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2.077395 | 5.905438 | 18 | Looking for Strategies and Activities? Click Here! Information
Gap Activities Teachers are often searching for activities to
make their classroom more interactive; language teachers in
particular are also looking for activities that promote target
language use. Info Gap activities are excellent activities as
they force the students to ask each other questions; these
activities help make the language classroom experience more
meaningful and authentic. This section will explain in more
detail what Info Gap activities are and why they are useful; it
will also give some examples of Info Gap activities for any
language classroom. An Info Gap activity takes place between
students, not between a student and a teacher, though a teacher
can certainly demonstrate the activity. The two students will be
asking each other questions to which they don’t know the answer;
these questions are called referential questions. The goal of
the activity is for the students to discover certain
information, whether about the other pers |
-1.301817 | 2.508479 | 81 | Meeting of rabbis held Aug. 20 and 21, 1844, at the town of
Paks, Hungary. The discussions in the Hungarian Parliament
concerning the emancipation of the Jews produced in Hungary, as
elsewhere in Europe, a demand for the reform of both dogma and
ritual, in order that Jews might be drawn more closely toward
their Christian fellow citizens. One of the principal demands
was the establishment of a rabbinical seminary. To anticipate
such an attempt, Paul (Feiwel) Horwitz, rabbi of Papa, planned a
rabbinical conference which should establish a hierarchical
constitution for the Hungarian congregations. Horwitz, who had
mastered the Hungarian language thoroughly—a very rare thing
among Orthodox rabbis in those days—wished to protect Orthodox
Judaism against changes that might be decreed by the government
or that might be introduced by individual congregations desirous
of gaining the good-will of the government. He therefore
addressed himself first to the Orthodox authorities, without
neglecting the liberal partizans. |
9.193258 | 3.198637 | -1 | In the summer of 1966 the Beach Boys and the Beatles topped the
popular music charts, the nowclassic television show Star Trek
first aired, and a young physician-scientist by the name of
George Lipkin filed for an National Cancer Institute grant to
study melanoma. He held the belief that melanoma could actually
be a reversible disease. This was considered quite a radical
idea at that time and Dr. Lipkin had never received his own
grant before. Nevertheless, the grant was awarded and a lifelong
pursuit was underway. This work became the foundation of Biomega
Laboratories, Inc. (“Biomega”), a company devoted to development
of a substance that might just make that original idea a
reality. Not a lot was known at that time about the biological
characteristics that distinguished cancer from normal cells. Dr.
Lipkin began by transfecting hamster melanoma cells (melanoma is
malignancy in thepigment producing cells of the skin) with DNA
or RNA from blue nevi. Blue nevi are heavily pigmented, benign
cells that most peo |
10.641131 | 2.45126 | -1 | Some Suggestions that May Help You: Herpes simplex virus, or
HSV, is an extremely common viral infection. There are two
herpes simplex viruses: Type I is more often associated with the
common cold sore in and around the mouth. Type II is associated
with genital herpes transmitted by sexual contact, producing
sores in the cervical and vaginal area and on the penis. - Flu-
like symptoms, including swollen glands, headache, muscle aches,
or fever. - Red and sensitive skin - Small red bumps, which may
develop into blisters or painful sores. - Small, thin-wall
blisters filled with clear liquid. These blisters rupture,
leaving shallow, painful sores which gradually form a scab and
heal, usually in a 2 or 3 week period. - Pain when urinating. -
Swollen lymph nodes in groin area. Symptoms of herpes usually
develop within 1 to 2 days after contact with the virus,
although some people develop symptoms several months later.
Although there is not yet a cure for herpes, appropriate
treatment is effective in helping to cont |
3.994819 | 8.631503 | 60 | SSL shorts for Secure Sockets Layer, a protocol developed by
Netscape for transmitting private documents via the Internet.
SSL works by using a public key to encrypt data that's
transferred over the SSL connection. Both Netscape Navigator and
Internet Explorer support SSL, and many Web sites use the
protocol to obtain confidential user information, such as credit
card numbers. By convention, URLs that require an SSL connection
start with "https" instead of "http". Another protocol for
transmitting data securely over the World Wide Web is Secure
HTTP (S-HTTP). Whereas SSL creates a secure connection between a
client and a server, over which any amount of data can be sent
securely, S-HTTP is designed to transmit individual messages
securely. SSL and S-HTTP, therefore, can be seen as
complementary rather than competing technologies. Both protocols
have been approved by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
as a standard. Digital certificates encrypt data using Secure
Sockets Layer (SSL) technology, the indu |
0.287136 | 5.304788 | -1 | American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth
Edition - n. A game played with a pile of straws or thin sticks,
with the players attempting in turn to remove a single stick
without disturbing the others. - n. One of the straws or sticks
used in this game. Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia - n. A
figure or effigy of a man made of straw; hence, a man without
any substance or means; a dependent. Also jack of straw. - n.
One of a set of straws or strips of ivory, wood, bone, or the
like, used in a children's game. The jack straws are thrown
confusedly together on a table, and are to be gathered up singly
by the hand, sometimes with the aid of a hooked Instrument,
without joggling or disturbing the rest of the pile. - n. plural
The game thus played. - n. [capitalized] In English history, a
name assumed by rick-burners and destroyers of machines during
the early years of the nineteenth century. - n. The whitethroat,
Sylvia cinerea, also called winnell-straw, from the straw used
in making its nest. Se |
-0.800141 | 2.155195 | -1 | Primary Documents - President Friedrich Ebert's Address to the
German Assembly, 7 February 1919 Following the German revolution
in November 1918 - which saw the forced abdication of Kaiser
Wilhelm II - a fresh constitution was drawn up and a new
assembly established; the latter first met on 6 February 1919.
Reproduced below is new President Friedrich Ebert's opening
address to the assembly on 7 February 1919. Click here to read
an extract from a follow-up address by President Ebert four days
later. Click here to read British journalist George Saunders'
summary of the compilation of the new constitution and its
implications. Click here to read former military leader Erich
Ludendorff's condemnation of the new government, in which he
first expounded his widely aired belief that the army had been
effectively 'stabbed in the back' by subversive political forces
rather than beaten in the field. President Ebert's Address to
the Opening Session of the German Assembly, 7 February 1919 The
Imperial Government welcomes |
0.036681 | 2.343331 | -1 | This is for Lesemann who wanted some information about the woman
who participated in the Am. Revolutionary War. One important
role that women played, but is often left out is their role as
"campfollower." In armies before 1800, women "camp followers"
played a crucial role doing all the supply work for the army. In
other words, the women "on ration" (they were paid by the army)
had to find food, clothing, medicine, other supplies the
soldiers needed from the towns where the army was staying. In
the modern army, 90% of the men in the army are doing this kind
of supply work. Generals like Washington knew that the army with
the greatest number of women campfollowers would win the war.
Washington was handicapped: the Congress did not give him enough
money to hire women as campfollowers. General Burgoine on the
British side had something like 7000 women in his army and
Washington had only 2000 or 3000. Needless to say, Burgoine felt
overwhelmingly self-confidant. The women campfollowers were not
all tramps. Only a |
7.33589 | 2.311669 | -1 | Sugar-free drinks which have had low-calorie sweeteners added to
them could help in obesity treatment, according to a new study.
Undertaken by staff at the Center for Public Health Nutrition at
the University of Washington, found that the drinks increased
dietary restraint, which is one of the key factors that help
people when they are trying to lose or maintain weight. Dr
Drewnowski, director at the facility, which was founded in 2002
which was founded in 2002 to combat health issues such as
obesity, pointed out that it was important that people realised
that it would need to be used in addition to other "tools" such
as exercise and portion control. "Low-calorie sweeteners and
reduced-calorie products are not magic bullets, which means
using these products will not result in automatic weight loss,"
he said. The researchers involved in the study also recommended
reducing fat intake and consuming fat- and sugar-modified foods
as aids to maintaining weight loss. The Center for Public Health
Nutrition was founde |
10.013245 | 0.798242 | 0 | It all started with the flu. In 2008, we found that the activity
of certain search terms are good indicators of actual flu
activity. Based on this finding, we launched Google Flu Trends
to provide timely estimates of flu activity in 28 countries.
Since then, we’ve seen a number of other researchers—including
our very own—use search activity data to estimate other real
world activities. However, tools that provide access to search
data, such as Google Trends or Google Insights for Search,
weren’t designed with this type of research in mind. Those
systems allow you to enter a search term and see the trend; but
researchers told us they want to enter the trend of some real
world activity and see which search terms best match that trend.
In other words, they wanted a system that was like Google Trends
but in reverse. This is now possible with Google Correlate,
which we’re launching today on Google Labs. Using Correlate, you
can upload your own data series and see a list of search terms
whose popularity best corres |
-1.406686 | 3.423601 | 1 | Everybody knows the most famous vacation destination in Europe.
But Rimini, or better ancient Ariminum, is also a city of art
with over 22 centuries of history. Rimini is a Roman city and
certainly not just any old city, but one of the most important
of ancient Rome. The official date of its founding is 268 BC
when the Senate of Rome sent 6000 colonists to establish a new
settlement there which took the name of the river Marecchia
(Ariminus). In the beginning it was a strategic settlement. Then
(90 BC) it became a “municipium”, and finally a blossoming city
of the Roman empire, with a grand forum (piazza Tre Martiri),
two central streets - the cardo maximus (via Garibaldi and IV
Novembre) and the decumanus maximus (corso d’Augusto) – and
triumphal monuments: the Tiberus Bridge and Augustus’s Arch. And
let’s not forget a rarity: the Surgeon’s Domus, a unique medical
clinic from the ancient Roman world, miraculously still intact
in 2011 AD. Among the great works decided upon by the Senate of
Rome, there are the |
3.71408 | -0.994233 | -1 | Chesapeake Bay and Global Warming - Upper Tidewater Region The
extensive tidal swamp, brackish marsh, and tidal flat habitats
of the Upper Tidewater Region could undergo major shifts due to
global warming. If sea level rises 27.2 inches this century, the
region would face: - 30 percent decline in tidal swamp - 85
percent decline in the area of brackish marsh - 76 percent
decline in tidal flats - Plum Tree Island National Wildlife
Refuge, home to many species of migratory waterfowl, largely
disappears. At the same time, that amount of sea-level rise is
projected to cause a 33 percent expansion of freshwater swamp
area, which includes both forested and scrub-shrub habitat, with
notable expansion into the undeveloped dry land along Mobjack
Bay. Overall, the area of undeveloped dry land across this site
declines by 17 percent, or 45,611 acres. For more in-depth
information about how the Chesapeake Bay is being impacted by
global warming, check out the following reports: Sea-Level Rise
and Coastal Habitats of the |
0.660655 | 3.786177 | -1 | I remember sitting in high school history class, learning about
our founding fathers and being in awe of what they were able to
accomplish. I also remember thinking, “What did women do?” There
were so few profiles and I was curious to know more. Thus began
my quest to find female heroes—in and out of history books. That
was over forty years ago, since then I have “met” many inspiring
women—Rachel Carson, Francis Moore Lappé, Jill Ker Conway just
to mention a few. Then, several years ago, I was introduced to a
remarkable woman from my community. This month, Women's History
Month, is a particularly appropriate time to take a look at this
local woman's significant and ongoing contribution. Allow me to
introduce you to Marion Stoddart. In the 1960s, Marion
spearheaded the environmental clean-up of the dying Nashua
River. The short form of Marion’s story focuses on the tasks she
directed to save one of the world’s most polluted waterways. The
larger picture unfolds to reveal a woman who overcame gender
roles of th |
3.62409 | 7.056798 | 41 | Video Clips of Augmented Reality System in Operation The links
below are to files showing the Augmented Reality system in
operation. These are in MPEG format acquired at a frame rate of
15 frames/second. One note about the videos available here. Our
method relies on tracking features in the scene and using those
features to create an affine coordinate system in which the
virtual objects are represented. These clips are from two
implementations of the system. One used the corners of two black
rectangles as the tracked feature points. The second
implementation used green colored markers. If there are green
markers in the image you are looking at the operation of the
second implementation. There still are high-contrast rectangular
areas in the images but those were not used as - Overall view 1
(640 kbytes), Overall view 2 (954 kbytes) - This shows the
overall view of the augmented reality system. There is the frame
with the two black rectangles that is used to define the affine
reference frame. The monitor shows |
-0.125404 | 0.748599 | 2 | Last Updated on Tuesday, 03 April 2012 13:12 On April 10, 1912
the RMS Titanic set sail from Southampton, England for New York
City. Four days in to crossing the North Atlantic, with 2,228
passengers and crew on board, the Titanic hit an iceberg and
sank 12,415 feet to the ocean floor. This year marks the 100th
anniversary for the maiden (and last) voyage of the glorious
vessel. The tragic event, with only 710 survivors, has spawned
countless fiction, nonfiction and even parody retellings. Here
are a few new titles, for all ages, available from your hometown
libraries on this amazing vessel and tale. The Band that Played
On: the Extraordinary Story of the 8 Musicians Who Went Down
With the Titanic by Steve Turner Call Number: 910.452 TU Adult
Nonfiction Collection The movies, the documentaries, the museum
exhibits. They often tell the same story about the "unsinkable"
Titanic, her wealthy passengers, the families torn apart, and
the unthinkable end. But never before has "that glorious
band"-the group of eight |
5.368791 | -2.004346 | 3 | HedgehogsBy Craig Sernotti Hedgehogs have only become part of
the pet trade within the last 20 years or so. Fascinating,
curious, and downright adorable, this exotic small animal makes
a great pet for the right person. Hedgehogs are nocturnal and so
are active at night; however, some species are active during the
day. They are naturally shy and nervous because they are hunted
as prey in the wild. Males should be kept singly—if you want to
keep a pair, stick with females only. Depending on the species,
if taken care of properly, hedgehogs can live for up to ten
years in captivity. Hedgehogs are considered an exotic pet, so
keeping one may not be legal in your state. Check with your
local government to see if you are allowed to keep one before
purchasing this animal. What About Those Quills?Hedgehogs are
covered with spines, not quills—a porcupine has quills. The
quills serve as a defense mechanism—if a hedgehog feels
threatened, he will roll up into a ball. What animal would want
to eat a ball of prickly spine |
-2.526326 | 2.306331 | 4 | Science Fair Project Encyclopedia It was most celebrated when it
was the capital of the Mughal sovereigns (1526 to 1658). Many
splendid buildings of that time are still there to be seen,
among them the fortress built by Akbar, within the walls of
which are the palace of Shah Jahan and the Pearl Mosque. Still
more noted is the Taj Mahal, built by Shah Jahan as a tomb for
himself and his wife. The contents of this article is licensed
from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details |
6.568042 | 2.509743 | -1 | <microbiology> One of the two major classes of prokaryotic
organism (the other being the Cyanobacteria). Bacteria are small
(linear dimensions of around 1 m), noncompartmentalised, with
circular DNA and ribosomes of 70S. Protein synthesis differs
from that of eukaryotes and many antibacterial antibiotics
interfere with protein synthesis, but do not affect the infected
host. Recently bacteria have been subdivided into Eubacteria and
Archaebacteria, although some would consider the Archaebacteria
to be a third kingdom, distinct from both Eubacteria and
Eukaryotes. The Eubacteria can be further subdivided on the
basis of their staining using Gram stain. Since the difference
between gram-positive and gram-negative depends upon a
fundamental difference in cell wall structure it is therefore
more soundly based than classification on gross morphology alone
(into cocci, bacilli, etc.). (02 Jan 1998) |Bookmark with:||word
visualiser||Go and visit our forums| |
7.067338 | -1.875095 | 5 | Last Updated: 8:46 AM, December 27, 2009 Posted: 3:24 AM,
December 27, 2009 When Dave Hackenberg jerked the lids off his
hives one bright November morning in Florida in 2006 and found
them empty, the stunned commercial beekeeper never thought that
four years later his bees and millions more across the United
State would still be mysteriously missing. Yet the man credited
with discovering colony collapse disorder, a strange phenomenon
in which workers bees suddenly desert the hive — that has wiped
out more than a third of all honeybees in the US — says this
winter could be the worst yet. “It’s got bad real fast,” he said
last week. “We had around 3,000 hives at the end of the summer,
but they started shrinking early, so when we came to truck them
to Florida there was only 2,000 of them left.” Pennsylvanian-
based Hackenberg, whose family-run apiaries provide pollination
services for farmers all over the country, moves his hives to
warmer climes before Thanksgiving each year to get them strong
and healthy for th |
5.362711 | -2.41129 | 3 | Family: Scolopacidae, Sandpipers view all from this family
Description ADULT Looks pale buffy orange overall, darkest on
back and wings. In summer plumage, close inspection reveals
intricate dark marbling on back and upper wings and subtle
barring on underparts. Bill is mostly pink with a dark tip. Legs
are dark and relatively long. In winter, plumage looks paler
overall and less colorful, with much less intense barring on
underparts; pink on bill is more extensive. JUVENILE Similar to
winter adult. Dimensions Length: 18" (46 cm) Habitat Fairly
common, breeding in wet grassland and marshes, mostly in the
northern Great Plains. Winters on coasts, mainly south of our
region, but reasonable numbers remain on Gulf coast (mainly
Texas) and Atlantic coast (mainly Florida to North Carolina);
favors mudflats, estuaries, and sandy beaches. Common during
migration along suitable areas of coastline. Observation Tips
Easiest to see in spring and fall on coasts. Range Southeast,
California, Texas, Northwest, Florida, Alas |
3.581669 | 1.336549 | -1 | Single-car drivers commuting in fossil-fuel burning cars, smog,
pollution, crime -- what other urban scourges can you think of?
Half of the world's population currently lives in urban areas;
yet these urban areas make up only 2 percent of the world's land
and spend three-quarters of the world's resources [source: MIT].
That's a lot of people in a very small space consuming a great
deal. Between now and the year 2050, urban growth will only
continue to rise: 89 million homes and 190 billion square feet
(about 17.5 billion square meters) of retail and other
nonresidential space will be built in the United States alone
[source: National Resources Defense Council]. And in conjunction
with that density, pollution is soaring. London, for instance,
released about 45 million tons (about 41 million metric tons) of
carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere last year
[source: IEEE]. By greening cities and neighborhoods around the
world, we have the opportunity to make a positive impact on
global warming. How |
-0.28722 | 4.847398 | 6 | MIT professor’s book digs into the eclectic, textually linked
reading choices of people in medieval London. Was it
coincidence? An era dubbed "the time of silence" -- the years
between 1642 and 1660 in England when Puritan rulers shuttered
theaters -- was also a period of intense interest in
experimental science. Three years ago, MIT students began to
take an in-depth look at this period during a drama, science and
performance seminar taught by professors Janet Sonenberg and
Diana Henderson. Research and other material developed by
students have served as the basis for an unusual play,
premiering Nov. 12 in London, that examines themes of science,
philosophy, creativity and family relations. The Royal
Shakespeare Company's production of "The Tragedy of Thomas
Hobbes," written by Adriano Shaplin and directed by Elizabeth
Freestone, will run through Dec. 6 at Wilton's Music Hall in
what Sonenberg characterizes as a "wild and daring enterprise"
that overturns preconceived notion of what a "science play" is
all a |
2.804747 | 4.394892 | -1 | What’s social work all about? Social work is about people.
People we see every day and people we may never ordinarily come
into contact with. Social workers work to form relationships
with these people. They recognise their problems and assist them
in trying to find ways to overcome any difficulties. As a social
worker, you’ll have a positive impact on the lives of others, as
well as your own. You’ll find that two days are rarely the same,
and every decision you make will affect the individual, their
local community and their society’s well being. Social work as a
career There are excellent career opportunities within the
profession, and it’s a job that really can be ‘for life’. Being
a social worker involves great mental challenges and emotional
rewards. As for the financial rewards, starting salaries can
range from £19,000 to £26,000, with many chances to develop,
diversify and specialise as your career progresses. |
5.033852 | -1.984685 | 121 | William West / AFP - Getty Images Melbourne Zoo's newest primate
baby, a three week-old Colobus monkey, is held in the arms of
her mother Clover, in Melbourne on June 29, 2011. Keepers have
not been able to determine the sex of the newborn monkey which
is pure white and won't display any black markings until it's
several months old. Black and White Colobus Monkeys, native to
Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi,
Tanzania and Kenya, have seen their populations suffer from the
fur trade during colonial times, but now the greatest threats to
their survival are the loss of their habitat and the bushmeat
trade, the large-scale hunting to supply meat to towns and
cities. See more great animal pictures in our Animal Tracks
slideshow. |
10.590858 | 1.835591 | 7 | AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome) Acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is an illness that weakens the
body's immune system. The immune systems of people with AIDS are
not able to fight off certain infections and cancers. More
Living With HIV/AIDS Improved medications have helped many
people with HIV live longer, but treating older adults with HIV
presents some unique challenges. Discusses the possibility of
pregnancy when one or both of the prospective parents is HIV-
positive. Dementia is a brain disorder characterized by a
general loss of intellectual abilities involving impairment of
memory, judgment, and abstract thinking as well as changes in
personality. Discusses the best condoms for preventing the
transmission of HIV and tips on using condoms effectively.
Discusses choosing accurate HIV home test kits and the pros and
cons of home testing. |
2.431748 | 8.225369 | -1 | A dice rolling program is only as good as the worst of: - the
random number return to die-sides algorithm - the pseudo-random
seed generator Most are close enough to be better than dice.
Since computers can not generate truly random numbers, no die
roller is truly random. The pseudorandom numbers, however can be
sufficiently random enough to be more random than real dice. A
recent study found that most commercial d6 are biased
significantly. The study had some flaws, but generally showed a
bias for low numbers on most commercially produced d6's. (In one
company's run, almost to the point of 1's being 2/7 of 1d6
rolls!) No individual batch tested showed a truly even
distribution. Some technical details... There are two methods of
random number return used in programming: - A fractional return
on a float or double-float (double). EG: 0.348826495 - A whole
number return on an int or double-int (long). eg: 25565 given a
fractional, the norm is to multiply the sides by the returned
fraction, giving a fractional nu |
4.075239 | -0.13229 | -1 | Clean CANAL Water is the proposal entry by Margot Krasojevic for
the Competition Amsterdam footbridge 2012. Water management is
still the most important function of Amsterdam canals. Without
them, the city would drown. Circulating the water is also vital
for sanitary reasons. In the days when windmills had to do the
job, the stench of the water could become unbearable in periods
with little wind or rain. Three times a week, 14 of the 16
existing waterlocks around the city close up, so clean water can
be pumped in from the big lake IJsselmeer. The current that is
created pushes the dirty canal water out through the open locks
on the other side of the city. Specialized cleaning boats with
big scoops and nets patrol frequently clean surface debris.
Since 2005, all the houseboats in the city are connected to the
sewer system. The cleaner water has attracted 20 different
species of fish and crab that live a healthy life below the
surface. Water birds like herons, ducks, coots, gulls and
cormorants also feed and li |
-2.062945 | 3.511464 | -1 | DARDANELLES or CHANAK-KALESSI: Name of the two cities situated
opposite each other on the shores of the strait at the entrance
to the Sea of Marmora. The European city is inhabited
byMohammedans exclusively; the Asiatic city contains
Mohammedans, Greeks, Armenians, Europeans, and Jews The Jewish
community dates from the year 1510 according to local traditions
which report that the Portuguese rabbi Jacob Ben-Ḥabib, the
author of "'En Ya'aḳob," after emigrating from Portugal,
established himself at Salonica, and afterward led a colony of
twenty Jewish families from Gallipoli to Dardanelles. The old
epitaphs in the cemetery of the city are illegible. The
community is not mentioned until the middle of the seventeenth
century, when the false Messiah Shabbethai Ẓebi was imprisoned
by Sultan Mohammed IV. in the castle of Abydos in the vicinity
of the Dardanelles. The Jewish population of this city, as well
as of all the places along the Sea of Marmora, made a pilgrimage
to the pseudo-Messiah (1664). Dardanelles is t |
3.022776 | 5.575058 | 163 | Below you can watch the interview of introduction done a few
days ago with my wonderful friend Greta in Argentina. I loved
talking to Greta, but I think that in the self-consciousness of
being video-interviewed, I missed sharing some ideas about what
I hope to discuss in my brief 30 minute presentation! In any
case, here are 10 points I hope to address in next week's
interactive discussion in Elluminate. I hope you will join me! -
Positive emotions "broaden and build" our capacity to think. For
more information, check out one of my favorite researchers, Dr.
Barbara Fredrickson, author of Positivity. - We can teach our
students the value of positive thought patterns and how to
control the downhill slide that happens when stress or anger
short circuit our thinking. - Routines and classroom rituals can
be mindfully designed to elicit more positive experiences which
make school a place kids want to go. - Celebrating mistakes,
through modeling and discussion, can go a long way in reducing
fear and encouraging stud |
5.446476 | -1.862529 | 3 | Species Description: Prairie dogs occur only in North America.
They are rodents within the squirrel family and include five
species-- the black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus),
the white-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys leucurus), the Gunnison
prairie dog (Cynomys gunnisoni), the Utah prairie dog (Cynomys
parvidens), and the Mexican prairie dog (Cynomys mexicanus)
(Pizzimenti 1975). The Utah and Mexican prairie dogs are
currently listed under the Endangered Species Act as threatened
(49 FR 22339) and endangered (35 FR 8495) respectively.
Generally, the black-tailed prairie dog occurs east of the other
four species in more mesic habitat. Prairie dogs are small,
stout ground squirrels. The total length of an adult black-
tailed prairie dog is approximately 14-17 inches. The weight of
an individual ranges from 1 to 3 pounds. Individual appearances
within the species vary in mixed colors of brown, black, gray,
and white. The black-tipped tail is characteristic (Hoogland
1995). Black-tailed prairie dogs are di |
5.975947 | 1.395678 | -1 | Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) No
Advisories - program content screened and verified. Scientists
at Silent Spring Institute have found that flame retardants in
common household products like upholstered furniture, textiles,
and electronics migrate into household dust, and from there,
into our bodies. The Chicago Tribune has reported that the
average American is born with the highest recorded levels of
flame retardants among infants in the world. The chemicals are
linked to cancer, changes in DNA, hormone disruption, lowered
IQ, decreased fertility, and hyperactivity. Such links are
denied by the chemical industry, which has lobbied for years to
get these chemicals into consumer products, backed by the
tobacco industry, which promoted the flame retardants to avoid
making cigarettes without accelerants. The Silent Spring study
was published on November 28th in the journal Environmental
Science & Technology. With Ruthann Rudel, senior scientist of
environmental toxicology and director of re |
3.172811 | 6.459233 | -1 | Stephanie Ludi and Tom Reichlmayr, software engineering
professors at the Rochester Institute of Technology , are
working to increase the participation of people with visual
impairments in computing fields. The ImagineIT summer workshop,
funded by Computer & Information Science & Engineering (CISE)
of the National Science Foundation , is designed for middle and
high school students (in grades 7 through 12) who have visual
impairments and would like to learn more about computing through
hands-on experiences. Participants learn about the wide variety
of career fields within computing and explore how computing is
applied in the real world. The ImagineIT workshop is divided
into three main modules: Robotics, Networking & Computer
Hardware, and Game Design. - In the Robotics module, students
learn about computer programming and design through Lego
Mindstorms. Student teams use screen readers and magnification
software, alongside accessible design manipulatives, to solve a
problem involving searching using touch |
-0.39018 | 2.205921 | -1 | The European flag consists of 12 golden stars in a circle on a
blue background. The stars symbolise the ideals of unity,
solidarity and harmony among the peoples of Europe. The number
of stars has nothing to do with the number of member countries,
though the circle is a symbol of unity. History of the European
flag The history of the flag goes back to 1955. The Council of
Europe - defending human rights and promoting European culture –
adopted the present design for its own use. Over the following
years the Council of Europe encouraged the emerging European
institutions to adopt the flag as well. In 1983, the European
Parliament adopted the flag. In 1985, it was adopted by all EU
leaders as the official emblem of the European Union (called the
European Communities at the time). All European institutions now
use an emblem of their own. |
3.350665 | 6.240145 | -1 | Video games are an exciting and interdisciplinary field of
study. Depending on your focus, your research may cover a
variety of disciplines. If you are interested in game
development, you may focus on Computer Science resources. If you
are looking at video games in their cultural context you might
use Communication or English resources. If you are looking at
gaming as a teaching tool you might look at Education resources.
Finding Video Games @ your library To find video games in the
catalog, you can search for ‘video games’ and then refine the
search using the option ‘computer file’ |
7.154375 | 6.507785 | 8 | Do you have a Enter your contact details to get access to a
guide that identifies common sleep disorders and shows how to
get a restful night's sleep. * Denotes a required field Sleep
and Health for You and Your Family - What’s the link between
unhealthy sleep and diabetes? - New Study Finds Late Night
Electronics Increase Insomnia in Children and Teens -
Understanding FMCSA Guidelines for Sleep Apnea - FusionSleep’s
Dr. Durmer Discusses the Dangers of Sleep Disorders on Healthy
Explosion BlogTalkRadio - Care Manager Talks Sleep Apnea Care on
Extreme Truckers Show Fusion Health Newsroom Sleep4Safety is
powered by FusionHealth Trouble sleeping and daytime sleepiness
may indicate poor sleep hygiene and/or an underlying sleep
disorder. To maximize the restorative powers of sleep and to
make falling asleep easier, good sleep habits help immensely.
The following suggestions can help both people with sleep
disorders and their families: - Wake at the same time every day,
regardless of when you go to sleep. - Maintai |
3.80457 | 0.947506 | 9 | It looks like the radical environmental left may have to find a
new favorite dirty four letter word. Scientists at Ohio State
University have announced the discovery of a new process that
takes the energy from coal without burning it – "and removes
virtually all of the pollution." The technology, known as Coal-
Direct Chemical Looping (CCDL), captures more than 99 percent of
coal's carbon dioxide emissions based on laboratory research.
The team of scientists led by Liang-Shih Fan, professor of
chemical engineering and director of the Clean Coal Research
Laboratory at Ohio State University, has been working on this
and other clean coal technologies for 15 years with funding by
the Department of Energy. Almost as amazing as the discovery
itself, Prof. Fan's research project has survived three
different Presidential Administrations with vastly different
energy policies. Carbon-dioxide has long been targeted by global
warming alarmists. According to the EPA, coal-fired power plants
produced about one-third of the |
0.363457 | 2.230821 | -1 | |From the Library of Congress G3764.B6S3 1775 .D4| This was just
a teeny skirmish during the American Revolution, but I love it
because the marsh and the island where it happened belonged to
some of my ancestors, and some of the people involved are right
out of my family tree. As I tell the tale of the Battle of
Noddle’s Island (sometimes known as the Battle of Chelsea Creek,
or the Battle of Hog Island), I’ll point out the family ties.
Noddle’s Island is now where Boston’s Logan airport sits. The
land around it has been filled in, and it is no longer an
island. One of the first settlers to live here was Samuel
Maverick, and in the 1630s his house was located near Maverick
Square in East Boston, today. There is a “Maverick Station” on
the blue line of the T (the Massachusetts Bay Transportation
Authority (MBTA) subway) in this part of East Boston. Samuel
Maverick (b. about 1602) is the brother to my 10 x Great
Grandfather, Moses Maverick (1611- 1686). Chelsea Creek, Rumney
Marsh and Pullen Point, all land nea |
-1.764076 | 3.359407 | 161 | Archaeologists in Israel said they've discovered a footprint
from the sandal of a Roman soldier during an excavation of the
ancient city of Hippos. The print, made by a hobnailed sandal
called a caliga that was worn by Roman soldiers, was found in a
wall that surrounded the city by Arthur Segal from the Zinman
Institute of Archaeology at the University of Haifa in
conjunction with archaeologists from the Polish Academy of
Sciences and Concordia University in St. Paul, Minn. "This rare
footprint, which is complete and well preserved, hints at who
built the walls, how and when," said Michael Eisenberg of the
Zinman Institute. The ancient city of Hippos overlooking the Sea
of Galilee was destroyed by an earthquake in the year 749.
Excavations this year have uncovered the city's colonnaded
street, a marble-paneled bathhouse, a glass bottle with an
embossed face and part of a marble statue. Copyright 2007 by
United Press International Explore further: King Richard III
found in 'untidy lozenge-shaped grave' |
3.511511 | 0.710747 | 9 | Introduction to International Development International
development is a profession unlike any other. Although modern
international development has more than half a century of
history, the practice of development is constantly evolving and
the industry is currently in the midst of major changes that
have the potential to improve the lives of billions of people.
Development professionals are working in every country in the
world to address issues including human rights, health, economic
growth, environment conservation and many others. As a
profession, few career choices can match international
development for the sheer range of the industry, challenge of
the work or relevancy to the world’s population. In recent years
the need for coordinated and comprehensive sustainable
development has been center-stage in world politics due to
increasing awareness of both the issues and the consequences.
Development champions including academics such as Jeffrey Sachs,
businesspeople like Bill Gates, politicians and celebri |
5.347451 | 4.889013 | -1 | Aikido is a non-violent martial art. For many people outside
Aikido, it is a new and surprising idea that physical practice
with opponents is important in training yourself to receive
opponents peacefully. Aikido techniques go along with the flow
of the attack to control the attacker, ideally protecting the
attacker from harm and ending the confrontation as peacefully as
possible. In Aikido, we repeatedly make the mental and physical
adjustments necessary to replace fight-or-flight aggression and
fear with calmness, inner strength and compassion. Through
training, we gradually overcome the human body's aggressive
reflexes. Training makes a peaceful reaction our default
response in times of stress, conflict, or attack. "Peace is
relatively easy to reach when there's no pressure. But people
are facing more pressure today than ever, whether that takes the
form of financial strain, emotional stress or something else.
Aikido can help us adjust ourselves to harmonize with the world
around us, including the pressure |
4.168097 | 3.914814 | -1 | What are tachyons? Tachyons are hypothetical particles that can
only travel faster than the speed of light. As you probably
know, objects with a real number for mass can never travel at
the speed of light because of Einstein's theory of relativity.
As a consequence of this theory, as a objects velocity increases
its mass increases. As is it can be seen by the following
formula mass=rest_mass*1/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2). At the speed of light
the mass becomes infinite. So, it would take an infinite amount
of energy for a massive particle to reach the speed of light.
These objects are sometimes called tardyons. Photons can travel
at the speed of light because they have no mass and their energy
is E=planck's constant * nu(frequency of the photon). In order
for something to travel at the speed of light it would have to
have an imaginary number for its mass. An imaginary number is a
number that is a multiple of the square root of a negative
number. As a particle travels faster than the speed of light the
denominator of mass |
5.916559 | 6.117948 | -1 | Ped Med: The many faces of autism SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 19 (UPI)
-- Although all show some degree of difficulty in socializing,
communicating and imagining, like snowflakes, no two cases of
autism are exactly alike, researchers say. Their newfound
recognition of the condition's diverse complexity and multi-
faceted nature carries over to the research field, where the
seekers of causes and cures are starting to look for ways to
subdivide the disorder and crack its armor of secrecy piece by
piece. "The analogy that I find most helpful is to childhood
leukemia," said Dr. Judith Miles, professor of pediatrics,
Thompson Endowed Chair of Child Health and Pathology and
director of the Medical Genetics Division at the University of
Missouri-Columbia. "When I went to medical school, we thought it
was one disorder, and only 5 percent of kids survived. Over the
past 25 years, we realized it's a class of disorders. By
separating the different types and learning how to treat each
appropriately, we were able to make progress |
9.14801 | 5.571602 | 21 | deltoideus muscleArticle Free Pass deltoideus muscle, large,
triangular muscle that covers the shoulder and serves mainly to
raise the arm laterally. The deltoid, as it is commonly known,
originates on the outer front third of the clavicle (collarbone)
and the lower margin of the spine of the scapula (shoulder
blade). Its fibres unite to form a thick tendon that inserts at
the deltoid tuberosity, a rough spot above the middle of the
outer surface of the humerus (upper arm bone). What made you
want to look up "deltoideus muscle"? Please share what surprised
you most... |
-0.83791 | -2.26418 | 10 | Greenhouse Effect Could Extend Habitable Zone Planets near their
suns reap the benefits of light and heat, while those further
away must endure colder temperatures. But the new research
indicates that planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres could
contain liquid at their surface even out to fifteen times the
distance between the Earth and the Sun. With a hydrogen
atmosphere, the greenhouse effect these planets could experience
would be sufficient to allow for liquid water on their surfaces,
despite their distant orbits. The area around a star in which
water can be liquid rather than ice is known as the habitable
zone. Sometimes called the "Goldilocks zone," it's just right -
not too hot (so the water doesn't evaporate) and not too cold
(so it won’t freeze). Typically, the distance calculated takes
into account a rocky body having an atmosphere made up of water
and carbon dioxide, the same greenhouse gases found on Earth.
"This is the kind of planet we know is habitable," explains
Raymond Pierrehumbert of the Un |
1.515423 | 7.348203 | 44 | If two lines are intersected by a transversal, then alternate
interior angles, alternate exterior angles, and corresponding
angles are congruent. The converse of the theorem is true as
well. If two corresponding angles are congruent, then the two
lines cut by the transversal must be parallel. Similarly, if two
alternate interior or alternate exterior angles are congruent,
the lines are parallel. So the question is, if we have two lines
that might be parallel and they're intersected by a transversal,
can we do the converse of the parallel lines theorem? Which
says, if we have alternate interior angles or alternate exterior
angles, or corresponding angles that are congruent, is that
enough to say that these two lines are parallel? And as we read
right here, yes it is. If two lines and a transversal form
alternate interior angles, notice I abbreviated it, so if these
alternate interior angles are congruent, that is enough to say
that these two lines must be parallel. If you have alternate
exterior angles. That i |
4.912931 | 1.013695 | -1 | The seeds of green energy - expanding the contribution of plant
oils as biofuels Plant oils represent one of the most energy
rich sources of renewable fuels available in Nature. Most of
these oils occur in the form of triacylglycerols (TAGs) that can
be transformed into biodiesel by conversion of their acyl chains
into fatty acid methyl esters. In 2009, 14 billion litres of
biodiesel were produced worldwide from plant oils (largely in
the EU). This compares with 70 billion litres of ethanol
(largely from Brazil and the USA). Both of these fuels now
depend on land and crops (e.g. oil seeds, palm trees, maize and
sugar cane) that are also used for foods. To meet growing demand
and avoid competition with food, major expansion of biofuel
production and development of new sources of biofuel are
required. In this article, we outline how plants synthesize oils
and describe some ways in which supplies of oils from plants
could be increased to provide a larger contribution to renewable
energy supplies. Ohlrogge JB & C |
0.108193 | 2.911302 | -1 | © Duane A. Cline 1999 Click here to return to the Main Page of
The Pilgrims & Plymouth Colony:1620 Upper Level Compact Study of
the Mayflower Compact THIS DOCUMENT STANDS AS A CORNERSTONE OF
OUR GREAT AMERICAN FORM OF DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT Upper Level
Compact Study of the Mayflower Compact THIS DOCUMENT STANDS AS A
CORNERSTONE OF OUR GREAT AMERICAN FORM OF DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
The Virginia Company of London had given the Pilgrims the first
Pierce patent, granting them permission to settle in the
Virginia's. The Mayflower, carrying the patent, set out from
Plymouth, England, on September 6, 1620. Arriving on the bleak
New England coast in the middle of winter, this sturdy little
band of idealists faced a combination of hardships and
difficulties almost unparalleled in history. Winter was coming
on and the land off which Mayflower anchored looked desolate and
dreary. Weakened by a stormy voyage of more than two months,
lack of proper food, medical supplies and all the ordinary
necessities of civilization, the |
2.58006 | 5.521883 | 39 | Methods | Statistics | Clinical | Educational | Industrial |
Professional items | World psychology | Reliability does not
imply validity. That is, a reliable measure is measuring
something consistently, but not necessarily what it is supposed
to be measuring. For example, while there are many reliable
tests of specific abilities, not all of them would be valid for
predicting, say, job performance. In terms of accuracy and
precision, reliability is precision, while validity is accuracy.
Reliability may be estimated through a variety of methods that
fall into two types: single-administration and multiple-
administration. Multiple-administration methods require that two
assessments are administered. - Test-retest reliability, is
estimated as the Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient
between two administrations of the same measure. This is
sometimes known as the coefficient of stability - Alternate
forms reliability is estimated by the Pearson product-moment
correlation coefficient of two different forms |
10.622281 | 1.733286 | 7 | National Institutes of Health on National Native HIV/AIDS
Awareness DayDate: March 13, 2009 Source: National Institutes of
Health (NIH) Author: National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases (NIAID) HIV/AIDS has left no segment of
American society untouched. On the third annual National Native
HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, we highlight the impact of this scourge
on American Indians, Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians, and we
intensify our commitment to fight the HIV/AIDS epidemic in these
multifaceted communities. Lack of access to basic health care
services, stigma associated with homosexuality and HIV/AIDS,
barriers to effective mental health care, and high rates of
substance abuse, sexually transmitted infections and poverty all
increase the risk of HIV/AIDS in native communities and create
obstacles to HIV prevention and treatment. Consequently, as a
proportion of their population, more American Indians and Alaska
Natives became infected with HIV than whites in 2006. American
Indians and Alaska Natives |
-0.035883 | -2.295896 | 11 | Grab your telescope. The asteroid known as Toutatis will make
its closest approach to Earth tonight. From Tuesday night to
Wednesday morning, the 3-mile long asteroid will be about 18
times the distance of the moon from the Earth. And if you miss
it Tuesday night, don't worry. The asteroid should be visible if
you have the right conditions, the right telescope and a good
star chart -- through the end of the week. Even at its closest
approach you won't be able to see Toutatis with the naked eye.
You'll need a small telescope. Of course, even if you find it,
it will still appear as a small point of light moving across the
night sky. To see what this asteroid really looks like, you'd
need something really, really big, such as the Goldstone Radar,
which looks like a whopping satellite dish 230 feet across.
Scientists who work at the Goldstone facility near Barstow have
been tracking Toutatis since Dec. 4 and posting images of the
asteroid on the Internet. The images are a little fuzzy, but
they give you a sense o |
2.633423 | 4.099431 | -1 | Page 2 of 5 The workings of a repayment loan or annuity are
actually easier to understand if we first consider the closely
related situation of a regular saving plan. In this case a
regular sum S (a payment denoted PMT in Excel's terminolgy) is
deposited each period and the total sum accumulated attracts
interest at I% (Rate in Excel) at the end of each period. It is
a convention that the money is deposited at the end of each
period and money that you pay out is negative. Thus after the
first period the balance is simply the first regular payment:
After the second period the amount is the first regular payment
plus the interest it has earned: =S*(1+I) + S After the third
period the amount is: =[S*(1+I)+S]*(1+I) + S and so on. You can
see that as each period passes the amount already on deposit is
increased by being multiplied by (1+I) and has S added to it. To
work out the Future Value of the savings plan after n periods
you could simply construct a spreadsheet that calculates the
repeated multiplication by ( |
2.517775 | -1.416684 | -1 | Sea Level Rise Won't Be a "Hollywood Cataclysm" for National
Geographic News |September 4, 2008| Sea levels will rise a bit
higher—but not catastrophically high—in the coming century,
according to a new study. The oceans will likely rise between
2.5 and 6.5 feet (0.8 and 2 meters) by 2100, researchers say.
This is not as high as the predictions from some scientists, who
have warned that sea levels may rise as much as 16 feet (5
meters) by 2100. Just because the amount of sea-level rise
predicted in the new study is "not a Hollywood cataclysm, it
doesn't mean it's not important," said study leader Tad Pfeffer
of the University of Colorado in Boulder.>> "A Real Outlier" As
greenhouse gases heat up the planet, the polar regions and high
elevations are warming the fastest. (Learn how the greenhouse
effect works.) That has caused glaciers, ice caps, and the vast
ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica to melt and break apart.
(See photos of Greenland's ice sheets crumbling.) In the new
study, Pfeffer and colleagues |
8.018725 | 1.306845 | -1 | Oral supplements containing extracts from green tea may help
protect against sunburn and the longer-term effects of UV
damage, says a new study from the UK. Skin levels of green tea
catechin compounds increased following oral supplementation for
12 weeks, and these increased levels were associated with
significantly lower levels of inflammatory markers when skin was
exposed to UV radiation, according to findings published in the
British Journal of Nutrition . “Our data provide the first
evidence that green tea catechins can be taken up into the skin
following oral intake in human subjects and indicate their
complex skin incorporation pattern,” wrote researchers from the
Universities of Manchester, Bradford, and Leeds. “Significant
reduction was found in the cutaneous UVR erythema dose–response,
with greatest effect at higher doses, and this reduced
inflammation may be attributable to the associated significant
abrogation of UVR up-regulation of the potent pro-inflammatory
12-LOX metabolite, 12-HETE.” The stud |
6.848099 | 0.434743 | -1 | The arracacha (Arracacia xanthorriza) is a garden root vegetable
originally from the Andes, somewhat intermediate between the
carrot and celery. Its starchy taproot is a popular food item in
South America, especially in Brazil where it is a major
commercial crop. The name arracacha (or racacha) was borrowed
into Spanish from Quechua, and is used in the Andean region. The
plant is also called apio criollo ("Creole celery") in
Venezuela, zanahoria blanca ("white carrot") in Ecuador, virraca
in Peru, and mandioquinha ("little cassava") or batata-baroa in
Brazil. It is sometimes called white carrot in English, but that
name properly belongs to white varieties of the common carrot.
The boiled root has about the same uses as boiled potatoes,
including side dishes, purées, dumplings and gnocchi, pastries,
etc., with the advantage of its flavor and (depending on the
variety) its intense color. In the Andes region it is made into
fried chips, biscuits, and coarse flour. Because it is highly
digestible (due to the smal |
0.785112 | 1.681754 | 12 | History of Welland - Summary of 3 Books written by W.H. Lewis
The City of Welland is located on the Welland Ship Canal, almost
midway between Lakes Ontario and Erie. It is served by the
Toronto, Hamilton & Buffalo; Norfolk and Western; Canadian
National and Consolidated Rail Corporation Railroads. It also
has an excellent dockage facility of the Welland Canal. With
existing transportation facilities, together with availability
of electrical power, Welland is a manufacturing centre of note
with large iron and steel, textile, rubber and electrical
equipment industries. With miles of paved streets, fine business
section, parks and well-organized education facilities,
including the Niagara College of Applied Arts & Technology, its
advantages for the visitor are numerous and attractive. The City
of Welland is the outgrowth of a settlement which commenced
about the year 1788, when a scattering of farms between what we
now know as Quaker Road and South Pelham Street, along the
Welland River came to be. Near Welland' |
4.341408 | 6.781474 | -1 | Jan 30, 2008 Determining sound direction I've been playing a bit
more with datalogging (check out the fantastic tips from Brian
in the forums) and I've always wanted a robot that could come to
me when I called it. The sound sensor is great for 'detecting'
sound but no good for deciding where the sound came from. One
way to figure out where the sound is coming from is to use 2
sound sensors. So I built myself a little NXT head that had 2
sound sensors and a bit of foam in between. "Sure it's pretty" I
hear you say, but whats that foam in between the ears for? Well
I figure that if I had 2 ears, with some sort of dampening
material in between, the ears would hear the same sound source,
but at different volume levels. ie. If I clapped my hands very
loudly on the left hand side, then the left 'ear' would hear a
certain volume and the right 'ear' would also register a sound,
but at a much quieter level. So I set up my head and start
writing sound readings from both the left and right ears to a
text file as fast as |
0.303393 | 1.830557 | -1 | |William Loney RN - Background| |Home-Loney-Background-The Naval
Surgeon| The Royal Naval Hospital, Hong Kong Hong Kong was first
occupied by British forces in early 1841. In April of that year
the Navy erected matshed buildings - including store sheds and a
naval hospital - on the site that later became the Wellington
Barracks, but these were soon destroyed by the typhoon of 22
July. Minden, a third rate sailing ship, was then taken into use
as a hospital ship for Navy personnel. The island proved to be
very unhealthy, and between May and October 1843, fever killed
24 % of the troops and 10 % of the civilians there. In about
1846 Minden was replaced by Alligator, a sixth rate frigate
which had participated in the first Opium War, and in 1857 by
Melville, another third rate, which had been Rear-Admiral George
Elliot's flagship during the early part of the war. In 1850 the
medical staff consisted of a Surgeon and two Assistant Surgeons.
In 1856 a Deputy Medical Inspector of Hospitals and Fleets was
first appoi |
7.386776 | 2.261021 | -1 | By Jessica, Networx With school kicking into high gear, it’s
important to make sure students of all ages are on top of their
games. A good night’s sleep and regular exercise are vital for
keeping the mind focused and alert, but diet plays an important
role, too. If you or your kids are heading into the classroom
every day -- or if you just want to perform better at work or in
general -- incorporate these eight kid-friendly foods into your
daily diet rotation: Omega-3 fatty acids are important for
healthy brain function and memory. If you’ve ever read anything
about nutrition, you know that salmon is a great source, but
good luck trying to get your kid to eat salmon for lunch.
Walnuts are also chock-full of omega-3s, and they come with a
lot less nose-wrinkling and complaints. The studies are in --
breakfast really is the most important meal of the day. Studies
have shown that students who eat before hitting the classroom
consistently perform better than those who don’t. And there’s no
better morning superstar |
-0.668762 | -2.308277 | -1 | Aug. 30, 2007 NASA's two venerable Voyager spacecraft are
celebrating three decades of flight as they head toward
interstellar space. Their ongoing odysseys mark an unprecedented
and historic accomplishment. Voyager 2 launched on Aug. 20,
1977, and Voyager 1 launched on Sept. 5, 1977. They continue to
return information from distances more than three times farther
away than Pluto. "The Voyager mission is a legend in the annals
of space exploration. It opened our eyes to the scientific
richness of the outer solar system, and it has pioneered the
deepest exploration of the sun's domain ever conducted," said
Alan Stern, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington. "It's a testament to Voyager's
designers, builders and operators that both spacecraft continue
to deliver important findings more than 25 years after their
primary mission to Jupiter and Saturn concluded." During their
first dozen years of flight, the Voyagers made detailed
explorations of Jupiter, Saturn, and their moons |
6.110774 | -1.886069 | 13 | MOBILE, Alabama -- It’s high summer, and a creeping wave of
lubbers is marching across the land eating everything in sight.
Present in seemingly uncountable numbers, the annual appearance
of swarms of giant grasshopper relatives in the Mobile-Tensaw
Delta and along the edges of the Causeway each August brings to
mind biblical accounts of locust plagues. Hatching out in March
or early April, millions of lubbers gorge themselves for months
on spring’s fresh greenery. By the heat of the summer, they have
grown exponentially, from the size of a grain of rice to
monsters nearly 4 inches long. Around Mobile, lubbers tend to be
a glossy black, with distinctive red or yellow piping running
along the legs, head, and abdomen. In a neat trick of nature,
the adults are believed to focus their diets on certain plants
that render their plump bodies poisonous to predators. “You
wonder why are they black if they are sitting on green
vegetation all the time,” said John McCreadie, a University of
South Alabama entomologist, di |
5.603415 | -0.464659 | -1 | Cities and organizations in the US state of Maryland have found
an original and ecologically sound method to cut the weeds from
their parks and gardens: Bring in the goats. Brian Knox, owner
of Eco-Goats, a business based in Davidsonville, Maryland, said
the hungry animals graze on dense vegetation and munch unwanted
weeds and invasive plants while also leaving fertilizer behind
for the grasses that people want. "There is poison ivy and all
kinds of stuff that you know people don't want to go in there
for, and the goats don't seem to mind that much," he said. Eco-
Goats, which has been in business for three years, often brings
dozens of goats to the site that a customer hopes to clear, then
puts up electric fences and allows the goats to graze for days.
One group of 30 goats can clear 100 square meters of brush per
day, according to Eco-Goats. Because the animals are agile and
good climbers, they can often get to hard-to-reach vegetation.
When the work is finished, the goats have left behind their
droppings wh |
5.894203 | 3.152549 | -1 | The DNA Learning Center has had a strong web presence since the
early days of the World Wide Web in 1993. We now maintain 21
sites with content and tools to enhance science education for a
broad audience. Follow the "learn more..." links to explore the
development of each site. Go directly to the site by clicking
the screen shots or the web address. With private and federal
foundation support, we continually develop educational, content-
based Internet sites for audiences from middle school to adults.
Learn About SMA, developed with support from the Spinal Muscular
Atrophy Foundation, is a resource for SMA patients, families and
researchers, including stories of living with SMA and the
science behind emerging therapies. A flexible "e-book" that can
be viewed as a website, an app, or a printable PDF. The
interactive e-book tells the story of the development of maize,
from domestication, hybrid vigor, genome sequencing, and
transposons, to genetic modification and biofortification of
modern maize. Discover the c |
0.903367 | 1.377338 | -1 | Scope and Content of Collection Title: Denton Ranch Collection
(Jacume, Baja California Norte, Mexico), Date (inclusive): 1864
- 1993 1.00 linear feet (2 archives boxes, 6 oversize folders)
Abstract: Title documents and correspondence related to the
ownership of the Denton Ranch, also known as Rancho Jacume,
located on the international border in Baja California Norte,
Mexico near La Rumerosa. The collection forms the documentation
for the Denton Family's claim for compensation for the
expropriation of the ranch in 1939 during the Cardenas
administration. The collection is divided into three series: 1)
TITLE DOCUMENTS, 2) CORRESPONDENCE, and 3) MISCELLANEOUS
MATERIALS. University of California, San Diego. Geisel Library.
Mandeville Special Collections Library. La Jolla, California
92093-0175 Collection number: MSS 0115 Language of Material:
Collection materials in English Collection is open for research.
Denton Ranch Collection (Jacume, Baja California Norte, Mexico),
MSS 0115. Mandeville Special Collections |
-0.444913 | 3.094599 | 14 | St. Patrick's Day St. Patrick's Day is celebrated on March 17,
the saint's religious feast day and the anniversary of his death
in the fifth century. The Irish have observed this day as a
religious holiday for over 1,000 years. On St. Patrick's Day,
which falls during the Christian season of Lent, Irish families
would traditionally attend church in the morning and celebrate
in the afternoon. Lenten prohibitions against the consumption of
meat were waived and people would dance, drink and feast--on the
traditional meal of Irish bacon and cabbage. - St. Patrick and
the First St. Patrick's Day Parade - Growth of St. Patrick's Day
Celebrations - St. Patrick's Day, No Irish Need Apply and the
"Green Machine" - The Chicago River on St. Patrick's Day - St.
Patrick's Day Around the World St. Patrick and the First St.
Patrick's Day Parade Saint Patrick, who lived during the fifth
century, is the patron saint and national apostle of Ireland.
Born in Roman Britain, he was kidnapped and brought to Ireland
as a slave at t |
10.549798 | 1.832461 | 7 | (Potential stem cell cure…) A team of Australian scientists is
advancing towards a cure for conditions including HIV and
diabetes using stem cells. Professor Alan Trounson, a world-
renowned Australian stem cell expert and head of the California
Institute of Regenerative Medicine, says their work towards HIV
cure is about to progress to human trials. He said if the trials
were successful further research would be needed to modify the
technology so it could be affordably used where it is needed
most, in Africa. "I want the HIV work to go globally because it
shouldn't be restricted to patients in Western (countries)," the
Herald Sun quoted Prof Trounson, the former director of Monash
Immunology and Stem Cell Laboratories in Melbourne, as saying.
"We're going to have to modify some of that further research to
get it into a suitable treatment that we can use in Africa. I'm
very hopeful that the industry will do that. We have to try and
make these as available to people as possible," he stated. Prof
Trounson said t |
-2.383784 | 2.060035 | -1 | Where God once lived December 6, 1992 will always be engraved in
the memories of Muslims and Hindus residing all across the globe
especially in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan. The day marks the
demolition of Babri Masjid which was built in 1598 on a site
which is considered sacred for many Hindus. The communal riots
that followed the demolition claimed over 2,000 lives of people
from both religions. The resonance of the demolition was felt
across borders, both in Pakistan and Bangladesh, where many
Hindus suffered the wrath of angry Muslims seeking revenge for
the blasphemous act. Dozens of Hindu temples were desecrated,
whereas hundreds of Hindus living in Pakistan and Bangladesh
faced retaliatory acts of violence in almost all the major
cities of both countries The unfortunate incident raises many
questions such as how are the people, who attack temples or
churches, considered better than the people who demolish
mosques? How is the desecration of one holy site justified
whilst the other is not? Shouldn’t de |
7.485681 | 3.998992 | -1 | In a novel study, researchers claim to have identified a gene
linked to human kidney aging. Kidneys age at different rates,
such that some people show little or no effects of kidney aging
whereas others show rapid functional decline. Determining
genetic factors associated with different rates of kidney aging
can help researchers understand the molecular mechanisms
underlying human aging process. Lead researcher Dr. Stuart Kim
used genome-wide transcriptional profiling to determine that 630
genes change expression with age in kidney tissue. They further
found that 101 of these age-regulated genes contain DNA
variations among individuals that associate with gene expression
level. gene that encodes an extracellular matrix protein (MMP20)
was revealed to be significantly associated with kidney aging,
providing the first gene association with kidney aging. The
researchers suggest that more aging genes are discovered and
confirmed, the particular genetic variants belonging to a person
could one day be combined to b |
-0.120658 | 5.786469 | -1 | Like all liberal arts, dance teaches life skills that will
benefit the student later in life, regardless of the vocation
selected. Dance teaches self-discipline, respect, dedication and
determination. Plato once wrote, "to sing and dance well is to
be well educated." He considered the uneducated man achoreutos
or danceless; the educated one, kechoreukos, endowed with dance.
It is our mission to endow our students with dance. W. Robert
Sherry Director of Dance DAN 170 Ballet I: Introduces
fundamental concepts and historical background. Presents
positions and barre exercises to build correct alignment,
flexibility, strength, coordination, and ballet vocabulary. DAN
175 Tap:Introduces fundamental concepts and historical
background. Covers basic time steps, waltz clog, triplets, shim-
sham, buffalo, cramp roll, and soft-shoe, along with tap
vocabulary. DAN 177 Jazz I: Introduces fundamental concepts and
historical background. Works in studio on body placement and
alignment through highly-structured classical jazz |
0.989516 | 5.855616 | -1 | In this article, Margaret Deuter, a managing editor in the ELT
dictionaries department at Oxford University Press, looks at why
proper use of dictionaries is so important to English language
learners. It’s not the stuff of spy novels, editing
dictionaries. But some teachers act as if we were producing some
subversive material that should be handled with extreme care.
It’s depressing for those of us who work to make dictionaries
useful resources for learners to go to conferences and hear
teacher trainers telling their audiences that dictionaries
should be kept out of the classroom. Or to read in a coursebook
multiple strategies for getting students to guess the meanings
of words and only as a last resort to look them up in a
dictionary. We all know that using a dictionary badly can lead
to hilarious results – well, not so funny if as a student you
get a really bad mark because of it; but funny, for example, to
visitors at this hotel where in the restaurant, “regional and
international courts are offered to win |
-0.790423 | -1.790141 | 15 | Monday, June 22, 2009 HAT South Telescope Network one step
closer Less than a month after the opening of the SkyMapper
Telescope a new telescope building has appeared at Siding Spring
Observatory. HAT-South is a network of six identical, fully
automated wide field telescopes, which are planned to be located
at three sites (Chile: Las Campanas, Australia: Siding Springs,
and Namibia: HESS site) in the Southern hemisphere. The primary
purpose of the telescope network is to detect and characterize a
large number of extra-solar planets transiting nearby bright
stars, and to explore their diversity. Each site will host two
"TH4" units. These TH4 units consist of four 0.18m Takahashi
astrographs fitted with Apogee 4Kx4K CCDs. Each TH4 unit
monitors 64 square degrees of sky at a time, so each site will
be capable of monitoring 128 square degrees of sky. Operation of
HAT-South is a collaboration among the Harvard-Smithsonian
Centre for Astrophysics (CfA), Max Planck Institute for
Astronomy (MPIA) and the Australian N |
7.994559 | 5.995941 | -1 | Print friendly version Charles Bonnet syndrome Other Names for
this Disease See Disclaimer regarding information on this site.
Some links on this page may take you to organizations outside of
the National Institutes of Health. Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS)
refers to the presence of visual hallucinations in individuals
with visual acuity loss without having psychosis or dementia.
The condition is likely caused by the brain continuing to
interpret images, even in their absence. Underlying conditions
of vision loss associated with Charles Bonnet syndrome are
diverse (including conditions such as macular degeneration and
stroke) and may affect the eye, optic nerve, or brain.
Hallucinations often resolve if the underlying vision deficit is
corrected and can also remit in some individuals with static or
progressive vision loss. Treatment is individualized. - Victoria
S Pelak. Visual release hallucinations (Charles Bonnet
syndrome). UpToDate. Waltham, MA: UpToDate; 2012. - Bou Khalil
R, Richa S. [Psychiatric, psycho |
-2.405577 | 2.688704 | -1 | cittaanurakkho wrote:Any mentioned of aurora in the Pali text or
elsewhere? Could be the radiant deva? Russian scholar of
Mahabharata Boris Smirnov brought up a hypothesis that the
apsara's "play of rainbows", described in Mahabharata as
happening near Meru, is actually aurora. There are descriptions
of mount Meru's efflugence in Mahabharata: There is a glowing
mountain called Meru, which is bathed in its own radiance. Fine
beyond all other mountains, it subdues the sun's own light with
its dazzling golden peaks. Indeed, it is like a wondrous golden
ornament. Popular with gods and Gandharvas, it is immeasurable
and can be approached only by those who are abundantly
righteous. Awesome beasts of prey frequent that great mountain,
and heavenly herbs illumine it. Standing tall, it spreads up and
over the vault of heaven. Unattainable by most, lying beyond
even their imagination, this mountain, rich in rivers and
forests, resounds with the songs of the most charming varieties
of birds. Scaling its bright and gem-s |
-1.272324 | 3.423859 | 1 | Ancient Near East, Greek, and Roman Art Spanning a period of
roughly 3,800 years, the collections of Ancient Near Eastern,
Greek, and Roman art at the Cleveland Museum of Art are held in
very high esteem nationally and internationally. Although the
collections are modest in overall numbers, they are typified by
singular works of rare quality. Sasanian silver is a clear
strength in the Ancient Near Eastern collection, along with
major masterpieces of large stone sculpture, and one of the very
finest "stargazer" figures to have survived. In the Greek and
Roman area, the collections feature exquisite small and large-
scale bronzes, such as the world-famous Apollo Sauroktonos
figure attributed to Praxiteles, several outstanding painted
vases from the Archaic, Classical, and late Classical periods,
and excellent smaller objects crafted of precious materials.
Additional great masterworks include an Assyrian relief of the
winged guardian figure in the gallery devoted to Asia Minor and
the Fertile Crescent, the Minoan |
2.144915 | -1.039297 | 16 | Typhoon Megi continues to intensify and is expected to be a
significant threat to the northern Philippine province of Luzon
by late this weekend. Americares is making preparations to bring
relief. Typhoon Megi is currently the only tropical cyclone
anywhere on earth but it could be one of the strongest of the
year to affect land. While it is very likely that the storm will
go well beyond the threshold of Super Typhoon status with winds
in excess of 100 kts, the specific track seems to be a little
problematic and that could mean all the difference for the
Philippines. By 18 UTC (Z) October 17, 2010 the typhoon is
expected to have sustained winds of 135 kts with gusts to 165
kts. Roughly, that would be just shy of the North Atlantic
Category 5 classification. Environmental conditions are such
that intensification from the 18 UTC (Z) October 15, 2010 95 kt
level to the loftier, stronger classification is likely. Megi is
the name of a catfish in South Korea and is related to the
feeling of getting wet, according |
3.45994 | 5.505814 | -1 | - Tuck a note into their lunchbox or book bag. Write a sweet
thought or a short joke to make them smile. - Give them a big
hug for no particular reason at all. - When you part in the
morning, tell them that you will be praying for them today. -
Put a small treat on their bed for them to find when they get
home in the afternoon - Smile at them often. - Make eye contact
and truly listen when your child is telling you something. -
When they have completed a task well, praise them. - While they
are close by, relate to someone else something good that your
child has done. - If you see them struggling with a task, offer
your help. - Watch for an area in their character where you see
growth and spend a few minutes communicating to them how proud
you are of how they're maturing. - Willingly do something they
ask you to do - stop working and play a game, help them find a
lost item, etc. - Allow them to help you with a project you're
working on that they're interested in - cooking, cleaning,
scrapbooking, or other chor |
9.337856 | 2.574514 | 128 | Measles immune globulin measles immune globulin A sterile
solution of globulin's derived from the blood plasma of normal
adult human donors; it is prepared from immune serum globulin
that complies with the measles antibody reference standard; a
passive immunizing agent. Synonym: measles immunoglobulin.
Results from our forum ... altered with human genes to trick a
patient's immune system into accepting it as its own flesh ...
The problem occurs in reverse as well. Measles, for example, a
serious but manageable disease ... (azathioprine), Atgam
(lymphocyte immune globulin), Prograf (tarolimus), and
Orthoclone (muromonab-CD3). ... See entire post |
2.243171 | 2.701486 | -1 | ||This map shows where industrial centers were developing in
Europe in the mid-1800s. It also shows varying degrees of
urbanization. Notice that Britain, which industrialized first,
already has at least 20 percent of its population living in
cities of 100,000 or more. The regions on the continent with
between 6 and 10 percent of the population in such large cities
are also the regions that experienced greater industrial
development. Industrialization and urbanization went hand in
hand. |
3.350158 | 0.943805 | -1 | When the last oil well runs dry Just as certain as death and
taxes is the knowledge that we shall one day be forced to learn
to live without oil. Exactly when that day will dawn nobody
knows, but people in middle age today can probably expect to be
here for it. Long before it arrives we shall have had to commit
ourselves to one or more of several possible energy futures. And
the momentous decisions we take in the next few years will
determine whether our heirs thank or curse us for the energy
choices we bequeath to them. There will always be some oil
somewhere, but it may soon cost too much to extract and burn it.
It may be too technically difficult, too expensive compared with
other fuels, or too polluting. An article in Scientific American
in March 1998 by Dr Colin Campbell and Jean Laherrere concluded:
"The world is not running out of oil - at least not yet. "What
our society does face, and soon, is the end of the abundant and
cheap oil on which all industrial nations depend." They
suggested there were per |
7.201887 | 2.579112 | -1 | In general, it is the parents' job to monitor what their child
eats, while the child is in the best position to decide how much
to eat. Normally, healthy and active children's bodies do a good
job of "asking" for just the right amount of food, although
their minds may lead them astray when choosing which foods to
eat. You can easily overestimate the amount of food your child
actually needs, especially during the younger years of middle
childhood. Youngsters of this age do not need adult-sized
servings of food. However, if you are unaware of this, you might
place almost as much food on your child's plate as on your own.
As a result, your child must choose between being criticized for
leaving food on his plate, or for overeating and running the
risk of obesity. Weighing your children occasionally is one way
for you to monitor your youngsters' nutrition. There is rarely a
reason for you to count calories for your children, since most
youngsters control their intake quite well. As the middle years
progress, child |
4.081728 | 7.984699 | -1 | Data centres have always been secure, tightly controlled
facilities, but 9/11 brought about changes that pushed security
and physical protections to even higher levels. Data centres
today, particularly those serving as colocation facilities, are
more likely to have multiple points of security that may include
physical barriers such as crash-resistant fences and high-tech
defenses such as biometric identification systems. It's less
likely today that backup and recovery data centres will be built
near one another. And new data centres are more likely to be
built outside of urban areas. "Data centre designers have always
been mindful of security concerns," said Tad Davies, an
executive vice-president at Bick Group, an IT services provider
whose work includes data centre design. "What 9/11 caused us to
do is think broader and on a massive scale." Davies said he
knows of one company that relocated its data centre to a site
that was within a four-hour drive of its backup data centres.
The reason: It wanted to be ce |
2.028743 | 6.014783 | -1 | Welcome to onestopclil With over 900 fantastic CLIL materials,
onestopclil is your resource bank for content and language
teaching. Choose from a wealth of resources for Young Learners
and Secondary, including exciting experiments, interactive
animations, a vibrant image bank and lots more. Why not check
out Keith Kelly's latest CLIL Picks and What's new this month to
get a real taste for the hundreds of great resources we have to
offer here on onestopclil? Keith's CLIL Picks Is it an animal,
plant or mineral? Pupils match the puzzle pieces, fill in a
chart and complete sentences to identify the materials used to
make everyday objects. Teacher’s notes include ideas for an
additional group activity and post-lesson projects. CLIL stands
for Content and Language Integrated Learning. It refers to
teaching subjects such as science, history and geography to
students through a foreign language. This can be by the English
teacher using cross-curricular content or the subject teacher
using English as the language of i |
4.780297 | 2.747061 | -1 | Research Article at the Digital Library for Physics and
Astronomy. Their website is hosted by the High Energy
Astrophysics Division at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics. The SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS) is a
Digital Library portal for researchers in Astronomy and Physics,
operated by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO)
under a NASA grant. |Title:||An experimental study for scale
prevention in boiler by use of ultrasonic waves| |Authors:||Heo,
Pil Woo; Lee, Yang Lae; Lim, Eui Su; Koh, Kwang Sik|
|Affiliation:||AA(Korea Inst. of Machinery and Mater., Taejon),
AB(Korea Inst. of Machinery and Mater., Taejon), AC(Korea Inst.
of Machinery and Mater., Taejon), AD(Kyungpook Natl. Univ.)|
|Publication:||The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,
vol. 112, iss. no. 5, p. 2441-2441 (ASAJ Homepage)| |NASA/STI
Keywords:||CHEMICAL REACTIONS, HEAT TRANSFER, METAL IONS,
SURFACE REACTIONS, THERMAL RESISTANCE, ULTRASONIC RADIATION|
|Comment:||NASA/STI Accession number: 20020082568| I |
3.969179 | 5.800703 | -1 | The Internet is a social medium made up of communities, cliques,
and groups. While this is usually positive, sometimes people
engage intimidation or harassment. This section explores the
myths and realities of cyberbullying and offers tips for adults
to help young people who are involved in it. For most youth, the
Internet is all about socializing, and while most of these
social interactions are positive, increasing numbers of kids are
using the technology to intimidate and harass others – a
phenomenon known as cyberbullying. It’s important to note that
there is no single profile of a child who bullies. While some
fit the traditional image of someone who is generally aggressive
and has poor impulse control, others may be very sensitive to
social nuances and are able to use that understanding against
their targets. Cyberbullying is everyone's business and the best
response is a pro-active or preventative one. From the outset,
we can reduce the risks associated with Internet use if we
engage in an open discussi |
6.412907 | 4.257543 | -1 | What is a critical care specialist? A critical care specialist
is a medical doctor who specializes in critical care or
intensive care medicine and treats patients who need urgent care
on an inpatient and outpatient basis. Critical care doctors work
in the ICU (intensive care unit) in hospitals.What kind of
background does a critical care specialist have? A critical care
physician attends medical school plus a 2-6 year residency in
internal medicine to receive training. They must pass a board
certification exam for critical care medicine, and typically
complete at least two years of fellowship training in critical
care. During training, these physicians learn a wide variety of
techniques they will need in an urgent medical emergency, during
surgery, or postsurgery. Critical care physicians especially
need a keen ability to think on their feet and make quick
decisions. Some of the techniques a critical care physician
learns during fellowship training include ultrasound, airway
management, cardiac life support a |
2.60499 | -0.742859 | -1 | James Vary, IITAP, (515) 294-3555 Skip Derra, News Service,
(515) 294-4917 NOBEL LAUREATE TO TALK ABOUT OZONE DEPLETION AND
SMOG AMES, Iowa -- Nobel Laureate Sherwood Rowland, a well-know
authority on atmospheric chemistry and one of the first
scientists to warn the public about the environmental dangers of
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), will give a talk on Feb. 15, at 8
p.m., in the Sun Room of the Memorial Union. The topic of
Rowland's talk will be "Two Atmospheric Problems: Stratospheric
Ozone Depletion, and Smog at Earth's Surface" The talk is part
of a University Lecture Series on Science and Technology for
Sustainable Development. Rowland, along with Mario Molina,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, and Paul
Crutzen, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, Germany,
were awarded the 1995 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their work in
atmospheric chemistry, particularly concerning the formation and
decomposition of Earth's ozone layer. Rowland's work focused on
the effects CFCs have on the ozone |
2.791618 | 8.693261 | 17 | 6. Built-in Exceptions Exceptions should be class objects. The
exceptions are defined in the module exceptions. This module
never needs to be imported explicitly: the exceptions are
provided in the built-in namespace as well as the For class
exceptions, in a try statement with an except clause that
mentions a particular class, that clause also handles any
exception classes derived from that class (but not exception
classes from which it is derived). Two exception classes that
are not related via subclassing are never equivalent, even if
they have the same name. The built-in exceptions listed below
can be generated by the interpreter or built-in functions.
Except where mentioned, they have an “associated value”
indicating the detailed cause of the error. This may be a string
or a tuple containing several items of information (e.g., an
error code and a string explaining the code). The associated
value is the second argument to the raise statement. If the
exception class is derived from the standard root class B |
9.424988 | 3.072512 | -1 | (HealthDay News) -- Nosebleeds are common during childhood,
especially during the preschool years. Though they can be scary,
they usually aren't caused by a serious problem. The American
Academy of Pediatrics says common causes of nosebleeds include:
- Allergies or a cold, which can lead to nasal swelling or
irritation. - Trauma to the nose, from blowing too hard, picking
or putting an object in the nose. - Exposure to a very dry
environment or harsh fumes. - An abnormal anatomical structure
of the nose. - An abnormal growth inside the nose. - A blood-
clotting problem. - Taking medication that dries out the nasal
passages. Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved. |
9.732547 | 3.676933 | -1 | Get answers to your Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma questions. Lymphoma -
Hodgkin's; Hodgkin's lymphoma; Hodgkins disease; HD Treatment
options depend on: Certain factors may determine whether more
intensive treatment is required. For example, the presence of B
symptoms and “bulky” (large mass) tumors are treated usually
indicates a more aggressive treatment approach. Chemotherapy,
radiation, or both (chemoradiation) are the main treatments for
Hodgkinâ ' s disease. Stem cell transplantation may be
recommended for patients whose cancer has recurred. Hodgkinâ ' s
disease is staged (I through IV) to determine to how far the
cancer has spread. Staging is the primary method for determining
both treatment options and prognosis. Stage I. Disease is
limited to a single node region (I) or has involved one
neighboring area or a single nearby organ. Stage II. Disease is
limited to two or more lymph nodes on the same side of (above or
below) the diaphragm or extends locally from the lymph node into
a nearby organ. Stage III. |
0.960029 | 3.283342 | -1 | History of Piedmont College In 1897, opening a college in the
wilderness of northeast Georgia must have seemed to some like a
prescription for failure. The area was accessible by few roads -
mostly crude dirt strips paved with sapling trees. A narrow-
gauge railroad did make a waterstop in the frontier town of
Demorest, but it was laden with passengers and freight bound for
points further north. For a youthful band of entrepreneurs
trying to forge a community of businesses, factories and schools
in Demorest, however, a college was just what they needed. Under
the direction of a Methodist minister, the Rev. Charles C.
Spence, they obtained a charter from the State of Georgia,
organized a board of trustees, bought books, hired a faculty,
and secured space for classes and dormitories. On the first
Wednesday of September 1897, amid much fanfare and ceremony, the
opening exercises for the J.S. Green Collegiate Institute were
held in downtown Demorest, and the entire student body, from
first grade to college juniors |
-0.718851 | 3.752895 | -1 | Leonardo da Vinci painted an earlier version of his famed
masterpiece "Mona Lisa," claims a private Swiss art foundation
dedicated solely to the alternate painting, which it unveiled
Thursday. But an expert on da Vinci in Britain says there is
evidence that the Renaissance master may not have been behind
the picture presented as the "Earlier Mona Lisa" but known more
commonly as the "Isleworth Mona Lisa." The Mona Lisa Foundation,
based in Zurich, offers a wealth of documentation to support its
argument that the painting it represents is a predecessor --
from the master's own hand -- to the world's most famous
portrait hanging in the Louvre Museum in Paris. Martin Kemp,
professor emeritus at Oxford University, who has examined the
arguments, says the "reliable primary evidence provides no basis
for thinking that there was 'an earlier' portrait of Lisa del
Giocondo." In addition to a 320-page art book titled "Mona Lisa:
Leonardo's Earlier Version," the foundation's website makes its
case using visual widgets o |
9.631617 | 0.60978 | 138 | Public Health History Nasty, brutish and short. That's how life
was before the development of public health. Poor sanitation,
unregulated food processing, lack of control of mosquitoes,
inadequate prenatal care, and other poor health conditions led
to unnecessary illnesses and deaths. In the year before
Florida's state health department was created in 1889, about 40
percent of the population fled Jacksonville due to a yellow
fever epidemic which sickened a third of those who stayed and
killed over 400. Similar epidemics of cholera and yellow fever
struck the state almost annually, one of which almost wiped out
the population of St. Joseph in 1841. In most cases, limited
medical care was available for the sick and weaker people died,
but not before infecting many others. Many survivors were
carriers, continuing to pass the diseases to others as a result
of poor sanitary practices. Control of infectious diseases was
the major reason for establishment of public health services and
remains a major focus today. Th |
7.028743 | -1.873504 | 5 | In an attempt to assess the link between bee health and
diversity of pollen they encounter, honeybee hives from as many
as 10 National Trust sites were studied. The study found that
the bees from farmlands had a noticeably narrower range of
pollens than both urban and untouched "natural" settings. Hives
from Kensington Palace in London showed evidence of eucalyptus
and elderberry, while suburban sites such as those around the
University of Worcester - where the researchers who carried out
the study work - showed a rich mix including lily, blackberry,
rowan trees, and oilseed rape. However, at more rural National
Trust sites near farmland in Yorkshire and Somerset, the hives
were overwhelmingly dominated by oilseed rape pollen.Matthew
Oates of the National Trust said that although the results were
no great surprise, they were "a very useful piece of information
in terms of being able to quantify the problem that bees are up
against in intensive agriculture systems." "What is clear is
that there is a far greate |
0.26314 | 2.896343 | -1 | "We shall either nobly save, or meanly lose, the last great hope
of mankind." The Gettysburg Address "...and that government of
the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from
the earth." Delivered at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on November
19, 1863. "At nightfall on November 18, 1863, a special train
drew into the small station at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and
President Abraham Lincoln and his party alighted. They were
greeted by Judge David Wills, chairman of a committee
supervising the dedication of a cemetery nearby, in which the
bodies of most of the six thousand men killed in the Civil War
battle fought there the preceding July might rest. Few could
have dreamed that the President's brief address the following
day would be remembered as long as the battle itself." Four
score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this
continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to
the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are
engaged in a great civil war, testing wheth |
1.768312 | 5.819276 | 18 | You know that the amount of reading your child does will have a
direct and positive impact on his reading fluency, but finding
appropriate material for the budding reader is often a hit-and-
miss endeavor. Some beginning readers are painfully dry with
insipid illustrations, not what a child dubious about the
rewards of reading should have to encounter. But Innovative Kids
has pulled together a series with you and your child in mind.
Each set includes ten captivatingly-illustrated stories designed
to tickle the funny bone of every child. Each zany story builds
on the other as your child progresses from short-vowel and
simple consonant sounds to long-vowel sounds and sight words. As
your child completes each book, he receives a comical sticker to
place on the inside cover; kids love that. You get a parent's
guide that offers helpful hints on how to use the books,
including exceptional enrichment ideas to use at the completion
of each book. What a fantastic way to further reinforce
necessary reading skills and bu |
0.293128 | 1.162093 | -1 | Published: August 28, 2010 Headed by Juan Carballo, the
remaining Spaniards left Cebu for bohol. There the survivors
burned the Conception off the coast of Bohol, because there were
not enough men to navigate her. On the two remaining ships-the
Victoria and the Trinidad-they cruised through the Visayas and
the Sulu Sea. They reached Palawan and there found plenty of
fresh foods provisions. From Palawan, they proceeded south to
Borneo where they captured a native warboat. From Brunei, where
they were well received by Sultan Siripada, they continued their
voyage. At last, on November 9 1951, with the help of a native
pilot, the survivors reached Tidore, an island in the Moluccas
in present day Indonesia. There they gathered a rich cargo of
spices and resumed their voyage home. The commanders of the two
ships agreed toseparate. The Victoria, piloted by Sebastian del
Cano, was to sail back to Spainby way of the cape of Good Hope;
the Trinidad under the command of Gomez de Espinosa, was to
cross the Pacific Ocean |
8.690885 | 5.986512 | 143 | To play or not to play? For kids with bleeding disorders, that
is the question—at camp, at school, at home, anywhere. Most
sports and other physical activities have some level of risk.
The severity and type of bleeding disorder vary, so what may be
unsafe for one person might be a perfect match for another.
(However, contact sports, such as football and hockey, are not
recommended for people with bleeding disorders.) There’s no one-
size-fits-all answer. However, there is a new workbook that will
help you make an informed decision. My Game Plan is a five-page
booklet with questions that help kids—and adults—evaluate their
physical abilities and any limitations placed on them by their
hemophilia or other bleeding disorder. For example, it asks you
to list your problem joints and to note any pain you may have.
Then, you are asked to describe the benefits and risks of the
activity you want to play. “Rather than telling you what sports
are safe and what aren’t, it’s a tool that will help guide a
discussion,” says |
0.987125 | 1.489575 | 12 | The Eureka is a side-wheel paddle steamboat, built in 1890,
which is now preserved at the San Francisco Maritime National
Historical Park in San Francisco, California. Originally named
the Ukiah to commemorate the railway's recent extension into the
City of Ukiah, the boat was built by the San Francisco and North
Pacific Railroad Company at their Tiburon yard. The ship
originally carried commuters between San Francisco and Tiburon
during the day and hauled railroad freight cars at night. As
automobiles became more common, motorists wanted to "drive
across the bay". Since there were no bridges on San Francisco
Bay at the time, the Ukiah was able to meet this demand via a
refitted lower deck designed to handle vehicles. The deck above
was expanded for passengers. The Eureka has been designated a
National Historic Landmark. [Wikipedia] |Overall length||299.5
feet| |Extreme Width||78 feet| San Francisco Maritime Park |
6.078604 | 0.527088 | -1 | According to current estimates on world population growth,
agricultural productivity will have to increase by 56 percent by
2030. Can organics help answer this need? That question was a
topic of great interest at a May conference of the United
Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome. Organic
agriculture is an environmentally friendly choice, conference
presenters said, for reasons including more efficient use of
local natural resources and less reliance on fossil fuels
(organic farmers don't use petroleum-derived fertilizers or
pesticides). Research by the Rodale Institute and others also
show that organic soils retain 20 percent to 40 percent more
water, so they require less irrigation and produce better yields
than conventional crops during times of drought and climate
change. On the social front, organic agriculture—which requires
30 percent more labor per hectare, or 2.5 acres—offers
employment opportunities and contributes to rural development.
Health benefits are another important contributio |
4.439487 | 1.882396 | 19 | UGA graduate student wins Singularity University scholarship to
grow food indoors April 30, 2012Print Athens, Ga. - University
of Georgia doctoral student Erico Rolim de Mattos envisions a
world where exploding human populations, global climate change
and land overdevelopment has rendered mankind incapable of
producing enough food to sustain humanity. This scenario is a
very real possibility, and it has captured the minds of
specialists from organizations like NASA and the United Nations.
Mattos has an idea that may help solve the problem, and it
recently won him a $30,000 scholarship to an intensive 10-week
graduate studies program at Singularity University, a Silicon
Valley ideas incubator that seeks to solve the planet's most
pressing challenges using advanced technologies. He proposes the
use of LED lights and advanced computer monitoring systems to
provide artificial light in structures known as vertical farms.
These immense greenhouse-like buildings are dedicated to the
production of indoor food crops. |
9.936094 | 4.217532 | -1 | Cancer of the renal pelvis or ureter is cancer that forms in the
kidney's pelvis or the tube that carries urine from the kidney
to the bladder. Transitional cell cancer of the renal pelvis or
ureter Causes, incidence, and risk factors Cancer can grow in
the urine collection system, but is uncommon. As a group, renal
pelvis and ureter cancers account for about 5% of all cancers of
the kidney and upper urinary tract. They affect men more often
than women and are more common in people older than 65. Tumors
of the renal pelvis and ureter are usually transitional cell
cancers. Approximately 10% are squamous cell carcinomas. The
causes of this cancer are not completely known. Long-term
(chronic) irritation of the kidney from harmful substances
removed in the urine may be a factor. This irritation may be
caused by: These tests may reveal a tumor or show that the
cancer has spread from the kidneys. The goal of treatment is to
eliminate the cancer. Surgery to remove all or part of the
kidney (nephrectomy) is usually r |
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