This interactive periodic table makes chemistry easier than ever – TNW

Chemistryhas broken the spirits of many struggling high-schoolers and university students alike, but there might be a handy tool that can finally guide you through the various elements and help you swiftly get thehang of the much-dreaded periodic table.

Available for free,PeriodicStats is an elegantly designed web-based interactive periodic table thattakes the hassle out of chemistry by putting together the basic properties of all elements in a clean and well-structured manner.

Gary Vaynerchuk was so impressed with TNW Conference 2016 he paused mid-talk to applaud us.

For more detailed information about the properties of individual elements, you can click on the element of your interest and PeriodicStats will readily pull up crucial information likeyear of discovery, density andtype of substance.

The interactive table also offers data about the precise electron and ionisation propertiesof each element as well as numerousbits and pieces abouttheir history.

In addition to the extensive catalogue of elements, PeriodicStats also features a nifty search engine that lets you filter out certain elements based on various criteria like bonding, magnetism, melting and boiling point, density and so on.

Now go step up your chemistry game and browse through PeriodicStats here.

In case youre seeking for more practical-oriented knowledgeof the periodic table, you might want to check out this alternative interactive periodic table that aims to clue people in as to what the various elements can be used for in the real world.

Periodic Stats Interactive Periodic table

Read next: Young and talented? Theres one week left to apply for the T500!

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This interactive periodic table makes chemistry easier than ever - TNW

Eugenio Derbez talks chemistry with Salma Hayek in ‘How to be a … – Newsday

Mexican comedy star Eugenio Derbez, who stars alongside Salma Hayek in How to Be a Latin Lover (opening April 28) says his on-set chemistry with the movies director, West Islip native Ken Marino, couldnt have been more perfect.

Marino, who is also an actor (Were the Millers, Role Models), did not appear in the film about Maximo (Derbez), a middle-aged gold digger who gets dumped by his rich, 80-year-old wife and is forced to move in with his estranged sister (Salma Hayek) while he pursues another wealthy widow (Raquel Welch).

He did, however, do a hell of a job directing it, said Derbez.

Hes an actor, producer, director and writer, like me, so it was really easy to work with him, and he had such a great attitude, making jokes all the time, said Derbez, whose 2013 film Instructions Not Included became the highest-grossing Spanish-language movie of all time.

Hes also very talented. I mean he shot a three-hour movie and had to cut an hour because he got such great, amazing material. We could probably have made another movie with the extra footage.

Rob Lowe, Kristen Bell, Rob Riggle and Michael Cera also are in the movie.

Derbez, 55, credits most of the films bloopers and laugh-out-loud moments to his rapport with personal friend Hayek, who he says he has known for more than 30 years even though theyve never worked together previously.

Were both Virgos. We were born on the same day actually, on Sept. 2, but in different years, he said. She always insists on being clear about that, he laughs.

Even so, for Derbez and Hayek, How to Be a Latin Lover marked their first time sharing the screen. And they just didnt expect to have so much chemistry.

Derbez says shooting alongside Hayek felt so natural, but he especially remembers one scene in which they were hanging out in a living room getting drunk on shots of tequila.

Well, the tequila was not real but it looks as if it were because we just had so much fun shooting it and couldnt stop laughing.

Hayek and Derbez are already planning to work together on future projects and dont discount the possibility of a How to Be a Latin Lover Part 2.

Listen, anyone can be a Latin lover, assures Derbez. Its just a matter of attitude, of really being confident about yourself. You have to walk into a room feeling like youre Brad Pitt, make strong eye contact and remember the power of a really good pickup line.

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Eugenio Derbez talks chemistry with Salma Hayek in 'How to be a ... - Newsday

Use of biotechnology must to attain food security: Bosan | Pakistan … – Pakistan Today

Around 130 national and international academicians and scientists hailing from seven different countries including Turkey, Tunisia, Sudan, Iran, Sri Lanka, and Uzbekistan attended a workshop held here to promote the safe use of modern biotechnology to attain the goal of food security and defeating hunger and poverty.

Minister for Food Security and Research Sikandar Hayat Khan Bosan inaugurated the 3rd International Conference on Agriculture, Food Security and Biotechnology on Wednesday.

The 2-day event being held at the National Agriculture Research Center, Islamabad, is jointly organised by Commission on Science and Technology for Sustainable Development in the South (COMSATS), ISESCO and Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC).

Addressing the audiences, the minister said that it was time that the countries of the region should encourage and support smart agricultural practices.

He said safe use of modern biotechnology was needed to enhance agricultural production and get rid of malnutrition and starvation. The minister pledged full support for agricultural production which was the backbone of economy with sustainable food security.

Dr Ghulam Muhammad Ali, Member Coordination and Monitoring, PARC, Islamabad, noted that advances in science and technology were the need of time for food security and safety. Noting the hunger still prevailing in various parts of the world, he opined that biotechnology was the basis of production of vast variety of transgenic and genetically modified crops which can solve the problem of hunger.

He said that the conference having similar agenda was good for the developing countries as it would open ways for research, collaboration and capacity building.

Speaking on the occasion, Dr Kauser Malik, Department of Biological Sciences, FC College Lahore, mentioned that it was our fear of unknown that kept the human beings away from adapting new technologies and advocated the use of genetically modified crops for addressing hunger.

In his message, Dr SM Junaid Zaidi, Executive Director COMSATS, said that despite major developments around the globe, many areas struggle with challenges of starvation and malnutrition. Even the developed countries cannot engage in bigger pursuits without ensuring food security. Mentioning the importance of biotechnology in agriculture, he noted that biotechnological influence on food production and agriculture is undeniable especially for countries like Pakistan with fertile lands and good weather conditions.

The message from Director General ISESCO, HE Dr. Abdulaziz Othman Altwaijri, noted that there was a dire need to provide an enriching and engaging environment to foster crop science research towards new and improved livelihood opportunities and sustainable food security. He considered collaborations in this regard necessary and appreciated the cooperation between ISESCO and COMSATS.

Shields were given to the esteemed participants who came from different countries for the conference.

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Use of biotechnology must to attain food security: Bosan | Pakistan ... - Pakistan Today

United States Biotechnology Industry – Porter’s Five Forces Strategy … – Business Wire (press release)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "United States Biotechnology Industry - Porter's Five Forces Strategy Analysis" report to their offering.

The rapidly emerging biotechnology industry is a critical element of national power. Advances in biotechnology are resulting in novel biomedical and pharmaceutical products and processes that are relieving human suffering, improving health, and increasing the quality of life for the world's citizens. The majority of U.S. biotechnology firms are pursuing markets in human health care.

The research analyzes the US Biotechnology industry in the Michael Porter's Five Forces Analysis. It uses concepts developed in Industrial Organization (IO) economics to derive five forces that determine the competitive intensity and therefore attractiveness of a market.

Apart from the Porter's Five Forces analysis, the report also analyzes the biotechnology industry in the US in a brief profile.

Key Topics Covered:

A. Executive Summary

B. Introduction to the Industry

B.1 Industry Definition

B.2 What is Biotechnology?

B.3 Industry Structure

B.4 Industry Size

C. Porter's Five Forces Strategy Analysis

C.1 Bargaining Power of Buyers

C.2 Bargaining Power of Suppliers

C.3 Competitive Rivalry in the Industry

C.4 Threat of New Entrants

C.5 Threat of Substitutes

D. Conclusion

E. Glossary of Terms

For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/pgkqzr/united_states

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United States Biotechnology Industry - Porter's Five Forces Strategy ... - Business Wire (press release)

Wesleyan Celebrates Completion of Science Theses with Poster … – Wesleyan Connection (blog)


Wesleyan Connection (blog)
Wesleyan Celebrates Completion of Science Theses with Poster ...
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Wesleyan's Natural Sciences and Mathematics Division recently hosted a Celebration of Science Theses, a poster session featuring the work of Honors and MA ...

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Fighting Infectious Diseases Using 3D Weapons – Technology Networks

UTSW researchers helped solve this structure showing how two Ebola proteins interact, VP35 (black) and NP (rainbow). Credit: UT Southwestern Medical Center

After a decade of work, the Center for Structural Genomics of Infectious Diseases (CSGID) a consortium of 10 scientific institutions in the U.S., Europe, and Canada announced that it has determined the 3-D atomic structures of more than 1,000 proteins.

Determining these structures is an important step in identifying and understanding where a pathogen might be vulnerable to assault by drugs or vaccines. Such vulnerabilities are frequently found at the points where molecules bind to one another, said Dr. Zbyszek Otwinowski, Professor of Biophysics and Biochemistry, who leads the UT Southwestern group participating in the project. Dr. Dominika Borek, Assistant Professor of Biophysics and Biochemistry, who works in Dr. Otwinowskis laboratory, contributed crucial expertise for the successful completion of these studies.

To make a 3-D structure, a protein must be cloned, expressed, and crystallized, and then X-ray diffraction data are collected at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory. These data define the location of each of the hundreds or even thousands of atoms to generate 3-D models of the structures that can be analyzed with graphics software. Each institution in the Center has an area of expertise it contributes to the project, working in parallel on many requests at once.

The UT Southwestern team manages the salvage pathway, meaning scientists design custom methods for determining structures of molecules that resist standard approaches and for which the high potential for drug or vaccine development justifies applying advanced efforts.

Structures solved with help from the UT Southwestern team include proteins involved in the replication of the Ebola virus a pathogen notorious for its ability to evade the bodys immune system. Their X-ray crystallography work formed the basis for preclinical studies currently underway in university and industry laboratories.

When other scientists run into trouble determining crystal structures, Drs. Otwinowski and Borek are among the top people in the world who can develop these advanced approaches because they understand the theory so deeply and they have created such powerful methods to deal with difficult problems, said Dr. Michael Rosen, Chair of Biophysics at UT Southwestern and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. Dr. Rosen has secondary appointments as a Professor of Biochemistry and in the Cecil H. and Ida Green Comprehensive Center for Molecular, Computational, and Systems Biology. Dr. Rosen also holds the Mar Nell and F. Andrew Bell Distinguished Chair in Biochemistry.

UT Southwesterns contribution to the Ebola project began when a scientist at the Washington University School of Medicine requested the consortiums help in structural studies of the Ebola protein VP35. UTSW researchers conducted detailed structural studies of a VP35 protein fragment that interacts with the Ebola nuclear protein (NP) to form a complex that protects Ebolas genetic material from digestion by the hosts enzymes.

The structure revealing the interactions between the VP35 fragment and the NP protein provided the first glimpse into the protein complexs role in viral replication. That work, part of a multicenter study to better understand the complexs function, was reported as a Cell Reports cover story in 2015.

This 3-D structure is among the 1,000 now deposited by the consortium into the World-Wide Protein Data Bank, an archive supported by the National Institutes of Health that is freely available to the scientific community. The CSGIDs breakthrough research is funded by two five-year contracts from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, with a total budget of $57.7 million.

This article has been republished frommaterialsprovided by UT Southwestern Medical Center. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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Seth Smith hits ‘Little League home run’ against the Rays (0:58) – ESPN (blog)

BALTIMORE -- To heck with the math.

According to the math, and the experts who like to use it to crunch numbers and make projections, the Baltimore Orioles weren't supposed to be very good this season. According to the math, they were supposed to win anywhere from not a lot of games to slightly more than not a lot of games. According to the math, they were supposed to be an afterthought in the AL Beast. Instead, they have the best record in the Son of Senior Circuit.

Are the O's a mirage? Maybe. After all, we're only at the one-eighth mark (is that even a thing?). Not to mention, their ho-hum run differential (plus-9) suggests they should be barely above .500 (a Pythagorean 11-9 record). Then again, the same thing happened last season too, when Buck Showalter's club parlayed a surprisingly hot start all the way to the postseason. Regardless, you don't jump out to a 14-6 start without the ball bouncing your way more often than not. You don't have a month like this without a little help from Lady Luck.

By beating Tampa Bay 5-4 in 11 innings on Wednesday, the first-place Birds improved to 6-1 in one-run games. They upped their mark to 3-0 in extra-inning games.

Not to take anything away from Dylan Bundy, who made his fifth straight quality start to kick off the season. Or Brad Brach, who threw up two more goose eggs and continues to do the best Zach Britton impression this side of Zach Britton. Or Chris Davis, who reached base three times, including a leadoff single that started the winning rally in the bottom of the 11th. But if weren't for Kid Karma, who paid an extra-special visit early on in this one, Baltimore might never have been in position to pull out a wild and wacky W that culminated in ... wait for it ... a walk-off walk.

Officially, the final box score will show that LongBalltimore, which led the majors in bombs last season and came into Thursday ranked third in the AL, did not go deep. Unofficially, Seth Smith hit a Little League homer -- a two-run shot that had the exit velocity of a Volvo on a crowded off-ramp, the launch angle of an Acme stomp rocket, and the distance of a sand wedge into high winds.

Actually, that's not entirely true. According to Statcast, Smith's hit off of Rays starter Alex Cobb left the bat at 96 miles an hour, which in theory could be dinger material. Except that it featured just a 15-degree arc and traveled only 322 feet -- to straight away center field. In other words, it had single written all over it. Until it didn't.

Here's how it went down:

With one out and the O's leading 1-0 in the second inning, Smith lined a 2-2 changeup into center field toward Kevin Kiermaier. Ryan Flaherty, on first following an RBI single, was running on the play.

Third baseman Evan Longoria, who had been positioned at shortstop as part of Tampa Bay's shift and was headed to second to cover the steal, had to scurry back toward third to receive the throw from center and didn't quite make it in time. Instead, he and a sliding Flaherty got tangled up, and Kiermaier's throw -- which was actually a pretty good one -- squirted away in the direction of the third-base dugout.

Flaherty started to go for home but then reversed course when he saw that Cobb, backing up third base, had picked up the ball and was about to make a play on him at third. Cobb threw to Longoria at third, but the ball glanced off Flaherty's helmet and caromed into left field.

While Flaherty was busy strolling home, Smith was steaming around second. And third. Left fielder Shane Peterson corralled the ball and made what could loosely be described as a "throw" to relay-man Longoria, who then fired home, where Smith slid in juuuuust ahead of the tag.

Got all that?

Perhaps the most unbelievable thing about the play -- ya know, besides the fact that a guy with three steals in the past five years made it all around the bases on a ball that landed in front of, was hit directly at, and was fielded cleanly by the center fielder -- was the defenders who were involved.

The center fielder in question was Kiermaier, a human web gem who has won back-to-back Gold Gloves. The pitcher in question was Cobb, who ranks in the top 10 among AL starters in runs saved over the past five years. The third baseman in question was Longoria, who isn't the defender he once was but has still saved more runs over the past decade than any third baseman not named Arenado, Machado, or Beltre. Not that it mattered.

"I never touched the ball the whole time," said Longoria after the game, maintaining a sense of humor about the whole thing. "Well, not until I got it and relayed home. It just got out of control. That's a homer in Little League, but in the big leagues it's just a bad play."

Flaherty would've scored it a little differently.

"We can give Seth a homer," Baltimore's utility man said. "If you're starting in the batter's box and you get all the way around to home, that's pretty cool."

Although Flaherty didn't cover quite as much ground as Smith did on the play, between all the starting and stopping and the shenanigans at the hot corner, he felt as if he did. And then some.

"That was more running that I did all of spring training," he said.

As crazy as the play was, Smith is in no hurry to do it again anytime soon.

"I hope that's the last time it happens," said the O's outfielder, who drew the walk-off walk in the 11th and who claims that he never has hit a Little League homer in his life -- not even in Little League. "I dont ever remember that happening."

As for how his four-base single should be classified, it depends on who's keeping score.

"My children will probably think I hit a home run," said the 34-year old father of three. "Then again, they think any time I put the ball in play, it's a hit."

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Seth Smith hits 'Little League home run' against the Rays (0:58) - ESPN (blog)

Freedom Day: An anatomy of privilege – News24

Ahead of Freedom Day, City Press followed two children to document their vastly different lives

Tolgas day

Its 6am in Blairgowrie, 40km northwest of Katlehong. Tolga Gles (9) untangles himself from his blanket cocoon. He rubs sleep from his eyes and pads across his bedrooms carpeted floor to give his mother a kiss.

Come on, time to get dressed and have breakfast, says his mother, Nicki.

He nods, still half asleep. His mother checks that her daughter, Saffiyya (11), is also up and hurries to the kitchen, where she prepares breakfast and packs their lunch of chicken sandwiches and a naartjie. The gleaming island in the kitchens centre is a celebration of choice, with butter, bread, cereals, vegetables and fruit on parade.

Light pours through the large glass windows in the kitchen and living room. The din of the morning news on the radio, the whisper of the stainless steel fridge, the final zip of a schoolbag packed and ready, and the dutiful plinking through a piano piece fill the four-bedroom house.

360 view of Tolga's room

The framed photos of Tolga and his family offer a glimpse into Tolgas middle class life, the culmination of generations of privilege. His home was bought with the help of a deposit secured by an inheritance from his great-grandfather. His life is enriched by overseas trips to London and Turkey to visit family. He spends holidays with his university-educated grandparents, learning maths and how to identify 25 different species of bird.

His parents, who are both employed, give Tolga and his sister what was given to them, and more.

A little before 7.30am, Tolga scrambles into his mothers comfortable SUV with his sister and a neighbourhood friend. They pass private security guards on patrol along their 1.4km route to Blairgowrie Primary School.

The former Model C school, with its sports field, swimming pool, courtyard and state-of-the-art learning facilities from the maths centre to the media centre bursting with books overlooks the city. Johannesburgs opportunities beckon the schools 819 pupils, 55% of whom are black.

I want to be an engineer one day because I like to make things, says Tolga. I want to build a robot that can cut bread for you. I want to create a chocolate that tastes the same but doesnt make you fat.

But I know I can be anything I want when I grow up. I can even be a cow Ive always wanted to be a mascot dressed as a cow for something.

360 view of Tolga's classroom

As the bell rings, Tolga and his fewer than 30 classmates find their seats in Mrs Rene Nels Grade 3 classroom. Colourful laminated posters adorn the walls, urging the children to B Someone U Would B Proud 2 Know! and reminding them of their times tables and vocabulary in English and Afrikaans.

Today, for our lesson on healthy eating, were going to do a tasting activity, says Nel. Youre going to get a plate of apples, grapes, oranges, carrots, peas and tomatoes, and I want you to taste each one and write down in your workbook a word that describes what it looks like, feels like, smells like and tastes like.

Remember, we dont want to use the word good to describe everything and I dont want to hear anybody say things like yuck or ew.

Tolga rummages through his pencil case, filled to the brim with a variety of stationery. Nel peruses each pupils work, encouraging them to use creative descriptions and spell out words they are unsure about.

You can make or break a child who is struggling, says Nel, who has been a teacher for more than 30 years.

I try to instil a sense of self-awareness and pride in every child to get them to believe that they can if they try.

Tolga is one of 30 learners in Mrs Nels grade 3 class at Blairgowrie Primary School. The school employs 18 extra teachers in order to keep class sizes small. Picture: Michelle Bao

Nel credits principal Pat Oosthuizen with fostering an environment of academic achievement, but also one of support and development.

The ethos of our school is all about the unity between the parents, the teachers and the children, says Oosthuizen, who has taught at Blairgowrie Primary since 1984.

We have a strong school governing body and a strong parent-teacher association, which allow us to raise extra funds and charge school fees. It means we can constantly improve our school, hire extra teachers and keep our classes small.

Tolgas school fees are R18715 a year.

Close to 1.20pm, Tolga and his classmates get antsy. As the final bell rings, Tolga grabs his backpack and winds his way down the steps, past the Grade 1 classrooms, to the pick-up area. His private transport, Granny Ann, drives him home and to the familys domestic worker, Auntie Mmapula.

After unpacking his bag, Tolga finds his mothers laptop, connects to the familys unlimited fibreoptic internet and plays one of his favourite online games.

When his sister returns, she signs in to the same game from the desktop in their parents bedroom. The house is quiet except for the click of the keyboard and the soft sizzle of the stove as Auntie Mmapula makes lunch.

Tolga and his older sister, Saffiya, cut out finger puppets and animal masks. They let their imaginations run wild as they make up storylines for the characters. Picture: Michelle Bao

When the virtual world no longer holds their attention, Tolga and his sister delve into the depths of their imagination, creating fictional worlds and breathing life into their toys. Later, as Tolga does his reading homework with his sister, he voices each character differently, in a tone and an accent he imagines would befit such a character.

We try not to limit him, says Tolgas father, Blent. We want to be home early to look after them and help them. Education starts at home.

It is important to his parents that Tolga understands he is privileged. To whom much is given, much is expected. He must have empathy for and help those who dont have, says his mother. Privilege is largely about what you have, but its also about what you have in your head: the tools youve been given to succeed.

For Tolga, this is beginning to sink in.

Privilege means Im very lucky to have what I have. I have an education, toys, books, experiences like travelling, a family, a roof over my head, clothes and food, he says.

I would say my life is lucky, appreciated, lovely, full of fun and excitement, and happy.

After dinner, a little before 8pm, Tolgas mother tells him its time for a bath and bed.

Come lie with me, Tolga says to his mother as he climbs into bed.

Tolga wraps his arms and legs around her as the two share a pillow, touching foreheads and whispering about his day. As he drifts off to sleep, she gives him a kiss, turns off the light and wishes him good night.

Tolga is the son of a City Press staff member

At 6am, Thuli short for Thulisile Malinga is awake. The seven-year-old lives in a one-room backyard shack with her father in Katlehong. There isnt much in the room a television, two chairs, a bowl and a few dishes on the shelves. The bed takes up most of the space. Aside from stickers of smiling faces and stars, there isnt much evidence that a child lives there.

Freedom Day may not yet be significant to Thuli, but it is relevant to her life because the promised equal society is still not available to her.

His income is not always reliable, but Thulis father Lucky Fakude (32) works at a funeral parlour as a tent, chair and table packer, for which he earns about R400 a week. When he can, he gives Thuli a packed lunch and some money, but there are some mornings when she receives neither.

On Thursday morning, she has a lunchbox and R2.

360 view of Thuli's room

Thulis mother lives about 5km away with Thulis younger brother. Fakude says he has not paid lobola for his girlfriend of nine years because he doesnt have the money. Without it, her family will not allow them to live together.

Fakude ensures Thuli has her morning bath, eats her breakfast of two slices of bread with butter, brushes her teeth and combs her hair before 7am. He walks her to Intokozo Primary School, less than five minutes away, and leaves to catch his taxi to work.

Other pupils arrive, some with their parents, others alone and others by bus. Just before school starts at 7.30am, the children assemble near the classrooms and begin to sing the school song.

Intokozo Primary is a no-fee school, says principal Obert Mazibuko. But Grade R, which is not subsidised by government, has to be paid for. Fakude says they paid about R800 for Thuli last year.

Mazibuko says most pupils are poor. Most of the parents do not work, he says.

Sometimes these parents cannot give pupils all the support they need and the parents may have limited education themselves. Fakude left school in Grade 7.

Mazibuko says, despite their problems at home, his parents try to help the school with donations. The spirit of the community is one of his favourite things about working at Intokozo.

360 view of Thuli's school

When we call a parents meeting, they come in great numbers, he says.

But problems persist. There have been burglaries at the school and what little they have is lost.

Our computers get stolen. Its very difficult to replace that, he says.

Inside Thulis classroom, colourful letters of the alphabet decorate the wall above the windows. Above the chalkboard, the numbers one through 10 are stuck on the wall, along with posters depicting different shapes. The classroom isnt small, but with 37 pupils occupying the space, it can feel cramped.

Thulis teacher, Ms Bonisile Gule, faces her own struggles with her pupils and their parents, who battle financially and socially, which affects the children. When she sends work home, some return the next day with little to nothing done.

Education is not prioritised in some homes, she says. When her pupils returned from holiday last week, she had to reteach some of her first-term lessons.

At about noon, the children are fidgety. Its lunch time. Most are eating a packed lunch from home or one provided at school. One girl in Gules class has nothing to eat. Gule encourages her pupils to share their lunches and a child offers to do so.

Thuli knows there are differences between her life and those of others in South Africa.

Id like to go to a white school, she says, explaining that she thinks they have better food. Also, teachers at white schools dont mete out corporal punishment, she says.

Thuli says her teacher doesnt beat them, but she hears that it is different in other classes. Mazibuko says the school does not use or condone corporal punishment.

In Thulis classroom, the children finish eating and go out to play. When they return, its time for their isiZulu lesson.

There are few after-school activities because there is no hall or sports field, and Mazibuko says they try their best with a community soccer field.

Thuli walks home by herself, stopping briefly at her aunts house before going to a neighbour across the street.

She changes out of her uniform into a pair of jeans and a purpleT-shirt.

After school Thuli walks home by herself. Picture: Jacquelyn Guillen

She claims not to have any homework and takes a book that needs fixing out of her suitcase. She grabs a stick of glue and puts the book back together. It is her isiZulu workbook.

Its my favourite subject, she says, but quickly adds that theres too much work.

Thuli dreams of becoming a teacher. When shes older, she says, she wants to pass her matric, and buy a big house and a BMW.

Other children trickle in and Thuli starts playing hopscotch and skipping with two other girls in the front yard. Their laughter occasionally disrupts the silence on the block.

A squabble erupts, and Thuli begins to cry. Her cry is loud enough to catch the neighbours attention, but no one comes outside to see whats going on. Her two friends realise they hurt her and try to comfort her with hugs, but Thuli, who hasnt smiled much today, continues to cry.

After school, Thuli changes into casual clothing and spends time at a neighbours house across the street. The neighbour is a family friend and cares for Thuli until her father returns. Picture: Jacquelyn Guillen

Later, Thuli follows another child to the spaza shop on the corner, where she buys and eats a bag of chips.

After 6pm, she receives her second bath of the day and changes into her pyjamas. As she waits for her father, the neighbour gives Thuli dinner of chicken and pap, which she eats in front of the television.

Fakude arrives after 7pm, but doesnt stay long. He checks in on Thuli and leaves to take a bath himself. She sits around waiting, watching the soapies. When the TV no longer interests her, she begins writing in a magazine.

On some nights, she returns to her aunts home, where she falls asleep on the couch. When its time for bed at 9pm or 10pm, Fakude fetches her and takes her back to the shack.

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Freedom Day: An anatomy of privilege - News24

IPL 2017: The anatomy of a wide in T20; the angle, length and breadth of it – The Indian Express


The Indian Express
IPL 2017: The anatomy of a wide in T20; the angle, length and breadth of it
The Indian Express
IPL 2017: The anatomy of a wide in T20; the angle, length and breadth of it. It's unlikely that umpire Ravi would have had enough time to take Rohit Sharma through the intricacies of an off-side wide. 0. Shares. Facebook · Twitter · Google Plus · Whatsapp.

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What’s Going On With Eastgate Biotech Corp (OTCMKTS:ETBI) – The Oracle Dispatch

Whats going on in Eastgate Biotech Corp (OTCMKTS:ETBI) sharesis any ones guess, and any time you see a stock move 150% or more you must ask the question. I see (by looking at the technical picture in a chart below) that this is a stock that made a high volume low and turning out of triple sub penny status and are retracing losses from early April.

When a stock trades 65 million shares something is up. It goes back to the volume strategy all sub penny traders must adhere to in terms of the volume growth ramp driving prices higher. The presence of new money in the stock has been a consistent theme with many movers we write about. Be aware that you must pay attention when this volume begins to decline, because when the music stops (and it always does), shares can have unwanted downside volatility.

Eastgate Biotech Corp(OTCMKTS:ETBI) is an emerging pharmaceutical stock that produces and distributes innovative and healthy nutraceuticals based on natural therapies as well as focusing on new pharmaceutical developments. The driver revolves around its recent acquisition, OMNI Surgery and Anti-Aging Centre has appointed a new Medical Director.Dr. Ishaan Sundar has assumed the role of Medical Director effective immediately. Educated by the American Academy of Aesthetic Medicine, American Cosmetic Cellular Medicine Association, Laser Sheer Training Academy and trained in Injectable Placements, Dr. Sundar brings over 20 years of extensive practice to the OMNI state-of-the-art centre.With a distinguished career in Critical Care Medicine (ICU, CCU), Dr. Sundar will oversee medical and surgical operations at Saskatchewans only combined fee-for-service surgical and anti-aging centre.

OMNI Surgery and Anti-Aging Centre is an upscale facility serving an underserved market in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada with great growth potential. It is poised to participate in the growing anti-aging market.According to Transparency Market Research, the Global Anti-Aging Market Boosted by Baby Boomer Population nearing retirement is to be worth US$191.7 Billion by 2019.

We are thrilled to welcome an experienced physician like Dr. Sundar to our leadership team.His holistic approach of crafting treatment plans unique to each individual mirrors OMNIs mission of making our patients feel comfortable and at ease, while getting the results that they want, states Bill Abajian, Global Business Development and Licensing at EastGate and former owner of OMNI Surgery.

Find outwhen $ETBI stock reaches critical levels. Subscribe to OracleDispatch.com Right Now by entering your Email in the box below.

OMNI is a fee-for-service, Surgery + Anti-Aging Centre offering plastic, orthopaedic, along with general surgical procedures. Alongside the surgical procedures, the Anti-Aging Centre is equipped with State-of-the-Art technology that work to contour, tone, and remove blemishes in order to reverse the aging process. As a Centre of Excellence in Saskatchewan, OMNIs board-certified surgeons work to deliver high quality care mindful of patients needs, while helping them achieve the results they want.

EastGate Biotech Corp. (OTCMKTS:ETBI) produces and distributes innovative and healthy nutraceuticals that are based on natural therapies and absorbed naturally by the body. But the real question here is about how shares will trade over the coming weeks and any retest of the lows on higher volume would be bad, on the upside you need to retrace the decline and test .03 cents which is another big leg higher for ETBIstock.

This would be easy to track by observing the volume alone, the short term players are here, now you need to sort out the meaning of these volume clues they translate to price so often it emerges as the most important metric to watch on any trading day.For more news on $ETBIand other fast-moving penny stocks, please subscribe to OracleDispatch.com below.

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What's Going On With Eastgate Biotech Corp (OTCMKTS:ETBI) - The Oracle Dispatch

New platform uses behavioral science to cut cyber security risks – BetaNews

With the right training and knowledge, many cyber attacks can be avoided. Addressing this human aspect of security is the idea behind a new platform from British start-up CybSafe.

Human error is a major cause of data breaches and security training needs to be able to positively change user behavior.

Using intelligent software and proprietary analytics, CybSafe's cloud-based platform learns an individual's knowledge level and their behavior patterns to deliver a personalized e-learning program. Delivered through a mobile app or online, the GCHQ-accredited e-learning platform is aimed at saving businesses money, not just by reducing their risk of falling victim to a security breach, but also by delivering meaningful training that constantly evolves based on current threats.

"Businesses recognize that their own staff represent their greatest security vulnerability, but its a problem that is costly and difficult to address and this results in cursory attempts to impart information which rarely has the desired effect," says Oz Alashe MBE, CEO and founder of CybSafe. "CybSafe transforms cyber awareness training from a box-ticking exercise into an immersive, recurring experience that positively changes security-related behavior."

The CybSafe platform is developed by specialists with a broad range of expertise. It uses written content combined with video learning and interactive assessments to make information accessible, maintain engagement and make learning effective.

Simulated cyber attacks are used to assess the level of effectiveness and retention of knowledge and there are regular updates based on the latest threat intelligence. There's a family and friends function too, so users can share the knowledge theyve gained.

Alashe adds, "Most businesses -- whether they have an information security team or not -- don't have the expertise, capacity or resource to address the human aspect of cyber security properly. The CybSafe platform gives them the edge and helps them more effectively protect their organization. We're harnessing the collective lessons from across the cyber security community and making this available to all."

You can find out more and sign up for a free trial on the CybSafe website.

Photo Credit: Wichy/Shutterstock

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New platform uses behavioral science to cut cyber security risks - BetaNews

Ignoring elephants in the room at Morningstar behavioral finance panel – Financial Planning

CHICAGO I went to Morningstars panel on the latest techniques in behavioral finance for advisers with high hopes. But while the speakers made some strong points about psychological bias, they ignored the elephant in the room. Actually, make that about 150 elephants the advisers who attended the panel, along with fund managers and other financial professionals.

Investing is simple but not easy, according to Morningstar's Steve Wendel, the head of the firms behavioral science division. Learning about our biases helps clients become better investors, so advisers must be behavioral coaches to our clients.

During the presentation, Wendel referred to Russ Kinnel's work at Morningstar showing that investor returns lag fund returns due to poor timing. In other words, performance chasing.

Wendel made the case that advisers should help clients understand their behavior and get them prepared for the inevitable stock plunge. That can inoculate them from bad behavior, he says.

We advisers are people, too, and we must first control our own behavior.

Morningstar's Samantha Lamas, a client service associate, says she believes that tailoring advice to different generations is key. Retirement means something different to a 25-year old than a 60-year old client. They will likely have very different answers when asked where they want to be in 10 years. Thus, they will have different motivations.

But, I think the elephant in the room was completely ignored. We advisers are people, too, and we must first control our own behavior.

Years ago, I wrote how advisers were heavy in stocks on October 9, 2007, at the height of the real estate bubble and heavy in cash on March 9, 2009, at the bottom of the market. We timed bonds poorly because we were confident that tapering and ending Quantitative Easing would lead to rising rates. Rates declined significantly as bonds rallied.

Perhaps we should take a painful look at the advice each of us gave clients at that time, to see if we timed markets poorly. What role did our own biases play in our portfolio decisions? Don't assume it was those other advisers who behaved badly. No market plunge or surge should go wasted. We are kidding ourselves if we think we can inoculate ourselves, or our clients, from the pain of a market plunge. The best we can do is work through the pain and buy stocks when the herd is selling. That is truly simple but not easy.

If we use behavioral finance to acquire clients, it will surely backfire. But if we use it to help clients, we may find those clients become fans who refer other clients.

Allan S. Roth, a Financial Planning contributing writer, is founder of the planning firm Wealth Logic in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He also writes for The Wall Street and AARP The Magazine and has taught investing at three universities. Follow him on Twitter at @Dull_Investing.

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Ignoring elephants in the room at Morningstar behavioral finance panel - Financial Planning

Kimberly-Clark Professional addresses allergens and hand hygiene – FoodQualityNews.com

Kimberly-Clark Professional has launched an industrial cloth and a system that uses behavioural science to improve worker hand hygiene.

The Kimtech Precision Cleaning Cloths and Allergen Control and the Continuum System were unveiled at the Global Food Safety Conference in Houston, Texas.

The disposable cloth, designed to remove allergens from food contact surfaces, will be launched in Latin America first and to the rest of the world by the end of the year.

It works on surfaces such as stainless steel and those that have direct contact with food like the inside of equipment and conveyor belts.

Basic principles of cleaning

Phillip Jarpa, global segment marketing manager of food processing at Kimberly-Clark Professional, said it is primarily for controlled wet type of cleaning usually found in dry environments.

The reason being that is where most of the clean out of place happens so you usually apply force and we know that those types of industries are focussed on controlling as much as they can the presence of moisture. So the cloths are not only good at removing but also helping drying those surfaces and preventing moisture, he told FoodQualityNews at the event.

This is important because removing allergens is about not just separating but also removing from surfaces and to avoid redeposit. We were able to remove up to 100% of some of the most unwanted allergens by combining with water.

This cloth is meant to be integrated in the current process without affecting product changeover time, for example. It is not a new step for dry processing environments it is replacing some of the supplies they are using so there should be no impact on cleaning time. We are not thinking about high volume because these are usually very precise tasks.

Jarpa said allergens are a new threat for industry which it is at the beginning stage of handling.

Regulation has moved faster than the practices. What the industry is using today is old technology for new contamination threats. It is very common to use brushes and vacuums which are very good at separating but not very good at removing and preventing from redepositing, he said.

This product falls under cleaning when manual force is applied under the controlled wet and drying process so the amount to be used is going to depend on the surface and the complexity of the soil.

Hand hygiene is important but is considered as basic and not a priority, according to Jarpa.

When you look at some of the research done, for example in a meta-analysis that looked at 66 outbreaks in the US in 23 years, they discovered around 82% were caused by workers and 50% of those, hands were the source of transmission. Which is not a surprise, when you see that 50% of employees do not wash their hands for the right amount of time, he said.

Other research has shown when you dont wash your hands for at least 20 seconds you wont effectively remove bacteria like E. coli and Shigella. When you go to the behavioural part, we know moist hands can proliferate bacteria 1,000 times more than dry hands.

Imagine you are a food worker and you have wet hands and you look across and you have 20 people in line for their turn at the hairdryer and youre standing there and you think Im not even paid for this, Im paid for being inside there. So what are they going to do? They are going to rub it on their apron which is the number one concern for QA managers when it comes to the hygiene station.

It is common practice that dryness in the hand hygiene process is overlooked and that causes bacterial proliferation and skin irritation of workers, said Jarpa.

If they are going to don gloves that is just a petri-dish effect. They can wear gloves; the problem is if your hands are dirty or moist when gloves rupture, as they rupture all the time, a single pinhole can release thousands of bacteria. We have seen many companies move away from gloves as they realise gloves make employees not care or worry about hand hygiene.

So those are the hands that are touching our food, that will go onto our surfaces but because traceability of an event to hand hygiene is so hard unless you make it visual and you provide industry with this data it wont be taken seriously.

The human factor

The Continuum System understands people are the most complex element of a process, said Jarpa.

There are a lot of existing models on behavioural science and Kimberly-Clark has experts on the subject, he added.

For example, the Kimtech cloth is part of this system. Weve incorporated the principles of behavioral science on the design of the product itself, how it will be used, where will it be used, what would workers be primed to, but we support that with interventions which are simple disruptive ideas that will drive behavior change for cleaning and for hygiene.

We start with the walk the walk is on-site where we look at practices, what are workers doing when it comes to hygiene and cleaning; station design so where and what are they doing it with and as an outcome of that well make a preliminary report on how effective the combination of those two things are today and how we can help them through products and interventions.

Weve done this in more than eight countries, for example in a facility in Latin America we were able to reduce dirty [more than 1,000 cfu/g per hand] from being 55% of the plant to being 3% of the plant without training a single employee, just by understanding what drives them.

For hand hygiene, washing and drying under Continuum the product brand will be Scott and for cleaning it will be Kimtech.

Food safety culture risks becoming a trend word, said Jarpa.

We have worked with GFSI member companies and based on what they are doing and public research we have defined a food safety culture as a place where you are guided by norms, so where safety is what you do and not what you are told, where safety is a value and not a priority; difference being that priorities change.

Jarpa said there are at least five dimensions of what need to be covered.

Continuum describes all the stages you will go through to get to that ideal within those five dimensions. One of the key ones, which is around norms, is practices so what is being done today? So that is why we start with behavior of employees. If we understand what it is they are doing and why they are doing it, it will be easier to move that dimension, he said.

In leadership what are the basic tools and processes that we can help our customers do to ignite change and sustain it. Engagement and motivation has a lot to do with how we address their workers.

One of the last dimensions, which is a joint effort, is how do we communicate and benchmark those practices. So we benchmark the different walks that we do so customers can see how they compare to the industry average of every other facility we have gone through and that way they have measurable baselines that they can act upon.

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Kimberly-Clark Professional addresses allergens and hand hygiene - FoodQualityNews.com

Achieve a lifetime of good health with care at medAge – The Mountaineer

medAge is customized medicine using a team approach to help patients become healthier and more energetic.

medAge patients lose fat and are leaner.They have lower risks for heart disease, cancer, arthritis, bone loss and other chronic conditions frequently associated with aging and the typical American lifestyle.

These are conditions that are commonly diagnosed and treated but rarely prevented in many medical offices. medAge is also anti-aging medicine staying abreast of the science to help patients stay healthy and look and feel young. medAge was founded in Asheville, a mecca for health and wellness centers. Due to its success at identifying and reversing early stages of disease,medAge can now be found in other parts of the country.

How medAge is different from other medical practices:

medAge is scientifically sound medicine and helps each individual patient formulate a healthy, sustainable way of living which is enjoyable and tailored to their specific lifestyle.

A division of medAge is dedicated to professional and amateur athletes of all ages. medAge for Athletes uses precise biometric measurements to test and train athletes allowing them to achieve peak performance in their individual sport. medAge trained athletes can be found all over the world competing and excelling in professional sports.

For more information on how to achieve optimal health visit http://www.medage.com.

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Achieve a lifetime of good health with care at medAge - The Mountaineer

What's Going On With Eastgate Biotech Corp (OTCMKTS:ETBI) – The Oracle Dispatch

Whats going on in Eastgate Biotech Corp (OTCMKTS:ETBI) sharesis any ones guess, and any time you see a stock move 150% or more you must ask the question. I see (by looking at the technical picture in a chart below) that this is a stock that made a high volume low and turning out of triple sub penny status and are retracing losses from early April.

When a stock trades 65 million shares something is up. It goes back to the volume strategy all sub penny traders must adhere to in terms of the volume growth ramp driving prices higher. The presence of new money in the stock has been a consistent theme with many movers we write about. Be aware that you must pay attention when this volume begins to decline, because when the music stops (and it always does), shares can have unwanted downside volatility.

Eastgate Biotech Corp(OTCMKTS:ETBI) is an emerging pharmaceutical stock that produces and distributes innovative and healthy nutraceuticals based on natural therapies as well as focusing on new pharmaceutical developments. The driver revolves around its recent acquisition, OMNI Surgery and Anti-Aging Centre has appointed a new Medical Director.Dr. Ishaan Sundar has assumed the role of Medical Director effective immediately. Educated by the American Academy of Aesthetic Medicine, American Cosmetic Cellular Medicine Association, Laser Sheer Training Academy and trained in Injectable Placements, Dr. Sundar brings over 20 years of extensive practice to the OMNI state-of-the-art centre.With a distinguished career in Critical Care Medicine (ICU, CCU), Dr. Sundar will oversee medical and surgical operations at Saskatchewans only combined fee-for-service surgical and anti-aging centre.

OMNI Surgery and Anti-Aging Centre is an upscale facility serving an underserved market in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada with great growth potential. It is poised to participate in the growing anti-aging market.According to Transparency Market Research, the Global Anti-Aging Market Boosted by Baby Boomer Population nearing retirement is to be worth US$191.7 Billion by 2019.

We are thrilled to welcome an experienced physician like Dr. Sundar to our leadership team.His holistic approach of crafting treatment plans unique to each individual mirrors OMNIs mission of making our patients feel comfortable and at ease, while getting the results that they want, states Bill Abajian, Global Business Development and Licensing at EastGate and former owner of OMNI Surgery.

Find outwhen $ETBI stock reaches critical levels. Subscribe to OracleDispatch.com Right Now by entering your Email in the box below.

OMNI is a fee-for-service, Surgery + Anti-Aging Centre offering plastic, orthopaedic, along with general surgical procedures. Alongside the surgical procedures, the Anti-Aging Centre is equipped with State-of-the-Art technology that work to contour, tone, and remove blemishes in order to reverse the aging process. As a Centre of Excellence in Saskatchewan, OMNIs board-certified surgeons work to deliver high quality care mindful of patients needs, while helping them achieve the results they want.

EastGate Biotech Corp. (OTCMKTS:ETBI) produces and distributes innovative and healthy nutraceuticals that are based on natural therapies and absorbed naturally by the body. But the real question here is about how shares will trade over the coming weeks and any retest of the lows on higher volume would be bad, on the upside you need to retrace the decline and test .03 cents which is another big leg higher for ETBIstock.

This would be easy to track by observing the volume alone, the short term players are here, now you need to sort out the meaning of these volume clues they translate to price so often it emerges as the most important metric to watch on any trading day.For more news on $ETBIand other fast-moving penny stocks, please subscribe to OracleDispatch.com below.

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What's Going On With Eastgate Biotech Corp (OTCMKTS:ETBI) - The Oracle Dispatch

ideas42: The biggest threat to America's cybersecurity is YOU – Yahoo Finance

NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - April 25, 2017) - When it comes to cybersecurity, you are the weakest link, according to insights uncovered by non-profit behavioral design lab ideas42. That holds true from the workplace to your home, from your personal banking data to your employer's systems and records.

Despite public and private sector investments in sophisticated security systems, vulnerabilities remain. This is due in part to the fact that the search for answers has been heavily steered toward finding technological solutions alone. In reality, up to 80% of the cost attributed to cyber attacks is actually a result of human error -- or, rather, human behavior.

In the final installment of Deep Thought, a CyberSecurity Story, released today, ideas42 addresses this technical problem in a way most people can relate to -- through a story. The true-crime novella dramatizes the human factors in cybersecurity and includes a robust index of key insights from behavioral science that can be used to rethink and improve security protocols.

Drawing on insights revealed in the story, here are five reasons you are the biggest threat to America's cybersecurity:

1. You connect to public Wi-Fi everywhere you go. Remember when connecting to an insecure, public Wi-Fi network: if it's easy for you, it's probably easy for "the bad guy."

2. Security warnings have lost all meaning to you. The "habituation" effect -- when we get used to something after seeing it several times -- often causes you to disregard security warnings with a single click, even if they are legitimate.

3. You think (and click) way too fast. Thinking fast can get you into trouble in a variety of situations, but it's particularly dangerous online, when one small action-opening a bad email or clicking the wrong link-can have a high cost. Is that weird email just a weird email, or is it a phishing attempt?

4. You don't follow through on installing the updates your device wants you to install. Poor "choice architecture" -- for instance, how a website or digital procedure is structured -- can often lead you to defer important security steps like downloading a new security patch or updating your operating system in a timely way.

5. Your pet's name is your password. When it comes to creating passwords, it is randomness (not your pet's name) that is your friend. Yet common security "rules of thumb" often inadvertently lead you in the opposite direction and result in passwords that hackers can work out in seconds.

This list isn't comprehensive -- it merely underscores the real problem with cybersecurity. The most secure system in the world is only as strong as the humans interacting with it. Failing to design for how we as human beings actually behave creates the opening for security breaches of all kinds.

Aside from tips like these, the ideas42 novella includes a rich vein of behaviorally-informed insights that can help organizations design systems that work with our human tendencies, not against them. The goal is to focus on behavioral insights and solutions that can be adopted quickly and brought to scale. For a full copy of the novella and behavioral insight appendix visit ideas42.org/cyber.

Here is our ideas42 novella and our cybersecurity video.

The organization's work in cybersecurity is supported by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Cyber Initiative in partnership with New America's Cybersecurity Initiative.

About ideas42

At ideas42 we believe that a deep understanding of human behavior will help us improve millions of lives. Using insights from behavioral science, we create innovative solutions in economic mobility, health, education, criminal justice, consumer finance, energy efficiency and international development. We're a nonprofit with more than 80 active projects in the United States and around the world and many partnerships across governments, foundations, NGOs and corporations.

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ideas42: The biggest threat to America's cybersecurity is YOU - Yahoo Finance

The High Cost of Bad Moods (Barry Goldberg On Leadership) – Arkansas Business Online

Research in behavioral science is showing that there is a trend toward higher irritability in the workplace especially in the United States and it has been more pronounced over the last 24 months. In short, more of us spend more time in a bad mood at work than ever before.

There are even healthy, if snarky, internet memes on the subject. In one, the comic strip character Calvin howls, Im in a very bad mood, so nobodyd better mess with me today, boy!! Bad moods are generally the result of higher stress, lower satisfaction, elevated levels of fear (even if we do not have something specific to be afraid of) and an increase in feelings of powerlessness. Bad moods are also contagious, according to Scientific American. And in a business, bad moods are expensive. Consider these examples pulled from a recent organizational psychology study.

The senior vice president of a banks branch operations is unhappy with a decision his boss made and takes his irritability into a meeting with a branch manager. She leaves the meeting feeling tentative and concerned for her job. When she declines to make a reasonable accommodation for a longtime customer, the customers family business moves to a competing bank.

A surgeon with a reputation for being unapproachable arrives for surgery in a particularly bad mood. Surgical staff say nothing when the surgeon opens the wrong leg on a patient.

A plant manager, angry about budget cuts, shortens his morning safety meeting. While the engineering staff is drawing straws about who will tell him about a maintenance issue that needs attention on one of the lines, a belt breaks and there are three serious injuries and one death.

What may be most discouraging about this normal human condition is that if we begin our day in a bad mood, we are likely to remain moody and unapproachable for the entire day. It takes a concerted effort to shake off a bad mood and generally one of the conditions of our mood is that we feel no reason to need to change it.

But change it we can and change it we should. Going through the day in a bad mood is not positive for our performance or our career. And it can create rifts that take weeks, months, even years to get over. If you are the leader of an organization, failing to shake off a bad mood gives tacit permission for the entire organization to do the same. So, here are a few ways to shake off a bad mood:

Get outside! Even a five-minute walk outside, focusing more on the sky, birds, dogs and kids in a park, whatever nature offers can provide a reframe allowing the ability to let go of a foul temperament.

Oxygen is your friend. A few deep breaths are useful for clearing the body of stress-inducing hormones.

What am I really irritated about? A little time in consideration of the source of your irritation, anger, or discontent can be useful as well. It may be that the thing most driving your bad mood can be addressed constructively, but only if you identify it.

The top stories of the day, right to your inbox

Does this all sound simplistic? A little on the armchair shrink side? Perhaps. But in the end, we are human beings. And as leaders in an organization we have an obligation to both model the behavior we want in others, and be the standard-bearer for the culture we aspire to create. If taking five minutes out to reset your own mood then prevents you from modeling poor behavior that often can lead to poor business outcomes, that might be the most important five minutes of your day.

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The High Cost of Bad Moods (Barry Goldberg On Leadership) - Arkansas Business Online

Aspen Institute now offering regenerative STEM Cell therapy – MilTech

Aspen Institute has added Umbilical cord blood STEM Cells to its treatment regimen focused on anti-aging and orthopedic regenerative medicine.

Dr. Gershon

ASPEN, CO, USA, April 25, 2017 /EINPresswire.com/ Aspen Institute for Anti-aging & Regenerative Medicine with offices in Aspen and Denver devote much of their time treating aging athletes with state of the art Bio-identical Hormone replacement and specially patients with pain or degenerative diseases. With over 35 years experience in Sports medicine the Aspen based practice utilizes cutting-edge technologies to help patients reduce pain and restore function with state of the art therapies like Stem cell therapy.

The Institute recently announced its latest breakthrough using Umbilical cord blood stem cells isolated in and FDA approved process from Bioburst technologies. These vibrant cells produce profound healing in arthritic joints and degenerative conditions such as those found in the knees, ankles, hips, shoulders and wrists. Most recently the Institute has been treating degenerative systemic diseases with great success such as Rheumatoid arthritis, Scleroderma, COPD or Emphysema and Diabetes. The Aspen clinic is the only practice in Colorado treating Erectile dysfunction with a unique combination of testosterone and stem cells. Where one simple injection can provide long-lasting benefits.

These remarkable treatments can repair tissue in the body that has been damaged from age related disease or degeneration. They do this by pinpointing the impaired areas, removing the swelling with powerful anti-inflammatory properties and healing them by regenerating new cells and tissue. The Institute also uses your bodies own stem cells derived from your own adipose tissue which is rich in regenerative stem cells. These cells are particularly effective in treating such conditions as degenerative arthritis, degenerative cartilage and ligaments, bursitis and tendonitis. According to Aspen Institute for Anti-aging & Regenerative Medicines founder Dr. Julian Gershon patients can experience a significant decrease in pain and an improvement in range of motion within weeks of one treatment. Our patients see results that are magical said Dr. Gershon. Its our hope that this truly amazing therapy will eliminate the need for drugs and painful surgery.

Dr.Gershon is stem cell Fellowship trained in Stem cell therapy. As well he is Triple Board certified by the American Osteopathic association in Sports Medicine and Family Medicine, and in Anti-aging Medicine by the American Academy of Anti-aging & Regenerative Medicine. Dr. Gershon in a physician peer to peer trainer for Bioburst and mentors physicians in regenerative medicine techniques from all over the world. Dr. Gershon has been performing cutting edge stem cell treatments for over 5 years in Texas and Colorado.

Dr. Rob Gershon Aspen Institute for Anti-aging & Regenerative Medicine 970-201-1332 email us here

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Aspen Institute now offering regenerative STEM Cell therapy - MilTech

Fish Oil Component Boosts Damaged Brain, Retinal Cells – Anti Aging News

Researchers at Louisiana State University have determined that fish oil boosts damaged brain cells as well as damaged retinal cells. The study was spearheaded by Nicolas Bazan, the Director of LSU's Health New Orleans School of Medicine's Neuroscience Center of Excellence. The research was performed in a model of human retinal pigment epithelial cells and ischemic stroke.

About NPD1

NPD1 is an acronym that stands for neuroprotectin D1. This is a lipid messenger made from omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid or DHA. It is made in an on-demand fashion when cell survival is threatened. NPD1 was identified and named back in 2004 by Dr. Bazan. Oxidative stress is created by the steady production of harmful free radicals. It sets the stage for cell death. Such death is hastened by catastrophic happenings like blinding-eye diseases, neurodegenerative diseases, and ischemic stroke.

The Findings

This study is considered a breakthrough as it provides the first evidence that NDP1, a signaling molecule, prompts the creation of a protective protein against harmful free radicals as well as brain cell and retinal cell injury. Dr. Bazan's research team found that the systematic administering of NPD1 a single hour following two hours of experimental stroke boosted the creation and accessibility of ring finger protein 146 called Iduna. Iduna allows for rapid DNA repair and protection against programmed cell death that occurs in stroke known as "parthanatos". This occurs as Iduna reduces the generation of PARP, a harmful protein.

The research team's findings also show that NDP1 boosted the generation of Iduna and protection in two distinct types of RPE cells, primary RPE and ARPE-19, that were enduring uncompensated oxidative stress. It was determined the effect of NDP1 on Iduna activity peaked about six hours following the beginning of oxidative stress. A dose-dependent curve displayed heightened Iduna activity commencing s 25 nM NPD1 in each type of RPE cells. The results indicate NDP1 causes Iduna activity in a selective manner in instances when uncompensated oxidative stress stimulates the creation of NPD1 that consequently triggers Iduna.

The findings are important as they show that NPD1 created in an on-demand manner, modulates the amount of Iduna protein necessary for cell survival. Iduna is important for the reprogramming of cell existence and proper functionality. A continued study of this protein might soon lead to key developments in terms of therapeutic interventions for ischemic stroke and retinal degeneration.

Ludmila Belayev, Pranab K Mukherjee, Veronica Balaszczuk, Jorgelina M Calandria, Andre Obenaus, Larissa Khoutorova, Sung-Ha Hong, Nicolas G Bazan. Neuroprotectin D1 upregulates Iduna expression and provides protection in cellular uncompensated oxidative stress and in experimental ischemic stroke. Cell Death and Differentiation, 2017; DOI: 10.1038/cdd.2017.55

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Fish Oil Component Boosts Damaged Brain, Retinal Cells - Anti Aging News

Anatomy of a goal: Breaking down the Seattle Sounders’ second tally against the LA Galaxy – SoundersFC.com

Last Sunday in a 3-0 road win overthe LA Galaxy, Seattle Sounders head coach Brian Schmetzer opted to start Will Bruin up front and move Jordan Morris to the left wing. And for the first time in 2017, the Sounders offense clicked looked the explosive juggernaut it could be.

The reason why the adjustment is so successful is because it more naturally suits Morris and Bruins styles of play. Morris is much more of a second striker and loves to run at defenders in space. Bruin is a target forward by trade, who is comfortable with his back to goal and stretching center backs deep.

Watching the Sounders front four operate against the Galaxy was like watching poetry in motion, the way Morris, Bruin, Clint Dempsey and Nicolas Lodeiro bossed the attacking third. In previous matches, Dempsey, Lodeiro and Harry Shipp stepped on each others toes and often made the same runs, while Morris was left on an island and a non-factor. Thepersonnel shift Schmetzer made last Sunday unlocked another offensive dimension.

To see how effectively this worked, lets take a look at the second goal the Sounders scored against the Galaxy. It was an own goal off the foot of Ashley Cole, yes, but Seattles build-up play forced the issue.

On this play, Dempsey has the ball 10 yards shy of midfield. Noticing a gap in the middle, Morris checks back to the ball to provide Dempsey with a passing option.

When Morris receives the pass, he turns and realizes he has space in front of him and attacks.

Morris initially wants to pass the ball wide to Joevin Jones, but Romain Alessandrini closes down the passing lane and forces Morris inside.

Recognizing the gap in between the Galaxy midfield and the back line, Morris instincts take over. He uses his pace to penetrate and force LA to collapse. Once it does, Morris senses the space opening for Jones on the left and lays it off to him.

Once Morris does this, LA is in real danger. Bruin is yards in front of Cole and making a run to the near post while Morris continues his run after his pass and bolts toward the penalty spot.

The subsequent cross from Jones is perfectly weighted and put just far enough out of the reach of goalkeeper Brian Rowe that it forces him to stay close to his line. A retreating Cole does everything he can to step in front of an onrushing and open Bruin, but all the veteran English left back can do is get a touch on it, which deflects poorly and sails past Rowe.

The goal may not have been finished by a Sounders player, but its origin was entirely Morris and his positioning in a wider, reserved role. Morris deserves a lot of the credit, but it was as much his doing as his tactical placement. Although not an out-and-out winger, Morris is far more successful in wide spaces than he is alone up top.

The best thing Schmetzer has done since taking over as head coach last July is put his players in optimal positionsto succeed. Morris on the wing with a true No. 9 in Bruin up front appears to be just that.

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Anatomy of a goal: Breaking down the Seattle Sounders' second tally against the LA Galaxy - SoundersFC.com