Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Wild Monkeys and Boars enlisted to help measure Fukushima Radiation in Japan

By Xeni Jardin at 3:33 pm Wednesday, Dec 14




Many challenges remain in measuring radiation leaked from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan, after a devastating quake and tsunami 9 months ago left that site crippled. The crowdsourced efforts of a DIY tech group called Safecast were the subject of a report I produced with Miles O'Brien for NewsHour; other projects to capture this badly-needed data have been led by young mothers.

Today, a story is circulating about a group of researchers from Japan's Fukushima University who plan to enlist the help of wild monkeys, and maybe wild boars, to monitor radiation starting in Spring of 2012.

From the Wall Street Journal:

    Researchers from Fukushima University plan to kit wild monkeys out with radiation-measuring collars to track the contamination levels deep in the forests, where it’s difficult for humans to go. (...) The monkey collars are geared with a small radiation-measuring device, a GPS system and an instrument that can detect the monkey’s distance from the ground as the radiation level is being tallied. Mr. Takahashi said more contraptions may be added, but these will be the three main ones.

So, it sounds like they'll capture the critters, tranquilize them, attach the devices, then free them again back in the wild to roam around and passively gather/transmit readings.

CNN reports that veterinarian Toshio Mizoguchi of the Fukushima Wildlife Rehabilitation Center (run by the regional government) came up with the idea. He wanted to find a way to observe the effect of radiation on the wild animals near Fukushima.

The researchers will first focus on the mountains near Minamisoma city, about 25 kilometers/16 miles from the Fukushima Daiichi plant. Some 14 monkey colonies are known to inhabit this area. Minamisoma city and its mayor Katsunobo Sakurai became "internet-famous" when the mayor posted a desperate appeal for help on YouTube.

During our reporting trip to Japan, I went with Miles to interview mayor Sakurai, by the way -- the interview didn't make it into our NewsHour piece, but man, he was really a fascinating character. Apparently things have not been easy for him personally or politically since.

More around the 'net about the "radiation-measuring monkeys will save Japan" story: CNN, ABC, Telegraph.

(Thanks, Miles O'Brien)

(Image: Snow Monkeys, or Japanese Macaques, bathe in the onsen hot springs of Nagano, Japan. This site is a considerable distance from the area that will be the focus of this project, and I'd imagine a different species may be involved.)

Black Widow Spider

By Maggie Koerth-Baker at 8:27 pm Wednesday, Dec 14






Reader Pete Johnson took this awesome photo of the red-splotched abdomen of a poisonous black widow spider. One of my favorite things about this shot: The fact that you can see hairs growing on the spider's abdomen.

Extra bonus: Until checking out this photo—and subsequently reading up a bit on black widows—I had no idea this spider came in brown. The specimen in this photo could be a male, or it could be one of several species that are simply brown widows, rather than black. Looking at the legs, there's a good chance it's Latrodectus geometricus.

Great work, Pete!
Technology confuse Lizard! Lizard no like!


By Dean Putney at 7:43 pm Wednesday, Dec 14
http://youtu.be/WTpldq3myV0

Why ant no tasty? Lizard mind no grasp concept of menu selection! AAAAAAAARRRRGH! Lizard crush microprocessors!!

I also originally found this as a GIF. Thanks to theortolan for Submitterating the video! [Video Link]

Tags: android, ant, bearded dragon, Delightful Creatures, lizard, phone, Technology

Give the Gift of Water

Honor someone you love by giving the Gift of Water in his or her name. Only $25 brings one person clean water for life.
https://water.org/ecards/

"The Protester" has been named Time's Person of the Year.

"The Protester" has been named Time's Person of the Year.




The magazine unveiled the choice on Wednesday morning. Managing editor Richard Stengel also revealed the decision on the "Today" show. Stengel said that finalists included Kate Middleton, Admiral William McRaven and Congressman Paul Ryan.

Steve Jobs and Rep. Gabrielle Giffords did not make the short list because they appeared elsewhere in the magazine. "It's not a lifetime achievement award," Stengel said of the award.

Time has bestowed the famous distinction on one person (or group of people, or, in the case of such choices as "The Earth" and "You," an idea) every year since 1927. Last year's choice was Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

The cover of the magazine mentions protesters from all over the world, ranging from the masses who fueled the Arab spring to the anarchists in Greece to the Occupy Wall Street movement. In Time's cover story, journalist Kurt Andersen wrote,

    It's remarkable how much the protest vanguards share. Everywhere they are disproportionately young, middle class and educated. Almost all the protests this year began as independent affairs, without much encouragement from or endorsement by existing political parties or opposition bigwigs. All over the world, the protesters of 2011 share a belief that their countries' political systems and economies have grown dysfunctional and corrupt — sham democracies rigged to favor the rich and powerful and prevent significant change. They are fervent small-d democrats.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/14/the-protester-time-person-of-the-year_n_1147328.html

How Credit Collectors Have Reinvented the Debtors’ Prison

Wednesday, 12/14/2011 - 11:59 am by Mike Konczal








mike-konczal-newNew tactics have an old ring to them and low-income debtors are falling prey.

NPR just ran a story called “Unpaid Bills Land Some Debtors Behind Bars.” As they report, ”Here’s how it happens: A company will often sell off its debt to a collection agency, generally called a creditor. That creditor files a lawsuit against the debtor requiring a court appearance. A notice to appear in court is supposed to be given to the debtor. If they fail to show up, a warrant is issued for their arrest.” Marie Diamond has more.

This is increasingly common across the country. My colleagues Matt Stoller and Bryce Covert have both written about debtors being jailed for failure to appear in court. Debtors’ prisons are illegal, and some point out that this is really jail for a summons problem, not a payment. But I haven’t had a full vision of the practice until I read this excellent working paper by Lea Shepherd of Loyola Chicago law school, “Creditors Contempt” (h/t creditslips). Beyond laying out the problems with the current system, which gives a disproportionate amount of the coercive powers of the state to creditors, this paper also has implications for another topic I’m interested in — the class bias of the submerged state.

The key here is something called in personam debt collection remedies. In an agrarian economy, it was relatively straight forward for creditors to order a sheriff to seize the property of a debtor. In rem actions, where a sheriff would go and seize property, would work just fine. But this became harder to do as time went on.

The debt collection market evolved in personam debt collection remedies. This in personam action has two goals: discovery and collection. The court orders the debtor to disclose information about his property, location of his assets, etc. to help creditors track down those assets. Then the court orders certain payments to be made, which allows for collection. This court order is enforced through the court’s authority to hold debtors in contempt, which in turn is enforced through threats of imprisonment. Depending on the jurisdiction, contempt charges can be made against either the failure to show up for the discovery process or the failure to stick to the collection ordered.

So how does this go wrong? The most obvious way is that this in personam debt collection method — which should be reserved for “extraordinary” situations — is used regularly by today’s collectors. Given that a debtor’s liberty is at stake, it seems very important that there are strict rules for this practice and that these actions are used only when appropriate. But as Shepard finds, “in personam remedies are often initiated and executed on a high-volume basis and with a striking degree of informality.”

Debtors who run into the law often don’t understand the process; since the debt has often been resold multiple times, they may not even recognize the names of the plaintiffs. It is also problematic that debtors who don’t show up for the summons are likely to be confused as to what they are being jailed for. They may think they are being jailed for nonpayment when they are actually being jailed for the failure to show up and not telling the court and creditors about their assets. It is in the interest of creditors to blur this distinction. Though debtors can often get out of jail by compliance, they may feel they need to pay off debts immediately to get out of jail instead. Debtors will be willing to make costly financial decisions, including using money that is legally protected from debt collectors, to get out of jail immediately. Indeed, many debtors are cash constrained and can’t deal with even temporary incarceration due to the costs of work and family disruptions and will be willing to do anything to get out of jail.

In many jurisdictions, bail posted to get out of being jailed for contempt of the discovery process is used to pay creditors. Besides being a great deal for creditors — as noted above, people often pay a huge economic penalty to get out of jail — it functions as a de facto debtors’ prison. As law professor Alan White described this process, “If, in effect, people are being incarcerated until they pay bail, and bail is being used to pay their debts, then they’re being incarcerated to pay their debts.” As the FTC noted, debtors being jailed for nonappearance “may be willing to pay the bail (and indirectly the judgement) using assets (such as Social Security payments) the law prohibits creditors from garnishing or otherwise obtaining to satisfy a judgement.”

Sign up to have the Daily Digest, a witty take on the morning’s key headlines, delivered straight to your inbox.

Debtors can also be jailed for being in contempt of the court-ordered payment plan, an action that certainly seems like the debtor is being jailed for a failure to pay debts (see Alan White on this battle in Indiana here). This exacerbates the first problem — as Shepard notes, “It may be easier to sue a debtor than to determine if she is a viable litigation target, and even judgement-proof debtors can tap ‘last resort’ payment sources, like exempt property, loans from family and friends, and fringe credit sources like payday lenders.” This encourages creditors to go fishing for potential earnings in an area of the law that endangers the liberty and freedom of debtors.

What does this have to do with the submerged state? The government’s method of providing benefits and protections through the tax code and legal channels disproportionately helps the most well-off, if only because they pay the most in taxes. But it also helps them because they can afford the necessary lawyers and support staff to take full private advantage of these rules. Let’s look at an example Shepard provides:

Steven Lipman had fallen on hard times… Steven received a pension income of $525 per month… One creditor who obtained a judgment against Steven served him personally with notice of an in personam debt collection action…

After about a 20-minute wait, the creditor’s attorney called out Steven’s name and guided him into the hallway outside the courtroom, where five other debtors’ examinations were taking place. The creditor’s attorney asked Steven about what property he owned and the location of his bank account. Eventually, the attorney asked Steven how much money he could afford to pay each month. Steven felt flustered and wasn’t sure what to say. Feeling embarrassed about having defaulted in the first place, Steven agreed that he could pay $80 per month until the debt was paid off. Steven, unfortunately, couldn’t pay $80 per month…

[H]e hadn’t noticed that it included examples of exempt property — various assets insulated from creditors’ collection efforts. The list included pension income, Social Security payments, a certain percentage of wage payments, veterans’ benefits, unemployment compensation, workers’ compensation, alimony and child support, and some personal property. Had Steven asserted his exemptions,  he would not have had to forfeit any of his money or property.

The creditor’s attorney didn’t tell him about the exemptions, and the judge never raised the issue. (Unless debtors affirmatively assert their exemption rights, judges may feel uncomfortable raising the topic. Otherwise, judges may be perceived as serving as debtors’ advocates — not as disinterested adjudicators.)

Notice that Steven is paying 15 percent of his meager income to creditors, even though if he had known about the full protections he’s entitled to under law he wouldn’t have to pay anything. Cash constrained Steven presumably couldn’t afford a lawyer — but one can imagine a richer debtor making sure each and every exemption was accounted for.

These exemptions are there for serious reasons. As Shepard notes, “Courts have articulated exemption statutes’ broad and fundamental public policy goals: 1) to provide the debtor with enough money to survive, 2) to protect the debtor’s dignity, 3) to afford a means of financial rehabilitation, 4) to protect the family unit from impoverishment, and 5) to spread the burden of a debtor’s support from society to his creditors.” With that in mind, why don’t judges take an active role in protecting exempt property?

Requirements to appear in court are being overused and abused as a way of confusing debtors and forcing a strong hand on payments. This ultimately threatens the integrity of the entire debt collection system and the crucial protection of freedom and liberty.

Mike Konczal is a Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute.

   

Rainbow Warrior: Dolphins at Gibraltar

En route from Bremen to Barcelona we kept looking for dolphins all the way from the English Channel and in the Bay of Biscay, but only when we reached the Strait of Gibraltar we were met by a large group of dolphins playing and swimming in front of the ship. They put on such a great welcome that was definitely worth waiting for.

Rainbow Warrior

Spiderwebs, Pakistan

December 14, 2011
Photograph by Russell Watkins

An unexpected side effect of the 2010 flooding in parts of Sindh, Pakistan, was that millions of spiders climbed up into the trees to escape the rising flood waters; because of the scale of the flooding and the fact that the water took so long to recede, many trees became cocooned in spiderwebs. People in the area had never seen this phenomenon before, but they also reported that there were fewer mosquitoes than they would have expected, given the amount of standing water that was left. Not being bitten by mosquitoes was one small blessing for people that had lost everything in the floods.

"God particle" could be found or disproved in 2012, expert predicts.

An illustration of the Higgs-Boson particle.

A typical "candidate event" in the Higgs-hunting CMS experiment. Red lines represent high-energy proton beams while yellow lines show the tracks of particles produced in the collision.
Illustration courtesy CERN

Physicists are hopeful that the long-sought Higgs boson is finally within reach, after two experiments at the proton-smashing Large Hadron Collider (LHC) observed tantalizing hints of the elusive particle.

Speaking today at a public seminar at the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva, scientists with the LHC's ATLAS and CMS experiments presented data showing that the Higgs boson—if it exists—likely has a mass of around 125 gigaelectron volts (GeV), the unit of mass used by particle physicists.

"We have restricted the most likely mass region for the Higgs boson to 116 to 130 GeV, and over the last few weeks we have started to see an intriguing excess of events in the mass range around 125 GeV," ATLAS spokesperson Fabiola Gianotti said in a statement.

"This excess may be due to a [random] fluctuation, but it could also be something more interesting. We cannot conclude anything at this stage. We need more study and more data."

CERN director general Rolf-Dieter Heuer later cautioned reporters that the results are preliminary.
"We still [need] many more collisions next year to get a definite answer to the Shakespeare question on the Higgs: To be or not to be?" he said.

David Evans is a particle physicist at the University of Birmingham and the leader of the U.K. team that works on the LHC's ALICE experiment, which is not involved in the Higgs hunt.

Evans said the ATLAS and CMS teams have done an "impressive job" of narrowing down the Higgs mass range, and that he expects more exciting results in the near future.

"By the end of next year ... they will have enough data to either discover the Higgs or prove it doesn't exist," he predicted.

Still Counting Higgs "Change"

Higgs bosons are thought to be extremely short-lived subatomic particles, so scientists can detect them only by spotting the particles into which the Higgs decays.

But just as a vending machine might return the same amount of change using different coin combinations, the Higgs can decay into different combinations of other particles. (Explore a Higgs boson interactive.)

What the ATLAS and CMS teams claim to have done is observe excesses of decay particles in the 116 to 130 GeV mass range—hinting that the Higgs could exist in that zone.

The CERN researchers say they have what they call a two-sigma degree of confidence, which translates to about a 95 percent chance that the results are not due to a statistical fluke.

But according to the very stringent standards of particle physics, an experiment must have a sigma level of five—or a 99.99 percent chance—to count as an official discovery.

"We make so many measurements at the LHC that three-sigma effects show up quite often. I've seen three-sigma effects come and go," Evans said.

"So you really do have to have this five-sigma [level of confidence] before the community will accept it as a discovery."

LHC Well Suited to "God Particle" Hunt

Finding the Higgs boson has been a major scientific pursuit, because the particle is crucial to the standard model of physics—the incredibly successful theory that explains how fundamental particles interact with the elementary forces of nature.

Popularly referred to as the God particle, the Higgs boson was proposed in the 1960s by physicist Peter Higgs to explain why some particles, such as electrons and quarks, have mass while others, such as the photon, do not.

Higgs proposed that the universe is bathed in an invisible field similar to a magnetic field. If a particle can move through this field—now known as the Higgs field—with little or no interaction, there will be no drag and that particle will have little or no mass.

On the other hand, if a particle interacts significantly with the Higgs field, it will have a higher mass.

The idea of the Higgs field requires the acceptance of a related particle: the Higgs boson.

"In the standard model, if you have this new type of field, there must be a particle that goes with it," Evans said. "You can't have a field without a field particle." For instance, the particle associated with the electromagnetic field is the photon.

While the standard model predicts the existence of a Higgs boson to go with the Higgs field, it doesn't say anything about its mass, which is one reason why the hunt for the God particle has proven so difficult.

In fact, while most physicists think the Higgs is a single particle, others have proposed a non-standard Higgs model—called the two Higgs doublet model—in which the Higgs is actually made of five distinct particles with similar masses but different electrical charges.

But in the past few years, physicists think they have limited the possible mass of a single, standard-model Higgs to a very narrow range, one which the LHC—the most powerful particle accelerator yet constructed—is quite capable of searching. (See LHC pictures.)

"With the LHC, we know that we will either find the Higgs or prove that it doesn't exist," Evans said.

According to Evans, the discovery of the standard-model Higgs would be a spectacular validation of the theory—and a find on par with the discovery of the electron by J.J. Thompson in 1897.
"People had been measuring and studying electricity up to that point, and then Thompson discovered the actual particle that was responsible," he said.

Higgs Search Is "No Lose" Situation

The next step for CERN scientists will be to conduct more proton-proton collisions to detect more Higgs signals and bolster their case.

Evans said he expects a conclusive result one way or the other as early as next summer.

Gianotti of ATLAS said that she would prefer that scientists find the standard Higgs, because "we as a community have been looking for for many years, and it would fix many problems in the standard model," such as why certain particles have their associated masses.

For Evans, though, a failure to find the standard-model Higgs would be even more interesting, because it would hint at completely new physics, such as a nonstandard Higgs. (Also see "Strange Particle Created; May Rewrite How Matter's Made.")

"To me," Evans said, "it's a no-lose situation."

The Two Twists that let Hummingbirds fly like Insects



In flight, the hovering hummingbird is more like a insect than a bird. Most most birds only create lift when they flap downwards. But the hummingbird, by flipping its wing before it flaps upwards, can create lift in both directions. Insects do the same thing, but their wings have no bones inside them. How does the hummingbird fly like a fly despite having the bones of a bird?

Tyson Hedrick has found out, by filming hovering hummers with high-speed X-ray cameras. I’ve written about the results in my new piece for Nature News, so go there and read the full story (including details about how hummingbird muscles work at high gear). The meat of it is this:

    By filming ruby-throated hummingbirds (Archilochus colubris) in flight, Hedrick showed that the birds invert their wings by twisting their wrists. “It looks like it’s affecting the whole wing because the bird’s skeleton is very compressed and its wrist isn’t very far from its shoulder,” says Hedrick.

    In most birds, the wrist collapses on the upstroke to draw the wing towards the body as it is raised. Hummingbirds have adapted the same movements to rotate their wings instead. “The usual mechanism makes the upstroke aerodynamically invisible,” says Hedrick. “The hummingbirds’ mechanism makes the upstroke aerodynamically effective.”

    The videos also showed that hummingbirds flap their wings by twisting the humerus (upper arm bone), rather than flapping it up and down from the shoulder like other birds. To understand the difference, Hedrick recommends trying to mimic a bird by flapping your arms. “You’re doing something not too different to what a seagull’s doing,” he says. To mimic a hummingbird, “hold your upper arm close to your body with your elbow on your hip, and flap your forearms back and forth”.

Go try it. You can look as stupid as I did when I was writing about the paper.
Photo by Joe Schneid

Monday, December 12, 2011

All Farewells are Sudden...

http://youtu.be/2X0xYT8Rtiw

Four Hemophiliac Patients Successfully Treated with Gene Therapy

Hemophilia, a disease whose victims can suffer serious internal bleeding and may bleed to death from injuries, has a long and eventful history. Caused by defective blood clotting factors, the disease has been with us since at least the second century, when a rabbi gave mothers whose first two sons had bled to death from circumcision wounds permission to leave the third sons uncircumcised. It also famously  afflicted several members of European royal families. But a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine brings us a bit closer to a new kind of historic event: a cure.

Following up on years of preclinical trials, including the curing of hemophiliac mice earlier this year, scientists gave six patients a  gene therapy treatment, injecting them with a specially built virus carrying a functioning version of the gene for the defective clotting factor. The virus inserted the gene into liver cells, which proceeded to manufacture the clotting factor, and the patients maintained elevated levels of it for over 6 months. Four of the patients were able to stop receiving injections of clotting factor (the current treatment) altogether.

The scientists are monitoring patients for any signs of liver cancer caused by the virus inserting the gene in an inopportune location, a known risk in gene therapy, but thus far, there have been no signs of such complications. The next stage, a trial of 20 patients, will assess what dosage of virus is necessary to get enough liver cells making clotting factor that most (hopefully all) patients can stop receiving injections. There are still plenty of ways that the treatment could fail before reaching the clinic. But here’s hoping that the results continue to be this promising.

Image courtesy of  Andrew Mason / flickr
 14  0 Share 0

December 12th, 2011 4:53 PM

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Dr. Sith’s The Grinch Who Stole Christmas Amateur Astronomer Discovers Sungrazing Comet


Back in the day, it used to be that most new comets and asteroids were discovered by astronomers diligently sitting at their eyepieces, spending one cold night after another patiently scanning the skies. The advent of robotic astronomy changed that, and now the vast majority of all celestial newcomers are found automatically.

But Australian "amateur" astronomer Terry Lovejoy changed that last week: not only did he discover a comet — which isn’t that unusual, though still cool — but it turns out to be a sungrazer, a comet that plunges deep down to the center of the solar system, practically skimming the Sun’s surface.

Here is Lovejoy’s discovery image:

This is a combination of three images; the comet moves between exposures a bit so he re-centered the comet in each shot and added them together. It’s the fuzzy blob in the middle of the frame. The comet’s official name is C/2011 W3 (Lovejoy), and on December 16th it will pass just about 880,000 km (500,000 miles) from the Sun’s surface — only a little bit more than than the radius of the Sun itself! 180,000 km (110,000 miles) — less than half the distance from the Earth to the Moon!* This may be a death dive, since many such comets don’t survive the intense heat of the Sun from that distance. Comets are composed of lots of rock held together by ice, so when the ice vaporizes, the comets disintegrates.

Michael Mattiazzo took the shot shown here of the comet on the evening of December 2. It’s a combination of ten short exposures lasting only minutes in total, but the comet moves enough during that time to trail in the final image. As you can see, it’s faint but moving rapidly as it heads down to its rendezvous with the Sun. You can also see more images of it at Astro Bob’s website.

Sometimes these sungrazer comets — technically called Kreutz family comets, after the man who figured out they all came from the same parent comet — survive their passage and sometimes they don’t. Sometimes they also get bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, though 2011 W3 is pretty faint right now and probably won’t brighten. But comets are difficult to predict; each is different and can surprise us. If this one flares up I’ll be sure to let you know.

This is a pretty good find by Mr. Lovejoy: most sungrazer comets are first seen when they appear in data from the SOHO solar observing satellite, already very near the Sun. It’s hard to find them when they’re far from the Sun since they’re usually so faint, and in fact this is the first such sungrazing comet found from the ground in over 40 years! So it’s quite a nice discovery. Congrats to Mr. Lovejoy, and we’ll have to see what happens to his comet over the next couple of weeks!

Image credits: Terry Lovejoy, courtesy José Luis Galache; Michael Mattiazzo. Both used by permission.

* I originally found a set of numbers that gave the closest approach distance to the Sun of 880,000 km, but turns out that was the distance to the Sun’s center. Subtracting the Sun’s radius of 695,000 km yields the surface-skimming distance of roughly 180,000 km. My apologies for the error.

One True God-Not as Popular as You Might Think

The above results are from an Ipsos MORI from last summer. Please note, the opinions above are restricted only to those who asserted a religious affiliation. Obviously in Saudi Arabia this is irrelevant, as nearly the whole population has a religious affiliation. But it is important in Japan, because there nearly 2 out of 3 individuals in the survey reported no religion, so these are results from the minority who reported having an affiliation (mostly Buddhist). As they say, read the whole thing. Here are some conclusions I drew from these data:

- Even in Saudi Arabia 25 percent of the population would not sign on to a very exclusive reading of their religion. This is not surprising to me. Very exclusive adherence to the proposition that all non-believers are damned is often hard to adhere to in any marginally cosmopolitan circumstance. Obviously there are people who will agree that Gandhi is in hell (this is a litmus test used to smoke out heterodox deviation in some fundamentalist Protestant churches in the USA), or that their close friend is going to hell, but when push comes to shove most people flinch. There seems to be a wide range in responses to this question about religious exclusivism, and I think that’s probably due to differences in priming.

- I have gotten into arguments with Hindus and New Atheists about the exclusive nature of Christianity online. My argument is that they tend to confuse fundamentalist Protestantism with Christianity qua Christianity. If I we believed that Christianity had a basis in truth this sort of attitude might make sense, but as that is not the case I don’t see the line of reasoning where non-Christians can assess who is, or isn’t, exhibiting more fidelity to Christianity. Granted, you can think of religion as a mathematical system where you can test propositions by inference from axioms. But I don’t think that’s too useful, though I see its logical coherency (and even in that case, it is trivially obvious to show that “fundamentalists” are themselves often revisionists who play fast & loose with what might “plainly” be inferred from the source text of a religion). The reality is that in most developed nations the vast majority of Christians no longer adhere to a position exclusivism which has come to make the Abrahamic religions particular distinctive. In fact, if you look at the survey in the results it indicates that Hindus in India are as exclusive in their understanding of their religion as Christians in the United States!

- Speaking of Hindus (and Buddhists to a lesser extent), these data speak to a difference between Abrahamic and non-Abrahamic religions. Though Hindus are not quite as universalist as Swedish Christians, matching social development they are quite tolerant. The Hindu model in India in a religious sense mixes a moderately high level of commitment with an acceptance of pluralism. This is pretty much the stereotype of Hindus in relation to Abrahamic faiths. In contrast, you have the Muslim model, which combines high levels of commitment with low levels of pluralism. Finally, you have the developed nations model, excepting the USA, which combines low commitment and high pluralism. India and the USA seem to occupy similar space in many ways in these data.

- Finally, in these results Turkey and Saudi Arabia seem to be positioned at the two poles of Islamic piety. I think that that is actually a good choice, as all other data indicates that Tunisia and Egypt would fall in the middle of these extremes (Tunisia closer to Turkey, Egypt to Saudi Arabia). What does that tell us? If you look at the results you’ll see that Turks as a nation seem to express attitudes and sentiments not too far from those of the USA. As I’ve long said, this is an important insight about the Islamic world: one of the most organically secular Muslim nations is in the same zone as the most pious of Western nations (along with Poland and Malta). In many ways the American Republican party today is probably analogous to moderate Islamists of the AKP; though I would suspect that the AKP has a larger “tail” of social conservatism than the Republican party.

COMMENTS NOTE: Any comment which misrepresents the material in this post will result in banning without warning. So you should probably stick to direct quotes in lieu of reformulations of what you perceive to be my intent in your own words. For example, if you start a sentence with “so what you’re trying to say….”, you’re probably going to get banned. I said what I tried or wanted to say in the post. Period.
 8  6 Share 0

By Razib Khan in Data Analysis

Classic Coconut Cream Pie



Ingredients (use vegan versions):

    1 cup coconut flakes
    3 cups coconut milk (or 2 cups coconut milk and 1 cup soymilk, depending on desired richness)
    1/2 cup blended soft tofu
    2/3 cup sugar
    1/2 cup cornstarch
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    1 9" pre-baked pie crust
    1 cup vegan whipped topping of choice

Directions:

1. Spread coconut flakes on a cookie sheet and bake in oven at 350 for 5 minutes. Set aside.

2. In a medium saucepan, combine coconut milk, tofu, sugar, cornstarch, and salt. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until mixture comes to a boil.

3. Remove from heat and add 3/4 cup toasted coconut and vanilla. Stir well. Pour into  pie crust and place in fridge. Chill pie in fridge for 3 hours, or until firm.

4. Remove from fridge and spread whipped topping evenly over the pie. Sprinkle with remaining toasted coconut, and voila! You have a delicious, decadent coconut cream pie.

Source of recipe: A friend gave me this recipe and I veganized it to perfection!

Makes: 1 pie, Preparation time: 3 hrs, 30 mins, Cooking time: 20 mins.

Share This Recipe

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Faster-Than-Light Neutrino Update: What's Going on Behind the Scenes?

via Boing Boing by Maggie Koerth-Baker on 10/31/11

The publication process for a research paper about physics works a little differently than other subjects. That's because of arXiv http://arxiv.org/. Funded by Cornell University, this site posts research papers, before they're formally published in a scientific journal. Unlike most scientific journals, which charge big fees for subscriptions or even to view a single paper, arXiv is free and open to the public. You can read everything published there—more than 700,000 papers about physics, math, computer science, and more. The other big difference: arXiv isn't peer reviewed. At least, not ahead of time.


A lot of the time, when you read a newspaper article about a new study in one of those fields, the study hasn't actually yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal. It's just been posted to arXiv, which sort of becomes a crowd-sourced peer review peer review of its own. Especially for headline-grabbing research making big, bold claims.

That's the background you need to understand what's going on right now with the study that claimed to find neutrinos traveling faster than the speed of light. That announcement was made in an arXiv paper. Putting those results on arXiv was as much a way of saying, "Woah, we just found something crazy, please tell us if you see something we've done wrong," as it was a formal declaration of scientific discovery.

Since that paper was published in September, there have been more than 80 follow-up papers, also published on arXiv, offering criticism of the original research or proposing theoretical explanations of how that seemingly crazy finding could fit into physics as we know it. And all of this is happening before anybody has gone through the peer-review publishing process.

That's why it's not terribly weird that you're now hearing all sorts of criticism of the original FTL neutrino findings. That's what was supposed to happen. It's also not terribly weird that the original researchers have announced that they're going to re-do the experiment themselves, taking into account some of the big criticisms brought up on arXiv. The BBC explains what will be done differently this time:

    The neutrinos that emerge at Gran Sasso start off as a beam of proton particles at Cern. Through a series of complex interactions, neutrino particles are generated from this beam and stream through the Earth's crust to Italy.

    Originally, Cern fired the protons in a long pulse lasting 10 microseconds (10 millionths of a second). The neutrinos showed up 60 nanoseconds (60 billionths of a second) earlier than light would have over the same distance.

    However, the time measurement is not direct; the researchers cannot know how long it took an individual neutrino to travel from Switzerland to Italy. Instead, the measurement must be performed statistically: the scientists superimpose the neutrinos' "arrival times" on the protons' "departure times", over and over again and taking an average.

    But some physicists say that any wrong assumptions made when relating these data sets could produce a misleading result. This should be addressed by the new measurements, in which protons are sent in a series of short bursts - lasting just one or two nanoseconds, thousands of times shorter - with a large gap (roughly 500 nanoseconds) in between each burst. This system, says Dr Bertolucci, is more efficient: "For every neutrino event at Gran Sasso, you can connect it unambiguously with the batch of protons at Cern," he explained.

By taking these criticisms into account now, the FTL neutrino researchers are doing sort of a pre-peer-review peer review. If their new experiment yields the same results, it makes the claim stronger and makes a traditional journal more likely to publish the results. As a bonus: Those results will already have been tested against the most obvious criticisms. If FTL neutrinos make it to a peer-reviewed journal, there will be a much greater likelihood that what's being published is actually worth paying attention to. If they don't, there's a well-established record of how smart people got something wrong—valuable to future researchers, even though it wouldn't be likely to pass muster in a journal.

Meanwhile, because none of these papers had to go through the lengthy (and costly) traditional publishing process, we've been able to see both the weird finding and the critical evaluations far faster than we otherwise would have. And because the weird finding was made available sooner, there will be independent researchers trying to replicate it sooner. In fact, there's a good chance that, if the FTL neutrino researchers decide to go ahead and publish their results in a peer-reviewed journal, several other, independent teams will be well on their way to replicating the results (or not) by the time that paper is printed.

So if there's one thing you should be taking away from all the fuss over FTL neutrinos, it's this: Science benefits when scientists have more than one way to share information with each other.

Image: Science Centre at CERN, a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike (2.0) image from johnjobby's photostream
   

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Italian Eggplant Casserole with Cashew-Tofu Ricotta

By Kathy Hester

Italian Eggplant Casserole - Slow CookerThis is my healthy, gluten-free substitute for eggplant parmigiana. Not frying the eggplant saves time and calories, and both of those can be at a premium. Its very saucy and perfect over pasta. Recipe from The Vegan Slow Cooker by Kathy Hester, reprinted by permission of the author. Photo by Cara Lyons of Cara’s Cravings.
Serves: 8

For the Cashew-Tofu Ricotta:

    1/2 cup cashews
    1/2 cup nutritional yeast (*use gluten-free)
    3 cloves garlic
    1 package (15 ounces) firm tofu
    1/2 cup unsweetened nondairy milk
    1/2 to 1 teaspoon salt (to taste)
    Pepper, to taste

Remaining ingredients:

    1 large eggplant, thinly sliced
    1 jar (25 ounces) marinara sauce, store bought or homemade
    Cooked pasta (*use gluten-free pasta), for serving

The night before:

To make the ricotta: In a food processor or blender, combine all the ricotta ingredients. Blend until smooth and creamy. Store the ricotta and the sliced eggplant in separate containers in the fridge.

In the morning:

Oil the crock of your slow cooker and pour in one-third of the marinara sauce. Top with half of the eggplant, half of the ricotta, and another one-third of the sauce. Repeat the layers once more, then top with the remaining sauce. Cook on low for 6 to 8 hours. Serve over the pasta.

If your slow cooker does not run hot and the final product is too watery, prop up the lid on the handle of a wooden spoon and turn the slow cooker to high. In 30 minutes to 1 hour most of the water will evaporate.

Total Prep Time: 15 minutes

Total Cooking Time: 6 to 8 hours

Kathy Hester is the author of The Vegan Slow Cooker. Visit her on the web at Healthy Slow Cooking and Busy Vegan.


Occupy LA!

Here are some photos of Los Angeles Occupy LA. There is hope in our human being heart right now.









Sperm Whales Really Do Learn From Each Other

By Brandon Keim Email Author
 November 3, 2011
  2:10 pm     

Sperm whales, Earth’s biggest-brained animals, live in far-flung clans with lifestyles so different and vocalizations so complex that it’s natural to think they have culture.

But is that really true? Might sperm whales simply be following genetic instructions? Could their “culture” really be a set of instinctive, mechanical imperatives?


Researchers led by Hal Whitehead of Dalhousie University and Luke Rendell of Scotland’s St. Andrews University, two of the world’s foremost sperm whale biologists, have asked just this question.

Their findings: Yes, sperm whale culture really is culture. And how.

“As far as we know, these are the largest cultures on Earth, aside from human ethnicities,” said Whitehead. “They may have thousands or tens of thousands of members, covering thousands of kilometers of ocean.”

In a study published Oct. 21 in Behavior Genetics, Whitehead and Rendell analyzed sound recordings and skin samples from 194 sperm whales in the southwest Pacific Ocean.

Example of sperm whale vocalization from a 2008 study describing between-whale communication. In this recording, two whales interact. Audio: Whitehead et al./Animal Behavior Image: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The whales belonged to three “vocal clans,” each possessing a distinctively different repertoire of the Morse code-like clicks used by sperm whales to communicate. Were these dialects biologically determined, the whales would have overlapped genetically as well as vocally — but that’s not what the researchers found.

Instead, whales from different clans are often genetically similar. They’re not identical, but there’s no sign of genetic differences large enough to explain clan differences. These aren’t just vocal: Each clan also differs in hunting patterns, reproductive rates and parenting habits.

“If the differences were genetic, this would make the differences more traditionally biological. We’d have two different subspecies,” said Whitehead. “It’s culture, not genetics.”

The researchers also looked at whether geography might play a role, with each clan responding to local environments. But that doesn’t seem to be a factor: Clans can occupy vast and overlapping swaths of ocean, not a little unlike indigenous human tribes in pre-colonial North America.

“This is like a situation that happens more rarely with humans, where you have several ethnic groups living in the same area but maintaining their identity,” Whitehead said.

In future research, Whitehead and Rendell hope to learn how sperm whale culture passes from generation to generation and between families.

The findings could influence conservation efforts, highlighting the importance of preserving threatened whale cultures. More fundamentally, they affect how people think of cetaceans — not just sperm whales, which are fortunate enough to have been studied by Whitehead and collaborators for decades, but all those species that remain unknown.

“If differences are cultural, we’re getting into the border between biology and anthropology,” said Whitehead. “We’re infringing on some of the traits that some people think are unique to humans.”

Citation: “Can Genetic Differences Explain Vocal Dialect Variation in Sperm Whales, Physetermacrocephalus?” By Luke Rendell, Sarah L. Mesnick, Merel L. Dalebout, Jessica Burtenshaw and Hal Whitehead. Behavior Genetics, Oct. 21, 2011

Hubble Spots Disk Around Distant Black Hole

By Adam Mann    
November 4, 2011     
12:08 pm 

Using the Hubble space telescope, astronomers have captured a direct image of the disk surrounding a black hole.

The disk is made of gas and dust, slowly being consumed as it spirals down into the black hole’s center. As it falls in, the material spews out a tremendous amount of energy, forming what is known as a quasi-stellar radio source, or quasar.




Among the brightest objects in the sky, quasars are short-lived phenomena that only existed during the earliest eras of the universe. They are known to be huge — most are around 60 billion miles across — yet they lie billions of light years from Earth, making them nothing but insignificant pinpricks in even the most powerful telescopes.

Hubble was able to image the distant disk, which is approximately 18.5 billion light-years away, because a huge galaxy happens to sit between Earth and the quasar. The mass of the enormous galaxy bent light from the quasar and directed it toward our telescopes, acting like a gigantic gravitational lens.

The technique allowed the Hubble telescope to see with unprecedented detail. Because of this, researchers were able to measure the disk’s size — between 60 and 180 billion miles across — and determine the temperature of different parts of the disk. They found that gas and dust from the imaged quasar became bluer and therefore hotter as it fell toward the central black hole.

Image: NASA, ESA, J.A. Muñoz (University of Valencia)

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Follow your Passion

Story Book Wallpaper


Katie Deedy Makes narrative-inspired wallpaper. Lately we have been attracted to collecting information as well as inspiration from people that are making a living following their passion. We discovered a few in this month's issue of Oprah's magazine. Katie's work and site truly inspires.
Please go to http://growhousegrow.com/collection/




Hacienda Hieghts Alpaca Farm





Betty Osburne went from teaching to becoming an Alpaca Farmer in the heart of Temecula, California. Although this has become her full time job, she is dedicated to teachng the public about Alpacas
Please go to http://www.thealpacahacienda.com

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Buster the Skating Rooster

Posted By: Scott Harrison
 Posted On: 12:54 a.m. | October 25, 2011

Aug. 17, 1952: Buster, a roller skating rooster, navigates between a girl’s legs during a photo session with former Los Angeles Times staff photographer Leigh Wiener.




Years later, Wiener wrote about Buster:

Because of an incident that happened to me when I was a photographer for the Los Angeles Times, I now have a surefire method of dealing with strangers who approach me on the street and ask me to take their picture.

A reporter and I were sent to a run-down part of town on South Alvarado Street to cover an apparent hit-and-run auto accident. Arriving on scene, we discovered that what had happened wasn’t much of a news story. There were no deaths, no injuries, and no damage to speak of .…

As we were about to get back into our car and leave, a man who fit the stereotypical “wino” image stepped out of the small crowd and came over to me .…

In a voice that was soft and cultured, he said, “Mister, will you take my picture? I’m Billy Lehr.” I was about to tell him to get lost when I suddenly remembered a phone conversation I had had three weeks before with a New York picture agent. The agent told me that he had heard there was a dog in California that could roller skate. If I could find that dog and photograph him, I could make a lot of money.

I looked at Lehr and said, “Sure I’ll take you picture, mister, if you have a dog that can roller skate.”Without missing a beat, Lehr came back: “I don’t have a skating dog, but how about a rooster?” “That can skate?” I asked.

“Of course he can skate,” he said, almost with disdain, “why else would I ask you to take my picture?” Why else indeed, I thought The following day – my day off – I made arrangements to meet the gentleman and his bird at two in the afternoon. What a meeting! Billy and Buster – Buster being the rooster – were on time. Billy was dressed as he was the day before with a few more stains on his shirt. Buster, however, wore a clean pair of “You Can’t Bust ‘Em” overalls, and his custom-made roller skates simply shined.

Some youngsters joined our party, and soon I had exposed 10 rolls of film with my Rolleiflex. The Times ran the pictures big, and by the time Associated Press and the United Press International had finished with them, the pictures of a skating rooster had appeared in almost every paper in the world .…

The story of Buster didn’t stop there. Two months later Lehr contacted Wiener and asked him to meet him at an ice rink:

There was Buster with his new ice skates. His proud owner was cleanshaven and wore brand new clothes. The only sad note on this occasion was that the young girls skating with Buster couldn’t keep up with him. He outskated them all.


Again, the Times gave a lot of space to the pictures and one of the editors, Hayden Reese, provided the photo essay with an appropriate headline: BUSTER THE ROOSTER CAN SKATE BETTER THAN HE USTER!

Now, whenever people stop me on the street and request me to take their picture, I say, “Sure, if you have a skating rooster.”

The text is used with permission from the 1982 book by Leigh Wiener, “How Do You Photograph People?”

Wiener worked at the Los Angeles Times from 1949 to 1956, leaving to pursue a successful freelance career. He passed away in 1993.

See more of Weiner’s photography.

Buster ice skates past Cathy Henderson of San Marino.  Photo publshed in the Times Oct. 12, 1952. Credit: Leigh Wiener / Los Angeles Times


to read more: http://framework.latimes.com/2011/10/25/buster-the-skating-rooster/

“It turns anything around you into a touchscreen, but it doesn’t mean you have to carry around a large touchscreen,”

By Paulina Reso, TechNewsDaily Contributor
25 October 2011 7:55 PM ET

A new device puts the world is at your fingertips, ready to be swiped, tapped and pinched as if it were a touchscreen.


OmniTouch, a prototype developed by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Microsoft Research, is extending the limits of handheld devices, making it possible to dial a phone number on the palm of your hand, take notes on a tabletop and digitally sketch on walls.

Typically, with mobile devices there is a trade-off between large screens and portability. But OmniTouch presents the best of both worlds, enabling users to run Android and iPhone programs on any surface imaginable.

“It turns anything around you into a touchscreen, but it doesn’t mean you have to carry around a large touchscreen,” said OmniTouch’s co-inventor, Chris Harrison, a Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon’s Human-Computer Interaction Institute.

While an intern at Microsoft Research, Harrison collaborated with staffers Hrvoje Benko and Andrew Wilson to develop the technology. The shoulder-mounted system pairs a depth-sensing camera, similar to those used by Microsoft’s Kinect, with a miniature projector. The infrared depth camera creates three-dimensional maps of the area, automatically adjusting for any distortion produced by an uneven or oddly shaped surface. As the compact projector displays keyboards, screens, or controls, the camera follows finger movements. Although OmniTouch is only in the prototype phase, its precision in distinguishing between finger taps and swipes is on par with touchscreen devices currently on the market.

omnitouch keypad
Along with being accurate, OmniTouch is also intuitive. During a user study, researchers found that subjects who weren't technologically savvy were still able to start using the technology immediately, effortlessly dialing phone numbers using their palms.

Yet, OmniTouch has a few hurdles to overcome before it is fully usable. Because projectors on the market are not bright enough to display outdoors, OmniTouch is limited to indoor use. Also, the current shoulder-mounted incarnation of OmniTouch is a bit bulky, but Harrison expects it to shrink it down to the size of a deck of cards in two years, and then to the size of a matchbox within five years.

Given enough time, Harrison thinks “the world is basically going to become a gigantic touch interface.”

Although OmniTouch is not scheduled to hit the market anytime soon, Harrison envisions an eventual time when this technology will be as compact as a button and seamlessly integrated into daily life: “For 99 percent of your day you’ll walk around like normal, but for that time you want to check your calendar you’ll be able to snap your fingers, draw a “C” in the air, and write on your hand your calendar for the day,” he described.

“We’re trying to remove the smartphone out of your pocket so you don’t have to carry around any electronics, except this tiny item. I think that can be a pretty dramatic change if we can get there.”

http://www.innovationnewsdaily.com/touch-and-tap-new-device-lets-users-use-anything-as-touchscreen-2330

Stealing the Show

By CAROL VOGEL
Published: October 20, 2011

She’s almost 90 and still living very much in the present, quietly painting every day in her West Side studio. Yet Françoise Gilot — Picasso’s muse and lover and the mother of two of his children — is about to revisit her past.


In May, John Richardson, Picasso’s biographer, together with Valentina Castellani, a director of the Gagosian Gallery, will present an exhibition that chronicles the years when Ms. Gilot and Picasso were together — from roughly 1943 through 1952 — living in Vallauris, a small hillside town near Cannes in the south of France. It will be the gallery’s fourth Picasso exhibition and will include paintings, sculptures, drawings, pottery and prints.

Ms. Gilot doesn’t mind dredging up what must seem like many lifetimes ago. “When you are old your life has different chapters,” she said the other day, standing near a colorful abstract painting perched on an easel.

“I was an artist before I ever met Picasso,” she emphatically explained. Yet those years “are very much a part of my life.”

Like other blockbuster shows that are proliferating among some of today’s most prosperous galleries, Mr. Richardson believes the exhibition will be an eye-opener because “nobody realizes the tremendous importance of Françoise to Picasso during that whole period.”

The show, which will open at Gagosian’s newly renovated Madison Avenue gallery, is poised to generate as much excitement as the other Picasso shows that Mr. Richardson has masterminded. (The first, “Picasso: Mosqueteros,” in 2009 drew more than 100,000 visitors, a figure more normally associated with a museum exhibition.)

And the show, like all the others, will be a costly undertaking that involves getting loans from museums, publishing a lavish catalog with scholarly essays and bringing in an architect to redesign the gallery. It’s a lot of work and expense. Often dealers say nothing is for sale; generally, however, one or two works are available — at the right price — making these shows profitable after all.

Larry Gagosian says he believes that either way, the headaches were worth it. “Now we get offered all kinds of Picassos,” he said. “Everything from a print worth $4,000 to, well, the sky’s the limit.”

With his network of 11 galleries around the world, Mr. Gagosian is by far the most visible of all the dealers presenting these kinds of crowd-pleasing shows. But other blue-chip galleries including Acquavella and Pace have been presenting them on and off for decades. “I’ll never forget in the early ’70s when we had a Matisse show,” William Acquavella recalled. “We had people waiting on line in the pouring rain.”

His gallery, just two blocks north of Gagosian’s Madison Avenue headquarters, is attracting crowds right now with “Georges Braque: Pioneer of Modernism,” which opened on Oct. 12. The show, which was organized by Dieter Buchhart, an Austrian curator, includes 42 paintings, many on loan from museums including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the National Gallery of Art in Washington and the Tate in London. “It’s good advertising,” Mr. Acquavella said. “Braque is an amazing artist and hasn’t really gotten his due.”

This fall, with the exception of the giant de Kooning retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art — an exhibition that was six years in the making — and “Picasso’s Drawings, 1890-1921: Reinventing Tradition,” at the Frick Collection, there are few museum exhibitions generating the same kind of excitement. Museums made their 2011-12 schedules in 2008, when the economy turned bleak and many were pulling back, which explains the proliferation of the permanent collection shows.

The prosperous, blue-chip galleries have the financial muscle to fill that void, often asking art historians and curators to help organize shows for them and write essays for the catalogs. But it is not only content that attracts visitors. The gallery shows are free and museums are not. (An adult who is not a member but wants to visit the Museum of Modern Art, for instance, has to pay $25 admission.)

“Galleries have more flexibility and can work on far shorter deadlines,” said John Wilmerding, an American art scholar and art history professor at Princeton, who is organizing two coming shows for the Acquavella Galleries. “Museums are laden down with timetables and bureaucracy. And a lot of dealers have the resources to put together serious shows. They’re willing to do all the things you have to do — line up the loans, pay the insurance, get reproduction rights, publish scholarly catalogs. It’s all very time-consuming.”

Mr. Wilmerding, who sits on the boards of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and the National Gallery of Art, among others, has also noticed a sea change in museums’ attitudes toward lending works from their collections to galleries. “It used to be that the National Gallery wouldn’t lend to dealers shows, but now that’s loosened up considerably,” Mr. Wilmerding said.

It was 20 years ago, when he first joined the Guggenheim board, that loan requests started coming from dealers, he recalled. “Now, not a meeting goes by when there’s not a request.” And the requests are taken more seriously as these gallery exhibitions have become more and more scholarly. In addition, most of the big dealers are generous supporters of the major museums and have private collections with works they gladly lend when asked.

Sometimes a show turns into an accidental blockbuster. At the Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea last winter, as word spread of Christian Marclay’s “The Clock,” a 24-hour montage of clips from movies and television that depict particular minutes in the day, synchronized with the moment they are shown, the audience kept building. Visitors of all ages found themselves glued to the video, not just because of its intrinsic charm but because it kept viewers on their toes as they tried to identify where the clips were from.

“We had no idea it would be so popular,” said Steven P. Henry, director of the gallery. “It became its own kind of happening. We had people waiting on line three or four hours in the bitter cold.”

“The first couple of weeks attendance was normal, a couple of hundred people a day, perhaps 300 on a Saturday,” he recalled. But as word spread, that figure doubled and finally tripled. “We had to let people stay as long as they wanted,” he said. On weekends the gallery was kept open for 24 hours.

“People stayed for multiple hours,” Mr. Henry said. “I don’t know of anyone who saw the whole thing.”

The video was a big hit this summer at the Venice Biennale, where Mr. Marclay won the prize for best artist. Not surprising then that it has been sold to several museums, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art. (The asking price was $550,000.)

“People started bonding as they waited on line,” Mr. Henry said. His gallery knows of three “Missed Connections” postings on Craigslist. In one, a woman wrote: “We made eye contact in the two-hour line outside the Paula Cooper Gallery today. You wore a black Tribeca bag and had bike clips on your jeans. I meant to say hello, but found myself too shy. ... ”

“It was a real New York moment,” Mr. Henry said.

The attention-getting, high-impact exhibitions on gallery schedules continue unabated. Expensive to produce and labor-intensive, they are generally organized by galleries with an international network of contacts, deep pockets and multiple spaces.

At the Pace Gallery, its chairman, Arne Glimcher, said: “We’ve always done these sorts of exhibitions. When we had a Bonnard/Rothko show in 1997, on the last day we had a line down to Park Avenue and had to stay open later.” It is the scholarship that Mr. Glimcher said he enjoyed the most. And the public seems to respond. Among the earliest blockbusters that Pace presented was “Piet Mondrian: The Process Works,” in 1970. Over the years the gallery has organized shows pairing artists like Barnett Newman and Rothko, Dubuffet and de Kooning. Standouts included “The Women of Giacometti,” in 2005 and “Picasso, Braque and Early Film in Cubism,” in 2007.

On Friday, the gallery opened “Calder 1941,” at its 57th Street gallery. The show explores an important year in Calder’s career when the sculptor was beginning to make ever-more-sophisticated mobiles and stabiles. Fifteen examples of these works are on view, many of which have not been publicly exhibited for decades.

In February, Pace will also present a retrospective of the famous Happenings, those fleeting performances, primarily from the 1950s and ’60s, that are considered classics of the genre today. The exhibition will include work by the main participants, including Jim Dine, Simone Forti, Allan Kaprow, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Whitman, Red Grooms, Carolee Schneemann and Lucas Samaras.

With its large staff and multiple outlets around the world, Gagosian organizes more shows than any other gallery. In the months leading up to the Picasso/Françoise Gilot exhibition opening in May, there are several other big shows in the works. Among them is “The Private Collection of Robert Rauschenberg,” opening Nov. 3 on Madison Avenue, which will give visitors an inside peek at the art that Rauschenberg lived with, both in Manhattan and at his home and studio on Captiva Island in Florida. There will be examples of work by some of his old friends, including John Cage, Merce Cunningham, Jasper Johns and Cy Twombly as well as others he collected over the decades by Magritte, Robert Mapplethorpe and Brice Marden.

In January, in every Gagosian Gallery around the world, Damien Hirst will be showing “The Complete Spot Paintings 1986-2011.” On view will be a total of about 300 works, many on loan from major museums around the world.

And in April, Gagosian’s 24th Street gallery will be devoted to the work of Lucio Fontana, an artist who has long been popular in Europe but has only recently been gathering a fan base of collectors in the United States. Organized by the curator Germano Celant, in collaboration with the Fondazione Lucio Fontana in Milan and Ms. Castellani from Gagosian, the show is called “Lucio Fontana: Environmental Spaces,” and will include a group of installations never shown in the United States before — a group of room-size environments, along with drawings, sketches and paintings made at the same time. In one environment there is a giant amoeba shape suspended in a darkened room illuminated by neon light. These works have an ephemeral quality to them, but were reconstructed for this exhibition using documents provided by the foundation that include the artist’s drawings, photographs and other archival material.

The Acquavella Galleries have just signed on to represent the California artist Wayne Thiebaud, who turns 91 next month, in the United States. A year from now it will present a show of his work organized by Mr. Wilmerding, the art historian and Princeton professor. It will be a kind of retrospective of the painter’s work, with examples from his entire career that Mr. Thiebaud has kept in his studio.

Mr. Wilmerding is also working on an exhibition about the still-life tradition in Pop Art, scheduled for the spring of 2013. “The still life has often been the stepchild to landscape, history and figurative painting,” he said. By examining themes like food and drink, household objects, flowers, trees and body parts, he explained, he hopes to “slice and dice Pop in a different way.” 

To read more http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/23/arts/artsspecial/art-gallery-shows-stir-excitement-of-their-own.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&sq=Francoise

Friday, October 21, 2011

Projecting the Future of Painting in Claudia Hart's 3D Utopian eScapes

We have been so out of touch with the art world since we became "so out of touch with the art world".

Just learned about this artist from a friend and the female side of us hasn't been the same or this excited since Judy Chicago's Dinner Party.....



To learn more about Claudia Hart and her current exhibit http://www.huffingtonpost.com/g-roger-denson/claudia-hart_b_1003289.html?

Thursday, October 20, 2011

The very Light Red Bird.....

Six Animals Saved from Carnage Settling in at Ohio Zoo

October 20, 2011 |  3:48 pm
We don't have the pictures of these guys but  we will post them if you want. We suppose they need allot of peace right now. 


A young grizzly bear, three leopards and two monkeys rescued this week from a backyard farm are adjusting to their new homes at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium.

The two monkeys were easily transported from the Muskingum County Animal Farm, but the four larger and more dangerous animals had to be sedated, Doug Warmolts, director of animal care at the zoo, told The Times. All are acclimating to their new diets and recovering nicely, he said.

"They are doing well," he said. "We had a close watch on them to make sure they came out of the anesthesia, but by early evening they were up and moving around." He added: "They are calm. They are not angry or aggressive; they are just being very quiet."

The animals were let loose this week when Terry W. Thompson threw open the cages and slashed open the pens at his makeshift zoo, letting all the animals loose before turning a gun on himself. Authorities are still searching for a motive, although there are some unfolding suggestions that he was in deep debt. In all, authorities killed 49 animals, including 18 tigers and a baboon. The six animals now at the Columbus Zoo are the only ones who were saved.

Their fate is unclear. Thompson's wife, Marian, arrived at the zoo this afternoon for what was described as an emotional visit with the animals, which she regarded as pets and a part of her family.

"She was probably here for about an hour," Warmolts said. "I think she was very attached to them." He said she gave no indication whatsoever as to what drove her husband to do what he did.

Authorities say the animals could theoretically be returned to her if she proves she can adequately care for them. But any attempt to gain possession of the animals would come amid the current bright spotlight on her farm, as well as on Ohio. The state is facing widespread criticism that it has failed to protect exotic and wild animals.

The six surviving animals are being held in an isolated area, away from the public. It is unclear whether they will ever be placed on public display. "Right now, they just need a period of quiet," Warmolts said.

The zoo has been flooded with callers from around the country asking about the animals' welfare, and offering to help defray the costs for their care. A special Web page has been set up, and about $25,000 had been raised by Thursday afternoon.

"The amount of contact we're received has been overwhelming; it's been tremendous," Warmolts said.

He hazarded a guess as to why so many people were reaching out, looking for a way to help.

"I think it's the magnitude of it -- the number of animals. It's just shocking," he said. "It's the reason people come and are attached to zoo, because they have an affection, an affinity to animals in the wild. When you look at this situation you can't help but have it tug at you."

He added: "It's still very raw."

i dont know where I got this feed so weird and complex

Join Us for a Special Celebration ofthe 1st Annual Food Day with a Movie, Honey & Nosh!

Join Us for a Special Celebration of
the 1st Annual Food Day  with a Movie, Honey & Nosh!
Monday, October 24th, 2011

 The Hollywood Farmers' Market & The Farmer's Kitchen
will host a screening of Vanishing of the Bees  at the historic
Montalban Theater in Hollywood in honor of the 1st annual
Food Day LA!

“Vanishing of the Bees”, featuring Michael Pollan, and narrated by Oscar Nominee Ellen Page at the historic The Ricardo Montalbán Theatre, 1615 Vine Street. The evening will begin with a tasting reception featuring seasonal local dishes prepared by The Farmer’s Kitchen paired with wine from the Beverly Hills Cheese Shop; a honey tasting from our local beekeepers, honey-infused treats, live music and conversation. After the movie screening there will be an intimate Q & A with film directors Maryam Henein and George Langworthy, local beekeeper associations and farmers’ market apiarists. The panel will be moderated by Council District 13’s Mitch O’Farrell, Senior Advisor to Councilpresident Eric Garcetti.

This event will include food, wine and entertainment. Tickets to the event are available on tix.com, keyword: montalban and cost $25. All proceeds benefit Sustainable Economic Enterprises of Los Angeles (SEE-LA), the non-profit operator of The HFM, whose activities include providing fresh food access and nutrition education programs to under-served communities throughout Los Angeles. This event is designed to bring awareness of our current agricultural landscape and sustainability issues. By appreciating local family farmers, participants learn to “Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food” ….and your local beekeepers!

RECEPTION: 5:45 pm - 7 pm
FILM SCREENING: 7pm - 8:45 pm
Followed by an intimate Q&A with the film's directors
and local Beekeepers.  Panel will be moderated by Mitch O'Farrell, Senior Advisor to City Council President Eric Garcetti.

The evening will feature local dishes prepared by The Farmer's Kitchen, wine from the Beverly Hills Cheese Shop, honey tasting from local beekeepers, live music, and a special screening of "Vanishing of the Bees"
Featuring Michael Pollan and narrated by Oscar nominee Ellen Page

$25 Tickets available at tix.com, keyword: montalban

Proceeds go to benefit SEE-LA's non-profit activities supporting fresh food access and nutrition education in  under-served communities throughout Los Angeles.

Shop Local and Fresh All Week on the Eastside of Los Angeles!
Get your mid-week fresh produce fix at any of our other weekday community Certified Farmers' Markets.

WEDNESDAYS, Noon - 6 pm:
Los Angeles Medical Center Farmers' Market:
Barnsdall Art Park, 4814 Hollywood Blvd. at Edgemont

THURSDAYS, Noon - 5 pm:
LA Central Avenue Farmers' Market Central Ave Constituent Services Center, 4301 Central Ave. at 43rd St.

FRIDAYS, 3 pm - 7pm:
Echo Park Farmers' Market
Public parking lot south of Sunset Blvd. at Logan St.     

Join Our Mailing List
www.see-la.org/

Hollywood Farmers Market Every Sunday
8 am to 1 pm
Ivar & Selma Avenues
Between Hollywood & Sunset Blvd Validated parking available at the Cinerama Dome. $3 for 2 hours.

Validation available. WE ACCEPT: CalFresh and WIC

All of our Certified Farmers' Markets proudly accept: CalFresh / EBT, WIC FMNP & Senior FMNP Coupons!
www.farmernet.com/