CWU Scientist to Speak at Seattle March for Science April 22 – Central Washington University

Geology professor and AAAS Science award-winner Anne Egger is an invited speaker at Seattle's March for Scienceon Earth Day, April 22. Egger, who has taught at Central Washington University for six years, is also a member of a state-wide consortium to improve science education in Washington and the Director of Undergraduate Research at CWU. Egger currently serves as president of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers (NAGT), which has endorsed the national March for Science.

"NAGT endorsed the national March for Science because we share the same values, including advocating for cutting-edge science education, for diversity and inclusion in the scientific endeavour, and basing policy and decision-making on evidence. It is particularly energizing for us as Earth scientists that the March is also happening on Earth Day."

The March for Science in Seattle is satellite march of a non-partisan national movement to celebrate science and to raise awareness of the importance of science in public policy, legislation, and education. Other speakers at the Seattle March for Science include Congresswoman Suzan DelBene, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, former EPA scientist Michael Cox, and University of Washington physics student Tyler Valentine.

"Speaking at the March is an opportunity for me to share my values of Earth literacy for all and high-quality science education," Egger added. "The evidence for what works in the classroom comes from social and behavioral science research; the evidence for how to prepare for the inevitable earthquake comes from Earth science and engineering studies.

"We want our policies to be based on that evidence, and we want a citizenry that is equipped to develop and vote on those policies."

Egger received the American Association for Advancement of Science Science magazine award for inquiry based instruction in 2011. She is participant of InTeGrate, a $10 million National Science Foundation grant for infusing Earth literacy and sustainability across the undergraduate curriculum. She has also received grants for earthquake hazard assessment and geologic mapping from the United States Geological Survey. Egger holds a doctorate in geological and environmental sciences from Stanford University.

There will also be an Earth Day March for Science in Ellensburg at noon, April 22, starting at the post office. CWU geology professor Susan Kaspari and math professor Dominic Klyve will be speakers.

Media Contact: Valerie Chapman-Stockwell, Public Affairs, 509-963-1518, valeriec@cwu.edu April 20, 2017

Edited April 21, 2017 to include Professor Klyve's participation in the Ellensburg march.

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CWU Scientist to Speak at Seattle March for Science April 22 - Central Washington University

Federal funding for basic research led to the gene-editing revolution. Don’t cut it. – Vox

Outside contributors' opinions and analysis of the most important issues in politics, science, and culture.

Labs across our country are a source of American optimism advancing knowledge, technologies, and cures. And yet, as citizens in 500 cities worldwide prepare to march this weekend in support of science, many American scientific practitioners are afraid. They worry that American science as we know it would be hobbled if President Trumps proposed 18 percent cut to the National Institutes of Health, Americas premier medical research funder, becomes reality.

We hope Congress will hear historys call and re-assert American leadership in advancing humanitys scientific knowledge.

Call us nave, but we believe as an immunologist and biochemist attempting to perfect and deploy gene-editing advances to cure disease that Democrats and Republicans alike can be united by a shared drive for scientific exploration and life-saving discoveries.

Science is not the property of any political party or region of the country. In red states and blues states, daughters and sons ask their first scientific questions when they come to us and wonder how the human body grows, how genes are inherited, and how a medicine works. Over the past century, American political leaders have encouraged young people to ask these fundamental questions, invested in their training to become scientists, and given them tools to translate questions into innovation.

The rewards of breakthroughs are felt most acutely when our families experience illness. Many of us know the pain of a loved one discovering a lump that turns out to be cancer or showing signs of neurological decline. In these moments, whatever our politics, we all hope to reach for the most powerful medicines, which continue to result from the relentless pursuit of scientific knowledge.

As we write, biomedical progress is accelerating, changing how we understand and fight disease. One example is CRISPR, a tool that can edit specific sequences in human DNA, which one of us helped invent and the other uses in research to understand and control the human immune system. Targeted at the building blocks of life, CRISPR could induce immune cells to fight disease or neutralize predisposition to one.

The combination of CRISPR and new therapies has raised hopes for a new generation of powerful cancer treatments. Across the US, our colleagues are teaming up and racing to apply similar approaches to dementia, heart disease, and countless other conditions.

A growing number of Americans have heard of CRISPR and its medical potential. Far fewer realize that the transformative applications of CRISPR genome editing would never have occurred without robust funding for basic scientific research. Inquiry into unusual genes in unglamorous bacteria before we even knew the gene-altering power they contained, laid the foundation for CRISPR technology. Now that same technology is driving a revolution in biomedicine and rapidly advancing towards clinical trials.

We certainly have not charted the breadth of microorganisms that will inspire the invention of future drugs, nor fathomed the full complexity of the inner workings of human cells. Thats the work of basic scientific research. The next revolution in biology is currently an idea in a scientists head, or being hashed out in a late night lab conversation among graduate students, or sitting in a grant application to the NIH asking for a chance.

Our research represents just a sliver of the vital projects that more than 300,000 researchers are undertaking in 50 states with NIH support. Unfortunately, the presidents proposed budget threatens that research. Among the deep cuts to science support he seeks is a nearly $6 billion reduction for NIH, representing nearly a fifth of the agencys funding. (For context, thats more than its entire current cancer budget.) The proposal has prompted justifiable concern among scientists and patient advocates. Funding cuts would deter tomorrows scientists from the field, or at least from pursuing careers in the US.

Curtailing the NIH budget, a significant chunk of Americas biomedical research funding, would cripple our capacity to lead on pressing health challenges. The vast majority of NIH funds go to funding scientific research and training, both within the agency and externally. For decades, America has been at the forefront of scientific innovation. Slashing funding would destroy long-term projects and threaten American primacy in medical research. More importantly, underfunding NIH will hamstring efforts to fight disease.

Some might argue that private industry will fill the void, given the economic benefits of scientific breakthroughs,. But the truth, surprising to many, is that while private investment can indeed lead to the discovery of profitable new drugs and therapies, its focus on the bottom line tends to short-change basic as opposed to applied research. In weighing a projects anticipated earnings and costs, businesses seek a probable path to profit.

Transformative science requires a different mold than the one found in industry. CRISPR grew not out of a race to develop disease treatments, but out of basic scientific research into bacteria. The boldest innovations stem from unlikely collaborations or quixotic investigations in other words, exploration driven by discovery rather than profit. Occasionally, these projects do become profitable, but only through a scientists persistent drive to show that an idea, a hope, a hunch, is not so crazy after all. While stockholders may not want a corporation to make bets that are unlikely to have an immediate payoff, as citizens we must demand our government does so.

And thats precisely why the National Institutes of Health exists: It ensures that, though we may not know what the next CRISPR will be, there are bright and dedicated American scientists pursuing many roads of inquiry, even if the path to profit isnt immediately clear.

As Congress considers the presidents budget, we have a simple request: Please give Americas scientists the tools we need to succeed.

Supporting NIH will position American scientists to continue the open-ended explorations at which they excel. Government funding is critical to encourage our scientists to pursue not just the challenges that are relatively easy, or obviously profitable, but the ones that are fiendishly hard yet crucial.

NIH funding is a down payment on discovery, the seed money to fund a critical step toward ending Alzheimers or curing cancer. What could be a bigger win for America than that?

Jennifer Doudna is a professor of chemistry, and molecular and cell biology, at the University of California, Berkeley. Alex Marson is an assistant professor of microbiology and immunology at UC San Francisco.

The Big Idea is Voxs home for smart discussion of the most important issues and ideas in politics, science, and culture typically by outside contributors. If you have an idea for a piece, pitch us at thebigidea@vox.com

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Federal funding for basic research led to the gene-editing revolution. Don't cut it. - Vox

Scientists discover gene that blocks spread of colon cancer – Medical Xpress

April 21, 2017 by Jane Butler Cancer Histopathologic image of colonic carcinoid. Credit: Wikipedia/CC BY-SA 3.0

Researchers from RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) and the University of Nice, France, have discovered the function of a gene called KCNQ1 that is directly related to the survival of colon cancer patients. The gene produces pore-forming proteins in cell membranes, known as ion channels. The finding is an important breakthrough towards the development of more effective therapies for colon cancer and new diagnostics that will provide a more accurate prognosis for colon cancer patients. The research is published this week in the prestigious journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

This is the first study of its kind to work out the molecular mechanisms of how the KCNQ1 ion channel gene suppresses the growth and spread of colon cancer tumours.

Worldwide, there are 774,000 deaths from colorectal cancer each year and it is the third leading cause of death from cancer globally. In Ireland, almost 2,500 Irish people are diagnosed with bowel cancer annually and it is the second most common cause of cancer death.

The research team, led by Professor Brian Harvey, Department of Molecular Medicine, RCSI, have identified the molecular mechanisms by which the KCNQ1 gene suppresses the growth and spread of colon cancer cells. The KCNQ1 gene works by producing an ion channel protein which traps a tumour promoting protein called beta-catenin in the cell membranes before it can enter the nucleus of the cell causing more cancer cells to grow.

The study looked at the relationship between the expression of the KCNQ1 gene and patient survival from more than 300 colon cancer patients. Patients who had high expression of the KCNQ1 gene were found to have a longer survival and less chance of relapse.

Commenting on the significance of the discovery Professor Harvey said: "This study has demonstrated the ability of an ion channel gene to block the growth of colon cancer cells. This is an exciting discovery as it opens up the possibility of a new kind of therapy that will target the KCNQ1 gene with drugs and also as a biomarker to improve diagnostics of colon cancer onset and development in patients. This information will help clinicians to identify the most effective treatment for the individual patient."

"In the future, when we understand more about the KCNQ1 gene through further research, it will open up the possibility of developing new drug treatments that will be able harness the suppressive properties of the gene to target the colon specifically, without exposing other tissues in the body to unnecessary chemotherapy. The development of more targeted treatments for colon cancer is vital to improve the prognosis and quality of life for colon cancer patients."

Explore further: Among colon cancer patients, smokers have worse outcomes than non-smokers

More information: Raphael Rapetti-Mauss et al. Bidirectional KCNQ1:-catenin interaction drives colorectal cancer cell differentiation, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2017). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1702913114

In an analysis of more than 18,000 patients treated for colon cancer, current smokers were 14 percent more likely to die from their colon cancer within five years than patients who had never smoked.

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A small molecule called TASIN-1 can selectively kill cells with a mutation that is considered to be a precursor to colon cancer, while sparing related normal cells, UT Southwestern Medical Center cancer biologists have demonstrated. ...

Many types of cancer are caused by gene mutations in the signalling pathways that control cell growth, such as the hedgehog signalling pathway. A new study from the Karolinska Institutet, published in the journal Nature Communications, ...

Researchers from Oregon Health and Science University and Oregon State University have found that aspirin may slow the spread of some types of colon and pancreatic cancer cells. The paper is published in the American Journal ...

Researchers and physicians have grappled with the role of "adjuvant," or post-surgery, chemotherapy for patients with early-stage colon cancer, even for cancers considered high risk. Now researchers from the University of ...

Researchers from RCSI (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland) and the University of Nice, France, have discovered the function of a gene called KCNQ1 that is directly related to the survival of colon cancer patients. The ...

The activity of cancer drugs changes depending on the types of microbes living in the gut, according to a UCL-led study into how nematode worms and their microbes process drugs and nutrients.

A new laboratory technique developed by researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and other institutions can rapidly test the effectiveness of treatments for life-threatening breast cancer metastases in bone. The study appears ...

A drug created from a malaria protein stopped tumour growth of chemotherapy-resistant bladder cancer, offering hope for cancer patients not responding to standard treatments.

"Inhale deeply ... and exhale." This is what a test for lung cancer could be like in future. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research in Bad Nauheim have developed a method that can detect the disease ...

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Scientists discover gene that blocks spread of colon cancer - Medical Xpress

The U.S. Regulations for Biotechnology Are Woefully Out of Date – Slate Magazine

CRISPR is a gene-editing tool that enables scientists to do things like turn off the enzyme that makes mushrooms turn brown when bruised or cut.

Brand X Pictures/Thinkstock

In April 2016, an unlikely thing made headlines: the common white button mushroom.

Gene-Edited CRISPR Mushroom Escapes US Regulation, wrote Nature.

Whats a GMO? Apparently Not These Magic Mushrooms, wrote Grist.

And from MIT Technology Review: Who Approved the Genetically Engineered Foods Coming to Your Plate? No One.

The white button mushroom in question looked like any other in the grocery store, with one imperceptible difference: It was missing a gene that codes for an enzyme called PPO, or polyphenol oxidase, which makes mushrooms turn brown when theyre bruised or cut. Scientists at Pennsylvania State University essentially turned off this PPO geneone of six in the mushroomwith a new gene-editing tool called CRISPR, or clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats. CRISPR is a bit like a biological word processor. It zooms to a specific genetic sequence in any living thingthe biotech equivalent of using Ctrl+F. Then, the tool can add, delete, or replace genetic information like an editor tweaking a sentence.

While the Penn State scientists used biotechnology to manipulate the mushrooms genes, their work didnt trigger government oversight, in part because current law doesnt necessarily apply to food made with CRISPR. The case highlights a chronic challenge with biotechnology regulation: It cant keep up with the fast pace of innovation. No surprise there: The relevant laws havent had a proper update in more than 30 years.

Not only that, the regulations are cobbled together, says Jaydee Hanson, a senior policy analyst at Center for Food Safety, an advocacy group. If you were writing a sci-fi novel, your editor would say, Thats just too unbelievable. No one would ever do it that way.

Your Cheat-Sheet Guide to Synthetic Biology

What Exactly Is Synthetic Biology? Its Complicated.

Can You Patent an Organism? The Synthetic Biology Community Is Divided.

The U.S. Regulations for Biotechnology Are Woefully Out of Date

The CRISPR mushroom doesnt appear to pose a health or environmental threat, so in this case the regulatory gaps may not matter. But what about a potentially damaging biotech creation made the same way? How will we regulate synthetic organisms made with technologies that dont yet exist? These questions arent just about food, as important as that istheyre also key for any biotech or synbio product, such as mosquitoes engineered to curb diseases and microbes made from scratch.

Depending on whom you talk to, the CRISPRd mushroom isnt strictly defined as synthetic biology. Still, genetic technology exists on a continuum, and the regulatory conundrum the mushroom raises is relevant to any organism tweaked in a lab.

Over the past two years, policymakers had a fleeting chance to improve biotech lawsand they missed it. Now that were in the wild and unpredictable world of the Trump administration, the future of biotech regulation is a big fat question mark.

To understand biotech regulations, we have to go back in time to 1986, when the cool kids were pegging their jeans, Top Gun was in the theaters, and Lionel Richie and Bananarama dominated the airwaves.

Another trend back then: recombinant DNA. Scientists discovered this genetic engineering tool in the early 1970s, when they first swapped genes from one species into another using the bacteria E. coli. The discovery was a landmark for biotechnology. By the 1980s, companies were commercializing microbes and plants made with recombinant DNA, and regulators ears perked up.

The decision fell to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, which has two main jobs. The first is to advise the president on matters of science, tech, and engineering. The second is to help coordinate multiple agencies on scientific policy. Rather than writing a new law, the OSTP decided to fit genetically engineered products into existing laws. The result, called the Coordinated Framework for the Regulation of Biotechnology, published in June 1986. A small update in 1992 didnt change much.

Under the coordinated framework, regulation falls to the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Food and Drug Administration.

Yang Labs

The EPAs job is to protect human health and the environment. Several laws allow the EPA to do this, but the two relevant for biotech regulation relate to pesticides and toxic materials. Under the coordinated framework, the EPA can regulate any biotech organisms that produce these chemicals in some way. A genetically engineered crop that makes its own insecticide, for example, would trigger EPAs oversight on pesticides, while a microbe altered to produce biofuel would trigger the rules for potentially toxic chemicals.

The USDAs job, in part, is to protect U.S. agriculture. When it comes to biotech, the relevant laws that give USDA power relate to plant health. When the coordinated framework first published, the state-of-the-art genetic engineeringrecombinant DNAused microbes to deliver new genes. In crops, for example, scientists used agrobacterium, a bacterium that can infect plants. Its a weird way to apply the lawthese microbes arent likely to hurt crops. But the microbes are technically plant pathogens, which gives the USDA the authority to regulate any crop made this way.

As for the FDA, part of its job is to keep our food safe. Under the coordinated framework, companies proposing to sell a biotech food may submit to a voluntary safety review, to prove that its not going to poison anyone or give them a horrifying allergic reaction.

The original coordinated framework was a messy solution, but it worked OK for the technologies that were available back in the 80s and 90s. Today? Not so much. Take the CRISPRd mushroom. Because the mushroom doesnt produce pesticides or potentially toxic chemicals, the EPA had no reason to regulate it. The Penn State scientists who made the mushroom didnt use microbes to deliver DNACRISPR doesnt require that stepand so their work didnt trigger USDA oversight. As for the voluntary FDA review, the agency hasnt published anything on the mushroom so far.

Policymakers knew the coordinated framework was rickety even before the mushroom came along. In July 2015, the Obama administration asked the OSTP to take another look at the policy to ensure that the system is prepared for the future products of biotechnology.

To do this, the OTSP proposed three steps. One was to commission a report from the National Academies of Science exploring new biotech that may come out over next five to 10 years (more on this in a minute). For the other two, the agencies had to update their role in current biotech regulation and spell out a long-term strategy for future products.

The update took more than a year and included a series of closed and public meetings. A draft published last September, and the final version came out in early January. It was a lot of work for an underwhelming document. Rather than update the coordinated framework, the document lists a series of hypothetical biotech products and explains how each agency might regulate them. But none of the hypothetical exercises explored how products made with new technologies, like the CRISPR mushroom, may fit the current rules.

Its hard to imagine President Trump giving biotech much thought.

I thought it was a missed opportunity, says Jennifer Kuzma, a professor of science and technology policy and co-director of the Genetic Engineering and Society Center at North Carolina State University.

A better approach may have been to blow the whole thing up and start over: Write a new law that could adapt to future technologies. Such a law would have a broad scope that could capture any biotech or synbio product, regardless of how its made. Ideally, the law would also be more elastic when it comes to risk. We should let the traits of the organism determine the level of regulation, says Greg Jaffe, biotechnology director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest. Things that are potentially more risky should get more scrutiny, and things that are potentially less risky should have less scrutiny.

Of course, writing new biotech laws would require legislative approvala tough job in any year, made even more unlikely in todays hyperpartisan, dysfunctional Congress.

But there are other ways biotech laws could change. Remember, the OSTP also tasked the agencies with a long-term strategy for future biotech products. In January, just days before Obama left office, the FDA published draft guidance on regulating genetically altered animals, which will include CRISPR and other new technologies, as well as guidance on gene-edited foods and mosquitoes.

Around the same time, the USDA proposed new rules on biotech plants. In addition to potential plant pests that it already monitors, USDA wants to use a law that lets it regulate noxious weedsplants that pose a threat to the environment, the economy, or society, such as invasive species. Using this law would broaden the agencys ability to do risk assessments on genetically engineered products. The new rules would also allow the USDA to revise previous decisionsfor example, if there is evidence that an approved product is causing unexpected ecological damage.

Before the FDA and USDA proposals can move forward, theyll go through public comment periods, which end on June 19. The draft changes can help fix some of the problems with the coordinated framework, says Kuzma. Theyre not the entire solution, but theyre patches.

The other piece that could inform new policy is the National Academies report on biotech, which was published in March. It lays out several possible recommendations for regulating biotech in the future. For example, one suggestionwhich has the support of many policy folks, including Jaffeis to create a single point of entry for biotech regulation. This could do away with needless regulatory overlap. It would also be easier for companies to navigate.

But the new administration doesnt seem to be paying much attention to any of this. Science and agriculture arent high-priority, if the proposed budget cuts for 2018 are any indication. Trump still hasnt named a science adviser or a director for the OSTP. Some on Team Trump reportedly want to do away with the OSTPa tricky proposal for biotech, since the office organizes and guides the relevant policies and agencies. And its hard to imagine President Trump giving biotech much thought. A search of his tweets, a direct line into his stream of consciousness, shows no mention of genetically modified organisms. Or biotechnology. Or biology.

It could be that the agencies will just plug along under the radar and get some real work done. Or the changes and recommendations will languish, and well be stuck with the 30-year-old coordinated framework. Or the Trump administration could wipe the regulations out completely, like it has with rules on clean water or protecting hibernating bears.

Those last two choicesdoing nothing or wiping out regulations altogetherwould be huge mistakes. Either could allow for a flood of unregulated, and potentially risky, products. It would be much wiser to let the agencies continue the hard work of updating the laws for biological innovations, so we can have confidence to pile a helping of CRISPRd mushroom on our plate.

This article is part of the synthetic biology installment of Futurography, a series in which Future Tense introduces readers to the technologies that will define tomorrow. Each month, well choose a new technology and break it down. Future Tense is a collaboration among Arizona State University, New America, and Slate.

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The U.S. Regulations for Biotechnology Are Woefully Out of Date - Slate Magazine

March for Science: Agony and ecstasy of a Malaysian agricultural biotechnology science communicator – Genetic Literacy Project

What can be more challenging than slogging in the laboratory, burning the midnight Bunsen burner, changing the methodology a few times, dealing with contaminated cell cultures and losing them, not having the transferred genes express themselves, and mining large genomics data in the terabytes?

It is communicating the science behind the research, repackaging it into plain language and dispelling the misinformation created by technology skeptics to ensure that viable science projects that help address food security and sustainable agriculture practices are commercialized, approved and reach the farms and our forks. This is no small task. Science communication is a complex field requiring special skills, training and experience. The heterogeneity of the public makes science communication both challenging and exciting. There is no cookie-cutter approach. Every audience, topic and concern must be approached differently. Each one is unique, requiring a customized communication strategy.

I have been a science communicator for 14 years and I have enjoyed every one of them, although it is not a bed of roses all the time. It requires patience and the ability to learn from our past mistakes and to perfect our techniques. Here I am sharing my agony and ecstasy.

The agony

Why is it that when scientists speak up for genetically modified (GM) crops we are immediately labeled as industry advocates and as recipients of industry money? In contrast, those who evangelize about organic products are seen as angels and saints? Yet, many of the critics of GM crops receive financial support from the organic industry and this industry has been no angel to science. Scientists who collaborate with agri-companies or receive funding from them are also demonized and their credibility trashed by critics. But, industry collaboration is not new in research at universities. The organic industry widely funds research. Why are only agribiotechnology scientists singled out?

Mahaletchumy Arujanan

Critics create myths about organic foods; instill guilt in mothers who dont feed their families with organic foods; and force consumers to pay hefty premiums in the pretext of serving more nutritious and sustainably grown foods. The claims that organic foods are more nutritious have been debunked many times. In spite of all this, GM crops and those who support them are painted as evil. For these reasons, I avoid organic foods like the plague it simply goes against my conscience.

Why is our job made so difficult while critics of GM crops have it easy? They create fear, doubts and myths. But those who embrace science take years to challenge the myths and doubts created by others. It takes years of research. Every time a doubt is created and turned into an unnecessary regulation, farmers pay the price in terms of economic losses. A good example is the failure to approve and commercialize insect resistant Bt brinjal in the Philippines (note the benefits were publicly acknowledged seven years ago but opponents successfully blocked its approval) and GM mustard in India.

It is not easy fighting ideology and hypocrisy with science. The opposition to GM crops has become a cult that no amount of science can dispel. I feel helpless when powerful tools are confiscated from farmers (see how EU Urges the G8 member states not to support GMO crops in Africaclause 72). They are deprived of technological innovations that could help them practice agriculture sustainably, prevent occupational hazards that are caused by the use of pesticides, increase their income and reduce their loss and costs.

A common accusation by critics is that GM seeds are patented by big agri-companies. But they fail to acknowledge that organic products are patented as well. Another favorite of scaremongers is that GM crops are dangerous and can even kill. Yet, since 1996 not a single GM-related health hazard has been reported. Not one. We cant however, say the same for organic produce. Read here, here and here to see the reality of safety of organic foods.

In spite of the mounting evidence on the benefits of GM crops, critics confuse the public with cooked-up evidence demonizing GM crops. For a science communicator backed by science, this is agonizing and makes my job extremely difficult.

The Ecstasy

When Malaysia was developing its Biosafety Act, I was involved in creating awareness about the need for a balanced, science-based regulatory instrument. I faced character assassination, accusations and sarcastic remarks.They were agonizing moments. But the agony turned to ecstasy when the act, and later the regulations and guidelines, became more science-based. Today, I sit in many meetings with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment to help implement the regulations in a balanced manner.

There have been other moments of ecstasy as well. Years ago, I waded into untested waters when I tackled issues related to Islamic principles (Shariah compliance) and GM foods. As a non-Muslim, I took a risk in handling such a sensitive topic but there were many countries that were contemplating a fatwa (decree) against GM crops, i.e. to declare GM foods and crops as haram (non-permissible). I didnt want the misinformation to spread among Muslim countries so I organized a dialogue between religious scholars and scientists.

The first meeting collapsed halfway through with many accusations hurled at me by GM opponents. I took a break from this topic for a while and analyzed my mistakes, found new credible partners and organized another high-level dialogue with top Islamic scholars from the Muslim world. It was a huge success. Here is the resolution that is used as a reference in many countries today that resulted from the discussion. Philippines became the first country after the dialogue to reverse its anti-GM rules, where initially they had a blanket decree claiming all GM foods were haram.

In 2010, I took a creative approach to educating a group that otherwise wouldnt take a second look at biotechnology fashion students, and through them a wider womens group. I engaged a university and got its fashion students to design outfits based on biotechnology themes and organized a fashion show. This was part of a bigger event called Bio Carnival with poster drawings, coloring, public speaking, debate, quizzes and spelling competitions for students, and exhibitions and hands-on sessions for the public. It was a rewarding experience when the university later introduced biotechnology as a special project for fashion students after realizing how it inspired fashion designs through its colors and unique patterns. With this approach, all the students had to search for information on biotechnology and we educated them about science and innovation.

Then there is my favorite project. I was long frustrated with the amount of space the mainstream media devoted to science issues. I tried making friends with journalists and organizing media training for scientists but it really did not effect much change. So, I decided to create my own playing field, The Petri Dish the first science newspaper in Malaysia. It is now seven years old and this year it graduated to become a digital portal to reach a wider audience.

The Petri Dish reaches all key stakeholders in Malaysia academia, researchers, policymakers, politicians (all cabinet members receive a copy), students, industry and the general public. We make it available at shopping malls and Starbucks outlets. I know a number of ministers who read it, and once a topic was fiercely debated at the cabinet meeting after being reported in The Petri Dish.

This is our initiative in bringing science to the headlines. It is aimed at creating awareness among all stakeholders on biotechnology so the public will be more receptive to emerging technologies and policymakers will be able to make informed decisions on regulations and funding. It also encourages young people to pursue STEM education and careers. Every time, I receive positive feedback on Petri Dish, I feel a rush of ecstasy. It is a struggle to sustain a science newspaper but the feeling of inspiring people about science is rewarding.

Another area I enjoy is talking to students both at schools and universities. These are uncorrupted minds and they are receptive to information backed by science when it is presented by a credible person. Every year, I reach out to more than 2000 students who are inspired by science and believe it offers solutions to many global problems.

The biggest lesson I have learned is that we need to build trust with our audiences before we start communicating with them: Connecting first and then communicating.

I believe the agony and ecstasy will continue, with exciting new developments in synthetic biology, gene editing and gene drives.

Mahaletchumy Arujanan is the Executive Director of Malaysian Biotechnology Information Centre (MABIC) and Editor-in-Chief of The Petri Dish the first science newspaper in Malaysia. She is also an Adjunct Lecturer at Monash University Malaysia. She has a degree in Biochemistry and Microbiology from Universiti Putra Malaysia, Masters in Biotechnology and PhD in science communication from the University of Malaya. She is an active science communicator who addresses policies, regulations, ethics, religions, STEM and other areas pertinent to biotechnology development. You can follow her onFacebook and Twitter @maha_mabic.

For more background on the Genetic Literacy Project, read GLP on Wikipedia

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March for Science: Agony and ecstasy of a Malaysian agricultural biotechnology science communicator - Genetic Literacy Project

GMU students make 3D printed prosthetic arm for violinist | WUSA9 … – W*USA 9

Students from George Mason University design prosthetic arm for violist

Peggy Fox, WUSA 7:28 PM. EDT April 20, 2017

FAIRFAX, VA (WUSA9) - A new beginning for a Fairfax County girl who has just received a new prosthetic arm that was designed and 3-D printed by George Mason University college students.

Isabella Nicola, 10, has been raised by her mother, Andrea Cabrera, to never say never.

"My mom's phrase is, when you say 'I can't do it', it's 'I can't do it yet,'" said Nicola.

The fifth grader signed up to play violin in the strings program at Island Creek Elementary in Franconia last year, even though she knew it'd be a little difficult.

RELATED:Dog rescued from slaughterhouse gets prosthetic legs

She was born with an incomplete left arm. Her music teacher fashioned a makeshift prosthetic arm out of PVC to hold her bow. Then he a called his alma mater and got the engineering department on board.

But now, Isabella has a bright pink, custom-made, brand new prosthetic arm that allows her to hold and move the bow properly.

"I have to say thank you to them because without them I couldn't really be able to play," said Nicola.

The five students have been working as a team for more than a year on their capstone senior project. It was designed, 3D printed, and pieced together by five George Mason University bioengineering students, Yasser Alhindi, the lead, Abdul Gouda, Mona Elkholy, Ella Novoselsky and Racha Salha.

Dr. Elizabeth Adams, a GMU music teacher, explained that a player's arm movement affects the violin's sound. Adams worked with the students and Isabella, providing advice.

The faculty mentors are Wilsaan Joiner and Vasiliki Ikonomidou. Laurence Bray is head of the bioengineering department.

"We were brainstorming ideas right away. We were aiming to take the strain off her shoulder to make her as comfortable as possible," said Ella Novoselsky.

RELATED:Injured animals get life-changing prosthetics

"It's amazing. They didn't have any background when they started, of the mechanical engineering aspect. I'm amazed. When they came to me with all those designs, and they told me, this is going to go there and this will go like that. 'Ok, sure,'" saidVasiliki Ikonomidou, one of the mentors said about the student designers.

For Thursday's hand-off, the students had a surprise for Isabella. They also made a grip so that she can ride bike with both arms. Isabella beamed as she held it like she was holding the handlebars.

"Very cool and nice...They thought about other things. They went above and beyond," said Isabella.

She and the college students hit if off from the start. At their first meeting, Racha Salha said Isabella was "making jokes and laughing. We were actually the ones who were nervous....She's amazing."

"I want her to play the violin and love playing the violin and be excited. And I want her to believe she can do anything she wants," said Ella Novoselsky.

The bioengineering department has already received more inquiries from other people, so another group of students could soon have a new project on their hands.

2017 WUSA-TV

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GMU students make 3D printed prosthetic arm for violinist | WUSA9 ... - W*USA 9

Hesston College serves, celebrates and showcases at Larkfest 2017 – Hesston College News and Sports

Hesston College took a day off from classes April 20, to instead focus on college values of service and student academic and leadership excellence during the annual Larkfest celebration.

The day started with on-campus students doing service projects around the Hesston and Harvey County communities. 234 students participated in 23 service projects from pulling weeds to reading to elementary students, and 34 faculty, staff or community members gave leadership to the service time.

Service was followed by the Larkfest awards ceremony where students were recognized for their achievements in academics and leadership. The top award, the Lark of the Year award, went to sophomore Elena Buckwalter (Fulks Run, Va.) for excellence in leadership, academics and service. Students are nominated for Lark of the Year by faculty and the recipient is chosen by a faculty vote.

Other award winners include:

Ambassador of the Year, freshman David Ladwig (Wichita, Kan.) and sophomore Vanessa Steckly (Milford, Neb.).

Behavioral Science Award, sophomore Elena Buckwalter (Fulks Run, Va.).

Bill Mason Business Scholarship recipients to receive a $2,500 scholarship for their sophomore year, Kylie Brenneman (Hesston, Kan.), Zac Neely (Ada, Okla.) and Jose Lezama (Lara, Venezuela).

Business Award, sophomores Cheri Baer (Apple Creek, Ohio), Wyatt Baer (Marshallville, Ohio), Chanhee Hwang (Gyeonggi-do, South Korea) and Riley Kingsley (North Newton, Kan.).

Student Development Officer Awards for students who call alumni during Phonathon, freshman Savannah Bontrager (Milford, Neb.) for the most money brought in, and freshman Emma Eitzen (Lititz, Pa.) for the most completed calls.

Early Childhood Education Award, sophomore Naomi Wright (Calhan, Colo.).

Peer Educator Award, sophomore Naomi Wright (Calhan, Colo.).

Clayton V. Beyler Award for Bible and Ministry students, sophomores Cassidy Bontrager (Wellman, Iowa) and Elena Buckwalter (Fulks Run, Va.).

Daniel Gerber Peace and Service Award, sophomores Christy Kauffman (West Liberty, Ohio) and Abraham Mateo (Fort Myers, Fla.).

Art: Most Promising Freshman Awards, for 2-D art, Brenna Peters (Hesston, Kan.) and for 3-D art, Monica Plank (Marion, Kan.).

Art: Outstanding Sophomore Award, Emily Griffioen (Belmond, Iowa).

Art: Ceramics Award, sophomore Laura Wright (Norwich, Kan.).

Music Award, sophomore Joel Brejda (Lincoln, Neb.).

Mariann Martin Theatre Award, sophomore Morgan Leavy (Telford, Pa.).

Standing O Theatre Award, sophomore Emily Griffieon (Belmond, Iowa).

Nursing Award, for the ADN program, sophomore Josh Merrill (Wichita, Kan.), and for the BSN program, senior Rebekah Bell (Wichita, Kan.).

Physical Education Award, sophomore Nelson Martinez (Port Saint Lucie, Fla.).

Science and Math Awards, sophomore Nicholas Eichelberger (Geneva, Neb.), Bailyn Piecewicz (Spokane, Wash.) and Jonah Short-Miller (Bellingham, Wash.).

Outstanding Academic Achievement Award, given to graduating international students with a 4.0 GPA, sophomores Chanhee Hwang (Gyeonggi-do, South Korea) and Lilian Trifena (Tangerang, Indonesia).

Resident Assistants of the Year, sophomores Rachel Brown (McKinney, Texas) and Wyatt Baer (Marshallville, Ohio).

During the afternoon, students showcased their academic work. Presentations included music recitals, directing skills at a short film festival, science demonstrations, speeches and more.

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People trust science. So why don't they believe it? – USA TODAY

Climate change activists carry signs as they march during a protest in Philadelphia a day before the start of the Democratic National Convention, on July 24, 2016.(Photo: John Minchillo, AP)

Scientists and their allies are expected to fill the streets of the nations capital Saturday for Earth Day'sMarch for Science, advocating for the importance of scientific truth in an era weve ominouslybeen told doesnt value the truth any longer.

Advocates say science is under attack. President Trumps Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt doesnt accept evidence that shows humans are causing climate change.Education Secretary Betsy DeVos' 2001 comments on wanting to advance Gods kingdom through education have educatorsworried she could undermine the teaching of evolution in public schools.Trumps budget blueprint slashes funding for the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Energy's Office of Science.

Esteemed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, in an impassioned video on his Facebook page, said he fears people have lost the ability to judge what's true and what's not.

"That is a recipe for the complete dismantling of our informed democracy," he says.

More:For scientists, marching is just the start

The scientific community is alarmed by the Trump administration, and by whatthey see as the diminishing role of objectivescience in American life. But the General Social Survey, one of the oldest and most comprehensive recurring surveys of American attitudes, shows that although trust in public institutions has declined over the last half century, science is the one institution that has not suffered any erosion of public confidence. Americans who say they have a great deal of confidence in science has hovered around 40% since 1973.

Many scientists say there is no war on their profession at all.

According to the 2016 GSS data released this month, people trust scientists more than Congress (6%) and the executive branch (12%). They trust them more than the press (8%). They have more trust in scientists than in the people who run major companies (18%), more than in banks and financial institutions (14%), the Supreme Court (26%) or organized religion (20%).

So why all the headlines about the "war on science"?

People protest for greater action against climate change during the People's Climate March on September 21, 2014, in New York City.(Photo: Andrew Burton, Getty Images)

Though science still holds an esteemed place in America, there is a gap between what scientists and some citizens think a rift that is not entirely new on issues such as climate change, nuclear power, genetically modified foods, human evolution and childhood vaccines.

Americans dont reject science as a whole. People love the weather forecast. They love their smartphones. When people reject science, its because theyre asked to believe something that conflicts with a deeply held view, whether political (myparty does not endorse that), religious (my god didnot say that) or personal (that's not how I was raised).

Manyconservatives reject the science of man-made climate change, just as manyliberals reject the science that shows nuclear energy can safely combat it. The views we express signal which politicalgroup we belong to. The gap between what science shows and what people believe, sociologists say, is about our identity.

The issue of climate change isnt about what you know, said Dan Kahan, a professor of psychology and law at Yale and a member of the universitysCultural CognitionProject. Its about who you are.

Polarization has exacerbated our differences, andwe know some of whats to blame:Therise of social media. A more partisan press. A dearth of universally-accepted experts. And greater access to information, which Christopher Graves, president and founder of the Ogilvy Center forBehavioralScience, said does not tug us toward the center, but rather makes us more polarized.

A human being cannot grasp something as a fact if it in any way undermines their identity, Graves said. And that is animmutable human foible. These things have always been there, but not at scale."

The GSS data show confidence in institutions overall has been in decline since the 1970s, though political scientists are quick to caution that this is animperfect benchmark.

Brendan Nyhan, a political scientist atDartmouth College, said trust in the mid-20th century was unnaturally high and polarization was unnaturally low,bolstered by unusual growth in middle class income and a reduction of inequality, which is when the "20th century version of the American dream and the trust in government to produce it was fully mythologized."

There was an usually high level of trust that came out of World War II, before the turn towards a more cynical view ofthe institutions of society especially politics and media after Vietnam and Watergate,"Nyhan said.

So how much more polarization can we expect?

Social scientists aren't sure, but they agreeTrump complicates things.

"He really is an us-versus-them figure," Kahan said. "People arent thinking about the arguments. Theyre thinkingaboutwhat side they're on."

Think about the way you search for information. If youre a new mom who believes vaccines cause autism (and a number of women in your mommy group do, too) are you searching for research that shows whether they actually do, or are you Googling vaccines cause autism to find stories to affirm your belief? (Studies show there is no link between vaccines and autism.)

The mother above is probably motivated by fear. Suchmotivated reasoning, says political scientistCharles Taberof Stony Brook University, shows that we are all fundamentally biased.

You have a basic psychological tendency to perpetuate your own beliefs, he said to really discount anything that runs against your own prior views.

It gets even more complicated.Once weve convinced ourselves of something, research suggests factsdont appeal to us. A studyco-led by Nyhanfound that trying to correct a persons misperception can have a backfire effect. When you encounter facts that dont support your idea, your belief in that idea actually grows stronger.

So what if we did a better job teaching people how science works? Doesn't help, Kahan said. Research shows peoplewith the most science intelligence are also the most partisan.

Its not knowledge but curiosity, Kahan says, that makes us more likely to accept scientific truths. A recent studythat Kahan led found people with more scientific curiosity were more likely to be open-minded about information that challenged their existing political views.

And arguing helps, too. ScientistsHugo Mercier and Dan Sperber contend in their new book, The Enigma of Reason,that reason isn't somethingthat evolved sohumans could solve problems on their own. It developed so we could work together.

Instead of forcing someone to agree that climate change is caused by humans, Graves said, you can stop once you agree that, for example, flooding in Florida is a problem, and that you have to fix it (the bipartisanSoutheast Florida Regional Climate Change Compactcan teach us about that).

Marcia McNutt, an American geophysicist and president of the National Academy of Sciences, said she isnt worried about a crisis of science, though she hopes the march will drive home that science is about the unbiased search for truth" and that benefits everyone
.

Being a scientist only means that when I have an intuition about something, I test that intuition, and see if Im right, she said. A very, very smart mentor told me once, I don't trust anyone who hasn't at least changed their mind once in their career.

Science, it appears, may havemore lessons for usthan we think.

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People trust science. So why don't they believe it? - USA TODAY

‘Their Finest’ review: Wartime film sizzles with chemistry – The Seattle Times

This utterly charming film set in World War II-era London contains a textbook example of screen chemistry. Rating: 3.5 stars out of 4.

Screen chemistry is an odd thing; often you only notice it when it isnt there. (See: far too many Hollywood romantic comedies.) But Their Finest, an utterly charming film set in World War II-era London, contains a textbook example. Gemma Arterton plays Catrin Cole, a young advertising copywriter hired by the British Ministry of Information to write womens dialogue for wartime propaganda feature films; Sam Claflin is Tom Buckley, a wry fellow screenwriter whos not sure that her presence is necessary. Catrins married, Toms not and so first they become co-workers (he grudgingly admits, eventually, that shes doing a good job), then friends. Watching them, you start noticing how he looks at her like shes a fascinating puzzle that hes trying to figure out, and how she blushes just a bit when hes around, and how effortlessly these two actors convey that they belong together.

Its one of many pleasures in Lone Scherfigs film, based on a 2009 novel by Lissa Evans and drenched in a sweet nostalgia that only very rarely tips into sentimentality. The plots mostly centered on the making of one movie, based on a true incident involving a pair of twin sisters who set out in their fathers shabby boat to help evacuate wounded soldiers at Dunkirk. Its a tale that, as the executives at the Ministry gleefully observe, has everything: Authenticity, optimism and a dog.

We watch the casting process (Bill Nighy, eyebrows perpetually raised, is a delight as a pompous veteran actor), the location shoot (note the 1940s version of CGI), and the way that the filmmakers and cast form an impromptu family. Along the way, were reminded of the new roles that women took on during that time, and how the shadow of war affected every day and every life, even as they soldiered on. And theres one scene, where Sam sits moodily smoking one evening, and Catrin appears behind him as if caught in a moonlit dream, and well, thats why we watch movies, isnt it?

Their Finest, with Gemma Arterton, Sam Claflin, Bill Nighy, Jack Huston, Helen McCrory, Jake Levy. Directed by Lone Scherfig, from a screenplay by Gaby Chiappe, based on the novel Their Finest Hour and a Half by Lissa Evans. 117 minutes. Rated R for some language and a scene of sexuality. Several theaters.

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'Their Finest' review: Wartime film sizzles with chemistry - The Seattle Times

BioTalent Canada’s Animation to Promote Accessibility in … – Yahoo Finance

OTTAWA, Ontario--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

BioTalent Canada announced today that its animated short, Expanding Accessibility in Biotechnology, has won the Platinum Award for Motion Graphics Information at the 2017 Hermes Creative Awards, an international competition overseen by the Association of Marketing and Communications Professionals (AMCP). The award showcases the talent and creativity of marketing and communications professionals, many of whom have contributed to public service or charitable organizations.

This Smart News Release features multimedia. View the full release here: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170420005937/en/

Expanding Accessibility in Biotechnology was created as part of BioTalent Canadas Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA) employer-awareness campaign, launched in 2016 and funded in part through the Government of Ontarios EnAbling Change Program. The campaign aims to reach and educate bio-economy employers on compliance with the new AODA accessibility standards.

As a national non-profit HR association for the Canadian biotechnology industry, BioTalent Canada works to ensure that the bio-economy has access to the talent it needs. According to research by the organization, only 7.6% of bio-economy companies had persons with disabilities on staff.

BioTalent Canadas animation seeks to increase awareness among employers on the importance of persons with disabilities as a strategically valuable labour market for Canadas biotechnology sector. Developed by eSolutions Group, the animation addresses the importance of creating an inclusive and diverse workforce, which in turn strengthens an organizations innovation.

Canadians with disabilities represent a valuable labour market, one which is under-represented in the bio-economy, says Rob Henderson, BioTalent Canadas President and CEO. It is encouraging to see an animation focused on the benefits of diversity win this award and get showcased at an international level.

Along with the animated short, BioTalent Canada is hosting events across Ontario to educate and train employers on AODAs accessibility standards and what they need to do to comply. The next event will be taking place on April 25th, in the heart of the City of Mississaugas life sciences core.

For more information on the Expanding Accessibility in Biotechnology event in Mississauga, or to register, visit BioTalent Canadas event page.

About BioTalent Canada

BioTalent Canada is the HR partner of Canadas bio-economy. As an HR expert and national non-profit organization, BioTalent Canada focuses on building partnerships and skills for Canadas bio-economy to ensure the industry has access to job-ready people. Through projects, research and product development BioTalent Canada connects employers with job seekers, delivers human resource information and skills development tools so the industry can focus on strengthening Canadas biotech business. For more information, please visit biotalent.ca.

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BIO Announces Educational Sessions for 2017 BIO World Congress … – Business Wire (press release)

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) today announced education program session titles and speakers for the 2017 BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology. The education program features seven diverse content tracks with speakers from around the world over three days of the conference. The worlds largest industrial biotechnology and partnering event will be held July 23-26, 2017 at the Palais des congrs de Montral in Montral, Qubec, Canada.

Brent Erickson, executive vice president of BIOs Industrial & Environmental Section, stated, BIOs 2017 World Congress will feature the most diverse group of speakers and presenters in the conferences history, with scientists and executives from start-up companies, investors from the finance sector, consumer product manufacturers and government officials from across Canada, Europe, the United States and Asia. The education program and partnering system provide a unique forum for conference attendees to share the latest advances in renewable chemicals, synthetic biology, enzymes, food ingredients, fragrances, flavors, cosmetics, biofuels and biorefineries, agricultural crops and biobased materials.

Sessions featuring Renewable Chemicals and Biobased Materials include:

A Revolution in Biobased Products and Packaging Wed. July 26, 11:45 am

Renewable Chemicals and Thermoplastics for Performance Materials Mon. July 24, 10:30 AM

Scaling Novel and Innovative Processes for Commercialization Mon. July 24, 1:45 PM

Meeting Brand Owner and Retailer Demand for Green Chemicals, Materials, and Products Wed. July 26, 10:30 AM

Industrial Synergies and the Circular Economy Wed. July 26, 10:30 AM

All programs at the 2017 BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology are open to members of the media. Complimentary media registration is available to editors and reporters working full time for print, broadcast or web publications with valid press credentials.

For more information on the conference please visit https://www.bio.org/events/bio-world-congress. For assistance, please contact worldcongress@bio.org.

About BIO

BIO is the world's largest trade association representing biotechnology companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related organizations across the United States and in more than 30 other nations. BIO members are involved in the research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental biotechnology products. BIO also produces the BIO International Convention, the worlds largest gathering of the biotechnology industry, along with industry-leading investor and partnering meetings held around the world. BIOtechNOW is BIO's blog chronicling innovations transforming our world and the BIO Newsletter is the organizations bi-weekly email newsletter. Subscribe to the BIO Newsletter.

Upcoming BIO Events

BIO International Convention June 19-22, 2017 San Diego, Calif.

BIO World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology July 23-26, 2017 Montreal, Canada

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Is ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ on Tonight, April 20th? – Heavy.com

GREYS ANATOMY You Can Look (But Youd Better Not Touch)- Bailey, Arizona and Jo go to a maximum security womens prison to treat a violent, 16-year-old pregnant girl and her unborn baby, on the midseason premiere of Greys Anatomy, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26th. (ABC)<

Unfortunately, there is no new Greys Anatomy on tonight, Thursday, April 20th.

Thats right well have to wait another week to see how Maggie reacts to the whole Meredith-and-Riggs-together deal.

In its place, ABC will air an old Scandal episode. The good news? Itll be back in one week, with a new episode titled Dont Stop Me Now. The synopsis for the episode reads: Bailey and April work to fix things between Richard and Catherine. Meanwhile, Eliza continues to pursue Arizona; and one of Alexs previous patients returns to the hospital.

Another bit of good news is that Season 14 of the show has been confirmed by the network, so theres a lot more to look forward to. What else? The show wont be taking another break after this! Starting next week, ABC will air all season 13 episodes in successive weeks with no gaps, so you dont have any more weeks off to break up your Greys watching.

On last weeks episode, Nathan and Meredith were on their way to a convention when their plane hit a rough patch of turbulence. Luckily, the doctors were there to save the day and take care of the injured passengers. Amid the chaos, Nathan was able to persuade Meredith to give their relationship a try one little problem: Maggie. In the promo, we see Nathan rubbing Merediths shoulder and making it clear to Maggie that the two are an item. Meredith then stares at herself in the mirror, realizing that Maggie will never forgive her.

In a recent interview with TVLine, Kelly McCreary discussed Maggies feelings about Nathan and Merediths secret romance. [on the other hand, Meredith and Maggie have] gone through something so extreme together, and I think the whole Nathan question has been completely irrelevant this whole time. So when it comes up again, I think it becomes about weighing, Oh, theres this guy that I liked against this life-and-death experience that theyve shared.

Dont miss a new episode of Greys Anatomy next Thursday, April 27 at 8/7c on ABC.

Cuba Gooding Sr., a soul singer the father of Oscar winner Cuba Gooding Jr., has died at age 72. Learn about him here.

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Facebook Has a Plan to Let You Type With Your Brain – WLTX.com

Jon Swartz, USA TODAY , wltx 8:15 AM. EDT April 20, 2017

The splash page for Internet social media giant Facebook. (Photo: KAREN BLEIER/AFP/Getty Images)

SAN JOSE There's mind-blowing technology, and then there's brain-computer technologies.

Facebooks direct brain interface, a creation of its secretive Building 8 division, could take tech-enhanced communication to the next level.

Facebook is exploring a silent speech system with a team of more than 60 scientists that would let people type 100 words per minute with their brain. "What if you could type directly from your brain... with the speed and flexibility of voice and the privacy of text?" Building 8 head Regina Dugan said at the second day of Facebook's F8 developer's conference here.

She noted the brain contains about 86 billion neurons and is capable of producing 1 terabyte of information per second. Think of a "brain mass for augmented reality," she said.

The brain-to-text project is a couple years away and would require new, non-invasive sensors to measure brain activity hundreds of times per second, Dugan told USA TODAY after the keynote. A speech prosthetic for people with communication disorders would likely be the first application. "This (project) could be as transformative as the (computer) mouse," she said.

While such a project represents a "huge leap", the implications could be unsettling to consumers, many of whom think Facebook knows too much about their daily habits and actions let alone their thoughts, says Debra Aho Williamson, a principal analyst at eMarketer.

Facebook is working with scientists, engineers and system integrators from UC San Francisco, UC Berkeley, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Johns Hopkins Universitys Applied Physics Laboratory and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, who specialize in machine learning methods for decoding speech and language.

"This is about decoding the words youve already decided to share by sending them to the speech center of your brain," Dugan said. It would "be crazy amazing" but only a start, she said. One day, one may be able to share their thoughts independent of speech.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has shown a predilection for telepathy, which he calls "the future of communication." Once virtual reality and augmented reality have run their course, he has theorized, a form of technology-enabled telepathy will help people capture and then share their thoughts and feelings with friends.

Last year, Facebook poached Dugan, who helped shape Google initiatives such as Project Tango (3-D mapping) and Project Ara (tools for building modular smartphones), to head Building 8, a research-and-product-development group considered vital to Facebook's 10-year technology road map.

Dugan's presentation highlighted a keynote devoted to Facebook's future projects in connectivity, artificial intelligence and virtual reality/augmented reality

Facebooks futuristic endeavor is the latest to explore the human brain.

Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla Motors and SpaceX, last month announced the formation of Neuralink, a company that would merge computers with brains to keep up with artificial intelligence. In October, Braintree founder Bryan Johnson invested $100 million in start-up Kernel to build hardware and software to augment human intelligence. One goal is to facilitate communication between brain cells by hacking the neural code that lets people store and recall memories and information.

The implications for brain-to-text technology are mind blowing and cautionary, says Joshua Feast, CEO of Cogito, an artificial intelligence and behavioral science company spun out of MIT.

"This has the potential to be the most important application of artificial intelligence," he says. "All AI technologies should be applied as a win-win-win for humans."

"If not," he warns, "they can be scary and creepy."

2017 USATODAY.COM

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Hopkins, Savage building chemistry – HoustonTexans.com

DeAndre Hopkins and Tom Savage have been teammates for three years. Hopkins was catching passes and touchdowns, while Savage diligently prepared as the backup quarterback each week.

"Thats something everybody in this locker room respects about him," Hopkins said Monday. "How he always stayed into it. How he never got down or never doubted himself.

Savage is now primed for a big opportunity to be the Texans starting quarterback. This offseason, the quarterback-wide receiver tandem has been putting in work in preparation.

"We definitely have been getting after it since weve been back in town," Hopkins said. "Just doing extra things. He throws a good ball. He knows this offense better than any quarterback that can be in this system. Hes been here since hes been in the NFL and under this system, so he knows how to put the ball where it needs to be.

Savage started two games last year and has seen action in other games over the course of his Texans career. While limited in their playing time together on the field, the duo has always been developing chemistry together, according to Hopkins.

We were building that chemistry even when he was on the sideline when he wasnt playing," Hopkins said. "Just him always being into the game and knowing whats going on and knowing what he could do if he was in the game. Even in practice, even in the film room, he was always into it. There was never a time that he didnt know where the ball was supposed to go or how it should be thrown. So, I feel like since hes been here for four years weve been building that chemistry. Not just now.

Savage and Hopkins also developed a friendship along the way. Recently, Hopkins spent time at the Savage house, playing video games and sharing it on his Snapchat. He even joked that he wasnt pleased when the quarterback didnt have his favorite beverage the last time he visited.

But besides that, were pretty tight, Hopkins said, smiling.

This year, Savage and Hopkins will have an opportunity to work together more than ever before. Hopkins, Savage, and the players returned to NRG Stadium on Monday for Phase 1 of the offseason workout program.

The kid is a go-getter," Hopkins said. "He doesnt quit. Even out there today he was trying to be first. He was hustling. He was out there being a leader even though he hasnt played many snaps in this league.

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Good chemistry of Shovels & Rope keeps getting better – Charleston Post Courier

Its often said that Michael Trent and Cary Ann Hearst essentially stumbled into discovering the musical chemistry they share as the duo Shovels & Rope.

In fact, for more than a decade, Trent and Hearst (who married in 2009) had pursued separate careers. Hearst released her first solo CD, Dust and Bones, in 2006 and followed that with a 2010 EP, Are You

Ready To Die, and a second full-length, Lions And Lambs, in 2011.

Trent, meanwhile, spent years in a band, the Films, until that group split in 2009 and also made a pair of solo albums along the way a self-titled effort in 2007 and The Winner in 2010.

While trying to decide their next moves musically, they started playing shows together around their home town of Charleston and found they liked their scrappy sound as a duo and that they could earn enough money from the shows to make ends meet.

But one thing that wasnt casual about Shovels & Rope was the couples decision to get serious about making music and turning their group into a career.

We took a good, hard look at it before we decided to do this thing in the beginning, said Trent, who joined Hearst for a recent phone interview. And both of us were like Well, if this gets to be too much, then its OK to quit and go do something else. Were like, Really, were going to be a married couple band? That sounds insane,

and it never works. But I think just establishing that before we got into all this

We were real honest about ourselves, said Hearst, who has a way of completing her husbands thoughts ways that are humorous and insightful, as well as succinct.

I think that worked to our advantage, Trent agreed.

We realized it wasnt a good idea, and then we did it anyway, Hearst said. We were just hoping it works out in the long run.

So far, so good. The couple has released Little Seeds, their third album of original material as Shovels & Rope, and their creative chemistry seems as strong as ever. And not only are they still happily married, in September 2015 they welcomed their first child, Louisiana Jean, into their family.

Trent and Hearst waited until after Louisiana Jean was born to record Little Seeds. Like their previous albums, 2012s O Be Joyful and 2014s Swimmin Time (as well as the 2015 covers album, Broken Jukebox Vol. 1), Little Seeds was made at the couples home studio.

And they quickly found that parenting threw some new twists into making the album.

Babies dont pay attention to schedules, Hearst said. Newborns dont care that you have a session scheduled at 10 in the morning.

But Little Seeds got finished and its another stirring effort. It retains the rowdy and twangy rock sound of O Be Joyful and Swimmin Time, but shows some growth both musically and lyrically.

I think every time we approach a new record, we want to expand the sonic landscape. We just want to try and do some new things, Trent said. So I think were stretching out a little bit more on this record and weve got a little bit more hair on it.

That growth is most apparent on the impressive opening track, I Know, which is arguably the most plugged-in, hard rocking song the duo has recorded, and Buffalo Nickel, a stomping, bluesy track. But Little Seeds is plenty diverse, with songs that range from the spare

balladry of St. Annes Parade and This Ride to the rollicking country rock of Botched Execution to the measured thump of Johnny Come Outside.

Lyrically, Little Seeds moves away somewhat from the story song style featured on the first two albums, adding a more personal and topical dimension to the album.

The social commentary is most evident in BWYR, a nearly a cappella call for unity whose haunting tone reinforces the gravity of the subject matter (Black lives, white lives, yellow lives, red/Lets all come together and share the bread).

Meanwhile, the poignant songs Mourning Song and Invisible Man were inspired by Trents father,

who is battling Alzheimers disease.

Trent and Hearst said they plan to play a good number of the new songs on tour this spring, but fans can expect the tunes to take on different dimensions live. Thats because Trent and Hearst tour as a twosome switching off playing guitars, drums, harmonicas and other instruments, and some songs need re-arranging to work with the limitations of having only two musicians on stage.

Trent said they like what the two-person format does for the songs.

I feel like it keeps it fresh for us, and more fun, he said. We have more instruments to pick from now that get thrown into the mix. But you can do a lot with very little to make really interesting arrangements. I think we dig that.

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Good chemistry of Shovels & Rope keeps getting better - Charleston Post Courier

Student to represent Grundy County at state chemistry competition – Morris Daily Herald

MINOOKA An eighth-grader has won a countywide chemistry competition and will move on to compete at the state level.

Cole Kics from Minooka Junior High School bested a field of 10 fifth- to eighth-grade students to become the Grundy County You Be The Chemist Challenge champion.

Local students came together in Oglesby to compete for the top prize. Cole Kics will represent Grundy County at the state-level competition.

Developed by the Chemical Educational Foundation, the challenge is a question-and-answer competition that motivates fifth- to eighth-grade students to sharpen their knowledge of chemistry concepts and their real-world applications.

Students compete for prizes at the local and state levels and the ultimate prize of a trip to Washington, D.C., to vie for college scholarships.

The challenge program relies on partnerships between community members, including industry, schools, universities and community organizations, that seek to foster student engagement with science.

The 2017 Grundy County Challenge took place at Illinois Valley Community College and was sponsored by Aux Sable Liquid Products, Flint Hills Resources, LyondellBasell. After correctly answering dozens of chemistry and general science questions during multiple rounds of competition, Kics was declared the Grundy County champion.

He will advance to the Illinois State Challenge in Romeoville on April 29.

The following top-placing students also have earned a chance to compete at the state level: Chris Karceski, Minooka Junior High School and Alex Gernenz-Coal City Middle School. Anthony Corrado-Mazon-Verona, Kinsman Middle School, will serve as an alternate at the state competition.

The winner of the state competition will receive an expenses-paid trip to Washington, D.C., to compete in the National Challenge on June 19. At the national level, state winners from across the country will vie for the title of Challenge Champion and a total of $18,500 in college scholarships.

For information about the You Be The Chemist Challenge competition, please visit CEFs website at http://www.chemed.org.

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Student to represent Grundy County at state chemistry competition - Morris Daily Herald

Mansfield outfielder says chemistry key to team’s success – Fort Worth Star Telegram

Mansfield outfielder says chemistry key to team's success
Fort Worth Star Telegram
I think the season is going well so far, and it has been fun with this team because of the great chemistry we have together and the leadership on this team, Tatrow said. I try to bring a positive energy day in and day out and a fun attitude, but at ...

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Mansfield outfielder says chemistry key to team's success - Fort Worth Star Telegram

Plandai Biotechnology Sets Aggressive Agenda for 2017 – Yahoo Finance

NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - April 19, 2017) - Planda Biotechnology (PLPL) recently presented investors with its outlook for 2017 and a number of milestones that the company plans to accomplish in 2017. Planda's plans are certainly aggressive and representative of the new Chief Operating Officer (COO) -- someone we feel is ideally suited to move the company forward. It didn't take long at all for the new COO, Callum Cottrell-Duffield, to put his stamp on the company's future.

Three weeks ago Planda named Callum Cottrell-Duffield as its new COO, a role that will have him running the day-to-day operations of the company. In the time since being named COO, he has put together a plan to not only get Planda back on track, but to also move it aggressively into the future. With Planda shifting from purely a research and development biotechnology company to a company that is more focused on operations and sales, Callum Cottrell-Duffield is the ideal person to run Planda's day-to-day activity.

After all, he has been there from the beginning where he helped to prepare the company's 8,000-acre tea estate to grow, harvest and produce Planda's signature product, the highly bioavailable Phytofare Catechin Complex. Last year when that signature product was available for mass production and ready to market on a much broader scale, it was Callum Cottrell-Duffield who led the company's sales and marketing team. He has traveled throughout Africa, the United States, Europe, Asia and South America to tell the Planda story, and he has become the face of the company to the industry and to the large buyers who are either current clients or interested in developing a relationship with Planda worldwide.

In the company's latest news release, the COO highlighted several areas where he expects to see improvement and areas where Planda can realize growth. Among those items, Callum Cottrell-Duffield said that he (i) has placed getting the company "current" with its SEC filings at the top of his agenda, (ii) expects to increase production and to continue growing sales with Planda's existing customers as well as gaining traction in the market, which should lead to the addition of new customers all in an effort to make Planda cash flow positive and profitable by the end of 2017, (iii) recently signed a financing agreement that will provide the necessary capital to see the company through until it becomes cash flow positive.

With the appointment of Callum Cottrell-Duffield to COO, the company's CEO, Roger Baylis-Duffield, can now focus his efforts as a scientist on spearheading the company's clinical trials and developing new products for Planda to market. In the company's research and development efforts, the CEO will be busy with a number of major studies this year.

According to the COO, Planda's work in the clinic will include:

Additionally, Planda has granted a research license to Protext Mobility to develop pharmaceutical applications involving Phytofare. Protext will be conducting a human study using Phytofare to regulate glucose levels in Type 2 diabetics as well as, taking over the research to establish a platform for producing non-psychoactive Cannabis. Planda states that the plan for Protext is to produce a Phytofare complex containing bioavailable cannabinoids, cannabinoid acids, and polyphenols that will be formulated into an oral delivery system.

Needless to say, with success in these studies, these are all areas where Planda could develop much-needed products that could, in turn, drastically improve the company's bottom line. For a full look into the COO's agenda for 2017, read Planda's latest news release here:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/plandai-biotechnology-chief-operating-officer-162043100.html

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Plandai Biotechnology Sets Aggressive Agenda for 2017 - Yahoo Finance