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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Tons of Water Ice Found on the Moon’s North Pole
Posted: June 25, 2017 at 1:48 pm
This story was updated at 6:39 p.m. ET.
Vast pockets of water ice numbering in the millions of tons have been discovered at the north pole of the moon, opening up another region of the lunar surface for potential exploration by astronauts and unmanned probes, NASA announced Monday.
A NASA radar instrument on an Indian moon probe found evidence of at least 600 million metric tons of water ice spread out on the bottom of craters at the lunar north pole. It is yet another supply of lunar water ice, a vital resource that could be mined to produce oxygen or rocket fuel to support a future moon base, NASA officials said.
More than 40 craters ranging from 1 mile (2 km) to 9 miles (15 km) wide were found harboring the water ice, which was detected using NASA?s Mini-SAR radar instrument on India?s Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter. The instrument is also known as Mini-RF in NASA parlance.
"After analyzing the data, our science team determined a strong indication of water ice, a finding which will give future missions a new target to further explore and exploit," said Jason Crusan, program executive for the Mini-RF Program for NASA's space operations program in Washington, D.C., in a statement.
Water, water everywhere
The ice was discovered in permanently shadowed craters at the moon?s north pole. Similar conditions of perpetual night exist at the moon?s south pole as well, where water ice was also confirmed to be present last year. Because these regions never see sunlight, water can stay in its frozen form indefinitely.
Last September, NASA and other scientists confirmed without a doubt the existence of water ice at the moon?s south pole, as well as signals of water molecules across large areas of the lunar surface. Several spacecraft, including India?s Chandrayaan-1 probe that carried the radar instrument used for the new findings, found hard evidence of water on the moon.
In October, NASA crashed two impactor probes into the lunar south pole in an attempt to kick up clouds of water ice and measure it from an orbiting spacecraft and other space and ground-based observatories. The subsequent analysis turned up significant amounts of water and water vapor in the debris cloud, NASA scientists said.
"The emerging picture from the multiple measurements and resulting data of the instruments on lunar missions indicates that water creation, migration, deposition and retention are occurring on the moon," said Paul Spudis, principal investigator of the Mini-SAR experiment at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, in a statement. "The new discoveries show the moon is an even more interesting and attractive scientific, exploration and operational destination than people had previously thought."
The research will be detailed in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
Will astronauts go?
Water ice is a tantalizing find anywhere on the moon because it can serve as a natural resource for astronauts on future lunar landing missions. The ice could be melted into drinking water or be separated into its component oxygen and hydrogen to provide breathing air and rocket fuel, NASA officials have said in the past.
NASA had planned to send astronauts on new lunar landing missions by 2020 as part of its Constellation program. The program was building the new Altair moon landers, as well as the Orion spacecraft and Ares rockets needed to launch ferry them to lunar surface, but experts said it was extremely underfunded and behind schedule.
Last month, President Barack Obama ordered NASA to cancel the Constellation program and focus on using commercial spacecraft to launch American astronauts to orbit instead. The move is aimed at freeing up NASA to concentrate on more lofty exploration missions, such as returning to the moon or sending astronauts to visit an asteroid, stable regions in space called Lagrange points or the moons of Mars.
NASA chief Charles Bolden told members of the U.S. Senate and Congress last week that Mars is expected to be the ultimate destination for astronauts. But the moon, he said, is still a good interim target to serve as a stepping stone for more distant space exploration goals.
Chandrayaan-1?s Mini-SAR radar was one of two instruments involving NASA on India?s Chandrayan-1 spacecraft. The probe also carried the Moon Mineralogy Mapper for NASA. A version of Mini-SAR, called Mini-RF, is riding on NASA?s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.
India launched Chandrayaan-1 probe in October 2008 and carried 11 instruments to observe the moon from lunar orbit. It was India?s first moon probe and carried an impactor probe that it unleashed in November 2008. The spacecraft went offline in late August 2009 after an abrupt malfunction cut off communications with Earth.
India is planning a successor to Chandrayaan-1, dubbed Chandrayaan-2. The name Chandrayaan means ?moon craft? in Sanskrit.
The new Chandrayaan-2 mission is slated to launch in 2013, according to Indian news reports.
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Tons of Water Ice Found on the Moon's North Pole
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Hawking urges Moon landing to ‘elevate humanity’ – BBC News
Posted: at 1:48 pm
BBC News | Hawking urges Moon landing to 'elevate humanity' BBC News Prof Stephen Hawking has called for leading nations to send astronauts to the Moon by 2020. They should also aim to build a lunar base in 30 years' time and send people to Mars by 2025. Prof Hawking said that the goal would re-ignite the space ... Stephen Hawking: Earth is in peril, it's time to get out of Dodge Stephen Hawking: 'I Am Convinced That Humans Need to Leave Earth' Stephen Hawking: Humans Should Ride a Beam of Light to Other Planets |
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Police release sketch of Montgomery Co. rapist drawn from DNA evidence – WTOP
Posted: at 1:47 pm
Montgomery County police released this sketch of the man who is believed to have raped five women between June 2010 and September 2012. The sketch was drawn based on characteristics found in DNA evidence the rapist left behind. (Courtesy Montgomery County Police Department)
WASHINGTON DNA left behind by a rapist who attacked five women in Montgomery County, Maryland, has provided police with what could provide a breakthrough in the unsolved cases: a sketch depicting what the unidentified man might look like.
Investigators believe the same attacker broke into the homes of the women and raped them between June 2010 and Sept. 2, 2012. He raped one of the women twice six months apart.
Police collected DNA from three of the cases the samples matched, identifying a single attacker. Police believe the same man was responsible for the other attacks because in each case he broke into the homes or sneaked in through an open door or window. Most of the women were attacked after midnight. The women ranged in ages from 37 to 95; most lived in the Germantown area.
In one case, the attacker wore a distinctive red hat with embroidered white vines and leaves.
The forensic evidence has never matched other samples submitted to law enforcement databases and police dont know if the man is still in the area, said spokesman Officer Rick Goodale.
A process called phenotyping, which determines physical characteristics based on DNA, found that the attacker was primarily of Western African descent. He likely had brown to dark brown skin and brown or hazel eyes. His hair was black and he likely had no freckles. The process can also suggest the shape of the mans face but cannot not depict height, weight or age.
Investigators hope that someone in the community might recognize the man in the sketch.
It might be the final piece of the puzzle that detectives need to solve this case, Goodale said.
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Pennsylvania Legislature eyes wider DNA sampling of convicts – Newsworks.org
Posted: at 1:47 pm
Pennsylvania lawmakers moved closer this week to mandating that DNA samples be collected from people who have been convicted of crimes, something supporters predict will help solve serious crimes.
The state House voted 157-32 for a bill that would require cheek swabs from those convicted of any first-degree misdemeanor and a list of 15 second-degree misdemeanors. Current law requires testing for those convicted of felonies and certain other offenses. Pennsylvania classifies as first-degree misdemeanors many crimes that are felonies in other states.
It was sent to the state Senate, where a nearly identical proposal is pending. A Senate Republican aide said Friday one of the bills could get a final vote before lawmakers adjourn for the summer.
"Not only will some crimes be solved, serial offenders would be stopped before they could reoffend, and innocent people would be ruled out of suspicion in cases where their DNA does not match what's found at the scene," said Tom Dymek, an aide to House Judiciary Chairman Ron Marsico, R-Dauphin, the bill's prime sponsor.
Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, opposes the bill in its current form, saying it would test for too many minor offenses, and its costs are not funded. A fiscal note for the House bill estimated the additional testing would eventually cost more than $3 million annually, based on an estimate of 40,000 offenders.
"Gov. Wolf believes we should expand DNA collection to combat violent crime," said his press secretary, J.J. Abbott. "However, this bill expands the law to include more than 100 misdemeanors, including many offenses that are non-violent in nature such as retail theft and littering."
The Senate will likely consider amending the proposal to remove a few of the less serious misdemeanors, said Mike Stoll, chief of staff to Sen. Tom Killion, R-Delaware, sponsor of the Senate bill .
"The list can't be reduced that much, or you defeat the purpose of it," Stoll said.
Previous efforts in recent years to expand DNA sampling in Pennsylvania have failed, partly because of opposition to collecting the genetic material upon arrest. The current proposal is limited to those who have been convicted. The House bill also would not authorize testing of prisoners already in jail, only the newly convicted.
Marsico "just wanted to make sure that the due process and the civil liberties rights of people, he thought they were best preserved by doing it post-conviction, where there's been a finding of guilt," Dymek said.
The expanded testing would go into effect in December 2019, which means the financial impact won't be felt by the state police and local crime labs for more than two years.
"This is a proven way of solving crimes and protecting victims," said Greg Rowe, legislative director for the state association of district attorneys. "When it comes to protecting victims, and when it comes to apprehending violent criminals, there's no price tag."
A spokeswoman for the state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union said the organization was opposed, calling the expanded list of offenses excessive.
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Psst, the human genome was never completely sequenced. Some scientists say it should be – STAT
Posted: at 1:46 pm
T
he feat made headlines around the world: Scientists Say Human Genome is Complete, the New York Times announced in 2003. The Human Genome, the journals Science and Nature said in identical ta-dah cover lines unveiling the historic achievement.
There was one little problem.
As a matter of truth in advertising, the finished sequence isnt finished, said Eric Lander, who led the lab at the Whitehead Institute that deciphered more of the genome for the government-funded Human Genome Project than any other. I always say finished is a term of art.
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Its very fair to say the human genome was never fully sequenced, Craig Venter, another genomics luminary, told STAT.
The human genome has not been completely sequenced and neither has any other mammalian genome as far as Im aware, said Harvard Medical School bioengineer George Church, who made key earlyadvances in sequencing technology.
Geneticist Craig Venter helped sequence the human genome. Now he wants yours
What insiders know, however, is not well-understood by the rest of us, who take for granted that each A, T, C, and G that makes up the DNA of all 23 pairs of human chromosomes has been completely worked out.When scientists finished the first draft of the human genome, in 2001, and again when they had the final version in 2003, no one lied, exactly. FAQsfrom the National Institutes of Health refer to the sequences essential completion, and to the question, Is the human genome completely sequenced? they answer, Yes, with the caveat that its as complete as it can be given available technology.
Perhaps nobody paid much attention because the missing sequences didnt seem to matter. But now it appears they may play a role in conditions such as cancer and autism.
A lot of people in the 1980s and 1990s [when the Human Genome Project was getting started] thought of these regions as nonfunctional, said Karen Miga, a molecular biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. But thats no longer the case. Some of them, called satellite regions, misbehave in some forms of cancer, she said, so something is going on in these regions thats important.
Miga regards them as the explorer Livingstone did Africa terra incognita whose inaccessibility seems like a personal affront. Sequencing the unsequenced, she said, is the last frontier for human genetics and genomics.
Church, too, has been making that point, mentioning it at both the May meeting of an effort to synthesize genomes, and at last weekends meeting of the International Society for Stem Cell Research. Most of the unsequenced regions, he said, have some connection to agingand aneuploidy (an abnormal number of chromosomes such as what occurs in Down syndrome).Church estimates 4 percent to 9 percent of the human genome hasnt been sequenced. Miga thinks its 8 percent.
The reason for these gapsis that DNA sequencing machines dont read genomes like humans read books, from the first word to the last. Instead, they first randomly chop up copies of the 23 pairs of chromosomes, which total some 3 billion letters, so the machines arent overwhelmed. The resulting chunks contain from 1,000 letters (during the Human Genome Project) to a few hundred (in todays more advanced sequencing machines). The chunks overlap. Computersmatch up the overlaps, assembling the chunks into the correct sequence.
Thats between difficult and impossible to do if the chunks contain lots of repetitive segments, such as TTAATATTAATATTAATA, or TTAATA three times. The problem is, when you have the same exact words, its hard to assemble, said Lander, just as if jigsaw puzzle pieces show the same exact blue sky.
In 2004, the genome project reportedthat there were 341 gaps in the sequence. Most of the gaps 250 are in the main part of each chromosome, where genes make the proteins that life runs on. These gaps are tiny. Only afew gaps 33 at last count lie in or near each chromosomes centromere (where the two parts of a chromosome connect) and telomeres (the caps at the end of chromosomes), but these 33 are 10 times as long in totalas the 250 gaps.
That makes the centromeres in particular the genomes uncharted Zambezi. Evan Eichler of the University of Washingtonsaid every chromosome has such sequence-defying repetitive elements think of them as DNA stutters including an infamous one thats 171 letters long and repeated end-to-end for thousands of letters.
At the beginning of the Human Genome Project, said Lander, now director of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, it became very clear these highly repetitive sequences would not be tractable with existing technology. It wasnt a cause of a great deal of agonizing at the time, since he and other project leaders expected the next generation of scientists to find a solution.
That hasnt really happened, partly because there hasnt been much motivation to map these regions.Im between agnostic and a little skeptical that these bits will be important for disease, but maybe Im saying that because we cant read them, Lander said.
As new sequencing technology has begun allowing scientists topeek into unsequenced territory, however, theyhave seen that these tough-to-sequence regions frequently have important genes, said Michael Hunkapiller, chairman and CEO of Pacific Biosciences, which makes DNA sequencers. (In 1998, Hunkapiller recruited Venter to his new company, Celera Genomics, to race the government-backed genome project; the race ended in a de facto tie.)
PacBios reason for being is to increase the length of DNA segments that can be read and assemble them, Hunkapiller said. Longer reads have an effect like enlarging jigsaw puzzle pieces; even though the pieces still contain a lot of repeated blue sky, the greater size makes it more likely theyll also contain something sufficiently novel to make assembling them easier. PacBios maximum DNA read is now about 60,000 letters,Hunkapiller said, andaverages 15,000.
With such long reads, Lander said, you could get through a lot of these nasty [unsequenced] regions.
Genome writers gather in New York to pitch bomb-sniffing plants and more. Wheres the funding?
Thats looking more and more like a worthy undertaking, and not only because the unsequenced regions might contain actual protein-making genes. There is evidence that the non-gene parts especially the DNA stutters clearly have disease implications, Hunkapiller said. Three-quarters of the [genome] differences between one person and another are in [such] variants rather than the single-letterspelling differences in As, Ts, Cs, and Gs which get all the attention.In a 2007 paper, Venter (now the chairman of Human Longevity Inc.) and his team showed that there are more person-to-person differences like this, called structural variants, than there are single-letter changes.
Yet about 90 percent of the structural variants, the vast majority of which werent sequenced by either the genome project or a later effort called the 1000 Genomes Project, have been missed, Eichler and his colleagues reported last year.
One reason the stutters are unusually influential is that this repetitive DNA can move around, make copies of itself, flip its orientation, and do other acrobaticsthat can have quite dramatic functional effects, Hunkapiller said. For one thing, repetitive elements around the centromeres, called satellites, might cause a dividing cell to become cancerous, Miga said, because they can destabilizethe entire genome.
When researchers at Stanford University tried to find the genetic cause of a young mans mysterious disease, which caused non-cancerous tumors to grow throughout his body, they found nothing using the standard whole-genome sequencing, Hunkapiller said. But the long reads made possible by the PacBio machines looked for structural variants and found the problem right away, he said.
The stutters might even be what makes us human. Some of these complex duplications appear to be important for the evolution of higher neuroadaptive function aka brain development, Eichler said. A gene called ARHGAP11B, which was created by one such duplication, causes the cortex to develop the myriad folds that support complex thought; SRGAP2C, also a duplication, triggers brain development.
These are new genes that evolved specifically in our lineage over the last few million years, said Eichler. The same duplications can also produce DNA rearrangements associated with neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and intellectual disability.
Finish the sequence! hasnt become a rallying cry, but maybe it should be, Venter said: Id be the last one to give you a quote saying that we dont need to bother with these [unsequenced] regions.
Sharon Begley can be reached at sharon.begley@statnews.com Follow Sharon on Twitter @sxbegle
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Psst, the human genome was never completely sequenced. Some scientists say it should be - STAT
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Fatty algae is biofuel breakthrough for Exxon – Business Mirror
Posted: at 1:46 pm
Its the holy grail for biofuel developers hoping to coax energy out of algae: Keep the organism fat enough to produce oil but spry enough to grow quickly.
J. Craig Venter, the scientist who mapped the human genome, just helped Exxon Mobil Corp. strike that balance, with a breakthrough that could enable widespread commercialization of algae-based biofuels.
Exxon and Venters Synthetic Genomics Inc. announced the development at a conference in San Diego last Monday.
They used advanced cell engineering to more than double the fatty lipids insidea strain of algae. The technique may be replicated to boost numbers on other species, too.
Tackling the inner workings of algae cells has not been trivial, Venter said. Nobodys really ever been there before; theres no guideline to go by.
Venter, who cofounded Synthetic Genomics and sequenced the human genome in the 1990s, added thedevelopment is a significant advancement in the quest to make algae a renewable-energy source.The discovery is being published in the July issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology.
Its taken eight years of what Venter called tedious research to reach this point.
When ExxonMobil announced its $600-million collaboration with Synthetic Genomics in 2009, the oil company predicted it might yield algae-based biofuels within a decade. Four years later, Exxon executives conceded a better estimate might be within a generation.
Developing strains that reproduce and generate enough of the raw material to supply a refinery meant the venture might not succeed for at least another 25 years, former chief executive and current US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said at the time.
Even with this newest discovery, commercialization of this kind of modified algae is decades away.
Venter said the effort has been a real slog.
Its to the teams creditits to Exxons creditthat they believed the steps in the learning were actually leading some place, he said. And they have.
The companies forged onrenewing their joint research agreement in January amid promising laboratory results.
Exxon declined to disclose how much the Irving, Texas-based company has invested in the endeavor so far. Vijay Swarup, a vice president at Exxon Mobil Research and Engineering Co., said the collaboration is part of the companys broad pursuit of more efficient ways to produce the energy and chemicals the world needs and mitigate the impacts of climate change.
Carbon consumer
Where Exxons chief productsoil and natural gasgenerate carbon-dioxide emissions that drive the phenomenon, algae is a CO2 consumer, Swarup said.
Most renewable fuels today are made from plant material, including corn, corn waste and soybean oil.
Algae has long been considered a potentially more sustainable option; unlike those traditional biofuels, it can grow in salt water and thrive under harsh environmental conditions.And the oil contained in algae potentially could be processed in conventional refineries.
The Exxon and Synthetic Genomics team found a way to regulate the expression of genes controlling the accumulation of lipids, or fats, in the algaeand then use it to double the strains lipid productivity while retaining its ability to grow.
To my knowledge, no other group has achieved this level of lipid production by modifying algae, and theres no algae in production that has anything like this level, Venter said in a telephone interview. Its our first super-strong indication that there is a path to getting to where we need to go.
Nitrogen starved
They searched for the needed genetic regulators after observing what happened when cells were starved of nitrogena tactic that generally drives more oil accumulation. Using the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing technique, the researchers were able to winnow a list of about 20 candidates to a single regulatorthey call it ZnCysand then to modulate its expression.
Test strains were grown under conditions mimicking an average spring day in southern California.
Rob Brown, PhD, senior director of genome engineering at Synthetic Genomics, likened the tactic to forcing an agile algae athlete to sit on the bench.
We basically take an athlete and make them sit on a couch and get fat, Brown said. Thats the switchyou grab this guy off the track and you put him on a couch and he turns into a couch potato. So everything he had in his body that was muscle, sinew, carbohydrateswe basically turn that into a butterball. Thats what were basically doing with this system.
Without the change, most algae growing in this environment would produce about 10 percent to 15 percent oil. The Exxon and Synthetic Genomics collaboration yielded a strain with more than 40 percent.
Venter, who is also working on human longevity research, views the development as a significant step toward the sustainable energy he believes humans need as they live longer, healthier lives. The study also is proof, he said, that persistence pays.
You have to believe in what youre doing and that where youre headed really is the right direction, he added, and sometimes, like this, it takes a long time to really prove it.
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World’s Oldest Woman Revealed Her Secret to Long Life
Posted: at 1:46 pm
Misao Okawa of Japan, who died April 1, 2015, was the world's oldest woman at 117.
The world's oldest person, a 117-year-old woman in Japan named Misao Okawa, died today. Okawa was born on March 5, 1898, and died of heart failure just a few weeks after celebrating her birthday.
Okawa was named the world's oldest person in 2013, when she was 114, according to Guinness World Records. Now, the world's oldest living person is Gertrude Weaver, a 116-year-old woman in Arkansas, according to the Gerontology Research Group, which keeps track of supercentenarians, or people older than 110.
Sakari Momoi of Japan became the world's oldest living man at 111, according to the Geronotology Research Group, since the death of Dr. Alexander Imich of New York City in June 2014. The oldest person ever known was Jeanne Louise Calment of France, who lived to be 122 years and 164 days old, and died in 1997, according to Guinness World Records. [The World's 7 Weirdest World Records]
Okawa previously told The Japan Times that the key to her longevity was "eating delicious things," such as ramen noodles, beef stew, hashed beef and rice.
In studies, a wide array of factors have been linked to living longer, including being vegetarian, eating lots of fiber, not sitting too much, jogging and volunteering. Women who drink moderate amounts of alcohol (about five drinks per week) and those who have kids when they're older may also live longer, some studies suggest. Even winning a Nobel Prizehas been linked to having a longer life.
The average human life span has increased by almost 30 years over the past century, thanks to lower infant mortality rates and medical advances ranging from vaccines to heart treatments, Live Science reported in 2006.
Life extension is a ripe field of research, and experiments in animals have shown promise in tacking more years on to people's lives.
One approach to living longer is calorie restriction, which has been studied since the 1930s, when researchers found that rats on severely restricted diets lived up to 40 percent longer than rats that ate normally. Restricting calories also has been shown to extend the lives of other animals, including fish and dogs, but it's not clear whether the benefits extend to humans.
Chemicals such as resveratrol, found in red wine, also have been reported to have anti-aging effects, but the findings on whether they actually help people live longer have been somewhat conflicting.
Meanwhile, other research is focused on developing tissue-engineered organs to replace faulty ones, or repairing the body through nanotechnology.
More speculative ideas include the notion of cryonics, or freezing a dead body in hopes that future medical technologies can bring it back to life, or uploading the mind to a computer to achieve a kind of digital immortality.
But for now, you're probably better off sticking with a healthy diet and exercise, most experts say.
Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter. Follow us @livescience, Facebook& Google+. Original article on Live Science.
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World's Oldest Woman Revealed Her Secret to Long Life
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Black, Gwendolyn – The Daily Progress
Posted: at 1:42 pm
Gwendolyn Fields Black, 90, passed away on Friday, June 23, 2017. She was born to Lester Fields and Frankie Davis Fields on November 15, 1926. Gwen was married to her beloved husband Raymond M. Black, who preceded her in death. Gwen was born in Bryant, Va., but was raised in Beech Grove, Va., in the heart of the lovely Blue Ridge Mountains. She was also preceded in death by one sister, Marion Brown. She is survived by four devoted siblings, LaVerne Napier, James Fields, Sylvia Witt, and Carolyn Mattox; and by her brother-in-law, Carlton Mattox. Gwen did not have children herself, but was a loving, generous aunt to her nieces and nephews, Donnie Brown, Dale Brown, Frankie Ann Kirtland, Debbie Garcia, Denise McClanahan, Vivian Brown, Keith Mattox, Diane Crickenberger, and Scott Mattox. Numerous great-nieces and nephews also remember Aunt Gwen with great fondness. The pall-bearers, Dale Brown, Keith Mattox, Scott Mattox, Jacob Anderson, Nathan Anderson, and Rachel Hysong, are all her nephews and nieces, and feel so honored to help lay her to rest. Gwen retired after a long career at General Electric. She and her husband Raymond enjoyed camping and square dancing. Gwen loved to raise flowers and feed the birds. Her Christian faith was extremely important to her. She was a charter member of Westwood Baptist Church, and a current member of Wayne Hills Baptist Church. One of Gwen's strongest characteristics was her generosity. She was very giving of her time and money to family and church. As one niece put it, she had a "heart of gold." She will be sorely missed, but her family is assured that she is now in Heaven, with her Lord. For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality. When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: "Death has been swallowed up in victory." "Where, O death, is your victory? "Where, O death, is your sting?" The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. 1 Corinthians 15:53-57 A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, June 26, 2017, at McDow Funeral Home in Waynesboro, Va. Interment will follow at Augusta Memorial Park. The family will receive friends from 5 until 7 p.m. on Sunday, June 25, 2017, at McDow Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to the Hospice of the Shenandoah, 64 Sports Medicine Drive, Fishersville, VA 22939, or to Cystic Fibrosis, 4550 Montgomery Ave., Suite 1100, North Bethesda, MD 20814. The family would also like to thank Waynesboro Manor for their devoted and kind long-term care of Gwen. A special thanks and recognition go to her faithful sisters, LaVerne and Sylvia, who cared for her constantly and with enormous devotion in her waning years. With their lives they fulfilled Galatians 6:2: "Bear one another's burdens, and thereby fulfill the law of Christ."
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Black, Gwendolyn - The Daily Progress
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Thief returns human toe stolen from bar’s signature cocktail – New York Post
Posted: at 1:41 pm
The man who stole a toe from a Canadian bar apparently had a change of heart and returned the pilfered digit, according to a report.
The pickled human appendage was stolen Saturday from the Downtown Hotel in Dawson City, where its the main ingredient for the Sourtoe Cocktail a toe floating in a shot of whisky.
You can drink it fast, you can drink it slow, but your lips must touch the toe! the hotels website states, although patrons are charged a fine for swallowing (or stealing) the toe.
The bar apparently has some backup toes, but the mummified one was donated by a man who had the toe surgically removed.
This was our new toe, and it was a really good one. We just started using it this weekend, hotel manager Geri Coulbourne said after the theft.
On Tuesday, the toe thief notified the Royal Canadian Mounted Police that he returned the digit in the mail, the CBC reported.
The man then called the Downtown Hotel and provided the same message to staff, along with a verbal apology, an RCMP news release said.
An officer was on hand to open the package, which contained both the toe and a letter of apology.
The toe was believed to be in good condition, the release said.
No charges are expected, police said.
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Thief returns human toe stolen from bar's signature cocktail - New York Post
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Don’t decimate human services in Pennsylvania – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Posted: at 1:41 pm
Don't decimate human services in Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Post-Gazette They are visiting North Park near their home in McCandless and they head straight to the playground. Max and Jack Cieply bring the place to life with laughter as they race between swing set and slide. Their dad, Zach, manages to find enough energy at ... |
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Don't decimate human services in Pennsylvania - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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