Channel Islands rushes past San Marcos

The Channel Islands High football team didn't miss a beat with two of its stars sidelined on Friday night.

A.J. Oto picked up big yardage and scored two touchdowns to lift the Raiders to a 28-0 non-league win over visiting San Marcos.

Richard Gray suffered a knee injury in last week's 31-0 loss at Royal. Gray had racked up 300 yards rushing on 34 carries in three games.

Behind the tandem of Oto and Paul Vasquez, the Raiders ran wild.

The Raiders (2-2) jumped to a quick 7-0 lead on a 73-yard run by Oto on the first play from scrimmage. Edel Hernandez kicked the first of four PATS.

Josh Carrera, Javier Vasquez, Vince Ines and Jose Machado blocked well for Channel Islands.

"We turned it all around tonight," said Channel Islands coach Gary Porter."A.J. just exploded out on the first play of the game."

In the second quarter, Vasquez added to the scoring show with as 68-yard run.

Oto scored his second TD with a 65-yard dash to make 21-0 with 3:27 left in the first half. Oto rushed for 182 yards on 14carries.

Channel Islands had 293 yards rushing in the first half against San Marcos (1-3). The Royals were coming off their first win last week 40-20 over Hueneme but couldn't stop the offensive surge.

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Channel Islands rushes past San Marcos

Barnabas Health President Calls Current Health Care System Chaotic – Video

21-09-2012 12:43 Health care has been in the national spotlight, as well as in New Jersey, with the passage of the Affordable Care Act and changes to hospital structures. Barnabas Health President and CEO Barry Ostrowsky told NJ Today Managing Editor Mike Schneider that while care has improved, the current state of health care is chaotic. For more New Jersey news, visit NJ Today online at

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Barnabas Health President Calls Current Health Care System Chaotic - Video

Family Physicians Are 'Linchpin' of Health Care Reform Efforts

Although the overall increase in health care costs in the United States has slowed recently, there still is an overwhelming consensus that the cost of health care in this country is unsustainable and more must be done to improve the quality of care. In response to this growing crisis, public and private payers have launched scores of innovative health care delivery and payment models designed to reward the value of health care services instead of the volume of services.

"We all agree that family physicians are among the most valuable people on the planet," he adds.

Nichols, like other analysts, describes primary care as the "linchpin of patient engagement." Most of the emerging payment and delivery models attempt to strengthen and incentivize primary care as a way of controlling costs and improving care, he says.

In fact, many of the nation's largest health payers have launched initiatives, such as the patient-centered medical home (PCMH), in local, regional and statewide markets, either separately or in conjunction with state programs to form multipayer collaboratives. These private payers include UnitedHealthCare, CIGNA, WellPoint Inc., Aetna, Humana, and Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

The ability of primary care to deliver on the promise of improved care, greater access and better controlled costs is well known and documented, fueling increased interest and investments in primary care. North Carolina's Medicaid managed care program, Community Care of North Carolina (CCNC), serves as one of the most potent examples of how a primary care-based delivery model can restrain growth in health care costs and improve care.

CCNC uses physician-led networks and the PCMH to provide care to the state's Medicaid patients. The program started with nine pilot projects covering 250,000 Medicaid enrollees in 1999 and has since expanded to 14 physician-led networks, 4,500 primary care physicians, and more than 1,400 medical homes that cover the entire state and provide care to 1.1 million enrollees.

According to North Carolina officials, CCNC has saved the state more than $1 billion in Medicaid costs during the past several years, emerging as an influencer of quality initiatives in North Carolina and a model for other states to consider.

For example, the Affordable Care Act created the CMS Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, (CMMI) to develop and test innovative health care payment and delivery models that slow Medicare and Medicaid cost growth, as well as costs for the Children's Health Insurance Program.

During the past several months, the CMMI has launched various innovations, including the Comprehensive Primary Care initiative, a pilot program that has CMS working with commercial and state health insurance plans to support primary care practices that deliver coordinated and seamless care based on the tenets of the PCMH.

The voluntary initiative is scheduled to begin as a demonstration project in seven health care markets across the country. The 500 participating primary care practices will be paid based on a blended payment model that combines fee-for-service (FFS) with a per-patient, per-month care coordination fee ranging from $8 to $40. Participating practices also have an opportunity to participate in shared savings from the project.

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Family Physicians Are 'Linchpin' of Health Care Reform Efforts

Businesses join up to try to bring down health care costs

North Carolina businesses have formed a working group to look for ways to lower health care costs, as the expense of providing coverage continues to rise for both employers and employees.

The North Carolina Business Group on Health includes 45 companies, employing some 100,000 workers in the state. Charlotte-based companies such as Piedmont Natural Gas and Polypore are members of the group, which is modeled on health care business groups in other states, such as Rhode Island and Connecticut.

The group held a meeting last week in Greensboro. They plan to kick off a contest next year called Step Up Carolinas, which will encourage employees to lose weight and exercise.

They say North Carolina lags in measures such as the use of electronic medical records and the adoption of primary care-focused medicine. Part of the groups goal is to identify and share best practices, so members can try to keep their costs down.

Employers and employees share in the cost of providing health care, so anything we can do to lower costs of health care benefits both, said John Hulla, a Polypore executive and the business groups employee engagement chair.

Renee Metzler, a Piedmont Natural Gas executive and president of Step Up Carolinas, said the costs of health care are driving employers with greater urgency to cut costs themselves by trying to make their employees healthier.

Employers started going down this road because of the costs and because health care costs are just getting out of control, she said. Youve still got to try to impact the overall cost, either improving the health and preventing disease or better managing conditions when an employee does get a disease.

A recent survey from human resources consulting company Mercer, which is one of the sponsors of the North Carolina group, found employers expect their total health benefit cost per employee to rise 5.7 percent this year. Thats on top of a 6.1 percent increase in 2011, well ahead of both inflation and wages.

To help deal with the costs, Polypore is starting a program to give employees who take a health risks assessment discounts on their health insurance premiums and prizes if they sign up for programs such as Weigh Watchers or smoking cessation.

Metzler said Piedmont has seen its health insurance claims fall since instituting similar wellness programs for employees. Wellness now factors into the company scorecard that drives employee incentive payouts.

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Businesses join up to try to bring down health care costs

Madison health care to emphasize end of life care discussions

MADISON - Madisons health care systems will encourage patients and families to talk more about end-of-life care decisions, in an effort organized by the Wisconsin Medical Society and modeled after a pioneering program in La Crosse.

Instead of merely asking patients if they have living wills or health care power of attorney documents, hospitals and clinics will offer advance care planning discussions, generally led by nurses, social workers or clergy.

Questions range from whether to resuscitate and ventilate to what kind of music and lighting patients want to be surrounded by near death.

Were going to make sure these conversations are offered, scheduled, had, documented and brought into the medical record, said John Maycroft, a medical society policy analyst leading the project.

The effort is based on the Respecting Choices program started in 1991 at Gundersen Lutheran Health System in La Crosse. The goal is to get more people to sign advanced care directives and talk about end-of-life choices long before they become ill.

Doing that in the hospital is not the best time, said Sue Sanford-Ring, vice president for quality and patient safety at UW Hospital, where she said much of the focus will be on patients coming to primary care clinics.

Doctors are not particularly good at this, said Dr. Geoff Priest, chief medical officer at Meriter Hospital. The time never seems to be quite right.

UW and Meriter are joining Dean Health System, St. Marys Hospital, Group Health Cooperative of south-central Wisconsin and the Madison Veterans Hospital in training staff to lead the discussions. In March, theyll start offering the talks to select groups of patients.

Fort HealthCare in Fort Atkinson, Community Care Inc. in Milwaukee and ProHealth Care in Waukesha are also participating. Organizations in northern Wisconsin will be invited to join next year before a statewide community outreach effort is launched in 2014, Maycroft said.

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Madison health care to emphasize end of life care discussions

Hospitals face challenges as reform looms

VOORHEES Whatever else they may think of the health care atmosphere, hospital executives agree that change is coming.

"We have a very tough period of adjustment," said John Sheridan, president and CEO of the Cooper Health System, which owns the hospital of the same name in Camden. "We all have our hands full."

Sheridan was one of five panelists discussing the state of the region's hospitalsas they face reforms imposed by the federal Affordable Care Act, the increasing costs of technology, and looming shortages in doctors and nurses.

The forum, "The State of Hospitals," was hosted by the Chamber of Commerce Southern New Jersey on Friday at the Mansion on Main Street.

About 150 people attended, a mix of business people that included bankers, engineers, lawyers and, not surprisingly, health care providers.

The executives agreed that there were many uncertainties flowing from the Affordable Care Act, which many consider the signature achievement of President Barack Obama and the Democrats in Washington. Many of the requirements will begin in 2014, such as mandatory insurance for all citizens.

"No matter what happens in the (presidential) election, we are in for a huge change in health care," said panelist Ron Johnson, president and CEO of the Shore Medical Center in Somers Point, Atlantic County.

Under the health care act, all Americans are required to have health insurance starting in 2014.

Johnsonreferred to the field as highly "schizophrenic" in terms of reimbursement for doctors and hospitals as well as spending.

"We're talking about cutting costs, but we're spending millions," he said.

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Hospitals face challenges as reform looms

Obama defends health care reforms

Tim Garraty/CNN

President Barack Obama and GOP vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan on Friday traded sharp criticism over health care reforms and Medicare, with each telling a leading advocacy group for senior citizens that the other was being untruthful.

"Contrary to what you've heard and what you may hear from subsequent speakers, Obamacare actually strengthened Medicare," the president told the AARP Liffe@50+ event, using the nickname for the 2010 Affordable Care Act that passed with no Republican support.

In particular, he called the claim by Ryan and other Republicans that $716 billion is being cut from Medicare to fund the health care bill "simply not true."

Ryan spoke to the same event shortly afterward, saying that Obama's contention that the health care law strengthened Medicare was "just not true," adding that the legislation "turned Medicare into a piggy bank for Obamacare."

The debate over Medicare is a major issue in the November election campaign, especially in the vital battleground state of Florida with its large population of senior citizens.

Ryan headed to Florida later Friday, while Obama campaigned in Virginia, Vice President Joe Biden spoke in New Hampshire and GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney headed to Las Vegas. All four states are considered up-for-grabs in the election less than seven weeks away.

In a separate development, Romney released details of his 2011 income tax return that showed he made $13.7 million last year and paid $1.94 million in federal taxes, giving him an effective tax rate of 14.1%, his campaign said.

The majority of the candidate's income last year came from his investments, Brad Malt, the trustee of Romney's blind trust, said in a blog post. The Romneys gave just over $4 million to charity.

In addition, the Romney campaign said his tax filings from 1990 to 2009 show that he and his wife paid 100% of the federal and state income taxes they owed and that their overall average annual effective federal tax rate was 20.2%.

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Obama defends health care reforms

Obama, Ryan trade charges on Obamacare and Medicare

Burmese opposition politician Aung San Suu Kyi, center, is presented with a U.S. Congressional Gold Medal by Speaker of the House John Boehner, left, as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, second left, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, right, look on during a presentation ceremony at the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in Washington. Aung San Suu Kyi was presented with the medal for her leadership and commitment to human rights and for promoting freedom, peace and democracy in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

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Obama, Ryan trade charges on Obamacare and Medicare

Campaign trail

Burmese opposition politician Aung San Suu Kyi, center, is presented with a U.S. Congressional Gold Medal by Speaker of the House John Boehner, left, as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, second left, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, right, look on during a presentation ceremony at the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in Washington. Aung San Suu Kyi was presented with the medal for her leadership and commitment to human rights and for promoting freedom, peace and democracy in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

Week in Politics: September 14 - 21

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Campaign trail

New Studies On Genetic Variations Offer Insights Into Origins Of Man

April Flowers for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

Thousands of years ago, a genetic mutation occurred which might be the answer to how early humans were able to move from central Africa and across the continent. This movement has been called the great expansion.

Three teams of researchers, from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and University of Washington School of Medicine, have analyzed genetic sequence variation patterns in different populations around the world. Their research, published this week in the online journal PLoS One, demonstrates that about 85,000 years ago, a critical genetic variant arose in a key gene cluster on chromosome 11, known as the fatty acid desaturase cluster (FADS).

This genetic variant would have allowed humans to convert plant-based polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) to brain PUFAs. The long-chain of PUFAs found in the brain are necessary for increased brain size, complexity and function, and the FADS cluster plays a critical role in determining how effectively medium-chain PUFAs in plants are converted.

According to archeological and genetic studies, Homo sapiens appeared approximately 180,000 years ago. For almost 100,000 years, our early ancestors tended to stay in one location close to bodies of water in central Africa. Scientists have hypothesized that this location was critical because early humans needed large amounts of the long-chain PUFA docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) commonly found in fish and shellfish in order to support complex brain function.

This may have kept early humans tethered to the water in central Africa where there was a constant food source of DHA, explained Dr. Floyd Chilton, director of the Center for Botanical Lipids and Inflammatory Disease Prevention at Wake Forest Baptist.

There has been considerable debate on how early humans were able to obtain sufficient DHA necessary to maintain brain size and complexity. Its amazing to think we may have uncovered the region of genetic variation that arose about the time that early humans moved out of this central region in what has been called the great expansion.

Under the intense pressure of natural section, this new trait was able to spread rapidly throughout the entire Homo sapiens population on the African continent.

The power of genetics continually impresses me, and I find it remarkable that we can make inferences about things that happened tens of thousands of years ago by studying patterns of genetic variation that exist in contemporary populations, said Dr. Joshua M. Akey from the University of Washington.

The most important result of this conversion was that humans no longer had to rely on just one food source, fish, for brain growth and development. This was particularly important because the genetic variant arose before organized hunting and fishing could have provided more reliable sources of long-chain PUFAs.

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New Studies On Genetic Variations Offer Insights Into Origins Of Man

Hawaii's best swimming and snorkelling beaches

Hawaii has some of the best and most famous beaches in the world, including Oahu's iconic Waikiki Beach. Some are only accessible by helicopter or watercraft, while others literally disappear under the high winter surf on the islands' north shores. But which beaches are the best for swimming and snorkelling?

- Kauai - Hanalei Bay Beach, with a nearly perfect semicircle of white sand and breathtaking backdrop of waterfalls and mountain peaks, is one of Kauai's most scenic swimming beaches. Kee Beach Park, with an offshore reef lagoon teeming with colourful fish, is a favourite snorkelling site.

- Oahu - Lanikai Beach, with a clean, wide white sand beach and crystal clear water, is considered by many among the top swimming beaches in Hawaii. Hanauma Bay is the most famous of Hawaii's snorkel-ling beaches and one of the best in the world, due to its high fish population.

- Lanai - Hulopoe Beach, with an expanse of golden sand and deep blue waters, has earned the title as one of America's best beaches. Clear waters and a variety of marine life make it ideal for swimming and snorkelling. . Molokai - Papohaku Beach is billed as Hawaii's largest white sand beach, and with very little foot traffic there's plenty of space to spread out, as well as enjoy the excellent swimming and snorkelling conditions.

- Maui - Kaanapali Beach, Maui's signature beach, is a swimmer's paradise with kilometres of white sand and easy access to beachfront hotels, shopping and dining. Black Rock Beach at the northern end of Kaanapali Beach, with an abundance of coral and tropical fish, is an excellent spot for snorkelling.

- Hawaii's Big Island - Hapuna Beach State Park, with white sand and clean, clear water has earned the reputation as one of Hawaii's finest swimming beaches. Kahaluu Beach Park, a tiny sheltered cove with a large tame fish population and shallow, calm water, is renowned for its excellent snorkelling.

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Hawaii's best swimming and snorkelling beaches

Surf life savers returning to beaches

As summer approaches, volunteer lifesavers are returning to beaches in New South Wales and Queensland to keep an eye on swimmers, surfers and fishermen.

Red and yellow flags will dot the coastal strip from now until the volunteer patrol season ends on April 28 next year.

Surf Life Saving NSW chief executive Phil Vanny says surf lifesavers spent more than 670-thousand hours a year patrolling beaches, and performed more than eight thousand rescues last season.

Mr Vanny says the statistics demonstrate the important service provided by Surf Life Savers in making our beaches safe for the community and visitors.

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Surf life savers returning to beaches

Royal Observatory Picks Best Astronomy Photos of the Year

Some of this years best images of the heavens include colliding galaxies, open star clusters, and frozen waterfalls beneath a twinkling night sky. All these photos are winners in the Royal Observatory Greenwichs annual Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition.

The competition is in its fourth year and growing, with a record 800 entrants submitting their cosmic photography. Winners were announced on Sept. 19 in four main categories Deep Space, Our Solar System, Earth and Space, and Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year and three special awards were also handed out.

The overall number one prize and top spot for the Deep Space category went to Martin Pugh for his amazing shot (above) of the Whirlpool Galaxy, which shows two galaxies colliding. Pugh also won in 2009 for his picture of the Horsehead nebula.

Other incredible images showed auroras, the Milky Way, and, particularly popular this year, the Transit of Venus. Being the last transit for 105 years, the event was highly photographed and the subject for two winners: Chris Warren, who won the Our Solar System category, and Paul Haese, who was ranked "highly commended" in the same group.

Here we take a look at all the winners, runners up, and highly commended images. If youd like to see the photos in person, they will be exhibited for free from now until Feb. 2013 at the Royal Observatory.

The following captions are courtesy of the Royal Observatory Greenwich.

Above:

This beautifully composed image of the Whirlpool Galaxy combines fine detail in the spiral arms with the faint tails of light that show its small companion galaxy being gradually torn apart by the gravity of its giant neighbour. A closer look shows even more distant galaxies visible in the background.

Image: Martin Pugh, winner for Deep Space and overall winner

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Royal Observatory Picks Best Astronomy Photos of the Year

7000 | Bad Astronomy

According to my software, this blog post you are reading is the 7000th article I have published on the Bad Astronomy Blog.

Wow.

Thats a lot of words. Its also a lot of astronomy, geekery, science, antiscience, web comics, puns, embiggenates, and "Holy Haleakala!"s (61, to be exact, plus this one to make 62).

I am generally not one to wade into maudlin celebrations of arbitrary numbers, so instead Ill celebrate this milestone by showing you something appropriate: the North America Nebula, taken by Mexican astronomer Csar Cant.

[Click to encontinentenate.]

Why is this appropriate? Because the New General Catalog of astronomical objects familiar to and used by astronomers across the planet lists it as entry number 7000.

And it should be obvious why its named as it is.

Of course, I cant leave you with just a pretty picture. This nebula is something of a mystery; we dont know how big it is or how far away it lies. In the sky, its very near the star Deneb which marks the tail of the swan constellation Cygnus and Deneb is a massive, hot, and luminous star. Its possible the gas in the nebula is glowing due to the light from Deneb; if so NGC 7000 is about 1800 light years away and over 100 light years across.

Its the site of furious star formation, too, with stars being born all along the bright sharp region which look like Mexico and Central America. The "Gulf of Mexico" region the darker area with fewer stars is actually the location of thick interstellar dust that blocks the light from the stars behind it. Visible light, that is; the dust glow in the infrared, so if you look at it with a telescope that sees IR like the Spitzer Space Telescope, what is invisible becomes ethereally visible:

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7000 | Bad Astronomy

Avascent to Sponsor First Wharton Aerospace & Technology West Conference in Silicon Valley

WASHINGTON, DC--(Marketwire - Sep 21, 2012) - Avascent will serve as a primary sponsor of The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania's first Aerospace & Technology West Conference, to be held on September 27, 2012 in San Francisco, CA. Avascent partners Jon Barney and Tim Wickham will also lead panel discussions on big data and cyber security.

Due to the increased reliance of federal defense and intelligence agencies on emerging technologies, Wharton has decided to bring the longstanding conference to Silicon Valley for the first time. The conference brings together senior-level industry executives, policy makers, and investors to discuss ways to further industry and government innovation and increase competitiveness in the face of growing rivals, such as China.

"We have been helping clients in technology, aerospace, and defense to grow their federal businesses for over 25 years," Avascent's Jon Barney commented. "Through our work in the federal space, we have seen large growth in innovative markets such as cyber, cloud, big data, and analytics." Avascent's panels will provide a rare opportunity for some of the biggest names in big data and cyber to exchange their views on the direction of industry innovation with federal investors.

"Though cuts to government budgets are likely in coming years, investment in technology-driven markets, such as cybersecurity, is expected to grow," said Avascent's Tim Wickham. "The federal government needs commercial talent and technology to strengthen national security and improve operations. The tech industry can make a real contribution here."

ABOUT AVASCENT

Avascent (www.avascent.com) is the leading strategy and management consulting firm serving clients operating in government-driven markets. Working with corporate leaders and financial investors, Avascent delivers sophisticated, fact-based solutions in the areas of strategic growth, value capture, and mergers and acquisition support. With deep sector expertise, analytically rigorous consulting methodologies, and a uniquely flexible service model, Avascent provides clients with the insights and advice they need to succeed in dynamic customer environments.

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Avascent to Sponsor First Wharton Aerospace & Technology West Conference in Silicon Valley

'End Of Watch': The Reviews Are In!

"Training Day" writer David Ayer patrols familiar territory once again in the new cop drama "End of Watch," buckling audiences in for a gritty, blood-stained ride-along with L.A.'s finest. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pea, the film follows a pair of officers who become targets of a powerful cartel's deadly vendetta.

Written and directed by Ayer, "End of Watch" is earning mostly positive reviews from critics, who praise the film's strong narrative and the winning chemistry between its male leads. Where opinions seem to differ, however, is over the film's "found footage" format, which some feel adds a sense of realism but others find distracting.

With "End of Watch" hitting theaters Friday (September 21), here's what the critics have to say.

The Story "David Ayer's South Central-set cop film 'End of Watch' feels like the work of a man who, after relishing venal and brutal police work in his scripts for 'Training Day' and 'Dark Blue,' has come to identify with, and maybe love, the L.A.P.D. Here, L.A.'s finest may work in a world of cut corners and bad attitudes, but they're the good guys, and damned if you're not going to accept it. Vigorously capturing the tension of walking into situations that could be deadly, horrifying, or both, it has a strong commercial appeal despite some shortcomings." John DeFore, The Hollywood Reporter

Gyllenhaal and Pea's Chemistry "But the only relationship that really matters is the one between Brian and Mike. There is a lot of love in that car, and Pea and Gyllenhaal make you feel it. The easy back and forth between them topics ranging from raunchy nonsense to philosophical musings have an organic feel that is hard to come by and usually worth the wait. These moments, seeded through the film, nearly always bring tension-releasing laughter, which we need as much as they do." Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times

The Found Footage Format "On the down side, it's also yet another movie utilizing the 'found footage' gimmick that's all the current rage. Much of the film consists of shaky, hand-held images purportedly shot by Brian for a filmmaking class he's taking. Even the villains are of the YouTube generation, bringing a video camera along for a drive-by. It's an unnecessary distraction from the story, which is a good one." Michael O'Sullivan, Washington Post

The Final Word "Nerve-rattling in the best way, the sharp, visceral urban police procedural 'End of Watch' is one of the best American cop movies I've seen in a long time. Directed from his own script by 'Training Day' writer David Ayer, it's also one of the few I've seen that pay serious attention to what cop life feels like, both on and off duty, for those who protect and serve the streets of L.A.'s danger zone Southland." Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly

Check out everything we've got on "End of Watch," opening September 21.

Originally posted here:
'End Of Watch': The Reviews Are In!

Under Controlled: Why the New GMO Panic Is More Sensational Than Sense | The Crux

Scicurious is a PhD in Physiology, and is currently a postdoc in biomedical research. Follow on Twitter @Scicurious and read her blogs at Scientific American and at Neurotic Physiology.

A new toxicology study states that rats eating genetically modified food and the weedkiller Roundup develop huge tumors and die. But many scientists beg to differ, and a close look at the study shows why.

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) have always been a controversial topic. On the one hand are the many benefits: the higher crop yields from pesticide- and insect-resistant crops, and the nutritional modifications that can make such a difference in malnourished populations. On the other side is the question that concerns many people: We are modifying the genes of our food, and what does that mean for our health? These are important question, but the new study claiming to answer them misses the mark. It has many horrifying pictures of rats with tumors, but without knowledge about the control rats, what do those tumors mean? Possibly, nothing at all.

The recent study, from the Journal of Food and Chemical Toxicology has fueled the worst fears of the GMO debate. The study, by Italian and French groups, evaluated groups of rats fed different concentrations of maize (corn) tolerant to Roundup or Roundup alone, over a two year period, the longest type of toxicology study. (For an example of one performed in the U.S., see here.) The group looked at the mortality rates in the aging rats, as well as the causes of death, and took multiple samples to assess kidney, liver, and hormonal function.

The presented results look like a toxicologists nightmare. The authors reported high rates of tumor development in the rats fed Roundup and the Roundup-tolerant maize. There are figures of rats with visible tumors, and graphs showing death rates that appear to begin early in the rats lifespan. The media of course picked up on it, and one site in particular has spawned some reports that sound like mass hysteria. It was the first study showing that genetically modified foods could produce tumors at all, let alone the incredibly drastic ones shown in the paper.

But can GMOs really produce such huge tumors? This paper isnt convincing. Following the release of the study, numerous scientists questioned the findings, citing anomalies throughout the paper that normally should have been corrected or resolved through the peer-review process. In particular, there are problems with the statistics performed on the data, the way the data were presented, and the numbers and types of animals used in the study.

First, the numbers. The authors examined groups of male and female rats in four different conditions: GMO food alone, GMO + Roundup, Roundup alone, and controls (normal food with no Roundup). For each experimental condition, there were three different doses of either the GMO maize (as a percent of the diet), Roundup, or both; the amount of doses of Roundup were all well below the approved doses. The 20 groups each contained 10 individuals, for a full total of 200 rats (100 male and 100 female). While 10 rats per condition might seem low, in a power analysis used to detect differences in response to, say a Roundup and non-Roundup condition, this would probably be OK. But how many final comparisons were the authors making? In the end, the authors compared each experimental condition to the same group of control rats, something that could severely bias the results. In most well-performed experiments, there would be a separate group of control rats for each condition, the GMO food alone, the GMO + Roundup, and the Roundup alone. The controls used for the study, as Anthony Trewavas, a cell biologist at the University of Edinburgh, pointed out in a press release response, are inadequate to make any deduction.

Then of course, there is the question of the animals themselves. Who were these rats? As it turns out, the rats used in the study were the Sprague Dawley rat strain, a widely used strain in biomedical and behavioral research. Unfortunately, this strain is prone to specific diseasesincluding the development of tumors. Up to 57% of female Sprague Dawley rats have been shown in other studies to develop tumors, especially mammary tumors, spontaneously. Males develop tumors at fairly high incidence as well. But in their striking mortality numbers for the study, showing the type and incidence of tumor development, the authors of the study do not show any of the control groups, and so we cannot actually compare the death rates of any of the GMO and Roundup exposures to controls. Tom Sanders, head of the Nutritional Sciences Research Division at Kings College London, pointed this fact out in the press-release response. Most toxicology studies are terminated at normal lifespan i.e. 2 years. Immortality is not an alternative. A careful read of the findings shows that the control group suffered a spontaneous death rate of 30% for males and 20% for females. But the authors do not state what caused the death. Did the dead animals develop tumors? Did control animals that survived develop tumors? We dont know. The authors did not show us.

Not only do they not show us, they do not present statistics to tell us the full story. In comparison to the 50% male death rate for the GMO maize dietis a 30% death rate in controls any better? There are no statistical analyses of how death rates compare between the different treatment groups and controls, only percentages. The way the data were analyzed is also unusual and highly complicated. This struck many of the scientists who read the study (including me) as odd. When comparing groups of doses as these authors did, there are simple enough statistical tests that will easily differentiate among the groups. Why were these tests not used? Why were the authors required to develop a highly convoluted analysis for something as simple as mortality rate?

In the end, while the results of the study look very drastic, there are too many issues to conclude that GMO maize and Roundup cause tumor formation. All we can really conclude is that rats who are prone to develop tumorsdevelop tumors, whether they are fed GMO maize, Roundup, both, or neither. In addition to the problems with the paper itself, the results contradicts a large amount of literature showing now difference in health consequences following consumption of GMOs. The potential health consequences of roundup exposure and GMOs should be carefully studied and evaluated, but studies like this one do not provide the answers, and only add to the hype.

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Under Controlled: Why the New GMO Panic Is More Sensational Than Sense | The Crux

New science course to be offered on OU’s Arezzo campus

New science course to be offered on Italian campus

Microbiology classes offered at OU in Arezzo, July 2013

Basic Immunology: A 4000-level course that teaches students about the bodys immune response when it encounters pathogens. It will also show how the immune system develops and how it can make mistakes and cause autoimmunity, allergies and cancer.

Pathogenic Microbiology: A 4000-level course that teaches students about pathogens that try to cause infections. It also will talk about emerging pathogens effects on society, as well as health care services.

A new microbiology study abroad program will infect OUs Arezzo campus next July and make it easier for science majors to earn credit while abroad.

The summer program will include OUs basic immunology and pathogenic microbiology courses and will join two other science programs already offered in Arezzo Organic Chemistry/Chemistry & Wine Culture and Chemistry & Art.

Science classes offered abroad are a rare phenomena for a number of reasons, immunology professor Casie Collamore said in an email.

I think part of the rarity is because it seems daunting to offer hard science courses in a four week time frame, she said. Some subjects just cant be tailored to fit such a tight schedule and expect the students to really absorb the material. Another problem is that many hard science faculty also have research labs that require their attention, and it is difficult to leave the lab bench and their students for a long period of time.

This isnt the first time the microbiology department has attempted to offer classes abroad, Collamore said. A few years ago, pathogenic microbiology professor Tyrrell Conway submitted a proposal to teach a microbiology class, but it was denied because it wasnt going to be taught alongside a second course.

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New science course to be offered on OU's Arezzo campus

Columbia researchers report novel approach for single molecule electronic DNA sequencing

Public release date: 21-Sep-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Beth Kwon beth.kwon@columbia.edu 212-854-6581 Columbia University

DNA sequencing is the driving force behind key discoveries in medicine and biology. For instance, the complete sequence of an individual's genome provides important markers and guidelines for medical diagnostics and healthcare. Up to now, the major roadblock has been the cost and speed of obtaining highly accurate DNA sequences. While numerous advances have been made in the last 10 years, most current high-throughput sequencing instruments depend on optical techniques for the detection of the four building blocks of DNA: A, C, G and T. To further advance the measurement capability, electronic DNA sequencing of an ensemble of DNA templates has also been developed. Recently, it has been shown that DNA can be threaded through protein nanoscale pores under an applied electric current to produce electronic signals at single molecule level. However, because the four nucleotides are very similar in their chemical structures, they cannot easily be distinguished using this technique. Thus, the research and development of a single-molecule electronic DNA sequencing platform is the most active area of investigation and has the potential to produce a hand-held DNA sequencer capable of deciphering the genome for personalized medicine and basic biomedical research.

A team of researchers at Columbia University, headed by Dr. Jingyue Ju (the Samuel Ruben-Peter G. Viele Professor of Engineering, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Pharmacology, Director of the Center for Genome Technology and Biomolecular Engineering), with colleagues at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) led by Dr. John Kasianowicz (Fellow of the American Physical Society), have developed a novel approach to potentially sequence DNA in nanopores electronically at single molecule level with single-base resolution. This work, entitled "PEG-Labeled Nucleotides and Nanopore Detection for Single Molecule DNA Sequencing by Synthesis" is now available in the open access online journal, Scientific Reports (2, 684 DOI:10.1038/srep00684, 2012), from the Nature Publication group.

The reported nanopore-based sequencing by synthesis (Nano-SBS) strategy can accurately distinguish four DNA bases by detecting 4 different sized tags released from 5'-phosphate-modified nucleotides at the single molecule level for sequence determination. The basic principle of the Nano-SBS strategy is described as follows. As each nucleotide analog is incorporated into the growing DNA strand during the polymerase reaction, its tag is released by phosphodiester bond formation. The tags will enter a nanopore in the order of their release, producing unique ionic current blockade signatures due to their distinct chemical structures, thereby determining DNA sequence electronically at single molecule level with single base resolution. As proof-of-principle, the research team attached four different length polymer tags to the terminal phosphate of 2'-deoxyguanosine-5'-tetraphosphate (a modified DNA building block) and demonstrated efficient incorporation of the nucleotide analogs during the polymerase reaction, as well as better than baseline discrimination among the four tags at single molecule level based on their nanopore ionic current blockade signatures. This approach coupled with polymerase attached to the nanopores in an array format should yield a single-molecule electronic Nano-SBS platform.

In previous work, the Center of Genome Technology & Biomolecular Engineering at Columbia University, led by Professor Ju and Dr. Nicholas J. Turro (William P. Schweitzer Professor of Chemistry), developed a four-color DNA sequencing by synthesis (SBS) platform using cleavable fluorescent nucleotide reversible terminators (NRT), which is licensed to Intelligent Bio-Systems, Inc., a QIAGEN company. SBS with cleavable fluorescent NRTs is the dominant approach used in the next generation DNA sequencing systems. Dr. Kasianowicz and his group at NIST pioneered the investigation of nanopores for single molecule analysis. They previously reported that different length polymers, polyethylene glycols (PEGs), could be distinguished by their unique effects on current readings in a -hemolysin protein nanopores at single molecule level and subsequently developed a theory for the method. Their results provide the proof-of-concept for single molecule mass spectrometry. The combination of the SBS concept with the distinct nanopore-detectable electronic tags to label DNA building blocks led to the development of the single-molecule electronic Nano-SBS approach described the current Scientific Reports article (09/21/2012).

As lead author Dr. Shiv Kumar points out, "The novelty of our approach lies in the design and use of four differently tagged nucleotides, which upon incorporation by DNA polymerase, release four different size tags that are distinguished from each other at the single molecule level when they pass through the nanopore. This approach overcomes any constraints imposed by the small differences among the four nucleotides, a challenge which most nanopore sequencing methods have faced for decades." Moreover, the technique is quite flexible; with PEG tags as prototypes, other chemical tags can be chosen to provide optimal separation in different nanopore systems.

With further development of this Nano-SBS approach, such as the use of large arrays of protein or solid nanopores, this system has the potential to accurately sequence an entire human genome rapidly and at low cost, thereby enabling it to be used in routine medical diagnoses.

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The authors of the Scientific Reports article were Shiv Kumar, Chuanjuan Tao, Minchen Chien, Brittney Hellner, Arvind Balijepalli, Joseph W.F. Robertson, Zengmin Li, James J. Russo, Joseph E. Reiner, John J. Kasianowicz, and Jingyue Ju. The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, a National Research Council/NIST/NIH Research Fellowship, and a grant from the NIST Office of Law Enforcement Standards.

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Columbia researchers report novel approach for single molecule electronic DNA sequencing

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DNA helps Wyckoff police nab 'motorcycle burglar'

WYCKOFF Police arrested a man known they called the "motorcycle burglar" this morning after matching him to DNA found at one of his victim's homes.

According to Wyckoff Chief Benjamin Fox, officers responded to a Nancy Lane residence in July 2011 after a homeowner reported that approximately $3,000 worth of jewelry had gone missing from her home.

A neighbor had observed a man activating an alarm system as he fled the home, and the man rode past the homeowner on a motorcycle as she was arriving home.

During an investigation, police found droplets of blood inside the home, along with a crowbar and a pair of latex gloves that had been discarded as the man rode away on the motorcycle, Fox said. They then matched DNA samples from the blood and gloves to 51-year-old Lee Malsch of Paterson, whose extensive criminal history included past burglaries.

Police obtained a warrant for Malsch's arrest on Sept. 11, but had trouble locating him. With the help of the Passaic County Sheriff's Department, however, they were able to find him this morning and take him into custody.

He was charged with burglary and theft, and is currently awaiting a bail hearing at the Bergen County Jail in Hackensack.

Fox praised the work of the investigating officers, saying that burglaries can often be difficult to solve.

"My guys don't solve every crime. No department does. But when they have evidence to works ith, they do everything that they can to apprehend those responsible," he said. "That's what they did here, and this community should be grateful."

Police were unable to recover any of the jewelry stolen from the home in 2011.

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DNA helps Wyckoff police nab 'motorcycle burglar'

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