Month: January 2005

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    Age-old religion vs. science war meets modern issues




       Acourt recently ruled that a school board in Atlanta cannot place a sticker that cautions students about the reality of evolution inside a science textbook cover. The conflict between science and some church leaders continues.


       Church leaders of many denominations and sects have carried on a running battle with science and scientists for centuries. After the invention of the telescope and advanced mathematics, the concept that planets revolved around the sun conflicted with church doctrine that the Earth, and people (God’s creation), was the center of the universe.


       ‘‘The Descent of Man,’’ Charles Darwin’s 1871 book of evolutionary observations, challenged the accepted church view that people were created by God, and discussed the evolution from a more primitive and older form. A raging conflict between a number of religions and some science concepts has ensued. Much of it hinges on the science term ‘‘theory.’’


       Theory is normally used in science to explain an observed phenomenon in nature until repeated experiments can prove the concept. Often the term remains attached to the idea long after it has been substantiated. We have had the ‘‘theory of gravity’’ and still talk about gravitational theory. We have proved atomic theory and the theory of continental drift. Some churches want to denigrate the science of evolution by pounding the term theory.


       Chromosomes and genes were identified in the 1950s. When it was determined how they interact, are reduced for sexual reproduction and mutated (changed), the mechanism for Darwin’s theory was proved. Change over time through survival of the most fit was a fact and no longer a theory.
       We are well into mapping the entire genetic structure of the human body.

     

    Genes, and DNA — the chemical protein that carries the command sequence for the various functions of life — are well understood. Church leaders resisting evolution are much like the individuals standing on shore shouting at Columbus that he would sail off the edge of the world.


       It would be humane, more loving and Christian, to get off the Darwin-bashing and on to some real science that explains our humanity. Studies now under way indicate that all humans alive today are descended from a few individuals who lived in northern Africa. Here are two sentences from that report:


       ‘‘Scientists have now identified the human lineages of the world descended from 10 sons of a genetic Adam and 18 daughters of Eve. This ancestral human population lived in Africa and started to split up 144,000 years ago. This time period is when both the mitochondrial and Y chromosome trees first branch out.’’


       This theory is undergoing testing. Sifting through almost 150,000 years of history will be exciting. Climatic changes, including ice ages and volcanic ash inundations, may be the evolutionary pressure to modify plants and animals — migration to different regions of the Earth the pressure to change humans. We are of different sizes, shapes and appearance. From Africa, we must have had some protection from the sun.


       It may cause a problem for some that our ancestors were dark-skinned or black. But for others, the idea that our humanity is real, is physical as well as emotional or spiritual, will be welcomed. That is a powerful incentive to look at each other in a different way, see each other as truly special — individuals, yet a part of the whole.

     

    -Carl Means

     

     

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    David Vardy of Hamshire, England is auctioning off his virginity on Ebay! Here he is...









     



     

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    Jenna herself becomes a child left behind



    gensleh@phillynews.com


    FIRST, Jenna Bush was going to teach poor kids in Harlem.


    Then, after Harlem didn't welcome her with open arms, she decided she was going to teach poor kids at a Washington, D.C., charter school.


    Then important news broke: Jenna would wear a Badgley Mischka dress at dad's inaugural ball.


    But what about that teaching job? How's that going?


    The Washington Post believes Jenna has started work not as a teacher, but as a teacher's aide because she doesn't have the qualifications necessary to take over a classroom under the stringent requirements of No Child Left Behind.


    The Post reported in December that Jenna was going to teach at Elsie Whitlow Stokes Community Freedom Public Charter School in a low-income neighborhood.


    But after rumors flew that Jenna had actually started as a teaching assistant, the Post spoke to executive director Linda Moore.


    "Jenna Bush is not employed as a teacher at the school," Moore said.


    Asked whether Jenna was working as an assistant teacher, Moore said: "I can't confirm that."


    That's when Moore mentioned No Child Left Behind.


    She told the Post there are "some very strict requirements about who can be hired and what their credentials have to be, and they do apply to charter schools."


    All Laura Bush's spokesman would say is "Jenna Bush has started work."


     

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    Poll: Nation split on Bush as uniter or divider


    (CNN) -- On the eve of President Bush's inauguration, a poll shows the nation is split over whether he has united or divided the nation


    From dharmabums


     

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    Posted on Wed, Jan. 19, 2005


    Dan Gross | Tonya's match is tonight


    TONIGHT Tonya Harding gets to hit somebody without getting arrested for it.


    Tickets remain for the bad girl of ice-skating's boxing match against busty Delaware County pro-wrestler Brittney Drake.


     

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    Media Training Now Required for Iraq-Bound Soldiers










    By Joe Strupp

    Published: January 18, 2005 12:00 PM ET


    NEW YORK Media training for soldiers going into the war zone has been stepped up, becoming mandatory.

    "Talking point" cards for military personnel are being updated regularly. Among the current talking points: "We are a values-based, people-focused team that strives to uphold the dignity and respect of all."

    Soldiers preparing for deployment in hostile or critical areas have received some kind of media training in handling press inquiries since the first Persian Gulf War. Such training has also included pocket cards with suggested talking points.

    The media training consists of one or two hours of briefings by public-affairs specialists. Since October, it has become a mandatory requirement for all deploying Army troops.


    The first talking point in a slide show for troops at Fort Bragg was: "We are not an occupying force."

    The Marine Corps has made such training a requirement for years.
    A list of "wallet-card" talking points given to a group of Marines heading to Iraq included:

    • The Marine Corps is committed to the cause and will remain in Iraq as long as we are needed.
    • We will remain steadfast and not lose heart.
    • We are moving forward together with the Iraqi government as partners in building a future for the sons and daughters of Iraq.
    • Coalition forces will help our Iraqi partners as they build their new and independent country and take their rightful place in the world community.
    • Our troopers and their families are our greatest and most treasured resource.
    • The Corps is a national institution -- it has never failed to do the will of the American people.

    Other advice includes talking to the interviewer, not the camera; avoiding acronyms, profanity, or a "no comment"; and not arguing.


     

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    Toothbrush cut from stomach after two decades


    January 18 2005 at 05:07PM


    Riyadh - A Saudi Arabian medical team removed Tuesday a toothbrush that had been in a man's stomach for 22 years, a medical official at the King Abdel Aziz Hospital in Taef west of the Saudi kingdom said.

    The 70-year-old unidentified man, had swallowed the toothbrush 22 years ago without realising it, as he had not experienced any pain until a few days ago.


     

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    Potty training: Diew, a five year-old Thai elephant, demonstrates how to use and flush a toilet at an elephant camp in Chiang Mai province, northern Thailand.

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    LITTLETON, Colo. (AP) - A Colorado construction worker who shot himself in the head with a nail gun - an accident he didn't discover until he went to the dentist with a nagging toothache - said he'll change his line of work.


    "I'll make pizzas," Patrick Lawler, 23, said Tuesday. Lawler, who may be released from the hospital as early as Wednesday, was working on a house near Breckenridge, Colo., when he accidentally fired the nail into his head. He said it felt like he had been hit with a steel baseball bat.


    Lawler said he doesn't know how he'll pay medical bills estimated to reach $100,000. He's uninsured.


    "I was self-employed on the job," he said.


    "I would have had to carry my own health insurance. But I didn't think I'd shoot myself with a nail, you know?"


     

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