Shell Wildlife Photographer of the year - Top 5 Pictures 2007-10-26 03:05:00 Taken in Botswana, this picture of a bull elephant kicking and spraying mud in a water-hole wins Ben Osborne from the UK the prize of Shell
Wildlife Photographer
of the Year 2007Shell Young Wildlife Photographer of the Year winner Patrick Corning was only nine years old when he captured this image of three squirrel monkeys during a holiday with his parents in Costa RicaCanadian Paul Nicklen's aerial image of male narwhal whales feeding was the winning photo in the competition's Animals in their Environment categoryThe artistic composition of this photo by David Tipling of two black grouse was specially commended by the judges, who spent three months sifting their way through more than 32,000 entriesRussian Sergey Gorshkov's close-up of a brown bear won the Animal Portraits category of the competition, organised by BBC Wildlife Magazine and London's Natural History Museum Read more: Pictures
Google Gives free IMAP access.. for Gmail 2007-10-26 02:24:00 Google today began giving its Gmail
users access to IMAP, an e-mail protocol that allows users to synchronize their e-mail across multiple devices.While Google's announcement is likely to be appreciated by users of Apple's iPhone (which supports IMAP) and business users, what's particularly noteworthy about the news is how Keith Coleman, Gmail product manager, describes Google's intentions."One of our core philosophies at Google is we don't want our users' data ever to be held hostage," Coleman said in a phone interview. "We want them to be able to take their data and do whatever it is they want to do with it. In the case of e-mail, that means taking their contacts to various devices, accessing their e-mail from any device or any e-mail client that they choose."Google CEO Eric Schmidt voiced similar sentiments earlier this year. Apparently, his thoughts have become corporate talking points.Google, in other words, is serious about not holding its users' data hostage. Think about Read more: Google
Politicians are not National Assets : Delhi HC slams policticians 2007-10-26 01:40:00 Politicians are not national assets that need to be protected, the Delhi High Court observed on Thursday, adding that the security cover given to political leaders was often a nuisance for the common man."If there is a threat to the lives of the politicians, they should remain in the confines of their homes and offices," a bench headed by Justice T S Thakur said."You should not let these men (politicians) to come out. Their presence in public places itself threatens the common men. I do not know why it has become a matter of prestige for them to move with 10-15 uniformed security personnel carrying lethal weapon."The court was hearing a public interest litigation (PIL) filed by Rajiv Awasti on police reforms, seeking a division of the force into two wings to deal with law and order matters and investigation independently.The court said people have been put in inconvenience due to the overwhelming presence of security guards accompanying politicians in public places."It has become fashi Read more: National
, Assets
Wealthy, healthy and aged 85: the women living ever longer 2007-10-26 01:34:00 Life expectancy for professional women has shot up by 30 months to 85 years in only the last four years, while the gap between the top and bottom classes has widened.Figures from the Office for National Statistics published yesterday show that females in high-status, well-paid jobs such as medicine, law and finance are living longer than ever. Their counterparts in clerical and manual jobs, however, are struggling to keep pace as their lifestyles and life expectancy emulate their male colleagues.Diet, drinking and smoking are taking their toll on women in the lower social classes but health experts suggest that females at the top are in better shape than ever, have quicker access to healthcare, are no longer dying from breast cancer and can afford better holidays. Some epidemiologists also suggest that women get a psychological boost from a high-status job where they are largely in control.The figures show that the life expectancy at birth for women in the top social class, or those wh Read more: Wealthy
, healthy
Nokia's new mobile social Networking site targets at content sharing.. 2007-10-26 01:33:00 Nokia has announced "Seek", the third dimension of its mobile sharing site called 'Mosh'.'Mosh' is a two months old mobile social networking site focused on the sharing of mobile content. The service is available on all mobile devices and not just limited to Nokia devices."Seek" is the third phase in the evolution of 'Mosh'. The first was the ability to upload, and share content with a global audience; the second was downloading and customizing your device; and now "Seek", true-to-its-name, provides the ability to seek content and interact with the community.Officially launching on December 14 this year, "Seek" will allow the global 'Mosh' community to connect with each other, and obtain content that is difficult to find elsewhere. Users can even get customized responses for their mobile needs."Seek" will allow users to not just share or ask for content, but also reply with suggestions or custom-created content.According to Nokia, with "Seek", the possibilities are endless: mob Read more: Nokia
, targets
Kimi Raikkonen wins 2007 FIA Formula One World Drivers Championship 2007-10-21 12:18:00 Kimi Raikkonen (Ferrari) won the 2007 FIA Formula
One World
Drivers
Chamionship fighting out the defending champion Fernando Alonso of McLaren and Current Leader Louis Hamilton of McLaren.1 Kimi - 110 points2 Louis Hamilton - 109 points3 Alonso - 109 point.Though Hamilton and Alonso were in the same points, as Hamilton had more 2nd places(both were tied in no of 1st places as well) than Alonso so he was awarded second in the championship.[updates will follow soon] Brazilian Race resultKimi finisht First 1Mass 2ndAlonso 3rdLouis Hamilton 7th Kimi Raikkonen came from seven points back, jumping over both two-time World Champion Fernando Alonso and points leader Lewis Hamilton to win the 2007 Formula One drivers championship. He did it by capturing Sunday's Brazilian Grand Prix at the Autodromo Carlos Pace. The No.6 Ferrari driver crossed the finish line 1.493 seconds ahead of teammate Felipe Massa.The victory for Raikkonen, the man who replaced the legendary Michael Schumacher, was his Read more: Kimi Raikkonen
, One World
[mid race update] Kimi Räikkönen could win 2007 FIA F1 world championship.. 2007-10-21 12:03:00 After the second pit stop Kimi Raikkonen(Räikkönen) muscled Massa to First position and Mass in 2nd , Alonso 4th and Lewis 8th positon in Grid after 45 Laps.As it stands as long as Lewis doesnt reach 6th position and Alonso doesnt get to 2nd positionKimi Raikkonen will win the championship
.
Lewis Hamilton has a disastrous start in the Brazilian Grand Prix.. 2007-10-21 11:46:00 Currently Massa 1, Kimi 2, Alonso 4, Louis Hamilton
9 after 36 Laps.Ferrari's Felipe Massa took the lead in Sunday's Brazilian
Grand
Prix at Interlagos despite a big challenge off the line from team mate Kimi Räikkönen.Räikkönen, who started from third on the grid, got round the outside of second-placed Lewis
Hamilton (McLaren-Mercedes) and up alongside Massa, but had to yield, retaining second. Hamilton, who had to tap off as Räikkönen hesitated behind Massa, got pounced on by team mate Fernando Alonso who barged through into third place. Hamilton tried to fight back in turn 4, but ran wide and off the track, rejoining down in eighth place.Giancarlo Fisichella (Renault) also ran off the track but cheekily rejoined right in front of Sakon Yamamoto (Spyker-Ferrari) who rammed hard into the back of the Renault, showering her track with debris. Neither driver was hurt but both retired.Hamilton began fighting his way up through the pack, taking Nick Heidfeld (BMW Sauber) for sixth Read more: Grand Prix
Aussy sucks ..and Booing everytime when Symonds is in Picture.. 2007-10-20 11:44:00 The scenes worsened and crowd behaviour became torrid, in the only T20 match of the India-Australia series. The Aussies were welcomed with "Aussy sucks
" chants and everytime the ball went to Symonds or when he came on to bat, the crowd was Booing, apparently nothing racist was said but still made fans like me really feel terribly bad at our hospitality. Mumbai has seriously lost a plot in terms of hospitality, compared to places like Chennai where even Pakistan and Australia got standing ovation for their cricket. This has worsened the media image of Mumbai and Indian crowd as a whole.India won the match comfortably with Gambhir laying a strong foundation. Earlier Harbhajan was impeccable and conceded only 17 runs and took a wicket from 4 overs.Gambhir 63(52)Ponting 74(53) Read more: Picture
Spiked : Picture of 50 spikes through a guys mouth.. 2007-10-20 09:31:00 Spiked : Picture
of 50 spikes
through a guys mouth
..
Picture of Britney's car running over a reporter. 2007-10-20 09:27:00 This image provided by TMZ.com reportedly shows a vehicle driven by Britney
Spears running
over the foot of a photographer working for the celebrity web site TMZ.com. Spears was driving away from a Beverly Hills, Calif., medical building, her car surrounded by photographers, when the incident occurred Thursday, Oct. 18, 2007 according to reports. Read more: Picture
25 Secrets of Mona Lisa revealed.. 2007-10-20 09:18:00 New images uncover 25 secrets about the Mona Lisa
, including proof that Leonardo da Vinci gave her eyebrows, solving a long-held mystery.The images are part of an exhibition, "Mona Lisa Secrets
Revealed," which will feature new research by French engineer Pascal Cotte and debut in the United States at the Metreon in San Francisco. The Mona Lisa showcase is part of a larger exhibition called "Da Vinci: An Exhibition of Genius."Cotte, founder of Lumiere Technology, scanned the painting with a 240-megapixel Multi-spectral Imaging Camera he invented, which uses 13 wavelengths from ultraviolet light to infrared. The resulting images peel away centuries of varnish and other alterations, shedding light on how the artist brought the painted figure to life and how she appeared to da Vinci and his contemporaries."The face of Mona Lisa appears slightly wider and the smile is different and the eyes are different," Cotte said. "The smile is more accentuated I would say."Mona Lisa mysteriesA zoomed
David Copperfield (illusionist) house raided.. 2007-10-20 09:14:00 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - FBI agents have seized nearly $2 million in cash from a Las Vegas warehouse owned by illusionist David
Copperfield
, local media reports said on Thursday.The agents also took a computer hard drive and a memory chip from a digital camera system during Wednesday's late-night operation. The reports said the raid stems from an investigation in Seattle."We understand there is an investigation, are in touch with the investigators, and are respecting the confidentiality of the investigation," Copperfield's attorney David Chesnoff said in a statement cited by Las Vegas broadcasters.The local CBS affiliate KLAS-TV quoted a source as saying the cash was stashed in a safe and that agents took the cash.Copperfield, 51, whose real name is David Kotkin, is famed for stunts such as making the Statue of Liberty disappear and walking through the Great Wall of China. He is a regular performer at the MGM Grand hotel in Las Vegas. Read more: David Copperfield
J. K. Rowling Says "Albus Dumbledore" Character is Gay 2007-10-20 08:54:00 Friday night, Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling
revealed that Albus Dumbledore, mentor to the world-famous boy wizard and Hogwart's headmaster, is gay. During a question and answer session before a full house at Carnegie Hall in New York City, Rowling made the surprise revelation when a fan of the books asked the author whether Dumbledore would ever find "true love".Rowling responded, "Dumbledore is gay."Some in the audience reportedly gasped while others applauded. The author went on to explain that Dumbledore loved rival wizard Gellert Grindewald who he had long ago vanquished in battle. Said Rowling, "Falling in love can blind us to an extent." She then added, Dumbledore was "horribly, terribly let down" and that his love was his "great tragedy"According to Rowling, she also revealed the truth about Dumbledore's sexual orientation during the filming of the sixth movie, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. She had noticed a reference in the script indicating Dumbledore had once b Read more: Character
Birth control pills for 11 year olds.. 2007-10-20 08:52:00 At the King Middle School in Portland, Maine, medical workers are allowed to give the girls as young as 11 birth control pills
without their parents knowing about it.The school board in Portland voted 7-2 to make that happen. The rationale is that some kids will have sex and the school must try to reduce pregnancies. Also, parents must sign a waiver allowing their children to receive medical care at the school.However, that medical care is kept secret from the parents, in the birth control area.Now giving sixth grade girls the pill is dumb. It doesn't protect them from disease and tacitly says that sex at that young age is understandable.This is foolish, ridiculous, and irresponsible. But in the secular progressive world. The SP doctrine is to quote, "empower children" and downgrade parental authority because some parents are bad.Right now seven states: Connecticut, Hawaii, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Washington and New Hampshire have no parental notification laws concerning abortion.
Microsoft's next windows is mini... 2007-10-20 08:51:00 Operating Systems, Windows Operating System October 20th, 2007 (15 hours ago)Microsoft
talks about MinWin, the base for future operating systemsSoftware giant Microsoft has revealed that they are working on redoing the core kernel of the Windows OS to make it smaller as mobile devices become more essential in daily life.This kernel is likely to become the base of the Windows 7 which would succeed Vista in the coming years.This project has been named MinWin.Eric Traut talked about this project: “A lot of people think of Windows as this large, bloated operating system, and that’s maybe a fair characterization, I have to admit. But at its core, the kernel, and the components that make up the very core of the operating system, is actually pretty streamlined.”Microsoft has already stated that they aim to have a successor ready for the Vista OS by 2010.
Obesity can reduce 13 yrs of your life 2007-10-18 00:03:00 LONDON: Addicted to junk grub? Beware! Snacking on fast food and chomping in between meals can lead to weight gain and knock more than ten years off your life.Yes, researchers in Britain have carried out a study and found that obesity is more dangerous than smoking as it can cut life expectancy by as much as 13 years."We must fight the notion that the current obesity epidemic arises from individual over indulgence or laziness alone. We live in a consumer society which encourages us to eat. We have a sedentary lifestyle."It's an environment which means that if we just behave normally we will become obese. We may only put on a bit of weight a day but there are 365 days in the year," according to lead researcher Professor David King.Prof King, the British government's Chief Scientific Adviser, and his team of 250 scientists have published their study in a report, titled Foresight, on Wednesday.The researchers have observed that being obese with a body mass index of more than 30 knocks n Read more: reduce
Food allergies linked to animals' proximity to humans, says study 2007-10-17 23:58:00 By Jess Halliday Early exposure to food allergens may increase toleranceResearchers develop new nut allergen testLactococcus strain may offer end to food allergiesAllergens: no room for mistakesPeanut gene breakthrough may lead to allergen free nutsScientists look to 'desensitise' kids to food allergens15/10/2007 - Scientists have found that the evolutionary distance of animal proteins to human proteins determines how likely they are to trigger a food allergy - research that could help with the development of free-from foods and allergy therapies.The most common forms of food allergies in infants are cow's milk and hen's eggs. For adults, fish and seafood are the most common allergens.Researchers led by Dr Clare Mills of the Institute of Food Research in Norwich, UK, used sequence-based homology methods to classify food allergens into families. They then performed in silico analyses to identify putative relationships in protein sequence, structure and allergenic properties."Ov Read more: linked
, humans
Eating Garlic boosts cardiovascular health 2007-10-17 13:40:00 TUESDAY October 16, 2007 (Foodconsumer.org) -- Eating garlic helps lower high blood pressure and protect against cardiovascular disease, according to a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The study by researchers from the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) showed the protective effect is determined by the amount of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) produced from garlic compounds when they interact with red blood cells in the body. The UAB researchers found the released H2S led to relaxation of blood vessels, lowering the blood pressure and in rats the resulting H2S caused up to 72 percent relaxation of arteries. For humans, the effective dose is two cloves a day. Early studies have showed that garlic provides protection against a myriad health conditions including diabetes and cancer. The current study by David Kraus, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences and Biology and colleagues was mean Read more: Garlic
TCS hires 9,000 in Q3, full-year target at 35,000 2007-10-17 13:20:00 India’s largest software company, Tata Consultancy Services, plans to make a gross addition of nearly 9,000 people in the third quarter of the current financial year. In the second quarter ended September, the company had hired 12,523 people, helped by campus recruitment. “The company’s plan to hire 35,000 employees for the full year to March 2008 is on track,” executive director S Padmanabhan said on Tuesday.The company is also planning to open training centres in smaller cities such as Chandigarh, Bhubaneswar and Gandhinagar with a capacity to train 5,000-10,000 people at a time. “We are looking to tap into the science graduates talent pool and train them to be engaged in TCS’s engagements though a training programme called Ignite,” Mr Padmanabhan said.Through this programme, the company has already trained 500 such graduates in Chennai deployed within TCS. Further, it is looking to train more than 2,000 people by the end of next year in the southern city. The company e Read more: hires
Home Spray Use – A Leading Cause Of Asthma 2007-10-17 13:19:00 A recent study has brought out that making use of spray cleaners as little as once a week increased the asthma risk by nearly over 50 percent.But whether or not the cleaning products or sprays are a key reason of asthma, or just a cause for people, who already have the problem (asthma), is not clear from this epidemiologic analysis that was issued in the October issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.But, the study researchers think that spray cleaners can be a reason of new-onset asthma, as the people included in this analysis didn’t have asthma problem or asthma symptoms at the beginning of the analysis.Study lead author, Jan-Paul Zock, a research fellow at the Center for Research in Environmental Epidemiology at the Municipal Institute of Medical Research in Barcelona, Spain, said, “Cleaning sprays, especially air fresheners, furniture cleaners and glass cleaners, had a particularly strong effect. The risk of developing asthma increased with the Read more: Spray
, Leading
, Cause
Symonds racially abused in Mumbai too 2007-10-17 13:00:00 MELBOURNE, October 17: After Vadodara and Nagpur, Andrew Symonds was racially abused in Mumbai
too during Australia's final cricket One- dayer against India on Wednesday, claimed the local media here.The Australian claimed that as Symonds walked out to bat, a hostile part of the crowd at the Wankhede Stadium greeted the towering all-rounder with cat calls and "distinct monkey calls". An Australian photographer took snaps of the hostile crowd, it said.The daily also claimed that the abuse unsettled Symonds so much that the batsman, who has been in tremendous form in the series, fell to Murali Kartik for a first ball duck."The International Cricket Council's anti-racism code was instantly flashed on the screen, but Symonds seemed unsettled and was dismissed first ball," it said.And while he was walking back to the pavilion, Symonds was greeted with another round of abuse, it claimed.The newspaper also took a dig at BCCI Chief Administrative Officer Ratnakar Shetty, who doubles up as th
Indian tailenders steal unlikely victory 2007-10-17 12:57:00 Courtesy : CricinfoThe stage was set for India's most loved cricketing son to bid adieu to his home crowd with the sort of innings that he often played to illuminate this venue for almost two decades. Instead, it was Murali Kartik, forever condemned to Indian cricket's fringes, who basked in the late-afternoon sunshine with a mesmeric spell of left-arm spin bowling, before taking part in the unlikeliest of rearguard actions to script a famous victory. Australia's pace bowlers had bullied and toyed with India's top order, before a defiant 65-run partnership between Robin Uthappa and Harbhajan Singh gave India fleeting hope, but it was a stunning 52-run stand for the ninth wicket between Kartik and Zaheer Khan that gave India a consolation win in a series otherwise dominated by the world champions. By one of those strange quirks of fate, the Kartik-Zaheer partnership mirrored the epic one between Javagal Srinath and Anil Kumble in Bangalore 11 years earlier. A crowd that had become d
Pakistani army accused of killing 55 civilians 2007-10-11 09:45:00 A tribal leader today accused
Pakistani
forces of killing more than 50 civilians in the worst clashes near the Afghan border for years.Maulana Nek Zaman, a local MP for Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, a hard-line religious party, said innocent people were killed in air strikes."We know that the army killed 55 innocent people, and they included women and children," Mr Zaman told the Associated Press."We know it because we buried them."At least 50 people were killed on Tuesday when Pakistani F-16 jets and helicopter gunships attacked suspected militant positions in Epi village in North Waziristan. Article continues <a href="http://ads.guardian.co.uk/click.ng/Params.richmedia=yes&spacedesc=mpu&site=Guardian&navsection=1699&section=10
Govt plans higher fees for rich to fund the poor 2007-10-11 09:42:00 NEW DELHI: If parents can pay higher school fees for their children, they may as well pay higher fees in colleges and universities too. The government is working out a plan to this effect.The Human Resource Development Ministry and University Grants Commission (UGC) are discussing the issue with vice-chancellors and state education secretaries at a two-day conference on higher education currently on in the Capital.While stressing that government's funding on education would increase substantially, the Planning Commission feels the contribution from students must also go up. "We are thinking about revising the fees structure. Parents paying Rs5,000 fees in nursery and other classes cannot get subsidised education for their wards at the college and university levels. The rich must pay more so that only those who cannot afford higher education gain from the government subsidies," said Commission member Professor B Mungekar, in a clear indication of the government's plan to unveil a two- Read more: plans
Protest in a Funeral and pay 10 million dollars.. 2007-11-01 05:04:00 A federal jury in Baltimore, Maryland, Wednesday awarded $10.9 million
to a father of a Marine whose funeral was picketed by members of a fundamentalist church carrying signs blaming soldiers' deaths on America's tolerance of homosexuals.A member of Westboro Baptist Church protests outside a veteran's hospital in Maywood, Illinois, in April 2006.The family of Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder -- who was killed in a vehicle accident in Iraq's Anbar province in 2006 -- sued the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas, and its leaders for defamation, invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress.Church members showed up at Snyder's funeral chanting derogatory slogans and holding picket signs with messages including "God Hates Fags."They've picketed the funerals of dozens of troops killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, claiming that God is punishing the United States because of its tolerance for homosexuality.Al Snyder, father of the slain Marine, said he considered filin Read more: Protest
, Funeral
, dollars
Top 10 Deadliest Animals of the world 2007-10-31 23:58:00 10 Poison Dart FrogThese pint sized frogs aren't for kissing. Their backs ooze a slimy neurotoxin that is meant to keep predators away. Each frog produces enough of the toxin to kill 10 humans.9 Cape BuffaloWhen faced with a predator, cape buffaloes charge head on. That's 1,500 pounds of beast topped off with two big, sharp horns. You're lucky if there's only one - the real danger comes when a herd of thousands stampedes in your direction.8 Polar BearSure they might look cuddly at the zoo, but in the wild they eat elephant seals for breakfast. Get between one and its cub and it could easily rip off your head with one swipe of its giant paw.7 ElephantNot every elephant is as friendly as Dumbo. Elephants kill more than 500 people a year worldwide. African elephants generally weigh in around 16,000 pounds - all the better to stomp you with - not to mention their sharp tusks.6 Australian Saltwater CrocodileDon't mistake this croc for a log! It can lay still in the water, waiting for Read more: Animals
Why do Beasts Stick Together ? 2007-10-31 23:49:00 Source : Yahoo News Social cliques among wild animals in the Serengeti are actually the glue that holds the ecosystem together and keeps population numbers stable.A new study could explain why birds flock, wildebeest herd, bees swarm and fish school: They are less likely to become a predator's next meal if they stick together. Rather than a food-sharing issue, the reason for lion prides, for example, could have more to do with territory defense and protection of their young.The tendency to "follow the crowd" and travel in packs is nothing new and anyone who has tried to exit a concert or sporting event knows, it's natural to follow others.In fact, past research revealed herds that are "democratic," with more followers than leaders, are more likely to stick together. Gangs of ants were found in another study to be more aggressive than singlets. But how social groups can shape an ecosystem has been somewhat of an unknown until this Serengeti study."The greater the tendency to form grou Read more: Stick
Breakthrough in growing eyeballs a new visonary idea for blind 2007-10-31 23:40:00 A genetic switch that gives tadpoles three eyes could allow stem-cell scientists to eventually grow human eyeballs or at least create replacement parts needed for repair jobs.If scientists could grow eyeballs from stem cells in the lab, the process would be a boon to individuals with damage to cells within the eye, including retinal disorders."If you knew all the genes, and how to turn them on, that you needed to make an eye, you could start with very early embryonic cells and turn on all the right genes and grow an eye in a dish," said co-leader of the study Nicholas Dale, a neuroscientist at the University of Warwick in England."What I think is the more realistic possibility is to make precursor cells for different bits of the eye, which could then be transplanted and differentiate in-situ to replace damage to the retina or the lens or iris," Dale told LiveScience.Scientists already had established the amphibian genes that initiate and direct eye development, which they refer to as E Read more: Breakthrough
Chimpanzee who can speak in sign language dies... 2007-10-31 23:35:00 Washoe, a female chimpanzee believed to be the first non-human to acquire human language
, has died of natural causes at the research institute where she was kept.Washoe, who first learned a bit of American Sign Language in a research project in Nevada, had been living on Central Washington University's Ellensburg campus since 1980. She had a vocabulary of about 250 words.She died Tuesday night, according to Roger and Deborah Fouts, co-founders of The Chimpanzee and Human Communications Institute on the campus. She was born in Africa about 1965.She was taken to the veterinary hospital at Washington State University on Wednesday for a necropsy. Her memorial will be Nov. 12."Washoe was an emissary, bringing us a message of respect for nature," Dr. Mary Lee Jensvold, assistant director of the nonprofit institute, said Wednesday.The Fouts went to Central Washington from Oklahoma in 1980 to create a home for Washoe and other chimps."The entire CWU community and the Ellensburg community are Read more: speak
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