Sunday, November 30, 2008

An Apollo 15 Panorama: Astronaut Exploring


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An Apollo 15 Panorama: Astronaut Exploring


An Apollo 15 Panorama: Astronaut Exploring
What would it be like to explore the Moon?

NASA's
Apollo missions
gave humans just this chance in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

In particular, the Apollo 15 mission was dedicated to better understanding the surface of the
Moon by exploring mountains, valleys,
maria, and highlands.

Astronauts David Scott and James Irwin spent nearly three days on the Moon while
Alfred Worden orbited above in the
Command Module.

The mission, which blasted off from Earth on 1971 July 26,
was the first to deploy a
Lunar Roving Vehicle.

Pictured above in this digitally stitched
mosaic panorama, David Scott examines a boulder in front of the summit
of Mt. Hadley Delta.

The shadow of James Irwin is visible to the right, while
scrolling to the right will reveal a well-lit and diverse
lunar terrain.

The
Apollo 15 mission returned about 76 kilograms of moon rocks for detailed study.

In the future, NASA and other space agencies plan to continue to
lead humanity's
explorati...


Ginny
I can has iPhone?

Thursday, November 20, 2008

SUCCESS


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SUCCESS




funny pictures of cats with captions


» Want moar fail? Visit Failblog!


SUCCESS: It can lead to fail


kittehz has manee fail momentz.


picture: dunno source, via our lolcat builder. lol caption:


» Recaption This


      




Ginny
I can has iPhone?

The Atheist Experience: Crippled dogs and one-trick ponies

http://www.google.com/gwt/n?u=http%3A%2F%2Fatheistexperience.blogspot.com%2F2008%2F11%2Fcrippled-dogs-and-one-trick-ponies.html


Ginny
I can has iPhone?

Stetson Kennedy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

http://www.google.com/gwt/n?u=http%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FStetson_Kennedy


Ginny
I can has iPhone?

Peculiar People

Having been bullied as a non-Mormon kid in Utah, my negatives for the church are extremely high. 

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Peculiar People


When I was growing up, a popular theme in church was the fact that we were a 'peculiar people', indicating a fulfillment of prophecy. What a lot of Mormons are not aware of is that Gordon B. Hinckley's life's work was to change all that. He understood that if the church seemed peculiar, it just made missionary work that much harder. You might call him the PR church president.


But it seems the rank and file of the church are not helping. A new book by LDS author Dr. Gary Lawrence shows why Hinckley, if not literally inspired, was certainly right. The Mormon church suffers from terrible negatives, and surprisingly, it has nothing to do with negative publicity about Mitt Romney or California's Prop 8 so much as, well, people just don't like them and because of "what are perceived as weird beliefs and secretiveness".


Thirty-seven percent [of those surveyed] have a favorable impression of us and 49 percent have an unfavorable impression". . .


It's even worse when compared with how Americans view other religions. The ratio for people who view those of the Jewish faith in a positive light is nearly 3.5-to-1; the same for Baptists. Catholics' enjoy a positive ratio of nearly 2-to-1; Mormons, less than 1-to-1.


"Thirty-seven percent of all Americans do not know a Mormon, 55 percent of all Americans do not know an active Mormon.



And probably the most telling fact of all:


. . . those who know one Mormon have a worse opinion of us than those who don't know any Mormons," Lawrence said.



Here in Utah, there is a lot of denial about this. Commenters on this blog have said that bad PR is a GOOD thing for the church (kind of a twist on there's no such thing as bad press, just spell the name right).


And before you attack me for hating the Mormon church (I don't, but you won't believe that), I'm just the messenger here. Here's a suggestion: Don't make every relationship about spreading the gospel. Try being friendly and interested in neighbors, co-workers, and even strangers just out of a simple love for and appreciation of people of the non-Mormon variety.



Ginny
I can has iPhone?

Monday, November 17, 2008

Researchers: New Explanation For Alzheimer's


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Researchers: New Explanation For Alzheimer's

Researchers think they've discovered precisely what damages brain cells and causes memory loss in people who have Alzheimer's disease. Brain scientists present the latest evidence at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience this week in Washington, D.C.

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Ginny
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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Bob Edwards: The President-Elect


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Bob Edwards: The President-Elect

I want to preface these remarks by assuring my listeners that if President Obama makes one false move, my producers and I will hold him to account and scrutinize him with the same fervor as we have President Bush. Yes we will!



I've obviously had days to think about this remarkable moment in American history and all the things have been said by now. As Desmond Tutu said in the Washington Post on Sunday, November 9th, no one of my generation thought he'd see the end of the Soviet Union or the inauguration of Nelson Mandela as president of a post-apartheid South Africa--as he ranked the Obama achievement with those milestones. I have thought this over a lot and I always believed that a black candidate of Obama's qualities would emerge--I just never thought there'd be enough white people who would vote for such a person, and now I'm very proud and pleased to know differently. Yes, I know that Obama lost the white vote--but I also know that he wouldn't have won without the significant number of whites who voted for him. As we all know, vast numbers of white voters overcame age-old prejudices---for whatever reasons--to cast their first votes for an African-American.



I grew up in segregationist Louisville, Kentucky. Jim Crow is not a page in a history book to me--I was there and I lived it. When I was a little kid, my mother would take me on the bus to go downtown to shop in department stores where black people were not be allowed to try on the clothes for sale. Those stores had four restrooms and two water fountains. I was a little kid and couldn't read the signs that told me which restrooms and which water fountains were designated "colored." When I chose the "wrong" one I'd get a whipping.



I loved my father, but I was repulsed by his bigotry. He believed black people were not fully human. They were not black people to my father--they were niggers. That was a word he passed on to me and I had to un-learn it. For this I give thanks to my five-years-older brother Joe, who told me about this fellow named Martin Luther King back in the 1950's when we were both still children. Nowadays we talk about being "on the right side of history." Brother Joe and I chose to be there at the expense of our father's love. Dad would even race-bait me. We'd be watching the Ed Sullivan Show and when a black performer came on, he'd utter some racial epithet to provoke a response from me. Once I caught on, I'd deny him a reaction. And here's the great irony: If my father had been alive last Tuesday, he'd have voted for Barack Obama because he was a yellow-dog Democrat who voted for EVERY Democrat. I am not, and have voted for Republicans and Democrats.



White people who voted for Obama are in a self-congratulatory euphoria--and I will not disturb them from that. Obama made a lot of white conve...



Ginny
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Monday, November 10, 2008

Jeffrey Feldman: Election Brought Hard-Right Nationalism Into Light


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Jeffrey Feldman: Election Brought Hard-Right Nationalism Into Light

While the 2008 election finished with a great celebration at the victory of Barack Obama, it also dragged a grisly hard-right nationalism into the bright light of American politics. The GOP had flirted with nationalism in the 1992 and 1996 Presidential bids of Pat Buchanan, but this time, the hard-right rhetoric of the McCain-Palin campaign shot through the Republican base with such an intensity that the Secret Service expressed concern. The rise of a hard-right nationalist front in the Republican Party goes far beyond the antics of Sarah Palin. Hard-right nationalism is a monster now fully emerged in America, and to ignore it or simply ridicule it would be a grave mistake and a missed opportunity.


Some political analysts would argue that the 1992 and 1996 presidential bids of Pat Buchanan brought a similar kind of hard-right nationalism to the main stage of American politics, and they would be correct. In both those campaigns as a Republican candidate, Buchanan argued that America was under attack from without and within, rallying to his side those Republican voters who saw the election of a candidate as the first step on the road to total defeat for America's enemies. For Buchanan, those enemies were defined in racial terms, but also in terms of gender and social issues. The threats Buchanan campaigned equally against included Latinos, homosexuals, and anyone who supported Roe v. Wade. But Buchanan lost and lost badly, and his ideas ultimately left him without any significant support in the GOP.

The McCain-Palin campaign succeeded at a level beyond Buchanan's wildest dreams by including several elements that took Buchanan's racist, sexist and protectionist nationalism and replaced it with a logic of political violence.

Where Buchanan argued that American was under social and cultural threat, McCain and Palin argued that their opponent presented a physical threat to every American's property and life. They did this in two ways: (1) by accusing Barack Obama of being a 'terrorist' and (2) by accusing Barack Obama of being a communist.

The result was startlingly effective.

In 1992 and 1996, the most devoted followers of Pat Buchanan had deep concerns about the Democratic Party and Republican Party candidates who did not stand up for 'conservative values.' In 2008, by contrast, the most devoted followers of John McCain and Sarah Palin had more than deep concerns about ideology--they were deathly afraid of Barack Obama himself.

According to a recent article by the Telegraph, one of the results of Sarah Palin's campaign speeches in particular, was a spike in death threats against Barack Obama. The sudden rise ...



Ginny
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Utah vet mourned his flight crew for decades - but lost more than he realized


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Utah vet mourned his flight crew for decades - but lost more than he realized

Posted: 3:05 PM- Nine men. One plane. Falling from the sky. Falling to the sea.
This is the scene, as it played out in Utah veteran Norman Workman's dreams, again and again, until dementia finally - maybe mercifully - stole it from him, a year or two ago.


Ginny
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Obama' Plane Lands in Washington

And it's an AA flight, according to the image on the TV in the
lunchroom.