Category Archives: North Carolina

Earlier today…

…I attended the Edwards rally in Chapel Hill, NC, together with some 5000 other people. My musings can be found here and here.

Pictures of Professor Steve Steve

Below the fold are the pictures of me, Prof. Steve Steve and Rev.Big Dumb Chimp taken immediately after the Ken Miller talk in Raleigh. If we look a little drunk or high, it is because we were just subjected to an overdose of theistic evolution and religious apologetics!

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NC blogging of the week

Ah, everyone is too busy getting ready for the holidays to remember to send their entries to the Tar Heel Tavern, so, this week, it is pretty small, but I am glad to see that I am not the only one writing about driving and traffic.
BTW, do not forget the Chapel Hill/Carrboro Blogger MeetUp tonight at 7pm at the library.

More pictures of the NC Zoo lion cub triplets

Go here and here.
Hat-tip: Russ Williams

NC blogging of the week

The 94th Tar Heel Tavern: Big Changes Edition is up on Scrutiny Hooligans.

Tweety in Chapel Hill – let’s play Hardball!

As a part of the Hardball College Tour, Tweety will be in Chapel Hill on Tuesday at the Memorial Hall, chatting for an hour with John Edwards. Tickets are free if you can come, or just watch on Tuesday night.
Though likelihood is small, it is not totally impossible Edwards may use this opportunity to announce his Presidential run.
But, what does it mean to announce? This is such a drawn-out ceremony. First you go on TV and, when asked, respond it is too early to even think about it. Later, you go on TV and say you have not ruled it out. Then, you go on TV and say that you have not made the decision yet. Then, you say that you are thinking about it. Later, you go on TV and say that you are considering forming an exploratory committee. Then you announce that you have formed an exploratory committee. Then you announce who will run your campaign. Then you reveal the address of your HQ. Then you go on TV on a less-serious show (like Edwards did on Daily Show in 2003) to announce the run. Then you repeat that on several other, more serious shows. Then you organize a meeting in your hometown where you give a Big Announcement Speech.
So, at which stage of the process is Edwards right now? I’ve been watching every night that workers are busily readying the office space above Town Hall Grill in Southern Village – the spot where the HQ will supposedly be. So, the announcement cannot be that far in the future.

New Cool Local Blogs

Go check out The Mill and Carrboro Commons.
The Mill Editor did some digging and found that a lot of cool scientific research on climate is being done locally.

NC blogging of the week

Tarheel Tavern #93, North Carolina’s mountains, is up on Nicomachus.

NC blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #92 – Thanksgiving Edition – is up on Slowly She Turned

NC blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #91 – Last Minute Edition is up on Slowly She Turned

Abducted by Aliens! Fundie Aliens!

Yikes! This was here in my neighborhood, in Winston-Salem, NC! Poor guy – did he get an education! What does he think about America now?
My Half-Year of Hell With Christian Fundamentalists:

When Polish student Michael Gromek, 19, went to America on a student exchange, he found himself trapped in a host family of Christian fundamentalists. What followed was a six-month hell of dawn church visits and sex education talks as his new family tried to banish the devil from his soul. Here’s his story.

Read the whole thing – it is an incredible story. The family’s whole purpose in taking him in was to recruit him to work on the building of a Baptist Church in Poland! How brazen!
(Thanks to The Science Pundit for the tip)

Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives

Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives, new book by Sen.John Edwards hit the bookstores today (I can’t afford it right now but it is on my wish list for later). You can read an excerpt here, check the dates and places for his booksigning tour, see the schedule for his media appearances (lots of them, including The Daily Show and Letterman) here and discuss it here.

Blogs on NPR

On The Media is one of my favourite NPR shows and today I was lucky to be in the car for almost the entire show. Today’s show was very “bloggy”. First, they had a report of the election and mentioned the positive impact of the netroots as well as the way Internet was ahead of CNN et al. in posting results (e.g., in Virginia).
Then, Steve Rubel talked about the way large companies can use blogs to connect with their customers.
Then , they had Marc Lynch of Abu Aardvark on , not as a blogger, or a curiosity, but as an expert – the best person to summarize the responses of Middle-Eastern media to the U.S. elections. I think the interviewer was taken aback a little to hear that Al Qaeda wanted Republicans to win contrary to the MSM “conventional wisdom”, i.e., Republican wisdom.
Then, they had a segment in which they did not mention blogs, but the topic is a hot one in the blogosphere perhaps because it is triggered by the way bloggers write – the question of bias. Should MSM journalists openly show their affiliations/biases/leanings or should they try, at all costs, to preserve the appearance of fairness and balance, i.e., should they continue to play the game of ‘he-said-she-said’ and always present two sides to every issue even when one side is clearly wrong?
If that is not enough, Matt Hill Comer will be on State of Things tomorrow at noon and 9pm. Matt has all the info.

Who should run against Elizabeth Dole in 2008?

Chairman of the NC Democratic Party wants to know who would you like to see run against her.

Ken Miller talk

Last night I went back to my old campus to attend the Dr. Robert Rabb Lecture by Ken Miller. The Stewart Theater was packed. I saw a lof of old friends, but, as it was crowded, only got to spend some time talking to a couple of them.
Oh, there were bloggers there, too, of course. I first met up with Reed and Professor Steve Steve. Steve Steve is omnipresent (today in Raleigh, NC, yesterday in Vancouver, before that in Australia), omniscient and omnipotent (knew how and then fixed the computer and projector for the speaker) and benevolent (endless patience getting his picture taken with everyone – will post once available). Mr R was also there with his wife, but had to leave during the break between the lecture and the panel discussion, so we met for only a few seconds.
Rev.BigDumbChimp is Dr.Rabb’s grandson. He drove up from South Carolina for the occasion. Reed and I were worried how we were going to find him in the crowd. I suggested we get up to the microphone and ask for Big Dumb Chimp and hope he’d raise his hand and yell “It’s me”. I do not recall now why we decided not to pursue this strategy. Anyway, he walked in with the rest of the Rabb family and we immediatelly recognized each other (having a picture on one’s blog is sometimes a good idea) and got to chat a little bit. Hopefully, he’ll come to the Science Blogging Conference in January so we can have more time to talk.
Ken Miller is a very polished and energetic speaker. I had to remind myself that I was an unusually well-informed person in the audience of academics there – I actually knew the details of the Dover trial and have read big chunks of Judge Jones’ decision, I have recognized the authors of all quotes before he revealed them (including the quote from the Pope), and I new all the examples of evolutionary findings he used (whale evolution, Tiktaalik, immune system evolution, bacterial flagellum evolution). But I read science blogs all the time, including the Panda’s Thumb. Scientists do not – they read scientific papers all the time and are not as well informed about the creationist shenannigans, so much was probably new to them last night. In any case, it was fun, and getting a little bit of internal information from the courtroom proceedings was great.
But then, in the last part of the talk, he started on his apologetics for theistic evolution, slamming Dawkins for being “pessimistic” and totally misunderstanding the Darwin quote (the last paragraph in the Origin):
“There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”
This does not mean there is a God making the world wondrous, it means that there is no need for the God hypothesis to see the grandeour. Actually, the God hypothesis impoverishes one’s sense and prevents one from being able to see the full scope of the grandeur of the Universe.
The panel afterwards was worse, with six “liberal” clergy-members on it: Miller is Catholic, there was a Baptist, a Presbyterian, a guy leading the Campus Crusade for Christ, a Moslem and a Reform Rabbi (the only one I knew from before – Rabbi Lucy Dinner of Temple Beth Or, the only woman on the panel). There was no representative of atheism on the panel, so these six people were free to preach “love”, and the power of prayer, and the Non-overlapping Magisteria without being challenged. I was sitting there watching them and thinking – hey, of all the hundreds of smart people in the auditorium, they picked the six with emotional problems to tell us all how to think?! OK, they were not the worse – there was also a local Creationist (YEC) group there, too scared to ask questions in public so they tried their hand afterwards, with Ken Miller enjoying himself visibly while rebuffing all their claims.
A few years ago, I was of the mind that something like theistic evolution is a good idea to spread the message that evolution is not evil. I thought that people like Ken Miller are great messengers to soften up the people (step 1) and prepare them for eventual compIete abandonment of the Creator (step 2). And even those who never get to Step 2 are less dangerous than straight-out creationists.
I certainly have no problems with anyone personally believing whatever they want. But I am more and more moving to the opinion that this is not a good strategy. It is just providing the apologia for the believers who have a problem with being perceived as medieval, and allowing them to, then, provide apologia for their more extreme brethren. They – the moderates and the fundies – flock together when the going gets tough and it really counts – the political battles between 15th and 21st centuries.
The moderates are no friends of reason when it counts the most, outside of comfortable chats on panels on campuses. Evolution battle is not a battle of science, it is a battle of mindsets and worldviews: medieval vs. modern. Giving a helping hand to those who give their helping hand to the medieval bigots and authoritarians is not a good strategy. They need to be made uncomfortable – Dawkins-style – and forced to choose and come clear with which side they are on. Otherwise, they’ll play nice with us when it does not matter, and stick their fingers in their ears and sing “la-la-la” when real action is required.
Note: the links to bloggers are now links to their own commentaries on the talk.

I Have Voted, Have You?

I voted at 9:40am and was voter #299 at our place which is huge! In some years there is less than that whole day.
Even more, earlier today, when I was dropping off my daughter at school around 7:50am, there was a line there with people even standing outside in the cold rain! I have NEVER seen a line there in the last 3.5 years here.
Oh, and if you are so new here that you do not know how I may have voted, I feel like this and this.
There is a judge race (officially non-partisan) in which I did not vote because the self-professed Democrat is bat-shit crazy (and not even endorsed by the Democratic Party) and the Republican…well, they all need to get the message that belonging to a maniacal party does not pay any more. There is another judge (who I think is an old-style Zell-Miller-like Southern Democrat) who is running unopposed for whom I did not vote because I saw his despicable demeanor in the courtroom – but that is personal.

Who to vote for in North Carolina

If you are in Chapel Hill (Orange County) NC and want to know how to vote on some races you did not pay much attention to, consult Concerned Citizen and Orange Politics. The debates in the comments at OP are quite informative as the candidates themselves tend to show up often.
For the broader Triangle area, check out the Independent and Exile on Jones Street.
For races across North Carolina, go for info to BlueNC

NC Blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #89 is up on Poetic Acceptance

Wine is Good For You

Shelley has already explained the recent study about the life-span increasing properties of Resveratrol, a compound found in wine.
Article in NYT tries to make a quick calculation (apparently erroneous) as of how much wine a person would have to drink in order to receive the same dose as the lab mice got in this study – “from 1,500 to 3,000 bottles of red wine a day”!
Perhaps the dose would be smaller if you could stand drinking the super-sweet Scuppernong (from muscadine grape – Vitis Rotundifolia) wine from Duplin Winery here in Rose Hill, North Carolina. As horribly sweet as it is, I actually like it. It comes in a couple of different versions, plus I heard that they also make and pack raisins (which are supposed to have an even higher concentration of Resveratrol).
There has been some research on the health effects of Resveratrol in muscadine wines locally, e.g.,. here, here and here (pdf). Duplin wines can be found in every store around here, but I wonder how easy it is to find them around the country? Have you tried them? Did you like them? Do you think you could drink a thousand bottles of it every day?
Addendum: Abel has more on the research.

Blogger meetup

The next Chapel Hill Bloggers Meetup will be tonight, on Thursday, November 2nd at 6pm EST at Open Eye Cafe. I will try not to oversleep this time around and get to see you there.

Fizzler on the Roof

Fizzler on the RoofThe worst Tevye ever (January 26, 2005)

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The Mooney Experience

Just a quick note. I finally got to meet Chris Mooney, my fellow Seed Scienceblogger and the author of The Republican War on Science.
On Saturday, we met early enough to have coffee and a little chat before his book-reading and signing event at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh. The long weekend in local schools (Friday off in Orange Co. and Monday off in Wake Co.) and a break in bad weather we had recently propably prompted a lot of locals to make that last trip out of town for the year this week, so the size of the crowd was not as impressive as it could have been, but those present were good and asked good questions afterwards.
I have to say that Chris has got his schtick down pat – the talk flows smoothly, is funny and to the point, and pre-empts all the usual protestations before they get to be voiced by anyone in the audience. If he comes to your neck of the woods, by all means go and see him.
His visit (which continues today at Regulator Bookshop in Durham and tomorrow at Duke University) was also an opportunity to just hang out (something I am out of practice with), chat and have a beer with friends who are also (science) bloggers, including Dave Munger,
Reed Cartwright and Tiffany, Abel PharmBoy, etbnc and Anton Zuiker.
Chris was not in a mood for a dinner at an elegant place, so instead we went to a cheep-beer/good-bar-food place, my old grad-school haunts where we stayed until midnight, chatting about science, politics, blogging, journalism, hurricanes (the topic of his next book) and many other things.
Even better, Chris gave us each a CD (“Luckless Pedestrian”) of his brother’s jazz band, the David Mooney Trio. I listened to it today and it’s great.

NC blogging of the week

The Tar Heel Tavern has a new host this week – Dr.R of Evolving Education has just posted the 88th edition. Go there, say Hi, and check out the best North Carolina blogging of the week.

Not more scientists, but more science-literate citizens

Not more scientists, but more science-literate citizensA short but good article by my schools’ President (April 25, 2006, also here).

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Lunch with Mike

I had a delightful lunch today with my blog-sparring-partner Mike Munger of Mungovitz End (see how my blog is labeled on his blogroll: “Coturnix’s nonsense”). We had great time discussing politics, academia, Horowitz, blogging and the life in the Triangle. Oh, Mike is also running for North Carolina governor in 2008 as a Libertarian candidate. Check his positions – how liberal!!!

Anton Zuiker’s article in today’s N&O

Anton Zuiker got a nice article (about blogging and the local blogging community) published in Raleigh News & Observer. The article is here and Anton’s personal version can be found here. Smartly, the article contains the URL of Blogtogether, so perhaps people will see it and register for the Science Blogging Conference or show up at the next meetup.
Oh, while there, you can also see two additional pictures of me from ConvergeSouth that Anton took – one with Elizabeth Edwards and the other with Maryam Scoble.
Addendum: Since I did not get my hardcopy of N&O (yet, I will soon), I did not know that there are several more articles on blogging there today. Abel links to them and comments.
Update: Paul Jones adds some thoughts (and useful links that N&O failed to provide), including more ammunition for my excuse not to have seen other peoples’ articles, including an article by another friend – Ruby Sienreich – who I would have linked immediately if only I have known. It took going out and getting a hardcopy to see she was in there!
Also interesting is the choice of blogs they chose to highlight – focusing on blogs with a distinctly local flavor, covering local issues (politics, environment, etc.). No mention of the best local aggregator!? I do not want to put down those blogs – they are all excellent and worth checking out even if you are not residing in the Triangle – but it is interesting they did not mention the area’s most popular blogs, i.e., popular outside the Triangle, nationally, perhaps internationally. So, I visited the Sitemeters of several local blogs I suspect have a large readership and this is what I found (average daily visits in parantheses):
Panda’s Thumb 5,387
Pam’s House Blend 3,649
Is That Legal 808
Silflay Hraka 727
A Blog Around The Clock 715 (and this is my all-time low since moving to Seed’s Scienceblogs – it is usually 800-1200)
Anyone else in the area who has big traffic that I may have missed?

Tar Heel Tavern #87

This week’s Tar Heel Tavern is right next door – over on my SciBling’s pad Terra Sigillata.

Chapel Hill – Carrboro Blogger MeetUp tonight

If you happen to be in the Triangle tonight and have some free time, come to the blogger meetup at 7pm at the Chapel Hill Public Library.

ConvergeSouth 2006

Yesterday, I spent a wonderful day in Greensboro, most of it on the NC A&T campus attending ConvergeSouth. I am still trying to recover from the event, so this post is just a big Hello to everyone I met there and another post about buidling online communities inspired by the meeting will follow soon.
First, a big Thank You to the organizers of the event, Sue Polinsky, Ed Cone, Ben Hwang and JW. Great to see you all again! Great job!
Last year, I came in knowing only a few people. Two days later, I knew many more. This year, it was only one day long so it was hard to catch up with everyone I know, as well as meet new friends, and I am sorry I did not have more time to spend chatting with some of them.
I rode with Kirk Ross (former editor of Independent Weekly) on the way there and with Will Raymond on the way home, both times with great conversations in which I have learned a lot (including the fact that Will’s sister and I know each other well).
Of course, Billy was there – the Great Organizer of the Blogsoro community. He drove to the conference riding his biplane bycicle (featured in Make magazine) and just hadf it parked there in front of the building all day long. You can see a movie about Billy and his plane if you click on the link on top of this page.
I managed to at least say Hello to Dave and Jinny Hoggard, Stu, Mr.Sun, Roch, Jay, Sandy Carmany, Sam and David Wharton, Jeff aka Fecund Stench (the best internet handle ever!), Anglico, Dave Anonymoses, Lex, Jude Iddybud, Matt Gross, Pam Spaulding, ae, Mark Tosczak, Janet and Daniel Conover, Matt Hill Comer, George Entenman and Jill (if I forgot someone, I apologize – feel free to remind me in the comments). Many of them have posted their own thoughts on the meeting, as well as pictures and videos, so dig around their blogs for more. And you can see who else was there here.
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The first morning session was on building online communities, wonderfully led by Elizabeth Edwards (and yes, I got another hug!). The biggest news from the meeting occured during this session as Mike Krempasky (the founder of Red State) all but endorsed Brad Miller for Congress, mainly for his fight for campaign finance and blogs, I guess, though who would ever want to vote for Vernon Robinson is going to remain forever a mystery to me. Southern Dem recorded the exchange which you can find on NCBlue:

One thing that I’ve certainly never done is endorse a Democrat. Ever. I am actually quite willing to say this when it comes to politics that we should (a little fuzzy) all just step back a little bit. If there’s an uglier time in Washington than right now, I don’t know. But Brad Miller ought to be re-elected.

(Here’s the picture of the two of them talking in the hall immediately afterwards. Also check the comments here)
The spirit of ConvergeSouth is wonderfullly non-partisan. We may bash each other in blog comments, but we enjoy each other’s company and have beer together in real life.
Anton liveblogged the lively and fun second session led by Maryam and Robert Scoble, who I managed to meet briefly afterwards.
The third session I attended was the one about the Facebook and other social software, moderated by Bill Wood who really impressed me with his thoughts on the topic. The best part of the session was the active participation of several students, real users of Facebook and MySpace. In the spirit of the unconference, I was really interested in hearing what they had to say instead of us old geezers pontificating to them. The session gave me a lot of food for thought, something I will have to ruminate on for a few days befor I turn it into a post here.
Also, the social networking showed its great real-life potential right there during the session. It took less than five minutes to match together people who have computers they don’t know what to do with, and people who need free computers to teach immigrants and refugees to read English.
As it apparently happens at every conference, a new blog got started right then and there.
Local media did not ignore the event either. You can read articles in News & Record and Yes Weekly.
After an afternoon chatting over beer with a bunch of bloggers, we had a great conversation at dinner in Ganache (great food – divine desserts!), with Elizabeth and Zak Exley, Austin Chandler, Anthony Piraino, Wendy Warren, Dan Rubin, Jim Buie, Cara Michelle, Lisa Scheer, Ed Cone, Kirk Ross and Will Raymond. Dan Rubin was a correspondent from Yugoslavia at the time when Milosevic was deposed, so we had a lot to talk about, as you can imagine.
Anton came prepared with a bunch of leaflets advertising the NC Science Blogging Conference which we gave out and left around the place for people to pick up. Several people showed great interest in it.
You can check out other peoples’ impressions here.
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Tar Heel Tavern #86

A beautifully written edition of Tar Heel Tavern is up on Poetic Acceptance.

ConvergeSouth, Hopefully, Tomorrow

No posting tomorrow. I will (or should be) at ConvergeSouth all day tomorrow. That is, if I make it there. My ride suddenly quit. I e-mailed a few local bloggers but have not received any responses yet. Perhaps I’ll make it, perhaps I won’t. If I do, I’ll post my thoughts on the conference on Sunday.
Upodate: Got a ride. See ya on Sunday. I have scheduled several posts for automatic posting before bed tonight, a picture of a cat, some science news, etc, just to prevent the blog from rotting away and falling apart…

Elizabeth Edwards is all of yours’ neighbor, too

a2%20EE%20booksigning.jpgI went to Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh on Monday to hear Elizabeth Edwards read from her new book, Saving Graces (I could not make it to the earlier event in Chapel Hill as I was picking up the kids from school at the time). Quail Ridge Books and the surrounding area can get quite busy when a famous person is coming in to sign books (e.g., when Al Gore and Jimmy Carter came there) so I made sure to come really early. By 6:45pm I have already dropped the kids off at grandma’s yet I still had to make a couple of circles to find a parking space and the bookstore was already full. I’d say there were more than 300 people there, including several familiar faces from OAC and the Wake County Dems.

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No More Animal Rights!

As Nick says:

Interestingly, as opponents of science (…..) continue to take on increasingly scientific-sounding arguments (….) this study demonstrates that these are only quasi-scientific, manufactured to support a particular viewpoint and not intended to actually communicate new information.

I am kinda tired of animal rightists trolls in my comments, so feel free to dissect this site on your own blogs….
On the other hand, I’d like someone with some expertise in reading legalese to explain what SB1032 really means.

Help Durham Literacy Center

Durham Literacy Center is in trouble and needs your help.
Mold in DLC Office:

For several years, the presence of mold in the DLC building has been a nagging but manageable concern. In the past 4 years, DLC has spent more than $15,000 to contain and destroy the mold that grows in the building’s damp basement and the attic. Unfortunately, conditions worsened significantly early this fall. The occurrence of allergic symptoms associated with mold increased. When it became clear that staff were having allergic reactions to the mold, we asked two environmental engineers to assess the building. The engineering report is pending. Although we have not yet received the report, they have clarified that the office is inundated with mold.

Literacy Center without a home:

Mold is forcing the Durham Literacy Center out of its home on West Chapel Hill Street. The nonprofit agency that helps about 500 people each year learn to read, get a high school equivalency or find a job is looking for a temporary home while the problem is addressed.
“We desperately need temporary office space,” said Reginald Hodges, the center’s executive director. “It’s an emergency situation for us.”
Hodges said the center has spent $15,000 over the past few years battling mold at its 3,000-square-foot home, built as a doctor’s office about 1950 and donated to the literacy center about seven years ago. But worsening symptoms among staff and students over the past few months led to the discovery that the problem was worse than thought. Classes have been suspended at the center while its leaders figure out what to do next.

Brian Russell explains how you can help.

Saving Graces

I went to Quail Ridge Books last night. I will post my report (hopefully with pictures and movie-clips) tomorrow at noon.

Fire in Apex

Grady, Kirk and Paul on the Apex chemical fire.

Tar Heel Tavern

Tarheel Tavern #85 is up on Another Blue Puzzle Piece. I am such an idiot – I forgot to send anything this week!

That’s one Cool Prof!

‘Hip Happy Prof’ teaches over MySpace, bosses protest:

N.C. State Professor Tom Hoban is offering Sociology 395-M, “Social Movements for Social Change,” on the popular social networking site that claims to have 100 million active users worldwide. But administrators say it’s the wrong space for teaching a university course.
Hoban says he received approval over the summer from his department head to teach via MySpace. But last week, Katie Perry, senior vice provost for academic affairs, told Hoban to move the course to university servers.
Hoban has refused.
“N.C. State’s distance education is primarily oriented toward what I would say is pushing information into students’ brains and then trying to get them to prove that they’ve learned it,” Hoban says. “I want my students to build relationships, to build friendships and to build trust in one another. No one can show me another tool. I’ve told the university, if they can show me one, I’ll move.”
A tenured professor, Hoban is citing academic freedom, saying the university’s applications don’t include social networking components that are essential to the course. He taught it last year using the university’s WebCT Vista site, but found it “impossible” to create social interaction.

Ah, but there is always more – the true reason he is in trouble is because the worst rightwing scum in North Carolina, the John Locke Foundation, does not like his politics:

There’s another aspect to controversy over SOC 395-M: the content. Hoban is both a scholar and a proponent of 1960s counterculture. Students are expected to participate in a social movement as part of the course. Hoban’s syllabus suggests they pursue issues such as “animal welfare and environmental issues; consumerism and healthier eating; peace in the Middle East and social justice; racial equality and spiritual tolerance; sensible drug policy and medical marijuana.”
Then there is Hoban’s reputation. He refers to himself as the Hip Happy Professor, and his personal profile on MySpace–which he makes clear is not affiliated with the university–features a background image of pot leaves, reggae music on the audio player and videos of himself and a young woman taking hits of marijuana and singing songs such as Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry.”
Last October, a profile of Hoban and his “apologetics course on hippies” ran in Carolina Journal, a publication of the John Locke Foundation, a conservative group that criticizes what it considers to be liberal bias in higher education.

Gotta love the guy! I hope he wins this and I hope his classes are always full!

Podcastercon2006 – the Teaching Session

Podcastercon2006 - the Teaching SessionBrian Russell is organizing the 2007 Podcastercon. Let me show you how much fun the last year’s Podacstercon was by reposting this January 16, 2006 post (also cross-posted on Science And Politics) about the exciting education session led by David Warlick of 2 Cents Worth blog:

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Are you…

…registered for ConvergeSouth by last name initial or by first name initial? If you have a website or blog, you should be registered both ways.

Sci-Fi And Building Blogging Communities

Sci-Fi And Building Blogging CommunitiesSome musings from February 13, 2005…

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2007 Triangle Blogging Conference – what you can do

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A science (and medicine) blogging conference, the first of its kind, is now officially announced for January 20th 2007. What can you do?
1. First, go to the conference wiki and look around to see what it is all about.
2. Help to spread the word by blogging about it. If you do, you can use these cool logos as well as this Technorati tag.
3. Download this flyer (pdf), print a couple of copies and post them outside your office/lab door or down the hall on a bulletin board, or wherever else you think it is appropriate.
4. Use the word of mouth or e-mail to tell your friends about it. Tell them the URL of the wiki: http://wiki.blogtogether.org/.
5. Check your calendar (and finances, I know, I know) and see if you can come to the conference yourself. If you can, register (as early as you can so we get a good idea about the number of people coming) using this easy registration form. See who else is already registered. So far, it is mostly bloggers – we are starting advertising around campuses, institutes etc. this week.
6. In a spirit of an Unconference, look at the conference Program and make it better by editing the wiki.
7. If you can, pitch in a small donation to help the conference run smoothly.
8. We have secured a couple of sponsors already and are in negotiations with several others. If you are connected to an organization that can, should and would like to be a sponsor, let me know. Cash, books, magazines, swag…we accept everything approporiate.
9. Sign up to volunteer. We’ll need locals to do a lot of driving between the airport, hotels, conference, post-conference dinner venues, etc. Out-of-town guests can also help on the day of the meeting by manning the registration desk, etc.
10. During the conference, consider liveblogging the meeting and posting pictures on Flickr using the tag. If you are a blogger and volunteer to do so, we can give you a name-tag of different shape/color which indicates that you are a science/medicine blogger and you are willing to answer questions by the non-blogging participants: scientists, physicians, students, science writers, journalists and librarians.
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Local science radio and podcast

Radio In Vivo is close enough to me that I can listen to it at home (but not when I am driving places around town ro to Raleigh):

Radio In Vivo: Your Link to the Triangle Science Community is a one-hour interview/call-in program, focusing on one scientific topic per week. Typically, but not exclusively, scientific activities and personalities local to the Research Triangle area of North Carolina are featured.
Ernie Hood, a freelance science writer based in Hillsborough, North Carolina, produces and hosts Radio In Vivo. Please click the “About Ernie” link to your left to learn more about Ernie’s services and experience.
Radio In Vivo airs each Wednesday from 11 AM-12 noon Eastern time on WCOM-FM 103.5, Carrboro’s low-power community radio station. Although WCOM’s air signal is only available within Carrboro and parts of Chapel Hill, the station does stream on the Web, so anyone anywhere with high-speed Internet service can listen via computer.
You are welcome to call in and participate in the live discussion at any time. Dial 919-929-9601 – your call will be put directly on the air as soon as possible.

Scroll down for podcasts of previous shows.
Hat-tip: Brian Russell

Tar Heel Tavern #84



Wow, it’s been a while since I last hosted the Tar Heel Tavern. This will be the first time since Erin took over the reins of this carnival and the first time since I moved my blog here to Seed’s ScienceBlogs (please look around and check out my SciBlings while you are here). In the meantime, Erin has performed a nice makeover of the carnival’s homepage and archives so go take a look.
I am happy to see a number of great entries this week. Still, I added a couple of “Editor’s Choices” at the end. Let’s start…
For the geeks out there, Melissa of Mel’s Kitchen has discovered a cookbook with Doctor Who recipes for your costume party…
Mr.R of Evolving Education is constantly evolving and now needs your help. Do you know much about the oceanography of the North Carolina Coast so he can teach it to the Classroom Guests?
Laura of Mooming Light disspells some myths about Columbus.
Erin of Poetic Acceptance writes about kids’ glasses, motion sickness and other stuff. She got written up in the local newspaper as well: Guided by a Star.
Billy The Blogging Poet is a poet so he sent in, what else – a poem: A Big Fuss Over Nothing.
Kenneth Corn of Colonel Corn’s Camera is proud of his brother-in-law Jimmy who is In The Navy now.
Laurie has moved from her blogspot blog to a brand new wordpress blog (adjust your bookmarks). She is starting up with a series of unusually (for her) personal posts: Assumptions Part I, Assumptions Part II and Assumptions Part III.
Jude of Iddybud reports on the talk by Bishop Desmond Tutu at the Clinton Global Initiative meeting.
The mother-daughter blogging team of Melinama and Melina sent one entry each. First, Melinama, on her telenovela site Caray! Caray! reviews the September 25 episode of Barrera de Amor. Melina, on Pratie Place wrote about Things I Do Not Like To Read in Online Personals, which is both funny and insightful.
Ogre starts his car with a Mini Key – you have to click to see the picture. He promises more soon.
Screwy Hoolie of Scrutiny Hooligans sent Sen. Max Cleland (D-GA) meets Screwy Hoolie. He explains:

This is from a Veterans rally last Thursday. In the clip, once my tired ass quits talking, Senator Cleland told me to “put this on your blog”…”When you pray, move your feet.” Never mind that he doesn’t have any feet. Or notice and rejoice in the poignance.

Added late: Laurie of A Sort Of Notebook has had a tough day and a rough year so far: Love the People You Love
Now to Editor’s Choices – some NC blogs I’ve been reading lately…
Back To The Woom is a husband-and-wife blog. Kate recently wrote Sad and her hubby wrote Perpetual War and the Pussycat Dolls.
Dave and Greta are my SciBlings here. Don’t be afraid – they explain cognitive science in ways that everyone understands and enjoys. Check out what they say about these studies on the way people remember faces (and impications for recognition of criminals in line-ups), the unconscious effects of smells on behavior (and how to make your kids more tidy) and an unusual disorder of cortical blindness in which the patient perceives only one (e.g., right or left) side of the visual field.
Abel of Terra Sigillata takes a break from blogging about medicine, cancer, herbal remedies and science education to write, every Friday, about wine.
James is in Saluda, close to Asheville, living on the Island Of Doubt, doubting everything, from neurotheology to intelligently designed lyrics of popular songs.
Raleigh scored big when Reed moved from Georgia to North Carolina. Reed runs his personal blog De Rerum Natura as well as one of the most popular science blogs in the world – whose server is now at NCSU so it is all ours! – Panda’s Thumb, a group blog dedicated to quality biology education and to fighting against efforts to replace the science curricula with various forms of Creationism.
Is there a Zoo in the world in which the Director blogs every day? Only in North Carolina – check out Russlings.
TOP 10 Ways To Get a Photo of an Ivory-billed Woodpecker – a Letterman list by Cyberthrush.
Mindy, one of several bright bloggers on NC Conservation Network asks:

Other organizations often accuse environmentalists of using scare tactics to push our agenda. But at what point does stating facts and alerting citizens become a “scare tactic?” How can we as environmentalists provide important, science-based, yet often hard-to-hear information without being seen as “fish scammers,” for instance? Do ordinary citizens believe we want to scare everyone or is that just a view held up by anti-environmentalists?

How much wildlife can you see during just one day in Maine if you know where to look for it? And how to grow a mushroom. From Northwestern NC.
Josh Wilson is one of science librarians at NCSU. On his blog Science! he comments on the history and current changes in peer-review.
Anton, Brian, Paul and I are organizing 2007 Triangle Science Blogging Conference on January 20th so register and come if you can.
I will see many of you in two weeks at ConvergeSouth, the beyond-blogging unconference in Greensboro. I’ll see some of you before and after at our regular meetups as well. And we’ll also meet in cyberspace next weekend, when the Tar Heel Tavern will be hosted by My Blue Puzzle Piece.

This week’s Independent

Some weeks, I skim through The Raleigh Independent and nothing catches my interest. Other weeks, I find it chockful of interesting stuff – some of if quite bloggable. This week’s issue is one of those.
This article about legal steps same-sex couples can take to get protections similar to heterosexual marriages is quite useful and informative. It is also cool it mentions Pam Spaulding and her blog.
In the same issue, an article, Family Values?, looks at another angle – the plight of straight people devastated by the coming-out-of-closet by their spouses who, due to religious upbringing, got married despite knowing they were gay:

Twenty-one years ago, I was a bright-eyed young woman who was in love with a handsome, albeit serious, young man. We married, then had a baby, and I expected to live happily ever after. We lived in a conservative, mostly fundamentalist Christian community at the heart of a mostly conservative, fundamentalist state. Homosexuals were not discussed except in derogatory terms, with the term “abominations before God” being used whenever the topic did arise.
Ten years into the marriage, it was revealed to this bride, who was still very much in love with her husband (though he was often distant and depressed) that he had a “terrible secret.” He was gay. He had fought that fact all of his life. When he met me, he knew that he was gay, but he thought he could change–that God would heal him. And the alternative–coming out as a gay man–could get him killed. Certainly it would mean he would be shunned by his congregation, his friends and possibly his family.

Read the rest…
Barbara Solow finds John Edwards uncomfortable in too-white, too-upper-class society.
And, I still want to see Science of Sleep, though interestingly, Fellerath does not even mention insomnia – the main character in the movie.

NC blogging and bloggable events

The 83rd edition of the Tar Heel Tavern, the blog carnival of NC blogging, is up on Poetic Acceptance.
Shortly before I moved here to Seed, Erin took over the management of the carnival and did a great job updating and beautifying the homepage and the archives.
Although I have hosted Tar Heel Tavern five times before, I have not done so since I quit managing it. So, to make up for the lost time, I will be hosting next week, on October 1st, right here. Send your entries by midnight Eastern Time on Saturday at: Coturnix1 AT aol DOT com.
Then, on October 14th, I hope to see a lot of you in Greensboro, at ConvergeSouth an Unconference Beyond Blogging.
Although, like the White House, we made the big announcement of the Triangle Science Blogging Conference on Friday night, it is not true that nobody is paying attention – a number of people have expressed interest already and a few have already registered. So, are you coming?
Next Chapel Hill-Carrboro blogger meetup will be on Thursday, October 5th. Unfortunately, it appears I will not be able to make it this time.
Kevin is back from China. He is nursing jet-lag, reconnecting with his family, and avoding Chinese food, as well as trying to use what remains of nice weather to do some herping in the Sandhills. We’ll meet soon for sure and I’ll let you know if he decides to start his own blog.
My daughter’s birthday was a few days ago. She got a nice new digital camera, so you’ll be seeing some more good cat pictures here in the near future.
There are also several notable book-related events in the area next month:
If you liked “Cold Mountain” you may like Chuck Frazier’s new book as well:

The long-awaited second novel, THIRTEEN MOONS, from Charles Frazier, winner of the National Book Award for Cold Mountain will have its national debut on October 3 at Jones Auditorium on the campus of Meredith College. Tickets are $6 each, or 1 free with the purchase of THIRTEEN MOONS.

Elizabeth Edwards will read from and sign her new book SAVING GRACES: FINDING SOLACE AND STRENGTH FROM FRIENDS AND STRANGERS on Monday, October 9, 2006 at 7:30 PM at Quail Ridge Books & Music in Raleigh.
Michale Pollan, author of “Botany Of Desire” and “Omnivore’s Dilemma” will be here in October:

October 10, 2006, 6 pm: Durham, NC; SEEDS Harvest Dinner
October 11, 2006, 7 pm: Chapel Hill, NC; Morehead Planetarium at the University of North Carolina

My SciBling, Chris Mooney will be here in late October, reading fromand signing the new updated paperback edition of the Republican War On Science:

Saturday, October 28
7:00 PM-8:30 PM
Quail Ridge Books
3522 Wade Ave.
Raleigh, NC 27607
Sunday, October 29
4:00 PM-5:30 PM
Regulator Bookshop
720 Ninth Street
Durham, NC 27705

Technorati Tag:

The First Year Teacher, now in her fourth year of teaching, suddenly becomes famous as a blogger

Unfortunately, not in my neighborhood any more, the First Year Teacher gets portrayed, quite positively, in USA Today in an article about teachers-bloggers.

Finding readers in the most unusual places

The coooolest thing ever!
My son’s science teacher broke his shoulder so he had to be out for two weeks (he’s the one who was instrumental in the district adopting the science textbook I like, and he teaches evolution “straight-up”).
During that time, they had a substitute teacher. She gave them their first assignment – to find something interesting science-related and write a short report.
Then, she started listing which sources are legit and which are not. Then, my son raised his hand and asked if they were allowed to find information on science blogs, for instance on one his Dad writes.
She asked:”What’s your Dad’s name”.
He said “Bora”.
She yelled:”Nooooo waaaaay! YOUR DAD writes A Blog Around The Clock!!!!”
I guess this blog is popular around here….
Well, being a sub, she is not in school any more, so my son cannot just say Hello, but she reads this blog – now I know this! I’d love to get a comment or e-mail….

NC Blogging

Tar HeelTavern #82 is up on Mel’s Kitchen.
Don’t forget to come to the first Chapel Hill – Carrboro blogger meetup tomorrow in the Library at 7pm. You don’t have to be a blogger – being a reader and/or commenter or someone interested in blogging is enough – it is a very open group.
And don’t forget to register (for free!) for the October 14th ConvergeSouth.
WNCNN - Where Western NC Comes For its God Fearin' News!

Francis Collins is in town

A Community Genetics Forum 2006: Finding the Genome is a 3-day conference here in the Triangle. I will try to go to the third day events on Saturday, 10am – 3pm.
It is a very medically oriented meeting, so I doubt they will mention the importance of comparative genomics in the study of evolution, but it will be fun anyway.
On the other hand, it is probably good for my emotional well-being that there is likely to be no mention of Francis’ awful book