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Daily Archives: August 13, 2017
Fast facts about cloning – WPSD Local 6: Your news, weather, and sports authority – WPSD Local 6
Posted: August 13, 2017 at 2:19 am
(CNN) -- Here's some background information aboutcloning, a process of creating an identical copy of an original.
Facts: Reproductive Cloning is the process of making a full living copy of an organism. Reproductive cloning of animals transplants nuclei from body cells into eggs that have had their nucleus removed. That egg is then stimulated to divide using an electrical charge and is implanted into the uterus of a female.
Therapeutic Cloningis the process where nuclear transplantation of a patient's own cells makes an oocyte from which immune-compatible cells (especiallystem cells) can be derived for transplant. These cells are stimulated to divide and are grown in a Petri dish rather than in the uterus.
Timeline: 1952 - Scientists demonstrate they can remove the nucleus from a frog's egg, replace it with the nucleus of an embryonic frog cell, and get the egg to develop into a tadpole.
1975 -Scientists get tadpoles after transferring cell nuclei from adult frogs.
1986 -Sheep cloned by nuclear transfer from embryonic cells.
February 22, 1997 -Scientists reveal Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be cloned from cells of an adult animal. She was actually born on July 5, 1996.
1998 -More than 50 mice are reported cloned from a single mouse over several generations. Eight calves are cloned from a cow.
2000 -Pigs and goats are reported cloned from adult cells.
2001 -Advanced Cell Technology of Worcester, Massachusetts, says it produced a six-cell cloned human embryo, in research aimed at harvesting stem cells.
2001 -Five bulls are cloned from a champion bull, Full Flush.
2002 -Rabbits and a kitten are reported cloned from adult cells.
December 27, 2002 - Clonaid claims to produce first human clone, a baby girl, Eve.
January 23, 2003 -Clonaid claims to have cloned the first baby boy. The baby was allegedly cloned from tissue taken from the Japanese couple's comatose 2-year-old boy, who was killed in an accident in 2001. Clonaid has never provided physical evidence of the cloning.
February 14, 2003 -The Roslin Institute confirms that Dolly, the world's first cloned mammal, was euthanized after being diagnosed with progressive lung disease. She was 6 years old.
May 4, 2003 -The first mule is cloned at the University of Idaho, named Idaho Gem.
June 9, 2003 -Researchers Gordon Woods and Dirk Vanderwall from the University of Idaho and Ken White from Utah State University claim to have cloned a second mule.
August 6, 2003 -Italian scientists at the Laboratory of Reproductive Technology in Cremona, Italy, say they have created the world's first cloned horse, Prometea, from an adult cell taken from the horse who gave birth to her.
September 25, 2003 -French scientists at the National Institute of Agricultural Research at Joy en Josas, France, become the first to clone rats.
February 12, 2004 -South Korean researchers report they have created human embryos through cloning and extracted embryonic stem cells. Findings by a team of researchers were presented to South Korean scientists and describe in detail the process of how to create human embryos by cloning. The report says the scientists used eggs donated by Korean women. An investigative panel concludes in 2006 that South Korean scientist Woo Suk Hwang's human stem cell cloning research was faked.
August 3, 2005 -South Korean researchers announce they have successfully cloned a dog, an Afghan hound named Snuppy.
December 8, 2008-April 4, 2009 -Five cloned puppies from Trakr, a German Shepherd Sept.11 Ground Zero rescue dog, are born.
May 2009 -Clone of Tailor Fit, a two-time quarter horse world champion, is born, one of several cloned horses born that year.
September 29, 2011 -At South Korea's Incheon Airport, seven "super clone" sniffer-dogs are dispatched to detect contraband luggage. They are all golden Labrador Retrievers that are genetically identical to "Chase," who was the top drug detention canine until he retired in 2007.
May 15, 2013 -Oregon Health & Science University researchers report in the journal Cell that they have created embryonic stem cells through cloning. Shoukhrat Mitalipov and the biologistsproduced human embryos using skin cells, and then used the embryos to produce stem cell lines.
April 2014 -For the first time,cloning technologies have been used to generate stem cells that are genetically matched to adult patients.Researchers put the nucleus of an adult skin cell inside an egg, and that reconstructed egg went through the initial stages of embryonic development, according to research published this month.
The-CNN-Wire & 2017 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.
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China’s cloning of genetically modified dogs for research raises concerns – SBS
Posted: at 2:19 am
Beijing biotech lab Sinogene say they have successfully cloned a genetically-modified dog for medical research, and now plan to use the same technology to create "superdogs" for Chinese police.
The beagle puppy named Longlong, born in May, is a clone of a gene-edited beagle called Apple.
These two dogs are 99.9 per cent the same. We've observed their personality and appearance, even their facial expressions are identical. As you can see they're both very naughty and active. Even the way they walk, how they move around, says Mi Jidong, Sinogene General Manager.
Two other clone puppies Nuonuo and Qiqi followed Longlong in June. All were born from surrogate mothers in the lab.
Apple, the original beagle, was genetically modified last year using a gene-editing tool known as CRISPR/Cas9.
Clone puppies Nuonuo and Qiqi were born in May.
Its been more than 20 years since the first mammal, a sheep named Dolly, was cloned in 1996. Since then other animals, including horses and pigs, have since been cloned. The first dog, however, was only duplicated in 2005.
Dogs are extremely difficult to work with. Some cells are very complex and difficult to clone. Also its extremely hard for a dog embryo to survive in lab conditions, its very vulnerable, explains Mr Mi.
Another reason the cloning of dogs may be more difficult is that the animal is more genetically similar to humans than other animals. Approximately 400 out of 900 genetic illnesses in dogs are similar to human diseases.
Its for this reason that Apple, Longlong and his fellow-clones will be used primarily for medical research.
It's the first step in our future development to delve further into modifying dogs for medical research, says Mr Mi.
Apple was gene-edited to have several times higher levels of blood lipid a trait associated with high cholesterol. Sinogene say theyre cooperating with other labs in China to study gene-based diseases including heart disease and diabetes and develop medicines.
Scientist Mi Jidong plays with Sinogene's cloned puppies from a gene-edited beagle.
But thats not the only focus of the lab. Sinogene will also be using the same gene-editing and cloning technique to create super dogs for the police force as early as next year.
Were also exploring how we can use genetic modification and cloning to improve the specific qualities of different working dogs. For example to improve their stamina, their intelligence to make it easier to train them And also give them a better sense of smell, says Mr Mi.
China currently imports many of its police, search and rescue dogs. Mr Mi believes Sinogenes work could save money and improve the quality of Chinas police dog pack.
But the work has been condemned as cruel by animal welfare groups operating in China.
Cloning has many problems. Large numbers of animals are used as donors and surrogates. But the success rate is very small. So its a huge waste of animal life, says Peter Li, China Policy specialist at Humane Society International, and Associate Professor of East Asian Politics at the University of Houston-Downtown.
He says money would be better spent caring for Chinas millions of unwanted dogs.
I think this super dog work is suspect. Dogs are already very intelligent. We know that cloned dogs have health issues, they dont live long. It is a huge waste of public resources to clone dogs for the police force, says Professor Li.
Beijing-based animal rights activist Mary Peng believes medical testing on animals needs to be better regulated
Animal welfare activist and founder of Chinas first international animal hospital in Beijing, Mary Peng, says she doesnt feel animal medical testing should stop but says labs need to be better regulated. Cloning is really just another form of breeding, says Ms Peng. But I share concerns of how the animals are treated.
She says though China has progressed rapidly in recent years when it comes to the treatment and general attitude towards animals, protective laws lag behind international standards.
China is having the worlds biggest love affair with their pets in the history of the world, she says, but this is all very new, less than 25 years old maybe.
And this experimentation, medical research etc, are also really new industries for China, Ms Peng says. And Im not sure that the laws and regulations about how the animals are treated while theyre in these labs have been fully developed.
But Professor Li says the labs work also raises larger ethical questions. If we see cloned animals as a testing object, I wonder how soon this work will be applied to humans. If we have this level of audacity, this level of recklessness as a standard, then many other test labs will do things that should be stopped.
Sinogene scientist works with dog cells in their Beijing lab
Retired Tsinghua University artificial intelligence and ethics expert Professor Zhao Nanyuan dismisses the criticism of animal rights groups as foreign and irrelevant, saying Chinas scientific progress outweighs the cost.
To see human-animal relations as an ethical question is a concept borrowed from Western religion. In Chinese ethics we dont have this.
He says many in China, like him, will focus on the long-term benefit, rather than the individual treatment of an animal or embryo.
In China we have less problems developing genetically modified technology. Im pretty sure other countries will be behind China when it comes to human genetic research because of their concerns."
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China's cloning of genetically modified dogs for research raises concerns - SBS
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How some of India’s PSUs are set for a logical evolution through disinvestment – Economic Times
Posted: at 2:18 am
After racking up accumulated losses of Rs 50,000 crore, debt of Rs 55,000 crore, a failed Rs 30,000 crore bailout in 2012 and an aborted disinvestment attempt in 2001, the NDA government bit the bullet: last month, the Cabinet gave its nod to sell its stake in the beleaguered Air India. It isnt the only state-owned behemoth in which the government reckons it doesnt need to be wasting its time.
Half of Indias 235 Central public sector enterprises (CPSEs) are under scrutiny for a possible disinvestment. The governments think tank NITI Aayog has recommended a strategic sale in over 40 public sector undertakings (PSUs) and outright closure of 26 sick PSUs.
This time, it may not be all talk and little action. Various governments have toyed with disinvestment since 1991, but with limited success. The biggest sell-off surge happened under the NDA government of 1999-2004, when PSUs like Maruti, VSNL, IPCL and IBP were privatised. It is hard to argue against the economic rationale for privatisation.
While CPSEs contribute over 20% to Indias GDP and employ over 10 lakh people, many have turned into bloated, inefficient behemoths and a drain on the national exchequer. One-third of the CPSEs today are making losses. Even a maharatna like BHEL has slipped. Between 2011-12 and 2015-16, a recent CAG report points out, its turnover declined from Rs 49,510 crore to Rs 26,587 crore and profits slipped from Rs 7,400 crore to losses of Rs 913 crore. Between 2007 and 2016, sick CPSEs reportedly logged losses of Rs 19.68 lakh crore. Small wonder, then, that NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant suggested that the government should hand over schools, colleges and prisons to the private sector as the government has no business to be in business.
The reality, globally, is a bit more nuanced. PSUs arent exactly out of fashion and have often been used to stoke nationalistic fervour. The French government has threatened to nationalise the shipyard in Saint-Nazaire instead of selling it to Fincantieri of Italy. Italians are nervous about French colonisation as many cross-border deals (like the 50 billion Essilor-Luxottica merger) have resulted in French firms having the upper hand.
Global Lessons In India, PSUs were created post Independence to build a self-reliant, state-led economy. Through the 1970s, amid a nationalisation drive, PSUs dominated the economic landscape before a bankrupt government was forced to rethink its strategy post liberalisation.
India echoed what was happening globally. Professors Aldo Musacchio and Sergio G Lazzarini talk about evolution of state capitalism in their book Reinventing State Capitalism (2014). Globally, too, state capitalism peaked around the 1970s. As a result, output of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to GDP reached 10% in mixed economies and 16% in developing economies.
Then reality dawned. The oil shock of the 1970s and the liquidity crunch of the 1980s meant SOEs globally ran average losses equivalent of 2% of GDP, according to the World Bank. In developing countries, they stood at 4% of GDP. Between 1980 and the turn of the century, the focus shifted to a wave of PSU reforms that included minority stake sales, listings and overhauls of PSU management.
The year 2008 was an inflection point when state-led bailouts of distressed companies PSUs or even private became the norm. The US government bailed out private firms like GM and AIG. By some calculations, firms under government control today account for a fifth of the worlds total stock market capitalisation.
While state capitalism has been in vogue, governments have been trying to make it efficient. The book refers to two examples. In 2007, Brazilian private firm JBS acquired US-based Swift & Co for $1.4 billion to become the world's largest beef processing company. Then it acquired Pilgrim's Pride for $2.8 billion. JBS, identified as a national champion, was funded by Brazilian National Development Bank (BNDES), which became the largest minority shareholder in JBS. SOEs in China are coming from the other end. In 2010, Agriculture Bank of China's mega IPO raised $22 billion.
The two examples reflect the new forms of state capitalism taking root. Both are distinct from the traditional (often inefficient) PSU model where government owns and manages the SOE like an extension of public bureaucracy.
PSUs have often helped government deal better with economic cycles. "In China when the economy is in danger of recession, SOEs can quickly deploy government resources and play a counter cyclical role. India is different in that governments, especially Central governments, are relatively much weaker," says Xi Li, professor at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.
After its independence in 1965, Singapore government owned a lot of companies like SingTel and Singapore Airlines. In 1974, it set up Temasek Holdings, a sovereign wealth fund, to hold and manage its assets on a commercial basis and push the nation's growth agenda. Temasek today owns and manages a portfolio of over S$250 billion.
Japan and Korea took a different approach. Chaebols in Korea and Keiretsu in Japan have played a key role in the economic growth of the two countries. And governments in both the countries have nurtured them. This also led to crony capitalism which they are now trying to tackle. For example, Chaebol reforms was a key issue in the 2017 election in Korea. "To avoid the trap of import substitution and make local firms globally competitive, governments gave these companies export targets. When achieved, they were given special credit and land," says Ajay Chhibber, visiting distinguished professor, NIPFP, a research institution.
India's Path NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant recently told ET Magazine that "the government should spend money on improving social indicators like health, education, nutrition". Beyond disinvestment and sell-off, some shifts are already visible. PSUs like BHEL are morphing to be relevant. Besides renewable energy, it now wants to make components for metro rail and defence. "To facilitate public spending, new PSUs are sprouting in areas like inland waterways, metro rail and renewable energy," says Vinayak Chatterjee, chairman, Feedback Infra. The government has set up the National Highways and Infrastructure Development Corporation to build highways. New mechanisms are being explored to help PSUs operate efficiently. For example, National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF) will help fund projects where the government's stake will be capped at 49%.
Former bureaucrat Pradeep Baijal says PSUs are a necessity in areas where government has a natural monopoly; like railways, metro rail, utilities or sensitive areas like satellite or nuclear power. In a rapidly evolving world, there should be a model of constant review of the PSU portfolio - what to retain and what to divest," adds Amit Sinha, partner, Bain & Company.
Gaurav Taneja, partner, EY, says PSUs are necessary in areas where private sector is not keen to invest, like public health in rural areas. "In fact, government should convert many of these operations into public sector outfits and set up a strategic framework to evaluate their performance," he says. Consider the case of not-so-profitable Jan Dhan scheme where public sector banks were asked to roll it out without adequate compensation and yet are expected to compete with the private sector.
"The difficulty with PSU emanates from a misplaced sense of their reason for existence," says Utkarsh Palnitkar, partner, KPMG in India. "Distortions come into play when a PSU is expected to perform on similar lines as private sector units yet is deprived of management autonomy," he adds. Experts recommend that disinvestment proceeds must be parked in a separate fund to be used in infrastructure investment. "We should not be selling the family silver to pay the grocery bills (which is the case now)," says Chhibber.
Ranen Banerjee, partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers India, says: "Private and public sector need not be completely divorced. While PSUs can build and own the infrastructure, private sector could do operations and maintenance efficiently." An example: railway tracks could be state-owned, and trains with the private sector. Any takers?
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DVQ 3.0: The latest evolution in fantasy football draft strategy – New York Post
Posted: at 2:18 am
In movie trailer voiceover voice:
In a world where the third time seldom is the charm, when source material often devolves into convoluted chaos, when the expansion of combinatorial storylines undermine the value of the product, a madman has defied the odds. But not just any madman, a Fantasy Madman.
In the fight to engineer a world-beating system to fantasy football draft strategy, the Madman has ignored complacency while avoiding the pitfalls of overcomplication. He has identified the confusing complexity of his past evaluations and has taken action. The days of sliding scales are over. The era of required cross-referencing player ratings is a thing of the past. This is a new world of player rankings.
This is the DVQ 3.0.
Sometimes, simpler is better.
Weve seen it before: a disappointing third installment of a beloved franchise. The Dark Knight trilogys weakest entry was the third. Spider-man 3 was a disaster, as well as the third X-Men or Matrix movies the list of part-three disappointments is long. Heck, a third presidential term isnt even allowed.
But the Madman, he perseveres. Past incarnations of the draft value equation (DVQ) have been functional but admittedly overly complex. With this, the third edition, we make it easier. This third entry is more Lord of the Rings: Return of the King than Godfather Part 3. It is the pinnacle of the DVQ thus far.
In the past, the DVQ addressed draft value with a sliding scale. Each player was evaluated based on projected results compared with their average draft position. It worked; were proud. But it wasnt as helpful as we wanted. The ratings varied based on where in the draft you were targeting a player, and it admittedly required cross-referencing to understand player-to-player comparisons.
But that was like going to a restaurant that only serves dishes a la carte. Even if the food is great, Give me a No. 8 is easier and quicker than surfing through an entire menu for individual items.
This season, the new DVQ 3.0 lets you simply order a full meal. It gauges each players value independently then assigns a draft position rating. The number reflected in each player rating is the spot in the draft at which the Madman projects the best value. Note: There is a parabolic curve near the top, where there is greater separation in individual projections, thus a greater separation between DVQ ratings.
So when you see 16.9 beside Jimmy Catchgood, that is the spot in the draft at which the Madman believes that players projected-point total agrees with the value of that draft pick. By shifting our evaluation to this paradigm, it accomplishes multiple tasks with one rating.
It shows where you should target a player. It will include clusters of players with similar ratings, which reveal the mash-up of similar values. It also will unveil tier cliffs, where there is a substantial divide in player ratings. And it does all of this with one number. One number that conveys actionable information. One number that simultaneously separates and groups players of varying or similar values. One number to rule them all.
So now that you know this, how do you employ the DVQ 3.0 in your personal draft strategy? First, no plan is foolproof. If there is a player you adamantly want on your roster, and you dont think they will be there when you pick again, take them when you can.
Use the DVQ as a guide. For example: You want Wilhelm Runningwell on your roster, and he has a DVQ of 29.3. Youre picking with the 22nd pick, and you dont think Wilhelm will last that long, then take him. But, say, you really want that player, and his average draft position (ADP) is drastically higher than the DVQ rating, then perhaps you should re-evaluate that choice.
For example: Christian McCaffrey has an ADP of 31.7 in a 12-team PPR (points per reception) redraft league, but a DVQ of 89.9. Chances are, if you really want McCaffrey, you will have to pick him well ahead of where the DVQ recommends. The Madman says wait. The Madman says that player is being overvalued. The Madman says there are more reliable options at the point in the draft when McCaffreys ADP indicates he will go. The Madman says, you must be mad!
The short story is: Play the odds. And the DVQ 3.0 is a method to convey those odds. Weve made it more simple to follow. Weve made it more universally informative. Weve made it easier.
This is the Bourne Ultimatum of third installments. This is a Christmas Vacation of fantasy advice. This is the DVQ 3.0.
Sometimes, simpler is better.
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Reflecting on the Evolution of San Antonio’s Botanical Garden – Rivard Report
Posted: at 2:18 am
Commentary By Candace Andrews | 1 hour ago
Courtesy / Candace Andrews
Water gathers in the blue inflorescence of a bromeliad in the conservatory at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
I recently retired from the San Antonio Botanical Garden after more than 25 years there. I like to say I was there long enough to see my hair turn silver and a beautiful garden evolve. It was my special delight to see the Garden step into its role as a place for families to connect with nature. And dont mistake the past tense in that last sentence the Garden will always be at the center of my heart.
What the Garden offers our community is wide ranging: a place where we could all learn about better landscaping practices, a place where cultural experiences range from family exhibits (watch for the Nature Connects exhibit featuring LEGO bricks this upcoming Tricentennial year) to outdoor sculpture, and where kids can make that all-important, needed connection to nature.Its a place where architecture meets landscape and a place to spread a picnic with friends.
With an amazing new eight-acre expansion on the brink of opening, the Garden is poised to step up as one of the finest regional gardens in the nation. The project is cutting edge, sustainably designed, and programmatically advanced. More about that later.
When I came onboard at the Garden in 1991 as a board member, I found it a place where I could engage. I was at a transition point in my life, and the Garden gave me an outlet for volunteering and channeling my creative energy. Soon I was involved with the newsletter, something I continued until this past May when I edited my final one. For 12 years in that era, I served as managing director of the nonprofit organization, and in the last few years have worked primarily in community relations.
Bonnie Arbittier / Rivard Report
San Antonio Botanical Garden Society, Inc. Former Director of Community Relations and Visitor Services Candace Andrews walks through Hill Country Seep in the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Bonnie Arbittier / Rivard Report
San Antonio Botanical Garden Society, Inc. Former Director of Community Relations and Visitor Services Candace Andrews admires Lucile Halsell Conservatory in the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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As I said in the opening, I have delighted in the Garden finding its identity by connecting with families. I will never forget the 2002 Dinosaurus Tex exhibit, when for three months the incessant squeals of delight from little dinosaur fans made the Garden come alive across the city. We saw what a difference an outdoor exhibit like this could do to create a special draw, a reason to come back for a visit. Of course, the Garden showcases the changing beauty of nature every day. Its just that humans enjoy that extra stimulation that an exhibit about Big Bugs, carnivorous plants, or a rainforest can deliver. Ultimately, the exhibits challenge all of us to be better stewards of our environment because we learn the importance of protecting the natural world.
And I found that photography was always a dynamic connector. The Garden is rich with photo opportunities and I loved taking photos from early morning to dusk, whether it was capturing the beauty of fall leaves at the lake or photographing summer camp activities, Dog Days weekends, or evening events like Brews and Blooms or Flowers and Fireworks.
My favorite part of the Garden has always been the native area. Called the Texas Native Trail, this 11-acre area includes everyones favorite spot: the one-acre, tree-lined lake with an 1850s log cabin. For me, perfection is sitting on that porch and taking the long view across the lake. I have never tired of that view or seeing the ducks make a calculated v-formation sail to check out a potential feeding opportunity.
The Bird Watch is another favorite spot. Its at the farthest reach of the Garden, all the way at the back of the South Texas trail. Modeled after the birding blind/barn at Pedernales State Park, this viewing space gives humans the perfect perch to watch birds splashing in the trough out front or tasting some citrus that volunteers have generously tended. We humans can enjoy the view from inside a simulated open-air cattle holding pen, with a mirrored glass front. Ill never forget seeing a painted bunting enjoying a splash early one morning.
Courtesy / Candace Andrews
Seasonal display beds from the Wisteria Arbor in full bloom at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Courtesy / Candace Andrews
A Magnolia blossom attracts a pollinator at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Courtesy / Candace Andrews
Lush foliage reflects in the acequia that leads to the East Texas lake at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Courtesy / Candace Andrews
A goldfish swims past lily pads in the San Antonio Botanical Garden's Rose Garden.
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Courtesy / Candace Andrews
Purple Mexican bush sage blooms beside agave at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Courtesy / Candace Andrews
Autumn leaves cover the East Texas lake along the Texas Native Trail at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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One surprise about the award-winning Childrens Vegetable Garden is the hike to get there. I recommend taking the path that peers down over the conservatory courtyard and leads to the 65 Palm House, the tallest of the five conservatory glasshouses. Veer left and youll see the handsome Cactus and Succulent Garden, a desert in bloom with seasonal wildflowers, soaring yucca, and exotic cacti. Just before reaching the Childrens Vegetable, turn around and look back at the futuristic conservatory complex, framed by the handsome desert specimens. Its a spectacular view and one that Ive shown many a visitor.
And then of course, you arrive at one of the oldest childrens vegetable gardens at a botanical garden. Since 1982, generations of youngsters have spent their Saturday mornings each fall and spring learning to grow vegetables. Radishes are some of the first veggies planted since they assure relatively instant crunch gratification for the young gardeners. Under the supervision of the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, Bexar County Master Gardeners and other volunteers mentor the art and science of gardening for kids ages 8-13.
I am leaving the Garden just as an amazing new project is about to open. Expanding our footprint by almost eight acres, the new project creates a brand new entrance experience for guests, and, I might add, expanded parking as well. With architecture subordinate to landscape, the new entrance invites guests to pass through canyon-like walls which hold within new classrooms and an exploration station offering orientation to the Gardens 38 acres. Access to culinary beds and an outdoor teaching kitchen/pavilion introduces an array of new programming opportunities that embrace health and wellness, including the exciting Culinary Health Education for Families (CHEF) initiative.
If you know who Richard Louv is, you know that he would be a fan of our new 2.5-acreFamily Adventure Garden. His books Last Child in the Woods and The Nature Principle extol the benefits of nature for all of us.
Courtesy / Candace Andrews
A young boy rides in a pushcart at the "Viva Botanica" children's parade during Fiesta at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Courtesy / Candace Andrews
Dancers from Ballet San Antonio perform in the Lucile Halsell Conservatory courtyard at the San Antonio Botanical Garden.
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Engaging children in nature at an early age gives them confidence, improving mental and physical health. Nature play opens their eyes to the importance of protecting and preserving nature, cultivating a sense of environmental stewardship in them. This new space is a unique take on hands-on nature experiences for San Antonio, from its Thunder Ridge to Prickly Pear Peak and Huisache Way. I think kids, their parents, and their grandparents are going to love it.
If you want a sneak peek of the new expansion, just drive up Pinckney Street toward Ft. Sam Houston and get a closer look at the new entrance layout, the outdoor teaching kitchen and culinary gardens, and the state-of-the-art Family Adventure Garden. Come Oct. 21, Funston will re-open at North New Braunfels Avenue, inaugurating this new entrance sequence.
Broadway is becoming an amazing cultural corridor, with The Pearl stimulating a creative burst all along the way. After two years of construction and decades of thoughtful planning the Botanical Garden takes one giant, exciting step toward its own transformation. Enjoy the old and celebrate the new with the expansions grand opening. I know that Ill be there.
In her retirement from 27 years with the San Antonio Botanical Garden, Candace Andrews enjoys the soul-satisfying role as chairman of the Cibolo Preserve, a nonprofit foundation that protects a 644-acre nature preserve in Kendall County. She will always be a huge fan of the Botanical Garden.
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Music Review: Constant Evolution Parts 1 & 2 WooliebuGGer – HuffPost
Posted: at 2:18 am
WooliebuGGer recently released Constant Evolution Parts 1 & 2, from his forthcoming EP or album, slated to drop later this year. Hailing from Aurora, Illinois, WooliebuGGer began creating music at the age of 14, stating, I am inspired everyday by the idea of what can be accomplished.
Stylistically, WooliebuGGers sound encompasses electronic, experimental, ambient, minimal and glitch elements. And his musical influences include Brian Eno, Kraftwerk, Future Sound Of London, Stereolab, Pink Floyd, The Doors and The Beatles.
Constant Evolution is a single, lengthy song composed of two distinct segments: part 1 consists of a radiant dance beat, while part 2 dampens the rhythm and takes on a flowing, almost psychedelic flavor rife with extended, syncopated notes.
The bipartite song begins with a percolating synth rhythm, followed by a mesmerizing, futuristic melody that exudes electronic dance elements riding on leitmotifs projected by the synths. The leitmotif gives the impression of gazing into a sonic mirror that reflects the melody in ever devolving fractal patterns. The groove is provided by handclaps that ebb and flow, depending on the intensity of the synth matrix. Part 1 concludes with a protracted synth note that vibrates horizontally as part 2 enters riding a clicking, popping groove, with white noise sound effects and an escalating shrill tone that abruptly halts. The tune segues into percussive effects backed by, and riding on, a rapidly stuttering synth, which eventually fades, leaving only the percussive effects, which assume a light industrial feel that elongates and increases in tension, like something out of 2001: A Space Odyssey. As the tune culminates, two part harmonies percussion and synth slowly fade, increase and end on a vibrating tone.
The overall sound of parts 1 and 2, together, is electronic ambient music that is kept fresh by the replicating leitmotifs serving as an elastic melody, a melody that ultimately devolves into an austere, minimalist series of detached sonic expression in Part 2. Even though part 2 depicts an almost mechanical detachment, it remains intense with suppressed energy.
Constant Evolution Parts 1 & 2 evokes turbulent, stylish sonority, along with tensile flamboyance under precise control. The latter component, the tensile flamboyance, provides the tune with an edgy tightness that imbues the music with pressure and strain that borders on apprehension. To that end, although its eccentric and quasi-experimental, it is good. That being said, if youre searching for relaxing ambient music, this is not it. On the other hand, if youre searching for ambient music that is pregnant with mysterious sonic symbolism stridently asserting its vitality, this is just the ticket.
Find out more about WooliebuGGer here.
Listen to more WooliebuGGer here.
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Music Review: Constant Evolution Parts 1 & 2 WooliebuGGer - HuffPost
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Primary school kids learn about robotics and love it – Western Advocate
Posted: at 2:17 am
The battle lines were drawn and robots were ready to fight
GREAT DAY: Harry Thorpe, Archie Williams, Declan Prior, Caleb Cunning and Majd Elkheir, from Stannies, and Jade Turner, Taylor Kleinschafer and Katherine Blackburn.
THE battle lines were drawn androbots were ready to fight.
This was just part of the fun of a robotics tour currently underway at primary schools in Bathurst.
Year 10 students at St Stanislaus College were at Holy Family School on Friday, working with students in Years 5 and 6and introducing them to robotics.
Shane Thurston, head teacher of TAS and computers at Stannies, said it was the first time the workshops had been held at a primary school level.
He said the idea was to introduce robotics at an earlier level, and garner an interest in the students. He said learning robotics was great for problem solving as the students learn about making programs and coding.
During the workshops, which were led by the Year 10 Stannies boys,students were able to programrobots to dance, battle and also complete a line following where they had tofollow a track.
Mr Thurston said Stannies hope to take the the roboticstourto other Catholic primary school in the city including the Assumption, Cathedral and St Phil's.
He said the primary school students really loved the workshops.
You can hear them yelling and laughing, and pulling their hair out in frustration when the robot isnt doing what it should, he laughed.
But they are really enjoying it.
Katherine Blackburnfrom Holy Family School said it was fun getting the robots to try and destroy one another.
They could do really cool tricks, she said.
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New Haven high schoolers develop tech skills in summer robotics internship – New Haven Register
Posted: at 2:17 am
High school students develop tech skills in summer robotics internship
By Brian Zahn, bzahn@newhavenregister.com @brizahn on Twitter
Photo: Brian Zahn / Hearst Connecticut Media
ESUMS student George Shelton demonstrates driving the Yo(unity) Bot 3.0 from an app on his phone.
ESUMS student George Shelton demonstrates driving the Yo(unity) Bot 3.0 from an app on his phone.
New Haven high schoolers develop tech skills in summer robotics internship
NEW HAVEN >> Following five grueling weeks of developing a cost-effective robotics kit, 15 aspiring entrepreneurs presented and defended their product before investors.
Later this month, they return to high school.
Fifteen New Haven Public Schools students with an interest in engineering got this chance to be entrepreneurs as they were selected to partake in a paid internship program sponsored by the Connecticut Pre-Engineering Program, with financial backing by Liberty Bank. The interns, challenged to develop inexpensive robotics kits for middle school students, were compensated with $1,000 for the five weeks.
Each of the kits had to be acquirable for less than $55, the interns were told, with all the mechanical structures and electrical components needed to build a robot. One of the four teams, a public relations team, was also tasked with developing a manual for middle school students on how to use the kit.
What we want to see is an excitement and passion for STEM, said Sade Owoye, a project manager for CPEP.
Mikayla Osumah, a rising senior at Engineering and Science University Magnet School, said it was indeed her passion for STEM that led her to the internship. She said things clicked into place for her when she built a drone for a class project, and she began to realize several possibilities that could be explored through manufacturing and engineering.
Didacus Oparaocha, a teacher who leads and coaches the interns through the program, said he sees a direct benefit for the students, most of whom come from low-income families.
One of the main goals is poverty elevation, he said. I believe STEM is an answer to solving poverty.
As an employee at Sikorsky Aircraft, Oparaocha said he wants the students to have an even higher quality of life than he has, after moving from Nigeria to Italy and then to Michigan and Connecticut.
The CPEP staff said the program is meant to give students relevant work experience to prepare for careers.
We believe if you give students an opportunity for a real work opportunity, showing up every day on time and dressed professionally, it gives them chances to succeed as entrepreneurs, said Kathy Ciullo, CPEP chief financial officer and director of operations. Were trying to give them provable hands-on opportunities.
One of those opportunities was preparing a presentation during which they would ask CPEP Executive Director David Beam for the funding to carry out the robotics kit project.
Further, in addition to developing a prototype for an affordable robotics kit and considering the costs of materials and labor, students were made to practice communicating and explaining their work.
Were taking the proper steps to be professional, said ESUMS rising senior Donavon Chisolm.
Rising ESUMS senior George Shelton called it an internship you can take further in life.
Shelton said he would like to pursue electrical engineering and automation after he graduates from high school.
District officials said they believe the program offers practical applications for lessons taught in the classroom.
Kenneth Mathews, the school districts math curriculum supervisor, said he believes the interest in the program among students is tenfold its capacity.
The skills theyve learned will serve them throughout their lives, Mathews said. Many have shaped what they want to pursue in college.
After asking the interns approximately a dozen questions on the skills theyve learned from five weeks of work such as about whether any challenge is too difficult for them to overcome, about the value of teamwork or about whether a career can be fun were a few examples Beam said he has worked with engineers at all different levels, and he is certain all of them could have benefited from the type of early job training offered by the program CPEP has to offer.
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New Haven high schoolers develop tech skills in summer robotics internship - New Haven Register
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OC Fair’s GameFest gives players a dose of virtual reality – Los Angeles Times
Posted: at 2:16 am
Jonathan Edwards jumped and dodged as masked soldiers fired assault rifles at him.
Though it might have seemed to the 14-year-old from Costa Mesa that he was in a war zone, the soldiers, fortunately, werent real.
They were part of a virtual reality video game that Jonathan was playing at the iBuyPower GameFest on Saturday at the Orange County Fair.
The festival, billed as a digital carnival meant to introduce PC gaming to casual fans, is being held through Sunday at The Hangar at the fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
One of the highlights is a virtual reality village presented by Oculus, the company known for the Oculus Rift, a VR headset that immerses users in whatever game theyre playing.
Dozens of people tried their hand at the headset Saturday morning. Some became so enveloped in the digital reality that they had to be led back into place by event workers after straying from the game screen with their headsets on, presumably trying to chase down an enemy alien or escape the pursuit of pirates.
Ramiro Martinez, 25, of Fontana said that when he dropped something in the game, it actually felt like an object had fallen from his grasp. Martinez said he plays a lot of PC games but had never tried virtual reality before.
Elaine Lin, 50, of Irvine said she likes old-school games like Super Mario Bros., but she found the headset to be interactive and immersive.
The event also offers several other attractions.
Spectators watched as gamers dueled in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive in a long row of computers.
Other tournaments are being held throughout the weekend. Some will be shown on a big screen above The Hangar stage.
Throughout the day Saturday, the screen showed the World Cup tournament of the popular game Overwatch. A viewing area was set up in front of the screen for visitors who wanted to watch.
In addition, a row of 75 computers and various gaming stations were set up for people to try their hand at Rocket League, Overwatch and other titles.
This is iBuyPowers first event during the fair, though it held a gaming tournament at The Hangar last year that brought out thousands of people over a few days, said Tyrone Wang, development manager for the Industry-based gaming PC company.
That led the fair and the company to partner for GameFest, he said.
The event is free between 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. with paid admission to the fair, which costs $14 for adults and $7 for children and senior citizens.
For tickets for access to the festival after 7 p.m., visit ibuypower.com/Site/Event/IBP-GameFest.
The fair will be open from 11 a.m. to midnight Sunday, the final day of its month-long run.
Twitter:@benbrazilpilot
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OC Fair's GameFest gives players a dose of virtual reality - Los Angeles Times
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You’re heavy, and your doctor makes you feel bad about it. That’s not good. – Washington Post
Posted: at 2:16 am
By Marlene Cimons By Marlene Cimons August 13 at 7:06 AM
Virtual reality in which people wearing headsets and other equipment experience computer-generated environments as if they were real is helping obesity researchers better understand peoples responses to their personal genetic information.
Its important to put people in a setting that is as close to real life as possible, says Susan Persky, a scientist with the National Human Genome Research Institutes social and behavioral research branch. For example, you really will feel much more like you are in a doctors office. You feel present within the system. At the same time, we control everything.
Persky and her colleagues have conducted several studies using VR to gauge how obese individuals react in clinical settings and at other sites when presented with genetic information about their weight.
In one, she found that telling overweight women about the likely genetic basis for their obesity reduced the womens feelings that they were blamed for their weight. Other research has found that women who feel stigmatized by their doctors may avoid medical treatment to the detriment of their health.
The scientists recruited 200 women unhappy about their weight and gave them a 10-minute appointment with a virtual doctor. The virtual clinician gave each woman one of four presentations. One stressed genetic factors, delivered in a supportive style. A second also emphasized genomics, but it was given in a directive, doctor-knows-best manner. A third was supportive but focused only on personal behavior. The fourth stressed behavior but in a directive manner.
Not surprisingly, the volunteers liked the supportive virtual clinician best, especially when the doctor also offered genetic information, saying this approach made them feel less stigmatized and better about themselves. People feel less blame when doctors talk about genetic factors, Persky says. In obesity, we find this idea of genetic predisposition resonates with people.
Researchers also looked at guilt among overweight mothers of 4- and 5-year-old children, providing information about the influence of lifestyle to one group and the effects of genetic factors and lifestyle to a second group. Mothers told about genetic factors felt guiltier than the others, presumably because they felt they were passing obesity along to their offspring.
The parents then were asked to select a meal for their children from a virtual food buffet offering choices that were more healthy (grilled chicken, steamed carrots, peas and green beans) and less healthy (chicken nuggets, macaroni and cheese).
Why use a virtual buffet rather than a real one? Its an assessment of actual parent behavior that can be measured in the controlled, sterile lab, while it actually looks and feels like a real-world environment where parents actually make feeding choices, Persky says.
Mothers who chose the healthier options felt less guilt afterward about the possibility of passing down genetic obesity risk factors to their children, even those in the group who werent explicitly told about genetic influences, according to the study. Most parents have some sense that there are genetic factors involved in weight, Persky says. This isnt a totally new concept for them.
The findings suggest that parents are inclined to change how they feed their children thus feeling less guilt about passing on their genetic risks while still reluctant to change their own eating behavior. Parents are often willing to do things for their children that they wouldnt do for themselves, Persky says.
Read more
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You're heavy, and your doctor makes you feel bad about it. That's not good. - Washington Post
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