Saturday, December 31, 2011

"Sherlock Holmes" surpasses $100 million domestically (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? The world's most famous detective is uncovering money at the box office.

"Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" quietly surpassed the $100 million mark domestically Wednesday.

Its total is $106,674,000 in North America, and $49 million internationally. The PG-13 adventure sequel from Warner Bros. is the first film of the holiday season to hit $100 million domestically and continues to be the highest-grossing domestic movie of December.

Paramount/Skydance's "Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol" had grossed about $86.2 domestically million as of Tuesday. Worldwide, that picture is a monster, grossing about $170 million internationally, for a total of more than $256 million.

"Sherlock" is behind the 2009 "Sherlock Holmes," which grossed more than $100 million in its first week of release. That movie went on to gross $109 million domestically and $315 million internationally.

But the sequel's performance going into its third week is impressive, and Warner Bros. expects Guy Ritchie's movie to continue to post strong numbers through the New Years weekend. The movie stars Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law.

"Sherlock" underperformed in its first weekend. It opened in first place, but with $39.6 million. At the time, Warner Bros. predicted that the movie, which cost about $125 million to make, would have a long play.

The prediction is proving accurate.

"Sherlock Holmes" is Warner's fifth movie to cross $100 million in the domestic marketplace. The others are "The Hangover Part II," which grossed $245 million, "Green Lantern," which took $116 million, "Horrible Bosses," which grossed $117 million an "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part 2," which grossed $381 million.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111229/film_nm/us_sherlockholmes_boxoffice

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Israeli airstrike on Gaza kills 1 militant (AP)

JERUSALEM ? The Israeli army says it has carried out an airstrike against a group of Palestinian militants preparing to launch rockets at Israel from the Gaza Strip.

The territory's Health Ministry says one man was killed and one wounded in the strike early on Friday.

The army says the airstrike thwarted an attempt by a group that had recently fired rockets at Israel.

Earlier this week, Israel carried out airstrikes in Gaza, targeting militants it says were about to launch an attack on the Israel-Egypt border.

Such Israeli air attacks have been relatively rare since the end of a three-week Israeli war against Gaza militants three years ago.

No Palestinian militant group has said it was behind the latest rocket launching attempt.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians

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Friday, December 30, 2011

China cuts 2012 rare earths export quota

(AP) ? China announced a cut Tuesday in its rare earths export quota as it tries to shore up sagging prices for the exotic metals used in mobile phones and other high-tech goods.

China accounts for 97 percent of rare earth output and its 2009 decision to curb exports while it builds up an industry to create products made with them alarmed foreign companies that depend on Chinese supplies.

In its latest quota, the Commerce Ministry said exporters will be allowed to sell 10,546 tons of rare earths in the first half of 2012. That is a 27 percent reduction from the quota for the first half of 2011.

China's export restrictions have strained relations with the United States the European Union, Japan and other governments that have called on Beijing to remove its curbs and make its intentions clear.

Despite production and expor curbs, rare earths prices in China have tumbled as U.S. and European economic woes dent demand for its exports. The government ordered its biggest producer to suspend output for a month in October to shore up prices.

But the restrictions have made rare earths much mor expensive abroad, giving Chinese makers of products that use them a price advantage and foreign manufacturers an incentive to shift operations to China.

In a sign of unusually weak demand, the Commerce Ministry said actual Chinese exports of rare earths in 2011 totaled 14,750 tons for the first 11 months of 2011 ? the equivalent of just 49 percent of the total annual quota.

In another possible move to tighten control over exports, the ministry's announcement Tuesday said only 11 companies will be allowed to sell abroad. That is down from 26 companies given licences for the first half of 2011.

Rare earths are 17 elements including cerium, dysprosium and lanthanum that are used in manufacturing flat-screen TVs, batteries for electric cars and wind turbines. They also used in some high-tech weapons.

The United States, Canada and Australia also have rare earths but stopped mining them in the 1990s as lower-cost Chinese ores flooded the market.

Surging demand has prompted ccompanies in Canada, California, India, Malaysia, Russia and other other countries to develop rare earths mines, some of which are expected to start producing by 2015.

Prices in China have fallen sharply since August, declining by 45 percent for neodymium oxide, by 33 percent for terbium oxide and by 31 percent for lanthanum oxide, according to Lynas Corp., an Australian rare earths producer.

Its figures showed an equally striking gap between prices in China and abroad, with lanthanum oxide costing triple the Chinese level on global markets, neodymium more than twice as much and terbium oxide near twice as much.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2011-12-28-AS-China-Rare-Earths/id-0359d80ae59e4d63a2d783a3f1b76b33

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Iran warns it might close Hormuz strait, stop oil (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? Iran's official news agency on Tuesday quoted a top official as saying Iran will close the Strait of Hormuz, cutting off oil exports, if the West imposes sanctions on Iran's oil shipments.

According to the IRNA report Tuesday Vice President Mohamed Reza Rahimi said Iran does not want hostilities but charged that the West continues its plots against Iran.

The West is considering limiting Iran's oil trade over its disputed nuclear program. Some 80 percent of Iran's foreign revenue comes from oil exports.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner called the threat "bluster." He said it was "another attempt by them to distract attention from the real issue, which is their continued noncompliance with international nuclear obligations."

Rahimi has no major role in Iran's foreign or military policy.

Iran is conducting a 10-day naval maneuver in the area the of the Strait of Hormuz, where about 40 percent of the world's oil supply passes. Closing the strait would have immense world economic impact.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Federal watchdog unrelenting in probe of Dover military mortuary

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Source: http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20111227/NEWS02/112270330/1218/rss1204

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Putin rejects suggestions of talks with opposition (AP)

MOSCOW ? Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has rejected the possibility of talks with opposition leaders who drew tens of thousands of people to protest rallies across the country.

The prime minister told Russian news agencies on Wednesday that "there's no one to talk to" among the leaders.

Putin's authority was dented by a recent parliamentary election in which his party lost 25 percent of seats despite widespread allegations of vote-rigging in its favor.

The vote fraud triggered the country's largest protest rallies in 20 years that demanded a rerun of the vote and Putin's resignation.

Putin on Tuesday firmly rejected the protesters' demands.

Putin served as Russia's president in 2000-2008 and is now seeking a third term in office.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_putin

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Doh! Top Science Journal Retractions of 2011

News | More Science

Each year hundreds of peer-reviewed scientific articles are retracted. Most involve no blatant malfeasance; the authors themselves often detect errors and retract the paper. Some retractions, however, entail plagiarism, false authorship or cooked data


Image: City of Yuma, Arizona

Bad science papers can have lasting effects. Consider the 1998 paper in the journal The Lancet that linked autism to the MMR vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella. That paper was fully retracted in 2010 upon evidence that senior author Andrew Wakefield had manipulated data and breached several proper ethical codes of conduct.

Nevertheless the erroneous paper continues to undermine public confidence in vaccines. After the Lancet article, MMR vaccination rates dipped sharply and haven't fully rebounded. This decline in the MMR vaccine has been tied to a rise in measles cases resulting in permanent injury and death.

Each year hundreds of peer-reviewed scientific articles are retracted. Most involve no blatant malfeasance; the authors themselves often detect errors and retract the paper. Some retractions, however, as documented on the blog Retraction Watch, entail plagiarism, false authorship or cooked data.

No journal is safe from retractions, from the mighty "single-word-title" journals such as Nature, Science and Cell, to the myriad minor, esoteric ones.

Yet as astronomer Carl Sagan once said, "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." Below are five science results retracted in 2011, pulled permanently off the books in part for falling far short of meeting the Sagan standard.

#5: Los Angeles marijuana dispensaries lead to drop in crime.

Keep smoking. The RAND Corporation retracted its own report in October after realizing its sloppy data collection.

Crime data compiled from neighborhoods with these highly contentious medical marijuana dispensaries supposedly revealed slightly lower crime rates. The authors attributed this decline not to marijuana itself but rather the presence of security cameras and guards in and around the dispensaries, having a positive effect on the neighborhood. [The History of 8 Hallucinogens]

The L.A. city attorney's office was incensed with the report, having argued the opposite ? that the dispensaries breed crime. The city's lawyers soon found critical flaws in RAND's data collection, largely stemming from RAND's reliance on data from CrimeReports.com, which did not include data from the L.A. Police Department. RAND blamed itself for the error, not CrimeReports.com, which had made no claims of having a complete set of data, and, in fact, didn't even know about the study.

#4 -- Butterfly meets worm, falls in love, and has caterpillars.

The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) published a fantastic claim in 2009 by zoologist Donald Williamson, which was delightfully reported in the science news media. Williamson claimed that ancestors of modern butterflies mistakenly fertilized their eggs with sperm from velvet worms. The result was the necessity for the caterpillar stage of the butterfly life cycle.

The PNAS paper got a few laughs among evolutionary scientists, but it hasn't yet been retracted. Williamson's follow-up 2011 paper in the journal Symbiosis, however, has been retracted.

Researchers Michael Hart and Richard Grosberg at the University of Texas, Austin, systematically refuted all of Williamson's claims in the pages of PNAS by the end of 2009. They based their arguments entirely on well-known concepts of both basic evolution and the genetics of modern worms and butterflies. When Symbiosis published its butterfly-meets-worm article in January 2011, Hart raised questions with the editor. As of November the paper is no longer available.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=0a7fd8c181e860c847be268ff2e60426

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Two charged over claims in Sugarland collapse

Two women are being charged after the Marion County prosecutor said they filed false claims related to the Indiana State Fair stage collapse.

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Prosecutor Terry Curry says Stephanie Murry and Sandra Hurn submitted claims to the Indiana State Fair Remembrance Fund (ISFRF) and the Indiana Tort Claim Fund, which is administered by the Indiana Attorney General's Office. Authorities say the women each submitted claims totaling $22,500.

According to the prosecutor, the women claimed they were injured in the Aug. 13 stage collapse. The prosecutor's office alleges that the women falsified hospital records in order to be eligible to make claims to both funds.

"The state police determined pretty that the medical records submitted were falsified," said Curry.

In fact, Curry said, neither Hurn nor Murry even attended the concert.

"It would certainly appear from the investigation that neither woman was actually at the State Fair," Curry told Eyewitness News. "Sandra Hurn stated who she went with and that she was there for a couple of the Sugarland songs which obviously Sugarland never performed that night."

The scaffolding on the stage collapsed when a strong thunderstorm moved through that night. That happened after Sara Bareilles left the stage but before Sugarland came on.

Curry says Hurn collected $7,500 from the ISFRF, but Murry's claim was denied because her alleged injuries did not meet qualifications to receive ISFRF funds.

Both women also submitted a notice of tort claim to the Indiana attorney general's office, and both were notified they would receive money from the fund. But Hurn was arrested when she went to pick up a claim check, and Murry was arrested a short time after that.

"It's beyond troubling in a situation which was clearly a tragedy, people were legitimately injured even killed, that there are people out there that in turn exploit it for their own gain," said Curry.

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The alleged false claims are especially disheartening for the people who were there that night and did suffer injuries.

"I can't believe that someone could stoop that low to do that. I'm appalled. I'm actually very angry," said Laura Magdziarz, who suffered a broken leg that night. Her young daughter Maggie had a critical arm injury. "That's just unbelievable. There are people out there that desperately needed the money and there's a lot of people that didn't get any money for the same reasons - they had people at different hospitals; they needed to find their family and that was more important than staying in the hospital."

That was the situation for Magdziarz, whose own claim was denied because she was not admitted to the hospital that night despite having broken her leg as the scaffolding came down that night. Magdziarz' first priority was to be by the bedside of her four-year-old daughter, who was undergoing surgery at a different hospital.

"Somebody either has to be really desperate or cold-hearted. That's like adding insult to injury," Magdziarz said. "I'm glad they caught them. I hope they throw the book at them."

Stephanie Murry has been charged with one count of forgery (class C felony), one count of perjury (class D felony), and one count of attempt theft (class D felony).

Sandra Hurn has been charged with three counts of forgery (class C felony), two counts of perjury (class D felony), one count of theft (class D felony), and one count of attempt theft (class D felony).

The maximum penalty both women could face for a class C felony is eight years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45804542/ns/today-entertainment/

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Texas police: Man in Santa suit killed 6 relatives (AP)

GRAPEVINE, Texas ? Investigators in suburban Fort Worth are trying to piece together the history of a family targeted in a Christmas Day shooting that police believe was carried out by a relative dressed in a Santa Claus suit.

The names of the seven people found dead inside the Grapevine apartment, including the alleged gunman, were expected to be released Tuesday, police said.

Grapevine police spokesman Sgt. Robert Eberling said the shooter showed up in the costume shortly before gunfire erupted, and the family appeared to have been opening Christmas presents. Police responding to a 911 call found four females and three males dead. They also found two handguns.

"We think he was just inside there celebrating Christmas with the rest of them and decided for whatever reason that's how he's going to end things," Eberling told The Associated Press.

Investigators worked through Sunday night and into Monday morning, meticulously searching the apartment where the bodies were found, along with vehicles parked outside. Police said they believe the victims were related, though some were visiting and didn't live in the apartment.

Eberling said investigators were assembling a "family history," and that the apartment was leased to a woman and her two children, one age 15 and the other either 19 or 20. He would not give other specifics.

"We're getting a clearer picture, but we're not ready to go on the record with anything until we find out from the medical examiner absolute confirmation of identities and the manner of death," Eberling said.

Autopsies of the shooter and the victims were being done Monday by the Tarrant County medical examiner.

Roger Metcalf, a spokesman for the medical examiner's office, said the victims have been tentatively identified, but the office couldn't confirm the names because the state driver's license fingerprint database wasn't available on the holiday.

"In addition, we need to locate next of kin before information can be released, and our investigators are working on that as well," Metcalf wrote in an email to the AP.

Late Sunday evening, police intently searched a sport utility vehicle parked outside the apartment. The vehicle is registered to a man who listed his residence as a home two miles away in the neighboring suburb of Colleyville.

Thomas Ehrlich, who lives near the home in Colleyville, told the AP he heard from neighbors that police went to the house Sunday. He said he believed the man and woman who once lived there were estranged.

Records show the couple had financial problems and that their home, most recently valued on the county tax rolls at $336,200, had been sold in 2010 at a foreclosure auction ? although it appeared the man was still living there.

"I actually saw him out doing yard work just last weekend," Ehrlich said.

Spa manager Leah Langford said she became concerned when the man's wife didn't show up for work Monday at the business where she had been employed for four years. Langford said she got no response when she called the woman's cell phone, nor could she learn anything when she went to the Colleyville home and the Grapevine apartment.

"For somebody who's always early to work and who never misses a day of work, we expected the worst," Langford said.

The shootings Sunday were the first homicides in Grapevine in more than a year and a half.

Police and firefighters rushed to the Lincoln Vineyards complex about 11:30 a.m. after receiving a 911 call in which no one was on the other end of the line. Because no one responded on the phone, police went into the apartment, located at the back of the complex. They found the seven, aged 15 to 60, dead.

Many of the nearby apartments are vacant, and police said no neighbors reported hearing anything on a quiet Christmas morning when many people were not around.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_us/us_texas_seven_dead

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Broncos, Ravens, hold advantages

(AP) ? Win and you are in as a division champion.

That's the easy scenario for the Broncos, Cowboys and the Giants next weekend. And while Baltimore already owns at least a wild-card spot, a victory for the Ravens earns them the AFC North and a first-round bye.

Denver is tied atop the AFC North with Oakland at 8-7, with the Broncos hosting Kansas City and the Raiders at home for San Diego next Sunday. Denver has the tiebreaker, but if it loses and Oakland wins, the Broncos can't get a wild card.

The Raiders can if both they and Denver win, as long as Cincinnati and Tennessee lose, or Cincinnati loses and the New York Jets win.

In first place in the NFC East are Dallas and the Giants, who meet at the Meadowlands. A win or a tie gives New York (8-7) the title; neither team can be a wild card.

The Ravens (11-4) swept the Steelers this year, so by winning at Cincinnati (9-6), they get the AFC North crown. Should Baltimore falter, Pittsburgh (11-4) gets the division title and the bye. Both teams already own at least a wild card.

Cincinnati grabs the other AFC wild card with a victory over Baltimore, or with a loss if either the Jets and Raiders both lose, or the Jets and Denver both lose.

AFC East champion New England (12-3) already has a bye, and with a win at home against Buffalo will earn home-field advantage in the conference playoffs. That advantage also would come to the Patriots if both Baltimore and Pittsburgh lose even if the Bills beat New England. However, the Ravens and Steelers both hold the edge over the Patriots for home-field advantage should they finish with the same record.

To get the wild card, the Jets (8-7) need to win at Miami while the Bengals, Titans and Raiders all lose, or the Bengals, Titans and Broncos all lose.

As for Tennessee (8-7), it needs to win at AFC South winner Houston and have one of the following three occur:

?losses by Cincinnati and Oakland, and a win by the Jets;

?losses by Cincinnati and Denver, and a win by the Jets;

?losses by Cincinnati and the Jets, and wins by Denver and Oakland.

In the NFC, New Orleans can clinch the South by beating Atlanta on Monday night, or with a victory on the final weekend over Carolina. The Falcons (9-5) are already assured of at least a wild card because of Chicago's 35-21 loss to Green Bay on Sunday night that eliminated the Bears from playoff contention.

Should the Falcons win out and the Saints lose out, Atlanta wins the division and New Orleans becomes a wild card.

New Orleans still has hopes for a first-round bye, but must win out for a shot. Detroit claimed the other NFC wild card on Saturday.

NFC North champ Green Bay (14-1) wrapped up conference home-field advantage with its win Sunday night. NFC West winner San Francisco (12-3) gets a bye by beating St. Louis in the finale.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-25-FBN-Playoff-Races/id-c1b6acfe72dc48d5930f084663d3d98e

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Two Illini to miss football bowl game

Article updated: 12/23/2011 4:34 PM

By Daily Herald News Services

CHAMPAIGN ? Illini senior running back Jason Ford and redshirt freshman wide receiver Jake Kumerow are academically ineligible to play in the 2011 Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl on Dec. 31 in San Francisco, university officials announced Friday.

Ford is Illinois? leading rusher in 2011 with 600 yards on 155 carries (3.9 ypc) and 7 touchdowns. He finishes his career 1,962 career rushing yards, which ranks 16th on the all-time Illinois rushing list, and 26 career rushing touchdowns, which is second in Illinois history behind only Howard Griffith?s school record of 31.

Kumerow played in seven games in 2011 and had three catches for 15 yards on the season. All three of his catches came in the regular season finale at Minnesota on Nov. 26.

The Illini (6-6) play UCLA (6-7) at 2:30 p.m. Dec. 31 on ESPN.

Source: http://dailyherald.com/article/20111223/sports/712239746/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

4 charged in shooting death at LDS Church parking lot

story image Nkoyo Iyamba??|? posted Dec 24th - 10:05pm

Two families are celebrating what they call a Christmas miracle, with a mother and a father receiving another chance at life.

story image

ksl.com??|? posted Dec 24th - 10:00pm

We put together a special performance from all the people that work behind the scenes to bring you the news. Merry Christmas!

story image

Wendy Leonard??|? posted Dec 24th - 8:13pm

Murder charges were filed Friday in the case of the shooting death of Hairam Torres, who was found dead in the back seat of a rental car parked at an LDS Church parking lot in West Valley City on Dec. 10.

story image Amy Joi O'Donoghue??|? posted Dec 24th - 8:12pm

Four members of a family, including two boys ages 1 and 3, were critically injured in a head-on collision Christmas Eve that also left the driver of the other vehicle with life-threatening injuries.

story image

Marjorie Cortez??|? posted Dec 24th - 7:04pm

Under current Utah law, if a resident of a nursing home ridicules, swears at or yells at another resident, the operator of the facility is required to submit a report to state human services authorities.

story image

Marjorie Cortez??|? posted Dec 24th - 5:03pm

Utah's new immigration enforcement law "threatens the human and civil rights" of Mexican nationals, attorneys for the government of Mexico wrote in a friend of the court brief filed in U.S. District Court in conjunction with a lawsuit that challenges the law's constitutionality.

story image Emiley Morgan??|? posted Dec 24th - 4:41pm

Just days after Brigham City doctor Dewey MacKay was sentenced to 20 years in prison by a federal judge, an appeals court upheld the revocation of the man's registration to dispense controlled substances.

story image Marjorie Cortez??|? posted Dec 24th - 3:07pm

To watch them interact, the two women appear to be old family friends.

story image Wendy Leonard??|? posted Dec 24th - 2:11pm

Bradley Begent has put on his fur-trimmed red coat and pants dozens of times in the past nine years, but never before has it meant as much as it did on Wednesday night.

story image

Wendy Leonard??|? posted Dec 24th - 1:09pm

While they can't do much to enforce it, the city officially and unanimously passed a resolution Tuesday encouraging local businesses to verify the legal status of new workers.

story image

ksl.com??|? posted Dec 24th - 12:03pm

Consumer prices along the Wasatch Front declined slightly in November.?

story image

Lisa Riley Roche??|? posted Dec 24th - 11:04am

Curtis Garner has withdrawn his nomination by Gov. Gary Herbert for a 3rd District Court judgeship.

story image

Wendy Leonard??|? posted Dec 24th - 10:03am

A 30-year-old Midvale man was charged in 3rd District Court on Friday after stabbing his wife and his dog.

story image

ksl.com??|? posted Dec 24th - 9:06am

Similar to an initiative conducted at Thanksgiving, the Utah Highway Patrol will up its manpower on the state's roadways over the Christmas holiday weekend.

story image

ksl.com??|? posted Dec 24th - 7:00am

The Utah Transit Authority has announced service changes for the Christmas holiday.

story image

John Hollenhorst??|? posted Dec 23rd - 10:45pm

A team Utah just returned from Africa last Thursday night after restoring the sight of more than 200 blind people. It was a mercy mission to a part of the world that is frighteningly dangerous, and has a stunning level of vision problems.

story image

Steve Fidel??|? posted Dec 23rd - 10:17pm

Last-minute shoppers may want to put one more thing on their list: something to open Christmas gifts that are encased in that horrid plastic blister or clamshell packaging. KSL's Steve Fidel attempts to figure out what the best "something" is.

story image Alex Cabrero??|? posted Dec 23rd - 10:02pm

Friday was certainly one of the busiest travel days of the year, with thousands of packed cars hitting the road. Some of those who stopped at Brigham City gas station drove away with a free tank of gas and a touch of the Christmas Spirit.

story image Wendy Leonard??|? posted Dec 23rd - 9:29pm

Murray police are searching for two men who made off with hundreds of thousands of dollars in jewelry they obtained in an armed robbery Friday night.

story image

Emiley Morgan??|? posted Dec 23rd - 8:53pm

A Riverton man has filed a personal injury lawsuit against an Idaho resident his wife left him for, alleging alienation of affection and intentional affliction of emotional distress.

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Source: http://www.ksl.com?nid=960&sid=18616929&s_cid=rss-960

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

kstatesports: RT @ESPNAndyKatz: Long beach state vs Kansas state in diamond final sounds like an NCAA tourney game to me in march. Martin and Monson d ...

Twitter / Andy Katz: Long beach state vs Kansas ... Loader Long beach state vs Kansas state in diamond final sounds like an NCAA tourney game to me in march. Martin and Monson doing solid jobs in '11

Source: http://twitter.com/kstatesports/statuses/150631356454543360

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iOS 5 Untethered Jailbreak: Apple's Updates May Hamper Pod2g, MuscleNerd's Efforts

Apple users, who are using the Cupertino-based tech giant's latest mobile operating system, have been waiting for an untethered jailbreak. But unlike the earlier jailbreaks, the new untethered jailbreak (whenever it is released) will not be able to make all jailbreak fans happy.

Finding a jailbreak for Apple's mobile operating systems had never been easy for hackers. However, in the case of iOS 5, it became more complicated due to the two new devices supported by the new A5 processor.

This is the first time when Chronic Dev-team's French member, Pod2g, has given his work to his team members and taken up a new task.

Pod2g in his recent blog post said: "I need to focus on A5 and hope I can find a path quick, and I have the feeling that Chronic-dev could help me."

So here is what I did:

"I gave all the details to the chronic dev team so that can finish, test, integrate and release the A4 JB ASAP.

I'll put all my energy from now on on the A5."

Like us on Facebook

Hackers, while working hard to find an untethered jailbreak for iOS 5, had been trying their luck in finding exploits which can jailbreak A5 processor devices - iPhone 4S and iPad 2.

Pod2g also succeeded in cache related problem in the A5 processor and working hard to get the final bootrom-exploit, but one more thing which can hamper Pod2g and MuscleNerd's hard work is updates of iOS 5. Apple, to solve battery issues related iPhone 4S running on iOS 5, will be releasing new updates of the operating software which can carry a patch for the new jailbreak.

The long wait of all the Apple device users to perform the jailbreak is going to be over soon as two hackers from two different Dev-teams - MuscleNerd and Pod2g - are working round the clock to find the crucial jailbreaking milestones.

Right now, two jailbreak programs are available and both are not untethered, and don't work on iPhone 4S and iPad 2.

Redsn0w is a tethered jailbreak - the user always has to connect his device to computer whenever he reboots it. ?A semi-tethered jailbreak reduces the problems but still can't replace the need of an untethered jailbreak.

oth the jailbreaks are compatible with the?iPhone?3GS (old and new bootrom), the?iPhone?4, the?iPod?Touch 3G, the?iPod?Touch 4 and the?iPad?1G. They won't work on the iPhone 4S and the?iPad?2 because of the A5 processor.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/272478/20111224/ios-5-untethered-jailbreak-apple-s-updates.htm

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US rep apologizes to first lady on 'big butt' quip (AP)

MILWAUKEE ? Wisconsin Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner has apologized to first lady Michelle Obama for reportedly saying she has a "big butt."

Sensenbrenner's press secretary says the Republican sent the first lady a personal note and released a statement Thursday saying he regrets his "inappropriate comment."

Sensenbrenner's office would not release the note.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ( http://bit.ly/s1kBwP) reports Sensenbrenner referred to Michelle Obama's "big butt" while talking to church members at a Christmas bazaar at St. Aidan's Episcopal Church in Hartford earlier this month.

Church member Ann Marsh-Meigs told the newspaper that she heard Sensenbrenner's remarks. She said the 16-term congressman was speaking about the first lady's efforts to combat childhood obesity, and added, "And look at her big butt."

Michelle Obama's press office didn't immediately return a request for comment Thursday.

___

Information from: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, http://www.jsonline.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_re_us/us_sensenbrenner_first_lady_apology

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Wayne State receives DOD grant; study may give insight to slow or halt breast cancer

Wayne State receives DOD grant; study may give insight to slow or halt breast cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Julie O'Connor
julie.oconnor@wayne.edu
313-577-8845
Wayne State University - Office of the Vice President for Research

DETROIT A Wayne State University School of Medicine post-doctoral researcher has secured a significant grant to study the signaling process that triggers a type of breast cancer to transform into an invasive state.

Kingsley Osuala, Ph.D., a post-doctoral trainee in the Department of Pharmacology, has secured a three-year, $450,000 grant from the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program for his study, "Paracrine Cytokine/Chemokine Pathways in Progression of Ductal Carcinoma in Situ to Invasive Ductal Carcinoma."

"This is especially exciting as only 22 grants nationally were issued in this category for this fiscal year," said Osuala, who received his doctorate in biomedical science from the University of Central Florida. "This is a major milestone for me because it will be the first grant on which I am listed as principal investigator."

Osuala is investigating the process by which breast cancer moves from a pre-invasive state to an invasive state. Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a pre-invasive breast cancer, was the fourth-leading cause of cancer diagnosed in women worldwide in 2010. Communication between the DCIS cells and other surrounding cells is known to accelerate movement to an invasive cancer, but the molecules responsible for the process have not been identified, he said.

The objective of the study, Osuala said, is to evaluate the potential roles of two small proteins that communicate between cells the chemokine CCL20 and the cytokine IL-6 in the progression of DCIS to an invasive state. Recent data has uncovered a previously unknown mechanism by which cancer cells increase expression of CCL20 and IL-6 to manipulate their environment, rendering them invasive. Thus, CCL20 and IL-6 may be potential targets for new drugs as well as markers that might allow doctors to accurately predict which patients with DCIS are likely to have it progress to invasive tumors, he said.

"By identifying chemokine/cytokine signaling pathways that are critical to breast cancer progression, we should be able to slow or even halt the invasion of breast cancers," he said. "Such an advantage would give clinicians more time to treat and remove breast cancer before it can travel to other organs. This study is unique in that we are evaluating the tumor and other cells in the tumor's microenvironment rather than just the tumor cells alone. This novel approach will provide answers about the way tumors interact with their neighboring cells."

The study, Osuala said, will provide technical insight for future studies in the discovery of biomarkers for early-stage breast cancers and in breast cancer in general.

"Defining new drug targets should give clinicians a new tool for the treatment of breast cancer, potentially increasing the post-diagnosis life expectancy of patients," he said. "Additional benefits of this study include decreased reliance on toxic therapies such as radiotherapy and conventional chemotherapy, and reductions in overtreatment."

###

Wayne State University is one of the nation's preeminent public research institutions in an urban setting. Through its multidisciplinary approach to research and education, and its ongoing collaboration with government, industry and other institutions, the university seeks to enhance economic growth and improve the quality of life in the city of Detroit, state of Michigan and throughout the world. For more information about research at Wayne State University, visit http://www.research.wayne.edu.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Wayne State receives DOD grant; study may give insight to slow or halt breast cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Julie O'Connor
julie.oconnor@wayne.edu
313-577-8845
Wayne State University - Office of the Vice President for Research

DETROIT A Wayne State University School of Medicine post-doctoral researcher has secured a significant grant to study the signaling process that triggers a type of breast cancer to transform into an invasive state.

Kingsley Osuala, Ph.D., a post-doctoral trainee in the Department of Pharmacology, has secured a three-year, $450,000 grant from the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program for his study, "Paracrine Cytokine/Chemokine Pathways in Progression of Ductal Carcinoma in Situ to Invasive Ductal Carcinoma."

"This is especially exciting as only 22 grants nationally were issued in this category for this fiscal year," said Osuala, who received his doctorate in biomedical science from the University of Central Florida. "This is a major milestone for me because it will be the first grant on which I am listed as principal investigator."

Osuala is investigating the process by which breast cancer moves from a pre-invasive state to an invasive state. Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a pre-invasive breast cancer, was the fourth-leading cause of cancer diagnosed in women worldwide in 2010. Communication between the DCIS cells and other surrounding cells is known to accelerate movement to an invasive cancer, but the molecules responsible for the process have not been identified, he said.

The objective of the study, Osuala said, is to evaluate the potential roles of two small proteins that communicate between cells the chemokine CCL20 and the cytokine IL-6 in the progression of DCIS to an invasive state. Recent data has uncovered a previously unknown mechanism by which cancer cells increase expression of CCL20 and IL-6 to manipulate their environment, rendering them invasive. Thus, CCL20 and IL-6 may be potential targets for new drugs as well as markers that might allow doctors to accurately predict which patients with DCIS are likely to have it progress to invasive tumors, he said.

"By identifying chemokine/cytokine signaling pathways that are critical to breast cancer progression, we should be able to slow or even halt the invasion of breast cancers," he said. "Such an advantage would give clinicians more time to treat and remove breast cancer before it can travel to other organs. This study is unique in that we are evaluating the tumor and other cells in the tumor's microenvironment rather than just the tumor cells alone. This novel approach will provide answers about the way tumors interact with their neighboring cells."

The study, Osuala said, will provide technical insight for future studies in the discovery of biomarkers for early-stage breast cancers and in breast cancer in general.

"Defining new drug targets should give clinicians a new tool for the treatment of breast cancer, potentially increasing the post-diagnosis life expectancy of patients," he said. "Additional benefits of this study include decreased reliance on toxic therapies such as radiotherapy and conventional chemotherapy, and reductions in overtreatment."

###

Wayne State University is one of the nation's preeminent public research institutions in an urban setting. Through its multidisciplinary approach to research and education, and its ongoing collaboration with government, industry and other institutions, the university seeks to enhance economic growth and improve the quality of life in the city of Detroit, state of Michigan and throughout the world. For more information about research at Wayne State University, visit http://www.research.wayne.edu.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/wsu--wsr122211.php

matt nathanson matt nathanson rick perry oops rick perry oops tom bradley penn state tom bradley penn state grace potter

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Eric Church Shows Off Adorable Photo of Baby Boone

Dean Dixon

It doesn't get much cuter than this ... Introducing Boone McCoy Church! Grammy nominee Eric Church and wife Katherine are showing off their son to fans for the first time, releasing this precious photo of the 10-week-old cutie.

Born Oct. 3, Boone is the couple's first child. Eric admits fatherhood has been beyond anything he could have ever imagined. "Everybody always tells you what an awesome and unique experience being a parent is," he says. "But words can never do the feeling justice. The way our life changed in that 24-hour period alone after he was born -- just by putting a little boy in the house --was awesome."

But while Eric may be getting in touch with his softer side for the first time, now that he's a dad, don't expect his notoriously rockin' music to change too much. "I can promise you this: I'm not going to be writing lullabies at any point in time, unless they're like bad-ass, kick-ass lullabies," he tells The Boot with a laugh. "There's maybe a market for that out there somewhere!"

Still, we're betting Boone will find his way into some of Dad's lyrics. "I've always made music that was representative of real life," says Eric. "Life doesn't get more real than having a newborn at home."

Eric and Katherine will spend their baby's first Christmas at home. The country star kicks off his headlining Blood, Sweat & Beers Tour on Jan. 19. See his concert schedule here.

Watch Eric Perform Live in Our Studio

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheBootCountryMusic/~3/gcWNTtNWrp0/

the patriot jeff dunham night at the museum young guns concord billy the kid safe and sound

Birders Fan Out to Count Feathered Friends

Copyright ? 2011 National Public Radio?. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

Every year, a group of people peer into the sky with binoculars while mimicking bird sounds on a cold winter day. No, it's not too much eggnog. They are volunteers for the annual Christmas Bird Count, now in its 112th year. These citizen scientists count birds across North America as they migrate south for the winter, and these bird enthusiasts are among the first to spot a bird like this Rufous hummingbird.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRD CHIRPING)

FLATOW: Spotting it far from its natural habitat, they also keep watchful eye on endangered species like this great sage grouse.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRD CHIRPING)

FLATOW: You knew what that was. The data they collect is vital for bird conservation. But before these bird lovers can count the whooping cranes, the prairie warblers and even the wood ducks, how do they identify them? My next guests know a thing or two about that. Dr. Gary Langham is chief scientist of the National Audubon Society, which manages the annual bird census. He joins us from our Washington, D.C., studio. Welcome back.

DR. GARY LANGHAM: Thank you. It's great to be here.

FLATOW: Nice to have you. Richard Crossley is a birder, photographer and author of the new book " The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds," which you can see all kinds of birds, every kind of bird from the East. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY, Richard.

RICHARD CROSSLEY: Thank you, Ira.

FLATOW: Gary, how is the bird count going this year?

It's going well so far. We started, as usual, on December 14, and it runs through January 5. It's, you know, shaping up to be a pretty mild year in terms of weather. And, you know, when people do these bird counts, they are usually hoping for a rare sighting, but they're also looking for these really cyclical events. And this year's winner seems to be snowy owl invasion.

Snowy owl invasion. What do you mean by that?

LANGHAM: Well, apparently, it was a bumper crop for lemmings in the Arctic this year, and so it was also a bumper crop for snowy owls. And most years, that species should be very far to the north. But because there are more birds than there are food to feed them all, we're getting a whole bunch of really young birds moving very far south, as far south as Oklahoma, Kansas and lots of sightings in the Great Lakes Region so far.

FLATOW: Wow. Any other surprises popping up?

LANGHAM: Well, you know, every time people go out, they're always hoping to break their own personal record or have a high count for the circle or see a vagrant bird like the Rufous hummingbird you had at the top, which I gather there's one - was one in Central Park this year.

FLATOW: It shouldn't be there?

LANGHAM: It shouldn't be there. It should be, you know, somewhere between Alaska and Mexico, closer to Mexico this time of year.

FLATOW: Wow. We're talking about the Christmas Bird Count on SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR, talking with Gary Langham. And now, Richard Crossley, before anybody bundles up and heads out for a bird count, you can prepare for it, and you're a proponent of reality birding. What does that mean? I know in your books, in "The Crossley ID Guide," the birds are just not on stark white pages, but they're in their natural habitat. Is that what you mean by that?

CROSSLEY: Yes, it is. I mean, for an effort to learn today, I want to make anything lifelike. Thankfully, because of digital technology and Photoshop, we can make things more lifelike. So I created images that were in focus from near to far. If we look how the brain learns, how we teach kids and apply that to all the research that's being done, I think it's created something that's far more visual than the flat white background images of the past. And it's going to help people - hopefully inspire people - to go out and look at birds more closely. We have to understand their world, relate to it better and hopefully become better birders.

FLATOW: Mm-hmm. In your bird book there are some gorgeous pictures of birds, but what role does sound play in identifying birds like the snowy owl or that Rufous hummingbird?

CROSSLEY: Well, not so much in the relative case of the snowy owl. We very rarely hear them, but sound plays a massive part in birding. You know, some people will say that 90 percent of birds are actually identified by sound before they're actually seen. So it's a huge part.

FLATOW: Hmm. Mm-hmm. 1-800-989-8255 is our number, talking about the Christmas Bird Count. Let's go to the phones, quick call before the break. Steve in North High Shoals, Georgia. Hi, Steve.

STEVE: Hi.

FLATOW: Hi there.

STEVE: We were on a bird count on Tuesday, the Lake Oconee Christmas Bird Count, and there are three of us in our party. And Rachel(ph) looked out the window and she's like, what's that bird with the green wing? And we looked up and it was a green-tailed towhee, and it was only the second time the bird has been recorded in Georgia. The first one was 1953. So, right now, every morning, people from all over Georgia have been going to that spot to see that bird.

FLATOW: Wow. Gary, what do you say about that?

Yeah. That's really one of the exciting things that gets people out, braving the cold, is looking for those rarities, and it's really - it's exciting when people will come from all over to add to their list. On the other hand, the reason we all do it is to get trends for birds that are supposed to be there.

LANGHAM: So, you know, it's a real privilege to be part of something that's been going on for 112 years to help the conservation side too. So you have your fun social event with your friends in your neck of the woods, but also building this much larger database that's useful for conservation science.

FLATOW: Well, congratulations to you, Steve.

STEVE: Thanks. And the only reason we'd ever be on that road was because it was a Christmas Bird Count. This is like in a farm area, a really kind of - in a cow pasture, basically. And so it got us out to an area where we normally wouldn't be birding. So that's another thing that's kind of interesting about Christmas Bird Count sometimes.

FLATOW: Good luck to you. Have a happy holiday.

STEVE: Thanks. You too.

FLATOW: 1-800-989-8255 is our number. Richard, quickly, you have that bird in your book?

CROSSLEY: I do have that bird in the book, mate. Yep. It's such a very, very rare from the West. I think there was a big drought in the middle of the country this year so a lot of green-tailed towhees, sage thrashers were displaced. They're not really wintering where they usually are. A lot moved further south and east than usual. So that's probably one of the reasons why it's been seen in Georgia.

FLATOW: All right. We're going to take a break and come back and talk lots more about birding with Dr. Gary Langham, who is chief scientist of the National Audubon Society. Richard Crossley is a birder of the highest order. He's a photographer and author of "The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds" out. Stay with us. We'll be right back. Get your binoculars after this break. I'm Ira Flatow. This is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

FLATOW: You're listening to SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow. We're talking about birds this hour. It's our annual bird, I guess, show where we talk about the Christmas Bird Count with my guest Gary Langham. He is chief scientist for the National Audubon Society. Richard Crossley is a birder, photographer and author of "The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds." And he's got some great photos in there of birds all on the East. Do you have an edition for the other parts of the country, Richard?

CROSSLEY: Yeah. I'm doing a Western one. I'm actually doing a British and Irish one. That might surprise some people with my accent.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

CROSSLEY: We're also working on this concept of doing some other books on raptors, warblers and one on ducks as well. So the one for ducks is actually going to be for birders and hunters so, hopefully, we can bring these two groups together because both do a lot for conservation. And that's one of my goals is to get more people involved, see as one and, ultimately, help with saving the great outdoors and birds.

FLATOW: Mm-hmm. And in that vein, let - we're going to have our first SCIENCE FRIDAY bird sound quiz. Maybe we can make this an annual bird count event. We're going to play a sound, you know the thing. You guess the bird. And the first caller to get the right answer is actually going to win a copy of Richard Crossley's book, "The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds." So we're going to play the sound. I may play it a couple of times, so you can hear it. Here is that bird.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRD CHIRPING)

FLATOW: OK. That was the sound of our first contest. If you think you know the answer, 1-800-989-8255. I would like to say you could tweet it in, but we have no way of getting back to you on Twitter on this sort of thing. So we're just going to take phone calls this time. Maybe next year we'll have a little bit more of an idea how to work Twitter better. I mean, let's - so let's - Neil(ph), let's play the sound again so that people who might have heard it now, they can perk up.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRD CHIRPING)

FLATOW: OK. That was the mystery bird sound. I'm going to give you a hint to begin with. It's a shore bird that lives in the forest. So that's our first hint. 1-800-989-8255. Let's go to the phones and take some calls while they're guessing on that one. Let's go to John(ph) in Sacramento. Hi, John.

[JOHN], CALLER: Hi. How are you guys doing?

Hi there.

Hey, I just had a question for your guest. As far as the bird call, I would have no clue. But with them doing this every year for so long, did they notice anything in the migratory patterns that they think might be contributable to global warming? I would like to know their thoughts on that. I can take the answer off the air.

FLATOW: OK, John. Thanks for calling. Gary, Richard?

CROSSLEY: Yeah. Actually, yes. When I first came to Cape May, to America, things were quite different. For example, willets didn't winter now in the neck of the woods. Now, there's - hundreds of them winter here. And so there's several other species were clearly the birds are wintering further north. And the hummingbird, Rufous hummingbird that you just mentioned, it's also quite clear that different species of hummingbirds, every winter, there's and more of them sort of reaching further and further north. And basically, what they're probably doing is just expanding their range further northwards, certainly, their wintering range because of the mild winters. Now, there are other examples, but, you know, but that's definitely the case, yeah.

FLATOW: Gary, you agree?

LANGHAM: Yeah. Absolutely. There are a number of species, you know, including things like black skimmer that have been documented to be progressively moving north. But a few years ago, we also did an analysis based on 40 years of Christmas Bird Count data in addition to breeding bird survey data to show that the birds are really spoken on this topic with their wings. They - if you look at where their centers of range abundance are, we looked at 305 species, they had moved, you know, 58 percent of them had moved around 100 miles north, their center of their range.

And we - we're doing a different kind of analysis right now. We're right in the middle of it for 600 species in North America based on the same counts that everyone goes out. They have a good time. They collect data to understand the relationship where birds occur and climate so that we can project forward under all future climates in 2020, 2050 and 2080.

FLATOW: Mm-hmm. 1-800-989-8255. Let's go Debra(ph) in Marquette, Michigan. Hi, Debra. You got a guess?

DEBRA: I do. I wasn't positive about it. It's just a wild guess, but I wanted to find my bird book before you got me but - oh, done. But I was thinking a booby?

FLATOW: Oh, I wish Flora were here with the sound effects.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: No. No, it's...

DEBRA: I think the guy - the guy who took my call didn't believe. He thought I was being funny. And I'm like, no, that's a kind of bird.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

DEBRA: It is, isn't it?

FLATOW: Well, I'll ask the bird experts. Gary, Richard, is it booby?

DEBRA: But I want you to know I'm a bird fanatic and I have to say...

CROSSLEY: No.

DEBRA: ...we have a dead tree in our - in the backyard, a dead Schwedler maple. It's been a home to - birds just love it. And I'm telling you, they just like - it's a perfect setting. We're north of a big park and we have such of wide variety of birds in our yard, but the birds like woodpeckers were - four woodpeckers were born in this tree and they - the babies come back and they're carving this tree to shreds, but it's just amazing and fun to look at.

FLATOW: Well, it sounds great. Well, you didn't get it right but thanks for - it's a great call. Thanks for calling.

DEBRA: You're welcome. Bye-bye.

FLATOW: Have a happy holiday. 1-800-989-8255. Let's go to second guess in Jessie from Linville, North Carolina. Hi, Jessie.

JESSIE: Hi. How are you, Ira?

FLATOW: Hi. Got a guess for us?

JESSIE: I was going to guess black-crowned night heron.

FLATOW: No.

CROSSLEY: Nope.

JESSIE: OK.

FLATOW: All right. Thanks. We're going to - just go down...

JESSIE: Thank you.

FLATOW: You're welcome. I'm just going to go down the phone list here and just in the order that they're coming in. Let's go to Mary in Richmond. Hi, Mary.

MARY: Hi.

FLATOW: Hi, there.

MARY: Hi, there. How are you?

FLATOW: Fine. How are you? You got a guess?

MARY: Yeah, American woodcock.

FLATOW: Bingo.

CROSSLEY: Yay.

FLATOW: You said it.

(SOUNDBITE OF BELLS RINGING)

FLATOW: All right. You rang the bell, American woodcock.

MARY: Yeah.

FLATOW: How did you know that?

MARY: Because I'm a birder, and I actually work for National Audubon Society.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

CROSSLEY: We should disqualify you.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Let's...

MARY: That's not fair. You didn't say that in the beginning.

FLATOW: No, that's true. OK, let's listen to the sound again just so that - OK, now, will note what to listen for the American woodcock.

(SOUNDBITE OF BIRDS CHIRPING)

FLATOW: We can hear those frogs chirping in the background. Ah, it's terrific. All right, Mary, stay on the line because someone is going to - I'm going to put you on hold. Someone's going to take your phone - your address so we can send you the new book, "The Crossley ID Guide."

MARY: Oh, I'm so excited. Thank you.

FLATOW: OK. Don't go anyway. All right, here we go. I got her on hold there. Tell us about that bird. Tell us about the woodcock, Richard. What is it?

CROSSLEY: It's - well, they did, as you mentioned, it's a shorebird that lives in the woods, usually in deep forest. It's fat thing with a quite a long, stout bill. It has wacky eyes that's on the side to the head, so it looks backwards as much as it looks forward. I guess it really looks sidewards. And it makes that noise in the spring. It's called peenting. And you can often see it right at dusk. It's crepuscular. It comes out, you know, in the twilight, and in spring you can see often flying in a road and over the woods as its displaying. And otherwise, it's a bit of a pain in the neck to see actually.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

CROSSLEY: It runs around in the floor and it's color is a camouflage, so it just blends in with the leaves, and when you go near it, it just freezes. And until you got too close and then it just flushes and flies off, not to be seen again.

FLATOW: What was your most challenging photo to take in the book?

CROSSLEY: Well, you must know your stuff, Ira, because that was actually the one.

FLATOW: That was it.

CROSSLEY: I'm a - that was it. Trying to get that at night, at dusk in flight was the hardest one - other than the ones that I didn't get, of course. But it took me probably five, six full days time-wise, but maybe about 30 attempts before I finally got it.

FLATOW: And he now...

CROSSLEY: My wife wasn't happy.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Are all birders this, you know, intense at what they do?

CROSSLEY: No, no. But I think it's like many sports. If you start as a kid like I did - I started when I was 7, it becomes an obsession. Now, it's really not - certainly not a hobby, debatable whether it's even a sport. It's more like life. So a number do become totally obsessed like you would guess I am, you know?

FLATOW: Yeah, I am. Yeah, I understand it. Gary, is too late to get in on this year's Audubon Society bird count?

LANGHAM: On the Christmas Bird Count, no. I mean, you can go to the Audubon website and find where - circle in an account that's upcoming, is still happened. In some cases, they're already full because there's a compiler in charge of each of the 2,200 and, you know, they spend a lot of time in effort making sure that they're being well covered.

But people can still get involved. You know, and it's not the only thing that people can do that's socially fun and for conservation. There are lots of things through the year, so I would - if people can involved this year, they don't need to wait till next Christmas Bird Count. They could do the Great Backyard Bird Count in February over President's Day weekend, or enter stuff into eBird. You know, there's lots of ways to get involved. Go to an Audubon chapter. Just get involved in your community. That's the main message.

FLATOW: Can you stay in your backyard and just tell you're - or are people interested in what comes to your bird feeder?

LANGHAM: Yeah. A few years back, we made it possible for people to just watch from their feeder, so. The only trick is the place where they're watching has to be within the count circle for a Christmas bird count. For Great Backyard Bird Count in February, you could just be anywhere.

FLATOW: Mm-hmm. 1-800-989-2855. Let's go to the phones. Let's go to Laurie in Gladstone, Michigan. Hi, Laurie.

LAURIE: Hi.

FLATOW: Hi, there.

LAURIE: Hi. I am listening to your show while driving back up north to Northern Michigan after doing some visiting in Southern Michigan for the holidays. On the way back, I stopped at a landfill to chase a rare gull that's been sighted there.

FLATOW: But what...

LAURIE: And I think that's pretty typical for birders to odd things like that.

FLATOW: Well, I was going to interrupt you and say, what do you mean? You get out of your car, and you just chase this bird. Where does this...

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

LAURIE: Well...

FLATOW: Into the landfill?

LAURIE: ...chasing, meaning I'm going, I'm driving out of my way to hope to see this bird that has been reported. And - but...

FLATOW: Did you get a picture of it at all?

LAURIE: I'm sorry. What?

FLATOW: Did you get us a picture or something?

LAURIE: I did take some pictures, and I'm actually going to have to review them to be sure that it's the bird I think it is. I'm actually not positive, but it has been sighted by others.

FLATOW: Let me remind - go ahead. Sorry.

LAURIE: My question was just it seems like there's more and more of these very odd of way - you know, out-of-their-range birds that we've seemed to be hearing about, and I'm wondering - my question for your guests is do these odd sightings seem to be increasing?

FLATOW: Let me just remind everybody that this is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR. I'm Ira Flatow, talking with Gary Langham and Richard Crossley, author of the "The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds." Gary, Richard, are we seeing more rare birds around?

CROSSLEY: Yes, but I think only because our knowledge is getting better, so we know what to look for a little more. I don't think reality is any different. You know, but I think the other thing your caller said, you know, the birders are like this, we're going to landfills. I think one of my points would be that we need to get away from creating the image of birders being a little whacky and eccentric. I mean, I think birds in - and this was really the point of the book - birding should be for the masses. I mean, I think we all want to love the outdoors. It's fantastic to be outdoors. Birds are around us everywhere, whether it'd be in suburbs, cities.

And so it's just about being out, enjoying the birds. Not necessarily putting a name to them but just relating to them, being aware of the environment around us and understanding birds. Not try to put a name to them but learning the bird, how they live, what they do, when do they occur in the garden. Watch how birds come through our gardens - different birds at different times a year - and just become more aware of our environment, so we relate to it better, enjoy it more. And so really, that was the purpose of my book, to help people look at things a little differently, because of their - knock on fur - conservation as well as lifestyles.

FLATOW: You know, I found one interesting remark you made in your book that I think we're all guilty of. Certainly, I even like to look at birds as - you say we look too much at the color of the birds. I mean, and that's all we're all looking at, isn't it?

CROSSLEY: Well - but it shouldn't be. When you describe people, you know, you might describe me as a white guy. Well, maybe my derriere is white, but the rest of me is pale brown. And my face is brown, and add a couple of drinks, it gets red, you know? And my clothes change every day. Well, birds are much the same. The colors are always changing, but the size, the shape, the behavior, where they live, what they do, just like in people, always stay the same. So the best birders, that's how we look at birds. But not only that, but it's more interesting. As people, we're interested in people's lifestyles, what they do, how they behave. And it's the same with birds.

I think birds are more fascinating because of, you know, how they live, what they do, and I think once people start looking at birds on that level rather than just on the level of color, they become much more engaged and fascinated by them, which, again, with all the knock ons of, you know, getting people doing it more often and conservation. I just think it's where we need to be going, and we need to deemphasize color and just make it more about enjoying birds, environment, and that's really the purpose of the book. That's why the plates are made into lifelike scenes, so you can just enjoy the beauty of it.

Research shows that anything that's more entertaining, anything that's more lifelike and reflects reality, you know, people are going to understand it and relate to it a lot better. So that's the purpose of the book.

FLATOW: Let me see if I can get a quick call in. Last call from Don in Bristol, Tennessee. Hi, Don.

DON: Hi, guys. My question is for Gary. And, Gary, I participated in two CBCs so far. I have one more to go this upcoming weekend. But this year, for our CBC, we had very low numbers of birds. We had great species but low numbers, and it was just inactive days, just what we called them, and the birds just weren't active. They were hard to find. We were beating the path, but we just won't - wasn't finding them. And my question to you is when you received the data, do you have a way to account for that? Or how...

FLATOW: Let me get a quick answer because we're running out of time. Good question.

DON: OK.

LANGHAM: Well, I mean, I think it's a really interesting observation, and something that are - that were being reported in other counts that have happened so far. And at the moment, we think it probably has to do with the mild nature of this winter season so far. So the so-called half-hearty birds may not have moved south yet. We haven't really had a lot of cold snaps. But, you know, Don, I think this really underscores the importance of doing this, not just one year at a time but year over year so that you can really do the good science to understand the real trends and differentiate between a weather event and real changes. But it's really interesting.

FLATOW: I want to thank both of you for taking time to be with us today. Dr. Gary Langham is chief scientist for the National Audubon Society. Richard Crossley is birder, photographer, and author of "The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds." Thank you for joining us today.

LANGHAM: Thank you.

CROSSLEY: Thank you.

FLATOW: Have a happy holiday. Have a great holiday season. Merry Christmas, and if you're taking a long vacation, have a happy new year. We'll see you next week. I'm Ira Flatow in New York.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/12/23/144190099/birders-fan-out-to-count-feathered-friends?ft=1&f=1007

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