Friday, 31 August 2012

Business Buzz 66: CBS Denver: Water Dog Reservoir On Grand Mesa To Be Restored

Business Buzz 66
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CBS Denver: Water Dog Reservoir On Grand Mesa To Be Restored
Aug 31st 2012, 21:04

CBS Denver
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Water Dog Reservoir On Grand Mesa To Be Restored
Aug 31st 2012, 21:04

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AP) — Colorado Parks and Wildlife managers plan to start restoring Water Dog Reservoir on the Grand Mesa next week.

Wildlife managers say they have found white suckers that could displace rainbow trout in the western Colorado fishery. They plan to remove the white suckers starting Wednesday by applying a plant-derived toxicant.

Managers said they expect the project will be completed by mid-October. They plan to stock rainbow trout in the reservoir early next summer.

Wildlife officials say white suckers were likely introduced to the reservoir by anglers using them as live bait. The use of live bait isn’t allowed at the reservoir.

(© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Business Buzz 66: CBS Denver: Denver Zoo Says Elderly Elephant In Poor Health

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CBS Denver: Denver Zoo Says Elderly Elephant In Poor Health
Aug 31st 2012, 20:57

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Denver Zoo Says Elderly Elephant In Poor Health
Aug 31st 2012, 20:57

DENVER (AP) — A 53-year-old elephant who’s been at the Denver Zoo since 1961 is in poor health and is going in what zookeepers are calling “hospice care.”

Zookeepers tell The Denver post that Mimi is at least 53, nearly a decade older than the average life span for elephants in captivity. Mimi has reportedly stopped eating much and appears to suffer from sore joints and tender feet.

Zookeepers say they’re not giving up on Mimi and are hoping for a rebound. But they’re going public about Mimi’s declining health to prepare zoo fans that the end may be near for the elephant who’s been at the zoo more than five decades.

(© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Business Buzz 66: The Atlantic Wire: 41% Fewer Viewers Watched Paul Ryan Than Palin in 2008

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The Atlantic Wire: 41% Fewer Viewers Watched Paul Ryan Than Palin in 2008
Aug 31st 2012, 20:55

The Atlantic Wire
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41% Fewer Viewers Watched Paul Ryan Than Palin in 2008
Aug 31st 2012, 20:33

What's the difference between Paul Ryan and Sarah Palin? 15.3 million viewers. And lipstick.

According to Nielsen, (via The Wall Street Journal with a hat tip to Andrew Kaczynski), about 21.9 million people tuned in to "nine broadcast and cable networks" to watch the second night of the Republican convention, when Paul Ryan gave his lie-filled speech. Compare that with the 37.2 million that watched Palin's fiery turn on the big stage in 2008. (It's important to note that fewer networks were included in the 2008 numbers.) 

So how many of those people not tuning in were actually watching Palin's fellow reality TV stars on Here Comes Honey Boo Boo? Some, probably, but BuzzFeed Shift's Amy Odell says there really was no competition between the TLC show and the convention.

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Business Buzz 66: The Atlantic Wire: Curved Glasses Make You Drink Quickly; Reconstructing a Stone Age Woman

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The Atlantic Wire: Curved Glasses Make You Drink Quickly; Reconstructing a Stone Age Woman
Aug 31st 2012, 20:55

The Atlantic Wire
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Curved Glasses Make You Drink Quickly; Reconstructing a Stone Age Woman
Aug 31st 2012, 20:41

Discovered: Troubled kids more likely to become addicts; reconstructed human relative; fallible robots are better teachers; glass shape affects alcohol consumption. 

Glass shape can make you drink more. Coping with stress. Happy hour with co-workers. Friends who egg you on. If all your usual excuses for drinking too much are starting to wear thin, here's a new one: the shape of your glass might be causing you to drink in excess without even knowing it. Researchers led by Dr. Angela Attwood at the University of Bristol constructed maybe the most awesome study ever, enlisting 160 moderate drinkers under 40 to participate in an experiment involving much drinking. Attwood and her colleagues discovered that people drink almost twice as quickly when drinking from curved glasses rather than straight-sided glasses. "People often talk of 'pacing themselves' when drinking alcohol as a means of controlling levels of drunkenness," says Attwood. "I think the important point to take from our research is that the ability to pace effectively may be compromised when drinking from certain types of glasses." [University of Bristol]

Perplexed robots make better teachers. Japanese researchers Shizuko Matsuzoe and Fumihide Tanaka from the University of Tsukuba have been studying robots and their potential applications in the classroom. But imagine having a robot for a teacher—it might be able to instruct students with the most pedagogically sound lesson plans out there, but they'd be freaky, wouldn't they? It would be hard to related to anything programmed to such perfection. That's essentially what the Tsukuba researchers discovered that the most competent robots didn't make for the best teachers with 4- to 8-year-old students. When robots taught students how to draw a shape incorrectly, the children actually learned more, because they had to teach the teacher robot how to correct its mistakes. "Anything that gets a person more actively engaged and motivated is going to be beneficial to the learning process," says the Georgia Institute of Technology's Andrea Thomaz, commenting on the research. "So needing to teach the robot is a great way of doing that." [New Scientist]

Denisovans reconstructed through DNA. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany have used recently discovered DNA to reconstruct the genetic library of a Stone Age ancestor to the human. Matthias Meyer and Svante Pääbo extracted genetic data from the fossils of a cave-dwelling Denisovan woman. Denisovans are ancient Siberians that scientists think may help us understand the bridge between modern humans and Neanderthals. The researchers believe to have passed genes on to Papua New Guineans, but not Asians, Europeans or South AMericans. "We can now start to catalog essential genetic changes that occurred after we separated from our closest extinct relatives," Pääbo says. Much more research is needed to fully understand the connection between these 44,000-year-old Denisovan fossils and modern humans, especially since all this research was built entirely off one tiny finger bone and two teeth found in a Siberian cave. [Science News]

Childhood trauma can presage addiction. The prevailing theory on drug addiction treats it as a genetic predisposition that people are either born with or not. But new research from the University of Cambridge suggests that environment—specifically, childhood upbringing—has a lot to do with it too. Researchers led by Dr. Karen Ersche have published a paper in the American Journal of Psychiatry that finds traumatic childhoods predisposing people to drug addiction later in life. They studied 50 people with cocaine addictions, along with their non-drug dependent siblings. The un-addicted siblings may have shared a traumatic childhood with their addicted brothers and sisters, but they all displayed signs of impulsivity and compulsive behavior, which many scientists believe is a predictor of drug addiction. "Not all individuals with these personality traits would have had a traumatic upbringing," says Dr. Ersche. "Nor does everyone with these traits develop an addiction.  However, our findings show that some people are particularly at risk and their upbringing may have contributed to it." [University of Cambridge]

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Business Buzz 66: CBS Denver: Mango Recall Includes Fruit Sold In Colorado

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CBS Denver: Mango Recall Includes Fruit Sold In Colorado
Aug 31st 2012, 20:53

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Mango Recall Includes Fruit Sold In Colorado
Aug 31st 2012, 20:53

DENVER (AP) — Mangoes sold in Colorado are among those being recalled because they could be contaminated with salmonella.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment says that Colorado is one of the states affected by the recall of Daniella mangoes distributed by a Northern California fruit distributor.

The Food and Drug Administration issued the warning Thursday after Burlingame, Calif.-based Splendid Products recalled five lots of mangoes imported from Mexico. The mangoes carry the Daniella brand sticker with the lot numbers: 3114, 4051, 4311, 4584 or 4959. The FDA says consumers should not eat the fruit and throw it away, if they have any.

The mangoes were sold between July 12 and Aug. 29.

(© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Business Buzz 66: CBS Denver: Purebred Yellowstone Bison Born At Zoo In New York

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CBS Denver: Purebred Yellowstone Bison Born At Zoo In New York
Aug 31st 2012, 20:44

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Purebred Yellowstone Bison Born At Zoo In New York
Aug 31st 2012, 20:43

DENVER (AP) — A purebred Yellowstone bison is growing up at the Bronx Zoo after scientists were able to successfully implant a genetically pure embryo into a commercial bison.

The zoo and Colorado State University announced Thursday that the surrogate bison gave birth to a healthy male calf at the zoo on June 20.

In October 2011, a team led by reproductive physiologist Jennifer Barfield took embryos from Yellowstone bison kept at a federal facility at the university, washed them free of disease and implanted them in a group of surrogates. An ultrasound two months later revealed that one was pregnant and that bison was taken to the zoo in New York City, along with the other bison, in April.

While many bison have been bred with cattle, Yellowstone National Park has one of the world’s largest and most genetically pure bison herds. However, about 40 percent test positive for exposure to brucellosis, which can cause pregnant animals to miscarry. Concern about the disease has prevented the animals from being taken out of the park to reproduce.

The zoo and Barfield both said it was the first time a genetically pure bison has been born as a result of an embryo transfer.

“It gives us an avenue to bring some of their valuable genes out of the Yellowstone population,” Barfield said of the technique.

The zoo has long been interested in establishing a breeding herd of genetically pure bison that can help establish herds at other zoos. The new calf however will not go on exhibit.

“The Bronx Zoo played an important historical role in the recovery of the American bison. By establishing a pure herd the zoo will be, in essence, returning to its roots,” Pat Thomas, the zoo’s general curator and associate director and the vice president of the Wildlife Conservation Society, said in a statement.

Another round of embryo transfers is planned for the fall.

(© Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Business Buzz 66: The Atlantic Wire: A Goodbye to Summer: It's Not Us. It's You.

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The Atlantic Wire: A Goodbye to Summer: It's Not Us. It's You.
Aug 31st 2012, 20:25

The Atlantic Wire
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A Goodbye to Summer: It's Not Us. It's You.
Aug 31st 2012, 20:21

Dear Summer, 

It's been real. Like, really pretty real. There are mosquito bite scars on our legs to prove it. And while it pains us to tell you this, it pains us not as much as the gash we sustained from falling off our bike while drunkenly riding it home after that booze cruise in July. So what if that didn't happen this summer but three summers ago, when we lived in a different place and were sort of a different person entirely? It feels like just yesterday—the gravel in our palms, the concerned tourists in fanny packs lifting us from the sidewalk. Finding ourselves at home, ice on our ankle, afterward; limping to work the next day in boat shoes to hide the cuts and scrapes.

That's the thing, Summer. The two of us were good together, now as much as we were back then, until someone fell off a bike. Coming back to you is familiar, warm, comfortable. You're an old flip-flop we've kicked around the room so often that maybe you've lodged under the chest of drawers and we won't find you until we move to a new apartment when our lease runs out next September. But the thing is, comfort is not always a good thing. Where are the challenges? Aren't you supposed to make us better, to bring out our positive side? That flip-flop should probably be thrown away; instead it's decaying on its own, wherever it is. It's time to toss the old flip-flop.

We confess. We drank too much last night and we dabbled with thoughts of another. We thought: Fall. So appealing. So crisp, so clean, so fresh, so unsmelly. Fall would take us places, places where we might be able to wear long sleeves. Fall would treat us right. Fall would bring us hot coffee in the morning, and in the afternoon. Fall would sweat a bit less. Fall would be healthy, with lots of root vegetables, and Fall would turn over a new leaf and go to yoga in the mornings and spin classes on weekends and stop leaving every damn weekend only to sit in traffic on the way to country houses and beach getaways all the time. But for occasional weekends of leaf-peeping and tailgating parties at college football games, where we, clad in ponchos, huddle together for warmth, Fall would stay in one place for a while, nesting. Fall would be there for us.

Summer, when we first met, you seemed so full of promise. The truth is, though, after these months together, we've learned things about you we're not sure we were ever ready to deal with. Let's talk, for instance, about your drinking problem—every damn night, you were sucking down some boozy concoction in the out of doors. How you wore the same shoes for three months in a row, sometimes even to bed. Your feet smell. Those shoes, try wearing them with socks next year, why don't you? Those disgusting, dingy cutoffs. We're tired of sitting outside in the park with you and sweating. We're tired of putting lotion on your back. We're tired of the false cold air that emerges from indoor locations when you're around. Your news cycle, it's frankly pretty ridiculous, and while it was briefly amusing earlier in the year, something of a novelty, now we're just tired. Tired. Summer, stop goofing around. You gotta grow up, sometime.

The magic, when we had it, yeah, it was good, lobster-roll-and-white-wine-out-of-plastic-cups good; outdoor concert good, beach good, rolling around in the woods and not even getting poison ivy good. But seasons fade. Things change. One of us ends up with sand fleas, or a tick, and suddenly we're applying antibiotic lotions and bandages and feeling a little bit wounded about life in general. We danced to close to the fireworks; we burnt our hands on the S'mores on that camping trip. Was the magic real, or did we imagine the whole damn thing? Should we have trusted?

We're different than we used to be. Maybe you never truly knew us, or us you, at all. I mean, sure, we might continue to have a fling or two, into September or maybe even October, so long as your legs are tan and your hair still smells slightly of suntan lotion and heirloom tomatoes, but we should clearly date other people. We just weren't meant for forever, Summer. You weren't the right season, you were only the season Right Now. 

On Monday things will be different. But we'll always have our Labor Day weekend—except, yeah, about that. We're taking September to the house in the Hamptons, so maybe it would be better for all parties if you'd just stay home? The city really empties out on holiday weekends; you'll enjoy it, we think. Think of it as the Staycation you never got to take.

Fond Memories,

Us

P.S. Destroy this note before May of next year, when we will come running back to you, complaining about what a mopey pain in the butt Spring is.

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