Saturday, May 06, 2017

Korea War: How Did That Happen? What America Can Learn From History?

Splitting a country in two and setting up a DMZ [demilitarized zone with 28,000 U.S. troops], "installing democracy" in South Korea where the last president was forced out-of-office by 100,000+ demonstrating in the streets for months in popular opposition, THAAD missiles now getting deployed ....what's wrong with expansion of the American Empire?
Published on May 5, 2017
Views: 6,424
To demonstrate he means business, President Donald Trump orders a U.S. aircraft carrier, two guided-missile destroyers, a guided-missile cruiser and a nuclear-powered submarine to the waters off North Korea. Kim Jong-un, the supreme leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, responds by threatening to sink U.S. carriers and putting on a large live-fire exercise, featuring hundreds of large caliber artillery guns. The United States and North Korea are today closer to reigniting a war than at any time since an armistice was signed in 1953. That war, which began in the summer of 1950, didn’t begin well for American Forces.
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Ringie-Dingie! Who's On The Line

Is Donald Trump calling you?
The world's problems will land on his plate.
Get briefed, decide what to do, and find out how likely the President-elect is to call you for advice at 3 a.m.
Go here to start if you want >> Global Headaches

Kinda Nerdy: More from AbSciCon 2017 Here In Mesa

Daily news  04 May 2017   
Resurrected gene allows time travel to an Earth before oxygen
A resurrected gene, brought back from the dead in the lab, is allowing molecular biologists to travel billions of years into the past to study one of the most significant transitions in Earth’s history.
About 2.5 billion years ago, oxygen began to build up in Earth’s previously anoxic atmosphere as a result of photosynthesis by cyanobacteria and other microbes. This Great Oxygenation Event must have caused an ecological upheaval, because oxygen is such a reactive molecule.
To understand more about this key point in evolution, evolutionary biologist Betül Kacar at Harvard University decided to reconstruct the ancient form of rubisco, the key enzyme in photosynthesis that converts carbon dioxide into the precursors of sugars. Rubisco has been called the most abundant protein on Earth, and its history dates back to the dawn of photosynthesis more than 3 billion years ago.
Kacar and her team compared rubisco gene sequences from modern organisms to infer what the sequence must have been in their common ancestor. By doing that repeatedly, she says, “we can walk back down the branches of the evolutionary tree”.
Rubisco changed much more quickly around the time of the Great Oxygenation than it did either before or after it, Kacar said last week at the Astrobiology Science Conference in Mesa, Arizona.
This rapid change must have been driven by the need to adapt to the presence of oxygen, she suggests. The modern rubisco molecule has to be selective because it encounters both oxygen and carbon dioxide, but even so it sometimes goes after the wrong gas. Rubisco from before the Great Oxygenation might have been more lax because it encountered oxygen so infrequently.
Kacar’s team has now synthesised the gene sequences to make the ancient rubisco and is using CRISPR gene-editing technology to insert them into cyanobacteria. The modified bacteria, they hope, will then produce a form of rubisco molecule not seen on Earth for billions of years. “Earth’s past is alive, in a way,” says Kacar.
The team can then compare the functions of the ancient proteins and their modern relatives, to see whether the enzyme did indeed become more selective during the Great Oxygenation Event. The technique adds a new dimension to studies of the past that cannot be gleaned from the geological record, says Kacar.
“What makes Betül’s work really exciting is that she’s actually using these sequences to reconstruct the protein in the laboratory,” says Roger Summons, a geobiologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The biggest insights, Summons adds, may come from features of the ancient protein that come as a surprise. “It’s about what you might learn that you can’t even anticipate at this point,” he says.

More articles by the same author:
Story image for mesa arizona news from New Scientist

Synthetic genes can make weird new proteins that actually work

New Scientist-May 3, 2017
By Bob Holmes in Mesa, Arizona. Novel proteins, created from scratch with no particular design in mind, can sometimes do the work of a natural protein

Who Pays The Most? Career Tracks For Interns: Big Tech Companies

These big tech companies pay their interns the most

Friday, May 05, 2017

Valley Metro and City of Mesa - Community Celebration

Valley Metro and City of Mesa - Community Celebration
Date: May 6, 2017
Time: 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM MST
Event Description:
Free Food, Family-Friendly Activities, and Raffle Prizes.

Valley Metro and the City of Mesa is hosting a community celebration to help promote the businesses along the Gilbert Road Extension (the current light rail extension construction project on Main Street between Mesa Drive and Gilbert.   

THE MONROE BUILDING IN DOWNTOWN PHOENIX SOLD TO VIAWEST VENTURE FOR $29.82 MILLION

Phoenix – Continuing with its strategy to purchase and reposition value-added properties in the Valley, a joint venture formed by ViaWest Properties LLC in Phoenix (Gary LinhartSteven Schwarz, principals) paid $29.82 million ($116.72 per foot) to buy The Monroe Building located in downtown Phoenix. The 255,477-square-foot office project, located at 111 W. Monroe Street, was acquired by ViaWest and GEM Realty Capital Inc. in Chicago Ill. (Barry MalkinNorman Geller, Michael Elrad, co-founders). 
Read more Go here > BREW AZ 

The 18-story structure was sold by RREF II-PE Tower LLC, a venture formed by Rialto Capital Advisors LLC in Miami, Fla. (Jeffrey Krasnoff, CEO), and Ironline Partners LLC in Phoenix (Bob Karber, Tim O’Neil, Olen Petznick, Earl Petznick, principals) and Valley investor John Graham.
The deal was brokered by Chris Toci and Chad Littell of Cushman & Wakefield in Phoenix, and Michael Crystal of Newmark Grubb Knight Frank in Phoenix.
The office space is roughly 50 percent occupied. Crystal, who has been leasing the project for the previous owner, says there are leases are out for signature that will increase the occupancy level to about 65 percent.
The property, which covers almost a full city block, was developed in 1964.
Maricopa County records show GVW 111 Monroe Owner LLC (GEM/ViaWest entity) acquired the property with a $33.81 million loan issued by TH Commercial Mortgage LLC, a division of Two Harbors Investment Corp. in New York City, N.Y. (NYSE:TWO).
The new owners have hired Bryan Taute, Kevin Calihan, Tim Watters and Charlie von Arentschildt of CBRE in Phoenix to take over the leasing assignment.
In April 2014, BREW reported the Rialto/Ironline joint venture paying $22 million ($86.11 per foot) to purchase The Monroe Building.
After acquiring the property three years ago, the project was renovated to attract a more diverse group of tenants to complement traditional government and legal office users in downtown Phoenix. Adding move-in ready creative office suites, first floor service retail restaurants and shops and upgrades to the building’s infrastructure have drawn high-growth, innovative and technology-oriented businesses.
The Monroe Building has been described as a “tech hub” and is positioned to keep luring tenants like Integrate Inc., a software developer that relocated from Scottsdale last year and now leases the top floor of the property.
While the Rialto/Ironline venture decided to sell the 111 W. Monroe Street office, Ironline Partners is already reinvesting in the area.
  • The group of Valley investors is under contract to buy the historic Ellis Building, which is located at 125 N. 2nd Avenue and completes the city block that includes the Monroe Building.
  • O’Neil of Ironline Partners credits Christine Mackay, Economic Development Director with the City of Phoenix, with helping to bring a new wave of tenants to downtown Phoenix. Over the past few years, ViaWest has been involved in more than $300 million of real estate acquisitions and developments in the Phoenix area. Many of the deals have involved ViaWest buying, repositioning and selling office and industrial projects in the Valley.
  • Last week, BREW reported ViaWest completing a $27.65 million ($223.28 per foot) sale of a 123,864-square-foot office project occupied by Amazon that is located on a ground-lease within the Arizona State University Research Park in Tempe.
  • In 2011, BREW reported GEM Realty Capital part of a venture that paid $60 million ($109.71 per foot) to buy 546,872 sq. ft. of office buildings within the Pima Center business park on the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. GEM Realty Capital, which invests in private-market real estate assets and publicly-traded real estate securities, sold about half of the Pima Center project in 2014.
Learn more from Linhart and Schwarz at (602) 957-8300. Barrie Bloom is the contact at GEM Realty Capital . . . call her at (312) 915-5518.
Talk to O’Neil at (602) 315-8275.
Reach the Cushman & Wakefield agents at (602) 253-7900. Crystal is at (602) 952-3878.The CBRE agents are at (602) 735-5555.

Noted In Passing: Pete Garcia

Valley leaders mourn passing of community leader Pete Garcia