Space Robots to the Rescue! How NASA Will Service Aging Satellites – Live Science

The Raven payload, before its integration on the International Space Station in February 2017.

Uncrewed satellites orbiting Earth and other planets in the solar system travel at thousands of miles per hour, their missions spanning years or even decades. They were built to last on their own, but how might space agencies service them if parts break down, or if they run low on fuel?

That's where space robots come in, according to panelists speaking at Future Con, a convention held in Washington, D.C., from June 16-18, where talks and exhibits explored the intersection of cutting-edge science with science fiction and popular culture.

At a June 18 panel "Robots in Space," NASA scientists explained how engineers are designing robots to perform a seemingly impossible precision task in space refueling satellites that are traveling at thousands of miles per hour. [10 Crazy New Skills That Robots Picked Up in 2016]

Space robots are not new to science fiction, and plenty of machines today perform complex scientific tasks on Earth and in space from surgically correcting eye defects to helping astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) during spacewalks. Several robots even dwell on the surface of other worlds, such as the Mars rovers: the now-defunct Spirit and the still-active Opportunity and Curiosity.

Experts from NASA's Satellite Servicing Projects Division (SSPD) appeared at Future Con accompanied by a scale model of a space robot called Raven, part of a mission that will be capable of tracking, locating and refueling autonomous spacecraft including satellites that were not designed to be serviced in space, according to a description on the NASA mission website. The mission, Restore-L, is expected to launch in 2020, NASA reported.

The Raven module recalls the three-eyed raven from the HBO series "Game of Thrones." It also has a trio of "eyes," or sensors, which gather data in visible and infrared wavelengths, and through lidar (radar detection of laser-generated light pulses).

Recently, Raven was sent to the ISS to gather data, Future Con panelist Ross Henry, project manager for the Raven module at SSPD, told the audience. By "watching" vehicles with its three sensors as they approached, docked and departed, Raven gathered valuable information about how spacecraft move, which will help NASA engineers prepare it to locate and track fast-moving satellites, Henry said.

Benjamin Reed, deputy project manager for the Satellite Servicing Capabilities Office at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, and Ross Henry, project manager for NASA's Raven module, pose alongside a Raven replica at the Future Con panel, "Robots in Space."

Since the beginning of the U.S. space program, approximately 5,000 satellites have been engineered, of which around 1,400 are in orbit now. Of those, only one is designed to be refueled the ISS, according to Benjamin Reed, a deputy project manager for NASA's Satellite Servicing Capabilities Office.

Present and future satellite designs will be better suited for servicing in space, but Restore-L will address special trials posed by earlier generations of satellites, thereby significantly extending their useful life spans, Reed said.

Spotting most satellites in the blackness of space is enormously difficult, because they're not "retroreflective," meaning they don't reflect light back to the light source, Reed said. Picture a roadside stop sign its surface is treated to scatter light so you can see it at night, even when the pole holding it up is effectively invisible. Of all the satellites in orbit, only the ISS and the Hubble Space Telescope are retroreflective, Reed said.

And finding the satellite is just the beginning. A refueling mission will also need to get close to the fast-moving spacecraft no small feat when both are traveling around 16,400 mph (26,393 km/h), Reed said.

After Restore-L is in position, the tricky work of refueling begins. Robotic arms controlled by operators in Maryland will cut through a protective shield on the satellite, remove the thermal cover, unscrew several protective caps and pump in highly explosive fuel, Reed told the panel audience. And then Restore-L needs to replace all those caps and covers, in the reverse order.

Once the servicing mission is ready to go, NASA probably won't deploy a squadron of refueling robots more likely, it will design an individual spacecraft capable of refueling a dozen or more satellites, according to Reed.

The project's challenges are considerable, but the progress made by NASA scientists in recent decades is no less incredible, Reed told the audience. The first in-space servicing mission a spacewalk to repair a damaged solar shield on Skylab took place in 1973, and the 40 years that followed saw the design, launch and subsequent servicing of Hubble and the ISS servicing conducted by both humans and robots, he said.

"What's the next 40 years going to bring? I don't know, but it sure is going to be fun to help make that happen," Reed said.

Original article on Live Science.

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Space Robots to the Rescue! How NASA Will Service Aging Satellites - Live Science

NASA Maps Reveal Scope, Intensity of Southwest’s Extreme Heat Wave – The Weather Channel

Story Highlights

A prolonged heatwave brought unusually hot temperatures to the Southwest.

Maps released by NASA show how abnormal the heat has been.

Land surface temperatures have reached upwards of 120 degrees in some places.

The Southwest is no stranger to heat, but June has produced unusually sweltering temperatures in the region, and maps released by NASA shows just how out of the norm the heat wave was.

A prolonged heat wave has affected the Southwest since the middle of June, according to weather.com meteorologist Chris Dolce.Phoenix and Las Vegas both recorded nine consecutive days with highs of 110 degrees or hotter through Sunday.

Maps released by NASA show the land surface temperatures of the Earth, which reflect how hot the planets surface would feel to the touch, according toa release from the space agency.

(MORE:This is Where 120-Degree Temperatures Have Officially Been Recorded the Most)

In themap above, Las Vegas, Phoenix and Needles and Palm Springs in California are all highlighted in a deep red zone, which reflects surface temperaturesof at least 113 degrees.

Phoenix has set three daily record highs in the last nine days and Las Vegas equaled its all-time record high of 117 degrees last week, said Dolce.Palm Springs hit 122 degrees for the third time in six days on Sunday. The town of Needles tied its daily record high of 125 degrees last Tuesday.

The second map shows land surface temperatures between June 15 and 21, compared to the averages for the same time period from 2001 to 2010. The red areas show where temperatures were hotter than the long-term average and the blue show areas that were below average.

The heat wave has taken its toll on millions, leaving at least five people dead,power grids stressed,flights grounded andwildfires raging.Heat has even been blamed for warping train tracks and causing a derailment near Earlimart, California.

In order to deal with the extreme temperatures, the National Weather Service suggests drinking plenty of water, limiting outdoor activity and wearing loose and light-colored clothing.

The NWS also suggests checking on the sick, elderly and those without air conditioning and never leaving children and pets alone in hot vehicles, even for a brief period.

MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Heat WavePlagues the Southwest

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NASA: Hundreds of New Planet Candidates Featured In Kepler Survey Catalog – SpaceCoastDaily.com

By NASA // June 26, 2017

ABOVE VIDEO: Space Station Crew Member Discusses Life in Space with Voice of America

(NASA) NASAs Kepler space telescope team has released a mission catalog of planet candidates that introduces 219 new planet candidates, 10 of which are near-Earth size and orbiting in their stars habitable zone, which is the range of distance from a star where liquid water could pool on the surface of a rocky planet.

This is the most comprehensive and detailed catalog release of candidate exoplanets, which are planets outside our solar system, from Keplers first four years of data. Its also the final catalog from the spacecrafts view of the patch of sky in the Cygnus constellation.

With the release of this catalog, derived from data publicly available on the NASA Exoplanet Archive, there are now 4,034 planet candidates identified by Kepler. Of which, 2,335 have been verified as exoplanets. Of roughly 50 near-Earth size habitable zone candidates detected by Kepler, more than 30 have been verified.

Additionally, results using Kepler data suggest two distinct size groupings of small planets. Both results have significant implications for the search for life. The final Kepler catalog will serve as the foundation for more study to determine the prevalence and demographics of planets in the galaxy, while the discovery of the two distinct planetary populations shows that about half the planets we know of in the galaxy either have no surface, or lie beneath a deep, crushing atmosphere an environment unlikely to host life.

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NASAs Kepler space telescope team has identified 219 new planet candidates, 10 of which are near-Earth size and in the habitable zone of their star. (NASA Image)

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Germany Publishes Meeting Report from Expert Dialogue on Application of Nanotechnologies in the Construction Sector – Nanotechnology News

Home > Nanotechnology Columns > Bergeson & Campbell, P.C. > Germany Publishes Meeting Report from Expert Dialogue on Application of Nanotechnologies in the Construction Sector

Abstract: On June 1, 2017, the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety published meeting documents from the Expert Dialogue on "Opportunities and Risks of the Application of Nanotechnologies in the Construction Sector."

June 26th, 2017

On June 1, 2017, the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety published meeting documents from the Expert Dialogue on "Opportunities and Risks of the Application of Nanotechnologies in the Construction Sector." The documents include a summary of discussion, meeting agenda, and report, Regulation of construction products and possibilities to address (new) risks from nanomaterials. See http://www.bmub.bund.de/fileadmin/Daten_BMU/Download_PDF/Nanotechnologie/nanodialog_5_fd1_zusammenfassung_en_bf.pdf ; http://www.bmub.bund.de/fileadmin/Daten_BMU/Download_PDF/Nanotechnologie/nanodialog_5_fd1_tagesordnung_en_bf.pdf ; and http://www.bmub.bund.de/fileadmin/Daten_BMU/Download_PDF/Nanotechnologie/nanodialog_5_bauprodukte_regulierung_en_bf.pdf During the Expert Dialogue, participants examined and discussed regulations for placing building products on the market and the general test procedures for reviewing their impact on the environment and human health. Topics covered included approaches that consider the whole life cycle of building products and the current status of knowledge about risks for workers and the environment. The summary states that participants saw potential risks in the production and application of nano construction products that could be managed using conventional protection measures. To date the particularities of nanomaterials have not been explicitly considered in the assessment of environmental and health impacts. An integration of respective requirements into the European Union (EU) standards is possible, according to the summary, but would require a longer process, which the EU Member States need to start. A stronger consideration of nanomaterials in national authorizations of construction products could be implemented in Germany via the principles for authorization or the integration of specific requirements in the model building law, respectively. Several stakeholders wished for more transparency on the benefits from the use of nanomaterials, as well as on the types and amounts of nanomaterials used in construction products. The summary states that "[a] comprehensive assessment and an understandable communication of benefits from nanomaterial-containing products as well as the potentially related risks from them, including from their disposal, was stated to be important for the acceptance of such products."

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Printed solar cells thinner than your hair could power your phone – Horizon magazine

Nanotechnology, a science that focuses on understanding materials on an atomic scale, is helping researchers and businesses introduce new technologies that could transform our economy into a greener, less wasteful one.

Nanotechnology as a field has an enormous role to play in moving our planet to sustainable and intelligent living, said Professor Martin Curley from Maynooth University in Ireland, speaking on 21 Juneat the EuroNanoForum conference,in Malta, organisedby the Maltese Presidency of the Council of the European Union and co-funded by the EU.

He explained to an audience of businesspeople and researchers that nanotechnology holds the potential to spark an explosion of innovation.

One area where this innovation could have its biggest impact is with how we generate, use and consume energy.

Speaking at a session dedicated to nanotechnology in clean energy generation, Prof. Alejandro Prez-Rodrguez, from the department of electronics at the University of Barcelona, Spain, said solar energy and photovoltaic (PV) technology itself could be considered a nanotechnology sector.

In all PV technologies and devices we put some nanotechnology If we want to move to devices with higher functionality, lower weight, higher flexibility, different colours, then we need to integrate more nanotechnologies into their materials and architecture.

At the same session, Artur Kupczunas, co-founder of Saule Technologies, explained how his company is using nanotechnology to print solar panels using perovskite crystals, a cheap and highly sensitive mineral that was first found in the Ural Mountains of Russia in 1839.

They produce thin layers of solar cells that are somewhere near one-tenth of the thickness of a single human hair. This innovation could greatly reduce the cost of producing solar energy while transforming any surface into a solar panel, from walls and road-side barriers to the surface of your smartphone.

The most interesting factor is the (reduction of) overall costs, said Kupczunas, explaining that this means the technology could be easily scaled out across the market.

Fuel cell

At the same session, John Bgild Hansen, a senior scientist from Haldor Topse, a Danish chemical engineering company, explained how they have been using nanotechnology to look at the atomic level of gases in order to better understand their properties.

This knowledge contributed to creating a fuel cell for greener biofuel production. Their process extracts pure hydrogen from plant materials while reusing any CO2 emissions created during the process to help power the production cycle, preventing any fossil fuels entering the atmosphere.

This, he believes, is a way to break the bottleneck on biofuels which currently struggle to get public and private support.

If we want to move to devices with higher functionality, lower weight, higher flexibility, different colours, then we need to integrate more nanotechnologies into their materials and architecture.

Prof. Alejandro Prez-Rodrguez, University of Barcelona, Spain

If we want the conveniences we have today from liquid energy carriers (oil, natural gas etc.) for transport hydrocarbons (biogas) are the best, he said.

Storing wind and solar energy during unstable weather is another gap in our sustainable energy future.

Professor Magnus Bergen and his team at Swedens Linkping University are looking into using nanotechnology to harness the molecular properties of a plastic conductive material called PEDOT:PSS. They combine this knowledge with nanocellulose, a product made from plants or oil, to create an organic material that stores energy.

If we make a (PEDOT:PSS) battery the size of a refrigerator it can store (enough energy for) the needs of a family in a house or an apartment for a day, he said.

Because of its ability to charge quickly, it could be a way to compensate for the under- or over- production of wind and solar energy during calm or cloudy days. This, in turn, could break cities dependency on fossil fuels.

You need to store when you are over-producing and release when you are under-producing, Prof. Bergen explained.

Waste-free

Nanotechnology also has the ability to make technology smaller, extend the life-cycle of electronics, improve manufacturing processes, all of which would mean less waste has to go to the landfill.

Speaking at one of the sessions, Joe Murphy, from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, an association in the UK dedicated to promoting waste as a resource, explained nanotechnologies may enable us to create a new material palette that allows future products to be recycled more easily.

At the moment we have a lot of barriers to recycling nanotechnology may enable us to do more, he said.

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More than 32 million people in the EU are employed in the manufacturing industry and 75% of EU exports are manufactured products. ButEurope's position as an industrial powerhouse has been eroding in recent years and its leadership in many important sectors is constantly challenged.

Nanotechnology could reverse this trend by increasing the competitiveness of these different sectors, from energy and pharmaceuticals to electronics and textiles.

The European Commission aims to support nanotechnologies within aEUR 1.8 billionfund for 2018-2020, which will also support next-generation materials as well as biotechnology and newmanufacturing processes.

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Printed solar cells thinner than your hair could power your phone - Horizon magazine

How to train your drugs: from nanotherapeutics to nanobots – Phys.Org

June 26, 2017 Artist's impression of a nanobot. Credit: Yu Ji

Nanotechnology is creating new opportunities for fighting disease from delivering drugs in smart packaging to nanobots powered by the world's tiniest engines.

Chemotherapy benefits a great many patients but the side effects can be brutal.

When a patient is injected with an anti-cancer drug, the idea is that the molecules will seek out and destroy rogue tumour cells. However, relatively large amounts need to be administered to reach the target in high enough concentrations to be effective. As a result of this high drug concentration, healthy cells may be killed as well as cancer cells, leaving many patients weak, nauseated and vulnerable to infection.

One way that researchers are attempting to improve the safety and efficacy of drugs is to use a relatively new area of research known as nanothrapeutics to target drug delivery just to the cells that need it.

Professor Sir Mark Welland is Head of the Electrical Engineering Division at Cambridge. In recent years, his research has focused on nanotherapeutics, working in collaboration with clinicians and industry to develop better, safer drugs. He and his colleagues don't design new drugs; instead, they design and build smart packaging for existing drugs.

Nanotherapeutics come in many different configurations, but the easiest way to think about them is as small, benign particles filled with a drug. They can be injected in the same way as a normal drug, and are carried through the bloodstream to the target organ, tissue or cell. At this point, a change in the local environment, such as pH, or the use of light or ultrasound, causes the nanoparticles to release their cargo.

Nano-sized tools are increasingly being looked at for diagnosis, drug delivery and therapy. "There are a huge number of possibilities right now, and probably more to come, which is why there's been so much interest," says Welland. Using clever chemistry and engineering at the nanoscale, drugs can be 'taught' to behave like a Trojan horse, or to hold their fire until just the right moment, or to recognise the target they're looking for.

"We always try to use techniques that can be scaled up we avoid using expensive chemistries or expensive equipment, and we've been reasonably successful in that," he adds. "By keeping costs down and using scalable techniques, we've got a far better chance of making a successful treatment for patients."

In 2014, he and collaborators demonstrated that gold nanoparticles could be used to 'smuggle' chemotherapy drugs into cancer cells in glioblastoma multiforme, the most common and aggressive type of brain cancer in adults, which is notoriously difficult to treat. The team engineered nanostructures containing gold and cisplatin, a conventional chemotherapy drug. A coating on the particles made them attracted to tumour cells from glioblastoma patients, so that the nanostructures bound and were absorbed into the cancer cells.

Once inside, these nanostructures were exposed to radiotherapy. This caused the gold to release electrons that damaged the cancer cell's DNA and its overall structure, enhancing the impact of the chemotherapy drug. The process was so effective that 20 days later, the cell culture showed no evidence of any revival, suggesting that the tumour cells had been destroyed.

While the technique is still several years away from use in humans, tests have begun in mice. Welland's group is working with MedImmune, the biologics R&D arm of pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, to study the stability of drugs and to design ways to deliver them more effectively using nanotechnology.

"One of the great advantages of working with MedImmune is they understand precisely what the requirements are for a drug to be approved. We would shut down lines of research where we thought it was never going to get to the point of approval by the regulators," says Welland. "It's important to be pragmatic about it so that only the approaches with the best chance of working in patients are taken forward."

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The researchers are also targeting diseases like tuberculosis (TB). With funding from the Rosetrees Trust, Welland and postdoctoral researcher Dr ris da luz Batalha are working with Professor Andres Floto in the Department of Medicine to improve the efficacy of TB drugs.

Their solution has been to design and develop nontoxic, biodegradable polymers that can be 'fused' with TB drug molecules. As polymer molecules have a long, chain-like shape, drugs can be attached along the length of the polymer backbone, meaning that very large amounts of the drug can be loaded onto each polymer molecule. The polymers are stable in the bloodstream and release the drugs they carry when they reach the target cell. Inside the cell, the pH drops, which causes the polymer to release the drug.

In fact, the polymers worked so well for TB drugs that another of Welland's postdoctoral researchers, Dr Myriam Oubera, has formed a start-up company, Spirea, which is raising funding to develop the polymers for use with oncology drugs. Oubera is hoping to establish a collaboration with a pharma company in the next two years.

"Designing these particles, loading them with drugs and making them clever so that they release their cargo in a controlled and precise way: it's quite a technical challenge," adds Welland. "The main reason I'm interested in the challenge is I want to see something working in the clinic I want to see something working in patients."

Could nanotechnology move beyond therapeutics to a time when nanomachines keep us healthy by patrolling, monitoring and repairing the body?

Nanomachines have long been a dream of scientists and public alike. But working out how to make them move has meant they've remained in the realm of science fiction.

But last year, Professor Jeremy Baumberg and colleagues in Cambridge and the University of Bath developed the world's tiniest engine just a few billionths of a metre in size. It's biocompatible, cost-effective to manufacture, fast to respond and energy efficient.

The forces exerted by these 'ANTs' (for 'actuating nano-transducers') are nearly a hundred times larger than those for any known device, motor or muscle. To make them, tiny charged particles of gold, bound together with a temperature-responsive polymer gel, are heated with a laser. As the polymer coatings expel water from the gel and collapse, a large amount of elastic energy is stored in a fraction of a second. On cooling, the particles spring apart and release energy.

The researchers hope to use this ability of ANTs to produce very large forces relative to their weight to develop three-dimensional machines that swim, have pumps that take on fluid to sense the environment and are small enough to move around our bloodstream.

Working with Cambridge Enterprise, the University's commercialisation arm, the team in Cambridge's Nanophotonics Centre hopes to commercialise the technology for microfluidics bio-applications. The work is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and the European Research Council.

"There's a revolution happening in personalised healthcare, and for that we need sensors not just on the outside but on the inside," explains Baumberg, who leads an interdisciplinary Strategic Research Network and Doctoral Training Centre focused on nanoscience and nanotechnology.

"Nanoscience is driving this. We are now building technology that allows us to even imagine these futures."

Explore further: Little ANTs: Researchers build the world's tiniest engine

Researchers have developed the world's tiniest engine - just a few billionths of a metre in size - which uses light to power itself. The nanoscale engine, developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge, could form ...

A "Trojan horse" treatment for an aggressive form of brain cancer, which involves using tiny nanoparticles of gold to kill tumour cells, has been successfully tested by scientists.

For the first time, WSU researchers have demonstrated a way to deliver a drug to a tumor by attaching it to a blood cell. The innovation could let doctors target tumors with anticancer drugs that might otherwise damage healthy ...

A Yale research team has found that by tinkering with the surface properties of drug-loaded nanoparticles, they can potentially direct these particles to specific cells in the brain.

A nanoparticle-based drug delivery system that can sense and respond to different conditions in the body, as well as to an externally applied magnetic field, could enhance doctors' ability to target drugs to specific sites ...

(Phys.org) UNSW chemical engineers have synthesised a new iron oxide nanoparticle that delivers cancer drugs to cells while simultaneously monitoring the drug release in real time.

Researchers have developed a novel platform to more accurately detect and identify the presence and severity of peanut allergies, without directly exposing patients to the allergen, according to a new study published in the ...

After radiation treatment, dying cancer cells spit out mutated proteins into the body. Scientists now know that the immune system can detect these proteins and kill cancer in other parts of the body using these protein markers ...

Scientists have found a way to make carbon both very hard and very stretchy by heating it under high pressure. This "compressed glassy carbon", developed by researchers in China and the US, is also lightweight and could potentially ...

Nanotechnology is creating new opportunities for fighting disease from delivering drugs in smart packaging to nanobots powered by the world's tiniest engines.

Biomedical engineers have built simple machines out of DNA, consisting of arrays whose units switch reversibly between two different shapes.

Tiny nanoparticles offer significant potential in detecting and treating disease - new review

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How to train your drugs: from nanotherapeutics to nanobots - Phys.Org

Cancer hijacks natural cell process to survive – Medical Xpress – Medical Xpress

June 26, 2017 Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Cancer tumours manipulate a natural cell process to promote their survival suggesting that controlling this mechanism could stop progress of the disease, according to new research led by the University of Oxford.

Non-sense mediated decay (NMD) is a natural physiological process that provides cells with the ability to detect DNA errors called nonsense mutations. It also enables these cells to eliminate the mutated message (decay) that comes from these faulty genes, before they can be translated into proteins that can cause disease formation. NMD is known among the medical community for the role it plays in the development of genetic diseases such as Cystic Fibrosis and some hereditary forms of cancers. But not all nonsense mutations can elicit NMD, so until now, it's wider impact on cancer was largely unknown.

Biomedical researchers and computer scientists from the University of Oxford Medical Sciences Division and the University of Birmingham developed a computer algorithm to mine DNA sequences from cancer to accurately predict whether or not an NMD would eliminate genes that had nonsense mutations. The work originally focused on ovarian cancers, and found that about a fifth of these cancers use NMD, to become stronger. This is because NMD ensures that the message from a gene called TP53, which ordinarily protects cells from developing cancer is almost completely eliminated. In the absence of NMD, a mutated TP53 might still retain some activity but NMD ensures that this is not the case.

Based on this research, the team predicts that because cancers essentially feed on NMD, they become dependent on it in some cases. If scientists were therefore able to inhibit or control the process, it is possible that they could also control cancer and prevent the progression of the disease.

Dr Ahmed Ahmed, Co-author and Professor of Gynaecology Oncology at the Nuffield Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology and the head of the Ovarian Cancer Cell Laboratory, at the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine at the University of Oxford, said: "Our first observations of evidence of the role of NMD in ovarian cancer were tantalizing. We found that NMD precisely explained why there was almost no expression of TP53 in certain ovarian cancers. We went on to test the role of NMD in other cancer types and the evidence of the role of NMD was compelling. This opens the door for exciting possibilities for customised treatments including individualized immunotherapies for patients in the future."

Following the ovarian cancer analysis, the team expanded the study to include other cancer types. They analysed about a million different cell mutations in more than 7,000 tumours from the Cancer Genome Atlas covering 24 types of cancer. The team was able to map how each cancer type used NMD revealing the remarkable extent to which NMD helps cancer to survive.

Katherine Taylor, CEO of Ovarian Cancer Action, who part-funded the research, said: "This is very exciting news. Professor Ahmed and his team have identified how cancer cells rely on a process called NMD for their survival. This discovery could help clinicians identify and inhibit the process, giving them much better control of a person's cancer.

"Ovarian cancer is a very complicated disease and survival rates are low, with only 46% of women living beyond five years after diagnosis. So understanding how we can prevent the disease from thriving is imperative if we are to improve the outcome for more women.

"It's fantastic to see how our funding is helping make real progress and we couldn't do this without the generosity of our supporters. We look forward to seeing where Professor Ahmed takes his research next."

Moving forward the team will focus on testing their theory and understanding to what degree stopping the NMD process allows them to control tumours.

Co-author, Dr Christopher Yau, a computational scientist at the Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences, University of Birmingham said: "As a result of these findings, we now plan to apply the same computer algorithm to determine if NMD affects cancer patients in The 100,000 Genomes Project. These investigations may pave the way to new treatment possibilities for NHS patients in the future."

Explore further: Two Oxford research discoveries offer hope for managing ovarian cancer

More information: The full paper citation is 'A pan-cancer genome-wide analysis reveals tumour dependencies by induction of nonsense-mediated decay,' and it will be published in Nature Communications on Monday 26 June 2017.

Oxford University researchers have found a way to detect ovarian cancer early and identified an enzyme that is key in making ovarian cancer more deadly. Their results, published in two journals, provide new research routes ...

Levels of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) detected in a blood test are correlated with the size of ovarian cancers and can predict a patient's response to treatment or time to disease progression, according to a retrospective ...

Testing for a gene commonly mutated in ovarian cancers could pick out patients who will respond well to a promising new class of cancer drugs, a major new study reveals.

A recent discovery by researchers from the Cancer Science Institute of Singapore (CSI Singapore) at the National University of Singapore (NUS) may lead to a new treatment strategy for an aggressive ovarian cancer subtype.

A new discovery that sheds light on the genetic make up of ovarian cancer cells could explain why some women survive longer than others with this deadly disease. A multi-disciplinary team led by the Research Institute of ...

Mutations in the BRCA1 gene are one of the most common risk factors for breast and ovarian cancers. Although tumors that harbor BRCA1 mutations initially respond well to cancer treatments, many tumors eventually become less ...

"Your cancer has metastasized. I'm sorry," is something no one wants to hear a doctor say.

Cancer tumours manipulate a natural cell process to promote their survival suggesting that controlling this mechanism could stop progress of the disease, according to new research led by the University of Oxford.

An international research team has found a way to improve the anti-cancer effect of a new medicine class called 'Smac mimetics'.

A subgroup of patients with osteosarcoma - a form of bone cancer - could be helped by an existing drug, suggest scientists from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and their collaborators at University College London Cancer ...

Some patients with a form of advanced kidney cancer that carries a poor prognosis benefited from an experimental drug targeted to an abnormal genetic pathway causing cancerous growth, according to research led by a Dana-Farber ...

A team of researchers at McMaster University has identified a unique feature of cancer stem cells that can be exploited to kill the deadly cells thought to be the reason that cancer comes back after therapy. Understanding ...

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4 Essential Tips To Optimize Videos For Mobile Screens – hypebot.com

As the future of video continues its move into our pockets, all artists and musicians should keep in mind how their videos will play on a mobile platform. Here we look at four different tips for optimizing your video to make sure it will hold up to a phone or tablet.

_________________________

Guest post by Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0

One of the things that we have to be aware of when making a video these days is how it will play on a mobile device. Heres an excerpt from the YouTube chapter of my Social Media Promotion For Musicians book that provides 4 tips to make sure that your video is effective on a phone or tablet.

Mobile viewers watch videos a lot longer than they do on their desktops. In order to maintain that attention, its important to observe the following:

1. Avoid using tiny text. Make sure that any text you use is readable on any screen that the video might be viewed on, especially a smartphone.

2. Make sure the audio is clear. Great audio is always a plus, but even more so when viewing on a phone. Remember that the speakers are small, so youre not going to hear many of the low frequencies, but thats okay as long as everything is intelligible. Also remember that theres always a lot of ambient noise around a phone if the user isnt wearing earbuds, so make sure that the audio is able to cut through it.

3. Use lots of close-ups. Close-up shots work great on small screens wide shots dont.

4. Test the video on your own phone before you upload it. What good is the video if it doesnt get the point across? The only way youll know for sure is if you test it, and your personal phone is a great place to start.

These are all good tips to keep in mind the next time you create a video. Remember that its more than likely that a great number of your viewers will now be watching on their phone, so compensate for the small screen right from the beginning.

People Watch Longer On Phones And Tablets While most people watch at least a couple of YouTube videos on their laptop or desktop during the day, it turns out that tablet users actually have the longest video engagement. Video distributor Ooyala did a study that determined that tablet users watched 28 percent longer than the desktop average. They also found that tablet viewers are more than twice as likely to finish a video than on a desktop, which was about 30 percent higher than that of mobile devices.

The study also found that desktops and laptops are more likely to be used for short video clips, whereas videos that are 10 minutes or longer make up 30 percent of the hours watched on mobile devices, 42 percent on tablets, and nearly 75 percent on connected TV devices and game consoles.

The bottom line is, if you make a video, be sure that it plays well on a phone and tablet.

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4 Essential Tips To Optimize Videos For Mobile Screens - hypebot.com

James Harrison practically spiking medicine balls on volleyball court … – ESPN (blog)

PITTSBURGH -- In what has become a ritual for a handful of Pittsburgh Steelers who train in Arizona during the summer, James Harrison's crew is taking to the sand courts for some medicine ball volleyball.

And it's no surprise that Harrison had impressive moves in a two-on-two matchup that included teammates Vince Williams and Robert Golden and veteran free-agent linebacker Sean Weatherspoon.

At one point during the game, which Harrison and Williams apparently won 7-0, Harrison jumped and double-clutched before tossing what looks like at least a 20-pound ball over the net.

The game is informally called "Danney Ball," after Harrison's head trainer, Ian Danney of Performance Enhancement Professionals in the Phoenix area -- which has an average high of 104 degrees in June, by the way. These workouts are legitimately tough and ill-advised for the average NFL fan.

Harrison spends his offseasons in Arizona and likes to host teammates for training sessions. Safety Mike Mitchell spent a few months with Harrison before organized team activities and said he gained about 10-12 pounds of muscle during that stretch. Williams looked noticeably more agile in team workouts after training with Harrison.

Harrison, 39, will be with the Steelers as the starting outside linebacker as the team takes the field for training camp on July 28.

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James Harrison practically spiking medicine balls on volleyball court ... - ESPN (blog)

WATCH: James Harrison still loves playing volleyball with a medicine ball – CBSSports.com

James Harrison is 39 years old and entering his 15th season, yet he remains one of the league's most efficient pass rushers.

His longevity is no accident; Harrison's workout regimen certainly plays a role, and that includes his version of beach volleyball. But instead of a regulation volleyball, he prefers a medicine ball.

Harrison and teammate Vince Williams go up against another teammate, Robert Golden and former Falcons linebacker Sean Weatherspoon. If this all sounds familiar, it should; Harrison, Williams, Golden and Ryan Shazier squared off two offseasons ago and again last summer.

And when Harrison isn't playing modified volleyball or terrorizing quarterbacks, he spends his offseason pushing 1,395 pounds like most of us push the lawn mower back to the garage after 30 minutes of cutting grass, or doing135-pound one-handed shoulder presses, or hip-pressing 528 pounds like he doesn't have a care in the world.

Your move, Father Time.

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WATCH: James Harrison still loves playing volleyball with a medicine ball - CBSSports.com

Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine Receives National Award – Texas Medical Center (press release)

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Houston Methodist Center for Performing Arts Medicine Receives National Award - Texas Medical Center (press release)

Marquette Family Medicine Residency Program welcomes new residents – UpperMichigansSource.com

MARQUETTE, Mich. (WLUC) - The Marquette Family Medicine Residency Program is pleased to welcome our new incoming residents, beginning July 1, 2017. The residency program is an education collaboration between UP Health System Marquette, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine.

Match Day was March 17, 2017. The ranking and results are computed by the National Resident Matching Program, a system that matches medical students with residencies. The results for the Marquette Family Medicine Residency Program from this years Match Day are as follows: Victoria Bobik, M.D., of Bear, Delaware, received her undergraduate degree from the University of Delaware, and her medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine.

Dexter Clark, D.O., of Muskegon, Michigan (originally from Skandia), received his undergraduate degree from Northern Michigan University, and his medical degree from Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine.

Cara Crawford-Bartle, M.D., of West Branch, Michigan received her undergraduate degree from Northern Michigan University, and her medical degree from Wayne State University School of Medicine.

Joel Phelps, D.O., of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, received his undergraduate degree from the University of Wisconsin Superior, and his medical degree from A.T. Still University of Health Sciences Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine.

Jeffrey Sweers, M.D., of Grand Rapids, Michigan, received his undergraduate degree from Hope College, and his medical degree from Michigan State College of Human Medicine Grand Rapids.

R. Anne Reinertsen, M.D., of Grosse Pointe, Michigan, received her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan, and her medical degree from Wayne State University School of Medicine.

To learn more about the Marquette Family Medicine Residency Program, please visit http://www.mgh.org/residenc.

--------------------

About Michigan State University College of Human Medicine Upper Peninsula Region The MSU College of Human Medicine Upper Peninsula Region Campus works in conjunction with the UP Health System-Marquette to coordinate the training of family medicine residents and Michigan State University College of Human Medicine medical students. Since its inception in 1974, 278 medical students and 192 resident physicians have graduated from the two programs. Currently, approximately 30 percent of the students who graduated from MSU College of Human Medicine UP Campus and 50 percent of family medicine resident graduates are practicing across the Upper Peninsula Region.

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Marquette Family Medicine Residency Program welcomes new residents - UpperMichigansSource.com

States rights might be best medicine for TrumpCare – The Hill (blog)

The Senate vote is a declaration of war

When senators vote on health care they will come face to face with a phantom which has stalked them since Obamacare was first proposed. This is the moment of no return. This will change everything.

This will not only throw millions of Americans off health coverage. Passage of the bill will actually take American lives. And like the Civil War and the two world wars, it will take lives in every town in America and in every extended family in America.

Today we have come to a critical turning in our history which we have been slouching toward for more than a decade. Americans no longer trust their president. We no longer trust Congress.

We in the liberal states are turning now to governors and state legislatures to solve our problem in unprecedented ways.

And California Gov. Jerry Brown is leading the way.

Trumpcare 2.0 has the same stench - and effect - as the bill the House Republicans and the White House slapped together last month: Millions will lose healthcare coverage while millionaires profit, Brown said to the Los Angeles Times.

Not just an idle rant.

Brown is redefining the meaning and purpose of a state. This will redefine America because other states and even nations sympathetic to him more sympathetic to Brown than they are to Trump are following his initiatives, joining him and ignoring Trump.

But can they do that?

Can U.S. states right Trumps wrongs, asks Barry Eichengreen, Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and a former senior policy adviser at the International Monetary Fund.

U.S. President Donald TrumpDonald TrumpCarter Page questioned in FBI Russia investigation: report Major progressive group rolls out first incumbent House endorsement Overnight Finance: CBO: 22M more uninsured with Senate ObamaCare bill | Trump gets green light for partial travel ban | GOP: ObamaCare taxes must go MORE, with the help of a Republican-controlled Congress, is undermining many of the fundamental values that Americans hold dear, he writes in Project Syndicate. He is jeopardizing their access to health care by seeking to repeal the 2010 Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). His budget proposes massive cuts in everything from early childhood education to food stamps and medical research. His tax reform plan, and especially its much lower top rate for pass-through business income, implies significant further redistribution of income to the wealthy.

It is a good time to remember that ours is a federal system enshrined in the Tenth Amendment of the Constitution, which stipulates that all powers not expressly assigned to the federal government are reserved to the states he writes.

As he indicates, that presents the problem.

They could invoke the Commerce Clause of the Constitution as part of an effort to prevent states from signing climate accords with foreign countries, he says. They could eliminate the federal deductibility of state taxes to increase the cost of funding state programs. They could curtail federal support for public services in sanctuary cities and states with immigrant-friendly policies.

But states rights and the Tenth Amendment are catching on as an anti-Trump strategy in blue states. Theyre not just for us New Hampshire hillbillies anymore.

And we even heard from John Vogel, a professor at the Tuck School at Dartmouth pitching states rights on the most liberal Vermont Public Radio this past week.

It might be time to consider a council of governors or other leaders in these states to meet to collectively consider their efforts and even a policy planning group which would plan collective and unified action within the blue states both ideas that the great ambassador George Kennan suggested for the U.S. which never materialized. And such a thing might already be at hand in fledgling form.

Professor Trumps curious tutorial tour through the tangled landscape of American checks and balances continues to take enlightening new turns, writes D.J. Tice of the Star Tribune in Minnesota. This month, governors of mainly Democratic-leaning states, including Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton, have forged something called the U.S. Climate Alliance.

Surely the new U.S. Climate Alliance could take on other issues like health care, immigration and the commerce clause.

Worth noting that Jeb Bush supports a constitutional convention in order to remove restraints on the commerce clause which has given the federal government far more regulatory power than the Founders intended, he says.

But as he opined recently, who cares what I think?

Certainly not the Republicans.

But libertarians might.

Maybe Jeb should get in touch with his old pal William Weld, the most popular (and best) Republican governor in the history of Massachusetts who ran as VP on the Libertarian ticket in 2016 and begin again from scratch with a few other exiles.

Bernie Quigley is a prize-winning writer who has worked more than 35 years as a book and magazine editor, political commentator and reviewer.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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States rights might be best medicine for TrumpCare - The Hill (blog)

Lisa Wong: Conducting an ensemble of music, medicine, and education – STAT

A civil war over painkillers rips apart the medical

A civil war over painkillers rips apart the medical community and leaves patients in fear

Hes 20. Has brain cancer. And is caught in

Hes 20. Has brain cancer. And is caught in the crossfire between the FDA and a

Meet one of the worlds most groundbreaking scientists. Hes

Meet one of the worlds most groundbreaking scientists. Hes 34.

More lawmakers want the Army to hold a hearing

More lawmakers want the Army to hold a hearing on Zika vaccine pricing

Pharmalittle: Shkreli jury selection begins; Will Trump pressure India

Pharmalittle: Shkreli jury selection begins; Will Trump pressure India to change patent laws?

Modest clinical trial win for Seattle Genetics, New Ra

Modest clinical trial win for Seattle Genetics, New Ra Pharma data on tap

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Lisa Wong: Conducting an ensemble of music, medicine, and education - STAT

Media Advisory: At long white coat ceremony, UB medical school welcomes 190 new physicians to Western New York – UB News Center

BUFFALO, N.Y. One hundred and ninety newly minted MDs will mark a critical milestone in their professional lives at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 27, at the Center for Tomorrow on the University at Buffalo North Campus. Thats when they become medical residents of the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB.

Afterward, all medical residents will gather outside for a group photo. A reception will follow.

This years class of residents of 81 women and 109 men includes 120 U.S. citizens and 70 citizens of at least 17 other countries, including 24 from Canada, 9 from Pakistan and six from India.

Forty of the new residents are UB graduates, 32 of whom graduated from the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and eight of whom graduated from the School of Dental Medicine.

After graduation from medical school, medical residents are matched with a residency program where they train in a medical or surgical specialty from three to seven years.The residents who take part in Tuesdays ceremony chose to start their careers as physicians in Buffalo at UB. They will provide patient care under supervision of UB medical school faculty in Western New Yorks hospitals and clinics.

The long white coat is not only a symbol of the profession but it also symbolizes the trust patients place in their physicians and the responsibility to act professionally while serving patients and the public, said Roseanne Berger, MD, senior associate dean for graduate medical education in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and associate professor of family medicine.

To celebrate the transition, UBs newest medical residents will don the long white coats that indicate they have graduated from medical school, leaving behind the short white coats they received when they entered medical school.

At the ceremony, medical residents recite the Hippocratic Oath and the UB Resident Code of Conduct.The ceremony occurs on Education Day, during which residents receive information on topics ranging from health issues in Buffalos population and communication and cultural issues to patient privacy, quality improvement and safety. There also is a focus on resident well-being, highlighting institutional support resources and advice from current residents.

Its part of UBs five-day medical resident orientation which includes background on UB, the Western New York community, its population and its health care systems. During orientation, residents visit UB-affiliated teaching hospitals, interact with program faculty and, in some cases, work with UBs Clinical Competency Center to assess interactions with actors playing patients. Before arriving on campus, residents completed online tutorials, including modules on addiction, pain medicine and safe prescribing practices.

The event was planned in collaboration with UBs Richard Sarkin/Emeritus Faculty Chapter of the Gold Humanism Honor Society, which launched the tradition of holding white coat ceremonies in the 1990s to symbolize that humanism remains at the core of all medical care.UB is one of only 14 medical residency programs in the U.S. that is home to a residency chapter of the Gold Humanism Honor Society.

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Media Advisory: At long white coat ceremony, UB medical school welcomes 190 new physicians to Western New York - UB News Center

Seth Thomas, missing USC medical student, found dead in Peru – Fox News

A University of South Carolina Medical School student who vanished in South America's Andes Mountains was found dead over the weekend, school officials announced.

Seth Thomas apparently died from a hiking accident, WIS reported. The second-year medical student was on a medical outreach mission trip in Peru when he disappeared during a hike Friday afternoon.

It is so tragic that someone who was dedicating his life to help those in need was taken from us before he could achieve his lifes dreams, USC President Harris Pastides said in a statement.

ANGUISH AS TRAPPED WORKERS CALL FOR HELP IN PERU FIRE

Thomas father, Heyward, asked for prayers on Facebook when he was informed that his son was missing. Local investigators and friends searched for Seths body.

Heyward posted on Facebook Sunday night that Seth was hiking up to a cross on a mountain in Cuzco on Friday. He added, Seth fell off a cliff near the cross. It could be that it had gotten dark or he lost his footing.

The student was working to improve womens health in a clinical program at a Peruvian non-profit. The program was through Augusta University.

The 24-year-old was scheduled to return to the United States next week.

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Seth Thomas, missing USC medical student, found dead in Peru - Fox News

Why medical schools are teaching self-care alongside patient care – Peoria Journal Star

Laura Nightengale Journal Star healthcare reporter @lauranight

PEORIA As concerns of depression and burnout among physicians rise nationally, a group of leaders at the University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria are working to equip new doctors to avoid the issues plaguing current physicians.

Faculty, along with leaders from OSF HealthCare and UnityPoint Health-Peoria, are working to find ways to incorporate stress relief into medical school curricula. Since their inception, medical schools have taught training physicians how to care for patients, but never before has self-care been part of the conversation.

Wickham leads UICOMP's committee investigating how best to address the issue during training. First, the focus is on residents and first-year medical students who will be studying at the Peoria campus for the first time this fall. Eventually, Wickham said, wellness will be incorporated throughout medical school training.

With mounting research about elevated risk of burnout, depression and suicide among physicians, awareness is heightened. The body that accredits medical schools has issued a mandate that schools, at minimum, must provide a tool for self monitoring, but some schools are taking greater action.

"It's a very complex issue, but I think with the national attention that's being paid to this now, it gives everyone a mandate to move forward," Wickham said.

Mayo Clinic has developed a wellbeing index a software-based approach that uses yes/no questions and agree/disagree statements to assess burnout in physicians and other medical personnel that is being considered for use at UICOMP. Faculty members are also undertaking research projects to assess burnout levels in medical students and residents.

Dr. Bento Suares professor, senior associate dean for research and head of the department of cancer biology and pharmacology is one of several faculty at UICOMP and Methodist College of Nursing who have been trained in a program developed at Emory University called Cognitively Based Compassion Training, or CBCT, which will be one part of the overall approach to improve student wellness. CBCT incorporates meditation and mindfulness training to help people better recognize, understand and control their emotions.

Empathy, Suares explains, is an essential tool for practicing medicine, but sometimes manifests itself as a feeling of shared suffering. CBCT can help students learn to see patients in pain, but rather than suffer alongside them, aspire to improve their situation.

Part of that is rethinking how physicians relate to their patient. In reality not all patients can be saved in fact, all of them will die sooner or later under varying circumstances. A physician who suffers with every death quickly accumulates a great deal of suffering.

"That ability to transition from the suffering with to the aspirational mode, that's a skill that needs to be developed. Otherwise when you are out there facing this challenge, you just might not be able to," Suares said. "This is a skill that we have to develop. Or else we're going to harm ourselves and we're not going to be able to help others as it was our intention, or else why would we have chosen this profession in the first place?"

CBCT is being taught at UICOMP through eight weekly sessions, 90 minutes each. So far, most of the students in CBCT have been faculty and community leaders, with a small number of residents and medical students. This fall, the course will be offered to all students, though it will not be required.

During CBCT, students will practice mindfulness: paying close attention to their emotions, raising their level of introspective awareness and controlling wandering thoughts. That will be followed by how to create emotional space: how to see a problem, without feeling like a part of the problem. Finally, comes self-compassion: being kinder to themselves and realistic in their expectations of success.

"We have the ability with this greater awareness of the present moment to catch a spark before it becomes a fire," Suares said.

Laura Nightengaleis the Journal Star's health and lifestyle reporter. She can be reached at 686-3181 or lnightengale@pjstar.com. Follow her on Twitter @lauranight.

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Why medical schools are teaching self-care alongside patient care - Peoria Journal Star

Dalhousie medical school boosts screening of would-be doctors – CBC.ca

The medical school at Dalhousie University is now screening prospective students for character traits such as empathy and integrity, and has reviewed its admissions process for first time in 10 years, following high-profile cases at the Halifax university of would-be doctors in trouble with the law.

Starting with applications for entrance in 2018, Dalhousie is using an online video-based tool to look at the non-academic aspects of potential students,such as his or her empathy, integrity, resiliency, communication and collaboration skills.

The same system the Computerized Assessment for Sampling Personal Characteristics(CASPer) is alsoused at schools including McMasterUniversity in Hamiltonand the University of Ottawa.

"Med students are expected to adhere to a code of conduct, and their fitness for the study and practice of medicine is continuously evaluated,"said university spokespersonJanetBryson in an email to CBC News.

The changes follow the case of WilliamSandeson,who was convicted last week of first-degree murderin thedeath of fellow Dalhousie student Taylor Samson.Sandesonwas just days away from beginning classes at the university's medical schoolwhen he shot and killed Samson in August2015.

William Sandeson, seen here in a 2015 police photo, was convicted last week of first-degree murder in the death of fellow Dalhousie student Taylor Samson. (Court exhibit)

In an unrelated case that same month, medical student Stephen Tynes was charged with threatening to kill an associate dean and her daughter, along with others. The university banned Tynes from all campuses after he was charged. He was later convicted of weapons charges.

Bryson did not draw a direct link between those cases and changes to the admissions procedures.

She said the academic history, extracurricular activities and references of medical school candidates were already being screened. Prospective students also underwent criminal background checks. (Neither Sandeson nor Tynes had criminal convictions prior to being admitted to Dalhousie.)

Past candidates have also been screenedby a committee of about 20 faculty and students. Since 2009would-be doctors have also been subject to a process the university calls the "multiple mini-interview."

"These are in-depth interviews where candidates interact with and are observed by evaluatorsin 10 separate stations,"Brysonsaid.

"The interviews are designed to assess candidates' personal qualities, like critical thinking, awareness of societal health issues, communication skillsand ethics."

Last year, the dean of the medical school ordered an independent external review of the admissions process. The last such review was done a decade ago.

The review was led by Dr. Gus Grant, registrar of the Nova Scotia College of Physicians and Surgeons, the body which regulates and licenses doctors in the province.

Grant's review is now being circulated among facultyat the school and will be released publicly once the school has responded.

In his role as registrar, Grant has the ultimate decision over whether someone is allowed to practice medicine in Nova Scotia.

He told CBC News there is nothing in the regulations that would preclude someone with a murder conviction from applying for a medical licence. But Grant said part of his job is to protect the reputation of the profession in the eyes of the public.

"Refusing to licence a murderer could be based entirely on the public trust in the profession," Grant said.

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Dalhousie medical school boosts screening of would-be doctors - CBC.ca

Supreme Court will hear religious liberty challenge to gay weddings – USA TODAY

The U.S. Supreme Court will consider if a Colorado baker discriminated against a same-sex couple by refusing to make a wedding cake for them. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

Jack Phillips, owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood, Col., outside Denver, wanted his refusal to bake a cake for a gay couple because of religious objections to be heard by the Supreme Court.(Photo: Richard Wolf, USAT)

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court agreedMonday to reopen the national debate over same-sex marriage.

The court willhear a challenge from a Colorado baker who lost lower court battles over his refusal to create a wedding cake for a gay couple. Like a New Mexico photographer three years ago, the baker cited his religious beliefs.

The case will be scheduled for the 2017 term that begins in Octoberand most likely will be heard later in the fall.

The justices -- who upheld same-sex marriage nationwide in a landmark 2015 ruling -- apparently decided that laws banning discrimination based on sexual orientation do not mean that merchants' obligations to same-sex couples are baked in the cake.

Colorado and New Mexico are among 22states with such laws. As a result, Jack Phillips, the owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop, previously lostin his effort to claim that the First Amendment protects his freedom of expression.

Twenty-eightstates have no such laws, so gays and lesbians freed to marry by the Supreme Court in 2015 still can face discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations. A Kentucky appeals court last month upheld a printer's right to refuse to print shirts promoting a gay pride festival, reasoning that his actions did not discriminate based on sexual orientation.

Phillips, like Washington State florist Barronelle Stutzman and others across the country,hasargued thathis religious objections are paramount. Rather than bake for same-sex weddings, he stopped making wedding cakes altogether, at a substantial revenue loss.

On the other hand, said James Esseks, who directs gay rights issues for the American Civil Liberties Union,"If you go with the bakery here, you've just shot this humongous hole through the nation's civil rights laws."

The key to the outcome of similar cases appears to hinge on whether states have laws barring discrimination against gays and lesbians, or whether they have laws protecting religious liberty.

The decision to hear the case next fall came as a surprise after it had been pending on the justices' calendar for months. The delay led both sides to assume the court would deny the case and was awaiting a conservative justice's dissent.

By agreeing to consider the religious exemption, the court is threatening to reverse the lower courts. Justice Anthony Kennedy -- who was believed to be considering retirement Monday -- will be the key vote once again, as he has been in the past on gay rights issues.

In his landmark opinion striking down state same-sex marriage bans, Kennedy appeared to leave the door open to challenges from those who object to participating in same-sex nuptials.

"It must be emphasized that religions, and those who adhere to religious doctrines, may continue to advocate with utmost, sincere conviction that, by divine precepts, same-sex marriage should not be condoned," he said.

Read more:

Supreme Court declares churches eligible for some public funds

Supreme Court may be converting on religion

Religious liberty vs. civil rights: A balancing act

The Supreme Court has sided with religious believers before, most recently by allowing anexception to the Affordable Care Act's requirement that most businesses offer health insurance coverage for contraceptives that some equate with abortion.

Phillips' legal battle began several years ago, when Charlie Craig and David Mullins came in to order a cake for their wedding reception. While the wedding was held in Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage had been legal since 2004, the celebration was planned for back home in Colorado.

We are disappointed that this case continues," Mullins said Monday. On the other hand, Craig said, "It is overwhelming to find yourself going to the Supreme Court."

Phillips, a born-again Christian, refused to bake the cake. Craig and Mullins filed a civil rights complaint and won, first before an administrative court judge, then before the state Civil Rights Commission, and finally before the Colorado Court of Appeals. The state Supreme Court refused to hear the case.

The U.S. Supreme Court passed up its first chance to hear a similar case in 2014 eight years after Elaine Huguenin and her husband, Jonathan, told a lesbian couple that their Albuquerque photo studio only worked "traditional weddings."

The Huguenins' petition to the Supreme Court was based on their freedom of speech and expression, which they interpreted as the right to decide what messages their photography conveys.

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Supreme Court will hear religious liberty challenge to gay weddings - USA TODAY

WNBA’s Liberty make history as first team to ever participate in New York Pride parade – ESPN

By D'Arcy Maine | Jun 26, 2017 espnW.com

Over 40,000 people marched in New York's Pride parade on Sunday, and among them were some pretty famous faces. Joining the likes of Mayor Bill de Blasio and Governor Andrew Cuomo, seven members of the New York Liberty took part in the festivities with a team float and became the first professional sports team to ever participate.

So, yeah, that's pretty awesome.

Shavonte Zellous, Amanda Zahui B, Kiah Stokes, Bria Hartley, Brittany Boyd, Rebecca Allen, and Nayo Raincock-Ekunwe were there, as well as head coach Bill Laimbeer, associate head coach Katie Smith and team president Isiah Thomas.

And, because duh, it's Pride, it looks like a fun time was had by all. But here's some proof if you don't believe me.

All. The. Squad. Goals.

See something entertaining on social media that you think deserves to be shared? Let me know on Twitter, @darcymaine_espn.

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WNBA's Liberty make history as first team to ever participate in New York Pride parade - ESPN