Professor Prem Misir’s book proposal unanimously accepted by world-renowned ‘Routledge’

THE editorial committee of Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, has unanimously approved Professor Prem Misir’s book proposal titled Ethics and Governance of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Healthcare.Routledge, according to its website, is a global publisher of academic books, journals and online resources in the humanities and social sciences.Founded in 1836, we have published many of the greatest thinkers and scholars of the last hundred years, including Adorno, Einstein, Russell, Popper, Wittgenstein, Jung, Bohm, Hayek, McLuhan, Marcuse and Sartre.
Today, Routledge is the world’s leading academic publisher in the Humanities and Social Sciences.According to information from Professor Misir, without question, society today is being fundamentally transformed through AI, machine learning, and automation.The book, among other things, intends to deliver illustrations of AI-driven health interventions on health inequality and inequity; how AI inputs health inequality and inequity, privilege, and vulnerability for individuals; addressing the status of ethics and governance for health in defining health inequality and inequity; illustrating the concerns and risks linked to the use of AI for health inequality and inequity; and using social perspectives to strengthen the existing AI ethical and governance framework for impacting health inequality and inequity.
“As per my contract with Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, this book is scheduled for completion in 2025,” Professor Misir said.Providing background on his book proposal, he said: “Notwithstanding that social questions are now being attended to by developers of new algorithmic technologies, these AI designers still present an inadequate understanding of the social impact of their technologies (Joyce et al., 2021); and seem wedded to technological determinism (Vicsek, 2020). Apparently, increased AI activity also has been responsible for the demise of human agency (Anderson & Rainie, 2018).”
However, the World Health Organisation (WHO) advances the view that AI is enamored with huge possibilities to consolidate health care delivery and medicine, which could facilitate the birth of universal health coverage globally.The WHO explained that AI could also aid low-and middle-income countries to alleviate their burden of substantial gaps in health care delivery. But the WHO also noted that these AI inputs in public health and medicine will not have a beneficial impact, unless ethical concerns and human rights center the design, growth, and deployment of AI technologies for health, according Professor Misir.
He added: “So ethical and governance concerns and human rights issues are social questions waiting to be addressed.“As we come to grips with the substantial growth in interest and investment in AI in healthcare, it is useful to mull what Schwalbe and Wahl (2020) concluded: that a great deal of the AI-driven intervention research in global health is devoid of ethical, regulatory, or practical considerations, essential for common use or deployment.”This situation, he said, has given rise to concerns about the need for an ethical and governance framework that addresses the values, institutional practices, and inequalities embedded in the AI system, even as some ethical guidelines for the employment of AI and data in health, albeit derisory, have appeared.
However, while there is some literature on ethics and governance guidelines with a robust emphasis on assessing the impact of AI on the individual (Smallman, 2022), that literature does not substantively consider the controlling, social and ethical shaping effects of AI on the social worlds.The intent of this book, therefore, is to develop an ethical and governance framework on AI for health rooted in social and behavioral sciences conceptual frameworks and theories, Professor Misir said.
He added: “And so, with AI increasing its leverage in health care, it now becomes essential to develop a full knowledge of how AI impacts health inequality and health inequity vis-a-vis the process of delivering healthcare as well as the impacts from various health systems.”Misir successfully completed the WHO modules on Ethics and Governance of Artificial Intelligence for Health, 2023. And he presented a paper on AI in healthcare at a symposium on artificial intelligence at Trinity Washington University, on October 27, 2023.He also has a Certificate on Improving Global Health: Focusing on Quality and Safety, Harvard University, 2020. His most recent book, COVID-19 and Health System Segregation in the US: Racial Health Disparities and Systemic Racism, was published by Springer— a German multinational publishing company of books, e-books and peer-reviewed journals in science, humanities, technical and medical publishing

Why Mike Ozekhome Launched 50 Books in Commemoration of 67th Birthday

October 20, (THEWILL) – Legal luminary and constitutional lawyer, Mike Ozekhome SAN recently added another age but rather than throw a lavish party for the sake of celebrating, he chose to mark the day by launching 50 books simultaneously.
The auspicious event took place at the Abuja Continental Hotel. A former chairman of the body of Benchers (BOB), Chief Wole Olanipekun, SAN reviewed the 50 books.
The book all expressed deep concerns about the state of the judiciary and its impact on the country’s political landscape. Some of the dignitaries at the event were former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan, both of who co-chaired the event; former first lady Patience Jonathan; presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi; former governor of Ogun State, Olusegun Osoba; Senator Shehu Sani; Obinna Iyiegbu aka Obi Cubana and many others.

A human rights activist, professor Ozekhome has dedicated his life to the advancement of justice, human rights advocacy, and the pursuit of democracy and good governance in Nigeria.
A titled chief, the Akpakpa Vighi Vighi of Edoland, the launch of the 50 books has further solidified his legacy as a thought leader, mentor, and defender of democratic values.

‘Courier’ boys hold ex-scientist at gunpoint, rob him of ₹2 crore in Delhi’s Rohini

Delhi news: A shocking incident of theft surfaced on Friday in Rohini’s Prashant Vihar. A retired scientist and his elderly wife were held hostage at gunpoint and robbed of ₹2 crore in cash and jewellery by two men posing as courier boys on October 18.”The way the incident has happened, the police suspect the role of some insider or someone known to the family members,” PTI quoted Delhi Police officer as saying.Police said on Saturday informed that the incident took place in F Block of Prashant Vihar where the retired scientist Shibu Singh lives with his wife Nirmala. The incident happened when the elderly couple was in their house on Friday afternoon. Two men impersonating as courier boys entered the house. A Delhi police official said, “After entering inside the house, they held Shibu and his wife Nirmala hostage on gunpoint.The husband was assaulted when he tried to resist. According to Shibu Singh’s statement, the accused decamped away with cash and jewellery worth ₹2 crore from his house. The ex-scientist later informed his son, who lives separately in Delhi, about the incident, prompting him to alert the authorities.Shubhu Singh’s son made a PCR call at around 2:30 pm and informed the police about the theft. According to PTI report, Delhi police team arrived at the house soon after the intimation about the robbery and collected evidence from the spot. While the further investigation is underway, both the victims were escorted to the hospital for medical examination.Over six police teams have been deployed in the task to search and identify the absconding accused. Furthermore, the police collected CCTV footage from the area and recorded statements of neighbours and other family members.Suspecting the role of an insider, the police said, “The CCTV footage has been collected and statements of neighbours and other family members have been recorded. Further investigation is on.”

‘Courier’ boys hold ex-scientist at gunpoint, rob him of ₹2 crore in Delhi’s Rohini

Delhi news: A shocking incident of theft surfaced on Friday in Rohini’s Prashant Vihar. A retired scientist and his elderly wife were held hostage at gunpoint and robbed of ₹2 crore in cash and jewellery by two men posing as courier boys on October 18.”The way the incident has happened, the police suspect the role of some insider or someone known to the family members,” PTI quoted Delhi Police officer as saying.Police said on Saturday informed that the incident took place in F Block of Prashant Vihar where the retired scientist Shibu Singh lives with his wife Nirmala. The incident happened when the elderly couple was in their house on Friday afternoon. Two men impersonating as courier boys entered the house. A Delhi police official said, “After entering inside the house, they held Shibu and his wife Nirmala hostage on gunpoint.The husband was assaulted when he tried to resist. According to Shibu Singh’s statement, the accused decamped away with cash and jewellery worth ₹2 crore from his house. The ex-scientist later informed his son, who lives separately in Delhi, about the incident, prompting him to alert the authorities.Shubhu Singh’s son made a PCR call at around 2:30 pm and informed the police about the theft. According to PTI report, Delhi police team arrived at the house soon after the intimation about the robbery and collected evidence from the spot. While the further investigation is underway, both the victims were escorted to the hospital for medical examination.Over six police teams have been deployed in the task to search and identify the absconding accused. Furthermore, the police collected CCTV footage from the area and recorded statements of neighbours and other family members.Suspecting the role of an insider, the police said, “The CCTV footage has been collected and statements of neighbours and other family members have been recorded. Further investigation is on.”

Inspiring books on courage and fitting in

We’ve all experienced the uncomfortable feeling of not fitting in from time to time. It’s no different for kids.For kids especially, who’ve had far fewer years of experience in handling such feelings, not fitting in can be more distressing than for an adult. It’s important to raise a child’s awareness of what another feels when that person is left out or made fun of.We raise that awareness by teaching kids through our own actions, what we say (or fail to say) and by reading books that both address these issues and ultimately can act as a springboard for further discussion and understanding.It’s all boils down to compassion and empathy, and we need a lot more of that in our world, don’t you think?Books to borrowThe following book is available at many public libraries.“Goin’ Someplace Special” by Patricia C. McKissack, illustrated by Jerry Pinkney, Atheneum, 36 pagesRead aloud: age 4 – 5 and older.Read yourself: age 8 and older.In a 1950s Southern town, an African-American girl, ‘Tricia Ann, lives with her grandmother, Mama Frances. One day, ‘Tricia Ann decides she is ready to go to Someplace Special by herself.Her grandmother hesitates, and tells her granddaughter, “Goin’ off alone is a mighty big step.” Finally, she relents, and as ‘Tricia Ann is leaving, her Grandmother tells her, “And no matter what, hold your head up and act like you belong to somebody.”On her journey, ‘Tricia Ann encounters stinging signs of prejudice everywhere. Then, in front of a beautiful hotel, she is swept up in a crowd of people who are there to see a famous celebrity. Suddenly, ‘Tricia Ann is inside the hotel, and it is quickly and loudly made clear she wasn’t allowed to be there.Being cast out of the hotel, ‘Tricia Ann heads for the sanctuary of the Mission Church ruins. There, she meets the kind and gentle Blooming Mary, who listens to ‘Tricia Ann’s story and tells her to listen closely and she will hear her granny speaking to her.As ‘Tricia Ann listened, she began to hear her grandmother’s steady voice, telling her, “You are somebody, a human being — no better, no worse than anybody else in this world . . . don’t study on quittin’, just keep walking straight ahead — and you’ll make it.”And that’s just what ‘Tricia Ann did. Finally, ‘Tricia Ann arrived at Someplace Special. She looked up and read the message chiseled in stone across the front of the building: PUBLIC LIBRARY: ALL ARE WELCOME.Based on the true events in McKissack’s young life, this powerful story should be required reading.Librarian’s choiceLibrary: Womelsdorf Community Library, 203 W. High St., WomelsdorfChildren’s program coordinator: Jessica MolinariChoices this week: “Verdi” by Janell Cannon; “Stage Fright on a Summer Night” by Mary Pope Osborne; “Horrible Harry and the Hallway Bully” by Suzy KlineBooks to buyThe following books are available at favorite bookstores.“Where?” by Jordan Collins, illustrated by Phil Lesnie, Candlewick, 2024, 40 pages, $18.99 hardcoverRead aloud: age 5 – 9.Read yourself: age 7 – 9.People repeatedly ask the child, “Where are you from?” The child knows people ask that question if their skin isn’t the same color, or their hair is different. The child isn’t sure how to respond in the way that will make others understand, and ultimately decides that an intergalactic explanation of sorts might help.Like everyone else, the child is from the interiors of collapsing stars, cosmic dust and the same ancient ancestors, all part of a line of shared humanity.Lavish illustrations perfectly complement this deeply reflective story of accepting differences, fitting in and what being a human really means.“The Kodiaks: Home Ice Advantage” by David A. Robertson expertly explores real-life issues of prejudice, friendship and standing tall. (Highwater Press)“The Kodiaks: Home Ice Advantage” by David A. Robertson, Highwater Press, 2024, 184 pages, $12.95 paperbackRead aloud: age 9 – 12.Read yourself: age 9 – 12.When 11-year-old Alex’s family moves from their home in Norway House Cree Nation to the city, his world is turned upside down. It’s hard enough being the new kid, but for the first time, Alex doesn’t fit in because his classmates don’t understand Indigenous culture.Alex has always been an excellent ice hockey player, and he decides to try out for the local hockey team. Securing a position to play with the Kodiaks isn’t difficult, but despite what a star player he is, Alex is faced with racist comments and more from opposing players because he is Indigenous. Will Alex be able to find a way to be accepted and still be proud of being Cree?Fast-paced and loaded with ice hockey action and more, “The Kodiaks: Home Ice Advantage” expertly explores real-life issues of prejudice, friendship, and standing tall.Nationally syndicated, Kendal Rautzhan writes and lectures on children’s literature. She can be reached at [email protected].

The United States of Automobiles

“More than any other country,” Lyndon B. Johnson once said of America, “ours is an automobile society.” He wasn’t exaggerating: Americans own more cars per capita than the citizens of any other nation. More than any other technology, the automobile has shaped America’s economy, infrastructure, climate, culture, and identity. From Motown to Tesla, from “On the Road” to “The Fast and the Furious,” nothing captures our all-American obsession with speed, freedom, and individuality like the vehicles we drive.Explore the United States of Automobiles• Check out the cars your neighbors love most• What our rides reveal about our politics• Cars used to be really colorful. What happened?• How we crunched the numbersTo provide a comprehensive road map of America’s automotive psyche, Business Insider took a close look at what’s actually on the road today. Combing through 1.7 million listings on CarGurus, we analyzed thousands of makes and models in three key areas: geographic location, political preference, and color. The result is an illuminating — and interactive — guide to what drives America. Where is your car most popular? What do your neighbors drive? Which rides are most Republican or Democratic? And why does it seem as if every vehicle on the road today is either white, black, or gray?Which car brands dominate which states?More than anything, the data confirms a deeply American trait: We are what we drive. No other choice we make as consumers conveys more information about how we see ourselves — and how we wish to be seen. We use our cars to flaunt our financial status, express our aesthetic leanings, signal our tribal loyalties, and reflect our hopes and fears. Do we opt for size over efficiency? Safety over style? Exclusivity over economy? Whether we’re cocooned inside the fortified cabin of a street-legal tank or smugly piloting a Prius to the next community board meeting, how we navigate the world says something about what we think there is to navigate.

Music in U.S. presidential campaigns dates all the way back to George Washington

Quick! When you hear “Don’t Stop” by Fleetwood Mac, what do you think of?
For a large swath of the U.S. population who lived through the 1990s, the answer may very well be Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign.
“I became old enough to vote during the Clinton years, and I very clearly remember the ‘don’t stop thinking about tomorrow’ song,” said Dr. Jennie Sweet-Cushman, professor of political science at Chatham University. “I think that’s probably true for campaigns that use music effectively. You’re trying to create an energy — a vibe, if you will — around the campaign, and using music is a really effective way to do that.”
Throughout American history, presidential candidates have used music as a vital part of their campaigns, from popular hit songs played at rallies to new lyrics written to familiar melodies.
The use of music by presidential hopefuls serves several purposes, including reinforcing campaign messages, said Dr. Eric T. Kasper, a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and editor of the book “You Shook Me All Campaign Long: Music in the 2016 Presidential Election and Beyond.”
“Because of the emotional appeal of music, they can help messages get across in different ways than the spoken word,” he said. “Particularly in the modern era, where a lot of campaign songs are repurposed popular music, there’s also the opportunity that once a song gets associated with a campaign, if people just hear that song being played on the radio it can make them think of that candidate.”
In the 2024 election, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’ campaign received permission from artist Beyoncé to use the song “Freedom,” and she’s played it at rallies and in several ads.
Sweet-Cushman thinks that this choice of theme song is brilliant. “It’s such a reclamation of the idea of freedom, which Republicans had kind of controlled for so long,” she said.
Republican candidate Donald Trump cast his musical net a little wider, Kasper said.
“I think a lot of the campaign’s music, in a lot of ways, reflects favorite songs of the candidate and songs from when he came of age. He thinks (they) have at least a good beat and lyrics that on some level can say good things about the campaign, but a lot of the music goes a lot farther back.”
Trump has also followed in President Ronald Reagan’s footsteps and frequently uses “God Bless The U.S.A.” by Lee Greenwood at rallies and appearances.
One of the complications that has arisen with using “canned” music is the legal pitfall of appropriating songs for political purposes without the artist or songwriter’s permission.
Reagan hit speed bumps with popular artists during his 1984 re-election campaign. Bruce Springsteen and John Mellencamp discouraged the president from using their songs “Born in the U.S.A.” and “Pink Houses,” respectively.
“Until we got to 2016, we had had a number of cases … where the artist disagreed with a candidate and they asked them not to play their music. Almost the universal response from campaigns had been — even if they had the legal right and they believed they had the legal right to play the song — they stopped out of respect for the artist or because they didn’t want it to be a drag on the campaign as far as negative press,” Kasper said. “That has not been the universally followed trend since then.”
In the past, many campaigns took the tactic of dropping tunes before copyright holders needed to turn up the legal heat. In 2008, Republican John McCain stopped using ABBA’s “Take A Chance On Me” at the band’s request, and Democrat Barack Obama nixed Sam and Dave’s soul hit “Hold On, I’m Comin’ ” after protest from singer Sam Moore.
Keith Kupferschmid, the CEO of the Copyright Alliance, said there is some nuance to this legal issue.
“The law is, basically, that you need a license if you’re going to perform these works, whether you’re a campaign or anything else. Usually, the venue will take out a license. … When you’re talking about a political campaign, things work a little bit differently.”
Different licensing
Performing rights organizations like ASCAP have separate licenses for political campaigns.
“If you’re a campaign … there’s a provision in that license that permits the PRO (performing rights organizations) to exclude any type of musical works from the license if they receive an objection from the songwriter or publisher regarding use in the campaign.”
Former President Trump recently lost a copyright infringement suit filed by singer Eddie Grant after Trump used his song “Electric Avenue” without permission.
According to Kupferschmid, these licenses came into use around 2012 after mounting calls for artists and publishers to have more of a say in how their voices and words would be used for political purposes.
Kupferschmid can’t confirm whether there has been an increase in conflicts between copyright holders and campaigns over the past few election cycles. He does note that individuals making these decisions for campaigns should be aware of the do’s and don’ts.
“When you’re talking about campaign managers and their teams, they should know and understand this. To the average person, this may seem complex and nuanced. For them … this should be pretty basic for them to know these rules,” he said.
Sweet-Cushman said that legal issues are never a good thing for a campaign, but she doesn’t think that battles with musicians will hurt Trump’s campaign specifically with voters.
“I think his campaigns have used that to his benefit as the political outsider. ‘I’m so outside the swamp that they won’t even let me use the music’ actually works for him, in a way,” she said.
The endorsement of musicians can also sway voters. Fans of musician Kid Rock will note that he performed at the 2024 Republican National Convention, and Swifties are aware that pop artist Taylor Swift endorsed Harris just after the Sept. 10 presidential debate.
Kasper said that the ease of using repurposed music likely means it will be the way forward for future campaigns.
“Now it’s so much easier to cue up individual songs. Before that technology was really there, it was usually the case that if you had to play music live anyway and get at least someone to do it, or if you’re going way back in the 19th century and you’re spreading song books to spread the word about a candidate, it would’ve been a very different set of circumstances and it would’ve made sense to take existing music that people knew well and was already in the public domain and just rewrite the lyrics to say something specific about the candidate. Now that’s just an extra level of work.”
Melodic beginnings
Campaign music in the U.S. has gone through several eras, adapting to social and technological changes — and it started with our very first president.
George Washington was honored with the song “God Save Great Washington,” which was penned three years before he was inaugurated and was used to rally new Americans behind their first leader. In a theme that would continue for a good century, “God Save Great Washington” was a familiar tune — “God Save The King” — dressed up with new lyrics. The song was more of a patriotic rallying cry for the first executive of the new Republic, as he faced no real opposition.
The first instance of battling campaigns using music was the election of 1800, with John Adams’ campaign releasing “Adams and Liberty” and the victorious Thomas Jeffeson publishing “Jefferson and Liberty” after the election but before his inauguration.
“There’s a long history of campaigns using some kind of music with the title ‘Freedom’ or ‘Liberty’ or something along those lines,” Kasper said.
Abraham Lincoln would use a similarly titled song for his successful 1860 bid.
In 1828, during the somewhat ugly competition between incumbent John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, Adams used a song called “Little Know Ye Who’s Coming,” which postulated that if Adams lost, a Pandora’s box of disasters — including war, famine and Satan himself — would befall the nation.
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This fearmongering was unsuccessful; Adams was trounced by Jackson in the general election.
Popular vote, popular songs
One of Kasper’s favorite way-back examples is the song “Tippecanoe and Tyler Too.” It was written for the 1840 campaign of William Henry Harrison, who earned the “Tippecanoe” nickname after a battle in the Indiana Territory while he served as its governor in 1811.
“It becomes so important because it’s right at this time when property qualifications are being removed from voting, so you have a large increase in the number of eligible voters and a significant percentage of them have a lower level of literacy. So being able to reach the public through song becomes so important by 1840,” Kasper said.
Harrison’s campaign worked to meet those voters where they were in a number of ways. He made national campaign stops with huge crowds. These stops also featured a large metal ball printed with slogans that rolled from town to town (the genesis of the idiom “keep the ball rolling”).
When it came to music, “Tippecanoe and Tyler Too” was popular in songbooks that were printed and handed out to supporters.
“People could play these at rallies or even at gatherings at home. All they’d need is a piano and someone who could play the sheet music,” Kasper said.
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For the rest of the century — and into the start of the next — campaign songs would continue to have a few things in common. One, they would normally be set to the tune of popular songs at the time: “Tippecanoe” itself was set to “Three Litle Pigs,” and Harrison’s opponent, Martin van Buren, also had a song set to the tune of “Rockabye Baby” where he called Harrison a drunk and fake. There was also a tradition of songs that heralded the gallantry and bravery of their candidate, especially since so many leaders at the time were war heroes.
The 1932 campaign of Franklin Delano Roosevelt started a trend that remains the norm: using existing popular music to bolster enthusiasm.
FDR’s team, after much debate, chose “Happy Days are Here Again” as their campaign anthem and message. In the midst of the Great Depression, the song — which was written for the musical film “Chasing Rainbows” — was quite popular. This message was also carried by a growing medium: the radio. Linking a song that could be played far and wide to an audience instead of just sung in person made the choice even more effective.
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Technology helps campaigns sing a new tune
By 1952, radio had given way to TV and one of the most famously successful campaign ads in American history. The “Ike for President” ad features a catchy song and patriotic cartoon images created by volunteers from Disney.
That campaign also featured the song “I Like Ike,” a tune written by Irving Berlin for a musical with slightly changed lyrics.
“It’s really kind of ushering in this ‘Mad Men’-era jingle trying to sell anything and it’s being used in a campaign. It’s toward the end of this era when you have a lot of music with lyrics written specific to the campaign. And the fact that they were trying to marry it with a cartoon — they could have a visual to go along with it — is something quite innovative,” Kasper said.
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John F. Kennedy’s campaign would bring all of these successful historical concepts together — jingle-like ads, celebrity-sung songs, changed lyrics to popular tunes and the masterful use of television — to craft its media in 1960. His catchy ad, simply called “Kennedy!” is legendary. There was also the song “High Hopes” — first appearing in the 1959 film “A Hole In The Head” and winner of Best Original Song at the Academy Awards — that Frank Sinatra sang with some lyrical changes to make it specific to the candidate.
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In the 1976 election, Jimmy Carter brought a more youthful tone to musical campaigning, quoting Bob Dylan in campaign speeches and partnering with artists including the Allman Brothers and Willie Nelson for fundraising and to energize younger voters.
The United States entered its current campaign music era in the 1980s when Ronald Reagan used “canned” music at his events. Simply playing pre-existing recordings of songs including “God Bless the U.S.A.” by Lee Greenwood became a staple of his public rallies, and that tradition continues in today’s election cycle.
It’s also important to note that the internet — and especially YouTube, which came online in 2005 — plays a big role in current campaigns’ ability to spread their message through song. The most famous example is rapper Will.i.am’s song “Yes We Can,” with a star-studded music video that was uploaded to YouTube supporting Barack Obama’s 2008 run.
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Choosing or creating the perfect songs can work to great effect for a campaign like Obama’s, and not just to increase the enthusiasm of a candidate’s voter base.
“Enthusiasm, sure, but just the emotional attachment. When those songs resonate with supporters and especially volunteers, there’s an energy that you create, a positive feeling that you then associate with the candidate,” Sweet-Cushman said. “Volunteering for political campaigns can be hard work — frequently you never even meet the candidate from a presidential campaign — and the gratification is in the good energy and satisfaction you get from contributing to something bigger than yourself. To attach feel-good music to that only expands that feeling.”

Alexis Papalia is a TribLive staff writer. She can be reached at [email protected].

Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library hosts Friends of the Library Book and Media Sale

TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) – The Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library invited everyone to come out for a day of browsing books, music, movies and more.The Friends of the Library Book and Media Sale was hosted Saturday, Oct. 19. “The book sale is just our opportunity as friends to make sure that we are putting back in to all of these great opportunities that are taking place at the library,” said Marty Hillard, board member of Friends of the Library. “It’s another point of accessibility for people in the community to be able to get the things that they want and need at affordable rates, and it’s something that I take advantage of as well.”This quarterly sale offered all types of different media, including CDs, DVDs and of course books.Everything for sale was donated to the library by people right here in the community. Prices are kept low to ensure class is not a barrier to accessibility.The friends of the library put on the event, with proceeds going directly to fund the future endeavors of the T&SCPL.The book sale will continue through Sunday, Oct. 20 from 12-3 p.m. with bag day. There you can fill a bag with whatever you can for just ten bucks, plus prices will drop even lower.Copyright 2024 WIBW. All rights reserved.

Want to survive a plane crash? Here’s where you should sit as per scientists who intentionally crashed a Boeing

In 2012, an ambitious experiment was conducted to answer a critical question: where should passengers sit on a plane to increase their chances of surviving a crash? A team of scientists, safety experts, and elite pilots collaborated on this unique project, crashing a Boeing 727 into the desert to study survival outcomes based on seat location.

Scientist warns that increased shipping could turn Casco Bay into ‘bioinvasion hotspot’

Thomas Trott, a benthic ecologist from Biddeford, is raising the alarm after finding three invasive species in Casco Bay in the last few years. The species themselves aren’t inherently harmful to the ecosystem, but they’re a sign that as international shipping increases, Casco Bay could become a “bioinvasion hotspot.” Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
A Maine scientist is raising the alarm that Casco Bay could become a “bioinvasion hotspot” after finding three new invasive species in three years.
Thomas Trott, a marine ecologist who lives in Biddeford, in a recent study tied their arrival to an increase in international shipping. And while the three species in question don’t spell ecological disaster, Trott believes they’re a harbinger of damage that could befall the bay if more ships come to Portland and there aren’t better safeguards in place.
A closeup of S. prolifica, an invasive species found in Casco Bay that encrusts mussels and barnacles. Courtesy of Thomas Trott
One of the so-called “invaders,” called the ribbed bryozoan, forms button-sized colonies on blades of eelgrass. Another, S. prolifica, encrusts mussel shells and barnacles. The third is a type of beach flea.
Trott, who teaches at Suffolk University, traced all three back to the North Sea, between Great Britain and the rest of Europe (where the organisms, originally from Japan, are also invasive). He looked at international shipping routes and found that the Icelandic shipping company Eimskip, which visits Portland once per week, has ports in the North Sea. The ribbed bryozoan has also been spotted in Nova Scotia, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Newfoundland, Norway, Sweden and the U.K., all locations where Eimskip has ports.
“This spike (in invasive species) matched a rise in commercial shipping from the Northeast Atlantic to Portland, Maine, suggesting this seaport is shifting towards becoming a bioinvasion hotspot,” Trott wrote in a paper published this summer in the Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.
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Of the three, the ribbed bryozoan that colonizes on eelgrass blades is the only one that could pose a threat. The discovery in Casco Bay is so new that it’s not yet clear what the long-term impacts could be, but Trott isn’t optimistic.
Eelgrass is a critical part of the marine ecosystem – it provides habitat and food for species all along the food chain, including juvenile lobsters. Its underwater meadows help keep the bay healthy by absorbing nutrients, stabilizing the ocean floor and reducing erosion. The plant is also valued for capturing carbon, which is important for slowing global warming.
An invasive species known as the ribbed bryozoan forms button-sized colonies on eelgrass blades. Eelgrass plays an important role in the ocean, including providing shelter for young lobsters. Of the three invasive species found in Casco Bay in recent years, this one threatens to cause the most harm. Courtesy of Thomas Trott
“When those plants get covered by organisms, it reduces the ability of the plant to photosynthesize, and so it produces less sugar as a result of that,” he said. “For anything that’s feeding on eelgrass … it won’t have the same value as something that isn’t covered with stuff growing on it.”
Casco Bay’s eelgrass meadows are already vulnerable. The impact of warming waters, algae blooms and invasive green crabs cleaved their numbers by more than 50% between 2018 and 2022.

Trott wasn’t aware of ways the other two species could cause harm. In other areas where they’ve lived for a longer time, like the North Sea, there haven’t been any noticeable changes. But in his paper, Trott warned against dismissing the organisms.
An enlarged view of an invasive beach flea researcher Thomas Trott found near Mackworth Island and has been linked to increased ship traffic in Portland. Courtesy of Thomas Trott
“Indifference risks playing ecological roulette in a time of unprecedented unpredictability,” he wrote. “The detection of three invasives in the course of three years in Casco Bay, each of them new to the Northwest Atlantic, gives a strong signal of more introductions to come.”Advertisement
Trott emphasized that the introduction of the three species is a result of increased traffic on the ocean, rather than a changing climate. However, climate change can still have untold impacts on the invasive species.
Just look at green crabs, which Jeremy Miller, a researcher at the Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve, said are the invasive species poster child. Green crabs were brought over as stowaways on ships over 100 years ago, but they’ve only started to wreak havoc in the last 15 or so years, decimating the state’s softshell clam fishery.
“Those really cold, hard winters that we used to get in the Gulf of Maine would freeze the marshes through and kill off 70-80% of these invasive species,” Miller said. “(But) now their numbers are through the roof because the Gulf of Maine isn’t as cold as it used to be.”
Jeremy Miller, a coastal ecologist and state coordinator for the Marine Invader Monitoring and Information Collaborative, packs up his gear after searching for invasive species in a tide pool on Willard Beach in South Portland. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
It’s hard to know how an invasive species will react in a new environment, and it’s even harder to predict when that environment is also changing.

“It’s just a matter of time until one of the species is another green crab or another something that’s just going to hammer one of our keystone species like lobster,” Miller said.
MORE SHIPPING, MORE STOWAWAYSAdvertisement
Shipping is responsible for 60% to 90% of marine “bio-invasions,” or introductions of invasive species.
In some cases, the organisms are transported through ballast water, which is water a ship takes on to stabilize at sea, then discharges closer to its destination to take on cargo. In others, they cling to the hull of the ship and accumulate in a process known as biofouling.
The container ship Largarfoss from Eimskip, an Icelandic shipping company, is docked at the International Marine Terminal in Portland in 2021. Eimskip ships stop in Portland once a week. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
Federal laws and an international agreement have been passed to regulate ballast water, but biofouling remains largely unaddressed. There are new technologies being used to curb the buildup of these creatures on boats and some countries like Australia and New Zealand have stringent regulations, but they’ve not been universally adopted.
Researchers at McGill University in Montreal estimate that the growing international shipping network could yield a three- to 20-fold increase in global marine invasion risk by 2050. The 2019 study suggests that maritime trade will outweigh climate change as a driver of invasion.
Gylfi Sigfússon, president and CEO of Eimskip USA, said in an email that all of the company’s ships that call on Portland are equipped with ballast water treatment systems that clean the water to meet strict international standards to minimize the risk. He did not answer questions about biofouling or whether it’s something the company has considered.
The new research comes amid rapid growth for the city’s International Marine Terminal and Eimskip. Last year was record-breaking for the terminal, with roughly 44,000 20-foot-equivalent shipping containers crossing the dock.Advertisement
Over the last decade, Eimskip has worked to grow trade by steadily increasing the number and size of vessels that operate on its Transatlantic Green Line Service.

Officials said last year marked a return to normal, following rapid growth from a pandemic-driven shipping boom. This year has so far been less auspicious, with a 23% year-to-date decline, according to data from the Maine Port Authority. Eimskip attributed the decrease to industry-wide challenges.
Chelsea Pettengill, the port authority’s interim executive director, acknowledged the decline but said she expects that the opening of a new, massive cold-storage facility early next year will be a boon for the region.

Eimskip’s transatlantic route has been good for Maine in many ways – it’s helped the state avoid problems like shipping delays and major supply chain disruptions that have plagued areas with larger ports, for instance.
And transporting goods around the world on boats is still more environmentally friendly than other options, like planes that emit over 55 times more carbon dioxide per ton of cargo every kilometer they travel, according to the Climate Action Accelerator.
Trott’s not suggesting Maine needs to cut back on shipping. There’s a delicate balance between the benefit of revenue generated from shipping against the potential revenue loss from bringing something bad to the port.Advertisement
“But it’s still a chance, (while) the income from shipping is not a chance,” he said. “It’s actually happening.”
‘THE WRITING ON THE WALL’
Miller, at the Wells Reserve, leads the Marine Invader Monitoring and Information Collaborative in Maine. Also called MIMIC, the collaborative is a network of trained volunteers, scientists, and state and federal workers who monitor marine invasive species along the Gulf of Maine. Volunteers monitor sites in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine. The Wells Reserve, which is partly funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, coordinates Maine’s MIMIC activities.
Miller has been monitoring invasive species in Casco Bay for 15 years and has had a front-row seat as the number and range of invasive species has increased.
On an early October afternoon, the last of MIMIC’s monthly checks of the year, Miller lay on his stomach, his head dangling over the side of a floating dock in South Portland. He reached into the water and plucked out a club tunicate, a small, bulbous organism also known as a “sea squirt” for the jet of water it shoots out when squeezed.
Jeremy Miller, a coastal ecologist and state coordinator for Marine Invader Monitoring and Information Collaborative, studies a club tunicate – an invasive species he found attached to a dock float owned by Southern Maine Community College. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
Tunicates are the most commonly observed invasive species in Casco Bay, he said, pointing to another variety on top of the sea squirt called colonial tunicates – “an invasive covered with an invasive.”Advertisement
Colonial tunicates are fouling organisms, so they grow on whatever they can. They’re prolific, smothering and outcompeting native species. And they’re hard to get rid of. When chopped up, say by a pressure washer, each piece can form a new colony.
Miller hauled a plastic cage off the side of the dock, covered in all manner of vegetation and organisms including tunicates and Japanese skeleton shrimp. The cage was equipped with small plates of different materials to test what surfaces the organisms like best. He estimated the cage weighed about 45 pounds – 43 of which were invasive species.
“The amount of biomass that they’re putting onto things is pretty extreme,” he said.
Jeremy Miller, a coastal ecologist and state coordinator for the Marine Invader Monitoring and Information Collaborative, studies a PVC frame that has been fouled with several invasive species on a dock float owned by Southern Maine Community College. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
When he started in 2008, a cage like that would have very little on it by October. But the warming waters made the problem “explode” and now it’s not uncommon to find species as late as December.
“Ten years ago, people really weren’t that interested in that kind of stuff, but as scientists, we saw the writing on the wall,” Miller said.
As the problem has intensified, with invasive species now creating economic challenges for aquaculture operations and wild fisheries, people have started to pay more attention.Advertisement
“This is becoming a huge problem in Maine because this has started to hit people’s back pockets,” Miller said. “People don’t start caring until we start talking about lobster or aquaculture, people’s money, (but) there is very much an intrinsic value … because we want to understand how our natural communities are changing.”
‘WE NEED MORE CANARIES’ 
Trott and Miller bemoaned the lack of state and regional funding for invasive species management.
The MIMIC program gets some funding from the Casco Bay Estuary Partnership, a federally funded agency that helps to fund research in and around the bay. The director has been giving the Wells Reserve $5,000 each year for MIMIC, which has allowed Miller to expand the monitoring program up the coast.
But beyond that, much of the research funding is scraped together through grants or is self-funded.
Jeremy Miller, a coastal ecologist and state coordinator for the Marine Invader Monitoring and Information Collaborative, takes notes as volunteer data collectors Alison Skoczenski, left, Kathleen Egan and Jamien Jacobs inventory the invasive species they discovered in a tide pool on Willard Beach in South Portland. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife has a comparatively robust invasive and non-native species monitoring program for inland bodies of water. The Maine Department of Environmental Protection and the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry monitor for terrestrial and aquatic plant species.Advertisement
The Department of Marine Resources does not have a person dedicated to monitoring or controlling invasive species in the ocean. The department instead monitors invasives by participating in and conducting an urchin dive survey, the Maine/New Hampshire Trawl Survey and the scallop survey, according to a spokesperson.
Dakota Stankowski, aquatic invasive species coordinator for IFW, focuses her efforts on education, stressing the importance of the “clean, drain, dry” protocol for boaters when taking their vessels out of the water and before putting them back in. Like in the ocean, boating is one of the major vectors for invasive aquatic organisms in the state’s inland bodies of water.

Zebra mussels, for example, are microscopic in their larval stage, so even a small puddle left in a boat could be enough to bring a few to a new lake or river. Once a species is in the water, it is significantly harder – sometimes impossible – to remove.
But the in ocean, container ships like Eimskip’s stay in the water, so something like “clean, drain, dry” doesn’t apply, Stankowski said.
Meanwhile, Trott noted, that Canada has extensive tracking and ocean monitoring programs with departments and funding dedicated to the issue. Canada still has work to do to improve regulations, but the difference, he said, is like night and day. “I’ve never been able to wrap my head around it,” Trott said.
Thomas Trott, a benthic ecologist from Biddeford, says more funding is needed to effectively manage invasive species in Maine. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
The MIMIC survey and the Rapid Assessment Survey – another invasive species monitoring program by the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management – have helped identify numerous new species in the Gulf of Maine over the years.Advertisement
However, the MIMIC survey does not have the resources to do a benthic (samples taken from the ocean bottom) or e-DNA survey that would more effectively detect the animals. Miller said the crew monitors for 16 species of invasives but that there are easily another 20-plus that are present, but too hard to find or identify. A 2008 report identified 33 invasive species in Casco Bay, but Miller estimated there are likely now more than 40.
“When we start looking closely, we seem to find new invaders almost annually,” he said.
Trott stressed the importance of early detection in controlling the spread of invasive species and said if people see something unusual, they should report it or do their research, rather than just assuming someone else has already seen it.
People often think of invasive species as the canary in the coal mine, he said, but that’s not the case. “The canary in the coal mine is saying ‘Hey, there’s some poisonous gas in here,’ so when these (invasive species) show up, it’s the person that discovers them that is actually the canary,” he said. “We need more canaries.”

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