Thursday, August 1, 2013

Sports Briefing | Basketball: Wall Extends Contract With Wizards

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Point guard John Wall, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2010 N.B.A. draft, agreed to a contract extension with the Wizards. ? ? ? ? ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/01/sports/basketball/wall-extends-contract-with-wizards.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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In Europe, there's always time for vacation

Many Europeans are finding ways to 'get away' despite the eurocrisis ? but their tactics span the spectrum.

By Sara Miller Llana,?Staff writer / July 31, 2013

A women sunbathes in the Luxembourg gardens in Paris earlier this month. Europeans have had to change their vacation habits due to the Continent's debt crisis, but vacations remain 'sacred' to many, especially the French.

Jacques Brinon/AP

Enlarge

Across Europe, the summer vacation is sacred. Less than two weeks? Rarely (most, in fact, take off the entire month of July or August). Work on the road? Never.

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But with record unemployment, slashed benefits, and no end in sight to the eurocrisis, many European citizens have had to forgo their cherished annual ritual.

This year, according to polling group Ipsos for the insurance group Europ Assistance, only 54 percent of those surveyed across France, Germany, Britain, Italy, Spain, Belgium, and Austria reported plans to go on summer vacation ? a 12-point drop from 2011.

On one hand, the survey provides a map of who is hurting economically and who is not. But a deeper look also reveals the different cultural battles under way in Europe, the "ways of life" that are being discussed, dissed, and embraced as the eurozone crisis rages and divides.

Germany, for example, is doing the best in Europe economically. Unemployment is around 5 percent, compared with the European Union average of more than 12 percent. Germans like to say they're doing so well because they "did their homework." But Germans are also prudent and pragmatic ? perhaps the reason that they sit below the European average for vacations this year, with only 52 percent saying they will be going away.

At the same time, Germans might look frustratingly at the figures for France, where 62 percent say they are going away this year. That does represent an eight-point drop from last year, but summer trips are still on the agendas of more French people than any of the other nationalities surveyed, despite a stubbornly high unemployment rate of more than 10 percent and few major economic reforms on the horizon. The Germans might, as they do in other aspects, bemoan an unwillingness of the French to "give up the good life."

By the "good life," they mostly refer to the generous pensions, early retirements, and short weeks that define French working culture. But Victor Roquin, a French consultant in sustainable development, counts vacations on the list of rights the French hold dear.

Across Europe, citizens average 25 to 30 days of vacation per year, according to an Expedia 2012 survey. But nowhere is a month off more ingrained than in France. There's even a verb to describe the act of returning home from summer holidays and back to school: rentrer. "Vacations are a part of our culture. We fought a lot to obtain paid vacation," says Mr. Roquin, who grew up going away each July or August to his family's summer home on the French coast.

It's a custom he has carried on in his adult life, and continues today, because he hasn't been touched by crisis, nor have the friends around him. At the start of August he will pack up his car and head south to a friend's family's summer home; then head to the coast of France; and then on to northern Spain before returning to Paris. "I only have two weeks off this year," he says, and then he laughs at the word "only" ? he knows he's talking to an American.

But he doubts that even a looming economic crisis would keep travelers from the roads.

"Holidays, especially summer holidays, are sacred. You can't touch them," he says. "No matter what the economic situation is, people will keep on going on vacation."

Who spends the most on travel?

1 China ($102 billion)
2 Germany (83.8)
3 United States (83.7)
4 Britain (52.3)
5 Russia (42.8)
6 France (37.2)
7 Canada (35.2)
8 Japan (27.9)
9 Australia (27.6)
10 Italy (26.2)

Source: UN World Tourism Organization

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vvrU6NbD1VU/In-Europe-there-s-always-time-for-vacation

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White House 'extremely disappointed' with Russia

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Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-08-01-US-NSA-Surveillance-Snowden-Reaction/id-79351620cbbb4c97816b0848c1151666

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This Interactive Map of Brooklyn Colors Every Building According to Age

This Interactive Map of Brooklyn Colors Every Building According to Age

One of the most incredible things about Brooklyn?and New York City in general?is the consistent commingling of the young and the old, the modern and the antiquated. And never have we seen anything that captures this quality quite like Thomas Rhiel's visualization of Brooklyn, which maps every building based on the year it was constructed.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/OKIo-KdNTHA/this-interactive-map-of-brooklyn-colors-every-building-989251661

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Flo Rida Responds To Diplo After 'Booty' Beef

Flo denied Diplo's claims that the "Can't Believe It" clip rips off Diplo during MTV's "RapFix Live."
By James Montgomery

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1711652/flo-rida-diplo-twitter-fight.jhtml

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LA Lakers guard Steve Nash joins Jim Rome tonight at 6PM ET on CBS Sports Network.

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/cbssportsnetwork/posts/10151457823907574

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Community Health gains Florida clout with HMA deal

Jane Meinhardt

Bayfront Medical Center in St. Petersburg

Community Health Systems Inc. would become a major player in Florida and in the Tampa Bay health care market with the pending acquisition of Health Management Associates Inc.

Community Health (NYSE: CYH), a Franklin, Tenn.-based hospital operator that currently has just two hospitals in Florida, will have 25 Florida hospitals after its deal with HMA closes.

That includes Bayfront Medical Center in St. Petersburg and six other hospitals: Bartow Regional Medical Center, Brooksville Regional Hospital, Heart of Florida Regional Medical Center in Davenport, Pasco Regional Medical Center in Dade City, Spring Hill Regional Hospital and Venice Regional Medical Center.

Florida would become the No. 1 state for Community Health, which would have 206 facilities in 29 states as a result of the deal, which is expected to close in the first quarter of 2014.

Community Health announced its planned $7.6 billion purchase of Naples-based HMA (NYSE: HMA) early Tuesday. Community Health will pay $3.9 billion for HMA?s stock and assume about $3.7 billion in HMA debt.

The deal was announced as HMA said it received additional subpoenas from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, regarding physician relationships and some emergency room operations, a report from the Associated Press said.

Margie Manning is Quality and Content Editor of the Tampa Bay Business Journal. She also covers banking, finance and professional services.

Source: http://feeds.bizjournals.com/~r/bizj_tampabay/~3/z4jliJsPJz8/community-health-gains-florida-clout.html

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Baby Boomers vs. Millennials: How Internet-Obsessed Are You ...

Have you ever noticed the generation gap grow wider when using your phone, computer or television around someone that just isn?t from your era? With technology developing so rapidly, each generation is bound to have a unique experience with gadgets and the internet at large. So, how has the internet impacted each generation? Scroll through the infographic below to find out how differently the kids of the ?internet generation? are living their lives.



Kids of The Past Vs. The Internet Generation



Kids of The Past Vs. The Internet Generation via Hostgator

Related
Why is the Internet So Obsessed With Cats?
12 Ways the Internet is Saving Endangered Species

Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/baby-boomers-vs-millennials-how-internet-savvy-are-you-infographic.html

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Eriez Offers White Paper Focused on Company?s Orange University Educational Program

News for the Aggregate, Ceramics, Coal Processing,
Food Processing, Glass, Metalworking, Minerals
Processing, Packaging, Pharmaceutical, Plastics
and?Rubber and Recycling Industries?

Erie, PA ? Eriez? announces the release of a new White Paper, ?Orange University?: An Eriez Educational Concept to Help Industries Understand and Apply Innovative Technologies.? It is available now for free download from the Eriez website.

This White Paper explains that Orange University was established by Eriez as an institute for learning geared toward the customers and industries the company serves. Introduced in 2011 with the development of a mobile RV classroom, Orange University is the center of the educational universe at Eriez.

?Orange University: An Eriez Educational Concept to Help Industries Understand and Apply Innovative Technologies? describes Eriez? unwavering dedication to customer education, highlighting the many Orange University tools and resources available to customers. These include the mobile training unit, digital literature library, videos, free tools, newsletters, articles, case studies, the Eriez Technical Center and much more.

The White Paper offers a comprehensive overview of the mobile training unit, including typical curriculum and course topics. It explains that Eriez Orange University mobile training and education center continually travels North America, delivering hands-on learning to all who step aboard.

?Orange University: An Eriez Educational Concept to Help Industries Understand and Apply Innovative Technologies? also highlights the company?s website, which supports Orange University by providing product and service literature, white papers, solutions/case studies, selection guides and video training.? The White Paper also details Eriez? commitment to industry trade shows and training for customers and representatives.

To learn more about Orange University and download ?Orange University: An Eriez Educational Concept to Help Industries Understand and Apply Innovative Technologies,? visit http://orangeuniversity.eriez.com/.

Eriez is recognized as world authority in separation technologies. The company?s magnetic lift and separation, metal detection, materials feeding, screening, conveying and controlling equipment have application in the process, metalworking, packaging, plastics, rubber, recycling, mining, aggregate and textile industries. Eriez manufactures and markets these products through 12 international facilities located on six continents. For more information, call toll-free (888) 300-ERIEZ (3743) within the U.S. and Canada. For online users, visit www.eriez.com or send email to ?. Eriez World Headquarters is located at 2200 Asbury Road, Erie, PA 16506.????????????

###

Source: http://news.cision.com/stevens-strategic-communications--inc-/r/eriez-offers-white-paper-focused-on-company-s-orange-university-educational-program,c9446572

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Vans California ?Overdye Pack?

July 30th, 2013 by Aaron Hope |

vans california overdyed pack Vans California Overdye Pack

What would happen if you took a pigment-saturated shoe and ran it through the washing machine? ?Vans California has one possible answer in their upcoming ?Overdye Pack?, a set of skate sneakers whose lighter elements look to have been stained by a process that also has the canvas and/or suede sections looking a little weathered. ?The Vans Authentic and Sk8-Hi are pillars of the low and hightop variety, respectively, and as such, natural representatives of this new look you can expect in the first half of 2014. ?As usual, Sneaker News will keep you posted with release info, and you can see five upcoming pairs depicted in more images below in the meantime.

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vans california overdyed pack 02 Vans California Overdye Pack

via HS

Filed under: Skate, Upcoming Sneakers, Vans // Tags: Vans Authentic, Vans Sk8-Hi

Source: http://sneakernews.com/2013/07/30/vans-california-overdye-pack/

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Maximizing Africa?s agriculture for economic growth

There are few development challenges in Africa more as pressing and fraught with controversy as the issue of land ownership and its persistent gap between rich and poor communities.

With a projected staggering demographic shift in Africa from rural areas to the cities where half of all Africans will live by 2050, these gaps will become steadily more pronounced as governments and communities rise to the challenge of growing enough affordable nutritious food for all families to thrive on the continent.

In some countries in the region, these gaps?allied as they are with high poverty rates and large-scale unemployment?have become sufficiently wide to undermine shared growth and social cohesion.

Women are especially vulnerable. They make up 70% of Africa?s farmers and yet, for the most part, are locked out of land ownership by customary laws and traditions. Without a title to the land they farm, women are unable to raise the money needed to improve their small harvests or to raise living standards. This gender biased legacy perpetuates poverty and blights the lives of women who are the backbone of Africa?s farming, present and future.

Many countries around the world have grappled with the challenge of inequality and land ownership. However, in Africa, which has 202 million hectares or half the world?s total holdings of useable uncultivated fertile land, is blighted by extremely low agricultural productivity.

Despite this abundant land and mineral wealth, much of Africa remains poor and too few countries have been able to translate their rapid economic growth into significantly less poverty and more opportunity.

Currently, only 10% of Africa?s rural land is registered. The remaining 90% is undocumented and informally administered, which makes it susceptible to land grabbing, expropriation without fair compensation, and corruption. Again these consequences fall hardest on women farmers who are oft en the only breadwinners in their families.

Undocumented land is also a problem in Africa?s cities, now increasingly the destination for millions of former rural dwellers. The inhabitants of Africa?s booming cities need secure access to land to live legally without fear of eviction.

This is where scaled-up land registration combined with legal recognition of the rights of squatters on public lands, would greatly improve the lives of poor families and their ability to tend communal gardens, improve urban agriculture, and run profitable businesses.

Fortunately, there are successful examples worldwide of countries that have improved their land governance and revolutionized agriculture. For example, in 1978, China dismantled collective farms and used long-term leases to confer land rights on households, which launched an era of prolonged agricultural growth that transformed rural China and led to the largest reduction in poverty in history. In Argentina, Indonesia, and the Philippines, legal recognition of land rights for residents in slum areas have improved the quality of their housing and the value of their plots.

?Based on such worldwide experience and encouraging evidence from country pilots in African countries such as Ghana, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda, a series of steps that may help to revolutionize agricultural production and eradicate poverty in Africa need to be implemented. These steps include improving tenure security over individual and communal lands, increasing land access and tenure for poor and vulnerable families, resolving land disputes, managing better public land, and increasing efficiency and transparency in land administration services.

Although poor land governance is daunting, the problem is not insurmountable. The last decade has witnessed an increase in concerted efforts by African countries and development partners to undertake land policy reforms and to pilot innovative approaches to improve land governance. Many of these countries either have legislation in place or initiatives in progress to address communal land rights and gender equality, the basis for sound land administration.

Surges in commodity prices and foreign direct investment have increased the potential return on investment in land administration. The opportunity to resolve the continent?s long-running struggle with land ownership and productivity has never been better. The time for action is now.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/EthicalTechnology/~3/hRbfIihhGeg/chetty20130731

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Society of Environmental Journalists ? lockstep in an appalling beat ...

?I am writing simply to express my support for the mission of the Society of Environmental Journalists. I am convinced that it is a worthwhile ? even a necessary ? organization. And in my lexicon, ?necessary? is one of the highest possible forms of praise.?

? Bill McKibben, author (Source)

Such glowing praise from well-known Drama Queen, Bill McKibben is somewhat at odds with the Society of Environmental Journalists (SEJ)?s depiction of itself as an organization whose ?vision and mission? include:

Vision

Credible and robust journalism that informs and engages society on environmental issues.

Mission

The mission of the Society of Environmental Journalists is to strengthen the quality, reach and viability of journalism across all media to advance public understanding of environmental issues.

SEJ provides critical support to journalists of all media in their efforts to cover complex issues of the environment responsibly [...]

If you take a look at the bios of their Board and staff, you may detect that there is rather a distinct ?green? bias in the leadership of the SEJ that is difficult to overlook.

In case you?re wondering how my mouse and I landed in this wonderland, I ?blame? Dr. Judith Curry whose post today, suggests that the SEJ has finally discovered ?The world?s most viewed site on global warming and climate change? aka Watts Up With That (WUWT) (not that the SEJ described it in quite this way!) ? as well as Curry?s own blog, which they describe as follows:

Judith Curry?s blog, Climate Etc., is an exception to the stereotype of denier blogs. Curry is a real climate scientist with strong credentials. Among other things, she is chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Committed to reason, evidence, and open inquiry, she is willing to examine legitimate points the climate skeptics may be making ? as well as the evidence and arguments from mainstream climate science.

In response to which, Curry wryly observed:

Ok, it looks like we now have a new definition of climate change denier [...] As far as I can tell, the SEJ is a reputable organization. However, I find much of their article to be rather appalling. Not to mention the fact that they left out a number of good blog sources, that are arguably better than DeepClimate [...] (emphasis added -hro)

The section Curry had quoted is from what SEJ calls ?Climate Change: A Guide to the Information and Disinformation? ? much of which does not appear to have been updated since Feb. 2009. Here?s the intro to their (Feb. 2009) section on ?Skeptics and Contrarians?:

As scientific evidence has accumulated that the planet is warming and that humans are behind it, many previous skeptics have been won over.

In their dreams, no doubt!

And here?s an item from their ?Editorial Guidelines?

3. EJToday is looking for a mix of the most important, exemplary, and interesting stories that come to our attention on any given day. Newsworthiness in the traditional sense is a key to getting a story included. [...] we are also looking for stuff that is interesting [...] and especially investigative stories.[...]

SEJ?s idea of ?Outstanding Coverage? is beyond bias. It certainly calls into question what their idea of ?exemplary? and ?investigative? might be ? as do the search results on ?Gleick?. Their top result was oh-so-thoughtfully compiled by DeSmog?s Littlemore. So you can well imagine how ?objective? this turned out to be!

Needless to say, SEJ are very fond of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and its ?Nobel Laureate? peddler of purple prose Chair, Rajendra K. Pachauri. And I can?t imagine how they might have missed it, but SEJ?s search engine turns up zilch on ?Almora? (as in The IPCC?s Love Guru).

A search on InterAcademy Council (IAC) yields a mere two items ? one was an announcement of its review of the IPCC, and the second a brief and uninformative newswire piece, from Augst 2010 ? in which the misleading reference to ?Nobel Prize-winning IPCC? can be found.

[Sidebar: Any bets on how many newbie enviro-journos (or unsuspecting members of the public, for that matter) would realize that this was a Nobel Peace Prize - not a Nobel Prize for any scientific endeavour or achievement?

Oh, well, what more could one expect from an organization that chooses to bill one of its 2010 conference plenary speakers as "Nobel laureate climate scientist Steve Running"?! Accuracy does not seem to be part of SEJ's agenda, does it?!]

But this page did include (although I?m not entirely sure how this might have crept in) a ?see also? link to a more informative piece by the Christian Science Monitor ? which contained the following from Dr. Roger Pielke Jr:

Taken as a whole, the report and its recommendations are ?remarkably hard-hitting,? says Roger Pielke Jr., who specialized in science policy at the University of Colorado at Boulder. ?It?s not at all the rap on the knuckles that some commentators had expected.?

Assuming the recommendations are adopted as a package, and not picked over, ?this could mark the moment when climate science joins the 21st century as far as science advice is concerned,? Dr. Pielke says. ?It?s had some practices that were too ad hoc for its prominent role.?

Unfortunately, as the intervening years continue to show, for all intents and purposes, the IPCC opted for ?picked over? ? almost beyond recognition in some instances. IOW, the IPCC chose business as usual. But I digress ?

While a search of the SEJ site does not yield any results for (Andrew) ?Montford?, (Donna) ?Laframboise? or (Ross) ?McKitrick?, it does yield one result for ?Steve McIntyre?: A pathetic little 2012 piece by USA Today?s Mann-fan, Dan Vergano.

In short, I find that SEJ?s ?Vision?:

Credible and robust journalism that informs and engages society on environmental issues.

is very cloudy ? if not fog-inducing ? and far from ?credible?. Although it is within the realm of possibility that (in the noble tradition of those dedicated to ?the cause?), they?ve redefined ?credible?.

In fairness, though, I should note that there was considerable coverage of Climategate; however, of the half dozen or so pieces I skimmed, most were predictably, well, not worth reading! The one notable exception, was a piece by Bill Dawson, assistant editor of SEJ?s quarterly SEJournal. In this July 2010 (presumed excerpt from the print edition) entitled How the U.S. Media Fumbled ?Climategate? and Other Climate Coverage, Dawson relays E-mail interviews with four correspondents, one of whom was SEJ Board member, Tom Yulsman. In response to Dawson?s:

What did you see in the way of opinion pieces ? editorials, op-eds, blogs ? in the non-national media?

Yulsman wrote:

I don?t have hard evidence for how Climategate played in local and regional media. But I can make the obvious observation that specialist reporters, including science and environmental reporters, have been among the hardest hit by the layoffs that have decimated the ranks of journalists. [...]

We should also keep in mind that most people still get their news from local television. And the only people in local television who might be inclined to cover these issues, and theoretically, at least, have at least a modicum of knowledge about the issues, are meteorologists. But mostly, they spend their time telling their viewers what temperature it is outside and whether it?s raining, snowing or sunny. As if we can?t figure that out for ourselves by looking outside and going online.

So I don?t believe most Americans actually got much in the way of news about Climategate from local and regional media.

They did hear a lot about it, though. From the blogosphere.

[...]

So Climategate and global warming in general have been an issue of major discourse in society. And, in fact, some major national news outlets, such as The New York Times, gave it quite a bit of attention (but generally screwed up the story as badly as can be imagined). But mostly, American news media seem to have all but ignored the issues.

Although Yulsman doesn?t articulate what ?the issues? might be, this may well have been the beginning of all the hand-wringing and moaning about ?engaging the public? that seems to have become an almost weekly ritual, of late!

Not to worry, though, the SEJ is gearing up to board the Chattanooga Choo-Choo for its 23rd annual conference in October. Under the ?banner? of the immortal words of no less a luminary than E.O. Wilson,

SEJ-Wilson-banner

this five-day conference will address the theme of ? wait for it ? Got Sustainability?. Be sure to check out the conference brochure (pdf). Here are the topics of their ?climate? panels:

? Climate Change and Media Coverage: Have We Blown It?
? Is Climate Change the Moral and Ethical Dilemma of Our Times?
? All Weather Is Local: Bringing Climate Change Closer to Home
? Super Storms, Tornadoes and Droughts, Climate and Deadly Weather

And lots of other ?responsible? scary stuff, of course!

Footnote:

While I was perusing the SEJ site, I came across the following in the ?Staying up to date on climate news: Publications to follow? section of their ?Climate Change Guide?:

The Guardian: Climate News

The Guardian does more environmental coverage than almost any newspaper on the planet, and they send reporters to international climate events even when most other newspapers stay home. They have a boisterous and popular tone, a bit of a liberal tilt, and a predilection for cute puppy stories, but their reporters are serious and break stories others don?t have the grit for. Being Brits, they do not suck up to the U.S. government.

How ?engaging? and ?responsible? ? and professional ? is that, eh?! By contrast, as I had noted above, in the section where they had recognized Anthony Watts? WUWT, they seemed to be holding their nose in order to ? uh ? sustain their carefully cultivated (but fact-free)?stereotype?. Here?s what they had written in their ?News from the climate wars? section on this same page (in which they had also mentioned Curry?s blog):

Watts Up With That

Watts Up With That is one of the more civil and well-read of the denier blogs. It is not reliable as a source of factual information. It does not disclose its funding sources. Anthony Watts, its proprietor, has worked as a broadcast weatherman for years but has no degree.

There?s a post today at WUWT, in which Watts, citing Andrew Montford at Bishop Hill wrote:

The Guardian has thrown all my preconceptions into disarray by printing an article about sceptics that is not only thoughtful, but is polite too!

Sceptics such as Andrew Montford and Anthony Watts agree with the mainstream view that the greenhouse effect brings about atmospheric warming as a result of carbon emissions, but dispute levels of climate sensitivity. However, others offer far more fundamental challenges to climate science, such as fringe sceptic group Principia Scientific who reject this orthodox view of atmospheric physics.

This Guardian article was by Warren Pearce, who had already sent the army of alarmist lesser-lights into an absolute tizzy because he had recently committed the cardinal sin of posting a devastating guest-essay by skeptic Ben Pile on Pearce?s University of Nottingham blog, Making Science Public.

So as ?gobsmacked? ? and appreciative ? as Watts acknowledged he was for Pearce?s article in the Guardian, I?m inclined to suspect this may well pale in comparison to the reactions ? and lack of appreciation ? behind closed screens at the SEJ. So here?s a little something to cheer them up ? as they contemplate the journey from their Pennsylvania home-base to Chattanooga;-)

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Source: http://hro001.wordpress.com/2013/07/31/society-of-environmental-journalists-lockstep-in-an-appalling-beat-of-bias/

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