Rec Sports
Faculty Publications April 17-23
This week’s edition of Faculty Publications includes Cedars-Sinai studies that were published April 17-23. If you have a published paper from this period that does not appear on this list, please contact Sue Marone. Cedars-Sinai in the News Pope Francis Had Health Issues That Increase Stroke Risk | The New York TimesMichelle Kittleson, MD Walking Faster May […]

This week’s edition of Faculty Publications includes Cedars-Sinai studies that were published April 17-23. If you have a published paper from this period that does not appear on this list, please contact Sue Marone.
Cedars-Sinai in the News
Pope Francis Had Health Issues That Increase Stroke Risk | The New York Times
Michelle Kittleson, MD
Walking Faster May Reduce Your Risk of Abnormal Heart Rhythms, Study Finds | CNN
Martha Gulati, MD
Chief of Sports Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Discusses Youth Sports Safety | CBS News
Michael Banffy, MD
Microscopic Plastic Levels far Higher in Those Who Suffer Strokes, Study Finds | UPI
Martha Gulati, MD
Cedars-Sinai, Black Men in White Coats Team up for Third Annual Youth Summit | Los Angeles Sentinel
Peter Slavin, MD
Slow Down, Chew More: Do Eating Behaviors Affect Obesity? | Medscape
Amanda Velazquez, MD
Inteligencia Artificial Identifica Enfermedad de las Válvulas Cardíacas a Partir de una Prueba Común de Imagen | Enlace Judío
David Ouyang, MD; Sumeet Chugh, MD
Genera of Bacteria in Small Bowel Microbiome Vary by BMI | Physician’s Weekly
Gabriela Leite, MD
6 Things Neurologists Would Never Do if They Wanted To Protect Their Brain Health | Women’s Health
Vernon Williams, MD
Faculty Publications
Anesthesiology
Role of Acetaminophen in Chronic Pain Management: Benefits, Risks, and Considerations. Elvir-Lazo, Ofelia Loani, Zufan Woldemariam, Alicia L. Romero-Navarro, Roya Yumul, and Paul F. White. Journal of Surgery and Research 8 (1): 176–81.
Biomedical Sciences
A Macrophage-Neutrophil Program Drives Mammary Carcinogenesis. Bolini, Lukas, Simon R. V. Knott, and Lorenzo Galluzzi. Trends in Cancer, April, S2405-8033(25)00093-7.
Hybrid Strategy of Coronary Atherosclerosis Characterization With T1-Weighted MRI and CT Angiography to Noninvasively Predict Periprocedural Myocardial Injury. Matsumoto, Hidenari, Satoshi Higuchi, Debiao Li, Hiroki Tanisawa, Koji Isodono, Daisuke Irie, Hidefumi Ohya, Ryoji Kitamura, Kyoichi Kaneko, Motoki Nakazawa, Kengo Suzuki, Yoshiaki Komori, Tetsuichi Hondera, Sebastien Cadet, Hsu-Lei Lee, Anthony G. Christodoulou, Piotr J. Slomka, Damini Dey, Yibin Xie, and Toshiro Shinke. European Heart Journal. Cardiovascular Imaging, April, jeaf116.
Cardiology
Single-Center 5-Year Observational Study of Thrice-Weekly Single-Strength Sulfamethoxazole–Trimethoprim as Adequate Prophylaxis for Pneumocystis Jirovecii Pneumonia in Patients With Heart Transplants. Lor, Kevin, Catherine Le, Evan Kransdorf, and Michelle Kittleson. Transplantology 6 (1): 3.
Music of the Heart: Arrhythmias. Hu, Jiun-Ruey. JACC. Clinical Electrophysiology, March, S2405-500X(25)00136-7.
Short-Term, Mid-Term, and Long-Term Outcomes of Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement With Balloon-Expandable Versus Self-Expanding Valves: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. Tavakoli, Kiarash, Negin Sadat Hosseini Mohammadi, Pegah Bahiraie, Sahar Saeidi, Farhad Shaker, Arman Soltani Moghadam, Sara Montazeri Namin, Habib Rahban, Shubhadarshini Pawar, Masih Tajdini, Hamidreza Soleimani, Yaser Jenab, Yousif Ahmad, Fady Hany Iskander, Mohamad Alkhouli, Raj Makkar, Aakriti Gupta, and Kaveh Hosseini. Clinical Cardiology 48 (4): e70134.
5-Year Echocardiographic Results of Transcatheter Versus Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement in Low-Risk Patients. Hahn, Rebecca T., Julien Ternacle, Iria Silva, Carlos Giuliani, Antonela Zanuttini, Alexis Théron, Nicole Cristell, Mathieu Bernier, Sabah Skaf, Jonathan Beaudoin, Susheel K. Kodali, Mark Russo, Samir R. Kapadia, Chris S. Malaisrie, David J. Cohen, Jonathon Leipsic, Philipp Blanke, Mathew R. Williams, James M. McCabe, David L. Brown, Vasilis Babaliaros, Scott Goldman, Wilson Y. Szeto, Philippe Généreux, Ashish Pershad, Brandon Park, Marissa Gunnarsson, John G. Webb, Craig R. Smith, Raj Makkar, Vinod H. Thourani, Michael J. Mack, Martin B. Leon, Philippe Pibarot, and PARTNER 3 Investigators. JACC. Cardiovascular Imaging, April, S1936-878X(25)00100-7.
Intersecting Impact of CAG Repeat and Huntingtin Knockout in Stem Cell-Derived Cortical Neurons. Stocksdale, Jennifer T., Matthew J. Leventhal, Stephanie Lam, Yu-Xin Xu, Yang Oliver Wang, Keona Q. Wang, Reuben Tomas, Zohreh Faghihmonzavi, Yogi Raghav, Charlene Smith, Jie Wu, Ricardo Miramontes, Kanchan Sarda, Heather Johnson, Min-Gyoung Shin, Terry Huang, Mikelle Foster, Mariya Barch, Naufa Armani, Chris Paiz, Lindsay Easter, Erse Duderstadt, Vineet Vaibhav, Niveda Sundararaman, Dan P. Felsenfeld, Thomas F. Vogt, Jennifer Van Eyk, Steve Finkbeiner, Julia A. Kaye, Ernest Fraenkel, and Leslie M. Thompson. Neurobiology of Disease, April, 106914.
High-Throughput Workflow for Detergent-Free Cell-Based Proteomic Characterization. Seyedmohammad, Saeed, Alejandro Rivas, Maxim Zhgamadze, Ali Haghani, Simion Kreimer, Ajay Bharadwaj, Niveda Sundararaman, Sameer Vasantgadkar, Kasturi Pal, Eugenio Daviso, Aleksandr Stotland, Chris Murray, Koen Raedschelders, Sudha Savant, and Jennifer E. Van Eyk. Journal of Proteome Research, April.
Incidence of Pacing-Induced Cardiomyopathy: Left Bundle Branch Area Pacing Versus Leadless Pacing. Chopra, Maya, Ji-Cheng Hsieh, William Mueller, Eric D. Braunstein, Stuart Beldner, Raman L. Mitra, Laurence M. Epstein, Jonathan Willner, and James K. Gabriels. Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology: An International Journal of Arrhythmias and Pacing, April.
Management of Complications After Valvular Interventions. Bansal, Agam, Rishi Puri, James Yun, Amar Krishnaswamy, Hasan Jilaihawi, Raj Makkar, and Samir R. Kapadia. EuroIntervention: Journal of EuroPCR in Collaboration with the Working Group on Interventional Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology 21 (8): e390–410.
Computational Biomedicine
Patient-Related Metadata Reported in Sequencing Studies of SARS-CoV-2: Protocol for a Scoping Review and Bibliometric Analysis. O’Connor, Karen, Davy Weissenbacher, Amir Elyaderani, Ebbing Lautenbach, Matthew Scotch, and Graciela Gonzalez-Hernandez. JMIR Research Protocols 14 (April): e58567.
Imaging
Comparative Analysis of White Matter Signal Alterations in Dementia With Lewy Bodies and Alzheimer’s Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Abdi, Asad, Milad Alipour, Milad Ghanikolahloo, Amin Magsudy, Fatemeh HojjatiPour, Ali Gholamrezanezhad, Mehran Ilaghi, Mehran Anjomrooz, Fatemeh Sayehmiri, Ramtin Hajibeygi, Mobina Fathi, and Reza Assadsangabi. Frontiers in Radiology 5: 1554345.
Medicine
Risk Scores for Choledocholithiasis Perform Poorly in Patients With Hemolytic Diseases: A PEDI Database Report. Thompson, Jennifer, Wenly Ruan, Douglas S. Fishman, Matthew Giefer, Kyung Mo Kim, Mercedes Martinez, Luigi Dall’Oglio, Valerio Balassone, Filippo Torroni, Paola De Angelis, Simona Faraci, Cynthia Tsai, Michael Wilsey, Racha Khalaf, Petar Mamula, Quin Liu, Yuhua Zheng, Bradley A. Barth, and David Michael Troendle. Frontiers in Pediatrics 13: 1574462.
Challenges in Diagnosing and Managing Acute Cholecystitis in Cirrhosis. Pornchai, Angsupat, Nicha Wongjarupong, Adil S. Mir, Evelyn J. Calderon Martinez, and John Cinicola. Cureus 17 (3): e80870.
Development and Validation of Crohn’s Perianal Fistula Educational Videos and Website for Increasing Patient Knowledge and Engagement. Khalil, Carine, Muskaan Mehra, Yixin Yang, So Yung Choi, Jan Ballesteros, Zoe Krut, Nirupama Bonthala, Karen Zaghiyan, Phillip Gu, Yee Hui Yeo, Brennan M. R. Spiegel, and Christopher V. Almario. Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology, March.
Efficacy and Safety of Mirikizumab in the Treatment of Moderately to Severely Active Ulcerative Colitis Regardless of Baseline Modified Mayo Score: Results From the Phase 3 LUCENT Trials. Abraham, Bincy, Jianmin Wu, Séverine Vermeire, Gil Melmed, Ryan Ungaro, Aline Charabaty, Richard Moses, Faye Chan-Diehl, Jerome Paulissen, Baojin Zhu, Edward L. Barnes, Adam C. Ehrlich, and David T. Rubin. Crohn’s & Colitis 360 7 (2): otaf002.
S-Adenosylmethionine Inhibits Plasminogen-Activating Inhibitor-1 and Protects Male Mice From FOLFOX-Induced Liver Injury. Gangi, Alexandra, Tony Wh Li, Youngyi Lim, Swati Chandla, Andrea Floris, Arash Khangholi, Maria Lauda Tomasi, and Shelly C. Lu. Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, April, 101513.
Prognostic Value of Minimal Residual Disease Detected by EuroFlow Next-Generation Flow Cytometry and Next-Generation Sequencing in Patients With Multiple Myeloma Achieving Complete Response and Receiving Lenalidomide Maintenance After Autotransplant: A Prospective Comparison Study. Yoroidaka, Takeshi, Hiroyuki Takamatsu, Ryota Urushihara, Mitsuhiro Itagaki, Satoshi Yoshihara, Kota Sato, Naoki Takezako, Shuji Ozaki, Kazuhito Suzuki, Kentaro Kohno, Tsuyoshi Muta, Morio Matsumoto, Yasushi Terasaki, Takeshi Yamashita, Shin-Ichi Fuchida, Jun Sakamoto, Tadao Ishida, Kenshi Suzuki, Hirokazu Murakami, Brian G. M. Durie, and Kazuyuki Shimizu. Haematologica, April.
How Alcohol Induces Human Acute Alcoholic Pancreatitis – Problem Solved? Nordback, Isto, Hannu Paajanen, and Stephen Pandol. The American Journal of Pathology, April, S0002-9440(25)00115-4.
De Novo Metastases in Patients With Primary Colorectal Cancer: A Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Analysis. Loroña, Nicole C., Kamya Sankar, Mariana C. Stern, Stephanie L. Schmit, and Jane C. Figueiredo. Cancer Causes & Control: CCC, April.
Development, Usability, and Validity Evidence of a Rheumatology Telehealth Feedback Form. Zickuhr, Lisa, Alberto Sobrero, Daniel Albert, Amanda S. Alexander, Tami Bonnett-Ami, Sarah Dill, Sharon Dowell, Elizabeth D. Ferucci, Connie Herndon, Bharat Kumar, David Leverenz, Jennifer Mandal, Amaad Rana, Irene J. Tan, Swamy Venuturupalli, Tiffany Westrich-Robertson, Marcy B. Bolster, Jason Kolfenbach, and American College of Rheumatology Workforce Solutions Committee. Arthritis Care & Research, April.
Multi-Omic and Spatial Analysis of Mouse Kidneys Highlights Sex-Specific Differences in Gene Regulation Across the Lifespan. Chen, Siqi, Ruiyang Liu, Chia-Kuei Mo, Michael C. Wendl, Andrew Houston, Preet Lal, Yanyan Zhao, Wagma Caravan, Andrew T. Shinkle, Atieh Abedin-Do, Nataly Naser Al Deen, Kazuhito Sato, Xiang Li, André Luiz N. Targino da Costa, Yize Li, Alla Karpova, John M. Herndon, Maxim N. Artyomov, Joshua B. Rubin, Sanjay Jain, Xue Li, Sheila A. Stewart, Li Ding, and Feng Chen. Nature Genetics, April.
Targeting Senescence With Apigenin Improves Chemotherapeutic Efficacy and Ameliorates Age-Related Conditions in Mice. Zhang, Hongwei, Qixia Xu, Zhirui Jiang, Rong Sun, Qun Wang, Sanhong Liu, Xin Luan, Judith Campisi, James L. Kirkland, Weidong Zhang, and Yu Sun. Advanced Science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany), April, e2412950.
Neurology
Noninvasive Assessment of β-Secretase Activity Through Click Chemistry-Mediated Enrichment of Neuronal Extracellular Vesicles to Detect Alzheimer’s Disease. Kim, Hyoyong, Junseok Lee, Audrey Qian, You-Ren Ji, Ryan Zhang, Qixin Hu, Christopher Kazu Williams, Han-Yu Chuang, Matthew D. Smalley, Yaya Xu, Liang Gao, Mary C. Mayo, Ting Zhang, Edwin M. Posadas, Zaldy S. Tan, Harry V. Vinters, Keith Vossel, Shino Magaki, Yazhen Zhu, and Hsian-Rong Tseng. Advanced Science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany), April, e2415289.
Orthopaedics
Long-Term Postoperative Outcomes by Surgeon Gender and Patient-Surgeon Gender Concordance in the US. Ikesu, Ryo, Hiroshi Gotanda, Tara A. Russell, Melinda Maggard-Gibbons, Marcia McGory Russell, Ryu Yoshida, Ruixin Li, Alexandra Klomhaus, Christian de Virgilio, and Yusuke Tsugawa. JAMA Surgery, April.
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
ELOC-Mutated Renal Cell Carcinoma Is a Rare Indolent Tumor With Distinctive Genomic Characteristics. Wang, Jasmine J., Rong Rong Huang, Brian D. Cone, Sung-Hae L. Kang, Reza Setoodeh, Anthony E. Sisk, Dipti P. Sajed, Brian M. Shuch, Adam G. Sowalsky, and Huihui Ye. Modern Pathology, April, 100777.
Surgery
Development and Assessment of a Patient-Reported Outcome Instrument for Gender-Affirming Care. Kaur, Manraj N., Charlene Rae, Shane D. Morrison, Alexis Laungani, Pierre Brassard, Margriet G. Mullender, Tim C. van de Grift, Danny A. Young-Afat, Jens Ahm Sørensen, Lotte Poulsen, Sylvie D. Cornacchi, Jack G. Graesser, Anne F. Klassen, et al. JAMA Network Open 8 (4): e254708.
1121 Shape-Sensing Robotic-Assisted Bronchoscopic Biopsies: Diagnostic Yield and Surgical Implications. Brownlee, Andrew R., Claire Perez, Lucas Weiser, Woosik Yu, Drew Bolster, Kellie Knabe, Sevannah Soukiasian, George Chaux, Raffaele Rocco, and Harmik J. Soukiasian. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, April, S0003-4975(25)00325-X.
Drug-Induced Acute Pancreatitis Following Dose Increase of Mycophenolate Mofetil in a Kidney Transplant Recipient: A Case Report and Literature Review. Abou-Jaoude, Maroun, Ahmed Elsidig, Sara Abdel-Samad, and Ibrahim Tfayli. Transplant Immunology, April, 102230.
Inhibition of Polymorphonuclear Cells Averts Cytotoxicity Against Hypoimmune Cells in Xenotransplantation. Hu, Xiaomeng, Grigol Tediashvili, Alessia Gravina, Jonathan Stoddard, Trevor J. McGill, Andrew J. Connolly, Tobias Deuse, and Sonja Schrepfer. Nature Communications 16 (1): 3706.
ASO Author Reflections: Advances in Axillary Management for Breast Cancer After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy. Boyle, Marissa K., and Armando E. Giuliano. Annals of Surgical Oncology, April.
Comprehensive Review of the Management of Patients With Acute Cholecystitis Who Are Ineligible for Surgery. Baron, Todd H., Irving Jorge, Ali Husnain, Petros Constantino Benias, Bradley N. Reames, Ashok Bhanushali, Salvatore Docimo, Matthew Bloom, Riad Salem, Patrick Murphy, Harjit Singh, Shyam Varadarajulu, and Ahsun Riaz. Annals of Surgery, April.
Urology
Fostering Equity: Assessing Access to Transgender Health Education in US Medical School Curricula. Arteaga, Rebecca, Samhita Mallavarapu, Maurice M. Garcia, Sandeep Sandhu, and Shannon M. Smith. The Clinical Teacher 22 (3): e70071.
Cedars-Sinai Health Sciences University is advancing groundbreaking research and educating future leaders in medicine, biomedical sciences and allied health sciences. Learn more about the university.
Rec Sports
Tyler’s Miracle League offers inclusive baseball for young athletes
TYLER, Texas (KETK) – The Miracle League, which offers opportunities for young athletes with physical limitations to participate in baseball, is coming to Tyler. The Miracle League is partnering with the City of Tyler to open up a field at Faulkner Park. The field is expected to open on June 14 and will feature an […]

TYLER, Texas (KETK) – The Miracle League, which offers opportunities for young athletes with physical limitations to participate in baseball, is coming to Tyler.
The Miracle League is partnering with the City of Tyler to open up a field at Faulkner Park. The field is expected to open on June 14 and will feature an exhibition game along with a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by former MLB players.
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The field will be tailored to allow athletes with a number of different kinds of physical limitations to enjoy baseball. In order to make the field more accessible, the bases are flat and smooth, preventing tripping hazards. The field is also designed to allow athletes in wheelchairs or other kinds of physical disabilities to compete on the field.
The games will also be conducted on a buddy system as they will pair each athlete with a ‘buddy’ who will help them navigate the game. Each player’s ‘buddy’ will be an athlete from a local high school or college who will make sure the players are safe and having a good time while allowing parents to set back and enjoy the game while getting to know other parents.
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The process of bringing the Miracle League to Smith County began in 2020. The project was headed by Casey Bryans, the President of the Miracle League of Tyler. The Miracle League is especially meaningful to Bryans due to his own son participating in the league during his youth.
After getting the opportunity to watch his son compete in the Miracle League, Bryans now wants to provide that opportunity to East Texans.
“Our desire is for every child who can play on a traditional baseball field to play on our field,” Bryans said. “There are literally thousands of kids in Smith County who can play on our field.”
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Bryans emphasized how the league will strive to create a sense of community in Tyler for families who want to provide their children with a chance who may not have the opportunity in the past to compete in youth sports and be a member of a team.
“This is about an opportunity for kids who may not have had the opportunity to be in a team in the past,” Bryans said. “An opportunity for them to come together and make friends. An opportunity for parents to come together and watch their kids have fun.”
The league hopes to provide more than just baseball to the athletes. It wants to provide them with purpose and fulfillment while also raising awareness across East Texas.
“Baseball is great, and we were so excited we were going to play baseball, but there is so much more than that,” Bryans said. “We have the opportunity to build friendships, relationships and just bring awareness to athletes in Texas.”
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Those who want to look into signing their children up for the Miracle League or seeking to volunteer can learn how the Miracle League website.
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For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to KETK.com | FOX51.com.
Rec Sports
Lake City Running Festival gives support to local youth athletes
The North Country spent part of the Memorial Day weekend gathering hundreds of athletes for race day around Cumberland Bay. The Lake City Running Festival returned for its third straight year. Close to 400 athletes from around Northern New York gave it their all to complete the course from start to finish. “Mentally, I told […]

The North Country spent part of the Memorial Day weekend gathering hundreds of athletes for race day around Cumberland Bay. The Lake City Running Festival returned for its third straight year. Close to 400 athletes from around Northern New York gave it their all to complete the course from start to finish. “Mentally, I told myself I was going to do this the past year,” said Peter Reynolds from Chateaugay, N.Y. “It was a really good feeling to say I finally did, and now I’ve done one bucket list item to cross off.” Participants got to run or walk in a 5 kilometer (KM), 10 kilometer (KM) or half marathon. Everyone started and finished at the Plattsburgh City beach, while running right alongside Lake Champlain. Those who participated in the half marathon ran as far as the U.S. Oval Park before finishing their 13.1-mile loop back to the city beach. Julia Ennis, a participant from Plattsburgh, N.Y., participated in the 10 KM run and said she enjoyed taking in all the sights the course had to offer. “Overall, a lot of fun,” Ennis said. “The trial, everything along the water was awesome … I really enjoyed all the bystanders cheering us along the way.” While the fans brought their energy to the athletes, the Lake City Running Festival knew the importance of also keeping the energy levels of their runners high. Volunteers were scattered across various mile markers providing Gatorade and water to keep everyone moving. One team who dedicated their time to support was the Lake Champlain Waves, a local youth swim team which features middle and high school athletes from all over Clinton County, N.Y. “We’re here to support our local runners,” said Maddison Mero, one of the volunteers from the Lake Champlain Waves Swim team. “It’s super important. We don’t want anything bad to happen to them on their race. We want them to be as comfortable as they can running or walking.” The Waves are one local team who was directly impacted by the race year after year. Proceeds collected from the Lake City Running Festival are donated to North Country Health and Wellness (NCHW) an organization which provides scholarship funds for local youth athletes to support their financial needs to compete for sports clubs and teams like the Lake Champlain Waves. “We really want to help some low-income kids that might not be able to afford to do club sports,” said NCHW president Hayden Reidy. “They might not be able to afford uniforms or anything like that for school sports, so we give scholarships to those kids to help them do those types of things.” At the conclusion of all the running, an after-party featuring food and music took place at the Plattsburgh City beach. Adirondack Foord Therapy provided the snacks which accompanied live music performance by Abi Allen, a local musician from Peru, N.Y. “It just keeps people here a little bit longer,” Reidy said. “Keeps them outside, gets them more active.” Reidy, who has been the Lake City Running Festival director for the past three years, hopes to bring back the race for many years to come. It all comes down to more new runners signing up and returning runners coming back, who are on board with supporting an important cause. “It makes it even better,” Reynolds said. “Helping the kids out and doing stuff for a good cause, that’s a big part of it.” It’s a cause that also hits home for Ennis. The former Plattsburgh State women’s soccer goalie knows how important fundraising events like these are to supporting a sports team. “As a former athlete myself, I understand how much fundraising helps,” Ennis said. “Donations and support really help the young athletes … any opportunity I have to give back to them is awesome.” The Lake City Running Festival is expected to make its return to Plattsburgh in 2026.
The North Country spent part of the Memorial Day weekend gathering hundreds of athletes for race day around Cumberland Bay.
The Lake City Running Festival returned for its third straight year. Close to 400 athletes from around Northern New York gave it their all to complete the course from start to finish.
“Mentally, I told myself I was going to do this the past year,” said Peter Reynolds from Chateaugay, N.Y. “It was a really good feeling to say I finally did, and now I’ve done one bucket list item to cross off.”
Participants got to run or walk in a 5 kilometer (KM), 10 kilometer (KM) or half marathon. Everyone started and finished at the Plattsburgh City beach, while running right alongside Lake Champlain. Those who participated in the half marathon ran as far as the U.S. Oval Park before finishing their 13.1-mile loop back to the city beach.
Julia Ennis, a participant from Plattsburgh, N.Y., participated in the 10 KM run and said she enjoyed taking in all the sights the course had to offer.
“Overall, a lot of fun,” Ennis said. “The trial, everything along the water was awesome … I really enjoyed all the bystanders cheering us along the way.”
While the fans brought their energy to the athletes, the Lake City Running Festival knew the importance of also keeping the energy levels of their runners high. Volunteers were scattered across various mile markers providing Gatorade and water to keep everyone moving. One team who dedicated their time to support was the Lake Champlain Waves, a local youth swim team which features middle and high school athletes from all over Clinton County, N.Y.
“We’re here to support our local runners,” said Maddison Mero, one of the volunteers from the Lake Champlain Waves Swim team. “It’s super important. We don’t want anything bad to happen to them on their race. We want them to be as comfortable as they can running or walking.”
The Waves are one local team who was directly impacted by the race year after year. Proceeds collected from the Lake City Running Festival are donated to North Country Health and Wellness (NCHW) an organization which provides scholarship funds for local youth athletes to support their financial needs to compete for sports clubs and teams like the Lake Champlain Waves.
“We really want to help some low-income kids that might not be able to afford to do club sports,” said NCHW president Hayden Reidy. “They might not be able to afford uniforms or anything like that for school sports, so we give scholarships to those kids to help them do those types of things.”
At the conclusion of all the running, an after-party featuring food and music took place at the Plattsburgh City beach. Adirondack Foord Therapy provided the snacks which accompanied live music performance by Abi Allen, a local musician from Peru, N.Y.
“It just keeps people here a little bit longer,” Reidy said. “Keeps them outside, gets them more active.”
Reidy, who has been the Lake City Running Festival director for the past three years, hopes to bring back the race for many years to come. It all comes down to more new runners signing up and returning runners coming back, who are on board with supporting an important cause.
“It makes it even better,” Reynolds said. “Helping the kids out and doing stuff for a good cause, that’s a big part of it.”
It’s a cause that also hits home for Ennis. The former Plattsburgh State women’s soccer goalie knows how important fundraising events like these are to supporting a sports team.
“As a former athlete myself, I understand how much fundraising helps,” Ennis said. “Donations and support really help the young athletes … any opportunity I have to give back to them is awesome.”
The Lake City Running Festival is expected to make its return to Plattsburgh in 2026.
Rec Sports
St. Sabina teens host peace carnival, criticize push for “snap curfews” in Chicago
With summer right around the corner, some Chicago teenagers on Saturday were calling out city leaders over a plan to allow police to impose so-called “snap curfews.” Although a final vote has been delayed until next month, the City Council has advanced an ordinance that would allow Police Supt. Larry Snelling to declare temporary curfews […]

With summer right around the corner, some Chicago teenagers on Saturday were calling out city leaders over a plan to allow police to impose so-called “snap curfews.”
Although a final vote has been delayed until next month, the City Council has advanced an ordinance that would allow Police Supt. Larry Snelling to declare temporary curfews anywhere in the city for up to 3 hours on as little as 30 minutes’ notice in an effort to stop teen takeovers.
Police could declare the curfews when any gathering of 20 people in public “is likely to result in, substantial harm to the safety of the community or others, or substantial damage to property, or substantial injuries to a person, including participants, or in a manner that otherwise presents or causes, or in a manner that is likely to present or cause, substantial harm to public health, safety, or welfare.”
Critics have said the ordinance is unconstitutional, and would subject Black and Brown teens to over-policing, and open the city up to lawsuits and police misconduct payouts.
The BRAVE Youth Leaders, an anti-violence youth program at St. Sabina church, said the city instead should provide more extensive youth programs instead of focusing on tightening curfew laws.
St. Sabina Academy alum Alexander Smith said youth curfews “may seem like an easy answer to the problem of youth violence, but in reality they are a temporary solution; one that only addresses the symptoms, but not the cause of the issue.”
“What truly makes a difference is meaningful community engagement. We need to invest in youth programs that have mentorships, that teach youth life skills,” he said.
St. Sabina was hosting a “peace carnival” and youth basketball tournament over the Memorial Day weekend.
Organizers said such events give teens a place to safe place to gather and interact with positive role models.
Rec Sports
From Spring to Fall: Howard Palmetto Covers All the Bases
The Howard Palmetto Baseball & Softball Association (HPBSA) is riding high after a dynamic Spring 2025 season, where over 800 kids showcased their talents in league play. As the spring season wraps up, the spotlight turns to All-Star Weekend on May 30th, a thrilling celebration featuring T-Ball skills competitions, home run derby parties, four-team All-Star […]

The Howard Palmetto Baseball & Softball Association (HPBSA) is riding high after a dynamic Spring 2025 season, where over 800 kids showcased their talents in league play. As the spring season wraps up, the spotlight turns to All-Star Weekend on May 30th, a thrilling celebration featuring T-Ball skills competitions, home run derby parties, four-team All-Star tournaments for the Atom American-Atom National and Bantam divisions, and the unveiling of new ball fields at Chapman Park. With this excitement setting the stage, HPBSA, the largest recreational baseball league in Florida since 1962, is eager to launch its Fall 2025 season, inviting young athletes aged 4–14 to sharpen their baseball skills in vibrant South Florida.
HP T-Ball Stars: Building the Basics
The T-Ball Stars Program is back, designed to prepare 5-year-olds for the Atom American Coach Pitch division while welcoming spring 2025 veteran-4-year-olds back to the diamond. No tryouts are required, and preselected teams prioritize volunteers’ children and 5-year-olds. Practices begin in August on weekdays, with Saturday morning games running from September to December at parks in Pinecrest & Palmetto Bay. Gameplay emphasizes fundamentals, tracking outs alongside runs, and wraps up with an exciting end-of-season tournament. For more details, contact Sean at tball@howardpalmetto.com.
HP Fall Ball offers Coach Pitch and Kid Pitch divisions, each forming 4–6 drafted teams. Games are played on weekends at Chapman Fields Park in southern Coral Gables and/or Suniland 1 park in Pinecrest from September through December, complemented by monthly single-elimination tournaments. Player evaluations are ongoing, with final makeups next week, team selections by early June, drafting by mid-June, and practices starting in August. Priority is given to returning HPBSA Spring 2025 players, while those in external fall leagues are ineligible. For more details, contact Josh at info@howardpalmetto.com
For players aged 6–11 not drafted to HP Fall Ball or looking to prepare for Spring 2026, HP Sandlot offers a flexible, low-commitment option. Featuring Coach Pitch and Kid Pitch games, Sandlot operates on a weekly RSVP basis with rotating players and guest coaches. It’s perfect for multi-sport athletes or those with busy schedules. Teams play pickup-style games (complete with uniforms and umpires) against each other and the Marlins Academy from early September to mid-December at Chapman Fields Park and Suniland 1, with the added perk of joining HP Fall Ball’s monthly tournaments. A set weekly practice keeps skills sharp. For more details, contact Carolina at info@howardpalmetto.com
The revamped HP Aces program targets competitive players aged 7U–14U, with tryouts scheduled over the next 10 days. Aces teams will compete in MYBA or PBSA leagues, with top-tier HP Fall Ball players (7U–10U) eligible to join tournament-only Aces teams for events in Dade County, the Keys, or other regional locations. Aces players in external leagues like MYBA or PBSA are ineligible for HP Fall Ball but can participate in HP Sandlot for additional playtime. As with HP Fall Ball, the non-refundable HPBSA Spring 2026 league registration is included in the fall HP Aces fee. For more details, contact Phil at aces@howardpalmetto.com
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Rec Sports
Elder High School alum lives out dream as Cincinnati Bearcats catcher
CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Bearcats catcher Kory Klingenback grew up with the same goal many young ballplayers in the area have. “Cincinnati kids want to play for Cincinnati,” Klingenback said. It wasn’t an easy path, but Klingenback is living out his dream. “They didn’t really look at me out of high school. I had the opportunity […]

CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Bearcats catcher Kory Klingenback grew up with the same goal many young ballplayers in the area have.
“Cincinnati kids want to play for Cincinnati,” Klingenback said.
It wasn’t an easy path, but Klingenback is living out his dream.
“They didn’t really look at me out of high school. I had the opportunity to come here after junior college. It was just surreal to me that it all came true… what this place means to me is quite insane,” Klingenback said.

University of Cincinnati Athletics
“When he comes out of that locker room every day, it doesn’t matter if he went 4-for-4 the last day; he’s going to give me a smile, he’s going to give me a ‘how you doing, coach?’ He’s going to say ‘coach, you look good today.’ I know he’s lying, but that’s OK,” Cincinnati baseball head coach Jordan Bischel said.
Inside baseball, Klingenback is what’s known as the ultimate “clubhouse guy.”
“I just want to play for the city and help these guys win as much as I can,” Klingenback said.
Last season, he only had one hit.
“I really didn’t want to play baseball anymore after last year,” Klingenback said.
“What’s awesome about Kory is when you’re a junior and get one hit at this level, you do one thing and you transfer out. You go somewhere else where you’re going to play more,” Bischel said.
“My family was here. I had all the support here. He came up to me last year in Texas, when we lost to Texas Tech, and he said, I gave him a hug and he said, ‘I want you back here.’ And that really hit me,” Klingenback said.

University of Cincinnati Athletics
“You have to get his; you have to strike people out, you have to do those things to win. But you need 40 guys who believe in what they are doing and who don’t make it about themselves,” Bischel said.
Klingenback said it’s all for the Queen City.
“It’s just for this place, it’s for Cincinnati. I just love it so much. I just love everybody around it,” Klingenback said.
Because of the game that raised him, after his baseball career ends this spring, the Elder High School alum will continue to serve the city he loves by joining the Cincinnati Fire Department.
“I just want to help the guy next to me, the guy to the left, the guy to the right,” Klingenback said.
Before he trades in his catcher’s mask for a fire helmet, Klingenback has postseason baseball to worry about. The Bearcats are awaiting to find out if and where they will play in their first NCAA regional since 2019.
“The signs on the wall (that show the Bearcats’ postseason accomplishments) back there haven’t been updated in a while,” Klingenback said.
Bischel said Klingenback has helped the Bearcats “win a heck of a lot more games than most people realize.”
“I want to leave this place better than I found it when I first got here,” Klingenback said.
Rec Sports
Pipestone National Monument to host artists-in-residence
Jeff Reddoor demonstrates his stone etching work. He’ll be at Pipestone National Monument May 24 through May 30 as part of the Monument’s artist-in-residence program. Contributed photo Jeff Reddoor will be the first of four Indigenous artists who will share their work at Pipestone National Monument this year as part of an artists-in-residence program. Reddoor […]


Jeff Reddoor demonstrates his stone etching work. He’ll be at Pipestone National Monument May 24 through May 30 as part of the Monument’s artist-in-residence program. Contributed photo
Jeff Reddoor will be the first of four Indigenous artists who will share their work at Pipestone National Monument this year as part of an artists-in-residence program. Reddoor will display and demonstrate his work from May 24 through May 30.
Reddoor said he comes from a family of artists and he’s been making art as long as he can remember. His art has included oils, acrylic, pen and ink, earrings, key chains, wood carving, stone etching and more.
“I’ve done all kinds of art, but what my passion has been the last several years and what I enjoy doing the most is wood carving, and I carve fish, I carve trout,” Reddoor said.
Reddoor uses primarily basswood and red cedar for his trout, which he said take hundreds of hours each. He paints some of them with great detail to make them look as authentic as possible. He also carves rocks from cedar to look like the river bottom under the fish and pinyon pine for stands to hold the fish.
“I love the look of pinyon pine,” Reddoor said. “When it’s sanded and shined, it just has this beautiful, raw look to it that really complements the fish.”
Trout are a subject he knows well as an avid fly fisherman.
“I like to go do research work, which means I like to go fishing,” he said with a laugh. “I tell my wife, ‘I’ve got to go do some research,’ and just disappear and go fly fishing all day.”
He said he also enjoys hunting and often hunts stones and wood to use in his artwork as he’s hunting animals.
Reddoor said he plans to demonstrate his stone art while he’s at Pipestone National Monument. He said he uses slate native to Utah, where he lives, that has red, gray and purple in it, and uses a scraper to etch images such as symbols, feathers and wildlife into the stone. He said that work has “more of a southwestern tone” to it.
Reddoor said he also plans to bring a family pipe made of pipestone with him during his visit. He said his family has been the pipe carrier for the Assiniboine Tribe and the pipe has been in his family for around 60 years. His father, Courtney Reddoor, made it and carried it until he died. Then his brother, Stormy Reddoor, carried it, and now he does.
“It’s absolutely beautiful,” Reddoor said. “It’s got an eagle’s head on it.”
In addition to making visual art, Reddoor is a performing artist, who plays the guitar and flute. He plans to play some Native flute music while he’s at Pipestone National Monument.
Reddoor’s family is originally from Poplar, Mont., which is on the Fort Peck Reservation. He and his family now live in Fillmore in central Utah, where his wife of 40 years, Tammy, is from. They have seven children, including two they recently adopted.
Reddoor is retired after a 40-year career with the state of Utah, which concluded with him serving as the director of the Utah State Building Board. He said he now spends most of his time making artwork and music, and hunting and fishing.
Other Indigenous artists who will share their work during week-long residencies at Pipestone National Monument over the summer include Holly Young from June 21 to 27, John Knife Sterner from July 25 to 31 and Marlena Myles from August 23 to 29. For more information, call 507-825-5464 ext. 214 or visit the park website at www.nps.gov/pipe. Event details and program schedules will also be posted on the park’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/PipestoneNPS.

This is a sample of the stone etching done by Jeff Reddoor, who will be sharing and demonstrating his art work at Pipestone National Monument from May 24 to May 30. Reddoor is from Utah and is the first of four Indigenous artists to be featured this year during Pipestone National Monument’s artist-in-residence program. Contributed photo

This is one of the trout carved and painted by Jeff Reddoor, who will be the first of four Indigenous artists featured at Pipestone National Monument this summer. In addition to wood carving, he does stone etching, bead work and more. Contributed photo

These are some of the earrings made by Jeff Reddoor, who will be the first of four Indigenous artists at Pipestone National Monument this summer as part of the Monument’s artist-in-residence program. He’ll be demonstrating his work there May 24 through May 30. Contributed photo
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