Sunday, September 30, 2012

Animal capers as pets are blessed | Toowoomba News | Local News ...

DOGS can seem pretty unholy after digging holes in the yard, but animal owners were able to put a bit of holy back after this morning?s Animal Sunday service.

Rev Penny Jones at Pet blessing at St Lukes Church.

Bev Lacey

DOGS can seem pretty unholy after going through the rubbish and digging a few holes in the backyard, but thankfully animal owners were able to put a bit of holy back into their pets after this morning's Animal Sunday service at St Luke's Anglican Church.

Dogs howling at hymns and grumbling at prayers for cats provided for a light hearted church service as Reverends Penny Jones and Val Grayson presided over what is easily the most fun Sunday on the church's annual calendar.

Pet owners brought along their furry friends to enjoy an outdoor church service aimed at thanking the little critters that often make our most dependable and loyal friends.

There were prayers for cats, dogs, ducks and even elephants said, as well as a moment to reflect on furry friends passed on.

"It's so important to recognise our interdependence with the animal world because we have one creator and we belong together in the web of life," Rev Jones said.

"They give us such marvellous gifts such as unconditional love and loyalty and deserve to be recognised."

Source: http://www.thechronicle.com.au/story/2012/09/30/animal-capers-pets-are-blessed/

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

As Obama and Romney prep for debates, VP candidates seek votes (reuters)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/252020719?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Slovenia debt to rise but no bailout needed: PM

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Slovenia's economy, saddled by a banking crisis, does not need a financial bailout, even though public debt levels will likely breach European Union rules in two years, Prime Minister Janez Jansa said on Friday.

Jansa expects government reform programs, such as increased public-sector wage cuts, job cuts, an increase in the retirement age and consolidation of a privatization program, if executed in time, will boost economic growth and make a bailout unnecessary.

"If we do what we planned, we won't need a bailout," Jansa told Reuters on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly meeting.

Slovenia is struggling to avoid becoming the sixth euro zone member to need some form of financial aid. Jansa said he hopes that all of the reform programs will become law within the next 45 days. He said that if there was a call for a referendum by opposition politicians, it would only serve to delay the process by two months, not stop it.

"Of course, if we run the same debt next year, the bailout is the only solution. But we are determined not to do it. This is why we had early elections and why we changed course," he said.

Slovenia's public debt to gross domestic product ratio rose to 47.7 percent in the first quarter of 2012, but it could cross above the 60 percent threshold set by European Union rules in 2014, Jansa said.

"2014 maybe," he said on the debt threshold, adding: "2014 is also the year when we count on all these measures to start growth will also have some impacts."

The overall public debt to GDP ratio for the 17-member euro zone rose to 88.2 percent in the second quarter, up from 87.3 percent in the prior period.

Jansa said Slovenia's budget deficit stood at 3.4 percent, and required smaller cuts, despite plans to place bad loans in the banking sector - equal to 17.5 percent of economic output - into a so-called "bad bank."

That move would require more government spending, but Jansa said it would not just be bad loans that are transferred.

"We will also transfer the shares of the companies," he said, referring to loans, the majority of which are tied to corporate assets.

"But with all of the other measures we are implementing, the value of those shares after two or three years will rise," Jansa said, referring to plans for more sales of state assets to raise revenues and reduce Ljubljana's ownership of enterprises.

He rejected criticism that consolidating the five agencies in charge of privatizations into one overseen by the government was a recipe for increased political influence and selling of assets on the cheap.

"We have five different agencies which are dealing with this and the transparency is very low. Now we are creating a system with 100 percent transparency," he said.

Jansa reiterated plans to start the process of selling a $1.5 billion Eurobond in October with the aim of finishing the sale before the end of the year to help finance the reform programs.

Slovenia postponed a similar issue in euros in April because the yield demanded was above 5 percent.

Slovenia's bond issuing plans were helped dramatically by the drop in European government bond yields brought on by a July 26 pledge from European Central Bank President Mario Draghi to do whatever is necessary to protect the euro zone from collapse.

"He has to do this," Jansa said. "There will never be total consensus about those measures because the difference between member countries is too big."

(Editing by David Brunnstrom and James Dalgleish)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/slovenia-debt-rise-no-bailout-needed-pm-205102858.html

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Friday, September 28, 2012

About That "Taxpayers Spent $1.4 Billion on Obama Family Last Year" Fake Outrage (Little green footballs)

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Video: U-Teach teachers 'are already passionate'

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49202782/

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Animals suspected in spread of new virus

LONDON (AP) ? Britain's Health Protection Agency says an early genetic sequence of the new respiratory virus related to SARS shows it is most closely related to bat viruses.

Global health officials say they haven't found evidence the virus can spread between people and suspect the two victims from the Middle East may have caught it from animals.

So far, there are no signs the virus will be as deadly as SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which killed hundreds of people, mostly in Asia, in a 2003 global outbreak

Experts say camels, sheep or goats ? animals commonly found in the region ? may be implicated too. Bats also harbor other deadly viruses, like Ebola and SARS, which usually infect other animals including monkeys and civet cats before jumping to humans.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/animals-suspected-spread-virus-073256244.html

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

It's time to turn up the girl power in science

European Commission

The European Commission's "Science: It's a Girl Thing!" campaign has been retooled.

By Alan Boyle

It's not exactly surprising that males are perceived as more competent in science than females ? but researchers at Yale University were surprised to find that even professional scientists showed evidence of such bias. Now the big question is what to do about it.

"Whenever I give a talk that mentions past findings of implicit gender bias in hiring, inevitably a scientist will say that can?t happen in our labs because we are trained to be objective," microbiologist Jo Handelsman, lead author of a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, said in a Yale news release. "I had hoped that they were right."

Nope.


Handelsman and her colleagues asked 127 science faculty members from six institutions to review an application from a senior undergraduate student looking for a job as a lab manager. The faculty members were asked to judge how competent the applicant was, how much the student should be paid, and whether they'd be willing to mentor the student.

Each researcher looked at the same application ??but in some cases the applicant was given a male name (John), and in the other cases a female name was assigned (Jennifer), all on a random basis. When the results were analyzed, it turned out that the sight-unseen male applicant was rated more competent than the female. The mean starting salary offer was $30,238.10 for John as opposed to $26,507.94 for Jennifer. Faculty members were more willing to mentor John than Jennifer.

The data showed a disparity whether the demographic category in question was male or female, young or old, tenured or untenured. "The bias appears pervasive among faculty and is not limited to a certain demographic subgroup," Handelsman and her colleagues wrote.

The researchers emphasized that they weren't suggesting the biases were intentional or stemmed from a conscious desire to hold women back. In fact, they found that the faculty members tended to like Jennifer more than John. That sentiment was generally voiced by faculty women as well as faculty men. It's just that the warm feelings for Jennifer "did not translate into positive perceptions of her composite confidence or material outcomes," according to the PNAS paper.

So what is to be done? "Our results suggest that academic policies and mentoring interventions targeting undergraduate advisers could contribute to reducing the gender disparity," the researchers wrote.

The findings suggest that it's not enough to get young women interested in careers in science, technology, education and math, a.k.a. STEM. There needs to be a conscious follow-through by the folks who do the hiring and mentoring.?You can read through the whole study at the PNAS website.

Maybe it shouldn't be so surprising to find out that scientists can be vulnerable to subtle biases, just like other people. Even journalists. Last month, for example, Lund University researchers Daniel Conley and Johanna Stadmark found that far fewer women than men were being invited to write commentaries for the journals Science and Nature.

Conley and Stadmark acknowledged that men tend to outnumber women in scientific fields, particularly at the higher levels, so there's something of a selection effect at work. But they said it was "still fair to conclude that fewer women than men are offered the career boost of invitation-only authorship in each of the two leading science journals." They called on the editors to "extend gender parity for commissioned writers."

Over time, raising the visibility of women scientists (and raising their salaries) will help draw more girls into research and science education. At least that's the idea. Here are a few more efforts that put girl power to work on the science world's gender issues:

'Girl Thing' reloaded: Remember the European Commission program that stirred up a controversy by putting out a glammed-up video about STEM careers for women? Now the EC's "Science: It's a Girl Thing" program is sponsoring a contest for videographers who think they can do better. On the Scientific American website, "Science Goddess" Joanne Manaster explains how to enter. The winning videos will be shown in November at the European Gender Summit?at the European Parliament in Brussels. Three winners will each receive a cash prize of??1,500 ($1,930).

Think locally:?It's worth looking for organizations that are bringing girl power to STEM on the community level. The best example is Sally Ride Science, which thinks globally and acts locally when it comes to getting girls involved in scientific pursuits. The organization, founded by?the late space icon Sally Ride, presents?a series of science festivals for girls?in grades 5 through 8. The next one is coming up?Oct. 27 at Rice University in Houston, with astronaut Wendy Lawrence as the featured speaker. Other organizations involved in girl-power science include?Girlstart in Austin, Texas; and Science Club for Girls in the Boston area.

Women chemists in the spotlight: The Chemical Heritage Foundation's video series pays tribute to seven women who have made their mark in chemistry?? including Stephanie Kwolek, the inventor of bulletproof Kevlar fiber; Paula Hammond, a pioneer in nanotechnology for drug delivery; and Nancy Chang, a successful biotech entrepreneur.?

Celebrating girl power: Today The Mary Sue?is highlighting a series of posters that pay tribute to women scientists such as Marie Curie, Rosalind Franklin and Jane Goodall. And next month, the Royal Society is planning a Wikipedia "Edit-a-thon" to improve the online encyclopedia's articles about women in science. "Female editors are particularly encouraged to attend," the society says. The event in planned in conjunction with Ada Lovelace Day on Oct. 16.

More about women in science:


In addition to Handelsman, the authors of "Science Faculty's Subtle Gender Biases Favor Male Students" include Corinne A. Moss-Racusin, John F. Dovidio, Victoria L. Brescoli and Mark J. Graham.

Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/26/14115377-turn-up-the-girl-power-in-science?lite

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