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		Ohio college basketball player who had 
		rare brain tumor dies 
		
		 
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		[April 11, 2015] 
		By Steve Bittenbender 
		  
		 (Reuters) - Lauren Hill, an Indiana native 
		who scored the first basket of the Mount St. Joseph University women's 
		basketball season in November while suffering from a rare inoperable 
		brain cancer, died on Friday at age 19, officials said. 
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			 "We are forever grateful to have had Lauren grace our campus with 
			her smile and determined spirit," university President Tony Aretz 
			said in a statement. "She has left a powerful legacy. She taught us 
			that every day is a blessing, every moment a gift." 
			 
			Hill had an advanced-stage diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, or 
			DIPG, but remained determined to play basketball for the small 
			Cincinnati, Ohio, university, which received permission to move its 
			first game up two weeks to ensure she could play. 
			 
			Demand was so strong for tickets that the team's Nov. 2 game against 
			Hiram College was moved to Xavier University's arena, where more 
			than 10,000 saw Hill score the game's first basket. Mount St. Joseph 
			won 66-55. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			After the game, Hill became an advocate for her condition, which 
			according to Weill Cornell Medical College is diagnosed in about 300 
			people each year. Many of those diagnosed are children under the age 
			of 10. 
			 
			Four-time National Basketball Association Most Valuable Player 
			LeBron James called Hill "the true definition of strength, courage, 
			power, leadership." 
			 
			"Your time spent on earth will never be forgotten," he said in a 
			post on Twitter, in which he said that while he had never met Hill 
			he was inspired by her. "For every life u touched, u made the 
			biggest impact of them by just being YOU!!" he added. 
			 
			Hill helped raise $1.4 million for DIPG research, said The Cure 
			Starts Now Foundation, which called her "a tireless advocate" and 
			spokesperson for its efforts to find a cure. 
			 
			At a vigil on Friday afternoon at Mount St. Joseph, women's 
			basketball coach Dan Benjamin called Hill "an unselfish angel." 
			
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			"It's not often you get to celebrate a loss, but today we celebrate 
			a victory of how to live a life through Lauren Hill," Benjamin said. 
			"Twenty-two (Hill's number) you will be missed and remembered by so 
			many. Rest in peace. We love you." 
			 
			A public memorial service for Hill is planned on Monday night at 
			Xavier University's Cintas Center. A private funeral service is 
			planned for Wednesday. 
			 
			(Reporting by Steve Bittenbender in Louisville; Additional reporting 
			by Steve Ginsburg in Washington; Editing by Lisa Lambert, Susan 
			Heavey and Leslie Adler) 
			
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