EU tests limits of drug pricing freedom in landmark probe – Reuters

By Foo Yun Chee and Ben Hirschler | BRUSSELS/LONDON

BRUSSELS/LONDON The first ever EU antitrust probe into excessive drug pricing is taking the European pharmaceuticals industry into uncharted territory, unnerving some companies and lawyers worried about the reach of market intervention.

It comes as drugmakers face global pressure over the high cost of prescription medicines, with particular anger focused on makers of older generic products who exploit limited competition to force through big price rises.

The European Commission's move last month to investigate if Aspen Pharmacare made "unjustified" hikes of up to several hundred percent in the cost of five old cancer drugs puts the EU executive in the vanguard of such enforcement.

In the past, the Commission has acted on specific market abuses, such as agreements between manufacturers of branded drugs and generics firms to delay the entry of cheaper copies.

The latest broad charge of excessive pricing, also described by Brussels as "price gouging", potentially sets a precedent for more direct action, especially if officials rely on a formula for what is a reasonable or justified profit margin.

"It's a huge threat to the industry and companies should be watching this closely," said Gianni De Stefano at law firm Hogan Lovells.

"Normally, in Europe, drug companies just have to negotiate with a national regulator on pricing. Now there is the prospect of additional European-level oversight and that is scary for the industry."

South Africa-based Aspen, which says it is committed to fair and open competition, could be fined up to 10 percent of its global turnover, or some $290 million, if found guilty by EU antitrust regulators.

Adrian van den Hoven, director general of the Medicines for Europe industry group representing generic drugmakers, is worried about the implications of the EU probe, while stressing he in no way condones any anti-competitive behavior.

"The investigation may be needed to stop bad behavior," he told Reuters. "However, this should not lead to a set of fixed principles that are not adapted to different situations, which then creates additional risks and which could increase the pressure on companies to withdraw important older medicines that patients need."

"UNFAIR" PRICES

EU law bans "unfair" prices, and the Aspen case follows controversy over U.S. market price hikes by the likes of Valeant and Turing Pharmaceuticals, previously headed by Martin Shkreli.

Shkreli, now on trial for fraud, was pilloried in 2015 for increasing the cost of an anti-parasitic medicine by more than 5,000 percent.

Maarten Meulenbelt, partner at law firm Sidley Austin, said the European Commission might be trying to fire a warning shot to make drug firms more cautious, rather than wanting to extend its remit into price regulation.

There certainly appear to be grounds for concern. A study by British academics in January found European prices for several off-patent cancer drugs had risen by more than 100 percent in the past five years.

National authorities have also been taking a more aggressive stance, with Italy's competition authorities fining Aspen $5.5 million last year over its cancer drugs and British regulators imposing a record fine of $107 million on Pfizer for steep price increases for an old epilepsy medicine.

But Miguel de la Mano, a former European Commission competition economist who now works at consultancy Compass Lexecon, said price increases even of several multiples were not necessarily evidence of market abuse.

"The Commission should proceed with extreme caution," he said.

The focus on excessive pricing comes at a time when there are also concerns about occasional shortages of some hospital drugs, due to production problems, unexpected spikes in demand and a limited number of suppliers.

The Aspen case centers on five drugs used in hospitals that are no longer protected by patents, which the firm originally acquired from GlaxoSmithKline.

Some lawyers believe the same principles could in future be applied to patented drugs, although Fiona Carlin, partner at Baker McKenzie, doubts the Aspen probe signals more intervention on innovative medicines, since officials will not want to take action that could undermine innovation incentives.

Any move to analyze a medicine's price based on cost plus a margin would go against the grain of the industry's drive to tie drug prices to clinical value - a key message for companies in the face of public disquiet about their marketing strategies.

(Editing by Adrian Croft)

CHICAGO A study testing the value of DNA sequencing as part of routine medical care showed that roughly one in five people carried a mutation linked with rare disease, but few actually benefited from that information, researchers reported on Monday.

WASHINGTON Twenty-two million Americans would lose their health insurance coverage over the next decade under draft legislation unveiled by Senate Republicans last week, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office said on Monday.

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EU tests limits of drug pricing freedom in landmark probe - Reuters

Bring Judasim and Freedom into the Eternal Fourth Dimension – HuffPost

New York and Israel Jewry in contrasting policies this week.

Wikimedia Commons

Two seemingly disconnected news items this week illustrate the contrasting realities defining American Jewry and Israeli Jewry. In New York, rabbis from the post-denominational congregation Bnai Jeshrun announced they would perform intermarriages. Reaction seems quite muted. Meanwhile, in Jerusalem, Prof. Asa Kashers proposed Academic Code of Ethics discouraging professors from politicizing the classroom triggered a firestorm.

While each story has its own back-story, the juxtaposition is powerful.

Lifting the intermarriage ban elicited yawns because it is the latest of so many examples of non-Orthodox American Jewrys if-it-feels-good-do-it approach to Judaism, reflecting the American tropism toward less clarity, less commitment, less meaning.

Imposing academic limits governmentally is yet another example of Israels command-and-control approach, reflecting the Israeli tropism toward a heavier hand rather than a lighter touch, which risks suffocating, not liberating. Judaism, at its best, like a light, fluffy omelet avoids either extreme: it must be more substantive, more satisfying, than the American variety but, if beaten too hard it turns rubbery and is no longer tasty.

Assessed historically, both an intermarriage ban and government-imposed academic restrictions result from modern Jewrys two greatest achievements. After three millennia of hatred, Jews are loved and free in America and in most countries where we live. And after two millennia of homelessness, Jews are sovereign and free in Israel.

As the clich goes, Jews are being loved to death: we would not have so much intermarriage if we werent so accepted. Faced with this epidemic among the non-Orthodox, many rabbis are solving the problem by declaring it an opportunity.

Its awkward, because the intermarriage issue involves the most intimate decision people make. Moreover, so many of us know and genuinely love the non-Jewish partners in intermarriages that condemning the phenomenon feels like rejecting them. It gets very personal, very quickly.

Yet you cannot build something lasting on a foundation of mercury.

Having nothing solid at its core makes everything about American Judaism fluid, sloppy, idiosyncratic, excessively personal and ultimately doomed. If its not definable its not sustainable. How do you pass on a mushy, feel-good feeling? Thats not how we survived until now.

To preserve the Jewish future, we cannot stop condemning intermarriage as a phenomenon; to preserve many current Jewish relationships, we continue befriending non-Jews who love and marry Jews.

The way out of the conundrum is to learn from the Orthodox and from secular Israelis, who win the battle against intermarriage by not fighting it. Intermarriage can only be fought pre-emptively, decades earlier.

In todays modern world emphasizing pluralism, choice and autonomy, once you are in the defensive position that many American Jews find themselves in, of guilt-tripping or condemning a couple in love, the battle is lost. Only by raising children in rich, meaningful, three-dimensional Jewish environments, where they grow up understanding Judaism as something long-lasting and historical, something broad and communal, and something deep and meaningful, can we make their Jewish identities so precious and comprehensive that they could no more give that up than change their genders.

When that Jewish experience really works, it enters an eternal fourth dimension. Being properly rooted, centered and steeped in meaningful Jewish experiences inevitably adds to the identity what Einstein noted in space: the cosmic element of time and timeliness. Judaism resonates because it is not just a construct located in the moment. Rather, as a 3,500-year-old heirloom building toward the future, it has an eternal, timeless dimension as well. That added dimensionality makes it cosmic, extra powerful, even if you dont believe in God.

Judaisms 4-D identity is relevant to the academic debate too. Prof. Kasher is one of Israels leading ethicists, hailed as the architect of the IDFs ethics code. Kasher has drawn up a thoughtful, subtle code of academic ethics every professor should follow.

We shouldnt impose our politics on our students. We fail them when we propagandize rather than educating.

And any Israeli academics with any self-respect, with any consistency, should resign after supporting a boycott of Israel, which means boycotting themselves. Taking a stand rhetorically then violating it essentially is the mark of a fool, not just a hypocrite.

But heres the rub. As much as I want my colleagues endorsing Prof. Kashers code, I want them internalizing it voluntarily. The great opportunity Israel offers of sovereignty, of state power, requires Jews, after millennia of homelessness, to learn how to use power and learn when not to use it. Self-imposed academic restrictions are principled; state-imposed ones are oppressive. The problem is not with Kashers code its with any kind of government restrictions which would inevitably lead to nightmares forcing compliance, including financial blackmail, McCarthyite review boards, student informers and other professional penalties.

Freedom in Israel and elsewhere, like Jewish identity everywhere, needs that timeless, ineffable fourth dimension.

State laws belong to the more prosaic part of life, the warp and woof of the mundane we all need to function properly.

Phenomena like Jewish identity, like the academic mission, have their practical sides, but only really work when their more cosmic sides, their fourth dimension, are nurtured and respected. In a modern Jewish world blessed with so much freedom, and the old-new renewal of Jewish sovereignty, we need to learn how to indulge our freedoms within limits and how, by embracing limits and frameworks voluntarily, we can find deeper meaning in that eternal fourth dimension.

Gil Troy is the author of The Age of Clinton: America in the 1990s. His forthcoming book, The Zionist Ideas, which updates Arthur Hertzbergs classic work, will be published by The Jewish Publication Society in Spring 2018. He is a Distinguished Scholar of North American History at McGill University. Follow on Twitter @GilTroy.

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Bring Judasim and Freedom into the Eternal Fourth Dimension - HuffPost

Religious freedom, anti-discrimination laws to go head-to-head in Supreme Court case – The Week Magazine

Climate scientists are uncertain if the world's "natural sponges," which for decades have helped absorb global carbon dioxide emissions, will be able to keep up with the amount of emissions being produced from burning coal, oil, and natural gas, The New York Times reports. In fact, the sponges might already be failing: Even as the amount of carbon dioxide being produced has stabilized in recent years, carbon dioxide levels in the air rose at record rates in 2015 and 2016.

That's where concerns about the "natural sponges," like the land surface and the ocean, come into play. "In essence, these natural sponges were doing humanity a huge service by disposing of much of its gaseous waste," the Times writes. "But as emissions have risen higher and higher, it has been unclear how much longer the natural sponges will be able to keep up." In other words, even if "emissions were to stay flat for the next two decades, which could be called an achievement in some sense, it's terrible for the climate problem," said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pieter Tans.

Should [the natural sponges] weaken, the result would be something akin to garbage workers going on strike, but on a grand scale: The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would rise faster, speeding global warming even beyond its present rate. It is already fast enough to destabilize the weather, cause the seas to rise and threaten the polar ice sheets. [The New York Times]

More research still needs to be done to confirm scientists' worst fears. But "I'd estimate that we are about at the emissions peak," said Chinese Academy of Sciences professor Wang Yi. "Or if there are further rises, they won't be much." Read more about the problem at The New York Times. Jeva Lange

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Religious freedom, anti-discrimination laws to go head-to-head in Supreme Court case - The Week Magazine

House Freedom Caucus sees an opportunity as the debt ceiling approaches – Washington Examiner

As the various congressional factions gather to fight over spending and the debt ceiling this summer, the House Freedom Caucus is ready to dig in as it senses a moment of opportunity and a chance to score concessions from House leadership on a host of issues as days tick down to the August recess.

The group of three-dozen conservatives, who have a history of picking fights with House leadership, have taken a variety of stances in the run-up to the fight as top House Republicans decide how to move forward on both the debt ceiling and a budget. In late May, the group laid down an initial marker by announcing its opposition to a clean debt ceiling bill, which pits the group against the Trump administration and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin. They also called for spending cuts to go along with any raising of the debt ceiling and for the issue to be resolved by the month-long August recess.

The GOP bill is aimed at taking away Democratic arguments that the U.S. would "default" on the debt by making it clear that if the U.S. was suddenly unable to borrow, it would use the existing flow of tax receipts to keep up debt service payments, including the regular process of paying and taking out new debt, and making interest payments.

The U.S. would not be at risk of a "default" if those rules were in place, although the U.S. would be in a position of taking in less money than it usually spends. But some conservatives are fine with that, since it would force the government to make choices about where to spend the limited money it has.

That step would eliminate the threat of a default on the U.S. Treasury securities that make up the backbone of the global financial system, calling the bluff of a doomsday scenario of a worldwide financial crisis. Treasury secretaries of both parties, however, have said that such "prioritization" of the debt isn't feasible, and that market panic would be likely in any case.

That's the Freedom Caucus' plan. But one major blow to the group was President Trump's decision to side with Mnuchin over Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, a key ally of the group, on the debt ceiling fight. Mnuchin has made clear his desire for a "clean" debt ceiling bill, which the Senate is expected to vote on in July. Mulvaney wants reforms to be brought into the mix.

On the spending battle, one unusual stance the group has embraced is support for an increase in spending levels in a potential budget deal, but with a catch. To go along with higher spending levels, the Freedom Caucus wants reforms to welfare, including cuts that could bring in about $400 billion in savings, according to said Rep. Mark Meadows. Despite potential opposition, the North Carolina Republican is optimistic their proposal could make a final bill.

"Very realistic," Meadows said when asked about the proposal's prospects. "We've had work requirements up until actually some would argue that they're still in statute right now. We've had work requirements in the past. I believe that most Americans believe an able-bodied, single adult should be doing some type of work, whether it's vocational training, volunteering for a government or a job in order to get those benefits. Now, we're not talking about moms with children or grandparents with kids. We're talking about able-bodied single adults that should be required to do some kind of work."

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, chairman emeritus of the group, admitted in an interview that while it seems counterintuitive for the Freedom Caucus to support this type of an increase in spending, it sees an opportunity.

"You hope we get a [budget] deal now, because if you don't, we know how it plays out. We've seen it six years in a row," Jordan said. "The smarter thing to do now is get an agreement on the budget. ... The budget's the gate. Nothing else can happen until you open the gate, right? You can't do any spending until you open the gate and get a number. You can't have tax reform until you get reconciliation; you can't get reconciliation until you have a budget 'til you open the gate.

"To open the gate, we conservatives, I think, are willing to entertain spending numbers we normally wouldn't be comfortable with," Jordan said.

Top members of the group have come out in support of the House Budget Committee's proposed $400 billion in cuts, although that could be pared to $150 billion, much to their chagrin.

"We're saying, You're the Budget Committee. You're the experts. If you think it's $400 [billion], let's go with $400,'" Jordan said, pointing to their desired welfare cuts.

The fight is expected to be the latest for the group of conservative hard-liners, who had a highly-publicized back-and-forth with GOP leadership and the White House over the American Health Care Act before ultimately coming on board thanks to an amendment allowing states to opt out of some essential health benefits. However, this new battle could be an opportunity for the caucus as it pushes for Republican leadership to take its proposals seriously in spending battles rather than forcing leaders to rely on Democratic votes to pass legislation.

Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., the vice chairwoman of the House Democratic caucus, floated the possibility that Democrats could withhold their votes on a "clean" debt ceiling bill to see if Republicans can govern on their own, although House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., poured cold water on that possibility if such a bill reaches the floor. However, Meadows said he doesn't believe any losses incurred by the caucus on this fight could affect their leverage or input in future fights.

"You win some, you lose some," Meadows said. "I'm in it for the long term. We find that we have a lot of allies when it comes to welfare reform and mandatory spending reform. A lot of guys are with us both publicly and privately, which I think would surprise some here on Capitol Hill.

"I don't know that we're looking at wins and losses as much as we are real savings moving forward," Meadows said.

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House Freedom Caucus sees an opportunity as the debt ceiling approaches - Washington Examiner

Do Animals Need More Freedom? – Colorado Public Radio

Freedom, Compassion, and Coexistence in the Human Age

There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe nor politic nor popular, but he must take it because conscience tells him it is right. Martin Luther King Jr.

News headlines these days often center on animals. Stories seem increasingly to be of two types. The first involves reporting on what might be characterized as the inner lives of animals. Scientists regularly publish new findings on animal cognition or emotion, and these quickly make their way into the popular press. Here is a sampling of some recent headlines:

The other type of news story focuses on individual animals or a particular group of animals who have been wronged by humans in some significant way. These stories often create a social media frenzy, generating both moral outrage and soul-searching. In particular, these stories highlight instances in which the freedom of an animal has been profoundly violated by humans. Some of these recent hot-button stories include the killing of an African lion named Cecil by an American dentist wanting a trophy head; the killing of a mother grizzly bear named Blaze, who attacked a hiker in Yellowstone National Park; the case of a male polar bear named Andy who was suffocating and starving because of an overly tight radio collar placed around his neck by a researcher; the euthanizing and public dissection of a giraffe named Marius at the Copenhagen Zoo because he was not good breeding stock; the ongoing legal battle to assign legal personhood to two research chimpanzees, Leo and Hercules; the exposure of SeaWorld for cruel treatment of orcas, inspired by the tragic story of Tilikum and the documentary Blackfish; and the killing of a gorilla named Harambe at the Cincinnati Zoo, after a small boy fell into the animals enclosure. The fact that these events have created such a stir suggests that we are at a tipping point. People who have never really been active in defense of animals are outraged by the senseless violation of these animals lives and freedom. The growing awareness of animal cognition and emotion has enabled a shift in perspective. People are sick and tired of all the abuse. Animals are sick and tired of it, too.

Yet although we prize our freedom above all else, we routinely deny freedom to nonhuman animals (hereafter, animals) with whom we share our planet. We imprison and enslave animals, we exploit them for their labor and their skin and bodies, we restrict what they can do and with whom they can interact. We dont let them choose their family or friends, we decide for them when and if and with whom they mate and bear offspring, and often take their children away at birth. We control their movements, their behaviors, their social interactions, while bending them to our will or to our self-serving economic agenda. The justification, if any is given, is that they are lesser creatures, they are not like us, and by implication they are neither as valuable nor as good as we are. We insist that as creatures vastly different from us, they experience the world differently than we do and value different things.

But, in fact, they are like us in many ways; indeed, our basic physical and psychological needs are pretty much the same. Like us, they want and need food, water, air, sleep. They need shelter and safety from physical and psychological threats, and an environment they can control. And like us, they have what might be called higher-order needs, such as the need to exercise control over their lives, make choices, do meaningful work, form meaningful relationships with others, and engage in forms of play and creativity. Some measure of freedom is fundamental to satisfying these higher-order needs, and provides a necessary substrate for individuals to thrive and to look forward to a new day.

Freedom is the key to many aspects of animal well-being. And lack of freedom is at the root of many of the miseries we intentionally and unintentionally inflict on animals under our carewhether they suffer from physical or social isolation, or from being unable to move freely about their world and engage the various senses and capacities for which they are so exquisitely evolved. To do better in our responsibilities toward animals, we must do what we can to make their freedoms the fundamental needs we promote and protect, even when it means giving those needs priority over some of our own wants.

The Five Freedoms

Many people who have taken an interest in issues of animal protection are familiar with the Five Freedoms. The Five Freedoms originated in the early 1960s in an eighty-five-page British government study, Report of the Technical Committee to Enquire into the Welfare of Animals Kept Under Intensive Livestock Husbandry Systems. This document, informally known as the Brambell Report, was a response to public outcry over the abusive treatment of animals within agricultural settings. Ruth Harrisons 1964 book Animal Machines brought readers inside the walls of the newly developing industrialized farming systems in the United Kingdom, what we have come to know as factory farms. Harrison, a Quaker and conscientious objector during World War II, described appalling practices like battery-cage systems for egg-laying hens and gestation crates for sows, and consumers were shocked by what was hidden behind closed doors.

To mollify the public, the UK government commissioned an investigation into livestock husbandry, led by Bangor University zoology professor Roger Brambell. The commission concluded that there were, indeed, grave ethical concerns with the treatment of animals in the food industry and that something must be done. In its initial report, the commission specified that animals should have the freedom to stand up, lie down, turn around, groom themselves and stretch their limbs. These incredibly minimal requirements became known as the freedoms, and represented the conditions the Brambell Commission felt were essential to animal welfare.

The commission also requested the formation of the Farm Animal Welfare Advisory Committee to monitor the UK farming industry. In 1979 the name of this organization was changed to the Farm Animal Welfare Council, and the freedoms were subsequently expanded into their current form. The Five Freedoms state that all animals under human care should have:

The Five Freedoms have become a popular cornerstone of animal welfare in a number of countries. The Five Freedoms are now invoked in relationship not only to farmed animals but also to animals in research laboratories, zoos and aquariums, animal shelters, veterinary practice, and many other contexts of human use. The freedoms appear in nearly every book about animal welfare, can be found on nearly every website dedicated to food-animal or lab-animal welfare, form the basis of many animal welfare auditing programs, and are taught to many of those working in fields of animal husbandry.

The Five Freedoms have almost become shorthand for what animals want and need. They provide, according to a current statement by the Farm Animal Welfare Council, a logical and comprehensive framework for analysis of animal welfare. Pay attention to these, it seems, and youve done your due diligence as far as animal care is concerned. You can rest assured that the animals are doing just fine.

Its worth stopping for a moment to acknowledge just how forward thinking the Brambell Report really was. This was the 1960s and came on the heels of behaviorism, a school of thought that offered a mechanistic understanding of animals, and at a time when the notion that animals might experience pain was still just a superstition for many researchers and others working with animals. The Brambell Report not only acknowledged that animals experience pain, but also that they experience mental states and have rich emotional lives, and that making animals happy involves more than simply reducing sources of pain and suffering, but actually providing for positive, pleasurable experiences. These claims sound obvious to us now, but in the mid-1960s they were both novel and controversial.

It is hard to imagine that the crafters of the Five Freedoms failed to recognize the fundamental paradox: How can an animal in an abattoir or battery cage be free? Being fed and housed by your captor is not freedom; it is simply what your caregiver does to keep you alive. Indeed, the Five Freedoms are not really concerned with freedom per se, but rather with keeping animals under conditions of such profound deprivation that no honest person could possibly describe them as free. And this is entirely consistent with the development of the concept of animal welfare.

Welfare concerns generally focus on preventing or relieving suffering, and making sure animals are being well-fed and cared for, without questioning the underlying conditions of captivity or constraint that shape the very nature of their lives. We offer lip service to freedom, in talking about cage-free chickens and naturalistic zoo enclosures. But real freedom for animals is the one value we dont want to acknowledge, because it would require a deep examination of our own behavior. It might mean we should change the way we treat and relate to animals, not just to make cages bigger or provide new enrichment activities to blunt the sharp edges of boredom and frustration, but to allow animals much more freedom in a wide array of venues.

The bottom line is that in the vast majority of our interactions with other animals, we are seriously and systematically constraining their freedom to mingle socially, roam about, eat, drink, sleep, pee, poop, have sex, make choices, play, relax, and get away from us. The use of the phrase in the vast majority might seem too extreme.

However, when you think about it, we are a force to be reckoned with not only in venues in which animals are used for food production, research, education, entertainment, and fashion, but globally; on land and in the air and water, human trespass into the lives of other animals is not subsiding. Indeed, its increasing by leaps and bounds. This epoch, which is being called the Anthropocene, or Age of Humanity, is anything but humane. It rightfully could be called the Rage of Humanity.

We want to show how important it is to reflect on the concept of freedom in our discussions of animals. Throughout this book, we are going to examine the myriad ways in which animals under our care experience constraints on their freedom, and what these constraints mean in terms of actual physical and psychological health. Reams of scientific evidence, both behavioral observations and physiological markers, establish that animals have strongly negative reactions to losses of freedom.

One of the most important efforts we can make on behalf of animals is to explore the ways in which we undermine their freedom and then look to how we can provide them with more, not less, of what they really want and need.

Excerpted from The Animals Agenda: Freedom, Compassion, and Coexistence in the Human Age by Marc Bekoff and Jessica Pierce (Beacon Press, 2017). Reprinted with Permission from Beacon Press.

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Do Animals Need More Freedom? - Colorado Public Radio

Freedom Charter is a dream deferred – Independent Online

There is an urgent need to go back to Kliptown and, like collecting the soul of the dead, collect the lost spirit of the Freedom Charter.

A few years ago, Cope adopted its name based on the historic meeting where this document was adopted, much to the irritation of the ANC, which even went to court to try and stop this move.

Next was the EFF, whose members believe they alone are custodians, especially when it comes to the crucial issue of land. In the process, the true meaning and spirit are lost in all the noise.

The sad reality is that, since its adoption, while it has served as a mantra of liberation forces marching to freedom, we have fallen very short of its intentions, and those that have so far claimed it as custodians have failed its bold pronouncements.

It requires a full paper to expatiate this point, and so I will focus on two cardinal clauses only: The people shall govern; and The doors of learning and culture shall be open to all. Have sufficient strength and courage gone into realising these high ideals?

In an interview on Power Perspective with the spokesperson of the youth league a few weeks ago, I inquired what the young lions have done about opening the doors of learning and culture through the implementation of the ANCs Polokwane resolution on free education.

This is because, a full decade later, all we see is protestation from young people who await the implementation of this resolution amid hollow promises and policy obfuscation.

The shocking answer was that the ANC took almost 100 years from establishment to freedom. This is the nub of the matter: a lack of urgency and a refusal to snap out of the underground and Marxist Leninist theories into the modern world, where policy shifts dont have to take a hundred years to materialise.

And so the clause of the Freedom Charter that the doors of learning and culture should be open to all doesnt even serve to excite the youth league to help open those doors.

And so a nation that is not educated, and therefore whose minds are still in bondage, is unlikely to realise fully the cardinal clause of the charter that the people shall govern.

While the people have been enfranchised and this must be celebrated as a step in the right direction, how can we safely say that the people are governing without land and without the means of production being in their hands?

Failure to resolve the land question with the necessary sense of urgency is robbing the people of meaningful governance. At this rate, someone else has captured the state and the markets are governing the country instead of the people.

There are far more protests by disillusioned people now than took place in the days of uprisings against an illegitimate regime. The numbers and frequency of such protests are simply staggering, painting a picture of hopelessness and a loss of confidence in the governing alliance whose mantra should be that the people shall govern.

The people, who clearly do not believe that governance is in their hands, even burn down libraries and other state-owned properties in the belief that these dont really belong to them.

Many assumed that when democracy dawned the new leaders would govern with the interest of the people in mind to give effect to this notion of government for the people, by the people. As soon as civil society was demobilised so much went wrong. The few developments over the last few years, be it the public protectors reports on various things or even the auditor-generals latest report painting a picture of chaotic management of municipal finances, shows that that notion simply doesnt exist.

There is an urgent need to go back to Kliptown and, like collecting the soul of the dead, collect the spirit of the Freedom Charter. Quite frankly, it is gone. The ANC gathers at the end of this week to assess the implementation of its policies.

The last time it so gathered it spoke of the second phase of the transition; this week we are not likely to hear anything other than the rather hollow slogan of radical economic transformation. It is actually sad to see our movement failing to take stock and instead moving the goalposts.

The concocting of what seems like a new policy a few moments before the next election is a tactic that the people have seen right through if the last elections were anything to go by; the ANC emerged with clear losses. It is clear from the utterances of the leadership that election results are seen as one big mistake and not really the will of the people. If you claim to listen to the people you cant keep finding excuses for why you lost elections.

The policy conference remains a golden opportunity for the ANC to re-look at its record of being the true and only custodians of the Freedom Charter and to answer truthfully what has caused its failure to keep the torch of the Kliptown founding fathers.

The forthcoming gathering will discover a dead alliance, a moribund youth league, a rogue MK veterans league and a shameful womens league.

Every part of the movement is coming apart. And despite repeated protestations, the centre is simply not holding.

And until this diagnosis is accepted, rebuilding the once glorious movement will remain a dream deferred. Its time to read the charter again and to remember what our forebears wanted to achieve. And therefore we, the People of South Africa, black and white together - equals, countrymen and brothers - adopt this Freedom Charter. And we pledge ourselves to strive together sparing neither strength nor courage, until the democratic changes here set out have been won.

Tabane is author of Power Perspective and host of Power Perspective on Power 98.7 9pm to midnight. Follow him on Twitter @JJTabane

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Freedom Charter is a dream deferred - Independent Online

Grim Photos Show The US & British Eugenics Movement During Its Heyday – IFLScience (blog)

When one thinks about eugenics, they usually associate the term with the horrible crimes of Nazi Germany and their unfounded and terrible ideas of race and purity. But the practice and advocacy of eugenics have a long history. Decades before the rise of Hitler, The Eugenics Society was advocating the forced sterilization of undesirable people in the US, Britain and Western Europe.

In 1907, India passed a sterilization law barring certain categories of disabled people from having children (a similar law was passed in Germany in 1933). By 1938, if you had been classified as insane, idiotic, imbecile, feebleminded or epileptic you couldbe forciblysterilized in 38 states in the USA. A mental institution in Lincoln, Illinois euthanized its patients by giving them milk from a herd suffering from tuberculosis. Similar laws were passed during the 20s and 30s in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Finland.

Great Britain never had such laws, but the Eugenic Societywas very active since its inception in 1907 and tried passing several pieces of legislation. In 1908 Sir James Crichton-Brownrecommended the compulsory sterilization of those with learning disabilities and mental illness to the Royal Commisionon the Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded.This was supported by Winston Churchill. In 1931, Labour MP Archibald Church put forward a bill very much in line with the eugenics legislation being approved around the world.

Eugenic Society meeting.Public Library/News Dog Media

These laws were repealed after the second world war but these images stand as a reminder of the barbaric treatmentof the many people experienced by our "civilized" society.

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Grim Photos Show The US & British Eugenics Movement During Its Heyday - IFLScience (blog)

Personal virtual assistants will become part of the enterprise IT … – ZDNet

There is a significant opportunity for organisations to integrate personal virtual assistants such as Amazon's Alexa, Microsoft's Cortana, and Apple's Siri into their enterprise systems, according to IT services firm Unisys.

Similar to the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) movement, Unisys is betting that personal virtual assistants will become part of an organisation's IT ecosystem. In fact, in many cases, it will become the access point to an organisation's "automation realm", according to Paul Gleeson, VP and global head of Service Management and SIAM at Unisys.

For example, an employee will be able to ask Siri on their personal iPhone how many days of annual leave they have accumulated, or how many servers are running over 50 percent capacity.

"A lot of millennials are using their private Siris, their private Cortanas, to access things such as the results of their favourite sporting teams, the weather, and indeed, when the next train is going to be available so they can get home," Gleeson told ZDNet.

"These systems are tuned to your moods, your language, your culture, and in some instances, your accent. They're more accurate than anything the company could provide."

In order to kick off the "Bring Your Own Automation" (BYOA) movement, Unisys recently created a proof-of-concept using Amazon Echo, plugging it into an enterprise system to see if both interoperate.

"We were emulating a worker working from a home office and asking to have their passwords set to their default policy approved password," Gleeson explained.

"This is not necessarily following two-part authentication protocols, but as a proof-of-concept, we were able to get it to pass through the Amazon environment back to our facility and actually trigger an event that we set up on our end to receive it."

The proof-of-concept has been demonstrated to two enterprise clients who Gleeson said responded positively. However, they were more enthusiastic about the use of the virtual assistants that are built into smartphones and tablets than smart home devices like the Echo.

"Samsung devices and Apple devices have the thumb print reading capability, as well as voice recognition. So we've got that two-factor authentication," Gleeson added.

When asked whether the addition of virtual assistants would make security harder to manage, Gleeson said "not particularly", as it is still the same device being used to access corporate systems. He did, however, note the importance of updating corporate IT policies to ensure virtual assistants are accounted for.

Unisys is currently considering the implications of corporate data being captured on an individual's personal device.

"You already sign over [access to your data] to your personal assistant provider, whether it's Apple, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, to use those natural language processing capabilities. That's because those providers need to use their machine learning algorithms to fine tune that data to get it where it needs to be," Gleeson said.

"From Unisys' perspective, when an enquiry comes into the corporate environment from a redirection through Amazon or Apple or whatever the natural language processing engine is going to be -- those queries that land are data that's going to be held within the walls of the organisation. So they become data for the enterprise."

While it's still early days, Unisys believes BYOA will resonate the most with organisations that have a large mobile fleet, as it will allow remote workers to multi-task.

"People who are on the road in cars a lot, they can find out what their leave balance is while they're driving down the freeway. They can find out how many emails they've got right now from a particular person. They can say, 'Hey Siri, read me all the emails in my inbox right now from my boss'," Gleeson explained.

That's not to say that BYOA would only work in an isolated setting; Gleeson said it would also work in a shared office setting, noting Unisys tested its proof-of-concept in a noisy call centre environment with multiple people, and the Echo was able to clearly differentiate between voices.

But more importantly, Gleeson said that virtual assistants can be configured to provide audible alerts when, for example, there are servers running at over 80 percent capacity.

"What we're looking at here is figuring out how to use some of the breakthroughs in technology that's ubiquitously available to everyone today, and using that to further enrich the experience, drive productivity, create new capabilities, multitasking, and really just changing the way people are getting and consuming services right now," Gleeson said.

"This is the integrated automation approach that we're looking to bring into the market. We just see the personal assistant as being another system of automation, and one that I think is a little overlooked, but one that has got, from the perspective of an end user or consumer, huge potential.

"It's best to use an automation engine that is attuned to you rather than using something provided by an organisation that has to be tuned to you over a longer period of time."

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Personal virtual assistants will become part of the enterprise IT ... - ZDNet

DNR: Georgia Coast ecosystem makes the grade – The News (subscription)

Coastal Georgia scored a B+ on its final exam for 2016 not exactly honor roll status, but a relatively overall clean bill of health for the vital ecosystems fisheries, wildlife and water quality.

So says the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, which did all the data cramming for this test of the coasts ability to maintain ecological health amid its growing demands as a desired destination to live and visit. The DNRs actual score came to 76 percent, just above a middle B on the testing formats grade scale.

Blue crab spawning stock and the American oystercatcher shorebird populations declined in 2016, while red drum fish populations improved significantly and water quality indicators remained steady with respectable A scores, according to the results.

It speaks to our success at balancing development with natural resources protection, said Jan Mackinnon, the DNRs Coastal and Ocean Management Program Manager. We did have things change, as we do every year. But after everything is calculated it all seems to balance out. This report card is a way to provide the public with current information about the overall health of the ecosystem.

Folks can see the report card for themselves online at: http://www.CoastalGaDNR.org/ReportCard. The DNR began grading the Coastal Georgia ecosystem in 2014 as a means of evaluating its mandate to balance a healthy ecosystem with human development and demands on natural resources. The ecosystem earned B+ plus marks also in each of its two previous gradings.

Data is gathered from the DNRs Coastal Resources Division, the Environmental Protection Division and the Wildlife Resources Division at various points throughout the Georgia Coast. Information is entered and computed by a grading system developed by the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Mackinnon said. The University of Maryland testing program is used by numerous government environmental and natural resources agencies nationwide, she said.

Georgias Coast scored a 93 percent in the overall human health index. That human health includes a grade of 92 (A) for fecal coliform measurements and 94 (A) for enterococcus measurements. The high scores indicate low content.

Essentially, this means that the water is safe for swimming; also, the regions oysters, shrimp, crab and fish are safe to eat.

The coasts fisheries index scored a low A, at 91 percent, Mackinnon said.

While the red drum fishery jumped from 69 percent (B) in 2015 to 100 percent in 2016, blue crab spawning stock went from 61 percent in 2015 to 47 percent (C) last year. Georgias ongoing drought conditions and subsequent decrease in fresh water to estuaries could have contributed to this drop, Mackinnon said. The shrimp fishery grade scored well at 97 percent (A).

The red drum grade is great news for the fishing community, she said. However, drought can have a significant impact on some of these resources.

The coastal wildlife index scored lowest overall at 53 percent, or a C. A lot of this had to do with the decline in American oystercatchers from 61 percent to 30 percent (D). Right whale populations dipped from 66 percent to 12 percent (F), but this could be due in part to new National Marine Fisheries Services standards for monitoring the species.

The annual report card gives the DNR a way to evaluate its efforts, while providing the public with a transparent view of the job it is doing, Mackinnon said.

It is meant to be an overall health assessment and that is why we selected the indicators that we did, she said. It gives us a snapshot of the health of the ecosystem, the fisheries, the wildlife, human health and water quality.

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DNR: Georgia Coast ecosystem makes the grade - The News (subscription)

Experts working out clear policy on Innovation Ecosystem Minister – Ghana News Agency

By Belinda Ayamgha, GNA

Accra, June 26, GNA - The Ministry of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation (MESTI) has started the process of developing an Innovation Ecosystem to power sustainable national development, Professor Kwabena Frimpong Boateng, the sector Minister, has said.

Speaking at the Citi FM Innovation Summit, held in Accra as part of the Citi FM Business Festival, the Minister said a team of experts, including the Dean of Engineering at Ashesi University, was thus helping to formulate a strategic Science and Technology Policy towards this endeavour.

The team would also recommend an apex to oversee the development and mainstreaming of Science and Technology; as well as the establishment of a fund for this purpose.

The Minster explained that the Governments allocation for research, which now stood at 0.025 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), would be increased to one per cent of GDP; and increased over time to 2.5 per cent of GDP.

Prof Frimpong Boateng, who is an innovator, explained that Ghana must build an Innovation Ecosystem in order to achieve sustainable development because the development of any nation was dependent on the level of its innovation, especially its capacity to make machines to address its problems.

Prof Frimpong Boateng said to build that ecosystem, it was important to promote Science Education in the schools and then establish and resource research and development institutions.

He explained that it was important for Ghanas educational system to move farther from teaching students only the what to teaching them the why and the how, as these would foster creativity and innovation.

He also urged students and innovators to develop the who of their knowledge, saying networking was very important in connecting them to the right people to push their innovations.

He emphasised that the linkages among academia, knowledge institutions, industry and the government must also be improved for the common good.

Additionally, the right environment for innovation would be created by improving the contracting, company and patenting laws in the country, he noted.

While acknowledging the challenges that innovators faced in the country, the Minister, however, expressed optimism of bright prospects for innovators in the coming days, explaining that the Ministry was addressing the basic problem for innovation: the weak Science and Technology Education framework.

Under the theme Creating our Future, panellists at the Summit interrogated the core issues affecting innovation in the Ghana, including mainstreaming innovation, monetising innovations, and leadership for innovation.

Mr Michael Quarshie, Co-Founder and Managing Director of Persol Systems Limited, urged innovators to find ways to bring their innovations to the market to monetise them.

He said they should, therefore, find ways of locking their innovations by patenting them and finding the value, identifying the market and pitching them.

He urged Ghanaians to celebrate local innovators and bring their ideas and innovations to light for the benefit of society.

Ms Estelle Akofio-Sowah, the Country Manager for Google Ghana, buttressed that point, and urged innovators to identify big problems and find big solutions to them instead of limiting themselves to micro-scale ideas.

It is difficult, but we dont have a choice; its our country and we must innovate to solve the problems, she stated.

Prof Fred McBagonluri, the Dean of the Department of Engineering at the Ashesi University, expressed optimism for innovation, saying those showcased at the Summit, which provided solutions for some of the most critical challenges faced in Energy, Sanitation, were testimonies.

He said there was the need for a clear national policy for Science, Technology and Innovation and a visionary leadership to drive the innovation agenda.

The best time to be alive is now; We have so many unique challenges as a nationwe are at the right point in history where we can innovate to develop our country and all I see is nothing but a sea of opportunities, he stated.

Mr Bright Simons, the Founder and President of mPedigree, however, was not very optimistic about the state of innovation in Ghana.

He said innovation had still not been mainstreamed and innovators had to justify their work to those whose problems they solved.

He condemned the lack of urgency to innovate, explaining that innovation was mostly seen from a consumer perspective instead of from a creative one.

Sometimes, only pessimism would create the urgency needed to solve the problem, he maintained.

The Summit highlighted the work of three innovators: Sesinam Dagadu of SnooCode, Dr Mark Amo-Boateng of the University of Energy and Natural Resources and Raymond Ategbi Okrofu of Safi Sana Ghana Limited.

GNA

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Experts working out clear policy on Innovation Ecosystem Minister - Ghana News Agency

AdLedger Consortium launches to explore ad tech ecosystem on blockchain – CryptoNinjas

TheAdLedger Consortiumhas been launched to transform the advertising industry with blockchain-powered solutions.Its inaugural meeting was held today on June 26th, 2017 in New York City. The consortium will be comprised of advertising and publishing executives committed to exploring the use of blockchain technology to bring increased transparency and data security to the ad tech supply chain.

IBM iX Executive Partner of Global Marketing, Babs Rangaiah, said:

We at IBM believe that blockchain will do for transactions what the Internet did for communications. We are particularly interested in blockchains potential to solve many of the issues facing Programmatic buying today.

Prospective AdLedger members from both the buy and sell side will be part of the conversation, all with the understanding that the greatest potential benefit of blockchain technology is achieved through collaboration.

The overarching goal of AdLedger will be to harness the potential of a real-time, blockchain-based, peer-to-peer network to lower costs for publishers while increasing transparency and ROI for advertisers. Specifically, the network will validate placements and transactions to ensure brand safety through greater transparency, enable data portability using multi-signature wallets and cryptographic keys for unduplicated campaign execution and measurement.

The network will aim to remove layers of inefficiency in technology stacks to address the issue of the disappearing ad dollar, introduce cross-network identity management and attribution reporting, and establish a protocol around a decentralized peer-to-peer data sharing solution. Based on existing industry standards, AdLedger will also determine rules and standards for the protocol that would apply to audience segments, regulatory compliance, data uploads, encryption via keys, and a universal language for smart contracts.

Jim Wilson, President of Premion, a division of TEGNA said:

Blockchain technology is well-suited to address many of the advertising industrys requirements and to fix the issues of frequency capping, attribution and data quality with Advanced TV. Participation by advertisers, agencies, and publishers is essential for building a network that meets the needs of all players in the ecosystem.

Currently, a combination of fraud and supply chain weakness costs the advertising industry an average of $8.2B per year, according to an industry-wide study conducted by the IAB. The supply chain describes all data transfers between industry players starting with creative and ending with the consumers browser. By leveraging a blockchain-powered network, the consortium will be able to increase the security and efficiency of data exchanges throughout the supply chain.

AdLedger will use open source code to develop its blockchain-protocol. By making the project open-sourced, the organization enables consensus-driven workflows and cryptography to ensure security and reliability. Open source code for blockchain protocol will be made available for peer review and the organization will release an API specification.

AdLedgers mission is to bring together advertising industry players to collaborate on creating technology and protocol to the end of improving transparency and streamlining the supply chain.

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AdLedger Consortium launches to explore ad tech ecosystem on blockchain - CryptoNinjas

Warmer ocean brings changes to R.I., wreaks havoc on state’s … – The Westerly Sun

NARRAGANSETT The ocean off Rhode Island has warmed 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit since 1959, when the University of Rhode Island began conducting bottom trawls.

The trawls, which are conducted weekly throughout the year, involve dragging nets along the ocean floor and collecting fish and other sea life to determine what is living in Narragansett Bay.

Joe Langan, a Ph.D candidate at the Graduate School of Oceanography at the University of Rhode Island, told the audience at a June 22 seminar that the weekly trawls, one of the longest-running data-collection initiatives in the world, had also revealed dramatic changes in the populations of fish and crustaceans that live in the bay.

Langan and fellow Ph.D student Ali Johnson were presenting the first in the new Bay Informed discussion series. Sponsored by Rhode Island Sea Grant, the free talks, which encourage members of the public to ask questions, will take place once a month.

Me and a couple of other grad students here, we were the founders, Johnson said. We came up with the idea and we all came together and created this event.

Johnson said she hoped that people attending the talks would come away with a better understanding of the ocean research taking place at URI. The lectures also give students opportunities to hone their communication skills.

I hope people are going to come away with a broader knowledge of some of the basic research that we do here, she said.

Johnson, who is studying physical oceanography, focused her presentation on the science-based evidence of climate change and included a tutorial on how ocean currents circulate around the globe.

In order to understand how these processes are going to change, its really important that we first understand whats going on, she told the audience. We know very, very little about the ocean. We know basics compared to some of the other science thats out there. It is so important that we learn what these physical processes are in order for us to better predict how these processes are going to change with increasing sea-surface temperatures and increasing air temperatures.

Langan is working on a Ph.D in biological oceanography and a masters in statistics.

My research is in quantitative fisheries ecology, which is just a fancy way of saying I like to do math about fish, he said.

Langan described Rhode Island as being on an ecosystem knife edge between the cold waters of the Gulf of Maine to the North and to the South, the Mid-Atlantic Bight. Traditional fish-migration patterns involved southern species coming to Rhode Island in the summer and northern species moving here for a period during the winter. Those patterns, which scientists refer to as residence times, have changed in recent years, because warm-water species are staying longer and species that prefer colder water arrive in Rhode Island later and leave sooner.

This is summer flounder, Langan said, pointing to a graph illustrating fish populations. Their residence time has changed by about five months. This is a very aggressive predator thats also a bit of a bully on the sea floor. It pushes other species out of different habitats. A five-month difference of how long a species spends in Narragansett Bay is a tremendous difference in the ecosystem. Theyre going to be eating a lot more. Theyre going to be out-competing other species. This is a massive ecological difference.

Winter flounder, on the other hand, have all but disappeared from Rhode Island waters, with a population decline of 99 percent. This population crash is also attributed to warming seas. Langan explained that predatory sand shrimp are now active earlier in the season, devouring winter flounder larvae.

They would show up when winter flounder were too big to eat, and maybe hide and defend themselves, but spring warming happens faster, and now these shrimp show up when winter flounder are mostly still larvae, and they eat them all, Langan said.

Winter flounder also face competition from scup. The population of scup in the bay has exploded in recent years, leaving less for the flounder to eat.

These and other changes, Langan said, show how seemingly minor temperature differences can affect an entire ecosystem.

When we think about climate change and ecosystems, its all about an interconnected web, where you dont have to change much, Langan said. If you change a little bit of seasonality for one species, it can have a huge ripple effect.

cdrummond@thewesterlysun.com

@cynthiadrummon4

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Warmer ocean brings changes to R.I., wreaks havoc on state's ... - The Westerly Sun

Big deal: Ireland’s ecosystem thrives – Global University Venturing

Knowledge Transfer Ireland (KTI), the countrys national office that helps companies access research at domestic universities, has released its Annual Knowledge Transfer Survey (AKTS) 2016, providing an insight into the ecosystem.

The report, published with the support of the Higher Education Authority, makes several heartening observations, chief among them that 28 new spinouts were formed last year and that by the end of December a total of 119 spinouts continued to thrive at least three years after incorporation employing an estimated 1,080 staff.

Furthermore, a total of 1,243 collaborative agreements were inked between industry and research organisations, including universities, institutes of technology and other publicly-funded research agencies.

If that figure is impressive on its own, it is worth considering that of the corporates, 78% were already based in Ireland. Counting only small and medium-sized enterprises, that number rises further to 94%.

KTI counted 186licences, options and assignments to intellectual property last year. New patent applications stood at 116 and invention disclosures reached 461, for a research expenditure of 535m ($600m).

The success comes despite KTI counting only 34 registered tech transfer professionals a fraction of the number of tech transfer office employees that a single institution such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which has more than 80 team members.

Established in 2014 by state-owned export credit agency Enterprise Ireland, KTI appears to have many reasons to celebrate on its third anniversary. Still supported by Enterprise Ireland and the Irish Universities Association, KTI is accountable to the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation and the presidents of domestic universities.

And if news reports in January 2017 are to go by, that department and those presidents are very happy with KTIs performance. Enterprise Ireland allocated another 34.5m to KTI for the Technology Transfer Strengthening Initiative (TTSI), a program that actually predates KTI.

Launched in 2007, the TTSI aims to bolster research commercialisation and deepen the engagement between public research institutions and industry. KTI previously managed the 28.5m in TTSI funding before securing the recent capital boost.

To date, the TTSI has led to the creation of 31 spinouts, the signing of 748 research agreements and the creation of 206 licensing deals.

The numbers are good news for Enterprise Ireland as well. The agency has been busy trying to prepare the domestic ecosystem for a dreaded Brexit shock the Irish economy is heavily dependent on trade with its neighbour.

The agency has been organising a Brexit roadshow, holding regional discussions to support struggling businesses as some have already been suffering due to the collapse of sterling. It also offers a grant, dubbed Be Prepared, of up to 5,000 to domestic businesses to help them generate an action plan for coping with the potential loss of access to the UK market.

KTI is not the only organisation aiming to support the Irish innovation landscape. In June 2016, University College Cork, University College Dublin and Trinity College Dublin partnered growth equity fund Atlantic Bridge to create a 60m fund for spinouts.

Enterprise Ireland also backed the University Bridge Fund, underlining the governments keenness on spinouts. Other limited partners included the EU-owned European Investment Fund, which has begun pulling out of its UK commitments, and financial services firms AIB and Bank of Ireland.

Alison Campbell, director of KTI said: Part of our role at KTI is to help drive capacity and capability for commercialisation within the research base.

The results of this years Annual Knowledge Transfer Survey shows consistent performance in the level of engagement with industry and a steady growth in the maturation of spinout companies.

The outputs leveraged from the amount of public research funding are impressive and recognise not only the focus on innovation within the Irish research base but the impact of the investment in technology transfer through the Enterprise Ireland TTSI program.

Graham Love, chief executive of the Higher Education Authority, said: Knowledge transfer and commercialisation of research are now firmly embedded within the Irish higher education sector and the AKTS 2016 results show that.

The Higher Education Authority is pleased to work with KTI to ensure the provision of robust system data. The AKTS is a longitudinal study that enables us to understand and analyse successful outputs over time.

The full annual report can be found on KTIs website here.

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Big deal: Ireland's ecosystem thrives - Global University Venturing

Setting up the defence industrial ecosystem – Livemint

Last week was an interesting one for Indian defence manufacturing. On Monday, Tata Advanced Systems Ltd and US plane-maker Lockheed Martin Corp. signed an agreement at the Paris Air Show to produce F-16 fighter jets in India. On Tuesday, in Delhi, Reliance Defence entered into a strategic partnership with Serbias Yugoimport for ammunition manufacturing in India. On Wednesday, back in Paris, Reliance Defence joined hands with Frances Thales to set up a joint venture that will develop Indian capabilities in radars and high-tech airborne electronics.

In Moscow, on Friday, defence minister Arun Jaitley and his Russian counterpart signed off on a road map for strengthening bilateral military ties. Meanwhile, at home in India, the army rejected, for the second year in a row, an indigenously-built assault rifle after it failed field testsa pointed reminder of how the countrys sub-par defence industry continues to damage the militarys operational preparedness.

For the most part, India has sought to make up for that failing at home with imports from abroad. Between 2012 and 2016, India was the worlds largest importer of major arms, accounting for 13% of the global total and increasing its arms imports by 43% from the 2007-11 period, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri).

That being said, in recent years there has been a greater focus on developing indigenous capabilities through technology transfers and joint production projects with international partners. The Narendra Modi government has also put defence at the core of its flagship domestic manufacturing programme, Make in India. It has opened up the still largely state-run sector to private players and foreign firms in an effort to build a defence industrial ecosystem that will not only support the countrys military requirements but also emerge as an important economic levergenerating exports, creating jobs, and spurring innovation.

The target is to source about 70% of Indias military needs from domestic sources by 2020. This is an ambitious planthats approximately how much India imports at the momentbut it is one that has been in the works for quite some time now. Notably, the defence manufacturing industry has been open to the private sector for well over a decade, and several foreign firms are involved in the joint production of weapons systems in India.

Yet the defence industrial ecosystem hasnt quite taken off. The Indian military is still heavily reliant on foreign imports and state-owned defence firms are still the dominant force in the market. Private firms, though growing in number, have struggled to find their feet. It is too early to say if the incumbent administrations efforts will bring better results, but much will depend on how its strategic partnership model, released late May, plays out on the ground.

Conceptualized by the Dhirendra Singh committee in 2015, this model has the defence ministry identifying a few Indian private companies as strategic partners (SPs) to tie up with a few foreign original equipment manufacturers to produce some big-ticket military platforms. In the process, the SPs are expected to help catalyse the countrys defence industrial ecosystem. This has already led to some concern about the ministry of defence (MoD), often criticized for not offering a level playing field to the private sector, picking favourites.

As Laxman Behera from the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (Idsa) notes, Time and again, the MoD has deviated from its own promise of fair play in award of contracts and handed over large orders to DPSUs (defence public sector undertakings) and OFs (ordnance factories) on nomination.

Moreover, the MoD also prohibits its strategic partners from working in more than one segment. This is supposed to ensure that the SPs keep their focus but, as Richard Heald at the UK India Business Council points out, this ring-fencing of six strategic platforms is problematic because many of the six named domestic champions have already invested in defence verticals that may be different from those they are selected to focus on. Then, questions are being raised as to whether mechanisms will be put in place to achieve value for money once the sector has been awarded to a strategic partner on an exclusive basis.

Yet another issue is that of how small and medium-scale enterprises (SMEs) will respond to this model. SMEs are crucial to building a vibrant and robust ecosystem. In particular, they do a much better job of absorbing, developing and commercializing niche technology, which is key in the defence sector. But while the government acknowledges their role and importance, it is unclear if its policy supports that vision.

Outside of policy design, the biggest challenge to developing Indias defence industry ecosystem is undoubtedly human resource and skill development. The Dhirendra Singh committee report deals with this issue at length, noting that India at present does not have a structured framework and a robust system to prepare its human resources to address all issues connected with building and sustaining defence systems. The report recommends several measures to bridge this skills gapfrom changes to academic curriculum to setting up institutions that specialize in defence and security to raising a new generation of system integration managers. The government must consider these carefully.

How do you think India can build its defence industrial ecosystem? Tell us at views@livemint.com

First Published: Tue, Jun 27 2017. 12 10 AM IST

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Setting up the defence industrial ecosystem - Livemint

Adopt a Beach pilot program set on Peninsula – Peninsula Daily News

Cub Scouts Pack Nos. 4192 and 4686 helped clean Ediz Hook during the last Washington Coast Cleanup.

Theyre easy to point out. The couple who parks on the same bench at dawn. The children who know the safest spots to build sand castles at every tide. The runner who treads through sand and ocean breeze every evening at sunset.

Theyre the frequent beachgoers. Its their beach, after all.

Soon, these individuals will be able to adopt their beach and put it in writing.

A new Adopt a Beach program, spearheaded by Washington CoastSavers, encourages people to take ownership of a Clallam County park beach and clear it of marine debris at least three times a year. The individuals, families, groups or organizations who adopt a beach will have their names printed on a sign in the park.

Proposed beaches include Salt Creek at 3506 Camp Hayden Road, Port Angeles; Cline Spit at 199 Cline Spit Road, Sequim; Dungeness Landing at 298 Oyster House Road, Sequim; Port Williams at 2499 Port Williams Road, Sequim; and Panorama Vista at 282 Buck Loop Road, Sequim.

The goal is to attract folks who see this as their beach, Washington CoastSavers Coordinator Jon Schmidt said. I have no doubt the beaches will be adopted.

Eventually, Washington CoastSavers hopes to expand the program to every beach along Washingtons coast, but currently has funding for a pilot program in Clallam County, Schmidt said.

Adopt a Beach partners will need to sign an agreement with Washington CoastSavers, agreeing to clean their beaches at least three times a year. Ideally, two of those times would occur during Washington Coast Cleanup (WCC) April 29 and International Coast Cleanup (ICC) Sept. 16.

WCC typically engages more than 1,000 volunteers to clean beaches on the outer coast and the Strait of Juan de Fuca, usually on the Saturday closest to Earth Day. ICC, a relatively new effort for Clallam County, rallies volunteers worldwide.

Last year, volunteers collected 20 tons of trash during WCC.

The amount of garbage on our beaches is just despicable, Schmidt said. Every tide brings more garbage to shore.

Rope and plastics, both commonly found items, endanger wildlife on the beaches, he said. Rope often entangles animals, and plastics fill seabirds stomachs to the point where they cant consume real food. They starve that way, or they starve because the plastic has lodged in their throats, Schmidt said.

Before Earth Day ever existed, some Washington state residents took a vested interest in this problem.

Around 1970, the first Washington beach cleanup crew, Operation Shore Patrol, hit the coasts. The Pacific Northwest Four Wheel Drive Association started the operation as a way to give back to the beaches where they recreated.

So Washington state can boast one of the earliest formal beach cleanup efforts in the nation, Schmidt said.

Now, beach stewardship has emerged as a subject of global concern.

Schmidt has traveled to Japan twice in the past four years to give presentations about marine debris cleanups, in light of recent tsunamis.

Hes seen some tsunami-related debris make its way to U.S. shores.

We know our trash is making the rounds as well, Schmidt said.

And as much as that should anger us, it should also unite us in the same effort, he said.

Its really one ocean, he said. Were all connected by the same tides.

Individuals or groups interested in adopting a Clallam County park beach can contact Schmidt at jon@coastsavers.org.

________

Reporter Sarah Sharp can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56650, or at ssharp@peninsuladailynews.com.

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Adopt a Beach pilot program set on Peninsula - Peninsula Daily News

Scientists study changes in the biodiversity of California’s sandy beaches – Phys.Org

June 26, 2017 by Julie Cohen TheIsla Vista beach near UCSB in 1976. Credit: Dale Straughan

And to think it was all right there in her garage. A load of boxes pulled from biologist Dale Straughan's home yielded a veritable treasure trove for UC Santa Barbara researchers studying the impact of climate change on coastal biodiversity in California.

To Jenifer Dugan, a research biologist at UCSB's Marine Science Institute (MSI), Nicholas Schooler, a Ph.D. student in UCSB's Interdepartmental Graduate Program in Marine Science, and David Hubbard, an ecologist at MSI, Straughan's field notes and data on California beaches were scientific gold. Beginning in 2009, the UCSB team worked closely with Straughan to compare present-day results to her original data sets. They resurveyed a subset of the more than 60 California beaches from Morro Bay to San Diego that Straughan and her colleagues had surveyed on multiple dates from 1969 to 1980.

Because the Earth's climate has changed dramatically since then, the researchers sought to determine whether and how biodiversity had decreased and to explore the processes responsible. Their findings appear in the journal Ecology and Evolution.

"Coastal ecosystems can be valuable indicators of biodiversity responses to anthropogenic and climate change-related impacts," said co-author Dugan. "We used this unique data set from extensive intertidal surveys to evaluate multidecadal change in the biodiversity of the important and widespread coastal ecosystems of sandy beaches."

Co-author Straughan conducted the original surveys for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management following the 1969 oil spill in the Santa Barbara Channel. At the time, she was based at the University of Southern California's Allan Hancock Foundation. One of the sites she surveyed more than 33 times was located in Isla Vista, close to the UCSB campus.

Evaluating impacts to biodiversity requires ecologically informed comparisons over sufficient time spans. One challenge for the UCSB team was calibrating different sampling methods from different decades. They developed a novel extrapolation approach to address data gaps that are common in such long-term data sets by adjusting species richness for sampling style over various time periods. This approach could be useful in addressing similar questions for other understudied ecosystems.

The investigators evaluated changes in intertidal biodiversity over time, using Straughan's results and those from their own recent surveys of 13 of her sandy beach sites, including the one in Isla Vista. Their analyses revealed large increases or decreases in species richness at some beaches, while at others changes were very small or not detectable.

"Our multidecadal comparison of beaches suggests that local processes exerted a stronger influence on intertidal biodiversity than did regional factors," Dugan said. "Intense local scale manipulationin other words, management practicesmade larger trends or gradients in biodiversity difficult to detect."

Digging deeper, the scientists found that upper beach species were disproportionally affected relative to the rest of the intertidal beach animals. However, they also found a positive surprise for this highly vulnerable group. Two beaches exhibited increases in richness, likely due to the fact that off-road vehicle use had been outlawed for at least 15 years. At those two sites, upper beach species showed a promising level of recovery following many years of protection from beach-driving impacts.

Another unexpected result was consistently low species richness on heavily urbanized beaches that have been groomedmechanically raked to remove kelpfor decades. According to lead author Schooler, lasting impacts to the total community persisted over time at these sites, but the upper beach species continued to decline.

"Our beach site at Isla Vista is a good example of what the future holds as sea level rises against a resistant boundary of either natural bluffs or manmade coastal armoring and buildings like those along urbanized stretches of the coast," Schooler explained. "We are losing ecologically important intertidal animals, such as beach hoppers and insects, from the upper beach zone, and this is likely to happen to more and more Southern California beaches as sea level rises."

The bluff-backed Isla Vista beach site had the highest percentage loss of habitat of any beaches the UCSB team surveyed. Such beaches experience a phenomenon called coastal squeeze because they have no room to move inland. "We saw a narrowing of the beach and a change in sediment size that was associated with a decline in the whole community, particularly in the upper beach animals," Schooler said.

Beaches backed by dunes, such as that at Coal Oil Point Reserve less than a mile west of the UCSB campus, have room to move inland and are projected to be more resilient to sea level change. But, Dugan noted, on bluff-backed beaches and those with man-made seawalls or revetments, the first species to disappear are those that feed on kelp wrack and live in the damp and dry sand of the upper beach zone.

"About 45 percent of the biodiversity of Southern California's beaches belongs to specialized upper beach species," she said. "They play a very important role in the coastal ecosystem by providing food for wildlife, such as western snowy plovers and other shorebirds, breaking down the kelp wrack that washes ashore and promoting nutrient recycling that then is potentially available for near-shore surf grass and kelps.

"On a more optimistic note, our research suggests that opportunities for ecosystem recovery from human impacts exist if we change the way some of our beaches are managed," Dugan added.

Explore further: Tiny beach crustaceans suffering localized extinctions

More information: Nicholas K. Schooler et al. Local scale processes drive long-term change in biodiversity of sandy beach ecosystems, Ecology and Evolution (2017). DOI: 10.1002/ece3.3064

Two types of small beach crittersboth cousins of the beloved, backyard roly-polyare suffering localized extinctions in Southern California at an alarming rate, says a new study by UC Santa Barbara scientists. As indicator ...

The western snowy plover is nesting along the Los Angeles area coast for the first time in nearly seven decades, federal officials said.

More than half of Southern California's beaches could completely erode back to coastal infrastructure or sea cliffs by the year 2100 as the sea level rises, according to a study released Monday.

Microorganisms play a crucial role in forming beachrock, a type of rock that forms on the beach and protects low-lying reef islands from erosion, a new study involving University of Queensland research has revealed.

Last winter's El Nio might have felt weak to residents of Southern California, but it was in fact one of the most powerful climate events of the past 145 years.

UC San Diego biologists who examined the biological impact of replenishing eroded beaches with offshore sand found that such beach replenishment efforts could have long-term negative impacts on coastal ecosystems.

Ocean levels rose 50 percent faster in 2014 than in 1993, with meltwater from the Greenland ice sheet now supplying 25 percent of total sea level increase compared with just five percent 20 years earlier, researchers reported ...

The Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone (ETSZ), a zone of small earthquakes stretching from northeastern Alabama to southwestern Virginia, may have generated earthquakes of magnitude 6 or greater within the last 25,000 years, ...

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 is one of the most studied spills in history, yet scientists haven't agreed on the role of microbes in eating up the oil. Now a research team at the Department ...

Monitoring changes to the amount of wetlands in regions where permafrost is thawing should be at the forefront of efforts to predict future rates of climate change, new research shows.

Biodiversity losses from deep-sea mining are unavoidable and possibly irrevocable, an international team of 15 marine scientists, resource economists and legal scholars argue in a letter published today in the journal Nature ...

A series of unprecedented storms over the Southern Ocean likely caused the most dramatic decline in Antarctic sea ice seen to date, a new study finds.

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Scientists study changes in the biodiversity of California's sandy beaches - Phys.Org

As Myrtle Beach reels from violence, NC beaches tout ‘family friendly’ alternative – StarNewsOnline.com

"I will not go back to Myrtle. ... It's just gotten crazy."

The day after this month's shootings in Myrtle Beach, a family showed up in Debbie Smith's office on Ocean Isle Beach looking for a room.

The family, Smith said, had stayed in an Ocean Boulevard hotel in Myrtle Beach next to where a teenager fired seven shots into a crowd early one Sunday morning. They cut their Myrtle Beach vacation days short and drove less than an hour north, across the North Carolina state line, to spend the next week in the small Brunswick County beach town.

Smith, a lifelong resident of the island -- before there was even a bridge to the mainland, she said -- manages rental properties and set the family up. She's also been the Ocean Isle Beach mayor for more than a decade.

The series of six Myrtle Beach shootings in three days left no one dead, but several people were wounded and the famous coastline is now publicly struggling with an image crisis. The city council held a special meeting, the governor of South Carolina held a meeting to talk policing strategies and the community called for action -- from more boots on the ground to barricades along the sidewalk to earlier curfews for those under age.

Beach trips are often well-worn affairs, the same family in the same hotel or rental on the same scrap of land by the sea. For generations, beach umbrellas are stuck into the same sands like rainbow-colored family crests. While we may live hundreds of miles away and log hours on interstates and two-lane rural shortcuts to get there, families often have their beach, a sense of ownership earned through tradition and memories.

In the days after the Myrtle Beach shootings, some vowed on social media that they were breaking their ties there, or already had before the latest violence. The beach is one of the most prominent and highly developed along the Atlantic coast and is fueled by a tourism industry in the billions of dollars.

"We recognize that if we don't address this, there's serious risk of reputational damage to the tourism industry and the community," said Brad Dean, president of the Myrtle Beach Chamber of Commerce. "It's still possible to salvage a good summer in terms of tourism. Hopefully we can use this as a turning point. Right now there's more uncertainty, and there have been more than a few cancellations."

It was a bad weekend for Myrtle, even for incidents that didn't occur there. Last Saturday, an SUV of Virginia teenagers was stopped in Bladen County with marijuana and cocaine, 18 liters of liquor, several cases of beer and thousands in cash. Their stated destination: Myrtle Beach.

The suspect in the most prominent Myrtle shooting, the one broadcast on Facebook from a hotel balcony, is a 17-year-old from Charlotte. Dean says Myrtle Beach is responsible for addressing crime that occurs in its city, but notes that most of that crime is committed by people from other places.

"The citizens of Myrtle Beach do a wonderful job caring for our kids," Dean said. "It's other communities whose children are coming here to cause problems. ... A few have decided not to respect our community and follow our laws. To them we say stay home or find somewhere else to go."

Kristty Smith, a hair stylist in Clayton, was on a vacation with her family in Myrtle Beach on the weekend of the shootings. She said it was a fun trip, a week spent on the beach and going para-sailing and to the Broadway at the Beach restaurant and entertainment area. She said Myrtle was where she went to the beach while growing up, but that the area's congestion is now pushing her toward North Carolina's more quaint beaches.

"I will not go back to Myrtle," Smith said. "There are just too many people there. It's just gotten crazy. It's so congested. That's the only reason I won't be back."

Diego Cancel of Raleigh spent a weekend in Myrtle Beach for the first time two weeks ago. While he enjoyed it, he doesn't foresee a return visit.

"Myrtle was fun, but it was definitely not for everyone," Cancel said via Facebook Messenger. "It is very trashy in the sense of people not being respectful of others regardless of race or age. It's an experience that I wouldn't want to repeat."

Back on Ocean Isle, Smith said she sometimes makes the drive across the state border for shopping or occasional dining in South Carolina. But she usually tries to stay out of Myrtle.

"You don't want to hear what I think of Myrtle Beach," Smith said.

The beaches of southern North Carolina are the strips to Myrtle's strand, often rural and often preferring it that way. Some use the phrase "family friendly" to distinguish the atmosphere north of the state line.

"There's a different dynamic between Myrtle and Sunset," said Sunset Beach Mayor Robert Forrester. "We're very much family oriented, families who have been coming for a number of years."

Sunset Beach's most significant controversy in recent years came last winter, when the town considered banning cabanas on the beach.

"I got 350 emails about banning cabanas," Forrester said. "The overwhelming majority all referred to the fact that they've been coming to the beach for 30 years. That their grandmother came 80 years ago."

Forrester doesn't speak ill of Myrtle Beach, saying he visits somewhat regularly for shopping and dining. He said plenty of Sunset visitors steal away for a day in Myrtle Beach while on vacation..

"The negative activities that happened over the weekend, the vast majority of the people that come here would not be associated with," Forrester said, saying he hears mostly of day trips to the alligator adventure shows or Broadway at the Beach. "You wouldn't find the same kind of population that stays there as stays here."

Smith acknowledged that Brunswick County has likely received a boost from the enormous growth of Myrtle Beach.

"I think Myrtle was primed for growth and in the right place, and Brunswick benefited from that," Smith said. "But thank goodness we've kept ourselves a little quieter."

That relationship may be most important for Calabash, which collects loads of day trippers from Myrtle Beach seeking out seafood restaurants or a day on the water. Bob Taylor runs Calabash Fishing Fleet and said 75 percent of his approximately 550 charter voyages a year are from groups from Myrtle Beach.

Taylor said he doesn't expect the shootings to drive the crowds away from Myrtle.

"Calabash is the closest port to Myrtle Beach, so if you're looking to go fishing or just out on a boat, you have to drive north and come to the inlet," Taylor said. "(The shooting) was an isolated incident; I don't foresee any real impact. In the short term, maybe, people might check out a little early. But that could happen just about anywhere. We've had a high influx of people this year. Out of all those people, you'll have a handful of bad seeds here and there."

John Hobgood runs the only grocery store on Sunset Beach, the Island Market. He said he doesn't expect the incidents in Myrtle to have much impact on Sunset or beaches like it.

"It was tragic," Hobgood said. "Nothing really good happens after midnight. But it's not really going to impact the people who come here."

Drew Jackson; 919-829-4577; @jdrewjackson

___

(c)2017 The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)

Visit The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.) at http://www.newsobserver.com

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Archive: Bathing Beauties: ‘Beaches’ of Bergen mark the sands of time – NorthJersey.com

By Samantha Hourihan, Special to North Jersey Media Group 8:00 a.m. ET June 26, 2017

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Bathers at Upper Saddle Rivers Anona Park, circa 1930(Photo: courtesy of Kay Yeomans)

From (201) Magazine archives: This story was originally published in the July 2006 issue.

Dig your toes into the warm sand. Wade into the cool water. Swim out to the diving platform and take a plunge from the high diving board. Sidle up to a picnic bench and snack on a boxed lunch. Stick around til after dark on a Friday evening and enjoy a family movie while little ones prance in front of large outdoor screens. And, if youre lucky, listen to live music and dance on a wooden-plank floor placed beneath a string of lights that swings in the summer breeze. Thats how residents and tourists who frequented Bergens sand-bottom pools escaped the seasonal heat for a good part of the 20th century.

Wealthy Bergen industrialists bought the properties usually including a dam, pond or stream and converted them into bathing beaches. These developers recognized Bergens potential as an important recreational destination. Sand reminded people of the shore without the travel and the inconvenience.

Some of the pools are gone, butseveral community-based sand-bottom pools still dot Bergens landscape.

Kay Yeomans, historian for Upper Saddle River, has fond memories of Anona Park, the pool built by her husbands grandfather in 1929.

People came up from all the big cities and rented picnic tables in the grove, she says. Theyd put the old wooden ice boxes by the tables, and that was their place for the summer. Anona was sold to a developer in 1968, and now is part of a homeowners association that has added tennis courts.

Allendales Brookside Racquet & Swim Club has a relatively new sand pool, constructed in the late 1960s. Chuck Elmes bought the property, excavated the site and trucked in sand from the Jersey shore to line the pond.

People enjoyed the gradual slope of the beach, explains Elmes. They didnt have to jump in, in order to get themselves wet. They could wade in the sand and play in the shallow water.

People were nostalgic about goingto the shore without the drive, Elmes continues. You could come to see friends from the area and have a good time outdoors and feel safe.

For many who still spread out their beach towels on the sandy shores of their local pools, that good-time outdoors feeling still remains.

I love going to Graydon in thesummertime, says 9-year-old Rachel Pizzuti, Ridgewood. I see all my friends there. I get to swim and play in the sand five minutes from my house.

Upper Saddle Rivers Anona Park, circa 1930(Photo: courtesy of Kay Yeomans)

Built just before the Stock Market crashed in 1929, Anona Park is one of the longest surviving sand-bottom pools in Bergen.

Brookside was designed to give visitors the feeling of a complete social outing. Picnic groves complemented the beach where swimmers could play in the sandor frolic in the shallow water.

Vintage Bergen: Long-gone drive-in theaters

Aerial Photo - Brookside Raquet Club 480 Brookside Ave Allendale(Photo: Michael Bocchieri, North Jersey Media Group)

Crestwood Lake on Crestwood Avenue, Allendale has been in recreational existence since 1928. The Crestwood Cruisers Swim Team, for children ages 7 to 17, invites all eager swimmers who can swim at least 25 yards to swim in the summer community league and compete against other sand pool teams in the county.

Crestwood Lake, Allendale, in 1970(Photo: Stuart Davis)

Darlington County Park, part of the Bergen County Department of Parks, offers two sand-bottom pools, basketball courts, tennis courts, and handball courts.With a permit, larger groups may hold picnics on the grounds from Memorial Day through Labor Day.

Darlington County Park, Mahwah, in 1965(Photo: the record archives)

Graydon has experienced a number of renovations since this photo was taken, but the parking lots of this village pool still overflow on a hot summer afternoon.

Graydon Pool, Ridgewood in 1957.(Photo: The Ridgewood News archives)

More on Graydon: 'There's just something homey about Graydon'

Memorial Pool and Walsh Pool provide Fair Lawn residents with hours of fun with rafts, slides and even a sand castle sculpture contest held in August.

Memorial Pool, Fair Lawn, in 1949(Photo: The Ridgewood News archive)

The Old Mill Bathing Beach, the ruins of which can still be found at 189 Paramus Road, has a familiar and often-photographed entrance. (Episode 22 ofThe Sopranos, From Where to Eternity, was shot on location at the Old Mill.)The Paramus Bathing Beach (not shown) was a 1932 structure that survived until it was boarded up in 1962. A housing development was constructed on the site in the 1980s.

The Old Mill Bathing Beach, Paramus, in 1962(Photo: Gordon Corbett jr., The Record)

Lake Idle Wild Bathing Beach delighted bathers with an extra feature a childrens zoo.

Lake Idle Wild Bathing Beach, Old Tappan, in 1984(Photo: Steven Auchard)

The grand-daddy of Bergen sand-bottom pools was Woodcliff Lakes Old Mill Pond Bathing Beach. The pool dated to the early 20th century and was among the very first of the countys pools.

Old Mill Pond Bathing Beach, Woodcliff Lake, in 1971(Photo: Emmett Francois/The Record)

More vintage photos:Follow @TheRecordArchives on Instagram

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San Clemente beaches closed after 8-foot shark sighting near pier – OCRegister

Closure signs, like the one seen here in May, again dot San Clemente beaches after an 8-foot shark was spotted Monday morning.(Photo courtesy of Jeff Antenore)

An 8-foot shark sighted by multiple people prompted city beaches in San Clemente to close Monday afternoon.

The sighting was first reported at 10:45 a.m. after multiple witnesses saw the shark outside the pier, according to a city announcement. The shark was then confirmed by a lifeguard working the pier tower.

Lifeguards hovered a drone in the area about 11:30 a.m. and saw the shark just outside of the surf near T-street, just south of the pier.

The closure spans from North Beach to Lost Winds for four hours, with plans to lift the closure at 3:30 p.m.

We have cleared the water, posted signs, updated surf tape and web page and are flying the red flag, according to the announcement.

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San Clemente beaches closed after 8-foot shark sighting near pier - OCRegister

Hubble captures massive dead disc galaxy – Astronomy Now Online

This is a wide view of galaxy cluster MACS J2129-0741, located in the constellation Aquarius. The massive galaxy cluster magnifies, brightens, and distorts the images of remote background galaxies, including the far-distant, dead disc galaxy MACS2129-1. Credit: NASA, ESA, M. Postman (STScI), and the CLASH team

By combining the power of a natural lens in space with the capability of NASAs Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers made a surprising discoverythe first example of a compact yet massive, fast-spinning, disc-shaped galaxy that stopped making stars only a few billion years after the big bang.

Finding such a galaxy early in the history of the universe challenges the current understanding of how massive galaxies form and evolve, say researchers.

When Hubble photographed the galaxy, astronomers expected to see a chaotic ball of stars formed through galaxies merging together. Instead, they saw evidence that the stars were born in a pancake-shaped disc.

This is the first direct observational evidence that at least some of the earliest so-called dead galaxies where star formation stopped somehow evolve from a Milky Way-shaped disc into the giant elliptical galaxies we see today.

This is a surprise because elliptical galaxies contain older stars, while spiral galaxies typically contain younger blue stars. At least some of these early dead disc galaxies must have gone through major makeovers. They not only changed their structure, but also the motions of their stars to make a shape of an elliptical galaxy.

This new insight may force us to rethink the whole cosmological context of how galaxies burn out early on and evolve into local elliptical-shaped galaxies, said study leader Sune Toft of the Dark Cosmology Center at the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Perhaps we have been blind to the fact that early dead galaxies could in fact be discs, simply because we havent been able to resolve them.

Previous studies of distant dead galaxies have assumed that their structure is similar to the local elliptical galaxies they will evolve into. Confirming this assumption in principle requires more powerful space telescopes than are currently available. However, through the phenomenon known as gravitational lensing, a massive, foreground cluster of galaxies acts as a natural zoom lens in space by magnifying and stretching images of far more distant background galaxies. By joining this natural lens with the resolving power of Hubble, scientists were able to see into the center of the dead galaxy.

The remote galaxy is three times as massive as the Milky Way but only half the size. Rotational velocity measurements made with the European Southern Observatorys Very Large Telescope (VLT) showed that the disc galaxy is spinning more than twice as fast as the Milky Way.

Using archival data from the Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH), Toft and his team were able to determine the stellar mass, star-formation rate, and the ages of the stars.

Why this galaxy stopped forming stars is still unknown. It may be the result of an active galactic nucleus, where energy is gushing from a supermassive black hole. This energy inhibits star formation by heating the gas or expelling it from the galaxy. Or it may be the result of the cold gas streaming onto the galaxy being rapidly compressed and heated up, preventing it from cooling down into star-forming clouds in the galaxys center.

But how do these young, massive, compact discs evolve into the elliptical galaxies we see in the present-day universe? Probably through mergers, Toft said. If these galaxies grow through merging with minor companions, and these minor companions come in large numbers and from all sorts of different angles onto the galaxy, this would eventually randomize the orbits of stars in the galaxies. You could also imagine major mergers. This would definitely also destroy the ordered motion of the stars.

Thefindingsare published in the June 22 issue of the journalNature. Toft and his team hope to use NASAs upcoming James Webb Space Telescope to look for a larger sample of such galaxies.

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., in Washington, D.C.

The Very Large Telescope is a telescope facility operated by the European Southern Observatory on Cerro Paranal in the Atacama Desert of Northern Chile.

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Hubble captures massive dead disc galaxy - Astronomy Now Online