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tb gold test :: Article Creator Scientists Develop A TB Test & Find A Genetic Vulnerability In Resistant Strains A rapid diagnostic test for tuberculosis (TB) has been approved for the first time by the World Health Organization (WHO). The assay can identify the tuberculosis-causing pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis in sputum samples within a few hours. Tuberculosis is a primary cause of death by infectious disease worldwide. The disease is estimated to kill over one million people every year, and is a huge socio-economic burden, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. "High-quality diagnostic tests are the cornerstone of effective TB care and prevention," said Dr. Rogerio Gaspar, WHO Director for Regulation and Prequalification. "Prequalification paves the way for equitable access to cutting-edge technologies, empowering countries to address the dual burden of TB and drug-resistant TB."  M. Tuberculosis c...

“Errors plague L-S baseball in loss to ACA - Yahoo News” plus 2 more

“Errors plague L-S baseball in loss to ACA - Yahoo News” plus 2 more


Errors plague L-S baseball in loss to ACA - Yahoo News

Posted: 31 May 2021 12:50 PM PDT

The Daily Beast

Lord Ashcroft's Daughter-in-Law Charged in Shooting of Belize Cop

Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photos Linkedin/FacebookThe daughter-in-law of British political and business titan Lord Michael Ashcroft was charged Monday with manslaughter by negligence in the shooting death of a top police officer in Belize.The arraignment of Jasmine Hartin, 38, comes three days after she was initially detained—after being found spattered with blood on a dock where she and Superintendent Henry Jemmott had been socializing alone after curfew. police said.Jemmott, 42, was found dead in the water with a gunshot wound behind his ear. Police said the weapon used was his service pistol.According to local reports, Hartin suggested to responding officers that Jemmott might have been shot by a passing boat, then stopped cooperating with investigators while one of the country's top lawyers was retained for her.After he was arraigned Monday night, bail was denied by the magistrate, though she can ask a higher court to release her, according to Belize TV news station Channel 7.UK Billionaire's Daughter-in-Law Questioned in Belize Cop's DeathBelize Police Commissioner Chester Williams told reporters that Hartin provided a statement but he declined to provide details of her account. "We cannot say we have a clear understanding of what happened because we were not there," he said."The only two persons who could have said that is the deceased and Ms. Hartin. The deceased is dead. He cannot speak for himself. Dead man carries no tale. Ms. Hartin has given her version of what she said transpired."Hartin, a Canadian who lives in Belize, is the wife of Andrew Ashcroft, the youngest son of Lord Ashcroft. The elder Ashcroft is a billionaire known as a top donor to the U.K. Conservative Party who also has massive business interests in Belize and recently donated a fully equipped gym to the police department.Hartin, who reportedly has two children with the younger Ashcroft, was the director of lifestyle and experience at the Alaia Belize, a luxury resort developed by her husband.Jemmott had five children and was engaged. His family has been demanding answers about what happened on the pier and brushing aside any suggestions that he might have taken his own life."My brother loved life, he loved life. He had passion for his work. He did his work with integrity and that's the way he loved his family as well," his sister, Marie Jemmott Tzul told reporters.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.

Alex Cejka wins Senior PGA Championship as putting problems plague Steve Stricker - Madison.com

Posted: 31 May 2021 02:15 AM PDT

Senior PGA Championship Golf

Alex Cejka holds the Alfred S. Bourne Trophy after winning the Senior PGA Championship, on Sunday, in Tulsa, Okla.

Alex Cejka won the Senior PGA Championship on Sunday for his second straight major championship, thriving on accurate and powerful ball-striking and deft touch around the demanding greens at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Cejka shot a 3-under 67 for a four-stroke victory over Tim Petrovic, three weeks after he beat Madison resident Steve Stricker in a playoff in the Regions Tradition in Alabama.

Stricker had a one-shot lead going into the final round and many expected another duel to the finish. That duel vanished early, with Stricker's usually reliable putting failing him greatly. He missed seven putts inside of 8 feet, and his ball-striking also was off, leading to a 77 that dropped into a tie for 11th.

Madison resident Jerry Kelly (70) finished in a tie for eighth place.

After a birdie at the first, Cejka had a nervous bogey-bogey stretch on Nos. 2 and 3. But with Mike Weir and Stricker making a mess of things around him, he steadily pulled away with birdies on Nos. 5, 7, 11 and 12. From there he held on, getting up-and-down from greenside bunkers and overcoming a water ball on the par-5 13th that led to his only bogey on the back nine. He also drove into a creek on the par-4 10th, but after taking a drop, hit his third shot to 6 feet and saved par.

He finished at 8-under 272.

Cejka said seeing what was happening to Stricker and Mike Weir early was a shock to his system. Weir started the day three shots back and shot 72.

"I was actually almost in shock, which threw my game off totally," he said. "I was expecting him (Stricker, who began the day at 6 under) to come out and just put so much pressure on, as great a player as he normally is. But it's golf."

Cejka won three times on the European Tour in 1995 and a fourth event in 2002 before moving to the U.S. He played the PGA Tour from 2002 to 2011 before losing his status, but regained it in 2015, a year he won the Puerto Rico Open for his lone PGA Tour victory.

Bernhard Langer, Paul McGinley, Kelly and others waited on the first tee to congratulate Cejka.

"After he won Regions Tradition, you know, he was really meaningful in saying, `I finally feel like one of you guys,'" Kelly said. "Now he's been a great player for a long time and he's put in so much time. He's playing the Outlaw Tours in Arizona. He's played everything he can. He never gave up and this is the reward that's happening right now. I mean I think it's an awesome story."

Jason Kokrak shot an even-par 70 in a final-group showdown with resurgent Jordan Spieth, winning the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas. He finished at 14-under 266, two strokes better than Spieth, who hit his approach at No. 18 over the green and into the water.

Kokrak had five bogeys to go with his five birdies. He twice needed two shots to get out of bunkers, and had back-to-back bogeys at Nos. 15 and 16.

But when he struck his final 4-foot putt, he followed the ball to the cup and finally broke into a smile.

A huge crowd followed the only contending group, most of them waiting to erupt for Dallas-native Spieth, who started the round with a one-stroke lead before a bogey-filled 73. Instead of his second win at Colonial, he finished as the runner-up at Hogan's Alley for the third time. It was still Spieth's eighth top-10 finish in his last 11 starts this year, one more top 10 than he had the previous two seasons combined.

"They were definitely rooting for the guy next to me," said Kokrak, who tied for third at Colonial last June. "Both of us didn't have our A-game today. We grinded it out."

Kokrak, who won the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek in October, joined Bryson DeChambeau and Stewart Cink with with two PGA Tour victories this season.

Ally Ewing won the LPGA Match Play at Shadow Creek, beating Sophia Popov 2 and 1 for her second tour victory.

Ewing won the difficult par-4 14th with a birdie to take a 2-up lead and closed out her German rival with a double-bogey halve on the par-3 17th.

Three Takeaways from the LA Clippers' Game 4 Win over the Dallas Mavericks - Sports Illustrated

Posted: 31 May 2021 09:24 AM PDT

As recently as five days ago, the LA Clippers looked dead in the water.

They fell down 0-2 to the Dallas Mavericks in their first-round series, giving up both games on their home floor and allowing both Luka Doncic and his teammates everything they wanted on the offensive end of the floor. They looked confused defensively, trying multiple schemes at once and attempting to take away everything, and in the process taking away nothing. Though Performance Artist Skip Bayless loves nothing more than to engage in hyperbole, this particular tweet actually encapsulated the NBA mediasphere's mindset for the rest of the series following the Game 2 loss:

Not everyone (media, fans, internet trolls) was declaring a sweep, but most were deeming the series over. Even after the Clippers won Game 3 by double-digits, there was still plenty of skepticism, as Dallas remained on fire from 3-point range (perhaps unsustainably so), and Doncic hung 44 points on LA despite the loss. But Game 3 was the first time one could find glimpses of a solid defensive plan, where the Clippers weren't sagging off of 3-point shooters to help on Doncic quite as often. They also trapped Doncic less, electing to either switch or fight over the screen. In the second half, Head Coach Tyronn Lue chose to go small with Nicolas Batum starting over Ivica Zubac, which gave Doncic one less weak spot to attack.

The Clippers were consistent with these defensive shifts in Game 4. Combine this consistency with Dallas' 3-point shooting finally falling back to Earth (they shot just 5-30 from deep in Game 4), and the result was a dominant 106-81 blowout victory to tie the series at two games a piece.

"Coming here to a hostile environment...the thing I'm most proud of is keeping our poise," Lue said postgame. "I thought we really had the focus of coming in, taking it one game at a time and winning these two games."

Defense unlocked

LA finally avoided Dallas' punch to the mouth in the first quarter, and they themselves struck first for the first time all series. They held Dallas to just 22 points in the first quarter, the second-fewest amount of points LA has allowed all series to that point (the fourth quarter of game 3 being the lowest). The defense was not a mirage, as LA held Dallas to 23 points in the second quarter, 15 (!!) points in the third quarter and 21 points in the fourth, much of which was garbage time. Overall, LA held the Mavericks to 81 points on 34.8% shooting and 16.7% from 3.

Were all of the Mavericks looks heavily contested? Not necessarily. Tim Hardaway Jr., who hit an absurd 15 of his first 23 3-point attempts through three games, was due for a regression to the mean sooner or later. He was just 0-4 from deep on Sunday, finishing with just four points on 1-8 shooting overall. Some of his looks were well-contested, but others he just flat-out missed. If anything, LA should be given credit for allowing just four attempts from deep for the sniper. Once an NBA player gets a 3-point shot off, it's almost irrelevant how close a defender is to him. They're too well-trained, their releases are too high and they've been hitting shots in defenders' faces their entire careers. What's more indicative of good perimeter defense is not allowing a shot off to begin with, and LA did just that. Maxi Kleber was reduced to a non-factor, contributing zero points on 0-3 shooting. While Kristaps Porzingis (18 points) performed well in the midrange, LA allowed him just two attempts from deep, and he missed both of them.

Laboring Luka

Lue has been reiterating it since their game 2 loss: the plan is now to make Doncic a scorer and to limit his supporting cast as much as possible—less trapping, less blitzing, less collapsing when he's posting up. Stay home on shooters, and if he beats them by scoring 60 himself, LA will tip their hat and go home. He came somewhat close with 44 on Friday, but tonight, while clearly suffering from a neck injury he sustained in Game 3, he scored just 19 points on 9-24 shooting (1-7 from 3) despite getting a lot of the same looks he was getting in games 1-3.

"He's in pain," Mavericks Coach Rick Carlisle said postgame of Doncic's cervical strain. "It appeared to me that he couldn't turn left. He couldn't look to his left."

Obviously, LA would want nothing more than to overcome Doncic's greatness when he's at full strength. But if this injury continues to plague him, it halts Dallas' entire offense. Doncic is their be-all and end-all, and if he can't contribute his usual magic, LA becomes the more talented team by a wide margin.

It is also worth noting that, even beyond the neck injury, Doncic has struggled mightily from the free throw line throughout this series. He's hit just 13 of his 32 attempts at the line; he's actually shooting better from the field (48.6%) and from 3 (40.9%) than he is from the stripe (40.6%). If Doncic has any offensive weakness, it's his inability to make LA pay for being too rough with him. It'll be interesting to see if Lue exploits this weakness (Hack-a-Luka?) in any potential clutch minutes throughout the remainder of this series.

Kawhi's greatness

Through the first three games of the series, Doncic was the best player on the floor, and rightly deserved the shine he was awarded given his team's success. But the margin between him and Leonard was quietly not that large, and the Claw separated himself on Sunday. Leonard has always been a spectacular postseason performer, but this series has been something else. His 11-15 shooting performance in Game 4 brought his averages for the series up to (get ready): 33 points (62.7% FG, 47.6% 3PT, 87.5% FT, equating to a 74.1% true shooting figure), 8.5 rebounds, 3.8 assists, 2.3 steals and one block in 39.8 minutes of action per game. He's also only turning the ball over twice per game despite a 28.5% usage rate. To put that in perspective, the only other player with a usage rate of 28% or more while maintaining a true shooting rate above 74% so far this postseason is Joel Embiid, a center who spends the majority of his time around the basket and whose team is on the verge of sweeping the 34-38 Washington Wizards. To have at-the-basket level efficiency with a shot chart consisting of quite a few midrange jumpers is seriously impressive.

Leonard has been unconscious, embarrassing primary defender Maxi Kleber by either blowing by him off the dribble, moving him in the post or shooting over the top of him.

Combine this offensive prowess with his usual stout defense (Leonard looked great guarding Doncic for stretches in Game 4) and Leonard has reinforced his status as one of the five greatest players in the world. In the postseason, having one of those guys—the LeBrons, the KDs, the Currys—often becomes the difference-maker in a series.

"The pace and the speed he's playing with is what we need," Lue said postgame. "It's unbelievable."

If the Clippers are fortunate enough to make it out of this roller coaster of a series alive, with Leonard performing at this level, they're suddenly back in the driver's seat. But that's a big "if." The series has now essentially reset to a best-of-3, with two games on the Clippers' home court (though evidently that means nothing even with fans, as the home team has lost every game of this series so far). However, Dallas is resilient, and with two and a half days off for Doncic to recover from his injury, there's no reason why the Mavericks cannot reclaim the momentum. Lue countered Carlisle's scheme, but the 2011 champion coach no-doubt has a counter to that counter somewhere up his sleeve. LA seems to have exorcised their playoff demons earlier rather than later (no Clipper fan would've felt safe had LA gone up 3-1 in this series), but there are still at least two more contests to play.

Game 5 tips off on Wednesday from Staples Center. 

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Kawhi Leonard says 'job is not done yet' after Clippers tie Mavericks series in Game 4

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