‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Season 13, Episode 18 Spoilers: Be Still My Soul Maggie, Diane Struggle Through Failing Health … – EconoTimes

Greys Anatomy Season 13, Episode 18 Spoilers: Be Still My Soul Maggie, Diane Struggle Through Failing Health; Richard to Forgive Bailey?

Greys Anatomy season 13s episode 18, titled Be Still My Soul, will follow Maggie and her mother Diane as they struggle through the latters failing health. Meanwhile, Richard will come to terms with Baileys betrayal. Perhaps it is possible that he may finally forgive Bailey.

The synopsis for Be Still My Soul posted on TV Guide reads, Maggie's (Kelly McCreary) mom's health deteriorates, and the doctors are at odds over how to treat her. Meanwhile, Richard (James Pickens Jr.) comes to grips with Bailey's (Chandra Wilson) betrayal over the Residency Program.

The upcoming episode will put focus on Maggie and her mother, Diane Pierce (LaTanya Richardson Jackson) as they struggle through her condition. Maggies colleagues will also find themselves divided over how to treat her.

In the previous episode, titled 'Til I Hear It From You, Diane returned to Seattle for a mastectomy to be performed by Jackson (Jesse Williams) after receiving chemotherapy at home. It seems that Maggie was left in the dark about her mothers true health condition that she has breast cancer. Dianes surgery became complicated leaving Maggie devastated.

During an interview with E! News, McCreary hinted at what to expected from Maggie in the upcoming episodes. The 33-year old actress said, "I think, first and foremost, Maggie is the brightest person she knows And she's going to try to solve her problems herself. And of course, when you try to do everything yourself, you get tuckered out."

Meanwhile, Richard is set to come to terms with Baileys betrayal after the latter attempted to mend their broken friendship. It would be interesting to see if Richard can finally forgive Bailey for going behind his back and taking his Residency Program away in favor of Eliza (Marika Dominczyk).

Greys Anatomy season 13s episode 18, titled Be Still My Soul, is scheduled to air on March 20, 2017 on ABC. It was directed by Ellen Pompeo and written by Meg Marinis. It will be followed by episode 19, titled "What's Inside", scheduled to be released on April6 and directed by Nzingha Stewart.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Season 13, Episode 18 Spoilers: Be Still My Soul Maggie, Diane Struggle Through Failing Health ... - EconoTimes

8 Things That Need to Happen for Grey’s Anatomy to Get Out of Its Slump – Cosmopolitan.com

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It pains me to type this, but here goes: This season of Grey's Anatomy hasn't been very good and the timing of that drop-off in quality couldn't be worse. We need smart, feminist, compelling shows to escape into, now more than ever! While it might be too late for the show to course-correct in season 13, it's not too late to start thinking about how season 14 could be better. Here are eight things Grey's Anatomy should do to shake off the cobwebs and recapture its magic.

Perhaps Ellen Pompeo needed to work less after the birth of her infant son, which would be totally understandable but her storylines should still count. Meredith is the Grey in Grey's Anatomy and she deserves more than what she's getting. Last season, we got to see her adjust to a world without McDreamy and cope with a life-altering assault. This season, we've seen her worry about Alex, get suspended from the hospital, and spin her wheels in a never-ending flirtation with Riggs. Ellen continues to nail the material she's given but she needs more to work with.

I've hated seeing characters like Webber, Alex, Bailey, and Arizona mishandled this season. Where has Alex been since he was released from prison? Why has the ball been dropped on digging into his relationship with Jo? Why have Webber and Bailey and Arizona spent so much time locked into the drama with Eliza, who at this point feels more like a plot device than a person? If it takes doing more bottle-style episodes, like the one with Jo, Arizona, and Bailey at the women's hospital, run with that!

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These days, they're fully each other's person, and that's something we haven't really seen developed or explored this season. We know they've gotten much, much closer, and the subtext is that's a result of Derek's death and Alex's arrest. That needs to become less of a background story. Meredith's honest, compelling voicemail to Alex when he was considering taking a plea deal was one of the best moments of the season, and we need more of that. They don't have to hook up (although I maintain that they are an end-game couple), but since the scenes they have together are one of the only elements of Grey's that continues to pop, the show needs to spend more time with them and, not to harp on this, with Meredith and Alex as individuals too.

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Remember when Grey's used to be all about doctors pulling one another into on-call rooms for nonstop hookups? I rewatched the Grey's pilot this week for the 12th anniversary of its airing (!!), and even though the characters barely knew each other, the show was crackling with sexual tension. I know a natural response to this might be that the characters are more mature now, which might explain the drop-off in sexual hijinks, but people in their 40s need hot sex too! And adding some younger characters and then actually taking the time to flesh them out (pun absolutely intended) might help with this as well.

Where are the hospital shootings? Where are the plane crashes? Where are the cut LVAD wires? So far, the major drama this season has come from "suspense" around Alex's arrest come on, was the series really going to put him in prison for 10 years? and the staffing shakeup in the residency director position. Grey's is literally asking us to stay invested in what amounts to an administrative staffing challenge for months, while turning major characters into cartoon-villain versions of themselves in the process. As it's done so, it's relied heavily on the stories of patients to drive the episodes, putting our characters' running stories in the backseat. I've loved some of the patient-driven storytelling the season, but it's frustrating when that comes at the cost of ignoring our favorite characters.

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This one might sound overly specific, but aside from a handful of random patients and guest stars, Grey's has never featured a romantic relationship between men. There aren't too many unique romantic angles left for the show to explore but really taking the time to develop a gay male relationship would give the show a new dimension (and possibly allow for more scenes with hot dudes with their shirts off, which the show has been sorely lacking lately).

Remember when Grey's made a huge deal out of the fact that Leah Murphy would be rejoining the cast? She showed up in a few random episodes, was barely used, and then disappeared. By contrast, Maggie's mom has only been in two episodes, but the show has managed to make her three-dimensional through a genuinely compelling story, which has given us a long-overdue chance to get to know Maggie better, too. More moms, fewer Murphys, please.

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If I squint and tilt my head to one side, I can see how maybe Grey's is trying to use Owen and Amelia's story to point out that in real life, couples fight and that's a normal part of relationships. But Owen and Amelia only fight. Do they even like each other?! They've been on a cycle of ignoring each other and then yelling at each other for weeks now, and it's tiresome. To make matters worse, we've seen Owen have nearly identical fights with Cristina, which means Kevin McKidd has been stuck doing the same material for years. Again, maybe Grey's is trying to tell stories about how Owen has patterns that sabotage his relationships, and I applaud their effort to be realistic in that regard. But it's gotten old and I'm over it.

Follow Lauren on Twitter.

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Esteemed Psychiatrist, Pharmacologist and Anti-Aging Physician in Minneapolis, Minnesota Faruk Said Abuzzahab Sr … – PR NewsChannel (press release)

The International Association of HealthCare Professionals is pleased to welcome Dr. Faruk Said Abuzzahab Sr., MD, PhD, to their prestigious organization with his upcoming publication in The Leading Physicians of the World. He is a highly-trained psychiatrist, pharmacologist, and anti-aging physician with extensive expertise in all facets of his work. Dr. Faruk Said Abuzzahab Sr. has been practicing for over 57 years and is currently serving patients within Clinical Psychopharmacology Consultants in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He is also affiliated with the University of Minnesota Medical Center.

Dr. Faruk Said Abuzzahab Sr. obtained his Doctor of Medicine Degree from the American University of Beirut in Lebanon in 1959. After completing internship in Beirut, Dr. Abuzzahab Sr. moved to the United States and completed a residency at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He then went on to undertake his Pharmacology fellowship at the University of Minnesota. Additionally, Dr. Abuzzahab also holds a Doctor of Philosophy Degree.

Dr. Abuzzahab Sr. is an internationally renowned expert in the chemistry of the brain, and is a specialist in delaying the aging process in the brain. He maintains a professional membership with the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, and since 2001 has organized annual anti-aging conferences. Dr. Abuzzahab Sr. attributes his success to the examples he gained from his parents and the inspiration they provided him with.

View Faruk Said Abuzzahab Sr.s Profile Here: https://www.findatopdoc.com/doctor/8138176-Faruk-Abuzzahab-psychiatrist-Minneapolis-Minnesota-55416

Learn more about Dr. Abuzzahab Sr. by reading his upcoming publication in The Leading Physicians of the World.

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FindaTopDoc.com is a hub for all things medicine, featuring detailed descriptions of medical professionals across all areas of expertise, and information on thousands of healthcare topics. Each month, millions of patients use FindaTopDoc to find a doctor nearby and instantly book an appointment online or create a review. FindaTopDoc.com features each doctors full professional biography highlighting their achievements, experience, patient reviews and areas of expertise. A leading provider of valuable health information that helps empower patient and doctor alike, FindaTopDoc enables readers to live a happier and healthier life. For more information about FindaTopDoc, visit: http://www.findatopdoc.com

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Esteemed Psychiatrist, Pharmacologist and Anti-Aging Physician in Minneapolis, Minnesota Faruk Said Abuzzahab Sr ... - PR NewsChannel (press release)

Fountain of Youth to celebrate 10th anniversary – Victoria Advocate


Victoria Advocate
Fountain of Youth to celebrate 10th anniversary
Victoria Advocate
Le, a physician who specializes in internal medicine, aesthetic medicine and anti-aging medicine, moved into the shopping center about 10 years ago. "It's quite a journey, and we want to celebrate the contributions our business has brought to the ...

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Fountain of Youth to celebrate 10th anniversary - Victoria Advocate

Scientists Spot Gene for Rare Disorder Causing Deafness, Blindness – Montana Standard

THURSDAY, March 23, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers say they have found the genetic cause of a rare disorder that causes children to be born with deafness, blindness, albinism and fragile bones.

The syndrome is called COMMAD. It occurs when children inherit two mutations -- one from each parent -- of a gene called MITF. Each parent is also deaf due to another rare genetic disorder called Waardenburg syndrome 2A.

Further research is needed to learn more about the role of MITF during early development and how mutations in this gene result in the development of Waardenburg 2A and COMMAD, said researchers from the U.S. National Eye Institute (NEI).

COMMAD stands for the names of a number of conditions that affect people with this disorder. It includes missing tissue around the eye; abnormally dense bones prone to fracture; small or abnormally formed eyes; an abnormally large head; albinism (lack of melanin in the skin, eyes and hair), and deafness.

Identifying the genetic cause of COMMAD is important because deaf people commonly choose to marry other deaf persons. People who are deaf may not know that their deafness is associated with Waardenburg 2A, the researchers explained.

Deaf couples may want to consider genetic counseling prior to conceiving a child. If both potential parents have Waardenburg 2A, they risk passing mutated versions of MITF to their children, who would then have COMMAD, study lead author Dr. Brian Brooks said in a NEI news release.

Brooks is chief of the NEI's Pediatric, Developmental, and Genetic Ophthalmology section.

The study describes two unrelated cases of children born with COMMAD who inherited the two mutations of MITF from their parents.

Most people who are born deaf don't have Waardenburg 2A. Along with hearing loss, people with the syndrome have premature graying of the hair, blue eyes, fair skin and sometimes vision problems, the researchers said.

The study was published recently in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

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Scientists Spot Gene for Rare Disorder Causing Deafness, Blindness - Montana Standard

OTUD6B gene mutations cause intellectual, physical disability – Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)

From left, Dr. Teresa Sim, Dr. Magdalena Walkiewicz and Dr. Jason Heaney discuss their recent paper in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

An international team of researchers from institutions around the world, including Baylor College of Medicine, has discovered that mutations of the OTUD6B gene result in a spectrum of physical and intellectual deficits. This is the first time that this gene, whose functions are beginning to be explored, has been linked to a human disease. The study appears in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

Our interest in this gene began when we carried out whole exome sequencing the analysis of all the protein-coding genes of one of our patients who had not received a genetic diagnosis for his condition that includes a number of intellectual and physical disabilities, said co-first author Dr. Teresa Sim, a postdoctoral associate of molecular and human genetics and a fellow in Clinical Molecular Genetics and Genomics. We identified OTUD6B, a gene that until now had not been linked to a health condition.

We identified a presumed loss-of-function mutation in the OTUD6B gene in our first patient, said co-senior author Dr. Magdalena Walkiewicz, assistant professor of molecular and human genetics at Baylor and assistant laboratory director at Baylor Genetics. We discovered that this gene seemed to be highly involved in human development; when the gene cannot fulfill its function, the individual presents with severe intellectual disability, a brain that does not develop as expected and poor muscular tone that limits the ability to walk, as well as cardiovascular problems.

Making a convincing case for OTUD6B

However, one case does not represent sufficient evidence to support the involvement of OTUD6B in the medical condition.

To make a convincing case that this gene is essential for human development we needed to find more individuals carrying mutations in OTUD6B, Walkiewicz said.

Mutations in OTUD6B are rare so the researchers had to look into the exomes all the protein-coding genes of a large number of individuals to find others carrying mutations in this gene. Walkiewicz and her colleagues first looked into their clinical exome database at Baylor Genetics labs, specifically into the data of nearly 9,000 unrelated, mostly pediatric-age individuals, many of which carrying neurologic conditions, and found an additional individual carrying genetic changes in the same gene. The clinical characteristics of this individual were strikingly similar to those of the first patient, which led the team to expand their search for more patients.

When we study very rare disorders we rely on collaborations with scientists around the world to find other families affected by mutations in one gene, said Walkiewicz.

One of the strategies that helps researchers find more cases is running the gene of interest through GeneMatcher, a web-tool developed as part of the Baylor-Hopkins Center for Mendelian Genomics for rare disease researchers. Similar to online dating websites that match couples, GeneMatcher allows researchers to find others that are interested in the same genes they are working on.

Without this type of collaborations it would be very difficult to make a convincing case. Between GeneMatcher and our database we found a total of 12 individuals carrying mutations in OTUD6B and presenting with similar clinical characteristics, Walkiewicz said.

An animal model corroborates the human findings

Animal models are one way to determine whether a change in this gene is actually causing the condition, said co-senior author Dr. Jason Heaney, assistant professor of molecular and human genetics and director of the Mouse Embryonic Stem Cell Core at Baylor. Having a similar change in an animal model gene that results in similar characteristics in a mouse can show us whether the gene is causing the condition.

Baylor is part of the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium. Its goal is to generate a knockout model for every gene in the mouse genome, about 20,000 protein-coding genes, and determine what each gene is involved with.

In this case we learned in the animal model lacking the OTUD6B gene that the gene is highly expressed in the brain and we knew that the patients had reduced intellectual capacities. The animals had cardiovascular defects very similar to those in the patient population. The animal models allowed us to see that having this mutation of this gene causes the clinical characteristics observed in the patients. It highlights how useful animal models can be for understanding human disease, Heaney said.

Through multiple lines of evidence the researchers have established that mutations in OTUD6B can cause a range of neurological and physical conditions and highlight the role of this gene in human development.

In addition, our collaborators in Germany performed functional analysis for this gene on blood cells from patients, Walkiewicz said. Their findings suggest that the OTUD6B protein contributes to the function of proteasomes, large molecular complexes that are at the center of the cellular process that degrades proteins that are damaged or are not needed by the cell. This discovery strengthens the notion that disturbances of the proteasome can cause human disease.

There is interest in better understanding the mechanisms of the disorder at the cellular and molecular level. By understanding the processes that lead to the disease, we can then hope to develop therapies for those patients, said Walkiewicz. One of the highlights of this project is the tremendous collaboration with a number of different centers and labs and putting this tremendous effort together resulted in a publication that is very strong.

Another important contribution of this project is that we provided some answers for the families, and brought them together which offers the opportunity of mutual support, said Sim.

For a complete list of the authors and their affiliations and financial support for this project click here.

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OTUD6B gene mutations cause intellectual, physical disability - Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)

EXCLUSIVE: Sharna Burgess and Bonner Bolton Talk Explosive Chemistry on ‘DWTS,’ Avoiding Another – 9NEWS.com

Antoinette Bueno , ET 3:13 PM. MDT March 27, 2017

It's no secret that Dancing With the Stars pair Sharna Burgess and Bonner Bolton look pretty great together, on and off the dance floor.

The 31-year-old dancing pro and the 29-year-old bull rider have had all eyes on them this season, thanks to their explosive chemistry, which doesn't show any signs of stopping soon. On Sunday, Burgess shared a steamy pic of her and Bolton getting super close, previewing their upcoming waltz on Monday's show.

"It's been one heck of a week for @bonner_bolton and I, to be honest... kinda stressful," she wrote. "However, all the controversy aside I have to tell you... this cowboy can waltz!!! He tells me it's because it reminds him of the Texas two step... so this dance is inspired by exactly that and the culture surrounding it. He's worked his butt off and is on track to kill it tomorrow. Get ready for it loverz."

NEWS: 'DWTS' Week 2 Preview -- Sharna Burgess & Bonner Bolton Turn Up the Heat, Maksim Chmerkovskiy Injured & More!

Burgess' "controversy" mention is, of course, referring to the pair's unintentional viral moment last week, when backstage cameras caught Bolton wrapping his arm around Burgess and his hand going quite a bit lower than her waist. ET's Cameron Mathison caught up with the duo at their DWTS rehearsals on Friday, where Bolton explained how he's going to avoid another mishap.

"It got a lot of attention, that's for sure," Bolton told ET. "I'm definitely going to be more cautious of where my hands are."

"Obviously, I don't know what to do with my hands," he joked, before getting serious. "It's really .. it was so unintentional and I have all the respect on and off the dance floor for this young lady, so it's totally cool."

"We're good," Burgess confirmed. "It's alright."

The pair also acknowledged their obvious spark. The two bonded early on when Bolton took Burgess out for Cajun food on the first day they met in Texas.

"We have a great chemistry getting to know each other, but obviously we're three weeks into this thing of having met each other on his ranch, and we're having a lot of fun, but our priorities obviously are getting Bonner through this competition as far as he can possibly go," Burgess said. "So, in the meantime, we're having a lot of fun getting to know each other and we do have great chemistry."

"She's really good to get along with," Bolton added of his partner. "We actually have a lot in common, I think, in that our personalities are real similar, but that can make it kind of challenging. Sometimes, I think, I get on her nerves a little bit."

Still, Bolton didn't shut the door on a future romance between them when asked if he would ever date Burgess.

"I'm gonna have to see where that one goes, and take that into consideration, but we'll just leave that a mystery," he said.

WATCH: EXCLUSIVE -- 'DWTS' Partners Sharna Burgess and Bonner Bolton Reveal Whether They Are Still Single

On Sunday, Bolton Instagrammed that he's feeling good about Monday's waltz.

"I hope it touches everyone's heart and that you all enjoy it as much as I enjoy dancing to it! #vote #teamdenimndiamonds," he wrote, alongside a cute picture of him with his arm around Burgess.

Watch the video below to see Bolton and Burgess' flirty night out at the Cowboy Palace Saloon in Chatsworth, California, last Tuesday.

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EXCLUSIVE: Sharna Burgess and Bonner Bolton Talk Explosive Chemistry on 'DWTS,' Avoiding Another - 9NEWS.com

Grey’s Anatomy Enlists Matthew Morrison for Mystery Role: Who … – E! Online

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Weinstein Company

The halls of Grey Sloan Memorial are about to get a bit more gleeful.

Before season 13 comes to a close, Grey's Anatomy will be welcoming Glee alum Matthew Morrison for a guest star role, E! News has confirmed. True to Shonda Rhimes form, the details surrounding his character are being kept under wraps for the time being, butthe actor did reveal via Instagram that he was busy at work on an unnamed TV series playing Dr. Paul Stadler.

Morrison's involvement with the long-running ABC series was first revealed when photos began surfacing on social media showing the actor shooting a scene with Justin Chambers on location in Los Angeles with Kevin McKidd as director.

Given that his character will clearly share scenes outside of the hospital with Alex, along with the continued looming threat of Jo's (Camilla Luddington) abusive doctor ex finally finding her location, many are speculating that Dr. Paul Stadler could, in fact, be man of Jo's nightmares. Naturally, ABC had nothing to say about that speculation, but with TVLine's recent report that Grey's was looking for an actor to come aboard at the end of the seasonwith the potential to return in the fallas a new doctor who is "appealing, charismatic and charming," but also "manipulative" with a "scary dark side," all signs seem to point to Jo's husband.

Since Glee wrapped in 2015, Morrison has been making the guest star rounds with spots on Younger and The Good Wife.

Who do you think Morrison's character will be? Share your theories in the comments below!

Grey's Anatomy airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. on ABC.

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Grey's Anatomy Enlists Matthew Morrison for Mystery Role: Who ... - E! Online

Scoop: GREY’S ANATOMY on ABC – Thursday, April 13, 2017 – Broadway World

On the episode In the Air Tonight Meredith and Nathan have to confront their feelings when they are are stuck sitting next to each other on a plane, on Greys Anatomy, THURSDAY, APRIL 13 (8:00-9:01 p.m. EDT), on The ABC Television Network.

Greys Anatomy stars Ellen Pompeo as Meredith Grey, Justin Chambers as Alex Karev, Chandra Wilson as Miranda Bailey, James Pickens Jr. as Richard Webber, Kevin McKidd as Owen Hunt, Jessica Capshaw as Arizona Robbins, Jesse Williams as Jackson Avery, Sarah Drew as April Kepner, Caterina Scorsone as Amelia Shepherd, Camilla Luddington as Jo Wilson, Jerrika Hinton as Stephanie Edwards, Kelly McCreary as Maggie Pierce, Jason George as Ben Warren, Martin Henderson as Nathan Riggs and Giacomo Gianniotti as Andrew DeLuca.

Greys Anatomy was created and is executive produced by Shonda Rhimes (Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder), Betsy Beers (Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder) and Mark Gordon (Saving Private Ryan). William Harper, Stacy McKee, Zoanne Clack and Debbie Allen are executive producers. Greys Anatomy is produced by ABC Studios.

In the Air Tonight was written by Stacy McKee and directed by Chandra Wilson.

Greys Anatomy is broadcasted in 720 Progressive (720P), ABCs selected HTV format, with 5.1-channel surround sound.

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Scoop: GREY'S ANATOMY on ABC - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - Broadway World

Gators credit team chemistry for strong start to season – Daily Commercial

By Jim HarvinCorrespondent

The second-ranked Florida softball team has reached the midpoint of the season with just one loss and carries a 19-game winning streak into this weekend's three-game series against fourth-ranked Auburn.

The remainder of the season, however, still looms ahead.

It startsSaturday when the Gators (27-1, 5-0 SEC) and Tigers (27-3, 2-1) square off at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium at 6 p.m.

Senior left-hander and 2016 first-team All-American Delanie Gourley feels it's all about trust.

Our team chemistry is just really, really good this year, she said. That's something that you can't ever force. When that happens like it did this year, that's something really special.

We feed off each other a lot, whether it's from our workouts or from practice or for games. That is really what has set this season off.

Gourley (11-1), the reigning SEC Pitcher of the Week, has 105 strikeouts and leads a staff that has posted a 0.54 ERA while holding opponents to a .128 batting average.

Kelly Barnhill (10-0, 0.23 ERA, 119 Ks) and Aleshia Ocasio (5-0, 0.55 ERA) also have been outstanding.

Auburn will counter with pitchers Kaylee Carlson (15-0, 0.93 ERA) and Makayla Martin (12-3, 0.98 ERA).

Five Gators Kayli Kvistad, Sophia Reynoso, Amanda Lorenz, Justine McLean and Nicole DeWitt have started every game this season.

We've been working hard. You can't ask for much more, DeWitt said. We go out here and we want to win games. We can't have any doubt in ourselves, so being able to believe in each other is going to be a huge key.

We don't focus on who is in the other dugout. We focus on ourselves and playing Florida softball.

UF has outscored the opposition by a 199-21 margin.

In addition, the Gators have made just six errors for a nation-leading .991 fielding percentage.

A huge part of how we've been playing is the relationships that we have with each other, DeWitt said. We have such strong bonds that can't be broken. We're constantly together. Even when we have an off day, we're still hanging out. We all enjoy being around each other. That's a huge thing.

UF also is doing the right things off the field.

They're student-athletes, coach Tim Walton said. They know priority number one is to go to school and do the things that they need to do.

The top-five showdown with the Tigers will be the first of six remaining SEC series for UF, which just two weeks into the league schedule is the lone remaining team unbeaten in conference play.

We're going to come out, keep doing what we've been doing and just play how we play, especially when we're playing at home in front of our amazing fans, Gourley said. We're going to come out and have fun.

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Gators credit team chemistry for strong start to season - Daily Commercial

TLU hosting 3rd Chemistry Night – Seguin Gazette-Enterprise

As part of its continuous efforts to reach out to the Seguin community, Texas Lutheran University will host its third annual CHAOS Chemistry Night on Thursday.

The acronym CHAOS is Chemistry Happens with Adventurous Outstanding Scientists, chemistry professor Dr. Allison Bray said. It is a hands-on event where we will have chemists doing science for K-12 students in the community. We will also be doing some high-powered chemistry demonstrations, but also tie it back to a theme this year, which is the chemistry of the earth.

TLU hosts this event because the science department enjoys sharing its knowledge with the community, Bray said.

Its difficult with the federal curriculum in schools to incorporate a lot of large-scale science and hands-on science, she said. We figured this was a way for us to share what we know with the community, and its also a great opportunity for our students to act as teachers and practice explaining science to the younger generation and hopefully get them excited and help them to be scientists, as well.

The event will include multiple stations both outside and inside, Bray said.

Well have one that includes art, so a station of rust and rust paintings. They can create their own rust very quickly, she said. Students are going to have the opportunity to make snowflakes, which is tricky in Texas of course. Theres also a room where they can experience all sorts of glow-in-the-dark items.

Bray said the event will be a great learning opportunity for students.

The kids will not only be learning about science, but theyll also be having fun doing it, she said. It tends to be a very exciting and dramatic event with really unusual experiments.

Director of Marketing and Communications Ashlie Ford said TLU holds events like this as an outreach to the community.

We welcome them on our campus and we really see ourselves as a community partner, she said. This is another way we can share the expertise of our faculty with children and their family, particularly to spark interest in the sciences.

The CHAOS Chemistry Night is scheduled from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the Jackson Park Student Activity Center.

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TLU hosting 3rd Chemistry Night - Seguin Gazette-Enterprise

iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Announces Quarterly Dividend of $0.30 – The Cerbat Gem

iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Announces Quarterly Dividend of $0.30
The Cerbat Gem
iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index logo iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (NASDAQ:IBB) announced a quarterly dividend on Friday, March 24th. Investors of record on Tuesday, March 28th will be paid a dividend of 0.299 per share on Thursday, ...

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iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (IBB) Announces Quarterly Dividend of $0.30 - The Cerbat Gem

The anatomy of family murder – the patterns and warning signs | The … – The Independent

Just one week ago, on the evening of Saturday 19 March, a generally quiet north London neighbourhood, Finsbury Park, was rocked by a terrible crime, when two toddlers were found with critical injuries. Aman, said to be the birth father, has been arrested and charged with murder and attempted murder. Three of the more restrained headlines in response to these attacks read, depending on which newspaper one read: Man arrested over murder of one-year-old boy as his twin sister fights for life after alleged hammer attack (Daily Mirror); Man arrested on suspicion of murder after mother heard screaming for help as one-year-old boy is killed and sister is fighting for life, (The Daily Telegraph); and Distraught mother ran into street screaming my kids, my kids after finding her son beaten to death with a hammer (MailOnline).

The case has been set for a plea hearing in June, with a provisional trial date in September. The arrested man has yet to enter a plea and we must not second-guess the facts in this tragic case. However, this was the third distressing instance of multiple family victimsnationally in just three weeks. And those only the ones known to any audience beyond the local newssheet.

Less than two weeks before the Finsbury Park incident, police in Stowmarket found 65-year old carpenter and decorator Richard Pitkin dead. Also dead in the extended family home that used to boast a tea room was Sarah Pitkin, 58. The Pitkins, by report, were well-liked and respected. Police were not looking for anyone else in connection with their inquiries.

White House Farm in Essex, scene of the Bambermurders. The court decided Jeremy had placed the gun in his dead sisters hands to make it look like murder-suicide (Rex)

Stowmarket is a fairly small Suffolk town. Wolverhampton, by contrast, is a city of 250,000 inhabitants. But, just three days after news of the Stowmarket tragedy, the people of Wolverhampton were nonetheless alarmed to read in their copies of the Birmingham Mail: Man killed sister and knifed mum before killing himself.Had citizens and neighbours in that part of the Black Country turned to The Sun, even less would have been left to their imaginations: Maniac knifeman stabbed his sister to death and injured his mum before turning blade on himself in bloodbath at flat.

***

So in cases where there is family annihilation, what is it and why and why does it happen?

One of the most infamous family annihilations evertook place in sprawling White House Farm, Essex, on 7 August 1985. Sheila Bamber, her parents Neville and June Bamber, and her sons Nicholas and Daniel, were all killed that fateful day. Worse, Sheilas brother Jeremy Bamber, then aged 24, apparently staged everyones murder as if Sheila herself were the culprit. Homicide/suicide, surely? Police who initially attended the scene ironically in response to a panicked-sounding telephone call from Jeremy seemed content to accept that interpretation.

For weeks lasting into months, that narrative amazingly stayed unchallenged; and it is fair to say the incarcerated Bamber still maintains his absolute innocence three decades after his belated conviction. Five years ago this spring, his lawyers failed in their most recent attempt to gain his acquittal, or at least his release, this time before the European Court of Human Rights.

Conventional instances of homicide/suicide where the perpetrator cannot go to jail because he it is statistically far more likely to be a he is already dead, either at the scene of horror or perhaps at some secluded beauty spot nearby tend to have 10 common features.

The historical cases show is that in murder-suicides, first, the killer is, as said, likely to be a man: where familial, a son, brother or father rather than daughter, sister or mother. Second, isolation is frequently a factor, if not the deciding factor: geographical isolation, psychological or psychiatric isolation, perceived isolation within the family bullying, deprivation, marginalisation, or isolated status, disgrace.

Newspapers offer lurid headlines on the act, but rarely shed light on motive

Third, often the perpetrator is consumed with hatred: sometimes hatred is fuelled by resentment. And, fourth, one influence persuading someone to attack his own family so viciously is frequently a grudge: expulsion from the home, threatened separation, refusal of money, not being mentioned in a will, unfair accusations, a partners alleged infidelity or even something as trivial as youre forever nagging.

Fifth, the instrument of death is more often than not extremely violent: gun, sword, knife or hammer are preferred over suffocation or gassing. However, in recent years, fire appears to have been used more, perhaps because perpetrators are more aware of the importance of destroying DNA evidence, and with the terrible bonus that it is the fire or the smoke or both doing the killing, not the instigator.

Sixth, typically escape routes are blocked, and a time chosen when the family are near-at-hand, sleeping or watching TV. Keys are hidden. Those who rush upstairs are pursued. And those who rush downstairs are trapped. Elaborate precautions are taken that a getaway car is not to hand except for the killers use. Also, that killer needs to be faster down the street were one of his intended victims to achieve temporary freedom.

Seventh, it is likely that there have been lesser preparatory and experimental attacks before the final showdown. For example, survivors of domestic violence typically endure between 20 and 200 assaults before sounding the alarm and calling on neighbours, trusted siblings, or the police. Perhaps the family car is in an inexplicable crash. Or prowlers, maybe suspected of mere rogue-trading or peeping Tom-ery, are been seen near the later site of execution.

In the 1977 Pottery Cottage murders, Billy Hughes (inset) butchered a family in Eastmoor, near Baslow in Derbyshire (Derby Telegraph)

Eighth, pleas for mercy are routinely and callously ignored. Ninth, the perpetrator usually neither expects nor tolerates retaliation. He likely relies on past romance or deep-seated trust placed in him as one of us to deter any last-minute fracas.

Womens aid, womens assertiveness, women survivors, and womens self-defence groups place emphasis on attempting realistic self-protection. Naturally it is a truism that fighting back is risky, statistically abortive, sometimes provocative prior to an even worse fate, or very occasionally peremptory: a false alarm. Nobody should expect doomed family members always to have a heavy chair or flower-pot to hand but advice is sensibly given that if you are going to die in any case, you might as well attempt some resistance. And there is rare forensic evidence that the escaping man, whether or not he later self-harms or takes his own life, bears scratches, bruises, cuts or organ-damage that must have been inflicted by one, more, or even all, his targets.

Finally and disturbingly, tenth, if the killer dies during or following his act of family annihilation, could well be set to be rather than blamed: Poor soul ; Must have borne terrible suffering in the Army, at work, as a child....; Moment of madness ; Wonderful dad ; Not round to put the record straight, whatever. And this (probably undeserved) taking into account of past misfortune has possibly been orchestrated by the killer long before the act. Maybe letters have been written, certificates displayed, thousands of pounds raised for charity, compensation successfully awarded... anything to perpetuate a story of awful injustice, noble self-abnegation, valid self-sacrifice.Because the killers unbelievable yet curiously tenable accomplishment is to write the first version of history.

History he has himself fulfilled. History he has himself shaped. Maybe history could supply us with detailed statistics for (a) homicide/suicides; and (b) whole- family killings not attributed to an integral, or past, members of those threatened families?No
such fortune. Whereas homicides (murders) appear in one table of figures, Suicides (sometimes attempted suicides) appear in other lists. Even then, statistic-gathering is chaotic, partly due to coroners hesitant to issue suicide verdicts.

Do other countries perhaps keep better records? No. What we do know is that family annihilation is occasionally cultural; also imitative. South Africa is blighted with two kindred phenomena: isolated Boer and/or white men, on the margins, killing their entire families then themselves; alternatively, a son: not impossibly a black or mixed-race son, killing his parents, maybe his siblings as well, with appropriation of assets an attributed motive.

As for the US, comparisons with UK family-killings are ever more fraught with difficulty. Guns and harmful weapons far more available than in Britain, and spree-killings of all types are hard to separate out from targeted killings of a culprits relatives, say with one or two bystanders also killed or injured. Home invasions in the States are certainly frequent but as few as 100 people each year die as a direct consequence of burglary or attempted burglary within the broken-into home; compared with at least 18,000 US suicides labelled suicides each year.

The Laitner familly at Suzannes (centre) 1983 wedding in Sheffield. Basil (left) along with Richard and Avril (right) were murdered hours later

Is alcohol an important component, giving the instigator more courage? Or are perpetrators drug-dependent? The jury is still out over mitigation. Who knows whether a killer with little or no regard to his own safety, his own discovery, his own lifespan, would have been more restrained with more inhibitions. Harmful substances certainly dont seem to reduce instances of family annihilation or their intensity.

***

So where do my 10 common factors leading to family annihilation leave we who survive; we the relations and friends who are not subject to our own familys annihilation or someone elses; we who read about it from the comfort of our armchairs; we who are safe, secure, cherished and uplifted at home? A difficult quandary. Arguably, more difficult in the aftermath of family annihilation than in the wake of almost any other crime, any other catastrophe, even any other unforeseeable disaster.

Nor do the police, the courts, psychiatrists, or social workers those whose daily employment is to help those in distress, but not this degree of distress give the rest of an easy lead; give us reasons, perhaps in reply to that familiar plea: give us a clue! Society buries family annihilation (undertakers, literally) because the subject is too painful; it is seemingly too far beyond comprehension. Maybe falsely, family annihilation is considered a flash-in-a-pan; perhaps it is put down far too quickly to the mental illness of which it is so obviously a manifestation; and crucially there is rarely a survivor, less so an attendant survivor, to enlighten either the authorities or the public.

Police, press, parliament, the Church, social services, the NHS, everyone most likely to be listened to, can usefully move on to more pressing issues because there is there is nobody to prosecute, and/or nobody who can be subject of a child protection conference, and/or nobody who can be reassessed as a risk; or else the intentional killer who is an accidental or purposeful survivor makes a full confession. In which case there are only three available disposals: long-termimprisonment, enduring committalto hospital, or leeway enough, without intention, for the prisoner to finally take his own life (far more likely, statistically, if he lived through an initial attempt so to do).

Ironically, societys certainty thatits all over and done with militates against prevention, mitigation, avoidance, of family annihilation in the future. So onlookers and professionals alike are tempted to close the chapter, to let bygones be bygones. Instead, it is beholden on everyone to take account of warning signs: buildups of spite and resentment; previous domestic violence; acrimonious divorce and separation; bankruptcy; custody and access sessions denied or giving rise to concern; threats.

Because threats are not always empty. What everyone takes to be bragging, bad-mouthing, intimidation or hyperbole might actually be a signpost to future family annihilation. So statutory reviews must in future be held before the event, not after.

***

Which brings me to my own commitment to find out more concerning family annihilation. That prompt came from four instances a little too near where I lived for comfort.

2017 marks 40 years after escaped prisoner Billy Hughes, now deceased, took a family hostage at a cottage in Eastmoor, near Baslow in Derbyshire, butchering Grandma, Grandad, the couples son-in-law and their granddaughter. Only Mum survived the Pottery Cottage Murders, even she within seconds of her own shooting or knifing. And Eastmoor is just four miles up the road from where for more than three decades we made our home.

The Shropshire estate at which in 2008 a millionaire with business problems murdered his wife and daughter before shooting dead their dogs and horses, setting fire to the house, and finally killing himself (PA)

Six years later came the Dore Wedding Day Massacre. A talented pupil taught by my wife crouched in her bedroom, in an affluent suburb of Sheffield, towards the end of the family celebrations that crowned her elder sisters marriage ceremony just hours earlier, and listened, listened, as every single member of her cherished family to hand solicitor father, doctor mother, older brother faced arbitrary execution at the other side of her hasty barricade. Grim. With worse for this young woman still to come. And all at the hands of a robber not a relative.

Came the day 10 years after that: at the time a I was a local government officer charged with supervising three childrens access to their mother at a voluntary-funded contact centre. I was returning from the centre when I heard that, in a lay-by just a few miles down the same road I was driving along, a jealous father, also a centre user, had had set light to himself and his two sons by a woman he had acrimoniously split from within the exactly parked care he had used for access to the children. Three bodies discovered within. No lads able to survive their ordeal, survive their access, and see their mother again; nor chance that mother should encounter, look after, love, her boys again. Total immolation. Total elimination.

One final coincidence: from 2011 to 2014, when I needed my car in the evening, I chose to park it at the other end of the alley opposite where Id moved to. And one enchanting summer afternoon, the cul-de-sac was full of police cars, sentries, men in white suits. I had not consciously registered the house before. It was semi-detached, privately owned, on the outer edge of a large post-war municipal estate. In succeeding days, I soon learnt Stepdad had murdered the widowed shopkeeper he had recently married, then laid on the same bed and stabbed himself to death. All because she had told him she had had enough.

In the face of such terrible calumny, in the light of such unimaginable discoveries, most observers, most survivors, most people holding Twitter or Facebook accounts, most readers of newspapers, will remain baffled as to why anyone, anywhere, would want to take them (those the murderer has known or loved) all with me thus releasing them from agony. Is this really the freedom from oppression a crazed killer yearns for? Or is this too speedy an escape from lifes trials and tribulations; too convincing a hope of a Better World than that into which we were all born?

Purportedly, family annihilation, family extinction, is absolute love absolute hatred? expressed absolutely. And whatever the reasoning behind it, this is an act committed so suddenly, so ruthlessly, so wilfully, it permits no second thoughts. No opportunity for reverse. No retrieval.

1) Christopher, aged 50, s
hot dead his wife, 49, and daughter, 15, before gunning down their horses and dogs and then setting alight his 1.2m Shropshire home in 2008. The former mattress and pizza-box salesman had made himself into a millionaire, but his business interests collapsed, leaving him in 4m of debt. Some say he killed his family in a crazed attempt to protect them from poverty they were about to face. The killer was caught on CCTV on the night of the blaze walking his mansion's grounds carrying a bucket, a rifle and lighter fluid for setting the fire.

2) The bodies of a mother, 44, her son, 13, anddaughter, nine, were found in February 2011. The mothers husband was working abroad. Police broke into the familys detached house, in the Midlands, after they were contacted by a concerned relation. The children were found in their bedrooms with stab wounds to their neck and chest. Their mother, a devout Roman Catholic, was in the bathroom with multiple knife wounds to her arms. An inquest heard that the womans mother called police after she was unable to contact her daughter. Police investigated the tragedy as a suspected double homicide-suicide.

3) A report into the care of a North-east of England ex-soldier, who shot dead four members of his family in 2006, found failings in the mental health care he received. David, 41, killed his aunt and uncle, both 70, and their sons Davids cousins aged 41 and 44. He was sentenced to a minimum term of 15 years after admitting manslaughter. There was a lack of communication between agencies.

Link:
The anatomy of family murder - the patterns and warning signs | The ... - The Independent

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Season 13’s In-Flight Episode Already Looks Bad for Meredith – Moviefone

Poor Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) has the worst luck with planes. You may have already heard that "Grey's Anatomy" Season 13 has an upcoming episode "set entirely on a commercial airliner as a crisis unfolds mid-flight." TVLine revealed a photo from that April 13 episode, "In the Air Tonight," directed by Chandra Wilson (Miranda Bailey).

As you can see below, Meredith and Nathan Riggs (Martin Henderson) are seated next to each other on the plane, and Mer already looks troubled:

TVLine didn't have any other details, so we don't know if the crisis is a problem with the plane -- like fans could handle another crash after the Season 8 finale took Lexie Grey -- or a crisis with one of the passengers, and Grey and Riggs have to step in to help.

For all we know, there could be other doctors on that flight with them, although it kinda looks like maybe they are getting away together. If so, their expressions don't suggest a romantic start. They both look a bit alarmed, no? Or wary, at least. Mer does not look comfortable. Are her eyes red, or are we just reading too much into it? The woman next to them doesn't seem to be bothered.

Meanwhile, Ellen Pompeo played down the idea of Mer-Riggs romance, warning Entertainment Weekly "Don't get too excited." She added, "Whether you're ready or not, you have to make the leap; I don't know if she's ready." Mer hasn't forgotten you, Derek!

"Grey's" has some intriguing episodes coming up, including Episode 18, "Be Still, My Soul," directed by Pompeo. That one is next, and it's meant to be very emotional. Then we have Episode 19, "What's Inside," which sounds troubling for Stephanie, at least professionally. This in-flight episode is Episode 20. At some point, Jo's husband is expected to show up to cause drama. The season finale will be Episode 24, and it's meant to be dark, dramatic, and intense.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Season 13's In-Flight Episode Already Looks Bad for Meredith - Moviefone

For women’s water polo, chemistry is the driving force of a … – The State Press

The Sun Devils are heading into their most difficult competition and will need cohesiveness to stay afloat

Freshman Maud Koopman passesagainstthe University of Pacific on Sunday, March 20, 2016 at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Complex in Tempe, AZ. ASU water polo won 5-3.

At the midway point in the season, the ASU womens water polo team is sitting high in the rankings.

ASU (17-4)began the season as the No. 5 team in the nation andhave only slightly fluctuatedin its ranking since beginning the season.The Sun Devils have remained at No. 6 for the majority of the season, dropping only onceto No. 7 briefly in early March.

Thus far, the Sun Devils have kepttheir reputation as a top-notch program. Junior attackerLena Mihailovic is currently leading the team with 43 goals, while junior centerAlkistis Benekou just reached the top-10 all-time scoring list for ASU water polo.

The Sun Devils have alsoput together 13 top-25 victories, falling only to four of the nation's best teams in USC, Stanford, Cal and Michigan.

Head coachTodd Clapper said the team isfindingtheir ownrhythm and are changing their practicing styles.

I think we're hoping that we can get ourselves sorted out, Clapper said. We're starting to practice more towards how our opponents are playing rather than what we need to do.

Practice is thekey for ASU to continue itssuccess, however, the chemistry built outside of the water is equallyimportant to creating a cohesive team.

That chemistry is already noticeable across the roster. Everyone has their own strengths and weaknesses, but each playerbuilds off one another.

We have such great chemistry and we've started becoming tougher, Benekou said.

In the coming weeks, the Sun Devils must ensure thattheir chemistry continues to translate in the water.

We have some important games coming up against Cal and others, Benekou said. I think it's going to be that defining moment to decide whether or not we make it to NCAAs.

ASU will face three top-four opponents back to back with Cal March 25, USC April 1 and UCLA on April 8.

Thecoming weeks will undoubtedly be the most difficult for the Sun Devils, butBenekou said she isconfident in the program.

I think we're going to be ready at the perfect time, Benekou said.

Junior goalkeeper Mia Rycraw set goals for the team early in the seasonand not much has changed.

Our goal is to win the NCAA Championship this season, and in conjunction with that, we are working on much smaller goals every day, Rycraw said. Our team already has such great chemistry, but I want this season's teamwork to go even further than last season's.

The No. 6 Sun Devils will head out to California this Saturday, where they will take on No. 4 Cal at 1 p.m.

Reach the reporter at klbroder@asu.edu or follow @KellyB1459 on Twitter.

Like State Press Sports on Facebook and follow @statepresssport on Twitter.

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For women's water polo, chemistry is the driving force of a ... - The State Press

Karnataka’s biotechnology finishing school programme, five years on – BSI bureau (press release)

Dr S Balasubramanya, BTFS Coordinator and Dr Mittur N Jagadish, Head-BioTech Facilitation Cell, KBITS, Government of Karnataka

Karnataka state has remained one of the major investment destinations in the biotech industry. Currently, the State of Karnataka contributes around 35 per cent of the Indian biotechnology sector. The state government has established Biotechnology Bio-Innovation Centre at Bengaluru Helix.

Theme-based biotech parks are at various stages of implementation in Bidar, Dharwad, Mangaluru and Mysuru. The state has already in place, multi-sector start-up policy with various industry specific incentives and ease of doing business measures to stimulate growth of industry in Karnataka.

Life Sciences Sector Skill Development Council (LSSSDC) has estimated life sciences industry which includes biotechnology industry to employ 1.5-1.6 million people by 2020. The sector is expected to see a possible supply gap upwards of 0.3-0.4 million, with the highest gap in the manufacturing segment.

The majority of full-time employees are distributed between marketing and manufacturing, and a limited number in R&D and other functions. Approximately, 40 per cent job roles are clustered at entry/junior level; 35 per cent at mid-level and 20 per cent at senior levels in the industry.

The junior and entry level positions that make up 40 per cent of the job roles requires attributes such as technical proficiency in laboratories, subject knowledge (basic and superior), high learning aptitude and thinking and questioning ability as key skills. Need is also felt for skill and capability building in Quality, IP and Regulatory aspects. Biotechnology industry in India is growing conservatively at 10 - 15 per cent and is said to be adding 15 to 20 per cent workforce to existing 50,000 jobs. The entry level jobs are 5 per cent of the 15 - 20 per cent workforce added each year.

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Karnataka's biotechnology finishing school programme, five years on - BSI bureau (press release)

MVIT organises three-day national seminar on Biotechnology – Times of India

BENGALURU: For all Bioscience graduates pursuing BE, BTech, BSc, MSc, MTech and PhD courses, there is good news for their career. The department of Biotechnology at Sir M Visvesvaraya Institute of Tecnology (MVIT) is organising a three day national seminar on Entrepreneurial Opportunities in Biotechnology from March 23 - 25 at its campus. The seminar that is also open to inquisitive parents, energetic alumni, enthusiastic faculty and industry experts is expected to alleviate the many concerns of graduates and their parents regarding their future prospects and career development. HG Nagendra, professor and head of the Biotechnology department, said: "The focus of education is to not only train the students in curriculum defined skillsets but also to guide them towards realising their higher aspirations." The seminar includes invited plenary talks by subject experts, panel discussions, industry-academia interactive sessions, poster sessions, project idea presentations, several stalls and displays. Cash awards will be awarded to those with best presentations and networking at the seminar.

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MVIT organises three-day national seminar on Biotechnology - Times of India

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ recap: ‘Till I Hear It From You’ – EW.com

Pardon me while I try to stop crying my eyes out and recap this mostly heartbreaking (and slightly annoying) episode.

We open on Maggie, Alex, and Meredith picking up Diane Pierce (a.k.a. Maggies mom) from the airport, and judging by the way Maggies upset about Mama Pierces upcoming boob job, she still doesnt know about the C-A-N-C-E-R.

Jackson tries to tell convince Diane to actually talk to her daughter about what shes going through which, seeing as how Maggies being a bit pointed, if not exceedingly rude, with her comments, I also recommend. But no. She says she wants to tell her after the surgery so she can say she had cancer, not that she still has it. (See? Told you it was heartbreaking and a little bit annoying.)

Not getting answers from her own mother, Maggie goes and questions Jackson, mentioning that shes locked out of her moms file. The plastic surgeon doesnt admit that he knows whats going on, but he does point out that her mother is scared of this surgery but not why shes this scared, thus maintaining doctor-patient confidentiality.

Later, we see Maggie obsess over why her mom would make this kind of decision, saying she wasnt allowed to pierce her ears though I suspect her mother was trying to save her from name-pun-related teasing on this account so why would her mother get a boob job?

At first Meredith and Amelia say its for sex for her shirts to fit better. But then Meredith says Maggie should ask her mother for a reason, while Amelia goes in the opposite direction and says its not her job to question her moms decision. (Both of these strategies are emblematic of what either woman is going through, so theyre not really great advice for Maggie herself.)

In any case, Diane does eventually tell her and Maggie is understandably shocked. She walks out of the room with her mothers case chart in her hands and proceeds to go study up on her moms condition. All this while her mom waits for her at Merediths house and plays with Zola and Bailey (and Baby Ellis? Honestly I cant track where this kid ever is).

The next day, Diane Pierce goes into surgery and Maggie paces nervously outside.

Elsewhere in the episode, Meredith is dealing with Riggs, who wants to know if she thought about what he said. Obviously she did, as we see her and Alex discuss it. But Dr. Grey stone cold lies to him, saying, I have three kids and a job. Im a surgeon. As funny as it is, fair point. Shes a very busy lady, and Im not sure what Riggs does on his time off. Probably practice his jokes for when he sees Meredith.

Anyhow, the next time he sees her, Riggs tries asking her again. But this time, Meredith points out that hes pushing her without giving her anything to go on. Everyone she knows who knows him doesnt like him, but Riggs insists on joking like it doesnt matter. (Like I said last time, If you want to be her lover, you gotta get with her friends.) So Riggs tries to give her a reason and cant.

Though he does get a chance to elaborate later on in the episode, saying he didnt want to like her, but he saw her laugh once, and now he comes in early to see if her name is on their surgery board and tries to come up with jokes to make her laugh (LOL). To this, Meredith suggests he ask her out to dinner. She then says yes when he does. But before she can say or do anything else, Jackson gets her because Maggie needs her

When Meredith finds her, Maggie is staring at her mothers charts. She turns to her half sister and says that her mom is really, really sick.

NEXT: 13 Seasons. Why?!

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'Grey's Anatomy' recap: 'Till I Hear It From You' - EW.com

10 Things You Need to Know If You Want a PhD in Grey’s Anatomy Star Justin Chambers – Cosmopolitan.com

1. Hes been married to his wife, Keisha, since 1993. They met when they were working in the modeling world, she as an agency booker, he as a model. We've been together for so long that I really don't know any other way to be, he told Good Housekeeping in 2007. I can remember lying in bed with her years ago and having conversations about our grandparents and now our grandparents are gone. We've gone through that together, and now our parents are getting older and we're going through that together. Every relationship has its ups and downs, but I'm glad I get to go through the ups and downs with her.

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2. He and Keisha have five kids: Isabella (born in 1994), twins Maya and Kaila (1997), Eva (1999), and Jackson (2002). Our house is sort of like a nightclub, he told Good Housekeeping. We've got loud music and chaos and crowds. But really, we're pretty laid-back. Our kids are in a little band, and they like to play video games, and my wife and I do our best to live a low-key, non-Hollywood kind of life.

With his wife and three of their kids in 2009.

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3. He was born in Ohio. His parents were deputy sheriffs and hes described them as cool. Hes also a fraternal twin (in addition to being a father to fraternal twins).

4. As mentioned above, he used to be a model. He did ad campaigns for Calvin Klein, among other labels.

Calvin Klein

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Calvin Klein

5. He has multiple tattoos, including the names of his wife and children, a ring of fire, and the number 7. Its known as the lucky number in Vegas, but its known as the number of perfection in Biblical terms, hes said.

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6. He wears sunglasses to table reads. I almost feel like he's got a Johnny Depp vibe, his costar Camilla Luddington, who plays Jo, told Cosmopolitan.com last year. Super cool. Like, [he] will come to the table read, and he's in his hat and his cool sunglasses. If I did that, I would probably look douchey, but he can pull it off. He just makes everything look cool.

7. He appeared on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition in 2009. You can watch a clip of his episode; it's a little odd.

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8. He checked into UCLA's psych ward in 2008 due to a longtime sleep disorder.Its a biological sleep disorder," he told People at the time. "Your mind keeps racing, and your body is tired. It wants to go to sleep, but it cant. He said he was sleeping no more than an hour a week by the time he sought help.

9. He practices hot yoga and considers himself a "spiritual" person. He also reads the Bible and is "obsessed with the Book of Revelation," according to this "25 Things You Don't Know About Me" he did with Us Weekly mandatory reading for this PhD program, FYI.

10. He's not opposed to Meredith and Alex getting together. Im very comfortable with them being platonic like brother and sister, and friends. I think that suits them better," he recently told ET. But hey, who knows? Nobody knows how things go, you know? I was friends with my wife before we started dating. #TeamMerlex forever.

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10 Things You Need to Know If You Want a PhD in Grey's Anatomy Star Justin Chambers - Cosmopolitan.com