SWC poses problems, but brighter times ahead for young Redbirds
‘Brighter times ahead’ for young AHS netters
Greg Shashack, gshashack@thetelegraph.com
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Alton sophomore Xavier Carter returns a shot during his No. 1 singles match against Marquette Catholic on Thursday at Moore Park’s Simpson Tennis Center in Alton.Greg Shashack | The TelegraphShow MoreShow Less
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Alton coach Jesse Macias (right) talks with freshman James McKeever during a No. 4 singles match against Marquette Catholic on Thursday at Moore Park’s Simpson Tennis Center in Alton.Greg Shashack | The TelegraphShow MoreShow Less
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Alton freshman Parker Mayhew hits a shot in his No. 2 singles match against Marquette Catholic on Thursday at Moore Park’s Simpson Tennis Center in Alton.Greg Shashack | The TelegraphShow MoreShow Less
Credits: Photos: Samantha Smiley
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The field of artificial intelligence is moving at a staggering clip, with breakthroughs emerging in labs across MIT. Through the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP), undergraduates get to join in. In two years, the MIT Quest for Intelligence has placed 329 students in research projects aimed at pushing the frontiers of computing and artificial intelligence, and using these tools to revolutionize how we study the brain, diagnose and treat disease, and search for new materials with mind-boggling properties.
Rafael Gomez-Bombarelli, an assistant professor in the MIT Department of Materials Science and Engineering, has enlisted several Quest-funded undergraduates in his mission to discover new molecules and materials with the help of AI. “They bring a blue-sky open mind and a lot of energy,” he says. “Through the Quest, we had the chance to connect with students from other majors who
The field of artificial intelligence is moving at a staggering clip, with breakthroughs emerging in labs across MIT. Through the Undergraduate Research.
We asked, what word best describes 2020?
Josh Cascio reports
TAMPA, Fla. - Some day, 2020 will probably take up a large part of the history books, but if you could only use one word to describe it in the present day, what would that word be?
Parker Mayhew kept it simple, calling it different. Everything s very different, he said.
Thanks to the pandemic, we all wear masks. We also live in a so-called new normal. It s been, to say the least, Stressful.
Billy Savage of Sun City Center said, Of all the uncertainty, not knowing what s going on with COVID-19.
From the pandemic to the candidates, we were bombarded with headlines in 2020. Every day, it felt like there were new twists and turns.