Category Archives: North Carolina

Dinosaurs under the microscope: New ways to look at old bones

From SCONC:

The next Sigma Xi Pizza Lunch is noon, THURSDAY. Jan. 22. The title: “Dinosaurs under the microscope: New ways to look at old bones.”
Come hear NC State University paleontologist Mary Schweitzer explain why she rocked science not long ago with evidence that soft tissue survived in a 68-million-year-old dinosaur fossil. Not all fossil experts accept it, but many do. If Schweitzer is correct, she’s found a whole new route to explore the biology and evolutionary lineage of extinct life.
Pizza Lunch is free and open to science journalists and science communicators of all stripes. Feel free to forward this invitation to anyone you would like to see included. RSVPs are required (for a reliable slice count) to cclabby@amsci.org.
Directions to Sigma XI:
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/center/directions.shtml

Science/Nature things to do in the Triangle, NC

If you live around here or if you are coming early or staying after ScienceOnline’09, you may be interested in science/nature stuff you can see around here. I know, it’s January and some of those facilities are not at their rose-blooming peak, but they are worth a look:
Take a look at the awesome North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh, Museum of Life and Science in Durham, Hemlock Bluffs Nature Preserve and Stevens Science Center in Cary, Morehead Planetarium and Science Center in Chapel Hill and JC Raulston Arboretum in Raleigh.
I’d also add NC Botanical Garden in Chapel Hill, Sarah P. Duke Gardens in Durham, The Science House at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, Carnivore Preservation Trust in Pittsboro and the fantastic NC Zoo in Asheboro.
Not just for kids – adults will love all of this as well.

Coral disease outbreaks and warming waters

The next Sigma Xi Pizza Lunch — noon, Wednesday, Dec. 17 — is a chance to learn more about climate change’s expected environmental toll. UNC-Chapel Hill marine biologist and ecologist John Bruno will discuss recent research on links between coral disease outbreaks and warming waters.
The Pizza Lunch speaker series is free and open to science journalists and science communicators of all stripes. Feel free to forward this invitation to anyone you would like to see included. RSVPs are required (so we can get a reliable slice count) to cclabby@amsci.org.
Directions to Sigma XI: http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/center/directions.shtml

Triangle Blogger Meetup

Last night was the first time we had a Triangle blogger meetup at the new Carrboro Creative Coworking place. Wayne Sutton, John Rees, Rob G, Jeff Cohen, Jim Buie, Brian Russell and I got together and talked about Twitter and FriendFeed, about engaging the commenters and moderating comments, and many other things. That was fun.

Triangle Blogger Meetup

Triangle bloggers will meet at Carrboro Creative Coworking on Wednesday, December 10th at 6pm. Please join us if you can.

ScienceOnline09 on Radio In Vivo

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As you know, Anton Zuiker, David Kroll and I were on the radio earlier today, chatting for an hour with Ernie Hood of Radio In Vivo, here in Carrboro.
We discussed science communication, education, publishing, blogging, popularization, journalism, social networking, Second Life, etc. The focus was on ScienceOnline09, but we also mentioned The Open Laboratory anthologies (2006, 2007 and 2008), LabLit.com, the NCCU BRITE, Duke Health, Inside Duke Medicine, PLoS, BlogTogether, SCONC and, of course, our blogs.
Try to find an hour of peace and quiet and listen to the show here (mp3).
And then check out the podcasts of the old Radio In Vivo science shows – there are some excellent previous shows with great scientists.

Update:
David took some pictures – you can see them here.

Science Communicators of North Carolina social tonight

Science Communicators of North Carolina:

Connect with SCONC in a cool Co-Working Environment!
Monday, November 24 at 6:30 p.m.
Join your fellow SCONC members for a casual evening in Carrboro on Nov. 24. Headlining this month’s meeting — remotely — will be SCONC’s ambassador to Norway. Tour the area’s first co-working venture (and a great place for freelance folks!) – Carrboro Creative Co-working. Details: www.carrborocoworking.com

Are more US students looking at studying in Canada?

This article made me think about this – it showcases two local examples, and it contains this statement:

Mary Gratch, the academic counselor for the junior and senior classes at CHS [Carrboro High School], was a counselor at Chapel Hill High School for 16 years before CHS opened. She said that about two of her students apply to Canadian universities every year.
“It’s a small number, but it kind of consistently happens,” she said. “In terms of people selecting schools, it’s the United States or Canada typically.”

But I am wondering if there are any trends occurring – do more (or less) students consider studying in Canada now than, let’s say, five or ten years ago?

Carrboro Creative Coworking Opening Party

This is where I was last night…. it was great fun, lots of people, lots of enthusiasm. Congratulations to Brian for pulling it off!

Science Communicators of North Carolina at Carrboro Creative Coworking

Science Communicators of North Carolina:

Connect with SCONC in a cool Co-Working Environment!
Monday, November 24 at 6:30 p.m.
Join your fellow SCONC members for a casual evening in Carrboro on Nov. 24. Headlining this month’s meeting — remotely — will be SCONC’s ambassador to Norway. Tour the area’s first co-working venture (and a great place for freelance folks!) – Carrboro Creative Co-working. Details: www.carrborocoworking.com

And if you can’t wait five days, but only two, Carrboro Creative CoworkingOpening Party is this Friday:

We’ll celebrate the opening of Carrboro Creative Coworking on Friday November 21 at 7pm. The party will be held here at 205 Lloyd Street, Suite 101, Carrboro, NC 27510. We’ll have wine and appetizers.

I intend to show up at both events….

Public Forum – The Historic 2008 Election: Analysis and Reflections…

An e-mail from the Orange County (NC) Democratic Party:

The exciting and historic 2008 election stirred our souls and mobilized millions, but how did it happen? And what does it mean for electoral politics going forward? Bring your questions and your friends to a public forum presented by the Orange County Democratic Party and the Orange County Democratic Women:
The Historic 2008 Election: Analysis and Reflections
Hodding Carter III, University Professor of Leadership and Public Policy, UNC-CH
Rob Christensen, Reporter and columnist, The News and Observer
Ferrel Guillory, Director, Program on Public Life, UNC-CH School of Journalism
7:30 PM, November 20, 2008
Carrboro Century Center
100 N. Greensboro Street, Carrboro
Open to the community – no charge

The very first LEED Platinum hotel in the USA….

…is right here in NC, an hour from here in Greensboro – the Proximity Hotel. The ceremony where the LEED Platinum designation was awarded was held today.

Paleontologist to discuss detecting life on other planets

In today’s News and Observer:

Mary H. Schweitzer, associate professor of paleontology at N.C. State University, will talk about how paleontology can help determine whether life ever existed on other planets.
She will speak at a Periodic Tables event sponsored by the Museum of Life and Science in Durham on Tuesday.
Periodic Tables is a regular program that gives adults a chance to learn and discuss the latest in science. Schweitzer will share her expertise in the field of astrobiology and explain how we can use the tools of molecular paleontology to detect biomarkers not only in fossils but also in extraterrestrial samples.
The program begins at 7 p.m. at the Broad Street Cafe, 1116 Broad St., Durham. It is free and open to the public.
For more information, go to the Periodic Tables page on the Museum of Life and Science’s Web site.

North Carolina newspapers – yesterday’s front pages

NC Press Asociation’s front pages from Wednesday.
Due to narrow margin – about 12,000 in Obama’s favor – the state has to count all the provisional ballots (which usually favor Dems) and all the mail-in ballots (mostly from the military personnel abroad – who knows who that favors any more!). There is little chance, though, officials and statisticians say, that the additional counting will reverse the order, but the official business has to be done in an orderly way. Unofficially, North Carolina went Blue this year. This will become official in a couple of days, I guess. How? Large influx of people from NY, OH, CA, MI and elswehere, coming to NC to work in technology and biotech industries. Large urban centers (Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Cary, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Asheville, etc.) getting more and more democratic, but also good ground game in heavily Republican counties in the mountains that each have a small University campus brought many of the students to vote and turned those counties blue as well.
The state went for Obama. The state legislature remains Democratic. The Dem governor Mike Easley was replaced by the Dem governor Beverly Purdue. Congressman Hayes was kicked out by Larry Kissel. Elizabeth Dole was trounced by the new Senator Kay Hagan. It feels good to be a North Carolinian today.
There were celebrations around here – in Durham, Chapel Hill and Carrboro on Tuesday night. And there were fireworks coming from the direction of the UNC campus and/or Carolina stadium after the 11pm announcement.
Update: It is official now – AP reports that Obama won North Carolina! w00t!!!!

I have voted. Have you?

This is an uber-liberal enclave in NC, so more than 80% excited voters already voted early. Still, it was hard to find parking this morning.
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Climate Change and the Neglected Majority

The next Sigma Xi lunch pizza in RTP will be noon MONDAY, Nov. 17. Come hear Rob Dunn, assistant professor of zoology at NC State, talk about “Climate Change and the Neglected Majority.” Dunn, among other things, is interested in insects and how changes in their distribution affect ecosystems.
Sigma Xi’s Pizza Lunch speaker series is free and open to science journalists and science communicators of all stripes (feel free to forward this message to anyone you would like to be included). RSVPs are required to cclabby@amsci.org.

Some North Carolina politics….

On the Road: Charlotte, North Carolina:

An observation we’ve heard repeated in Obama offices across America, Crandall emphasized how beneficial the contested primary had been for building the foundation for record turnout. “We had real hints of it in the primary,” Crandall said. The first-time voters the campaign energized for the May 6 vote foreshadowed what North Carolina is seeing today. Crandall remembers thinking “these are NOT your typical primary voters.”

Pathetic yard sign captured in Raleigh – and Q of the Day:

By far I see more Obama stickers and signs in my town, including a hilarious “Tina Fey in 2008” sign next to an Obama sign on one yard in Durham. What have you seen in your area? Take a stab at the proportion of Obama to McCain signs and stickers.

On the Road: Raleigh, North Carolina:

With only a short time to go, the Obama campaign is tightening up with information and statistics, and most of our questions for numbers were met with referrals to already-published newspaper stories. Still, when asked what kinds of numbers the data-obsessed field teams were seeing in the early voting precinct-by-precinct statistics, Cox said “in terms of the early vote, we feel very comfortably that we’re in a good position.”
While there was no way to predict a win, Cox gave off the vibe of a man who was liking what he saw in the numbers. With more votes cast already at the halfway point than in all of 2004, and registered Democrats holding a huge double-digit lead in those ballots, the campaign here is already in full fledged GOTV mode.

Polls suggest electoral gains for Obama:

It’s a simliar story in North Carolina, which last voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in 1976, when Jimmy Carter was running. A new poll suggests Obama has a six-point lead over McCain, 52 percent to 46 percent. Obama was up by four points in our last poll, conducted last week. “Other polls are showing North Carolina is essentially tied, but our poll shows Obama picking up support among younger voters and the blue-collar segment. Those are two reasons the race in North Carolina has gone from a 49-49 tie in early October to a 52-46 edge for Obama, at least in our results,” Holland said.

On the Road: Wilmington, North Carolina:

Hillary Stookey wouldn’t tell us her age. “60 and holding” and a big smile was all we got. But on her birthday, Hillary Stookey canvassed Wilmington, North Carolina for Barack Obama from 1:30 until 8:00 pm. That’s three hours past the time the Republican office had closed.

Updated: More statistics that supports why North Carolina won’t might swing blue:

I’m told that electoral votes are based on popular votes. Well I’ll be damned. If that’s the case, then I really don’t see what the big whoopie is about people being against electoral votes. Unless the elector doesn’t vote with popular vote. I still don’t believe NC will swing, but the probability becomes a lot larger from a mathematical stand point. The place where it fails is the historical trend data pulls it to the red still from a predictability factor.

Early balloting ends Saturday; Obama supporters flock to polls:

According to the State Board of Elections, more than 1.4 million votes had been cast in North Carolina through Oct. 27–23 percent of the 6.2 million registered voters. The figure eclipsed the total 984,000 early votes in the 2004 election–with five days to go.
In heavily Democratic Durham and Orange counties, the numbers were even higher: About one-third percent of voters in Durham and Orange had cast early ballots by Oct. 27.
That turnout jibed with the state elections board report that 58 percent of the early voters statewide are registered Democrats, while just 25 percent are registered Republicans. And the statewide turnout was heavily African-American, the board reported: Black voters accounted for 28 percent of early voters, though they make up 21 percent of the population; they accounted for just 18.5 percent of the turnout four years ago.
In 2008, it’s the Democrats who can’t wait to vote, especially black Democrats, since Obama is on course–the polls say–to become the first African-American president.
New African-American voter registrations comprise 31 percent of the total in the state since the start of the year–271,000 out of 875,000 total new registrants through last Thursday.

Maybe voting at the mall isn’t such a great idea:

Conspicuously absent from the mall voting experience were political candidates, their supporters and party volunteers, who normally greet voters and hand out campaign literature. Security officers have ousted politicians and their supporters attempting to campaign, including one who was warned that his car would be towed. Confusion surrounding mall voting rules has allegedly prompted at least one election worker to enforce policies that contradict election law. Outcry over the policy prompted picketing and a boycott effort by critics who say it violates the First Amendment.
This year marks North Carolina’s first experiment with mall voting. As officials ponder whether that experiment is successful, they should also consider whether the promise of higher turnout trumps the right of voters to receive information–and the right of candidates to provide it.
Last year, the state legislature voted to allow non-public buildings to serve as early voting sites–a move Wake County election officials clamored for. The goal was to make early voting more convenient and get more voters to the polls, especially in areas where there are few public buildings that can absorb thousands of voters over the course of two weeks.

The historic 2008 election–without John Edwards:

The irony, of course, is that it only matters in America. The day the bad news about Senator Johnny began to make the rounds, we were eating lunch with a Chilean businessman, husband of an old friend of my wife’s. “In Chile, anywhere in Europe or Latin America, no one would have known about this,” he said. “And if they knew, no one would care.”
“What’s the big deal?” asked the Chilean, in the presence of his wife. But Edwards was no Candide. He knew what we all know about America’s double standard. Our private morals might make rabbits blush, but the standards we impose on public servants have changed very little since the Mayflower dropped anchor. Nowhere else in the world is there such a hypocritical discrepancy between private and public morality. Edwards knew the risk and took it. That’s where hubris comes in, as a sense of entitlement and immunity that comes with uncommon success.
I admit to a certain sympathy for this ruined man, this outcast. I don’t make political contributions, but I wouldn’t be surprised if my wife, who knows Edwards’ wife and is not bound by my scruples, has sent a check or two in their direction. I liked many of the things Edwards was saying during the primaries; some of them have even more bite now that corporate avarice and irresponsibility have brought the American economy to its knees.
I met him a couple of times. He had the nerve, rare among North Carolina politicians with more than local ambitions, to show up at holiday parties for the staff of the notorious Independent Weekly, once denounced by a Republican as “Left-wing attack media from hell.” Last spring I sat next to him at a small fund-raising luncheon and confess that I was unnerved by his boyish appearance–he could pass for 35 in the right light–and surreptitiously inspected his profile for signs of the plastic surgeon’s hand, or the hair-restorer’s.

How Did NC Become an Electoral Battleground?

This is interesting:

But voter behavior is only part of the change drawing political attention to North Carolina. Presidential contenders are increasing their focus here because the state has more clout on the national stage than it did as recently as the 1980s. The same population boom that has helped alter the political landscape in North Carolina has also led to an increase in the number of electoral votes the state is allotted in the presidential election. While some states (such as Illinois and Pennsylvania) have been given fewer and fewer electoral votes since 1980, North Carolina has been on the rise. North Carolina now has 15 electoral votes, up from 13 in 1988. While that is fewer than Ohio’s 20, it is more than some of the other traditional swing states such as Missouri, which has 11.
In fact, only eight states have more electoral votes than North Carolina (New Jersey and Georgia are tied with North Carolina at 15 votes). In an election where only 270 electoral votes are needed to win, the Tarheel State matters.

Obama in Raleigh

Just got this e-mail earlier today:

This Wednesday, October 29th, please join Barack Obama in Raleigh, where he will talk about his vision for creating the kind of change we need.
Early Vote for Change Rally
with Barack Obama
Halifax Mall
Government Complex
300 North Salisbury Street
Raleigh, NC 27603
Wednesday, October 29th
Doors Open: 10:00 a.m.
Pre-program Begins: 11:15 a.m.
This event is free and open to the public. Tickets are not required; however, an RSVP is strongly encouraged.
For security reasons, do not bring bags or umbrellas. Please limit personal items. No signs or banners allowed.

He is finally coming close enough for me to consider going to see him live (ah, the beauty of living in a battleground state – who would have thunk NC would be one!). I am thinking about bringing the kids along (they want to go), but I am not sure that the venue is large enough for everyone who will probably want to be there. Four years ago, when Kerry picked Edwards as running mate they came to Raleigh and used a bigger venue on the NCSU campus – it was full (25,000-40,000 people, depending who counted). This year, the crowd should be at least twice as big – how about 100,000? I have no idea how that many people will fit downtown. And where should one park? Probably far away, then walk or take a bus.
Any folks from Chapel Hill, Carrboro or Durham interested in car-pooling?

UNC scientists comment in support of fruit fly research for understanding autism

As a follow-up to the yesterday’s press release, Dr. Manzoor Bhat and Joseph Piven, M.D., researchers at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill who use the Drosophila model system to study neurexin and its implications in the development of autism, have now released the video response – well worth watching:

Publishing and Communicating Science

The W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology at North Carolina State University (which includes students, faculty and staff from Departments of Biology (formerly Zoology, my own Department), Genetics and Entomology) is a group I called home for a large chunk of my own graduate experience. Every year, on top of monthly discussion meetings for members, they organize other interesting events, including this one, coming up in two weeks:

The W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology at North Carolina State University announces its 2008 Professional Development Workshop:
Publishing and Communicating Science
Orli Bahcall, Senior Editor of Nature Genetics: The Nature of Scientific Publishing
Peter Binfield, Managing Editor of PLoS ONE: PLoS ONE-Leading a Transformation in Academic Publishing?
John Rennie, Editor-in-Chief of Scientific American: How and Why Scientists Should Talk to the Public
Joe Palca, Science Correspondent for National Public Radio: How Much Can You Say in Three Minutes?
Saturday, November 8, 2008
8:30 am – 3:00 pm
Sigma Xi Conference Center, RTP
****registration required****
A registration fee of $20 is required. Registration after the deadline is $40. Payment by check only, made out to “NC Agricultural Foundation”.
The registration fee includes breakfast, served at 8:30 am, and a box lunch, and is non-refundable.

For more information, check the flyer. I’ll be there….

Reporter assaulted at a Palin rally

Joe Killian is a reporter for Greensboro News&Record. Friday, he went to a Sarah Palin rally at Elon University and filed a report from there for his newspaper.
But he also got assaulted – the first reporter so far – and then blogged about the incident.
Pam has more details.
Joe lived through the ordeal and joined us all at ConvergeSouth for a while.
More local discussions here, here, here and here.

Quick ConvergeSouth08 recap

I am back from the 4th ConvergeSouth, the do-not-miss Greensboro conference about the Web, blogging, journalism and community (and the model/inspiration for our own science blogging conferences, including the third one) . Big kudos to Sue Polinsky, Ed Cone and the cast of thousands for putting together the meeting again, making it better and better every year. And of course, thanks to Dave Hoggard for hosting the legendary BBQ with (even more legendary) banana pudding.
I rode to Greensboro with Kirk Ross and came back home with Anton Zuiker, having interesting conversations with each.
Dave Slusher and I found a common interest beside blogging – animal domestication!
Pam Spaulding was on two panels, and did a great job liveblogging the conference. Melody Watson also has interesting thoughts on it all.
At the BBQ, Anton and I talked with Anil Dash (also here) whose SixApart runs MoveableType which is the platform on which scienceblogs.com is hosted. Of course, scienceblogs.com is a complex site, with much more than just a bunch of blogs, and Anil gave kudos to Tim, the tech guru of Seed, for his amazing ability to build, fix and run our platform. We also talked about the ability of the blogosphere to effect change (e.g., in Washington). Something Anil said in a panel discussion lit a lightbulb in my head. He said that until about two years ago or so, it was very unusual for a Congressman or a Senator to receive many phone calls from the constituents. But with blogs (either big blogs like DailyKos or lots of smaller blogs acting in unison), this changed. Suddenly, the blogs can turn the ‘on switch’ and send thousands of people to ring the phone in the offices on The Hill – something for which the offices are not prepared. Instead of a few letters, or some e-mails, suddenly, for a day or two, the phone is ringing off the hook and prevents all other business from getting done over the phone. This is an element of surprise to them and thus they tend to sit up and listen! This may explain why the blogosphere-wide action to defeat PRISM was so successful (and it was so thoroughly defeated that the ridicule even outside of science blogs was widespread). I heard that SPARC got a number of call from various senatorial offices, pretty much saying “call off the dogs, we got it, we understand the issue now and will vote Yes, and please, we need to use the phones again!” As a result, despite being voted on twice (Bush vetoed the bill the first time around), the NIH mandate language remained unaltered and the bill became the law.
After the initial talk by Chris Rabb and the morning panel, I first went to a session on Social Networking for Bloggers led by Kelby Carr. That was quite an interesting discussion about do’s and dont’s of social networking behavior, etiquette, dividing personal from professional, etc. It fed nicely to what someone at the closing panel said (and I’ve been saying for a long time) – that in the age of the Web, the criteria for ‘proper behavior’ for getting a job or running for office will change, as the Facebook generation takes over, knowing that everyone has drunk pictures on Facebook and that it is OK, so let’s look at what really matters about the person, not such superficalities that insult old puritanical norms stemming from the times when such behavior, while ubiquitous, could be safely hidden from the public. Soon enough, we can stop pretending to be mortally insulted that someone, gasp, had a beer at a college party or did/said something silly or stupid at some time in the past.
My own session was small – but that was good. Those who came were interested in the science side of things, so I could quickly dispose of the more general stuff about people being active on Facebook, twitter, FriendFeed or blogs, and focus more on commenting behavior (and specifically psychological barriers to commenting) on science-related content online, be it science posts on blogs or peer-reviewed papers. I got a lot of useful feedback on this which may help me both here on the blog and at work on PLoS.
Next, I went to hear Kirk Ross on “Slow News”. As you already know, I am a big fan of Carrboro Citizen and the concept that guides its publishing model. While the panic – “OMG! The newspapers are dying!” – may well apply to large metro, state and national papers, the small, hyperlocal newspapers are doing just fine and will probably continue to do so. I am constantly online, constantly scouting for news – about science, science publishing, U.S. electoral politics, Serbia, etc. – which is a ‘pull’ model. I am interested in particular topics and actively search for them at places I trust. Thus, I may be missing something interesting which is outside of the realm of topics I actively look for. This includes news about the happenings in my own town and neighborhood (if I spent less time online and more walking the streets, I may get such news the old, from-the-horses-mouth way). For this, I need to occasionally succumb to the ‘push’ model, which I do every Thursday when I go to La Vita Dolce, get a mocha (‘Bora’s style, please’), sit back and enjoy the new edition of Carrboro Citizen. I learn which cool plant is in bloom right now, what is the controversial issue at the Town Hall this week, what is going on at my kids’ school, and what the candidates for local elections are saying. And it is all written with no rush (digest the news first, don’t rush to print) and no heed for the he-said-she-said false-equivalence mode of journalism that has been poisoning the A.S. media for decades. See, for instance, this editorial from this week’s edition (this is just the ending paragraph – read the entire thing – well worth your time):
For The Record:

This has not been lost on many. In fact, in a recent local candidate forum, a member of the GOP — yes, there are a few here in Orange County — acknowledged that it appears there are programs or missions where government actually does a better job than the private sector. Such acknowledgements are rare, but increasing. It will take years, though, for the poison injected into our political discourse to be metabolized. People will still rail about big government and taxes. But there’s a difference between pushing back in order to insist on efficiency, transparency and fairness and simply attracting the system for ideological or political gain.
In a recent New York Times column, Thomas Friedman recalled Oliver Wendell Holmes remark that “I like paying taxes. With them I am buying civilization.”
We’re a far cry from that sentiment but perhaps a little closer to understanding the role of government and how dangerous it is to entrust the whole of civilization solely to those out to profit from it.

Now, if you are a partisan Democrat you will love this piece, if you are a partisan Republican, you will hate it. But if you are unbiased in any way, you will recognize that the piece has no ideological axe to grind – it is a mix of stuff you should have learned in high school Civics and what you have learned in college freshman Economics 101, plus recent statements from the two presidential campaigns. It provides you a baseline expert consensus on what the Reality is, so you can compare the party platforms, proposals and rhetoric to the Reality and decide for yourself which party tends to better consult with Reality when designing their campaign promises, i.e., this is how journalism should be committed.
The final panel compared the roles of the Web and technology between the 2004 and 2008 elections. The two-way communication between campaign and volunteers in real time, texting, ads on games, real-time updates of the voter databases – none of those were possible in 2004, but are ably used by the Obama campaign this year (McCain campaign is relying mainly on old-style techniques: nasty robocalls, racist flyers, and negative TV and radio ads). But the main difference between the two years is video – as soon as someone does or says something on TV or a campaign event, it immediately shows up on YouTube for everyone to see. The video of the ‘macaca’ moment that millions saw in 2006 did not so much show Sen. Allen as a racist as much as a jerk – someone you do not want to vote for. The videos this year are really making the opinions change – when you see the behavior of supporters at McCain/Palin rallies, when you watch the racist, dishonest and nasty ads they are putting out, when you watch the conventions and debates (and important moments from them), when you watch Obama’s rallies, ads and speeches in contrast, when you watch GOP operatives openly lying on TV, and you watch all of that over and over again – it is easy to make up your mind.
Finally, it was so much fun meeting and chatting with Ginny Skalski and Wayne Sutton (of 30Threads), Matt Gross, Lenore Ramm, Heather Solos (you can find her here, here and here), Dan Conover and Janet Edens, Jim Buie, Robert Scoble, Ruby Sinreich, Nancy Shepherd, Lauren Polinsky, Dennis Meredith, Donna Fryer, Ilina Ewen, Vera Hannaford, Jay Ovittore, Andrea Novicki and many others.
You can see more pictures from ConvergeSouth here and more discussions here. See you all next year – same time, same place.

Precinct Walking with a Congressman

Scoble goes for a walk through Rep.Brad MIller’s precinct, canvassing the neighborhood and talking about politics:

ConvergeSouth08

Back from ConvergeSouth. Energized but exhausted. Time for bed. Forgot I had a camera with me so I only had one picture taken – this one, with Robert Scoble and myself, trying to make the FriendFeed logo with our fingers:
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More ConvergeSouth microblogging on FriendFeed can be found here.

A banner year for me, in a sense….

Every year, when I go to ConvergeSouth (and I still need your help with my session this year), I look forward to seeing again some of my good blogospheric friends. And somewhere very, very high on the list of people I am most excited about seeing again, are Dan and Janet, journalists and bloggers from South Carolina who are regular, annual participants there.
Their blog Xark has been one of my regular reads for a few years now. So, I was astonishingly flattered when I went there the other day and saw my own face on top of the page! Yikes! What have I done?
Oh, Xarkers just thought they would put a bunch of people they consider influential on their banner. What an honor (I guess – there is good influence and there is bad influence – see the list!).
You can see the banner in high resolution here and the small version is this:
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Carrboro Citizen – a model for the newspaper of the future

The future of newspapers is bleak, but there are three saving strategies: 1) hyperlocal papers will beat the big city, state, national and international papers, 2) telling the truth instead of false equivalence will foster reader loyalty, and 3) the print-to-web mode of thinking will be replaced by web-to-print, community-driven model.
Carrboro Citizen is an examplar of all three strategies. If you know that Carrboro is tiny, you already see how hyperlocal it is. If you have read it for a while, you know that they do not do the dreaded he-said-she-said tired, old schtick – they tell is at it is, and if you find that the truth hurts, you need to re-examine your own beliefs or loyalties.
But you may not be aware of their web-to-print strategy. The Citizen is really small – a couple of employees, a couple of interns and that’s it. But they are also next to UNC and its amazing Journalism program. Jock Lauterer teaches a class there and each year his students go out to Carrboro and surrounding areas and find interesting things to write about. Their articles then get published online first, on Carrboro Commons, where Kirk Ross and the staff of The Citizen read them and, if they like something, edit the article and publish it in The Citizen. The students learn their trade, the community gets to chime-in in the comments (on both sites), and Carrboro Citizen get to publish good articles written by fresh voices. Everyone wins.
You may remember last week when I told you about an article (which I like for obvious reasons – I am in it) about Carrboro Creative Coworking, and about telecommuting and coworking in general – Creative Coworking offers a new dynamic.
Just a few days later, and from what I can see minimal editing, the article is now on news-stands (as well as online – commenting allowed again) in Carrboro Citizen.
I am willing to bet that in ten years, when New York Times is either dead or changed beyond all recognition, Carrboro Citizen will still be going strong.
And here is more about Carrboro Creative Coworking:

Whither (wither?) Science Journalism?

From SCONC:

Tuesday, Oct. 14
6 to 8 p.m.
SCONC monthly meeting – Whither (wither?) Science Journalism
Durham science journalist Cathy Clabby, formerly of the N&O now of American Scientist, discusses the sorry state of her craft in U.S. newspapers and magazines and shares some of the new venues that journalists are finding to publish their work. NC Biotech Center, #15 Alexander Drive, RTP. Congressional Room. Please rsvp@ncbiotech.org

The voter registration deadline in North Carolina is this Friday, October 10th.

Are you registered? Do you know where to vote? You can find information and register (if you are not) here (this is an Obama site, but it works for everyone):

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Emerging Nanotechnology: A New Risk Factor for Lung Diseases?

From Sigma Xi:

Greetings everyone. We meet again at noon on Wednesday, Oct. 15 in RTP to hear NCSU associate professor James Bonner discuss “Emerging Nanotechnology: A New Risk Factor for Lung Diseases?” As you know, the commercial use of nanomaterials has outpaced scientific assessments of any potential health or environmental risks. Jamie Bonner is one of the scientists working to catch up.
Sigma Xi’s Pizza Lunch speaker series is free and open to science journalists and science communicators of all stripes (free to forward this message to anyone you would like to be included). RSVPs are required to cclabby AT amsci DOT org.
Directions to Sigma XI:
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/center/directions.shtml.

Can you raise sea-water blue crabs in fresh-water ponds?

Apparently yes: Freshwater Farm Ponds Turning into Crab Farms:

North Carolina’s native blue crab population has been at historic lows since 2000. Dr. Dave Eggleston, director of NC State’s Center for Marine Sciences and Technology (CMAST) and professor of marine, earth and atmospheric sciences, looked at various methods for helping the population recover. He hit upon a solution which not only reduces pressure on existing crab populations, but also benefits farmers looking to diversify their crops: using irrigation ponds on farms to grow blue crabs.
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Eggleston and his fellow researchers discovered that crabs can tolerate a salinity level of only .3 parts per thousand, which is about the same level found in coastal tap water. They did further work to determine the best set of circumstances for raising crab: population density, food rations, and habitat structure in ponds.
This past July, Eggleston and Ray Harris, NC State director of cooperative extension for Carteret County, had the opportunity for a large-scale test when they stocked a 10-acre lake with 40,000 hatchery-raised crabs, and a smaller pond with 4,000 crabs. The crabs will take approximately 105 days to reach maturity, and so far the endeavor looks successful.
With the rapid rate of growth for pond-raised crabs, Eggleston expects that in a given year, a farm could produce two to three harvests, as crabs don’t do well in freshwater during the winter months.
“If you look at a 2 1/2 -acre pond, you could stock it with 50,000 hatchery-raised crabs and expect to harvest around 20 percent, or 10,000 fully grown crabs. At $3 per crab, that’s $30,000 – and multiply that times three. It definitely adds up.”

Maps, maps, maps…

Lots of stuff happening locally at Community Cartographies Convergence:

OCTOBER 16: DURHAM, 5:30pm-7:00pm
Talk by Berkeley-based radical cartographer Trevor Paglen at the Center for Documentary Studies, Duke University
in conjunction with the Visiting Artists Series of Duke’s Department of Art, Art History & Visual Studies, and the 2008 Conference ‘Scenes of Secrecy’
OCTOBER 17: DURHAM, 7pm-10pm
Evening refreshments at Golden Belt for open studios and mapping exhibitions on Durham’s traditional ‘3rd Friday of the month’ celebration.
OCTOBER 18: DURHAM
North Carolina Counter Cartographies Convergence Main Event and closing. All day at the Golden Belts Arts studio building (building 3), east of downtown Durham
Also late afternoon reception in conjunction with the 2008 Conference ‘Scenes of Secrecy: Interdisciplinary Inquiries on Suspicion, Intelligence, and Security’

DonorsChoose 2008 Challenge – where are my readers?

Wow! Six of my DonorsChoose projects – Science Laboratory Kits, Who Gives A Hoot!, No More Worksheets!, Vroom! Vroom! Forces and Motion, What’s the weather for today? and Math Mania have now been fully funded!
Unfortunately, not by my readers…. (pout)
If this keeps happening I’ll add some more projects. All for science/math teaching projects in schools in low-income areas of North Carolina.
Your turn…

From Telecommuting to Coworking

Great article in Carrboro Commons today – I know because I’m in it! The concepts of ‘work’ and ‘office’ are changing and those in the information economy are starting to adapt to the new world:
Creative Coworking offers a new dynamic:

“People left the office and cubicle and they say, ‘OK, I’m going to break out.’ … So you start doing that. You work at home. You want to get something better than the couch, so you get a table. … You start creating an office in a spare bedroom. That works great for a while,” Russell said.
“Then you get a little bored, and your spouse is like, ‘Why haven’t you gotten out of your pajamas in the past five days?’ And so they go and get dressed and take their laptop and bag and go to a coffee shop.”
“They do that for a while, but then the music starts to bug you. There aren’t enough electrical outlets. … You get frustrated, so you go back home. …”
Ultimately, all those public places with social potential don’t have all the things you need, Russell said.
“There’s a big gap between working at a coffee shop and owning your own office.”

Then, a little further down the page, you can see a familiar name …. 😉 Doing this interview was actually tons of fun!

DonorsChoose 2008 Challenge – Scienceblogs.com rocks!

You may have noticed, all around Scienceblogs.com, that we have started our traditional annual fundraiser – helping fund science and math projects in schools around the country, mainly focusing on schools in low-income areas where most of the students get free lunches and there is not much support for “extras” which should be normal part of every school – the basic supplies for math and science instruction.
I am right now having a technical problem with my side-bar widget, which I will install as soon as I can. But in the meantime, check out the Scienceblogs.com leaderboard, and pick some of the projects from my list. Then click on “Fund this project” button and make some kids very happy:

Mac McCorkle, Political Consultant for Lt. Governor Beverly Perdue, to speak at Town Hall Grill’s ‘Village Voice’

Chapel Hill, NC – September 24, 2008 – Mac McCorkle, Political Consultant for Lt. Governor Beverly Perdue and 2008 Democratic Nominee for Governor, will be speaking on behalf of the Lt. Governor on October 6, 2008 at Town Hall Grill in Chapel Hill as part of the Village Voice political forum.
Town Hall Grill, located in Southern Village in Chapel Hill, N.C., launched the bipartisan community issues forum, “The Village Voice,” in June and has featured political candidates William (BJ) Lawson, Republican candidate for U.S. House District 4 and Ellie Kinnaird, six-term NC State Senator, District 23.
Mac McCorkle will be speaking at 5:30pm on October 6th at Town Hall Grill on the covered patio. Individuals interested in attending are encouraged to reserve a seat using the online reservations form at www.thetownhallgrill.com.
The Village Voice is sponsored by The North Carolina Center for Voter Education, NBC TV-17 and MyNC.com.
For more information, please visit www.thetownhallgrill.com or contact Sandy Andrews of Hummingbird Creative Group at sandyAThummingbird-creativeDOTcom or (919) 854-9100, ext 307.

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Inside Duke Medicine

If you came to either the first or the second Science Blogging Conference (or both) you may remember that, among other goodies in your swag bag, you also got a copy or two of Inside Duke Medicine, the employee publication for the Duke University Health System.
And, you may remember it looked kind of….soooo last century 😉
Furthermore, it had its publishing model backwards – it was Print-to-Web, i.e., the well-crafted articles were first printed in hardcopy and then posted online almost as an after-thought.
Well, that model does not work, so Duke got smart and hired a visionary – Anton Zuiker
Over the past 18 months, Anton turned the publication around. Now, it is the way it should be – Web-to-Print. The news, stories, video clips and blog posts are constantly being added to the brand new website which, I may be biased but I think so, totally kicks ass!
Then, the best pieces get prepared for hardcopy print and get printed in the completely redesigned newsletter, for those who prefer to read on paper (or still have not discovered the ‘On’ button on their computers).
Anton describes the process in his own words. So, if you grab that RSS feed or make a bookmark, you will always be up-to-date on what’s happening at Duke Medicine.

Today in Greensboro, NC

I should have gone. Greensboro is barely an hour from here. If I did, I would have heard this:

ConvergeSouth program change

Since BlogHer cancelled several parts of their Fall Tour, including the one in Greensboro, this does not mean that you go home on Friday night after ConvergeSouth as there WILL be a Saturday program, says Sue.

Last chance to party!

The North Carolina part of the Millionth Comment party is this Saturday at the Zoo! If you intend to come, please sign up here so we can have a head-count and provide you with free zoo tickets, then show up at 1pm at the North America entrance at the left-most cashier and tell them who you are.

More on the Creationist school board in Brunswick Co, NC

The story about Creationist school board in Brunswick Co, NC is now getting some legs:
Brunswick school board to consider creationism teaching:

The board allowed Fanti to speak longer than he was allowed, and at the end of his speech he volunteered to teach creationism and received applause from the audience. When he walked away, school board Chairwoman Shirley Babson took the podium and said another state had tried to teach evolution and creationism together and failed, and that the school system must teach by the law.

Editorial: Teach science in science class:

If you wonder why American children are falling behind the rest of the world in science, look no further than the Brunswick County school board.
While educators and policy makers debate how to improve the teaching of science and mathematics in American schools, the Board of Education has been talking about ways to teach creationism alongside evolution. Fortunately, the state put the brakes on this idea before it could get rolling.

Brunswick Stew: Creationism Crusade Bubbles Up At N.C. School Board:

Members of the Brunswick County, N.C., School Board seem to be having problems telling the difference between science and theology.
All four members of the board are looking for a way to bring creationism into the classroom, reported the Wilmington Star-News. The issue arose after a parent, Joel Fanti, criticized the schools for teaching evolution.

Theory of creationism considered in Brunswick County:

The school board is expected to talk about the issue at its next meeting on October 7, 2008. A spokesperson from the State Department of Public Instruction told WWAY the state is required to follow national standards on teaching evolution which students are tested on. School boards can act independently on certain standards but risk the possibility of legal action being taken by civil liberties groups.

No place for creationism in science class, state says:

But neither creationism nor the related “intelligent design,” which says life forms are so complex only a higher power could have created them, may be taught as a required course of study, Edd Dunlap, science section chief for the N.C. Department of Public Instruction, said Wednesday. These are considered religious teachings and may not be taught in science class or as fact, although they may be included as part of an elective, such as a course on religion or philosophy, he said.
While evolution is a course of study that must be taught in public schools, based on national standards, creationism is not, Dunlap said. Brunswick, New Hanover and Pender counties all follow the evolution curriculum.

Creationism in Brunswick County schools?:

Atkinson says schools across the state are taking a new interest in teaching that God created human life.
“It’s a trend that goes and comes. Sometimes it’s a big issue in pockets of North Carolina, and then years go by and it’s not an issue,” said Atkinson.
But, it is an issue right now in Brunswick County. The school board is looking into teaching creationism and evolution side by side.

As you may have noticed, all of those articles are in local press from SE North Carolina, mainly from Wilmington in neighboring New Hanover County. Perhaps we can speed this thing up a little and nick this in the bud if we spread the news (with required attendant ridicule) across the globe…so blog about it!
Also, if you live in that area and want to help, let me know….

Take a Child Outside Week

From today’s Carrboro Citizen:

Next week, Sep 24-30, is “Take a Child Outside Week,” and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences has planned some specific activities to promote awareness (www.naturalsciences.org).
A visit to the Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh begins with awareness on the outside. Along the half-block-long north side of the museum facing Jones Street, there is a wild garden in dramatic contrast to the strictly regimented lawn and shrub monoculture of the North Carolina Legislature across the street.
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Every week should be “Take a Child Outside Week.” If you don’t routinely do it, then begin it now. And don’t forget to take your inner child out with you. Whether in a local nature reserve or passing one of many hidden wild patches in and around town, keen eyes will lead you to beauty and drama. And don’t be surprised if you become inclined to begin a small wild garden of your own.

Ouz Nouz! Fear at Cape Fear!

Not in my back yard!
It appears that some people are, erm, a little behind the times down in Brunswick County. That dog will not hunt, though, as it has no legal legs to run on, as PZ explains – it’s even less sophisticated than what the Dover board tried to do.

Today: SCONC monthly meeting at BRITE

From SCONC:

Wednesday, Sept. 17
6-7:30 p.m.
SCONC monthly meeting at BRITE
Please join us as we visit BRITE — the Golden LEAF Biomanufacturing Research Institute and Technology Enterprise — at NC Central University in Durham. (http://brite.nccu.edu) David Kroll, SCONC member, blogger and chairman of pharmaceutical science at Central, will be our host. We’ll tour BRITE’s 52,000 square foot laboratory and classroom facility where students train with scientific equipment and instrumentation found in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industry, meet some faculty, and talk about biotech drug development.
DIRECTIONS: Fayetteville Street exit of NC-147 (the Durham Freeway), south on Fayetteville through three traffic lights to Lawson Street. Right onto Lawson, two blocks to the two story glass building on the left with the large metal awning. Park in the first lot on the left and proceed up the large staircase to the main floor of the building.

Food Scene in the Triangle

A lovely article in Bon Appetit about the food scene in Durham and Chapel Hill – here are a few short snippets:
America’s Foodiest Small Town:

Imagine a place where foodies not only have a favorite chef, but also a favorite farmer; a place where the distance between the organic farm and the award-winning restaurant is mere miles; a place where a sustainable future is foreseeable. It’s all a reality in Durham-Chapel Hill.
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Durham and Chapel Hill–united by an eight-mile stretch of U.S. Highway 15-501–are best known for two things: tobacco and their utter hatred for one another’s college basketball teams, the Duke Blue Devils and the North Carolina Tar Heels. But to many they are considered one and the same. And after spending several days meeting farmers like Stuart and Alice, visiting restaurants and farmers’ markets, and eating up the wildly diverse culinary scene, I was beginning to think food–not hoops–was the area’s outstanding asset.
This partly explains why, while eating a pimiento cheese sandwich at Parker and Otis in Durham, I found myself daydreaming about ditching the big city. How could someone so infatuated with food and restaurants, with chefs and fancy cocktails and plates of oysters at 3:00 a.m., think that these two towns (with a combined population of less than 300,000) would stand up to my hometown, New York City? Had the fresh country air and wide open spaces distorted my thinking? The folks here, when it came to food, were onto something. And I wanted a piece of it.
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There are more than 120 small farms within a 50-mile radius of Chapel Hill. You’ll find many of them represented at the area’s dozen or so farmers’ markets. The best is held just across the train tracks from Chapel Hill, in the artsy town of Carrboro. In its 30th year, the market is home to 70 farmers, many of them nationally known for their trendsetting organic practices.
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In the end, no matter where I dined and shopped, or whom I talked with, it always came back to the land and the importance of local farmers. I asked Aaron Vandemark, chef-owner at the Italian-influenced Panciuto restaurant in Hillsborough–who estimates that 95 percent of his summer menus are sourced locally–why he supports Alice and Stuart White and other farmers. “I work with them and other farmers because I want to contribute to their success in some way. Because I need them [in order] to do what I do,” he said. “Because their eggplants taste of brown sugar, and their strawberries are little miracles, and they are good people doing important work.” Without them, Vandemark seemed to say, there would be no heirloom tomato salads, no fancy five-course prix fixe dinners, no food at all. The future of any local food movement rests with young farmers
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After dinner I asked Dawson, who has farmed in the area for 36 years, what he thought about the state of food in America, and Durham and Chapel Hill’s place in it. “I see a real change in the way people are eating,” he said. “They care about where their food comes from, who is growing it, and how it is being grown. I think folks could learn a lot from the synergy between farmers, farmers’ markets, restaurants, and the community that we have in Durham and Chapel Hill. It’s a model for the rest of the country.”
I couldn’t agree more.

Thomas Friedman lecture at Duke University

From SCONC:

Monday, Sept. 22
5:30 – 7:00 PM
Lecture: “Hot, Flat and Crowded”
New York Times columnist and Pulitzer-Prize winning author Thomas Friedman will discuss his new book on the technology needed to address the energy and climate crisis and how America can be a leader in the “Green Revolution.”
Information: Karen Kemp 919-613-7394
Page Auditorium, Duke

North Carolina Gubernatorial Debate tonight

Tune in tonight at 7pm for another live televised debate between Beverly Perdue and Pat McCrory. You can watch the debate in the Charlotte area on WMYT, in the Triangle on WRAL, and in the Triad on WFMY. In addition, you can listen live on WUNC or watch online at WRAL.com. The debate will also be replayed numerous times across the state. Check the schedule here.

An Evening of Field Research and Exploration

From SCONC:

Saturday, Sept. 20
7:30 p.m.
“An Evening of Field Research and Exploration” Presentations by three National Geographic explorers discussing seals in the Juan Fernandez Islands of southern Chile; a 275-mile journey on foot through the Himalayas to the calving grounds of the Tibetan antelope; and Madagascar’s endangered predator, the cat-like fossa.
Page Auditorium, Duke

Hanna

…is coming this way. It’s been drizzling a little bit all day, but we expect a lot more rain tonight and over the weekend.

Sigma Xi Pizza Lunch – Lemurs

Message from Sigma Xi:

You may know that Duke University is home to the Duke Lemur Center (http://lemur.duke.edu/), the world’s largest sanctuary for rare and endangered prosimian primates. But do you know its research? For a glimpse, attend Sigma Xi’s first 2007-2008 pizza lunch at noon, Wednesday, Sept 24. Center director Anne Yoder will speak on the “Historical bio-geography of Madagascar: Using genes to study the evolution of an island” as well as field your questions.
Pizza lunch is free. RSVPs required to cclabby AT amsci DOT org. Directions to Sigma XI: http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/center/directions.shtml.