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    A Texas Grand Jury Is Considering Another Charge Against Deshaun Watson

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    A grand jury in Brazoria County in Texas is considering evidence related to a 10th accusation of sexual misconduct against Deshaun Watson, the former Houston Texans quarterback who was traded to the Cleveland Browns just days ago, according to a lawyer for the complainant.

    A grand jury in Harris County, Texas, where Houston is, rejected nine criminal cases against Watson earlier this month. But a 10th criminal complaint filed with the Houston Police Department described an alleged incident outside the jurisdiction of the Harris County District Attorney’s Office.

    The case, in Brazoria County, south of Houston, is the last criminal case pending against Watson. The complainant told police that Watson ejaculated on her in a November 2020 massage appointment. Her lawyer, Tony Buzbee, said he expects the grand jury to deliberate and issue a decision on Thursday or Friday. Neither the Browns nor Rusty Hardin, Watson’s lawyer, were immediately available for comment.

    The latest grand jury proceeding was first reported by Fox 8 WJW in Cleveland.

    The publicly available police report was heavily redacted but said that the complainant told police that Watson “touched her with his penis and ejaculated causing semen to touch her arm and hand.”

    The complainant, whose name was redacted in the criminal complaint, is one of the 22 plaintiffs who are suing Watson in civil court for sexual misconduct during massage appointments.

    Watson has denied all wrongdoing, and Hardin has said that any sexual acts that occurred during massage appointments were consensual.

    After the grand jury in Harris County declined to bring charges on March 11, Hardin said in a statement that “the criminal investigations have been completed.” N.F.L. teams viewed the decision in Harris County as a green light to pursue Watson via trade, and the Browns gave Watson a guaranteed five-year, $230 million contract, a record for a guaranteed deal. They structured the deal to mitigate Watson’s financial penalty if the N.F.L. suspends him for a violation of its personal-conduct policy by setting his 2022 base salary at just over $1 million, minimizing each potential missed game check.

    The Browns said in a statement on Sunday that they undertook a “comprehensive evaluation process” before trading for Watson and did “extensive” investigative, legal and reference work. The statement acknowledged that “some legal proceedings” were still ongoing, but it was unclear whether the Browns were aware that a case would be brought before the Brazoria County grand jury this week.

    The N.F.L.’s investigation into the allegations against Watson is ongoing. A person who identified himself as a security representative for the N.F.L. requested information from the Houston Police Department on March 15, including witness statements and phone records or social-media messages, and also asked for interviews with the police investigators who worked the case, according to police records.

    Watson invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in civil depositions given before the decision by the Harris County grand jury, but waived that right and answered questions under oath in depositions last week and this week, Buzbee said.

    Before the deal with the Browns, Watson also met with the Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers and New Orleans Saints last week.

    Kevin Draper contributed reporting.

    Man stuck in Costa Rica after flesh-eating bug infected genitals

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    A British man developed a flesh-eating disease that infected his genitals after undergoing a minor medical procedure during a recent business trip to Costa Rica, according to a report.

    Colin Graw, 47, who traveled to the Central American country to pursue a business opportunity, underwent the operation and was discharged the same day, but soon developed intense pain, LancsLive reported.

    Four days later, doctors told him he was suffering from necrotising fasciitis, a rare but serious flesh-eating bacterial infection that affects the tissue under the skin and surrounding muscles and organs.

    Making matters worse, he contracted Fournier’s gangrene, a form of necrotizing fasciitis that affects the scrotum, penis or perineum, according to the outlet.

    Graw underwent grueling surgeries to remove the infected tissues and was left with multiple wounds and intense pain.

    He has been put on antibiotics to fight off the flesh-eating disease but is susceptible to more infections and goes to the hospital three times a week to prevent them, according to LancsLive.

    Colin Graw underwent the operation and was discharged the same day, but soon developed intense pain
    Family handout

    “It’s been absolutely horrific for him, he is in exceptional amounts of pain, he can’t sit properly — he only had a 30 percent chance of survival because it’s such a rare bacterial infection and there aren’t many antibiotics that can treat these types of infections,” his sister Tanja Wilis, 49, told the outlet.

    “He is in Costa Rica, he’s in the public hospital there, he’s got no family, he’s got his girlfriend but he was weeks in hospital where very few people spoke English, absolutely no visitors allowed, no family around dealing with what was a near-death experience fighting for his life for week. It’s just been awful,” the resident of Parbold in the UK added.

    In late January, Willis flew to Costa Rica to be at Graw’s side but was only allowed a brief opportunity to hold her brother’s hand.

    Graw pictured in the hospital in Costa Rica
    Colin Graw has been put on antibiotics to fight off the flesh-eating disease.
    Family handout

    “They’re still trying to fight off infections that are highly resistant to antibiotics. He is too ill to travel so we’re not in a position to get him home,” she told LancsLive.

    “Since the visit, I’ve been in contact with Katya, his partner who he is now at home with, and we communicate via Whatsapp and social media so that I can get regular updates on his progress and treatments,” Willis said.

    “I think he was exceptionally unlucky to contract bacteria like that. He was on the beach one day, and three days later he was in hospital fighting for his life, it happened so quickly,” she said.

    Colin Graw GoFundMe page
    The GoFundMe has raised about $14,000 of its goal of $210,000 as of Thursday.

    “It was just supposed to be a day procedure. He just got an infection and it literally escalated from something minor to him being lying on his death bed,” the sister added.

    The medical costs have so far amounted to about $105,000 but with the additional treatment required, it has been estimated the total will be as high as about $200,000, according to a GoFundMe account she has set up.

    As of Thursday, it has raised about $14,000 of its goal of $210,000.

    Ukraine-Russia War Live Updates: Biden Meets With G7 Leaders

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    President Biden’s trip to Europe includes a rare day of three back-to-back global summits on Thursday as the world’s leaders gather in a variety of forums to discuss their response to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    NATO: On Thursday morning, Mr. Biden was joining leaders of the 30 countries that make up the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a group formed after World War II to promote a common defense. On the agenda: Whether, and how, to provide more robust weapons to Ukraine and how to shore up NATO’s own defenses in Poland and along the eastern front with Russia.

    Mr. Biden and the others were also to discuss the grim scenarios of a possible further expansion of Russian attacks into NATO countries, and how the alliance would respond.

    G7: After the NATO gathering, Mr. Biden will join the leaders of the Group of 7, the world’s largest wealthy democracies, to continue the discussion about Ukraine. The meeting, which includes the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States, was called by Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany, who is the current president of the G7.

    The group is expected to confront the refugee crisis sparked by millions of Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s forces, and to discuss what more the world can do to punish President Vladimir V. Putin for his aggression.

    European Council: Mr. Biden will then cross Brussels to join the 27 leaders of European Union member states. The summit, known as a European Council, was the long-planned regular meeting of E.U. leaders that happens every quarter, but Mr. Biden was invited in view of the bloc’s close coordination with the United States on sanctions and all other measures responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    The group is likely to focus on expanding sanctions as well as a push by Mr. Scholz to enhance enforcement measures to ensure that Russia is not able to evade the pain of the sanctions. The E.U. leaders will continue their meeting on Friday, after Mr. Biden has left for Poland.

    Overlapping memberships: NATO and the European Union both have their headquarters in Brussels and their origins in the years after World War II, but the differences between them are important. NATO was built as a military bulwark against Soviet power, while the European Union is a political and economic bloc that grew from efforts to unite the formerly warring nations of Western Europe through trade.

    Twenty-one countries now belong to both, including a swath that once fell under the Soviet sphere of influence. But the 27 E.U. members include several countries that have stayed outside NATO, often because of traditions of neutrality, like Austria, Ireland and Sweden. The 30 NATO members include the United States, by far its dominant military partner, and Canada, alongside several countries that have left or declined to join the European Union (Britain, Iceland, Norway) or have applied to join it (Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Turkey).

    The Group of 7, meanwhile, was formed during the economic upheavals of the 1970s to facilitate discussions between the leaders of the Western world’s most powerful economies; it now includes European Union leaders, alongside those from Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States.

    iFixit teardown offers a detailed look inside the Mac Studio and Studio Display

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    iFixit has gotten its grubby mitts on Apple’s new Mac Studio computer and Studio Display, and has taken both apart to learn more about them — including how easily they can be repaired or even upgraded. The Mac Studio in particular has generated some controversy because its SSDs don’t appear to be user-upgradable, despite being fairly easy to access and remove.

    There’s one piece of good news from iFixit’s teardown, which is that it does appear to be possible to swap out the SSD in a Mac Studio for one of the same size in case the drive fails. But despite there being a second SSD slot accessible, it doesn’t appear to be possible to simply insert an additional second drive to easily upgrade the Studio’s storage yourself. As for whether it could ever be possible for an end-user to upgrade a Mac Studio’s storage? “The jury’s still out,” says iFixit.

    These difficulties have prompted speculation that Apple is implementing some kind of software block to prevent end-user SSD upgrades. But as ArsTechnica explains, it probably has more to do with the fundamental design of the storage in Apple Silicon Macs. While PC SSDs typically include both NAND flash chips and an SSD controller on the same (removable) module, Apple’s recent Macs have separated them. The NAND stays on the SSD module itself, but the SSD controller is built into Apple’s chips.

    Regardless of the reasoning, it’s still frustrating not being able to easily upgrade your own computer’s storage. Instead, you’ll have to pay Apple’s (often exorbitant) prices for its higher storage configurations as a safeguard.

    Elsewhere, there’s both good and bad news for the Mac Studio’s repairability. The good news is that most components are held together with screws, and that the computer’s ports are modular and should be relatively easy to replace if they break. But actually getting into the computer requires peeling off a sticky rubber foot ring, its RAM is soldered on, and its cooling mechanism — while beefy — looks like it’ll be a nightmare to dust when the time comes. Overall, iFixit gives the Mac Studio a 6/10 score for repairability, same as the old Mac Mini.

    Finally, iFixit also took the opportunity to take apart the new Studio Display, which it says “opens like an iMac, and inside looks… a lot like an iMac.” Although the company teases that it’ll have more to say about the display at a later date, it confirms that the Studio Display’s webcam appears to use the same camera sensor as what was found in the iPhone 11. Which makes it even more confusing that the monitor’s webcam offers such shocking quality. Here’s hoping Apple’s promised software update improves things.

    Jodie Turner-Smith films herself getting her eyebrow shaved off for dramatic new look

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    Jodie Turner-Smith reveals she’s shaved off her EYEBROWS as she shares a glimpse of her dramatic look

    She no stranger to making a bold statement.

    And Jodie Turner-Smith shocked fans on Wednesday as she revealed she’d shaved off her eyebrows.

    The 35-year-old actress, who is mother to daughter Janie, 23 months, with husband Joshua Jackson, took to Instagram to document the process.

    New look: Jodie Turner-Smith shocked fans on Wednesday as she took to Instagram to reveal she’d shaved off her eyebrows

    She filmed herself getting her brow shaved off by a razor, and captioned the post: ‘Bye bye brows’.

    Her skin glowed and she looked relaxed as she underwent the surprising makeover. 

    The shocking new look comes after Jodie gave a candid interview for AnOther magazine, about motherhood.

    When discussing what life is like as a new mother, Jodie revealed that she loved to see the world through her daughter’s eyes.

    Before: The actress is pictured earlier this month before having her eyebrows shaved

    All gone! She filmed herself getting her brow shaved off by a razor, and wrote over the top: 'Bye bye brows'

    Before: The 35-year-old actress took to Instagram to document the process (pictured left earlier this month and right during the shaving)

    ‘It’s incredible to watch a person gain an understanding of the world and be beside them as they conceive of every single thing’.

    She continued: ‘It’s like experiencing life again, because you are seeing them discover a tree, the ocean, a shark. We were looking at sharks in the water today – we’re in the Bahamas’. 

    ‘One of the best parts about parenting is that you get to learn everything again because you see the world anew through innocent, fresh eyes. It’s humbling and beautiful and exciting – and it’s really emotional’.

    The British actress, who is now based in the U.S with her young family, also spoke own mother’s influence in the intimate chat. 

    New parents: It comes after Jodie detailed her 'humbling and beautiful' journey through motherhood with her daughter Janey (pictured with her husband Joshua Jackson)

    New parents: It comes after Jodie detailed her ‘humbling and beautiful’ journey through motherhood with her daughter Janey (pictured with her husband Joshua Jackson) 

    ‘I feel so lucky that I have my Mom with me to not only just be there for my daughter, but to teach me how to be a Mom’.

    The Anne Boleyn actress continued: ‘My mother is a really, really good mother. And now I have her teaching me how to mother my daughter’. 

    ‘I never had a close relationship with my grandmas. So the fact that my daughter is really close with her grandma literally makes me cry every time I think about it’.

    ‘To me, the concept of someone being close to their grandma was like a movie and TV thing. It wasn’t real life. I’m just happy to create that world for my daughter. It really does take a village. And I have so many people helping me make it happen’.

    During the glamorous shoot Jodie can be seen looking sensational in a number of different avant garde outfits.

    Wow: AnOther SS/22 is on sale globally from Thursday 24 March

    Wow: AnOther SS/22 is on sale globally from Thursday 24 March

    In one shot she sports a block coloured ostrich feathered ensemble with statement earrings and one striking PVC glove.

    In a purple chiffon gown, which clings to her gorgeous frame, Jodie lets the wind raise the long cape high into the air covering her face. 

    The raven haired beauty was speaking ahead of the release of her new movie After Yang where stars alongside Colin Farrell. 

    The Sci-fi movie, which has been lauded by critics, sees Jodie play a mother who attempts to repair her unresponsive robotic child. 

    After being a hit at film festivals around the world, the film will be available to stream in the coming months. 

    AnOther SS/22 is on sale globally from Thursday 24 March.

    Movie: The raven haired beauty was speaking ahead of the release of her new movie After Yang where stars alongside Colin Farrell

    Movie: The raven haired beauty was speaking ahead of the release of her new movie After Yang where stars alongside Colin Farrell

    Mysterious ‘odd radio circles’ seen in space, new image shows

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    They are known as odd radio circles, or ORCs. While the thought of ORCs may bring the goblinlike humanoids from the “Lord of the Rings” books to mind, these fascinating objects have baffled scientists since they first discovered them in 2020.

    Astronomers found the odd radio circles using the Australian SKA Pathfinder telescope, operated by Australia’s national science agency CSIRO, or Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, two years ago.

    These space rings are so massive that they measure about a million light-years across — 16 times bigger than our Milky Way galaxy.

    Astronomers believe it takes the circles 1 billion years to reach their maximum size, and they are so large that the objects have expanded past other galaxies.

    Now, a new image captured by the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory’s MeerKAT telescope provides more detail and information. (MeerKat is shorthand for Karoo Array Telescope, preceded by the Afrikaans word for “more.”) The image and findings were published Monday in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

    3 possible theories

    Initially, astronomers thought the circles could be galactic shock waves or even the throats of wormholes, among a whole host of ideas.

    Now, researchers have narrowed down a range of theories to three.

    The odd radio circles could be remnants of a huge explosion at the center of a galaxy, not unlike what happens when two supermassive black holes merge together.

    Second, they might be powerful jets pumping out energetic particles from the galactic center.

    Or, the third possibility is that they could be the result of a starburst shock wave triggered by the birth of stars in a galaxy.

    Only five radio circles have been found in space so far.

    The ASKAP radio telescope is located in western Australia.

    “We know ORCs are rings of faint radio emissions surrounding a galaxy with a highly active black hole at its centre, but we don’t yet know what causes them, or why they are so rare,” said study coauthor Ray Norris, a professor at the Western Sydney University and CSIRO, in a statement.

    So far, odd radio circles have only been found by telescopes that observe through radio wavelengths. Visible light, infrared and X-ray telescopes have yet to spot them, despite their massive size.

    As radio telescope astronomers find more of them to observe, those observations could help fill the many knowledge gaps about these curious new objects.

    “People often want to explain their observations and show that it aligns with our best knowledge. To me, it’s much more exciting to discover something new, that defies our current understanding,” said study author Jordan Collier, astronomy and bioinformatics user support specialist at the Inter-University Institute for Data Intensive Astronomy in South Africa, in a statement.

    Over a thousand cosmic explosions traced to mysterious repeating fast radio burst

    Collier produced the new image from data collected by MeerKAT.

    The MeerKAT telescope, located in the Karoo region of South Africa, includes an array of 64 radio dishes and has been operational since July 2018. The powerful telescope is sensitive to faint radio light.

    Collaboration will allow astronomers to find more of the odd radio circles — as will more sensitive radio telescopes in the future.

    New high-resolution telescope

    MeerKAT is a precursor to an upcoming telescope, the transcontinental Square Kilometre Array or SKA, which is under construction in both South Africa and Australia.

    The MeerKAT radio telescope dishes can be seen beneath a star-filled sky in Karoo, South Africa.

    “No doubt the SKA telescopes, once built, will find many more ORCs and be able to tell us more about the lifecycle of galaxies,” Norris said in a statement. “Until the SKA becomes operational, ASKAP and MeerKAT are set to revolutionise our understanding of the Universe faster than ever before.”

    The array will include thousands of dishes and up to a million low-frequency antennas in an effort to build the world’s largest radio telescope.

    Despite the fact that these dishes and antennas will be in two different parts of the world, together they will create one telescope that has over 1 million square meters (386,102 square miles) of collecting area, meaning that astronomers can survey the entire sky much more quickly than with other telescopes.

    It will also exceed the image resolution of the Hubble Space Telescope and image large portions of the sky in sensitive detail.

    Stocks Open Higher After Wednesday Selloff

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    U.S. stocks edged higher, putting Wall Street indexes on course to recoup some of Wednesday’s losses, while oil prices hovered near recent highs.

    The S&P 500 added 0.4% in early trading Thursday. The tech-focused Nasdaq Composite Index rose 0.5% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.3%, about 100 points. U.S. stocks declined and oil prices jumped Wednesday. 

    In individual stocks, shares of

    Nikola

    soared 18% after the company confirmed that production has begun on its electric commercial truck, the Tre.

    Investors have grappled with how Russia’s war with Ukraine will put additional pressure on supply chains that are already disrupted from Covid-19. Oil prices, which remain above $100 a barrel, have added to concerns that consumers could see higher prices for energy and even products like plastic wrap or lawn fertilizer. Federal Reserve officials have penciled in a series of additional interest-rate increases to limit inflation this year.

    Brent-crude futures, the international benchmark, were 0.4% lower at $117.24 a barrel.

    “Through mid-February, it was all about rising rates, and then it was all about the war, and what’s concerning now is that they’ve combined,” said

    Daniel Morris,

    chief market strategist at BNP Paribas Asset Management. “The challenge in this environment is what do you buy. You can’t sit in cash. It is a ‘least-bad option’-type of market.”

    Traders worked on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday.



    Photo:

    BRENDAN MCDERMID/REUTERS

    Russia’s stock market jumped in its first limited trading session since the West unveiled punishing sanctions nearly a month ago. The benchmark MOEX index added around 4%. 

    The increase is unlikely to be interpreted as a sign that all is well with the Russian economy. Only 33 shares out of 50 shares on the index were allowed to trade. To prevent a steep selloff, Russia’s central bank banned short selling, and blocked foreigners, who make up a huge chunk of the market, from selling their shares. 

    The move will also help prevent the ruble from weakening, as foreign investors would likely sell their ruble-denominated shares and then move out of the ruble for the dollar or euro. Russia’s currency has trimmed some of its losses against the dollar in recent sessions, trading at 98 rubles to the dollar Thursday. 

    In bond markets, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note ticked up to 2.377% from 2.320% Wednesday. Yields and prices move inversely.

    Overseas, the pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 was down 0.1%. Major indexes in Asia closed with mixed performance. China’s Shanghai Composite fell 0.6%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng declined 0.9%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 added almost 0.3%.

    New orders for durable goods—products designed to last at least three years—fell 2.2% in February from the month prior after auto production was again held back by supply chain bottlenecks and

    Boeing Co.

    had a relatively weak month for aircraft orders. 

    The number of Americans applying for first-time unemployment benefits fell to 187,000 in the week ended March 19, down from 215,000 in the week prior. 

    Write to Caitlin Ostroff at caitlin.ostroff@wsj.com

    Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    2022 March Madness predictions: College basketball expert picks, odds, lines for Sweet 16 games Thursday

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    Time for a confession off the top here before we get to Sweet 16 picks: March Madness has not been my month. The good news is that our expert picks — back in action today ahead of Thursday’s Sweet 16 fun! — features more than just your’s truly. Gary Parrish, Matt Norlander and Chip Patterson are all riding heaters into this second wave of tourney action, and David Cobb’s had a nice little run, too.

    So if you want to tail their picks instead, I completely understand. Or if you really want to earn a bag, it seems fading me might be the real move. That choice is yours as you check out our picks below.

    Either way, to get you prepped for the first day of the second week of the tournament, I’ve again convened our experts to make picks straight up and against the spread to help you pick your bracket (and hopefully make some cheddar along the way). You can also check our expert brackets or our reset brackets for the third round.

    Be sure to stick with CBS Sports throughout the rest of the month for NCAA Tournament coverage through the end of the Final Four. Let’s take a look at our expert picks for the final slate of third-round games on Thursday.

    Odds via Caesars Sportsbook | All times Eastern

    NCAA Tournament: Sweet 16 picks

    (1) Gonzaga vs. (4) Arkansas

    Thursday, 7:09 p.m. | CBS, March Madness Live: Gonzaga has not covered the spread in four of its last five games, including both of its NCAA Tournament matches. Arkansas, however, has covered the spread in 20 of its 35 games this season and is 4-1-0 ATS as an underdog, according to TeamRankings.com. The 8.5-point line feels like a reasonable number to clear for a Razorbacks team that can win a shootout or slugfest and has the personnel to match up favorably with the Zags. Pick: Arkansas +9

    Spread

    ARK +9

    ARK +9 ARK +9 ARK +9 ARK +9 ARK +9

    Straight up

    ZAGS

    ZAGS ZAGS ZAGS ZAGS ZAGS

    (2) Villanova vs. (11) Michigan)

    Thursday, 7:29 p.m. | TBS, March Madness Live: Villanova right now looks like the strongest remaining No. 2 seed left in the bracket. That’s not saying too much — two of the four such seeds are already home and the other, Duke, has looked vulnerable — but it counts for something. This Jay Wright-coached Wildcats team is old, experienced and playing really well. Their advantage in the backcourt should trump their disadvantage in the frontcourt by a wide-enough margin to cover the spread. Pick: Villanova -5

    Spread

    NOVA -5

    MIA +5 MIA +5 NOVA -5 MIA +5 NOVA -5

    Straight up

    NOVA

    NOVA NOVA NOVA NOVA NOVA

    (2) Duke vs. (3) Texas Tech

    Thursday, 9:39 p.m. | CBS, March Madness Live: What feels like an underdog play isn’t so in the eyes of oddsmakers. Texas Tech, the No. 3 seed, is giving 1.5 points to Duke, the No. 2 seed, in this West Region matchup. And I’m laying it with the Red Raiders. Their defense is ferocious, and the matchup overall for Duke is a nightmare for which to prepare even with several days of time. Pick: Texas Tech -1.5

    Spread

    DUKE +1.5

    DUKE +1.5 TTU -1.5 TTU -1.5 TTU -1.5 TTU -1.5

    Straight up

    DUKE

    DUKE TTU TTU TTU TTU

    (1) Arizona vs. (5) Houston

    Thursday, 9:59 p.m. | TBS, March Madness Live: Arizona had to go to overtime to take care of TCU in the second round, and it really struggled with the way the Horned Frogs crashed the offensive boards. That’s especially concerning against a Houston team that ranks as the third best offensive rebounding team in all of college hoops. But it’s an area in which I suspect Tommy Lloyd and his Wildcats staff will be prepared to battle ahead of Thursday. If it boils down to talent as I suspect, I like Zona giving the points. Pick: Arizona -2

    Spread

    ARIZ -2

    ARIZ -2 ARIZ -2 ARIZ -2 ARIZ -2 HOU +2

    Straight up

    ARIZ

    ARIZ ARIZ ARIZ ARIZ HOU

    Who will win every college basketball game, and which teams will sink your bankroll? Visit SportsLine now to see how to pick the spread, money, line, and over-under in each tournament game, all from the model that’s up almost $1,500 on top-rated college basketball picks and simulates every possession 10,000 times.

    Brain Implant Enables Completely ‘Locked-In’ Man to Communicate Again

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    A pair of brain microchips could one day allow those in ‘pseudocomas‘ to communicate whatever they want, a new breakthrough suggests.

    In a first, a 34-year-old patient who lacked even the most subtle of muscle twitches has used the technology to share a few precious words with his family, using little more than an intent to move his eyes.

     

    Similar devices have previously given patients with the fast-progressing condition amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) the means to send simple messages with extremely limited movements, but researchers say the severity of the man’s condition here represents a significant advancement for the technology. 

    “To our knowledge, ours is the first study to achieve communication by someone who has no remaining voluntary movement and hence for whom the BCI is now the sole means of communication,” says neuroscientist Jonas Zimmermann from the Wyss Center in Switzerland.

    A pseudocoma is also known as ‘locked-in’ syndrome, because while these patients cannot walk or talk, they are still very much conscious, capable of seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling, thinking, and feeling.

    Without the ability to move the mouth or the tongue, however, communication is severely limited. If the eyes can still move, patients can sometimes blink or ‘point’ with their pupils to make themselves understood, but in some advanced cases, even that basic form of communication is out of reach.

    The man in this case was one such patient. Within months of diagnosis with the condition, he had already lost the ability to walk and talk. A year later, the patient was placed on a ventilator to help him breathe. A year after that, he lost the ability to fix his gaze.

     

    The extreme isolation ultimately led the patient and his family to agree to a cutting-edge experiment.

    Before the patient lost the ability to move his eyes, he consented to a surgical procedure that would implant two microchips into the part of his brain that controls muscle movement.

    Each chip was equipped with 64 needle-like electrodes, which could pick up on his conscious attempts to move. That brain activity was then sent to a computer, which translated the impulses into a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ signal.

    In the past, similar brain implants have allowed some patients with ALS to communicate via a computer typing program. But this is the first time an ALS patient without the ability to so much as use their eyes has been able to do something similar. 

    “People have really doubted whether this was even feasible,” Mariska Vansteensel, a brain-computer interface researcher who was not involved in the study, told Science.

    (Chaudhary et al., Nature Communications, 2022)

    Above: The experimental setup of the brain implants, plus the biofeedback device and the spelling program.

    The technique took months of training, but once the patient learned how to control the firing rates of his brain signals, he was able to respond to a spelling program and select specific letters, spoken out loud by the program, to form words and even sentences.

     

    Each letter the patient heard took about a minute for the patient to respond to, making for slow progress, but nonetheless, for the first time in a long time, the device allowed this man to express himself.

    The accuracy of the technology is still not perfect. The patient could only signal ‘yes’ or ‘no’ about 80 percent of the time, with about 80 percent accuracy. Some days he could only generate words, not sentences.

    “These apparent poor performances are primarily due to the completely auditory nature of these systems, which are intrinsically slower than a system based on visual feedback,” the authors write in their study.

    The first phrase the ALS patient successfully spelled out was a ‘thank you’ to the lead neurobiologist on his case, Niels Birbaumer.

    Then, came a slew of requests for his care, like “Mom head massage” and “I would like to listen to the album by Tool [a band] loud”. 

    Then, 247 days after the surgical procedure, the patient gave his verdict on the device: “Boys, it works so effortlessly”. 

    On day 251 he sent a message to his kid: “I love my cool son”. He then asked his child to watch a Disney film with him. 

     

    On day 462, the patient expressed that his “biggest wish is a new bed”, and that the next day he could go with his loved ones to a barbecue.

    “If someone is forming sentences like this, I would say it is positive. Even if it is not positive, it is not negative,” first author of the study Ujwal Chaudhary told The Guardian.

    “One time when I was there, he said, ‘Thank you for everything, sister’ [to his sister, who helps care for him]. It was an emotional moment.”

    The ability for someone in a pseudocoma to communicate obviously comes with a whole slew of ethical considerations.

    After all, who condones the initial insertion? And once a person has learned to communicate again, can they speak for themselves and the future of their care? How accurate do these systems need to be before we can adequately interpret what patients are telling us?

    We don’t have rules or outlines for this type of technology quite yet, but if the device turns out to be useful for other patients, we will need to start confronting these quandaries.

    Giving advanced ALS patients their voices back could be a huge medical breakthrough and a great relief for individuals and their families. How we respond to those voices is up to us.

    The study was published in Nature Communications.

     

    Biden, Western allies gather at tense moment in Ukraine war

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    BRUSSELS (AP) — As the war in Ukraine grinds into a second month, U.S. President Joe Biden and Western allies are gathering to chart a path to ramp up pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin while tending to the economic and security fallout that’s spreading across Europe and the world.

    Over the course of Thursday, the European diplomatic capital is hosting an emergency NATO summit as well as a gathering of the Group of Seven industrialized nations and a summit of the 27 members of the European Union. Biden will attend all three meetings and plans to hold a news conference at the end of the day.

    Biden arrived here late Wednesday with the hopes of nudging allies to enact new sanctions on Russia, which has already seen its economy crippled by a steady stream of bans, boycotts and penalties over the past four weeks.

    While the West has been largely unified in confronting Russia after it invaded Ukraine, there’s wide acknowledgement that unity will be tested as the costs of war chip at the global economy.

    The bolstering of forces along NATO’s eastern flank, almost certainly for at least the next 5-10 years if Russia is to be effectively dissuaded, will also put pressure on national budgets.

    “We need to do more, and therefore we need to invest more. There is a new sense of urgency and I expect that the leaders will agree to accelerate the investments in defense,” said NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg before chairing the security alliance’s summit.

    En route to Brussels aboard Air Force One, Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, told reporters that “what we would like to hear is that the resolve and unity that we’ve seen for the past month will endure for as long as it takes.”

    The energy crisis exacerbated by the war will be a particularly hot topic at the European Council summit, where leaders from Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece are hoping for an urgent, coordinated bloc-wide response. EU officials have said they will seek U.S. help on a plan to top up natural gas storage facilities for next winter, and they also want the bloc to jointly purchase gas.

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has dismissed calls to boycott Russian energy supplies, saying it would cause significant damage to his country’s economy. Scholz is facing pressure from environmental activists to quickly wean Germany off Russian energy, but he said the process will have to be gradual.

    “To do so from one day to the next would mean plunging our country and all of Europe into recession,” Scholz said Wednesday.

    Poland and other eastern flank NATO countries will also be looking for clarity on how the United States and fellow European nations can assist in dealing with their growing concerns about Russian aggression as well as a spiraling refugee crisis. More than 3.5 million refugees have fled Ukraine in recent weeks, including more than 2 million to Poland.

    Biden is scheduled to travel to Poland on Friday, where both issues are expected to be at the center of talks with President Andrzej Duda. Another significant moment could come shortly before Biden returns to Washington on Saturday. The White House said he plans to “deliver remarks on the united efforts of the free world to support the people of Ukraine, hold Russia accountable for its brutal war, and defend a future that is rooted in democratic principles.”

    Sullivan said that Biden and fellow leaders would aim to “set out a longer-term game plan” for what forces and capabilities are going to be required for the alliance’s eastern flank countries.

    Four new NATO battlegroups, which usually number between 1,000-1,500 troops, are being set up in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is expected to address the NATO summit by video, said late Wednesday that he wants the alliance to “declare that it will fully assist Ukraine to win this war” by supplying any weapons necessary.

    All the while, national security officials from Washington to Warsaw are increasingly worried that Putin might deploy chemical, biological or even nuclear weaponry. Sullivan said the allies would consult on how to respond to “potential contingencies” of that sort, including “this whole question of the potential use of nuclear weapons.”

    Biden, before departing for Brussels on Wednesday, told reporters that he believed the possibility of Russia deploying chemical weapons was a “real threat.”

    Stoltenberg would not be drawn Thursday on whether such a strike is a red line that would draw the alliance into war with Russia. “I will not speculate beyond the fact that NATO is always ready to defend, to protect and to react to any type of attack on a NATO allied country,” he said.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov in a CNN interview this week said that Russia could consider using its nuclear weapons if it felt there was “an existential threat for our country.”

    The head of the European Union’s executive arm said she wanted to discuss with Biden the possibility of securing extra deliveries of liquefied natural gas from the United States for the 27-nation bloc.

    Speaking at the European Parliament ahead of Biden’s visit, Ursula von der Leyen said the EU was seeking a a commitment for additional LNG supplies from the U.S. “for the next two winters.”

    The EU imports 90% of the natural gas used to generate electricity, heat homes and supply industry, with Russia supplying almost 40% of EU gas and a quarter of its oil. The bloc is looking at ways to reduce its dependence on Russian gas by diversifying suppliers.

    Sullivan said the United States was looking for ways to “surge” LNG supplies to Europe to help make up for supply disruptions.

    Biden, for his part, was expected to detail plans for new sanctions against Russia and humanitarian assistance for the region.

    One new sanctions option that Biden is weighing is to target members of the Russian State Duma, the lower house of parliament, according to a U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations. The official added that a final decision hadn’t been made and that the new sanctions would be rolled out in coordination with Western allies.

    Biden arrived in Brussels with Americans increasingly accepting of the need for the U.S. to play a role in stopping in Putin, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

    But even as concern among Americans has swelled and and support for a major U.S. role in the conflict strengthened in the last month, Biden’s negative approval rating has not budged, the AP-NORC poll found. Few are very confident that he can handle a crisis, and a majority thinks he lacks toughness in dealing with Russia.

    Biden promised voters that he had the experience to navigate a complicated international emergency like the one unfolding in Europe now, and his trip will be the latest test of that proposition as he tries to maintain unity among Western allies and brace for potentially even bigger challenges.

    At a time when it is essential to avoid fissures in what’s been a largely unified Western response to Russia, the U.S. president will look to press important allies like Poland to dial back the idea of deploying a Western peacekeeping mission to Ukraine. It’s an idea that the U.S. and some other NATO members see as too risky as they seek to deny Russia any pretext to broaden the war beyond Ukraine’s borders.

    For his domestic audience, Biden is expected to once again underscore the heroics of the Ukrainian military and volunteers who have managed to hold off an imposing Russian military. He will highlight those remarkable efforts — as well as the generosity of the Poles and other allies at the front lines of the humanitarian crisis — as he redoubles his calls for Americans to stand firm against a Russian war that is spurring gas price hikes and adding to inflationary pressures in the U.S.

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    Madhani reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Matthew Lee, Hannah Fingerhut and Darlene Superville in Washington and Samuel Petrequin in Brussels contributed to this report.