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Most companies will prohibit you from using your work email to post comments on chat forums, sign up for social media or shopping sites, or buy goods online, unless it is for work purposes. Top tips to stay compliant when using social media at work: 1. Know what is expected of you — a. Avoid airing grievances — a. They opened the season with a win over Red. After losing to White in their second game of the opening weekend, the Royals beat Light Blue with the two SW Christian players, Odefey and Konkel, each scoring.

Eagan goalie Graeme Edmund returns. Edmund skated Red and Black last season and skated for the Eagan Varsity as a sophomore. Joining him in the Yellow nets will be Eagan teammate Victor Henk. Wilary will be a senior next fall. Cody Rehder, another Eagan defender last season, is on the Yellow Team. Rehder will be a junior. Boor, Henk, and Anderson will be juniors and Alexander a senior this fall. Aidan White skated two seasons ago for the Eagan jv.

Hastings has five players on the Yellow. Eid tuned up for the tourney by substituting for the short-handed Red Team last week. Both will be juniors next fall. The line of Freiermuth, Bauer, and Zaruba could be on one of the top line in the state. The three complete the Hastings contingent on the Yellow Team.

Savage and Zaccardi skated for the Hastings Bantam A team last season. Symthe will be a junior; Sigel a sophomore.

The Yellow Team went in the first two weekends. They won their opener beating Green in a wild game. Bauer, Zaruba, and Jack Greeley each had a four point game with each scoring twice. Stotts scored twice and Van Sicien once in the win. After losing to Orange in their second game, the Yellow came back to win their third game beating Red Zaruba scored the hat trick with Bauer, Alexander, and Van Sicien each getting a single goal.

The second weekend, the Yellow edged the White with Victor Henk in the nets. Luke Savage tied the game with seven minutes left to play and Ryan Blake scored the winner with 28 seconds left in the game. Yellow beat Neon for their fourth win with Kyle Bauer getting the hat trick. Jack and Mikhail Greeley each scored once. The tenth player from Edina is Quinn Peterson who will be a junior. Thorson skated in the Edina bantam program.

Peterson skated last season for the Edina Junior Gold B team. Wang skated for the Jefferson Bantam AA team. The Black Team this spring consists mostly of next fall sophomores that will have their first impact on Edina, Woodbury, Jefferson, and Eastview varsities in the next three years.

That Vintage Team struggled playing. The Black youths are backed by three Rosemount players who will be seniors next fall Jonah Forshier, Emmett Durigan, and Matt Akemann , one Rosemount player will be a junior Jack Buckenberger , one Jefferson player that will be a senior Grant Dokken , and one Jefferson player will be a junior Aran Daniels. Daniels skated for the Jefferson varisty and Dokken skated between jv and varsity last season.

The Black Team is tied with the Yellow Team for third place after the first two weeks of play posting a record.

Black lost their first two games of the season, won their third game beating Grey Neon Team: Two weeks into the season and three teams are tied for fifth place in the 12 team Spring League with records, Neon, Teal, and White. All four Andover skaters will be seniors in the fall.

Clough finished second. Bauer swung between varsity and jv posting 4 points playing defense in 22 games while growing. Both will be seniors. Both played for Andover varsity and jv last year. Eight of the nine St. One Knight, Hunter Lucas will be a sophomore. Two of the seniors, Roos and Robinson, skated for the varsity last season that will graduate three centers, one defense, two wings, and one goalie this spring.

Ryan Berchild skated for the Skippers JV last season. The lone Edina player, goalie Joshua Mansky will be a sophomore next season. The Neon Team posted a record in this opening two weeks of the Spring League regular season. Their best win was a win over the Black Team on opening weekend.

The Andover players led by Clough fueled the win. Clough had a six point game scoring five goals. The Neon Team rallied in the second weekend to tie second place Royal Team. Playing without Clough, the Neon Team rallied behind four second half goals by the Minnetonka contingent Roos, Robinson, Witta, and Caron to tie the game after trailing at the half.

Armstrong is has three on the roster. Martin led the Hopkins varsity defense last season posting 14 points in 25 games. Gieseke led the Owatonna varsity defense last season. Max and Tate Cothern who will be a sophomore this fall at Mayo are the Teal goalies this spring. He skated in the Fall League for the Purple Team that consisted of mostly Gentry Academy players who went on to post a record in their first season of high school play.

Yusupoff posted13 points in the Fall League and had a good season with the Stars posting another 8 points. One, Petr VanVoorhis, will be a junior.

Three of the Teal players skate from Armstrong. Teal posted a record in the first two weeks of play. Teal beat Light Blue and Yellow Max Cothern got the win. Nicholas Olson scored the hat trick in the win over Yellow, Yusupoff, Badertscher, and Jack Sellman scored a goal each.

Max Cothern got his second win. Tate Cothern was in the nets for the tie. Tate was in the nets for the second tie with White White: The White Team is balanced with three high school programs forming the bulk of the team.

All six Monticello players will be juniors next fall. Brooks and Sibley skated for the Moose varsity last season; Hill, Ronayne, and Bitz skated jv last winter. Dahlheimer skated for the Moose Bantam A team last winter.

Chanhassen goalie, Amrhien, will be a senior this fall. Amrhien skated for the varsity last season. Joe Gerebi saw significant time on the Chanhassen varsity at defense as a freshman and with four defense graduating is likely to be full time varsity this season as a sophomore. Ryan Nicholson will be a sophomore. Favour and Hoikka will be sophomores next fall, Hammer will be a junior. Pehrson will be a junior and Weber a sophomore next fall. Body Amrhein and Derek Reed are the goalies.

White handed the Royal Team their only loss beating the Royals on opening weekend. The Monticello players Dahheimer and Ronayne scored three of the goals in the win, Ronayne scoring twice. LaMotte got the game winner with two minutes left to play. Burnsville goalie Derek Reed got the win. The White Team beat Pink for their second win. Derek Reed got his second win of the season. The White tied Grey in their opening game of the season behind Brooks hat trick and goals by Dahlheimer and Gunnar Sibley.

All five goals were scored by Monticello players. Goalie Amrhiem was in the nets for the tie. Ten of the Pink skaters will be seniors next fall; seven will be juniors, and five will be sophomores.

One Pink skater will graduate this spring. Woodbury will be graduating nine players this year. Those fourteen players will be competing for spots next fall on the varsity. Ethan Wu is will be graduating this June. With Woodbury losing two of their top four defensemen, Schwartzhoff and Hanson will likely move into the top four defense for Woodbury.

Tony Hoops, who has swung between defense and forward in the Red and Black last season, could be a swing player between defense and varsity. Woodbury graduated five of their top 10 scoring forwards.

Early in this decade, the Woodbury Association fielded numerous youth teams that ended up playing in state tournaments. In , they send a record seven teams. Thomas Academy in the semifinals. They posted a record on the season. Both skaters will be seniors in the fall.

With East Ridge graduating both goalies last season, senior Bierwerth will be in a battle with two senior goalies for a spot on the East Ridge varsity. Defenseman Gustafson swung between varsity and jv last season and will be in a tough competition this fall with Simley graduating only one from the defense. The Pink Team won their first two games on opening weekend beating Black and Green before losing to league leading Orange They struggled the second weekend tying Grey , losing to second place Royal Team, and losing to White In their tie with Grey, Woodbury again provided the scoring punch but with different players.

The seventh player, Aaron Brekken will be a senior. Tichy skated for the Orono varsity last winter and returns to play Red and Black this spring.

He played in the league last summer. Brekken swung between varsity and jv last winter. With Orono graduating eight of the top eleven forwards this spring, Tichy is likely to skate on one of the two top Orono lines and Brekken is likely to make varsity. Defenseman Gabe Lewis played jv. Five of the eleven players graduating played defense two seniors swung between defense and offense last season. Pritchard, Hansen, and Chalusky skated varsity last season.

Hanson had a great Fall League last year and was instrumental in leading the Orange Team to a second place finish in the playoffs. Hanson skated varsity for Chaska last years.

Meyer played for the Holy Angels jv last winter. Light Blue has a record going into the third weekend of play. They beat the Red Team in their Saturday opening weekend game Goalie Mason Meyer got the win. Light Blue beat the Grey in their Saturday weekend 2 game behind balanced scoring. Zach Hanson got the win. Green: The Green Team this fall is loaded with players who will be seniors or juniors next fall. Eight of the Green will be seniors and 13 will be juniors when the November tryouts start.

Only two players, Benilde St. Dokman posted a 20 point season 6 goals. Michael Paulison will be a junior next fall at Benilde St. Paulison skated with Toft and Curtiss on the St. Louis Park JGA team last winter. Green will be skating five BSM players this spring. Blumer, Sorrentino, and Laurance will be juniors. All three skated for the Crimson jv last season. Mason Olson will be a senior next fall at Wayzata. All three will be juniors. Schmidt will be a senior and Skluzacek will be a junior.

Both skated for the New Prague jv last season. Both are juniors next fall. Lessard will be a senior next fall; Coryell a junior. Lessard will be a starter at defense for the Red Hawks next winter with Coryell potentially ending up in the varsity defensive corps. Green is tied with Light Blue in the standings after two weekends of play with a record. They beat Neon on the opening weekend Sunday game Mason Moore scored the fourth goal.

Maple Grove goalie, Blumer, got the win. The Green beat the Red Team last Sunday, Calvin Mathe got the win.

McNeill, Twardoski, and Pakkala all skated for the Shakopee varsity last season and were three of the five seniors on the team. McNeill is becoming more physically mature. He skated in the Red and Black last summer.

Both skated for the Shakopee JV team last season and will be juniors this fall. Twelve of the players on the Grey Team skate in the Prior Lake program. Two will be seniors next fall, Marco Bianchi and Joe Dueber. Bianchi swung between varsity and jv last winter. Defenseman Dueber skated jv. Halstrom and Hadlund skated jv last winter.

Dicke skated for the jv last season. Bobby Hughes, Straszewski, and Vos skated varsity last season for the Academy. All three will be juniors this fall. John Hughes also skated varsity last season, but will be a sophomore this fall.

All four are forwards and will be battling for top spots on the Lions varsity next fall. The Grey Team has struggled in the first two weekends of play posting a record. They beat Teal and tied White opening weekend, but could salvage only a tie with Pink Team. McNeil scored the hat trick in the win.

Dicke, Haghighi, Bianchi, and Carsten each scored once. Goalie Lavigne got the win. McNeil and Bianchi scored twice in the tie with White. Kinsella scored once. Goalie Ethan Haglund got the tie. Kinsella scored twice in the tie with the Pink Team. McNeil, Bianchi, Pakkala, and Kettle each scored once. Goalie Lavigne got the tie. McNeil is off to a fast start scoring 8 goals in the first six games 10 points.

This team will be tough before the season ends. The team has a balanced mix of five players who will be seniors next fall, ten players who will be juniors, and eight players who will be sophomores. The Red Team is off to a slow start winning one game in their first two weekends. When a team struggles, it is left to the players, especially the future seniors to find out how to lead; the future juniors to find their varsity grove, and the sophomores to adjust to high school hockey before they hit the tryouts.

That makes this team an interesting team to watch. Stock skated varsity last season. De Georgeo, Skogg, Crowell, and Gilberston skated jv. Grimm and Moore skated jv last season; Lamont and Cirone skated in the Minneapolis Storm association bantam program last season. Here comes Washburn? Breck has seven players on the Red Team this spring. Five will be juniors next fall led by junior to be Beau Courneya. He has a quick accurate shot from almost anywhere on the ice.

Berman played varsity defense last season, Sellman, Jacob Hanson, and Rosenberg swung between varsity and jv. Both skated for the Breck jv team. Breck will be graduating nine players this June. The Red Team Breck players will most likely be the core of the Breck varsity next season. The Red Team posted a record in the first two weeks of play. They beat the Teal soundly in their Saturday game. Drew Eid, who skated last fall dropped in to skate for the Red and showcased his skill.

He made the Minnesota Senior team. The Seniors ended up losing the tie breaker to Wisconsin in pool play. The Minnesota Senior team is selected from the Ted Brill Great 8 tournament played earlier this month. Those graduating seniors who have not been selected, skate to showcase their talent. Those players who are 18 but will not graduate participate in the Great 8. The Minnesota 18 team placed third in their pool play. Let it snow-its Xcel time! The grind for 82 Minnesota Class A hockey teams ended last Saturday.

The 16 week grind of practices interlaced with 25 games ends as the first round of sectional play begins. Already some play-in games have been completed. In two weeks, eight Class A teams will be headed to the Xcel wondering who they will play. The eight winners will be seeded into the Class A State Tournament based on their regular season performance.

Class A will play their quarterfinal round on Wednesday, March 6th. The quarterfinal round opens with the 2 seeded team playing a TBD seed only 5 teams are seeded, the three unseeded teams are assigned their opponent in the opening game at 11 AM.

The second game Wednesday night will match the 4 and 5 seeds. That game starts at 8 PM. Who will survive their sectionals and who will face who in the State Tourney quarterfinals on March 6th? Here is my guess at filling in the blanks. This post predicts who will play in the four quarterfinal Class A games.

It also lays out how they will get there by going through each sectional opponent that will likely compete for a ticket Class A quarterfinals. Who will win the Class A title this year?

Everybody will have an opinion this year. See you at the Xcel and let it snow! Park in the ramps and have fun. Totino Grace was seeded 1 and Mahtomedi seeded 2. Northfield earned the 3 seed and St. Paul Johnson the 4 seed. There will be four play-in games with 5 seeded St.

Paul Academy playing 12 St. Paul Highland Park and the winner playing St. Paul Johnson. South St. Paul earned the 6 and will play 11 Minnehaha Academy with the winner playing Northfield. Gentry Academy, in its first high school season, earned the 7 seed and plays Red Wing with the winner playing Mahtomedi. Simley seeded 8 and Henry Sibley seeded 9 play each other with the winner playing Totino Grace. All Section 4A quarterfinal games will be skated at Aldrich.

Semifinals and the 4A championship game will be skated at Roseville. Howe and Heffron have exploded this year on the hockey scene under the tutelage of head coach Adam Sharratt to lead the Eagles to the Northwest Suburban West Conference championship. But the Eagles will be challenged in their 4A run to the state. This is Minnesota High School hockey and challenges will come from most likely 2 seed Mahtomedi, 3 seed Northfield, 4 seed St.

Paul Johnson, and 7 seed wild card Gentry Academy. TG goalie, Jon Howe is the best kept secret in the high school scene. The Eagles have one of the best disciplined goaltenders in the state in Howe who has stopped an average of 32 shots per game this season.

Howe has posted over minutes in the net in regular season and if the Eagles make state, he will come close to posting a minute season. Howe has faced 18 Class AA teams in 22 games this season.

Few teams have stopped the big guy. Those that have had top defenses like Andover. Heffron is one stride away from becoming a terror on ice. Bonfe has been the playmaker. Meehan scored the hat trick in the Eagles season ending win over Breck. Overall, the defensive corps has played a solid season. To get there, they will need their defensive corps to step up and their second and third lines to play solid hockey. If the TG skaters do that, goalie Jon Howe will take care of the rest.

Section 4A challangers: Many that predicted defending 4A champions Mahtomedi would be seeded 1 maybe surprised with the 2 seed. Both have similar records this season. The Zephyrs are on the season and finished third in the Metro East champs St.

Thomas Academy and Hill Murray. A senior dominated Northfield team could make a run at both TG and the Zephyrs. The remaining three contenders, South St. Paul , St. Paul Johnson , and Gentry Academy are young.

Look for some upsets in this 12 team section in the early rounds. TG, Mahtomedi, and Northfield are the only teams that are assured of a first round bye with South St. Paul and St. Paul Johnson most likely contending for the 4 seed and the fourth bye. Mahtomedi coach Jeff Poeschi tries to schedule tough opponents and posted an record this season beating Hastings, Greenway, Orono, St.

Cloud Cathedral, and Breck. The Zephyrs tied Hill Murray. Skillings is the top Zephyr defender and has posted 19 assists on the season. Ben Dardis and John Poirer have split the goal tending this season. Freshman Dardis , 1. Cloud Cathedral and Hermantown. Senior Poirer , 2. Thomas Academy and Orono. They will have to rely on their depth at forward to score against the Eagles Jon Howe.

Paul, St. Paul Johnson, and Gentry Academy. Northfield finished in the middle of the Big 9 Conference this season and has a record. Senior goalie Wesley Lideen , 3. Jink has been skated well as the season ended. Paul has losing record with two games left to play. Junior goalies Jacob Lissick , 2.

Lissick was in the nets in the Hastings loss. Paul Johnson posted a record and finished their season with four straight wins including a win over South St. Johnson is a younger team this year. Senior Thomas Heesch and junior Drake Teal provide the experience on the offense. Senior goalie Aaron Lee has been the rock in the Govs net this season playing minutes while posting record.

Younghans earned more respect at the Blaine STP tourney in July skating all five lines in a tough battle with Breck narrowly won by Breck.

Gentry Academy skates a young team with only two seniors forward Reed Bartelings and defenseman Jake Henthorne. The rest of the players are sophomores and ninth graders.

Gentry won two of their last six games and may have hit that late season wall skating tired. Still the sophomore Damon Furuseth finished the season with 62 points 30 goals. Senior Reed Bartelings posted 53 points 23 goals. Junior goalie Sam Fellows , 3. The Stars have posted a respectable season record and may have jumped stated their team when the core group played a 22 game fall season in the Red and Black league.

Section 3A quarterfinal games will be played at the higher seeds home ice on February 21st. Marshall and New Ulm play in the Big South.

This section has become a test for Big South teams and they have fared well since the Big South was started a few years ago. He returns as a sophomore this year and has posted minutes in the nets in regular season , 2. Predicting that the Dragons will make state again is a mixed bag.

On the other hand, that loss to Luverne has to make the LDC coaches nervous. The deciding factor is the overall depth of the Dragons compared to Marshall and New Ulm looks to make them the winner. The Section 3A tourney will be a great one this year with great goaltending. And the Section 3A finals played at Gustavus Adolphus is one game to see, packed with the feel of old-time high school hockey. If you go, go early.

Marshall will be the 1 seed and will challenge LDC. The Tigers are one of the few Class A teams to post a 20 game winning season They won the Big South title outright with a season ending win over Waseca.

Marshall has the creds and have earned that top 3A seed. Marshall has a solid goalie in junior Dominik Caspers. Caspers has played minutes in the net in regular season posting a record giving up 1. He is fronted by a defensive corps of four juniors and two seniors. Offensively, Marshall is led by the 1 scorer in Minnesota this year, senior Mason Plante. Plante leads the team and the state in points 77 and goals Their defensive corps has scored only eight goals, but who cares?

New Ulm is led by their senior goalie Jack Raymond. Raymond played minutes in the nets this season posting a record giving up 2. Hutchinson has an outside shot. Halfway through the game, the wear and tear will be felt by the Dragons. If that happens, anything goes, but the game is not likely to reach that point.

Class A Quarterfinal Game 2: 3 seeded St. Quarterfinal Game 2 St. Cloud Catherdral was seeded 1, but surprisingly Sartell who finished second in the Central Lakes Conference was seeded 2 over conference champions, Alexandria.

Little Falls was seeded fourth. Quarterfinal games will be played at the higher seed home ice Tuesday, February 19th. Early in the season, it looked like a three team race for the Section 6A ticket to the Xcel. At that time, St. Cloud Cathedral was considered the best Class A team in the state. Cathedral was unbeaten and veteran coach Derrick Brown was at the helm. To get to the Xcel this year, Cathedral has to beat Alexandria.

Cathedral has posted a 20 game season with one game left to play Alexandria has ended their season with an record two games were postponed. The Cardinals finished the season with a win over East Grand Forks.

They are the Central Lakes Conference Champs this year. Stephens is the third challenger in Section 6A. They finished second in the Central Lakes Conference. Cathedral finished up and down in regular season losing to Moorhead , Mahtomedi , and Holy Family That loss to Mahtomedi makes them a shaky pick over Alex; the loss to Holy Family Catholic on the road makes them a strong pick over Alex.

That is hockey. From a Cathedral stand point, not much has changed from last season. They have posted an record then and are with one game to play this year. Cathedral has beaten most of the top contenders until their loss to Mahtomedi. If any major military power pushes ahead with AI weapon development, a global arms race is virtually inevitable, and the endpoint of this technological trajectory is obvious: autonomous weapons will become the Kalashnikovs of tomorrow.

Unlike nuclear weapons, they require no costly or hard-to-obtain raw materials, so they will become ubiquitous and cheap for all significant military powers to mass-produce.

It will only be a matter of time until they appear on the black market and in the hands of terrorists, dictators wishing to better control their populace, warlords wishing to perpetrate ethnic cleansing, etc. Autonomous weapons are ideal for tasks such as assassinations, destabilizing nations, subduing populations and selectively killing a particular ethnic group.

We therefore believe that a military AI arms race would not be beneficial for humanity. There are many ways in which AI can make battlefields safer for humans, especially civilians, without creating new tools for killing people.

Just as most chemists and biologists have no interest in building chemical or biological weapons, most AI researchers have no interest in building AI weapons — and do not want others to tarnish their field by doing so, potentially creating a major public backlash against AI that curtails its future societal benefits. Indeed, chemists and biologists have broadly supported international agreements that have successfully prohibited chemical and biological weapons, just as most physicists supported the treaties banning space-based nuclear weapons and blinding laser weapons.

In summary, we believe that AI has great potential to benefit humanity in many ways, and that the goal of the field should be to do so. Starting a military AI arms race is a bad idea, and should be prevented by a ban on offensive autonomous weapons beyond meaningful human control. Lethal Autonomous Weapons. Risks of Nuclear Weapons.



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