"Leave It Inside" Grey’s Anatomy TV Review Minnick surprisingly … – A.V. Club

Because The A.V. Club knows that TV shows keep going even if were not writing at length about them, were experimenting with discussion posts. For certain shows, one of our TV writers will publish some brief thoughts about the latest episode, and open the comments for readers to share theirs.

Previous episode Greys gets back to its stomach-churning self with a wormy episode

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"Leave It Inside" Grey's Anatomy TV Review Minnick surprisingly ... - A.V. Club

Style anatomy: Manal Waqi – The Express Tribune

The London College of Fashion student and the blogger behind The Amanqi Edit decodes her style

The London College of Fashion student and the blogger behind The Amanqi Edit decodes her style. Find out what she is currently coveting and what she tries to avoid!

Understanding your body is the key to looking good and a trait found amongst all impeccably dressed fashionistas. While people shy away from talking about their bodies, these brave souls explain how they work their anatomies to their advantage

How would you describe your body type?

I would describe my body type as slender.

Has your body type changed over the last five years?

Fortunately, over the past five years my body type has barely changed.

How has your style changed over the years?

I think at different times of my life, Ive had an obsession with various accessories. At one point it was headbands and statement necklaces; currently Im into basketball caps and beanies. As trends change, I adapt my wardrobe and style with the pieces that I love. Col Montant tops, leather trousers and statement sneakers are my current go-to pieces.

In your opinion what is your most troublesome area?

I cant think of a particular area, but I feel I could focus on some toning.

How do you dress your body according to your body type?

I always wear clothes that I feel comfortable and confident in, and what I feel suits me.

In your opinion what is the biggest mistake a person can make while dressing here?

I feel excessive amounts of logos look unnecessarily flashy. Also, I strongly believe people should wear pieces that they are comfortable in, rather than blindly following trends.

Which silhouettes suit your body the most?

I like playing with proportions, so my typical go-to outfit is an oversized sweatshirt with skinny jeans, or a high-neck, slim-fit sweater or top with boyfriend jeans.

What is the one piece of clothing that you shy away from wearing and why?

I definitely avoid v-neck tops and sweaters (especially deep v-necks), as well as anything body-con. I feel both these cuts dont complement my style or my body type.

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Style anatomy: Manal Waqi - The Express Tribune

Pa. official’s tweet causes flap in linking genetics to crime – The Philadelphia Tribune

A high-ranking employee for the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections went viral on social media Thursday after he posted a tweet suggesting there is a genetic component to crime.

Bret Bucklen, the director for the DOCs Office of Research and Statistics, was engaged on May 1 in a political debate on Twitter that appears to have been based on the new Republican health care bill.

There are those who are unfortunate. There are many more who made bad choices, Bucklen said. Why cant liberals come to terms with that.

The debate took a turn, though, when Bucklen suggested crime was genetic.

One Twitter user responded, writing that, this could go toward a racist fallacy really quick and I hope it doesnt. To which Bucklen replied, You doubt that there is a genetic component to crime?

Some have tried to make a scientific link between race and crime, promoting the idea that Blacks and other ethnic minorities are genetically disposed to criminality, are less intelligent and lack work ethic to justify white superiority.

The ideas also go along with eugenics, a strain of thought from the early 20th century and adopted by the Nazi regime of Adolf Hltler that believed controlled breeding could improve the human race.

A New York Times article from 2011 linked criminality and genetics, saying researchers estimate about 100 studies showed a link between genes and crime.

But with nearly 2,000 retweets by Thursday afternoon, including one from new era civil rights activist Deray McKesson, Bucklens comments were looked at through a racial lens by many social media users.

In an email that was sent through a spokesperson to the Tribune, Secretary of Corrections John Wetzel noted the limits of social media.

Complex subjects rarely are adequately defined in 140 characters, Wetzel said. Department of Corrections employees have the right to freedom of expression on their personal social media accounts on their own time.

With that being said, we recognize the sensitivity to a subject like this given the historic connotation of race in criminal justice policy, he added. I have spoken to Dr. Bucklen, our Director of Planning, Research and Statistics, and that was not the intent of his remark and he should have used better judgment in his word choice and lack of context for his comments.

That said, Wetzel said, Dr. Bucklen has been a leader on my team in reducing biased and unjust policies in Pennsylvanias criminal justice system, including criminal justice reforms through the Justice Reinvestment Initiative and leading the fight against new mandatory minimums.

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Pa. official's tweet causes flap in linking genetics to crime - The Philadelphia Tribune

Amazing genetics – The News International

With the world population expected to reach nine billion by 2050, and with limited cultivable area on our planet, there is an increasing probability of droughts and mass famines in many countries.

Pakistan will be among those countries that will be most seriously affected by global warming. The spectacular advances in genomics in the last few decades offer some beacon of hope. The development of genetically-engineered crops will give increased yields, offer better nutrition and be resistant to diseases.

All the hereditary information in plants or animals is contained in their genes. Think of a tiny microscopic necklace (DNA) with many millions or billions of four different types of molecules known as nucleic acids arranged in it. It is the sequence in which these nucleic acids are arranged that determines everything about living organisms, such as the types and qualities of fruits that plants bear, the colour of our eyes, the structure of our hearts or brains, etc. The order in which these molecular beads are arranged is known as the genetic code. The first such code in humans to be unravelled was that of Prof Jim Watson in 2007. It cost about a million dollars and took years to accomplish. With faster sequencing machines now available, this can be done within a week at a cost of about $1,500 today.

A remarkable breakthrough has now been made by scientists at Imperial College, London. They have developed a microchip that can allow the sequencing to be done at an incredible speed the entire genome of 3.16 billion nucleic acids in human beings can be read and deciphered within minutes. The device in which the chip is incorporated reads the small changes in current as the molecular necklace passes through it. It is being scaled up so that it can read the sequence of molecules at a speed of 10 million molecules per second (compared to the present machines that can read the sequence at 10 molecules per second).

Another amazing development has been the identification of crime genes in hardened criminals. The presence of the gene restricts the formation of serotonin B2 receptor, and so affects the part of the brain that is responsible for restraint and foresight of the consequences of ones actions. The presence of the gene increases the predisposition to violence. However, all the people carrying the gene are not necessarily violent. Other psychological causes may also be responsible for violent behaviour.

A few years ago, researchers at Kings College London had identified certain genes that are responsible for the ageing process in human beings. They found that these genes are switched off and on by certain external factors, such as diet and the environment, and may hold the keys for living a longer and healthier life. The four key genes that affected the rate of healthy ageing and potential longevity were related to cholesterol, lung function and maternal longevity.

A research group at ETH Zurich discovered that when certain ageing genes are altered, the healthy lifespan of laboratory animals can be extended significantly. Efforts to achieve something similar in human beings are under way and many scientists believe that our children may be able to live up to the age of 120 years. In 2016, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an anti-ageing drug trial. This was the first time the FDA recognised ageing as a new drug target

Over 200 million people are afflicted with malaria each year and nearly 800,000 deaths are recorded due to it every year. Over 90 percent of these deaths mostly of chidren occur in Sub-Saharan Africa. An exciting approach to tackle this disease is to develop genetically modified mosquitoes that can bring down the population of the harmful female variety. Anthony James, working at the University of California Irvine, has developed a genetically-modified variety of these female mosquitoes only. The genetic deformation prevents them from flying. The larvae hatch on water but the females cannot fly, and therefore die.

This approach of genetic genocide may ultimately help to reduce the populations of malaria-causing mosquitoes and save millions of lives. The advances made in the rapid sequencing of the human genome are leading to a greater understanding of the genetic causes of many human diseases. A whole new area of personalised medicine is also under rapid development. This will allow drugs to be tailored according to individual genetic make-up of different groups of populations.

An excellent centre for genetic engineering has now been established in Pakistan. The Jamil-ur-Rahman Centre for Genome Research built from my personal donation and named after my father is located in the International Centre for Chemical and Biological Sciences (ICCBS) in Karachi and is emerging as a centre of excellence. It is equipped with the state-of-the-art gene sequencing facilities the best in the country and is now deeply involved in health and agricultural research under the able leadership of the dynamic director of the ICCBS, Prof Iqbal Choudhary.

The rapid advances in genome sequencing technologies are opening up a whole new era of medicine. We need to develop our own research base to develop new genetically engineered varieties of food crops rather than relying on seeds imported from the West. This will also reduce the danger of us becoming completely dependent on foreign masters. Control the food chain within a country and you can control that country. This must not be allowed to happen in Pakistan. We need to invest massively in developing salt-tolerant and drought-resistant varieties of different crops through natural selection or through genetic engineering before we are engulfed by the challenges of famine and drought that surely lie ahead. Science must come to the rescue.

Countries that are investing in such advances are earning billions of dollars. For Pakistan to emerge from the shackles of poverty, we need to invest in science, technology, innovation. We also need to establish strong linkages between research and industry/agriculture. But the development budget of the Ministry of Science and Technology in Pakistan (about Rs1.8 billion only) is extremely low. Our investment in education is also low a little over two percent of our GDP ranking us among the bottom nine countries of the world.

We must realise that in order to develop, we must invest in top quality schools, colleges and universities so that we can transition to a strong knowledge-based economy. It is time to change directions and invest in our real wealth our children so that we too can stand with dignity in the comity of nations.

The writer is chairman of UN ESCAP Committee on Science Technology & Innovation and former chairman of the HEC. Email: [emailprotected]

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Amazing genetics - The News International

Clemson Center for Human Genetics opens in Greenwood – Clemson World magazine

Self Regional Hall, a new 17,000-square-foot, state-of-the art facility that will house the Clemson University Center for Human Genetics, has opened on the campus of the Greenwood Genetic Center.

The facility will enable Clemsons growing genetics program to collaborate closely with the long tradition of clinical and research excellence at theGreenwood Genetic Center, combining basic science and clinical care. The center will initially focus on discovering and developing early diagnostic tools and therapies for autism, cognitive developmental disorders, oncology and lysosomal disorders. The building will house eight laboratories and several classrooms, conference rooms and offices for graduate students and faculty.

According to theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention, one in six children between the ages of 3 and 17, roughly 15 percent, suffers from some type of developmental disorder.

Opening Self Regional Hall means that we will be able to do even more to help children with genetic disorders, and their families, and to educate graduate students who will go out into the world and make their own impact, said President James P. Clements.

As the parent of a child with special needs, the kind of research that you are doing here is especially meaningful and important to me and my family, Clements said during the event. As you all know, an early diagnosis can make a huge difference for a child and their family because the earlier you can figure out what a child needs, the earlier you can intervene and begin treatment.

Self Regional Hall is a state-of-the-art facility that provides the resources our scientists need to understand the genetic underpinnings of disorders, said Mark Leising, interim dean of theCollege of Scienceat Clemson. This facility, and its proximity to the Greenwood Genetic Center, elevates our ability to attract the brightest scientific talent to South Carolina and enhances our efforts to tackle genetic disorders.

The facilitys name recognizes the ongoing support fromSelf Regional Healthcare, a health care system in Upstate South Carolina that has grown from the philanthropy of the late James P. Self, a textile magnate who founded Self Memorial Hospital in 1951.

Self Regional Healthcares vision is to provide superior care, experience and value. This vision includes affording our patients with access to cutting-edge technology and the latest in health care innovation and genomic medicine, without a doubt, is the future of health care, said Jim Pfeiffer, president and CEO of Self Regional Healthcare. The research and discoveries that will originate from this center will provide new options for those individuals facing intellectual and developmental disabilities, and will provide our organization with innovative capabilities and treatment options for our patients.

We are pleased to welcome Clemson University to Greenwood as the first academic partner on our Partnership Campus, added Dr. Steve Skinner, director of the Greenwood Genetic Center. This is the next great step in a collaboration that has been developing over the past 20-plus years. We look forward to our joint efforts with both Clemson and Self Regional Healthcare to advance the research and discoveries that will increase our understanding and treatment of human genetic disorders.

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Clemson Center for Human Genetics opens in Greenwood - Clemson World magazine

Henderson County 4-H: Hatching eggs is a highlight of elementary school – BlueRidgeNow.com

By Denise Sherrill, Henderson County 4-H

What is your favorite memory from elementary school? Was it playing on the playground, a favorite teacher, or a best friend?

Henderson County 4-H has provided eggs, supplies for hatching them and teacher training for schools for over 20 years, and teachers tell us that participating in 4-H Embryology is a highlight for many elementary school students.

Fifty-eight classes, mostly second grade, are participating in 4-H Embryology this spring, along with all of the students at Dana Elementary. The N.C. Essential Standards for Science require second grades to learn about life cycles.

4-H volunteers first hatch eggs at home, helping them to become incubation "experts." These volunteers then deliver eggs to the schools. On delivery day, they check each classroom to ensure the incubator is located in a good spot, has water in the bottom, and the temperature is 100 degrees.

They explain to the students that the incubator is the closest thing we have to a mother hen. It provides protection, warmth and humidity. Protection and warmth are obvious, but humidity is a surprise for most of us. The mother hen provides moisture by plucking out some of her feathers, and pressing her skin against the eggs. The volunteers also answer students' questions. The 4-H agent also visits each classroom to help ensure a successful hatch.

Learning life skills is a focus of 4-H. Teachers tell us that the main skill learned by participants in 4-H Embryology is responsibility. Students also develop an interest in wildlife and caring for wildlife, and an improvement in their basic knowledge of science.Teachers also report that the embryology project helps their students aspire to a career in science or a related field.

One teacher wrote, "Students took responsibility for the record-keeping, egg turning and mentored first-graders by teaching them about the embryonic development. This gave them great life experience and great material for writing, which is the heart of comprehension!"

Teachers incorporate math, vocabulary, journaling and many different concepts into the embryology unit. This year Candi Mains and Zach Knox, teachers from Dana Elementary, created a fun song about oviparous animals.

A private donor helped to fund 4-H Embryology the past few years. Grant funds will be sought for new equipment for future years. Donors will be needed for ongoing supplies. Volunteers would be welcome to help with any part of this program: equipment repairs, delivering eggs to schools, preparing equipment for teachers, and sorting and storing equipment as it is returned.

Henderson County 4-H uses bobwhite quail eggs for 4-H Embryology. A dad of several 4-H alumni raises and releases the quail into the wild.

4-H Award

Deborah Clark, agricultural engineering teacher and 4-H club leader at Dana Elementary, received the NC 4-H Volunteer Leaders Association School Enrichment Award in March.

Clark enthusiastically works to develop skills in leadership, citizenship and responsibility in her students and 4-H club members. She involves all 480-plus students at her school in gardening and learning about nature each week. She implements 4-H Embryology and nutrition programs, and assists other teachers with these programs.

Deborah Clark inspires her students, and everyone who knows her, to do their best in all aspects of life.

4-H Mini-Gardening Contest

For all Henderson County youth, ages 9-18, as of Jan. 1: Each participant plants and cares for a 10-foot-by-12-foot vegetable garden and maintains a garden journal. Training, seeds and tomato plants are provided. Extension Master Gardeners visit each garden twice during the summer. Space is limited, so register soon.

4-H Sewing Classes

Registration for 4-H sewing classes is now open to anyone ages 10-18. Classes will be on Friday afternoons, beginning monthly from June 9 to Nov. 17. and each class will run for four weeks. Choose either 1-3 p.m. or 3:30-5:30 p.m. Beginners are welcome. Sewing machines, patterns and basic sewing kits are provided, along with adult helpers. The fee is $25. Sewing volunteers are always needed.

4-H Paper Clover Days at Tractor Supply, now through May 7

Support your local 4-H program by purchasing paper clovers at Tractor Supply.

Denise Sherrill is the 4-H agent for Henderson County. 4-H is the Youth Development Program of NC Cooperative Extension, which is a division of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at NCSU. Visit henderson.ces.ncsu.edu/4-H, call 828-697-4891 or email Denise_Sherrill@ncsu.edu to learn more about 4-H clubs, activities or endowments. Donors are always needed to help provide scholarships for 4-H camp and other activities. Donations may be sent to: Henderson County 4-H, 100 Jackson Park Road, Hendersonville, NC 28792.

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Henderson County 4-H: Hatching eggs is a highlight of elementary school - BlueRidgeNow.com

Fertility regulator launches inquiry into ‘cash for eggs’ claims … – The Guardian

To prevent exploitation it is illegal to pay egg donors in the UK. Photograph: Chris Knapton/Alamy

The fertility regulator has launched an investigation into allegations that IVF clinics are inducing women to donate eggs in return for free or discounted treatment.

Women on low incomes who have healthy eggs but cannot get pregnant are being given complimentary treatment or offered a discount if they donate eggs at some clinics, which then resell them for a large profit, according to the Daily Mail.

The paper sent undercover reporters to IVF clinics posing as would-be parents who could not afford treatment. They were encouraged to donate eggs at clinics in London, Hertfordshire and County Durham.

To prevent exploitation it is illegal to pay donors, although compensation of up to 750 a cycle is permissible to cover any costs associated with the donation.

Sally Cheshire, the chair of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, said: We are very concerned by the allegations made in this investigation. At the HFEA our priority is the best possible treatment and care for patients and donors. If any patients at these clinics have worries about their care, they should contact us while we investigate further. We have already contacted the clinics involved and our inspectors will investigate each allegation. If we find poor practice in a clinic, we will take regulatory action.

The health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, described the allegations as serious and worrying and urged anyone with concerns to contact the HFEA.

The Mail said the clinics charged couples as much as 7,500 a time for donated eggs. One consultant was filmed on a hidden camera telling the undercover reporters that the clinic offered discounted treatment because it could get more than 6,000 for the donated eggs. But he advised the couple not to state in writing that their reasons for donating were financial, as it is not allowed.

Egg sharing, where women receive IVF as a benefit in kind in return for donating eggs, is legal but there are strict rules on the information that should be provided to potential donors and how consent is obtained.

Prof Adam Balen, the chair of the British Fertility Society, said: Egg sharing practice is legitimate and can work well for those concerned, provided that it is combined with appropriate counselling for both donor and recipient. However, if there was adequate NHS funding of fertility treatments, many couples would not have the need to donate their own eggs in order to enable the funding of the treatment that they so desperately seek.

Many patients are required to self-fund treatment and so it is essential that [it is] made clear exactly what they are being charged for.

Funding cuts have led to a reduction in fertility treatment on the NHS. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence recommends that women under 40 should be offered three cycles of IVF. Last year, only 16% of clinical commissioning groups in England most of them in the north of the country offered three cycles, down from 24% in 2013, according to Fertility Fairness.

In March, the Scottish government said it would fund three cycles for all eligible couples trying to start a family. In Wales, women under 40 are entitled to two cycles and in Northern Ireland women under 40 are offered one cycle.

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Fertility regulator launches inquiry into 'cash for eggs' claims ... - The Guardian

Sexiest Female Doctors of ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ (PHOTOS) – Wetpaint – Wetpaint

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Sexiest Female Doctors of 'Grey's Anatomy' (PHOTOS) - Wetpaint - Wetpaint

BWW Recap: It’s a Tale of Two Tumors on GREY’S ANATOMY – Broadway World

Thursday night's episode of GREY'S ANATOMY, written by Elizabeth R. Finch and directed by Zetna Fuentes, offered viewers a tale of two tumors-two very different patient cases in which the doctors want to try to remove a tumor but the patient (or patient's parents) do not want them to...for very different reasons. As the medical cases play out, we also get an update on the Arizona/Eliza romance, and the Meredith/Riggs romance (and Maggie's stance on it). We also see Edwards finally reach her boiling point with the existential crisis she has quietly having all season. Oh, and I'm pretty sure Alex is tracking down Jo's estranged, abusive husband...so that should be interesting.

The episode opens with Meredith lugging a giant portion of her bedroom wall-the one with Derek's drawing of a spinal tumor-down the hall to Amelia's room (PS where does Alex live now?). She offers the tumor to a very confused Amelia, who, along with Maggie is not sure why Meredith is choosing to do this at 3:30 in the morning. They later realize that it is because Meredith is considering inviting Nathan over and maybe doesn't want him in her bedroom if it is "a shrine to Derek". The sisters realize that Meredith and Nathan's relationship must be a big deal and decide to support it. Meredith initially cancels plans with Nathan, but by the end of the episode, after giving some advice to the suitor of a patient, she chooses to move forward. Now that this relationship is in full swing, I'm sure a huge wrench is about to be dropped into it.

The patients this week were very interesting. First there's Holly. She fell down a set of stairs after a steamy one-night stand. She also happens to have a giant inoperable heart tumor. She has seen many doctors and is resigned to the fact that she doesn't have very long to live. She has decided to spend her time hooking up with hot guys. Meredith, Aoril and Maggie are on her case, and Maggie thinks she can remove her tumor and finally convinces her to let her try. It turns out that Holly was right all along though and all Maggie can do is give her a bit more time by resecting parts of the tumor. It is Holly's story that allows Meredith to recognize that unlike Holly, she has a whole life to live-Derek left her behind and as she says to Holly (when she thinks that Maggie might be able to save her) the scariest thing to do is acknowledge that she has to live it. Meredith decides to take the leap and move forward with Riggs. Maggie and April decide that they want to take out of Holly's book and find themselves a hot hookup.

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BWW Recap: It's a Tale of Two Tumors on GREY'S ANATOMY - Broadway World

Love Actually Follow Up Adds Grey’s Anatomy Star – CinemaBlend – Cinema Blend

In Love Actually, Sarah is eyeing the affection of her boss Karl, who is played by actor Rodrigo Santoro. The two share a kiss in their Love Actually storyline, but nothing more happens and Sarah ends the film with her mentally ill brother Michael, opting to stay with him over the holidays. There has been no word if Santoro will be appearing in this new scene between Patrick Dempsey and Laura Linney, but if he does you have to imagine Karl and Dempsey's character will be somewhat at odds. Then again, maybe the goal is just to give Sarah the romantic send off she was denied in the first film.

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Love Actually Follow Up Adds Grey's Anatomy Star - CinemaBlend - Cinema Blend