Whiteout: Anatomy of a ski death – Steamboat Pilot & Today

This is part two in a three-part series on Colorado skier deaths. Click here for part one.

Kristine Gustafson wakes up each morning with the same thought: What really happened on Jan. 12, 2017?

Late in the afternoon on a chilly but clear powder day, the Centennial resident, her close friend, Sean Haberthier, and three other skiers were standing at the top of Breckenridge Ski Resorts Peak 8 Contest Bowl. They stopped to take a break and appreciate the near-perfect conditions they had marked with fresh tracks the whole day. They all agreed to meet at the bottom of the E Chair before a final run to the base.

Always the first one down, Haberthier was a conspicuous no-show, an instant red flag to the group. Calls to his cellphone went unanswered, and his friends began to worry.

The 47-year-old lived to ski, for years making the 5 a.m. drive up to Summit or Vail from Denver most days during the winter to pursue his passion. It was not out of the ordinary for Haberthier to eclipse well over 100 days each season.

You had to pry him away from it, said Gustafson. He approached it almost like a job and never missed a powder day. Hed bring his lunch with him and would get antsy if anyone he was with even had to go to the bathroom, because he wanted to get every single moment in on the day.

When Haberthier collided with a tree on the Lower Boneyard run that Thursday, he became the third skier to die at a resort in Colorado this season No. 127, overall, since the 2006-07 season.

To his friends, though, he wasnt yet a statistic when they alerted ski patrol of his disappearance that evening. Final evening sweeps of the mountain found nothing, and officials from the resort and the sheriffs office suggested he might have headed into town to join the annual Ullr Fest revelry. Haberthiers friends braced for bad news.

Sixteen hours passed in the frigid cold before a search party finally found Haberthiers remains the following morning in a tucked-away stand of lodgepole pines. A 4-inch gash ran across the back of his head, which the coroner would later assign as the cause of death, despite his friends still having questions.

Its been hard on all of us, said Gustafson. I just cant explain the feeling of him being there one second, and then us standing at the bottom waiting, with my gut telling me to go back up and look. They tell me he died on impact, but what if he didnt? What if he was just unconscious, and something could have been done? The thought of him being out there all night by himself; its shattered me.

Front lines

At least 137 people have died skiing at Colorado resorts since the 2006-07 season. More than 40 percent of those deaths occurred at one of Summit Countys four ski areas, among the most heavily trafficked winter sports destinations in the nation. During the past 10 years, Summit County has seen 58 ski-related fatalities far more than any other county in the state.

So far this season, Colorado has recorded 13 ski deaths. Five of them, including Sean Haberthier, happened at Breckenridge Ski Resort, one of North Americas most popular ski areas.

By volume, Summit Countys Regan Wood is one of the busiest coroners in the state, if not the country, when it comes to ski death investigations. Shes on the front lines of every fatality in the county, observing firsthand the trends behind the tragedies the overdoses, the suicides, the altitude-related heart attacks.

However, Wood holds an elected position that largely flies under the publics radar. In Colorado, coroners are not required to have a medical background. The only qualifications for making a run at the office are a high school diploma, a clean criminal record and one year of residency in the county. It would seem that politics has little to do with investigating deaths. And, for the most part, that rings true for Wood.

Not unlike other mountain town residents, Wood has worn many hats since she moved to Summit County 25 years ago to ski. She slung lift tickets at Copper Mountain Resort; volunteered for the Advocates for Victims of Assault, a group she eventually ran; and, in 2008, embarked on a new career path as a deputy coroner.

Coroners and their deputies are charged with determining the cause and manner of death. They do this by reading the signs on the body, studying the environment where the deceased met his or her end, obtaining toxicology tests, taking scans, securing medical records and interviewing family members. Often, the coroner calls for an autopsy, a procedure conducted by a medically trained pathologist. It is the gold standard for death investigations, according to experts.

Its a job for someone with a strong stomach, and Wood dove into it headfirst. The position became her lifes calling.

Though state law requires only minimal training, Wood binged on internships, courses and certifications. Eventually, when her mentor left office, she put her name in the hat to take his place. Running unopposed as a Republican, she took the oath of office in January 2015.

Still a devout skier, she prides herself on getting out on the mountain at least three times per week. But, given a swelling county population and increasing popularity of Summits resorts, theres been a rising tide of ski fatalities, and Wood has had to make even more trips to the resorts each winter.

Wood is confident she investigates each case thoroughly.

However, of the 58 ski-related fatalities recorded in Summit County over the past 10 years, only five autopsies have been performed. Thats a stark contrast to coroners in most other counties with ski areas. And in deaths where an autopsy was not called, Colorados open records law significantly narrows the amount of available public information.

A lone ranger

By the time Sean Haberthier was found, about 8:30 a.m. Friday, Jan. 13, his body was so hardened from the overnight freeze that hed have to thaw out so a physical exam could be completed.

For a skier or snowboarder at a resort to have a serious accident and not be immediately attended to is abnormal. In a typical case, ski patrollers, certified in emergency medical care, are alerted, arrive quickly and attempt to save the persons life.

When Wood responds to the scene of a fatality, she tries to understand the circumstances of the death by interviewing witnesses. For Haberthiers accident, there were none.

After concluding the manner of death as accidental, the body is moved to the morgue, and a series of tests, including X-rays and CT scans, is conducted. In this case, each assisted with understanding just how serious a blow to the head Haberthier suffered when he slammed into a tree.

To help determine someones cause of death, the county coroner has at her disposal forensic pathologists to perform autopsies. From board-certified medical examiners to researchers for the National Institutes of Health, the postmortem exam is considered a hallmark of diagnosis. It is used to definitively come to scientific conclusions by closely analyzing a decedents body and internal organs.

However, state statute grants considerable freedom to coroners for whether to call for the procedure. According to National Association of Medical Examiners standards, autopsies are required in particular types of deaths, including car crashes, aircraft accidents, drownings, electrocutions and fatalities associated with police activity. Ski accidents dont make the cut, but many coroners offices still order autopsies in those cases.

Caruso is an uncommon breed in Colorado. He is the only coroner required to be a forensic pathologist. Denver, along with Pitkin and Weld, are Colorados only three counties to have done away with the elected system for coroner in favor of appointing an individual with an established medical background.

I wouldnt have taken the job, otherwise, said Caruso, adding that, because hes neither elected nor deals in politics, I have no reason to make decisions based on non-medical factors.

Meanwhile, in the states other counties with ski resorts, the data shows an autopsy is conducted on those who died in a ski-related accident between 70 percent and 100 percent of the time.

But, taking a page out of the book of her two predecessors, Wood calls autopsies on a very small number of ski deaths. Instead, she relies heavily on her instincts and instruction as a certified death investigator rather than conforming to the norms followed by the majority of her peers across the state.

I feel we do a good job investigating accidental deaths and doing a comprehensive investigation, taking it all in and asking all the questions, said Wood. Were not here to do autopsies for medical curiosity.

For many of the states coroners, though, the autopsy isnt about intrigue. Its about ensuring a higher level of certainty.

Even though a death may look obvious due to trauma, I always want to know if that may have been induced by outside influences, said Emil Santos, coroner of San Miguel County, home to Telluride Ski Resort. We almost always find something that could be considered a contributing factor in someones death. (We) dont want any surprises.

Routt County Coroner Rob Ryg, a 15-year vet of the area Steamboat Ski Resort calls home, agreed. He cited the example of a 40-year-old San Antonio woman who plummeted 25 feet to her death from a chairlift in December at Ski Granby Ranch where the cause and manner both appeared obvious and yet neighboring Grand County still opted for the postmortem procedure.

Often, I know what happened, but Im just going to do an autopsy, said Ryg. Its better to have a pathologist to say he did not have a heart attack, he died of this. Its just a lot cleaner and a lot simpler that way.

I dont know what the response would be for not doing more autopsies, he added of Summit. Theyre kind of a lone ranger.

Wood said she often doesnt see the need.

An autopsy costs the county roughly $1,500.

Clear cause of death

During the weeks following her best friends death, Gustafson could hardly eat or sleep. She had too many unanswered questions about Haberthiers death. Three months later, she still seeks closure.

Its haunted me, because I was 100 feet from him and I could have hiked back up, she said. These are the questions as friends that we just dont understand. He was such a good skier, and Ive seen the guy get out of some hairy situations, so cant imagine him hitting a tree. It just doesnt make sense to me.

Harry and Lynda Taylor, who lost their 27-year-old son, Jay, in a ski accident at Keystone Resort almost exactly a year before Haberthier died, said the experience with those who handled his body, including the county coroners office, couldnt have been worse. They said they received few answers to inquiries about his death, were actively discouraged by Woods then-deputy coroner from having an autopsy and Jays preference of organ donation was overlooked. They assumed they were dealing with personnel with medical backgrounds.

Because, how often do you deal with a coroner? asked Lynda. And thats the sham of it all, with a skeleton in their office, and all the posters and other photos. You ask medical questions and come to realize they never even referred them up the chain, as they might have.

Having taken the advice not to obtain an autopsy, but with so many questions about how their expert skier son may have died, the Taylors regret not getting a second opinion before having his body cremated, forever eliminating the option. The pain of not knowing doesnt go away.

Because she was not next of kin to Haberthier, Gustafson was unable to petition for an autopsy to better understand what may have ultimately killed her friend that day. When she pressed Wood after the fact due to conflicting reports she received from ski patrollers about the nature of Haberthiers injures, she was repeatedly told that blunt-force trauma had already been determined the cause.

I want to know if he was still alive after he hit, she said. They said for sure he died instantly, but I can tell you, the following two weeks after wouldnt have been as hard if it wasnt for that unknown. Why not do an autopsy? I dont get it.

Wood explained it this way: When I have a decedent with a crushed skull, I have a pretty clear cause of death.

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Whiteout: Anatomy of a ski death - Steamboat Pilot & Today

Renowned primatologist to tout animal intellect at free Spokane lecture – The Spokesman-Review

Sat., April 22, 2017, 1 p.m.

Humans routinely underestimate the intelligence of other animals, according to Frans de Waal, one of the worlds leading primatologists.

We look at intelligence as one way to solve problems in the environment, and animals can do things we cannot do, de Waal said in an interview with The Spokesman-Review.

Echolocation used by dolphins and bats is just one example of how some animals are capable of advanced intelligence.

Humans tend to judge things based on what were good at, and were really not impressed by echolocation, but really it is as complex (a form) of communication, de Waal said.

The Dutch/American biologist and author will discuss themes from his best-selling book, Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are? at a public lecture and book signing at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Martin Woldson Theater at the Fox in Spokane. The free event is part of the Presidents Forum for Critical Thought lecture series at Eastern Washington University. He will also speak at a special event for students, faculty and staff earlier in the day on the EWU campus.

De Waal is the C.H. Candler professor of primate behavior in the Emory University psychology department, the director of the Living Links Center at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta and a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences. His numerous books, which include The Primate Mind and Evolved Morality, have drawn parallels between animal behavior and perceived human morality.

Chimpanzee Politics compared power struggles between chimpanzees with that of human politicians. The term alpha male was used to describe leaders that would enforce the power dynamic within a group, though de Waal said popular culture oversimplified the term when applying it to human behavior.

People have the impression that alpha male just means being a bully and ordering people around, de Waal said. Alpha males become leaders through diplomatic efforts, and it is rare they become alpha just by their physical strength.

The alpha male breaks up fights, consoles victims of aggression and a has a lot of different roles, he said.

Still, de Waal said political grandstanding often resembles animal behavior, citing some of last years preliminary presidential debates.

It was very chimp-like, because they were posturing, making anatomical connections, insulting each other, de Waal said.

His studies on empathy in chimps have also led to how people perceive emotional capabilities within the animal kingdom.

Its something we see in all mammals and even some bird studies, de Waal said.

While anyone with a loyal dog wouldnt be surprised by emotional awareness in animals, de Waal said there are some who still push back on the idea of animals being capable of complex human behaviors.

I think it helps placing us in a biological context, especially when it comes to positive behavior, de Waal said. As soon as humans do bad things, like kill each other, we call them animals. As soon as we do good things, thats our humanity. But in both the positive and the negative, we are animals.

Moral tendencies are not just intellectual, he said.

Continued research on animal intelligence has had a major cultural impact in recent years, particularly in the treatment of animals in captivity, de Waal said.

Circuses are disappearing, killer whales in captivity are disappearing, there are all these movements where slowly and steadily we take animals more seriously and how we treat them, he said. It may have implications for the farm industry those are much bigger numbers of animals than the research labs and the zoos.

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Renowned primatologist to tout animal intellect at free Spokane lecture - The Spokesman-Review

The importance of understanding the fundamentals of genetics – The University News

Why do children look more like their mother than their father? Why do people have diseases such as Albinism or Trisomy 21? Does the environment influence our appearance? These questions all deal with genetics and heredity. Genetics is the study of genes and their impact on organisms. Genetics deals with DNA and RNA, cell division, laws of inheritances, mishaps in genetic machinery and how genes and the environment influence the phenotype. I believe genetics is very important in each and every human being, especially as our traits are determined by it.

Genetics starts with the microscopic. Humans all have cells, which are the basic units of life. These cells contain hereditary information in the nucleus known as DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid). DNA contains the instructions that allow organisms to express their characteristics. Some traits include lactose intolerance, five-fingered hands and melanin production. These result from biological proteins. Te method in which proteins are made is known as the central dogma. The DNA produces RNA (Ribonucleic Acid), which is a single-stranded molecule. This acid is made in order to transport it out of the nucleus of the cell. The site of protein synthesis occurs outside the nucleus, specifically in the Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum. RNA helps produce the proteins at this site. With these proteins, traits are expressed. Without the central dogma, there would be no production of proteins that are necessary for survival and growth. There would be no life without the essential proteins.

In addition to protein synthesis, cells need to multiply rapidly in order to provide sufficient functions in the body such as formation of tissues and organs. Cells divide by two methods: mitosis and meiosis. The former deals with reproducing somatic body cells. In mitosis, two body cells are made per cell and the genetic information is passed on from the parent to the daughter cell. Meiosis is the process of producing gametes or sex cells. In meiosis, half of dads chromosomes are expressed in the child and the other half comes from mom. Trough meiosis, a genetically unique individual is created.

Problems can exist with cell division; a major problem that occurs is cancer. Cancer results from abnormal growth and division of cells. The cells undergoing mitosis never stop dividing, and too many cells are detrimental to the body. The cells move from one body section to another, which makes it hard to stop and remove all of the tumors. I believe this is an important area of study because it is important that we understand how traits pass from one generation to the next, and it is important to understand abnormal proliferation of cells during division. Without understanding this, it will be very hard to cure and treat those who have cancer. Understanding the basis of tumor growth allows doctors to save lives.

Scientists have used pedigrees to study human inheritance patterns. They study autosomal and sex-linked traits among people in a family and what is the likelihood that others will have or will not have a disease. Inheritance can also help to find certain problems that exist. One example is sickle-cell anemia. Tis is caused by homozygous recessive alleles for the blood cell gene. The proteins produced cause red blood cells to form their sickle shape. These sickle cells have a decreased surface area and cannot uptake enough oxygen. Understanding inheritance is crucial because you should be able to figure out the probability that your offspring will have some disorder and what the preventive measures are if there is a high probability.

Our phenotypes are not totally dependent on the outcomes of genetics. Lots of times, the environment plays a role with expression. Another branch of genetics is known as epigenetics. Epigenetics is the study of how external factors affect the expression of DNA rather than the change in the genetic code. Rabbits, for example, have different colored ears in different environments. Different environments have different external stimuli that affect the expression of the code. You know that living in different environments affect the moods and behaviors of people. Some may prefer the heat over the cold, while others may prefer the opposite.

Of course, this may seem a simple overview of genetics, but it is very complex. Genetics is very important as it determines the individual and the properties that exist within in that individual. While we may think about it, genetics apply to our lives each and everyday.

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The importance of understanding the fundamentals of genetics - The University News

Henrietta Lacks: The True Heroine of HBO’s Latest Movie, Starring Oprah – NBC4 Washington

Henrietta Lacks (left) died in 1951 from cervical cancer, but her cells, called "HeLa cells" (center) are still used in research today. Oprah Winfrey plays Lacks' daughter, Deborah Lacks, in an HBO movie about the woman that changed modern medicine.

When Oprah Winfrey signs her name to something, it captures attention far and wide. Her latest project is no exception.

Winfrey stars Saturday in HBO's "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks," a movie based on the national bestseller that tells the real story of a woman whose cervical cancer cells propelled advancements in medical research.

"I was really like, how could I have been a reporter all those years and never heard of HeLa cells and never heard the name Henrietta Lacks?" Winfrey, who was once a reporter in Baltimore, told NBC News.

From countless medical advancements to a family torn apart, the story of Henrietta Lacks' cells is multi-faceted.

Below are six things to know about Henrietta Lacks' contribution to science ahead of the HBO premiere.

Henrietta Lacks (HeLa)

Henrietta Lacks was a 31-year-old African American mother of five from rural southern Virginia. She died in 1951 after being diagnosed with cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore.

As told in Rebecca Skloot's bestseller, doctors took her cells without her knowing during her cancer treatment and discovered the cancer cells' remarkable ability to keep growing -- something that had never been seen before. They called them HeLa cells for the first two letters of her first and last name.

Immortal Cells

As the title of the book and movie implies, Lacks lives on through her cells that continue to grow in laboratories to this day.

For decades, scientists grew and sold HeLa cells around the world, but didn't know why or how her cancer cells managed to replicate and thrive.

In the 1980s, German virologist Harald zur Hausen discovered the cells had human papillomavirus or HPV. HeLa cells contain a strain of the virus which doctors now know can cause cervical cancer.

Two HPV genes in HeLa cells are what allow them to keep growing and growing, according to Dr. Richard Schlegel, the chair of Georgetown University's Department of Pathology.

"If you turn off those two genes in that cell, the cell stops growing. It doesn't form tumors anymore," Schlegel said.

HeLa cells are the oldest and most commonly used cell line and the "workhorse" cells, as Skloot called them, are so hardy that they are known to sometimes contaminate experiments.

"It's a very durable cell line. It's very easy to grow. It's almost like the equivalent of a weed in a lawn, you know, when the summer gets hot, your grass dies and these weeds somehow maintain themselves and that cell is like that," Schlegel said.

Major Strides in Medicine

Schlegel used zur Hausen's groundbreaking research on HeLa cells in developing the technology for the HPV vaccine, which now helps prevent women from dying from the same illness that took Lacks' life.

HeLa cells have also helped in eliminating polio, developing in vitro fertilization and creating cancer drugs.Lacks' cells have traveled the globe and gone to space.

They were critical for scientists to answer questions about basic biology, such as how cells move, DNA, RNA and protein synthesis, Schlegel said.

"It really opened up the era of cell biology and molecular biology and understanding it at a new level," Schlegel said.

In more recent research, scientists have found that the Zika virus cannot multiply in HeLa cells.

A Different Era

While HeLa cells have led to extraordinary advancements, the way in which Lacks' cells were taken and the lack of transparency with her family is in conflict with current ethical standards in medicine.

In 1951, there was no consent required from patients.

"Medicine was not really a business yet, it was just coming out of the 'family doctor comes with his little black bag' era," said Dr. Arthur Caplan, head of the Division of Bioethics at New York University Medical Center. "In 1951, we have no kidney dialysis, no ventilator, no heart-lung machine, no intensive care unit, almost no drugs -- much less -- no gigantic pharmaceutical companies."

Caplan said doctors also weren't truthful with patients about their diagnosis during that time -- no matter the patient's race or economic class. Doctors often wouldn't tell patients they had cancer for fear of scaring the patient.

"The basic idea of truthfulness with patients, much less with subjects, wasn't in place," Caplan said.

Henrietta was informed of and underwent radiation for her aggressive cancer, but like most patients during that time, did not have a say in her cells being used for research. Her family didn't know about HeLa cells until 20 years after her death, when doctors tested the family's blood for more research. But the family didn't understand what was happening and doctors continued to withhold information.

This lack of transparency created the distrust voiced by Deborah Lacks, Henrietta's daughter who is portrayed by Winfrey in the movie.

Lacks Family "Torn Apart"

"I could [cry] when I think about Deborah and hear her voice from the tapes, how eager she was to know about her mother and to have this story told," Winfrey said in an interview with NBC News.

For decades, no one knew about the woman behind the amazing immortal cells, which is what inspired author Rebecca Skloot to tell her story. Skloot found Deborah and discovered the family of the woman whose cells led to major medical breakthroughs could not afford their own health care.

The Lacks family was never compensated or profited from HeLa cells, although the cells have led to millions of dollars in profits as they have been sold for a myriad of studies. Johns Hopkins has said it never profited from HeLa cells, but some of Henrietta's descendants maintained they should receive payment.

"Unfortunately some members of the family are still being torn apart... by the burden of those cells," Winfrey said.

According to Caplan, research subjects and their families are not paid today, but one simple change has been made since the 1950s.

"It's not different than it was for Henrietta Lacks or anybody else... But now institutions, to protect themselves, basically say, 'We're not going to pay you if something valuable is made from your cells,'" Caplan said.

In 2013, three years after the book was published, more concerns came for the family after a group of scientists in Europe published the genetic makeup of the cells. The family was concerned that anyone who had the full genome map could learn personal medical information about them and asked for the researchers to withdraw the paper.

After the study was withdrawn, the Lacks family met with the National Institutes of Health and came to an agreement about how to proceed with publishing information about the genome.

Lessons Learned

Caplan said the Lacks family will never profit from HeLa cells, but their agreement with the NIH is a major milestone in medical ethics.

"I think they do have the right to control [the genome] anything that identifies somebody or potentially identifies somebody -- you have the right to consent to its use or not," Caplan said.

Out of the agreement came the HeLa Genome Working Group, which includes two representatives of the Lacks family. Those family members now choose which researchers can have access to HeLa cells.

Meanwhile, Skloot has set up a foundation for the family using proceeds from the book and movie. The foundation provides scholarships for Lacks' descendants and health care for Henrietta's children.

The Lacks family is still hoping that research organizations and companies that have profited from HeLa cells will do something to honor Henrietta and recognize what her family went through, according to Skloot.

HBO's movie will premiere Saturday, April 22 at 8 p.m. Eastern Time.

Published at 4:00 PM EDT on Apr 21, 2017 | Updated 5 hours ago

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Henrietta Lacks: The True Heroine of HBO's Latest Movie, Starring Oprah - NBC4 Washington

Seattle’s March for Science draws thousands on Earth Day including a Nobel Prize winner – Seattle Times

Damn right Im in this march, said Eddy Fischer, 97, professor emeritus of biochemistry at the University of Washington and Nobel Prize co-winner in 1992 for physiology or medicine. He was among thousands gathered at Cal Anderson Park on Capitol Hill.

A crowd of several thousand gathered Saturday at Cal Anderson Park on Seattles Capitol Hill for the March for Science to Seattle Center. It is part of similar marches being held around the world, with scientists, students and research advocates and ordinary citizens conveying an Earth Day global message of scientific freedom without political interference.

Participants holding signs such as Make America smart again and Climate change is real began arriving around 9 a.m.

Anticipation of Seattles march attracted a social-media following second only to the main event in Washington, D.C. Another dozen marches were planned around the state, from Kennewick to Coupeville.

In Seattle, the promised rain began arriving at about 10:45 a.m. , but with temperatures in the low 60s it was relatively nice spring weather for this city.

The event began with a guitarist playing the Star Spangled Banner in Jimi Hendrix style. People cheered.

Among those attending was Julie Smith, of Mountlake Terrace, who had taken the bus to the march with her husband.

She was holding a sign that said, Survived cancer? Thank science!

Smith said, I have a lot of friends who survived cancer. They wouldnt be here if scientists werent investigating cancer.

She perceives an anti-science movement among some politicians. I dont know why, Smith said. I guess they play to their base, fundamentalist Christians.

Also in the crowd: Eddy Fischer, 97, professor emeritus of biochemistry at the University of Washington and Nobel Prize co-winner in 1992 for physiology or medicine.

He was a there using a wheelchair.

Damn right Im in this march, he said.

Of the Trump administration, Fischer said, I know very little about politics. Im appalled by some of the statements coming out of them.

President Donald Trumps proposed budget, if enacted by Congress, would cut nearly 20 percent of funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Those cuts would be devastating to Seattles medical research community, and the pipeline for critical advances, scientists say. For example, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center receives 85 percent of its budget from the NIH, or nearly $250 million annually more NIH grants than any other cancer-research center in the nation.

From Germanys Brandenburg Gate to the Washington Monument on Saturday, crowds around the world urged spending what is necessary to make breakthroughs possible.

We didnt choose to be in this battle, but it has come to the point where we have to fight because the stakes are too great, said climate scientist Michael Mann, who regularly clashes with politicians.

Standing on the National Mall in D.C. with thousands soaked by rain Saturday, Mann said that like other scientists, he would rather be in his lab, the field or teaching students. But driving his advocacy are officials who deny his research that shows rising global temperatures.

President Donald Trump, in an Earth Day statement hours after the marches kicked off, said that rigorous science depends not on ideology, but on a spirit of honest inquiry and robust debate. The president also said his administration was committed to advancing scientific research that leads to a better understanding of our environment and of environmental risks.

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Seattle's March for Science draws thousands on Earth Day including a Nobel Prize winner - Seattle Times

11 memories from when the whole country was obsessed with Grey’s Anatomy – DailyEdge.ie

Source: YouTube

AH, REMEMBER THE mid-2000s when it seemed like the entire country was fixated with Seattle Grace and McDreamy?

If you werent watching Desperate Housewives, you were probably busy watching Greys Anatomy, the hospital drama that totally gripped the nation and helped fill the ER-shaped hole in our lives.

Lets take a look back, shall we?

Mysterious illnesses! Dramatic plane crashes! Sexy time in closets!

So much used to happen in Greys Anatomy.

They look after sick people, have salacious workplace affairs and always look impeccable. They really earn their money.

I might not know my arse from my elbow, but I strongly believe I could be Irelands Cristina Yang.

Source: Emoji Request

Meredith, Izzy, George, Cristina you loved them all.

<3

007!

Frightening fact: How To Save A Life was number one in Ireland ten years ago.

That piano intro, though.

I am your person.

<3

Source: Pinterest

Source: Tumblr

The most exciting hospital since County General Hospital.

Pop culture, web gems and social Ireland, Daily Edge via Facebook. Just click Like.

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11 memories from when the whole country was obsessed with Grey's Anatomy - DailyEdge.ie

This Is The One Character Shonda Rhimes Regrets Killing On Grey's Anatomy – Refinery29

Shonda Rhimes is the most dangerous woman in America. Or, fictional TV America, at least. The showrunner has killed of so many characters during her many incredible years working on programs like Grey's Anatomy, Scandal, and How To Get Away With Murder. However, there's one character she regrets killing, and it's someone who appeared very briefly on Grey's.

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This Is The One Character Shonda Rhimes Regrets Killing On Grey's Anatomy - Refinery29

Anatomy of Turkish referendum stamp controversy – TRT World

Turkeys main opposition, the Republican Party (CHP) claims the inclusion of ballot papers missing a stamp has cast severe doubts on the legitimacy of the outcome of last Sundays referendum approving 18 constitutional amendments.

By a slim majority of 51.41%, the Turkish electorate approved the controversial amendments that will see the country move from a parliamentary system to a presidential system.

Three political parties lodged objections with Turkey's Supreme Electoral Board (YSK) over the unstamped ballot papers. On Wednesday the YSK announced that 10 of its 11 members had rejected the parties' objection and appeal to annul the referendum. One member voted in favour of objections.

YSK president Sadi Gven said the board decided to accept to unstamped ballot papers because the real voters cast their votes with the real ballots, real envelopes and real stamps in a healthy manner.

CHPs vice chairman, Blent Tezcan said on Friday that CHP would take the case to the Council of State in a bid to overturn YSKs decision.

What was the process?

On the morning of the referendum, YSK sent watermarked ballot papers, envelopes bearing YSK's logo, and the stamps to polling stations. These arrived at the respective polling stations in a sealed bag.

Electoral officers were responsible for checking that the number of ballot papers and envelopes was equal to the number of voters registered for that polling station.

Each ballot paper was then supposed to be stamped on the back by the electoral officer. Each envelope into which the voter was to place his vote also had to be stamped once by the electoral officer and once by the representatives. That had to be completed by 9am when the polling stations opened.

Gven rejected claims of irregularities, saying that the stamps were secondary security measures and voters had been protected by the fact that ballot papers were already watermarked.

According to the rules, party representatives were expected to report any irregularities to the YSK, which was then obliged to investigate them. In the absence of any objections party representatives were obliged at the end of the day to sign off approving the process.

So what is the fuss over the stamps?

On the the day of voting some polling officers failed to stamp the back of some ballot papers and the envelopes before the voting began.

YSK later said that this had been due to error, neglect or manipulation. Voting continued with ballot papers that had not been stamped at the back.

Gven said on Monday, that it was impossible to know how many ballot papers with missing stamps were used, because the numbers were not reported by polling officers when the referendum was underway.

After complaints that some polling officers didnt stamp some ballots and envelopes with the second stamp, YSK ruled during the referendum that as long as it was confirmed that the ballot paper and the envelopes were not brought into polling station from outside, the vote at those stations would remain valid.

Is YSKs ruling unlawful?

The parties which objected to the ruling claim that YSKs decision conflicted with an earlier ruling, therefore unlawful.

Following the YSKs decision to reject the objections and the call to annul the referendum, CHP Chairman Kemal Klcdaroglu issued a statement saying that judges should decide according to law.

According to the YSK's earlier ruling, ballot papers and the envelopes which had not been stamped should be declared invalid.

However, Gven said the decision to accept ballot papers that had not been unstamped was not unusual. It had happened before.

He said that in these instances, the YSK had ruled in favour of accepting unstamped ballots because the board believed voters should not be punished because of the polling officers irresponsibility and that their right to cast their votes should be protected.

Gven told a press conference on Sunday that all the ballots and the envelopes were delivered to polling officers on the referendum day.

The numbers of delivered materials were being recorded by the officers before the voting and its proven that the number of ballots, envelopes and the number of voters are consistent, he said.

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Anatomy of Turkish referendum stamp controversy - TRT World

Cormac McCarthy explains the brutal, beautiful neuroscience of the unconscious – Quartz

When Cormac McCarthy writes an essay on the origin of language and the history of the unconscious mind, you can expect to find yourself wiser after reading it. The author, who has a cult fanbase for his novels The Road, All the Pretty Horses, and No Country For Old Men, doesnt disappoint in his new piece for the science magazine Nautilus.

It turns out McCarthy has been thinking about the unconscious and how it relates to human language for a couple of decades. He has indulged this exploration as a member of the Santa Fe Institute, a nonprofit organization whose researchers study the underlying, shared patterns in complex physical, biological, social, cultural, technological, and even possible astrobiological worlds, according to its website.

And now McCarthy has somehow distilled the lofty ideas, unanswered questions, and epiphanies collected during this long inquiry into a beautifully written narrative.

But of course he did. Thats his calling, as he writes in the essay: The facts of the world do not for the most part come in narrative form. We have to do that.

The Kekul Problem begins with McCarthys take on one of historys most famous dreams: the German chemist August Kekuls vision of the ouroboros, a snake eating itself, which provided a visual answer to his question about the shape of the benzene molecule. He shared that solution with the world in an 1865 paper.

This story raises a logical problem, points out McCarthy (who favors minimal punctuation and doesnt use apostrophes in negative contractions):

The problem of coursenot Kekuls but oursis that since the unconscious understands language perfectly well or it would not understand the problem in the first place, why doesnt it simply answer Kekuls question with something like: Kekul, its a bloody ring, To which our scientist might respond: Okay. Got it. Thanks.

Why the snake? That is, why is the unconscious so loathe to speak to us? Why the images, metaphors, pictures? Why the dreams, for that matter.

A logical place to begin would be to define what the unconscious is in the first place. To do this we have to set aside the jargon of modern psychology and get back to biology. The unconscious is a biological system before it is anything else. To put it as pithily as possiblyand as accuratelythe unconscious is a machine for operating an animal.

The rest of the essay gently sinks into that question, examining what the unconscious doesnt do (like tell us to keep breathing), and where it excels (in solving mathematical equations, for instance).

Its actually so common for mathematicians to solve problems in their dreams that George Zweig, the Russian-American physicist and friend to McCarthy, calls sleeping the Night Shift. The unconscious teaches usour conscious, decision-making brainlessons through recurring dreams, McCarthy explains, writing this hilarious dialogue for that mysterious part of our primeval minds:

Here the unconscious may well be imagined to have more than one voice: Hes not getting it, is he? No. Hes pretty thick. What do you want to do? I dont know. Do you want to try using his mother? His mother is dead. What difference does that make?

While language is useful for describing problems, thinking is an unconscious act, McCarthy demonstrates, pointing out that because of language, we can remember novels and booksbut we do that using concepts and visual representations in our mind, not by remembering the words we read.

He describes language as a force that at some point took possession of our brains, like a parasitic invasion:

The sort of isolation that gave us tall and short and light and dark and other variations in our species was no protection against the advance of language. It crossed mountains and oceans as if they werent there. Did it meet some need? No. The other five thousand plus mammals among us do fine without it. But useful? Oh yes. We might further point out that when it arrived it had no place to go. The brain was not expecting it and had made no plans for its arrival. It simply invaded those areas of the brain that were the least dedicated.

Eventually McCarthy does offer an answer to that question of why Kekuls unconscious conjured up the snake. I wont share it, but Ill tell you its related to the unconscious minds long history, dating back to the earliest humans of two million years ago, predating language by about 900,000 years.

Read the whole essay at Nautilus to find out, but keep in mind its just a hypothesis. After all, as McCarthy writes, How the unconscious goes about its work is not so much poorly understood as not understood at all.

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Cormac McCarthy explains the brutal, beautiful neuroscience of the unconscious - Quartz

W&M joins statewide neuroscience alliance | Williamsburg Yorktown … – Williamsburg Yorktown Daily

WYDaily.com is your source for free news and information in Williamsburg, James City & York Counties.

Participation in the Virginia Neuroscience Initiative will open new opportunities for William & Marys neuroscientists.

Josh Burk says the VNI is a component of the Virginia Biosciences Health Research Corporation (VBHRC, also known as the catalyst) a state created non-profit corporation. Burk is chair of William & Marys Department of Psychology and an affiliated faculty member of the universitys expanding neuroscience program.

The VNI is an effort to bring together major research institutions within the commonwealth to collaborate more than they have in the past, Burk explained. Another aspect is that the commonwealth is putting funds into this, so theyre looking at return on investment.

Burk said VNI participation would be particularly beneficial for William & Marys neuroscience program, an initiative that straddles five departments and conducts one of the universitys most popular undergraduate major programs.

William & Mary is one of seven academic institutions participating as core members of VNI, along with five major medical centers: Carilion Clinic, Inova Health System, Sentara Healthcare, UVA Health System and VCU Health. VNI also includes industrial partners.

Burk says that VNI participation offers a number of benefits, all of which revolve around collaboration. For example, the alliance has increased access to scientific instruments throughout the commonwealth. VNI researchers can use facilities at other VNI institutions at the same rate as researchers in the home institution.

Say that I had a collaborator at the University of Virginia, I could put a core facility at UVA into my grant proposal, Burk explained. Its something that I would have access to and at the same rate as someone at UVA. Its going to really strengthen grant proposals.

He added that VINs mission of collaboration matchmaker begins with a registry of Virginia neuroscientists. William & Mary has a couple dozen names on the registry now, and Burk says the goal is to have 50, once the word gets out to students, graduate students and post-docs in the universitys neuroscience community.

Anyones whos interested should be in the registry students, faculty, graduate students, whomever, Burk said. Even if theyre not doing core neuroscience research, they might have expertise that could contribute to neuroscience.

The registry makes a good starting part to find a collaborator. Burk has been working in a successful long-term, inter-institutional collaboration, a partnership that has received two RO1 grants from the National Institutes of Health. The key to creating a successful research partnership is to find someone who is working on something similar, but who has different, complementary, skills.

But you need to be compatible to be able to work together, he said. This is where the registry helps, because you can call someone up or invite them to come visit.

Burk pointed out that William & Mary has a lot to offer a statewide neuroscience collaboration, offering a wide range of experts from cellular-molecular research to behavioral and cognitive neuroscience to computational neuroscience.

He added that there are a number of core facilities available on campus as well, led by the nuclear magnetic resonance facility operated by Myriam Cotten, associate professor of applied science.

Thats a piece of equipment thats unique within Virginia, and there are very few instruments like that around the world, Burk said.

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W&M joins statewide neuroscience alliance | Williamsburg Yorktown ... - Williamsburg Yorktown Daily