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Childhood Leukemias Forged by Different Evolutionary Forces than in Older Adults

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A University of Colorado Cancer Center paper published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences shows that the evolutionary force of 'genetic drift' contributes to the ability of cancerous cells to overtake populations of healthy cells in young children. The finding points to new strategies for treatment of the disease.

Aurora, Colo. (PRWEB) January 13, 2016

For half a century, cancer researchers have struggled with a confusing paradox: If cancer is caused by the occurrence and accumulation of cancer-causing (oncogenic) mutations over time, young children should get less cancer as they have fewer mutations. Why then do young children have a higher incidence of leukemia than teenagers and young adults?

A University of Colorado Cancer Center paper published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences proposes a solution. Using a computational model describing the population dynamics of blood stem cells that give rise to leukemias, Drs. Andrii Rozhok, Jennifer Salstrom and James DeGregori provide evidence that the evolutionary force of genetic drift contributes to the ability of cancerous cells to overtake populations of healthy cells in young children. In contrast, genetic drift contributes almost not at all to leukemia formation in adults.

"Basically, leukemia risk early in life may be more dictated by chance than by the typical 'survival of the fittest' that characterizes leukemia formation in older adults," says James DeGregori, PhD, associate director for basic research at CU Cancer Center and the paper's senior author.

In previous work, the DeGregori lab has shown that the inevitable tissue declines associated with aging benefit blood stem cells (HSCs) with mutations that allow them to better adapt to the new ecosystem. (Very similar to how organisms have adapted to changes in earth's climate and landscape over time.) In contrast, the ecosystem of young tissue favors healthy cells - optimized by millions of years of co-evolution, most mutations make cells less fit for the ecosystem of young, healthy tissue and lead to purging of mutant cells from the tissue.

However, Rozhok and colleagues made a surprising discovery: Despite the ability of young tissue to select against cells with cancer-causing mutations, the computational model showed increased proportions of specific, mutation-bearing HSCs in the first few years after birth. Strikingly, they showed that these populations of mutated cells were not dependent on the effect of the mutation on cell fitness - these mutation-bearing cells were not more fit than healthy cells without these mutations. Instead of the survival-of-the-fittest form of natural selection that drives the evolution of cancer in older adults, there was another force at work.

In fact, they discovered two factors that influence the development of early-life leukemia: the small HSC pool size at birth and the high rate of cell division necessary for body growth early in life.

It's easy to understand how more cell divisions early in life create greater risk; mutations largely happen during cell divisions, so more cell divisions will mean more mutations. This in turn increases the risk that some of these mutations could contribute to leukemia development.

But what about the small HSC pool size? Thus far, we've talked about two evolutionary forces: mutation and selection. But there is a third factor, often overlooked, that is critical in evolution. It is drift. Drift is the role of chance - the possibility that despite being less fit, an animal, organism or blood stem cell with cancer-causing mutation will survive to shift the genetic makeup of the population.

Importantly, the influence of drift is greater in small populations.

"Imagine if you flip a coin 10 times. You would not be surprised if 7 or more out of 10 flips gave you heads (in fact, the odds are about 1 in 6). But if you flipped the same coin 1,000 times, the odds of getting 700 or greater heads would be much smaller (less than 1 in a million)," DeGregori says. "Basically, the more trials we do, the less chance plays a role."

The same is true in stem cell pools. In small stem cell pools, such as for HSC pools very early in life, drift (chance) becomes much more important as a lucky genotype may end up with a larger share of the total HSC pool than warranted by its fitness status. If this lucky cell clone happens to have a mutation that can start the HSC down the path towards being leukemic, then this drift-driven expansion should increase the risk of leukemia by increasing the number of HSCs with this mutation.

"Thus, early somatic evolution in HSC pools is significantly impacted by drift, with selection playing a lesser role," the paper writes.

Now consider the impact of drift as the HSC pool grows along with an infant's body to reach adult size. Just as more coin flips decrease the role of chance, so does the larger HSC pool size decrease the role of drift in the success of particular cells in the tissue. In addition, as the pool size reaches its maximum, the HSC division rate slows to a crawl (as these stem cells enter the maintenance rather than growth phase). With a landscape of healthy, youthful tissues and low rates of mutation due to low cell division rates, the odds of leukemia diminish.

"With a large population of healthy cells optimized to young, healthy tissue, the ability of mutations, including cancerous mutations, to drive uncontrolled cell proliferation is reduced," DeGregori says.

However, we did not evolve to live forever. The model shows that in old age, tissue decline promotes selection for adaptive mutations, leading to the expansion of potentially oncogenic HSC clones that will again increase the risk of leukemia. Thus this paper shows that in early life, leukemias are driven by mutation and drift whereas in later life, leukemias are driven by mutation and selection.

"We show that leukemias of children and older adults are different diseases, forged by different evolutionary forces, and propagated under different circumstances," DeGregori says.

Importantly, this understanding raises the possibility of a new approach to cancer treatment: Could we manipulate the parameters of evolution for cells within our bodies? Could we manipulate the tissue ecosystem to decrease cancer risk? Considering our bodies as ecosystems that select against or allow the development of cancer offers a new avenue for combatting the disease. Reported by PRWeb 1 day ago.

US Sports Camps and Xcelerate Nike Lacrosse Camps Announce 2016 Lineup

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This summer, Xcelerate Nike Lacrosse Camps is offering 19 camp locations for boys and girls ages 10-18 across the country.

San Rafael, CA (PRWEB) January 13, 2016

US Sports Camps and Xcelerate Nike Lacrosse Camps provide the best coaching to student athletes across the country through positive reinforcement, encouragement, and commitment. Building confidence is an essential component to a young person’s development and a very important step in achieving success both on and off the field. The camps aim to provide the leadership necessary to help build confidence and help each camper reach their full potential.

“Xcelerate Nike Lacrosse Camps provide campers the opportunity to learn from some of the most respected coaches in the nation,” says Steve Anderson, Founder of Xcelerate Lacrosse. “We provide a nice balance of experienced senior staff members, highly skilled professional players, enthusiastic recent college graduates, and current college players. Their coaching credentials are outstanding: All-Pros, All-Americans, Hall of Famers, Coaches of the Year, and All-World players.”

Summer 2016 camp locations include: Auburn, AL (Auburn University); Vail, CO (Vail Mountain Lodge); Atlanta, GA (Emory University); Naperville, IL (North Central College); Highland Heights, KY (Northern Kentucky University); Albion, MI (Albion College); Northfield, MN (St. Olaf College); Liberty, MO (William Jewell College); St. Louis, MO (Saint Louis University); Amherst, NY (University at Buffalo); Aurora, NY (Wells College); Charlotte, NC (UNC Charlotte); Cleveland, OH (Baldwin Wallace University); Oberlin, OH (Oberlin College); Corvallis, OR (Oregont State); Columbia, SC (Univeristy of South Carolina); Nashville, TN (Vanderbilt University); Georgetown, TX (Southwestern University); Tacoma, WA (Pacific Lutheran University).

At Xcelerate Nike Lacrosse Camps skill level and overall team play will dramatically improve over the course of the camp week. EVERY FIELD POSITION is covered in our camp: Attack, Midfield, Defense and Goalie. From the beginner to the elite lacrosse player, camps provide a challenge to every camper.

About US Sports Camps

US Sports Camps (USSC), headquartered in San Rafael, California, is America's largest sports camp network and the licensed operator of Nike Sports Camps. The company has offered camps since 1975 with the same mission that defines it today: to shape a lifelong enjoyment of athletics through high quality sports education and skill enhancement. For more information, please visit http://www.ussportscamps.com or call 1-800-NIKE-CAMP Reported by PRWeb 19 hours ago.

Arapahoe County's Quincy Ave. rules shut down Aurora Res triathlons

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Triathletes in the south metro area are lamenting an Arapahoe County road closure decision that has contributed to the cancellation of at least two triathlons at Aurora Reservoir this year. Reported by Denver Post 15 hours ago.

Magna says acquisitions to boost 2016 sales

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Magna International (TSE:MG) advanced on Wednesday after the Canadian auto parts marker said it expected sales in its auto parts manufacturing business to rise about 15.7% this year, helped by acquisitions including that of German transmission parts maker Getrag. Shares rose 2.1% to C$51.59 at 1:04 p.m. in Toronto, paring slump over the past twelve months to 17%. The Aurora, Ontario-based company said it expects sales in its parts production business to rise to $30.3bn-$31.6bn in 2016, from an estimated $26.3bn-$27.2bn in 2015. Magna said it expected capital spending of $1.8bn-$2.0bn in the year ahead, against an estimated $1.5bn last year. The company said its operating margin was likely to be in the high 7% range. Reported by Proactive Investors 14 hours ago.

S.F. theater artist updates Ibsen drama for our times

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San Francisco theater artist Mark Jackson was struck by how current the story sounded when his partner, actor Beth Wilmurt, described “Little Eyolf” to him in 2013. “I responded to it immediately,” says the versatile Jackson, whose new adaptation of this lesser-known Ibsen work, “Little Erik,” premieres at Berkeley’s Aurora Theatre on Jan. 29 and runs through February. Jackson didn’t care for the original’s “kind of old-fashioned, hysterical quality, but the situations that the characters were in, and the severity with which they talked about their emotions in those situations, felt really contemporary to me.” In this version, which Jackson is directing, the wife, Joie, played by Marilee Talkington, is a Bay Area tech company CEO. Mariah Castle plays Freddie’s sister, who’s just come from attending their recently deceased father’s estate, bearing secrets eventually revealed. In the original, a character called the Rat-Wife entices rodents out of houses and leads them to their deaths. There was a bit of humor in the Ibsen original but far more in “Little Erik,” which Jackson calls “a love story, mystery and family drama wrapped together.” There’s a feeling to me of Hitchcock, in the use of silence and what’s not said, in the use of stillness and the holding back of information. Noel Jewkes, the great jazz saxophonist who is treasured here at home in the Bay Area but not widely known beyond, plays Sunday, Jan. 17, at Oakland’s landmark Chapel of the Chimes, the 1909 columbarium that architect Julia Morgan redesigned in 1928. Singer Kenny Washington joins Tolling, bassist Sam Bevan, drummer Eric Garland and Colin Hogan on piano and accordion, performing TV and movie songs like “Meet the Flintstones” and the love theme from “Romeo and Juliet.” Reported by SFGate 13 hours ago.

Month-long lane closures on Aurora start Monday

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Starting Monday, drivers will have one less lane in each direction on Aurora Avenue North between Highland Drive and the Aurora Bridge. Reported by SeattlePI.com 13 hours ago.

Aurora reviewing tactical flashlights after accidental shooting

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The Aurora Police Department is reviewing its use of gun-mounted tactical flashlights after an officer who was using his light last month slipped on ice and accidentally shot a suspect in Denver. Reported by Denver Post 12 hours ago.

Age of Amity

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Age of Amity
--------------------*AGE OF AMITY*

 

We are barely into the Twenty-First Century and we see a world of turmoil. The United States stumbles on the world stage with no clear sense of direction, an economic recovery plodding along and beset by increasing problems with racism, economic inequality and political alienation. A medieval Islam holds center stage. The Middle East is in distress. The Arab Spring had waved a vision of democracy, but disintegrated into civil war in Libya, Syria and Yemen and a dictatorship in Egypt. Daesh, the so-called Islamic State, occupies wide areas of Syria and Iraq and inspires massacres in both Paris and California. Afghanistan is on the verge of civil war. Refugees are flooding Europe, which has no concept on how to handle them; the United States has a smaller refugee problem but is also without any strategy on how to deal with it. Further afield, China antagonizes all of East Asia with its claims to the South China Sea. Russia seizes the Crimea, rattles its nuclear forces, and adds to the convulsions in Syria. Africa stagnates under the weight of autocratic governments and continuing population increases. Global warming takes on a new urgency, while asteroids, earthquakes and supervolcanoes lurk in the background.Nevertheless, looking further ahead one can see a century of astounding progress, an Age of Amity.The present turmoil hides an unprecedented strategic situation. For the first time in history, no major power faces any serious threat of invasion, subjugation or destruction. There is lots of competition on the economic stage, but real threats are actually small.The United States is seriously concerned that Daesh could provoke an attack that might kill perhaps 100 people. For a major country, this is not a threat but an annoyance. There are 100 people killed every day on the roads, another 100 by guns, and hundreds more by medical shortcomings. After previous mass shootings, as when James Holmes slaughtered 12 people in a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, or when Adam Lanza killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, no one talked about a major threat and the president did not address us from the Oval Office. Nor were Americans speaking obsessively and anxiously about their fear of being ambushed anywhere in their lives (though they were no less subject to that possibility than they are now). There were more than 1,000 “mass shootings” and 1,300 dead since Sandy Hook, and the 355 such incidents in which at least four people were injured or killed so far this year alone, almost none connected to Islamic terrorism and many minor indeed, did not put the national security state on high alert to protect us. In fact, since 9/11, more people in the United States have been killed by right-wing extremists than by Islamic radicals. A hundred people at a time, as in a plane crash or natural disaster, is of course distressing, but it does not represent an overwhelming danger to the American people. Just a few years ago, during the Cold War, the nation faced a threat of 100,000,000 dead in a Soviet nuclear threat, a real threat that it seems was only narrowly avoided on a couple occasions. That puts the Daesh "threat" in perspective. Even the spectacularly successful terrorist strikes of 9/11 were only a pinprick for the nation as a whole.Global leadership is badly needed, and the United States remains the only nation capable of supplying it. Its foundational values of freedom and equality are indeed universal. The biggest challenge for the United States is how to live up to its own values, to demonstrate how they support prosperity with a peaceful and satisfied society. Its penchant to solve international problems with military force is an approach appropriate for the Twentieth Century, but not for the Twenty-first. Force has been the basis of security for nations through all of human history. The Twenty-first century offers an opportunity to shift gears to an emphasis on positive collaboration and cooperation. West Europe provides an example on a continental scale - countries that fought each other continuously for thousands of years are now a zone of peace. It has internal economic and political challenges, but there are no thoughts of raising armies to once again engage one another. This is the vision that is only now becoming possible on a global scale. Indeed the forces of globalization with modern telecommunications have shrunk the world to the point that all pieces are now interconnected. It is no longer possible for parts of the world to prosper at the expense of other parts. This is the core challenge of the Twenty-first Century, how to promote a more equitable and peaceful world.There are some residual patterns from earlier ages that still embroil global politics, most particularly the presence of autocratic regimes, of autocrats that focus their energies on buttressing their own personal positions. Indeed, greed for wealth and power is embedded in human nature and has been a driving force in history as nations fought to dominate one another. The aftermath of World War II was the first time in history that enlightened leaders prevailed on the world stage. Yet some major nations still have autocratic leaders. Autocrats in smaller nations, nations that could otherwise be pressured by the international community to open their governments, are protected by major powers and international norms that support governments at the expense of their populations.The world is now in a period of transition where informed populations can insist on good government. This is facilitated by the second unprecedented development, an internet which makes information available at the grass roots level and gives people the ability to demand change. the Arab Spring was the first manifestation of this new capability. It faltered due to inadequate international support, particularly a failure of the United States to champion its own ideals. But now, underneath all this turmoil, the world is ripe for an astounding transformationThe central driving force of any such transformation has to be a reinvigorated United States.- no other nation is in a position to provide the needed leadership.The critical first step is for the United States to make its own ideals come home, for its citizens to work together to reassert the American Dream hard work brings prosperity which in turn supports prosperity and tolerance. The United States can once again become a Beacon of Freedom, not a beacon of slogans but a beacon of real harmony and prosperity.But such prosperity cannot be limited to the United States alone. Indeed, it cannot exist in the United States alone, but has to be set in a global prosperity; the two are interactive. So fundamental change has to be promoted not only at home but globally, supporting the power of the people to oppose corruption and autocracy.Such global leadership can indeed lead to an Age of Amity, a global economy where every nation can develop its own culture in a framework of global respect for human rights and dignity. This is our challenge for the Twenty-first Century.-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 8 hours ago.

New York City Judge Rules that Asbestos Lung Cancer Case Can Proceed to Trial – Levy Konigsberg, LLP Successfully Argues Defendant Waived their Right to Cross-Examine

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Honorable Peter Moulton ruled on December 14th, 2015 that a plaintiffs’ asbestos lung cancer case can proceed to a jury against defendant Aurora Pump Company.

New York, NY (PRWEB) January 14, 2016

Honorable Peter Moulton ruled on December 14th, 2015 that a plaintiffs’ asbestos lung cancer case (Supreme Court of the State of New York, Index No. 107016-08) can proceed to a jury against defendant Aurora Pump Company.

The plaintiff in the action represented by Levy Konigsberg, LLP provided less than one day of deposition testimony before his failing health necessitated an adjournment. According to J. Moulton’s decision, the plaintiff testified that his asbestos-related lung cancer was caused in part by his work with asbestos-containing gaskets and packing located in and on Aurora pumps during his time as a merchant marine. Unfortunately, the plaintiff succumbed to his asbestos-related lung cancer approximately five years later. J. Moulton explains that despite the testimony against Aurora, at no time during the following five years did Aurora make any attempt to protect their interests by cross-examining the plaintiff.

Instead, Aurora filed a motion with the Supreme Court of New York, New York County seeking dismissal of plaintiff’s claims against them. According to J. Moulton, in Aurora’s motion, they argue the plaintiff’s deposition cannot be used against them because Aurora did not cross-examine the plaintiff. Without the deposition, Aurora argues, there is no evidence to support the plaintiff’s case. The plaintiff’s case is part of the New York City Asbestos Litigation, a large group of asbestos personal injury cases which are coordinated in New York City. Levy Konigsberg represents this plaintiff as well as many others in the New York City Asbestos Litigation.

Judge Moulton, the presiding Judge for the New York City Asbestos Litigation, rejected Aurora’s arguments and denied their requests for dismissal. Judge Moulton explained in his December 14, 2015 opinion that Aurora’s unexplainable inaction during the five year period following plaintiff’s one day of testimony amounts to a waiver of their right to cross-examine the plaintiff. As a result of this waiver, the plaintiff represented by Levy Konigsberg, LLP may use the incomplete deposition to support their claims Aurora. Judge Moulton states in his opinion that “it was incumbent upon Aurora to demand its right to depose plaintiff…[i]nstead, defendant elected to do nothing.”

Because of this ruling, the plaintiff’s family will be able to continue their fight against the defendants that caused their loved one’s disease and demise as the case pushes toward trial. This is an important decision because in some cases plaintiffs with asbestos lung cancer or mesothelioma are unable to complete their depositions due to failing health. According to this opinion, a defendant cannot game the system by doing nothing when a deposition is not completed and then later trying to strike the plaintiff’s testimony. The plaintiff’s family is represented by Levy Konigsberg, LLP and the motion was briefed and argued by LK asbestos attorney Nicholas Novack.

Levy Konigsberg LLP has been representing men and women suffering from asbestos-related lung cancer and mesothelioma for more than 30 years. The firm’s deep team of asbestos trial attorneys consists of three generations of lawyers who learn from each other and pass on knowledge and expertise from generation to generation. In 2013, Levy Konigsberg was named Plaintiff’s Product Liability Law Firm of the Year by U.S. News and World Report. The firm regularly tries and settles asbestos cases throughout the Country. For more information, please call 1-800-637-6529 or visit http://www.levylaw.com. Reported by PRWeb 11 minutes ago.

Green Dragon Cannabis Company Now in Breckenridge

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Breckenridge Cannabis Club Joins the Green Dragon Family

Breckenridge, Colorado (PRWEB) January 14, 2016

The Green Dragon brand of cannabis dispensaries continues to grow and now has six stores with a seventh on the way! Greenwerkz LLC, the parent company of Green Dragon, purchased the Breckenridge Cannabis Club doing business as Backcountry Cannabis Company on December 29th, 2015. Back in September, Greenwerkz purchased Green Dragon Cannabis Company's two locations in Aspen and Glenwood Springs.

All stores will operate under the Green Dragon name. Ryan Milligan, president of the combined companies, is proud of the unique shopping experience with quality products and excellent customer service that Green Dragon offers. "Customers can expect the best prices and quality because of our seed to sale large scale grow, says Milligan, and we can pass these savings on to the consumer. In addition we have a large variety of accessories and apparel. We are in a lot of tourist areas and customers want to bring home a non-medicated souvenir."

The Breckenridge Cannabis Club was recently made famous by the CNN Docu-series “High Profits” which spotlighted the dispensary’s drama-filled journey through the politics of a small resort town. Last February, The Breckenridge Cannabis Club was forced to move off of Main Street in Breckenridge after a town vote. They relocated to Airport Road and renamed their store Backcountry Cannabis Company.

Green Dragon Cannabis Company operates retail locations in Denver, Edgewater, Aspen and two in Glenwood Springs. An Aurora store will be added in early 2016, bringing the Green Dragon store count to seven recreational and five medical locations. The seven store fronts are supported by two state-of-the-art grow facilities located in Glenwood Springs and Denver. Reported by PRWeb 17 hours ago.

Lazydays RV Promotes James Paredes to General Sales Manager

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The RV Authority and world’s largest RV dealership has appointed James Paredes as General Sales Manager for Lazydays’ new Johnstown, Colorado location

Tampa, Fla. (PRWEB) January 14, 2016

Lazydays, The RV Authority and world’s largest RV dealership, has announced the promotion of James Paredes to General Sales Manager (GSM) for the company’s new Johnstown, Colorado dealership. Paredes has 20 years of retail experience, including sales and managerial roles in both the automotive and RV industries.

Lazydays recently expanded into the Colorado market following its acquisition of RV America, which includes two Denver-area RV dealerships in Aurora and Longmont as well as the Johnstown dealership in Northern Colorado. In his new role as GSM, Paredes will oversee the day-to-day sales operations of the Johnstown location.

“James has a long history of success at Lazydays, having consistently contributed to the company’s growth and high levels of customer satisfaction throughout his sales and management career,” said Chris Trapeni, Vice President of Lazydays’ Western Region. “I am confident that he will excel in his new position and will help our Johnstown dealership achieve the same excellence for which our Tampa and Tucson locations are renowned.”

Paredes began his career at Lazydays in 1999, when he was first hired as a sales consultant. He subsequently spent nine years in the automotive industry, where he served as Sales Director and General Sales Manager for Morgan Automotive Group. He returned to the Lazydays sales team in 2008 and was promoted to Sales Manager in 2012. While he was previously employed at Lazydays’ Tampa headquarters—the largest single-site RV dealership in the world—Paredes has relocated to Colorado for his new role.

“The opportunity to grow the Lazydays’ business and branding in the Southern Rockies region is a responsibility that I take very seriously, and I believe this development will have a huge impact on the RV industry,” said Paredes. “I am honored to have been appointed as GSM in Colorado, and I’m excited to take on the challenges of this new role. My passion for learning and training, as well as my proven ability to increase both profits and unit sales, will serve me well in this new endeavor.”

ABOUT LAZYDAYS
Lazydays®, founded in 1976, is the world’s largest RV dealership. Based on 126 acres outside Tampa, FL, since 1996, Lazydays also has a dealership located in Tucson, AZ, as well as the recent addition of three dealerships located in Johnstown, Aurora and Longmont, CO. Lazydays has the largest selection of RV brands in the nation featuring more than 1,700 new and pre-owned RVs, nearly 300 service bays, three accessories and parts stores and two on-site campgrounds with over 700 RV campsites. Lazydays has built its reputation on providing an outstanding customer experience with exceptional service and product expertise, and as a place to rest and recharge with other RVers. More than a quarter million RVers and their families visit Lazydays every year, making it “their home away from home.” Lazydays has been recognized as a “Top 50 RV Dealer” by RV Business and as one of Tampa Bay’s “Top Work Places.” The Lazydays Employee Foundation, supported by payroll contributions from more than 60% of Lazydays’ employees, has contributed more than one million dollars to make many historic changes for at-risk children in the Tampa Bay and Tucson communities. For most people, Lazydays isn't just the beginning of their journey; it's very much a part of their ride. To learn more, visit http://www.lazydays.com.

### Reported by PRWeb 16 hours ago.

Ride the Ducks to resume tours Friday; first two trips sold out

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Ride the Ducks, the amphibious tour company that was suspended after a horrific crash on the Aurora Bridge last fall that killed five international students, will resume its tours on Friday morning. Reported by Seattle Times 12 hours ago.

Aurora Avenue traffic will be slow going for next month with lane closures

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Transit rides will take longer on Aurora Avenue North for the next month, while construction pushes general traffic into the southbound bus lane. And during some nights and weekends, traffic will be scrunched into a single lane each way. Reported by Seattle Times 11 hours ago.

Probation ordered for gun buyer in Jewish site killings

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SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — A southern Missouri man has been sentenced to five years of probation for purchasing one of the shotguns that a white supremacist used in a deadly attack at two Jewish sites in suburban Kansas City. Forty-nine-year-old John Mark Reidle, of Aurora, was sentenced Thursday in federal court in Springfield. He previously […] Reported by Seattle Times 11 hours ago.

How dying baby salmon inspired these developers to build a better building for Tableau

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When they go to work in their new Seattle office building in 2017, Tableau Software (NYSE: DATA) employees who commute by bicycle will be able to pedal directly into a street-level shower room. Then they can go upstairs knowing that their new digs are good for salmon. That's because the new building at 744 N. 34th St., will capture water runoff from the Aurora Bridge, which is overhead, and filter it before it makes its way into Lake Union across the street. These are some of the eco-friendly features… Reported by bizjournals 11 hours ago.

Ex-Boyfriend Hit, Choked Former Girlfriend: Police

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Ex-Boyfriend Hit, Choked Former Girlfriend: Police Patch Montgomery, IL -- The 26-year-old man allegedly abducted the woman, but let her out of the car in Aurora. Reported by Patch 10 hours ago.

Aurora man charged with sexual assault of child

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A 26-year-old Aurora man has been arrested and charged with child molestation for an incident that happened in December. Reported by Denver Post 10 hours ago.

Armory Shooting Plotter Says Attack Nothing But Bold Talk: Lawyer

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Armory Shooting Plotter Says Attack Nothing But Bold Talk: Lawyer Patch Montgomery, IL -- Jonas Edmonds, of Aurora, said he had smoked marijuana, which led to his "bravado" statements with an undercover FBI agent. Reported by Patch 9 hours ago.

Lawmakers seek to strengthen state’s assault-weapons ban

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Assemblyman David Chiu, seeking to strengthen the state’s ban on assault weapons, brought two semiautomatic rifles to San Francisco to show how quick and easy it is to load a clip full of bullets — legally and illegally. [...] it took him about three seconds — using the “bullet button” loophole in existing law — to change the clips on a legal semiautomatic rifle, the kind available for sale throughout California. The demonstration in a conference room in the State Building was the opening salvo in the campaign by Chiu, D-San Francisco, to ban detachable clips from semiautomatic rifles sold in California. Chiu intended his demonstration to show how easy it is to stay within the law while quickly changing ammunition clips — the same action that gunmen have performed during recent mass killings in San Bernardino, Sandy Hook, Conn., Aurora, Colo., and elsewhere. Gun safety advocates have long complained that gun manufacturers exploit loopholes to circumvent the intent of laws such as California’s assault weapons ban, passed in 1989 following a shooting in a Stockton schoolyard. Among the supporters of the bill at Chiu’s demonstration were pastor Arelious Walker of True Hope Church in San Francisco, who said gun violence “affects all of us, but especially communities of color.” Reported by SFGate 7 hours ago.

Protective Head Gear Maker Sport Shieldz® Sees Interest, Sales Climb along with Concussion Awareness During NFL Playoffs

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Protective Head Gear Maker Sport Shieldz® Sees Interest, Sales Climb along with Concussion Awareness During NFL Playoffs AURORA, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--With the NFL playoffs and a peak in awareness of sports-related concussions, one Denver-area company is seeing a spike in interest and sales of its Sports Shieldz® wearable protective head gear. Reported by Business Wire 18 hours ago.
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