MEDIA-Anatomy of an outbreak: how coronavirus swept through JPMorgan's trading floor -WSJ Reuters
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MEDIA-Anatomy of an outbreak: how coronavirus swept through JPMorgan's trading floor -WSJ - Reuters
[There are spoilers ahead for last night's episode of Grey's Anatomy.]
Alright, Grey's fans. Gather 'round for maybe the most bonkers/absurd Grey's article you'll read this season. During last night's episode, Tom Koracick had to operate on his ex-wife's son, who had a brain tumor that had spread to his spine. That was plenty of drama in and of itself, but fans of the show noticed something pretty off during the operating scene. It looked like there was a training dummy where the child's body should be. No, I'm not kidding.
I'm going to provide you with some screenshots of the scene, so you know what we're dealing with here. Fair warning, the photo quality isn't perfect!
I mean, I don't want to be the definitive authority on whether that is a real person or not, but... I'm skeptical. Fans on Reddit had a pretty good time poking fun at it. "What in the dollar store mannequin..." one fan wrote. Someone responded, "I seriously thought they just had a random prop there for some reason. And then I realized it was supposed to be the kid and I felt dumb. Glad I'm not the only one who thought that it looked extremely fake." The best response, though, was this one: "I really hope that crash test dummy survives to see another airbag."
Here's what the actor playing Guthrie looked like in other scenes.
Let me just say that if the show did decide to use a dummy there, I totally get it. That does not look like a super comfy position to put a child actor in! Especially considering how long it can take to shoot a scene. And it's also totally possible the fans are wrong and it is actually the real actor in there, in which case, we have even more questions for whoever lit this scene....
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'Grey's Anatomy' Fans Are Convinced They Saw a Training Dummy in an Operation Scene Last Night - Cosmopolitan
Love triangles and gay storylines aren't a new concept for 'Station 19'. In this week's episode, the new bisexual hot couple Maya Bishop (Danielle Savre) and Carina DeLuca (Stefania Spampinato) raise the heat with their chemistry.
If that wasn't enough, Travis Montgomery (Jay Hayden) goes on a lunch date with his booty call Emmett Dixon (Lachlan Buchanan) and his longtime girlfriend, Alicia. After Alicia expresses her desire to marry Emmett, Travis confronts him and tells him to apologize to the "lovely girl" he's destroying.
All of this makes us wonder after Travis's advice, will Emmett come out of the closet? Fans can't stop wondering what will happen next. "I think Travis is taking some of the doctor's advice in letting Emmett or "rabbit" figure out who he is and step up to his dad," one said and another posted, I have a feeling Emmett is going to come out..he clearly has fallen for Travis. Travis walking away makes sense... but it wont last... just wait till something happens to Emmett."
"Apologize to that poor woman youre destroying' Damn, Travis!! #Station19," one fan wrote and another said, "Travis is the best person. even if he doesnt have feelings for Emmett, he wont have his girlfriend get hurt anymore. he deserves better." Another one wrote, "I think Travis is gonna get hurt and Emmett's gonna hop out the closet because of it." One said, "I love that talking to Travis gave Emmett towards the end of the episode. #Station19."
However, many 'Grey's Anatomy' fans stepped in and thought Travis should meet Levi Schmitt (Jake Borelli) after the latter's breakup. Considering there are too many crossovers in the show, this doesn't seem impossible, does it? After @Station19 and @GreysABC I have decided that #Jovi is friendship goals and I need a Travis/Levi meet cute," one tweet read and another said, "If Emmet dies in #Station19 I will never forgive Krista because that means Travis and Levi WILL get together and #Schmico can't get back together and get married."
One fan directly asked, "So when can we make Travis and Schmitt a thing?" and another wrote, "Just want to say...I would loveee to see Travis and Schmitt date! They would be awesome!! Like look at this handsome friendship/duo!! #Station19."
As more episodes of 'Grey's Anatomy' and 'Station 19' roll-out every Thursday, it will be interesting to see the makers actually bring another crossover-couple.
The American Academy of Microbiology (AAM) recently honored Peter Chien, professor in biochemistry and molecular biology by naming him to the 2020 class of Fellows of the Academy based on his record of scientific achievement and original contributions that have advanced microbiology. The AAM is the honored leadership group within the American Society of Microbiology (ASM), one of the oldest and largest scientific societies in the world.
Chien says of the honor, This recognition from the AAM reflects the cumulative work of the amazing group of students and trainees in my lab. I am thankful for all the work this team put into our science,and humbled by the recognition for our efforts."
Chiens lab studies the highly-regulated cellular cleanup system in which specialized proteins called proteases degrade damaged or no-longer-needed proteins. In bacteria, these cleanup systems help cells defend against antibiotics and other stresses. One effort in the Chien lab is to find ways to target these proteases to improve the ability of antibiotics to kill pathogens, even for bacteria that have become antibiotic resistant.
The AAM says that its 68 new members join 2,500 others who represent all subspecialties of the microbial sciences and are involved in basic and applied research, teaching, public health, industry and government service. The academy reports that the class of 2020 represents fellows from11 countries including Australia, Austria, Brazil, Chile, China, France, Germany, Israel, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States. Election to the Academy is by nomination only and is a distinction given for lasting contributions to the field of microbiology.
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Peter Chien Named an American Academy of Microbiology Fellow - UMass News and Media Relations
A 17-year-old boy tapped a kitchen knife on his leg a number of times before he lunged forward and stabbed a student in the neck in Cork last January, the Central Criminal Court heard today.
The teenager has pleaded guilty to the murder of 20-year-old Cameron Blair, who tried to act as "a peacemaker" at a house party on Bandon Road on 16 January.
Thebiochemistry studenthad earlier allowed the accused and his two friends into the party.
Healso acted as a "good Samaritan" when he brought a drunk sleeping homeless man into the house because he was concerned about him.
The court also heard that Cameron did not realise he had been stabbed and laughed it off before he collapsed and later died.
His final words were"don't worry lads, I don't want to be fighting", before he smiled and closed his eyes.
Defence counsel Brendan Grehan read an apology from the 17-year-old in which he said he was "deeply remorseful" for what he had done.
He is due to be sentenced later this month.
Cameron was a sportsman, a rugby player, a student in biochemistry and a black belt in karate.
The 20-year-old went to a student party at a house on the Bandon Road in Cork on 16 January this year and agreed to watch the door.
The 17-year-old who killed Cameron arrived with an 18-year-old, a 14-year-old and a drunk homeless man and although the others in the house did not want to admit them, Cameron said they were "tome" which means "sound" and let them in.
The three drank with the students inside but at one stage went into the kitchen and armed themselves with knives.
The court heard they had become paranoid.
One of the students got them to arrange a cannabis deal for him and bought 50 worth, another got worried and got them out of the house by telling them the party was finishing and that everyone was going into town.
The 17-year-old had the large kitchen knife down his trousers and got one of the students to buy him more drink at the off licence.
When he returned to the house, Cameron was at the door preventing them from getting back in.
The court heard he was"acting as the peacemaker and trying to keep the situation calm".
A number of students called garda and said there were men outside with knives trying to get in, but Cameron insisted they were "sound".
He said to one of the three "will you tell your friends to relax" and shook his hand.
CCTV footage of the murder was also shown to the court.
Detective Sergeant Martin Canny said that the 17-year-old "paced up and down" and "tapped the knife on the back of his leg" a number of times before he lunged forward in a downward motion and stabbed Cameron once in the neck.
The accused waited around 12 seconds before he ran and caught up with the 18-year-old and a group including those who had sold the student the cannabis.
The 14-year-old ran in another direction.Garda saw them running away as they rushed to the scene.
The 17-year-old had been wearing gloves and threw them and the large kitchen knife, the murder weapon, down a steep embankment that night before going to stay with his grandfather.
The area was described in court as "impenetrable" and it took garda two days to recover the items.
His DNA was found on the gloves while Cameron's was found on the knife.
When asked for his clothes, he first gave garda a different set other than those he was wearing on the night, but when they retrieved them Cameron's blood was found on the boy's jacket.
Cameron's parents and brother gave victim impact statements in court today.
His mother Kathy said she screams at the injustice of this, she is no longer living, only existing, and that positivity and kindness came naturally to Cameron.
"The price of immense love is immense grief when that person is taken from you" she said, "we will be paying that price for the rest of our lives," she said.
Noel Blair said the sight of his son on a trolley will haunt him to his dying day, adding "the full weight of what you have taken hits me hard".
He said: "The death of a son is described as the ultimate grief and I now know this to be true."
His brother Alan said he stares in disbelief at Cameron's name on the plaque in the graveyard.
"You have robbed me and my brother of his life," he said.
He also said Cameron wrote a wish list that he was ticking off, which included learning to drive, studying and living to 100.
In his apology, the 17-year-old saidCameron"was nothing but nice to me on that night".
"He did nothing wrong to me. I think about that night first thing in the morning and last thing at night. If only I could turn back the clock and walk away. I will never forgive myself."
Mr Justice Paul McDermott said caseswhere a juvenile is convicted of murderdo not attract the mandatory life sentence appropriate to an adult.
He said the court hasto consider the appropriate sentence to be imposed under the Children's Act 1908 and coulddispose of the case today.
The judge said he was sorry the case cannot be brought to a conclusion today and put it back until later in the month.
Link:
Court told stabbing victim tried to act as 'peacemaker' - RTE.ie
Thanks to the fast action of two UB faculty members, Kaleida Health Labs will have two more crucial tools to help it fight the COVID-19 crisis in Erie County.
Last week, John Tomaszewski, SUNY Distinguished Professor and Peter A. Nickerson PhD Professor of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and Norma J. Nowak, a professor in the Department of Biochemistry in the Jacobs School, identified two pieces of equipment in the UB Biorepository that they felt could be deployed to Kaleida Health Laboratories on Flint Road in Amherst to assist with the processing of COVID-19 test kits.
The equipment was not in active use due to the current pause in research at UB.
Tomaszewski, who is also chief of service at Kaleida Health Laboratories, outlined the developments that led up to the equipment transfer.
In mid-March, the Erie County Department of Health Laboratories received a limited number of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-issued SARS/COV2 test kits. Those tests required an intense manual testing process. The county labs ran out of the necessary reagent after approximately a week of testing, he said.
Then, Kaleida Health Laboratories adapted Abbott Laboratories equipment that had previously been used for clinical trial hepatitis C testing in an academic-health system partnership arrangement between Andrew Talal, a UB investigator, and Kaleida Health Laboratories. Those machines have been used to good effect for COVID-19 test processing for the past 14 days. During most of this time, Tomaszewski said, Kaleida Health Labs has been the highest volume health system testing facility in Buffalo for SARS/COV2.
Last week, manufacturer Perkin Elmer released an Emergency Use Authorization for its nucleic acid extraction equipment, which would allow the health system to supplement the Kaleida Health COVID-19 testing. UB had two of those machines on hand in the UB biobank at the Clinical and Translational Research Center.
Tomaszewski and Nowak proposed to Venu Govindaraju, UBs vice president for research and economic development, that UB transfer the machines to the Kaleida lab.
After review by counsel from SUNY and Kaleida, the agreement was signed Monday, and the equipment was moved on Tuesday. By Thursday, Kaleida expected to receive reagents needed to perform the tests and will begin validation of a laboratory-developed test leveraging its high complexity testing status.
Govindraju said his office fully supports this transfer, and thinks this is an excellent opportunity for UB to demonstrate its agility and community orientation during times of crisis.
This will be huge, Tomaszewski said. When fully implemented, it will allow us to triple our testing capacity. This is the university responding to a health care crisis as a true partner.
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UB initiative will help Kaleida increase, speed up COVID-19 testing in Erie County - UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff - University at...
Do we pursue what is possible when it may not be ethical? What core beliefs from Scripture guide us in scientific exploration?" Barnes asks. "As we think about beginning-of-life and end-of-life challenges, how will the teachings of Jesus inform our thinking?
With questions like that in mind, the space is designed for Christ-centered community in tandem with cutting-edge research. There are interactive, multimedia-equipped classrooms; private labs for student-faculty research teams; and 27 fume hood-equipped work stations. An environmental studies storage space will function as a mudroom, of sorts, where students will be able to go outdoors for hands-on labs and then stow nets, waders, and other equipment in a dedicated room. A chemistry prep room will keep lab materials at the ready, with dishwashers and ample counter space. Perhaps most noticeable, a cantilevered portion of the building features floor-to-ceiling windows that give entry-level science classrooms and lounges stunning views of Lake Valentine.
This feature alone is a significant step for us since our previous facilities have been on the second floor and in the center of the building. Being able to see Gods creation through the windows as we teach, and to be able to step outside quickly and easily to further investigate the beauty of the natural world, is an exciting new step, explains Professor of Biology Jeff Port. He adds that labs are more intentionally designed and appropriately sized for the number and type of students in a typical course. Many of our existing spaces were not originally designed as laboratory spaces ... This addition provides spaces for students to explore science at Bethel and find success in their academic experience.
Professor of Chemistry James Christenson notes that theres been tremendous growth within some program areas since Bethels Academic Center (AC)where current science labs are locatedwas built in the 1970s. Today, biochemistry is an integral pillar of the healthcare field and has become a popular major for future doctors, physicians assistants, and medical researchers, he says. Learning has also become much more hands-on in recent years, with dozens of Bethel student-faculty research teams working on projects for national and international publication.
Originally posted here:
Science Addition to Open in Time for Fall 2020 Classes - Bethel University News
Mark Athitakis, Special for USA TODAY Published 7:00 a.m. ET March 30, 2020
Days of Distraction, by Alexandra Chang.(Photo: Ecco)
Jing Jing, narrator of Alexandra Changs spiky and contemplative debut novel, Days of Distraction (Ecco, 336 pp., out of four), is a tech journalist. And like every tech journalist, part of her job is worrying about how many people are reading her. I am consistently middling, with the occasional bump, she notes.
Shes talking about page views, but shes also talking about everything. As a Chinese American woman on a staff with few people of color, shes underpaid and promised a raise ... someday. Shes scraping by in San Francisco and wants to move, but her living situation is a function of her boyfriend, J, whos applying to Ph.D. programs in biochemistry. Her parents have split, with her father living back in China and imploring her to visit. But she feels too at odds with herself to make a decision to go.
Until she has her life sorted out, her work is a series of racist microaggressions and banal job tasks. I post about an app-controlled massage pillow, an app-controlled oven, an app-controlled blood pressure monitor, an app-controlled fork, she writes. Sometimes the bumps are potholes.
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This seems like extremely thin fictional material, but Chang has plainly inhaled the work a generation of contemporary novelists Jenny Offill, Rachel Cusk, Dana Spiotta with a knack for making gripping fiction out of banality. The lack of outward drama in Days of Distraction belies the stormy consciousness of a woman whos struggling to define her identity as others try to do the job for her.
A main trigger for Jing Jings reckoning is Js landing a slot in Cornells biochemistry program. To spell her loneliness in upstate New York, she takes a job at a history museum, where she stumbles on a photo of Kin Yamei, a pioneering Chinese American doctor with a fiercely independent streak. (Her divorce was the stuff of national news in 1904.) Kin isnt exactly a mirror for Jing Jing though she does have second thoughts about her relationship with J but she helps her feel less alone in her disconnection.
Early on, she craves Js assuredness as a white man: If there were an app that let me see the world as J sees the world, Id pay more than two dollars for it and would give it five out of five stars, she writes. But no one filter will resolve her identity. Visiting her father in China is not the revelation she hopes for, and the country reveals its own class and racial divides, not to mention dads prattling on about meals. What I wanted were answers, she thinks, and all Im getting is food commentary.
Author Alexandra Chang(Photo: Alana Davis)
Changs strength is her ability to give a sense of confusion contours: Jing Jings observations are pointed, witty, and free of easy resolutions. And Changs deadpan style offers up moments of absurd humor. (A former editor offers up some work: Do you want to do a roundup review of mechanical pencils? No rush, its evergreen.)
Ultimately, though, Chang shows the challenge of trying to raise issues about racism that even those closest to her wish to avoid. Struggling to spark a conversation nobody wants to have, she conducts an engrossing one with herself.
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Review: A Chinese American woman grapples with race, romance in 'Days of Distraction' - USA TODAY
Dr. Tom Maniatis, the Isidore S. Edelman Professor of Biochemistry and Principal Investigator at Columbia's Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute. Photo by Eleni Sakellis
NEW YORK According to a news release dated March 27, Columbia scientists have provided new insights into how mutations in a gene called TBK1 cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurodegenerative disease that robs patients of movement, speech, and ultimately, their lives. The researchers found that ALS-associated mutations in TBK1 can have both positive and negative effects on the progression of disease in mice genetically modified to have ALS-like symptoms.
These findings, reported on March 27 in the scientific journal Neuron, provide both genetic and mechanistic insights that could lead to novel strategies for the development of treatments for ALS.
One of the greatest challenges to finding a cure for ALS is using genetic data to understand the diseases underlying mechanisms, said the studys senior author, Tom Maniatis, PhD, a principal investigator at Columbias Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute.
For example, neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS involve multiple cell types that are constantly changing as the disease progresses, so a drug that is beneficial in the early stages of the disease could be detrimental at later times. Our study provides a glimpse into the complex relationship between ALS genetics and its mechanisms, and highlights the challenge in developing safe and effective drugs to treat the disease, commented Dr. Maniatis, the Isidore S. Edelman Professor of Biochemistry at Columbias Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.
ALS is a disease of the spinal cord, which can be triggered by the accumulation of misfolded proteins in motor neurons, the nerve cells in the spinal cord that drive movement.
The human TBK1 gene is one of more than 25 genes that have been shown to associate with or cause ALS when bearing a mutation. TBK1 is a central player in multiple cellular functions, including autophagy, a process that removes misfolded proteins, damaged bits of cells, and bacterial pathogens. TBK1 is also required for the antimicrobial interferon response, which protects cells from bacterial and viral infections.
TBK1 helps cells clear away clumps of misfolded proteins and defends the body against invading viruses and bacteria, said Valeria Gerbino, PhD, an associate research scientist in the Maniatis lab, and the papers lead author. And because individuals with certain mutations in TBK1 have ALS, we wanted to develop a deep, mechanistic understanding of how these mutations affect cellular functions in the spinal cord during the course of the disease.
Working in partnership with The Jackson Laboratory, Drs. Maniatis and Gerbino inserted ALS-causing TBK1 mutations in mice. These mice showed no signs of motor neuron disease.
This was not surprising, as only a few of the many human ALS mutations tested thus far in mice by other ALS researchers have resulted in motor neuron disease, said Dr. Maniatis, who is also director of Columbias Precision Medicine Initiative.
In an attempt to overcome this problem, the researchers inserted TBK1 mutations into an already established mouse model of ALS: the SOD1 mouse. Dr. Gerbino and collaborators at the Zuckerman Institute then tracked disease progression in these mice.
These new mice displayed striking differences in disease progression compared to mice that only bear the SOD1 mutations. Specifically, the disease onset began earlier.
We found that mice bearing both SOD1 and TBK1 mutations experienced earlier movement abnormalities compared to those bearing only SOD1 mutations, said Dr. Gerbino. A closer examination of the mice also revealed damage to motor neurons and the loss of muscle connections earlier than expected.
To further investigate this phenomenon, the scientists examined another group of SOD1 ALS mice, in which the TBK1 gene was deleted only in motor neurons, and not in other cells in the spinal cord. The team found that the absence of TBK1 activity in motor neurons alone led to the loss of autophagy in these cells. This loss led to an increase in the accumulation of harmful proteins, earlier death of motor neurons, and lost neuron-muscle connections. These observations demonstrated that early disease onset was a consequence of losing TBK1 in motor neurons.
Paradoxically, however, disease progression slowed down later in disease, and mice with TBK1 loss of function in all cells lived 25 percent longer than both the mice bearing only SOD1, as well as those mice for which the TBK1 gene was deleted only in motor neurons.
The team next investigated precisely how TBK1 mutations influenced other cells in the spinal cord. The researchers discovered that the interferon response was suppressed in glial cells, namely astrocytes and microglia. The interferon response, while critical for defense against infections in healthy people, can be toxic if over produced (as in the case of ALS mice), and can trigger a cascade of cellular processes that are toxic to motor neurons.
The loss of TBK1 in microglia and astrocytes clearly diminishes the interferon response in the spinal cord of ALS mice, said Dr. Maniatis, who is Evnin Family Scientific Director and Chief Executive Officer at the New York Genome Center. This correlates with significantly extending their lives.
Our study provides an example of how multiple pathways within and between cells can be targeted through manipulation of a single gene, and how modifying these pathways in ALS can be beneficial or detrimental at different stages of disease progression, Dr. Gerbino added.
Dr. Maniatis argues that this type of foundational, discovery-driven research will move the needle toward treatments that focus on the underlying mechanisms driving ALS and its devastating symptoms.
All neurodegenerative diseases ultimately begin with genes, said Dr. Maniatis. As we continue to gather critical genetic information, we can identify mutations, like those in TBK1, which will provide additional mechanistic insights. These genes and the pathways they control will hold the key to developing drugs that make a difference in the life of ALS patients.
Continued here:
Greek-American Dr. Tom Maniatis on New Findings and Insights into ALS - The National Herald
Is our social distancing affecting the bird life around us? The University of Washington is inviting citizen scientists to find out and connect with nature themselves.
The stay-at-home restrictions prompted by Covid-19 are resulting in sudden changes to traffic, air pollution, and use of green spaces. Researchers with the University of Washingtons Quantitative Ecology Lab want to know whether birds will respond to these changes by living and nesting in different places.
They're asking people throughout the Northwest to sign up to document the birds they see or hear in a specific place, such as their backyards or local parks, at least once a week for 10 minutes through June 30. They said beginners are welcome; theyll record their sightings through an app called E-Bird.
Olivia Sanderfoot, the project coordinator, said the goal is to get insights about birds, while benefiting humans as well.
I am hopeful that this project will help us learn more about how humans directly and indirectly affect bird communities in the Pacific Northwest, she said. And Im hoping that the folks who are involved can use this as an opportunity for self-care in a very challenging time.
Before the coronavirus hit, Sanderfoot had planned to study the impact of wildfire smoke from prescribed burns on birds. Now that research is on hold.
I figured why not take advantage of this moment and see if we can start to think about how air pollution in our cities is changing right now, she said. And collect observations of birds that could help us figure out how birds respond to changes in air quality.
She said researchers know some birds are more threatened by urbanization than others. But under normal conditions, it can be hard to tease out the impact of factors like loss of habitat versus air quality.
So what were hoping to do is think about how social distancing is affecting human behavior in a way that is leading to short-term environmental change that we could then zoom in on, Sanderfoot said, and see how birds are responding.
She said shes mindful of the trauma and tragedy that occasioned the public health restrictions.
We dont want our project to be misconstrued as something that is a positive spin on a pandemic, she said. Instead were hoping to, as ecologists, take advantage of this moment to think differently about a research question that weve already been considering but now have an opportunity to look at in new ways.
But Sanderfoot said it seems like a blessing to find this way for people to connect with nature while following health guidelines.
I was trying to figure out how we could get more people outside just a little bit each day, she said. Because we know that exposure to the outdoors is super-important for mental health. And right now I think a lot of us are feeling trapped.
She said 66 people have signed up so far; most are pledging to monitor the birds they see out their windows or in their yards. Researchers hope people can monitor the same place again next spring to compare any changes without the social distancing rules.
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Trapped at home? You can help UW study bird responses to social distancing - KUOW News and Information