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In Westfield, Indiana, the city and surrounding areas are cashing in on youth sports. This Midwest town has about 40,000 full-time residents. On most weekends, however, that population more than doubles with families traveling in from across the country to play to big time competitive sports, and they're spending big bucks during their stay.“If you count hotels, gas, food, league fees, everything, ,000 to ,000 give or take,” parent Mike Williams of Imperial, Missouri says about the annual cost of competitive sports. With that kind of money, Westfield city leaders are capitalizing on what’s known as “sports tourism."To play ball, teams come to Grand Park, a massive multi-use sports complex that the city built a few years ago by investing million, turning hundreds of acres of cornfields into dozens of soccer fields and baseball diamonds.“Prior to Grand Park being here, we were kind of city without an identity,” says Westfield city spokesperson Vicki Gardner. “But now, you go places and you say Westfield and they say, ‘Grand Park.’”Gardner tells us investing in youth sports is paying off. Since its inception a few years ago, Grand Park has had a 0 million economic impact on the surrounding area. It's a number that city leaders hope to grow.“We’ve been in business for not even three years and we see about 2.5 million visits a year and we account for 92,000 hotel stays and that’s a conservative number,” Gardner said. “When people come here, they’re blown away by what they see and that’s a challenge. So, we got to get out there and let them know, tell the story of Grand Park, tell the story of Westfield.”Bub’s Burgers is one of many nearby businesses reaping some of those financial rewards. With its sales tripling during tournament time.“It’s controlled chaos but it’s constant,” Bub’s Burgers employee Jillian Isles says. To help fill these ball players’ bellies, this burger joint has added 30 jobs. But with economic growth comes growing pains. There’s new construction by entrepreneurs who are trying to cash in on spillover from the sports complex.Locals say more visitors means more traffic, but that it also means more money. “The fact that it developed so much in the last year, two years, they needed a barbershop here,” says Eli Resendez, who opened up Barbershop 32 down the street from Grand Park a few weeks ago. Resendez says he picked this location to hopefully capture customers from the visiting teams.“Most of my clientele this morning were out-of-towners,” he says. “Because of it, I have been able to thrive here very easily.” That easy money has more cities thinking about following Westfield’s business model and hoping to hit a home run in the growing sports tourism industry. 2746
LAKELAND, Fla. — Hurricane hunters made history Thursday while gathering the latest data on Hurricane Dorian.According to a tweet from the NOAA Aircraft Operations Center, the first all-female, three-pilot flight crew flew a mission into the storm.The Florida-based crew consisted of Capt. Kristie Twining, Cmdr. Rebecca Waddington and Lt. Lindsey Norman.Data gathered on these flights help meteorologists determine the strength and path of the hurricane.Manned flights into hurricanes have been occurring since 1943, so congratulations to these ladies! 565

Is anybody home? Astronomers have pinpointed two planets orbiting a nearby star that meet pretty much every requirement for supporting life. They're almost exactly the same mass as the Earth, they are billions of years old (which means life could have had time to evolve), and they're orbiting their star at a distance that would support things like water flow and habitable temperatures.The two planets orbit Teegarden's star, an ancient star that is only 12-light-years away from the Earth. ("Only" is relative -- 12 light-years is equal to 70,540,000,000,000 miles.) Research on the planets and their sun, 621
In the record-setting 562 participants of this year’s Scripps National Spelling Bee, you will find nine sets of siblings. Sisters Triyatha and Pranathi Jamulla are one set of the siblings, and they think it’s pretty cool they both made it to the national competition. Last year, Triyatha watched Pranathi come in 25thplace in the National Spelling Bee, and it made her want to compete too. This year, the sisters tied in their school’s spelling bee, both earning a trip to nationals.It gave Pranathi a built-in study buddy.“Before, when it would just be me sitting at home and my sister would be out somewhere and doing something else, like it wouldn't be that motivating to study because I know like I'd rather be where she is,” Pranathi says. “And now that we're both in the room studying, it makes it easier to study, I guess.”It also meant Triyatha had an expert to tell her what to expect."Yeah, she definitely helps me to stay calm and composed and gives me a few tips on like winning languages and language patterns,” Triyatha explains.Their mom, Prasanna Jammula, says it’s easier having two spellers in the house.“They quiz each other. That's how they are learning, too," she says. "Now, we are on the same page right. Everybody’s working towards [the] spelling bee, so that makes it easy.”She says what matters most here is the girls’ experience. 1368
It was a rare disagreement between a teenager and his mother that was shared in front of Congress and the public in a hearing Tuesday. “With my mother, it wasn't she didn't have the information, she was manipulated into believing it,” high school senior Ethan Lindenberger said in the hearing. Lindenberger told senators how he grew up believing vaccines were harmful and how his mother would not allow him to get vaccinated.“As I approached high school and began to critically think for myself, I saw the information in defense of vaccines outweighed the concerns heavily,” he said. When Lindenberger turned 18 a few months ago, he defied his mother and got vaccinated. A U.S. Senate committee invited him to share his story during a hearing that discussed what's driving outbreaks in parts of the country, mostly blaming it on those who don't get vaccinated. Doctors and Congress spent the hearing talking about the importance of vaccines, especially among children. An overwhelming majority of parents vaccinate their children. However, polls have shown public support of vaccine has fallen and according to the CDC, the number of children under 2 who have not received any vaccinations has quadrupled in the past 17 years. “I used to work in the pharmaceutical industry. This is why I question vaccines,” says mother Brandy Vaughn, who has chosen not to vaccinate her son. Vaughn criticized Tuesday’s hearing, saying those who question vaccines did not get a seat at the table. “We tried to put them on the witness list, and there's no room for anyone that has anything negative to say about vaccines. Yet, an 18-year-old teenager, without absolutely no background in any kind of science or vaccines, can testify in the hearing? It's outrageous,” Vaughn says.Doctors today blamed social media, in part, for spreading false information about vaccines and encouraged concerned parents to turn to pediatricians, not the internet. 1942
来源:资阳报