Category Archives: North Carolina

Science Cafe: Have your bug and eat it, too!

Tuesday, Sept. 16
6:30-8:30 p.m. with discussion at 7:00
Science Cafe: Entomophagy
“Six-legged Solutions: Become Earth Friendly and Eat a Bug” with Dave Gracer – teacher, writer, and president of Sunrise Land Shrimp.
sciencecaferaleigh.blogspot.com
The Irregardless Cafe, 901 West Morgan Street, Raleigh, 833-8898

Science in the Triangle

Science in the Triangle is a community service provided by the Museum of Life + Science, in partnership with Blue Pane Studio. There, in one place, you can find news and information about science events and research in the Triangle area of North Carolina.

Duke Bloggerhood

A nice article about Durham bloggers today (it will be on paper later, online for now). Bloggers featured or linked include, among others, my friends Anton Zuiker, Pam Spaulding, Sheril Kirshenbaum and Lenore Ramm.

Scienceblogs Millionth Comment parties!

Yes, you have heard right. There will be parties around the world, wherever SciBlings are, celebrating the one millionth comment on scienceblogs.com, expected to happen some time mid-September.
You can meet Sciblings and fellow-readers at parties in Michigan, Oklahoma, Iowa, Minnesota, New York, San Francisco, Vancouver, London and other places – watch all the blogs for announcements of the details.
As the North Carolina contingent here is the largest of them all at scienceblogs (7-8 SciBlings, depends on the exact date of the event and how one does the counting), there will be a big event here on September 20th.
We will start in the morning, meeting at the N.C. Zoo in Asheboro and seeing the exhibit led by one of their staffers (perhaps seeing some stuff behind the scenes). Then we will spend about an hour in their new Valerie H. Schindler Wildlife Learning Center (scroll down to read more) to meet with the zoo stuff and researchers, with the members of the NC Zoo society (whose President is a wonderful blogger), the teachers and students at the Zoo School, and then proceed to a nearby watering hole for some food and drinks (yes, serving of alcohol just got legalized in Asheboro a few months ago).
I (and other NC sciblings) will post more information once we have it, but it would be nice if you could post a comment here and on other NC scienceblogs if you can/will show up so we get an idea of potential numbers.

I am assuming this is remnants of Hurricane Faye

We are under tornado watch all day. Barely got the kids to school in the heavy rain this morning. Parts of Chapel Hill flooded, I hear. Not here as Southern Village is on a hill.

Carrboro Creative Coworking – the pricing list released

You know I am excited about Carrboro Creative Coworking. Looking at the pricing list which was released today, I think there will be a place for me there I can afford….

BlogTogether 2008 Backyard Barbecue

Update: Register, login and edit the wiki if you intend to show up tonight.
———————–
Anton just sent a message to the Triangle blogging community:

The annual BlogTogether Backyard Barbecue is this Saturday, August 23 from 5pm on, at my home in Durham. I’ll provide a cold keg of Carolina Brewery suds, a hot grill and tasty pulled pork barbecue, and a deck perfect for conversing into the night. More details at http://blogtogether.org/index.php/wiki.

In NC next weekend? Join us!

Carrboro Creative Coworking is a Go!

Carrboro Creative Coworking, a brilliant local project spearheaded by Brian Russell, is now a reality. The lease has been signed!

Carrboro Creative Coworking now has a lease for office space at 205 Lloyd Street, Suite 101 in downtown Carrboro! It’s 3,049 square feet and has nine small offices, two conference rooms, a kitchen, and public work space. The TARGET opening date for CCC is Wednesday, October 1, 2008. Stay tuned for exact dates and grand opening party info. 🙂
To launch this business I need your help now. Its essential that I pre-sell as many services as I can. This will fulfill a requirement for receiving my loan from the Town of Carrboro. Plus it’ll give us a personal boost. My wife and I are taking a LARGE financial risk. I believe its worth it.
Early next week I’ll have a pre-sell agreement for you with a list of services and their costs. We’ll have the Coworker (day/seat), the Full Time Coworker (desk/month), and the Office Coworker (office/year). Once the space actually opens we’ll fill out a more formal sales agreement contract. This pre-sale agreement will primarily act as evidence for the Town of Carrboro that you want to work at the space. MOST IMPORTANTLY it will help me to get my loan!
So if you believe in Carrboro Creative Coworking PLEASE get ready to commit. Look for the pre-sale agreement here. Contact me if you have questions.

You can read (and if you are local forward to your friends and media) the official press release (pdf):

August 21, 2008 – Carrboro, NC – Carrboro Creative Coworking signed the lease
and is ready for business. And it’s not any ordinary business – Carrboro Creative
Coworking (CCC) is a professional shared workspace with a cafe-like
atmosphere. Designed with a welcoming environment for micro-business owners
such as freelance professionals, home-office workers, entrepreneurs, start-up
business owners and more, CCC offers a place to set up shop quickly and
conveniently. Small offices, full time desks, and seats are available for presale
now.
” For years I’ve dreamed of creating a place for people that need reliable office
space, a cool community with interaction and flexibility,” says CCC founder Brian
Russell. “Carrboro is the ideal spot for folks that telecommute from everywhere to
the Triangle to DC to San Francisco to New Delhi. We have an amazing group of
people right here looking for a place to convene professionally. They may not
want to work at home alone for long stretches. They may not want to work in a
vast commercial office. This affords social interaction as well as professional
opportunities. In the end, CCC can actually be less expensive than other office
space and you get great coffee!”
Russell is preparing to launch CCC sometime in early October. It will be located
at 205 Lloyd Street, Suite 101 in Carrboro, NC. Please keep a look out for
information about the grand opening party and office tours.

See what Brian says:

NC Gubernatorial Debate Tonight

Support Beverly Purdue:

Bev and Pat McCrory will face each other tonight in the second televised debate of the general election. The debate will be broadcast live at 8pm on WTVD in the Triangle area and streamed live on ABC11.com. Tune in tonight as Bev continues to prove why she’s the best candidate to move North Carolina forward.
New ad, including Charlotte
Click here to see Bev’s new ad, which is also airing in the Charlotte media market — the first ad by either side to air in Charlotte. It focuses on Bev’s extraordinary record of accomplishment and her plans for North Carolina’s future – a higher minimum wage, property tax relief for seniors, and creating the jobs of the future.

NPR interview with Nancy Olson

I was just on my way to Raleigh this morning, among other errands also heading to Quail Ridge Books to pick up a book there, when I heard Nancy Olson’s interview on NPR’s The State Of Things. Very nice interview with the owner of my favourite bookstore! I drove slowly in order to hear the whole thing:

When Nancy Olson opened a small bookstore back in 1984, she wanted it to be more than just a place to find bestsellers. Today, Quail Ridge Books and Music is a community anchor, an incubator for Raleigh’s creative class and a dream come true. Nancy joins host Frank Stasio to share stories from her many years of selling books and meeting authors.

A college student gets to redesign a town!

Downtown Revival:

The decline of downtown Gastonia, N.C., began long before Jennifer Harper was born, exacerbated by the collapse of the state’s textiles manufacturing industry and the exodus of retailers to suburban shopping malls. But the young Gastonia native is lending her design skills to help restore the town center to its prime – and its roots.
Harper, who graduates in August with a master’s degree in industrial design from North Carolina State University, walked into city hall a few months ago when she heard that city officials were planning a new convention center for the downtown area.
———————
This time it was city officials who were surprised – at the quality of the design work coming from a college student.
“They were really interested in the historical aspects of the design,” Harper says. “And they were very pleased with the concept.”
City officials have promised to include Harper’s name on a plaque in the park. And she’ll receive credit from her professors at NC State’s College of Design, who have agreed to accept the Gastonia park design as Harper’s master’s project.

The MIST facility

First Line of Defense:

A new facility at North Carolina State University will help provide increased protection to first responders by testing their turnout gear against potentially harmful chemical and biological threats.
The Man-in-Simulant Test (MIST) laboratory, located in NC State’s College of Textiles, will allow researchers to evaluate the capabilities of protective garments against non-toxic vapors that resemble chemical and biological agents. The new facility will give researchers the necessary technological advances to provide test results and analysis faster than similar facilities.
The MIST facility is the only one of its kind located at a university in the United States. The laboratory was funded by a two-year, $2 million grant from the Department of Defense secured by U.S. Rep. Bob Etheridge, who serves on the U.S. Homeland Security Committee.
In the main testing chamber, researchers can test the penetration of chemical vapors through protective clothing on mannequins and human subjects. During testing, subjects can perform the same tasks as a first responder, such as climbing a ladder, crawling, or carrying a victim to safety, in an environment that can be controlled for temperature, wind speed and vapor concentration.

Okapi in NC!

This may take a couple of years, but I’ll be patient. And as soon as the okapi arrives, I’ll be off to the Zoo! I’ve only seen okapi once in my life, in the early 80s in London.

30Threads.com

I got a million and a half invitations to the Big Blogger Bash in Raleigh the other day, but unfortunately I could not make it.
At the bash, Ginny Skalski and Wayne Sutton unveiled their brand new project – a website called 30Threads, which will cover all sorts of locally interesting stories and engage the local community. It certainly already has interesting stories and an interesting and novel layout. Looks like the media of the 21st century should look like (especially after all but hyper-local newspapers die out or completely move online).
I bookmarked it and will keep an eye – it looks very cool, but then, I know Ginny and Wayne are cool people so I am not in the least bit surprised 😉

New principal hired at Carrboro High

Ruby reports:

Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools just released a statement saying that the School Board selected a new principal for Carrboro High list night. Parents at the brand new school have been feeling shafted as their students have less advanced courses available, and their last principal was let go rather swiftly and unceremoniously. I wonder if people will be more satisfied after this new principal gets settled in.

Fortunately, both of our kids avoided having to go to the new Carrboro High School, so we have been watching this saga from the sidelines. It is, nonetheless, the local school where a lot of our neighbors’ kids go, and I hope that the new principal, Kelly Batten, will be able to get the school back on track as well as to fix the perception that there might be something wrong going on there.

Science Cafe: Monster Storms – Hurricanes in North Carolina

Science Communicators of North Carolina:

Tuesday, August 19
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Science Cafe: Monster Storms – Hurricanes in North Carolina
Dr. Ryan Boyles, State Climatologist and Director of the State Climate Office at NC State University with Dr. Anantha Aiyyer, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Marine, Earth, Atmospheric Sciences at NC State.
Tir Na Nog 218 South Blount Street, Raleigh, (919) 833-7795

Summer science student blogging at Duke

Just like they did it last year, Howard Hughes program at Duke is hosting student blogs in their summer program. Check out what the students are writing on their blogs, starting at homepages of the undergraduate students and high school students and going through the blogrolls on the right-hand sidebars.

Get politically engaged at Town Hall Grill

You know I love and often eat at Town Hall Grill in Southern Village. This is where we had our Friday Night Dinner during the last Science Blogging Conference (photographic evidence here, here, here and here) and more recently a little local meetup (see also Lenore’s review of the evening, and note she was nearby recently again).
Anyway, Town Hall Grill now has a new website (with a new URL), and the chef, Chris Burgess recently completely redesigned the menu: my old favourites (lamb kebab, chopped salad, chicken-under-the-brick, filet mignon and NY strip) are still on the menu, but there are new excellent additions: the salmon arugula salad and pork scallopini, to mention just a couple. And for a weekend lunch with beer, the marinated chicken sandwich, the cheeseburger, and the roast beef sandwich are excellent choices.
The best stuff is usually a couple of specials, something new every week – this week Mexican Meatballs, last week pork sliders – sometimes I like the special so much I go there 3-4 nights in a row just to have that before it goes off the menu.
What they have that is really interesting, is Village Voice – a series of “town hall meetings” scheduled for this year where you can come and meet local politicians. The series is designed to raise awareness, inform the voters, get people more politically engaged.

The purpose of the forum is to provide people with the opportunity to engage with political, environmental, and business leaders in a comfortable, thought provoking dialogue regarding current issues in a “town hall” style format.

I had to miss the first one (with Dr. William Lawson, Republican – Candidate for U.S. House District 4), but I will try to make it tonight (Monday, July 14th at 4pm), when local citizens can break bread with Senator Ellie Kinnaird, (Democrat – North Carolina Senate District 23). If I do, I will report about it here late tonight.

A very nice article about Pam’s House Blend

My friend, neighbor and uber-blogger Pam Spaulding, has an article about her in today’s New & Observer. Very nice! Good read. And also, Happy Birthday, Pam – what a great present you got from the corporate media today 😉

SCONC: Podcasting 101

Thursday, July 10
6:00 – 8:00 PM
With support from our friends at Burroughs Wellcome Fund, SCONC (Science Communicators of North Carolina) is hosting an introduction to podcasting (think of it as radio over the Internet). National authority Ryan Irelan of Podcast Free America will lead a two-hour session at Sigma Xi on NC 54 in the Research Triangle Park. (click here for directions) Please RSVP to Ernie Hood no later than Tuesday, July 8, or you might go hungry. (bkthrough AT earthlink DOT net)

NC Symphony on the Green

Last night, my daughter and I went to hear the NC Symphony at the Green here in Southern Village. The entire square was packed (a couple of thousand people?). It was very enjoyable and an interesting choice of pieces. What was more interesting, and I am not sure I liked it, is the chosen ORDER of the pieces. The first half was filled with classics, the second half with pop stuff, including some not-well-known pieces. I am not sure that worked very well….
The concert started with Johann Strauss Sr.’s Radetzky March – a very powerful piece of music. But there is a reason why that is traditionally the very last piece to be played at the annual New Year’s concert in Vienna – it takes some time to build up, through the duration of the concert, one’s emotional response to music. The early parts of the concert are there to gradually break down your defenses. Then, at the end, there is nothing you can do to resist the powerful emotional effect of the Radetzky March – you nod, you clap, your foot keeps the beat, you cry…but you cannot watch and listen without passion unless you are a heartless, soulless corpse.
It is similar to “Hair” – I hate it when local radio stations play the hybrid combo of ‘Aquairus’ and ‘Let The Sunshine In’ for this same reason. The finale of ‘Let The Sunshine In’ means nothing on its own, without the intro. The crucial part is the slow crescendo, the gradual build-up of emotion during the first 2/3 of the song. Then, when the finale comes along, full-throated, open-airway, than it is one of the most powerful pieces of music ever – it moves you, makes you shake and cry and sing along out loud.
So, if I were a conductor of the NC Symphony I would have reversed the order – I would have played Irving Berlin’s Patriotic Overture, the Circus theme and pop-song medley first, followed by John William’s movie music from “Midway” and “Star Wars” (Yoda’s Theme), followed by Terry Mizesko’s Little Dance Suite (which is actually quite nice) and only then, once the brains of the people in the audience are already softened and captured and tuned in to emotion, start hammering with the powerful pieces like Tchaikovsky’s ‘Cossack Dance’ from “Mazzepa” and a couple of scenes from “Swan Lake”, Weber’s overture to “Abu Hassan”, and finally make the audience cry with Grieg’s ‘Morning Mood’ and “In the Hall of the Mountain Kind” from Peer Gynt – one of the most powerful pieces of music ever (interesting that he did not choose ‘Solveyg’s Song’ as part of this), and drive the last nail in your emotional coffin with the Radetzky March.
But those are quibbles. It was great fun and I am happy to see so many people show up. Not to mention that the execution of all pieces was absolutely perfect.

Smoke

There is a huge forest fire raging in Eastern North Carolina, unfortunately affecting the Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge. The smoke has now moved more than 100 miles to the west, which means right here. It’s been stinking of smoke all day, getting worse and worse as time went on. And it appears it will not get any better soon.

Have you….

….registered for ConvergeSouth yet?
ConvergSouth.png

3D visualization

Another SCONC event:
RENCI to Show the Power of Visual Communications at Lunchtime Bistro:

The Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI) invites the public to a Renaissance Bistro lunchtime demonstration and lecture from noon to 1 p.m. Thursday, June 26 in the Showcase Dome room at the RENCI engagement center at UNC Chapel Hill.
The Bistro is free and includes lunch on a first-come, first-served basis.
RENCI experts, Eric Knisley, 3D visualization researcher, and Josh Coyle, new media specialist, will demonstrate three-dimensional visualizations and interactive touch screen displays. Attendees will observe a brief demonstration of the Showcase Dome, a research environment equipped with a 15-foot tilted multi-projector dome display for interacting with data in an immersive 180-degree field of view.
RENCI at UNC Chapel Hill is located in the ITS Manning Building on UNC Chapel Hill campus, 121 Manning Drive. Parking is available in the UNC Hospitals lot on Manning Drive. For directions, see http://www.renci.org/focusareas/eduoutreach/bistro.php.
RSVP by June 23 to jshelton@renci.org.

The Beautiful Mind

News from SCONC (Science Communicators of North Carolina):
On Thursday, June 5 at 7 p.m. in the Banquet Hall of the Morehead Planetarium in Chapel Hill, NC:
Public Lecture:
The Beautiful Mind: Breakthroughs and Breakdowns of the Brain,
with Dr. Ayse Belger.

New UNC Chancellor is a scientist. w00t!

Holden Thorp is a chemist and an overall great guy. Good news for NC science and education.

Colleges should not discriminate against Martians and Tralfamadorians

Our governor agrees. At least in the print version of this article which has a somehwat different title: “Easley supports college for aliens”. I wonder why they changed it for the Web version – is the editorial position that having green or purple skin disqualifies one from higher education?

For the Triangle locavores

A special issue of The Independent on local food scene:
The road to real food
Farm to table challenges
Farmers’ helpers
One missing link: organic grains

Thanks, Jim Neal!

I wanted to write this, but Abel did it much more eloquently.

NC primary

I am about to go to vote. You can watch the NC results here.
Update: Pam is liveblogging the election. If you have experiences from the polling places around NC today, post them in her comments.

The Tar Heel Tavern is back!

The Tar Heel Tavern was the first blog carnival that focused on a geographical region instead of a topic. It was going strong for about two years, but I could not find enough time to manage it any more, so it went extinct.
But now that blogging in North Carolina has grown so much and got well organized, the idea of resurrecting the Tar Heel Tavern has popped up. Perhaps we can do a few, for special occasions, and if it “catches” turn it into a monthly or fortnightly carnival (weekly is far too intense).
Anton hosted the first resurrected TTHT with the topic of Water, due to the draught.
Next, Abel will host the Tavern focused on the question: “What would you want the rest of the world to know about North Carolina?” Send your URL to Abel at tarheeltavern.abel at gmail dot com by next Monday 28 April.
And after that, the topic will be Mom, in time for Mother’s Day. So, if you are a NC blogger, or even if you are not but have something to say about NC, please help the Tavern open its doors again.

BlueNC Blogger Bash

A rare blogging event that I will miss, but you should come and meet the local political bloggers and candidates.

Registration is open for ConvergeSouth 2008

ConvergeSouth 2008 is ready to roll:

The Web site is online and registration is open: http://2008.convergesouth.com/
We’re calling for presentations – see the schedule and apply to present.
There’s a brand-new Video Walking Tour on Thursday, October 16, with Robert Scoble and Tom Lassiter leading two groups around Greensboro.
Lots more new stuff is happening. Keep up with ConvergeSouth on the blog: http://2008.convergesouth.com/blog/
See you in October!

Whassup?

You must have noticed that there wasn’t too much effort on this blog over the past couple of weeks (except for the elaborate and too successful April Fools hoax). I’ve just been so busy lately. So, here is a quick recap, and some pictures.
Back on March 21, I went to Duke University to participate in a panel called Shaping the world, one job at a time: An altruistic/alternative career panel. From education, to public health in the developing world, to science journalism, writing, blogging and publishing. The room was full (80 people? Perhaps 100?!). I am not sure one hour was enough for all five of us to say everything we wanted, but I did manage to explain what PLoS is all about (especially PLoS ONE). Sheril was sitting in the front row and she took these pictures. Abel was sitting right next to her, and wrote more about one of the other panelists. As usually happens at such meetings, the most useful part was the hallway chatter right after. I talked to people who may be interested in publishing with us, or collaborating, or applying for an internship.
On March 22 we met at Miltown in Carrboro to say farewell to our friend Bharat. The weather was nice enough to sit outside. Anton (actually the waitress using Anton’s camera) took this picture. Bharat is going to Vancouver Island, all the way on the West coast of Canada to do some environmental work. There are many science bloggers in that part of the world, so perhaps they can invite Bharat to their blogger meetups (I cannot tell you his blog as I used his real name in this post, but I can facilitate connection).
Then on March 26th, again the weather was good for sitting outside at Milltown for a joint meetup between BlogTogether and the Orange Politics Happy Hour. There were about 20 people there, some old friends (including OP hosts Ruby Sinreich and Brian Russell, the camera master Wayne Sutton and Ginny Skalski from NBC, the Facebook guru Fred Stutzman, the Carrboro mayor Mark Chilton and many others), some new to me and fun was had by all. And we all had Moo.org cards to exchange with each other. They all tried really hard to get me on Twitter, with no success… 😉 Wayne took a bunch of pictures, but here is one of me, so my Mom can see that I look decent when I go out to meet people. Actually, I was dressed up for a funeral I went to earlier that day.
On March 28th, Sheril, Abel and I went to Duke and talked about Science 2.0 and blogging to a class on science/policy communication, which was great fun, and interesting pictures are circulating on the Web (check the links).
In the meantime, I got engrossed in reading the entire Framing Science flare-up, but decided not to write anything myself (except a few comments on a couple of other blogs) as I did not want to draw even more attention to it – that would be bad framing 😉 Greg has collected the links to the first wave of these posts. Now a second wave, quite more sober and mature, is popping up around the blogs so take a look.
Last week I went to the dentist twice. I was always so proud of my perfect teeth…until I lost dental insurance five years ago. Now there is something rotten with pretty much every tooth in my head. Finally employed and insured again, it’s time to aggressively pursue a pearly smile again. They did the two most critical teeth first, those that needed swift rescuing. We’ll do the rest in May and June.
I am also busy organizing my European trip – primarily the first part, in the UK. You can meet me in London or Cambridge. Then I’ll spend a weekend with Henry Gee (and no, I will not divulge all the PLoS secrets to a Nature editor!).
I am preparing myself for two panels (one on Open Access, one on science blogging) for the science FEST in Trieste, Italy, as well as an article in their journal there. I hope Franc will be able to come to Trieste so we can finally meet.
Later, I will be giving a talk about Open Access at the Ministry of Labor in Serbia and, hopefully, also at the Medical school at the University of Belgrade. I will enjoy my Mom’s cooking, meet my highschool and equestrian friends and local bloggers.
Bjoern is organizing a dinner for me and local bloggers in Berlin. On the way back, I will stay one day in London with my cousin and will be back home on May 3rd, just in time for the NC primaries/caucuses – perhaps I will make up my mind by then (and European media may help me clear my mind about US politics). Anyway, if you are in any of those places at any of those dates, please let me know and let’s meet.
I think I’ll take Amanda’s book and Vanessa’s book for airplane reading, then buy some SF once I am finished with these.
This morning I finished my last BIO101 Lab (just the lab – no time for the lecture and lab combined) and turned in the grades, so that is one more thing I don’t have to worry about for a while. And tomorrow I will start working on my poster for the SRBR meeting.
Due to the popular consensus, I have already scheduled all the Clock Quotes for the duration of the trip. I will do the “My picks from ScienceDaily”, and YouTube videos, and “New and Exiciting in PLoS” as regularly as I can while abroad. I will also repost some of the stuff from the Archives, e.g., some Greatest Hits and, as I tend to do every year, my Clock Tutorials for the new readers. And I will post pictures from the trip every day. So, there may not be much of new, long, deeply thoughtful posts next month, but there will be something every day.
Finally last Thursday, I met a bunch of friends at Town Hall Grill. Lenore, Andrea, Catharine, Rosalyn, Sheril, David and Vanessa were there. The food was delicious, and the pictures are under the fold (blurry, as the wine was too good to resist):

Continue reading

Support Jay Ovittore

I have announced before my support for my friend and blogger Jay Ovittore in his race to unseat the Republican Congressman Howard Coble. But before he can get there, he first needs to defeat the establishment Democrats in the primaries, still not easy for a true Progressive here in North Carolina.
The last day of this month is the day when the money is counted and you know that these numbers have a big effect on the way press reports on races (since they have no knowledge of the issues, or spine to report them, they use campaign finances as a proxy for who is “winning”) which then become a self-fulfilling prophecy, etc…
So, to help Jay win the primaries (against opponents like this!), he needs the money. It’s easy, through ActBlue – here.

Carrboro Citizen is One

My favourite newspaper has been publishing for a year now. . Robert Dickson and Kirk Ross mark the anniversary. Newspaper is not dead.

Triangle Blogger Meetup

Next Triangle blogger meetup is this Wednesday at 6pm at Milltown (307 E. Main St., Carrboro). It is organized by our friends at Orange Politics, for several years the model for local political organizing online. It is likely some of the local politicos and candidates will show up. It is free and open for all and, heck, if you do not want to chat about politics, you don’t have to – we’ll chat about everything and anything anyway, as we usually do 😉

Alan Alda at the N.C. Zoo

He was here last Tuesday for filming of a scientific documentary for PBS:

He was doing important work on an upcoming PBS special “The Human Spark”, a three-part documentary about what makes us human, due to air next year.
Alda, who also met with researchers at Duke University on Monday, started filming last week and said he will tape additional segments in France, England and South Africa, as well as in the Pacific Northwest. Duke primatologist Brian Hare suggested the NC Zoo as a shooting location, zoo spokesman Rod Hackney said.

SCONC/BlogTogether joint meetup

Yesterday we had our first blogger meetup since the Conference, the Triangle bloggers jointly with the NC science communicators. Who was there? Anton Zuiker, Russ Campbell, Brian Russell, Ernie Hood, Chris Brodie, Abel Pharmboy and Lenore Ramm who took the pictures. We talked about plans for foodblogging, wineblogging and blogging101 events, about local jobs in academia, about the next Conference, about Sigma Xi, about Eve Carson (the helicopters were in the sky above, helping catch the second suspect), and about Carrboro Coworking. Fun was had by all (the weather was gorgeous as well – 65 degrees). Next meetup is in two weeks, organized by the good folks of Orange Politics.

Triangle Bloggers AND Science Communicators joint Meetup

SCONC Second Wednesday AND the BlogTogether bloggers meetup will occur jointly this month, at Tyler’s Taproom, Durham!

Does science make you thirsty?
Jargon got you down?
Want to kick back with other SCONCs?
We’re here for you. Come hang with other science communicators on Wednesday, March 12 and talk shop. Or not. Whatever. This is a social event, a chance to talk with people who share your passion for explaining science.
There’s no official start time, but say 5-ish. Early arrivers: grab a table. Wear your SCONC pin to find each other.
Tyler’s Taproom is on the American Tobacco Campus next to the Durham Bulls stadium.
Our meeting coincides with the regularly scheduled meetup of the blogtogether community in Durham.

Coworking in Carrboro

Carrboro’s Creative Coworking in the works:

Freelance web designer Brian Russell’s vision to create a shared workplace for freelancers and other creative types is moving toward a concrete Carrboro reality.
The idea to open what he called a shared office space with a coffee shop atmosphere was first mentioned publicly nearly a year ago. Russell said James Harris, director of economic and community development in Carrboro, encouraged him to make it happen.
The concept lies somewhere between a wireless-equipped coffee shop and the generic, cubicle-clad office. Russell said the need for this type of space is generated by people who have been driven away from the typical office environment but who are unhappy working alone at home.

Patricia Brennan on bird genitalia

News from SCONC:

On Thursday, March 27 at 4 p.m., the Zoology Department at NCSU will host a seminar from Patricia Brennan of Yale University entitled “The Biology of Avian Genitalia: Form and Function.” Brennan’s work on the genital anatomy of waterfowl has revealed the existence of a “sexual arms race” between males and females. Unlike 97 percent of bird species, male waterfowl have a phallus, and it can range “from a half-inch to more than 15 inches long.” The seminar will be held in 101 David Clark Labs. Refreshments will be served in the lobby at 3:45.

Related:
Friday Weird Sex Blogging – The Birds Do It….
More on duck phalluses and uteri

Zoo School X-Press

Regular readers must be familiar by now with the ZooSchool in Asheboro, NC. Today’s news from the school – their students have put up the first issue of their online newspaper, the ZSX-Press. Go check it out!
In related news, and also at the Asheboro Zoo and related to education, The NC Zoo and NC Zoo Society will be hosting the No Child Left Inside Conference Thursday (today), March 6th, which will be held in the MPR [multi-purpose room] of the Stedman Education Building. I wish I could go. Perhaps someone there will write about it and post something online.

Reptile & Amphibian Day at the Museum

News from SCONC:

The NC Museum of Natural Sciences presents Reptile & Amphibian Day on Saturday, March 15 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dozens of displays, activities and presentations highlight reptiles and amphibians from North Carolina and around the world. Here’s your chance to get up-close and personal with hundreds of live animals, from giant pythons to bearded dragons. Meet reptile expert Dr. Brady Barr, the first person to capture and study all 23 crocodilian species in the wild.

Linda Buck explains the sense of smell

News from SCONC:

Linda Buck is the Nobel-Prize winner that may live farthest from NC (but still in the U.S.). She will give a seminar Monday, March 10 at 4 p.m. in the Grand Ballroom of the Talley Center at NCSU. Buck won the Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2004 for the discovery of olfactory receptors and subsequent work on the neurobiological basis for smell. The title of her talk is “Olfactory Sensing in Mammals.” Buck is based at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. This seminar is part of a series put on by the W.M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology at NCSU.

Oliver Smithies on stem cells and gene targeting

News from SCONC:

Oliver Smithies is the Nobel-Prize winner next door. A professor at UNC for almost 20 years, Smithies got the nod from Stockholm last fall. He will give a seminar at the Friday Center on Thursday March 6 at 6:30 p.m. in a lecture hosted by the Carolinas Chapter of the American Medical Writers Association.
Along with Mario Capecchi and Martin Evans, Smithies was recognized for his research on embryonic stem cells and DNA recombination in mammals. Their work on gene targeting in mice made it possible to study individual genes in health and disease–a fundamental breakthrough that affected all fields of biomedicine. Smithies has used gene targeting to develop mouse models for diseases such as cystic fibrosis, thalassemia, hypertension and atherosclerosis. A reception at 6:00 p.m. will precede the talk. The lecture will be held in the Redbud Room of the Friday Center in Chapel Hill

ConvergeSouth2008

Sue announces that the website will be up in two weeks, and the blog is already up and running. You can help with organization. In any case, mark you calendars:

ConvergeSouth 2008 will be held on October 16-17, 2008 in Greensboro, North Carolina. BlogHer will be held on October 18.

Science Communicators of North Carolina meeting at NIEHS

The March SCONC meeting will be Wednesday, March 5, at 6 p.m. at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) in RTP. The evening will include presentations on how NIEHS research impacts public health, the new NIEHS Web site and highlights of a few of the Institute’s important research programs.

Annie Get Your Gun

Last night we went to Raleigh Memorial Auditorium and saw the opening (“student”) night of “Annie Get Your Gun”, starring Larry Gatlin, who is apparently some big name in country music, and Raleigh-born Lauren Kennedy who we last saw as Lady Of The Lake in Spamalot when we went to NYC two years ago (btw, Spamalot is coming to Raleigh in April, but the Lady will be played by someone else).
It was fun (a couple of minor glitches that they skillfully masked or played for laughs, the biggest being when Larry forgot his line in one of the songs and Lauren saved him by singing them for him without missing a beat and he recovered with the next line – some of the kids in the audience probably never knew that this was not how it was supposed to go).
Lauren has so much energy and a great presence on stage – she makes it look easy and fun. And of course, they both sing phenomenally.

Congratulations to the good people of Greensboro

Greensboro is the only North Carolina town on the ‘Popular Science’ list of the America’s 50 Greenest Cities. We still have a lot of work ahead of us until we catch up with the West Coast.
(Hat-tip)