Nanoparticles seen as gene therapy advance

Published: Oct. 16, 2012 at 8:30 PM

EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 16 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say they've discovered how to control the shape of nanoparticles that can move DNA through the body to treat cancer and other diseases.

A gene therapy technique utilizing nanoparticles is significant in that it does not use a virus to carry DNA into cells, as some gene therapy strategies relying on viruses have posed health risks, researchers at Northwestern University and John Hopkins University reported.

"These nanoparticles could become a safer and more effective delivery vehicle for gene therapy, targeting genetic diseases, cancer and other illnesses that can be treated with gene medicine," John Hopkins material science Professor Hai-Quan Mao said.

Mao, who has been developing non-viral nanoparticles for gene therapy for a decade, said a major breakthrough is the ability to "tune" the particles in three shapes, resembling rods, worms and spheres, which mimic the shapes and sizes of viral particles.

The nanoparticles carry healthy snippets of DNA within protective polymer coatings and are designed to deliver their genetic payload only after they have moved through the bloodstream and entered the target cells, prompting the cells to produce functional proteins that combat disease.

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Nanoparticles seen as gene therapy advance

Ray Kurzweil’s new book predicts development of a super ‘digital brain’

Futurist Ray Kurzweil optimistically predicts much longer life expectancies, cures for cancer and heart disease, flying cars and robot butlers.

Humans will become capable of feats that now seem impossible for many of us, in our lifetime in large part due to expected advances in brain research, posits the inventor and author in his new book, How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed, due out next month.

Key to his predictions, which hes also outlined in a series of other books including The Age of Spiritual Machines and The Singularity Is Near, is the law of accelerating returns. Kurzweil suggests the pace of information technology advances will grow at an exponential pace until sometime near the end of the century.

In his new book, he predicts technology will virtually grow the human neocortex the section of the brain responsible for thinking, language, and sensory perception by directly tying into electronic resources, including the Internet.

In another 25 years, computers will be the size of blood cells, theyll be another billion times more powerful and well put them inside our bodies and brains, says Kurzweil, who is speaking at Torontos Danforth Music Hall on Thursday.

Nanobots, little robotic computerized devices, will keep us healthy from inside by augmenting our immune system, theyll go inside our brain, interact with our biological neurons, put our brains in the cloud, on the Internet, and well be able to actually have direct brain connection to artificial intelligence, which will incorporate a synthetic neocortex.

While some will undoubtedly write off Kurzweils predictions as hokum, he has an impressive list of inventions to his name and a proven capacity for visionary thinking. Hes credited with inventing the first flatbed scanner, multifont optical character recognition, the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, and the first music synthesizer to mimic the sound of a grand piano among many other things.

While his track record of previous predictions has been debated he claims hes been on the mark or close the vast majority of the time, while critics suggest thats not really true he has made a number of prescient calls.

In The Age of Spiritual Machines, which he says he wrote in the mid to late 1990s, back when nearly everyone used dial-up modems, he outlined his visions for 2009. He wrote about the widespread use of portable computers, mobile devices without keyboards, the adoption of digital music, movies and books, the implementation of facial recognition technology, and distance learning.

A transition toward a cyborg future in which society accepts becoming part human, part computer may seem beyond belief, but Kurzweil doesnt think so. He points to present-day medical treatments that already involve brain implants of electronic devices and argues similar procedures could become common among the healthy, too.

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Ray Kurzweil’s new book predicts development of a super ‘digital brain’

Freedom from Islam

By Daniel Greenfield

In 1941, FDR proposed his famous Four Freedoms. Some seventy years later it may be time to add a fifth freedom to that list. Freedom from Islam. Freedom from Islam would have seemed like an unlikely candidate back in 1941 when the worry was over secular ideologies, but as the West and its ideologies have fallen into a soporific state of decline, the fascism that concerns us no longer wears a military uniform or any of the trappings of nationalism, but instead wraps itself in the turban of religion. Of those four freedoms, three are directly endangered by Islam. We have seen Freedom of Speech being burned in effigy across the Muslim world, and even in the urban centers of Western nations. The Muslim bomb plots aimed at synagogues and the specter of Americas first, albeit unofficial, blasphemy trial, warns us that our Freedom of Worship is also under threat. Coptic Christians, who for many centuries were forced to live in an atmosphere of terror, subject, like all Christians in the Muslim world, to blasphemy trials as tools of persecution, have found that their land of refuge here is not so different a place from their old homeland after all. As Coptic Christian churches are patrolled against the threat of Muslim violence and one of their own is on trial for offending Muslims, they cannot help but wonder what happened to the vaunted freedoms to worship and believe, to speak and be free, that first drew them to this country. And third, Freedom from Fear, not a right but the outcome of a well-managed system of government, has been under attack by decades of Muslim terrorism whose purpose is to terrorize the non-Muslim into surrendering to its demands. Instead of freeing us from Muslim terror, government authorities have universalized it, spreading it about as much as possible to avoid offending Muslims by drawing attention to the motives and religion of their terrorists. Finally, there is Freedom from Want, which like Freedom from Fear, was an example of positive rights being snuck into a national compact based on the negative rights of minimal government, and yet it is interesting to note how the liberal mega-state has failed to uphold even its own four freedoms. Domestic drilling is banned, while the oil wells of Saudi Arabia and the other backward monarchies, that fund terrorists with one hand while slipping bribes to our officials with the other, go on pumping day and night. Gas prices in America keep climbing and the terrorists draw out those record profits to expand their sphere of terror. Despite all this wealth, created by non-Muslims for Muslims, where Islam goes then poverty soon follows. Even with wealth, the Muslim world remains a place of great poverty where powerful families and organizations control access to the economy and women are kept out of the workplace. Muslim economic failure has been chronicled elsewhere and yet it is worth noting that Muslim immigration fills up not only the prisons of the West, but also its social service centers. When Islam has the freedom to undermine freedom of speech and freedom of religion then no freedom is safe. And when Muslim immigration is unleashed on the free world, then freedom from fear and even freedom from want also become distant memories. Why discuss the Four Freedoms at all? Perhaps because they remind us that the freedoms inscribed into the Bill of Rights are meant to protect us against the abuses of government authority. And yet there is a more primal form of freedom that must first be defended if those freedoms are to have any meaning at all. Before the American colonies were free of British rule, the Bill of Rights could have no function. The first freedom, before all freedoms from domestic government authority, is the freedom from rule by external oppressive forces. Only when a people are free of foreign dominance and alien rule and are able to lift their heads and make their own laws without fear of their oppressors, can there be true freedom. The first freedom in the days of the American Revolution was freedom from British rule. The first freedom in 1941 was freedom from Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. The first freedom during the Cold War was freedom from Communism. The first freedom in our own time is freedom from Islam. The freedoms of our Constitution express a relationship between us and our government. But when a third party invades this relationship and imposes its will on both parties then the relationship can only be rebuilt by banishing this external oppressive force. When that oppressive force is comprehensive enough, when like Nazism, Islamism or Communism it represents both a physical means of conquest as well as a political ideology with its own cult, then freedom comes to be defined in terms of being free of that external force. Islam is not a subject for civil liberties debates. Those only address the relationship between a people and their government. It is not a constitutional issue because Islam already has its own Constitution, its own government and its own set of laws. It is a wartime matter. There are two kinds of wars: wars of survival and wars of choice. The war of choice is optional; it may be fought or it may not be fought. There may be compelling moral, political or economic reasons why it should be fought, but if it is not fought then life for most people will still go on much as it has before. And then there are wars of survival. Those wars are no more optional than fighting off a shark circling you in the water is optional. A war of survival is a conflict where an external force is determined to conquer the United States and eliminate the rights, freedoms and identities of all Americans. And in a war of survival, freedom is defined by remaining unconquered. Freedom from Islam is the fundamental freedom of our time. It is the freedom in whose shelter America can still be America. It is the freedom on which all other freedoms depend.

Daniel Greenfield is a blogger, columnist and freelance photographer born in Israel, who maintains his own blog, Sultan Knish.

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Freedom from Islam

Quest Software Founder Vinny Smith Announces $1 Million Donation to the Fuel Freedom Foundation

IRVINE, CA--(Marketwire - Oct 17, 2012) - Vinny Smith, technology entrepreneur, founder and former CEO of Aliso Viejo-based Quest Software, which recently sold to Dell for $2.4 billion, announced today a $1 million donation to the Fuel Freedom Foundation. This is a non-partisan, non-profit organization dedicated to breaking America's oil addiction by opening markets to competition from replacement fuels for gasoline. Smith made his gift, which consists of two $500,000 installments, through the Orange County Community Foundation, a leading philanthropic institution that connects donors to the organizations they care about most.

To achieve its objectives of ending America's oil addiction, the Fuel Freedom campaign focuses on five priorities: outreach and education, regulatory reform, legal initiatives, political advocacy and alliance building.

"I am privileged to have the opportunity to be a part of the Fuel Freedom campaign," said Smith. "The need to end our dependence on foreign oil is one of the most important issues facing our country right now. Fuel Freedom has found a solution that appeals to all Americans, which includes lifting barriers to competition so that innovation and entrepreneurship can work their magic, just as they have done in my industry and across our economy."

Abundant supplies of natural gas, together with ethanol and methanol, could enable American consumers to have $2-a-gallon fuel if outdated regulations and commercial barriers to competition were removed. Most new cars would require a relatively minor upgrade to become flex fuel cars, and could be modified to do so for as little as $100, allowing them to optimize the use of fuels like ethanol and methanol.

"I am more than pleased that my friend and partner Vinny has so graciously donated to Fuel Freedom Foundation. Vinny is a proven visionary and a leader, and with his support we will continue to build our foundation and succeed in our mission to end our nation's oil addiction," said Eyal Aronoff, Co-Founder of Fuel Freedom Foundation, and Co-Founder of Quest Software. "Gaining Fuel Freedom will impact the whole fabric of our nation for the better. It will create jobs in the burgeoning industry of American made fuels, provide a cleaner environment and reduce health risks for our children, enhance our national security and give a much needed boost to our economy. This is the legacy we can all proudly leave for those who come after us, and I urge every American to follow Vinny's lead and stand with us for Fuel Freedom."

Please visit http://www.fuelfreedom.org to learn more about how you can join the Fuel Freedom team, get involved, and help end America's addiction to oil.

About Fuel Freedom The Fuel Freedom Foundation is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to breaking the U.S. economy's oil addiction by powering our cars and trucks with cheaper, cleaner, healthier American replacement fuels. Consumers could easily convert their cars to run on replacement fuels for gasoline, but outdated regulations and entrenched commercial interests stand in the way. The Fuel Freedom campaign aims to remove barriers to competition so that natural gas, methanol, ethanol and electricity can compete on equal footing with gasoline at the pump and at the dealership. Achieving Fuel Freedom will lower fuel prices, create jobs, spur economic growth, reduce pollution, and improve national and global security. For more information go to the Foundation's website at http://www.fuelfreedom.org; Facebook: FuelFreedomFoundation; and Twitter: @FuelFreedomNow.

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Quest Software Founder Vinny Smith Announces $1 Million Donation to the Fuel Freedom Foundation

Nayland Blake: Freedom key to Tool Box

Nayland Blake's hot-colored new installation at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, "Free!Love!Tool!Box!," celebrates sexual and artistic liberation as it played out in San Francisco during two culture-changing periods: the early 1960s, when the artist was a toddler in Manhattan and knew nothing of places like the storied South of Market leather bar called the Tool Box, and the early '90s, when the pioneering queer performance artist, as Chronicle Art Critic Kenneth Baker recently called him, was at the hub of the action.

"It was this moment that was post-ACT UP, post the activism coming out of the AIDS epidemic," said Blake, a warm, gray-bearded bear of a man who was busy mulling what to put where in this improvised project, which he calls a big installation with discrete parts. "There was this kind of flowering of a new sort of drag scene, a new art scene, an explosion of activity among a lot of queer people in San Francisco.

"The show tries to evoke those two moments," adds Blake, who was lit up by the famous 1964 Life magazine photograph of the Tool Box that figured prominently in Life's revealing spread on homosexuality in America. Many of the patrons in the photo, which Blake came across a few years ago, appear in the striking 1962 black and white mural Chuck Arnett painted on the wall behind the bar. Blake, who moved to Brooklyn in '96 but has remained a presence in museums and galleries here, has re-created the mural on a gigantic digital print on silk, which fills an entire wall at Yerba Buena.

The artist is also mixing things from his box of materials - plastic bags, an old wood bench and other discarded objects he found on the street outside his house, clown shoes, tutus, latex face casts and other things he's used in performances and sculptures - with personal objects from people at ancillary events whom the artist asked to bring something expressing freedom.

He's placing them on shelves on a canary-yellow wall (he chose the color because it had a psychedelic feel that suggested the free-loving hedonism of '60s San Francisco). A reading in the gallery last week yielded a self-published chapbook, and a studded dog collar in a red velvet-covered case.

Blake has also built some new things in the galleries. There's a hanging sign glowing with red and yellow bulbs that says "Tool Box" on one side and "Free Love!" on the other.

The actual Tool Box stood at Fourth and Harrison streets, a block from where the long-delayed Yerba Buena project would eventually rise, a connection not lost on Blake. It closed in '71 and the building was torn down. But the mural, which had been painted on a wall adjoining another building, was exposed and visible to drivers coming off Highway 101 until it was demolished a few years later.

"It's a piece of art that allowed guys to identify with something they only thought about in their heads before," Blake said, "and it counteracted the image of these people as freaks and losers. They're not tortured souls." He speaks of the moment in the early '60s when artists and "people in these sexual minorities" embraced the idea that "freeing yourself sexually would lead a kind of transformation of society. This photograph served as a kind of siren call to all these guys who were into leather, around the world, that San Francisco was a place you could go."

Blake, who hopes this show offers a taste of liberation, has also built a tall metal pole with crossbars, draped at the moment with chains made of black construction paper of the kind we all used in grade school.

"I was thinking of maypoles. I wanted to come up with something that would be like scaffolding," the artist said. "I like that it suggests a ship's mast and also a Christmas tree."

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Nayland Blake: Freedom key to Tool Box

EU Ambassador to Ukraine: There Is Freedom of Self-Expression in Ukraine

KYIV, Ukraine, October 17, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --

"There is a complete freedom of self-expression and no censorship in Ukraine," stated the Head of the Delegation of the EU to Ukraine Jan Tombinski. At the same time, he said, there was an issue regarding the ability of citizens to express their views through the media.

Tombinski mentioned that the Ukrainian media were focused on influencing voters instead of educating them. It is only after the election that it would be possible to see to what extent access to the media or its absence influenced the results of the vote, he added. Many international and local activists, including the international NGO CANADEM, indicate that media freedom has been an important factor for Ukrainian voters while making an informed choice at the October 28 parliamentary elections.

While the media in Ukraine is widely criticized for placing paid publications and spreading biased information regarding both the opposition and the ruling party, Freedom House gave free Internet freedom status to Ukraine in the organization's September 2012 report. Ukraine received 27 points out of 100 (maximum points indicate the least free environment) - the best Internet freedom result among the researched CIS countries.

"Ukraine has relatively liberal legislation governing the Internet and access to information," reads the report. The document states that access to broadband Internet in Ukraine is fairly affordable, Internet penetration in Ukraine has been growing steadily, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, WordPress and LiveJournal are freely available. The authors note that the backbone connection of UA-IX to the international Internet is not centralized.

Notably, in September 2012, Ukraine hosted the 64th World Newspaper Congress and 19th World Editors Forum. Almost 1,000 representatives of the world-leading media from more than 90 countries attended the event in Ukraine, receiving first-hand experience in the state of the media environment in the Eastern European country. International media CEOs had a chance to meet Ukrainian government officials and reflect on the issues of freedom of press and speech in Ukraine.

The issue of media freedom is particularly important on the eve of the parliamentary elections in Ukraine, which will take place on October 28, 2012.

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EU Ambassador to Ukraine: There Is Freedom of Self-Expression in Ukraine

Tunisian struggle with new freedom hits silver screen

ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Although Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was toppled nearly two years ago, Tunisia's fight for freedom has only just begun, acclaimed Tunisian filmmaker Nouri Bouzid says in his latest film.

In "Hidden Beauties", Bouzid uses the Islamic veil to symbolise the struggle facing Tunisians now negotiating issues of religion, freedom and identity in the vacuum left in the aftermath of an uprising that ousted Ben Ali after 23 years running a model police state.

Bouzid's central characters are two young women, Aisha, who is veiled but struggling with her need for freedom and her desire for a young man, and her free-spirited friend Zainab, who is fighting a family that wants her to wear a veil and get married.

The film, part family drama, part love story, depicts the deep personal conflicts the revolution has brought to individuals, who, in the new-found freedom that they craved, are having to face up to the contradictions that were weighing on society and on them.

"You need something concrete in cinema, and the hijab is a good incarnation of this precarious freedom and the struggle for it," Bouzid told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of the Abu Dhabi Film Festival.

Bouzid, who previously spent time in prison for his political views, studied film in Brussels. His first feature, "Man of Ashes" in 1986 won the Un Certain Regard critics prize at the Cannes Film Festival. His other titles include "Bezness" (1992), "Clay Dolls" (2002) and "Making Of" (2006).

The role of Islam in government and society has emerged as the most divisive issue in Tunisia in the wake of Ben Ali's departure, which sparked revolts that brought changes of government in Libya, Egypt and Yemen.

The Islamist-led government that won elections in October is treading a fine line between conservatives who see the revolution as a chance to express a religious identity suppressed by Ben Ali and secularists who want to broaden freedom of expression.

"The real revolution is happening now, the real battles are now because there are precise issues at stake, like the constitution," Bouzid said.

Many Tunisians fear that the North African country, long considered one of the most secular in the Arab region, may succumb to Islamist pressure to ban films, plays or musical performances, and to censor exhibitions.

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Tunisian struggle with new freedom hits silver screen

The Cricket

"Melodic hardcore" band Taking Back Sunday marks its 10th anniversary with a complete performance of their debut album "Tell All Your Friends," at In the Venue, 219 W. 600 South, Salt Lake City. Show starts at 6:30. Tickets are $25, available at Smiths Tix and 24Tix.

Minimalist rock band The xx performs at The Complex, 536 W. 100 South, Salt Lake City. Opening acts: John Talabot, 2:54. Show starts at 7. Tickets are $27.50, at Smiths Tix.

Rock band Switchfoot performs at The Depot, 400 W. South Temple, Salt Lake City. Opening act: Paper Route. Show starts at 7. Tickets are $25, at Smiths Tix.

A screening of Tod Brownings infamous 1932 horror film "Freaks," and a presentation by author Angela Smith of her new book "Hideous Progeny: Disability, Eugenics and Classic Horror Film," will happen at the City Library auditorium, 210 E. 400 South, Salt Lake City. The event, part of the Utah Humanities Councils 15th annual Book Festival, is free.

Jazz double-bassist Ben Allison performs at the Capitol Theatre, 50 W. 200 South, Salt Lake City. Show starts at 7:30. Part of the JazzSLC series. Tickets are $25, at ArtTix.

Funk performers The Steve Kimock Band featuring the legendary Bernie Worrell (Parliament-Funkadelic), Black Crowes bassist Andy Hess, and Timbuk 3 drummer Wally Ingram plays The State Room, 638 S. State St., Salt Lake City. Opening act: Zach Deputy. Show starts at 8. Tickets are $25, at the venues website.

Copyright 2012 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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The Cricket

Tintin racism row puts spotlight on children's literature

The decision to reshelve Hergé's books because of their perceived colonial and racist tint has generated heated debate Last month, one of Sweden's most prestigious national dailies blew up an article on its front page about cultural director at Stockholm Culture House Berhang Miri (a Swede of Iranian descent) reshelving Hergé's Tintin books because of their perceived colonial taint, generating ...

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Tintin racism row puts spotlight on children's literature

Face Off 3 Recap: Calling All Cyborgs!

Why Did Kate Gosselin REALLY Get Fired From Coupon Cabin? | Home | Kate Gosselins TLC Earnings Revealed In Controversial New Book

October 17, 2012 10:57 AM by Ryan Haidet

Face Off took a robotic twist this week as the final five aspiring makeup artists worked to create an original cyborg character. To help get them each motivated for the project, the contestants were taken to a junkyard where they gathered various parts to include in their final product. While I didnt think this task would interest me very much since cyborgs arent my thing, I was extremely impressed by some of the finished makeups.

Sarah was a tad weary of the task because of her Mormon upbringing, which sheltered her from seeing a lot of cyborg-style flicks. She has admittedly seen two of the Terminator films, so she clearly isnt oblivious to the concept. While it seemed everybody else started zipping through their creations, Sarah struggled choosing which direction she wanted to go with.

Different Task, Same Worries

As it has become customary, the episode showcased everybody fighting the clock trying their best to avoid cracked molds. No surprises here. When judge Glenn Hetrick stopped by the lab on the second day of the challenge, he offered up advice to each contestant. He liked the concepts and overall designs that Derek, Nicole and Laura had come up with. Meanwhile, he offered up some warnings to Sarah about her lackluster chest piece.

Model Woes

With less than an hour before revealing their finished products, Lauras model suddenly started to feel faint. She asked production to get him some water before he stepped away to go to the restroom. Naturally, Laura was freaking out about it because she still had work to do. He returned a few minutes later saying he was feeling OK.

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Face Off 3 Recap: Calling All Cyborgs!

Parks and Beaches group sets priorities for budget cycle

By Pat Sherman

La Jolla Parks and Beaches, Inc. (LJP&B) voted on its top priorities for capital improvement projects, in anticipation of an invitation by the mayors office for community groups to provide input on the capital improvement budget for fiscal year 2014 this time, well before the city begins working on it in December.

After some discussion and a vote by active LJP&B members in attendance last month, the group decided that its top four priorities (and estimated costs) are: 1) Aesthetic improvements to the sidewalk on Coast Boulevard near Childrens Pool ($250,000) 2) A Coast Walk parking feasibility study ($50,000) 3) Improvements to Scripps Park ($1,863,000) 4) A parking plan for South Coast Boulevard ($299,942).

Prior to the meeting, LJP&B president Patrick Ahern and Dan Allen came up with a list of nine projects to consider. The chosen four priorities were sent to the La Jolla Community Planning Association to be integrated with other La Jolla capital improvement projects of importance, such as park, sewer and street repairs.Projects already under construction were removed from the prioritization process, Allen said, because they are expected to be complete.

Mount Soledad lighting update During public comment, architect James Alcorn offered an update on the Mt. Soledad Memorial Associations proposal to illuminate the flag and portions of the veterans memorial at night. During a lighting test held in July, some of the lights proposed to illuminate the steps and portions of the memorial wall were found to be too bright, Alcorn said.

The end result is that the client has decided not to try to illuminate the walls, Alcorn said. Lighting of the flag was received favorably by those at the test, Alcorn said, and will remain in the plans, thought the flag will be lit from below, rather than from the side.

Alcorn said 7-watt lamps illuminating the steps looked horrible and gave off too much light.

Thank God they did some testing, he said. Theyre now looking at a 3-watt LED lights to light the stairs at the end of certain walls, Alcorn said, for a total of 12 lights.

Lighting of plaques around the circumference of the memorial was also considered too bright and removed from the plans.

Eventually, Alcorn said, there may be a second phase with more lights added to steps at the opposite side of the memorial, but for now there is no plan to add additional lights, he said.

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Parks and Beaches group sets priorities for budget cycle

Canterbury's beaches safe to swim at – report

Fancy a swim this summer? If you're in Canterbury, chances are your favourite beach is safe, a new report shows.

More than 80 per cent of Canterbury's beaches have been graded safe to swim at,says the Ministry for the Environment's Recreational Water Quality in New Zealand report.

The report is based on data from 210 freshwater beaches and 248 coastal beaches acquired over five consecutive summers, including the 2011-12 summer.

Of the beaches monitored in Canterbury, 89 recorded usable data.

Of those, 13.5 per cent were safe for swimming all the time and 41.5 per cent were considered satisfactory for swimming most of the time.

A further 28 per cent were ''generally satisfactory'', but there was a risk of illness for those who swam there as they were potential sources of faecal matter.

The worst swimming spots in Canterbury are the Avon, Heathcote,Kaiapoi and Selwyn rivers, Lyell Creek Lagoon,the Waihao River at Black Hole and the Waihi River at thegorge.

The top spots included Waikuku Beach, Taylors Mistake, Gore Bay and Lake Hood.

Nationally, about 80 per cent of coastal beaches were considered safe to swim in, while about 55 per cent of freshwater beaches fell into the same category.

The reportsaid mosteffects of swimming in contaminated water, such as gastric-intestinal illnesses with symptoms like diarrhoea or vomiting, and infections of the eye, ear, nose and throat, were short-lived.

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Canterbury's beaches safe to swim at - report

Red tide found on Collier beaches

Red tide monitors have found levels of the toxic algae bloom at various concentrations this week along Collier County beaches and reported a smattering of dead fish on Barefoot Beach on Wednesday.

Water samples taken Monday showed red tide at background levels at Barefoot and Vanderbilt beaches, at medium levels at Seagate, and at very low levels at the Naples Pier. Red tide was not present at Marco Island beaches, according to the countys pollution control department.

Offshore, patches of water with elevated to very high chlorophyll levels, an indication of a possible red tide, were visible on satellite imagery stretching as far south as southern Collier County, the department reported today.

Red tide is a bloom of microscopic algae that can release a toxin that kills marine life and causes respiratory irritation. The county has not received any reports of respiratory irritation at the beaches but is cautioning people with emphysema and asthma to avoid the beach.

Winds will be mostly from the south this week with a slight westerly shift Friday, which could worsen red tide impacts at the beaches. To report dead fish or red tide symptions, call 239-252-2502. Red tide updates are available on the county hotline at 239-252-2591 or at http://www.colliergov.net/redtideupdate.

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Red tide found on Collier beaches

Free Astronomy e-Book Helps Stargazers and Science Educators Enjoy the Wonders of the Night Sky

New e-book entitled The One-Minute Astronomer: Tips, Tales, and Tours for the Casual Stargazer now makes it easier for would-be stargazers to learn about astronomy. This e-book is a collection of more than 100 short and easy-to-read articles about stargazing for new and experienced stargazers, and for middle and high-school science teachers and homeschoolers looking to learn more about basic astronomy.

Ottawa, Canada (PRWEB) October 17, 2012

Some think astronomy is too hard, while others are too busy, always waiting for the right time to learn more about the night sky, says Dr. Brian Ventrudo, editor and publisher of the book. The idea behind this e-book is simple: it helps build understanding and enjoyment of astronomy one small step at a time. Most of the articles take just a minute or two to read and dont require any specialized background in science. After dipping into these articles, readers will have a grasp of the basics of stargazing. And theyll know a little of the science behind some of the most beautiful sights in the night sky.

The One-Minute Astronomer: Tips, Tales, and Tours for the Casual Stargazer is based on the most widely-read articles from One-Minute Astronomer, a website that provides readers with accessible, interesting, and accurate information related to stargazing and the science of astronomy. Articles in the e-book include tips to help stargazers see more in the night sky and select their own equipment, tales to introduce readers to historical events and to remarkable astronomers who changed the course of science with their astonishing discoveries, and tours to help readers find and enjoy dozens of beautiful and fascinating objects in the night sky. The articles include illustrations and detailed star maps.

The e-book is available at the Amazon Kindle website at http://amzn.to/T50d44, and can be downloaded at no cost until midnight (PDT) on Saturday, October 20, 2012. To learn more about One-Minute Astronomer, visit http://www.oneminuteastronomer.com.

BRIAN VENTRUDO Mintaka Publishing Inc. 1(613) 282-6115 Email Information

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Free Astronomy e-Book Helps Stargazers and Science Educators Enjoy the Wonders of the Night Sky

New astronomy group hosts kick off event

The night sky is a wondrous, mysterious draw for star gazers and astronomy enthusiasts.

The newly formed Warren County Astronomical Society hopes to attract members with a sky party kick off event, set for 4:30 p.m. Oct. 20 at Hisey Park, 5443 Middletown Road in Waynesville.

It is our opening event to invite the public in and see if they would like to join, president Jeff Blazey said.

The group formed about a year ago and is headquartered at Hisey Park. The cost of a yearly membership is $35 per person.

Were seeking membership and want to teach people about the night sky, said Fred Bay, Warren County Park District commissioner and director of the astronomical society.

The society is affiliated with the Warren County Park District. The group will operate out of three locations: Hisey Park, Camp Joy and Gulley Park, on Middleborough Road, southwest of Clarksville.

The darker the sky equals better viewing, Bay said. That is the jewel of Warren County. Jeff did extensive surveys to find the darkest areas in the county.

One subgroup within the astronomy society is radio astronomy, which includes talking through satellites and listening to sounds from planets. Future subgroups will track the international space station and satellites, and learn how to make telescopes.

Goals include workshops and educational components for members.

Blazey and his late wife, County Prosecutor Rachel Hutzel, donated a refracting telescope to the society.

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New astronomy group hosts kick off event

MEDIA ALERT: Peter Bardwick of Rocket Fuel to Participate in AGC Partners' Boston 2012 Conference on Wednesday October …

REDWOOD SHORES, CA--(Marketwire - Oct 16, 2012) - Rocket Fuel, the leading provider of artificial intelligence advertising solutions for digital marketers, today announced that CFO Peter Bardwick will join a panel at AGC Partners' 9th Annual East Coast Conference on October 16-17 at the Westin Copley Place in Boston, Massachusetts.

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MEDIA ALERT: Peter Bardwick of Rocket Fuel to Participate in AGC Partners' Boston 2012 Conference on Wednesday October ...

Paging Dr. Watson: Artificial Intelligence As a Prescription for Health Care

Everyone agrees health care in the United States is a colossal mess, and IBM is betting that artificially intelligent supercomputers are just what the doctor ordered. But some health professionals say robodoctors are just flashy toys.

Such are the deep questions raised by the medical incarnation of Watson, the language-processing, information-hunting AI that debuted in 2011 on the quiz show Jeopardy!, annihilating the best human player ever and inspiring geek dreams of where its awesome computational power might be focused next.

IBM has promised a Watson that will in microseconds trawl the worlds medical knowledge and advise doctors. It sounds great in principle, but the project hasnt yet produced peer-reviewed clinical results, and the journey from laboratory to bedside is long. Still, some doctors say Watson will be fantastically useful.

Its not humanly possible to practice the best possible medicine. We need machines, said Herbert Chase, a professor of clinical medicine at Columbia University and member of IBMs Watson Healthcare Advisory Board. A machine like that, with massively parallel processing, is like 500,000 of me sitting at Google and Pubmed, trying to find the right information.

Others, including physician Mark Graber, a former chief of the Veterans Administration hospital in Northport, New York, are less enthused. Doctors have enough knowledge, said Graber, who now heads the Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine. In medicine, thats not the problem we face.

Chase and Graber embody the essential tensions of applying Watson to healthcare, even if the machine is inarguably a wonder of artificial intelligence. Winning Jeopardy! might seem like a trivial, so to speak, accomplishment, but it was an enormous computational achievement.

Watson wasnt programmed with the information it needed, but given the cognitive tools necessary to acquire the knowledge itself, teasing out answers to complicated questions from vast amounts of electronic information. And it did this not in response to computer-language queries posed through an arcane interface, but with everyday conversational English.

'A machine like that is like 500,000 of me sitting at Google and Pubmed.'

After all, doctors make mistakes. Lots of mistakes. Enough to kill about 200,000 Americans annually. Experts put misdiagnosis rates around 10 percent, a number that varies widely by condition but in some situations, such as complicated cancers, goes far higher. Watsons programmers say the machine might prevent many of those mistakes. It would constantly be updated with the latest medical knowledge, bringing to every doctor insights that often take years to filter out of academia, and merging those insights with each patients own data.

We have all these different dimensions of data about an individual. How do we match the different characteristics they have personal, medical with a set of knowledge, of information, that is going to define what the best thing for them to do is? said Basit Chaudhry, lead research clinician for Watson, at the Wired Health Conference on Oct. 16.

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Paging Dr. Watson: Artificial Intelligence As a Prescription for Health Care

Aerospace, defense symposium comes to Mesa, ASU Wednesday

In a changing sector, a business accelerator symposium will be held Wednesday to help aerospace and defense small companies find a new direction to grow.

There will be topic specialists who will discuss multiple topics, which will include sales, marketing and business acceleration strategies, said Dan Nienhauser, a principle at Impact Business Accelerators, which will host the event.

And while the event is specifically targeted at small defense companies, Nienhauser said these skills can easily be applied to other companies as well.

Itll touch on many areas, he said. It will touch on how small companies can attract new business and how to attack the challenges they will be facing.

The event will also host a panel of innovation experts, as well as an open question and answer section. It will cover organizational, operational and strategic challenges that impede growth, expansion and success.

With the cuts to defense spending, many are small companies that will face significant program cuts in 2013, Nienhauser said.

But those cuts dont have to be the end for these companies, Nienhauser said. Instead, they can find new ways to adapt and expand in a changing business environment.

The experts include a representative from Continuum Advanced Systems, a Boston industrial design firm, Dr. Chell Roberts, College of Innovation and Technology executive dean, and a design manager from ECCO, a New York product innovation firm.

Its about finding different ways to use technologies in other opportunities, Neinhauser said.

Continuum has experience in translating technologies across different sectors, Neinhauser said. By taking a medical bladder and putting it in a shoe, the company created whats now known as the Reebok Pump.

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Aerospace, defense symposium comes to Mesa, ASU Wednesday

ITT Exelis to highlight defense and aerospace technologies at 2012 AUSA Meeting and Exposition

MCLEAN, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

ITT Exelis (XLS) will display a wide variety of its industry-leading aerospace and defense products and services at the 2012 Association of the United States Army (AUSA) Annual Meeting and Exposition in Washington, D.C., Oct. 22-24, 2012.

Some highlighted technologies from the Exelis exhibit at this years AUSA Conference will include:

In addition to exhibiting a wide range of business solutions, Exelis will also highlight its new community volunteer program, Exelis Action Corps at the event. In partnership with Points of Light, Exelis is engaging its employees and residents of the communities in which Exelis operates in meaningful volunteer projects that serve and support returning military service members, veterans and their families.

As a company that manufactures technologies that protect our military service members abroad, and one that has a global workforce comprised of approximately 10 percent military veterans, it was only natural that ITT Exelis decided to invest in and deploy its own employees to support the men and women who so bravely serve, and have served, our nation, said Exelis CEO and President David Melcher.

To learn more about Exelis, stop by the lower level, booth 2625 at the event, visit http://www.exelisinc.com/ausa or follow us on Facebook and Twitter for real-time social media updates.

About ITT Exelis

Exelis is a diversified, top-tier global aerospace, defense and information solutions company with strong positions in enduring and emerging global markets. Exelis is a leader in networked communications, sensing and surveillance, electronic warfare, navigation, air traffic solutions and information systems with growing positions in cyber security, composite aerostructures, logistics and technical services. The company has a 50-year legacy of innovation and technology expertise, partnering with customers worldwide to deliver affordable, mission-critical products and services for managing global threats, conflicts and complexities. Headquartered in McLean, Va., the company employs about 20,500 people and generated 2011 sales of $5.8 billion. http://www.exelisinc.com

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ITT Exelis to highlight defense and aerospace technologies at 2012 AUSA Meeting and Exposition

Mexican Aerospace Industry is Viewed from a European Perspective in Offshore Group Podcast

TUCSON, Ariz., Oct. 17, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The latest in a continuing series of Offshore Group podcasts on topics related to manufacturing in Mexico examines the Mexican aerospace industry from a European perspective.

Jean Claude Bouche, a dual Mexican and French citizen currently working to develop connections between the Mexican aerospace industry and the aerospace cluster of Toulouse, France, recently sat down to share his experiences and insights in a discussion centered on the subject of linkages between the Mexican and European aerospace industries.

Throughout the approximately thirty minute-long interview, Bouche points out that, over the last decade, Mexico has not only strengthened its aerospace ties and capabilities within North America, but also is becoming increasingly tied to some of Europe's major industry players.

Among the actions taken by European aerospace manufacturers that will have a long-term positive impact on the development of Mexico's aerospace industry include: The recent decision of Airbus to locate its first non-European manufacturing plant in the State of Alabama. This will cause its European supply chain to look toward Mexico as a possible base for North American manufacturing operations; another important and impacting factor has been the decision of prime contractors such as Eurocopter and the Safran Group to establish an increasing number of production facilities in Mexico.

Bouche believes that at some point all the necessary links in the supply chain will be in place that will enable an entire airplane to be built in and flown out of Mexico, but it is his opinion that achieving this goal will take some time.

The podcast in its entirety can be listened to on The Offshore Group's manufacturing in Mexico 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 affiliate in Hermosillo, Sonora. 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 Offshore Group RSS Feeds.

Website: http://www.offshoregroup.com

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

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Mexican Aerospace Industry is Viewed from a European Perspective in Offshore Group Podcast