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Casting announced for Anatomy of a Suicide at Royal Court, London – The Stage

Londons Royal Court Theatre has announced casting for Alice Birchs new play Anatomy of a Suicide.

The production will star Hattie Morahan alongside Kate OFlynn, who was recently nominated for an Olivier Award for her role in the West End production of The Glass Menagerie.

Other cast members are Gershwyn Eustache Jnr, Paul Hilton, Peter Hobday, Adelle Leonce, Sarah Malin, Jodie McNee and Dickon Tyrrell.

Katie Mitchell will direct, returning to the Royal Court after her production of Alice Birchs play Ophelias Zimmer in 2016.

Anatomy of a Suicide explores the repercussions of suicide across three generations of a women.

Design is by Alex Eales, costume by Sarah Blenkinsop and lighting by James Farncombe. Music is by Paul Clark and sound by Melanie Wilson.

It runs from June 3 to July 8 in the Jerwood Theatre Downstairs space, with press night on June 3.

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Casting announced for Anatomy of a Suicide at Royal Court, London - The Stage

Could genetics influence what we like to eat? – Medical Xpress – Medical Xpress

April 23, 2017 Researchers found that variations in certain genes play a significant role in a person's food choices and dietary habits. For example, higher chocolate intake and a larger waist size was associated with certain forms of the oxytocin receptor gene, and an obesity-associated gene played a role in vegetable and fiber intake. Other genes were involved in salt and fat intake. Credit: By Adriano Kitani

Have you ever wondered why you keep eating certain foods, even if you know they are not good for you? Gene variants that affect the way our brain works may be the reason, according to a new study. The new research could lead to new strategies to empower people to enjoy and stick to their optimal diets.

Silvia Berciano, a predoctoral fellow at the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, will present the new findings at the American Society for Nutrition Scientific Sessions and annual meeting during the Experimental Biology 2017 meeting, to be held April 22-26 in Chicago.

"Most people have a hard time modifying their dietary habits, even if they know it is in their best interest," said Berciano. "This is because our food preferences and ability to work toward goals or follow plans affect what we eat and our ability to stick with diet changes. Ours is the first study describing how brain genes affect food intake and dietary preferences in a group of healthy people."

Although previous research has identified genes involved with behaviors seen in eating disorders such as anorexia or bulimia, little is known about how natural variation in these genes could affect eating behaviors in healthy people. Gene variation is a result of subtle DNA differences among individuals that make each person unique.

For the new study, the researchers analyzed the genetics of 818 men and women of European ancestry and gathered information about their diet using a questionnaire. The researchers found that the genes they studied did play a significant role in a person's food choices and dietary habits. For example, higher chocolate intake and a larger waist size was associated with certain forms of the oxytocin receptor gene, and an obesity-associated gene played a role in vegetable and fiber intake. They also observed that certain genes were involved in salt and fat intake.

The new findings could be used to inform precision-medicine approaches that help minimize a person's risk for common diseasessuch as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancerby tailoring diet-based prevention and therapy to the specific needs of an individual.

"The knowledge gained through our study will pave the way to better understanding of eating behavior and facilitate the design of personalized dietary advice that will be more amenable to the individual, resulting in better compliance and more successful outcomes," said Berciano.

The researchers plan to perform similar investigations in other groups of people with different characteristics and ethnicities to better understand the applicability and potential impact of these findings. They also want to investigate whether the identified genetic variants associated with food intake are linked to increased risks for disease or health problems.

Explore further: Genetic testing for personalized nutrition leads to better outcomes

More information: Behavior related genes, dietary preferences and anthropometric traits , app.core-apps.com/eb2017/abstract/bec756a56516e96fd9b3196099bd6f5b

Provided by: Experimental Biology 2017

Researchers from the University of Toronto (U of T) report that personalized dietary advice based on a person's genetic makeup improves eating habits compared to current "one-size-fits-all" dietary recommendations. The findings ...

Inherited differences in taste perceptions may help explain why some people eat more salt than recommended, according to preliminary research presented at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2016.

A new study from the University of Eastern Finland shows that a relatively high intake of dietary cholesterol, or eating one egg every day, are not associated with an elevated risk of dementia or Alzheimer's disease. Furthermore, ...

A study by York University researcher Caroline Davis and her colleagues at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) is the first to demonstrate that variants of the Oxytocin Receptor (OXTR) gene contribute to why ...

Limiting saturated fat could help people whose genetic make-up increases their chance of being obese. In a new study, researchers from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (USDA HNRCA) at Tufts University ...

Have you ever wondered why you keep eating certain foods, even if you know they are not good for you? Gene variants that affect the way our brain works may be the reason, according to a new study. The new research could lead ...

Whole-exome DNA sequencinga technology that saves time and money by sequencing only protein-coding regions and not the entire genomemay routinely miss detecting some genetic variations associated with disease, according ...

(Medical Xpress)An international team of researchers has developed a way to use RNA sequencing to help in diagnosing patients with rare genetic muscle conditions. In their paper published in the journal Science Translational ...

Research published this week in Scientific Reports uses computer image and statistical shape analysis to shed light on which parts of the face are most likely to be inherited.

Salk scientists and collaborators have shed light on a long-standing question about what leads to variation in stem cells by comparing induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from identical twins. Even iPSCs made from ...

In a study published today in PLoS ONE, a team of researchers reports solving a medical mystery in a day's work. In record-time detective work, the scientists narrowed down the genetic cause of intellectual disability in ...

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They have pills that make alcohol disagreeable to drinkers. This tailoring of the diet thing may be going too far. I can see anti-flavour drugs being prescribed some day. Addicted to ice cream? Here, take these. You'll hate it.

Ok then no matter how much SCIENTIFIC evidence you still want to keep this spiritual genetic idea....no you know what FUCUK YOU JESUS

No right ill, keep to your ideal my brother died with a liver and kidney and heart who go on to keep a family and he died with no kids a heavy drinker but no....I get how things can contribute but if you come to my fucking family i will fight you with the power of science you piece of shit

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Could genetics influence what we like to eat? - Medical Xpress - Medical Xpress

KDA seeks participants for beef genetics trade mission to Argentina – hays Post

KDA

MANHATTAN The Kansas Department of Agriculture is seeking individuals to participate in an agricultural trade mission to Argentina. Tentatively, the mission will take place July 24-30, 2017. The goal of this mission is to provide an opportunity for Kansas purebred beef cattle producers and allied industry to develop relationships with livestock producers in Argentina to increase market opportunities for U.S. and Kansas beef genetics.

The primary activity during the mission will be to interact with breeders and promote the use of U.S. beef genetics while attending Exposicin Rural (Palermo), the major Argentinian livestock show. Kansas ranchers and related agribusinesses specializing in export of Angus and Hereford genetics are invited to participate.

This trade mission is funded in part by the U.S. Livestock Genetics Export, Inc. Selected participants will be eligible for travel stipends for airfare depending upon number of applicants and fund availability. Participants will be responsible for the cost of hotels, meals and other incidental expenses.

KDA strives to encourage and enhance economic growth of the agriculture industry and the Kansas economy by exploring and expanding both domestic and international marketing opportunities.

Individuals interested in participating in the trade mission should complete the application forms available on the KDA website at agriculture.ks.gov/International. The deadline for submitting applications for consideration is Monday, May 22. For more information on the trade mission, contact Billy Brown, KDA agribusiness development coordinator, at billy.brown@ks.gov or (785) 564-6752.

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KDA seeks participants for beef genetics trade mission to Argentina - hays Post

Chinese space scientists study human organs in space – Space Daily

Scientists around the world are looking for the "keys" to enable humans to regrow tissues or organs lost due to illness or injury, just like gecko can regrow a tail. Their quest now extends into space. Stem cell research on Tianzhou-1, China's first cargo spacecraft, is far from realizing this dream, but it's the first step to explore the possibility.

Scientists from the Institute of Zoology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) are conducting experiments on Tianzhou-1, which launched Thursday, to study the effects of micro-gravity on embryonic stem cell proliferation and differentiation.

The spacecraft is carrying embryonic stem cells and embryoid bodies of mice. Scientists will observe the process of their proliferation and differentiation in space through telescope images. Parallel experiments will be conducted on the ground to compare the results, says lead researcher Duan Enkui.

"We hope to get an initial understanding about the space micro-gravity effects on stem cell proliferation and differentiation," said Duan.

The basis of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine research, stem cell biology is regarded as one of the most important research fields of the 21st Century.

Embryonic stem cells are pluripotent cells that have the potential to become any type of cell in the body. One of the main characteristics of stem cells is their ability to self-renew or multiply while maintaining the potential to develop into other types of cells. Stem cells can become cells of the blood, heart, bones, skin, muscles, brain or other body parts. They are valuable as research tools and might, in future, be used to treat a wide range of ailments.

The study of micro-gravity's effects on the proliferation and differentiation of stem cells is a hot topic in the field of space life science.

"In ground experiments simulating micro-gravity conditions, we found the differentiation ability of mouse embryonic stem cells is enhanced. We also discovered the key gene responsible for this change and the molecular signaling pathway," says Lei Xiaohua, a member of the research team.P "Can we use micro-gravity conditions to realize large-scale proliferation of stem cells and tissue engineering construction? That's what we want to find out," says Lei.

"As the ground experiments are conducted in simulated micro-gravity, we must move the study to a real micro-gravity environment in space to understand how it will affect the proliferation and differentiation of embryonic stem cells."

The experiment might provide a new method to better realize in-vitro expansion of embryonic stem cells, and might explore a new way to apply multi-potent stem cells in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, Lei says.

"Maybe scientists will be able to induce stem cells to grow into certain tissues or organs in space in the future to serve people on earth. In another scenario, if a human is injured and loses organs in future space migration, the lost organs might be regenerated," says Lei.

Previously, the research team conducted a series of space life science experiments on China's recoverable satellites Sj-8 and Sj-10.

"We expect to continue our research into embryonic stem cells on China's future space station. We aim to try to culture functional tissues, such as heart, kidney, liver and spleen tissues," Lei says.

The current life science experiments on Tianzhou-1 are remotely controlled, which is very difficult, he adds. Scientists hope to enter China's space station in future to personally conduct the experiments.

Source: Xinhua News Agency

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Chinese space scientists study human organs in space - Space Daily

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

OPINION: An anatomy of a killing – Arkansas Democrat-Gazette – Arkansas Online

It's a calm Thursday morning with a peaceful breeze. The state of Arkansas waits to find out whether it will get to scratch its itch and kill a man or two this evening.

It has been a dozen long execution-barren years in Arkansas. And now those damnable courts ...

Arkansas is not handling stress well.

Bart Hester, a state senator from Northwest Arkansas who holds office to make Jason Rapert seem restrained, is surely itching for some killing.

He became highly aggravated last night when the Arkansas Supreme Court voted 4-to-3 to let a death row inmate scheduled for Thursday demise--one of five men the state was eager to kill in a week's time--off the hook, if only for a while.

It was because the court majority determined the man was due an additional DNA test. Or so I assume. As much as I appreciate the ruling, I lament that the court declined to issue a full majority opinion explaining it.

The best explanation I could get for that was that the court wanted the ruling out immediately because of the urgency and believed it didn't have time for arduous composition.

To that I say write faster, in the manner of U.S. Judge Kristine Baker, who held marathon hearings ending last Thursday night and got out a 101-page ruling by Saturday morning, and the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which got out a written ruling by Monday afternoon reversing her.

What Hester did was throw a hissy fit because the state Supreme Court had stopped this killing. He went on Twitter and posted the cell number of Chief Justice Dan Kemp. He sought to incite. He sought to punish a judge for his ruling. His approval ratings probably shot up.

Perhaps the judge got called things some of us have endured for not sharing the official state itch to kill.

Those not broken out in a shingles-grade rash over momentary delays in killing stand accused of not caring about the families of the victims.

We simply don't accept that justice is about revenge. We simply don't see how killing twice condemns killing once.

State Sen. Jeremy Hutchinson, one of the more sensible Republican legislators, tells the Associated Press: "I would say there is frustration among the Legislature as to the court's continued refusal to let an execution to go through."

An itch, as someone put it.

Jeremy's uncle, Gov. Asa Hutchinson, has, on this issue, thrown to the wind his two years of hard work to keep the state from shaming itself internationally. He is saying the four-judge majority on the state court ought to explain itself to those victims' loved ones.

The governor is a veteran lawyer. He understands that a judge is accountable to the law, to dispassionate justice, not to the emotions of the people, no matter how strong and understandable.

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge is complaining that the state Supreme Court had turned down that very inmate on that very DNA issue in 2004, as if it shouldn't have dared to take a variant view 13 years later.

If a court ruling lasted irrevocably forever, then the Republican Party might be out of business. It would not be able to cling to the possible repeal of Roe v. Wade to stir vital supportive passions against abortion on the evangelical right.

On this calm breezy morning, it appears that the state, by the end of the day, may take an issue or two to the U.S. Supreme Court to seek urgent relief from these onerous local court rulings that won't let it scratch its itch.

The state had already urgently appealed one denied execution, on Monday night, and forced the U.S. Supreme Court to stay up past its bedtime before issuing a perfunctory denial of our plea to get our itch scratched.

I wouldn't be surprised if this is happening Thursday morning: Justice Stephen Breyer is popping his head into Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's office and saying, "Don't forget that we're probably going to have to work tonight. It's Arkansas again."

RBG is sighing and saying she had best take a nap.

To update: It's a warm spring Thursday evening. Both the U.S. Supreme Court and the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals have been pestered half to death from Arkansas, mostly by lawyers for Ledell Lee, the first man Arkansas stood a good chance of being permitted to kill.

Shortly after 9 p.m., Rutledge's press aide puts on Twitter: "Another request for a stay by Ledell Lee has been denied by the 8th Circuit. One left."

Arkansas adrenaline is pumping. We're getting closer to kickoff.

After an 0-3 start this killing season, Arkansas seems primed for its first victory.

At 11:56 p.m., we the people kill Ledell Lee. Surely Bart Hester stayed up for it.

------------v------------

John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, was inducted into the Arkansas Writers' Hall of Fame in 2014. Email him at jbrummett@arkansasonline.com. Read his @johnbrummett Twitter feed.

Editorial on 04/23/2017

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OPINION: An anatomy of a killing - Arkansas Democrat-Gazette - Arkansas Online

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

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

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The most exciting hospital since County General Hospital.

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

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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