Short Takes: News From All Over
February 15, 2007
February 2007
Staff Utne.com
The Great Backyard Bird Count
By the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Audubon
From February 16 to 19, neighborhood bird spies armed with cameras and binoculars will be watching the skies across North America in an annual effort to help scientists gather information on the health of avian populations. The project's official website has information on bird flight patterns and how you can participate as well as historical maps, graphs, and lists showing the types and numbers of birds in your area. -- Jenna Fisher
http://www.birdsource.org/gbbc/
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Fast Forward
By Sue Carter Flinn, the Coast
Considering the enduring popularity of speed dating and internet dating websites, Sue Carter Flinn thinks that people are looking for love in all the wrong places. Instead of searching for instant gratification, Flinn has founded a 'tr?s romantique' outfit called the 'Slow Love Club.' Just as the Slow Food movement seeks to counteract the prevailing fast-food culture, the Slow Love movement encourages people to take their time dating, and actually meet face-to-face. -- Bennett Gordon
http://thecoast.ca/1editorialbody.lasso?-token.folder=2007-02-08&-token.story=150270.113118&-token.subpub=
Graduating to Prison: Native Americans Sue School District
By Mary Annette Pember, the Progressive
Tribal leaders from the Rosebud Sioux (Lakota) reservation in South Dakota have teamed-up with the local American Civil Liberties Union chapter to launch a class action suit against the Winner school district for 'discriminatory disciplinary practices' and 'unfair criminal prosecution' of Native American students. The coalition points to some damning statistics to bolster their case. Among them: 'Native students are three times more likely to be suspended from school and ten times more likely to be referred to law enforcement than white students.' -- Elizabeth Oliver
http://progressive.org/mag_pember0207
Breathing Earth
By David Bleja
With all the talk of global warming, what better way to understand the pressing fragility of the planet than a real-time simulation? David Bleja's interactive map tracks carbon dioxide emissions and birth and death rates for countries throughout the world, using data from the CIA's World Factbook. As an ongoing display of symbols and red flashes pepper the map, you can scroll over countries to compare data. The site also keeps a running ticker to see how those numbers have grown since you opened the site. -- Elizabeth Ryan
http://www.breathingearth.net/