Friday, October 25, 2013

American University to study Pennsylvania performing arts organizations

American University to study Pennsylvania performing arts organizations


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

24-Oct-2013



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Contact: Angie Antonopoulos
angieanto@american.edu
202-885-5950
American University






Across the country, arts organizations are besieged. The Minnesota Orchestra has been embroiled in a labor dispute and lockout. New York City Opera tried a last-ditch fundraising effort before filing for bankruptcy earlier this month. Changing lifestyles, economic pressures and technological change have made it more challenging for performing arts organizations such as orchestras to stay ahead.


To help address the situation, the William Penn Foundation recently awarded American University's Arts Management Program a three-year, $350,000 research grant to study the challenges facing performing arts institutions in Pennsylvania. AU, the William Penn Foundation, and AEA Consulting will partner to examine three leading Philadelphia arts organizations: the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, Opera Philadelphia, and the Pennsylvania Ballet.


"All of the pieces that were part of the original health and success of the industry are now shifting," said Andrew Taylor, assistant professor of arts management at American University and principle investigator for the project. "Our goal is to observe and learn how these organizations try to cope."


In a sluggish economy, traditional funding sources are often scarce.


"Individual giving is still pretty good," Taylor said. "Although after the market crash in 2008, a lot of people just held their cash, for good reason. Corporate giving has dropped like a rock."


A Changing Landscape

The post-World War II economic boom in the United States greatly enhanced the performing arts. From the 1950s to the early 1990s, demographic growth and economic prosperity fostered a healthy arts community, Taylor says. And arts scenes flourished beyond established creative hubs such as New York City and Los Angeles. Now, new forms of entertainment are vying for the public's attention within a more fractured time frame.


Performing arts organizations frequently utilize large, professional infrastructures, built around strong legacy values. So adapting in a shifting environment is not easy, Taylor said. Increased responsibility from board members may help these organizations in the long run, he predicts.


While studying these Philadelphia-based groups, AU and its partners could discover valuable lessons in best practices for other institutions as well.


Making This Wonderful Thing Happen

Taylor is the previous president of the Association of Arts Administration Educators, and is a consulting editor for The Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society. He also writes his own blog on the business of arts and culture.


"This is sort of the physics of music. How do you bend reality to make this strange and wonderful thing happen?" he asks.


Taylor will work closely with AEA Consulting founder Adrian Ellis, former executive director of Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York.


The research grant comes at a noteworthy time. In 2014, American University's Arts Management Program will celebrate its 40th anniversary. Sherburne Laughlin, director of the Arts Management Program, says this is the largest grant the program has received in recent memory. "This grant is important to the Arts Management Program because it will deepen and enrich our understanding of how durable change occurs," she says.


###


American University is a leader in global education, enrolling a diverse student body from throughout the United States and nearly 140 countries. Located in Washington, D.C., the university provides opportunities for academic excellence, public service, and internships in the nation's capital and around the world.




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American University to study Pennsylvania performing arts organizations


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

24-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail

]


Share Share

Contact: Angie Antonopoulos
angieanto@american.edu
202-885-5950
American University






Across the country, arts organizations are besieged. The Minnesota Orchestra has been embroiled in a labor dispute and lockout. New York City Opera tried a last-ditch fundraising effort before filing for bankruptcy earlier this month. Changing lifestyles, economic pressures and technological change have made it more challenging for performing arts organizations such as orchestras to stay ahead.


To help address the situation, the William Penn Foundation recently awarded American University's Arts Management Program a three-year, $350,000 research grant to study the challenges facing performing arts institutions in Pennsylvania. AU, the William Penn Foundation, and AEA Consulting will partner to examine three leading Philadelphia arts organizations: the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, Opera Philadelphia, and the Pennsylvania Ballet.


"All of the pieces that were part of the original health and success of the industry are now shifting," said Andrew Taylor, assistant professor of arts management at American University and principle investigator for the project. "Our goal is to observe and learn how these organizations try to cope."


In a sluggish economy, traditional funding sources are often scarce.


"Individual giving is still pretty good," Taylor said. "Although after the market crash in 2008, a lot of people just held their cash, for good reason. Corporate giving has dropped like a rock."


A Changing Landscape

The post-World War II economic boom in the United States greatly enhanced the performing arts. From the 1950s to the early 1990s, demographic growth and economic prosperity fostered a healthy arts community, Taylor says. And arts scenes flourished beyond established creative hubs such as New York City and Los Angeles. Now, new forms of entertainment are vying for the public's attention within a more fractured time frame.


Performing arts organizations frequently utilize large, professional infrastructures, built around strong legacy values. So adapting in a shifting environment is not easy, Taylor said. Increased responsibility from board members may help these organizations in the long run, he predicts.


While studying these Philadelphia-based groups, AU and its partners could discover valuable lessons in best practices for other institutions as well.


Making This Wonderful Thing Happen

Taylor is the previous president of the Association of Arts Administration Educators, and is a consulting editor for The Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society. He also writes his own blog on the business of arts and culture.


"This is sort of the physics of music. How do you bend reality to make this strange and wonderful thing happen?" he asks.


Taylor will work closely with AEA Consulting founder Adrian Ellis, former executive director of Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York.


The research grant comes at a noteworthy time. In 2014, American University's Arts Management Program will celebrate its 40th anniversary. Sherburne Laughlin, director of the Arts Management Program, says this is the largest grant the program has received in recent memory. "This grant is important to the Arts Management Program because it will deepen and enrich our understanding of how durable change occurs," she says.


###


American University is a leader in global education, enrolling a diverse student body from throughout the United States and nearly 140 countries. Located in Washington, D.C., the university provides opportunities for academic excellence, public service, and internships in the nation's capital and around the world.




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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/au-aut102413.php
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HIV drugs may get new role in fighting cancer


By Ben Hirschler


(Reuters) - A type of HIV medicine that stops the AIDS virus from entering immune system cells could in future be put to work against cancer in new combination therapies being developed by drug companies.


Interest in using so-called CCR5 inhibitors to fight tumors was fuelled last year when U.S. researchers, testing the drugs on mice, reported a marked reduction in aggressive breast cancer cells spreading to the animals' lungs.


Researchers from the Thomas Jefferson University Kimmel Cancer Center described the results as "dramatic" after they were published in the Journal of Cancer Research.


Now industry analysts at Citi believe Merck & Co Inc is set to take things to the next stage by testing its CCR5 drug vicriviroc in cancer patients. The product was abandoned as a treatment for HIV in 2010 following an unsuccessful study.


Pfizer Inc and Bristol-Myers Squibb - which also have similar drugs in their portfolios - could follow suit, Citi said in a note on Friday.


Asked to comment on the suggestion that it would start testing vicriviroc in patients in 2014 as part of a combination therapy for cancer, a spokesman for Merck said: "We have not disclosed any such plans."


Citi said it expected vicriviroc to re-enter clinical testing in combination with cancer immunotherapy as Merck explores its potential across multiple tumor types, including melanoma, colorectal, breast, prostate and liver cancer.


Immunotherapy, which harnesses the body's immune system to fight cancer, is a hot new area for cancer research, with some experts predicting the approach will in future form the backbone of many cancer treatments.


However, drug combinations are expected to be critical to its success as oncologists will need to block cancer cells on several fronts at once.


One option is to combine two immunotherapies, while another approach, also being pursued by other companies like Roche Holding AG and AstraZeneca Plc, is to combine immunotherapy medicines with different drug types.


CCR5 inhibitors are one such option, given the encouraging signals from pre-clinical research. As these drugs have already been studied in HIV, their development could be relatively rapid.


Pfizer could also start clinical trials in cancer with its approved CCR5 drug Selzentry, which is currently marketed for HIV via the ViiV Healthcare alliance with GlaxoSmithKline Plc and Shionogi & Co Ltd.


Bristol, meanwhile, has a dual CCR2/5 inhibitor in mid-stage Phase II development, which is being tested for diabetes and kidney disease.


(Editing by Patrick Lannin)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hiv-drugs-may-role-fighting-cancer-163238053--finance.html
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Microsoft repackages websites as Windows Phone apps in bid to lure developers

What do you do when your conventional strategies for attracting mobile app developers haven't always been successful? If you're Microsoft, you build web apps. The company tells ZDNet that it has been repackaging dozens of popular websites as Windows Phone apps in an attempt to get the site owners to ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/CCnwEL5m91k/
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AT&T won't match T-Mobile's free data on the iPad Air, at least for now


October 24, 2013




By Martyn Williams | IDG News Service




AT&T won't be matching T-Mobile's offer of free wireless data for the iPad Air when the device debuts at the company's stores across the U.S. next month.


AT&T, the country's second-largest cellular carrier, said it will offer a $100 discount to customers who sign a two-year contract for tablet data service.


[ Understand how to both manage and benefit from the consumerization of IT with InfoWorld's "Consumerization Digital Spotlight" PDF special report. | Subscribe to InfoWorld's Consumerization of IT newsletter today. ]


For customers who don't want to sign a contract, AT&T will offer recently announced plans costing between $5 for 250MB of data for one day and $50 for 5GB for one month. Those customers won't get the $100 discount.


Subscribers will also be able to add the iPad Air to an existing data plan for an additional $10 per month.


On Wednesday, T-Mobile said it will give tablet owners 200MB of data per month for no cost. Once that's used up, customers will have the option of paying $5 for 500MB of data for one day or $10 for 1GB of data for a week.


T-Mobile, which is the fourth-largest of the country's four major carriers, is aggressively courting customers with cheaper pricing plans. It recently said customers heading overseas would get unlimited 2G data at no additional cost.


A spokesman for AT&T declined to comment on T-Mobile's announcement.


Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address is martyn_williams@idg.com



Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/att-wont-match-t-mobiles-free-data-the-ipad-air-least-now-229448
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A Tale Of Two HealthCare.gov Users




Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.



 



Kimberly Cartier and Chelsea Altman have had two very different experiences trying to use the new health care exchange website. David Greene explains what happened.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=240685250&ft=1&f=3
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2 shot at Nat'l Guard armory; gunman in custody

(AP) — A member of the National Guard opened fire at an armory outside a U.S. Navy base in Tennessee, wounding two soldiers before being subdued and disarmed by others soldiers, officials said Thursday.

Millington Police Chief Rita Stanback said the shooter was apprehended Thursday by other National Guard members, and that he did not have the small handgun used in the shooting in his possession by the time officers arrived. Stanback said two National Guard members were shot, one in the foot and one in the leg.

"I'm sure there could have been more injury if they hadn't taken him into custody," Stanback said.

The two people shot were taken to a hospital. Stanback said at a news conference that their conditions were not immediately known, though the Navy said on its official Twitter account that neither had life-threatening injuries.

The shooter was a recruiter who had been relieved of duty, said a law enforcement official briefed on the developments. The official was not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Stanback said the shooting happened inside an armory building just outside Naval Support Activity Mid-South. There are more than 7,500 military, civilian and contract personnel working on the base, according to the facility's official website. The facility is home to human resources operations and serves as headquarters to the Navy Personnel Command, Navy Recruiting Command, the Navy Manpower Analysis Center and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Finance Center.

The Navy said the base was briefly placed on lockdown as a precaution, though the lockdown was lifted in the afternoon.

On Thursday afternoon, yellow crime scene tape remained around the front of the building where the shooting happened. Law enforcement had blocked off streets with access to the armory, which is across the street from the army base.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-24-US-Navy-Base-Shooting/id-eb3808b1f3a1486bb54bf99d20f2dc4f
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Vector 17: Brian Klug on desktop-class mobile chipsets

Brian Klug of AnandTech talks to Rene about Apple's iPad & Mac event, the beefiness of the A7 Cyclone CPU, Google's Nexus tablets, and desktop power in tiny packages.

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