Thursday, February 21, 2013

NFL Draft Combine: 7 Under-the-Radar Players for New York Jets Fans to Watch

Spencer Ware has a lot more name recognition than many others in this slideshow, but as far as the Jets' interests are concerned, he is not somebody who has been linked to the team much at all.

While the Jets need to focus on game-breakers on the offensive side of the ball, they will still be in the market for a tough runner once Shonn Greene is gone.

Ware could be just the candidate.?

The 5'11", 225-pound Ware is going to rank near the bottom of the running backs in his 40 time at the combine, but he has the ability to rank near the top in strength categories.

Ware is no lock to be drafted at all right now, but he will be with someone come August.

While he isn't a true fullback, Ware could be a useful short-yardage runner and a power back to complement a team that lacks such a player.

If the Jets draft a player like Eddie Lacy early, Ware might not fit into the Jets plans. However, if they choose a speed back to add alongside Bilal Powell and Joe McKnight, Ware could fill a role.

The Jets took a chance on Terrance Ganaway at last year's draft, and that didn't work out. Keep a slight interest in Ware during the combine as he could turn up on the Jets radar if they look for a late-round power runner again.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1537526-nfl-draft-combine-7-under-the-radar-players-for-new-york-jets-fans-to-watch

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Bone marrow cells used in bladder regeneration

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

A new approach to bladder regeneration is capitalizing on the potential of two distinct cell populations harvested from a patient's healthy bone marrow, a new study reports.

The Northwestern Medicine? research, which will be published February 18 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by lead author Arun K. Sharma, research assistant professor in urology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and colleagues, is an alternative to contemporary tissue-engineering strategies. The bone marrow cells are being used to recreate the organ's smooth muscle, vasculature, and nerve tissue.

"We are manipulating a person's own disease-free cells for bladder tissue reformation," said Sharma, a member of the Institute for BioNanotechnology in Medicine and the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago Research Center. "We have used the spina bifida patient population as a proof of concept model because those patients typically have bladder dysfunction. However, this regeneration approach could be used for people suffering from a variety of bladder issues where the bone marrow microenvironment is deemed normal."

In end-stage neurogenic bladder disease ? an illness often associated with spinal cord diseases like spina bifida ? the nerves which carry messages between the bladder and the brain do not work properly, causing an inability to pass urine. The most common surgical option, augmentation cystoplasty, involves placing a "patch" derived from an individual's bowel over a part of the diseased organ in order to increase its size. The current "gold standard," the procedure remains problematic because the bowel tissue introduces long-term complications like the development of electrolyte imbalance and bladder cancer.

Because Sharma's procedure does not use bowel tissue, it offers the benefits of augmentation without the association of long-term risks. His technique combines stem and progenitor cells from a patient's bone marrow with a synthetic scaffold created in the lab of Guillermo Ameer, ScD, professor of biomedical engineering at McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science and of surgery at Feinberg. The scaffold takes the place of the traditional patch.

"We decided to use material that has the ability to be tailored to simulate mechanical properties of the bladder," said Sharma, director of pediatric urological regenerative medicine at Lurie Children's. "Using the elastomer created by Dr. Ameer and the bone marrow stem and progenitor cells, I believe that we have developed a technique that can potentially be used in lieu of current bladder augmentation procedures. However, further study is needed."

###

Northwestern University: http://www.northwestern.edu

Thanks to Northwestern University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126870/Bone_marrow_cells_used_in_bladder_regeneration

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Russian asteroid highlights astronomers' challenge: Predicting such space objects

Astronomers have cataloged about 95 percent of the space objects wider than half a mile?? those that could destroy civilization.?But they have found less than 1 percent of the objects 100 feet across or larger, a class that includes the asteroid that?flitted past Earth on Friday.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / February 16, 2013

Members of the Astronomical Association of Sabadell prepare to watch asteroid 2012 DA14 pass near Earth, in Sabadell near Barcelona, Spain February 15, 2013.

Gustau Nacarino/REUTERS

Enlarge

The unexpected appearance and explosion of a small asteroid over Russia's Ural Mountains on Friday highlights the challenges astronomers face as they try to get a better handle on the risk Earth faces from objects whose orbits bring them uncomfortably close to Earth, or even cross Earth's orbit.

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In their hunt to identify such near-Earth objects wider than half a mile across ? potential civilization busters if one were to strike Earth ? astronomers have cataloged about 95 percent of the objects in this size class during the past 15 years.

But they have found less than 1 percent of the objects 100 feet across or larger, a class that includes the asteroid 2012 DA14. This object flitted past Earth Friday afternoon Eastern Standard Time a scant 17,200 miles from Earth ? a record for a known object of its size.

RECOMMENDED:?Are you scientifically literate? Take our quiz

At 150 feet across, 2012 DA14 is comparable in size to the object that exploded over the Tunguska River in Siberia in 1908. The shock wave flattened 820 square miles of forest ? an area about the size of greater Tampa-St. Petersburg.

The asteroid over Russia's Chelyabinsk region Friday was smaller still, estimated to span about 50 feet and weigh about 7,000 metric tons before it exploded into fragments high above the ground. The shock wave shattered windows in three major cities in the region, damaged a zinc factory, and inflicted mostly minor injuries on more than 950 people.

Nobody saw the object coming.

It's enough to make some lawmakers wince. On Friday, Lamar Alexander (R) of Tennessee and chairman of the House Science Space, and Technology Committee, issued a statement regarding the two events which noted that the committee will hold hearings in the near future to explore ways to improve efforts to detect asteroids as well as to deal with any deemed a potential threat to the planet.

Given the size of the Chelyabinsk asteroid, astronomers estimate that an event like this occurs on average every 100 years. Yet smaller objects also can arrive with little or no warning, and explode in a loud, spectacular fashion, even with no damage on the ground. And they hit more frequently.

These surprise visitors are among the near-Earth objects that keep Kalait Ramesh awake at night.

"Historically, we've had relatively low population density. These things tended to happen in areas where nobody sees them or nobody remembers them," says Dr. Ramesh, a professor of mechanical engineering at the Johns Hopkins University whose studies of stress on various materials has led him to include asteroids in the mix of materials.

"But as our population's gone up, it's gotten to the point where these things can have a big impact. My biggest worry is that this will happen in a place where there is significant political instability or two countries on the verge of a war," he says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/qCDLZbUvh9o/Russian-asteroid-highlights-astronomers-challenge-Predicting-such-space-objects

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Privatizing Roads, Bridges, Schools and Energy Grids? Corporatism Pervades SOTU

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Young Alumni Make Their Mark in Political Arena - Posted ... - News

Meagan Bachmayer '08 (second from left) on the floor of the Minnesota House.

Meagan Bachmayer ?08 (second from left) on the floor of the Minnesota House with Susan Allen (right), the first American Indian woman to serve in the Minnesota legislature.

Alumni of Gustavus Adolphus College have a long tradition of involvement in Minnesota politics that dates back to the late 19th?century when 1895 graduate Adolph Olson Eberhart served as governor of the state. Other alumni of Gustavus to serve as Governor of Minnesota include Luther Youngdahl ?19 and Harold LeVander ?32.

More recently, several alumni have had distinguished careers in the state legislature. Mindy Greiling ?70 retired from the legislature in 2012 after serving for 20 years in the state House, where she focused much of her efforts on education and mental health reform. Margaret Anderson Kelliher ?90 served for 12 years (1999-2011) in the state House ? a stint that included four years (2007-2011) as Speaker of the House. In 2010, Anderson Kelliher became the first woman to earn a major-party endorsement for a gubernatorial election in Minnesota. David Hann ?73 was reelected to a fourth term in the Minnesota Senate in November of 2012 and was subsequently selected to serve as the Senate Minority Leader for the Republican Party for the current biennium.

Continuing this Gustavus tradition of service ? one of the College?s five core values ? are more recent alumni who are working their way up the political ladder, determined to become tomorrow?s leaders.

Working to Elect Women

Some students come to Gustavus with a clear career path already in mind, while others are influenced by a class they take or a faculty member they develop a relationship with early on during their four years on the hill. Meagan Bachmayer ?08 says that Associate Professor of Political Science Alisa Rosenthal inspired her to major in political science and set her on her career path.

?I had always been very interested in government, advocacy, and international relations. I took Intro to Political and Legal Thinking my freshman year with Alisa and shortly thereafter declared my major and asked her to me my advisor,? Bachmayer said. ?I appreciated that Alisa asked a lot of us as her students, really encouraged us to think critically, and had a creative teaching style. She also took an interest in her students outside of the classroom and I would often find myself in her office after class just talking about how life was going in general.?

Bachmayer with Anita Hill at Women Winning's Annual Event.

Bachmayer with Anita Hill at Women Winning?s Annual Event.

Bachmayer is currently the Marketing and Development Director at Women Winning, a political action committee that seeks to encourage, promote, and support pro-choice women?s leadership in all political parties and levels of public office.

?At Women Winning, we work to elect more women to all levels of office, from park board to President of the United States, in Minnesota,? Bachmayer said. ?Women make up more than 50 percent of our population, but only 20 percent of the U.S. Senate and 33 percent of our state legislature here in Minnesota. Ensuring that women and other underrepresented groups in our society have the same access to and protection under the law is a core value for me.?

Bachmayer?s path to her current job with Women Winning started with a unique opportunity while she was still a student at Gustavus.

?Attending Gustavus was one of the best things I did for my professional career. I felt very encouraged to explore internships to learn about what it was like to work in the field I was majoring in,? Bachmayer said. ?When I learned that Professor Terry Morrow was running for the Minnesota legislature, I knocked on his door, asked if he needed any help with his campaign, and off I went exploring what a career in politics could be like.?

Morrow?s successful campaign back in 2006 led Bachmayer to other internship opportunities in the congressional office of Tim Walz and at the Minnesota House of Representatives. After earning her degree at Gustavus, Bachmayer took a job as a field organizer in south central Minnesota for two State House candidates? campaigns. Following that election, she worked as a legislative assistant at the Minnesota House of Representatives.

?I had the wonderful opportunity to work for such a great group of legislators during my tenure at the capitol including Terry Morrow, Marsha Swails, Rich Hensen, Will Morgan, and the leadership team of Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher and Majority Leader Tony Sertich,? Bachmayer said. ?I learned so much during the two years that I spent at the capitol, both about the political process and public policy, but also how to be successful as a professional in my field.?

Psychology Major to Politics

Unlike Bachmayer, 2009 graduate Kaleb Rumicho ? a staff assistant for U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar ? did not major in political science at Gustavus. Instead, Rumicho settled on a psychology major with a political science minor.

?I ultimately chose psychology because it is a fascinating science concerned with the study of human mind, behavior, and what dictates it,? Rumicho said. ?It has a broad range of real world applications in everyday life, ranging from stress, health, personal development, and social interaction. Therefore, I believed this would keep my career prospects wide open and would come in handy no matter what I decided to do.?

Kaleb Rumicho '09

Kaleb Rumicho ?09

After graduation, Rumicho spent two years at St. John?s Preparatory School in a residential life position, but also taught a U.S. government and politics course at the school. After a short stint as a policy associate at the think tank Minnesota 2020, Rumicho signed on to help with Senator Klobuchar?s reelection campaign in October 2011. In January of 2012 he was offered a full-time position in the Senator?s Minneapolis office.

In his current position, Rumicho works with constituents on a daily basis by listening to their concerns, taking their suggestions on policy, answering their questions on various issues, and helping them navigate the federal bureaucracy. Rumicho is also involved in some immigration casework.

Like Bachmayer, Rumicho credits his Gustavus education for putting him in a position to create a career path that fits his interests, passions, and goals.

?I immensely enjoyed my four years at Gustavus. I met a lot of amazing people, made many great friends, and learned and benefitted from the rigorous courses offered,? Rumicho said. ?Many of my professors were instrumental in not only teaching me the subject matter, but also in helping me to think outside the box, to be open minded, to think critically, and making me realize that learning does not stop at the end of class.?

?I was very fortunate to have professors Jennifer Ackil and Kate Knutson as my psychology and political science advisors, respectively,? he said. ?They were phenomenal advisors. They helped guide me and provided the necessary support for me to be a successful person. Professor Knutson?s U.S. Government and Politics class was the first time I truly thought about working in politics.?

Mixing Politics and Agriculture

Amber Hanson ?10 was born and raised on a corn and soybean farm in the small town of Grand Meadow, south of Rochester in rural Mower County. She says the people, the quality of academics, and the College?s many storied traditions were the factors that drew her to Gustavus.

?It seems so clich? to say that it just felt right, but it really did,? Hanson said. ?My four years at Gustavus were life changing. I was able to grow academically, not only in the breadth of topics and knowledge, but it also challenged my way of thinking and how I see the world.?

Today, Hanson is using her degrees in political science and communication studies to help shape state and national agricultural policy as the Associate Director of Public Policy for the Minnesota Farm Bureau. She splits time in Minnesota and Washington D.C., follows different legislative and regulatory issues involving agriculture and rural Minnesota, and builds and maintains relationships with government contacts, offices, and agencies, as well as Minnesota farmers.

Amber Hanson '10

Amber Hanson ?10

?Being able to be a voice for farmers in the political arena has been my dream job for as long as I can remember because it mixes two of my biggest passions ? politics and agriculture,? Hanson said. ?Lobbyists tend to get a bad name because of the stereotypes of the profession, however, I find it to be incredibly rewarding. I am able to develop relationships with people from across the spectrum ? from my farmers to members of Congress and their staff. Working on an issue for months and seeing something change for the better is a very rewarding feeling.?

Hanson received a strong introduction to the political process when she completed a summer internship in 2008 in then-Senator Norm Coleman?s St. Paul office. She spent time working with Coleman?s agriculture, energy, housing, and education staff and also assisted with constituent work such as phone calls and letter writing.

?That internship helped me to understand how a congressional office really works, who the key players are, and how things actually get done, which has all been valuable in my time as a lobbyist,? Hanson said. ?This furthered my respect for congressional staff, and really helped me to realize that I like being on the issue side of politics.?

Hanson says that two professors in the political science department at Gustavus were and continue to be important mentors for her today.

?Professor Richard Leitch was my advisor and he was really the first professor to challenge me and make me grow outside of just my academics,? Hanson said. ?He encouraged me to study abroad, which completely changed my life and the attitude which I face our global community. He also discovered my passion for agricultural politics. He has helped me get to where I am because he invested the time in me in order to find and encourage my passions in life.?

Professor Chris Gilbert was Hanson?s senior thesis advisor and is another faculty member who Hanson views as a mentor.

?Even now after graduation I am able to keep in touch with him and develop that relationship that I know I can always go to him for words of wisdom in this very crazy industry,? Hanson said. ?Now that I am in graduate school, I look back at the relationships I was able to develop with my professors at Gustavus and realize that you don?t get that at every school. I am so thankful I was able to find mentors in my professors who take a genuine interest in their students.?

###

Media Contact: Media Relations Manager Matt Thomas
mthomas@gustavus.edu
507-933-7510

Source: http://news.blog.gustavus.edu/2013/02/12/young-alumni-make-their-mark-in-political-arena/

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Building a biochemistry lab on a chip

Feb. 12, 2013 ? Miniaturized laboratory-on-chip systems promise rapid, sensitive, and multiplexed detection of biological samples for medical diagnostics, drug discovery, and high-throughput screening. Using micro-fabrication techniques and incorporating a unique design of transistor-based heating, researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign are further advancing the use of silicon transistor and electronics into chemistry and biology for point-of-care diagnostics.

Cross-section of device with a droplet. The left side shows an unheated droplet with the DNA FRET construct in the double-stranded form. The right side shows a heated droplet where the FRET construct has denatured, resulting in an increase in fluorescence.

Lab-on-a-chip technologies are attractive as they require fewer reagents, have lower detection limits, allow for parallel analyses, and can have a smaller footprint.

"Integration of various laboratory functions onto microchips has been intensely studied for many years," explained Rashid Bashir, an Abel Bliss Professor of electrical and computer engineering and of bioengineering at Illinois. "Further advances of these technologies require the ability to integrate additional elements, such as the miniaturized heating element, and the ability to integrate heating elements in a massively parallel format compatible with silicon technology.

"In this work, we demonstrated that we can heat nanoliter volume droplets, individually and in an array, using VLSI silicon based devices, up to temperatures that make it interesting to do various biochemical reactions within these droplets."

"Our method positions droplets on an array of individual silicon microwave heaters on chip to precisely control the temperature of droplets-in-air, allowing us to perform biochemical reactions, including DNA melting and detection of single base mismatches," said Eric Salm, first author of the paper, "Ultralocalized thermal reactions in subnanoliter droplets-in-air," published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS) on February 12.

According to Salm, approaches to perform localized heating of these individual subnanoliter droplets can allow for new applications that require parallel, time-, and space multiplex reactions on a single integrated circuit. Within miniaturized laboratory-on-chips, static and dynamic droplets of fluids in different immiscible media have been used as individual vessels to perform biochemical reactions and confine the products.

"This technology makes it possible to do cell lysing and nucleic acid amplification reactions within these individual droplets -- the droplets are the reaction vessels or cuvettes that can be individually heated," Salm added.

"We also demonstrate that ssDNA probe molecules can be placed on heaters in solution, dried, and then rehydrated by ssDNA target molecules in droplets for hybridization and detection," said Bashir, who is director of the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory at Illinois. "This platform enables many applications in droplets including hybridization of low copy number DNA molecules, lysing of single cells, interrogation of ligand-receptor interactions, and rapid temperature cycling for amplification of DNA molecules.

"Notably," Bashir added, "our miniaturized heater could also function as dual heater/sensor elements, as these silicon-on-insulator nanowire or nanoribbon structures have been used to detect DNA, proteins, pH, and pyrophosphates.

By using microfabrication techniques and incorporating the unique design of transistor-based heating with individual reaction volumes, 'laboratory-on-a-chip' technologies can be scaled down to 'laboratory-on-a-transistor' technologies as sensor/heater hybrids that could be used for point-of-care diagnostics."

In addition to Salm and Bashir, co-authors of the study included Carlos Duarte Guevara, Piyush Dak, Brian Ross Dorvel, and Bobby Reddy, Jr. at the University of Illinois; and Muhammad Ashraf Alam, Birck Nanotechnology Center and the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Purdue University.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Illinois College of Engineering.

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Journal Reference:

  1. E. Salm, C. D. Guevara, P. Dak, B. R. Dorvel, B. Reddy, M. A. Alam, R. Bashir. Ultralocalized thermal reactions in subnanoliter droplets-in-air. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1219639110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/80wdjpfxh3c/130212132007.htm

Caleb Moore

Monday, February 11, 2013

Stagetecture Radio ? Spruce Up Your Winter Curb Appeal 2.13.13

Entry #2097, February 11, 2012

Winter is the best time to start planning for the spring months when it comes to your outdoor home. Curb appeal is often forgotten in the winter months and if you neglect it now ? your spring yard and landscaping will reflect it!

Join me this Wednesday, February 13, 2013 at 12pm EST on Stagetecture Radio ? ?Your Weekly Home at Stagetecture?.

YWHAStagetecture_Episode 15 2.13.13

February 13, 2013 at 12:00pm- 12:30pm EST

On Stagetecture Radio ? > Listen here: or go to Http://stagetecture.com/episode15

Want to call in and ask me a question? (713) 955-0779

?Sprucing Up Your Winter Curb Appeal ?

Winter time is not the time to forget about your outdoor home. Learn how to spruce up your front entry, yard, and exterior home with winter curb appeal ideas. The more you do now, the less you will have to do this spring!

Want to get these ideas in your home? Go to 111 Simple Tips Ebook: All tips are highlights are for saving time and money are in the book.

Want to see all of the great inspiration for today?s show? Follow my Pinterest board for each episode to lend inspiration you can do at home to complete the look :)

Pinterest ?> See pictures here: or go to Http://stagetecture.com/Pinterest

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Did you miss the show, or want to download on iTunes so you can listen to again? You can look for Stagetecture Radio show every Wednesday after the show and download my episode or any of the other shows.

If you love the show ? please leave a review in iTunes

iTunes ?> Download podcast here: or go to Http://stagetecture.com/itunes

Ronique Gibson - Stagetecture.com | Blog Talk Radio Feed

All ideas are highlights from 111 Simple Tips Ebook ? get your copy here!

Can?t wait to have you join me. See or ?talk with you? then!


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Source: http://stagetecture.com/2013/02/stagetecture-radio-spruce-up-your-winter-curb-appeal-2-13-13/

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

As Northeast digs out, storm brewing in Plains

BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Northeast started digging itself out of a blizzard that dumped up to 40 inches of snow with hurricane force winds, killing at least nine people and leaving about half a million customers without power.

Airports slowly cranked back to life on Sunday, rare travel bans in Connecticut and Massachusetts were lifted, but roads throughout the region remained treacherous, according to state transportation departments.

As the region recovered, another large winter storm building across the Northern Plains was expected to leave a foot of snow and bring high winds from Colorado to central Minnesota into Monday, the National Weather Service said.

South Dakota was expected to be hardest hit, with winds reaching 50 miles per hour, creating white-out conditions. The storm was expected to reach parts of Nebraska, North Dakota, Wyoming and Wisconsin.

Friday and Saturday's mammoth storm stretched from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic and covered several spots in the Northeast with more than 3 feet of snow. Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts took the brunt of the blizzard.

Hamden, Connecticut, had 40 inches and nearby Milford 38 inches, the National Weather Service said.

Amtrak said it planned to run a limited service between New York and Boston on Sunday and a regular Sunday schedule from New York to the state capital in Albany.

However, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority and Connecticut Transit said service would remain suspended Sunday.

Stratford, Connecticut, Mayor John Harkins told WTNH television on Saturday snow had fallen at a rate of 6 inches an hour and even plows were getting stuck.

The storm dropped 31.9 inches of snow on Portland, Maine, breaking a 1979 record, the weather service said. Winds gusted to 83 miles per hour (134 km per hour) at Cuttyhunk, New York, and brought down trees across the region.

The storm contributed to at least five deaths in Connecticut and two each in New York state and Boston, authorities said. A motorist in New Hampshire also died when he went off a road, but authorities said his health may have been a factor in the crash.

The two deaths in Boston were separate incidents of carbon monoxide poisoning in cars, an 11-year-old boy and a man in his early 20s. The boy had climbed into the family car to keep warm while his father cleared snow. The engine was running but the exhaust was blocked, said authorities.

There were also road rescues along the Long Island Expressway from Friday night to Saturday morning, some using snowmobiles. A baby girl was delivered early Saturday by emergency services personnel in Worcester, Massachusetts.

About 5,800 flights were canceled Friday and Saturday, according to Flightaware, a flight tracking service. Boston's Logan International Airport reopened late on Saturday, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.

Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, and Long Island MacArthur Airport were both expected to reopen on Sunday morning. Both were closed on Saturday.

By early Sunday, utility companies were reporting roughly 500,000 customers still without electricity across the nine state region after the wet heavy snow brought down tree branches and power lines. About 277,000 were in Massachusetts.

(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Wisconsin, Scott Malone in Boston, Kevin Gray in Miami, Ellen Wulfhorst in New York, Ian Simpson in Washington, Jason McLure in Maine, Dan Burns in Connecticut, and Dan Lovering and Zach Howard in Massachusetts; Writing by David Bailey; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blizzard-hammers-northeast-nine-dead-700-000-lose-031347041.html

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Monday Launch to Continue 40-Year Earth-Observing Mission

When NASA's Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM) launches on Monday (Feb. 11), it will deliver to orbit the latest and most capable Earth-observing satellite in a four-decade long project to study the surface of our planet.

Examining Earth at a resolution of a quarter of an acre (0.1 hectare), the Landsat satellites have enabled a better understanding of deforestation, glacial retreat, the shrinking Antarctic ice sheet, increasing wildfires and other big changes taking place across the planet.

"All of these changes are occurring at rates unprecedented in human history due to an increasing population," LDCM project scientist Jim Irons, of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said during a press conference Friday (Feb 8).

"We will be able to continue monitoring these changes from the best Landsat satellite ever launched," he added. [Photos: The Next Landsat Earth-Observing Spacecraft]

A forty-year project

When astronauts first left the surface of the Earth in the 1960s, some of their first science objectives involved mapping the planet's surface. But such mapping, linked to human exploration of space, came in starts and stops, failing to provide consistent data.

The Landsat program, a joint effort of NASA and the United States Geological Survey (USGS), changed all that.

Originally called the Earth Resources Technology Satellites Program when it was proposed in 1966, Landsat officially received the green light in 1970 and first reached orbit with Landsat 1 in 1972.

Each new satellite has overlapped with its predecessor, sometimes for years. Landsat 7, launched in 1999, still functions in limited capacity, while Landsat 5 was recently decommissioned after more than 28 years of service.

The LDCM spacecraft ? set to blast off Monday at 1:02 p.m. EST (1802 GMT/10:02 a.m. PST) from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California ? will be the eighth satellite in the program.

It will be renamed Landsat 8 after launch and a series of on-orbit checkouts. The USGS will take over operation of the spacecraft at that point, about three months after liftoff.

Orbiting the Earth every 90 minutes, the Landsat satellites image the entire planet over the course of 16 days. When two work together, changes on the surface are captured every eight days.

Although the technology behind the satellites has improved, the programs manage enough consistency that data from the newest satellite is easily comparable to data from the original.

Each Landsat pixel measures 98 feet (30 meters) on a side, capturing enough detail for scientists to glean a great deal of information about environmental change and surface processes.

In 2009, the possibilities for Landsat data grew significantly when the entire image library was placed on the Internet for anyone to use free of charge. The archived data, which is managed by the USGS, is the longest continuous record of Earth's land surface as seen from space.

"The Landsat data plays a critical role in enabling scientific inquiry," said Mike Wulder of the Canadian Forest Service in Victoria, British Columbia. "Over time, the systematic collection and archiving of imagery since the inception of the Landsat program has enabled sophisticated scientific analysis to be taken." [The Top 10 Landsat Photos Ever]

Endless possibilities

The continuous, detailed Landsat coverage creates a wide range of possible uses.

Key among those is the management of water resources. Although almost three-fourths of the planet is covered with water, only a small fraction is available for human consumption.

"Ensuring the wise use of that scarce resource and maintaining the quality of the water within our water supply is a critical societal goal," said Tom Loveland, USGS Landsat science team manager.

Government officials use Landsat observations to monitor deforestation inside their borders. Forest services can monitor the intrusion of pests such as the mountain pine beetle and determine how they will impact day-to-day operations.

Before Landsat arrived on the scene, the forest service would make a circle on a conventional map to indicate where they thought such an infestation might be, Wulder said. Today, using Landsat data, they can look at contextual clues from the detailed coverage to determine a more precise location.

"The imagery is really allowing them to tackle different problems with a number of different approaches," Wulder said.

Landsat assisted in the identification of the breakup of West Antarctic ice shelves, which change slowly over time. By studying the shear margins, where ice flows connect to ice masses or rocky walls, scientists were able to determine the long-term change happening in Antarctica.

Landsat also helps with the management of wildfires, allowing scientists to map and monitor vegetation and fire trends and better understand the results once a fire has passed. The U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency also uses data from the satellites as part of a flood mitigation program.

"Both of these programs use Landsat data to measure risk, and to help our country as a whole to avoid that risk and to respond to national disasters when they occur," said Kass Green, president of Kass Green & Associates, a private company that relies on Landsat data for its remote sensing and mapping programs.

Opening Landsat to the public means that not all of its applications deal with sustaining human life. Google Earth also makes use of the freely available imagery.

"Whenever you're on Google Earth and you go into a regional level, where you look at a state, do you know what you're looking at?" Green asked. "Landsat data."

Keeping the observations going

Landsat's continuous coverage over more than four decades has been a tremendous boon for the United States and the world, researchers said. The program's 40-year history allows scientists to track not only seasonal changes but also subtle, long-term shifts in vegetation stress and water levels.

With the addition of Landstat 8 to the program, "our record will move from 40 years to 45 to 50 years, or hopefully beyond," Loveland said.

But scientists emphasized that it should not be the last mission.

"What we must all do is look forward," Green said. "We must ensure there is a Landstat program that will ensure that future generations can look back and see where we've been so they can plan where we're going."

Follow SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/monday-launch-continue-40-earth-observing-mission-174030781.html

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

From Obama to Rick Perry, pressure mounts in Boy Scout gay debate

IRVING, Texas (AP) ? The Boy Scouts of America's policy excluding gay members and leaders could be up for a vote as soon as Wednesday, when the organization's national executive board meets behind closed doors under intense pressure from several sides.

BSA announced last week it was considering allowing troops to decide whether to allow gay membership. That news has placed a spotlight on executive board meetings that began Monday in Irving, Texas, where scouting headquarters is located.

BSA spokesman Deron Smith said last week that the board could take a vote Wednesday or decide to discuss the policy, but the organization would issue a statement either way. Otherwise, the board has remained silent, with reporters barred from the hotel where its meetings are taking place.

At nearby BSA headquarters, a handful of Scouts and leaders delivered petitions Monday in support of letting gay members join. The conservative group Texas Values, meanwhile, says it has organized a Wednesday morning prayer vigil urging the Scouts to keep their policy the same.

President Barack Obama, an opponent of the policy, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, an Eagle Scout who supports it, both have weighed in.

"My attitude is that gays and lesbians should have access and opportunity the same way everybody else does in every institution and walk of life," said Obama, who as U.S. president is the honorary president of BSA, in a Sunday interview with CBS.

Perry, the author of the book "On My Honor: Why the American Values of the Boy Scouts Are Worth Fighting For," said in a speech Saturday that "to have popular culture impact 100 years of their standards is inappropriate."

The board faces several choices, none of which is likely to quell controversy. Standing pat would go against the public wishes of two high-profile board members ? Ernst & Young CEO James Turley and AT&T Inc. CEO Randall Stephenson ? who run companies with nondiscrimination policies and have said they would work from within to change the Scouts' policy.

Conservatives have warned of mass defections if Scouting allows gay membership to be determined by troops. Local and regional leaders, as well as the leadership of churches that sponsor troops, would be forced to consider their own policies. And policy opponents who delivered four boxes of signatures to BSA headquarters Monday said they wouldn't be satisfied by only a partial acceptance of gay scouts and leaders.

"We don't want to see Scouting gerrymandered into blue and red districts," said Brad Hankins, campaign director of Scouts for Equality.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boy-scouts-board-meets-amid-talk-policy-gays-080645170.html

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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

What is gay marriage? : Changing Attitude

I never imagined when I was in my teens and 20s and 30s and 40s that one day, parliament would be debating an equal marriage bill and almost certainly voting in favour. Radical reform of the place of LGB&T people in British society didn?t start until 1997 when I was 52.

I had a dream when I was younger, and gay, and working as an architect, and then training for ordination, that I would be the centre of attention as the new curate arriving after the ordination service for the first service in my new parish. The church was grand and beautiful with an amazing organ and the service was to die for. I served my title in St George?s Camberwell where the Waterloo church had been abandoned for two decades and we worshipped in the 1960?s school hall. You can imagine ?!

The dream moved on ? I would be appointed to my first parish and that would be a grand building with beautiful music and liturgy. I was appointed to St Faith?s Wandsworth where the church had been demolished and the congregation met in an 1880?s school hall, half the size of Camberwell. You can imagine that too!

I left parish ministry and later met my life partner and dreamed of celebrating our marriage (or at least having a blessing following our civil partnership) in our parish church. That was not to be, not allowed by the rules and sabotaged anyway by my inability to keep quiet.

Why shouldn?t lesbian and gay couples dream of walking up the aisle together to be married in their parish church by their own priest? The scenario might look a tad different from a heterosexual wedding but the service would express the couple?s deepest dreams and hopes, in a service filled with love and affirmation, possibly with a fabulous organ and hymns in an amazing church building.

Many conservative party members find gay marriage a difficult if not impossible concept including a significant proportion of backbenchers, many party chairpersons and many constituency party members. They tend to represent the old guard. Some gay couples don?t believe in marriage. In this gay people are no different from straight people. I?m told that some straight couples don?t want to marry and prefer instead to simply live together. Some would prefer a civil partnership in the option was open for them.

This morning I was interviewed by BBC Radio Wiltshire together with a Roman Catholic deacon from Salisbury. He said he knew many gay couples who didn?t want to get married. The implication was that gay couples therefore don?t need marriage equality if some don?t desire to be married. I imagine the couples he knows are Catholics and have internalised the Catholic Church teaching on homosexuality and gay relationships. They will believe their sexuality is intrinsically disordered and that same-sex love is a category impossibility in God?s created order ? or perhaps they don?t ? perhaps they are confused.

The deacon was articulate and rehearsed some of the usual arguments against gay marriage. He mentioned complementarity and said that desire for someone of the opposite sex is hard-wired into our human nature. Marriage has an identity which is unique in society, he said. It?s about love and mutual support and being open to procreation. Gay marriage changes the whole meaning of what marriage stands for, he said. The teaching of the gospels is that marriage is restricted to a man and a woman.

The Preface to the Common Worship Marriage Service says this:

Marriage is a gift of God in creation
through which husband and wife may know the grace of God.
It is given that as man and woman grow together in love and trust,
they shall be united with one another in heart, body and mind,
as Christ is united with his bride, the Church.

The gift of marriage brings husband and wife together
in the delight and tenderness of sexual union
and joyful commitment to the end of their lives.
It is given as the foundation of family life
in which children are [born and] nurtured
and in which each member of the family, in good times and in bad,
may find strength, companionship and comfort,
and grow to maturity in love.

Note the brackets around ?born and?. The theological arguments being rehearsed against gay marriage are based on complementarity, the ability to procreate and the requirement of penile penetration to ensure a marriage is consummated and to provide grounds for divorce.

The complementarity argument was challenged long ago by the women?s movement. Bearing children is clearly not essential as the Common Worship service reveals. No-one demands to know whether penis has entered vagina to know whether a marriage has been consummated and divorce is primarily based on the breakdown of relationship, a state of affairs experienced by both same and opposite sex couples.

The description of marriage in Common Worship describes what it is that lesbian and gay Christian couples seek when we ask for the Church of England to open its doors and welcome same-sex marriage.

Changing Attitude sees a big problem looming for the Church. We have been arguing that the minimum change that we expect the House of Bishops to recommend following their reception of the Pilling report in December is acceptance of civil partnerships and authorisation of a blessing in church following a CP.

However, sometime late this year or next, marriage will be open to lesbian and gay couples and we imagine the majority will chose to marry rather than contract a civil partnership. The Church of England is in danger of revising its teaching to accommodate something that very few couples will wish to take advantage of.

I suspect conversations are taking place in the Pilling Review Group, between bishops and amongst Church House staff as to the minimum change the Church can get away with to demonstrate that it welcomes LGB&T people after all.

Unless the Church does revise its teaching and theology of marriage, it is going to find itself in an even worse place at the end of this year. The country will have moved on and the Church of England will still look like a body beset with institutionalised homophobia.

Meanwhile, lesbian and gay Christian couples dream of the day when the Church welcomes us with open arms and we can walk down to aisle to music from a fabulous organ and make vows in the presence of God, our family and friends, feel special and weep tears of joy.

Source: http://changingattitude.org.uk/archives/6929

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Monday, February 4, 2013

NFL says it was ready with backup power system

Players huddle on the field during a Superdome power outage in the second half of the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Ravens, Sunday, Feb. 3, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

Players huddle on the field during a Superdome power outage in the second half of the NFL Super Bowl XLVII football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Ravens, Sunday, Feb. 3, 2013, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

(AP) ? NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says the Superdome had a backup power system that was about to be used during the Super Bowl electrical outage but it wasn't needed because power started coming back at that time.

Goodell says Monday that the backup system was ready, but Entergy New Orleans, which provides power to the stadium, and Superdome operator SMG were able to reboot the original system.

The 34-minute delay in the third quarter forced the league to consider contingency plans if the game between the Baltimore Ravens and San Francisco 49ers couldn't resume. But NFL vice president of business operations Eric Grubman says there was virtually no chance of not being able to continue play Sunday night.

Baltimore led 28-6 when the lights went out, and wound up winning 34-31.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-04-Super%20Bowl-Contingency%20Plans/id-8bd6f68172d84da6b41364374e0e0038

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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Good Reads: Mexico City cleans up, avoiding 'truth,' and a rare visit to North Korea

This week's good reads include Mexico City's bike-sharing and walkways, the gap between information and understanding, outsourcing personal chores, and a young American's insights on the 'hermit kingdom.'

By Whitney Eulich,?Staff writer / January 30, 2013

New metrobus lines in Mexico City have helped to ease traffic congestion.

Bernardo Montoya/Reuters/File

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Mexico City has long had a dark cloud hovering over it ? both literally and figuratively ? when it comes to traffic woes and vehicle emissions. As recently as 2011, residents of Mexico?s vibrant capital city reported ?enduring the most painful commute,? according to a report in National Geographic. ?Based on factors such as roadway traffic, stress levels, and commute times, the city scored worse than 19 cities, including Beijing, China, and Nairobi, Kenya.?

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So it might come as a surprise that this megacity, home to 20 million people and more than 4 million vehicles, was recently selected to receive the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy?s Sustainable Transport Award.

National Geographic describes Mexico City?s progress, noting that over the past two years the city has taken great strides to become more pedestrian-friendly with car-free walkways and plazas, new bus lines, a bike-sharing program, and a system of parking meters.

Sure, traffic still exists and air quality isn?t perfect, but anyone who has been to the bustling metropolis knows the hurdles the city has had to confront and what great progress must have been made to entitle it to an award of this sort.

Avoiding the truth

?In the three or four decades after 1490, the human experience on planet Earth arguably changed more than it had since the Year One,? writes Todd S. Purdum in Vanity Fair. And the life-altering changes that took place ? from international exploration connecting the Eastern and Western Hemispheres for the first time to the creation of movable type ? may have been the most revolutionary years civilization has seen. Until now.

?[W]e know almost everything? today, Mr. Purdum notes. That?s thanks in part to a second round of radical change that started a few short decades ago and continues in full force. Changes such as the ?ricochets? of money and people around the world, and the simplification of information sharing via the Internet. But our newfound knowledge and interconnectivity doesn?t necessarily mean we understand our environment or ?The Truths? that confront us.

Unlike our forefathers ? who may not have had enough information to understand that the ?sweating sickness? (malaria) that suddenly plagued coastal England was linked to the slave trade, or who couldn?t foresee that the printing press might also launch freethinking and religious wars ? we aren?t in the dark. We have overwhelming amounts of information that wash over us daily that we can?t seem to process.

Consider the lasting debate over global warming, despite the volumes of real-time proof.

?Fixed cameras can capture the melting of glaciers through time-lapse photography, but they can?t quell the doubts of climate-change deniers,? Purdum offers as one example.

The chore of no more chores

Have you ever dreamed of coming home from work and having that pile of dirty laundry miraculously washed and folded? Or of having that book that?s been taunting you from your bedside table read in time for your next book club meeting? You, dear reader, are not alone.

?Oh, to be rich and powerful,? Patricia Marx writes in the opening of her New Yorker article ?Outsource yourself: The online way to delegate your chores.? Ms. Marx takes her readers through a humorous journey of ?test driving? the world of online services. There, ?Task Rabbits? (errand runners) and ?virtual personal assistants? can be hired to do everything from writing a brief history of outsourcing in the US for an article (hers) or even to read Proust and come up with insightful musings to impress book club friends (hers again).

There are numerous websites and Internet communities dedicated to outsourced work. But, as you might imagine, Marx?s adventures reveal that after spending time soliciting errand runners for simple tasks and then sifting through bids on these chores, it might just be quicker to do them yourself.

Turn up the heat, North Korea

Sophie Schmidt, daughter of Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt, tagged along in January when her father took part in a nine-person US delegation to North Korea, organized by former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson. Ms. Schmidt, a grad school student, made a number of enlightening observations about the ?hermit kingdom? on her blog, Sophie in North Korea.

In a post titled ?It might not get weirder than this,? Schmidt writes, ?Our trip was a mixture of highly staged encounters, tightly-orchestrated viewings and what seemed like genuine human moments.? She notes under ?Top Level Take-aways? that ?Nothing I?d read or heard beforehand really prepared me for what we saw.? It was also extremely cold and none of the sites they toured ? schools, malls, and government buildings ? were heated, despite frigid temperatures.?

?It is quite extraordinary to have the Honored Guest Experience in such conditions: they?re proudly showing you their latest technology or best library, and you can see your breath. A clue to how much is really in their control.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/ae6dGpTAAxI/Good-Reads-Mexico-City-cleans-up-avoiding-truth-and-a-rare-visit-to-North-Korea

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Friday, February 1, 2013

Senate to clear debt limit increase for Obama

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Senate is poised to permit the government to borrow hundreds of billions of dollars more to meet its obligations, putting off one Washington showdown even as others loom in coming weeks.

The measure would suspend the $16.4 trillion limit on federal borrowing through May 18, allowing an estimated $450 billion in new debt to be added to the federal ledger.

The Republican-controlled House passed the legislation last week. A successful Senate vote would send the measure to President Barack Obama, who is expected to sign it into law immediately.

Without the bill, the government would default on its obligations by as early as mid-February.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senate-clear-debt-limit-increase-obama-081555093--finance.html

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