Freedom honour for Lord Laird

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Freedom honour for Lord Laird

Freedom of Information bill to be taken up in July — Honasan

By Katherine Evangelista INQUIRER.net

Senator Gringo Honasan

MANILA, Philippines Despite the Senates failure to pass the Peoples Ownership of Government Information (POGI) bill (formerly called the Freedom of Information bill) before adjourning for sine die on Wednesday, Senator Gregorio Honasan II remained confident that the bill will be taken up when session resumes in July.

During the Kapihan sa Senado media forum, Honasan, who is the chairman of the committee on public information and mass media, said that he is happy with the pace of the passing of the bill which is in the period of interpellation in the Senate while they await the House version.

I hope when session resumes after SONA (State-of-the-Nation Address) in July, or the last Monday of July, [we will be able to deliberate on it]. Im confident that we will do this as expeditiously as possible, he said.

Honasan said that Senator Allan Peter Cayetano will also deliver his co-sponsorship speech for the POGI bill.

The bill has been pending in the Senate for several months after they had to wait for the Malacaang version of the measure, Honasan said.

The Senator explained that the bill was probably not given enough attention and priority by Malacaang.

In fact this has never been certified as urgent so thats what we are asking for: to identify the national priorities so we would know [what to tackle first], Honasan told reporters.

Nevertheless, Honasan said that they have received the Palace version and has consolidated their amendments with the Senates version.

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Freedom of Information bill to be taken up in July — Honasan

Virginia AAA baseball tournament: Freedom-South Riding falls to Kellam after unusual interference call

Freedom-South Ridings dizzying season of firsts might have been done in by an odd play at third Wednesday night in a 3-2 loss to Kellam in the Virginia AAA baseball quarterfinals at Old Dominion University in Norfolk.

The Eagles had the potential tying run on third with one out in the top of the sixth, and Coach Jason Treon was about to send senior pinch runner Nick Plesce home on a one-out sacrifice fly to left. But Treon touched Plesce, an interference call that resulted in an automatic out that ended the inning.

It would have been bang-bang at the plate, Treon said. Nick went back to tag right away. I got a little too close communication-wise and got tangled up.

Freedom, the first Loudoun County team to advance to the state tournament, went down in order in the seventh.

We have a group of seven seniors who should be proud of themselves for helping put our program on the map, said Treon, whose team won the Cedar Run District regular season and tournament championships in its first year of AAA competition.

The Eagles (18-8) won nine straight games before ending their season with consecutive losses, to Hylton in the Northwest Region final and then to Kellam, a team they out-hit, 7-3.

Freedom took a 1-0 lead on the Eastern Region champions in the top of the first on an RBI double by junior Colin Dean. The Eagles squandered a leadoff double by senior Matt Malacane in the top of the fourth when he was retired at third on a sacrifice bunt, but they got another double by Malacane with one out in the sixth. Junior Zach Newell then walked and junior Kevin Dean singled to make it 3-2.

Kellam (25-2) advanced to face James River (19-7) in a state semifinal at 7 p.m. Friday at Westfield. Lake Braddock (24-3) and Hylton (21-4) will meet in a semifinal at 3 p.m. Friday.

The championship is at 3 p.m. Saturday at Westfield.

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Virginia AAA baseball tournament: Freedom-South Riding falls to Kellam after unusual interference call

Eugenics in the House

Its certainly not a celebratory moment, but heres a cheer, nonetheless, for the state House and its important vote this week to set aside up to $10 million to compensate victims of North Carolinas former sterilization program. Involuntarily sterilized people mostly women but some men as well are eligible for $50,000 payments once their cases are verified; so far, there are 118 verified living victims.

The bill now goes to the Senate, which should approve it promptly so that at long last the sterilization victims can have a measure, if not a full measure, of recompense.

Theres a lot of history behind that 86-31 House vote on Tuesday. Starting in the 1930s, the N.C. Eugenics Board ran a program to sterilize people in mental hospitals and schools for troubled youths. Later the program focused on people on welfare. Some of the sterilizations were indeed voluntary (this was before the days of reliable birth control) but many others were not. And while other states had similar programs, ours was unusually extensive (third in the U.S. in total number of people sterilized) and long-lasting (into the 1970s).

The various states sterilization programs, which Americans today view with something akin to horror, did not seem that way to most people at the time. These were days particularly during the pre-Nazi Holocaust days when educated Americans talked openly of the dangers of enfeeblement and about selectively improving the human race.

In North Carolina the Human Betterment League, created by corporate leaders, proudly proclaimed that North Carolina offers its citizens protection in the form of selective sterilization. Its efforts, commencing after World War II, resulted in an upturn in state-conducted sterilizations. Over the decades, more than 7,000 North Carolinians were sterilized. Most were white, although African-Americans were sterilized in disproportionately large numbers.

The effort to bring the involuntary sterilizations to light, and then to obtain compensation, began several years ago. Many people and organizations deserve credit; a special nod goes to the Winston-Salem Journal for its reporting and advocacy. In contrast, those in the House who this week ducked responsibility for even the relatively few still-living victims of a grievously harmful state action are due no credit at all.

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Eugenics in the House

Ecosystem Services in the Pacific Coastal Temperate Rainforest of North America – Video

06-06-2012 12:19 April 19, 2012 - Session developed by Brad Ewing (Alaska Coastal Rainforest Center). Presentations by Trista Patterson (USFS PNW Research Station), Colin Beier (SUNY), Steve Colt (U. of Alaska Anchorage), David Saah (Spatial Analytics Informatics Group), Marc Conte (Stanford University), and Sarah Klain (U. of British Columbia) Session Abstract: The Pacific coastal temperate rainforest of North America provides a wide range of ecosystem services that are vital to human health and livelihood. Collectively, these services can be grouped into the following categories: provisioning (eg food, forest products, and fresh water), regulating (eg carbon sequestration, purification of water and air, and pest control), supporting (eg soil formation, nutrient cycling, and primary production), and cultural services (eg recreation, scientific discovery, and spiritual enlightenment). This session will include presentations on (1) incorporating demands for ecosystem services—alongside studies that focus on increasing or maintaining the supply of ecosystem services—to increase the value of various initiatives throughout the region, (2) integrating supply-side and demand-side measures of ecosystem services to inform adaptive management, (3) utilizing ecosystem service valuations to inform policy decision making, (4) quantifying, throughout the chain of production, the impacts from shifting to wood-based energy in rural communities, (5) utilizing economics and ecosystem services to inform ...

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Ecosystem Services in the Pacific Coastal Temperate Rainforest of North America - Video

Delta Tree House Demonstrates “Smart Green Life” at Computex

TAIPEI, Taiwan--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

With the theme Smart Green Life and an eco-friendly and energy-saving tree house the Delta Group demonstrated their latest green consumer products and services at the 2012 Computex show in Taipei. Featuring mobile power, LED lighting, video conference image systems and network application systems, Delta demonstrated highly efficient energy-saving solutions via scenario applications. Also, the Magic Cable Trio 3-in-1 charge & sync cable from Deltas consumer power brand, Innergie, also received the highest honor Gold Award at the COMPUTEX TAIPEI design & innovation awards today.

Deltas Vice Chairman and CEO Yancey Hai indicated that the theme Smart Green Life and the Delta tree house represent how people can coexist with nature through intelligent green building technologies and energy-saving technologies. The smart green life scenarios at Deltas exhibit demonstrate its latest green products and services, and communicates the Delta brand spirit Smarter. Greener. Together. through actual applications.

At the exhibition Delta is also promoting tips on energy-saving from the Delta Electronics Foundation. Visitors may scan a QR Code using a smart phone or flat panel mobile device to obtain the seven energy-saving tips.

In the living room area, Deltas Seamless Screen Switchable Multimedia System allows anywhere-to-anywhere enjoyment of audio and visual entertainment wirelessly and with multimedia control in the kitchen, study or other areas. For lighting, Deltas LED lighting designs are used for the outdoor energy-saving lighting system and for the indoor light source reducing electricity consumption by 90%. Deltas wind power system and solar energy modules supply endless green electricity. Deltas electric vehicle is also charging on the lawn with charging facilities that conform to various international specifications.

In the studio, the combination of Deltas extreme short throw projection and interactive sensing frame projection technology projects a 97-inch picture within just around 7cm. The extreme short throw projection design is convenient for presentations or discussions and keeps the user free from the projected light source. In the study, the portable Qumi-Q5 HD micro-projection system, projects a 90-inch picture, while Deltas uninterruptible power system protects personal computers and peripheral accessories even in an environment with unstable voltage.

Innergie Magic Cable Trio for Smarter Mobile Power

The Magic Cable Trio from Deltas consumer power brand, Innergie, has received the Gold Award for the COMPUTEX TAIPEI design & innovation awards. The design of the smart 3-in-1 connector combines three types of connectors for Mini USB, Micro USB and Apple products onto one single USB cable. The single cable may be used for charging or synchronized operations for smart phones, flat panel computers, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and other Mini or Micro USB devices. The Magic Cable Trio is another innovative power solution product from Innergie that allows mobile users to easily charge anytime and anywhere.

Intelligent Wireless Multimedia Convenience

Delta displayed its family and vehicle entertainment system, the Seamless Screen Switchable Multimedia System for the first time. The new system integrates video conference and network systems allowing the user to relocate and enjoy multimedia anywhere-to-anywhere via wireless transmission and multimedia control. With support for various portable devices and smart phones, the user can edit and operate the interface with just one touch. The Seamless Screen Switchable Multimedia System is also ideal for vehicles and tourist coaches, meeting rooms, and family entertainment systems.

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Delta Tree House Demonstrates “Smart Green Life” at Computex

BP oil spill disrupted microbes on Gulf Coast beaches, new research shows

Communities of microbial organisms - including nematode worms, single cell animals called protists, and a variety of fungi - that live in the sediment of beaches on Grand Isle, Dauphin Island and elsewhere along the Gulf of Mexico underwent dramatic changes in the months immediately following the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, according to a new study published today in the online scientific journal PLos ONE.

The variety of organisms in beach sand that form one of the lowest links in the Gulf's food chain dropped dramatically several months after the spill, with the remaining species believed to favor those that munch on oily hydrocarbons and are better able to survive the polluted conditions that others species found unlivable, the researchers with the University of New Hampshire's Hubbard Center for Genome Studies and its partners found.

"We went from this very diverse community with an abundance of different organisms to this really (impoverished)community that was really dominated by a couple of fungal species," said Holly Bik, a computational biologist and lead author of the study, who recently moved from the University of New Hampshire to the University of California at Davis.

The results were especially shocking for Dauphin Island, Bik said, because the post-spill samples were taken from what looked like a pristine beach.

"If you dug down in the sand, maybe you could find a discolored layer of oil in the beach, but there were no tarballs," she said. "It was like a ghost town, no tourists, but if you'd been in a media blackout for the previous six months, you wouldn't have even known there had been a spill."

The researchers tested the beach samples for DNA, collecting 1.2 million separate DNA sequences from the different locations. The research was conducted under a grant from the National Science Foundation.

"We go to the beach and take a spoonful of sand and put it in a blender and extract all the DNA from everything that's living in there,"said Bik, who also commented on her research as it was occurring on the web at Deep Sea News.

Using chemical tests, the scientists extracted the equivalent of DNA bar codes from the samples and compared them to known codes from the life forms that live on beaches.

In the pre-spill samples, the bar codes showed a rich variety of species. But the post-spill samples from both Dauphin Island and Grand Isle, which had more clear evidence of oiling, were near-matches for the dramatically reduced number of species, Bik said.

"The fungal communities at Grand Isle were very similar to the communities we found on the Alabama coast," she said, and indicated a disturbed microcommunity.

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BP oil spill disrupted microbes on Gulf Coast beaches, new research shows

Artificial noses as diseases busters

ScienceDaily (June 6, 2012) Artificial noses have, until now, been used to detect diseases such as urinary tract infection, Helicobacter pylori, tuberculosis, ear, nose and throat conditions and even lung cancer. They have also been clinically tested for use in continuous monitoring of different disease stages.

Now, a multidisciplinary research team with eight European partners is collaborating under a EU-funded project called Bioelectronic Olfactory Neuron Device, dubbed BOND. Their aim is to develop a very sensitive and selective device that can detect and distinguish different types of smells.

This system relies on functionalized electrodes binding to olfactory receptors capable of sending tiny electric signals, which are subsequently detected and amplified. The challenge is to develop whole new arrays of olfactory receptors to process different smells for different diseases.

Its applications are manifold. For example, prostate cancer could be detected through the analysis of urine samples. The project researchers combined artificial intelligence with sensing technologies to design noses that display greater performance than currently available olfactory technology.

The efforts of the EU research consortium to detect diseases through an electronic nose in patients urine are not isolated. Other researchers at the University of Warwick, UK, developed an electronic nose sensing volatile organic compounds from urine as a means to separate patients with diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease and controls.

Artificial noses represent a non-invasive, rapid diagnosis tool, which could allow quick disease screening and ultimately significantly transform diagnostics.

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Artificial noses as diseases busters

The Aerospace Sector in Sonora, Mexico is the Subject of Offshore Group Podcast

TUCSON, Ariz., June 07, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The aerospace industry in Sonora, Mexico, and its more than a decade development trajectory is the subject of the latest of The Offshore Group's podcasts on Mexico manufacturing and other business topics.

In the interview, Gale Thompson, a longtime maquiladora industry veteran and vice president of international operations of The Offshore Group, speaks in detail of his experiences at the forefront of Sonora's decade plus effort to develop the aerospace manufacturing base that it has in place today.

According to Thompson, "Although at first many were skeptical of Mexican industry's ability to manufacture complex, high-precision aerospace parts, the country has proven, in a relatively short period of time, that it has what it takes in terms of the physical, educational and human infrastructure to become one of the premier suppliers to the global aerospace industry in the coming years."

Sonora is located in Northwest Mexico, bordered by the states of Chihuahua to the east, Baja California to the northwest and Sinaloa to the south. To the north, it shares the U.S.- Mexico border with the states of Arizona and New Mexico, and on the west has a significant share of the coastline of the Gulf of California. Information on its economy and business environment can be found on its Economic Development Council's website.

The Offshore Group is the largest provider of outsourced business support, "shelter" services in Mexico. Currently 61 businesses operate at The Offshore Group's three Mexico manufacturing industrial parks in the State of Sonora, the city of Saltillo, Coahuila, and at the Group's Vangtel subsidiary in Hermosillo. Vangtel offers Mexico shelter services to companies that occupy the call center, IT development and BPO markets, while the International Logistic Solutions Company (ILS) is a leading provider of supply chain services. The Offshore Group has recently initiated operations in Mexico's second largest city, Guadalajara. Sign up to receive information via Offshore Group RSS Feeds.

This press release was issued through 24-7PressRelease.com. For further information, visit http://www.24-7pressrelease.com.

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The Aerospace Sector in Sonora, Mexico is the Subject of Offshore Group Podcast

Jugaad innovators don't plan – they improvise

Jugaad innovators don't plan - they improvise By demonstrating agility, jugaad innovators can deal with unanticipated challenges faster and seize unexpected opportunities-such as changing customer needs-more swiftly than their competitors Jugaad Innovation / Jun 04, 2012, 00:45 IST

Emerging markets are characterized by high volatility. Economic circumstances are constantly changing. Growth rates are often in double digits, and the competitive landscape is often shifting. New laws and regulations are constantly being put into place, and policy is constantly evolving. So jugaad innovators need to experiment as they go along and be willing to try multiple options, rather than adopting one approach at the start and sticking to it thereafter. Unlike their counterparts in Silicon Valley, jugaad innovators do not attempt to work everything out in advance or rely on a business plan to determine the mid- to long-term roadmap for their new ventures. Instead, they improvise their next course of action as circumstances change, and they do so from within a framework of deep knowledge and passion. Their approach is in fact more akin to a jazz band than to an orchestra: everything is improvised, fluid, and dynamic. As such, their strategies are organic and emergent rather than predetermined. Jugaad innovators flexible thinkingtheir ability to improviseserves them especially well when confronted with adversity.

Given their propensity for improvisation, jugaad innovators dont rely on forecasting tools like scenario planning, as many companies do, to assess future risks. They believe in Murphys Lawanything that can go wrong will go wrongso whats the point of anticipating every single obstacle that might appear down the road? Jugaad innovators dont have a Plan B, let alone a Plan C. Rather, when confronted with an unexpected hindrance, they rely on their innate ability to improvise an effective solution to overcome it, given the circumstances at that time.

In 2007, however, local farmers began protesting against the acquisition of land for the factory. The dispute rapidly escalated into a political issue and caught Tata Motors off guard. As the protests intensified through 2008, Ravi Kant, then managing director of Tata Motors (and later its non-executive vice chairman) made a bold decision. He set aside his firms prior manufacturing plans and swiftly shifted the production of the Nano to Sanand, in the investor-friendly state of Gujarat, on the other side of the country. He didnt hire a management consultant to advise him on the move; he just trusted his instinct that this was the right thing to do, given the circumstances. In just fourteen months (compared to the expected twenty-eight months for the Singur plant), Tata Motors built a new factory in Sanand, Gujarat. The new factory began production of Nanos in June 2010.

One year later, Ravi Kant and his team had to demonstrate the ability to adapt to rapidly changing circumstances yet again: the Nanos werent selling as well as expected. Monthly sales had fallen well below the optimistic forecast of twenty thousand units. Rather than being disappointed by the Nanos lackluster performance, Tata Motors leadership used this early market feedback to improvise a plan to shore up sales. Ratan Tata originally envisioned a distributed supply chain model whereby Tata Motors would dispatch flat packs to local entrepreneurs across the country, who would do the final assembly of Nanos close to customers thus creating gainful employment in local communities. With flagging sales, however, this original vision had to be revised: Tata Motors executives went back to the drawing board and quickly revamped Nanos logistics network to a more straightforward one, which involved manufacture and assembly at one site in Gujarat, and distribution through a traditional dealer network throughout the country. But again Tata Motors hit a snag: rural customers such as farmers were not venturing into Tata Motors showrooms in small towns. Among other things, they felt intimidated by dealers dressed in suits and ties.

This setback led Tata Motors management to redesign their rural showrooms to make them more informal-for example by staffing them with casually attired salesmen who could pitch the Nano to Indian farmers over a cup of chai. Tata Motors also launched a nationwide TV campaign and began offering consumer financing at highly attractive rates to lure frugal Indian consumers. By constantly adapting and refining its business modeland implementing changes within weeks, not monthsTata Motors invigorated sales of the Nano, which, although still lower than expected, are gradually beginning to pick up. Indeed, it is very likely that the future success of the car will depend on more such quick adaptation and flexible thinking by the managers of Tata Motors.

Jugaad innovators experiment with multiple ways to reach a goal Unpredictability is the norm in emerging markets. Because of diversity and rapid change, it is hard to predict how consumers will respond to new products and services-and how new business strategies will perform in, say, rural markets. Jugaad innovators may have a single-minded vision of where they want to get to, but they must be willing to try different paths to get there. Specifically, they must be willing to keep experimenting in order to attain their goalsand they must be flexible enough to quickly switch from one path to another along the way.

Dr Mohan, for instance, experimented with a number of different ways to frugally yet effectively engage rural communities both as consumers (patients) and employees. When he first sent his expensive technicians from his city hospital to work in remote villages, he found that these techniciansalthough highly competentwould soon leave, wanting to return to city life. Learning this, he developed a training curriculum in his city hospital to impart to young men and women from villages the basic skills they need as healthcare workers. After about three months, these newly trained healthcare professionals would return to their rural homes, where they were more likely to want to remain. This in turn helped reduce costs and turnover in Dr Mohans model. Dr Mohan had a similar experience with his attempts to work with non-traditional partners to develop a cost-effective tele-medicine platform. Although he initially contemplated partnering with more typicaland expensivetechnology providers, Dr Mohan eventually linked up with ISRO, which provides his roaming tele-medicine van with a free satellite uplink to his clinic in the city of Chennai.

Jugaad innovators act with speed and agility In emerging markets, new threats and opportunities can emerge from out of the blue. This forces jugaad innovators to not only think but also act flexibly. By demonstrating agility, jugaad innovators can deal with unanticipated challenges faster and seize unexpected opportunitiessuch as changing customer needsmore swiftly than their competitors. Zhang Ruimin is one such jugaad innovator who thinks and acts quickly.

Zhang, is the CEO of Haier, a Chinese consumer goods company that is making appliance makers like GE and Whirlpool nervous. Under Zhangs leadership, Haier has, in the space of a decade, made huge inroads into North American and European markets by selling quality appliances at lower prices than those of Western suppliers like Whirlpool and GE. Armed with its value for money strategy, Haier is disrupting the consumer goods market not only in mainstream segments like air-conditioners and washing machines, but also in niche segments like wine coolers. For instance, Haier launched a $704 (Rs 35,200) wine cooler that is less than half the cost of industry leader La Sommelires product. Within two years of this launch, Haier has grown the market by a whopping 10,000 percent and now controls 60 percent of the US market by value. By leveraging its value for money strategy, Haier has also rapidly established a strong presence in the Indian home appliances market, where it commands 8 percent of market share. In coming years, Haier aims to grow its Indian market share to at least 10 percent and achieve Rs 4,500 crore in revenue and become one of the top five brands in India by 2014.

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Jugaad innovators don't plan - they improvise

PFINGSTEN: Class of 2012 salutatorian has big plans

Considering his roots, Caleb Ashbrook's plan to enlist in medical school and then the Navy makes good sense: One grandfather served with the Marines in Vietnam, and the other was a Medical Corps veteran and ophthalmologist who started a nonprofit to provide eye surgeries for the poor around the world.

As one of this year's most accomplished seniors, Ashbrook, 18, will take the stage as salutatorian next week to welcome thousands of people to Fallbrook High School's 2012 commencement.

I sat down with Ashbrook in the bleachers at Warriors Stadium on Monday as he explained that his 4.5 grade-point average has been the result of a lifelong dream and more than a little competitiveness.

"I've known that I wanted to go into the medical field from a really young age, so I kind of knew that if I wanted to get into a (good) university, that's what I needed to do," he said, adding with a grin: "I also like being able to say I'm number one or two" in the grade books.

At every high school, each class of graduates delivers a few shining examples of academic and athletic accomplishment, and Ashbrook certainly fits the bill.

As an athlete, he played on the soccer, golf and cross-country teams, overcoming a recent knee surgery to repair a torn meniscus.

His academic record is spotless ---- expect nothing less from a kid whose mother runs her own kindergarten ---- and he is wrapping up a term as the student representative to the school board.

Recalling a few late-night board meetings, I asked Ashbrook if he had fallen asleep yet, and he laughed knowingly.

"During the financials, it gets pretty bad, I'm not gonna lie," he said.

But it has been an interesting year to be sitting at the table, he added: "There's been some interesting stuff going on with all the cuts. They had to make, like, $2 million in cuts ---- I'd never wrapped my head around how much money this school has to deal with. I didn't even know how much we cost."

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PFINGSTEN: Class of 2012 salutatorian has big plans

MU medical school dean resigns as school is under investigation

The dean who was hired less than three years ago to fix problems at the University of Missouri School of Medicine has resigned as the school faces a federal fraud investigation.

Dr. Robert Churchill will leave the university in October to prevent further distractions surrounding the investigation of two of the school's radiologists, according to MU officials.

The radiologists, Dr. Kenneth Rall and Dr. Michael Richards, were dismissed Friday as part of the shake-up after an internal audit found the doctors illegally billed Medicare for services performed by resident doctors in training.

A law firm conducted the audit for the university after the U.S. Attorney's Office in Kansas City notified the school in November 2011 of its investigation into potential Medicare fraud. Rall stepped down as radiology department chairman in December, but stayed on as a professor.

"We were shocked and disappointed to learn about this, because any kind of fraud is entirely inconsistent with our health system's values, our mission, and our commitment to patient care," said Dr. Harold Williamson Jr., vice chancellor of the University of Missouri Health System, in a statement.

Both radiologists have clean records with the Missouri State Board of Registration for the Healing Arts, which licenses and regulates doctors.

Department of Justice spokesman Don Ledford said the agency doesn't discuss pending investigations.

In what it calls the early stages of its own investigation, school officials said they have not turned up any evidence that radiology patients were harmed.

Resident physicians are allowed to read patients' X-rays, but cannot bill Medicare for the procedure unless the images are also analyzed by a supervising doctor.

"We believe these two doctors sometimes claimed that they had actually completed this second review without actually looking at the image," Williamson said in the statement.

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MU medical school dean resigns as school is under investigation

Safed medical school to place students in northern hospitals as doctors' assistants

Students at the medical school in Safed will work as doctors' assistants and serve patients in northern hospitals as part of a new program launched by the school, Haaretz has learned.

Safed medical school, the country's fifth medical school, which opened in November as a branch of Bar-Ilan University, will place students in hospitals as doctors' assistants beginning next year. Students will work from 4 P.M. to 11 P.M. in Poriya Hospital in Tiberias, Rebecca Sieff Hospital in Safed and Western Galilee Hospital in Nahariya. They will admit patients into the wards, but treatment will be administered by doctors.

Health Ministry director general Ronni Gamzu has notified hospital directors in the north that the ministry will support the project with a sum of NIS 1 million, about half the estimated cost. Gamzu wrote that this sum is significantly higher than what has been given to similar programs enabling students to take part in hospital activity in the central region. "There is no such [funding] in Sheba [Medical Center] and Ichilov [Hospital] together," Gamzu wrote.

However, the ministry is still looking for ways to finance the program, and ministry officials said "the issue is still under debate."

According to Ran Tur-Kaspa, dean of faculty in Safed, "The students will be called doctors' assistants, admit the interns to the wards and later present the cases to the doctor on evening duty, who will decide what treatment to give the patients."

Only students who complete their clinical training in internal wards will be employed as doctors' assistants.

The faculty had considered canceling a program intended for Israeli medical students abroad, who are set to begin their clinical training in northern hospitals in about a year, as these hospitals are already training students with bachelor's degrees, Tur-Kaspa said. "But following discussions we decided to continue the program that helps Israeli medical students abroad to return to Israel for their final study years," he said.

Some 50 out of 300 Israeli medical students abroad who have applied to the Safed medical school have been admitted for next year's studies. These students are planning to return to Israel for their last three years of study.

The registration process for the four-year program for students who hold a bachelor's degree is still underway.

Within four years, 200 doctors are expected to graduate from the Safed medical school. By 2015, 150 doctors are expected to graduate each year.

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Safed medical school to place students in northern hospitals as doctors' assistants

James A. Shapiro: Can Cells Bias Natural Genetic Engineering Toward Useful Evolutionary Outcomes?

A few blogs ago I asked, "Where, in fact, do 'the good ones' really come from?" By "good ones" I meant useful genome changes in evolution. This question stimulated some debate about whether it was possible to distinguish good changes from bad changes before they occur.

In the abstract, this may seem an overwhelmingly difficult problem. But if we think a bit about the highly organized state of the genome and non-random natural genetic engineering, biasing changes toward "good ones" becomes more conceivable.

I have already discussed purposeful, targeted changes in the immune system. The immune system illustrates how efficiently cells can target DNA restructuring by recognizing specific sequences and coupling DNA changes to transcription (copying DNA sequence into RNA).

Some evolutionists object that a somatic process like antibody synthesis provides no model for germline changes in evolution. So let's examine natural genetic engineering events in microbial cells. We'll look at mobile genetic elements targeted in ways that increase their evolutionary potential.

Mobile genetic elements come in many forms. Some operate purely as DNA. Others make an RNA copy and reverse transcribe it back into DNA as it inserts at a new location. Elements that move, or transpose, to multiple new locations are called "transposons" or "retrotransposons" (if they use an RNA intermediate).

Other mobile elements only insert in particular locations by a process called "site-specific" recombination. In bacterial evolution, this process is used in specialized structures called "integrons" that capture casettes containing protein coding sequences for antibiotic resistance, pathogenicity, and other functions.

What all mobile elements share are proteins that aid them to cut and splice DNA chains so that they can construct novel sequences, much as human genetic engineers do in their test tubes. These proteins have various names, such as "recombinase," "transposase," and "integrase." It is the specificity of the cutting reactions involving these proteins that determines where a mobile element moves in the genome.

One fascinating case of highly biased integration is the bacterial transposon Tn7. Tn7 has two specialized proteins to target its transposition. The TnsD protein directs Tn7 to insert into a special "attTn7" site in the chromosomes of many bacterial species where it does not disrupt any host functions and so causes no deleterious effects.

Another, more interesting protein, TnsE, directs Tn7 to insert into replicating DNA molecules. The reason this is important is that transmissible plasmids replicate their DNA as they transfer from one cell to another. TnsE targeting to plasmids in transit to new cells thus enhances the spread of Tn7 and the resistances it carries to many different kinds of bacteria.

Tn7 carries its antibiotic resistance determinants in an integron. Integrons and their recombinase proteins are likewise specialized to participate in plasmid spreading through bacterial populations. Plasmids enter new cells as single-stranded DNA. We learned just in 2005 that integron site-specific recombinases are special in operating on single-stranded DNA, not double-stranded molecules like previously studied recombinases. Moreover, integron recombinase synthesis is triggered by the entrance of single-stranded DNA into a cell. So integron activity is intimately linked in more than one way to plasmid transfer.

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James A. Shapiro: Can Cells Bias Natural Genetic Engineering Toward Useful Evolutionary Outcomes?

Councils protect their growers from Genetic Engineering

7 June 2012

Councils protect their growers from GE

In the vacuum of inaction left by the National Government, local councils are having to lead the way in keeping New Zealand free of genetic engineering, the Green Party said today.

Hastings District Council have given official support to the GE free movement, voting unanimously in support of a proposal to declare the district GE free.

This is an exciting move made by the Hastings District Council but they have been forced to take this action because the National Government is refusing to, said the Green Party GE spokesperson Steffan Browning.

This region by region approach will be able to protect some growers but is not the real solution New Zealand needs.

The growers in the Hawkes Bay have identified that they need to be able to reap the significant branding benefits of being able to market GE free food, said Mr Browning.

These producers are receiving demand for GE free products and we need to be protecting their market for them

There are not sufficient liability protections for non GE growers should their produce get contaminated.

Farmers in Australia are already experiencing loss of income due to contamination by GE crops.

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Councils protect their growers from Genetic Engineering

Baby in womb's entire gene code mapped

A MAJOR scientific breakthrough has enabled the mapping of an unborn baby's entire genetic code using DNA taken from its parents.

Scientists at Seattle's University of Washington said their new technique could make it possible to scan for 3500 genetic disorders before birth, ABC News reported today.

The amniocentesis procedure currently used to diagnose disorders in babies - including Down's Syndrome, spina bifida, cystic fibrosis and muscular dystrophy - is invasive for the mother and can cause a miscarriage.

In the groundbreaking new research, scientists harnessed tiny traces of a baby's free-floating DNA, found in the 18-week pregnant mother's blood. They then tested DNA from her blood sample and DNA from the father's saliva.

By using these pieces of the genetic jigsaw puzzle, researchers were able to reconstruct the entire genetic code of the unborn baby boy. They were then able to see what spontaneous genetic mutations had arisen.

Scientists conceded that the breakthrough raised "many ethical questions" because early detection of disorders in babies could be used as a basis for abortion, an issue that was immediately raised by pro-life campaigners, The (London) Daily Telegraph reported.

"This is an incredible breakthrough with huge ethical implications," Art Caplan, a professor of medical ethics at University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, told ABC News.

Published in the Science Translational Medicine journal, the study was able to identify 39 of 44 "de novo", or new, genetic mutations before the baby was born. De novo mutations are not inherited from the parents and are responsible for a large percentage of genetic disorders. They are also thought to play a role in conditions like autism and schizophrenia.

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Baby in womb's entire gene code mapped