LIRR strike has many worrying about Monday’s commute. Here’s the latest.

By John Dias, Jeff Capellini, Kristie Keleshian

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — Long Island Rail Road workers were back on the picket lines at various spots in New York City and on Long Island on Sunday, voicing their concerns and demands as the strike continues for a second day.

While the work stoppage has caused a mess for people heading to weekend events, the real concern is Monday morning’s commute. The LIRR is the busiest commuter rail system in North America, with roughly 250,000 weekday riders. The strike is expected to force many to find alternative routes into the city from the Long Island suburbs.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it has activated its contingency plan, which includes recommended subway stations as passenger drop-off points to get into the city. However, if you don’t have a ride, there will be limited, free shuttle buses from several Long Island train stations to subway connections in Queens. Bay Shore, Hicksville, Mineola and Lakeview will go to Howard Beach-JFK Airport, while Ronkonkoma and Huntington will be bound for Jamaica-179th Street.

The MTA says it intends to issue pro-rated refunds to may monthly ticket holders.

For months, the railroad’s unions and the MTA have been negotiating a new contract, but talks have repeatedly stalled over workers’ salaries and healthcare premiums.

With no deal, workers went on strike just after midnight Saturday and no new negotiations are currently scheduled.

“The MTA never really came to the table to negotiate until we had to call them out at their last board meeting,” said Karl Bischoff, president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen. “There is no sense or urgency, as has been said before. It just seems like the MTA board is never held accountable. My members are always held accountable for their actions.”

MTA President and CEO Janno Lieber issued a response on CBS News New York on Sunday morning.

“Just to be perfectly clear, we never broke off negotiations. The union elected to cut off negotiations and go on strike and inconvenience everybody. That was their choice,” Lieber said. “We have been available every minute of every day, if they are serious about trying to bring this to a close. These are by far the best-paid workers in the entire national railroad system, and they want a better deal than every other MTA worker. That’s not fair.

“These guys seem to think they are special, they are better than everybody else, and we’re not going to blow the MTA’s budget and put more burdens on taxpayers and riders because they think they are special,” Lieber added.

Asked how long the MTA can sustain such a standoff financially, Lieber said, “Listen, the MTA is a big organization and if we don’t have ridership, obviously, that hits the bottom line. It’s not a secret that fares don’t cover the entire amounts, so this is not a financial crisis right now for the MTA. It would be a financial crisis if we gave in and gave them, and then everybody else, a ton more money.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul and Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, her opponent in the upcoming November election, each addressed the strike late Sunday morning.

Flanked by Lieber and other MTA officials, Hochul praised LIRR workers and said they deserve fair wages and benefits, but added, “The strike has put all that at risk. Just three days of a strike would erase every dollar of additional salary that workers would receive under a new contract.

“We don’t need to be here. Workers deserve better, but also New Yorkers deserve better. That’s why today, I am urging all parties once again to bargain at the table and get a deal done,” Hochul said.

The governor also went into further detail on the MTA’s contingency plan and urged all non-essential workers to work from home Monday if they can.

Speaking at the Long Beach station, Blakeman again blamed Hochul for the strike, calling it “a failure of leadership.”

He also lauded the unions and called for congestion pricing, the controversial Manhattan tolling program, to be suspended for at least the duration of the strike, if not completely after the work stoppage ends.

“We shouldn’t have to finance our state government with a toll on a road that we already paid for in our tax dollars,” Blakeman said.

Blakeman then took aim at Lieber, saying he’s mismanaging the MTA and that a change of leadership is necessary.

Though Monday’s expected chaos looms, many weekend travelers have been left feeling confused and frustrated.

At the Jamaica station, normally a main transit hub in the city for LIRR riders and expected to be a main picketing location for workers, many commuters arrived Sunday morning unaware that trains were not running.

While the MTA has those contingency plans, the shuttle bus service doesn’t start until Monday.

So weekend events like the Subway Series between the Yankees and Mets at Citi Field, the Bruce Springsteen concert on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden, and the Brooklyn Half Marathon, not to mention graduations and other events across the city, have been a real struggle to get to for Long Islanders who normally would get around on the LIRR without an issue.

“It would’ve been a 15-minute train ride. Instead, it was like an hour and a half to get here,” Alex Lupo said at Citi Field on Saturday night.

“It’s pretty annoying. I hope they could figure this out. It’s really poor timing for this to happen during the Subway Series,” Ryan Mattel added.

And with another Yankees-Mets game set to start at 1:40 p.m., the same travel scenario is likely to unfold. In other instances, some ticketholders for other concerts and Broadway shows had no choice but to give up their tickets because of the strike.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Long Island Rail Road strike leaving riders with marathon travel times to NYC

By Kristie Keleshian, Andrew Ramos

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — On Day 1 of the Long Island Rail Road strike, riders reported their regular trips to and from New York City turned into marathons.

Long Island drivers also faced heavy traffic Saturday, as people who would’ve taken the train were forced to hit the road, including Mets and Yankees fans heading to Citi Field for the Subway Series.

While there’s been no word from the MTA or unions about when negotiations will pick up, the National Vice President of the Brotherhood for Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen gave some new insight on why talks fell apart.

“We thought we were going to have something, and at the last minute, the MTA, in their usual fashion, wanted to throw in new items that were never discussed during any type of the negotiations, regarding healthcare, and that blew everything off the table,” Jim Louis said.

“We want a contract, we want something that’s fair and equitable to be able to live here on Long Island and support our families,” said one LIRR worker who was picketing Saturday.

Gov. Kathy Hochul said she received an update from MTA leaders on the status of negotiations and plans for alternate service.

“The MTA remains ready to negotiate, and I continue to urge both sides to stay at the table and work around the clock toward a deal that ends this strike,” Hochul said in a social media post Saturday.

“We refuse to make a deal that puts it on riders and taxpayers to fund outsized wage increases – far beyond what anyone else at the MTA is getting – and for folks who are already the highest-paid railroad workers in the country,” MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber said in an earlier statement about the strike.

It’s all quiet on the rails after LIRR union workers walked off the job amid the failed contract negotiations with the MTA.

“Woke up this morning, got to the LIRR and I was like, ‘Oh s***, it’s not running,'” said a rider named Devin from Port Washington.

Devin had to take two buses to visit his friend in Manhattan, which meant he had a longer day ahead of him than if the trains were running.

He didn’t know how he’d get back home.

“I might crash at a friend’s house tonight,” he said.

Ramses Brye, of Queens Village, was on his way to work the overnight shift at a Syosset Amazon warehouse when he found out about the strike.

“I took the train at midnight. That was the last time, and then I looked at the [TrainTime] app at like 12:30, and, like, yeah, they’re definitely on strike,” Brye said.

MTA workers posted signs at Mineola Station, where starting Monday shuttle buses will take essential workers to and from New York City subway stations in Queens.

The MTA’s strike contingency plan designates five subway stations as drop-off locations, which are also near major roadways to and from Long Island.

Over the weekend, however, the Nassau Inter-County Express bus is all the area has.

“Fortunately the buses are reliable, but the trains would’ve been better,” Brye said.

It means riders will be dealing with excess travel times.

“The train ride itself is 36 minutes. So, it turns out now an hour and 36 minutes instead of 36 minutes,” said a rider named John from Mineola.

Max Rallo, of Dix Hills, and his friends spend over $100 on an Uber ride from Long Island to Jamaica, Queens.

“Now the plan’s all messed up because I can’t take a 45-minute train ride anymore. It’s a two and a half hour trip,” said Rallo, who said it was too early to think about how he’ll get home.

The Subway Series at Citi Field this weekend might be the unofficial litmus test for what commuters can expect Monday if the strike spills into the workweek.

Even with the Mets expanding their direct shuttle service for the series against the Yankees, fans faced obstacles getting to Saturday’s game.

Chopper 2 video showed backups on the Long Island Expressway, Grand Central Parkway and Northern State Parkway.

“Everyone has to use the LIE instead of mass transit. So the LIE was all backed up,” said Ryan Mattell. “It’s pretty annoying. I hope they can figure this out. Really poor timing for this to happen during the Subway Series.”

“It was smooth, but it was bumper-to-bumper. It was like a parking lot,” Ed Owens said.

“It would’ve been a 15-minute train ride. Instead, it’s like an hour and a half to get here,” said Alex Lupo.

“I heard my neighbor earlier, he was just like, ‘Yeah, I’m giving up my tickets for Sunday because it’s not worth driving,” a fan named Daniel said.

Fans leaving Friday night’s game had to catch the last train before midnight in order to beat the strike.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

New lawsuit filed by a group of residents seek to block “outrageous” Trump Presidential Library

By Jim DeFede

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    MIAMI (WFOR) — The Trump Presidential Library is facing a new legal challenge. A group of Miami residents, including historian Marvin Dunn, filed suit last week in federal court to block the transfer of land for the proposed library.

The downtown Miami site, located next to the Freedom Tower, was originally controlled for Miami Dade College for future growth, but Governor Ron DeSantis demanded the college surrender the three-acre parcel so that it could be used by the Trump family to build Trump’s presidential library.

The lawsuit argues the land transfer would constitute a gift, and violates emoluments clause of the U.S. Constitution, which specifically prevents the president from receiving financial benefits – so-called emoluments – other than his salary. The Founding Fathers believed it would be wrong for groups to be able to provide gifts and other financial benefits to a president to curry favor.

The suit argues that since the plans for the 47-story tower call for not just a library but also a Trump hotel, condos and commercial offices for lease, it constitutes a financial gift to the President and is therefore illegal.

On Sunday’s Facing South Florida, one of the attorneys bringing the lawsuit, Gerald Greenberg, spoke to CBS Miami’s Jim DeFede about what makes this presidential library different than others.

“This is not, by any stretch, a presidential library,” Greenberg argued. “You know, I’ve been to a number of them. The Harry Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, doesn’t have a 47-story skyscraper. I happened to go last year to the George W. Bush Library in Texas. It’s a library and it’s a museum. Same with the Clintons, Obamas, the Reagans. If this were just a library, we would not have this lawsuit, but they’ve made it crystal clear. This isn’t a library. The president himself said, I don’t do libraries and museums. He said he expects it to be a hotel. They released this well-documented and well-produced video showing what it’s going to be. It’s going to be hotel. It is going to a commercial center.”

Added Marvin Dunn: “Miami-Day College will get nothing back from this highly commercial pitch of the Trump family. That’s outrageous, absolutely outrageous.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

How Boston health clinics are using ketamine to help treat mental health. “It’s worth it.”

By Paula Ebben

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    BOSTON (WBZ) — Many people struggle with getting mental health care, whether it is too slow for their recovery or just not accessible to them. Lumin Health, a Ketamine clinic in Boston’s Fenway neighborhood, hopes to change that.

Linda Deveraux has struggled with depression most of her life, turning to therapy and prescription medications with no luck.

“The side effects alone will discourage you, like the weight gain, the nausea, the constipation, the fogginess,” Deveraux said. “Sadness, hopelessness, fatigue, sleeping all the time, not being interested in doing anything pleasurable or anything. It was hard. The struggle is real.”

So her medical provider recommended ketamine therapy and her mental state finally started to improve.

“Everything feels lighter, lighter, like I pushed that, you know, my best friend, my sadness, best friend off my shoulder, he’s not there anymore,” she explained.

The medical director at Lumin Health, Dr. Aakash Sathappan, explained that ketamine therapy doesn’t come with many side effects.

“In general, the treatment is well tolerated. There are some time-limited side effects; most people feel a little bit tired, a little bit drowsy, perhaps a bit dizzy after treatment. That tends to wear off with time,” Dr. Sathappan said.

But the treatment comes with misconceptions and a stigma, following its connection to Matthew Perry’s sudden death in 2023. Dr. Sathappan explained that Perry’s addiction problems likely led him to be quickly hooked on the drug. He emphasized that supervision is key when getting treated with ketamine.

“The treatment does impair you, similar to another substance like alcohol,” Dr. Sathappan said.

“I think the biggest misconception is that ketamine is either purely a biologic or purely this thing that’s meant to give you a trip. It’s neither. It’s really a combination of both of them,” said Dr. Benjamin Yudoff.

It works by using a low dose to block certain signals in your brain, helping nerve cells form new connections.

“It allows people to reconnect with a version of themselves that’s often lost with depression,” Dr. Sathappan said. “We think that the treatment is basically creating biological conditions to help the brain grow and restore in a way that was once damaged with depression.”

Dr. Sathappan said that the stimulation of the brain can help lead to changes in mood, behavior, energy levels, and overall outlook on life. He emphasized that ketamine is a treatment, not a cure.

“They want something that works quicker. They want something that works more reliable. They don’t want to feel the same way that they have for the past three, four, five years. They have goals. They have desires. They have dreams. And they want something that might actually compel a different kind of change,” Dr. Yudkoff explained.

Deveraux is ready to embrace that change, even if it means she has to continue the treatment for the rest of her life.

“You have to be 100% committed to this. For me, it’s worth it, like I’m in this because I have not felt like this for so long,” she explained.

If you or someone you know is struggling with mental health, you can reach out to NAMI Massachusetts by calling them at 617-580-8541 or visiting their website.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Woman struggled with mental health her whole life. Now she’s helping others seek help at NAMI Massachusetts

By Mike Sullivan

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    MASSACHUETTS (WBZ) — Eliza Williamson has struggled with mental health all her life, but after undergoing recovery, she made it her mission to help others struggling in Massachusetts.

She now works as the executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Health in Massachusetts, a nonprofit that helps people access mental health support. Her own struggles with mental health began in middle school when she turned to self-harm and eating disorders to cope with her mental state.

During her sophomore year of high school, her doctors believed she had mononucleosis, but it turned out she was struggling with complex post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“I was describing all of the physical symptoms. I was tired. I had headaches. I had no energy. It didn’t occur to me that it was about feelings,” she explained.

Williamson said that by the end of college, she had hit rock bottom as she struggled with her relationships and began making mistakes at work. She believed there were no options left and attempted to take her own life.

“I got very lucky that day, my Mom was worried and asked the police to do a wellness check. They, you know, kicked in my apartment door. I was able to get help,” she said.

She was admitted to a medical hospital before being transferred to a psychiatric hospital. She then continued her recovery in a group home.

“A big piece of that for me was being in support groups and listening and learning from other people about their own experiences,” she explained.

Williamson joined NAMI Massachusetts as a volunteer in 2012 before becoming a staff member in 2015. Two years ago, she became the executive director, and now that support she received is a key pillar of the way NAMI helps people dealing with mental health.

“The support that can come from being with other people who had similar experiences can be life-altering,” Williamson said. “I know how hard it is to navigate systems. I know how complicated things are.”

She said that it can take someone eight to ten years before they seek help for a mental health condition, which can be someone’s entire childhood. She hopes that her story and work can help encourage people struggling that there is light at the end of the tunnel and they can make a recovery to live a happy life.

“There are spots in my life where I think ‘Oh, if I had gotten help, then the trajectory of things might have been different,” she said.

Williamson now relies on her wife and two dogs as her support system. She explained that her niece is her inspiration now to help make mental health resources accessible and encouraged.

“My great hope is that Tabina or other kids, if they are struggling, that they will know how to get support if they need it,” she said.

If you or someone you love is struggling with mental health, you can call the NAMI Compass hotline at 1-800-370-9085. For more information on navigating a mental health crisis, head to the NAMI Massachusetts website.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Mother and son graduate together from UMGC on same day: “A massive accomplishment”

By Janay Reece

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    MARYLAND (WJZ) — Graduation season is here, and thousands are marking a new chapter around the country, including two Marylanders — a mother and son — who both received their degrees Thursday at the University of Maryland Global Campus.

“To walk the stage with my son, it’s just so great,” Lissette Garcia told CBS News Baltimore.

“I thought it was a massive relief and a massive accomplishment to finally cross that stage,” said her son, Jason Garcia.

The pair have both been pursuing their degree at the same time, and the two crossed the stage together.

“We would talk about our classes because we had different majors,” Lissette said.

“Believe it or not we have never shared a class together,” Jason said.

Lissette began her UMBC journey in 2018, and Jason started his in 2023.

Through it all, Jason moved forward focusing on academics and his health — his mother by his side through it all while pursuing her own degree.

Lissette received her Bachelor of Science in human resource management and psychology, while Jason earned a Bachelor of Science in political science.

“To quote the Roman philosopher Lucius Ankis Seneca: ‘Fire is the forge of gold adversity is that of man,’ and I think that would perfectly describe my situation, and why I chose UMGC,” Jason said.

As for what’s next, the duo plans to make big career moves and take a nice restful vacation.

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Neighbors rush to help teenagers shot: ‘I saw the fear in his eyes’

By Mike Hellgren

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    OWINGS MILLS, Maryland (WJZ) — Baltimore County police are searching for the person who opened fire on two teenagers in Baltimore County on Thursday.

The broad-daylight shooting has shaken the quiet Owings Mills neighborhood, and neighbors recounted to WJZ how they worked to place tourniquets on the 16-year-old and 19-year-old victims.

Sharon Jackson heard the three shots—one right after the other.

“Boom, boom, boom,” she told WJZ Investigator Mike Hellgren.

This violence unfolded steps from her front door on Simonds Drive in Owings Mills around 6:30 Thursday night.

First responders arrived within minutes, but by then, Jackson and her neighbors had already rushed outside to stop the teenage victims from bleeding.

The youngest collapsed in front of Jackson’s townhome. Video shows his shoes sticking out next to the front of a parked SUV.

“It was heart-wrenching. All I could think of was I saw the fear in his eyes, and he really couldn’t believe what’s happening to him,” Jackson said. “He said, ‘I can’t believe this is what’s going on.’ I told him, ‘Just calm down. Calm down, baby. You’re going to be OK.’ He tried to get up and stumbled literally in front of my home. By then, the paramedics came, but yeah, it’s heart-wrenching because it could be any of our children.”

Jackson, a mother of five and a pastor who has lived in this community for more than 20 years, said the 16-year-old victim was bleeding from a gunshot wound to his arm.

The 19-year-old had been shot in his chest and his leg.

“When I ran over there, he was on his face—the 19-year-old—and you could see the gunshot wound was in his chest,” Jackson said. “The youngest one—he’s hollering out and screaming. But the one that was the oldest was laying down. He wasn’t saying anything.”

She said he was breathing but could not speak when paramedics arrived.

Jackson believes the shooting was targeted, and she will never forget the youngest victim, who immediately called his mom.

“He said, ‘I’m scared. I’m scared. I can’t breathe.’ So, we were just trying to say, ‘Just calm down, calm down,’ and then we kind of tied up his arm where he was shot,” Jackson recalled.

Baltimore County police tell WJZ Investigates the shooting was “an isolated incident between known individuals.”

A $2,000 reward is being offered for information leading to an arrest. Those with tips may call Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7-Lockup or contact authorities.

Police said the 16-year-old and 19-year-old victims remained in serious but stable condition as of Friday afternoon.

Neighbors told WJZ the quiet, residential area never sees violent crime like this.

“We don’t want this to become something that becomes normal, and when you put guns in anyone’s hands, anything could happen,” Jackson said. “Our children—when they’re not protected like that—it’s scary. It really is.”

Another neighbor, Joana Winningham, told WJZ that while crime can happen anywhere, her family will be extra vigilant. “Our kids had to sleep together because they were a little afraid to go to sleep last night, and so this definitely weighs on you. I hope they are able to catch the person and bring justice to those who were injured,” Winningham said. “And I hope this doesn’t hit our neighborhood again.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Man who beat “unicorn” case of Merkel cell carcinoma to ride in Pittsburgh’s Rush to Crush Cancer

By Tory Wegerski, Meghan Schiller

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    PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (KDKA) — A western Pennsylvania dad went from wondering what a spot on his leg was to learning he has an extremely rare skin cancer. And then, things get even weirder. But now, he’s tackling this weekend’s Rush to Crush Cancer.

There’s never a good place to get cancer. But you really don’t want to get cancer somewhere that makes world-leading researchers and oncologists like Dr. Ravi Patel describe your case as “a unicorn.”

Cam Cerro was just 32 when he was first diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma five years ago.

“Merkel cell carcinoma is an aggressive skin cancer,” explained Cerro’s oncologist, Dr. Melissa Burgess. “Some estimate about 3,000 cases a year. So it’s an extremely rare condition that affects patients mostly ages 65 and older.”

What he thought was just a cyst on his leg turned out to be the rare cancer. Doctors at Hillman treated him with two dozen radiation sessions, immunotherapy and surgery. Cerro got the all clear, but doctors warned him they’d need to keep an eye on him for life.

“These tumors, even when they do a good surgery, it tends to come back,” Patel said.

And come back it did. And that’s when things got weird.

“He had a PET scan that showed something weird in the heart, which is a very unusual location,” Patel said.

“It’s not typical to metastasize or spread to the heart,” Burgess added.

Burgess called in Patel, a researcher and radiation oncologist at UPMC Hillman Cancer Center.

“The heart is a difficult place to treat, to do a big surgery in a very young patient, and so we had to come up with something different,” Patel said.

“We don’t typically irradiate the heart, and there’s no standard protocols,” he added.

Patel knew that Merkel cell carcinoma responds very well to radiation. He talked to national experts and his fellow Hillman researchers to come up with a game plan to treat Cerro’s heart cancer with radiation.

“To Dr. Patel’s point, he’s never radiated anybody in their heart, but looking at that piece and finding other people that have and getting the expertise to help him was essential,” Cerro said.

“In certain cases, certain times, cancer behaves in weird ways where it’s unpredictable and does things that you don’t expect, and you have to think of something on the fly that’s safe, that’s reasonable and effective, and fortunately, we were able to get that,” Patel said.

And that’s when Cerro went from weird to one of a kind. He was the first patient ever to receive radiation treatment for heart cancer at UPMC Hillman, getting 15 treatments over a period of three weeks.

“It was a difficult thing to go through, and he had to make a lot of tough decisions,” Patel said.

Those tough decisions paid off and paid off fast.

“The cool thing was, once the next set of scans came around, everything was gone, which was insane,” Cerro said.

Now, three years later, Cerro is a healthy father of two kids who will be cheering him on this weekend at the Rush to Crush Cancer cycling event in Pittsburgh. The event raises money for cancer research at UPMC Hillman.

“The research piece is obviously vital for us, for our younger generation, to make sure that they’re taken care of,” Cerro said.

It’s all to help the next person who becomes the “most interesting” case in Pittsburgh.

“Without the research, we wouldn’t be here today, and we can’t advance the medicine without it,” Cerro said.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Emory physicist takes science out of the lab and onto the playground

By Brian Unger

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    ATLANTA, Georgia (WUPA) — Inside a small lab at Emory University’s Math & Science Center, physicist Justin Burton spends his days teaching and asking some very big questions.

How do dust particles behave in plasma? How fast are glaciers melting? Is it possible to handle delicate materials without ever touching them by levitating them with sound?

“If you look at those particles, it’s quite complex,” Burton said, gesturing toward a video monitor displaying an experiment in progress.

Burton’s research has earned recognition from the National Academy of Sciences and caught the attention of the New York Times, which recently featured a piece headlined “The Secret to Sliding Eggs Off Stainless Steel.”

For Burton, the mission behind all of it is clear.

“We’re trying to explore nature’s secrets, but we’re not just doing it randomly,” he said. “We do care about important problems.”

In another room, a small-scale model of a glacier, composed of what appears to be white blocks of plastic submerged in a water flow, yields valuable insights into the impacts of melting glaciers on rising sea levels.

But beyond the research, awards, and academic recognition, Burton says he’s made an even bigger discovery.

Almost every month for more than a decade, he and his graduate students have packed up their experiments and carried them out of the university and onto the playground at Laurel Ridge Elementary School in Decatur. There, the laws of physics get demonstrated loudly.

“Usually, making it big and loud gets them excited,” Burton said.

The demonstrations are exactly that. Chemical reactions. Exploding trash cans. Balloons that go out with a bang. Burton sees the spectacle as inseparable from the science.

“There’s enjoying the wonders of nature like blowing up trash cans, and there’s discovering her secrets as well,” he said. “So, we gotta do both.”

Fifth-grade science teacher Tracy Hammer has watched the program’s impact stretch well beyond her classroom walls.

“I’ve had kids who have written me letters, sent me emails from high school, thanking me for introducing them to science, and thanking Dr. Burton,” Hammer said.

That kind of response — observable, measurable, and lasting — is exactly the proof Burton finds most meaningful.

Some of the most important discoveries, it turns out, don’t always happen in a laboratory. Sometimes they happen on a playground, with exploding balloons, a group of fifth graders, and a lesson they never forget.

Burton and his team are currently on their summer break from the Laurel Ridge program and are set to return when the new school year begins in the fall.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

More expensive than a starter home: rare Kobe Bryant basketball card expected to sell for over $500K

By Joe Brandt

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    PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (KYW) — Three rare basketball trading cards depicting the late Kobe Bryant are expected to fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars at auctions this weekend. And buyers from the Philadelphia area, where Bryant grew up and starred in high school ball, could be especially interested.

The most valuable of the three cards is one of only eight in existence. Its full name is a mouthful, but every word shines like gold for a collector who knows the market. This is the 1997 SkyBox E-X2001 Essential Credentials Now Kobe Bryant card, with a serial number 1/8.

As of 1 p.m. on Friday, bidding was up to $280,000 but expected to intensify around the auction’s closing time at 11 p.m. Eastern Time.

What makes this basketball card so special?

We talked to Mike Provenzale, production manager at Heritage Auctions, and he told us there’s been a spike in interest in the sports card market in general. A card from this same print run depicting Allen Iverson sold last year for over $700,000, a record for an Iverson card.

“In the last 10 years or so, those limited cards have really exploded in value, especially for those top-tier athletes. And Kobe Bryant, certainly, is in that group,” Provenzale said.

And in the Philadelphia area, where Bryant starred at Lower Merion High School — and was named MVP of the 2002 All-Star Game, there’s typically a high level of interest.

“There’s a few areas on the map where he’s especially popular. Of course [Los Angeles], but also Philadelphia, where he grew up, they have a special place in their heart for him,” Provenzale said, noting that collectors do come from all corners of the world.

2 other Kobe cards going for 6-figure prices Also for sale is a 1997 Metal Universe Championship Kobe Bryant card from the Precious Metal Gems series. That one is up to $200,000 with an estimated auction value of $400,000.

Rounding out the trio with an estimated value of a mere $200,000 is a 1998 Metal Universe Kobe Bryant from the Precious Metal Gems series.

What to expect for the end of the sale Any of these three auctions could go to overtime — what Heritage calls “extended bidding.” At the end of the normal bidding period, anyone who has previously placed a bid is allowed to place another, and that process will continue until there is one bidder left standing.

There could be some serious cash thrown around Friday night and into Saturday morning.

I have a Kobe Bryant card from the ’90s, too. Can I have half a million dollars, please? Probably not! Or, maybe, if it’s very, very special like this one. This one is a “parallel,” meaning it’s a rarer variety of an existing card. Let’s explain.

As an easy example, say there’s a regular, run-of-the-mill Kobe card in 1 in every 10 packs of cards; if you buy a couple of packs, you have a pretty good chance of getting a Kobe. But then, in 1 in 100 packs, you could find the same Kobe with an added shiny, special, more aesthetically pleasing treatment.

This card follows that example, but on another level. Other Essential Credentials cards of Bryant were printed, but the “Now” versions feature individual serial numbers on the back according to the player’s jersey number. Because Bryant wore No. 8 for the Los Angeles Lakers at the time, there are only eight of these.

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