been right before you came in I said America is now one country and two worlds. Is that true for Israel? Is it that severe? Israel is fighting Internally, I'm not so sure that they're trying to Undo what was done as much as they're seeing openings to pick up the power that they might be able to get their hands on so each side is looking for the mechanics of Functioning in a government where they say things are unconstitutional and yet there's no Constitution or laws Go through on the way to being approved as a law of the country Goes through a system whereby somebody will yell it's unconstitutional and have to go through the Constitution committee But yet there's no Constitution. Yeah, that's a phenomenon I will admit but I am curious about the depths of the division what I described about America Do you would you say that about Israel today? It's two countries or two worlds People won't talk about it. It's the kind of discussion that certain things are off limits nobody wants to be accused of doing something because they don't like the sardine where the Ashkenazim where they're taking those kind of intranasian battle Decree you have the phenomenon and I I I shudder to ask the question Do you have the phenomenon that we have in America and I'm telling you it is widespread of Children, I don't mean five -year -olds or ten -year -olds I mean 20 and 30 year olds who will not speak to a parent because of how they voted It's starting to seep in that's what I was about to add and you are beginning to see this happen. Really? Yes Yes, so this has been very divisive But you know Dennis I have to say there are issues here that are far more serious. You're looking at Iranian nuclear proliferation Imagine around October November it could happen and Israel has to go solo Something kicks up off the war. There's been all kinds of tests on borders with Israel whether it's Lebanon It's all of Iran's proxies and all of a sudden you have reservists right now that are saying that we're not going to show up Because of the judicial reforms and we're talking about 10 ,000 or more reservists. We're talking about Air Force pilots We're talking about those that manned drones we're talking about intelligence officers and you can read this every day This is getting to the heart of the nation so I ask you that even if Prime Minister Netanyahu may be correct and if even if you agreed with Prime Minister Netanyahu in terms of the fact of how judicial reforms should play out and when Sometimes the timing for the sake of a nation's security Might be more important and I'm throwing that out because I think people sometimes stop short and don't look at the big picture So even if Netanyahu and his supporters are right It's not it may not be the time because of the security issue. It's one one I have to admit I read that there were people members of the Air Force for example who threatened this and I couldn't believe it because Iran doesn't care if you're pro or anti Netanyahu pro or anti judicial reforms They want to kill you like the Nazis did not distinguish between left -wing and right -wing Jews secular and religious Jews They don't see it that way. They are willing to jeopardize Israel These reservists because of politics. Yes That's how bad it's gotten. So I think that Israel is at a very dangerous moment Where there's such a discomfort look you have high -tech Israel with many of the techies taking their companies already and moving out Now I hear it's happening now too with the doctors and I think that's probably less so but when you have two industries That are so vital to the state of Israel. Then you have to ask yourself why now? You have to ask yourself if you're an activist in Netanyahu's camp, yes you do So the question that many are asking is why now Well, the opportunity presented itself now Yeah Because he won with the elections were coming and going coming and going and finally you got a chance to put the numbers together Right. What's what has people? Pounding their heads against the wall is wondering why when the For example, we're now at something like 30 or 29 consecutive weekends of multi tens of thousands of people marching in the streets We fly in an airplane headed to Israel and we hear the conversations like oh, we'll meet you after the demonstration Or you know, I'm coming to visit Israel I may not go to the Western Wall this time, but I'm not going to miss the demonstration on Saturday night it's become the culture of the country and as it spread each sector within the nation is putting their hat in the ring to be the deciding factor of pushing the Numbers over the top. I guess you'd say what do the supporters of the current situation? Of the the anti -netanyahu folks, what is their argument with regard to the Supreme Court? That they should be allowed to rule on anything without reference to any Constitution Well, I give the this Constitution that aspect of it has fascinated me free free decades Now the idea that when they say it they believe they're talking about something being unconstitutional But they don't take the next step to describe how it becomes unconstitutional because that's their opinion That's why we have what's called the reasonable yes, that's that the reasonableness clause Yeah, all right, we're gonna be back in a moment Folks two great countries are in trouble That's the bottom line the US and Israel to democratic The editors of the editors of the media line org a source of non -biased news about the Middle East Michael and Felice Fritzen are in town from Israel and What they're describing? I mean we have not reached the point where we have Members of the armed forces taking a political position and saying they they won't show up That's I have to say that's that's scary and we're not threatened with existential annihilation like Israel is If these people don't show up a Hesitation is everything and if they're not practicing it's a big problem What is their what is their statement This is not a country worth defending if we don't get our way on the on judicial reform That's basically this the gist of it if you will leave that part of the imagination, but clearly that's what they're saying It's not a democracy anymore and because it will cease to be a democracy if these So if this this notion it will cease to be a democracy That's what they say here on the left.

The Charlie Kirk Show
A highlight from Reject Their Terms LIVE from CLS in Florida
"The U .S. dollar has lost 85 % of its value since the 70s, when the dollar decoupled from gold, and the government seems bent on continuing the tradition. Charlie Kirk here. From now until after the elections, the government can print as much money as they want. The last time they did that, inflation went up 9%. Gold is the only asset that has proven to withstand inflation. Invest in gold with Noble Gold Investments. You will get a 24 -carat, one -fourth of an ounce gold standard coin for free. Just use promo code kirk. Go to noblegoldinvestments .com. That's noblegoldinvestments .com, the only gold company I trust. Hey everybody, happy Sunday. My conversation, my speech at the Turning Point USA Chapter Leadership Summit. Then I take questions from our amazing chapter leaders. Our chapter leaders are America's last best hope. Get behind them, support them, pray for them. TPUSA .com. Start a high school chapter, college chapter. These are the people that will stop the American cultural revolution. TPUSA .com. That is 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 White House, folks. 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. Thank you. Wow, this is by far the largest chapter leadership summit we have ever had. Great to see all of you, but having a good day. Good. Well, I want to say thank you guys. I see so many familiar faces. We had a fun year this last year, didn't we, on tour? Raise your hand if I came to a from New Mexico to anybody, UC Davis. Where's our UC Davis? Yeah, that was quite a visit. That was terrible. We survived. UC Santa Barbara, that was something. How about Ohio State, the Ohio State University? You don't boo. You don't boo our chapter leaders. You don't do that. Here's Danny, doing a great job. You guys are on the front lines. Every day, I get asked the question by people that are 30 or 40 years older than you, and they ask me, how can I save the country? What can I do? Some people have private jets, yachts, second or third homes. Now, you are probably like, I want the private jet, the yacht, the second or third home. You should want that stuff. But guess what? You have a thing that millions of people wish they had, and that's you have something you can do every single day to help save the country. You have an action item where you could say, you know what? The country is falling apart. It's collapsing. We're seeing Western civilization basically be stolen from us by some really, really bad people. But you're going to be able to say for the rest of your life that you took your college and high school years, and you decided to stand for truth to save the greatest nation ever to exist in the history of the world.

KCBS All News
"ohio state university" Discussed on KCBS All News
"Thorpe. To his sermon, the Pope chose the theme of the good shepherd, and he urged his listeners to open the doors we close towards those who are foreign or unlike us towards migrants or the poor. Customers are pulling their money out of the troubled first republic bank, democratic California congressman, ro Khanna spoke on CBS's face the nation. This is what a modern bank run looks like. Let me tell you what companies in my district are saying. They're saying that payroll companies are telling them, move your deposits on a first republic, you're not going to be able to have access to the accounts. There are reports a couple of banks are bidding this weekend to take over first republic. Too heavily Republican states, Nebraska and South Carolina did not pass total abortion bans last week. South Carolina congresswoman Nancy mace on face the nation. Certainly we can find some agreement. That's why I say 15 to 20 weeks. That's something even pro life groups like Susan B. Anthony's list, although they're against it now, two years ago, they were for 20 weeks with exceptions. They've just moved the goalposts. Police are searching for the man accused of shooting 8 neighbors at a home in Cleveland, Texas, 5 of them died, including an 8 year old boy. Grace white. According to authorities, the family had asked the suspect to stop firing rounds just before the attack. The gentleman stepped out of his house, said, hey, we're trying to keep an infant to bed. The man went back in the house next thing they know he's walking up the driveway with the rifle in hand. 14 people are hospitalized after an overloaded roof of a home near Ohio, Ohio State university gave way. Columbus fire battalion chief, Steve Martin. Call that came in was a report of a roof claps with people possibly pinned or trapped. When we got here, what we found was the front porch roof had collapsed

The Charlie Kirk Show
Ohio Senate Candidate Bernie Moreno Talks Anti-Americanism
"Story is amazing. I mean, so you've come here, you built something from nothing. And so Bernie it must drive you nuts when you hear some of these activists at Ohio State university or any of these schools say that we're racist. We're an awful country CRT. I mean, you came here. You had to build something from absolute nothing. Talk about this cancer, this virus of anti American ism that is spreading throughout our country. It's the most dangerous thing we're facing Charlie because the reality is everybody in America has the incredible privilege of being in this country. This is the true privilege as being American. And this is the greatest country on earth, even with our problems today. We're better than the next 5 countries combined. And we've always been a great country. We've been a Beacon of hope for the whole world. And what the left, the radical left, and the media, especially in universities, is teaching our kids that there's something fundamentally wrong with the country. When the reality, there's fundamentally something wrong with them. You know, here's the deal. You're not seeing Americans fleeing the country going to Mexico and Mexico asking us to put up a wall. It's the other way around. We have millions of people that want to come to this country, black people, Hispanics, now Chinese nationals. This is a great country, but we have to control who comes here in an orderly fashion. And that shouldn't be controversial, Charlie. That's just common sense.

Animal Radio
"ohio state university" Discussed on Animal Radio
"We made the coffee today. Is that you? I don't make coffee. I don't drink coffee, I don't make it. I don't know how to make it 'cause I don't drink it, so I don't know what's good about it. No, whoever made the coffee this morning, good stuff. Put in here on my chest. Doctor W, ready to take some calls? I sure am. Let's get to work. Debbie, hi, Debbie. How are you doing? I'm great. How are you? Good, what's going on in your world? I think I need to talk to doctor Debbie. I have an unusual situation. I have four Boston terriers. And I have one of them at 6 years old. He has developed a weird thing when the leaves started to fall this year that he's never had before. And that's where he starts bubbling out of his nose and he has trouble breathing and then he might fall over on his side and sit up slim and then be okay, but it's seemingly defeats you can see that he's in distress. We've been to the emergency clinic and alternative a integrative veterinarian here and a regular veterinarian and nobody seems to really have a real answer or are they just want to put them on prednisone or P and benadryl and then he seems okay sort of and then when we start to wean them off he goes back to the same weird behavior and we've had leaves for the 6 years that we have had him and this is the first time I've ever seen this. Okay. And so has he had problems breathing unrelated to the fall being a Boston interior has he had problems with any kind of nasal surgery, soft palate as far as before the age of 12 months he had two soft palate surgeries from Ohio State university. Okay. And the nasal one, too. Okay, all right. So he has. So and that's the big thing. Now, when he has the episodes when he's bubbling in that, does he just fall over kind of all of a sudden, have any kind of seizure like activity? You know, it does not look like a seizure and they don't think that it is. They think that he can't get air because right afterwards he sits up white slim and then he's like, fine. And he's not really Tapping out passing out, but he just falls over on his side. And I've even tried like I've given the heimlich in the white pop out until he'll find. So what they're saying is they think it's accumulating the excess of mucus as accumulating. And he has, I was told he has an extra fat tongue. And that he has even since the surgery he just has a tiny little opening, you know, through his throat. I gotcha. All right. And that's going to be the big thing is what I think your boy is doing is having vagal episodes. And this is actually something that happens a lot in the brachiocephalic breeds, the short faced breeds. And one of the reasons is that, well, I'll back up. The vagus nerve is a nerve that goes from the head down to the abdomen. And there can be certain things in the body that disrupt that or overstimulate that nerve. For some animals and people, it could be things like digestive problems. It can be respiratory problems. And I see this a lot in the brachiocephalic that if they have a lot of the respiratory components to the upper airway disease, they have the narrow nostrils. They have a narrow trachea, long soft palate. They can even get a tracheal laryngeal saccule, and some other changes up there. So some of those things, they might not see, but they might suspect you'd have to kind of go up with a scope to see some of those other things in the back of the throat. But just be in that breed and having some of these airway changes, it's going to make it very likely that the vagus nerve can get overstimulated. And what happens with that, the heart rate drops and the heart doesn't pump as well in the blood pressure drops in the will pass out in a usually come right back up. I've even seen dogs do this after they vomit. So where they'll vomit, and then they just pass out, and then they come right back up. So the goal would be is to try to address what is the biggest problem and that's going to be the respiratory disease. So that might mean going to have some of these other upper airway things evaluated and to see if those need to be addressed. And then the other thing is, yeah, if we have allergies, something seasonal that makes our respiratory symptoms worse, oh boy, you've got an extra whammy onto the whole thing there. So then we might talk about things like steroids can be helpful for the short term. But you may even want to see a dermatologist for allergy testing. And molds just like anything else seasonally, we can test for. We can hypo sensitive desensitize a pet with hypo sensitization injections. And that might be one of the things you can do. You can do that to mold. Yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. And every region in the country is a little different in some of those things. So you have to make sure that testing is done appropriate for your area. I see. And then the other little Boston terrier that actually is his daughter. That I have. She just started doing the bubbling too. And I thought, okay, now we know this is because they've been at the bat. We know there's nothing contagious going on here. But at the same thing, she'll go out Biden to play with a ball in the leads and then she'll come back in and she's not as bad as him. But, you know, she's doing it now too. And I'm thinking, what the heck? Yeah. Yeah. So I would definitely make sure. If she hasn't had her nears evaluated or corrected, that'd be definitely one of the first things. But even going further back and going up with a scope. Because some of these things, they're progressive. So you can correct with a brachiocephalic docs. We want to jump on these things when they're young. Because with time, all these other components start to involve. And once some of the more chronic things happen, you can't reverse them more easily. So we want to get in there beforehand, do the soft palate, do the stenotic nares, if necessary, because there's all these other problems that will come on and that just are so much more challenging to deal with. Wow. Okay. All right, you don't know anybody that's in this area that's a specialist in this type of thing to you. You know, if you're dealing with veterinary schools, you're going to find a lot of the people at the top of their fields right there. And as far as in dermatology, they're going to have dermatologists there as well. So I think you're going to have two different type of approaches. One is going to be addressed the allergies, and the second is going to be addressed the upper airways. And that will be through an internal medicine type specialist. Okay, great. Thank you so much. I appreciate it. Thanks for your call, Debbie. How would you like to save money on nearly all your prescription drugs? We've set up a special toll free number for the Rx outreach program. They're a nonprofit company whose mission it is to make prescription drugs more affordable to the masses. They don't take insurance. And in many cases, your prescriptions are even cheaper than your co pays. They carry thousands of different prescription drugs, so whatever you're taking, there's a good chance they have it. No coupons are required, and this is not a discount card. It is pure savings on your prescription drugs. They specialize in generic meds for any chronic health needs you have. Call with your prescription and find out for free. How little you can pay for your prescription drugs. Remember, we don't take insurance, so call right

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ohio state university" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"I'm Brian shook. This is Bloomberg law with June Grasso from Bloomberg radio. I've been talking to professor Douglas spearman of the Moritz college of law at Ohio State university about a case the Supreme Court may take. So that before the break you were telling us about the defendant, mcclinton, who had been involved in a robbery. And the prosecution's claim was that mister mcclinton was the shooter and was guilty of speaking to try to rob his cohort of his part of the loot and when he couldn't get it, he then shot this individual. Ultimately, and this is the key part of the story, the jury didn't agree with that theory. And there was evidence presented at trial that suggested somebody else may have done that and as the details were unclear, but was clear as a hurry was not convinced was not certain that mister mcclinton should be held accountable because they acquitted him on the charge of that trial that related to the other young men being shot and killed. When it the case got to sentencing, however, the government said, hey, judge, remember all that evidence he put forward, arguing that he was guilty of killing his co-conspirator? Well, even though the jury acquitted on those counts, we still think the evidence should convince you by a preponderance of the evidence, which is typically the standard applied at sentencing, as opposed to the beyond a reasonable doubt standard applied at trial. We think you should still be convinced that he was responsible for that other young man's death, and so when you sentenced him for the robbery that he was convicted of robbing the pharmacy, consider also the fact that he is responsible for causing this death that he really is a murderer, even though the jury acquitted him on that. And the rich long detailed backstory is there's a case from almost 25 years ago now with the Supreme Court said a judge is consideration of evidence even related to counts on which a defendant has been acquitted doesn't violate due process. And that older decision in a case called watt came before some more recent rulings about the right to jury trial and the reach of the Sixth Amendment and so there's been lots of complaints by me and lots of other people saying we don't think that's good precedent anymore. And the mcclinton case is being pressed as an opportunity for the court to reconsider that older president of the fitted constitutionally permissible for judges to increase sentences based on conduct that was related to account that the jury acquitted the defendant. So he got 19 years as opposed to the 5 that he might have gotten for just the robbery he was convicted of. That's pretty much right. And again, exactly what he would have gotten for just the robbery, could be

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ohio state university" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Bets expire 7 days from issuance. Please gamble responsibly gambling problem call one 8 8 8 5 three two 3500. Berg pursuits look at luxury. It's not just the BTS army feeling the sting of the KPop band's breakup. Bang C hooked the South Korean billionaire behind the boy band has seen his personal fortune dynamite to the tune of $2.6 billion. Shares of his entertainment firm HYBE tumbled on the news to a record low, mega yachts have been running low on safe harbors, partially due to Russian sanctions. More than a dozen boats worth more than two and a quarter $1 billion have been seized by the U.S. EU nations and allies like Fiji, where the $325 million amedia that's been linked to Russian billionaire Suleiman karimov was taken. Graduates of Ohio State university have been emphasizing there from the Ohio State university since the 80s. The school has now officially won trademark rights to the word the the home to the buckeyes took legal action against fashion designer Mark Jacobs in 2019, who similarly tried to trademark the word on a sweater. Scott Carr, Bloomberg radio. How are financial services firms managing in this new reality? Claire Santa niello managing director at BNY Mellon's Pershing explains. If the current times have taught us anything, it's a critical role that technology plays in client relationships. Global conditions have created a business imperative for firms to digitally transform the way they meet client needs and the way they work. Perching to industry leading technology enables you to adapt the evolving ways

Mark Levin
Who Is Ed Rensi, Former President and CEO of McDonald's?
"Tell us a little bit about your background Well I started I was in college at Ohio State university I was going to be a school teacher and I got a degree in business education I went to work for McDonald's because I needed a job and I was making about 85 cents an hour And I kept getting raises and working hard and I just woke up one day and I was a presidency on McDonald's to this day I'm so amazed that I was able to do that but it was a company that was led by visionaries Ray Kroc Fred Turner Jerry Newman and great people that really focused on customer service and elevating everybody I mean you know I was a burger flipper making minimum wage and all of a sudden I was successful And it's a wonderful journey and I am so proud of it I actually had lunch today or breakfast with a former employee of mine and now earns 25 McDonald's restaurants Kim just a beautiful man And you know there's so many great stories in McDonald's about entrepreneurs who became successful because it became franchisees Ricky wade over at Fort Lauderdale my goodness He's got 30 some restaurants He's an African American man customers beautiful employees I mean he's just an angel of a businessman's focused on the community Said the McDonald's story is not about the executives It's always about the franchisees and their commitment to community Boy you should still be the CEO over there From what I'm hearing Now Friends Running that company I'm old school Yeah me too

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal
Limits On Toilet Paper And Cleaning Supplies Are Back At Costco
"Go to costco or your local big box. Perhaps you got toilet paper on your list. Maybe some water cleaning supplies as well. But when you go to load up your car you see the signs that say two per customer or whatever. The limit is not as you might think. Thanks to reprise of the apocalyptic stockpiling early on in this thing. It's a supply chain again. But as marketplace's amanda peach reminds us limits on how much consumers can buy can backfire on retailers. Trying to sell it when there was a run on certain products in pandemic early days. The explanation was simple. Basically consumers freaked out. Ken boyer studies operations management at ohio state university and people heard. There's gonna be a shortage so they went to buy more but shortages now are much more about shipping delays and other supply chain constraints boyer says take toilet paper even if it's manufactured in the us the chemicals to make it might come from china or thailand. They're sitting on a boat. Offshore that becomes a delayed the toilet paper manufacturers sometimes. The shortage is in packaging or containers like cans for soda or bottles for water in melbourne. Florida alley strands. Saw a sign at the grocery store. At limiting the number of cases of water customers could purchase to to literally. My first thought was hurting. Strands checked her phone. No hurricane warnings so she thought what's going on with bottled water. She bought two cases and had her son. Do the same. You drink the bottle of water. But he was getting his shopping part for me. Because is there going to be a run on water. And that's why stores have to be careful about signaling. Shortages with product limits on we realize goods are scarce. They become more valuable to us. Care me. Burke is a behavioral economist with the university of southern california. I might not new toy right now. But i know toilet. Paper is scarce. So i may go stock up on it as much as i can at the moment. In burke says that unnecessary purchasing can add pressure to supply chains at exactly the wrong time. I'm amanda pitcher for

WTVN
"ohio state university" Discussed on WTVN
"I want to get to something for those that don't know. Matt Mayer is the president of Opportunity. Ohio But his resume is I like to say is a mile long a accomplishment. I will never steep but but you've achieved stuff that I will never achieve in my lifetime. You know your law degree from the Ohio State University. Your work in government, But what many might not know is as we remember the anniversary of 9 11 this weekend on Saturday. You helped put together the Department of Homeland Security. Tell us about that. Yeah, you know, So you know that God created after 9 11, obviously And when it got stood up, you know, I got a call out president in Colorado at the time to come help stand that up and get it moving forward and hopefully doing good stuff and so packed up the bags and headed out out to Washington and Spent about 2.5 years working for the president and secretary to try to make that thing. Work work. Well, So, Matt, where are we? As we look back, You know, 20 years later, all the work that's been done All the war on terror with Iraq and Afghanistan and and really around the globe. Where Where are we Today with this? How are we doing? Uh, you know, look, I mean, I think we're safer from a global standpoint, Uh, 20 years later, because you know, one of the things we did with with the post 9 11 environment was we pushed our borders. Physically out right by saying We're not like people on a plane in France if we can't get them cleared, right? We're not letting cargo leave China or, you know Dubai if we don't know what's in that cargo, and it's safe. Um so in that sense, we we made it harder for the bad guys to get here and strike. Right. Um, Afghanistan creates that curveball because great it creates a safe haven. But you know, they already had a safe haven in Pakistan and Iran. So It just creates another place for them to do their dastardly deeds. So to speak. Um, my sense is the bigger threat we face today is from Nation states. I mean, everyone we focus on the 9 11 piece and it was tragic and horrible event and it killed 3000 Americans. But, you know, in the last 18 months over 600,000 Americans have died from the Wuhan virus right? That came most likely out of that lab in China. That's like box biological, so Whether it was a weapon or not. We'll figure out some day, but but to me, we've got a They're bigger challenges that we're going to face. Uh than that, I think from, you know, domestic side of the fence from Al Qaeda or Isis, they may get you may get a one off shooting or a suicide guy or gal. Um, and that's gonna be tragic. Don't want to dismiss that right? But but we're talking, you know? Dozens kind of impact versus the You know, tens of hundreds of thousands that we've seen with with the virus and things like that. So you know, or opioid epidemic is half a million Americans, right? Come into with the Fed and all we see people this week in New York's famous guy got, you know, movie star he went down for for Fentanyl overdose, Right, right. Yeah. So this is that We have big big problems, So I think we made it safer. Um But that doesn't mean Washington is still working. Well, there's lots of stuff I call T s A is faux security because it's just we screen Grandma and little Billy and we know they're not terrorists because we were too You know, chicken, but just screen the people. We should be focused on sure, because that will be profiling. Right? So you know that it's faux security, but the cockpits are secure. Hard to get in here. And so that then, that way we are safer well and it I'll add because I have to go mad. But there's also the concern. Now of all the Afghanistan's that are coming back here to make sure that they're all properly vetted. Yeah, that's the other issue right now. Right. But look, you know, Hezbollah has people that are here have been here. They're sitting in cells. You know, whether they get activated by Iran is a different question. But we know they're here. We know where many of them are. So we've got bad people here already. Yeah, So the question becomes, through the everything is the Afghan stream going to add more in a number that became problematic for us to track That's where we have some concern. Great talk. President of Opportunity, Ohio Opportunity Ohio dot org. Mr Matte Mayor, Thanks for taking the time and joining us in studio Man Appreciate it Right now. Traffic and weather together from temps are heating and cooling.

WFAN Sports Radio_FM
"ohio state university" Discussed on WFAN Sports Radio_FM
"The college football playoff. We could find a good opponent. From now until December. 4th. We can't find that for Clemson. I understand that brand recognition matters. In college football. Member, the first playoff Where was between Ohio State, Baylor and TCU. She thought that you're the Baylor had a better argument that Ohio State It doesn't really matter because one team is Baylor. The other team is the Ohio State University. It was obvious who they were going to pick. So if that scenario gets here Maybe that's what we end up seeing. But if we're just going to do the blind resume test at the end of the season And we're going to put Clemson's resume up against Auburn's resume, for example, just throwing an SEC opponent out there. I don't think it's going to be that close. This is where playing in the A C C really hurts you And this is where South Carolina being down really hurts you. You played one of the big dogs in the SEC. You lost that team. The second SEC opponents you play later in the year. It's just not one of the premier teams in the country. So Clemson still might make the college football playoff. Even aside from the loss, it is going to be an uphill climb. For them. It is going to be an uphill climb. For them to make the college football playoff. Given the schedule that they have there just aren't enough Good wins. There's just not enough. Goodwin's for Clemson to be able to make the college football playoff I thought the A. C C is the clear loser and week one. Clemson loses their game to Georgia and pretty dominating fashion. I thought In North Carolina. Now, let me be honest. Let me admit. Was drinking the North Carolina Kool Aid just a little bit. You know how every year we try to find that team that's like rank 10 through 17th, and we convince ourselves that there a sleeper for the college football playoff. I did that. I did that myself. I'm guilty. I did that with North Carolina. Watch North Carolina about three or four times last year. They got a future NFL quarterback and they got Matt Brown, who's one of college football championship and I'm thinking of myself, all right. Clemson is not on your schedule. You're in the city. You can get these winds together. Sure. You've got a tough opening game on the road against Virginia Tech. But That's on everybody's schedule. Everybody's got to go on the road and beat a good opponent. If you're going to get to the heights that North Carolina felt like they could get to Laden egg. Week one. The might have lost its two title contenders. Before Labor Day. Clemson is still going to be around because they're Clemson. I'm not so sure about North Carolina. I saw a stat in the last 13 seasons. One team that was selected in the top 10 preseason was unranked at the end of the year. Tell me that doesn't look like North Carolina. Tell me, North Carolina doesn't look like a four lost team this year. Tell me, North Carolina doesn't look like a team who want paper made a lot of sense. But just over the course of the year they were unable to really bring it all together and win at the level that we expected them to at the very beginning of the season. Thought the C C was the clear loser. This weekend Clemson in North Carolina. The Pac 12 had somewhat of a mixed bag. U C L, A major winner. It's time for us to have a conversation about L s u L s u was still eating off that 2019 Championship and I know 2019 wasn't that long ago..

WNYC 93.9 FM
"ohio state university" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"You order something from a retailer. It gets picked off the shelf stuck on a truck or a boat or a plane, and eventually, however many miles it has traveled. That package has to cross the last mile to get to your front door or cardboard, her mail room and that last mile Is often the most challenging, which is why it's of note today that there is a new and very big participant in that last mile market. WalMart is expanding its delivery service to handle shipments from other businesses or Even local retailers. Marketplaces Kimberly Adams has that one. The last mile of delivery tends to be the most expensive, says Vince Castillo, who teaches logistics at the Ohio State University. Because it's the hardest to get the most route efficiency, the most amount of revenue that you can't get out of an entire delivery route. But Wal Mart has already solved that problem in many rural areas where it's already making last mile deliveries of its own products. The company's new go local service announced today. What it does is, it allows them to be able to make more deliveries with the infrastructure they already have, and for any businesses that might be uncomfortable having their products delivered out of a WalMart van. The retailer is promoting Go local as what's called a white label service. Which means someone coming up to your door is not going to have a WalMart sure around. Okay. Cathy Robertson is president of Logistics Trends and Insights, a market research firm. It could be Betty's Bakery. You know, as a consumer receiving those baked items or what have you Have no idea that Wal Mart is behind this. WalMart will charge retailers for the service, but it will also get something else. That's incredibly valuable data whether it's understanding which neighborhoods tend to prefer certain products versus other products, or What time of day people tend to buy products or which products are brought together. Tom Dairy is CEO of the Institute for Supply Management, so data becomes really critical and understanding consumer Purchasing patterns of being able to better serve the consumer and being able to better sell to the consumer in Washington. I'm Kimberly Adams for Marketplace..

WTOP
"ohio state university" Discussed on WTOP
"It looks like you're going to have to wait a little longer if you want to be inside the Washington Monument, really, really. Anthony Labatt of Toledo, Ohio, was bombed when he heard he couldn't sign up for a pass to get up to the top of the monument, something he planned to do with friends while in D. C. Yeah, we were, but I mean, you got struck by lightning. It's kind of cool, at least. Not go apart. The lightning damage the access system two Sundays ago. Mike litters with the National Park Service says parts are on the way and we're targeting right now to reopen on Thursday to folks disappointed they can only look up at the monument. We share the frustration and disappointment of people not being able to get in there on the National Mall. Mike Murillo w T. O P News money to pay for police body cams could come soon and Howard County after a pilot program for body worn cameras ended in 2018 full Implementation was delayed because of funding. It was then in the next budget. But Howard County executive Calvinball said the state mandated maintenance of effort funding level for school system Was significantly higher than anticipated. So the funding was put in contingency by the County Council. Now I'm pleased to announce that we are filing a budget amendment to request the county Council. Move all of the funding out of contingency. The funds will be used to start implementing the program right away. If the council votes to release the funds in early October. The total cost would be $3.1 million. Battery Bank. W T O P news when you're not working and trying to relax, don't stress out about being unproductive. A new series of studies show feeling like your leisure time is wasteful and unproductive may lead to less happiness and higher levels of Researchers examined the effects of a common belief in modern society that productivity is the ultimate goal. And time's a wastin if you're just having fun. Most people who strongly agreed with this belief not only enjoyed leisure less, but also reported poor mental health outcomes. Some of the work was done at Ohio State University. I do not have that problem. Yeah, I was going to say Wait a minute. I'm supposed to feel bad about not doing anything. It's OK. Okay. 5 37 get.

The Culture Soup Podcast
"ohio state university" Discussed on The Culture Soup Podcast
"Of the olympics even which is ra paralympics are happening right now and they just announced that there will be no spectators and announced a new concept which i i think it's interesting on how we will continue to navigate on if there are substantial things that will stick going forward on decisions on large crowd events in sports Until we truly like come out of the woods with the virus and that's not something that's obviously happened yet. It's interesting as leaders. Were learning to pivot on top of the pivot. Have you noticed i i. I've been invited to my first in person. Speaking event here in dallas on the ninth of september. This is something they've been planning for months but you start planning when you start to read the tea leaves and it looks like people are getting vaccinated and the virus isn't ramping up. But at that one it wasn't and now it is so yeah you know. They're making sure that everybody social distance distances a room. That probably could hold three thousand. But we're going to limit it to three hundred and now i'm wondering what do i do at the end because yes i'm gonna mask up because people come to the stage and they want to speak to you. So am i going to shake hands and just have sanitizers. Like what am i going to. You have to learn to pivot on top of the pivot yet. Even a great point and quite frankly ray like you'll probably decide what you're most comfortable with and i hopefully people will support that. And so your point pit on the piven on when i love that. I'm gonna utilize that you're someone minor statement. I think the evolution of the decision making of crisis management of like constant interaction with employees. Who are scared. Who are you know. Angry don't want to return to the office. Understand why who else some employees you see. Sorry organizations are handling it very differently rated coming from a place the nba. Where i wasn't even a part of the organization. They were the first take that. Step in the precaution. Pull the plug. The technique. Protect the employees. And you know. I admire the league for so many reasons that being one of them. You know the other being quite frankly just the also being the leader in inclusion and really walking the walk when it comes to talent representation not just on the court of course but across our teams in the front office. Which is one of the primary reasons. I was attracted to coming into the organization to begin with. Yeah you know what. That's a really good place to talk about how you got. The're let's talk about your story because you didn't just show up at the nba. There were a journey and i. You made a decision to work in sports. How did you come to that decision. And when did you decide that you know front office where you wanted to be a really great question. The second piece of that. Let's take it back a little bit and just set the stage here. I wasn't apple lee. I'm still an athlete. Just older retired now. Like oh y'all go check out. the vacation. picks still an athlete gene. Well i guess but that so. I competed in all things growing up was fortunate to have parents that put me into opportunities that i chose ray like you name a sport and when i say that there's a lot of things i just learned on the olympics that i'd never been familiar with the four this year. I literally started playing. T-ball age like five In in softball soccer basketball track and field. Volleyball i if i had interest if i was asked if i had the ability and opportunity. I probably china-bound gymnastics volleyball player. Gymnastics didn't last long as a little for that sport but got the opportunity to have support appearance to you to really compete and be a part of team sports from early age so i knew once i graduated that i would want to pursue a career in the sports industry and i didn't exactly know what that meant but i played two years volleyball ohio state university and and Transferred to the university of kentucky. As i believe blue all day long however i'm from the great state of ohio. Cincinnati is is what i claim a lot of people shuttle lupus together. There is a difference between the let me. Just be clear. Yes so. I got the big ten experience. Got the sec experience and had the opportunity to to play volleyball professionally overseas that after competing at elite level in college in leading team as team captain for two years at uk and get into stackups of sec regional honors based on my play continued to compete at the international level in spain and That was prior to graduating with the transfer ahead. Another year of school to finish so i decided i could always come back finish school at any time yet in. The university. honored me returning to do that. So went to play. And that's an experience that i quite frankly directly tie back to wanting to be on airplane out of the country every day. Yeah and into in europe. So that's amazing. That's an amazing story in quite a journey that some people lead to remove and i it's so funny l. michelle because i literally like reflect off. Dana's i'm extremely grateful for the things. I've been exposed to your gotten to do that. I've done more in my lifetime than some people will ever get to that he eh. You know you gotta be grateful awesome. Yeah which is in hell. You're extending these opportunities to other folks in your role. that's true. And i honestly. I thought austin riley a reaching the hand back pulling someone up.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
How are Black Holes Discovered?
"Black holes have been kind of a big deal ever since the first photo of a supermassive black hole was taken in two thousand nineteen black holes are exceptionally hard to find because they don't admit any light to pinpoint where they are. You look at how nearby stars interact with them and measure the x ray activity. The way that's yielded. The most black holes was to go. Look for x ray emission. The black hole stripping material off star as the black hole strips material off the star. It emits a bunch of rays. And those x-rays are very prominence. Scientists believe there are many more black holes in the universe. we haven't identified yet black holes that aren't interacting with a star and have very little x-ray activity trump theoretical models. We know that there are thousands of these non interacting black holes in the galaxy and scientists from all over the world very interested in finding these non interacting backhoes ohio state university professor todd thompson and presidential fellow tarin dude giant singer looked at the problem and set out to prove that black holes can be discovered in a different way. They set their sights on an unusual object in the constellation. Mono ceos the unicorn constellation there an unknown mass is causing a disruption in the shape of the light coming from surrounding older star called a red giant backhoes distort the shape off the red giant and the distortion creates changes in star over the face of the orbit of the back hall around the giant measure. How fast it's coming towards you and how fast it's going away and you can also measure. How star is distorted by the gravity of the nearby. Dark object and this particular star is in this is in this teardrop shape

WSJ The Future of Everything
How Psychedelic Drugs Are Making A Comeback To Treat Depression
"Depression. It can be a difficult mental illness to pin down. It can feel different for everyone and even those who struggle with it can have trouble identifying bought. It is a mostly came to understood that. I had depression through talking with my friends for the longest time. I kind of system that everyone felt this way. Like weird just like general malays for this twenty nine year old. Depression surfaced about six years ago and began as a feeling of being disconnected with the world. I didn't want to eat because they didn't feel like i deserve to eat. I don't know. I didn't hang out with friends because i didn't feel like i deserve to see my friends. I didn't feel like i should be punishing them by talking to them seeing them. This person uses they them pronouns. They're a maryland resident and work as a software tester. They sought help for their depression. Trying numerous types of treatments may visited a bunch of different mental health professionals and tried different types of arby's In different types of medication but it always kinda felt like things were getting worse and worse and a current really find someone who has really helped me understand what was going on like. I still didn't even believe that. I had depression. All the while the depression advanced it felt like being alive and lake wanting to die rolling constantly fighting over like the resources in my mind then. Their health insurance lapsed in two thousand eighteen making the situation worse a surprise solution appeared while they were scrolling on social media and a posting from johns hopkins university researchers and then one day i was kind of like clicking through facebook and i actually found this ad four like this little simon. Study silla simon. That's the psychedelic drug found in magic mushrooms. And i thought it was fake remarks. I didn't expect there to be you know like a a legitimate study showing up on like facebook ad but they had no insurance basically they were out of options so they called wanted to have hope again from the wall street journal. This is the future of everything. I'm janet babbling today on the podcast. How the hallucinogenic compounds silla zyban once associated with nine hundred sixty s drug culture is making a comeback and giving people suffering from depression and other mental illnesses. Hope for this twenty nine year old study participant. Depression was not something that happened in their family. My family's from the caribbean and lived in america probably for about lake in years. We came here in ninety nine. It's kind of interesting because where from like a place that doesn't really view mental health. The that like america's mental health. It took me a while to realize that. I was having mental health problems that i was kind of experiencing depression. Depression affects a staggering number of people hundreds of millions worldwide according to a study published in the peer reviewed journal the lancet in two thousand eighteen. The pandemic didn't make things any easier. Last june about a third of people who responded to web based surveys said they suffered from symptoms of depression or anxiety disorder. Those results were published by the centers for disease control and prevention the protocol for treating these conditions hasn't changed much in the past few years. What we've been using is typically one of two things either a medication that people take every day or we have psychotherapy dr. Alan davis is clinical psychologist and an assistant professor at the ohio state university. He's also an adjunct assistant. Professor at johns hopkins university. A lot of people will improve with either medication or therapy or both to basically have both have a better chance but it doesn't work for everyone. Some studies report between ten and thirty. Five percent of patients suffer from treatment resistant. Depression and davis is that similar to what he's found in his own practice working with veterans suffering from substance abuse trauma and other mental health issues. So he began looking for alternative treatments present and welcome to psychedelic science. Two thousand and thirteen in twenty thirteen davis attended a science conference and came across a study exploring the use of silla. Sivan a chemical compound found in specific varieties of mushrooms to treat cancer patients with mental health conditions. The compounds documented facts include feelings of heightened awareness ecstasy visions and changes in the perception of reality for researchers say one of the most useful qualities is its ability to dissolve the ego to allow a user to observe oneself from the outside in the study of cancer patients. The drug was able to alleviate some of the anxiety and depression that can be associated with having a life threatening illness. I was just inspired by that word. I thought gosh this really could have a strong impact in the areas that i'm working with veterans and with others davis became part of a team of researchers at johns hopkins university that put together a randomized clinical trial. Twenty four participants. They were administered. Silla sivan with talk therapy to treat their depression. Enrollment for the trial took place in two thousand seventeen and twenty nineteen and the results were analyzed in two thousand twenty. Most of them had had chronic depression meaning decades of experiencing depression though not some had had it for shorter amount of time but this study was a weightless control trials so some people came in and started treatment right away. Others had to wait eight weeks before starting treatment so we had a comparison group. The study subjects received an extensive intake examined questionnaire to confirm. They were suffering from symptoms of depression. Participants were screened for schizophrenia. And drug use as these conditions can interfere with suicide and treatment. The big worry many people have about psychedelics is what's often referred to as a bad trip. Mary negative hallucinations. That can be scary and this is kind of trip that can go bad. Martissant received hefty doses of these drugs. The doses are based on weight and they vary slightly but patients receive around twenty milligrams in the first session a bit more in the second session to minimize the risk of a negative experience. Davis says researchers focused on controlling. What's called and setting. They work ahead of time to ensure the volunteers current mood and surroundings while taking the drugs. Remain as calm and comfortable as possible and so we spend about eight to ten hours with people before they ever get the drug talking about what the effects are talking about. What may or may not happen when they have this experience and that's why we have to train professionals there with them not only to prepare them for that but to help them through the experience when it happens because a lot of people have anxiety coming into the session. The person we spoke to the twenty nine year old participated in davis study group in august of two thousand eighteen. They had no prior experience with psychedelic drugs and didn't know watch expect basically went in kind of blindly. I don't have any other options. So that's kind of my thought process at the time was just basically kind of sticking anything to the wall and hoping it would work after fasting the previous night the treatment can cause nausea. They were placed in a small tranquil room fitted with a comfy couch. The whole room was a really really cool in very comforting because like they had like these statues like imagery in their end like. I think one of the muslim dowa tibetan model. I wanna say this and like there was like this nice lamp. It's off this really. Soft light psychedelic assisted. Therapy participants are encouraged to bring in objects from home to make them feel more comfortable. Some bring in ten bears pictures of family. The twenty nine year old brought a lightness of an ancient sumerian goddess. Soon nana once they were settled in the room. They were given two pills in a wooden cop the therapists top that the sivan would take fifteen to thirty minutes to start working. In the interim they were told to put on ice shades and headphones. That would play a selection of music they choose from classical tibetan chanting african drumming and modern music too. Once the drug fact the participants says the first session became a kaleidoscope of mental images and sensations. I remember being in lake. Felt like mount olympus the fall of the gods like oval the clouds and suffering them. And then one of my god's up to me and she gave me a key fell through the clouds. And i felt all the way down through the earth and i ended up in hell which is really strange because they don't remember being scared even though i was in hell and i remember asking like hey you know why am i hair And it was like haiti's leading me through hell kind of just like showing me around for life this very cold and desolate last. He was like of course. This is where you would come like. This is where you've made your home. The self revelations continued throughout this long session and turned intensely personal. I remember like hearing like the beats. Come on and i felt myself in like this place like all of my ancestors were and i was really close to my grandfather when i was a kid. And he died. Probably around when i was like four and i saw him kind of materialize And he walked towards the youth like these. She'll bananas which is what he's doing her then he handed one to me and i always kind of was afraid that if he was alive he would be disappointed in me and i remember asking him you know. When am i supposed to do like if my family like my parents and lake my siblings can accept me and he said that he'll always be there for me and my ancestors will always be there for me and i like that scene just like it. Metsu in mental to me after about seven hours than drugs started to wear off when it was over. You know you're still kind of like feeling it but just not as intensely so just basically like this really happy kind of floaty failing and we couldn't drive so like i had to have a sister pick me up. They ended the experience hungry and exhausted as for the depression not much appeared to have changed then. They tried the silla sivan trip once more this time with the stronger dose and after that these say they experienced to palpable shift. It felt like i was back into the world again like i was in reality. A lot of people said that not only was there. Depression differently felt like they had come out of dark hole that they've been in for years but a lot of people regardless of whether they're depression was gone or or reduced said that there was something really meaningful different about how they view their life initial results for the study reviewing outcomes from up to a month after the sessions were completed found that silla sivan plus therapy was more than four times more effective than other treatments. Such as medication alone at one week. Fifty eight percent of the sample were in complete remission from depression that actually lasted up to four weeks. After fifty four percent of people were in complete remission and were now studying those same people up to twelve months after to see how long that remission lasted the rest of the participants in the study. Were not in remission they were still experiencing clinically significant depressive symptoms researchers have yet to publish the results of longer term outcomes for all the participants their condition up to a year after treatment and this was a small study. Just twenty four people. Some scientists remain skeptical of this kind of treatment not just of silla simon. But of the validity of the data an outcomes for all studies involving psychoactive substances

Rattle & Pedal: B2B Marketing Podcast
"ohio state university" Discussed on Rattle & Pedal: B2B Marketing Podcast
"Welcome back from are really extended hiatus. We talked over two months. Actually that's not entirely true but so get it all out. You can get it all out right now. I'm giving you one chance to get it out. You've got thirty seconds to do it and then we're not talking about it again. The rest of the year go. Are you talking about the choke your time once again once again. I was sucked in to rooting for the ohio state university. And they disappointed me. But there's always next year and you did.

KFI AM 640
"ohio state university" Discussed on KFI AM 640
"Welcome to coast to coast Am Later tonight. Celestial events of Planet Earth. Here's what's happening. While they say the world faces around 4000 variants of the virus that causes covert 19, prompting a race to try to improve vaccines as researchers began to explore mixing doses, for example of the visor and AstraZeneca's shots. The world's first we'll see what happens there. A lot of blame for covert 19 2nd wave has been pointed out of people following safety guidelines put out by health experts and government officials. But a new report, however, says Don't blame people blame the weather. Researchers from the University of Nicosia in Cyprus find that the hot weather in wind have a bigger impact on virus transmission rates than social distance seen during a pandemic. I believe that Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot is warning the city's teachers union that enough is enough, and the deal must be struck immediately to reopen public schools during the Corona virus pandemic. Students suffering from failing grades. Depression isolation, simply cannot afford to wait any longer than we talk about depression, anxiety how two people cope with covert 19. Mr Keeler and authors Sonia Grace with us. Sonia. What do your recommendations? You're an upbeat person. What do your recommendations on what people should do during this time? Hi, George. Thanks for having me year thing. Um I really recommend that while we're all sequestered at home, people consider meditation. Meditation is such a great way to raise your vibration kind of rejuvenate yourself. And I'm doing a free one hour meditation every month. It's called the Meditation peace project. It's on the website and people can sign up and actually sit in meditation with me where we go into a really deep grounding. We we connect with our inner peace and we work on, actually. Budding inner peace around the world. Because ultimately no matter how this goes, no matter what happens here, there anywhere that's what we're going to need. People need to do something. Don't say it in your room and get out and walk, you know, exercise. I think everybody I'm watching. My clients declined because They're really not getting enough exercise and it's it's some. We can walk seriously. It's a good way to exercise. What is your website Sonia? It's Sonia. So in J A grace, G R a c e dot com Super. Thanks A lot. Appreciate that U. S. Congressional investigators found dangerous levels of toxic heavy metals in certain baby foods. That could cause neurological damage, according to a House oversight subcommittee in a report that was just released today. Now listen to this one. A new study finds that may be having a dad body isn't such a bad thing. After all, researchers from Ohio State University Say people who enter adulthood at a normal weight and start to pack on the pounds later in life actually lived the longest. Let's check in with food safety coach Jeff Milken. Jeff Why is that? Are you put on weight and you live longer?.

WJR 760
"ohio state university" Discussed on WJR 760
"Another shooting sub, you know, and Gabe, you know, I think he gets out of quarantine. Today or tomorrow, and you know another 67 days. I think, maybe by next Saturday or Sunday, maybe he's back. And yet it'll take another period of time. And those are all good excuses but the reality of had to deal with and and so all in all I thought we battled. I thought we cut it back down. We just couldn't make the big play to Get it over the home. What time I sure appreciate it and we'll do it again. Tuesday. Sounds good. So there goes some of the thoughts of Michigan State's head basketball coach Tom Izzo. And, of course Our chances. Eyes is brought you by Menard's Before you're ready to send it back to dawn cellar for more of the farm, your insurance postgame show And any final thoughts, Mr Cabin? Yes. O s. Oh, certainly. Some progress progress tonight. The progress doesn't doesn't show itself in there in the win column, but Michigan State fought need need tol need to make more shots and there and hopefully that's the case Tuesday night in Iowa City, and we'll look forward to talk and then We know there's gonna be a lot of shots in that game. Fired all over the place that carved rock God. Well, the ice. Thanks. My broadcast partners, Kevin, pal. Good filling in for Matt. Stinging. Of course. Don't shut. We're back in the studio in our studio producer. Kevin will it from my mess? You have other communications or ice, thanks to Mex Kerry, social director as well as basketball executive assistant Gary bringing stool All these thanks to do the NASCAR, Michigan state's video coordinator. And from Ohio State University, thanks to head coach Chris hoping for visiting with with us in our pregame show in one of our longtime.

WTVN
"ohio state university" Discussed on WTVN
"That's something that Greg himself has been doing for me. Three decades. Almost Greg Huh? That's weird that you should question is for sure e I knew that was gonna cause I started when I was five. Okay? You know, it's funny, you know, working in this industry for so many, many years, I remember almost 15 years ago now. It sounded better to hear two decades, you know, Because Greg looks so young. I looked so young and look, I even tried to make myself look a little older. You know, you don't want a woman that looks like she's 20 when you're in your sixties, right? That's a little awkward. And you think Oh, that's my Granddaughters aged in some cases, right? But now that we're further down the line, and Greg is looking his age finally. Oh, now he doesn't push that 2 to 3 decades thing anymore. He just doesn't talk about not quite at the three yet, Greg. So, listen, I was a Googie Hauser of financial planning. Okay, we'll go with that. I never forget a client. Coming in to meet with us. Probably 10 years ago in asking me kind of on the slide, she says, not tell me christen this Greg use Grecian formula. Oh, and the answer is an emphatic No. His hair is just this dark, shiny. Perfect. I mean, he sprayed that stuff till it was a helmet because I've been working with you guys. What? Seven or eight years? Yeah, I finally talked about of it about seven or eight years ago. Some of the photo Was still live on. That's why I know that's my all right. Greg will back off. Here we go because the truth is, there's a new administration in charge of D C and a lot of folks. Are getting very hyped up about that. Is that valid or not? How does that affect you Listening financially. We will address that If you've got any questions about anything. Greg and Kristen talk about today, or maybe something they don't get to about your 401 K IRA mutual funds. Maybe it's a pension decision. Possibly you're facing early retirement. You've got questions about your overall portfolio and how you're going to pay yourself when you stop working. Reach out to a team member off the air. You can grab a copy of that. Tim Page, my retirement kid. Help you get organized or you can set up a portfolio X ray 6143367660614336 76 60. These days. It seems that we don't really know who to trust. When it comes to information in almost every category. It feels like But I contacted a few friends and I didn't contact friends that were all right. All left are all in the middle. These air all different viewpoints that I contacted. And virtually asked them if they trust the news that they get from the media. Here's what they had to say. The media tells us what they want us to know and often bombard us with smaller issues. It helped cover up the larger problems. They don't want us to know anything about so all in all, No, I do not trust what I'm hearing or reading about what is really going on. It's hard to see past everyone being so emotionally charged about what's happening in the world because it affects everyone So right now, I don't really know who to believe. Evaluating media sources is part of my job. One of the things I do is I check about us section find out where the sources of information come from. Who's behind the stories? The easiest way to feel confident and what you're seeing from the news in the media. Is to spend as little time as possible, watching the news and paying attention to the media. When you think about how life used to be hundreds of years ago, Of course, we didn't know what was happening all over the world immediately. As it happened. We knew exactly what was happening in our communities because you could live in that and actually hear the news first hand Tend to be somebody who doesn't necessarily rely on the news to figure out what I'm going to do with my life. Every day Journalism has become less an industry of disseminating information and exposing truth as opposed to pushing forward an agenda. So I get most of my interpretive news from daily wire, and it's because they're open about that bias. I do feel like I can get reasonably accurate news for what's going on in the country. NPR offers a pretty balanced in depth review, and that tends to be corroborated by the Wall Street Journal and New York Times. Mm. Just mm, interesting lots of opinions, and there's all kinds of opinions. But you know, in life, we have to trust people on a daily basis, right? I mean, I don't know about you, but I don't frequently check my doctor's credentials. Yeah, that's right. They have the certificate on the wall, right, But you just kind of trust that they did well in school. They didn't write their way through and passed the medical exam and Their residency and all that. And if you hire a lawyer for something again, you're not Typically checking specific credentials unless you need something really specific, right? You just kind of assumed they passed the bar and trust what they're doing. Unfortunately, I think the same has been true of journalism. You know, we just kind of trust that they are true journalists and they actually went to journalism school. You know, here at a really such a thing As journalism there, you're used to be because here in Columbus at the Ohio State University, where I graduated from There was a school of journalism. You had advertising degree within that you could do all kinds of things, and I think there was a point in time where, Of course, it's always been a little bias. But you know, there's a point in time where it was really true Journalism. And so people trust that that is an actual credential, an actual career that you went into biased about your personal opinion, and that's just simply not the case anymore, And it's a period because throughout all those interviews, I'm sure they have different political viewpoint. Ral all of this points there was a German in there a Canadian in there that are now Americans. There were Quakers in there. There were Methodists in there. There are non denominational was everyone Hallelujah! But you know, the problem is, is that you would have to be An expert and almost every area to really do your due diligence and what these media sources are saying, and most people don't have the time and they frankly just don't want to dig and get the truth for themselves. So That leaves us that what we do, and I see highlights. Great writing very diligently here. He's highly down. Some lone is about the Helena Helena Blow up. But, you know, I'm sitting here without my brain tied behind my back just to make it fair for everybody else. OK? Not that I borrowed that from anyone. Yes, you're dead. Very important person in the media. Mr Ross. Yes, but there are some interesting comments amongst those you interviewed Christian and As I was listening to those I got to thinking about how journalism Can relate to the financial industry. And one of the comments was they tell us what they want us to know. Preach. You know, that really does correlate to the financial industry because You know when when someone has an agenda. On Lee sell stocks and bonds and mutual funds. Then all we really hear anything good about Stocks and bonds and mutual funds. And not that those things were bad per se. But Something else that was said by one of your other people. The interview was pushing forward an agenda, huh? And so if you ever felt No matter what industry you've gone, too, are or what line of thinking you're looking at. From the standpoint of our they only telling me what they want me to know it could be buying a car. Are they pushing forward an agenda and I find that could be true in the financial industry as well. I mean, you can go to one of those free dinner things you know, and you know, someone's going to give you a free steak dinner at a five star four star, Whatever restaurant And you're thinking well, why they willing to do this? Well, maybe they have something that they want you to know. That's kind of pushing something that's Gonna help them. Maybe not. But regardless We shouldn't really feel like an Indian history. Whether it's in journalism, whether it's in buying a vehicle, whether it's in getting a furnace, One of our staff members talked about this past week about a horrible experience she had buying Windows. Because all the things that were being told when it was sold. Wasn't what happened later. So you shouldn't get that in the financial.

WTOP
"ohio state university" Discussed on WTOP
"8 51 Experiencing about delays 25 to 35 minutes from earlier CSX freight train interference. Jack Taylor. Wtlv traffic, All right, we get our Friday forecast here with Chuck Bell looking Not too bad this morning. Check. Yeah. Not too bad at all. Enjoy the quiet and dry weather while we have it. There's an 80% chance You're gonna get rain at your house between now and the end of the day today, but that rain chance really doesn't start to begin until we get towards the middle and later parts of the afternoon. So if you're trying to run some errands, and you don't want to do it in the rain drops You have between now and at least three or four o'clock to get that done. Temperatures are still on the chilly side. 39 now at Dulles Airport, 39 here in Washington, 33. Culpepper, Virginia and 38 in Gaithersburg, Maryland. On our way to a high right around 50 degrees today, but again increasingly cloudy and a risk for some showers before sunset and the study of the rain coming in between about six and midnight tonight. The weather system that's bringing us this rain chance also has a large slot of dry air with it. So once the rain ends around midnight tonight, Sky's will actually try and clear out pretty quickly and we're likely to start off with a fair amount of sunshine on Saturday morning, seasonably cold low to mid thirties but at least some sunshine tomorrow afternoon and all right, go right back to a mostly cloudy day. And there's a 40% chance of a rain shower. But tomorrow's rain chances more of an intermittent hit miss short lived rain shower or two, maybe a wet snowflake mixed in temperatures only in the low forties tomorrow that rain chance will come to an end after sundown tomorrow. And your Sunday and Monday the doctor King Holiday will be dry but plenty chilly temperatures on Sunday loaded mid forties on the breezy side as well Monday. Also mostly cloudy but not arrange chance highs in the low to mid forties. She could keep the dry weather in place. Once you get past tomorrow should be drive for the first half of next week, all the way up through Inauguration Day. I'm Storm Team four. Meteorologist Chuck Bell for w T o p. 37. Degrees outside w T o P Studios brought to you by lend the plumber trusted same day service seven days. A week, and it's 9 22 now. Well, if you're wondering how the Corona virus vaccine is going to affect you, it may depend on what kind of shape you're in both mentally and physically, we know, And there's some research to suggest that these vaccine responses are modifiable. In least Madison is a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology at Ohio State University, she says, developing immunity and how long at last could be affected by stress, anxiety, Nutrition and whether you're sedentary that based on a review of 49 human vaccine, trying Was this generalizes across a wide variety of vaccines, which is why we think that it also would hold true for the coven. 19 vaccine findings reveal benefits.

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal
Economic recovery: one step forward, several steps back
"A big day. This was for the two people who will arguably be running this economy for the next number of years i speak here of course number one. A fisherman jay powell who did an online thing at princeton today in which he said among many other things now is not the time to exit. Allow to translates. If i might that is fed. Speak for we're going to keep on propping up this economy with low interest rates for as long as we have to and the other guy the one who's going to be in charge of this economy in six days said i see your interest rates jay and i will raise you one point nine trillion dollars. President biden is rolling out his economic relief. Plan tonight another fourteen hundred dollars in checks to individuals more unemployment assistance billions for vaccines and testing. Tracing all the stuff we all kinda thought would be in there and however much does pass the new congress. It is not going to come a moment too soon. Because this being thursday we got new numbers for initial unemployment claims this morning a big spike backup to almost a million people who lost their jobs last week and that comes as some new research from the federal reserve shows. The unemployment rate for this economies highest paid workers has fallen down underneath five percent. While for the lowest paid workers. We have it's as high as twenty percents marketplace's jasmine guy gets his gone. The numbers paint. What economists have called case shaped recovery. Things are improving for the better off and getting worse for the rest. Paul iverson an analyst at the university of iowa's labor center says there are long term ramifications to this people that were already in a precarious position that were one paycheck away from disaster. Now find themselves without that paycheck and so disasters the result industries like hospitality which tend to be low wage and employ more black and latino have been particularly hard hit by the pandemic manet. Yanko is an economist. At the university of michigan issue of very very different levels of unemployment in different sectors of the economy is not going to go away until we allow our restaurants and hotels to near full capacity in yesterday. Speech federal reserve governor brainerd. The need for urgent economic policy to help millions of unemployed americans travel logan an economist at ohio state university agrees we do need to support the income of the workers. Take uley those who are indeed high contact service industries working reductions than ours and now facing increasing and prolonged unemployment but he also says it conomic recovery hinges on the success of the vaccine rollout jasmine garst for

What A Day
Ohio researchers discover new strain of COVID-19
"This variant emanating from the uk is not the only one that researchers have their eyes on across the world. There's also the south africa one and some other. So what else do we now. Yeah this is sort of coming out. In drips and drabs so on wednesday researchers at the ohio state university said that they had preliminary evidence of two new variants in ohio. That could potentially be more contagious than the original strain. This has all been reviewed by other experts. And it's difficult right now to know the significance of the finding then also in recent days. Japan has said that they found another variant which they claimed came from travelers from brazil. We don't actually know too much more about that. At this point

Sean Hannity
Ohio researchers discover new strain of COVID-19
"Is the helm of a new variant of the Corona virus of AC C of the Corona virus. It's similar to the UK strain but has now been identified in Columbus. According to researchers with the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. The mutation in the strain is likely To make the virus more infectious, meaning it's easier to pass from person to person.

WIBC 93.1FM
"ohio state university" Discussed on WIBC 93.1FM
"At 1 38. That's what some Republican lawmakers are saying about the metal detectors installed at the U. S. Capitol, Chris Davis reports Indiana's Larry Boo Shawn is hung about the new security measures. Bhushan says the detectors are unconstitutional. One of his colleagues representative Greg Studio, Florida, spoke about it on the House floor speaker and her Democratic colleagues think an appropriate response. Is to prevent members from exercising their Second Amendment constitutional rights in the very place that wasn't secure. A week ago, the Indiana Democratic Party accuses Bush on a playing political games rather than complying with a safety measure. Chris Davis 93. W I B C MOBILE NEWS The Ohio State University says there's a new strain of the Corona virus. It was discovered in a patient from Ohio. I'm Madison McGill on the level with so many great options to choose from in the sheets. Three for five APP sampler. You'll have plenty to share mix and match any of your favorites and get all three for just five bucks. Like Mac and cheese bites. Mozzarella sticks boneless wings, You know, I think about you don't really have to share the three for five sampler. Order on your sheets app and pick it up curbside. She's run and done. On the go and on wnbc dot com. Do you get Sinus infections? Congestion, Sinus pressure and pain above your eyes below your eyes. Sinus headaches. You've gone to the doctor. You visited urgent care over and over again. And it's always the same thing. Oh, I know. Let's try antibiotics and nasal sprays. But the Sinus infections keep coming back. The good news relief is possible..

KNBR The Sports Leader
"ohio state university" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader
"Unite Greg, Papa and John Lund. Continue here. Them on your Google home. Smart speaker by saying play, Okay, NPR. Friends Mike Pereira, and about 10 55. He had a great tweet yesterday where after he had finished, he asked if he was gay. He thought to himself. He's gonna watch the next game or is he gonna sit on the beach and drink vodka? And I think, sit on the beach and drank vodka is probably What he did, but we'll find out in about 10 55 carnal, eternal 11 30. The lawyers sweep the weekend in very different fashion. They come back against the Clippers they hold on against the Raptors. Steph was really good in one game and struggled in the Next to We'll get into that and get into the warriors at the 10 game Mark and then our pal Dante Whitner is going to join us to talk everything he saw about the playoffs. Plus, he's going to be far more interested in what happens tonight. Uh, yes. The Buckeyes in the Crimson died, and I'm gonna shoot again because Dante is from the Ohio State University. But I think in this sake of equal time because we don't care who wins this game tonight. I'll be watching for the draft eligible. Certainly think I'm gonna shoot an email to our friend Eli Gold, the voice of the Alabama Crimson tide and maybe get him on. Maybe right after Dante me, Jalen Waddle. He's the one guy on their chain that I thought was possibly I thought, you know, I just Sherry Judy's just another. Level and he proved out to be really underwhelming as a rookie, but I'll get better, but I got bottle was maybe better than him. They get Jalen waddled back off the ankle injury along with Devante Smith. I mean, if your state You're worried about it. I thought Jalen Ronald heading into the year. John was a better wide receiver. But how they gotta stop Alabama from scoring. Their offense is incredible. Yeah, the only I think the only chance they have is if Justin Fields is what he was against Clemson. Me. That's why he has to be. I mean, they both got great offensive players, but What Alabama like you said has is unbelievable. Plus, I know this is boring to talk about for fans, but There's probably five or six offensive lineman between Alabama Ohio State, They're gonna go say top. There always is great this year old. These offensive lines are really good. So Something to look for tonight for? Yeah, There's so much talent on the field tonight. I'm excited. I love that. We get six games over the weekend, and then we get a national championship on Monday. It's amazing. I think it's shit without question. The three best days of football viewing ever. I mean to have three Playoff games and Saturday come back with three more on Sunday and then on Monday in a roll out a BCS national championship game, College football and I'm the college football season's weird but these clean chemical the argument. These are not the two best teams. Especially after what Ohio State did to Clemson. So in Alabama's just every year, you think that's the best Alabama team I've ever seen. And now this team with Mack Jones a quarterback, and now she Harris to run cross check with a huge piece on him over the weekend in the Chronicle. D telling him and he's got his far is yards from scrimmage. He's passed him all. Shaun Alexander, Bobby Humphrey, Mark Ingram, Derrick Henry Trent Richardson T. J. Yeldon. He sees the He's the best running back in the history of Alabama. I'm not leaving, you know, getting going back to when he was younger Chess. Jacobs was a better player out of the adult translate into the NFL. But natural Harris is really matured and becoming a big part. So we'll be watching him. He's a bear you guy from any act. Last game, Chris Babcock and the money Vista Mustang. Shut him down. Kinda. They beat him, but it was it was a shootout, but anyway Um So did you watch the Nickelodeon broadcast it all? Yes. Did you get slimed? You know my seat to watch. You know what's interesting about it. I didn't have any idea. Error. At least I had for gotten, and then George comes over and he was watching it on his phone, and he was laughing. They said, What do you watch? And he said, I'm watching the broadcast on Nickelodeon. So we threw it on. And first of all, I thought that no eagle And especially Nate Burleson were so good because obviously it's a totally different audience and make references. So when something happens, it's pretty elementary. What you say, and they're making references like well, It's like it. Recess or it's like when you have detention or like and then the slime touchdowns and the little Sheldon coming up When you know, though, it's offsides. What does that mean? I mean, I think it's genius. I don't know how much it'll help. I don't know what the ratings will be on it, but you know for for kids teaches them the game. I don't know if it'll end up working, but I thought it was. It was a pretty good idea. And I thought it was kind of funny, too. Who was the young lady that was in the middle of no ego? And Nate Burleson? She on the entire game, or just the one part that I watched, you know, she was on the whole time except for half time in the you know, they were kind of breaking down what was happening, But I think she was probably some Nickelodeon personality that they some of the kids relate to. I didn't mean she obviously didn't have much, but it was. I mean, I thought it was pretty ingenious to give it a shot, Would you? Yeah, they're trying to grow an audience there. Which tells you that the NFL is worried about you know, young people aren't playing football out of high school programs getting scrapped and Because of the concussion situation. It's just you got to reach out to him in a younger way. If they're not going to actually gonna be playing it so that they talked about it a lot. And you know, Sean Payton got slimed after they won the game, and there was a lot of fun elements to it. The bottom line is I don't know if you saw the numbers, but NFL ratings were down. They were down a lot this year 7%. Some of the shows were down more. The only time I can recall the ratings going down was the 2016 year, and it also spilled in 17. The presidential election was a big part of that, Colin capper, Nick and him demonstrating of like it or not, people, the ratings went down. I don't know why they went down this year. You would think that they would go up. In light of our all you know, quarantine, less people. The stadium I don't know why I'm in the N B. A. You could have an understanding why the numbers went down. Baseball stood well compared to the NBA, but football's got to be a concern. My football one down the one thing I would ask Mike Pereira..

Plantrama
All You Need To Know About Earthworm Castings
"Are going to talk about earth. worm castings aka earthworm poop. You know it's interesting castings as sort of a It's it's the standard term for the excrement from earthworms. It's what they cast aside. I guess that's where it comes from. It's a very interesting thing. It's like many manures and this is earthworm manure. Basically it was what we're talking about Like many manures. It has fertilizer value for plant. But earthworm castings turn out to have much more value as well. I feel like castings is a euphemism because nobody wants to say poop but there you go. I remember hearing about them. I probably ten or fifteen years ago. They're much more mainstream now. And at the time. I worried about using them in house plants and i realize now that that was an unfounded concern. Using the castings in in moderate amounts as a fertilizer is perfectly good for house. Plants isn't it. I mean this time of year. That's what people are thinking about. It is wonderful for houseplant. Wonderful for for most plant. Its first of all one hundred percent organic humus all right but the basic thing that makes it different from many other Fertilizers i guess. You'd say organic fertilizers is. There's a rich microbiological community going on in earthworm castings. That is good for your plants. Well tell me more about this microbiological community. Do you mean micronutrients or do you mean. Living things in the castings well. I mean Bacteria first of all But good bacteria right. That's number one number two. In terms of fertilizing value they are rich in iron sulfur calcium nitrogen phosphorus and potassium right but they also are believe it or not not all readily available to plant apparently in the process of going through the earthworm the castings get coded with something that makes the ingredients available to plants very slowly. Wait a minute. This is like nature's time release. Fertilizer is what you're telling me exactly. That's exact- that's fascinating. What is it nature this time. Release that is a wonderful thing. The people who have studied this and by the way earthworm castings have been extensively. Studied at ohio state at cornell. University uc davis and one study at cornell demonstrated earthworm castings suppressed damping off disease in seedlings. Wow all right. And they naturally degraded the protective covering of some insect pests so they dissolve the insect pest from the in. Yes so love that yes. At ohio state university they found that earthworm castings enhanced seed germination plant growth flower and fruit production. They curb to certain plant diseases. Including root rod and crown rot and inhibited. Insect pests including mites aphids. And mealy bug. This is like way more than just a fertilizer. Then it's kind of a magic pill a one thing you know. I wondered about is. How do you know how much to apply. And from what i've read. Apparently it's it's difficult to add too much. I mean you don't want you don't want a plant in solid worm castings but but it's something that you can apply regularly without worrying that you're going to burn the fine roots of your plants. Which is concerned with a with a commercial fertilizer. Yeah i think you know for the general rule that i use for house plants and we're thinking now in the middle of winter about plants indoors but the general rule that i use is about a quarter of a cop cop four a container that somewhere between six and ten inches in diameter.

Newsradio 700 WLW
"ohio state university" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW
"I can brew. Um As we count down to the final regular season games of the 2020 season, we look ahead to the college football championship game. It is one week from tomorrow night. Near Miami. And it will feature as you well know, by now, the University of Alabama and Ohio State University, Ohio State manhandled Clemson. Now it may seem a little strange, considering that Clem's in rolled up 400 yards of total offense. Look at the numbers. Ohio State ran up and look at the big splash plays at Ohio State had to defeat Clemson. So now we get Alabama and Ohio State one team that has just rolled through its regular season, another team that had to wait for its regular season to begin. And play just a handful of games compared to what Alabama played this year. Right now. Alabama is about a touchdown favorite. We'll see how that line moves between now in a week from tomorrow night. Standing by somebody that cover that game the other night in New Orleans and is headed to Miami later this week. He is Dan Hope from the website. 11 warriors dot com. Good guess to this program and Someone that is always there when we need a little information on the Ohio State University, Dan, How are you on this glorious Sunday? Do Well, you know? Oh, you know, don't get I'm getting contemplate. This weekend has been pretty busy weekend, but Getting ready now that I discover a national championship game. Yeah, And I think what's interesting about what transpired in New Orleans on Friday night wasn't so much what Justin Fields did it. It was. It was amazing as you point out in one of your stories on 11 warriors dot com. It was the dominance that Ohio State had over claims in, particularly on the ground. I was shocked that they ran the ball is effectively Aziz. They did. What was the reason for that? Yeah, well, you know, I think you know there was an underlying thought going into the game. You know some of the clubs and people I thought, too, But that might be an area where Clinton was more vulnerable than they appeared, even though it has been successful in the run game all season. It's defensive line. You know, they don't have as many studs up fun If they haven't passed years, they're not quite as big and physical and you know, we've seen it. You'll be starting to become champion games. I think this Ohio State offensive line has really hit its stride down the stretch and trade sermon. I mean, he's tapped into a new level, You know, we saw His first few games with the Buckeye. He looks a little positive. I think it took in some time. They kind of get used to playing in Ohio State's office, but these last few games I mean, he's just run like a man possessed that it really it kind of reminds me of Ezekiel Elliott. If years ago where, at the end of the season, you know the big 10 chance of Game of Golf Club playoff. We saw him take his game to these new heights, and we're seeing trace arm and do the same thing right now. Yeah, I mean, 254 rushing yards for Ohio State is an enormous number. And you're right, Clemson coming into this game, and I saw enough of their games to know that they weren't facing great rushing attacks. I don't think they saw anything like they saw Friday night from Ohio State. I'm just wondering Sermon to me and again. You're you're up there 24 73 65 with us, But to me, he just burst onto the scene out of nowhere. Did anybody see him coming with us? I don't think we did. And I think a few weeks ago just the way that you know. He just played only okay in the first few games of the season. I think this feeling Woz, Okay, He's a good back, but, you know, maybe he doesn't have That Ezekiel Elliott, JK Dobbins kind of here and him. And now we've seen that we have, like, Thank you know you gotta factor in. You know this guy he transferred from another school. It's been such an unusual year that he didn't have much time to get to learn the offense to get to practice with his new team as a guy typically would, and so I think it's just kind of cooking some time. Really get comfortable and get confident, and I think now that he's got that confidence we've just seen him just really take his games were different level where he's running with a different level of explosiveness, and you believe that he's gonna make a play every time he gets the ball. Justin Fields, 22 of 28 385 Yards, six touchdowns. Ran for 42 yards in eight attempts as you point out in your story, but the hit That James Cal ski put on him, I think would have knocked out any other mere moral on. He's in great pain. I'm sure this weekend over it, but to be able to got out after that, and deliver the kind of game he did. It's amazing it really is. And it sounds like from your story that his teammates absolutely knew that he was not going to leave that game. What? We've seen it before. We decide against Michigan two years ago where he went down in the knee injury. Looks like it was gonna be really bad. And then I think it was nine players later he comes back in the game. There's a place down on his first play of the game and alone. Behold..

The Gravel Ride. A cycling podcast
Nutrition for Gravel Cycling with Kristen Arnold
"This week on podcast. We've got sports nutritionists and professional cyclists. Kristen arnold kirsten has a masters degree in science and human nutrition from ohio. State university is a usa level to cycling coach with source endurance. End racist professionally with the butcher box racing team. I've always got a million questions about nutrition and it certainly a topic. That's coming up in the new ridership for them. Kirsten helps us break down. What to think about eating the week before an event during an event and after an event i thought it'd be useful to think about it in that context just because a lot of us these big events. One hundred miler. That's a big unusual ride for us. We're not doing that every month in are cycling career. We're just kind of peaking for something. That is really extreme in terms of what our body is used to. So it's important to kind of think about that not only in your physical preparation but also nutrition and hydration. Christine does a great job of breaking down the things you should be thinking about before the event during the event to give yourself the best chance for success. She's got some fantastic takeaways for us. All and a few little tricks that i hadn't thought about so. I hope you enjoyed this episode. Let's jump right in kristen. Welcome to the show. Thanks for having me craig. I'm excited to get into the topic of nutrition with you. But i always like to set the stage for the listener to get a little bit more of an understanding about your background. Since you've got a background both professionally. Nutritionist but also as a professional cyclist once you give us a little bit of both okay So i kind of make my living in three different ways right now and I went to school for nutrition. So i have an undergraduate degree and dietetic and then got my registered dietitian or credential Ended up getting my masters of science and human nutrition then became a certified specialist sports dietetic. So i was in school for eight years Nutrition and So open my private practice. Sports died headaches. Company in twenty fourteen and then started coaching Cycling in sixteen hour with source endurance. And i've been reading on the professional road circuit and twenty sixteen and now rethink for butcher. Box pro cycling. Wow that keeps you busy. Yeah we've had a couple episodes recently where we've touched on things that i would fall in the realm of nutrition and i was excited when we connected just to bring you on board and talk from the athlete's perspective about how my listeners might improve their overall nutrition nutrition and such because such a massive field and something that everybody needs to spend time thinking about and integrating into their lives. I thought we would just think about it from the perspective of an athlete. Who may be only doing a handful of events a year so not a professional cyclist by any means but someone who's peaking for an event that may be way out of the ordinary for them so think about like a two hundred mile gravel race an sp t gravel or amid south gravel event. So let's try to break down the conversation by starting. You know if you have one of those big peaks senior year. How should you be approaching it. Nutritionally in the week leading up. And then how should you be approaching your nutrition during the event. Okay all right so we're gonna talk about the week before and the day of a big event There is some research to show that what people call carb loading is effective. And what this means is that you are eating High proportion of your calories up to seven to ten grams per kilogram body weight of carbohydrates per day. and what's that doing. it is super saturating or glycogen stores so for endurance athletes especially cyclists with these long gravel event Even though a lot of the time you'll be below threshold the majority of the type of effort. You're going to be doing it. Relies on glycogen and so the main goal with Going into the event to make sure that those lijun thursday or as full as possible if not fuller than they normally are And then that also goes for hydration so ulta making sure that we have adequate hydration stores and meeting knows with fluid and electrolyte so short version of that is to Continuously e carbohydrate rich foods throughout the day for up to a week before the event and then also making sure to hydrate well with electrolytes every day consistently throughout the day.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
38 percent of Americans planning on having Thanksgiving dinner with 10 or more people
"A new survey asks americans whether they'll be getting together for the holidays. States and cities across the nation are tightening restrictions as the number of corona virus cases in the us continued to arise however a survey of over two thousand people by the ohio. State university wexner medical center. Finding nearly forty percent of americans will attend a holiday gathering with more than ten people and a third will not ask guests to wear masks. We'll celebrations will look different this year reps for the survey are encouraging folks to follow health experts guidelines calling it an opportunity to experiment with new traditions like virtual gift

Morning Edition
How To Talk To Your Kids About The Election
"Feel like you've been riding an emotional rollercoaster this election season. Well, guess what the kids in your life have noticed. But this anxious moment in history also presents a learning opportunity. Anya Kamenetz and Corey Turner cover education and parenting for NPR, and they have these tips for talking to kids about the election. In pre coded times. Hassan Cua May, Jeffries remembers taking his daughters to vote in 2016. We were right. There was me and all three of them the youngest one. I had her in my carrier, and I have my other two right there that we don't vote. Jeffries is a professor of history at Ohio State University, he says this year his middle daughter who's eight. Wanted to know was our voting plan. You know, Like what? So she's not fully clear, but she knows enough that there needs to be a plan. So step one in the election parenting playbook. Get active. Show your kids that you and by extension, they have a voice. Children are picking up on so much right now, And unfortunately, that also means in many cases they can see that we're on edge. So be honest. Tell them Adds a little nervous about the election. It's helpful for kids social and emotional development to hear you naming your feelings, yes, and to reduce that stress as much as possible. Try your hardest to turn off the TV or the radio, Put away your phone and connect with their kids Ask what they've been hearing and feeling and then listen carefully to what they share. It's so important for young people to be Engaged in conversations about meaning and purpose and different political viewpoints. Ashley Burner at Johns Hopkins University is an expert in civics education. She says. It could be tempting to stay in our bubbles and bash the people We disagree with. Politically. It's always been difficult, and it's even more difficult when we have media that helps create these separate holes in which we're all siloed in our own worldview with without touching others, Burner says. We actually need to strive for the opposite. Actively expose our Children to a range of opinions that can help our kids build skills like empathy and evaluating claims and evidence skills that are absolutely necessary for a functioning democracy. We know that civic formation is the prime reason why modern democracy started funding education in the first place was to raise able citizens. To be those able citizens. Kids also need to know about the world. Its history and geography or under, says research shows that students who spend more time with East social studies topics in school actually do better in other subjects, too, And this basic context will help them sort fact from everything else. Yeah, election season is full of learning opportunities. Just take a look at all the maps that are online. Or for slightly older kids. You can talk about the 18th century origins of the electoral College. You know, the thing about talking about history with our kids is that they're living through history right now.

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal
California wants to ban gas-powered cars, but is the auto industry ready to go all electric?
"The trump administration is not pursuing climate-friendly Policies California is Governor Gavin. NEWSOM this week pledged to ban all sales of new gasoline powered vehicles in the state by twenty thirty, five California consumes a lot of gas and would be the first state in the country to enact this kind of blanket ban. So what would it mean for the auto industry and for the state's economy marketplace's Jasmine Garcia reports remember that SNL skit the Californians, it's a spoof on how much time Californians spend behind the wheel. Take to the. Age of forty five doors and liftgate dump you onto Mohali Blah. There's something to this California is the largest consumer of motor gasoline in the nation banning the sale of gas powered cars starting twenty, thirty, five cents a message to an auto industry that's been sluggish on change says Ethan L. Kind Director of the climate program at UC Berkeley. Look if you want to do business in a major market, like California, fifteen years you better get going but industry insiders say the ban accelerate the inevitable sam for any with auto forecast solutions. Industry believes that the next big thing is vs the problem is the pricing on visas still expensive it's still takes a while to. Charge charging him structure is building, but it's still not everywhere we needed to be and even with the ban on purchases, it's going to take a long time to get all those gas powered cars off California's roads says Georgia with Sony head of the Ohio State University's Center for Automotive Research cars have two three lives. You buy a new car then you sell it maybe five years later, and if it's a good car might through two or three different cycles overeat sales, right. But as the state continues to grapple with climate change, many Californians feel time is of the essence of Jasmine guards for marketplace.

The Model Health Show
The Massive Impact Work Has On Your Health & Why NOW Is The Time To Change It
"Today we'll be talking about one of the most overlooked health issues that has been affecting our entire world and it's been overlooked long enough and I truly believe that right now is giving us an opportunity to actually change this. So, we're going to start this with a Meta analysis of four, hundred, eighty, five studies, and this is published in occupational and Environmental Medicine. And found that job satisfaction is one of the strongest influences on mental health issues. In Our world, most notably for depression and anxiety. The study noted a relationship also between our job satisfaction and physical health issues like gastrointestinal issues and cardiovascular as well, and this is echoed in several other studies including study that was cited in the Journal of chronic diseases. Taking into consideration array of risk factors and of vocations and an array of income levels uncovered that the lack of satisfaction in the work that we do is a significant risk factor for coronary heart disease. Why don't we talk about this? Real health and wellness is dynamic. It comes from so many different things. It's not just about food you can eat the perfect. Personalized, unique blood type buddy type, every type diet. And go to work and spend half or more of your waking hours of your entire life hating what you do or being unhappy go into the place that you go every day or doing the work that you're doing instill still develop chronic health issues even if your diet is perfect, even if you're hitting the gym all the time, all of these things matter. Relationships matter our sleep matters. All of these things go into the overall code. The human that you are. and. This issue. More than any other time in our lifetime is something that we can change what's happening right now with the job market and all of the turmoil I believe is offering up an opportunity for us to change this because many people are working themselves in his sickness and don't even realize it. It's happening and they don't realize that it doesn't have to be this way now we're going. To discuss, there is a modicum of course of doing what you gotTa. Do you know getting the bills paid but we have to move beyond that and this is the opportunity to do. So we're GONNA talk about how we can actually do that today as well. But I want to dive a little bit deeper here because I scratched the surface in some of the issues that we see. The results of another peer reviewed study and this was published in two thousand fifteen finally direct link between job satisfaction and psychological distress as well as physical disorders. Now according to the researchers satisfaction with the nature of work that was doing was the strongest predictor for psychological distress for sleep disorders, headaches, and gastrointestinal problems what. You don't hear stuff like sleep problems caused by. Dissatisfaction with the work one is doing. The data exists, but this is something that we brush off really think about this. Again, we think somebody's illness quote comes out of nowhere where there are so many different factors like they eat. Perfectly they're exercising all the time. And we have to take a broader view of health now and take all of these things into consideration. And that's what I'm encouraging us to today. Another study. This was from researchers from the Ohio State University say that their work shows that happiness on the job or lack thereof appears to have the biggest impact on midlife mental health. One of study authors noted that and listen to this is really interesting. And having a scale very satisfied satisfied to completely dissatisfied. They discovered that quote seen with the majority of people are either very satisfied or satisfied with their job, but we find that even they subtle distinction between. Satisfied and simply being satisfied has significant effects on your health. I would say our studies, main findings are you're likely to have worse health if you don't love your job rather than if you hate your job So did you catch that distinction? People who are just kinda getting by tolerating what they do, and maybe they're okay with their job. But if they don't love their work, not loving your work, not loving the thing that you do every day is far more of a predictor of negative health outcomes than if somebody absolutely hated the job. So that little subtle distinction of actually enjoying what we do every day is the strongest predictor of our health when it comes to the work that we do.

60-Second Science
Leftovers Are A Food Waste Problem
"Restaurants I shut down early in the pandemic American's rated grocery stores, they started cooking more at home and presumably generating more leftovers those leftovers can be a convenient future meal, but they've also got dark side. There's a tendency that you put an item on the plate that's a leftover those higher probability that you are not going to fully consume that item, and so he's probably GonNa go. To Waste Brian Rowe an applied economist at the Ohio State University he and his colleagues recently studied leftovers and food waste by tracking the eating habits of eighteen men and women in Baton Rouge. Louisiana, the participants tracked what they ate using an iphone APP and during the week-long study, the study subjects collectively piled twelve hundred different foods on their plates after analyzing what God eaten save or thrown. Away. The researchers found that leftovers were more likely to be picked data and not fully eaten, which is finding. We can all probably identify with, but they also observed that leftovers perhaps due to being older and less fresh directed diners attention to the other more novel items on their plate, which brings up an interesting possible strategy to get people to eat their veggies I, guess if you have an. Item that you don't normally eat as much of trying to get people eat peas perhaps surrounding it with leftovers is a way to make them focus of the newest item on the plate. The findings in the journal plus one overall Roe says one bigger lesson emerged on how to avoid scraping perfectly good food into the trash. So for us, the real take home here was choose a smaller meal. And you're less likely to generate leftovers and that's a good thing because leftovers all else equal tend to be wasted more often not that road doesn't have a few aspirational tupperware sitting around I'm guilty of this as well. We have stuff left over from last Thanksgiving sitting around our freezer and I know people who have moved with frozen items