Canterbury's beaches safe to swim at – report

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Canterbury's beaches safe to swim at - report

Red tide found on Collier beaches

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

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

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

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

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

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Red tide found on Collier beaches

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

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

Ottawa, Canada (PRWEB) October 17, 2012

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

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

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

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

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

New astronomy group hosts kick off event

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Goals include workshops and educational components for members.

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

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New astronomy group hosts kick off event

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

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

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Rocket Fuel is the leading provider of artificial intelligence advertising solutions that transform digital media campaigns into self-optimizing engines that learn and adapt in real-time, and deliver outstanding results from awareness to sales. Recently awarded #22 in Forbes Most Promising Companies in America list, over 700 of the world's most successful marketers trust Rocket Fuel to power their advertising across display, video, mobile, and social media. Founded by online advertising veterans and rocket scientists from NASA, DoubleClick, IBM, and Salesforce.com, Rocket Fuel is based in Redwood Shores, California, and has offices in fifteen cities worldwide including New York, London, Toronto, and Hamburg.

2012 Rocket Fuel Inc. All rights reserved. Rocket Fuel Inc. is a registered trademark of Rocket Fuel Inc. in the U.S. and/or other countries. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Aerospace, defense symposium comes to Mesa, ASU Wednesday

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Aerospace, defense symposium comes to Mesa, ASU Wednesday

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

About ITT Exelis

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The podcast in its entirety can be listened to on The Offshore Group's manufacturing in Mexico website.

The Offshore Group is the largest provider of outsourced business support, "shelter" services in Mexico. Currently 61 businesses operate at The Offshore Group's three Mexico manufacturing industrial parks in the State of Sonora, the city of Saltillo, Coahuila, and at the Group's Vangtel affiliate in Hermosillo, Sonora. Vangtel offers Mexico shelter services to companies that occupy the call center, IT development and BPO markets, while the International Logistic Solutions Company (ILS) is a leading provider of supply chain services. The Offshore Group has recently initiated operations in Mexico's second largest city, Guadalajara. Sign up to receive Offshore Group RSS Feeds.

Website: http://www.offshoregroup.com

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

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

Aerospace firm plans $2.5M expansion in Monroe

abell@charlotteobserver.com

A Monroe aerospace company plans to spend $2.5 million to expand its facility within the next year, a move that will add 10 jobs over several years, the city announced Wednesday.

Cyril Bath Co. had been considering expanding near Charleston to be closer to Boeing, a major customer, said Chris Plat, Monroes executive director of economic development and aviation.

Instead, the company decided to invest in new equipment and building improvements at its Monroe facility behind the Charlotte-Monroe Executive Airport.

Tuesday, the Monroe City Council approved a cash incentive grant of up to $52,000 for the company, spread out over a five-year period. No Union County or state incentives were part of the expansion plan, Plat said.

They are a very significant company for Monroe, Plat said. They provide direct product to the aerospace industry and are an engineering house.

Monroe has the highest geographic concentration of aerospace companies in North Carolina. Since 2002, the city has seen more than $500 million in investment from the aerospace sector.

Cyril Bath, which has a sister company in France, has 45 employees in Monroe and has been based in the city since 1979. It designs and manufactures machines used to form airplane skins, and also provides equipment for other industries.

Cyril Bath Company is excited about expanding its operations here in Monroe, company President Michael Zimmer said in a statement. This will solidify keeping the existing machines and work in Monroe.

The company said it expects to see significant growth from its work providing material for Boeings 787 planes.

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Aerospace firm plans $2.5M expansion in Monroe

Harvard Ophthalmologist Dr. Ula Jurkunas Introduces Stem Cell Transplant for Eyes

Grants Pass, OR (PRWEB) October 16, 2012

Harvard Ophthalmologist and Corneal Stem Cell Researcher Ula Jurkunas, MD, has announced an important new stem cell transplant procedure for the eyes.

Speaking on the Sharon Kleyne Hour Power of Water radio show, Dr. Jurkunas, predicted that the procedure will offer a significant benefit to patients with certain corneal diseases, and corneal injuries such as chemical and thermal burns (The cornea is the eyes clear portion).

Stem cell research has been in the news because the 2012 Nobel Prize for Medicine was awarded for stem cell research.

Dr. Jurkunas explained to host Sharon Kleyne that the human eye produces its own adult (non-embryonic) stem cells. These are found between the limbus (where the clear cornea meets the white of the eye) and the conjunctiva (the red meaty tissue in the eyes inner corner). Their function is to replenish corneal cells to keep the cornea clear and healthy.

Production of corneal stem cells, according to Dr. Jurkunas, can become impaired due to a disease entity such as an infection, severe allergy, severe dry eye, immunological disorder or chronic inflammation; or due to injury such as a chemical or thermal burn. These traumas can cause the cornea to become cloudy and ulcerated. Prior to the present corneal stem cell research, there had been no reliable, non-invasive treatment for these conditions.

Corneal stem cell transplantation, Dr. Jurkunas explains, has the advantage of utilizing the patients own tissue as donor cells. Stem cells may be taken either from healthy tissue elsewhere in the diseased eye, from the patients other eye, or from the patients inner cheek (which has many similarities to eye tissue and also produces adult stem cells). Donor stem cells are then isolated and grown in culture. The final step is to transfer them to the affected cornea using a stem cell bandage.

The procedure, says Dr. Jurkunas, has resulted in dramatic corneal clearing and sight restoration. Although research is ongoing and the procedure remains experimental, corneal stem cell therapy is available in clinical trials. Widespread applications of the procedure, including routine testing for corneal stem cell deficiency, are anticipated. Stem cell therapy, according to Dr. Jurkunas, could eventually be used for macular degeneration, glaucoma and other eye diseases.

Dr. Jurkunas stressed the importance of water and hydration in maintaining a healthy tear film and cornea. The tear film covering the cornea is 99% water and is essential to the light refraction that enables vision. Dry eye and related eye infections, according to Dr. Jurkunas, can damage both the cornea and adjacent stem cell producing tissues that enable the cornea to repair itself. Water in the tear film stimulates the healthy production of stem cells. Water is also critical to keeping stem cells viable during transplantation.

Mrs. Kleyne and Dr. Jurkunas agree that non-invasive therapies using the bodys own tissues, such as corneal stem cell transplantation, could eventually prove indispensable in combating the worldwide health effects of global drying and dehydration.

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Harvard Ophthalmologist Dr. Ula Jurkunas Introduces Stem Cell Transplant for Eyes

Husband testifies wife ‘was looking for a cure’ and found Bonita stem-cell doctor

The Grekos hearing is scheduled to resume today. The location is the Collier County Courthouse in room 4-D, according to a case filing Monday.

The hearing before J. Lawrence Johnson, an administrative law judge from Tallahassee, is scheduled to last four days. The Collier County Courthouse is located at 3315 U.S. 41 E.

Photo by Allie Garza

Zannos Grekos

EAST NAPLES The patient was friends with the mother of Dr. Zannos Grekos, a Bonita Springs cardiologist who performed stem cell therapy on people with debilitating illnesses.

Chemotherapy for breast cancer several years earlier had left the 69-year-old patient, Domenica Fitzgerald, with numbness in her legs. She was unable to walk for more than 10 minutes. She hoped Grekos and his stem cell treatment could help.

"She was looking for a cure. She wanted to get well," her husband, John "Jack" Fitzgerald, testified Tuesday.

A four-day administrative hearing started Tuesday in a Collier County courtroom for a state Department of Health complaint against Grekos. The state says he committed medical malpractice and violated other standards of care when he performed a stem cell treatment on the patient on March 24, 2010. The patient suffered brain damage.

The state is only identifying the patient in its complaint by her initials, D.F. The Daily News learned of her identity by a public records request to the Collier County Medical Examiner's Office of all people who died on April 4, 2010, in the county. That was the day that Fitzgerald died after being taken off life support.

The state last year restricted Grekos' license after her death and ordered him not to do anything with stem cells with other patients. His license was fully suspended earlier this year when the state said he violated the order by treating another patient who also died.

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Husband testifies wife 'was looking for a cure' and found Bonita stem-cell doctor

Reaccreditation site visit set for S.C. State grad program

The Speech Pathology and Audiology Program in the Department of Health Sciences at South Carolina State University is scheduled to have a reaccreditation site visit Oct. 29-30.

The Speech-Language Pathology graduate program is accredited by the Council on Academic Accreditation in Audio and Speech-Language Pathology of the American-Speech-Language-Hearing Association. CAA is a nationally recognized accrediting body which allows public input about the accreditation process and about the graduate education program.

The public meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 29, in Belcher Hall, Room 237 on the S.C. State campus. Those wishing to comment should refer to a copy of the Standards for Accreditation and/or the CAAs Policy on Public Comment, which may be obtained by contacting the Accreditation Office at ASHA, 2200 Research Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20850; calling ASHAs Action Center at 1-800-498-2071; or accessing the documents on ASHAs website at http://www.asha.org/academic/accreditation/.

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Reaccreditation site visit set for S.C. State grad program

Star Nutrition's Incrediwear Line Now Features TEC-3 Arm and Calf Sleeves

CHICO, CA--(Marketwire - Oct 17, 2012) - Star Nutrition, Inc. ( PINKSHEETS : STAU ), a California-based diversified health and wellness industry firm, has announced the release of the latest addition to its popular Incrediwear line: The TEC-3 arm and calf sleeves. Engineered from an Italian 3-D weaving machine and utilizing Carbonized Charcoal Anion Technology, the 360-thread count TEC-3 is designed to increase circulation to the arms and calves, while decreasing fatigue, swelling and recovery time.

"The TEC-3 is already loved by many championship athletes around the world," said Star Nutrition CEO Jackson Corley. "They are using the sleeve because it helps them train harder and longer, as well as recover faster from their workouts. The TEC-3 is also our thinnest sleeve available so it allows for a premium release of negative ions and maximum benefit to the athlete. We're excited to bring this product to market to help all athletes unlock their true potential."

Among the athletes currently using the TEC-3 are Morrocan runner Aissa Dghougi, MMA professional trainer Kevin Kearns, championship snowboarder Terje Haakonsen, professional rock climber Ivan Greene, four-time Olympic Judo competitor and bronze medalist Mike Swain, 2012 U.S. Judo Olympic bronze medalist Marti Malloy and 8th-degree Karate black belt Pat Haley.

Benefits of the TEC-3 include:

About Star Nutrition, Inc. California-based Star Nutrition is a publicly traded company ( PINKSHEETS : STAU ) that prides itself on providing innovative, over-the-counter health care products. The company's products include Incredisocks, Rx Diabetic socks and Incredibraces. Its mission is to focus on producing products that will enhance the lives and wellness of its customers.

For more information visit http://www.StarNutrition.com or http://www.BuyIncrediwear.com.

Join the Incrediwear community at Facebook.com/Incrediwear and @Incrediwear.

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Star Nutrition's Incrediwear Line Now Features TEC-3 Arm and Calf Sleeves

Longevity Global Inc. Upgrades Its Inventory With A Completely New And Advanced Range Of Welding Machines

Longevity Global Inc., USA's leading cutting and welding equipment manufacturer and supplier has yet gain introduced some of the most advanced welding and cutting machines to the world. Their newly launched ForceCut series of PLASMA CUTTING MACHINE will now be available for sale on the e-commerce website of Longevity Global Inc. Along with the introduction of most powerful and efficient cutting tools, the welding market leading company has also extended its offered product range by staging some of its self manufactured futuristic models of STICK WELDING MACHINE.

Hayward, CA (PRWEB) October 17, 2012

President Longevity Global Inc., Simon Katz talked about his company's product updates during a press conference. He said, Industrialists and professional welders often make mistakes while choosing a welding machine and very often get annoyed after using the manual and inefficient welding machines after some time. Since, there is very less margin for error while performing a welding job, welders should only rely on machines which can perform versatile operations and are embedded with mechanism control features. We at Longevity Global Inc. have used our modern engineering standards to manufacture some new and the most advanced models of Stick, MIG and Tig welding machine. And I can confidently claim that these new welding tools will outperform all the other similar devices which you have used so far.

Longevity Global Inc. has not abstained from giving discounts even on their newly launched series of Mig welding machine and other welding devices. Longevity Global Inc. offers a full line of welding equipment for both Do-It-Yourself (DIY) and professional welding purposes. All of these equipment comes with an unmatched warranty of 5-Years on both parts and labor. Through innovation, experience, and engineering, they provide customers with affordable and reliable welding machines in all ranges of production from the garage users, to pipe welders, and ship builders. The warranty they provide is tailored to the end users and their customer support is unmatched.

About The Company

Longevity Global Inc. is providing its dedicated services since 2001. It is growing at a phenomenal pace with high customer satisfaction, new and used welders, cutters and efficient industrial production for welding purposes. It works in different parts of world with distributors in Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Australia, United Kingdom, and multiple other countries. Longevity Global Inc. serves globally with manufacturing facilities with its logistic companies to effectively distribute products in a punctual and effective manner.

To know more visit http://www.longevity-inc.com

Simon Katz Longevity, Inc. 1.877.566.4462 Email Information

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Longevity Global Inc. Upgrades Its Inventory With A Completely New And Advanced Range Of Welding Machines

Top Ten Companies in DNA Sequencing

NEW YORK, Oct. 17, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Top Ten Companies in DNA Sequencing

http://www.reportlinker.com/p01013573/Top-Ten-Companies-in-DNA-Sequencing.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Genomics

INTRODUCTION

The story of molecular biology is being both written and printed by sequencing toolsvarious chapters being currently authored by oncologists, ID experts, pathologists, and so forth. The narrative is understood by only those select few who have the cross discipline knowledge to comprehend what the sequencing tools output, and who also have the niche domain experience to act upon knowledge of that data. Recently, this story has begun to change as low cost next generation sequencing democratizes genome data, allowing a politics and commerce of inclusion, to enter the lab and now also the clinic.

Diagnostic manufacturers can now afford to develop sequencing tools as diagnostic shortcuts. The clinician does not need to understand the mathematical underpinnings of 16SrRNA coverage for phylogeny to run a rapid anthrax test.

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Top Ten Companies in DNA Sequencing

Posted in DNA

DNA evidence could free the innocent-if it were available

By: Jessica Zafra October 17, 2012 3:59 PM

InterAksyon.com The online news portal of TV5

After I saw "Give Up Tomorrow," the documentary on the apparently wrongful arrest, trial, and conviction of Paco Larraaga, I wondered how many innocent persons have been doomed to rot in our overcrowded jails. Thats how I heard about the Innocence Project Philippines, a network of law schools, non-governmental organizations and academic laboratories that seeks to make justice accessible for wrongfully convicted persons. Founded in 2012, the Innocence Project is presently headquartered at the DNA Analysis Laboratory at the University of the Philippines in Diliman.

Being a compulsive viewer of the Law and Order shows and forensic dramas on TV, I asked for an interview with the head of the UP DNA Analysis Laboratory, Dr. Maria Corazon de Ungria. Unfortunately she didnt have the time, but she did answer, via email, my very elementary questions about the initiative. An NAST Outstanding Young Scientist Awardee in 2003, De Ungria is also the director of the Program on Forensic and Ethnicity of the Philippine Genome Center. She gave technical assistance in the formulation of the Rules on DNA Evidence, and has been an expert witness in criminal cases.

Incidentally, in a newspaper article she published two weeks ago, De Ungria noted that Eyewitness testimony is recognized to be the leading cause of judicial errors in the US and elsewhere. After I wrote about the Larraaga case I heard from various people who saw the accused in Manila on the day he was supposed to be committing the crimes in Cebu. As the movie points out, the Larraaga case is notable for the number of eyewitnesses whose testimony was ignored.

Have you any idea as to the number of wrongful convictions in the Philippines?

I dont think there is an estimate of the overall number of wrongful convictions. In 2004, in the case People of the Philippines v Mateo, the Supreme Court reported about 71.8% of all death penalty cases that were reviewed resulted in a modification of the sentence, a remanding of the case back to the lower courts and in some, acquittal of the accused.

Statistics would disclose that within the eleven-year period since the re-imposition of the death penalty law in 1993 until June 2004, the cases where the judgment of death has either been modified or vacated consisted of an astounding 71.77 percent of the total of death penalty cases directly elevated before the Court on automatic review that translates to a total of 651 out of 907 appellants saved from lethal injection.

What is the process for getting a conviction reviewed with your help? How has the Innocent Project been received by the Philippine police and judiciary?

The project is just about to start. We are in the process of registering the group with the SEC and launching the project. The target date and sites for the launch is December 9, 2012 at the National Bilibid Prison in the morning and the Correctional Institute of Women in the afternoon. We are still processing the papers and request forms but we are hoping to make this happen soon. Since the project is really based on the passionate commitment of volunteers and students who want to make a difference, we are actually needing financial assistance for the launch. So best to check the Facebook account for further information.

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DNA evidence could free the innocent-if it were available

Posted in DNA

Marriage = Biology (Not Bigotry) – Video

15-10-2012 13:44 Some generous (and talented!) folks came together and offered this excellent video to us to distribute. Please help us share this far and wide particularly with your friends and family in the four states voting on marriage in November as one example of articulating the case against redefining marriage. Government promotes natural marriage for a reason, permits many other relationships (including gay relationships) while prohibiting very few relationships (like incest). Please support our efforts to protect marriage! Visit and

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Marriage = Biology (Not Bigotry) - Video

Flying ant day 'a summer myth'

17 October 2012 Last updated at 01:17 By Matt Bardo Reporter, BBC Nature

The notion of an annual flying ant day, when swarms of ants emerge and take to the air in mass mating flights, is a "myth", scientists say.

UK summer data gathered by the Society of Biology shows two peaks in flying ant appearances over one fortnight.

They mapped 6,000 flying ant sightings, made by members of the public this year, to learn about ant behaviour.

The team now hopes to repeat the study in future years so that the scientists can draw firmer conclusions.

The survey was organised by the Society of Biology with the results announced as part of Biology Week, which runs until Friday.

The main findings to be drawn from the study concern the black garden ant (Lasius niger), the most common ant species in the UK.

Some of the results have surprised the experts.

"Even over a small area emergences happened on different days, suggesting that local synchronisation is not as precise as is widely believed," said Professor Adam Hart, an ecologist at University of Gloucestershire, who presented the results of the survey at a Biology Week event.

"We found a relationship between flying ant swarms and weather conditions, which we expected, and geographical variation, which we didn't expect," he said.

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Flying ant day 'a summer myth'

National Brain Tumor Society Gathers Leaders at its 2012 Summit to Support Scientific Collaboration and Advance the …

Systems biology-based research vital to advancing the discovery and development of therapies.

Boston, MA (PRWEB) October 17, 2012

Key themes repeatedly heard and spoken among the attendees at the 2012 Summit were the importance of systems biology-based research and the value of collaboration. As the only brain tumor organization with both a Chief Scientific Officer and a Director of Public Policy, National Brain Tumor Society continues to partner with a wide array of organizations to gain a deeper understanding of the complexities of brain tumors, the barriers to research advancements, and the resources needed to support translational science for the development of durable therapies. Focused on creating change, National Brain Tumor Society has also used this knowledge to challenge its academic colleagues and grant recipients to approach their brain tumor research through systems biology, which provides a better understanding of genes and their mechanisms of action through an integrated view.

At the 2012 Summit, leading researchers and clinicians, as well as peers in nonprofit, government, and industry also concurred that systems biology is required to foster progress of therapeutic developments for brain tumors, as well as a better understanding of the behaviors of a wide array of other cancer genes. Knowing how they (genes) develop, interact, and change as part of a system, will enable a more predictive approach to therapy development, thus enhancing efficacy and overall success.

With a disease where over 120 different tumor types exist, and with only 4 FDA-approved treatments for adults in the last 20 years, the time is now. We can no longer try to understand brain tumors with a unilateral approach, said N. Paul TonThat, executive director of the National Brain Tumor Society. Brain tumors are deadly and there is no cure, so we have to foster collaboration and the scientific models that are poised to deliver new, durable treatments, sooner. Its our obligation to this community, and we wont rest until a cure is found, said TonThat.

Through the first phase of its Mary Catherine Calisto Systems Biology Initiative, a multiyear grant program, National Brain Tumor Society is currently supporting several multi-disciplinary research teams at leading institutions such as Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, University of California, Agios Pharmaceuticals, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, University of Alabama, University of Florida, and Brigham & Womens Hospital. Phase II will encourage an even greater team-science approach by allowing the Phase I recipients to collaborate together, and leverage their initial findings and achievements (presented at the 2012 Summit) to expedite the progress of Phase II research.

The 2012 Summit included an annual meeting, the first convening of state lead advocates, a research symposium, and the Boston Brain Tumor Walk which rallied 3,000 participants and raised over $500,000 to fund critical brain tumor research.

Sponsored by EMD Serono and The Colony Group, the event hosted distinguished speakers from the brain tumor community including Anna Barker, PhD (Transformative Healthcare Networks, Arizona State University), WK Al Yung, MD and Giulio Draetta, MD, PhD (MD Anderson Cancer Center), Dennis Berman, JD (Tocagen, Inc.), Robert Langer, Sc.D and Ernest Fraenkel, PhD (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Tyler Jacks, PhD (Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Wendy Selig, (Melanoma Research Institute), and Timothy Cloughsey, MD (University of California, Los Angeles).

National Brain Tumor Society also honored the following individuals and families for their steadfast commitment to the brain tumor community:

Margaret Foti, PhD, MD (h.c.), and chief executive officer of the American Association for Cancer Research was awarded the Founders Award in recognition of her tireless efforts and leadership to support the advancement of cancer research.

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National Brain Tumor Society Gathers Leaders at its 2012 Summit to Support Scientific Collaboration and Advance the ...