Patients with cancer, unstable heart disease, uncontrolled diabetes they all show up at Southwest Boulevard Family Health Care looking for help.
To reach Alan Bavley, call 816-234-4858 or send email to abavley@kcstar.com.
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Patients with cancer, unstable heart disease, uncontrolled diabetes they all show up at Southwest Boulevard Family Health Care looking for help.
To reach Alan Bavley, call 816-234-4858 or send email to abavley@kcstar.com.
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July 28, 2012 - Frontier League (FL) Florence Freedom Washington,PA-The Florence Freedom got superb starting pitching in their doubleheader against the Washington Wild Things on Friday night as they swept both games with wins of 7-4 and 1-0. The Freedom completed the series sweep against Washington and are now 34-29 on the season.
In game 1, Alec Lewis hurled a complete game, his third of the season as he struck out six batters while scattering six hits and allowing three earned runs. Lewis improved to 3-6 with his complete game performance. Peter Fatse had a pair of RBI doubles in the game to lead the Freedom offense. John Malloy, Junior Arrojo, Jim Jacquot, David Harris, and Stephen Cardullo each produced an RBI as well for the victorious Freedom.
In game 2, it was Sean Gregory going the distance for the Freedom as he allowed only three hits, while striking out six on his way to his second complete game of the season. The difference in the game was the 5th inning homerun off the bat of Drew Rundle. It was his 9th homerun of the season, a deep shot beyond the right center field wall. Rundle also made several terrific defensive plays in the game to preserve the shutout win for Gregory.
The Freedom now return to Florence for a twelve game homestand starting Saturday night against the Evansville Otters. Evansville will send LHP Garrett Bullock(3-5, 3.06) to the mound to take on the Freedom's Brandon Mathes(0-0,5.12) The game can be heard with Steve Jarnicki starting at 5:50 pm on radio station Real Talk 1160 and realtalk1160.com.
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JERUSALEM—Mitt Romney has said repeatedly he won't criticize President Barack Obama on foreign soil. But the presumptive Republican nominee got in a dig at his Democratic rival ahead of his arrival here, telling the Israel Hayom newspaper that the Middle East is in turmoil because Obama "abandoned the freedom agenda" pursued by former President George [...]
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by Lian Cheng. Posted on July 29, 2012, Sunday
LOOKING AHEAD: After his first book, Henry will start another on Sarawak.
AUSSIE septuagenarian John Henry has finally found his freedom after a 50-year search.
The 71-year-old is sharing his experiences in a 180-page pictorial titled Sweet Freedom: A daring search for freedom, consisting of 840 stunning full colour photos and thought-provoking illustrations.
Its more than just a book of pictures its also a record of the authors quest of the true meaning of freedom after traversing the length and breath of Australia.
It was the constant stress and pressure from authorities and establishments that drove Henry to question the existence of freedom and set about looking for it.
What my wife Jill and I want to do is find out about freedom. Is there such a thing? If so, what is it? Is it the same as happiness? Is it the same as survival? Can anyone truly get away and be free and happy? Or is freedom is just a dream. Are we just kidding ourselves?
Henry and Jill, former CEO of Sarawak Convention Bureau (SCB), sold their business and took the less-travelled road to venture into the wilderness of Australia, hoping that freedom could be found somewhere far away and beyond.
I looked for freedom among the Australian Aborigines only to discover they live in reserve areas. Where is their freedom?
I thought creatures such as kangaroos and crocodiles might have freedom, yet I dont find freedom in them as they are being hunted by man, said the man from Down Under.
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Those of us who research and teach entrepreneurship understand the strong direct link between freedom and entrepreneurship. There is a strong, positive correlation between the amount of freedom we enjoy from our nation-state and entrepreneurship and prosperity. Freedom and entrepreneurship go hand in hand. With freedom, entrepreneurship will flourish. Without freedom, entrepreneurship can?t ...
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MAYVILLE, NY (WIVB) - The Chautauqua County Health Department has closed two area beaches due to high bacteria levels.
Point Gratiot and Wright Beaches in Dunkirk will remain close after testing for unsafe levels of bacteria that could pose health dangers. Beaches are closed on the same day testing shows unhealthy conditions.
You can check the status of Chautauqua County beaches by going to the Chautauqua County Health Department website here.
All other Chautauqua County beaches are at a satisfactory level.
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Four Halifax-area beaches reopened Saturday after bacteria levels proved safe for swimming. Birch Cove, Kinsmen, Black Rock and Dingle beaches closed last week due to health concerns about elevated bacteria counts.
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Seeking relief from temperatures that keep soaring into the 90s and above, hundreds of thousands of visitors are flocking to the state's shorelines, pushing attendance at Michigan's state park beaches to the highest levels in years.
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Student-created robotic vehicles raced during the International Autonomous Robot Racing Competition on Saturday at University of British Columbia. Students create the robotic vehicles using sensors, GPS and artificial intelligence.
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India's Reliance Industries, led by tycoon Mukesh Ambani, could spend $2 billion to boost its aerospace and telecoms businesses, reports said on Saturday.
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Eric Dane leaving 'Grey's Anatomy' during upcoming season
Editor's Choice Main Category: Neurology / Neuroscience Article Date: 28 Jul 2012 - 3:00 PDT
Current ratings for: Decoding The Secrets Of Balance
Over 70 million people in North America suffer from this condition. People with vestibular loss have a difficult time performing necessary daily living activities (like eating, dressing, getting in and out of bed, moving around the house and moving outside) because even turning their head slightly can make them dizzy and give them a risk of falling.
It has been known that a sensory system in the inner ear, known as the vestibular system, helps us keep our balance by keeping the visual field stable as we move around. Scientists have already developed basic knowledge of how the brain forms our perceptions of ourselves in motion. But until now no one has understood the most important step by which the neurons in the brain select the information needed to keep us balanced.
The information taken in and decoded by the brain, sent by neurons in the inner ear, is done so in a complex way. The peripheral vestibular sensory neurons in the inner ear take in the time varying velocity and acceleration stimuli caused by our movement in the outside world (for example, riding in a car that changes from a stationary position to 50 km per hour). Detailed information about these stimuli (information that helps reconstruct how stimuli change over time), in the form of nerve impulses, is transmitted by these neurons.
It was previously believed that the brain decoded this information linearly, attempting to reconstruct the time sequence of acceleration and velocity stimuli. However, two professors in McGill University's Department of Physiology, Kathleen Cullen and Maurice Chacron, combined electrophysiological and computational approaches and were able to show that neurons, in the vestibular nuclei in the brain, decode incoming information nonlinearly as they respond to sudden and unpredicted changes in stimuli.
At each stage in this sensory pathway, our representations in the outside world change. For example, neurons found in the visual system closer to the periphery of the sensory system (such as ganglion cells in the retina) usually respond to a wide variety of sensory stimuli (a "dense" code), unlike central neurons (primary visual cortex at the back of the head) that usually respond much more selectively (a "sparse" code). The selective transmission of vestibular information, which Chacron and Cullen documented for the first time, happens as early as the first synapse in the brain.
Cullen said:
Since this kind of selectivity in response enhances the brain's perception of unexpected changes in body posture, it is important for everyday life. For example, if you step off a curb you didn't see, within milliseconds, your brain is able to receive the necessary information and perform the sophisticated computation essential to helping you readjust your position.
The researchers hope this discovery will apply to other sensory systems and eventually to the development of better treatments for patients suffering from dizziness, vertigo, and disorientation during their everyday activities. This finding also has the potential to lead to treatments that will help reduce the symptoms that come with motion and/or space sickness that take place in more challenging environments.
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Decoding The Secrets Of Balance
Researchers reporting online on July 26 in Current Biology have for the first time shown that they can control the behavior of monkeys by using pulses of blue light to very specifically activate particular brain cells. The findings represent a key advance for optogenetics, a state-of-the-art method for making causal connections between brain activity and behavior. Based on the discovery, the researchers say that similar light-based mind control could likely also be made to work in humans for therapeutic ends.
"We are the first to show that optogenetics can alter the behavior of monkeys," says Wim Vanduffel of Massachusetts General Hospital and KU Leuven Medical School. "This opens the door to use of optogenetics at a large scale in primate research and to start developing optogenetic-based therapies for humans."
In optogenetics, neurons are made to respond to light through the insertion of light-sensitive genes derived from particular microbial organisms. Earlier studies had primarily validated this method for use in invertebrates and rodents, with only a few studies showing that optogenetics can alter activity in monkey brains on a fine scale.
In the new study, the researchers focused on neurons that control particular eye movements. Using optogenetics together with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), they showed that they could use light to activate these neurons, generating brain activity and subtle changes in eye-movement behavior.
The researchers also found that optogenetic stimulation of their focal brain region produced changes in the activity of specific neural networks located at some distance from the primary site of light activation.
The findings not only pave the way for a much more detailed understanding of how different parts of the brain control behavior, but they may also have important clinical applications in treating Parkinson's disease, addiction, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and other neurological conditions.
"Several neurological disorders can be attributed to the malfunctioning of specific cell types in very specific brain regions," Vanduffel says. "As already suggested by one of the leading researchers in optogenetics, Karl Deisseroth from Stanford University, it is important to identify the underlying neuronal circuits and the precise nature of the aberrations that lead to the neurological disorders and potentially to manipulate those malfunctioning circuits with high precision to restore them. The beauty of optogenetics is that, unlike any other method, one can affect the activity of very specific cell types, leaving others untouched."
More information: Gerits et al.: "Optogenetically-induced behavioral and functional network changes in primates." DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2012.07.023
Journal reference: Current Biology
Provided by Cell Press
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Controlling monkey brains and behavior with light
New York, NY (PRWEB) July 28, 2012
Artist and Behavioral Specialist Greg Herzog, uses COLOR CODING DNA Technique, to help better understand the performance of Michael Phelps and his 2012 London Olympic medal quest.
So what is it that gives Michael Phelps his unique competitive edge?
Greg Herzog, a former sub four minute miler and conditioning specialist in New York City has worked with competitive athletes, as well as individuals from the ages 5-94, and has made studying human performance his lifes work. This extensive experience led to the development of AXIS CORE, a mathematical equation to predict and change behavior, as well as a Quantum Reaction Theory: COLOR CODING DNA, to help better understand the foundation of the makeup of an individual in regard to performance.
Herzog believes he has broken the code of Michael Phelps and his 2012 London Olympics medal quest.
Michael Phelps is an American international swimmer who has, overall, won 16 Olympic medalssix gold and two bronze at Athens in 2004, and eight gold at Beijing in 2008, winning more medals than any other athlete at both of these Olympic Games. He has twice equaled the record eight medals of any type at a single Olympics achieved by Soviet gymnast Alexander Dityatin at the 1980 Moscow Summer Games. His five gold medals in individual events tied the single Games record set by compatriot Eric Heiden in the 1980 Winter Olympics and equaled by Vitaly Scherbo at the 1992 Summer Games. Phelps holds the record for the most gold medals won in a single Olympics; his eight at the 2008 Beijing Games surpassed American swimmer Mark Spitz's seven-gold performance at Munich in 1972. Phelps' Olympic medal total is second only to the 18 Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina won over three Olympics, including nine gold, that he hopes to eclipse in London Olympics 2012. Phelps also holds the all-time record for most gold Olympic medals, at 14, as well as the record for most gold medals in individual events, at nine.
Is one of the main reasons behind American swimmer Michael Phelps unprecedented success his whopping 12000 calories per day diet, or physiology or both?
Phelps begins his day with hearty breakfast consisting of three fried-egg sandwiches, three chocolate chip pancakes, a five-egg omelet, three sugarcoated slices of French toast, and a bowl of grits(maize porridge).
Phelps lunch is not much smaller as he annihilates a pound of pasta over lunch, two large ham and cheese sandwiches covered in mayonnaise and many gallons of energy drinks.
For his evening meal, he finishes the remaining pound of pasta, followed by a pizza and more energy drinks.
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Artist and Behavioral Specialist Greg Herzog, uses COLOR CODING DNA® Technique, to help better understand the ...
07/27/2012 . Pathology have invited fans in the Chicago area to take part in their upcoming video shoot next week. Their camp sent out this call to action:
Pathology will be shooting a brand new music video on Tuesday, July 31 at Mojoes in Joliet, Illinois. The video will be for the new single from their upcoming album The Time Of Great Purification, out everywhere on September 25.
Fans in Joliet and the surrounding Chicago areas are encouraged to come out and join in. Video shoot address: Mojoes 22 W. Cass St Joliet, IL 60432.
Pathology is currently headlining a twenty- six city run on the Slaughter Survivors tour with Enfold Darkness, Fallujah, Fit For An Autopsy and Aegaeon.
7/26- Denver, CO @ Marquis Theater 7/27 Salina, KS @ The Factory 7/28- Des Moines, IA @ Vaudeville Mews 7/29 St Paul, MN @ Station-4 7/30- Green Bay, WI @ The Hideout 7/31- Joliet, IL @ Mojoe's 8/1- Cleveland, OH @ Peabody's 8/2- Danbury, CT @ Heirloom Arts 8/3- Smithtown, NY @ Masonic Temple 8/4- Trenton, NJ @ Backstage at Champs 8/5- Wilmington, DE @ Mojo 13 8/6 New York, NY @ Studio at Webster Hall 8/7- Springfield, VA @ Empire 8/8- Richmond, VA @ Kingdom 8/9- Wilmington, NC @ Soapbox Laundro-Lounge 8/10 Atlanta, GA @ Masquerade 8/11- Tampa, FL @ Brass Mug 8/13- Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live 8/14- San Antonio, TX @ Korova 8/15- El Paso, TX @ House Of Rock 8/16- Albuquerque, NM @ El Rey Theater 8/17- Tempe, AZ @ Rocky Point 8/18- Temecula, CA @ The Vault 8/19- Hollywood, CA @ The Whisky 8/20- Canoga Park, CA @ The Catalyst Atrium
antiMUSIC News featured on RockNews.info and Yahoo News
...end
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Pathology Need Fans For New Video
This section displays the last 50 news articles that were published.
Updated07/27/2012 03:29 PM
Nutrition is tough. But it becomes even more difficult when you're training for a triathlon and have to fuel your body for three sports and for hours of practice. In this week's Segment of "Tri it Again," our Katie Gibas tells us the best nutrition to maximize performance during triathlon training and races.
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Fueling your body for a triathlon can be tough.
"It's taken a lot of getting used to. I've been writing down everything I eat and when I eat it. And then chronicling my workout and how I feel," said Laura Currey, a Cicero resident.
Everything you eat has the potential to either make or break your performance.
"It definitely makes a difference on the workout. Whether it's something youre eating or not drinking enough water, the next day you can definitely feel that in a bike or a run or a swim with cramps, stitches in your side, calf cramps," said Currey.
During training athletes need to eat consistently and consume the right kind of calories, especially fruits and vegetables.
"You need fuel. You need to keep those muscles fueled. You need to not be burning muscle when you're out there doing longer workouts. So constant, healthy eating is my advice," said Brendan Jackson, the Fleet Feet Triathlon Training Program Director.
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Tri it Again: Triathlon nutrition
MERIDEN (AP) -- New DNA testing has solved the mysteries of a skull found in Waterbury in 1981 and a man fatally struck on Interstate 91 in Meriden in 2008, State Police said Friday.
State police and other officials announced the new findings at the state crime lab in Meriden, saying they identified the two men as people reported missing by their families.
Both men's identities were confirmed by DNA testing done over the past few weeks, said Lt. J. Paul Vance, a state police spokesman.
Authorities said the skull belonged to Kenneth LaManna, of Waterbury, who was 30 when he went missing in 1980. The state's chief medical examiner, Dr. H. Wayne Carver II, said LaManna shot himself to death.
The new information in LaManna's case was developed after a detective in the state police Missing Persons Unit and a Waterbury police detective noticed similarities between the skull being found in 1981 and the missing person case of LaManna from 1980.
Forensic scientists then obtained DNA samples from the home of LaManna's mother, and they matched samples from the skull, state police said.
Police identified the man struck on the highway in 2008 as Phat Quy Mai, who was 50. Authorities have said he was struck while lying motionless on the roadway, and what exactly happened remains unclear.
Detectives couldn't identify Mai's body immediately after the accident, but sent information to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System.
State police received new information from the system in April and began investigating.
A detective met with Mai's family in Massachusetts and obtained DNA samples that matched samples from the man killed on the highway.
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DNA testing solves two cold cases
The Delhi High Court today made public the DNA test results of veteran Congress leader N D Tiwari, confirming that he is the biological father of Rohit Shekhar, the youth who filed a paternity suit against him four years ago.
On a day of protracted drama in the court, a division bench first rejected Tiwaris plea to keep the report a secret and then remitted the case to Justice Reva Khetrapal, the judge who had earlier decided to open Tiwaris DNA test report and declare the result in open court. After their appeal was dismissed, Tiwaris counsel failed to appear in court.
The counsel for the 32-year-old Shekhar and his mother Ujjwala Sharma accompanied the judge into her chamber where the DNA report was desealed. They emerged smiling. The judge then declared the result in open court, saying: Tiwari is found to be the biological father of Rohit Shekhar and Ujjwala Sharma is found to be the biological mother.
Tiwari, who was not present in court, had his lawyer read out a statement in which he said that no one has the right to look into my private life. I have been a freedom fighter. I have the right to live according to my own wishes, the statement read.
The 87-year-old veteran Congress leader also said he bore no grudge against Shekhar.
Due to my simplicity, at this point of my age, my trusted people hatched a conspiracy against me in a planned way. I have no remorse against them. My sympathy is with Rohit Shekhar.
... contd.
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DNA results out, Tiwari fathered Rohit
Your Diet Affects Your Grandchildren's DNA, Scientists Say
By: Christopher Wanjek, LiveScience Bad Medicine Columnist
Published: 07/27/2012 10:00 AM EDT on LiveScience
You are what you eat, the saying goes. And, according to two new genetic studies, you are what your mother, father, grandparents and great-grandparents ate, too.
Diet, be it poor or healthy, can so alter the nature of one's DNA that those changes can be passed on to the progeny. While this much has been speculated for years, researchers in two independent studies have found ways in which this likely is happening.
The findings, which involve epigenetics, may help explain the increased genetic risk that children face compared to their parents for diseases such as obesity and diabetes.
The punch line is that your poor dietary habits may be dooming your progeny, despite how healthy they will try to eat. [10 Worst Hereditary Conditions]
Epigenetics
Epigenetics refers to changes in gene expression from outside forces. Different from a mutation, epigenetic changes lie not in the DNA itself but rather in its surroundings -- the enzymes and other chemicals that orchestrate how a DNA molecule unwinds its various sections to make proteins or even new cells.
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Your diet affects your grandchildren's DNA, studies say
McMurry University and Texas Chiropractic College in Pasadena on Thursday signed an agreement allowing students in McMurry's Department of Biology's bachelor of science degree to go into TCC's doctor of chiropractic degree.
The agreement, which will be renegotiated in 10 years, would allow McMurry undergraduates to complete their prerequites in three years and transfer to TCC to complete the rest of their work toward their doctor of chiropractic degree. The program will begin in the fall semester.
"They (students) could, in six years, have their bachelor's from McMurry, their doctor of chiropractic, and a master's of science in fitness and human performance from the University of Houston in Clear Lake," said Dr. Larry Sharp, associate professor of biology and pre-med and pre-dental adviser at McMurry. "It's a win-win situation."
Sharp began pursuing the agreement with TCC two years ago. A chiropractor, Sharp said he wants to provide new avenues for students interested in pursuing careers in medical fields.
"It's not for the faint of heart," he said. "It's a rigorous program."
The students who would enter the program would be biology majors.
"Chiropractics is based in biology," said Sharp. "It's all about biology, biology of the body."
Sharp said the program didn't require McMurry to hire extra staff.
"With the current faculty, we can implement this program," he said.
Texas Chiropractic College is the fourth oldest chiropractic college in the United States. Provost Dr. Clay McDonald said TCC has similar agreements with other schools in Texas, plus a school in Louisiana and one in Pennsylvania. He said the strength of McMurry's science department was a determining factor in the agreement.
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Agreement allows McMurry students to work toward degree at Texas Chiropractic College