Saturday, February 16, 2008

Bats Dying from "White Nose Syndrome"


The one error I see is that they have found what it is that is afflicting the bees and are already dealing with it in an efficient way. Now for the bat mystery.

From http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23169737/

By Michael Hill

updated 3:15 p.m. ET, Thurs., Feb. 14, 2008

ROSENDALE, N.Y. - Bats in New York and Vermont are mysteriously dying off by the thousands, often with a white ring of fungus around their noses, and scientists in hazmat suits are crawling into dank caves to find out why.

"White nose syndrome," as the killer has been dubbed, is spreading at an alarming rate, with researchers calling it the gravest threat in memory to bats in the U.S.

"This is definitely unprecedented," said Lori Pruitt, an endangered-species biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Bloomington, Ind. "The hugest concern at this point is that we do not know what it is."

A significant loss of bats is chilling in itself to wildlife experts. But —like the mysterious mass die-offs around the country of bees that pollinate all sorts of vital fruits and vegetables — the bat deaths could have economic implications. Bats feed on insects that can damage dozens of crops, including wheat and apples.

"Without large populations of bats, there would certainly be an impact on agriculture," said Barbara French of Bat Conservation International of Austin, Texas.

White nose syndrome has afflicted at least four species of hibernating bats, spreading from a cluster of four caves near Albany last winter to more than a dozen caverns up to 130 miles away.

Alan Hicks, a wildlife biologist with the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, said he fears a catastrophic collapse of the region's bat population and is urgently enlisting experts around the country to find the cause.

It is not even clear if the fungus around the bats' noses — something scientists say they have never seen before — is a cause or a symptom. It may be a sign the bats are too sick to groom themselves, said Beth Buckles, a veterinary pathologist at Cornell University.

The die-offs could be caused by bacteria or a virus. Or the bats could be reacting to some toxin or other environmental factor. Whatever it is, afflicted bats are burning through their winter stores of fat before hibernation ends in the spring, and appear to be starving.

The Northeast has generally had mild winters in recent years. But Hicks said he doubts that is the culprit in some way, since there are no reports of large die-offs in warmer states.

Nor are there any known links between what is wiping out the bees and what is killing the bats. The cause of the bee deaths is still a mystery, though scientists are looking at pesticides, parasites and a virus not previously seen in the U.S.

Researchers said there is no evidence the mysterious killer is any threat to humans. Scientists venturing into the caves wear hazardous-materials suits and breathing masks primarily to protect the bats, not themselves.

Hicks said it is possible that a cave explorer introduced the problem in the Albany-area caves and that it spread from there. "It could have been some caver in Tanzania with a little mud on his boot and a week later he's in a cave in New York," he said.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Reggae Lectures Now Available Online


From my class SPCH214 - Rhetoric of Reggae Music, here are a few video lectures I made a few years ago. You will need RealPlayer installed to watch them, but they seem to pop right up and stream pretty well.

Go to http://www.uvm.edu/~debate/watch/?M=D

twotonemovement.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:30 46.8M
reggaeuk.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:29 49.8M
reggaerhetandimages.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:28 95.7M
reggaerasrhetmovemen..> 14-Feb-2008 10:26 46.6M
reggaedub.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:25 58.4M
reggaebarrow_2.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:24 89.5M
reggaebarrow_1.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:22 96.5M
reggaeafrica.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:20 50.4M
reggaestructure_2.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:14 50.1M
reggaestructure_1.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:13 55.5M
dancehall_4.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:12 49.5M
dancehall_3.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:11 45.6M
dancehall_2.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:10 35.1M
dancehall_1.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:09 49.6M
tosh.RM 14-Feb-2008 10:08 99M
marley.rm 14-Feb-2008 10:06 105M
reggaeorigins_4.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:32 42.1M
reggaeorigins_3.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:31 46.7M
reggaeorigins_2.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:30 50.2M
reggaeorigins_1.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:29 48.7M
reggaerbackground_1.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:28 40.8M
reggaebackground_4.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:27 27.8M
reggaebackground_3.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:26 54.7M
reggaebackground_2.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:25 58.7M
womenofreggae_2.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:23 95.1M
womenofreggae_1.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:21 98.7M
wordsoundpower_2.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:17 95.9M
wordsoundpower_1.RM 13-Feb-2008 20:15 97.5M
rasta_part3.RM 13-Feb-2008 16:27 98.8M
rasta_part2.RM 13-Feb-2008 16:25 97.6M
rasta_part1.RM 13-Feb-2008 16:22 93.7M

I Appear in WIRED Article on Doctor Who

One of Doctor Who's biggest American fans, Alfred Snider, poses with a police box reminiscent of the TARDIS space machine on a visit to London. Photo courtesy Alfred Snider

I guess this proves that people notice when you are really obsessed with something for a long time. Thanks to Mike Calore for helping hook me up with this.

From http://www.wired.com/entertainment/hollywood/news/2008/02/dr_who#
New Doctor Who Regenerates Fan Base
By Renée Davidson 02.14.08 | 12:00 AM

The long-running campy BBC TV series Doctor Who is back on the airwaves after a 15-year absence, and the U.S. fan base is growing rapidly. This weekend, hundreds of fans will gather in Los Angeles for Gallifrey One, the biggest Doctor Who convention in the country.

"The Time Meddlers [fan club] has gotten a lot of new fans coming to our doors since the new show came on," says Aaron Cistrelli, president of the 20-year-old Los Angeles-based Time Meddlers.

Doctor Who is one of the U.K.'s longest-running television shows, and is currently enjoying a huge surge in popularity. The most-recent Christmas special, "Voyage of the Damned," was viewed by 12.2 million people, or 50 percent of the British viewing audience.

Doctor Who chronicles the adventures of a gadget-loving alien known as "the Doctor," who travels through space and time in the TARDIS, an unreliable space and time machine that looks like a 1950s British police box.

The show returned to U.K. TVs in 2005, and several PBS stations in 2006, but because Doctor Who never enjoyed the massive syndication that Star Trek did, the U.S. fan base is smaller. It might be smaller, but it is perhaps far geekier.

No fewer than 40 local fan clubs across the nation give Whovians a chance to socialize offline. The Time Meddlers maintains a library of Doctor Who movies and episodes, and meets once a month to watch the show.

Today, DoctorWhoForum.com claims more than 18,000 active members who congregate online to debate the relative merits of recent episodes, compose Who-related poetry, and exchange images of Doctor Who actor David Tennant's backside.

Alfred Snider, who might be the biggest fan in the Whoniverse, has been hosting a weekly Doctor Who theater event in his Vermont home for more than 15 years. In this way, classic fans have kept the series alive for a new generation of fans.

"I knew [the show] would come back, but I never thought it would be this good or this popular," says the 57-year-old professor of forensics.

Snider named his 28-year-old daughter after Sarah Jane Smith, one of the Doctor's longtime companions. He sometimes carries one of the Doctor's gadgets, a sonic screwdriver, and has attended Chicago TARDIS, the "other" Doctor Who convention, four times.

When I reach him, he is in a cellphone store upgrading to a new BlackBerry. "It's funny you should call right now because I was just expressing concern about getting my ring tone on the new phone. It's the theme song from Doctor Who."

While many fans also appreciate Star Trek, Star Wars and Battlestar Galactica, many find simple space travel a bit boring. After all, their beloved blue TARDIS can travel to any time and any place, from the Big Bang to the end of the universe.

"I've been a fan since I was growing up," says Matt Abbott, a 35-year-old software engineer from San Francisco, who plans to attend the Gallifrey Convention for the first time this year.

At the convention, fans will get a chance to look inside the TARDIS, meet actors and writers from the show, participate in panel discussions, purchase Doctor Who toys and memorabilia, and dress as their favorite Doctor Who characters for Friday night's masquerade ball.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

A Note to Matt Grindy

Amber Bell kisses her husband Matt Grindy in his hospital room after he earned his doctorate degree in speech communication from FSU President T.K. Wetherell on Friday, Feb. 8, 2008. Friends and family turned his hospital room into a graduation party.

Dear Matt,

I am very sad this morning because you have left us. I understand that you are now at peace and free from pain, but I cannot help but feel a strong sense of grief and sadness.

I was so impressed by what you have done, in your life and in the last year. In the last year you coached debate, finished your doctoral degree and published a book as well as dealt with your cancer. I will try and remember that the next time I want to complain about having too much to do.

As I get older I am prepared to have some people around me passing on, but I am not really prepared to see people as young and vital as you do so.

I was very moved by your quotation in the news story about you receiving your degree, where you gave a last wish, that debating be preserved, even in times of financial difficulty. I would like to go a step further and say that it needs to be advanced at all times.

Last night we had a public debate about terrorism and we had about a hundred people there. Shortly before you departed a number of people in the audience came forward and wanted to join the debate team.

I can, in your memory, continue to dedicate myself to this mission. I can only aspire to a future where, in the great beyond, I will be worthy of having you shake my hand and say that I did a good job. I know that we have allies and I will try to use them and tell them about you as a source of inspiration.

Please look up Bob Branham, another great debate coach taken from us far too early, as I think you two would really like each other.

Until then, let us forward the global debate prospect.

Your friend,

Tuna

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Church of the Subgenius Introduction

Many of my students, colleagues and friends have been asking about J. R. Bob Dobbs and the Church of the Subgenius.

Want to know more? Simply Google it and enjoy.

For now, consider this short video...


Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Sarah Jane Adventures Renewed by BBC


One of my favorite television programs ever, THE SARAH JANE ADVENTURES, has just been renewed for a second season by the BBC. There will be 12 30-minute episodes. This is the second Doctor Who sin-off after the very successful TORCHWOOD. Both SJA and T are showing in the USA now and also in a number of other countries.

The BBC website is at http://www.bbc.co.uk/sja/ but many features are blocked to non-UK visitors. A good blog about the show is at http://sarahjanetv.blogspot.com/ .

This makes me happy.

Lost in Translation for February

From http://www.engrish.com/


Who cares about excitement?

Inviting underwear

Maybe they can return you

Nice smile, it is party time!

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Meteorite Kills Goose & Damages Car



From http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article763054.ece

By VIRGINIA WHEELER
Published: Today

A GOOSE crashed onto a car after being knocked from the sky by a METEORITE, it was claimed yesterday.

Postman Adrian Mannion was having a morning cuppa with his wife Fiona when they heard the 9lb space rock hit their driveway.

One second later a dazed Canada Goose smashed into their prized Mini’s roof, causing £2,500 damage.

Adrian, 46, of Elstree, Derbys, said yesterday: “We heard two almighty thuds and rushed out to see this large, odd-looking rock next to our Mini – and a very poorly-looking mangled goose on the car roof.

“A flock of Canada Geese were overhead so the falling stone must have hit the poor creature.”

Bizarrely, they said, a fox then dragged away the bird before they could rescue it.

Fiona, 46, said: “It has to be the unluckiest bird ever.

“It survived being knocked out by a meteorite – only to be savaged by a fox.”

The University of Derby is now studying the meteorite – one of only 1,000 asteroid fragments that hit earth each year.