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111 result(s) for "Wolfe, Jeremy"
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Jeremy Wolfe
  Surviving are his parents; a brother, Zach Wolfe and his fianc, Virginia Vanderhoof, of Churchland; grandparents Lloyd and Juanita Hughes of Churchland; grandfather Dale Wolfe and his wife, Mary, and grandmothers Charlotte Meadows and Sharon \"Nana\" Powers and her husband, Ronnie, all of West Virginia; two aunts, Joanne Maddox and her husband, Joey, and Jada...
REITZ GIRLS' SOCCER SEEKING A TURNAROUND
[Jeremy Wolfe]'s five starters back include three seniors -- midfielders Katie Molinet and Jessica Yurks and stopper Katie Harvey -- and a pair of sophomore wings, Stephanie Owens and Kelsey Schmitt. Wolfe also expects immediate help from freshmen Stephanie Thompson, a forward, and sweeper Mackenzie Wallace. Others back are junior goalkeeper Chris Heriges and seniors Matt Braker, Nick Murphy, Same Cosgrove, Mike Hudson, Anthony Laufer and Ricky Gonterman.
STORM-TOSSED SWIMMERS THREATENING WEATHER PUTS A DAMPER ON CITY MEET
Jeremy Wolfe, the tournament director, cleared the pool and asked parents and swimmers to go to their cars. Children and parents ran from the pool area in a panic, fearing what the ominous cloud could bring. Their fear was elevated by cell phone calls from relatives and friends relaying television reports of damage in the Tri-State. JUSTIN RUMBACH / Courier & Press Howell Pool coaches Gina Whobrey, left, and Hallie Denstorff encourage 6-year-old John Parker during the Evansville City Swim Meet at Garvin Park Pool on Tuesday night. The girls decorated their hair and painted their faces to show team spirit. The meet was stopped when a threatening storm moved into the area. Swim team coaches and Parks Department officials plan to meet today to decide how to proceed, if at all, with the meet. Colin Phillips, 8, comes up for a gulp of air while competing in the boys 7 & 8-year-old division of the 100-meter Individual Medley at the Evansville City Swim Meet on Tuesday night at Garvin Park Pool. Hundreds of men, women and children, including Christian Elpers, 9, from the Lorraine Pool team, competed in Tuesday's Evansville City Swim Meet at the Garvin Park Pool. The meet was stopped by bad weather.
REITZ'S WOLFE TO FOCUS ON SOCCER
Coaching girls' basketball and girls' soccer during their respective seasons was never a problem for Reitz's Jeremy Wolfe. So Wolfe has resigned as the Panthers' girls' basketball coach after six years. He said he wants to concentrate solely on Reitz's girls' soccer team, which he has coached for 10 years. In soccer, Wolfe will have 13 seniors returning. \"We have a tremendous middle school program going on,\" he said. \"Now, instead of doing both (basketball and soccer) and only doing half in each, I can focus on soccer.\"
What a relief when I found out I was unwell
IT IS ALWAYS encouraging to learn that there may be an explanation for the apparently inexplicable. Why, for example, having turned the house upside down searching for a credit card or a set of keys, do we come across them a couple of days later, bold as brass, in some place we know we have checked several times over? This usually arouses the suspicion that \"someone\" must have moved them, but it is more likely, writes Dr Jeremy Wolfe in New Scientist, that the \"search image\" was incorrect, and as Dr Wolfe runs the Visual Attention Laboratory at Harvard University, presumably he knows what he's talking about. When searching for a missing object we are apparently guided by a mental picture of its colour, size, shape, shininess and so on. This picture can be deceptive on two counts. First, the \"search image\" will fail to match the object's actual appearance if the object is at an odd angle or partially concealed. Alternatively, the image may be correct but confused by other equally good but misleading matches - as when you are looking for a specific item in the cutlery drawer.
Interview: Jeremy Wolfe discusses his experiments on how people search for objects
Prof. [Jeremy Wolfe]: ...only our pictures are much uglier. But what we had subjects do was to push one button if they found a tool and another button if the fake bag didn't contain a tool. And when we had them do this in a block of trials where the tool was present half the time--so in half the trials, there was a tool; in half the trials, they were supposed to say no. Well, if they did that, they missed about 7 percent of the tools, but that's not what's going on out there in the real world of baggage screening or medical screening for--in radiology or something of that sort. There, the targets are much rarer. So we ran the same study with much rarer tools, and the tools only showed up 1 percent of the time. If you do that, you have to run thousands and thousands of trials. But when we did that, the error rates went up from about 7 percent to about 30 percent. Prof. WOLFE: ...to find the rare threat that's showing up in your bag, or we want them to find the rare tumor that's showing up in a routine mammogram. And we may be built by nature to do search tasks for targets that aren't spectacularly rare. The mechanisms that control your ability to do visual search were probably designed by nature to help you find raspberries on raspberry bushes or friends in groups of people, not to look for things that only show up one time in a hundred or one time in a thousand. [IRA FLATOW]: Oh, yes. We're talking with Jeremy Wolfe, professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Med School in Boston. I'm Ira Flatow, and this is SCIENCE FRIDAY and NPR News.
Life: Dispatch: Lesser spotted luggage items
In a laboratory mock-up of airport baggage screening, Jeremy Wolfe, of Harvard medical school, and colleagues found that volunteers failed to notice up to 30% of the unusual items (such as guns, knives and bombs). By contrast, they were better at noticing items that occurred frequently, with only 7% of these objects going unnoticed.
NORTH LOOKS FORWARD TO REMATCH WITH REITZ
North and Reitz will face off against each other in the Evansville West girls' soccer sectional, but the team that makes it past that Oct. 12 match will have to win two more to advance to the regional round. \"Obviously, us and North got the toughest draw,\" said Reitz coach Jeremy Wolfe. \"We're happy with our draw, but I think every coach wants that first- round bye.\" Reitz, ranked No. 10 in the Indiana Soccer Coaches Association poll, beat North 2-1 in the first game of the season. North coach A.J. McAdams said his team has improved, and \"we're looking forward to a rematch.\"
Law and order briefs
\"Given Mr. [David M. Diaz]'s repeated violent engagements with law enforcement that evening and the numerous opportunities he was afforded to end the conflict peacefully prior to him shooting directly at the officers on the ground, Corporal [Jeremy Wolfe] acted fully within the law,\" the letter said. Jesus Cota, 23, is accused of committing 28 acts of aggravated shoplifting at a south-side Circle K for the past several months, Tucson police said in a post on their Facebook page. The Circle K is in the 1900 block of East 36th Street. In May, [Cota] turned himself in to Pima County sheriff's detectives after seeing himself on the news and on Facebook in connection with multiple shoplifting incidents at two Circle K stores on the south side.
MAN ARRESTED AFTER TEEN PLAYS HOOKY WIND GAP
[Jeremy Wolfe] was arraigned before District Justice Adrianne Masut of Wind Gap on charges of corruption of minors, disorderly conduct and loitering and prowling at night and committed to Northampton...