Sooners explore human body in anatomy course

Katherine Leavey, aspiring oncology nurse, surveyed her patients exposed chest cavity.

The metastasized lung cancer had sent malignant tendrils into surrounding regions, fusing rib cage to lung tissue.

Atrophied and rigid, the left lung resembled a piece of granite while the cancerous, plum-colored right lung lay in a disintegrated state.

The heart, veiled in a thin layer of fat, lay in the middle of it all.

All that was missing was a heartbeat.

OUs human anatomy course continues to challenge students as it delves into internal organs and an extensive amount of course material.

Students exposed their cadavers internal organs in lab for the first time last week.

Once rib cages are removed, a moment of fascination usually follows, human anatomy professor Cindy Gordon said.

Its always those few minutes of Wow, Gordon said. The first thing that everyone does is look at their [cadaver], and then theyll go around to all the other bodies.

Transitioning from the study of musculature to internal organs, students in the course are starting to witness the incredible amount of variation among the bodies, Gordon said.

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Sooners explore human body in anatomy course

Anatomy of a thriller in Davidson's double OT win

ASHEVILLE -- Davidson's 93-91 double-overtime victory Monday against Western Carolina for the Southern Conference basketball tournament championship will go down as one of the most compelling games in league history.

Here's a closer look at the final minutes of regulation and the two overtimes:

Regulation

2:47: Forward Jake Cohen hits a jumper that gives the Wildcats a 74-61 lead, their biggest of the game. Davidson has rallied from a 12-point deficit in the first half - a 25-point swing. "For us to have come back from that far back was remarkable," Cohen would say later.

2:00: The Wildcats make it to the 2-minute mark with a double-digit lead, although Western Carolina's Tawaski King hits two free throws to cut it to 76-66.

1:14: After Davidson's JP Kuhlman, misses a 3-pointer, the Catamounts' James Sinclair quickly hits a 3-pointer and it is 76-69. The crowd of 6,049 - about two-thirds pro-Western - has come to life.

40 seconds: Western gets the ball back after Kuhlman misses a free throw. Trey Sumler makes a 3-pointer, making it 76-72. Catamounts coach Larry Hunter calls timeout.

20 seconds: Western's Harouna Mutombo steals the ball from Cohen and gets it to Sumler. He hits another 3-pointer, cutting the lead to 76-75.

19 seconds: Cole immediately fouls Davidson's Nik Cochran, who gives the Wildcats their first points in two minutes by making both free throws. Wildcats lead 78-75.

11 seconds: Cochran can't get out of the way of Cole and fouls him as Cole launches a shot from the corner. It misses, but there is a question about whether it was a 2- or 3-pointer. Referee Ted Valentine indicates it was a 3. Cole makes all three free throws and it's tied 78-78.

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Anatomy of a thriller in Davidson's double OT win

Jeremy Lin: Anatomy of a Sports Star and Cultural Sensation

When I did a online search of Jeremy Lin this morning, many of the headlines that popped up were pronouncing an end to the so-called "Linsanity" - that would be the media and cultural frenzy set off by the NY Knicks point guard and his outstanding performance.

Lin is the rookie basketball player who allegedly came out of nowhere to help ramp up the Knicks' season. But beyond the team's future, pundits and fans alike have seized on his accomplishments to ask questions about diversity in sports, how Asians and Asian-Americans are represented (or not) in popular culture and more.

Lin may not keep racking up points, but I doubt the media interest in him is going away - another recent headline promised to reveal "What Jeremy Lin can teach us about dating."

Yeesh. Whether you're into sports or not, you've likely caught wind of this story. The folks over at the Illinois Humanities Council certainly have. They've commissioned a number of people - from the arts, media and academia - to write out their thoughts on the cultural swirl around Lin. I'm going to feature some of their posts in this here blog over the next few days.

Of course you're invited to join the conversation as well. You can weigh in below with your reaction. And why not meet up with the IHC crew at Jane Addams Hull-House Museum next Monday evening for the conversation Linsanity: What's Beyond the Hype?

The "Feel-Good" Story in the Racial Frame: Jeremy Lin and the Same Politics of Race, by David Stovall.

Before any type of deep analysis on the recent rise of Jeremy Lin in the National Basketball Association (NBA), its important to state the facts: In 2006 Jeremy Lin was Northern Californias Player of the Year in Basketball at Palo Alto High. His hometown university of Stanford wouldnt offer him a four-year scholarship and instead offered him the opportunity to play basketball as a walk-on. Coach Dawkins former backcourt running mate at Duke (Tommy Amaker) decided to take a chance on Lin at Harvard.

In 2010 he graduated from Harvard with a degree in economics. Fast-forward six years and you have all the makings for a made-for-TV movie. Lin goes undrafted in the first two rounds of the 2010 draft despite numerous inquiries on his ability to play the point-guard position by NBA scouts, his All-Ivy selection and him being in the top three in assists in the country. His hometown team (the Golden State Warriors) takes him as an undrafted free agent, and he makes the roster. He sees limited playing time as a rookie, gets cut, gets picked up by Houston, gets cut, goes to the NBA developmental league, gets picked up by the Knicks on a 10-day, sleeps on his brother's couch for a couple of days, surfs to another teammate's house for a spot on the couch, and leads the Knicks on a 8-0 winning streak in the process. I know whod a thunk it? All of this is great for the ESPN documentary, but its also absent many of the racial realities of the day. Despite the fallacy of a post-racial society, we still try to obfuscate the realities of race. Without question, Lin is a great talent who deserves to be on the court. Simultaneously our oddity addiction in the U.S. could easily make Lin a caricature of himself. With all of the new monikers that roll off the tongue (Linsanity, Linpossible, etc.), we have to grapple with the fact that Lins individual journey takes place in a social, political and economic context.

Part of that context is the fact that the American mainstream media has an extremely limited number of themes in its repetoire: tragedy/disaster, triumph, scandal or oddity. Commentary with any type of critical analysis is relegated to the fringes as we become engulfed by Lins feel-good story of triumph. Never to discount his struggles, but Lin would have been all right without the NBA. An econ degree from Harvard goes a long way.

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Jeremy Lin: Anatomy of a Sports Star and Cultural Sensation

Grey's Anatomy cast to stage musical

Wed, 07 Mar 2012 12:34p.m.

The cast of Grey's Anatomy is set to hit the stage for a one-off musical performance of the medical TV drama.

After the success of an all-singing, all-dancing episode last year, executive producer Shonda Rhimes is putting on a special live show featuring Grey's Anatomy stars Eric Dane, Sarah Drew, James Pickins Jr., Kim Raver and Chandra Wilson.

Rhimes tells The Hollywood Reporter, "The biggest thing we took away from doing that episode was how much fun everyone had - the actors, the crew, the writers... it was fun and inspiring to step out of our comfort zones. So we're just going to try to have fun with this benefit concert and give the audience a good time."

Rhimes also reveals actress Sara Ramirez, who plays Dr. Callie Torres on the series, is spearheading the project using the experience she gained in Broadway's Spamalot.

The producer adds, "She has an amazing voice and an incredible confidence that comes with that level of talent. She's been instrumental in the planning of this event."

The performance will be held on 18 March at the University of California, Los Angeles campus to benefit The Actors Fund, a non-profit charity providing care for professionals in the entertainment industry.

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Grey's Anatomy cast to stage musical

Grey's Grey's Anatomy Cast To Stage Musical

The cast of Grey's Anatomy is set to hit the stage for a one-off musical performance of the medical TV drama.

After the success of an all-singing, all-dancing episode last year (11), executive producer Shonda Rhimes is putting on a special live show featuring Grey's Anatomy stars Eric Dane, Sarah Drew, James Pickins Jr., Kim Raver and Chandra Wilson.

Rhimes tells The Hollywood Reporter, "The biggest thing we took away from doing that episode was how much fun everyone had - the actors, the crew, the writers... it was fun and inspiring to step out of our comfort zones. So we're just going to try to have fun with this benefit concert and give the audience a good time."

Rhimes also reveals actress Sara Ramirez, who plays Dr. Callie Torres on the series, is spearheading the project using the experience she gained in Broadway's Spamalot.

The producer adds, "She has an amazing voice and an incredible confidence that comes with that level of talent. She's been instrumental in the planning of this event."

The performance will be held on 18 March (12) at the University of California, Los Angeles campus to benefit The Actors Fund, a non-profit charity providing care for professionals in the entertainment industry.

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Grey's Grey's Anatomy Cast To Stage Musical

'Grey's Anatomy': Patrick Dempsey And Ellen Pompeo's Future In Question

"Grey's Anatomy" stars Patrick Dempsey and Ellen Pompeo's contracts are up at the end of Season 8. Though the two have spoken out about returning, series creator Shonda Rhimes said their future with the show is still in question. "I have my fingers crossed," Rhimes told TV Guide when asked if the two were returning. "What I think is really lovely is that everybody wants to come back."

After making some seemingly final comments regarding his future with the show, Dempsey hedged and said he'd be open to discussing signing a new contract.

"I have a family to support, and why not have a discussion about continuing?" he said. "The question is will I do a full season, a half season or come back at all?"

Meanwhile, Pompeo said she'd "never turn up my nose at 'Grey's.'"

"If I hear from the fans that they want us to keep going, then I would continue because we owe them everything," Pompeo told TV Guide in October.

Rhimes said she has a plan in place for the finale that will work regardless of who signs on for Season 9. "Our goal is to have Derek and Meredith move in to the completed dream house," she told TV Guide. "And our residents will be interviewing for jobs all around the country."

Pomepo and Dempsey aren't the only "Grey's" actors making headlines about their future with the show. While promoting her movie, former series star Katherine Heigl told multiple members of the press that she wants to return to "Grey's Anatomy" to check in on her character, Dr. Izzie Stevens.

"I just want to know what happened to her and where she went and what she's doing now," Heigl told E! Online. The "One For the Money" actress said she's even reached out to the show. "I've told them I want to," she said.

However, Pompeo told Chelsea Handler that having Heigl return to the ABC medical drama was unlikely. "I don't think that's happening," Pompeo said during an appearance on "Chelsea Lately."

As for Rhimes, the creator said it was nice to hear Heigl show some appreciation for the show, but "Grey's" is on a long-planned path and "the idea of changing that track is not something we are interested in right now."

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'Grey's Anatomy': Patrick Dempsey And Ellen Pompeo's Future In Question

Anatomy of a Government Phone, or, Can the NSA Build an Android?

The craziest thing about a typical "top secret" U.S. Government phone is that you can probably spot it from a football field away. If your mental picture of a Hollywood-style NSA agent drives a black AMC Ambassador, wears a polyester suit and Ray-Bans, and smokes Luckies, then his phone may either be Maxwell Smart's shoe or a General Dynamics Sectera Edge (pictured left). At any distance, it looks like one of the pocket football games my junior high school vice principal used to confiscate and collect in his back drawer.

The National Security Agency wants a real-world smartphone, not the one it has now - not the one you see here. Of course, it must fulfill the Dept. of Defense's requirements for session encryption and data retention. But beyond that fact, the NSA wonders why its secure phone can't have multitouch, apps, and speed just like the civilians have. Based on looks alone, you'd think the civilians are a couple of pegs ahead of the G-men. This is a story of looks being more deceptive than even a security agency could have anticipated.

The real face of the National Security Agency looks more like Margaret Salter. At the RSA Conference in San Francisco last Wednesday, Salter told attendees the story of the NSA's Secure Mobility Strategy. She leads a department called the Information Assurance Directorate. For the better part of four decades, IAD has been tasked with securing secret government communications, and building specifications for the tools to do it. The NSA contracts with private suppliers to build a class of devices it calls GOTS (government off-the-shelf). The gestation cycle for each of these devices - from the conceptual stage, to development, to deployment - typically consumes years. Perhaps the best-known GOTS product is still in wide use today - 1987's STU-III secure telephone, which looks about as home on an agent's desk today as an IBM PC.

Still, as Salter told the RSA attendees, for the better part of half a century, the NSA explicitly defined its own market, a private universe of products made for its own exclusive consumption. "That was cool for us, for the longest time. We kinda had a monopoly on this from the very beginning," she remarked. "We were mostly building things like radios for combat, [and] big link encryptors to hook one site up to another site."

But their ease of use ranked right up there with a World War II cipher machine. "Once you get something in the hands of an individual user who's not a cleared COMSEC custodian, someone who knows what they're supposed to be doing with this stuff and understands all the details, ease of use became incredibly freakin' important. And it turned out that, although our stuff was incredibly secure, it was not incredibly easy to use."

Over time, it became more difficult over time for the agency to define "ease of use" on a comparative scale. In just the last five years, the consumer universe appeared to leave the NSA's secure market behind. "The world everyone wants is, I want to get what I want, when I want it, where I want it."

Salter's team considered whether it was feasible for NSA to utilize a real, commercial smartphone - one like all the kids are using nowadays - but with software that made the device perhaps more secure than the Sectera Edge. "The phones are so popular and exploding all over the place, because we can play Angry Birds on them, and do whatever you want. But we needed enterprise management - some control over it, because honestly, we didn't really want you to be able to go load Angry Birds on your TS [top secret] phone... That was not a business model that we could support, or even defend."

They launched Project Fishbowl, a pilot to produce a smartphone made of mostly commercial parts and infrastructure (more COTS than GOTS), capable of supporting classified voice and data, while remaining as easy to use as its civilian counterpart and staying inexpensive. The historical significance of the NSA embracing commercial crypto standards cannot be stressed enough. Anyone familiar with how RSA came to be in the first place will recall the fights its engineers faced keeping the government from classifying it, taking its power out of the public's hands. Perhaps the whole point of the RSA standard and the RSA conference is to promote the power of security for everyone through manageable encryption.

"So one of the things I harp on most is, why was that so hard?" remarked Salter.

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Anatomy of a Government Phone, or, Can the NSA Build an Android?

Heigl unlikely to return to TV show

Katherine Heigl will likely not be returning to Greys Anatomy.

The actress portrayed Dr. Izzie Stevens on the popular ABC show, which she starred in from 2005 to 2010. She left to focus on her family, but also made some seemingly controversial comments about the programme such as that the material she had to work with was not worthy of an Emmy Award.

Katherine recently said she would love to go back and see where Izzie is now, but show creator Shonda Rhimes has appeared to disregard that idea.

I think it was really nice to hear her appreciating the show. We are on a track we have been planning, and the idea of changing that track is not something we are interested in right now, she told TV Guide, when asked if Katherine would be welcomed back.

Ellen Pompeo and Patrick Dempsey also appear in Greys Anatomy. Patrick caused a storm last year when he said the current eighth series would be his last comments he later claimed were taken out of context.

Shonda is refusing to discuss which stars will be returning for the next season.

I have no idea. I have my fingers crossed, she replied, when asked if Ellen and Patrick would be back. What I think is really lovely is that everybody wants to come back. There's [money] stuff happening. I am [confident], but I have a plan in place for the finale that can occur regardless of who is staying. Our goal is to have Derek and Meredith move in to the completed dream house. [The home the pairs characters have been building through the show]. And our residents will be interviewing for jobs all around the country.

Appearing on a US talk show in January, Katherine explained how much her time on Greys Anatomy meant to her. She also revealed she misses the show, which helped launch her movie career.

Oh yeah, sometimes [I regret leaving]. You miss it... I miss it. I miss my friends. It was a great work environment in that we all got along really well, and it becomes a family. I spent six years with these people every day We grew up in a way, she said.

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Heigl unlikely to return to TV show

Anatomy class makes science pop at Pacheco High

As two high school girls sat down in their anatomy class last week, they could not wait to pick up a scalpel and dig into a cow's eye.

Pacheco High School, which has a junior class for the first time this year, added an anatomy class to its selection of science offerings for upperclassmen.

"We were going through the eye, looking at all the parts: the cornea, the retina and the iris," said junior Brianna Magana after the dissection.

Magana's lab partner Aleena Mathew said the idea was to compare the cow's eye to a human eye. She said the anatomy students have already sliced up a sheep's brain this year.

"That was pretty cool," Mathew said.

As a whole, American students lag in the fields of science and math. They scored 23rd in math, behind Lichtenstein and Singapore, and 31st in science, behind Estonia and Hungary, when compared with 65 other top industrial countries.

Anatomy teacher Jennifer Brock said those subjects have a stigma of being hard and are often intimidating to students. However, her class has a dozen students and most of them are headed into science or medical fields in college.

"In this school district, we push science and math as much as we can," Brock said.

Brock said the anatomy class is always popular at Los Banos High, so it was an easy decision to bring it to Los Banos Unified School District's newest high school.

Grace Taylor, an assistant principal, sees upperclassmen in science classes as a victory.

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Anatomy class makes science pop at Pacheco High

Anatomy of a road closure

graphic

Ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes of a major road event?

As Sydney recovers from another Mardi Gras hangover, a group of traffic experts is already planning road closures and logistics for next year's event.

"We'll debrief from an event the next day, and then start planning the next year's event straight away," says Brendan McNally, senior major events planner at the Transport Management Centre.

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The centre is responsible for managing traffic flows at all major events in Sydney, from last week's parade to the Sydney Marathon and City2Surf.

It coordinates the efforts of all the interested parties in a big event, from the event organisers to NSW Police and emergency services, the State Transit Authority, RailCorp and Sydney Ferries.

"Beyond that, it's basically anyone who has an interest, and depending on the location the negotiations could include the City of Sydney council, Centennial Park, the Royal Botanical Gardens, or the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority,"Police Inspector Paul Carrett from the State Planning Unit says.

With this year's Mardi Gras attracting 9000 people in the actual parade, roughly 1000 volunteers, and an estimated 150,000 spectators, the potential for something to going pear-shaped is obvious.

The Mardi Gras Parade has followed the same route for decades, but the details of the road closures around the route are always up for consideration.

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Anatomy of a road closure

The newest innovation in … laundry? Anatomy of a new product, from idea to store shelves

NEW YORK, N.Y. - It took eight years, 450 product sketches, 6,000 consumer tests and hundreds of millions of dollars for Procter & Gamble to create something that it hopes will be destroyed in the wash.

Tide Pods are palm-size, liquid detergent-filled tablets that are designed to be tossed in the washer to take the measuring cups and messiness out of laundry. P&G says the product, which hit store shelves last month, is its biggest innovation in laundry in about a quarter of a century.

Tide Pods aren't the sexiest of inventions, but they illustrate how mature companies that are looking for growth often have to tweak things as mundane as soap and detergent. The story behind Tide Pods provides a window into the time, money and brainpower that goes into doing that.

P&G, the maker of everything from Pampers diapers to Pantene shampoo, has built its 175-year history on creating things people need and then improving them. (Think: Ivory soap in 1879; Swiffer Sweeper in 1999.) Each year, the maker of everything from Pampers diapers to Pantene shampoo spends $2 billion on research and development. The company also rolls out 27 products annually, or more than two a month, worldwide.

The focus on innovation has paid off. P&G says 98 per cent of American households have at least one of its products in cupboards, broom closets or bathrooms.

And while about 15 to 20 per cent of all new products succeed, P&G has claimed a 50 per cent success rate. Four of the top 10 new consumer products in 2010 were made by P&G, according to research firm SymphonyIRI.

"What they've gotten very good at is being able to understand consumer expectations," says Robert Passikoff, president of Brand Keys Inc., a New York customer research firm.

But improving things like window cleaner and toilet paper can take years. It also can cost hundreds of millions of dollars or up to 100 per cent of first-year sales to develop, make and market them. And even then, new products are a tough sell to consumers.

"You have to develop a product that is meaningfully better than the ones out there, which is tough because generally speaking consumer products work pretty well," says Ali Dibadj, an analyst at Bernstein Research who follows P&G. "You then have to convince the consumer to try the product ... and then get that consumer to break their old habit to make a new one."

FIRST LOAD: A PRODUCT IS BORN

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The newest innovation in ... laundry? Anatomy of a new product, from idea to store shelves

Keck's Exclusives: Grey's Anatomy Boss on Who'll Be Back – and Who Won't!

Shonda Rhimes

Grey's Anatomy/Private Practice creator Shonda Rhimes has plenty to sing about. Her new ABC series, Scandal, debuts April 5; she's got several pilots in the works; and most of the Grey's cast is taking part in the March 18 musical charity event (held at UCLA): "Grey's Anatomy: The Songs Beneath the Show," benefiting The Actors Fund. Even more exciting, she's confident all our favorites (yes, that includes Patrick Dempsey and Ellen Pompeo) want to return for Season 9.

TV Guide Magazine: How did "Grey's Anatomy: The Songs Beneath the Show" come about? Rhimes: When we did the musical episode last season, we discovered we had way more singing talent than we ever imagined. The entire cast with the exception of Patrick and Ellen and Jesse Williams, who has a prior commitment is on board and pretty excited.

TV Guide Magazine: Why no Patrick and Ellen? Rhimes: I'm not sure. I threw it out there "If you're free and available, this is what we're going to do." Sara Ramirez, Kevin McKidd, Justin Chambers, Chyler Leigh and Jessica Capshaw are all going to sing. Sandra Oh has stated she's not a singer, so she'll do a couple special things. [Eric Dane, Sarah Drew, James Pickens Jr., Kim Raver and Chandra Wilson will also take the stage.]

TV Guide Magazine: You must know by now if Patrick and Ellen will be back next season. Rhimes: I have no idea. I have my fingers crossed. What I think is really lovely is that everybody wants to come back. There's [money] stuff happening. I am [confident], but I have a plan in place for the finale that can occur regardless of who is staying. Our goal is to have Derek and Meredith move in to the completed dream house. [A real L.A. home will be used.] And our residents will be interviewing for jobs all around the country.

TV Guide Magazine: Katherine Heigl recently said she wants to come back to "see where Izzie is." Is she welcome? Rhimes: I think it was really nice to hear her appreciating the show. We are on a track we have been planning, and the idea of changing that track is not something we are interested in right now.

TV Guide Magazine: Switching gears to Private Practice, tell me you're going to finally give Addison a baby? Rhimes: That journey is going to be completed by the time the season is over, and I think fans will be very satisfied.

Subscribe to TV Guide Magazine now!

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Keck's Exclusives: Grey's Anatomy Boss on Who'll Be Back – and Who Won't!

Is It the End for Grey's Anatomy's Owen and Cristina?

Sandra Oh

Uh oh! It looks like bad news for fans who hope that Grey's Anatomy docs Owen Hunt (Kevin McKidd) and Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh) can still save their marriage.

"It's just sad and hard right now," Oh told TV Guide Magazine at Sunday's L.A. benefit for Mariska Hargitay's Joyful Heart Foundation which supports survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse. "If there's [hope], I can't see it right now."

In the episode that aired Feb. 23, Cristina started to suspect that Owen was having an affair, and those suspicions will continue in the March 15 episode, "One Step Too Far."

"What I really am happy with, is that a dissolution of a relationship if it is a dissolution takes a long time and is painful. We're spending time with them, seeing it happen," says Oh. "And not quickly, but painfully, day by day."

"It's real, it's messy and it's also why we root for them so much," adds costar Kim Raver. Though Raver's character, Teddy, has currently written off her friendship with Owen, there seems to be a glimmer of hope that the former best friends may reconcile. "In terms of Teddy and Owen, the rift is so dramatic that maybe that walk back home hopefully will be an interesting journey," Raver says. "That's what's interesting to me about the relationship now."

Oh also says that the subject of sexual assault will come up in an future episode, and the entire cast will be involved. "We're dealing with a very dramatic side of this issue," she says. "I really admire Mariska and her work, not only on her show and the influence and the impact that she has on the show for this work, but it translates also in our work on Grey's Anatomy."

"It touches all of us, even if we don't know that it does," adds Raver. "I think the fact that we're discussing it is the first step to aiding it."

Subscribe to TV Guide Magazine now!

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Is It the End for Grey's Anatomy's Owen and Cristina?

Anatomical Street Art Combo Sticker Packs

Available for $8 at the Street Anatomy store! [16 left]

Street Art Sticker Combo Packs in the Street Anatomy Store (4)

Street Art Sticker Combo Packs in the Street Anatomy Store (3)

Street Art Sticker Combo Packs in the Street Anatomy Store (5)

Street Art Sticker Combo Packs in the Street Anatomy Store guide

We’re releasing another fantastic sticker pack, this time combining anatomically themed stickers by a variety of talented US street artists.  These stickers are made for the streets, but can go anywhere your anatomical heart desires.

Screen printed sticker packs by street artists Rx, N.O. Bonzo, SKAM, and The Lost Cause. Plus two Street Anatomy slaps!

  • 6 high quality hand cut stickers per pack
  • Stickers range in size from 3 inches to 6 inches
  • Vivid colors make these stickers stand out against almost any surface
  • Colors and sticker sizes vary from pack to pack
  • Limited edition of 50 packs
  • Available for $8 at the Street Anatomy store!  [16 left]

 

Stickers ship within 2-5 days of order and we are more than happy to ship internationally!

 

Source:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/streetanatomy/OQuC

Anatomy of an Apology: Rush Limbaugh's Shameless Week

Money talks, apparently, to Rush Limbaugh, as the conservative radio trollhas issued an apology to Sandra Fluke in a last-ditch effort to stanch the flow of advertisers abandoning the show in droves. The comments began on Wednesday, after Fluke, a Georgetown law student and activist, was barred by Republicans to speak before an all-male Congressional panel contraception. Fluke insteadtestified before Democratic members of the House of Representatives, which earned this commentary from Limbaugh:

"What does it say about the college co-ed Susan Fluke [sic] who goes before a congressional committee and essentially says that she must be paid to have sexwhat does that make her? It makes her a slut, right? It makes her a prostitute. She wants to be paid to have sex. She's having so much sex she can't afford the contraception. She wants you and me and the taxpayers to pay her to have sex."

The next day, after the Senate had already voted down the GOP measure attempting to block women's access to contraception coverage, and amid growing controversy over his incendiary and nonsensical comments, Limbaugh chose to doubled-down on his attacks on Fluke.

"So, Ms. Fluke and the rest of you feminazis, here's the deal: If we are going to pay for your contraceptives and thus pay for you to have sex, we want something for it. And I'll tell you what it is. We want you to post the videos online so we can all watch."

He also remarked in that broadcast,"I think this is hilarious. Absolutely hilarious. The Left has been thrown into an outright conniption fit!" Except so had the Right: Rick Santorum called the claims "absurd," a spokesoman for John Boenher said they were "inappropriate, as is trying to raise money off the situation." Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown said via his own spokesperson that "as the father of two daughters, [he] found the remarks offensive and reprehensible and believes Limbaugh should apologize." As a Twitter and Reddit boycott campaign mobilized on Friday, HuffPost tech blogger Catharine Smith writes, news had broken that President Obama had called Fluke to offer words of encouragement. That brought more mockery and shaming from Limbaugh.

RELATED: Advertisers Distancing Themselves Over Limbaugh 'Slut' Rant

Meanwhile,advertisers were pulling out in droves: First Sleep Number, then The Sleep Train, Quicken Loans, Legal Zoom, and Citrix all pulled their spots from his show.

RELATED: As Advertisers Drop Him, Limbaugh Mocks Obama's Call to Sandra Fluke

Which brings us to his apology, posted to his website on Saturday:

For over 20 years, I have illustrated the absurd with absurdity, three hours a day, five days a week. In this instance, I chose the wrong words in my analogy of the situation. I did not mean a personal attack on Ms. Fluke.

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Anatomy of an Apology: Rush Limbaugh's Shameless Week

Anatomy of a Murdered Show: Creators of Carrie Talk About Musical's Second Coming

Anatomy of a Murdered Show: Creators of Carrie Talk About Musical's Second Coming

By Harry Haun 04 Mar 2012

Carrie writers Lawrence D. Cohen, Michael Gore and Dean Pitchford look back at their notorious musical's past and revel in its present revised revival.

*

Kelly and Moose Murders, which ran a total of two performances (collectively), and Breakfast at Tiffany's, which closed in previews at minus-2, were infinitely more infamous but poor Carrie is the one forever cursed as the bedrock of bad Broadway shows, no small thanks to theatre historian Ken Mandelbaum, who called his chronicle on 40 years of flops "Not Since Carrie."

One thing that has happened since Carrie might just warrant a re-titling: namely, her comeback easily the greatest since Nixon and, before that, Lazarus. Officially, this came to pass at Off-Broadway's Lucille Lortel Theatre on March 1 in like a lion, as they say, and mostly because of its own legendary, marinated awfulness.

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Yes, after three years in the remaking and a full month of intensive, all-hands-on surgery in previews, Stephen King's telekinetic teen killer pounces anew, as vivid (and patched-up) as The Creature in Dr. Frankenstein's laboratory alive!

Still, there's something different about her like, say, the times: in the light of current events, Carrie White looms like a pioneer crusader against high-school bullying. So what if her strike-back has enough zeal and overkill to wipe out a whole student body? Much of that must be laid at the door of her religious-wacko mom, Margaret, who, too, is brought up to contemporary speed with her fanatical fundamentalism.

Piper Laurie and Sissy Spacek were the original mother-daughter act in Brian De Palma's 1976 horror-cult flick. Lawrence D. Cohen, who adapted King's 1974 novel into that movie, also wrote the book for the musical version, which premiered with Barbara Cook and Linzi Hateley in Stratford-upon-Avon, England, in February 1988.

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Anatomy of a Murdered Show: Creators of Carrie Talk About Musical's Second Coming

Off to Italy in Search of the Material History of the Human Corpus with Evan Michelson


I have some very exciting news to report! This evening, my very good friend--and Morbid Anatomy Scholar in residence/Oddities star--Evan Michelson and are absconding to Italy to collect images and data related to a long term project which has long obsessed us both. In Evan's (very eloquent) words:

We will be exploring the social, spiritual, philosophical and material history of the human corpus from the Early Christian period, through the Enlightenment and into the Early Modern Era. This trip will take us to medical museums, ossuaries, cathedrals and burial grounds in several different cities, and it is the culmination of a lifelong obsession on both our parts.

Italy seems like the logical place to start: home of the Roman Catholic Church and the greatest of the early anatomical artists, it is also the home of the Renaissance - the historical pivot point that brought us from the Dark Ages into the Age of Science. Death in all its mystery has the most profound lessons to impart, and the religious attempt to transcend decay through myth transmuted the body into an object of sensual luxury and splendor. Science reclaimed the corpse, and in doing so gave rise to a different kind of purely mechanical beauty. That transitional moment is the object of our pilgrimage.

So please excuse some predicted silences, and look for reports and updates here! And please, feel free to send suggestions for sites to visit, things to eat, etc. to morbidanatomy[ag]gmail.com.

Ciao for now!

Image: Ercole Lelli's anatomical waxworks, Bologna, Italy; photo by Joanna Ebenstein

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Federico Carbajal’s Anatomical Architectures

Federico Carbajal brain

Federico Carbajal brain

Federico Carbajal heart

Federico Carbajal heart

Federico Carbajal anatomical architectures

Federico Carbajal anatomical architectures

Montreal-based architect, Federico Carbajal creates anatomical architectures out of galvanized wire, stainless steel and acrylic through what he calls spatial sketching.

Federico describes his work,

With the influence of the old masters and the early works of Alexander Calder, to current digital 3D media and architectural representation, these tridimensional hybrids bring together drawing, architecture and sculpture in order to create a coherent spatial entity.

Spatial sketching allows for the possibility of new representations of images in space, exploring the void and the dematerialization of volume.  The physical and metaphysical presence of the human body emanate through a combination of transparent planes and spatial lines.

Love the entire concept and execution. View more of Federico’s work on his portfolio site!

 

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Ellen Pompeo: Katherine Heigl's Return To 'Grey's Anatomy' Is Unlikely (VIDEO)

Ellen Pompeo is downplaying the rumors about Katherine Heigl returning to "Grey's Anatomy."

The actress stopped by "Chelsea Lately" (weekdays, 11 p.m. EST on E!) to promote the ABC medical drama. When she wasn't talking tequila and making out on camera, Pompeo was shooting down the rumors that her former co-star Heigl seemingly started while promoting her film "One For the Money."

"So wait, what's going on? Is Katherine Heigl coming back to the show?" Handler asked Pompeo.

"I don't think so," Pompeo said, shaking her head.

Handler pressed further and Pompeo said, "No, I don't think that's happening."

During her January press tour, Heigl said she was ready to return to "Grey's Anatomy," and told the powers that be at the series that she wants to come back.

"I really, really, really want to see where [Izzie] is," Heigl told E! "I just want to know what happened to her and where she went and what she's doing now."

Pompeo's comments come as Season 8 of "Grey's Anatomy" -- and her contract with the show -- come to a close. Both Pompeo and co-star Patrick Dempsey have been vocal about their desire to remain with the series, while remaining vague.

"I would never turn up my nose at 'Grey's' ... If I hear from the fans that they want us to keep going, then I would continue because we owe them everything," Pompeo told TV Guide in October.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

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Ellen Pompeo: Katherine Heigl's Return To 'Grey's Anatomy' Is Unlikely (VIDEO)

Anatomy of a Winnipeg Jets Blowout: Fan's Take

A close game was expected between the Winnipeg Jets and the Southeast division-leading Florida Panthers on Thursday, March 1 at the MTS Centre. Let's just say the game didn't go according to plan, as the Jets routed the Panthers, 7-0. Here's a timeline of the evening's stunning events.

Fans cheer the Jets at the MTS Centre. Wikimedia Commons

7:32 p.m. Winnipeg comes into the game four points behind the Panthers in the Southeast and one point out of eighth place in the Eastern Conference. The home crowd senses the importance of the game, as the Jets take the ice to a vociferous, standing ovation. It'll get louder before the game is over.

7:43 p.m. Evander Kane steals the puck in Florida's zone, skates in alone and beats Panthers goaltender Jose Theodore at 4:01 of the first period for the first goal of the game. In the process, Kane extends his career-high point streak to eight games.

7:46 p.m. Jim Slater buries a rebound at 6:03 of the first to make it 2-0. Mark Stuart and Chris Thorburn draw assists on Slater's ninth goal of the season and first in 19 games. So much for the Panthers taking the crowd out of the game. Only a few minutes into the action, the MTS Centre is rocking.

8:13 p.m. End of the first period. Winnipeg leads the Panthers in both shots and hits at 13-7 and 15-7, respectively. The Jets are showing no ill effects from Monday's 5-3 loss to the Edmonton Oilers in which they allowed four unanswered goals in the third period.

9:01 p.m. End of the second period. The Jets still lead 2-0, but Florida controlled play for much of the middle frame, outshooting Winnipeg, 17-8. The Jets record this season when leading after three periods is 23-3-1. Conversely, Florida is 3-17-2 when trailing after three.

9:21 p.m. Kyle Wellwood tips home Stuart's blast from the top of the circle at 1:49 of the third period to make it 3-0. Kane draws the secondary assist for his second point of the game.

9:25 p.m. The Panthers turn over the puck in Winnipeg's zone, sparking an unheard of 5-on-1 rush the other way. Blake Wheeler ultimately feeds Bryan Little, who fires into an empty net for his 19th goal of the season to make it 4-0. Scott Clemmensen replaces Theodore to the delight of the MTSC crowd.

9:33 p.m. Nik Antropov bangs home a loose puck in front of the cage on the power play for his 10th goal of the seasonthe Jets lead, 5-0. Winnipeg entered the game with the top-ranked home power play in the National Hockey League. The Jets went 1-for-3 on the man advantage.

Originally posted here:
Anatomy of a Winnipeg Jets Blowout: Fan's Take