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9.83691 | 0.785409 | 0 | *This was originally posted on The Hill's Congress Blog. Do any
swine have the virus that has infected humans? There is no
evidence at this time that swine in the United States are
infected with this virus strain. Can I get this new strain of
virus from eating pork or pork products? According to USDA and
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, no. Swine
influenza viruses are not transmitted by food so you cannot get
swine influenza from eating pork or pork products. Eating
properly handled and cooked pork and pork products is safe.
Cooking pork to an internal temperature of 160°F kills all
viruses. The USDA suggests, as it has in the past, cooking pork
and pork products to the proper internal temperature and
preventing cross-contamination between raw and cooked food is
the key to safety. You should: Wash hands with warm water and
soap for at least 20 seconds before and after handling raw pork;
Prevent cross-contamination by keeping raw pork away from other
foods; After cutting raw meat, wash cutting b |
0.427266 | 4.740354 | -1 | SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) -- Their dinner had just arrived as the two
college professors watched their guests, a group of singers from
the Georgia coast, unexpectedly turn saying grace into an
outburst of song, rhythm and shouted praises that soon had other
diners in the restaurant joining in with the impromptu
performance. "Before you know it, they're out of their chairs
and the beat is getting played on a table and you had all the
children in the restaurant shouting praises with them," said
Mary Ellen Junda, a music professor at the University of
Connecticut. The dinner at a restaurant in Richmond, Va., last
year with the Geechee Gullah Ring Shouters of Darien, Ga.,
turned into another lesson for Junda and fellow music professor
Robert Stephens, who have spent years studying the art and
traditions of the Gullah, descendants of slaves who live in
coastal communities from North Carolina to northern Florida.
Scholars say their culture, long isolated from the mainland, has
clung to its African roots and traditions mor |
7.041045 | 4.188022 | -1 | Forget "slow and steady wins the race." A new study shows that,
at least sometimes, the best way to conserve energy and reach
your destination on time is to alternate between walking and
running-whether your goal is the bus stop or a marathon finish
line. In the January 30, 2013 issue of the Journal of the Royal
Society Interface, researchers examined how people budget their
time as they travel on foot to reach a destination at a
particular appointed time. The study found that when people have
neither too much time nor too little time to reach their
destination, they naturally switch back and forth between
walking and running, which turns out to be the best strategy for
saving energy. The study is the first of its kind not conducted
on treadmills, and it supports the notion that the human body
has an innate sense of how to vary speed to optimize energy when
we're on the move in our natural environment. "We don't live our
lives on a treadmill," said Manoj Srinivasan, co-author of the
study and assistant profes |
-0.98517 | 4.299364 | -1 | 11.] QUALITIES. 111 War;' I could afterwards without effort, say
pages of the work by heart." 6. " At school I used to learn in a
single evening 100 lines of Virgil, and repeat them correctly in
the morning. Good memory for facts and figures. 1. " Next to no
verbal memory, but good for facts small or great which will fit
into any chain of reasoning." 2. " Of moderate verbal memory,
but strongly retentive of facts and figures so far as they are
related to any subject on or in which I was engaged. "Father-
Memory very retentive, but not systematic. He had a great amount
of information, but had not great acquirements ; his familiarity
with Scripture was, however, remarkable. Mother-Very retentive
for small facts and figures." |
2.575709 | 5.002959 | 43 | The following statistics provide information about Nebraska's
Career Education students. All information was collected through
the Nebraska Student and Staff Record System (NSSRS) using data
reported for the 2010-2011 school year. The objective in
analyzing this data is to find out just who the Nebraska Career
Education student really is and how he/she differs from the
average Nebraska student. In the 2010-2011 Nebraska school year,
63 percent of Nebraska students in grades 7-12 were identified
as CTE Participants (taking at least one CTE semester-course
during the 2010-2011 academic year). In the same year, 34
percent of Nebraska high school seniors were identified as CTE
Concentrators (taking at least three CTE semester-courses
throughout their academic career within a particular Career
Education program of study). CTE Students by Grade About 58
percent of Nebraska junior high students (7-8th grades) were
classified as Career Education Participants. About 65.5 percent
of Nebraska high school students (9th-1 |
2.497871 | 8.465812 | 17 | OR operator is a kind of a conditional operators, which is
represented by | symbol. It returns either true or false value
based on the state of the variables i.e. the operations using
conditional operators are performed between the two boolean
expressions. The OR operator ( is similar to the Conditional-OR
operator ( ||) and returns true, if one or another of its
operand is true. Read more at: If you are facing any programming
issue, such as compilation errors or not able to find the code
you are looking for. Ask your questions, our development team
will try to give answers to your questions. |
1.537376 | 3.833108 | -1 | In its landmark 1978 decision, Regents of the University of
California v. Bakke, the Supreme Court declared the use of
racial quotas in university admissions impermissible, but upheld
the use of race as a factor in such admissions (438 U.S. 265).
As a basis for his decision, Justice Powell found that
attainment of a diverse student body is "clearly a
constitutionally permissible goal for an institution of higher
education." Now, almost a quarter of a century later, the
consideration of race in university admissions has inspired a
series of lawsuits brought by nonminority applicants who assert
that their race prevented them from gaining admission to the
state school of their choice. In addition to prompting a re-
examination of Bakke, these cases have also defined a role for
empirical research in judicial decision-making. This month, the
Sixth Circuit will hear arguments on two cases involving
admissions processes at the University of Michigan. In Gratz v.
Bollinger, the plaintiffs challenged the university's u |
9.601037 | 1.655001 | -1 | International Healthcare Worker Safety Center Global Initiative
for Healthcare Worker Safety A forum for sharing research and
best practices worldwide in the prevention of needlesticks and
occupational exposures to bloodborne pathogens Defining the
problem... Healthcare workers are a critical resource in every
corner of the globe -- the infrastructure without which
healthcare cannot exist. But in caring for us, they place
themselves at risk daily of contracting life-threatening
infections from bloodborne pathogens, including HIV, hepatitis B
and hepatitis C. Injuries from needles and other sharp medical
devices, along with accidental exposures to blood and body
fluids from splashes and sprays, are the most serious
occupational hazard faced by healthcare workers. (read more)
...and the solution. Who should use this site? Devices with
engineered sharps injury protection are highly effective in
reducing the risk of needlesticks and sharps injuries. We know
that a combination of safer devices, hepatitis B vaccine |
4.567947 | -0.824651 | -1 | In 2005, Ducks Unlimited (DU) completed over $1 million worth of
wetland restoration work in Montana on tracts of land enrolled
in the Wetland Reserve Program (WRP). The restoration projects
cover a total of 2,330 acres of wetland habitat making it one of
the largest engineering programs DU’s Great Plains Regional
Office worked on that year. Three of the restoration projects
were located in Flathead County, and one project each in Hill
County, Gallatin County and Lake County. These projects will
provide breeding and migration habitat to waterfowl within the
inter-mountain valleys of western Montana. DU delivers the
wetland restoration projects under a cooperative agreement with
the U.S. Department of Agriculture –Natural Resource
Conservation Service (NRCS). Landowners with restorable wetlands
are eligible to enroll in the program. The land is secured by a
conservation easement, and NRCS pays for the wetland
restorations. DU provides the engineering and construction
management to deliver the restorations. NRC |
2.258545 | 6.1243 | -1 | Teachers face enormous challenges in their work: - balancing the
needs of äverage" students with those of students who have
learning difficulties, and those of gifted students; -
motivating uninterested and undisciplined students; - enriching
the classroom experience of students who enjoy Teachers need to
keep abreast of new approaches to learning, curriculum reforms,
and changes in technology. They also need to be able to explain
reforms and new methodologies to parents, and to do all this
while teaching all the other subjects. The elementary school
years are crucial in shaping students' perceptions of, and
attitudes towards, mathematics. Their effect can last a
lifetime. So the importance of the quality of mathematics
teaching in these early years cannot be underestimated. How can
we attract good mathematics undergraduates to careers in primary
How can we prepare future elementary school teachers to deal
with the challenges they will face in teaching mathematics? How
can we support hem during their careers? |
3.535212 | 6.902577 | -1 | |NSF Report - Facial Expression Understanding| III-B. Computer
Vision and Face Processing Thomas S. Huang, Peter Burt, and
Kenji Mase Abstract. Computer vision deals with the problem of
scene analysis; more specifically the extraction of 3D
information about scenes/objects from 2D (possibly time-varying)
images obtained by sensors such as television cameras. Over the
years, many algorithms have been developed for determining 3D
shape, texture, and motion. In this session, some of the major
approaches are reviewed in light of applications to face
structure/motion analysis. Emphasis is on methods of estimating
3D rigid and nonrigid motion/structure from 2D image sequences.
Presenters: T. S. Huang, P. Burt, K. Mase In this brief
tutorial, we review computer vision with special emphasis on
face processing. From an engineering viewpoint, the goal of
computer vision is to build automated systems capable of
analyzing and understanding 3D and possibly time-varying scenes.
The input to such systems are typically two-d |
4.937536 | 4.126436 | 38 | Hopping on a bicycle saddle and peddling through the heart of
the city is not for the faint of heart. Besides being
safeguarded by minimal protection amidst aggressive traffic,
their slower pace and low visibility often subject bikers to
unfathomable road rage and projectiles hurled from angry
motorists. I've been grazed by enough tossed cups, bottle caps,
and side-view mirrors to know that biker visibility is paramount
to a more peaceful and safe coexistence between cyclists and
motorists. Helping bridge this gap is BLAZE, a device invented
by Emily Brooke, a final-year Product Design student at the
University of Brighton. Her device alerts drivers to the
presence of a bikers by projecting a laser image onto the road
in front of the bicycle. "Eighty percent of cycle accidents
occur when bicycles travel straight ahead and a vehicle
maneuvers into them," said Emily Brooke, in a university news
release. "The most common contributory factor is 'failed to look
properly' on the part of a vehicle driver. The eviden |
6.364304 | 5.539463 | 88 | Although the Enlightenment strove for scientific advancement,
there was still many theories and methods that were simply
primeval. One of these was maternal impressions, an idea that
would last through the Victorian age. Maternal impression was
the belief that a pregnant woman's experiences would affect how
her child would come out. It was mostly used to explain why a
child was born deaf (there was a loud noise that surprised the
mother) or blind (the mother looked at a blind person) or ugly
(I just made that one up). One of the most famous cases of birth
defects credited to maternal impression was Joseph Merrick, aka
the Elephant Man, of whom it was said his mother was scared by
an elephant. You mean they couldn't narrow it down to
neofibromotosis? Hullabaloo of course, but I would still
recommend pregnant women shouldn't eat too much garlic and stay
away from circus clowns...just in case! 19 minutes ago |
0.589458 | 5.250106 | -1 | Scenes or Acts? Should you divide your play into acts, or just
into scenes? It's really a matter of personal taste, as long as
you recognize a few basic principles of play construction and
why we have these divisions in the first place. Virtually all
plays, as much as we rail against the way some screenwriters
have turned this into a cookie-cutter, divide into what has come
to be called three-act structure. Here's where you get to
impress your friends with your fancy verbiage: - The first act
is the Protasis, or exposition. - The second act is the
Epitasis, or complication. - The final act is the Catastrophe,
or resolution. Just as in screenwriting format, the middle act
is the longest. Aristotle (384-322 BCE.), whose Poetics
represented his collected observations on dramatic structure and
playwriting based on the practice of Greek dramatists, is
largely credited for three-act structure and has had long-
lasting influence on playwriting. Want to really, really impress
your friends? Tell them Aristotle didn't s |
0.933386 | 1.941221 | 12 | December 15th, 2011 Throughout colonial history in the Americas
and Oceania, many Portuguese, Spanish, and English colonists and
leaders compared Indigenous Peoples to animals. See Robert J.
Miller, The International Law of Colonialism: A Comparative
Analysis, 15 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 101, 161-69 (forthcoming
2012). (available now at
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1920009)
George Washington, the father of the United States, was no
different. In a letter to the U.S. Congress in 1783, then-
General George Washington analogized Indians to animals when he
foresaw that “the gradual extension of our Settlements will as
certainly cause the Savage as the Wolf to retire; both being
beasts of prey tho’ they differ in shape.” Letter to James Duane
(Sept. 7, 1783), in 27 The Writings of George Washington,
1745–1799, at 133, 140 (John C. Fitzpatrick ed., 1938). It's
easy to see the future that Washington and most American
Founding Fathers and political leaders over the years envisioned
for American Indi |
0.49165 | 5.749175 | 40 | Capitalization in German Groß- und Kleinschreibung |More of this
Feature| Capitalization in German Groß- u. Kleinschreibung
Spelling Reform: Double-s Spelling Reform: Newsstand Reform der
Reform Top Grammar BOOKS But in all the wrangling over how
German should be properly spelled there has been one prominent
sacred cow: the capitalization of all nouns. German is the only
language in the world that requires the capitalization of ALL
nouns. There are only a few fringe groups calling for German
capitalization rules similar to those in most other languages.
Headquartered in Zurich, the Bund für vereinfachte
rechtschreibung (note the spelling of the BVR's name,
"Federation for simplified spelling") dates back to 1924. While
there are a few rebels who write their German email like e.e.
cummings, most German-speakers still cling to their sacred
Großschreibung (capitalization). Although Kleinschreibung had
its advocates, the framers of the 1996 German spelling reforms
felt it was simply not politically feasible to ca |
0.383532 | 3.59137 | -1 | The disciples of communism claim that their ideological system
is the cure for colonialism and imperialism. All the
proletariats (working-class people) of the world, according to
the prescriptions of Marx, are brothers. However, analysts
observe that communism scarcely worked that way even in theory.
Marx was a German nationalist who called for the extermination
of Croats, Pandurs, and “similar scum.” He sneered at Danish
culture as purely copied from Germany and rejoiced at the
Prussia victory over France in 1871 because it would lead to the
triumph of German, rather than French, socialism. He loathed
Judaism and Jewish society, as well as Christians. The Bolshevik
junta in late 1918, followed four years later by the formation
of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), presented
itself to the world as anti-colonialist and anti-imperialist.
Click here to read the entire article. Photo: Karl Marx |
3.426868 | 5.954648 | -1 | Augmentative and Alternative Communication Decisions The Goal:
Interactive Communication Success in life can be directly
related to the ability to communicate. Full interpersonal
communication substantially enhances an individual's potential
for education, employment, and independence. Therefore, it is
imperative that the goal of augmentative and alternative
communication (AAC) use be the most effective interactive
communication possible. Anything less represents a compromise of
the individual's human potential. The Importance of Language The
next step is deciding how to achieve this goal. For most people,
the most effective approach is SNUG, spontaneous novel utterance
generation. SNUG allows a person to say anything he or she wants
at any time. SNUG is based on access to the individual words,
word combinations, and commonly used phrases of our language.
The alternative to SNUG is the use of pre-stored sentences.
While there is some utility in pre-stored sentences, e.g.,
faster communication, pre-stored sent |
2.303704 | 7.886322 | -1 | write an employee class. the class will have the following
fields. - Employee name - Employee number in the format XXX-L,
where X is a digit within the range 0-9 and the L is a letter
within the range A-M. - Hire date write "set" and "get" method
for each field. write no args constructor. Write constructor
that has an argument for each field. Next, write a class named
ProductionWorker that extends the Employee class. The
ProductionWorker class should have fields to hold the following
information: - Shift (an integer) - Hourly pay rate (a double)
The work day is divided into two shifts: day and night. The
shift field will be an integer value representing the shift that
the employee works. The day shift is shift 1 and the night shift
is shift 2. Write appropriate accessor and mutator methods for
the class and no args constructor. write a constructor that has
args for the fields. write an employee demo class that will
contain a main method. the main method will create the following
output -Employee John cena, ID |
9.121679 | 4.576738 | 61 | Congenital Valve Disease Treating Cardiovascular Diseases in
Wisconsin and Northern Illinois Your heart has four valves that
open and close with each heartbeat. Their job is to make sure
your blood flows in only one direction as it passes through the
four chambers of your heart and on to the rest of your body. The
heart’s upper chambers are known as atria; the lower chambers
are ventricles. Congenital heart valve disease occurs when your
valves do not form correctly before birth. Your valves may an
abnormal number of leaflets, or tissue flaps; the leaflets may
be the wrong size or shape; or they may lack an opening for
blood to flow through. These conditions can interfere with your
heart’s pumping ability, causing it to work harder. Types of
Congenital Valve Disease One of the most common types of
congenital valve disease affects the aortic valve. This one-way
valve separates the left ventricle from the aorta, which is the
main artery that distributes blood from the heart to the body.
Instead of having the no |
1.602117 | 4.250193 | -1 | This archived Web page remains online for reference, research or
recordkeeping purposes. This page will not be altered or
updated. Web pages that are archived on the Internet are not
subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards. As per the
Communications Policy of the Government of Canada, you can
request alternate formats of this page on the Contact Us page.
Here are some sites to help you with your homework! - Across
Canada: A Department of Canadian Heritage website that gives
information about provincial and territorial flags, flowers and
other symbols. - The Canadian Encyclopedia (Ages 12 and up)
Visit this great encyclopedia online! - Canadian Information By
Subject (Ages 12 and up) Discover links to websites on Canadian
subjects. - Images Canada (Ages 9 and up) View thousands of
historical pictures of different places and people in Canada. -
Arts Alive - Music - Kids Hey kids! Want to learn more about
music and the people who make it? Come see all the fun things
you can explore in our website! Spac |
-0.631571 | 2.927661 | 52 | An excerpt from www.HouseOfNames.com archives copyright © 2000 -
2013 Where did the Spanish Tolomeo family come from? What is the
Spanish Tolomeo family crest and coat of arms? When did the
Tolomeo family first arrive in the United States? Where did the
various branches of the family go? What is the Tolomeo family
history? Spelling variations of this family name include:
Toliba, Toledo, Tolomella, Tolomeo, Toli, Tolido and many more.
First found in Castile, in north central Spain. This web page
shows only a small excerpt of our Tolomeo research. Another 434
words(31 lines of text) covering the years 1514, 1515, 1553,
1584, and 1587 are included under the topic Early Tolomeo
History in all our PDF Extended History products. Another 32
words(2 lines of text) are included under the topic Early
Tolomeo Notables in all our PDF Extended History products. Some
of the first settlers of this family name or some of its
variants were: Diego De Toledo who immigrated to Venezuela in
1534. The Tolomeo Family Crest was acqu |
3.852167 | 5.34541 | 62 | Posted: October 23, 2012 At just 14 years old, Georgia teen
Allison Waters Albert has become an ambassador for anti-bullying
within her community. Earning respect and admiration from peers
for her willingness to share her own story, Allison has inspired
several teens across her school district to take a stand against
bullying. Through extensive work with 4-H, one of the largest
youth development programs in the world, and numerous speaking
engagements at area schools, Allison’s efforts have spearheaded
the campaign for bullying prevention in her Georgia hometown.
Once a victim of bullying herself, Allison says she became
involved with anti-bullying efforts through her 4-H membership.
4-H has been very committed to educating youth on all facets of
bullying, helping to empower those who have suffered as victims
and inspiring... Continue ReadingPosted in Profiles/Voices from
the Field Posted: October 12, 2012 There are many warning signs
that may indicate that someone is either being bullied or
bullying others. |
-1.79565 | 2.807055 | -1 | xxi. Turkic and Kurdish clothing of Azerbaijan In Azerbaijan as
a whole, including both Persian and Soviet territories, the
traditional costume, now worn largely in a tribal context,
retains the form of garments much as they were at the end of the
19th century; it is maintained primarily by women, and it is
only among Kurdish, rather than Turkic, men that elements have
survived the reforms of Reżā Shah (see xi, above) in everyday
wear. The Azeris. The Turkic dress of Azerbaijan has much in
common with clothing in the Caucasus. That of women is based on
a full-sleeved shirt (könyäk) with straight-cut shoulders and a
breast opening fastened with a clasp, worn over a full lower
garment reaching the ground; this consists either of very wide
cotton drawers (tuman, jüt-tuman) of six layers of cloth, cut as
a skirt divided by a gusset and gathered with a drawstring, or
of much narrower drawers (darbalaq), also cut straight.
Undergarments are thus called tuman-köynäk. Over these drawers
are worn one or more full skir |
-0.772052 | 5.840323 | 36 | In the late seventeenth century, the sonata genre was becoming
more and more standardized, but there are always exceptions. One
example is this set of violin sonatas by Heinrich Ignaz Franz
von Biber depicting the Mysteries of the Rosary, a series of
biblical narratives used for religious meditation. The sonatas
were not published, an indication of their eccentricity, their
difficulty, and their distance from the development of mass-
marketed music. Fourteen of the sixteen sonatas also use a
technique known as scordatura, in which the strings are re-tuned
to achieve particular colors and facilitate the playing of
unusual chords. Another distinction of these works is that each
sonata is accompanied in manuscript by an engraving of its
associated mystery. The Sixth sonata depicts Christ’s painful
coming-to-grips with his fate, traditionally believed to have
taken place in an olive garden. |
2.510456 | -1.162804 | 63 | Douglass & Knox 2012 pre-bunked Posted on 26 February 2012 by
Rob Painting The global energy imbalance, the difference between
energy entering and leaving Earth's atmosphere, is one of the
most important metrics of global warming in that it indicates
how much warming is 'in the pipeline'. Given its importance, it
is a topic we have frequently blogged about in one form or
another, most recently in SkS posts: Breaking News…The Earth Is
Warming…Still, and Search For 'Missing Heat' Confirms More
Global Warming 'In The Pipeline'. A yet-to-be-published paper,
Douglass & Knox (2012) takes a cherry-picking approach to the
Earth energy imbalance, and contradicts just about every single
paper which has examined this subject in the last few years.
Unlike Loeb (2012), however, these authors do not attempt to
reconcile their calculations with the top-of-the-atmosphere flux
observed by satellites. Douglass & Knox (2012) ascribes warming
to mysterious step-changes. But, quite conveniently, it has
already been pre-bunked by |
3.931246 | 4.702224 | -1 | Nonlinear Dynamics of Wooden Toys Wooden toys are very
interesting systems from a dynamical point of view. We studied a
number of wooden toys in our paper The Nonlinear Dynamics of
Some Wooden Toys with Impact and Friction Some of the results
are shown on this webpage. The Woodpecker Toy The Woodpecker Toy
is a toy with interesting dynamic behaviour, showing both impact
and friction phenomena. The toy consists of a sleeve, a spring
and the woodpecker. The hole in the sleeve is slightly larger
than the diameter of the pole, thus allowing a kind of pitching
motion interrupted by impacts with friction. Click on the right
figure to see an animation of the motion. The Woodpecker Toy is
a system which can only operate in the presence of friction as
it relies on combined impacts and jamming. Restitution of the
beak with the pole is not essential for a periodic motion but
enlarges the resemblance with the typical behaviour of a
woodpecker. The motion of the toy lies in a plane, which reduces
the number of degrees of |
3.578863 | -0.762918 | -1 | Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-
read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top
30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a
whole. Intended to provide our own search engines and external
engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text
on the opening pages of each chapter. Because it is UNCORRECTED
material, please consider the following text as a useful but
insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages. Do not use
for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for
search engines. OCR for page 61 OPPORTUNITIES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
APPLICATIONS OF MARINE BIOTECHNOLOGY: PROCEEDINGS OF THE OCTOBER
5-6, 1999, WORKSHOP Contributions of Marine Biotechnology to
Marsh Oil Spill Restoration Ralph J. Portier INTRODUCTION There
is an estimated 3.2 million tons annual (mta) input of petroleum
hydrocarbons into the world's oceans (NRC 1985). The majority is
in small amounts from chronic sources, 0.7 mta from tanker
operation |
0.656059 | 2.175414 | 42 | Beams of sunlight streaming through the windows at Grand Central
Station, New York City, circa 1930. (Hal Morey/Getty Images)
Grand Central Station This New York City landmark that recently
celebrated its centennial was famously slated to be torn down,
before a group of public figures, including Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis, and others fought to save it. The Beaux-Arts station,
including its famous constellation-studded ceiling, was restored
in the 1990s. According to NPR, the station is the largest
interior public space in New York City and is one of the top 10
most visited sites in the world. |
4.776137 | -1.595875 | 108 | |a chattering or flighty, light-headed person.| |a gadget;
dingus; thingumbob.| |cladistics (klə-dĭs'tĭks) Pronunciation
Key A system of classification based on the phylogenetic
relationships and evolutionary history of groups of organisms,
rather than purely on shared features. Many modern taxonomists
prefer cladistics to the traditional hierarchies of Linnean
classification systems. Compare Linnean. A method of taxonomic
classification that groups organisms according to their lines of
evolutionary descent. All descendants of a given organism are
called a clade. |
0.975962 | 5.98824 | 53 | Writers Workshop: Writer Resources Grammar Handbook: Nouns A
noun is any word that defines a person, place, or thing in a
sentence. Nouns give names to: - Concrete Things: Carlos lost
his keys. - Abstract Ideas: Her personal philosophy is odd. -
Abstract Qualities: She says I lack sensitivity. - Feelings: I
feel great joy when I run. - Actions: Parking can be difficult
on campus. - People: Steve Lamos is our instructor. - Animals:
What kind of bear is Fozzie Bear? - Places: The University of
Illinois is located in Champaign-Urbana. |
-2.973515 | 3.356777 | -1 | Ramadan starts next week, and the people here in Morocco are
beginning to get prepared. If you aren’t aware of what Ramadan
entails, it is a month on the Arabic (lunar) calendar. During
this month (about 28 days), Muslims are required to fast from
sunup to sundown, going without food or drink all day long. Many
people I know use this time to reflect, forgive, and pray. This
will be my second Ramadan here in Morocco. I am looking forward
to the Iftar treats that are placed on the table during the
first meal after fasts are broken and the absolute quiet that
occurs when the prayer is called to signal the end of fasting,
as everyone heads inside to eat. I am also using this
opportunity to talk with my children more about the meanings
behind this and other Muslim holidays. Here is a center packet I
created for my students last year to discuss the three major
Muslim holidays – Ramadan, Eid al F’tr and Eid al Adha. Feel
free to download it FREE from my Teacher’s Notebook store. |
7.480868 | 4.136712 | -1 | Scientists report the identification of variants associated with
biological aging in humans. The team analyzed more than 500,000
genetic variations across the entire human genome to identify
these variants, which are located near a gene called TERC. The
study, published in Nature Genetics, was conducted by
researchers from the University of Leicester and King's College
London, working with University of Groningen in The Netherlands.
The paper is titled “Common variants near TERC are associated
with mean telomere length.” There are two forms of
aging—chronological aging and biological aging, whereby the
cells of some individuals are older (or younger) than suggested
by their actual age—explains British Heart Foundation professor
of cardiology at the University of Leicester Nilesh Samani who
co-led the project. “There is accumulating evidence that the
risk of age-associated diseases including heart disease and some
types of cancers are more closely related to biological rather
than chronological age. “What we s |
5.170189 | -1.770734 | 121 | General Technical Report hroughout the New World attention is
now being focused on the status of populations of landbirds,
which are the many species of smaller birds, sometimes referred
to as non-game birds. Landbirds have not usually been the focus
of management activities except in a few cases of threatened or
endangered species, such as the Kirtlands Warbler. Recent
evidence suggests that some landbird species are declining in
abundance, fueling much speculation upon the causes of these
declines, the species involved, and their habitat preferences.
Hypotheses about the causes of these declines are varied,
ranging from tropical deforestation to nest parasitism by the
cowbird. However, part of the difficulty in determining the
status of landbirds results from problems in monitoring these
small birds, as compared to larger, more easily-studied species.
To determine population changes, and to hypothesize possible
causes of these changes, more basic information needs to be
gathered. Much of the evidence for th |
2.352514 | 2.981678 | -1 | One of the most frequently asked questions about the Equal Money
System is the question of how the system will be implemented.
Indeed it can be difficult to see how an entirely new way of
existing is and will be possible considering how we currently
exist. What is important to realize and understand is that a new
way of living will not suddenly come about by itself. So how we
will get from where we are today, to an Equal Money System , is
through practical changes accumulated step by step, through
actions taken by directive groups and individuals advocating the
Equal Money System. For an Equal Money System to be implemented,
we require a re-education of the group, as all of humanity. This
is required because we, as we currently exist, are in no
condition to take self-responsibility for the world as a whole.
It is also required so that we can realize and understand that a
different way of existing is even possible and from there,
educate ourselves to be able to implement the changes required
practically. Even |
5.820135 | 6.955826 | 67 | January 10, 2013 (The New York Times News Service) -- Boston
researchers have for the first time used a drug to regenerate
the delicate hair cells that sense sound in the ears of adult
mice, in a promising initial step toward a potential treatment
for hearing loss. Hair cells damaged by loud noises or lost
during aging don't regrow in people, but in the mouse
experiments published on Wednesday, the scientists coaxed new
cells to develop, enabling the animals to recover modest
hearing. The deaf mice were far from cured; the improvement in
hearing was much less than could be achieved by an existing
technology, called a cochlear implant. But researchers not
involved in the work said the results, published in the journal
Neuron, were important because they showed such regeneration was
possible and suggested a similar nonsurgical approach could one
day be tested in people. "What's really novel is that they
showed you can use a pharmacological agent, basically a drug, to
get some level of hearing recovery in animal |
0.663562 | 3.031077 | 42 | Did Dogs Really Eat Slaves, Like in 'Django'? 100 Amazing Facts
About the Negro: Plus, whether slaves rode horses or had
Mandingo death matches. (slaveryimages.org; original source
unidentified) Horses and horsemanship played an interesting role
during slavery. The most famous black horseman in the
Revolutionary period was our old friend, William "Billy" Lee,
George Washington's slave and personal attendant, the only slave
whom Washington freed upon his death. Billy Lee was, by all
accounts, a superb horseman, and rode just behind his master. In
the black abolitionist Henry Bibb's famous slave narrative of
1849, horses compose almost a leitmotif: Before finally
attaining his freedom, he is captured, handcuffed and tied by
his feet to a horse and returned to slavery, but he effects his
ultimate escape by stealing another horse ("the best looking of
them") from a large plantation, and riding him "not less than
forty miles that night, or before sunrise the next morning," to
gain his freedom. Bibb, a famous newsp |
5.103323 | 3.448032 | -1 | Diamonds are a scientist's best friend: Research into building
better small machines Do diamonds really last forever? That's
the hope of University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers who are
trying to solve the problems associated with building extremely
small machines and having them withstand the test of time, wear
and tear. The problem is that these machines are so small —
microscopic or smaller — that their moving parts cannot be
assisted by lubricants; instead, they have to function in a dry
state, like a car with no oil. A really, really small car with
no oil. "They no longer behave in the same way as they do at the
macro-scale, where materials may be far stronger, have more
power to catalyze chemical reactions, be more optically
responsive, and more," says Rob Carpick, associate professor of
engineering physics. "That is why it is very interesting to
study the fundamental physics of nanoscale materials and also to
try to utilize these unique properties for real applications."
An example of a real applica |
4.269625 | 0.257587 | 70 | See a lot of people squatting in the open today? Don't be
offended. The so-called "big squat" was held worldwide to
coincide with the 10th annual World Toilet Day, an initiative to
bring awareness to the need for adequate sanitary facilities.
Every day, some 1.1 billion people go to the bathroom without
any type of toilet, according to the World Health Organization.
And even with a toilet, facilities are not necessarily sanitary.
WaterAid America estimates that roughly 2.5 billion people –
nearly 40 percent of the global population – do their business
unsafely, often in public spaces. World Toilet Day is organized
by the Singapore-based World Toilet Organization, which has 235
member organizations in 58 countries "working toward eliminating
the toilet taboo and delivering sustainable sanitation." Here's
a list of the world's worst nations in terms of people lacking
access to sanitary facilities. Four in 5 people in Niger go in
the open, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
That's about 12 million |
-0.185909 | 1.76199 | -1 | January, 1918: Neufchateau Training Area In January, 1918 the
26th “Yankee” Division concluded its preliminary training for
the Western Front in the area of Neufchateau in the Vosges
region of northeastern France. On January 23, word was suddenly
received that the 26th Division had been assigned to reinforce
the depleted XI Corps of the French 6th Army on the Chemin des
Dames front, north of Soissons and the Aisne River. Hasty
preparations were then made to complete the insurance forms,
write home to loved ones and make ready for the move to the
Front. Read about the Neufchateau Training Area here. See
original film of the 26th Division at Neufchateau here,
including Sam himself standing Color Guard following Evening
Parade [far right edge of frame at 06:19]. Also, read Sam’s
January correspondence from Liffol-le-Grand as the winter
continues, the men look forward to packages from home and Sam
suddenly hears word that he and the boys are finally heading for
the Front. January, 1919: After the Armistice On Jan |
-2.289601 | 4.202788 | 37 | A Commentary, Critical, Practical, and Explanatory on the Old
and New Testaments, by Robert Jamieson, A.R. Fausset and David
Brown at sacred-texts.com jer 43:2THE JEWS CARRY JEREMIAH AND
BARUCH INTO EGYPT. JEREMIAH FORETELLS BY A TYPE THE CONQUEST OF
EGYPT BY NEBUCHADNEZZAR, AND THE FATE OF THE FUGITIVES. (Jer
43:1-13) Azariah--the author of the project of going into Egypt;
a very different man from the Azariah in Babylon (Dan 1:7; Dan
3:12-18). proud--Pride is the parent of disobedience and
contempt of God. jer 43:3Baruch--He being the younger spake out
the revelations which he received from Jeremiah more vehemently.
From this cause, and from their knowing that he was in favor
with the Chaldeans, arose their suspicion of him. Their perverse
fickleness was astonishing. In the forty-second chapter they
acknowledged the trustworthiness of Jeremiah, of which they had
for so long so many proofs; yet here they accuse him of a lie.
The mind of the unregenerate man is full of deceits. jer
43:5remnant . . . returned |
8.235307 | 3.908783 | -1 | DHEA, a steroid hormone made in the adrenal glands and brain, is
one of the most plentiful hormones in the body. Levels of DHEA
decline with age; a 70-year-old produces about 10 percent of the
DHEA levels produced by a 20-year-old. First identified in 1934,
DHEA is produced in greater quantities than other adrenal
steroids. Since DHEA can be converted into other hormones,
including estrogen and testosterone, scientists assumed DHEA was
merely a reservoir the body could draw on to produce other
hormones. However, research suggests that DHEA has specific
physiologic functions. DHEA, like many of our other hormones, is
not immune to the damaging effects of manufactured fats.
Symptoms of DHEA deficiency include fatigue, anxiety,
depression, low sexual desire, and lack of sexual
satisfaction.Adequate levels of DHEA are linked to longevity. To
learn how to properly balance DHEA and start your journey
towards the healthy life you desire, order your copy of The
Perfect 10 Diet today! |
2.155741 | 1.55008 | -1 | In recent years, a handful of projects have used online map
programs such as Google Maps to provide access to historic
images of San Francisco. These programs allow website creators
or users to “geotag” digital versions of historic images – in
other words, to situate the digital images on an online map.
Some of these projects are examples of Web 2.0, meaning that
users are able to make contributions by uploading images of
their own, or add tags or comments to others’ photos. By
considering some of these projects together, it is possible to
compare their features. I’ll discuss five projects here, and
then raise three issues related to this kind of work. One
project is HistoGrafica. Users can upload images, as well as a
free-text description of the image and its source. Users can
also contribute to others’ photos by rating the image, adding it
to a list of their favorites, recommending it to other users, or
suggesting that the location assigned to the image may be
incorrect. Images can be searched by location o |
8.761099 | 2.590601 | -1 | The research - published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical
Immunology – shows how UV (ultraviolet)-B light boosts vitamin
D, as well as cells in our body that are responsible for
regulating or balancing the immune system. Vitamin D is made in
our bodies by UV-B light from the sun. Some studies have
suggested a link between vitamin D deficiency and autoimmune
diseases such as MS. This possible link might also explain the
increasing prevalence of autoimmune disease among those living
far from the equator, where there are lower levels of winter
sun. Autoimmune diseases - like MS and type 1 diabetes - are
diseases where the immune system mistakenly attacks the body’s
own tissues or harmless substances that enter the body.
University of Aberdeen researchers studied patients in the north
of Scotland - which has the highest rate of MS in the UK - who
were being treated during winter with artificial UV-B light
therapy for skin diseases caused by their immune systems acting
inappropriately. Researchers looked at |
6.220755 | 3.269216 | -1 | THE ULTIMATE CLUE, MY DEAR WATSON: DNA FINGERPRINTING Students
learn practical applications of DNA profiling in today's
forensic science and the future's many possibilities. While
viewing the video, students delve into the problems of
extracting ancient DNA from fossils. These molecular biologists
use DNA profiling to sequence pieces of the dinosaurs' genome.
After viewing the video, students will simulate DNA profiling
with electrophoresis gel to solve a possible baby mix-up at the
hospital. NOVA: The Real Jurassic Park Students will be able to:
- Explain the steps of DNA Profiling - Describe the possible
usefulness of DNA Profiling to our society - Contrast extracting
ancient DNA from fossils to modern DNA from blood and other
cells of organisms. Per group of two: - Copies of the lab "Will
the Real Baby Smith Please Speak Up!" - Glue or tape To prepare
students for the video, explain the steps of extracting and
profiling DNA. Explain how DNA is extracted and isolated from
cells. Cell membranes are lysed wit |
-2.199695 | 1.615438 | -1 | Supporters of a democratic Burma have for decades adhered to a
non-violent approach in order to secure some form of democratic
processes in a nation ruled by murderous thugs who use violence
in order to enforce their will. An organizer of last September’s
failed uprising told the British newspaper, the Guardian, “There
is a very real debate among us about how to begin a more
sustained armed struggle. We are ready for that kind of action,
if we can get the supplies and training we need.” Speaking from
exile in Thailand, Soe Aung, the chief spokesperson for the
National “Council of the Union of Burma(NCUB) which represents
several groups, admitted “some are considering violent means…
the Burmese people are not that kind of people, there has been a
real change.” Soe Aung admitted his group is able to receive
assistance from the US State Department funded, National
Endowment for Democracy, and the United States is “doing the
most for the opposition. There has been real success in training
and forming an undergrou |
3.063415 | 1.148984 | -1 | FUTURE REACTOR: The Advanced Test Reactor at Idaho National
Laboratory, with a maximum capacity of 250 megawatts, would
qualify as a small modular design, although it is primarily used
to test nuclear components for larger reactors. Image: Courtesy
of Idaho National Laboratory Small may be beautiful for the
nuclear power industry So argue a host of would-be builders of
novel nuclear reactors. While the U.S. government has not given
up on investing in large units that boast conventional designs,
the Department of Energy has also announced the availability of
$450 million in funds to support engineering and licensing of
so-called "small modular reactors." "The Obama Administration
and the Energy Department are committed to an all-of-the-above
energy strategy that develops every source of American energy,
including nuclear power," said Secretary of Energy Steven Chu in
a statement announcing the funding, which aims to get such
modular reactors hooked into the grid by 2022. "The Energy
Department and private indu |
6.094969 | 0.361629 | 193 | From last week’s post, you’ll remember we explained that GMO
crops (to date) do not fulfill their promise: - They do not
decrease hunger and poverty; - Data shows that GMO crops
actually increase pesticide and herbicide use; - They do not
yield more; in a new report from the Union of Concerned
Scientists, Failure to Yield, data shows that despite 20 years
of research and 13 years of commercialization, genetic
engineering has failed to significantly increase U.S. crop
yields. In fact data points to possibly lower yields than would
have been achieved by NOT using GMO seed. But I still didn’t
understand what the fuss is all about. After all, companies have
been making claims for products forever. Shouldn’t the product
just die by way of non-purchase? Why should governments get
involved and prohibit the use of GMO seeds? Why are the organic
trade associations around the world in such an uproar? After
all, the promise of genetic engineering is very powerful - to be
able to feed the world as populations increase an |
-0.610931 | 1.909962 | -1 | KERR SAYS WE CAN NOT REMAIN ALOOF Another World War Inevitable,
He Says, if We Do Not Remove Causes--Blames England, France, and
U. S. Before an audience that crowded the Living Room of the
Union last evening Mr. Philip Kerr spoke on "The Situation in
Europe". He was introduced by Professor M. O. Hudson '10 of the
Law School. Introducing his speech with the statement that he
had come here to learn. Mr. Kerr said that in the course of his
learning he had concluded that America was no longer the land of
the pioneer. The people of the United States are not seeking
land for settlement, nor are they seeking an increase in
population through the channel of immigration. America is today
approaching the same economic stage which England reached in
1840, when her manufactures surpassed her agricultural
interests. Foreign trade will increasingly become the great
interest of America. Present Situation Discouraging Everyone
must look with disappointment upon Europe, Mr. Kerr continued,
for the world has been disillusione |
1.978436 | 6.509578 | -1 | Anomia: [uh-NO-mee-uh] - Noun - 1) A problem with word finding
or recall. 2) Chaos. 3) The game where common knowledge becomes
uncommonly fun! Anomia plays off the fact that our minds are
positively brimming with all sorts of random information; ice
cream flavors, pop songs, websites, etc. Sure, under normal
circumstances, it’s easy enough to give an example of a frozen
food, or a dog breed; but you will find that your brain works a
little differently under pressure! The directions are simple.
Draw a card from the center pile and flip it over in front of
you. Does the symbol on your card match one on another player’s
card? If so, you must quickly face-off with the other player by
giving an example of the person, place, or thing on their card
before they can do the same for yours. If you blurt a correct
answer out first, you win their card and drawing continues.
Sounds simple, right? Wrong! Wild cards allow unlike symbols to
match, increasing the number of things you must pay attention
to. Cascading face-offs |
5.90949 | 4.205248 | 87 | - For Teachers Which is the correct idiom 'rates for' or 'rate
of'? I have read both of them. e.g The rate of change of speed
is very rapid. 'Suicide rates for the soldiers increased' NY
Times. Which usage is correct or which one is more appropriate
in what situation. Thanks for taking time to reply. I guess my
question was little different. I wanted to know what are the
situations where 'rate of' is more appropriate than 'rate for'.
Why not 'Rate of suicide among the soldiers'? |
5.175517 | 5.938184 | -1 | A monkey controls his robotic arm with a brain-machine
interface. If this monkey can eat marshmallows with his robotic
arm, mind-controlled prosthetics for humans can’t be far off,
right? Well, that’s true if all you ever wanted to do with your
prosthetic was sit strapped in a chair reaching for
marshmallows. But as Michael Chorost explains in a recent
feature for Wired, challenges abound when building an arm that
works in everyday life. Over the course of a day, you might use
your arm to pick up a chair, unzip your jacket, or scratch your
neck—each one of these actions are unique. But statistical
algorithms used now can translate the firing of neurons into
only a few stereotyped motions. And it’s not just about writing
better algorithms; it’s an input problem too. Getting electrodes
to pick up signals from the same neurons over time is a
continuous battle against the body’s natural defenses: |
2.441874 | 7.500764 | -1 | The Join tool allows you to attach a number of objects together
into a single object. The Join tool is almost exactly like
PowerCADD's Attach command, with a few important exceptions. The
objects that are joined together consist of an ordered, end-to-
end group of objects known as a path. Thus, you can combine
lines, polygons, arcs, B-splines, Béziers, and splines to form
an irregular shape that can have a single fill pattern or color
and a single pen pattern, color and dash pattern. (If you join a
line to a Bézier, however, the result is a single Bézier.) Paths
are important for several reasons. First, you can create a
single 'object'-say a maple leaf consisting of lines, arcs,
polygons, Béziers, B-splines and splines-that you can ungroup
and individually edit the objects within the group. Second, when
paths are printed or plotted, they are actually treated as a
single object. This means that a single line dash pattern is
used for the entire object, thus providing an even pattern of
dashes rather than the awk |
5.501921 | -2.163759 | 3 | THE LIVING MUSEUM Vol. 1. No.6 October, 1939. Illinois State
Museum Springfield, Illinois Located on Fifth Floor of
Centennial Building A monthly guide to a keener understanding of
the Illinois State Museum as a living thing--a Museum whose
exhibits are planned for popular enjoyment without loss of
scientific accuracy. GEESE ON THE WING October--and in the north
there has been a growing exodus of flying things. Out of the
vast Canadian marshes where, for a brief summer, geese nest and
rear their young--out of here, on a night with a pushing north
wind, come the geese, heading south. Perhaps they flew over
while you slept--the blue geese and snow geese from Baffin Land,
or big Canadas from Saskatchewan. Perhaps, in a cold October
rain, you heard wild honkings, and, if you looked up, maybe you
saw silver-bellied birds circling over the city, picked out by
lights below, confused by the lights and reflections on the
clouds. There is a strange, nostalgic longing in most of us when
the geese go over. It is a longin |
9.885533 | 0.937009 | -1 | |Ferrets as experimental models of influenza in humans| 07 Mar
2012 A number of animal models have been used to study how
influenza viruses may work in humans: mice, hamsters, guinea
pigs, and both cotton rats (Sigmodon) and ordinary rats
(Rattus). However one of the most used is the ferret model. This
species is very susceptible to infection with human influenza
viruses and unlike some other animal models, such as mice, there
is no need for prior host adaptation of the human viruses. Hence
ferrets are considered by many to be the most suitable small
animal model for influenza research relating to humans. For
decades the degree of antigenic match of drifted influenza
viruses to existing vaccines has been judged by seeing how
reactive they are with ferret anti-sera raised against the
current vaccine strains. Many studies on ferrets have modelled
the pathogenesis mechanisms of influenza viruses and the
potential for these to cause disease in humans through similar
pathogenesis patterns including not only human |
1.212962 | 6.277315 | -1 | In this section, you will find many instructional materials
we've developed for our Writing Center teaching. However, there
are limitations to these materials. Assignments vary, and
different instructors want different things from student
writers. Therefore, the advice here may or may not apply to your
writing situation. Finally, handouts can give only a fraction of
the customized guidance that an individual conference with a
Writing Center instructor can provide. If you have questions
about the information in our handouts, please make an
appointment to see a Writing Center instructor. About
Documentation Styles - What are documentation styles? - What do
I need to document? - How should I gather information for
documenting sources? - Which style should I use? A documentation
style is a standard approach to the citation of sources that the
author of a paper has consulted, abstracted, or quoted from. It
prescribes methods for citing references within the text,
providing a list of works cited at the end of the p |
7.582108 | 1.801833 | -1 | EDMONTON - It doesn’t get more old school than barley. Eons
before Scotch broth joined the British canon of hearty soups,
barley was a staple of the ancient world. As the oldest
cultivated cereal in Europe (and possibly anywhere) barley was
once the most important grain for human consumption. But over
millenniums, according to the Oxford Companion to Food, barley-
based foods, from porridge to bread, fell from grace, eclipsed
by wheat as the grain of choice. Though still popular when
turned into malt for beer, barley found itself relegated to
animal fodder for much of the last 10,000 years. But a
resurgence in interest in ancient grains of all descriptions —
from quinoa to spelt to amaranth — has helped raise the profile
of barley. An increase in food sensitivities among the
population has also worked in barley’s favour; though it does
contain gluten, and therefore isn’t suitable for celiacs, barley
has less gluten than wheat, making it a possibility for those
who have a sensitivity to wheat. Furthermore, base |
-0.275486 | 1.937463 | -1 | Armistice Day, as November 11 became known, officially became a
holiday in the United States in 1926, and a national holiday 12
years later. On June 1, 1954, the name was changed to Veterans
Day to honor all U.S. veterans. In 1968, new legislation changed
the national commemoration of Veterans Day to the fourth Monday
in October. It soon became apparent, however, that November 11
was a date of historic significance to many Americans.
Therefore, in 1978 Congress returned the observance to its
traditional date. Official, national ceremonies for Veterans Day
center around the Tomb of the Unknowns. To honor these men,
symbolic of all Americans who gave their lives in all wars, an
Army honor guard, the 3d U.S. Infantry (The Old Guard), keeps
day and night vigil. At 11 a.m. on November 11, a combined color
guard representing all military services executes “Present Arms”
at the tomb. The nation’s tribute to its war dead is symbolized
by the laying of a presidential wreath and the playing of
“Taps.” Congress voted Ar |
5.116339 | 5.896369 | -1 | A golden age of discovery in neuroscience Developments in
imaging technology, genetics, brain chemistry and computing are
promising fresh insights into the workings of the mind and
mental illness. Our science correspondent Tom Feilden asks what
neuroscience has to say about what it means to be human. "So
this is it. This is our new toy. Not bad for eight million
quid." I'm standing in the control room at the Nuffield
Department of Clinical Neurosciences's Brain Imaging Centre at
the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. Looking through a plate
glass window with me, and gesticulating enthusiastically, is the
centre's director, Professor Irene Tracey. On the other side of
the glass is one of the most powerful imaging machines anywhere
in the world. Weighing in at 40 tonnes - and generating a
magnetic field strength of 7 Tesla - its central component, a
huge cylindrical magnet, is so big they had to take the roof off
the building to get it in. End Quote Dr John Williams Wellcome
Trust We're on the cusp of a series |
2.85847 | 0.691317 | -1 | Saturday, May 18, 2013 The Associated Press HARTFORD, Conn. -
Connecticut's nuclear plant is preparing to ask federal
regulators for permission to use water that's even warmer than
the temperature that forced it to shut a unit last August.
Regulators were cool to at least two other suggestions by
Millstone Power Station in Waterford to operate with rising
water temperatures, according to emails among Nuclear Regulatory
Commission officials obtained by The Associated Press through an
open records request. One of the plant's two operating units was
forced to shut down for nearly two weeks last year because the
water in the Long Island Sound was warmer than the limit of 75
degrees that's in place to keep the plant operating safely. The
partial shutdown at Millstone was the first in the United States
to be caused by rising water temperatures, and the head of the
NRC has asked for a review of climate change impacts on nuclear
plants nationwide. Nuclear plants require large amounts of water
to cool equipment and bu |
6.437375 | -1.564143 | -1 | McLean, VA (written by Doyle Rice/USA Today) -- As if this
summer isn't bad enough already, the unusual warmth is turning
bugs extra frisky. "We're calling it a breeding bonanza," says
Missy Henriksen of the National Pest Control Association. Across
the country, as a result of record heat, pests from grasshoppers
to crickets and ants to bees are arriving earlier and in greater
numbers than usual, entomologists at HomeTeam Pest Defense say.
"We're seeing an increase in a lot of different pests right
now," company entomologist Russ Horton says. Pest controllers
are battling grasshoppers in Texas, ants in Florida, and
crickets and bees across the country, he says. "Insects develop
more rapidly with higher temperatures," says entomologist David
Denlinger of Ohio State University. He adds that insects did
well this past winter given the lack of intense cold. Through
June, the USA was sweating through its warmest year on record,
according to the National Climatic Data Center. Insects such as
grasshoppers and cricke |
6.113462 | 0.355468 | 193 | Competitive Enterprise Institute | 1899 L ST NW Floor 12,
Washington, DC 20036 | Phone: 202-331-1010 | Fax: 202-331-0640
Co-authored by Drew L. Kershen. The modern techniques for
genetic improvement — recombinant DNA, or “genetic modification”
(GM) — began to be applied to bacteria and plants 40 years ago.
For the first time, molecular biologists could very precisely
move genetic material and its traits from one species to
another. The resulting new plant varieties have revolutionized
agriculture by boosting farmers’ profits and food security in
much of the world. But not in Europe. For more than 20 years,
bucking a worldwide scientific consensus, the European Union
(EU) has maintained literally nonsensical laws and regulations
that focus not on the risk-related characteristics of new plant
varieties but on the process — recombinant DNA technology — used
to create them. The result is a dysfunctional regulatory system
in which there is an inverse relationship between the degree of
regulatory scrutiny and the p |
-2.15786 | 4.283893 | 37 | When did the authors write the Bible? How can we date the
Levitical laws in the first five books of the Bible? Were these
laws in the Bible written down during the time of Moses? Is
there evidence for a later date for the composition of the legal
code in the Pentateuch? The time of the writing of the Bible can
be determined by comparing history books like Samuel and law
books like Leviticus, and this analysis, among others, reveal
that the Torah was composed later than the time of the earliest
history books in the Bible. If principle characters in the Bible
were law breakers, then Moses composed the entire Torah. If
these characters did not follow Torah regulations because they
were unfamiliar with the rules (the rules being composed later
than their time, by Levites) then it becomes obvious that the
Torah evolved gradually over time. The evidence of the
contradictory nature of history and doctrine on the pages of the
Torah indicates that the documents did not come from a single
source. The Bible is found to |
7.776171 | 5.066824 | -1 | Mr. Malone’s research focused on identifying factors that
regulate the survival of adult neural stem cells. The neural
stem cells that exist in the adult brain are capable of turning
into all the different types of cells found in the brain. As a
result, these stem cells are thought to be one way in which the
brain can repair itself when an injury such as a stroke occurs.
One of the major problems with adult neural stem cells is that
they often die when they reach a site of brain injury. Mr.
Malone discovered that a specific protein, known as Mcl-1, is a
crucial survival factor for adult neural stem cells. Mcl-1 had
previously been shown to enhance the survival of blood and liver
stem cells, but it was not known whether it had a role in adult
neural stem cells. The graduate student found that when the
concentration of Mcl-1 in neural stem cells was decreased, the
cells died. Likewise, when the amount of Mcl-1 in the neural
stem cells was increased, the numbers that survive was enhanced.
“Collectively, my resul |
2.688248 | 8.55757 | 17 | What References Are References in PHP are a means to access the
same variable content by different names. They are not like C
pointers; for instance, you cannot perform pointer arithmetic
using them, they are not actual memory addresses, and so on. See
What References Are Not for more information. Instead, they are
symbol table aliases. Note that in PHP, variable name and
variable content are different, so the same content can have
different names. The closest analogy is with Unix filenames and
files - variable names are directory entries, while variable
content is the file itself. References can be likened to
hardlinking in Unix filesystem. |
1.53015 | 6.503881 | -1 | To make the face of the pumpkin, cut assorted shapes from
adhesive backed foam, such as circles, triangles and rectangles.
Use the photo as your guide. Cut your own designs shapes for the
eyes, nose, mouth, teeth and eyebrows of the pumpkin. Remove
backing from shapes and place on pumpkin. To make the pumpkin
hat, cut a 4-inch circle of foam for the bottom of the hat. Glue
this circle to the top of the pumpkin. Cut another piece of foam
2 inches by 8 inches long and join ends together to make a
circle (see photo). Glue this piece on top of the hat base. To
complete the hat, cut another 4-inch circle of foam to fit on
top of the hat. Glue in place. To decorate the pumpkin hat, cut
assorted colored foam triangles and add to the hat brim. Glue
chenille stem, curling ends to brim of hat as shown. Cut a leaf
from the foam. Cut lines from the foam and glue to the leaf to
create leaf veins. Glue the leaf to the hat. Option: Use wiggle
eyes or almost any other fun craft materials to decorate your
own spooktacular pum |
0.266009 | 2.071597 | 64 | John Hunt Morgan |John Hunt Morgan| John Hunt Morgan Engraving
by George Edward Perine (1837–85) June 1, 1825| |Died||September
4, 1864 |Place of burial||Lexington Cemetery| |Allegiance||
United States of America Confederate States of America
|Service/branch|| United States Army Confederate States Army
|Years of service||1846–1847 (USA) 1857–1861 (Kentucky Militia)
|Rank|| First Lieutenant(USA) Captain (Kentucky Militia)
Brigadier General (CSA) Morgan is best known for Morgan's Raid
when, in 1863, he and his men rode over 1,000 miles covering a
region from Tennessee, up through Kentucky, into Indiana and on
to southern Ohio. This would be the farthest north any uniformed
Confederate troops penetrated during the war. Early life and
career John Hunt Morgan was born in Huntsville, Alabama, the
eldest of ten children of Calvin and Henrietta (Hunt) Morgan. He
was an uncle of geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan and a maternal
grandson of John Wesley Hunt, an early founder of Lexington,
Kentucky, and one of the first mil |
-1.951285 | 4.513861 | 37 | If Mary resembles Billy Holiday then Zechariah is more like Nat
King Cole. The Benedictus (Lk. 1.67-79) at it core is a love
song in which old Z sings about how "Unforgettable" his God is.
The first word says it all, "Praise." (i.e. to bless, to adore)
Zechariah shows us that jazz is not all improvisation but
composition too… Because he had been sentenced by the angel
Gabriel to over nine months of silence he had plenty of time to
work on his song of adoration. As you read it you will notice
that it is a list of reasons why he loves God. You might also
see a minimum of 16 references to the Old Testament. Finally, it
is structured like a chiasmus (a form of poetry that makes use
of inverted parallelism). While Mary was improvising, Zechariah
had the time to compose. Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus where
great composers but no less magnificent jazz musicians. A jazz-
shaped faith has room for both. A jazz-shaped faith needs both. |
4.209219 | 8.630778 | 60 | When an infected program is first executed, Riihi becomes memory
resident, and infects COM files as they are executed. Riihi does
not decrease available DOS memory, and it does not show up in
When the virus is resident, it will check every executed
program. If the file extension is COM, and the program does not
start with the 'M' letter, the virus infects it. The 'M' check
is done in order not to infect EXE files that have been renamed
to COM. Infected programs grow by 132 bytes. The virus does not
do anything except spread, and it does not contain any texts.
The exact origin of Riihi is not known, but it is suspected to
be written in Finland - it caused several large-scale infections
in Finland during December 1993 and January 1994. [Analysis:
Mikko Hypponen, F-Secure] |
4.100716 | -2.255413 | 49 | |Science Museum of Virginia sea stars| Strange creatures are our
sea stars; they have no blood, no brains, and if we chop them
up, as long as there is a fifth left, they will grow everything
back. As for the no brains thing, anyone who has seen “SpongeBob
SquarePants” can attest that Patrick Star, SpongeBob’s best
friend, is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. Comedy is not
the only reason Patrick is a little slow on the uptake. The
creator of SpongeBob, Stephen Hillenburg, taught marine biology
at Orange County Ocean Institute in California and puts weird
facts like that into the story and characters. Sea stars
actually have something going on upstairs, but it’s just a nerve
ring instead of a brain. Breathing is another thing that our
dear sea stars don’t do like most of the creatures we come in
contact with. They absorb sea water through a small dot normally
located somewhere on the top facing side of the sea star; this
is called a madreporite. The water they absorb is used in their
circulatory system (ye |
6.463809 | 4.611665 | -1 | By Chris Roberts By Joe Eskenazi By Albert Samaha By Mike
Billings By Rachel Swan By Erin Sherbert By Joe Eskenazi By
Albert Samaha Does distant healing actually work? If it works,
can scientists really study it? The jury is still out on both
questions. Critics of distant healing research question whether
a clinical trial should study spirituality, and whether it can
measure something so ephemeral and unexplainable. But scientists
like Targ say it is possible to use accepted methodologies and
"rigorous science" to determine the answers. "Rigorous science"
means subjecting a hypothesis to the Western "gold standard" of
clinical trials -- a randomized, controlled, and double-blinded
trial, commonly known as an "RCT." As an example, a simple RCT
might be used to test a new medicine. Participants would be
split randomly into two groups so external factors wouldn't skew
the data. One would be given the medicine and the other "control
group" would be given a "placebo" pill (something that looks,
smells, and tastes |
4.168643 | 3.913045 | -1 | A particle which always moves faster than the speed of light.
Such particles are hypothetically possible, but none has ever
been observed, and their actual physical existence is now
considered more than a little doubtful. Also see luxon and
tardyon. a hypothetical faster-than-light quantum particle,
which has not been proven to actually exist a hypothetical
particle that travels at superluminal velocities a hypothetical
particle that travels faster than the speed of light and has
imaginary mass a theoretical particle that always travels faster
than light a theoretical particle that can travel faster than
the speed of light a type of subatomic particle that exists only
at faster-than-light velocities a [theoretical] particle that
moves faster than light. A tachyon (from the Greek (takhús),
meaning "swift, fast") is any hypothetical particle that travels
at superluminal velocity. The first description of tachyons is
attributed to German physicist Arnold Sommerfeld, but it was
George Sudarshan, Olexa-Myron Bila |
3.810943 | 5.142354 | -1 | To ensure a safe and caring environment for children and youth A
Toolkit on Positive Discipline with Particular Emphasis on South
and Central Asia. Regional Working Group, Save the Children
Sweden 206 page s . 2007. English . http://www.crin.org/docs/Too
lkit%20on%20Positive%20Discipline%20final.pdf This toolkit
outlines an approach that parents can utilize in place of
physical and psychological punishment. Though the Toolkit was
designed primarily for those working abroad, it is extremely
applicable to service providers working with refugee and
immigrant families in the United States. Of particular relevance
to service providers are the sections on: natural and logical
consequences (p. 76), establishing norms and limits in
families/schools (p. 77), conflict management (p. 89), and
managing aggressive behavior (p. 106). The Toolkit includes case
scenarios that can be used for discussion and other activities
suitable for parenting classes. Are there Universal Parenting
Concepts among Culturally Diverse Families |
4.026698 | 1.384984 | 19 | This year, THE CONCRETE PRODUCER, with our sister publication,
CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION, introduced the GreenSite Project of the
Year con contest honoring the concrete community's efforts to
promote concrete's role in creating eco-friendly structures that
will stand the test of time. The name “GreenSite” reflects the
innovative processes and materials that create a green building
project, many of which are invisible in the final product. For
instance, visitors to the Aldo Leopold Legacy Center in
Wisconsin breathe air that is pretreated by an underground
concrete pipe ventilation system. Meanwhile, in Philadelphia,
lightweight CarbonCast walls protect residents of the Symphony
House condominiums from the elements, while using less energy
and fewer materials than traditional concrete panels. TCP's 2008
GreenSite winners each represent a different category:
Institutional, Commercial, Multifamily, Residential, and High-
rise. For more details and photos of each project, click here.
To learn how to participate in nex |
3.209328 | 5.455277 | -1 | From Our 2010 Archives Preschoolers' Skills Get Boost From
Confident Teachers Latest Healthy Kids News FRIDAY, June 11
(HealthDay News) -- Highly confident teachers and emotional
support in the classroom play important roles in helping
preschoolers learn language and literacy skills, a new study has
found. The researchers focused on 67 preschool teachers and 328
of their students over a 30-week period. The teachers completed
a questionnaire designed to measure their level of confidence in
their teaching ability, which the study authors deemed "self-
efficacy." In addition, the researchers used trained observers
to measure the level of classroom emotional support for
students. Language and literacy skills tests were given to the
children at the beginning and end of the 30 weeks. Students
whose teachers had high self-efficacy showed gains in a measure
of an early literacy skill called print awareness, such as being
able to identify a single letter on a page. However, advances in
vocabulary knowledge skills occur |
8.850956 | 4.310482 | 80 | NETWORK WITH US! Stop, even reverse, heart disease The support
you need to succeed The tools that make it easy Access to
cutting-edge info MORE REASONS TO TRACK YOUR PLAQUE! New Medical
Discoveries ... Dr. Davis Comments If the means to turn off
heart disease are already within our grasp, why don’t most
doctors tell you about it? Surely, if there were some medicine
or health practice that could stop heart disease in its tracks,
he/she would tell you about it! Think about that for a moment:
Coronary heart disease is the number one cause of death in
America, and most physicians do not know how to screen a
seemingly well person for hidden heart disease. You may, in
fact, know of friends or acquaintances who passed their annual
physical exam from their family physician, only to die or have a
heart attack shortly afterwards. The fact is, the latest
research and discoveries regarding the role of factors beyond
cholesterol in heart attacks is so new that most practicing
physicians and cardiologists have not yet been |
1.174718 | 2.055121 | -1 | History & Culture Kahnawake's Council of Chiefs:1840-1889 By:
Gerald F. Reid, Ph.D Sacred Heart University Prior to the
establishment of a band council system in the late nineteenth
century, Kahnawake was governed locally by a council of chiefs.
When the Indian Advancement Act was applied to the reserve in
1889 Kahnawake’s council of chiefs had a structure perhaps only
about a half century old, but still rooted in the Iroquois
system of clans and the community’s traditional form of
government. Part 1 of this report focuses on the organization
and composition of the council of chiefs during the second half
of the nineteenth century. Part 2 is concerned with divisions
within Kahnawake over the issues of the council and the Indian
Act. Part 3 focuses on the circumstances under which the chiefs
council was replaced by a band council system in 1889. The
following discussion is based on a variety of primary and
secondary source materials. The most important of these are
files of the Indian Department and Department |
0.582858 | 2.432176 | 42 | Register style, a specific format for organizing genealogical
data, was first introduced in the January 1870 Register. Editor
Albert Harrison Hoyt explained “for the benefit of future
contributors to the Register, and perhaps of those about to
publish family-genealogies, we have arranged the Sherman
Genealogy, a portion of which appears in this number of the
Register, on a plan easily understood, and convenient for
reference.” In the July 1883 Register, John Ward Dean reported
on the ‘Register plan for genealogical records.’ “It has now
been in use thirteen years and has given satisfaction. The
Publishing Committee will continue to require genealogies
intended for the Register to be arranged on this plan.”
Modifications have been made to this style over the last 140+
years to account for changing tastes and technologies, but the
format remains flexible, effective, and popular. In the
Publications Department we regularly receive enquiries from
people seeking guidelines for writing their genealogical
informatio |
5.14373 | 0.45856 | 65 | 6. The Council noted that during the period under review there
had been little change in the world food situation. While there
were some encouraging factors in the last two years, the
situation was still fragile and many unsatisfactory features
remained in respect both of longer-term trends and of the actual
results obtained in different developing countries. Little
progress had been made towards either the goals agreed at the
World Food Conference or the target of agricultural growth set
forth in the development strategy of the Second Development
Decade. There was therefore no cause for complacency or undue
optimism. 7. World food production had shown a good production
performance in both 1975 and 1976, including the developing
countries where, in these two years, the increase in food
produc- tion had averaged about 4 percent per year, although
this average covered considerable differences between countries
and regions. 8. The improvement in world food supplies begun in
1975 had continued. However, the Counc |
8.787021 | 2.559825 | -1 | The beauty enhancing properties of milk have been known and
documented for thousands of years. Legend has it that, in
ancient Egypt, Queen Cleopatra regularly bathed in goat’s milk
to retain her youthful appearance. In the 21st century, milk
remains a useful beauty ingredient that delivers nutrients and
enzymes to improve the appearance of tired, aging, or irritated
skin. Milk is produced by mammals as the primary source of
nutrition for their young. As a result, milk is packed with
vitamins, minerals, protein, and carbohydrate, which are
essential for the growth and development of a young mammal.
Customers prone to breakouts, excess oil production and/or who
are lactose intolerant may want to avoid using milk-based
products. Topical application of milk brings out the natural
beauty of skin. Milk contains lactic acid, an alpha hydroxy acid
(AHA) that exfoliates the skin, removing dead cells from the
skin’s surface and promoting the generation of fresh skin cells.
Regular application of milk to the skin encour |
2.838954 | 7.759552 | -1 | States are the basic units of the state machines. In UML 2.0
states can have substates. Execution of the diagram begins with
the Initial node and finishes with Final or Terminate node or
nodes. Please refer to UML 2.0 Specification for more
information about these elements. State Machine diagrams
describe the logic behavior of the system, a part of the system,
or the usage protocol of it. On these diagrams you show the
possible states of the objects and the transitions that cause a
change in state. State Machine diagrams in UML 2.0 are different
in many aspects compared to Statechart diagrams in UML 1.5.
Copyright(C) 2008 CodeGear(TM). All Rights Reserved. What do you
think about this topic? Send feedback! |
1.003844 | 0.488244 | -1 | In his novel Entangled, Graham Hancock spun a tale suggesting
that Neanderthals were way more creative than the violent homo
sapiens who wiped them out. New research suggests that Hancock
may have been right, reported by James Noble Wilford in the New
York Times: Stone Age artists were painting red disks,
handprints, clublike symbols and geometric patterns on European
cave walls long before previously thought, in some cases more
than 40,000 years ago, scientists reported on Thursday, after
completing more reliable dating tests that raised a possibility
that Neanderthals were the artists. A more likely situation, the
researchers said, is that the art — 50 samples from 11 caves in
northwestern Spain — was created by anatomically modern humans
fairly soon after their arrival in Europe. The findings seem to
put an exclamation point to a run of recent discoveries: direct
evidence from fossils that Homo sapiens populations were living
in England 41,500 to 44,200 years ago and in Italy 43,000 to
45,000 years ago, an |
4.338296 | -0.346535 | -1 | Should Chiapas Farmers Suffer for California’s Carbon? “We are
not responsible for climate change—it’s the big industries that
are,” said Abelardo, a young man from the Tseltal Mayan village
of Amador Hernández in the Lacandon jungle of Chiapas. “So why
should we be held responsible, and even punished for it?”
Abelardo was one of dozens of villagers who had traveled to the
city of San Cristóbal de las Casas to protest an international
policy meeting on climate change and forest conservation. At a
high-end conference center, representatives from the state of
California and from states and provinces around the world were
working out mechanisms intended to mitigate climate change by
protecting tropical forests. The group was called the Governor’s
Climate and Forests Task Force (GCF), and California’s interest
was in using forest preservation in Chiapas as a carbon offset—a
means for meeting climate change goals under the state’s 2006
Global Warming Solutions Act. Such an agreement among
subnational governments i |
4.30511 | 1.637339 | -1 | Nube De Oro - Leaf Writing Sys Test In order to allow the agave
to express his relation to light, and time, the piccolo
(piccolo.cc) is used for agave leaf "writing". The simple
'drawing' is based on the data from a hibiscus glass solar cell
acting as a light sensor that is transformed via arduino. The
power system consists of sixty six natural dye sensitized glass
solar cells -shaped after the seeds of teosinte (the mother of
maize)- and two supercapacitors. As soon as the growing agave
stalk starts flowering, the agave will start writing on its
leaves, as long as the cells provide sufficient power. |
1.361735 | 1.411209 | -1 | Alaska Native Wisdom for Modern Times There is a single place in
the United States where indigenous peoples still live on
ancestral lands, consume over four hundred pounds of wild foods
annually per capita, and indigenous elders still remember the
arrival of the first Westerners in their regions. That place is
Alaska. Despite daunting challenges to cultural integrity and
ways of life, Alaska’s Native peoples retain vast storehouses of
their traditional knowledge, wisdom, and lifeways. Thus, many
traditional Alaska Native lifeways and understandings about how
human beings fit into the bigger matrix of creation remain
relatively intact. These ways have allowed our cultures to
survive and thrive for thousands of years, even in the face of
many daunting ecological and economic crises. In today’s
challenging times, such ways, having evolved through an intimate
and profound relationship to lands, waters, and all life, have
much to offer the American people and the entire human family.
Alaska’s vast lands are home t |
3.806918 | 8.277105 | -1 | HP OpenVMS Systems Documentation Compaq PATHWORKS for OpenVMS
(Advanced In addition to the network card and the network card
driver, a network computer must have a protocol driver, also
called a transport protocol or a protocol. The protocol driver
works between the upper-level network software---such as the
workstation and server---and the network adapter card. The
protocol packages the data that are sent over the network in a
way that the computer on the receiving end will understand. The
process of associating a protocol driver with the network
adapter card with which it will work and establishing a
communication channel between the two is called binding. For two
computers to communicate on a network, they must use identical
protocols. In the case where computers are configured to use
multiple protocols, they need to have only one protocol in
common to communicate. For example, a server that uses both
NetBEUI and TCP/IP can communicate both with workstations that
use only NetBEUI and with workstations that |
9.715443 | 1.482589 | -1 | Eliminating cell receptor prevents infection in animal study New
research from The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia sheds
light on the role of cell receptors in acting as gatekeepers for
infectious viruses. By using mice genetically engineered to lack
a particular receptor in heart and pancreas cells, the study
team prevented infection by a common virus that causes
potentially serious diseases in humans. "This finding is a step
to understanding how cell receptors operate in infections," said
study leader Jeffrey M. Bergelson, M.D., a pediatric infectious
diseases specialist at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
"Scientists have identified receptors for many viruses that
cause disease," said Bergelson, "but it is not always clear
whether the receptors found in cell cultures actually play a
role in the disease process. In this case, we confirmed that
this receptor really is involved in the disease." The current
study, publishing July 23 in Cell Host and Microbe, focused on
the coxsackievirus and adenov |
2.452772 | 5.240725 | 43 | - What is credit? Credit is a quantified means of expressing
equivalence of learning. Credit is awarded to a learner in
recognition of the verified achievement of designated learning
outcomes at a specified level. It is a way of comparing learning
achieved in a variety of different contexts. - How is credit
gained? Credit is gained through the achievement of learning
outcomes and their assessment. - How is credit quantified? The
amount of credit achieved is related to the amount of learning.
In the UK, in further and higher education there is widespread
agreement that ten hours of learning activity (including
assessment) leads to the award of one credit. It is understood
that this calculation is an approximation and depends on
academic judgement. That judgement is guided by the
identification of learning outcomes that are to be achieved
during the learning. - Is all credit at the same level? No,
credit is awarded at different levels representing different
degrees of educational challenge. SEEC has developed C |
4.838223 | 3.31956 | -1 | Microwaves can transform a frozen pizza into hot, melted
goodness in four minutes flat, but they can’t rescue your melted
ice-cream sundae. To cook food, a microwave oven converts
voltage into high-frequency electromagnetic microwaves. The
molecules in food—especially water and fat—absorb this energy
and wiggle at high speeds, causing them to heat rapidly and warm
the surrounding food. Although quickly turning leftovers cold
would be handy, this is a one-way operation, explains David
Pozar, a professor and microwave expert at the University of
Massachusetts. Microwaves can only speed up atoms, not slow them
down. Scientists do have a high-tech method for slowing atoms,
however: lasers. Shoot a moving atom with a laser, and it will
absorb the laser’s photons and re-emit them every which way,
causing the atom to hold nearly still. Placing an atom at the
junction of multiple beams can slow its momentum in all
directions, decreasing its energy and cooling it. This drops an
atom’s temperature a couple hundred degr |
2.351276 | 4.732152 | -1 | VOICE (Violence-Prevention Outcomes in Civic Education) VOICE is
a year-long elementary social studies program created by the
Constitutional Rights Foundation Chicago designed to increase
academic achievement, foster peaceful resolution of conflict,
and spark community service. VOICE combines law education, peer
mediation and service learning to educate 4th grade through
middle school students about our democratic government and offer
ways to resolve conflicts non-violently. Research has shown the
VOICE curriculum to be highly effective in helping students
retain and use essential information and skills relating to
government and to resolve conflict peacefully. Through VOICE,
students gain basic civic knowledge about how our government
works and about their roles as citizens in our constitutional
democracy. They practice creative problem-solving and
cooperation, using math, science, and writing skills. They learn
and practice peaceful ways to resolve conflict. They develop
positive connections to their commun |
9.880536 | 3.82155 | -1 | Fundoplication - children - discharge; Nissen fundoplication -
children - discharge; Belsey (Mark IV) fundoplication - children
- discharge; Toupet fundoplication - children - discharge; Thal
fundoplication - children - discharge; Hiatal hernia repair -
children - discharge; Endoluminal fundoplication - children -
discharge When Your Child Was in the Hospital Your child had
surgery to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). GERD is
a condition that causes food or liquid to come up from the
stomach into the esophagus. This is the tube that carries food
from the mouth to the stomach. During the operation, the surgeon
wrapped the upper part of your child’s stomach around the end of
the esophagus. The surgery was done in one of these ways:
Through a large incision (cut) in your child’s upper belly (open
surgery) With a laparoscope (a thin tube with a tiny camera on
the end) By endoluminal repair (like a laparoscope, but the
surgeon goes in though the mouth) Your child may also have had a
plyoroplasty proced |
4.970259 | 3.156546 | 181 | A newly developed route for the synthesis of hollow carbon
nanospheres without introducing template under hydrothermal
conditions was reported. Hollow carbon nanospheres with the
diameter of about 100 nm were synthesized using alginate as
reagent only. Many instruments were applied to characterize the
morphologies and structures of carbon hollow nanospheres, such
as XRD, TEM, and Raman spectroscopy. The possible formation and
growth mechanism of carbon hollow spheres were discussed on the
basis of the investigation of reaction influence factors, such
as temperature, time, and content. The findings would be useful
for the synthesis of more materials with hollow structure and
for the potential use in many aspects. The loading of SnO2on the
surface of carbon hollow spheres was processed, and its PL
property was also characterized. Keywords:Synthesis;
Nanostructure; Carbon hollow nanospheres Please see Electronic
Supplementary File which accompanies this paper Inorganic hollow
spheres with tailored structural, op |
3.386361 | 5.13674 | -1 | 1 July 2005 What is Disability Arts? What are the issues which
have underpinned the development of Disability Arts? Allan
Sutherland offers a concise explanation. The generally agreed
definition of disability arts, the one that we in the disability
arts movement have found most accurately reflects what we are
doing, is that it is 'art made by disabled people which reflects
the experience of disability.' Disability arts is Art. It is
seriously intentioned creative work - poems or painting or music
or comedy or theatre or whatever - made with some sort of
aesthetic purpose. It is not a hobby to keep the cripples' hands
busy. And it is not therapy. Disability arts is made by disabled
people. So we're not talking about anything that portrays us
according to other people's perceptions: Rain Man or Richard III
or 'isn't it tragic' documentaries. In disability arts we are in
charge, we tell our own stories, we present our own perceptions
of disability and the issues around it. Disability arts reflects
the experience |
3.60442 | 1.525863 | 66 | This item is available under a Creative Commons License for non-
commercial use only 2. ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY Electricity
generation from renewable sources of energy will be a key part
in the development of future strategies for many countries
globally. This renewable electricity generation will be hugely
important for Ireland, due to its lack of fossil fuel resources.
The extremely good wind resource available provides Ireland with
the opportunity of generating vast amount of electricity from
wind energy. Large-scale wind electricity generation reached
1264 MW installed capacity by January 2010 in Ireland. However,
micro scale wind electricity generation has not been very
popular in Ireland to-date. The unclear economics of micro wind
turbines, under Irish conditions, is considered the biggest
obstacle for expanding micro wind turbine installation in
Ireland. This paper presents a methodology to accurately
evaluate the economic viability of a micro wind turbine on a
case-by-case basis. The methodology ut |
-0.404622 | 3.529842 | -1 | This sermon, first preached in the First Presbyterian Church in
Philadelphia on May 23, 1814, explains why Jesus’ command to “go
and preach to every nation” represents a new and important era
in the history of the church and the world. A Missionary Sermon
reminds the church of its obligation to preach, and explores the
extent to which the nineteenth century church in America has
followed that command. With the Logos Bible Software edition of
A Missionary Sermon, all Scripture references directly link to
your original language texts and English Bible translations. You
can also employ advanced searching, along with the powerful
tools in your digital library. The Logos edition is a must-have
for historians of American Christianity and Presbyterianism, as
well as biblical scholars and Reformed theologians. -
Exploration of the extent to which the nineteenth century church
in America has followed the command to preach - Explanation of
why Jesus’ command to preach represents a new and important era
in the history o |
3.522062 | 6.66469 | -1 | The Chinese version of Twitter is a microblogging service called
Weibo which launched in 2010. This allows users to post 140
character messages with @usernames and #hashtags, just like
Twitter– although 140 characters in Chinese contain
significantly more information content than in English. In just
three years, Weibo has picked up some 300 million users who
between them send 100 million messages each day at the rate of
70,000 per minute. That makes the inevitable process of
censorship a tricky task for the Chinese authorities. So an
interesting question is how they do it. Today,Dan Wallach at
Rice University in Houston, Texas, and a few pals reveal the
results of a detailed study of censorship on Weibo. Their method
has allowed them to reconstruct the censorship techniques used
by the government, to calculate the number of workers who must
be involved and even to discover their daily work schedules. The
work is possible because at least some of the content on Weibo
is not censored prior to publication, only |
5.78814 | 6.994728 | 67 | The first commercial cochlear implants were approved by the FDA
in the What is an Otolaryngologist? Otolaryngologists are
physicians trained in the medical and surgical management and
treatment of patients with diseases and disorders of the ear,
nose, throat, and related structures of the head and neck. They
are commonly referred to as ENT physicians. What is a
Neurotologist? Neurotologists are subspecialists within the
field of Otolaryngology (Ear, Nose and Throat) who focus on the
neurology and neurosurgery of the ear. This includes the
diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of hearing and balance
disorders, the facial nerve, the ear and temporal bone, and
related structures such as the skull base and brainstem. The
human ears are completely mechanical. Unlike your sense of
smell, taste and vision, which all involve chemical reactions;
your hearing system is based solely on physical movement. The
cochlear implant is the most expensive implant placed in the
human |
5.911928 | 3.464442 | -1 | Molecular beacons would be ideal diagnostics for detecting point
mutations in disease genes if they weren’t so hard to
distinguish. These noose-shaped DNA segments are engineered to
light up when they bind to target DNA, such as a mutated cancer
gene. However, it has been difficult to detect the difference
between complete complementarity and binding that is mismatched
by one or two nucleotides, because an imperfect match still has
a chance—though a smaller one—of binding and fluorescing. Xudong
Fan and Yuze Sun of the University of Michigan bypassed the
problem by creating an amplification step based on physics
rather than biochemistry. They inserted the molecular beacons
and target sequences that differed by one nucleotide into the
head of a liquid laser, thereby replacing the laser’s light-
generating crystal or usual liquid dye with the sample medium.
When mismatched, the probes lit up in the laser chamber, but the
fluorescence was not strong enough to create the feedback needed
to initiate an emitted lase |
3.870541 | 3.452353 | -1 | Ray Kurzweil was inducted in 2002 into the National Inventors
Hall of Fame, established by the U.S. Patent Office. He received
the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize, the nation’s largest award in
invention and innovation. He also received the 1999 National
Medal of Technology, the nation’s highest honor in technology,
from President Clinton in a White House ceremony. He has also
received scores of other national and international awards,
including the 1994 Dickson Prize (Carnegie Mellon University’s
top science prize), Engineer of the Year from Design News,
Inventor of the Year from MIT, and the Grace Murray Hopper Award
from the Association for Computing Machinery. He has received
twelve honorary Doctorates and honors from three U.S.
presidents. He has received seven national and international
film awards. Ray’s books include The Age of Intelligent
Machines, The Age of Spiritual Machines, and Fantastic Voyage:
Live Long Enough to Live Forever. Four of Ray’s books have been
national best sellers and The Age of Spir |
4.196926 | -0.853907 | -1 | by Kenneth Rainis and Bruce Russell Microlife is everywhere–on
your food, in your hair, and around the house. Even though we
can't see many of them, these tiny critters play an important
role in our world. Without them, we would have not food to eat
or oxygen to breathe. Students discover the microanimals,
microfungi, monerans, and protists that make our lives possible,
and learn how to collect, view, and identify types of microlife;
how to use a microscope, and how to take photomicrographs.
Appendices, index. 288 pp., softcover |