Thursday, January 31, 2013

Check out our high school sports coverage from Wednesday

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MORNING JOURNAL/JIM BOBEL Firelands' Destiny Samples, left, looks to put up a shot around Buckeye's Jessica Banas in the third quarter on Wednesday.

MORNING JOURNAL/JIM BOBEL Firelands' Rachel Holowecky steps around Buckeye?s Julia Sekerak to score in the third quarter on Wednesday at Firelands. The Falcons beat the Bucks, 42-31, to clinch the Patriot Athletic Conference Stars Division title.

HENRIETTA TWP. ? It has been a long time coming for Firelands.

Relying on defense and exhibiting patience on offense, the Falcons claimed their first conference championship since 1996-97 with a 42-31 Patriot Athletic Conference Stars Division win over Buckeye.

?This is an awesome feeling,? Firelands senior Rachel Holowecky said. ?Being a season and to win a championship is great. We were a little nervous in the beginning, but once we settled in ? we knew we could do it.?

Firelands (14-5, 13-1) struggled a bit early on against Buckeye?s zone defense, but freshman Keely Hall and junior Casey Morrissette provided enough offense needed to give them a 9-5 lead at the end of the first quarter. Morrissette had five of her team-high 12 points in the quarter, while Hall scored four.

?We were a little frustrated early on,? Morrissette said. ?(But) we knew we had to work together.?

Firelands Falcons clinch Patriot Athletic Conference Stars Division title with win over Buckeye Bucks

Also read:

Elyria Catholic Panthers rout North Ridgeville Rangers in West Shore Conference action

OHSAA Wrestling Team Tournament a resounding dud

Source: http://morningjournal.com/articles/2013/01/31/sports/doc5109f1c3b94c8155697268.txt

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Kelly: Work together to save lives (CNN)

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Dissident Chen urges US: Stand firm on China

FILE - In this Thursday, May 31, 2012 file photo, blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. Nine months after he escaped the purgatory of house arrest in China for the more sedate life of a New York University law student, Guangcheng is receiving a human rights award in Washington on Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

FILE - In this Thursday, May 31, 2012 file photo, blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. Nine months after he escaped the purgatory of house arrest in China for the more sedate life of a New York University law student, Guangcheng is receiving a human rights award in Washington on Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

Actor Richard Gere, far right, stands with Chinese human rights activist Chen Guangcheng, as he reacts after being awarded the 2012 Tom Lantos Human Rights Prize on Capitol Hill in Washington, on Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013. At left is Lantos' widow, Annette Lantos, and Guangcheng's wife, Yuan Weijing. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Actor Richard Gere hugs Chinese human rights activist Chen Guangcheng, after awarding Guangcheng the 2012 Tom Lantos Human Rights Prize on Capitol Hill in Washington, on Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Blind dissident Chen Guangcheng is urging China's people to end to the communist-governed nation's "leadership of thieves" and for Washington not to "give an inch" on human rights in its relations with Beijing.

Chen made the comments as he received an award from a human rights group in a ceremony attended by several U.S. lawmakers on Capitol Hill Tuesday.

The 41-year old lawyer caused a diplomatic crisis last April when he fled house arrest in rural China and sought refuge at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. China subsequently allowed him to come to the U.S. to study law.

Chen urged an end to communist rule that "maintains a monopoly on power and enslaves the people."

Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte said Chen had "bravely stood up in the face of oppression."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-29-US-China-Blind%20Lawyer/id-16e39332af1a47b69aec495697c08bf1

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Saturday, January 5, 2013

Rethinking bacterial persistence

Friday, January 4, 2013

It's often difficult to completely eliminate a bacterial infection with antibiotics; part of the population usually manages to survive. We've known about this phenomenon for quite some time, dating back nearly to the discovery of penicillin. For more than 50 years, scientists have believed that the resistant bacteria were individuals that had stopped growing and dividing.

Up to now, in fact, it hasn't been possible to track the growth of cells before and after their exposure to antibiotics, which makes any analysis of the phenomenon quite imprecise. "Using microfluidics, we can now observe every bacterium individually, instead of having to count a population," says John McKinney, director of EPFL's Microbiology and Microsystems Laboratory (LMIC).

Active survivors

This new tool has revealed quite a few surprises. "We thought that surviving bacteria made up a fixed population that stopped dividing, but instead we found that some of them continued to divide and others died. The persistent population is thus very dynamic, and the cells that constitute it are constantly changing ? even though the total number of cells remains the same. Because they're dividing, the bacteria can mutate and thus develop resistance in the presence of the antibiotic," explains LMIC scientist Neeraj Dhar.

This point is extremely important. "We were able to eliminate a purely genetic explanation of the phenomenon," continues Dhar. In other words, "a population of genetically identical bacteria consists of individuals with widely varying behavior. Some of them can adapt to stressors that they have not previously encountered, thanks to the selection of persistent individuals. This could lead to a revision of the entire theory of adaptation," says McKinney.

Intermittent efficiency

The EPFL scientists were particularly interested in a relative of the tuberculosis bacterium. Their observations enabled them to formally challenge the argument that persistent bacteria are those that have stopped growing and dividing. "We were able to reveal the role of an enzyme whose presence is necessary in order for the antibiotic to work, and show that the bacilli produced this enzyme in a pulsatile and random manner," explains Dhar. "Our measurements showed that bacterial death correlated more closely with the expression of this enzyme than with their growth factor." The research is being published this week in Science magazine.

These conclusions could mark the beginning of a new theory of bacterial resistance, or perhaps even introduce a new view of how such resistance evolves. Further research is being done using other microorganisms, such as tuberculosis and E. colibacteria. The persistence of some cancer cells to treatment could also be studied in a different manner. "It's a new approach for trying to figure out why some infections are so difficult to eliminate. The techniques we've developed for this study are now also being used to develop new antibiotics, in collaboration with pharmaceutical companies," says McKinney, adding that "it is the microengineering expertise at EPFL that has enabled us to create these innovative tools and open up new avenues for investigation."

###

Ecole Polytechnique F?d?rale de Lausanne: http://www.epfl.ch/index.en.html

Thanks to Ecole Polytechnique F?d?rale de Lausanne for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126133/Rethinking_bacterial_persistence_

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Analysis: Obama's ad team used cable TV to outplay Romney (reuters)

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Green Blog: Will Biomimicry Offer a Way Forward, Post-Sandy?

As neighborhoods devastated by Hurricane Sandy begin drafting plans for reconstruction, some progressive architects and urban planners have been pointing out that the emerging science of biomimicry offers a way forward. The notion is that the next generation of waterfront designs could draw inspiration from the intricate ways that plants and animals have adapted to their situations over hundreds of millions of years.

Kapok trees, honeycombs and mangroves are just a few of the naturally occurring features or processes that have informed the designs of buildings from Haiti to South Korea to New York City in recent years.

?Nature is a dynamic entity, and we should be trying to design our buildings, our landscape and our cities to recognize that,? said Thomas Knittel, a biomimicry specialist at the prominent Seattle-based architecture firm HOK.

In Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital, for example, the rainy season and humid climate have informed HOK?s Project Haiti, an orphanage that is to replace one ruined by the 2010 earthquake. Construction is to begin this spring, and the building should be completed later this year.

The highly adaptable Caribbean kapok tree inspired Project Haiti?s functional design. Kapok trees store water internally and shed their leaves under drought conditions to conserve energy. Likewise, Project Haiti responds directly to the weather and maximizes available resources.

?The big difference is this project really needs to live within limits and boundaries, as nature does,? Knittel said. ?People are subject to this by necessity in Haiti.?

In his design, Mr. Knittel overcame the scarcity of local wood by taking advantage of readily available concrete and bamboo.

An onsite biodigester treats human waste, producing cooking gas, compost and water for gardens on the roofs and grounds. Meanwhile, the structure of the building?s balcony mimics the kapok tree?s branching system, with so-called ?daughter limbs? and doubly thick ?mother limbs? on alternating floors for added strength.

A porous bamboo layer protects the building?s concrete core; the bamboo?s high surface area and cell-like pockets circulate trade winds and deflect heat.

Taking climate and habitat into consideration defies much of what Mr. Knittel said he absorbed in architecture school. When building near water, for example, he and other students focused on ways to keep water away from, or guide it away from, the structure. Biomimicry takes a different tack, following nature?s lead rather than battling it.

?Nature does the exact opposite: it slows water, it sinks it, and it stores it,? Mr. Knittel said.

For Project Haiti, the slowing, sinking and storing start on the roof. Plants receive rainwater, slowing the flow, before the water is filtered and funneled down to a container garden on the lower roof for irrigation. Meanwhile, rooftop photovoltaic panels absorb solar energy for the building and power streetlights and public charging stations, so residents are less reliant on the unstable Port-au-Prince power grid.

Honeycombs have meanwhile informed the design of HOK?s commercial tower in New Songdo City, South Korea. To achieve the twisting look the clients desired but prevent the tower from buckling in heavy winds, HOK designed a structure with supporting walls that stagger out and upward from the center.

Like the hexagonal parts of a honeycomb, the supporting walls hug the core like puzzle pieces, creating a balanced and secure structure with no wasted space.

Yet merely imitating nature?s designs will not suffice. Biomimicry involves understanding the science underlying an adaptive structure or strategy before applying it.

?Nature has found its way over 2.8 billion years to not only survive, but thrive on this planet,? said Amy Coffman Philips, founder of?the B-Collaborative, a network of certified biomimicry specialists who lead workshops for designers and architects. ?If we?re finding holes in the resiliency, then maybe we can look to alternative sources of inspiration.?

For flood-prone coastal areas in the post-Sandy era, biomimicry could provide fresh architectural solutions. American ground squirrels and prairie dogs, for example, essentially construct circular dikes that prevent rainwater from reaching their burrows below ground; similarly, circular plantings of trees and shrubs could funnel and slow stormwater, easing pressure on city sewers.

And plants? cooperation techniques could inform coastal architecture. Peatland plants withstand unpredictable water levels from snow melt and heavy rains by clumping together into stilt-like rafts. Similarly, red mangrove trees crowd together to withstand the heavy waves of their coastal habitat, absorbing wave energy in their roots and forming a natural breakwater that protects shoreline.

Mangrove trees often grow in swamps and marshes, but gnarled roots hoist their trunks and branches safely above water. Those roots inspired the design of Skygrove, a vertical office park concept created by the New York City architecture firm HWKN. The building would divide into root-like branches that lift it safely above rising water. Each branch is independent, housing offices and providing its own energy.

The concept won first place in the Museum of Modern Art?s ?Rising Currents? competition and exhibition of 2010, which challenged architects to design buildings capable of adapting to rising seas.

Matthew Hoffman, a project manager for HWKN, said his firm had not determined which materials to use for Skygrove. The experimental nature of the project has even led to some to question its feasibility for some locales.

Daniel Williams, a practicing architect in Seattle who specializes in sustainable waterfront design, noted that Hurricanes Andrew and Katrina obliterated nearby mangrove forests in Florida. The trees? adaptive strategies, like their tendency to clump together and utilize all of the land around them, could be more worthy of emulation than the shape of their roots, he suggsted.

?We should look at the ecology and botany and how the tree is functioning, rather than just copying its form,? Mr. Williams said.

When it comes to functioning optimally despite extreme weather, the octopus could be the ultimate model. Rafe Sagarin, a marine ecologist and the author of ?Learning from the Octopus,? said a physical readiness to adapt, combined with a thoughtful approach to sudden change, gives the cephalopod its edge.

?The octopus has this really strong, powerful brain,? Dr. Sagarin said. ?It?s thoughtful and can plan but also adapts in an automatic way.?

The octopus? combination of quick and measured thinking could inform coastal cities? approach to climate change, he said. While government must respond quickly in emergency weather situations, people on the ground can provide the other half of the octopus approach: carefully considered, long-term solutions.

?All these amazing minds out there aren?t activated for certain problems,? Dr. Sagarin said. ?But if you can reactivate them, you get the aspects of adaptable systems.?

In other words, the more people who are invested in creating to solutions to climate change, the better. But first, the public needs access to detailed information and hazard maps depicting sea-level rise.

?So people can see, here?s what we expect is going to happen in Manhattan or the Hudson River Valley,? Dr. Sagarin said.

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/04/will-biomimicry-offer-a-way-forward-post-sandy/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Friday, January 4, 2013

World's Oldest Fossils Found In Australia

Dexter Herbivore sends this quote from the Washington Post:
"Scientists analyzing Australian rocks have discovered traces of bacteria that lived a record-breaking 3.49 billion years ago, a mere billion years after Earth formed. If the find withstands the scrutiny that inevitably faces claims of fossils this old, it could move scientists one step closer to understanding the first chapters of life on Earth. The discovery could also spur the search for ancient life on other planets. These traces of bacteria 'are the oldest fossils ever described. Those are our oldest ancestors,' said Nora Noffke, a biogeochemist at Old Dominion University in Norfolk who was part of the group that made the find and presented it last month at a meeting of the Geological Society of America."

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/DcIJnuuj9dg/story01.htm

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Thursday, January 3, 2013

TEMECULA: Identity theft reveals amount of Pechanga tribal ... - blog

Posted on | January 2, 2013 | Comments

A recent identity theft case in which a Pechanga tribal member?s monthly casino profits check was stolen casts some light on a topic of much speculation by outsiders.

How much does each tribal member receive?

According to court records, it?s about $13,000 a month, or, about $156,000 a year.

In years past, the per capita payments were apparently higher.

Each adult tribal member received a benefit of more than $250,000 per year in 2006, according to a 2009 opinion from the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

That case involved a claim filed by sixteen people stripped of their membership in the Pechanga Band of Luise?o Indians in 2006 after their tribal lineage was disputed.

In the recent identity theft case, investigated by the Riverside County Sheriff?s Department, tribal member Robert Freeman told sheriff?s officials that he went to pick up his check in September from the Pechanga Tribal Government office near Temecula but was told it was not available. A tribal government worker told him he had signed up for direct deposit.

Trouble was, Freeman hadn?t.

The worker told authorities that she had received a call from a man claiming to be Freeman and asking for direct deposit, search warrant documents say. The worker traded email messages and phone calls with the man, who filled out a direct deposit application.

As soon as the theft was reported, the bank account where the check had been deposited was frozen, court records say. There was still $11,500 in the account.

Freeman told sheriff?s investigators that he suspected his former roommate, Ji Yong Lee, who would have had access to his personal information, court records say.

Yi, 29, was charged Nov. 26 in Riverside Superior Court and pleaded guilty Dec. 6 to identity theft. He was sentenced to three years? probation, 90 days in jail and ordered to pay fines and $13,088.64 in restitution, court records say.

Follow Sarah Burge on Twitter: @sarahkburge

By Sarah Burge

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Source: http://blog.pe.com/crime-blotter/2013/01/02/temecula-identity-theft-reveals-amount-of-pechanga-tribal-payments-2/

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Quadrantids create year's first meteor shower

Jan. 2, 2013 ? A little-known meteor shower named after an extinct constellation, the Quadrantids will present an excellent chance for hardy souls to start the year off with some late-night meteor watching. Peaking in the wee morning hours of Jan. 3, the Quadrantids have a maximum rate of about 80 per hour, varying between 60-200. Unfortunately, light from a waning gibbous moon will wash out many Quadrantids, cutting down on the number of meteors seen by skywatchers.

Unlike the more famous Perseid and Geminid meteor showers, the Quadrantids only last a few hours, so it's the morning of Jan. 3 or nothing. Given the location of the radiant -- northern tip of Bootes the Herdsman -- only observers at latitudes north of 51 degrees south will be able to see Quadrantids.

Watch the Quadrantids! Live Ustream Feed

A live Ustream feed of the Quadrantid shower will be embedded below on the nights of Jan. 2-4 (http://www.ustream.tv/channel/nasa-msfc). The camera is mounted at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. During the day you will see either pre-recorded footage or a blank box -- the camera is light-activated and turns on at dusk (approx. 6 p.m. EST). ? Convert to your local time: http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/tc.cgi

Do You Have Some Great Quadrantid Images?

If you have some great images of the Quadrantid meteor shower, please consider adding them to the Quadrantid Meteors photo group in Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/groups/quadrantids/). Who knows -- your images may attract interest from the media and receive international exposure.

More About the Quadrantids

The Quadrantids derive their name from the constellation of Quadrans Muralis (mural quadrant), which was created by the French astronomer Jerome Lalande in 1795. Located between the constellations of Bootes and Draco, Quadrans represents an early astronomical instrument used to observe and plot stars. Even though the constellation is no longer recognized by astronomers, it was around long enough to give the meteor shower -- first seen in 1825 -- its name.

Like the Geminids, the Quadrantids originate from an asteroid, called 2003 EH1. Dynamical studies suggest that this body could very well be a piece of a comet which broke apart several centuries ago, and that the meteors you will see before dawn on Jan. 3 are the small debris from this fragmentation. After hundreds of years orbiting the sun, they will enter our atmosphere at 90,000 mph, burning up 50 miles above Earth's surface -- a fiery end to a long journey!

Editor's note, Jan. 2, 10:45 a.m. EST: Tonight is the peak of the 2013 Quadrantid meteor shower. Best viewing will be in the northern hemisphere, but the shower can be seen at latitudes north of 51 degrees south. Meteor rates increase after midnight and peak between 3 a.m. and dawn, your local time. To view Quadrantids, go outside and allow your eyes 30-45 minutes to adjust to the dark. Look straight up, allowing your eyes to take in as much of the sky as possible. You will need cloudless, dark skies away from city lights to see the shower. The maximum rate will be about 120/hour. However, light from the waning gibbous moon will wash out fainter meteors, so don't expect to see this many. The peak rate of the Quadrantids has varied between 60-200, so its peak is not as consistent as other showers.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/nasa/~3/0tMbonAFf2M/130102124016.htm

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Tuesday, January 1, 2013

A blood clot's danger depends on where it is

Blood clots like the one that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is being treated for following her recent concussion can occur for a host of reasons. How serious a clot is depends on where it is and why it formed. A Clinton aide would not say where hers is located.

WHAT THEY ARE: Blood pools and thickens into a clot after an injury or because of a heart problem, clogged arteries or other condition. Clots also can break off and travel to another part of the body.

WHERE THEY OCCUR: In leg veins (called deep vein thrombosis) or in blood vessels in the neck, brain or lungs. Leg clots are a common risk after someone has been bedridden. Clots are most dangerous when they travel to the lungs, a potentially life-threatening situation, or to the brain, where they can cause a stroke.

RISK FACTORS: High blood pressure, diabetes, birth control pills, pregnancy, stroke, recent surgery, prolonged sitting, circulation problems and heart problems ? especially an irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation ? raise the chances of developing a blood clot.

TREATMENT: Sometimes a blood thinner such as warfarin (Coumadin) is prescribed to allow the clot to dissolve by itself over time and prevent new ones from forming.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blood-clots-danger-depends-where-033843767.html

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Executive Speech Coach - Business Presentations: Warning ...

When you speak before an audience you will encounter the ravages of Murphy?s Law. It is not a matter of ?if? things go wrong, it is only a matter of ?when? they will go wrong. You can?t predict when that will happen. Murphy is always lurking in the room just waiting to attack.

Don?t count on luck to help you avoid these presentation gremlins. Remember that there?s both good luck and bad luck. Some presenters claim that if it wasn?t for bad luck, they?d have no luck at all.

If you speak, you will encounter some of these presentation potholes, detours and accidents. Murphy seems to enjoy messing with presentations. This report is as close as you can get to holding a ?Get Out of Jail Free? card.

You can?t always prevent these potholes, detours and accidents from assaulting your presentation. But you can prepare for them so you can minimize the damage and shine through the turbulence.

Luck is the residue of design.

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Turn Presentation Disasters into Presentation Success

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Source: http://executivespeechcoach.blogspot.com/2012/12/warning-presentation-danger-ahead.html

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