Scoop Business Using milk protein to 3D-imprint muscle and bone … – Scoop.co.nz

Press Release University of Canterbury

A University of Canterbury PhD student is using milk protein to 3D-imprint muscle and bone cells and one day she hopes her research may be used to regrow missing body parts.Using milk protein to 3D-imprint muscle and bone cells A University of Canterbury PhD student is using milk protein to 3D-imprint muscle and bone cells and one day she hopes her research may be used to regrow missing body parts.

Electrical and Computer Engineering doctoral candidate Azadeh Hashemi, originally from Tehran, Iran, came to start her PhD at the University of Canterbury (UC) four years ago.

Azadehs successful work in UCs Biomolecular Interaction Centre is turning what is basically milk powder into biomedical devices, such as implants to help regrow missing body parts. Her work is focused on fabrication of casein-based films with surface patterns, and growing cells on them.

The aim of my work is to replicate a 3D imprint of cells onto films made of milk protein, to use them as a substrate for growing cells. Development of the replication process and controlling the biodegradability of these films are the main parts of this work, she says.

The patterns on these biodegradable cell culture substrates mimic the cells natural physical environment and they can influence cell shape and growth. Once they have done their job, the films gradually degrade and leave the grown tissue behind.

The possibilities of these micro- and nanostructures are tantalising, with applications in stem cell engineering, regenerative medicine, and implantable devices.

If they can help the cells grow into muscles, bones or other tissues they would be able to replace any missing body part and help them regrow, Azadeh says.

Another great application for these substrates is to grow stem cells on an imprint with patterns of different cell types and see what type of cell the stem cells would change into. We might even be able to stop cancer cells from being cancerous by growing them on these patterns, in which case the biodegradability of the substrates would also be an advantage for eliminating the need for secondary surgery.

These materials have not been used in the human body yet, but in theory their application could help recovery from injury or disease with muscle or bone replacement.

These films could especially be used as implants to help missing tissue or muscle regrow using the surface patterns as a guide. The biodegradable implant would then just dissolve and there wont be any need for secondary surgery to take the implant out.

The project is based on a collaboration between Dr Volker Nock of UCs Biomolecular Interaction Centre and Dr Azam Ali, formerly AgResearch, now at the University of Otago. It was initiated through the Biomolecular Interaction Centre via a summer scholarship.

The early results were promising and Azadehs work took it to the next level, Dr Nock, her PhD supervisor, says.

Azadehs work has demonstrated that we can replicate the shapes of biological cells into casein biopolymers with extremely high-resolution, that we can control how long these materials take to degrade and that we can culture other cells on top of them. She is just now getting her first results as to what influence the shapes have on the cells and how the shapes change over time. One premise is that plastic (bio or not) with the shape of similar cells imprinted on the surface may positively influence the response of other real cells encountering such a surface, he says.

Azadehs research also builds on the work of her PhD co-supervisor UC Professor Maan Alkaisi and his students in developing a method of imprinting the shapes of cells into plastic.

We now have a biodegradable, pattern-able surface on which we can culture cells. The patterns can for example be used to help guide cells during muscle fibre formation in a Petri dish, while slowly being dissolved by the cells in the process so that only the finished tissue remains, Dr Nock says.

Azadeh recently returned to Christchurch from the United States where she was invited to give a presentation at one of the largest micro- and nanofabrication conferences in the world, the International Conference on Electron, Ion, and Photon Beam Technology and Nanofabrication, based on a prize she won last year at a European conference in Vienna, Austria (International Conference on Micro & Nano Engineering). She co-wrote the academic paper Fabrication of free-standing casein devices with micro- and nanostructured regular and bioimprinted surface features. ends

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$10 million medical research institute closed by MU – Columbia Missourian

COLUMBIA The MU International Institute of Nano and Molecular Medicine was closed June 30 as part of the UM System's cost-cutting measures.

The institute, at 1514 Research Park Drive off Providence Road, has been on campus since 2009.The decision to close the institute was made last month,MU spokesman Christian Basi wrote in an email.

MU broke ground on the $10 million institute in 2008. The future of the building is still to be determined, but it is likely to be used as a research facility, Basi wrote.

Next semester, teams studying biomedical innovations and disease therapeutics will be in the building, Basi wrote.

The closure will affect 17 full and part-time employees through a combination of layoffs and contract non-renewals, Basi said. MU expects to save about $1.5 million annually.

Reasons for the institutes closure included its substantial operating expenses, as well as the lack of grant funding it has received in recent years, Basi wrote.

Frederick Hawthorne, recipient of the prestigiousNational Medal of Science, for his work on the element boron, had been the director since 2008.

The institute studied nanotechnology and how to apply it to fight diseases. Nanotechnology is the manipulating of matter on a tiny scale, less than 100 nanometers. A nanometer is one-billionth of a meter or .000000001 meter.

Hawthorne used the technology to manipulate the element boron in an attempt to combat cancer, arthritis and other illnesses.

The institute's webpagedescribes it as "thestrongest research facility for the development of boron neutron capture therapy of cancer in the world."

Hawthorne was lured to MU from UCLA, where he had worked since 1969, in part because of the institute and the *MU Research Reactor it used, which is among the best in the world for academic research, according to earlier Missourian reporting.

He is still an employee of MU at this time, though his ongoing role is unclear.

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$10 million medical research institute closed by MU - Columbia Missourian

How CD44s gives brain cancer survival advantage – Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)

Understanding the mechanisms that give cancer cells the ability to survive and grow opens the possibility of developing improved treatments to control or cure the disease. In the case of glioblastoma multiforme, the deadliest type of brain cancer, researchers have discovered that the molecule CD44s seems to give cancer cells a survival advantage. In the lab, eliminating this advantage by reducing the amount of CD44s resulted in cancer cells being more sensitive to the deadly effects of the drug erlotinib. The study appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Treatment with erlotinib attempts to kill cancer cells by inhibiting EGFR signaling, a cellular mechanism that is hyperactive in most cases of glioblastoma multiforme and associated with poor prognosis, said senior author Dr. Chonghui Cheng, associate professor of molecular and human genetics and of molecular and cellular biology at Baylor College of Medicine. However, the clinical benefit of treatment with this and other EGFR inhibitors has been limited by the development of drug resistance.

Erlotinib can inhibit EGFR signaling but in time cancer cells become resistant to the treatment, in part because other molecules can compensate for the lack of EGFR activity.

Increasing evidence also suggests that EGFR and related signaling mechanisms do not act alone. Another molecule present in a number of cancers, CD44s, seems to be involved in sustaining those cancer-promoting mechanisms, but how this happens remained a mystery.

CD44s gives cancer cells a survival advantage

In this study, we discovered a mechanism by which CD44s helps maintain the EGFR signaling activated in glioblastoma multiforme, said Cheng, who also is a professor in the Lester and Sue Smith Breast Center at Baylor, part of the NCI-designated Dan L Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center. Working with a number of cancer cells grown in the lab, we determined that CD44s on the cell surface can enter the cell and prevent the digestion of EGFR, thus sustaining the activity of the signaling cascade that gives the cells a survival advantage.

Cheng and her colleagues have shown that CD44s holds a strategic place from which it can influence not only EGFR, but also a number of other signaling cascades that are important for cancer cell survival.

If we remove CD44s from the cell surface, we also can reduce the appearance of other molecules that could help cancer cells sustain their growth by compensating for the lack of EGFR activity, Cheng said.

Importantly from the therapeutic point of view, the researchers also found that removing CD44s from cancer cells in culture and treating them with erlotinib resulted in higher cancer cell deaths than treating with erlotinib alone. Cheng and colleagues anticipate that CD44s might also play a similar role in other types of cancer in which EGFR signaling is involved. This opens the possibility that targeting CD44s could potentially reduce the growth of many types of cancer, not just glioblastoma.

Researchers have been focused on developing inhibitors of EGRF and related pathways. Instead, we want to find novel approaches to boost the activity of inhibitors already available, and removing CD44s is a good example of how this could be done, said co-author Sali Liu, a graduate student in the Cheng lab. Our work suggests that in the future, physicians and scientists might approach cancer treatment in a different way. For example, instead of deciding on a treatment based on the type of breast cancer a patient has, they might choose a treatment according to the type of mechanism that helps this particular cancer grow, regardless of the type of cancer it is.

Other contributors to this work include Wei Wang, Honghong Zhang, Chung Kwon Kim, Yilin Xu, Lisa Hurley, Ryo Nishikawa, Motoo Nagane, Bo Hu, Alexander Stegh and Shi-Yuan Cheng. The authors are affiliated with one or more of the following institutions: Baylor College of Medicine, Northwestern University, Saitama Medical University and Kyorin University.

This research was supported in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Northwestern University Brain Tumor Institute and a Brain Cancer Research Award from James S. McDonnell Foundation. Further support was provided by a Zell Scholarship at Northwestern University and the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas.

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How CD44s gives brain cancer survival advantage - Baylor College of Medicine News (press release)

Hands-On: The Mira Prism Headset Wants To Be The Google Daydream Of AR – UploadVR

When Ben Taft and Matt Stern, two of the co-founders of Mira, opened up the box of the Prism AR headset for me for the first time Ill be honest: I wasnt that impressed. Having tried the HoloLens and Meta 2 Id seen what extremely expensive AR devices were capable of (again: not that impressed personally) so I wasnt going to hold my breath for this relatively cheap looking pair of lenses attached to a glorified visor. But after trying them out for myself Ive gotta say I changed my mind.

The Prism AR headset, from new company Mira, is lightweight, cheap, and surprisingly effective. All you do is clip your smartphone into the devices holder, the screen reflects images onto the lenses in front of your face, and then you can easily see and interact with everything right there in front of you. It helps that the field of view is surprisingly large when compared to the likes of the postage-stamp sized view in the Microsoft HoloLens.

In addition to announcing the device today, Mira is announcing $1.5 million in seed funding from Sequoia Capital, Troy Capital Partners, S-Cubed Capital, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, global will.i.am, Jaunt VR founder Jens Christensen, and more.

Instead of relying on hand-based gesture controls every Prism will come with a controller you hold in your hand similar to the Samsung Gear VR or Google Daydream controller. The design principles, style, color, and controller arent the only things that reminded me of the Daydream though the co-founders themselves are pretty honest about the inspiration.

Whereas the HoloLens, Meta, and other contemporary AR devices are aiming at a high-end market with only devkits right now, the Prism is launching a single device with a controller thats all powered wirelessly by your smartphone for just $99. Since the phone powers everything no separate devkit is even required.

As developers, we wanted a way to build and experiment in AR without the need for expensive equipment, and as AR enthusiasts, we wanted the opportunity to play and explore without limits. We challenged ourselves to build a mobile headset that would make AR accessible to anyone, said Taft, co-founder and CEO of Mira, in a prepared statement. Prism is a bridge between the physical and digital worlds and Mira is creating the thread that lets people connect and share experiences.

Taft and Stern explained to me that the core inspiration behind the Prism was a desire to get peoples gaze off of their phones and back to the world around them. After deleting social media off of his phone completely, Taft realized how freeing it felt. Now with Prism, the two realities are able to merge together seamlessly.

Obviously this evokes a similar promise that weve heard time and time again with AR technology and frankly we arent there yet, but the low cost and ease-of-use the Prism represents is certainly a step in the right direction.

For my hands-on time with the device they walked me through the setup process that involved calibrating the controller and getting used to wearing a 360-degree set of AR lenses. They sat around my head comfortably and hung in front of my eyes. There was plenty of room to keep my standard everyday glasses on still.

Stern (right) and I (left) playing a multiplayer AR game on two Prism headsets.

The two main demos I tried involved spinning around in circles while shooting aliens, similar to Face Raiders on the Nintendo 3DS, and guiding a rolling doughnut through a maze reminiscent of Pac-Man. For the latter demo Stern actually put on a second Prism headset and joined in through wireless networking. We were able to both look down and see the same maze on the table using the AR card marker, shown above. The image you see was taken using Miras Spectator Mode which allows anyone with an iOS device or iPad to watch the experience happening in real-time.

The Mira Prism is far from being the most advanced device on the market, but its not trying to be. With a goal of fulfilling the role of being the Google Daydream of AR, there are a lot of hurdles left to cross still.

When it launches there will be a handful of apps available, but most of the responsibility falls in the laps of intrepid developers to make content for the device or add AR modes onto existing mobile apps. Software sells hardware so a compelling reason to own one of these has yet to really arise other than the novelty factor alone.

The Prism is a big move for ARs step towards mass adoption. If youre interested in learning more you can visit the official website to learn more and pre-order yours for $99. Devices will ship to developers this fall with consumer units should start arriving before the end of the year. At launch the device will be iOS only with Android support coming later.

Tagged with: mira, prism

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Hands-On: The Mira Prism Headset Wants To Be The Google Daydream Of AR - UploadVR

Bombay High Court quashes PIL seeking 50 per cent seats for ‘non-minority students’ in minority institutions – The Indian Express

By: Express News Service | Mumbai | Published:July 19, 2017 1:52 am If the directions as sought for by the petitioner are issued, disregarding all the subsequent developments, it will lead to a chaotic situation and disrupt the entire admission process in the State of Maharashtra. Resultantly, the petition is dismissed, said Chief Justice Manjula Chellur.

The Bombay High Court Tuesday dismissed a public interest litigation seeking to keep aside 50 per cent seats for non-minority students in minority institutions. The PIL also alleged lack of transparency in the admission process, saying more than the assigned percentage of students under minority quota were given seats through backdoor entry.

If the directions as sought for by the petitioner are issued, disregarding all the subsequent developments, it will lead to a chaotic situation and disrupt the entire admission process in the State of Maharashtra. Resultantly, the petition is dismissed, said Chief Justice Manjula Chellur.

The petition was filed by an NGO, Forum for Justice in Education, against the state government and colleges established and administered by Shri Vile Parle Kelavani Mandal. The petitioner had referred to newspaper reports regarding the manner in which the colleges run by Shri Vile Parle Kelavani Mandal have admitted their students. The court pointed out that the state had issued government resolutions keeping in mind Supreme Court judgments regarding this issue to streamline the entire process.

A perusal of the government resolutions issued from 2009 onwards shows that the state government has taken a decision to make the process of admission of students online. The GRs take in their ambit the minority institutions as well. The entire admission process is done online. The admission to all these categories is on merit. The minority institutions have to upload their management quota as well as the in-house quota and the system adopted is transparent, said the court.

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Bombay High Court quashes PIL seeking 50 per cent seats for 'non-minority students' in minority institutions - The Indian Express

Medicine’s shameful silence on silencers – Washington Examiner

What if a cheap, simple, and safe method existed for preventing permanent hearing loss in tens of millions of Americans?

America's doctors should be singing its praises and recommending it to their patients. American doctor organizations should be doing the same, as well as vigorously supporting the Hearing Protection Act (H.R. 367 and its companion bill S. 59) or the newly introduced Silencers Helping Us Save Hearing Act, or SHUSH (S. 1505 in the Senate and H.R. 3139 in the House). But they are doing neither. Why not?

The Hearing Protection Act would remove Al Capone-era federal restrictions on firearm silencers or suppressors. The Act's repeal of the $200 transfer tax, the months-long wait, and the mountain of red tape would afford American hunters and sport shooters wider access to a safety device known to preserve hearing. SHUSH would go even further, defining suppressors as just another firearm safety accessory, which they are.

But the American Medical Association, the American College of Physicians, American College of Surgeons, and the American Academy of Pediatrics not only refuse to support doing away with the outdated restrictions. They won't even promote the use of suppressors as a valuable public health solution.

Even the group representing ear doctors, the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, has decided officially to refuse their support of both this hearing-saving tool and the legislation that would make it widely available to their patients.

As an ear specialist, I was consulted by innumerable people for noise-induced hearing loss the kind caused by loud music, industrial machinery, and firearms. But I could offer no surgery or medicine. My best solution for them, to their frustration and mine, was to recommend hearing aids.

Although the American public is beginning to learn the science-based truth (disclosure I am one of the authors of this white paper) about suppressors, much ignorance remains. Major media outlets have allowed their hostility to anything and everything about firearms to override any recognition of the public health benefit. That they have condemned the use of suppressors on the flimsiest of pretexts is bad enough. But the refusal of the medical establishment to heartily endorse suppressors and supportive legislation is nothing short of a moral failing.

One obstacle to reform is the stubbornly persistent myth that suppressors actually do silence the ear-splitting impact noise of a gun being fired. The Hollywood image of a hit man or spy squeezing off shots with no more than a punchy hissing sound is what informs much of the public. And it is a complete fiction.

In reality, suppressors are much like auto mufflers. They reduce the ear-pounding impact noise of a gunshot by about 30 decibels. So, a shot from a rifle with a muzzle sound pressure level of 170 dB would still deliver a 140 dB sonic punch to your ears, about the level of noise from a jackhammer. It is still loud enough to require supplementary hearing protection on the target range in the form of ear plugs and muffs.

The scientific principles are not difficult to understand. The truth about how suppressors really work is readily available. It's understandable that the lay public would still be in the dark about them, considering the fantasy images they've seen for decades in movies and on television.

But the scientists who lead the national organization of ear doctors have no excuse for ignorance of how suppressors prevent hearing loss. The ignoble reason that they and other leaders of organized medicine have shirked their moral obligation to prevent human infirmity is prejudice, fueled by a willful ignorance.

Suppressors are not going away. Over the last decade, the states have led the way in laws making this public health benefit more available. Americans are now better informed about their value. But instead of taking a leadership role, our medical organizations have indulged their prejudices and remained silent to the detriment of their patients. Let us hope their better angels will prevail, and they will become leaders in the movement to save their patients' hearing.

Timothy Wheeler is a retired ear surgeon and the past director of Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership, a Project of the Second Amendment Foundation.

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Medicine's shameful silence on silencers - Washington Examiner

Schumer: ‘Bipartisan Medicine’ Is Needed To Fix Health Care – TPM

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) blasted his Republican colleagues plan to repeal Obamacare without a replacement, saying the move would be a disaster and calling the current GOP Senate health bill unworkable.

Its time to move one. Its time to start over. Rather than repeating the same failed partisan process, yet again, Republicans should work together with Democrats on a bill that lowers premiums, provides long-term stability to the markets and improves our health-care system, Schumer said Tuesday from the Senate floor, slamming majority leader Mitch McConnell for assuming Democrats did not want to work with GOP leaders on a health care compromise. The majority leader admitted he decided the matter for us when he locked Democrats out of the process at the outset. Now that their one-party effort largely failed, we hope they will change their tune.

Schumers comments came after the GOP effort to repeal and replace Obamacare unravelled Monday night when two Republican Senators came out as opposed to the plan.

Make no mistake about it, passing repeal without a replacement would be a disaster. Our health care system would implode, millions would lose coverage, he said, adding that repealing now and having it go into effect two years later would be worse for American people than the passage of the Republican health care bill that was just rejected.

Its like, if our health caresystem was a patient who came inand needed some medicine.Republicans propose surgery, theoperation was a failure.Now Republicans are proposing asecond surgery that will surelykill the patient.Medicine is needed, bipartisanmedicine, not a second surgery, he said.

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Health Notes: UF College of Medicine-Jacksonville honored – Florida Times-Union

Three pediatricians with the University of Florida College of Medicine-Jacksonville have been honored by the Northeast Florida Pediatric Society. Laura Beverly was named the societys Pediatrician of the Year. Asad Tolaymat was named Educator of the Year. Daniel Indelicato was named Pioneer of Innovation.

Beverly is medical director of the UF Health Pediatrics-Beaches practice. She has practiced pediatrics in Jacksonville Beach since 1991 and has been a UF faculty member since 2004. Tolaymat is a professor of pediatrics and chief of pediatric nephrology and rheumatology. Indelicatos focus is pediatric radiation oncology and he is a key member of the UF Health Proton Therapy Institute.

GUIDEWELL OFFERS PITCH COMPETITION FOCUSED ON AGING WELL

GuideWell Innovation, a subsidiary of Florida Blues parent company, GuideWell Mutual Holding Corporation, has launched a new pitch competition to fast track entrepreneurial ventures focused on aging well. Health+Accel is a one-week intense workshop for advanced entrepreneurs with innovations that allow individuals to age with dignity on their own terms.

Selected entrepreneurs will participate in Health+Accel Oct. 30 through Nov. 3 at the GuideWell Innovation CoRE located in Lake Nona Medical City, a 650-acre health and life sciences park in Orlando. They will obtain insight into the dynamic needs and relationships between insurers and providers and will receive coaching on how to differentiate themselves from competitors.

Health+Accel will conclude on Friday, Nov. 3, with a pitch competition. The entrepreneurs will have an opportunity to pitch their aging well solutions to executives, investors, business leaders. A panel of judges will award a $20,000 cash prize for the winning pitch.

Applications currently are being accepted from advanced entrepreneurs at GuideWellInnovation.com/Health-Accel. The deadline to apply is July 31. Those selected will receive a travel stipend to cover the cost of attending.

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Health Notes: UF College of Medicine-Jacksonville honored - Florida Times-Union

A pioneer in medicine gets his day – Standard Speaker

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Dr Stanley Dudrick, 82, stands near his former home at 414 W Union St., Nanticoke. The legendary Nanticoke doctor is being honored as being one of the top 50 doctors in world history.Mark Morancv16dudrickp4

Dr Stanley Dudrick, 82, stands on the front porch of his former home at 414 W Union St., Nanticoke. The legendary Nanticoke doctor is being honored as being one of the top 50 doctors in world history. Mark Moran cv16dudrickp1

NANTICOKE As a rookie physician in the early 1960s, Dr. Stanley Dudrick was so frustrated with his patients dying he nearly switched specialties. Instead, the Nanticoke native revolutionized the medical world.

The descendant of Nanticoke coal miners, Dudrick invented the intravenous feeding method known as total parenteral nutrition, or TPN, which is considered one of the most important breakthroughs in modern surgery.

Known as the father of intravenous feeding, Dudrick is constantly ranked among the most influential doctors in world history for his pioneering work, which he unveiled in July 1967 at age 32. His work is credited with saving millions of lives.

This month marks the 50th anniversary of Dudricks invention and his hometown is planning a big honor for him this week.

It seems very simple and obvious now, but at the time it terrified the medical profession, Dudrick said. A lot of people said it wouldnt work and youre going to kill people. I had to convince doctors not only that it would work, but it would be safe. Soon, it took the world by storm. And the rest is history.

Nanticoke City will recognize Wednesday as Dr. Dudrick Day. A historical marker will be unveiled at the monthly city council meeting that night at Luzerne County Community College. The plaque will eventually be erected outside Dudricks childhood home on West Union Street, which his grandfather built during evenings after long days working underground in the mines.

Dudrick invented TPN while a surgical resident at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia. He always intended to return to the Wyoming Valley, but after his invention, his skill level was too far advanced for what was being practiced in local hospitals.

He became a professor of surgery at Penn. He helped launch the surgery department of the University of Texas Medical School and became chief of surgery at the universitys hospital. He was named chairman of the surgery department at Pennsylvania Hospital, the oldest in the nation. Later, he was tapped as surgery department chairman at the Yale University School of Medicine.

But Dudrick always longed to come back home. And in 2011, he did.

Dudrick, 82, is now the director of the physician assistant program at Misericordia University and is a professor of surgery at Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine.

All these years later, I still wanted to come back home to kind of pay back the people who helped me grow up and support me and allowed me to go off and get a great education, Dudrick said. I had this emotional draw to come back to the area.

Dr. Steven J. Scheinman, president and dean of the Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine, called Dudrick a mythical character whose contribution to medicine ranks in importance with the development of open heart surgery and organ transplantation.

I think its fitting that Stans monumental contribution has been to nourish people. Thats what true philanthropists do they find ways to sustain and uplift people and never forget that all the technological wizardry in the world cannot replace simple caring, nurturing and compassion, Scheinman said.

Scheinman noted Dudrick developed hundreds of scientific and technological advances to invent TPN, but never sought to patent any of his work.

Had he done so, and licensed and profited from them, he would today be a billionaire, Scheinman said. But he felt that to do so would limit access to these advances by patients and their doctors, and limit their benefit, so he intentionally did not do that. So Stan is not just humble and brilliant, he is absolutely selfless.

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UNLV School of Medicine opens with stethoscope ceremony – Las … – Las Vegas Sun

Mikayla Whitmore

UNLV School of Medicine Vice Dean Ellen Cosgrove greets students during a stethoscope ceremony by UNLV School of Medicine for its inaugural class of medical students at the Student Union on July 17, 2017. 60 students were honored and presented with stethoscopes donated by Constantine George,MD.

By Mick Akers (contact)

Published Monday, July 17, 2017 | 5:54 p.m.

Updated Monday, July 17, 2017 | 9:46 p.m.

The long-awaited UNLV School of Medicine kicked off Monday with members of the inaugural class honored with stethoscopes at a ceremony.

The 60 students began orientation and will get into their first course Tuesday with emergency response and population studies.

So many people have worked so hard over the years to get to this day for the start of the first medical school class, UNLV President Len Jessup told the crowd at the one-hour event. Its unbelievable.

Barbara Atkinson, the schools dean, was noticeably absent. She is hospitalized with an undisclosed illness.

She really wanted to be here. No one has worked harder than her or was more excited about today, so it was tough for her, Jessup said. It would have been nice for her to see everything physically today, but I spoke with her this morning and she is very excited about how far weve come.

Many of the students already have a strong connection with Atkinson.

Im very sorry that Atkinson couldnt have been with us today, because she is the heart and soul of the program, student Alex Ma said. You could really feel her presence was missed today.

Although missed at the ceremony, Jessup assured that Atkinsons absence would not be a long-term event.

Shes making really good progress and now shes up and moving around, so its only a matter of time for her physical therapy for however long that takes, he said.

The 60 students for the first class were chosen from more than 900 applicants. There are 31 women and 29 men, all Nevada residents. Each has a scholarship worth $25,000 per year for four years.

That was intentional because we wanted to increase the chances of them staying after to be doctors and serve the community, Jessup said. We knew having students from Nevada, or with strong Nevada ties would help us to do that.

Seventeen of those students are the first to attend college in their families. Two of the students are veterans, and two students went to high school in rural Nevada. The class is made up of 20 percent from groups deemed underrepresented in the medical field.

Well be going out into the community, into some of the medically underinsured areas and really getting to know the neighborhoods, Ma said. Well see what their medical needs are and will report it back to the school to see if theres any chance of us making an impact to the community.

Ma, who previously studied media and filmmaking, said he was both excited and nervous to be part of the first School of Medicine class.

I want to do the best that I can and put my best foot forward because were establishing the culture for the program, he said. They told us, none of you are here by mistake and that really struck me. I always thought that I came here by accident, but the fact there was some much consideration involved and so much thought in the process, it really means a lot.

The main building of UNLV School of Medicine, planned for West Charleston Boulevard across from UMC, is still a few years off. Jessup said the school is in the early design phase, with about $50 million raised so far.

The goal is $100-$125 million in place for the first phase, he said. It all depends on the donors (to how fast UNLV reaches their goal).

Jessup believes the school could reach its fundraising goal as quickly as the end of the year.

The medical school addition will serve as a critical step to UNLVs goal of achieving Tier 1 university status, Jessup said.

You almost cant get to the Tier 1 status without having a medical school, he said. Its very important to the university.

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UNLV School of Medicine opens with stethoscope ceremony - Las ... - Las Vegas Sun

Former USC medical school dean no longer seeing patients; Pasadena police discipline officer – Los Angeles Times

The former dean of USCs medical school is on leave and is no longer seeing patients after the Los Angeles Times reported that he associated with criminals and drug users who said he abused methamphetamine and other drugs, university officials said Monday.

Carmen A. Puliafito led the Keck School of Medicine for nearly a decade before resigning in 2016. He remained on the Keck faculty and continued to represent the university at public events.

Puliafito, a noted ophthalmologist, also continued to accept patients at campus eye clinics as recently as this weekend, according to his USC web page.

The Times published its investigation Monday. USC said in a statement later in the day that it was following all proper procedures to review his status in patient care. He is currently on leave from his roles at USC, including seeing patients.

If the assertions reported in the July 17 Los Angeles Times story are true, we hope that Carmen receives care and treatment that will lead him to a full recovery, the statement said. Officials declined to comment further.

As of Monday, Puliafitos USC web page had been changed to say he is not accepting or seeing patients.

Paul Pringle, Harriet Ryan, Adam Elmahrek, Matt Hamilton and Sarah Parvini

Photos and video show then-head of Keck School of Medicine partying with criminals and drug-users.

Photos and video show then-head of Keck School of Medicine partying with criminals and drug-users. (Paul Pringle, Harriet Ryan, Adam Elmahrek, Matt Hamilton and Sarah Parvini)

Also, a tweet sent Friday by the USC Roski Eye Institute, announcing that Puliafito was among five doctors who had been inducted into the Retina Hall of Fame, was deleted.

Puliafito, 66, is a renowned eye surgeon whose skill in the operating room was matched by his gift for attracting talent and money to the medical school. USC officials hired the Harvard-educated physician in 2007 to raise the profile and ranking of the Keck School.

As dean, he oversaw hundreds of medical students and thousands of professors and clinicians. He was also a key fundraiser for USC, bringing in more than $1 billion in donations, by his own estimation.

Puliafito resigned his $1.1-million-a-year deans post in March 2016, in the middle of the spring term, saying he wanted to explore outside opportunities.

He did not mention that three weeks earlier, a 21-year-old woman had overdosed in his presence in a Pasadena hotel room. The woman was rushed to a hospital, where she recovered. Police found methamphetamine in the hotel room, according to a police report, but made no arrests.

The incident drew no notice, but a tip about it led The Times to investigate.

The newspaper found that during his tenure as dean, Puliafito kept company with a circle of criminals and drug users. They captured their exploits in photos and videos shot in 2015 and 2016.

In one video, a tuxedo-clad Puliafito displays an orange pill on his tongue and says into the camera, Thought Id take an ecstasy before the ball. Then he swallows the pill.

In another, Puliafito uses a butane torch to heat a large glass pipe outfitted for methamphetamine use. He inhales and then unleashes a thick plume of white smoke. Seated next to him on a sofa, a young woman smokes heroin from a piece of heated foil.

The overdose occurred at the Hotel Constance in Pasadena. Just before 5 p.m. on March 4, 2016, a hotel employee called 911 to report that a guest had suffered an apparent overdose. The woman, Sarah Warren, now 22, told The Times she became incapacitated while using drugs with Puliafito.

Pasadena police did not write a report on the incident. After The Times made repeated requests for information, the department acknowledged that an officer at the scene should have prepared a report, and he was belatedly ordered to do so.

In the report, Puliafito is identified as a witness to the overdose and as a friend of the victim.The rest of the document is heavily redacted.

No arrests were made, and Warren told The Times that Pasadena police never interviewed her

A Pasadena councilman said Monday that the Police Department conducted an internal inquiry and determined that the officer handled the case inappropriately.

Councilman Victor Gordo said Police Chief Phillip Sanchez told him the officer might have prematurely determined the overdose was a medical incident, as opposed to a possible crime scene.

Gordo said Sanchez assured him the case was ultimately investigated fully and that appropriate actions have been taken in order to ensure that this does not occur again.

City government spokesman William Boyer said the officer had been disciplined. He declined to say how.

Sanchez did not return a call seeking comment.

Pasadena City Manager Steve Mermell on Monday sent a memo to council members saying that The Times account of the hotel incident reflects poorly on the city and the Pasadena Police Department.

As indicated in the article, initially there was no police report made of the incident, Mermell said. There should have been and that was a failure on the part of our responding officer. Once this came to light, [police] undertook an appropriate investigation and ultimately the involved officer was the subject of disciplinary action.

Still, Councilman Tyron Hampton said he wanted a written explanation for why a police report wasnt promptly prepared.

If that was my daughter or your daughter, youd want to make sure that the people who are here to protect and serve you are doing all they can to protect you, said Hampton, a member of the councils public safety committee. Ill make sure were transparent.

Puliafito did not return a phone call and email seeking comment.

Contact the reporters

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UPDATES:

8:40 p.m.: This article was updated with additional comments from USC and from Pasadenas city manager.

This article was first published at 7:45 p.m.

Excerpt from:

Former USC medical school dean no longer seeing patients; Pasadena police discipline officer - Los Angeles Times

Classes are in session as UNLV medical school opens – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Dr. Constantine George told UNLVs first class of medical school students that stethoscopes should be used as a reminder to keep patients at the center of what they do over the next four years and beyond.

Presenting the stethoscopes was more than a symbolic gesture.

Dr. Constantine George told UNLVs first class of medical school students that the instrument should be used as a reminder to keep patients at the center of what they do over the next four years and beyond.

Without patients, we have no doctors, we have no medical school, we have no clinics, we have no hospitals, said George, who donated and presented the stethoscopes to the students. Without a patient, we dont exist. You have to keep that in mind and that should be your motto starting today for the rest of your career.

Students received the stethoscopes along with a healthy dose of advice Monday in celebration of their first day of studies, and the opening of Southern Nevadas first allopathic school of medicine.

George, a local physician, encouraged students to uphold five core values throughout their medical careers: humility, hospitality, respect, integrity and accountability.

UNLV President Len Jessup called it an incredible moment.

It took a lot of hard work from a lot of people over a decade or more to get to this day, Jessup said. This is a great time for this university.

The students who are receiving full-ride scholarships shared his enthusiasm.

To have everybody finally in one area and to be able to talk with my classmates who have like-minded ideas about how we should practice medicine in Nevada is really exciting, said student Lauren Hollifield, 25, of Las Vegas.

Hollifield said she and her fellow classmates are already talking about the communities they want to help.

Were going to be out into neighborhoods starting Thursday, Hollifield said. So were already discussing what kind of populations we want to work with.

There was one noticeable absence from Mondays ceremony: Founding Dean Barbara Atkinson, who is recovering in the hospital from a major health scare. She suffered a ruptured intestine that triggered a serious infection.

Jessup said he spoke to Atkinson in the hospital Monday morning, who wanted to reassure students that they are in very good hands.

Barbara has built an excellent team and everything is running like clockwork as shes recuperating, Jessup said.

Following the ceremony, Jessup said although the university has no acting dean for the medical school, on-campus and off-campus community members have sent in about eight to 10 nominations to temporarily replace Atkinson. Jessup said soliciting nominations for an acting position is part of university bylaws.

Now were talking to each of the nominees, Jessup said, adding that it helps with accreditation if the dean has a medical doctor degree. We hope to have someone soon.

The medical schools opening day is cause for celebration, but Jessup said university officials are eyeing their next goal: securing the remaining donor funds for a new medical education building.

The university recently received $25 million from the state Legislature, which an anonymous donor matched. He said officials are talking with about eight to 10 additional donors. Officials have estimated the building will cost at least $100 million to construct.

In the meantime, the university has made a temporary home for the students at its existing Shadow Lane campus.

I feel confident the community will step up for that project just as they did for the scholarships, he said.

Contact Natalie Bruzda at nbruzda@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3897. Follow @NatalieBruzda on Twitter.

Did you know?

With 198 physicians per 100,000 residents in 2010, Nevada falls far below the U.S. average of 272 doctors, a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows.

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Classes are in session as UNLV medical school opens - Las Vegas Review-Journal

USC Med School former dean, a Buffalo native, on leave following LA Times expose – Buffalo Business First

USC Med School former dean, a Buffalo native, on leave following LA Times expose
Buffalo Business First
A Buffalo native who led the University of Southern California medical school for a decade has been put on leave following a blockbuster story in Monday's Los Angeles Times alleging he abused methamphetamine and affiliated with prostitutes.

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USC Med School former dean, a Buffalo native, on leave following LA Times expose - Buffalo Business First

SD medical school sees more applicants than seats – The Capital Journal

VERMILLION The University of South Dakotas medical school is taking a different path than the universitys law school and staying where it is due to a significantly high number of applications.

The universitys Sanford School of Medicine is seeing more applicants than it has available seats, the Press and Dakotan reported.

Medical school Dean Mary Nettleman said that more than 850 people apply for the school, but most of the applicants dont have South Dakota ties and arent considered.

Some students do meet our minimum standards for qualification (for acceptance), she said. But they need to brush up on their qualifications before they would be someone who is likely to enter the class. Not every one of those 200 would be a slam dunk to get into medical school. There is no doubt that there are some times where we would turn away good doctors.

The schools strict admission standards require medical students to have strong state ties, which include graduating from a South Dakota high school, having a parent living in the state or being a member of a Native American tribe in or bordering the state.

The school interviews about 200 students before each school to fill about 71 open seats. Of those seats, two are given to MD or PhD students and two are given to Native American students through a grant.

The school currently has no plans to expand but is looking into expanding opportunities for students.

In medical school, there is a lot of what we call experiential learning, Nettleman said. You have your classroom learning, but then you also go out and work with patients directly.

Unlike its medical school, the universitys law school is looking into the possibility of moving to Sioux Falls due to low enrollment.

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SD medical school sees more applicants than seats - The Capital Journal

Liberty Global Launches Platform One Media, Katie O’Connell to … – Variety

Cable giant Liberty Global has moved into production and distribution with the launch of Platform One Media, a new entity backed by private equity firm TPG and helmed by former Gaumont Television and DreamWorks executive Katie OConnell Marsh.

Everyone wants to get into original content to further engage consumers and scale their businesses, Marsh told Variety. It is good timing for Platform One as the [drama] market is robust, and there is a great opportunity in original content.

The new studio will service Liberty Globals platforms, including Virgin Media in the U.K. and Unitymedia in Germany, as well as third parties. We will have the international footprint of a studio, but with a curated, boutique approach, and thats a combination thats rare, OConnell Marsh said. Were not limited by the needs of Liberty Global. Not everything will make sense for them, but that does give us a lever to pull.

OConnell Marsh has put together a seasoned team that includes her former Gaumont colleague Erik Pack, who will run Platform Ones distribution business from London, and Courtney Conte, a former BBC Worldwide Productions exec who will be COO. Elisa Ellis, formerly of DreamWorks, will be chief creative officer. Neil Strum is head of business affairs, and former ABC Studios exec Julia Franz will be a consultant. Conte and Strum have both worked at L.A.-based production company Slingshot Global Media, which was backed by TPG, and along with its development projects, is being absorbed by Platform One.

Liberty Global already has stakes in, or partnerships with, numerous content businesses, such as Discovery, Lionsgate, and Starz. It also backs producer and distributor All3Media.

But Platform One will have its own production and sales operations. The cable giant said last year it was moving into original production, and at least some of these projects are likely to go through Platform One. The first of these originals is expected to be unveiled within weeks.

Bruce Mann, chief programming officer at Liberty Global, said Platform One hands the cable company a well-capitalized, strategic asset. It also gives us the opportunity to work with world-class talent creating high-quality scripted programming, which could potentially feature on Liberty Globals pay-TV platforms in Europe, he said.

OConnell Marsh noted that the Platform One team is familiar with the international market, meaning it has the ability to look beyond the U.S. as a production base. The market is global and Liberty Global has an international footprint, so we have the opportunity to seed projects where they make the most sense, she said.

OConnell Marsh boss will continue as an executive producer on Narcos, the series she placed with Netflix while working at Gaumont.

TPG will fund its investment through Evolution Media, an investment partnership with CAA and Participant Media.TPG Growth has a history of identifying and building companies, such as STX Entertainment, that can redefine their categories, said Bill McGlashan, founder and managing partner of TPG Growth and co-founder and CEO of The Rise Fund.

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Liberty Global Launches Platform One Media, Katie O'Connell to ... - Variety

Dem Congressman Wants a Statue of Liberty Built on Southern Border – Washington Free Beacon

BY: Jack Heretik July 18, 2017 2:29 pm

Democratic Rep.Jos Serrano (N.Y.) on Tuesday spoke out against President Donald Trump's proposed wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, arguing that a Statue of Liberty should be built there instead.

Serrano made the comment at a Homeland Security markup hearing, where he spoke out against the border wall,NTK Network reports.

"This country should never build a wall to keep people out," Serrano said. "Should it deal with an immigration issue? Yes, but never, ever, ever build a wall."

"On the contrary, build another Statue of Liberty on the southern border," Serrano said. "That's our message to the world, that statute, not the wall."

The Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor in New York City served as a symbol for immigrants, primarily from Europe, coming to the United States; it was one of the first images of America they would see as ships sailed in.

Serrano also spoke against the cost of the proposed wall and said that it would lead to divisions in the U.S.

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Dem Congressman Wants a Statue of Liberty Built on Southern Border - Washington Free Beacon

Elroy man arrested after crashing pickup into Liberty Flag building in Reedsbug – Reedsburg Times Press

An Elroy man was arrested July 17 after he allegedly crashed a pickup truck into Liberty Flag in Reedsburg.

Korey J. Hoppman, 21, was arrested for driving under the influence and possession of marijuana, according to the Reedsburg Police Department.

He tried to make a right turn from Vine Street onto South Webb Avenue around 10 p.m. when he fell out of the vehicle and it struck the building, according to the police report. Hoppman, the lone occupant, was not injured.

Hoppman also faces charges of possession of drug paraphernalia, operating without insurance, failure to maintain control of his vehicle and failure to fasten his seatbelt.

He was cited and released pending an appearance in Reedsburg Municipal Court, according to police.

Liberty Flag owner Joshua Gonzalez said he was notified of the incident at around 10:15 p.m. He said he didnt see the vehicle, just the broken window and bowed-in wall where it had struck. Gonzalez and his brother, along with help from passersby, boarded up the window.

He said he carries insurance, but will have to pay a deductible before the damage can be repaired. The extent and cost of damage has not yet been determined.

Gonzalez said he has sought to keep the store open during regular hours. For him, the weather means he won't have to worry about snow or ice getting in through the opening.

Thats actually a perk, he said. The weathers not that bad.

Follow Heather Stanek on Twitter @HStanek1 or reach her at 608-697-6353.

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Elroy man arrested after crashing pickup into Liberty Flag building in Reedsbug - Reedsburg Times Press

National Security: Religious Liberty – Madison County Carrier

Joe Boyles: Guest Columnist

Our country was founded on the principles of religious liberty. In the early 17th Century, Europeans who feared religious repression in their homeland looked across the Atlantic for a new opportunity to found a nation where they could worship God in their own choosing rather than how the state or their king demanded. The new land they founded on the eastern seaboard was dedicated to that liberty.

My own family is an example. Between 1636 and 1642, one-third of the village of Hingham in Norfolk, England fled the old world and braved an ocean voyage aboard leaky sailing ships and the uncertain future of a harsh new land to escape religious repression and the resulting English Civil War. In 1638, the good ship Diligent carried one hundred people making this exodus, among them the five members of the Henry Chamberlin family.

After two months at sea, the Diligent arrived in the waters off the coast of Massachusetts and off-loaded their human cargo and supplies. The voyagers formed a town in the new world they named Hingham after their home in the old world. The Chamberlin family was among them. My maternal grandmother, June Chamberlin Holdren, was a direct descendent of Henry Chamberlin. Another Hingham voyager was the great-great grandfather of Abraham Lincoln. From humble beginnings, great things can happen.

There are countless other examples of people fleeing religious persecution and beginning a new life in the new world. In the latter part of the 18th Century, our founding fathers had religious liberty foremost on their mind as they sought to create a new nation. In 1787, our namesake James Madison called a Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. The original Constitution only mentions religion in one place, Article VI where it states, No religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.

At the urging of his mentor Thomas Jefferson (at this time, Jefferson was in France serving as our ambassador), Madison crafted a Bill of Rights to protect individual citizens from the heavy hand of an overbearing government. These became the first ten amendments to the Constitution and were ratified by the states two years later.

The First Amendment begins this way: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The first clause is referred to as the Establishment Clause while the second is the Free Exercise Clause. The intent of our founders was that we would not have a state religion; and secondly, every citizen would be permitted the right to follow his or her own religious instincts.

Several centuries later it seems, we have lost that perspective. The religious freedom that our ancestors fought so desperately to preserve is under attack in the 21st Century. The Establishment Clause is now interpreted as no public pronouncement of religion is permitted in the public square. By deferring to the first interpretation, the second clause is ignored and all too frequently, violated.

There is a popular notion that the Constitution says that church and state must be separated. The document says no such thing. Those words come from a letter from President Thomas Jefferson to the Danbury (Connecticut) Baptists. A century and a half later, the Supreme Court codified the concept in their 1962 Engel vs. Vitale decision which said that New York could not have a state approved prayer to be read in every public school.

For more than a half century, the secularists working through the courts and bureaucracies have expanded that ruling to the point where the law and popular culture ridicules and restricts those of us who practice our religion. Yet, the Great Commission at the end of the Gospel of Matthew exhorts Christians to go into the world spreading the message of Jesus Christ. Here is a case where church and state are in conflict, pulling in opposite directions.

The recent Trinity Lutheran decision by the current court is landmark in that it reverses the trend of absolute and expanding separation. Trinity Lutheran Church in Columbia, Missouri applied for a grant to improve the surface of their playground and prevent injuries to children. Their application was denied because the government agency felt that by providing the funds to improve the playground that would be tantamount to endorsing Lutheranism and a violation of the First Amendment. In a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court reversed the ruling and allowed the grant application to proceed. It is a reasonable decision; and ultimately, the children of all faiths who enjoy that playground will benefit.

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National Security: Religious Liberty - Madison County Carrier

Sketch of Liberty German & Abigail Williams Killer Released by Indiana Police – Heavy.com

Indiana State Police

Police in Indiana have released a sketch of the man they say killed two teen girls, Abigail Williams and Liberty German, in Delphi. He is seen at right in a photo taken from the cell phone of one of the victims.

Indiana State Police have released a composite sketch of the man believed to have killed two teen girls who disappeared in Delphi five months ago.

The person depicted in the composite sketch is described as a white male between 56 to 510, weighing 180 to 220 pounds, with reddish brown hair, eye color unknown. This sketch depicts a hat that may not be accurate. We ask that you focus on the persons facial features, Indiana State Police said on Monday, July 17.

The composite drawing is the result of information received during the course of this ongoing investigation, police said. Anyone with information about the murders or the person depicted in the composite sketch should call the established tip line at 844-459-5786 and can remain anonymous. Tips may also be emailed to abbyandlibbytip@cacoshrf.com.

Police have been searching for the suspect in the deaths of Abigail Williams, 14, and Liberty German, 13, since they vanished while walking on an abandoned railroad bridge. A reward of more than $230,000 is being offered for information that leads to the suspects arrest. Police previously released a photo of the suspect recovered from Libertys cell phone.

Indiana State PoliceThese photos show the suspect in the killings, police say.

Libby German and Abby Williams were reported missing by their family on February 13. Hundreds of people, including police, firefighters, family, friends and residents of the surrounding community, searched for the girls into the night Monday and again Tuesday morning. Their bodies were found about 12:15 p.m. a day later.

We feel this is very important because it actually gives a better view of the person in the picture that you see down below, Sergeant Kim Riley said at a press conference, Fox 59 reports. It shows a little more facial features it gives you a little more information on what were looking at, who the suspect might be, and thats why we feel that its very important that this picture is out there at this time.

Riley said its important for people to look at the facial features.

Weve got the information out there, the pictures out there, now weve got this composite that we feel it is the same person and we just want to make sure that people realize this picture is this person , Riley said.

Abigail Abby Williams, left, and Liberty Libby German. (Facebook)

Police also previously released audio recorded on Libertys phone in hopes of identifying the man they believe killed the girls.

The man can be heard in the brief audio clip saying what police believe to be down the hill. You can listen to the audio released by police, a six-second loop of that phrase, below:

Liberty had the presence of mind to turn on her cell phone before she was killed, according to police.

This young lady is a hero, Indiana State Police Sergeant Tony Slocum said at a press conference. We are actively looking for this person. This person is our suspect.

Investigators have recovered other video from the phone, but said they are not ready to release it.

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Sketch of Liberty German & Abigail Williams Killer Released by Indiana Police - Heavy.com