Daily Archives: February 2, 2021

Elucidation of the Genomic-Epigenomic Interaction Landscape of Aggressive Prostate Cancer. – UroToday

Posted: February 2, 2021 at 7:53 pm

Majority of prostate cancer (PCa) deaths are attributed to localized high-grade aggressive tumours which progress rapidly to metastatic disease. A critical unmet need in clinical management of PCa is discovery and characterization of the molecular drivers of aggressive tumours. The development and progression of aggressive PCa involve genetic and epigenetic alterations occurring in the germline, somatic (tumour), and epigenomes. To date, interactions between genes containing germline, somatic, and epigenetic mutations in aggressive PCa have not been characterized. The objective of this investigation was to elucidate the genomic-epigenomic interaction landscape in aggressive PCa to identify potential drivers aggressive PCa and the pathways they control. We hypothesized that aggressive PCa originates from a complex interplay between genomic (both germline and somatic mutations) and epigenomic alterations. We further hypothesized that these complex arrays of interacting genomic and epigenomic factors affect gene expression, molecular networks, and signaling pathways which in turn drive aggressive PCa.

We addressed these hypotheses by performing integrative data analysis combining information on germline mutations from genome-wide association studies with somatic and epigenetic mutations from The Cancer Genome Atlas using gene expression as the intermediate phenotype.

The investigation revealed signatures of genes containing germline, somatic, and epigenetic mutations associated with aggressive PCa. Aberrant DNA methylation had effect on gene expression. In addition, the investigation revealed molecular networks and signalling pathways enriched for germline, somatic, and epigenetic mutations including the STAT3, PTEN, PCa, ATM, AR, and P53 signalling pathways implicated in aggressive PCa.

The study demonstrated that integrative analysis combining diverse omics data is a powerful approach for the discovery of potential clinically actionable biomarkers, therapeutic targets, and elucidation of oncogenic interactions between genomic and epigenomic alterations in aggressive PCa.

BioMed research international. 2021 Jan 13*** epublish ***

Tarun Karthik Kumar Mamidi, Jiande Wu, Chindo Hicks

Center for Computational Genomics and Data Science, Departments of Pediatrics and Pathology, University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Medicine, Birmingham, Alabama 35233, USA., Department of Genetics and the Bioinformatics and Genomics Program, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, School of Medicine, 533 Bolivar Street, New Orleans, LA 70112-1393, USA.

PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33511206

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Science Talk – AI and the genome: What’s next for precision cancer treatment? – The Institute of Cancer Research

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Image: Transcriptomes heatmap example. Credit:Thomas Shafee/Wikimedia Commons, CC by 4.0

The field of genomics has been revolutionised by the breadth of data available and the development of artificial intelligence (AI) techniques that are powerful enough to process this information.

AI has been a key focus at the Festival of Genomics & Biodata since its launch in 2016. Over the years, our scientists have presented on the latest techniques in machine learning, which is a type of AI that finds and learns from patterns in statistics and data.

Dr Anguraj Sadanandam leads the Systems and Precision Cancer Medicine team at the ICR and applies his multidisciplinary experience both in the wet-lab and computational biology to identify and test personalised therapies for different cancer types.

He says, Machine learning may be considered a new buzzword to some, but its been applied by researchers for a very long time. I have been working in this space over the last 15 years.

Dr Sadanandam will speak about "Precision Oncology Through Data Orchestration, Artificial Intelligence and Clinical/Preclinical Therapeutics" on 29 January as part of the AI stream of the Festival of Genomics & Biodata.

Previously, genomic data was the bottleneck and researchers would have to work with what was available. Now, there is a wealth of genomic data, which covers all genes and their variants. Researchers can also combine this with other -omics data ranging from proteomics, which examines data from proteins, to radiomics, which is based on data from medical radiology images, as well as clinical income information from patients.

Going forward Dr Sadanandam says context is key. Researchers and clinicians need to be able to integrate various pieces of information to develop personalised cancer treatments. In the future, he said he hopes that when a patient comes in with a tumour, a doctor could look at it and tell them what the progression of that tumour could be 10 years from now.

Dr Sadanandams lab has harnessed AI for cancer treatment in a number ways including PhenMap, a new tool for personalised cancer medicine.

PhenMap uses machine learning to identify cancer subtypes and biomarkers based. Dr Sadanandam likens PhenMaps approach to asking a question from the clinical and biological perspectives in parallel. PhenMap, short for phenotype mapping, starts by looking at patient prognosis and treatment responses, known as phenotypes. At the same time, PhenMap looks at biological data this could be genomics or other data. Next, it integrates both sets of data to create integrated groupings of patients. These new categories are more distinct and could potentially identify patients who might benefit from certain treatments as well as new targets for drugs.

In a recent study, Dr Sadanandams team showed PhenMap could identify clinically-relevant subtypes and biomarkers in breast cancer. These subtypes were associated with specific drug responses to an inhibitor currently in development. Researchers used data from mRNA in breast cancer cell lines and patient samples, though PhenMap could be applied to different types of data and other cancers. The tool also works with single cell samples rather than bulk tumour sequencing making it more accessible and suitable to the clinic.

AI tools like PhenMap help targeted cancer treatment become more personalised. Scientists have been able to group people with cancer into subtypes, but machine learning can pick up more complicated patterns and narrow these groups.

PhenMap groups patients in two ways: into discrete subgroups and as individuals along a spectrum. While a doctor may say a patient is in stage 1 or stage 3, AI tools could help pinpoint patients on a scale of 1 to 100, for example.

The greatest challenge in developing the next generation of personalised cancer treatments for patients is not more data or more powerful algorithms.

Dr Sadanandam says, We are now in a situation with an overwhelming amount of methods and techniques that can find a solution, but the real hurdle is making sure youre getting the right information and then can take it to the clinic. As fast as artificial intelligence is evolving, the treatment protocols are not evolving.

There are findings from other AI tools like PhenMap that could potentially be used in the clinic. However, it takes time for these findings and related technologies to gain regulatory approval and become licensed for patient use. Similarly, AI tools may identify new biomarkers, but validating them in the lab and developing clinical trials can take years.

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NeoGenomics and Tempus Join the Access to Comprehensive Genomic Profiling Coalition – PRNewswire

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WASHINGTON, Feb. 2, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --The Access to Comprehensive Genomic Profiling Coalition (ACGP) announced today the addition of NeoGenomics, Inc. (NASDAQ: NEO) and Tempus to its coalition of diagnostics companies and laboratory service providers to advocate for appropriate broad U.S. health insurance coverage of comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) for patients living with advanced cancer.

NeoGenomics is a premier cancer diagnostics and pharma services company serving oncologists, pathologists, pharmaceutical companies, academic centers, and others with innovative diagnostic, prognostic, and predictive testing.

Tempus, a leader in precision medicine and artificial intelligence, is a technology company that has built the world's largest library of clinical and molecular data and an operating system to make that information accessible and useful to physicians to enable data-driven treatment decisions.

"NeoGenomics' and Tempus' commitment to innovation to help identify the mutations driving advanced cancers make them valuable partners in ACGP's mission to raise awareness about CGP for advanced cancer patients," saidJim Almas, MD, vice president and national medical director of clinical effectiveness atLabcorp, and the chairman of ACGP.

"We are thrilled to be supporting the important mission of ACGP and its goal of raising awareness about the need for a comprehensive genomic profiling approach in clinical diagnosis and treatment therapy decisions," said Douglas VanOort, NeoGenomics' Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. "ACGP's goal of increasing patient access and insurance coverage of CGP resonates with our ongoing investments in CGP testing."

"Tempus' smart diagnostic testing platform provides physicians with the information they need to personalize patient treatment," said Ryan Fukushima, Chief Operating Officer of Tempus. "We believe that all cancer patients should have access to genomic profiling, and ACGP's aim to increase insurance coverage of this critical service aligns well with our mission."

CGP testing performed soon after a diagnosis of advanced cancer better informs medical management, including treatment decisions and patient care, which can improve clinical outcomes. In advocating for coverage of CGP, ACGP will educate health insurers and other healthcare stakeholders about the clinical utility and economic value of CGP.

All companies that offer CGP tests or offer a product with CGP CDx are eligible for consideration of membership in ACGP. If you are interested in learning more about becoming a member, please contact us here.

About NeoGenomics, Inc.

NeoGenomics, Inc. specializes in cancer genetics testing and information services. NeoGenomics provides one of the most comprehensive oncology-focused testing menus in the world for physicians to help them diagnose and treat cancer. The Company's Pharma Services Division serves pharmaceutical clients in clinical trials and drug development.

Headquartered in Fort Myers, FL, NeoGenomics operates CAP accredited and CLIA certified laboratories in Fort Myers and Tampa, Florida; Aliso Viejo, Carlsbad and San Diego, California; Houston, Texas; Atlanta, Georgia; Nashville, Tennessee; and CAP accredited laboratories in Rolle, Switzerland, and Singapore. NeoGenomics serves the needs of pathologists, oncologists, academic centers, hospitalsystems, pharmaceutical firms, integrated service delivery networks, and managed care organizations throughout the United States, and pharmaceutical firms in Europe and Asia.

For more information, visit: http://www.neogenomics.com

About Tempus

Tempus is a technology company advancing precision medicine through the practical application of artificial intelligence in healthcare. Tempus is a technology with one of the world's largest libraries of clinical and molecular data, and an operating system to make that data accessible and useful, Tempus enables physicians to mark real-time, data-driven decisions to deliver personalized patient care and in parallel facilitates discovery, development and delivery of optimal therapeutics. The goal is for each patient to benefit from the treatment of others who came before by providing physicians with tools to learn as the company gathers more data.

For more information, visit: http://www.tempus.com

About the Access to Comprehensive Genomic Profiling Coalition

Access to Comprehensive Genomic Profiling (ACGP) is a collaborative coalition of leading molecular diagnostics companies and laboratories that aims to raise awareness about comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) for advanced cancer patients.

For more information, visithttp://www.accesstoCGP.com

SOURCE Access to Comprehensive Genomic Profiling

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Genomic Testing Cooperative Establishes a Program to Address Cancer Disparity by Offering Molecular Profiling to Minority Patients without Adequate…

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IRVINE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Genomic Testing Cooperative, LCA (GTC) announced today that they are establishing a program offering comprehensive molecular profiling (DNA+RNA) testing to patients with cancer who are affected by cancer disparity and unable to pay due to lack of insurance or lack of coverage of this type of testing. Ethnic and racial minorities, impoverished people, sexual and gender minorities (LGBTQ) are typically affected more negatively with cancer. One of the reasons for this disparity is poor access to precision medicine and exclusion from clinical trials or studies evaluating the potential differences in the biology of their cancer.

GTC molecular profiling will provide the treating physicians and patients with proper diagnosis and classification of the tumor, help in determining prognosis, selecting therapy and in developing a strategy for treatment that is specific for the patient. The molecular profiling report provides information regarding potential clinical trials that will help the patients evaluate their options to participate and be treated in these clinical trials. Participation in this program will increase access of underserved patients and reduce disparity within community-based cancer care. In addition, the data generated from this program will be de-identified and made available to appropriate academic and scientific groups for the purpose of developing more personalized cancer treatment for minority groups of patients.

GTC is committed to donating 5% of its annual testing volume to this program. GTC is also establishing a donation fund allowing others to support this program and to increase the number of patients benefiting from this program. Individual donors and organizations can contribute to this program with 100% of the raised funds being used to pay for the actual cost of testing.

Patients must be nominated for this program by their physicians. Patients with solid tumors or hematologic neoplasms are eligible for testing. Hematologists/Oncologists can download a simple nomination form from the GTC website, fill in the required information and fax or e-mail to GTC. Patients can mention this program to their hematologists/oncologists and request nomination for this program.

Dr. Maher Albitar, GTC Chief Executive Officer and Chief Medical Officer, stated GTC is committed to making cancer molecular profiling available to all patients with cancer. We all know that patients seen in academic centers are different from real-world patients. Minority patients are not adequately represented in the process for developing innovative medicine nor in the implementation of state-of-the-art medicine. As a diagnostic company, we are doing our part by defining the precise molecular abnormalities that can be targeted but having access to the expensive targeted therapy is a different struggle. We are hoping that pharmaceutical companies will join our effort and do their part in providing the appropriate drugs to these patients and will develop a mechanism to recruit them in their clinical trials.

A recent study reported that one-third of disparities in survival between white and black patients with stage IV colorectal cancer is a product of treatment gaps (HemOnctoday, January 21/2021).

For downloading the patient nomination form, donations or more information, please visit our website genomictestingcooperative.com

About Genomic Testing Cooperative, LCA

Genomic Testing Cooperative (GTC) is a privately-owned molecular testing company located in Irvine, CA. The company operates based on a cooperative (co-op) business model. Members of the co-op hold type A shares with voting rights. The company offers its patron members a full suite of comprehensive genomic profiling based mainly on next generation sequencing. Molecular alterations are identified based on rigorous testing with the aid of specially developed algorithms to increase accuracy and efficiency. The clinical relevance of the detected alterations is pulled from numerous databases using internally developed software. Relevance of findings to diagnosis, prognosis, selecting therapy, and predicting outcome are reported to members. The co-op model allows GTC to make the testing and information platform available to members at a lower cost because of a lower overhead. For more information, please visit https://genomictestingcooperative.com/.

Forward Looking Statements

All of the statements, expectations and assumptions contained in this press release are forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements are based on the GTC managements current expectations and includes statements regarding the value of comprehensive genomic profiling, RNA profiling, DNA profiling, algorithms, therapy, the ability of testing to provide clinically useful information. All information in this press release is as of the date of the release, and GTC undertakes no duty to update this information unless required by law.

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Technologies in the Emerging Digital Genome Industry | Illumina, PerkinElmer, Pacific Biosciences of California, Thermo Fisher Scientific KSU | The…

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The GlobalDigital Genome Market,byProduct Type (Sequencer & Analyzers, Reagents & Kits, and Sequencing & Analysis Software), by Application (Clinical (Reproductive Health, Oncology, and Others), Forensics, Drug Discovery and Development, and Other Applications), by End User (Hospitals, Diagnostic Centers, Research Institutes, Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Companies, and Others), and by Region(North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East, and Africa)was valued atUS$ 7.5billionin 2018, and is projected to exhibit a CAGR of10.9%during the forecast period (2018 2026).

Key players in the market are engaged in development of digital genome, owing to greater future prospects of digital genome in the detection of chronic and infectious disease, birth anomalies, drug discovery & development, and diverse clinical applications. Also, market players are adopting inorganic growth strategies to increase their market presence.

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For instance, in October 2016, IBM Corporation collaborated with Quest Diagnostics, an American clinical laboratory, launched IBM Watson Genomics, which can be used for Quest Diagnostics. The service is intended to be used for precise medicine for cancer. In December 2017, PerkinElmer collaborated with Neuromuscular Disease Foundation for launching Whole Genome Sequencing research conducted for the rare muscle disease. Furthermore, in July 2018, Google partnered with National Institutes of Health for developing Google Cloud for the biomedical research.

Furthermore, key players in these market are focused on acquisition strategies to expand their geographical presence. For instance, in January 2016, Thermo Fisher Scientific acquired Affymetrix in order to obtain its chips used for genotyping, cytogenetics and gene expression and array-based platforms for around US$ 1.3 billion. In June 2018, Roche made definitive merger agreement to acquire Foundation Medicine, Inc. This merger agreement enable both companies to accelerate the broad availability of comprehensive genome profiling in oncology. In October 2017, Eurofins Scientific signed an agreement to acquire Forensics and Security division of LGC (LGC Forensics).

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Technologies in the Emerging Digital Genome Industry | Illumina, PerkinElmer, Pacific Biosciences of California, Thermo Fisher Scientific KSU | The...

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Stem Cell Study Illuminates the Cause of a Devastating Inherited Heart Disorder – Newswise

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Newswise PHILADELPHIAScientists in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania have uncovered the molecular causes of a congenital form of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), an often-fatal heart disorder.

This inherited form of DCM which affects at least several thousand people in the United States at any one time and often causes sudden death or progressive heart failure is one of multiple congenital disorders known to be caused by inherited mutations in a gene called LMNA. The LMNA gene is active in most cell types, and researchers have not understood why LMNA mutations affect particular organs such as the heart while sparing most other organs and tissues.

In the study, published this week in Cell Stem Cell, the Penn Medicine scientists used stem cell techniques to grow human heart muscle cells containing DCM-causing mutations in LMNA. They found that these mutations severely disrupt the structural organization of DNA in the nucleus of heart muscle cells but not two other cell types studied leading to the abnormal activation of non-heart muscle genes.

Were now beginning to understand why patients with LMNA mutations have tissue-restricted disorders such as DCM even though the gene is expressed in most cell types, said study co-senior author Rajan Jain, MD, an assistant professor of Cardiovascular Medicine and Cell and Developmental Biology at the Perelman School of Medicine.

Further work along these lines should enable us to predict how LMNA mutations will manifest in individual patients, and ultimately we may be able to intervene with drugs to correct the genome disorganization that these mutations cause, said study co-senior author Kiran Musunuru, MD, PhD, a professor of Cardiovascular Medicine and Genetics, and Director of the Genetic and Epigenetic Origins of Disease Program at Penn Medicine.

Inherited LMNA mutations have long puzzled researchers. The LMNA gene encodes proteins that form a lacy structure on the inner wall of the cell nucleus, where chromosomes full of coiled DNA are housed. This lacy structure, known as the nuclear lamina, touches some parts of the genome, and these lamina-genome interactions help regulate gene activity, for example in the process of cell division. The puzzle is that the nuclear lamina is found in most cell types, yet the disruption of this important and near-ubiquitous cellular component by LMNA mutations causes only a handful of relatively specific clinical disorders, including a form of DCM, two forms of muscular dystrophy, and a form of progeria a syndrome that resembles rapid aging.

To better understand how LMNA mutations can cause DCM, Jain, Musunuru, and their colleagues took cells from a healthy human donor, and used the CRISPR gene-editing technique to create known DCM-causing LMNA mutations in each cell. They then used stem cell methods to turn these cells into heart muscle cells cardiomyocytes and, for comparison, liver and fat cells. Their goal was to discover what was happening in the mutation-containing cardiomyocytes that wasnt happening in the other cell types.

The researchers found that in the LMNA-mutant cardiomyocytes but hardly at all in the other two cell types the nuclear lamina had an altered appearance and did not connect to the genome in the usual way. This disruption of lamina-genome interactions led to a failure of normal gene regulation: many genes that should be switched off in heart muscle cells were active. The researchers examined cells taken from DCM patients with LMNA mutations and found similar abnormalities in gene activity.

A distinctive pattern of gene activity essentially defines what biologists call the identity of a cell. Thus the DCM-causing LMNA mutations had begun to alter the identity of cardiomyocytes, giving them features of other cell types.

The LMNA-mutant cardiomyocytes also had another defect seen in patients with LMNA-linked DCM: the heart muscle cells had lost much of the mechanical elasticity that normally allows them to contract and stretch as needed. The same deficiency was not seen in the LMNA-mutant liver and fat cells.

Research is ongoing to understand whether changes in elasticity in the heart cells with LMNA mutations occurs prior to changes in genome organization, or whether the genome interactions at the lamina help ensure proper elasticity. Their experiments did suggest an explanation for the differences between the lamina-genome connections being badly disrupted in LMNA-mutant cardiomyocytes but not so much in LMNA-mutant liver and fat cells: Every cell type uses a distinct pattern of chemical marks on its genome, called epigenetic marks, to program its patterns of gene activity, and this pattern in cardiomyocytes apparently results in lamina-genome interactions that are especially vulnerable to disruption in the presence of certain LMNA mutations.

The findings reveal the likely importance of the nuclear lamina in regulating cell identity and the physical organization of the genome, Jain said. This also opens up new avenues of research that could one day lead to the successful treatment or prevention of LMNA-mutations and related disorders.

Other co-authors of the study were co-first authors Parisha Shah and Wenjian Lv; and Joshua Rhoades, Andrey Poleshko, Deepti Abbey, Matthew Caporizzo, Ricardo Linares-Saldana, Julie Heffler, Nazish Sayed, Dilip Thomas, Qiaohong Wang, Liam Stanton, Kenneth Bedi, Michael Morley, Thomas Cappola, Anjali Owens, Kenneth Margulies, David Frank, Joseph Wu, Daniel Rader, Wenli Yang, and Benjamin Prosser.

Funding was provided by the Burroughs Wellcome Career Award for Medical Scientists, Gilead Research Scholars Award, Pennsylvania Department of Health, American Heart Association/Allen Initiative, the National Institutes of Health (DP2 HL147123, R35 HL145203, R01 HL149891, F31 HL147416, NSF15-48571, R01 GM137425), the Penn Institute of Regenerative Medicine, and the Winkelman Family Fund for Cardiac Innovation.

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Penn Medicineis one of the worlds leading academic medical centers, dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and excellence in patient care. Penn Medicine consists of theRaymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (founded in 1765 as the nations first medical school) and theUniversity of Pennsylvania Health System, which together form a $8.6 billion enterprise.

The Perelman School of Medicine has been ranked among the top medical schools in the United States for more than 20 years, according toU.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $494 million awarded in the 2019 fiscal year.

The University of Pennsylvania Health Systems patient care facilities include: the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Presbyterian Medical Centerwhich are recognized as one of the nations top Honor Roll hospitals byU.S. News & World ReportChester County Hospital; Lancaster General Health; Penn Medicine Princeton Health; and Pennsylvania Hospital, the nations first hospital, founded in 1751. Additional facilities and enterprises include Good Shepherd Penn Partners, Penn Medicine at Home, Lancaster Behavioral Health Hospital, and Princeton House Behavioral Health, among others.

Penn Medicine is powered by a talented and dedicated workforce of more than 43,900 people. The organization also has alliances with top community health systems across both Southeastern Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey, creating more options for patients no matter where they live.

Penn Medicine is committed to improving lives and health through a variety of community-based programs and activities. In fiscal year 2019, Penn Medicine provided more than $583 million to benefit our community.

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Stem Cell Study Illuminates the Cause of a Devastating Inherited Heart Disorder - Newswise

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Black History Month: How did it start, and why February? – 11Alive.com WXIA

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Here are some questions often associated with the famed month.

ATLANTA Black History Month is a time to remember, reflect and celebrate the many contributions people of the Black diaspora have made throughout American history.

Here are some questions often associated with the famed month.

Who is Carter G. Woodson?

Woodson is a Harvard educated historian who started a group now known as the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASL.

Woodson was the son of a former slave and was the second African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard. He formed his group 50 years after the abolishment of slavery in the United States. Woodson is credited as the "Father of Black History." He is also a celebrated member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Incorporated.

How did Black History Month originate?

Woodson's fraternity, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Incorporated, were the creators behind "Negro History and Literature Week," which was initially celebrated in April.

According to pambazuka.org, "The program was hugely popular on Black college campuses across America."

Why February? Why the shortest month of the year?

In 1926, the ASALH chose the second week inFebruary as a time to celebrate the contributions of African Americans. The week was picked to coincide with the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, two men who played a prominent role in eliminating slavery.

The selection of February is celebratory and honorary in context - it is not documented as a malicious choice (for it being the shortest month of the year).

How did it become a month-long celebration?

Mayors across the country issued yearly proclamations, but for many around the country, a week wasnt enough. In the 1960s, college campuses extended the celebration to a month.

In 1976, President Gerald Ford officially recognized February as Black History Month. In an effort to make it official in 1976, President Ford named February "Black History Month" in a commemorative speech. In the speech, he urged Americans to "seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout our history."

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This Black History Month, remember: History isnt here to make you feel good – Chicago Sun-Times

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The mistake people make about history is to treat it as a crutch to prop up their sagging egos. It starts in childhood, when kids meet a parade of airbrushed heroes. But you grow up, or should, and the pretty story learned in second grade must become a jumping-off point, the branch you fly from, toward the stars of what actually occurred.

To stay on that branch, preening your feathers, is to risk ending up an affirmation junkie, able only to process another hit of flattery.

And we know what that looks like.

In September, Donald Trump denounced as a twisted web of lies the simple reality that racism is baked into the crust of our American apple pie. He created the 1776 Commission to promote a happy gloss of American history to help his supporters feel better about themselves.

But before we sluice away the plagiarized slop that Trumps commission squeegeed together, since this is Black History Month, it might be worthwhile to wonder if the inclination to sugar-coat the past is limited to unreflective white folks.

It is not.

Which is too bad. Because once you break free from the need for history to lick your hand like an affectionate pup, you are primed for a clearer understanding of what went on back then and, as a bonus, what is going on now and what might occur in the future.

For example. The election of Harold Washington, Chicagos first Black mayor, is generally presented as a seismic breakthrough and triumph. The power structure that previously served up an unbroken chain of 41 white mayors bowed its head and deferred to the rising might of African American Chicagoans as manifested in the personhood of the joyful Heres Harold! Washington.

Pretty to think so.

What actually happened, as older Chicagoans might remember, is that the incumbent mayor, Jane Byrne, having made a hash of her first and only term, was challenged by Ritchie Daley. They despised each other, and the weakened Democratic Party couldnt impose discipline. So both ran in the February 1983 mayoral primary. Daley got 29.6% of the vote. Byrne, 33.6%. And Washington got 36.3% and won.

Because the two white candidates split the vote. Had either run, alone, theyd have crushed Washington, 2 to 1. As it was, Bernie Eptons whipped-together Republican Before its too late run was a close call, Washington winning 52% to 48%.

Why is this important? First, because understanding why Washington won sets up what follows. The City Council, still existing in the deeply bigoted Chicago that had somehow elected a Black mayor, thwarted almost everything he attempted.

Second, grasping the truth of Washingtons election makes it easier to realize that declarations that America has transcended race like Trumps 1776 Commission are invariably premature.

For instance: The heart-stirring ascendance of our nations first Black president, Barack Obama, a cool, sophisticated slice of supra-racial brilliance, led directly to the grotesque opera buffa, bigoted, sneering piece of human wreckage that is Donald Trump, spastically winking at white supremacists, his orange makeup streaking down his face, staining the collars of his $500 Brioni shirts.

How did that happen?

It happened because, as with Washington, too many people bought the past-is-redeemed narrative and took their eyes off the ball. I was having lunch with David Axelrod, Obamas former chief strategist and senior adviser, and made a confession. I find myself blaming Obama for Donald Trump, I said. Is that fair? He paused and said in essence, I didnt write it down that in Obamas last two years in office, freed of the need to run again, he felt safe concentrating on issues that he particularly cared about. Issues such as reestablishing relations with Cuba, instead of focusing on the urgent need to groom an increasingly bitter, divided, crazy and hallucinating citizenry to accept what was, for them, the unimaginable humiliation of electing a woman president.

The past is a story we tell ourselves and each other. If its too soothing, a lullaby and not a march, then we are doing it wrong, and setting ourselves up for trouble. We dont study the past because its a fun hobby, like collecting stamps. We study the past because, in doing so, we see the future. Accepting only the parts that make you feel good is like driving a car while gazing up at the beautiful blue sky and big puffy clouds. It only works until you hit the truck stopped in front of you.

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This Black History Month, remember: History isnt here to make you feel good - Chicago Sun-Times

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Creativity Is the Focus of Black History Month 2021 | | SBU News – Stony Brook News

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When it came time to choose a theme for Black History Month, after the turbulent year the world has just experienced, the choice was clear.

The theme ofSankofa! Black Creativity reflects the innovation, struggles, resilience and beauty of the African American/Black people, in the past, the present, and during this unprecedented time in our nations history, said Zebulon Miletsky, associate professor, Department of Africana Studies and co-chair of the Black History Month (BHM) committee.

It also speaks to the importance of artistic and creative pursuits, and also the creativity needed to move through a pandemic, Miletsky continued. The fact that we are virtual this year illustrates that reality. Weve been through a pandemic, a series of racial justice movements and protests, and violence in our streets and in our nations Capitol. Black Creativity also speaks to the ability to survive in the midst of all of these things, and the creative accomplishments and contributions that have made life richer for all Americans.

The groundbreaking research being conducted by Stephanie Dinkins, associate professor ofartin Stony BrooksCollege of Arts and Sciences, regarding artificial intelligence and equality, and the cross-campus interdisciplinary team of physicians, engineers, paramedics and students that developed a new patient particle containment chamber to combat the dangers the COVID-19 pandemic presented to frontline medical personnel are just two recent examples of real-world creativity taking place at Stony Brook.

When we say creativity, we dont just mean the arts, but solutions, innovation and invention, said Cheryl Chambers, associate dean and director of Multicultural Affairs and co-chair of the BHM committee. In a way, everything we do at Stony Brook is creative in some way.

Sankofa teaches us that we should reach back and gather the best lessons of what our past has taught us, so that we can use them as we achieve our full potential moving forward, added Judith Brown Clarke, vice president for equity and inclusion and chief diversity officer. Black History Month gifts us with meaningful and historical learning opportunities to move forward with rich contributions to a more inclusive and equitable world.

A long-standing campus tradition, Black History Month is coordinated by the Office of Multicultural Affairs, the Black History Month Committee and the Department of Africana Studies.

Stony Brooks BHM programs have had a long and impactful history, said Isobel Breheny-Schafer, assistant director of Student Media and a member of the Black History Month committee. This years theme is a perfect way to highlight the talents of the Stony Brook community.

The University radio station, WUSB, will host its 30th annual reggae marathon, a three-day celebration that coincides with Black History Month. The tradition was founded by SBU alumni and current disc jockey Lister Hewan Lowe in 1991, and celebrates the legacy of influential Jamaican artist Bob Marley.

Another Black History Month highlight is the annual Spoken Word contest, a competition featuring student poetry, rap, storytelling and creative artistry. The content will take place virtually on February 22. Winners are invited to perform on WUSB and be published by BlackWorld media.

In the fine arts, the Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery is presenting Reckoning, which features an online exhibition showcasing the work of Stony Brooks world-renowned faculty artists, as well as an online student digital mural featuring work created in response to the challenges and issues they are experiencing.

Creativity Speaks BHM Through the Eyes of Student Artists

I created a piece called Enough is Enough the night before my very first Black Lives Matter protest, said senior psychology major Priscilla Nash 21. I was in a completely frazzled, upset state with everything that had been going on, and I needed an outlet. I needed to express my disbelief for how long things like this have been happening and how the stories that we hear today mimic stories that have been told over and over for decades.

Going into Black History Month amidstthe Black Lives Matter movement is an intersection in recenthistory that needs to be recognized by all, addedGianna Coscia 22, a physician assistant studies student. Its a time to reflect thoroughly on the centuriesof historical injustice that preceded this Black History Month of 2021, but also a time to recognize that history is still happening now.

The Black History Month opening ceremony takes place virtually on February 3 at 1 pm, and will feature a keynote speech by Julieanna L. Richardson, founder and executive director of The HistoryMakers, the nations largest African American video oral history collection of scholarly materials.

Acquired by the Stony Brook University Libraries and celebrating its 20th anniversary, The HistoryMakers database highlights nearly 2,700 historically significant African Americans in education, science, business, politics, arts, entertainment, sports, the military and other fields.

Register on Zoom to view the opening ceremony. You can find the fullscheduleof events on Stony Brooks Black History Month website.

Rob Emproto

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Thanks to the Internet Archive, the history of American newspapers is more searchable than ever – Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard

Posted: at 7:50 pm

My two intellectual loves are history and journalism alternately, history and its first draft and Im always happy to see the two overlap. Thats the case with word that the Internet Archive has digitized nearly the entire back catalog of Editor & Publisher for decades the bible of the newspaper industry and made it searchable to all.

I may be one of the youngest journalists to have experienced E&P in its period of pre-Internet glory, when it was the best (and often only) place to find out about job openings at newspapers. I remember, as a cub reporter at The (Toledo) Blade in 1997, going in with a couple of coworkers for a shared subscription so we could see who was hiring. The Internet knocked E&P off its perch, offering free-or-cheap competition for both job listings and media gossip and giving it the fusty smell of yesterdays media, though its shown some signs of life under new owner Mike Blinder.

Its Blinder we have to thank for handing E&Ps archives over to the Internet Archive for digitizing:

When Blinder called Brewster Kahle of the Internet Archive and found out we had the microfilm for his back issues, he was very excited to find the microfilm was not only safe, but that the Internet Archive would digitize all of the issues at no cost to him. Blinder enthusiastically gave permission for the full 100-year history to be read and downloaded by anyone, anywhere along with E&Ps International Yearbook and Market Guide. Going beyond the Internet Archives traditional lending system ensures it can be indexed by search engines and made maximally useful to readers and researchers.

I just went nuts, Blinder recalls of learning about the project earlier this year. I read history all the time. The fact that content about this incredible industry was available to humanity was exceptionally exciting.

So if youre at all interested in the 20th-century history of the American newspaper business, you now have access to a robust new resource. To give you a taste, I spent an afternoon combing through the archives to pull out some of the centurys most interesting moments; check them out below.

(But before I release you to those clips, allow me a minute on my soapbox. Newspapers archives are an incredible storehouse of information about the history of our country. And too many of those archives are, as E&Ps were, left crumbling in some storage facility or hidden away on unindexed rolls of microfilm. If you work for a newspaper or magazine and your archives arent yet digitized and available online, do what Mike Blinder did and reach out to the Internet Archive, which can handle the process, often at no cost to you, and make sure the public will benefit from your newspapers work for years to come.)

Without the subject of this story, you wouldnt be reading this website right now: Agnes Wahl Nieman, widow of Milwaukee Journal owner Lucius Nieman, leaves a portion of her estate to Harvard to promote and elevate the standards of journalism in the United States and educate persons deemed especially qualified for journalism.

French inventor douard Belin shows off his experimental television in cooperation with the New York World though its more like a photograph transmission device, based on his earlier Blinographe. The photo sent in tests? One of the Lumire brothers.

Eight full years before the founding of the National Association of Black Journalists, a group of African-American journalists assembled under the name Black Perspective, whose purpose is to improve the image of the Negro in American life. Among those at the first meeting: Ed Bradley (later of 60 Minutes fame), Bob Maynard (future owner of the Oakland Tribune), Ernest Holsendorph (later a business writer for The New York Times), Claude Lewis (the first black columnist for a Philadelphia daily), and Melvin Miller, who is still running Bostons Bay State Banner today, 54 years later.

By way of contrast, check the adjoining story: Civil Rights Coverage Angers Editor, in which the editor of the Dallas Times-Herald complains that some news outlets were too supportive of civil rights for his taste.

A new hire at The Washington Post named Benjamin Bradlee, whod spent the previous four years running Newsweeks Washington bureau.

The birth of unions in journalism: 102 editorial employees of three Cleveland dailies the Press, the News, and the Plain Dealer vote to form the Cleveland Editorial Employees Association. The initiation fee: 50 cents. Newspapermen like to call themselves liberal. They pretend to be radicals, communists, bolsheviks, but the fact is they like to have other people wear the badges. Radicalism and unionism are perfectly swell for the other fellow. Most newspapermen like to remain aloof.

Survival was the top priority for the embattled New York Daily News even back in 1982, showing some things never change. But most noteworthy here is the first E&P appearance of Donald Trump, a real estate developer, who has applied for a casino gambling license in New Jersey.

A profile of 22-year-old Garry Trudeau, whose comic strip Doonesbury was just moving from the Yale Daily News to national syndication. His goal: to generate enough income in six months to have six months a year free.

An pre-syndication appearance from legendary Boston Globe columnist Ellen Goodman, who E&P misidentified as the papers Home Furnishings Editor in a piece on the debate over women in the newsroom. Women are not in favor of giving men the junk. Theyre in favor of junking the junk.

E&P was the bible of the mainstream, overwhelmingly white daily newspaper business, but its coverage of black newspapers and black issues was spotty at best. Heres a dispatch from the trial (trial) of the men who murdered Emmett Till in Mississippi. The Negro press had a large table over on the right of the courtroom near an open window. The first day their table was small but next morning a larger table was substituted.

Ernie Pyle already one of the countrys most popular newspaper writers leaves America for the battlefields of World War II, where hed become a legend. He was killed by enemy fire at the Battle of Okinawa on April 18, 1945.

A brief E&P editorial notes (and attempts to parry) the complaint of Ms. Magazine editor Gloria Steinem that news stories use more descriptive language in describing women than men.

The military newspaper Stars and Stripes prepares to shut down as World War I comes to a close. Check out that staff: Harold Ross, who would go on to found The New Yorker, the famed drama critic Alexander Woollcott, and the artist C. Leroy Baldridge.

The New Yorker offers up John Herseys Hiroshima which filled the entirety of its August 31, 1946 issue for newspapers to publish. The piece runs about 30,000 words and no cutting or condensing is to be permitted.

Hunter S. Thompson, formerly a free-lance travel writer in the U.S. and once a reporter for the Middletown (N.Y.) Daily Record, is syndicating articles from South America to several U.S. newspapers.

The muckraker Ida Tarbell promotes the importance of truth in the news. In our time there is much discussion of exposure, or of muck-raking, as it is called. Muck-raking consists in laying bare the practises, conditions, or policies existing in institutions or in groups of menAs long as men combine to do things secretly the reporters will have the task of exposing them. It is an unpleasant one, but if he is any good, he will not shirk it.

One of the lower points in 20th-century American newspapering: the discovery that Jimmys World, a Pulitzer-winning story in The Washington Post by Janet Cooke, had been an invention. Jimmy, an eight-year-old heroine addict with needle marks freckling the baby-smooth skin of his thin, brown arms, didnt exist. The public faith in the press is minimal at the moment, said Boston Globe editor Tom Winship. When you add a trauma like thisyou just add fuel to the fire. The crazies out to get the press are going to love it. (A reminder that you cant trust the media is an eternal phenomenon.)

Heres another case of white Southern editors complaining about national coverage of the civil rights movement. Louis Lyons, then curator of the Nieman Foundation, correctly notes that some large Southern papers had ducked the issue' and defended the coverage in Northern papers as objective and comprehensive.

James J. Kilpatrick seen here complaining he didnt get as much air time to discuss race relations as James Baldwin was one of the leading advocates of continued racial segregation during the Civil Rights Movement. Around the time of this E&P story, he was writing that the Negro race, as a race, is in fact an inferior raceWithin the frame of reference of a Negroid civilization, a mud hut may be a masterpiecewhat, pray, has he contributed to [Western civilization]? Putting aside conjecture, wishful thinking and a puerile jazz-worship, what has he in fact contributed to it? Kirkpatrick remained a popular, nationally syndicated columnist until 2009. (A worthwhile example to consider in debates over cancel culture.)

This was the first substantial appearance in E&P of Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham, who had taken that position after the suicide of her husband Philip. In a speech given in Minnesota, Graham asks: How can a modern, general newspaper talk to the dozen experts in town and not lose the other half-million subscribers? Or put it the other way around. How can we talk to the half-million subscribers and not insult the dozen experts? Does it matter? I think it does. Can it be done? I think it can.

The first appearance of the Rev. Martin Luther King, a Negro minister convicted of leading a bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala. New Jersey publisher Wayne D. McMurray had raised funds from readers to pay Kings fines and court costs. King later wrote to McMurray: Your spirit gives new hope to those of us who are forced by sectional necessity to stand under the batttering rams of segregation and discrimination. Our struggle here is not merely a struggle for Montgomery but it is really a struggle for the whole of America. (McMurray is now the namesake of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Monmouth University.)

Within a few months, the Cleveland Editorial Employees Association changed its name to the somewhat more blunt Cleveland Newspaper Guild, and they wanted to take their model national. The Cleveland Guild decided to act as a temporary clearing house for information leading to the integration of all the guilds until a permanent arrangement could be made. That permanent arrangement was what would eventually become todays NewsGuild.

The audience of E&P was, of course, people who worked at newspapers, which made it the prime place to pitch new syndicated columns, comics, and features. Here, less than three months after the strips debut, is an ad for Charles Schulzs Peanuts. (CLEVER, TYPICAL.)

A profile of San Francisco Chronicle reporter Randy Shilts, who was almost alone in covering the earliest days of the AIDS crisis in mainstream media. (Nobody else would do this job. But there is nothing Id rather be doing.) A few months after this story, his book And the Band Played On was released.

A report from the press gallery of the so-called Scopes monkey trial in Dayton, Tennessee. The Chattanooga News has leased a house across from the courthouse which will be converted into a club for the visiting newspaper men. Note the reporter fined $2 for using profanity in a public place.

Its difficult to pinpoint the true start of television in America there were years of experimental stations, with lifespans ranging from hours to years but this story is as good as any. In 1931, radios Columbia Broadcasting System launched W2XAB, the experimental station that would eventually become WCBS, CBS flagship station in New York. W2XAB was the first American station to feature an actual weekly schedule of programming the birth of appointment television! Note the headline: Director Sees Time When News Events Will Be Broadcast.

This was E&Ps first substantial mention of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernsteins Watergate reporting, here honored with a $6,000 prize from the Drew Pearson Foundation. The award was for excellence in investigatory reporting by a Washington correspondent; The New York Times Neil Sheehan had won the first prize the year before for the Pentagon Papers. This piece also properly notes that Woodward and Bernstein werent working alone: The prize was also given to Barry Sussman (cq, Bob here is an error), who edited most of the Posts Watergate stories (and was later editor of the Nieman Watchdog Project). Barrys omission from All the Presidents Men remains criminal.

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Thanks to the Internet Archive, the history of American newspapers is more searchable than ever - Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard

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