Monday, December 3, 2012

Chihuahua - Simba - Small - Adult - Male - Dog | Larkspur | eBay ...

Chihuahua - Simba - Small - Adult - Male - Dog

I'm a male Chiweenie ? you know, a cross between a Chihuahua and Dachshund. In fact, you could say I'm a limited edition! I am a small little dog of about 9 years (but I act much younger), and totally fabulous ? very sweet and friendly to everyone. My foster mom says I will grab your heart in no time! I love to be held and to play with other dogs. I'm neutered, current on shots and microchipped. I'm great with other dogs, cats, and kids over 10. If you are looking for a dog that LOVES sitting on your lap, please complete an application for me at www.pekesandpoms.com.

CHARACTERISTICS:
Breed: Chihuahua
Size: Small
Petfinder ID: 21398333

ADDITIONAL INFO:
Pet has been spayed/neutered

CONTACT:
Colorado Peke and Pom Rescue Inc | Morrison, CO | 303-681-2512

For additional information, reply to this ad or see: http://www.petfinder.com/petnote/displaypet.cgi?petid=21398333

Brought to you by Petfinder.com

Source: http://denver.ebayclassifieds.com/dogs-puppies/larkspur/chihuahua-simba-small-adult-male-dog/?ad=24774119

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Why We're Mad for Mars

An excited comment by a NASA scientist set off a bout of feverish online speculation last week about what new discoveries might be coming from the surface of Mars.

John Grotzinger, the principal investigator for NASA's Mars Curiosity rover mission, told an NPR reporter that the rover's soil sampler analysis had turned up something exciting.

"This data is gonna be one for the history books," he said. "It's looking really good."

The comments kicked off immediate online speculation on what the finding could be, but NASA immediately began to manage expectations, with a spokesperson telling CBS News that the discovery was "nothing earthshaking."

But try as it might, NASA likely can't tamp down enthusiasm about the Red Planet. Earth's neighbor has long fascinated the public for its potential to have a history of life, or even to one day support a future human colony.

The lure of Mars

Until the first spacecraft flybys of Mars in the 1960s, scientists believed the planet might have liquid water and sustain life. That possibility was enough to fascinate the public, Bob Crossley, author of "Imagining Mars: A Literary History" (Wesleyan, 2011), told LiveScience in August.

"Somewhere deep in my own psyche, and maybe for other people as well, there is a desire for another world," said Crossley, an emeritus professor of English at the University of Massachusetts. "For me, the deepest meaning of Mars is it represents some kind of longing for something outside ourselves, something outside our own world." [5 Mars Myths and Misconceptions]

Literary greats like Ray Bradbury likely helped boost Mars' profile; you don't have to be a planetary science geek to love "The Martian Chronicles." Nor do you have to love astronomy to enjoy sci-fi films such as "Total Recall," which is set on the planet. This cultural cachet likely increases familiarity with Mars among the public.

Disappointment in Mars

Of course, familiarity can breed contempt. Bill Sheehan, a psychiatrist and author of "Mars: The Lure of the Red Planet" (Prometheus Books, 2001), said NASA's Mariner missions to Mars in the 1960s demoralized the public when they sent back images of a dead, cratered planet.

"The less defined an object is like Mars, the more evocative it is. We use it as a Rorschach to project our hopes and fears on to. As Mars becomes more explored, it becomes a more quotidian setting that no longer captures the imagination," Sheehan told LiveScience in August.

That hasn't kept excitable space-lovers from clinging to their own myths about Mars. In 1976, for example, NASA's Viking 1 spacecraft snapped a picture that seemed to show a massive humanoid face on the planet's surface. Scientists pointed out that the image was a trick of light and shadow, but UFO lovers paid them little mind. (In 1998 and 2001, photos snapped by NASA's Mars Global Surveyor revealed the "face" to be an ordinary butte.)

The Curiosity mission, which landed a car-size rover equipped with 165 pounds (75 kilograms) of scientific equipment on the Red Planet, may have injected some of the excitement back into public discussions of Mars. The rover's NASA-run Twitter feed, for example, has more than 1.2 million followers.?

Grotzinger and other Curiosity scientists will hold a press conference Monday (Dec. 3) at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU), though NASA officials say there will be no major announcement, only an update of the rover's soil analysis.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas?or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-were-mad-mars-142332048.html

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Sunday, December 2, 2012

Holiday calendar puts Earth in the spotlight

By Alan Boyle

This picture may remind you of an alien landscape, but it's actually a look at our own planet from hundreds of miles above. NASA's Terra satellite captured this view of a 35-mile-wide (55-kilometer-wide) alluvial fan in China's Xinjiang Province in 2002.


The geological feature spreads across the desolate landscape between the Kunlun and Altun mountain ranges that form the southern border of the Taklimakan Desert. Terra's color-coded view shows water flowing down from the mountains along the left side of the fan. Vegetation appears in shades of red in the upper left corner. NASA says the lumpy-looking terrain at the top of the image consists of sand dunes at the edge of the Taklimakan, one of the largest sandy deserts on Earth.

This is one of the first images you'll see in "Earth as Art," a newly published 158-page book featuring satellite pictures of planet Earth. NASA is making the book freely available online in PDF format, but it can also be downloaded as an iPad app or purchased as a coffee-table book from the U.S. Government Printing Office's online store.

"Earth as Art" serves as a great kickoff for this year's Cosmic Log Space Advent Calendar, which highlights views of Earth from space. Every day from now until Dec. 25, we'll pass along a fresh image for you to enjoy. The idea takes its inspiration from a traditional Advent calendar, which lets kids count down to Christmas with a daily treat.

If one cosmic treat a day just isn't enough, you're in luck: The Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar has just started up over at The Atlantic's In Focus photo gallery, and Zooniverse is offering a cosmic Advent calendar as well. Feel free to fill your eyes, and your imagination, with all these non-fattening holiday goodies over the next 25 days.

More goodies from space:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other science and space news coverage, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered via email. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/30/15583160-holiday-calendar-satellite-spies-a-fantastic-fan?lite

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Photos: World AIDS Day 2012

Like It. Tweet It. Digg It.

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Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/slideshow/world-aids-day-2012-17849331

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ODK honor society adds 20 members, including ... - MTSU News

MTSU alumnus Phil Williams, investigative reporter for WTVF-TV in Nashville, will be among the initiates inducted into the Omicron Delta Kappa honor society at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 30.

Phil Williams

Williams, a Columbia, Tenn., native who graduated in 1985, was added to the MTSU College of Mass Communication Wall of Fame in 2003. He completed his thesis, ?Dissent in a Free Society,? during Dr. Ron Messier?s tenure as honors program director, and Messier was Williams? thesis adviser.

Williams is the winner of two George Foster Peabody Awards, the George Polk Award for TV Reporting, a National Headliner Award and a 2012 Alfred I DuPont-Columbia Award for excellence in local reporting.

The ceremony, which will take place in Room 106 of the university?s Paul W. Martin Sr. Honors Building, will welcome a total of 20 students, faculty and staffers into the organization.

?Our students epitomize the best among student leaders on campus,? said faculty adviser Georgia Dennis, events coordinator for the University Honors College. ?I think we have the cream of the crop.?

Faculty initiates include Dr. Debra Sells, vice president for student affairs and vice provost for enrollment and academic services; Dr. Deana Raffo, assistant professor of management; and Dr. Charlene True, associate professor of educational leadership.

Dr. Charlene True

Dr. Deanna Raffo

Dr. Debra Sells

The Challenge Speaker, who will issue the new members? marching orders for success in life, will be Michael Giles Jr., an ODK Foundation trustee and Nashville-based marketing manager for the Pedigree and Cesar brands of pet food produced by Mars Inc.

Omicron Delta Kappa, founded in 1914 and now 300,000 members strong, is ?the first college honor society of a national scope to give recognition and honor for meritorious leadership and service in extracurricular activities and to encourage development of general campus citizenship,? according to its website, www.odk.org.

The society recognizes achievement in the areas of scholarship; athletics; journalism, speech and the mass media; creative and performing arts; and campus/community service, social/religious activities and campus government.

For more information, contact Dennis at 615-898-5645 or georgia.dennis.mtsu.edu.

? Gina K. Logue (Gina.Logue@mtsu.edu)

Source: http://mtsunews.com/odk-initiation-fall-2012/

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LIFE: The photo that changed the face of AIDS

So you know the people who dashed your hopes of winning that stupidly large Powerball jackpot, instantly crushing your dreams of living like a king and dipping your butt in gold? Everyone who knows them says the first winners are pretty awesome people, and we now know that least one of their mothers is almost absurdly adorable. Granted, we'd be saying pretty glowing stuff, too, if we were neighbors of Cindy and Mark Hill ??who possess one of the two winning $558 million Powerball tickets?? because, hey, it doesn't hurt to be nice to multimillionaires. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/life-the-photo-that-changed-the-face-of-aids-slideshow/

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Saturday, December 1, 2012

Analysis: The next stop for Palestinians could be global courts

(Reuters) - The U.N. General Assembly's overwhelming vote to recognize Palestine as a non-member state offers little prospect for greater clout in world politics but it could make a difference in the international courts.

The formal recognition of statehood, even without full U.N. membership, could be enough for the Palestinians to achieve membership at the Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC), where member states have the power to refer for investigation alleged war crimes or crimes against humanity.

With its upgraded status at the U.N., the Palestinians may now seek to apply to the ICC for membership and authority to file war-crimes charges against the Israeli government and its officials.

That threat of so-called "lawfare" has already prevented some Israeli civilian and military leaders from traveling abroad out of fear they'd be arrested as war criminals.

"Israelis are afraid of being hauled to The Hague," said Robert Malley, the Middle East program director for the International Crisis Group.

The Palestinians have long planned to use non-membership statehood at the U.N., once obtained, as a way to enter the ICC. One Palestinian negotiator, in talking to the International Crisis Group, called the strategy a "legal or diplomatic intifada" against Israel.

When Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas addressed the United Nations in September he specifically accused Israel of committing war crimes.

Israeli officials have said the country's armed forces strictly adhere to international law and argue the true aim of Palestinians' accusations is to isolate Israel.

Last spring, the ICC's former chief prosecutor turned down a 2009 Palestinian request for prosecution of Israel's actions in the 2008-2009 Gaza war with Hamas, specifically noting that Palestine was only a U.N. observer entity.

In September, the new ICC prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, said a General Assembly vote could make the difference.

"What we have also done is to leave the door open and to say that if this -- if Palestine is able to pass over that (statehood) hurdle, of course, under the General Assembly, then we will revisit what the ICC can do," Bensouda said during a talk in New York.

The Hague-based ICC is the one international venue where individuals can be criminally charged. All 117 countries that ratified the Rome Statute, which created the court, are bound to turn over suspects.

The United States and Israel have not joined the Rome Statute, but that would not prevent the Palestinians from pursing cases under the treaty. ICC arrest warrants and rulings carry geopolitical weight even when they can't be enforced. An indictment of Libya's Moammar Gadhafi last year helped mobilize international support for the rebels who opposed him.

Of course, if the Palestinians enter the legal battlefield, they, too, risk being accused and prosecuted in the venues where they'd try to target Israelis.

There is no guarantee for either side that the ICC prosecutor would follow through on charges. The ICC has procedural obstacles that could head off any prosecution there.

Some commentators argue that, like lawyers in any legal fight, both the Palestinians and Israelis have exaggerated the stakes in what's more of a political and public-relations drama.

"The concern that something dramatic would change is overblown," said Rosa Brooks, a professor of international law at Georgetown University who has also served in policy roles at the State and Defense departments.

And it's important to remember that the ICC is a political organization as much as a legal one -- cases are initiated by member governments and the U.N. Security Council -- so geopolitical considerations can trump a strictly legal case.

(Reporting by Joseph Schuman; Editing by Eileen Daspin and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-next-stop-palestinians-could-global-courts-014457076.html

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