Ebolaviruses need very few mutations to cause disease in new host species – Outbreak News Today

Kent researchers have identified how few mutations it can take for Ebolaviruses to adapt to affect previously resistant species.

Ebola is one of the worlds most virulent diseases, though rodent species such as guinea pigs, rats and mice are not normally susceptible to it. However, through repeated infection of a host animal, Ebola virus strains can be generated that replicate and cause disease within new host rodent species.

Scientists in the University of Kents School of Biosciences examined the changes associated with Ebolavirus adaptation to rodents including guinea pigs and mice across four different studies. They found that only very few mutations, probably fewer than five, are required for the virus to adapt.

In particular, a change in the Ebolavirus protein VP24 seems to be critical for Ebola viruses to infect a new animal species. Ebolaviruses infecting domestic species, including pigs and dogs, may also result in virus changes that may increase the risk to humans. Reston viruses, Ebolaviruses that have not been shown to cause disease in humans, so far, are known to circulate in domestic pigs in Asia.

The research was performed by Dr Mark Wass (Senior Lecturer in Computational Biology), Professor Martin Michaelis (Professor of Molecular Medicine), and Dr Jeremy Rossman (Senior Lecturer in Virology) and members of their research groups.

The research, entitled Changes associated with Ebola virus adaptation to novel species, was published in the journal Bioinformatics. See here: https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btx065

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Ebolaviruses need very few mutations to cause disease in new host species - Outbreak News Today

What becomes of the broken hearted in the age of apps? – CNET

Jimmy Ruffin says it all in his 1960s hit "What Becomes of the Broken Hearted" when he sings, "I know I've got to find some kind of peace of mind. Help me, please."

This is part of CNET's "It's Complicated" series about the role technology plays in our relationships.

If you type "how do you fix a broken heart" into Google, you'll get roughly 2.5 million search results. The top of the list includes tips from WebMD, WikiHow, World of Psychology and Oprah.com (which recommends, tongue-in-cheek, to see a psychic).

Most of the guidelines are things we've all heard before -- spend time with friends, let yourself cry, write down all the positives and negatives of a relationship -- which got me wondering if there is anything decidedly more modern to cure heartache.

The process of finding love has become increasingly high-tech, with dating apps and sites like Tinder, Match and OkCupid. Social media lets you tell the world you're in a romantic relationship. Facebook gives you options to display whether you're "in a relationship," "married" or the dicier "it's complicated." But where's the tech for people sobbing into their pillows at night?

That's a "gap in the industry begging to be filled," said Donna Freitas, author of "The Happiness Effect" and "The End of Sex." "While college students spoke of apps like Tinder when I did my recent study on social media, no one mentioned anything about an app that is good for healing a broken heart."

So while the industry plays catch-up, I can offer suggestions on tech that serves in a pinch.

The app Mend touts itself as "a personal trainer for heartbreak." It puts you on a 28-day "heartbreak cleanse" that guides you through daily audio trainings and "journaling." It's subscription-based, with the first week free and $9.99 a month from then on. There's also the $3.99 Breakup Medicine app, which offers day-to-day exercises and "action tips" for getting over a breakup. If neither works, you could use the free Picture to Burn app that lets you upload photos of an ex and digitally light them on fire.

While hanging out on social media can often make you feel worse as you see friends coupling up and exes moving on, there are a few helpful Facebook groups, subreddits and Twitterbots.

Most Facebook groups for the heartsick are community forums where people can share their stories and get support from other members. Broken Heart Rehab has earnest inspirational phrases and articles about healing, like "Don't let the past control you." Similarly, HeartBroken has tips for feeling better but also throws in some scornful jokes like, "Ignoring my messages? Don't Worry! You won't receive one someday."

Reddit has at least a dozen subreddits for people in the lonely-hearts club. A few popular ones include Heartbreak (tagline: "Hearts break. Deal with it here"); BreakUps, where people discuss future, current or past separations; and Limerence, where folks talk through obsessive infatuations.

Twitterbots can lighten the spirit in the way they pair words and tweets. Consider DSCOVR:EPIC. This bot regularly tweets out whole-Earth photos taken from NASA's DSCOVR satellite, reminding onlookers just how big the world is. And the knock knock bot creates jokes using Google's autocomplete feature -- sure to make even the saddest person laugh. For example, "Knock knock! Who's there? Acorn. Acorn who? Acorn squash!"

Does your heart break every time you see an ex's photo on social media? Are you having trouble controlling your urge to online stalk past loves? Fortunately, there's a fix for that.

"Some people get into these crazy loops [by] Facebook stalking and breaking into email accounts," said Ilana Gershon, associate professor at Indiana University and author of "The Breakup 2.0: Disconnecting Over New Media." "People who can't control themselves ... need ways to keep themselves from being online all of the time."

Enter browser extensions. Eternal Sunshine lets you hide someone from Facebook without deleting them, while the more extreme KillSwitch will erase all your past interactions and photos of that certain someone you can't seem to forget. StayFocusd limits the time you spend on websites that hold traces of your ex.

Even Facebook has acknowledged how hard breakups can be in this age of social media. In 2015, it began testing a tool that lets you hide your ex from your news feed and remove your name from previous posts and photos with them.

In the end, though, it might not be tech that'll mend your broken heart.

Technology "helps you stay in touch," said Michael Rosenfeld, Stanford sociology professor who studies online dating. "It is only your friends who can console you when you are heartbroken."

It's Complicated: This is dating in the age of apps. Having fun yet? These stories get to the heart of the matter.

Technically Literate: Original works of short fiction with unique perspectives on tech, exclusively on CNET.

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What becomes of the broken hearted in the age of apps? - CNET

WhatsApp to YouTube, master social media with these secret tips – Economic Times

The most popular platforms out there evolve at a rapid pace. Any user will know the basics but there are hidden tricks too.

Here is a list of the things that even regular users may find interesting:

FACEBOOK Regular Facebook users will probably be aware of exactly how it works across platforms they make it so easy to use! You probably also know that anyone on Facebook can message you, regardless of whether theyre friends with you or not. All of these messages go into a special inbox called message requests. If you choose to accept the request, it doesnt mean that youre accepting a friend request. But did you know that there are actually two message inboxes? Theres another one called filtered requests and you can access it from the Facebook Messenger app or if youre signed in on a web browser. Look though it once in a while and you may find something interesting.

TWITTER There are a bunch of ways to use Twitter better and power users will know all about lists, hashtags, conversations, keyboard shortcuts and mentions. But there is a way to read a lot more about your tweets, engagements, top mentions and biggest followers using Twitter Analytics. This is Twitters own analytics tool and can be accessed at http://analytics.twitter.com.

This will show you a month-bymonth account of your Twitter stats and you can use this info to grow your following. Another cool Twitter trick is to schedule tweets, done using third-party tools like Twuffer and Hootsuite.

WHATSAPP WhatsApp GIF support is currently available for iOS only. Within the app, WhatsApp has its own collection of animated GIFs that can be used directly. In the chat window, tap the + button and select photo and video library. On the lower left, you will see a search sign with GIF next to it tap to view and search the GIF collection. WhatsApp also lets you individually manage storage for friends/groups. By default, you cannot view how much data is being consumed by a chat. Go to Settings > Data and Storage Usage > Storage usage you can view your chats arranged as per the amount of storage consumed. Tap on a chat name to view details of the type of media for each chat you can even tap manage to delete the media from the chat.

YOUTUBE YouTube has a built-in feature that automatically generates captions for uploaded videos. Once you upload a video, YouTube takes some time (depending on the length of the video) to generate the transcript. You can open the video, tap the More button and select Transcript to view the text. All this text can also be copied to a notepad for later use. If you have an audio file and need it transcribed, you can use YouTube. First, you need to convert your audio file into a video file using http://www.tunestotube.com.

Then just upload to YouTube. Keep in mind that the transcription is not 100% accurate but it does beat manually transcribing something. Finally, YouTube has a section called TestTube where you can try out experimental features. Currently, theyre testing 4k video playback at 60 fps if you have a powerful enough computer and a fast-broadband connection, you can try it out.

INSTAGRAM A lot of people really love the unique filters on Instagram. However, there is an easy workaround if you really want to use one of those filters without sharing anything. This works on both Android and iOS versions of the app. First, open the app, click on your profile tab and settings (top right). Under Account and Story Settings, switch on the option to save shared photos. Then, you can load a photo into Instagram and apply your filter. Before you click share, switch the phone to airplane mode. The post will fail obviously, but the edited image will be saved to the image gallery. Theres another small trick most users may not know the ability to reorder the filters. If you favourite filters are way down the list, you can arrange them so that they come up first. While scrolling through the filters, go to the end till you see Manage. Tap this and use the three lines on each filters name to rearrange their order according to your favourites.

HYPERLAPSE & BOOMERANG On the iPhone versions of these apps, there is a hidden Labs menu that you can access by using a special gesture: you have to use four fingers and tap four times on the screen when the app is open. If this doesnt happen at first, slow down your taps, with a short gap between the first two and last two taps. In Hyperlapse, you can switch resolution from 720p to 1080p, adjust frame rate from 30 to 24fps and change the speed of the video. With the looping video app Boomerang, you can also increase video resolution to 1080p, change the video direction (forward and back, forward only, back only) plus adjust a host of other settings like frame count, playback frame rate etc. Experiment with these settings to get a unique video.

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WhatsApp to YouTube, master social media with these secret tips - Economic Times

Gigabit LTE, a 5G stopgap, is now live – Network World

Thought-provoking commentary on technologies that are changing the way mankind does things.

Network World | Feb 14, 2017 11:17 AM PT

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Groundbreaking peak download speeds of 930 Mbps were obtained last week at the operational launch of Telstras Gigabit LTE network. Peak upload speeds of 127 Mbps were obtained at the same event.

The ultra-fast service has now rolled out in major Australian Central Business Districts (CBDs),Qualcomm says in a blog post. That includes the CBDs of Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney, according to Android Central.

Those speeds are significantly faster than average existing 4G (LTE) download speeds. The two fastest carriers in the U.S. (T-Mobile and Verizon) average slightly under 17 Mbps nationally,according to Open Signals February 2017 survey of network speed comparisons. OpenSignal used measurements obtained from 169,000 smartphone users in the fourth quarter of 2016 to get this years results.

The Australian Mobile Network Operator (MNO) Telstra, which runs the new network along with Qualcomm, Ericsson and NETGEAR will make hardware available at the end of this month. A Gigabit LTE-specific router called the NETGEAR Nighthawk M1 is used.

The service, termed Gigabit LTEwhich incorporates the Nighthawk M1 modem and contains theSnapdragon X16 LTE modem, along with ac Wi-Fiis being pitched at future multimedia applications by Qualcomm in its marketing materials.

Live 360-degree, 4K streaming video running in virtual reality (VR) headsets without frame drops was part of a demonstration at the launch event. Large offline movies, those that experts increasingly believe will be downloaded more frequently at airports before plane boarding, will benefit from these kinds of speeds. Qualcomm demonstrated a 32-minute, HD film download in 15 seconds on the mobile network. Uploading 4K video files of about 300 MB took 30 seconds, the company claims.

Peak download speeds that are nearly ten times as fast as those first-generation 4G LTE devices are obtainable with the Snapdragon X16 LTE modem, writes Sherif Hanna of Qualcomm in the mobile technology companys blog.

The X16 modem derives from Qualcomms 2014 LTE modem, monickered the X10. That device aggregated three, 20-MHz-wide LTE carriers to obtain 450 Mbps at 60 MHz. The X16 uses the same amount of spectrum to grab 1 Gbps throughputin other words, around 100 percent faster.

Theyre doing it by using more antennas and more-sophisticated digital signal processing. The new modem can receive 10 streams of LTE data simultaneously. It uses four MIMO antennas, says Hanna. Usually two are used.

The modem utilizes better signal processing to extract more bits out of every LTE transmission, he says. The boosting of the throughput of each of the 10 spatial streams creates around 100 Mbps. More streams means more data can be sent by the LTE network.

With 256-QAM, a newer form of digital processing for decoding LTE, a third more bits can be encoded. Thus each spatial stream increases from 75 Mbps to 100 Mbps.

Gigabit LTE is also an important step on our journey to 5G, Qualcomm says in a press release. Unreleased, and as yet unratified, 5G will likely be commercially available in the U.S. in 2020.

Fifteen MNOs through 11 countries intend to launch or trial Gigabit LTE in 2017.That includes AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile in the U.S., Qualcomm says.

This article is published as part of the IDG Contributor Network. Want to Join?

Patrick Nelson was editor and publisher of the music industry trade publication Producer Report and has written for a number of technology blogs. Nelson wrote the cult-classic novel Sprawlism.

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Squash review: Drop and compress your way to smaller image files in a flash – Macworld

An easy to use, drag-and-drop Mac utility that cuts JPEG, PNG, and GIF files down to size with no noticeable loss of quality while saving valuable storage space.

Macworld | Feb 15, 2017 4:53 AM PT

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When it comes to the web, smaller is always better. If an image-heavy site takes too long to load, visitors will just click over to something else. While there are plenty of software tools for optimizing image files on the Mac, few do it with the simplicity and speed of Squash.

Over a year ago, I reviewed a useful Mac utility called JPEGmini, which reduces image files with no discernable loss in image quality. Although limited to JPEG, the software was easy to use and produced impressive results, but at $99, its clearly not aimed at casual users.

Drag and drop one or more image files onto the Squash window, and within seconds youll have optimized versions a fraction of their original size.

Enter Squash ($20, available on the App Store), which offers the same quality and simplicity for less, and does it faster. The premise is the same: Drag and drop one or more images onto the application window, and within seconds youll have optimized versions a fraction of the size that look identical to the naked eye.

The more versatile Squash works with PNG and GIF files as well as JPEG, and can also be used to create JPEGs from TIFF or PSD files; theres currently no PDF support, however. While Photoshop users can perform such conversions, Squash launches in the blink of an eye and is nimbler at quick conversions you may want for sending client approval emails or uploading images to the web.

After each task is finished, Squash shows how much space has been saved and allows users to drag and drop converted files anywhere theyd like.

Squash displays the cutesy animation of a vice squeezing a photo into a gift-wrapped present as it works. Its mildly entertaining the first few times but gets old after a while, especially accompanied by raucous sound effects. Thankfully, you can disable them entirely in settings. Theres no way to cancel the process once its started, short of quitting the application, but everything happens quite fast.

Squash reduced an 852.5MB folder containing 230 JPEG files to 258.2MB in just under 40 seconds, a savings of 594.3MB with no visible differences in image detail. By comparison, JPEGmini took three times as long but only saved 581MB, gobbling up significantly more CPU time in the process. JPEGmini displays animated thumbnails as images are optimized and an option to resize images, which Squash does not.

Both are minimalists when it comes to settings. By default, Squash users must choose where to save converted files, but this can be changed to a specific location or replace original files instead. (Originals are never actually replaced, only moved to Trash in case you change your mind.) You can also drag-and-drop optimized images from the save button to any desired destination, a convenient hidden shortcut.

There are only a few settings in Squash, but youll want to disable the often-overbearing sound effects after the first few conversions.

Step aside, JPEGmini. Squash for Mac is now the fastest, cheapest, and most versatile image optimization utility in town.

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Squash review: Drop and compress your way to smaller image files in a flash - Macworld

These are the science concepts you need to know to understand political life in 2017 – Quartz

Its early days of 2017 still, but already its become apparent that this year science will play a larger role in public discourse than it has in the past, at least in the US. The scientific community has found itself at odds with the new White House administration in countless ways, and is gearing up for a fight that will take place in labs and hacker spaces, in the halls of civic buildings, and in streets nationwide.

The move science is making from the ivory tower to the polis is not limited to the US; labs across the world are already taking in scientists made homeless (in the institutional sense) by Donald Trumps immigration policies. And since Trumps policies will inevitably impact global concerns ranging from climate change to the free movement of scientists who rely on cross-border collaborations, we should expect to see science take on a more political flavor all across the world in 2017.

Quartz has put together a compendium of the scientific concepts and terms that will be at the heart of these conversationsand will characterize the world of scientific discovery through the rest of the year.

Skepticism, according to the Skeptic Society, is the application of reason to any and all ideasno sacred cows allowed. Reason in this context is the scientific kind. Skeptics dont take claims at face value. They demand proof in the form of concrete evidence and replicable results. In that sense, every scientist is a skeptic.

In a political era rife with linguistic manipulation, the word has been co-opted to mean its opposite: a person who denies the evidence in front of them, whether on climate change or vaccines. In the Orwellian, fact-fudging world of the US president Donald Trump administration, this trend will only get worse. Skepticism is a willingness to evenly assess the scientific evidence available. It is not and never was denial of the truth. Im a skeptic not because I do not want to believe, one prominent skeptic wrote, but because I want to know.

At this point, the reality of the US opioid epidemic is widely accepted across the political spectrum. Toward the end of 2016, Congress committed $1 billion to fight a growing public health problem affecting 2 million Americans and causing 33,000 overdose deaths a year as of 2015. But reversing the often-fatal course of addiction will be far more difficult than, say, stopping the spread of Zika, because the opioid problem is not rooted in a microscopic enemy virus that can be isolated and identified. Instead, it frequently starts with compassion.

Iatrogenesis, Greek for brought forth by the healer, is a useful term to keep in mind when thinking about the opioid epidemicand when assessing the state of health care more broadly. The phrase refers to any negative health effect on a person resulting from doctors or other health care workers promoting or applying services as beneficial to their health. Thats a mouthful, but its the perfect explanation of how the opioid epidemic came to be: A patient in pain they cant explain comes to an overworked doctor who prescribes the miracle drug that makes everyones problems go away, and then another addict is made.

Its not just an opioid problem, either. By some estimates, medical error is the third-leading cause of death in the USand it has nothing to do with incompetence, laziness, or malevolence. Instead, its the result of doctors applying medical practices they think will work, but dont. So the real health care question of 2017 is this: how do you solve a problem like iatrogenesis?

Its been hailed as the most important number youve not heard of. Simply put, the social cost of carbon is the measure of economic damage that each ton of carbon dioxide causes to society. The US government puts the price today at $36 per ton. But estimates for it range from as little as $6 to as much as $250 per ton.

Another way to think about the social cost of carbon is as an environmental insurance policy. If carbon emitters pony up money for the emissions they put out, high-emission products are priced at the value that they should be based on, i.e. the amount of harm those emissions cause to common resources like air and water that we all use.

Youve already heard this term bandied around by Trump. And he is likely to keep bandying it around for quite some time. Clean coal is not a thing, its a process. When coal is burnt, it releases carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the air. Clean-coal technology captures the carbon dioxide and buries it underground or puts it to some use.

So far, carbon capture and storage, also called CCS, hasnt taken off because its too expensive for commercial viability. But if the Trump administration is willing to admit climate change is real, and buys into the idea of a carbon taxwhich takes into account the social cost of carbon, and which other Republicans are loudly supportingit could make clean coal a realistic possibility.

The field of genetics has come a long way, and very quickly. We discovered the structure of DNA in 1953, and now we can manipulate it to create plants with exquisite properties, pig-human hybrids, and genetically modified babies. Next up: outsmarting evolution through a new technology called gene drives.

Normally, an organism has a 50% chance of inheriting any given gene from each of its parents. But certain genes can increase their own chances of being inherited. Scientists are developing techniques to exploit this natural trick and enhance it. If they are successful (and pass stringent ethics tests), we could use gene drives to wipe out whole species of mosquitoes. But as with any powerful technology, its also possible to use gene drives to do ill.

The human genome has 3 billion letters, and theyre 10 million times smaller than a human hair. To change only a handful of the letters to manipulate DNA requires extraordinary precision. Thats where CRISPR comes in. The term stands for clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats, and its the most precise cut-and-paste genetic tool ever developed.

The reason it works so well is that its based on a naturally developed tool that bacteria have been using to fight off viruses for billions of years. That means evolution has had its sweet time to hone it into a near-perfect biological mechanism. Ever since CRISPR was first published in scientific literature, geneticists around the world have flocked to use it.

In 2016, researchers announced a precision-gene-editing alternative to CRISPR, called NgAgo, that appeared to be even more precise. But so far, attempts to replicate the process have failed.

Nature Biotechnology, which published the initial findings, said it would give the research team the opportunity to investigate and respond to criticisms by January 2017. However, on Jan. 19, the journal said it would postpone any final announcement. Meanwhile, a large Danish biotech firm announced it would be backing the Chinese university lab that had reportedly used NgAgo successfully.

When scrolling through Twitter, do you reflexively retweet things affirming what you already know? When thinking back on a relationship turned sour, is it easy to see in hindsight the comments and slights revealing the other persons true character? If so, youre guilty of confirmation bias. But dont feel bad. We all are.

Faced with a bombardment of environmental data, our brains make constant unconscious judgments about whats worth our attention. Confirmation bias is the flaw in our reasoning that impels us to seek information that supports our beliefs and discount or ignore that which doesnt. Its a constant presence in our politics, media, and personal relationships.

When it comes to science, confirmation bias can lead to flawed research and disastrous results. Its the reason doctors are prone to overlook symptoms that undermine their diagnoses, or researchers dismiss as errors results that dont support their hypotheses.

Each time you click on an HTTP link, your browser has to establish a connection with the physical servers where that website stores its information, wherever they are in the world. Thats costly, slow, and ultimately very fragileif a single link between your computer and a far-away server breaks, the information transfer fails. It also makes both censorship and inadvertent erasure very easy; take down the HTTP link, or simply stop paying for your server space, and suddenly that information drops out of the web and becomes inaccessible.

The InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) is a relatively new idea to radically remake the internet into a peer-to-peer distributed web. Instead of relying on an origin server to house and transfer data, IPFS would make it possible to permanently store a copy of that dataeffectively turning your computer into another host server. When you click on a link, the data within it would be stored permanently, resulting in copies of data on many computers that can be retrieved easily. Pages would be labeled with a fingerprint-like cryptographic hash, or a long string of numbers and letters, that would make it easily identifiable as a legitimate copy of the original data. If anything changes on the page, so does the hash.

Right now, programmers and archivists are scrambling to download government data for fear that the Trump administration might alter it, or take it offline. But even in rescuing that data, the most the programmers can do is upload the data back onto one (or at best, a few) origin servers. But IPFS would change that; just as hundreds of libraries may have a copy of the same book, many servers could have a legitimate copy of the file containing a data setso there would be thousands of servers hosting that information in a legitimate form, not just one. And that information could be retrieved easily from the nearest source by anyone looking for it.

During the contentious Senate confirmation hearing for Scott Pruitt, Trumps pick to lead the US Environmental Protection Agency, careful observers might have heard the acronym PFOA name-checked by a Republican senator from West Virginia. Perfluorooctanoic acid, or PFOA, an ingredient in Teflon, and its sister compound, perfluorooctane sulfonic acid or PFOS, a widely used flame retardant, have been in the spotlight lately. Thats because the cancer-causing toxins keep turning up in drinking water supplies of US towns and cities.

As with roughly 80,000 other chemicals approved for use in the US, PFOA is not currently regulated by the EPAso state or local governments arent required to test for them. But after years of debate and a major scientific report connecting PFOA to two cancers and several other serious diseases, the EPA was rumored to want to start regulating the toxin this yearbut that was before Trump became president. Now his promises to gut the EPA leave that and all other public health regulation up in the air.

When introduced in the early 1990s, this class of pesticides was hailed as a godsend. Neonicotinoids were just as effective at protecting crops as then-popular organophosphate and carbamate insecticides, but with none of the toxic impact that the latter had on birds and mammals, including humans. Then we started to realize they had been harming us all alongjust in a way hidden from view.

Neonicotinoids, it turned out, were culpable in the bee colony collapse disorder that became a global trend. The crisis isnt bad just for the insects; bees and other pollinating insects are key cogs in the planetary food chain. Honeybees alone pollinate one-third of US crop species.

Over the past few years, the EPA has been reviewing the scientific literature on all approved neonicotinoids.; both the EPA and the EUs environmental regulator were expected to make final decisions in 2017 about whether or not the substances should be banned. But under an industry-friendly Trump administration, the EPAs recent work to regulate these chemicals could be scuttled.

The search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) began with the dawn of the space age, but the effort has long remained on the fringes of science. Thats changing, though, because many years of investment in astronomy and imaging technology are finally paying off.

Its like weve gone from looking down a drinking straw while using older generations of telescope to using a full-picture IMAX camera with the newer telescopes, says Steve Croft, a radio astronomer at the Berkeley SETI Research Center. That means, as early as this year, a lot of new phenomena will be found that will need explaining by scientists.

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These are the science concepts you need to know to understand political life in 2017 - Quartz

New Patent Suggests Sony Is Working On Vive-Like Tracking For PSVR – UploadVR

Sonys PlayStation VR (PSVR) is a great headset, but tracking quality is a common complaint from users. A new patent from the company, however, suggests it could be working on a fix for that.

A new patent from Sony Interactive Entertainment, filed last year and published earlier this month, reveals the company is working on a new tracking system that looks similar in concept and setup to the Lighthouse tracking seen in HTC and Valves Vive. As reported by CGM, the patent details a method for determining an orientation of a photosensor of a controller with respect to a projector which uses beam forming to pick up the location of both a head-mounted display like the PSVR and a controller like the DualShock 4.

The above image shows how these beams will further determine a position of a headset with respect to a projector. It is similar to the Lighthouse stations that come with the Vive and were developed as part of Valves SteamVR system. Two of these stations shoot beams across the room, which allows the headsets location to be tracked.

Currently, PSVR uses the PlayStation Camera to track a series of lights fitted around the front and back of the device. While the system works, light interference and a reliance on a single tracking sensor can cause drift, with users observing movement inside even if they arent moving their head or controllers. It could be that this alternative method of tracking is more accurate, solving what is one of the biggest complaints for the headset.

Of course, patents arent confirmation of products, and even if Sony is planning to more effective means of tracking, whos to say its for this iteration of PlayStation VR and the PlayStation 4? This could just as easily be the company laying the foundation for future versions of its tech.

Intriguingly, the description for this figure notes that the headset may be linked to a computing device (aka: the PS4) wirelessly via Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, radio frequency, protocol or other methods. Could that suggest that Sony is also working on a wireless version of PSVR? At the very least the documentation doesnt rule out the possibility, but it could also just be overly-descriptive.

Until this concept turns into a reality, you might want to keep closing your blinds and turning off the lights when using PSVR.

Tagged with: PSVR, sony, tracking, Vive

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New Patent Suggests Sony Is Working On Vive-Like Tracking For PSVR - UploadVR

Mt. Sinai Merger Shuts New York’s Integrative Medicine "Crown Jewel" – Huffington Post

The Continuum Center for Health and Healing on First Avenue in New York City was a pearl among the large integrative medicine centers that were sponsored by medical delivery organizations in the first years of the integrative era. First conceived in 1998, an estimated $10-million in philanthropic funds directly backed the construction and supported clinical services. The clinic's leaders included Woodson Merrell, MD, Barbara Glickstein, RN, MPH and Ben Kligler, MD, MPH.

The work at the Continuum Center was leading edge. The team fostered a high level of interprofessionalism and team care. They generated an important body of research. They experimented with business models and experienced times of profitability. Yet amidst a larger economic drama of what was called a merger between Continuum Health Partners and the now dominant Mt. Sinai Medical Center, the formerly 32-clinician integrative center, with its 6,000 visits per month, was put on the corporate chopping block last fall.

To gain an understanding of what took place, I contacted Merrell, pictured above, who left his position prior to the decision, and Kligler, who had already accepted a new position with the Veteran's Administration's integrative health initiative prior to Mt. Sinai's closure decision. Glickstein left early on.

In a short interview, Merrell spoke to how significantly new leadership or corporate culture can shift an integrative center's stature: "A vice president of the (former) Beth Israel leadership described us as a 'crown jewel' of the system. We were drawing a high percentage of new patients to the system. We got great reviews from patients for our care. Now Mt. Sinai is taking a more limited view of how to assess value, focusing on RVUs [relative value units]. They clearly didn't see the value in the center."

Kligler and I spoke at length about the turns of events leading to the decision. At the core of our exchange was the vulnerability of these stand-alone clinics amidst leadership changes and system mergers. I shared that I had recently interviewed his frequent colleague, University of Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine's executive director Victoria Maizes, MD about the shutdown of ACIM's Phoenix-based integrative health clinic. Maizes had referenced what she viewed as a parallel with the Continuum story. In both cases, the clinics seemed to be collateral damage to a larger merger with a dominant player who didn't have much interest in the field. (That interview is here.)

Kliger began by sharing a perspective from the Continuum partner, Beth Israel, with which the clinic was most directly associated: "From Beth Israel there was a long-time commitment to the idea of integrative health and of integrative health having value to the system. There was always pressure about the business model but there was never a question that integrative health had more value to Beth Israel than just the stand-alone clinic."

Kligler was vice chair and Merrell chair, for instance, for an associated Department of Integrative Medicine, formed in 2007. The Center's robust activities hit on all three of the research-education-clinical care sweet spots. They had not only an Academic Fellowship in Integrative Medicine but also an inpatient acupuncture fellowship. Kligler secured a series of major federal research grants.

This was a remarkable track record of local and national engagement. Yet, Kligler added, "we never got a message from Mt. Sinai that integrative health as a clinical service was important to them."

Kligler quickly clarified that he "totally understands how it looks from [Mt. Sinai's] point of view. We just looked like another practice in a hospital that was losing money." He shared that the termination of operations is part of the territory. Mt. Sinai is also ending Beth Israel's service as a general hospital. "Some systems have integrative health in their core clinical mission," Kligler says, adding, with finality: "Others don't."

Kligler views the loss of the Center as "just bad luck." Why? "[Mt. Sinai] came in when we were the most vulnerable." Had the merger come through a couple of years earlier, it would have been when the center "was booming."

Kligler explains. In 2012, demand exceeded the ability to fulfill on meeting patient interest. The Center was operating profitably and expanded to a third floor. New investment coupled with new practices not yet overflowing added up to a temporal moment of significant red ink. Had the merger come later, in Kligler's view, the new configuration would have had time to fill out and flourish. Mt. Sinai caught the snapshot of that moment's performance rather than considering a promising revenue trajectory. Kligler summed up his view: "Honestly, we can't hold Sinai responsible. It was terrible timing."

Mt. Sinai's integrative clinical services will not be fully terminated. A core of 4 physicians will re-locate to a clinic across Manhattan in the West Village. Some are pushing the system to keep some of the non-MD practitioners associated. Research grants and education initiatives have been moved to the Sinai Department of Family Medicine, reflecting the fact that Sinai remains supportive of research and education in integrative medicine, reports Kligler.

Meantime, the Department of Integrative Medicine has not been terminated. Kligler, who applied in August 2015 for his current new position as the National Director of the Integrative Health Coordinating Center at the Veteran's Health Administration, maintains a role in research as principal investigator on three projects. How well these will survive the departure of Kligler's driving energy is yet to be seen, especially as the curret research grants come to an end.

Kligler noted that "health systems tolerate losses in many areas, for all kinds of reasons - primary care for instance." While typically losing money, primary care serves as a funnel for more lucrative tertiary care operations.

I asked Kligler his views of what Mt. Sinai lost in their decision to shut the Center. He spoke first of the group of patients "for whom integrative health is important." He then considered the loss to students and residents to experience integrative practices on such a large scale through their rotations through the interprofessional and multidisciplinary Continuum Center. Mt. Sinai lost, he concluded "the opportunity to envision a healthcare system that brings a wider range of tools and practitioners to the treatment of patients."

This article is one in a series on significant ups and downs with major centers. We see significant expansion at Jefferson in Philadelphia, a new 17,000 square foot space for the Center for Functional Medicine at the Cleveland Clinic, and system-wide integrative health at Meridian Health. The build-up of integrative health and research in the Veterans Administration with which Kligler is now involved is another bright light.

Meantime, on the deficit side: the shutdown of the Banner/Center for Integrative Health in Phoenix which was intended as a proving ground for integrative care; the Allina/Penny George Institute shut its research department and limited its inpatient program; and while not a clinical site, the Samueli Institute, an engine of integrative health research, also announced that it is ending operations.

I am still digesting the meaning of all these changes. One reasonable conjecture is that the lack of discussion in the Trump administration of the need to move to from "volume to value" that is promoted in some ways through the Affordable Care Act will make the medical industry even less hospitable to integrative services.

What is certain, however, is that as Continuum's robust research output winds down, the real world, institutional research base for integrative health - with the losses here, at Penny George, Samueli Institute and in Arizona - is on the ropes. Who and what will step up?

More here:

Mt. Sinai Merger Shuts New York's Integrative Medicine "Crown Jewel" - Huffington Post

The Daily Pennsylvanian | Penn Medicine has developed a vaccine … – The Daily Pennsylvanian

Professor of medicine Drew Weissman said that vaccines that require multiple doses are hard to implement in areas with poor infrastructure because it can be hard to ensure people get their follow-up vaccinations.

The Zika virus may be mostly out of the news after its summertime peak, but Penn Medicine is still actively working to combat the spread of the disease.

A new vaccine developed at Penn Medicine could provide long-term protection against the Zika virus with just a single, relatively low dose. The virus continues to affect 76 countries in Central and South America and the Caribbean, with isolated local transmission cases in Florida.

Unlike other vaccines currently being developed, this new immunization does not use live viruses, which tend to cause adverse side effects and are not effective for those who have already been affected by the virus.

The new vaccines uses tiny strands of RNA that hold the genetic codes for making viral proteins that block Zika infection.

Drew Weissman, professor of medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine and senior author of the report on the new vaccine, said vaccines that require multiple doses are difficult to implement in areas with poor infrastructure.

The population that you would immunize right now is across South America, and much of that is very poor regions without much infrastructure for medical care, so if you had to give a vaccine twice or more, you would have to set up clinics and ways of following people to make sure everybody got immunized with two doses, Weissman said.

With a single dose, you go in, you find everybody, you immunize them once and youre done, he continued.

Up to this point, the vaccine has been tested on lab mice and monkeys. Human clinical trials are expected to start within 12 to 18 months.

The most important finding of this paper is that the vaccine is safe, Norbert Pardi, research associate and co-author of the report, said. We didnt see any side effects after vaccination in mice and monkeys.

Pardi also noted that the vaccine is protective after a single immunization with a relatively small dose.

This is very important [that] there is long-term protection, Pardi said. Many times, the problem with vaccines is that we get some protection for a while but after months or years, you have to be vaccinated again.

Weissman said this type of vaccine could be applied to other diseases, including influenza, HIV and malaria.

The research involves collaboration with lab researchers at Duke University and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health.

Theres a lot of potential to move [the vaccine] into a lot of different directions, he said.

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The Daily Pennsylvanian | Penn Medicine has developed a vaccine ... - The Daily Pennsylvanian

UI teaching future doctors the business of medicine – Iowa City Press Citizen

Jeff Charis-Carlson , jcharisc@press-citizen.com Published 5:20 p.m. CT Feb. 14, 2017 | Updated 15 hours ago

University of Iowa professor John Murry leads a seminar for medical school students at the Beisner Auditorium in the Bowen Science Building on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2017.(Photo: David Scrivner / Iowa City Press-Citizen)Buy Photo

What do the business histories of greeting cards and filtered water have to do with the practice of medicine?

Both help explain to future physicians how, when thinking about the future of medicine, they need to look beyond the limited field of their own expertise.

In the 1990s, for example, Hallmark and American Greetings discovered they had a lot less to worry about from each others market share than they did from their customers deciding to call each other, rather than send cards, becauseof the dropping costs of long distance.

The business planners for Britaand PUR water filters, likewise, have less to gain from poaching each others customers than they do from drawing clients the vast majority of people who get their water right from the tap.

Those are just two of many examples offered Saturday by John Murry, a marketing professor from the University of Iowas Tippie College of Business, to about 50 students from UIs Carver College of Medicine.

You are going to find yourself competing with people who look different than you, Murry told the students, shortly before the mornings first break.

Murrys marketing presentation was part of a half-day seminar designed to get the future internists, ophthalmologists, urologists and undecided specialists thinking about the various business conundrums they will face throughout their careers.

We need people who not only understand medicine and how to take care of patients but who also have a population health skill set and a business skill set, said Alan Reed, a professor of surgery and director of the Organ Transplant Center at UI Hospitals and Clinics. People who know how to get data from a financial statement and put that information to good use.

When Reed graduated medical school in the 1980s, he said physicians had really punted on being leaders in health care.

University of Iowa professor John Murry leads a seminar for medical school students at the Beisner Auditorium in the Bowen Science Building on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2017.(Photo: David Scrivner / Iowa City Press-Citizen)

Slowly but surely, physician leadership is becoming a more important part of the health care landscape, he said, pointing to the expansion of UIHC under the physician leadership of Jean Robillard, a professor of pediatrics and UI's outgoing vice president for medical affairs.

Reed went back to school himself and earned an MBA from UI in 2012.

It opened up a whole new avenue for me, he said.

So when a handful of medical students came to Reed asking for more exposure to business case studies, he worked with them to develop a new, three-year distinction track program to offer to medical students on a continual basis.

We thought these concepts were important and werent as represented as much as we would like them to be, said Charlie Paul, a fourth-year medical student who majored in finance as an undergraduate.

Paul said and his colleagues had kicked around various ideas, but they eventually settled on the quarterly, half-day seminar as a way to fit the sessions into medical students' busy schedules. The Carver College of Medicine already offers a few distinction track options for students, so the format would be sustainable year after year.

This isnt an MBA; it's not an advanced degree, Paul said. But as Dr. Reed says, it whets everyones appetite. It exposes students to these concepts and provides resources for reading more about them and for getting involved with larger projects.

Paul also stresses that the focus of the class isnt on treating individual patients as some sort of business commodity; its about preparing doctors for the business decisions they will have to make.

Those are separate and both very different and challenging problems of the health care industry, Paul said. You cant sacrifice patient care for the bottom line, but you also do yourself a disservice if youre not thinking about how to keep the lights on and how to keep patients happy. Its not in the patients best interest to not having the operating room running efficiently and on time.

In addition to Saturdays discussion of marketing, previous half-day seminars have focused on e-health and managerial accounting.

Instead of just learning how to practice medicine from a purely science- and patient-based point of view, Im also learning about how to consider the other external factors that are going to shape and influence and really dictate the way that I practice medicine, said Kelsey Adler, a first-year medical student from the Chicago area.

Medical school students follow along as University of Iowa professor John Murry holds a seminar at the Beisner Auditorium in the Bowen Science Building on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2017.(Photo: David Scrivner / Iowa City Press-Citizen)

The lesson Adler learned Saturday, she said, was to keep her eyes on those external forces.

You cannot just make decisions on your own experience, with only the perspective you have from your professional background, Alder said.

Lizzy Gerdis, a third-year medical student from Waukee, said she learned much from the previous seminars, but she arrived Saturday morning questioning whether a four-hour discussion of marketing would be helpful for her.

Her opinion changed as soon as Murry began his presentation.

I guess sometimes I dont really know what Ill be interested in until Im here, Gerdis said.

Reach Jeff Charis-Carlson at jcharisc@press-citizen.com or 319-887-5435. Follow him on Twitter at @JeffCharis.

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UI teaching future doctors the business of medicine - Iowa City Press Citizen

Virdis Medicine comes to Chambersburg Town Hall meeting to inform residents about their company – WHAG

CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. - Tuesday evening many in Chambersburg came to the Eugene C. Clarke community center where they could learn more about Virdis Medicine. Daniel Kearns is the managing operator for the company and says their goal is to provide medications to people in need.

There are 17 qualifying conditions, things like cancer, HIV, PTSD, epilepsy, so you have to have medical documentation that you have one of these conditions and you obviously have to get the recommendation from a physician, said Kearns.

During his presentation, he outlined that they were interested in Chambersburg because of it's location in South Central Pennsylvania.

When you look at the South Central Zone in Pa, Franklin County is in the middle and there are going to be a lot of counties in the South Central zone that don't receive a dispensary and we want to make sure that everyone in the zone has access to the medication, said Kearns.

Once Kearns was done with his presentation, people had the chance to both comment and ask questions. Deb and Richard Miller have a 35-year-old son who is autistic, and they believe their son could benefit from medical marijuana.

He's on very powerful medications right now, which have had some significance side affects and some of the research; I used to be a medical librarian indicates that medical marijuana would be helpful with someone with autism, said Deb Miller.

Karen Diller has a 20-year-old daughter who has struggled with seizures most of her life. She gave a personal testimony about how medical marijuana worked for their family and knows it will help others.

I know several people with situations such as ALS, cancer, MS, different things that I know people that really need to try this because it could be a life changer, it certainly has for us, said Diller.

Continued here:

Virdis Medicine comes to Chambersburg Town Hall meeting to inform residents about their company - WHAG

Campaign to pay for renovation of downtown site of KU medical school reaches goal – Salina Journal (subscription)

A campaign to fund the renovation of a downtown Salina building into the new home for the University of Kansas School of Medicines Salina campus has exceeded its original $7.5 million goal, representatives of the Salina Regional Health Foundation announced Tuesday.

Campaign contributions totaling more than $7.6 million have been received, but contributions continue to be sought to ensure that the expenses of the renovation of the former bank building at 138 N. Santa Fe can all be met, said Tom Martin, executive director of the foundation.

The campaign goal was set during the planning stages, and it was based on projections and estimates, Martin said. We hope its realistic, but its inevitable in construction that things come up that werent anticipated, and there are changes and revisions.

Martin said the Blueprint for Rural Health campaign, which received a $2 million lead gift from the Dane G. Hansen Foundation as well as a large anonymous gift from a Salina couple, has had strong support. He said the project is important for Salina, and also for rural areas of the state that are medically underserved. Of the first 16 students to graduate from the program, 11 have entered primary care residencies and most plan to practice in Kansas. Graduates already have committed to establish practices in Salina, Quinter and Phillipsburg and there will be more to follow, Martin said.

Martin said the two biggest determinants of where doctors decide to establish their practices are where they came from and where they went to medical school.

Salina is relatively small, and the majority of students here are coming from rural areas, he said. Its a lifestyle and background they are familiar with.

He said many donors to the campaign saw it as a commitment to addressing physician shortages in rural Kansas. Ninety-seven of the states 105 counties are considered medically underserved, and 34 counties reported two or fewer primary care physicians in 2013.

The campaign was like none other that Ive been involved with, in terms of the widespread support and the time of it, Martin said. To do that within a years time means that an awful lot of people stepped up to the plate and contributed. I just think this is such an exciting project and program for Salina in so many ways.

The new facility expected to be complete in the spring of 2018 will provide 40,251 square feet of space, more than doubling the current campus size to accommodate small group work and different types of classroom and lab space needed in a new curriculum that is being implemented. The additional space also accommodates possible future expansion of class sizes, currently capped at eight students per year, and could house a nursing school, said Dr. William Cathcart-Rake, dean of the Salina campus.

Were pretty thrilled with whats going to happen, Cathcart-Rake said. Its cleaned up really, really nice.

Cathcart-Rake visited the former Bank of America building Tuesday afternoon to see the progress that has been made so far in demolition and asbestos-abatement efforts at the site. Looking at the large, empty space, he pointed out where classrooms, lab space, study carousels and other features of the new medical school will be. He said the large vault door will be retained, with offices to be in the space where money was once stored.

Eventually, he said the mobile bank area and drive through behind the building will be removed, and two tunnels that lead from the main building to that area will be filled in. That will clear more space for parking.

With the demolition phase nearing an end, subcontractors were visiting the building Tuesday in preparation for submitting bids for various aspects of the construction job. Cathcart-Rake said hed been told that in the next two or three weeks the bids will be in and well have an idea how far the money will go.

All the electricals out. All the heating and air conditionings out. Its going to have brand new electrical from the panel, water, plumbing, new HVAC system, Cathcart-Rake said. Basically what youre looking at is an empty building gutted back to the studs.

Busboom and Rauh Construction, of Salina, is serving as general contractor for the construction portion of the project, and Donnie Marrs with DMA Architects, of Salina, is providing architectural services.

The Salina Regional Health Foundation will own the building, which the foundation will renovate, furnish and equip, and the foundation will allow the school to use the space rent-free, Martin said. Classes will relocate to the new school site in time for the July beginning of the 2018-19 school year.

When the KU-Salina campus first opened in July 2011 in the Braddick Building to the north of Salina Regional Health Center, Salina became the smallest community in North America to host a four-year medical school, Martin said. That is still true, he said.

Where else could this get accomplished but Salina? Martin said. It speaks well of our community and region.

Originally posted here:

Campaign to pay for renovation of downtown site of KU medical school reaches goal - Salina Journal (subscription)

At medical school, student finds her family – News – The Times-Tribune – Scranton Times-Tribune

Joelene Joinvil left her Mayfield foster home before sunrise.

She rode a bus through the valley, arriving at the Commonwealth Medical College in Scranton by 6:30 a.m. She waited in the lobby, half asleep and listening to rap and R&B.

Classes for high school students began at 8. Ida L. Castro, the programs leader, noticed Joelene that first Monday and wondered why the 15-year-old showed up so early.

That Friday, Castro asked. Joelenes answer sparked the dawn of a new life together.

Opening her home

As a high school sophomore, Joelene entered the foster care system in 2011.

Any thoughts about the future had been put on hold, she said.

That spring, Joelene learned about the medical colleges Regional Education Academy for Careers in Health - Higher Education Initiative, more commonly known as REACH-HEI. Castro spoke to Joelenes class at Scranton High School about opportunities in the medical field and how the new initiative would prepare students from disadvantaged backgrounds to enter and graduate from medical or other health profession schools.

Joelene saw the program as the opportunity she needed.

During the four-week summer program at the school, now named Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine, Joelene received SAT prep, learned about careers and how to apply for college. She left her foster home at 5 a.m. each day because another bus would have made her five minutes late. During those four weeks, she was never late or absent.

I was truly, truly impressed by that level of commitment and dedication, said Castro, the schools vice president for government and community relations and chief diversity officer. I admired that very much.

During the program, Joelene learned that because of her new foster care placement in Mayfield, she could not go back to Scranton High in the fall. Distraught, she told staff members, and Castro began searching for ways to help. She tried to find a foster home in Scranton, but no one could take Joelene. Without other options, Castro opened her own home.

The offer surprised Joelene, who thought Castro was nice, smelled good and was fashionable.

As Castro began the process of becoming a foster parent, the pair went to movies together and out to dinner.

Finally, Castro began a long conversation with Joelene.

I told her, if she came to my home, I didnt want her to come as a transient, said Castro, who has an adult daughter in New Jersey. If Id open my home, it was to make a family to make it a forever thing. I asked her to think about it. She thought about it and told me she wanted to be a family.

A cool mom

That October, three months after the program, Joelene moved into Castros home near Nay Aug Park in Scranton. Castro replaced the spare rooms futon with a bed and painted the walls blue.

Joelene finally could sleep soundly at night. She no longer had to stack books in front of her bedroom door out of fear someone would enter while she slept.

She started celebrating birthdays and holidays again. Castro threw her a sweet 16 party. For the first time in years, Joelene didnt have to bake her own birthday cake. She and Castro played the music video game Just Dance 4.

I had the ability to be a kid, Joelene said. I had been forced to grow up a long time ago.

Castro enrolled Joelene at Wyoming Seminary, and in February of her junior year there, Castro went from Joelenes foster parent to her legal guardian.

I dont remember life without her, Castro said.

She and Joelene cared for their three rescue dogs and took trips to Puerto Rico and Disney World. Joelene cried when she saw Cinderella Castle.

It was so great to do it with someone who loves you, Joelene said. I love Ida and she loves me.

After graduating from Wyoming Seminary in 2013, Joelene received a full scholarship to Susquehanna University in Selingsgrove. Now 21, Joelene will graduate in May with degrees in psychology and Spanish. Inspired by Castro, a lawyer President Bill Clinton appointed in 1998 as the first Latina Chairwoman/CEO of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Joelene wants to be a lawyer, too.

I always told people how cool my mom was, Joelene said. We have to fight for whats right. We have to protect people. We have to let people live to their fullest extent. Thats what she gave me. ... My life, everything goes back to her.

Castro wiped away tears.

For years, people would ask me why I moved to Scranton, she said. It was always to help build a medical school, but I stopped saying that. I really think I came to Scranton to meet Joelene.

Contact the writer:

shofius@timesshamrock.com

@hofiushallTT on Twitter

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At medical school, student finds her family - News - The Times-Tribune - Scranton Times-Tribune

UC Davis medical school dean Dr. Julie Freischlag tapped to lead … – Sacramento Business Journal


Sacramento Business Journal
UC Davis medical school dean Dr. Julie Freischlag tapped to lead ...
Sacramento Business Journal
Dr. Julie Freischlag, University of California Davis vice chancellor of human health sciences and school of medicine dean, has been chosen to lead Wake Forest ...

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UC Davis medical school dean Dr. Julie Freischlag tapped to lead ... - Sacramento Business Journal

The artist who drew Trump beheading Lady Liberty is a Cuban refugee – PRI

Its pretty hilarious that in 2017, a drawing is making the world go nuts.

Thats what artist Edel Rodriguez says about his cover for Der Spiegel magazine that broke the internet last week.

But to be fair, its not just any drawing. Its a cartoon of President Donald Trump, standing in the pose of a jihadi warrior. In one hand, he holds the severed head of the Statue of Liberty, which is dripping blood onto the floor. In the other hand, he grasps a bloodstained knife.Der Spiegels online version even has an animated version of the image, with the blood dripping from Lady Libertys head.

The image sparked fierce debate online and in the press.Germanys Die Welt daily said the cover damages and devalues journalism. Another paper, the center-right Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, wrote that equating Trump and terrorism is too simple.

The artist, Edel Rodriguez, disagrees: I dont think you can be subtle about whats happening right now, he said. I think we were subtle [] during the primary. And because of that, because the media treated it as sort of a show and wasnt very serious about it, we have the president that we have right now.

Rodriguez started doing Trump covers last year. When it looked like the Trump campaign was in a tailspin, Rodriguez drew covers for Time magazine that showed Trumps head melting into a puddle, like the Wicked Witch of the West.

After Trump won the election, he drew a cover for Der Spiegel featuring Trumps head as a fiery sun hurtling toward planet Earth.

Rodriguez is already brainstorming for his next cover:I can have Trump sitting on the Statue of Libertys head like [Auguste Rodin's] 'The Thinker.' And all thats in his mind is a Twitter bird!

Or in case the president does a 180 on his political views, Rodriguez says, maybe hes on the statue, and hes sewing the head back on and were all good again. Or if he gets impeached, I have an image for that.

But hes not giving spoilers on that one.

Rodriguez compares Trump to a schoolyard bully. And, he says, just like with any bully, peoplehave to fight back.

When I was a kid, I would go outside and get in trouble with someone," he says. "They might punch me, and Id come home crying, and my dad would say, just go out there and punch them harder next time. Thats how I grew up.

Rodriguez spent his childhood in Havana, Cuba. He came to the United States as a refugee when he was 9 years old, on the Mariel boatlift in1980.

Rodriguez says his experience as a political refugee informs his reaction to Trump: Growing up in Cuba, I saw firsthand how people behave in a dictatorship. How theyre afraid to talk. So when Ive been here [in the US], and Ive seen people do that, it jogs my mind.

Rodriguez says he started making political art to warn people, saying, Hey, this is very serious! This is very important! Pay attention, pay attention, please pay attention. Part of it is that Ive been there, and Ive seen what could happen.

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The artist who drew Trump beheading Lady Liberty is a Cuban refugee - PRI

The Deal That Threatens Liberty Media’s $8 Billion F1 Buyout – Forbes


Forbes
The Deal That Threatens Liberty Media's $8 Billion F1 Buyout
Forbes
Europe's governing body, the European Parliament, today voted for an immediate investigation into the takeover of Formula One auto racing by Liberty Media last month due to allegations that it broke the law. The European Parliament publishes an ...

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The Deal That Threatens Liberty Media's $8 Billion F1 Buyout - Forbes

Liberty basketball team inspired by team manager – NBC4i.com


NBC4i.com
Liberty basketball team inspired by team manager
NBC4i.com
COLUMBUS, Ohio Days before Olentangy Liberty started its basketball season, the players gathered in the gym to check out their new senior pictures hanging on the wall. Wesley Walters, the team manager, did not see a photo of himself on the wall.

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Liberty basketball team inspired by team manager - NBC4i.com

Kemrite does right as Liberty edges High Point 55-52 (Feb 14, 2017 … – FOXSports.com

LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) Ryan Kemrite scored eight of his 21 points down the stretch, including a pair of 3-pointers as Liberty held on to defeat High Point 55-52 for its seventh win in a row on Tuesday night.

The win puts the Flames alone atop the Big South Conference, at least until the rest of the conference plays on Wednesday.

High Point (14-13, 8-7) made a 5-0 run to trail 44-43 with just under five minutes left, but then Kemrite scored on a pretty turnaround jumper in the paint, dropped in a trey from the top of the arc and the 52-44 lead was Libertys largest. Kemrite added a wide-open 3 from the corner with 12 seconds left and the Flames (18-10, 13-2) led 55-50.

A Ricky Madison tip-in pulled High Point to 55-52 and an Andre Fox 3 at the buzzer was short. Madison, Miles Bowman Jr. and Fox each scored 14.

Co-Big South leader UNC-Asheville (12-2) has reeled off seven straight wins since being upended by Winthrop Jan. 19. Liberty closes the regular season at UNC-Asheville on Feb. 25.

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Kemrite does right as Liberty edges High Point 55-52 (Feb 14, 2017 ... - FOXSports.com

Struthers uses 19-0 run to beat Liberty – Youngstown Vindicator

Published: Tue, February 14, 2017 @ 10:14 p.m.

Referencing the old adage When it rains, it pours, Liberty head coach Chris Kohl said his team was in a hurricane as Struthers blew open what was a close game early with long runs en route to a 69-52 win.

Trailing 18-16 after a first quarter that saw eight lead changes, the Wildcats (15-7, 8-4 AAC White) went on a 19-0 run in the second quarter. The only bright spot of the period was Kevin Hawns 3-pointer in the final minute or the Leopards (4-16, 3-8 AAC Blue) wouldve been shut out.

We couldnt drop one into the ocean, Kohl said. We played a great first quarter, the kids did everything we asked of them and then it just disappeared. It was a terrible shooting night.

Carson Ryan led Struthers with 14 points and Andrew Carbon had 13. A.J. Musolino and Jaret Jacubec each had 12 in the win.

Liberty was led by Dra Rushtons 12 points while Andrew Bowers finished with 11.

Return to Vindy.com and read Wednesday's Vindicator sports section for more on this story.

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Struthers uses 19-0 run to beat Liberty - Youngstown Vindicator

Trump’s acting FTC chief presents herself as ‘big proponent of economic liberty’ – Washington Examiner

A self-described "big proponent of economic liberty" is running the Federal Trade Commission and is a candidate to be President Trump's pick to become chairwoman of the agency.

Maureen Ohlhausen, the acting chairwoman of the FTC and a commissioner since 2012, told the Washington Examiner in a Tuesday interview that she hopes to be Trump's choice to head the commission and that she has "laid out an agenda that I think is very consistent with one the president has set out."

"We want to protect small business, average people, we want to be sure that people have competitive choices in the marketplace," Ohlhausen said.

To do that, she recommends that the commission prioritize cases in which there is actual harm to consumers, focus on antitrust cases with strong legal and economic grounds, especially ones that involve using government power to undercut competition, and exercising "regulatory humility."

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In addition, Ohlhausen said, she is preparing the commission to retake responsibilities currently exercised by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in case the new unified Republican government is successful in its efforts to reform or eliminate the new agency.

Ohlhausen's vision for the FTC and regulation generally is a major shift from that of the Obama administration and what might have been implemented had Democrat Hillary Clinton won the election. In the late Obama years, the administration made overtures to liberal advocates of more aggressive antitrust enforcement and advocated greater competition across industries.

Ohlhausen, however, has called the Obama administration's conclusion that monopoly power was increasing "empirically unsound."

The bar for antitrust cases is whether a company is doing something that "lifts a competitive constraint on the firm," either by taking out a competitor through a merger or through other exclusionary conduct that hurts competition.

Hospital mergers, Ohlhausen indicated, are an area in which the commission has done a good job with antitrust cases. But she wouldn't support antitrust cases in areas in which there wasn't clear evidence that antitrust laws were being violated, such as instances in which stakeholders were merely concerned about high prices. "We shouldn't be a price regulator," she said.

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Last week, the commission sued a drug company, ViroPharma, for antitrust violations on the basis that it raised the price of a drug used to treat sometimes deadly infections and sought to prevent a generic replacement from being developed with a series of filings with the Food and Drug Administration and courts. Ohlhausen cited that case as an example of the kind of anti-competitive behavior that she wants to crack down on.

As for patent trolls, a major concern for the tech industry, Ohlhausen counseled a "very balanced" approach in protecting companies at risk of abusive suits while enforcing intellectual property rights. "We don't want to kill the goose that lays the golden egg," she said, referring to the need for property rights to drive investment.

Before the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law, many of its responsibilities monitoring fraud in financial products belonged to the FTC. The bureau, however, is now threatened by Republicans who have opposed it from the beginning.

Should the bureau see its powers limited, Ohlhausen said, the FTC should be prepared. Last week, she named lawyer and former FTC staffer Tom Pahl to be the acting director of the commission's Bureau of Consumer Protection, a role that would oversee many of the relevant areas. The FTC would regulate through enforcement rather than writing major rules, as the CFPB does, but it has to be ready so that "that we can step in and take over," Ohlhausen said.

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