Research chemists from the Hollings Marine Laboratory  have fond a chemical from an ocean-dwelling sponge that reprograms  anti-resistant bacteria to make them vulnerable to medicines again.  Once-ineffective antibiotics proved lethal for bacteria treated with the  compound, researchers found. The sponge’s chemical defense points to a compound  called ageliferin. Fragments of the ageliferin compound successfully  resensitized bacteria that cause whooping cough, ear infections, septicemia and  food poisoning. The compound also works on Pseudomonas aeruginosa that causes  horrible infections in wounded soldiers and on MSRA, bacteria resistant to  multiple drugs. 
 For newly chartered e3Bank, being “green” or  “sustainable” is not a suite of product offerings or a vertical market within a  company. It is an operating system. “It is part of our DNA,” according to the  Bank’s Chairman Sandy Wiggins. The bank’s name, e3bank, reflects its focus on a  triple bottom line: sustainable enterprise, the planetary environment, and  social equity.  The bank has designed loan approval criteria to reflect all  three dimensions of sustainability and that screen for environmental and social  risk. Finance rates for a loan will be reduced, says Wiggins, as projects reach  higher levels of sustainability. The bank’s employees will all be LEED  certified. The Pennsylvania bank has just received its charter from the FDIC.  
   -  Sustainable Practices provided David Schaller, daschaller at  yahoo.com