Thursday, March 7, 2013

Job Registry: Education Abroad jobs, International Education ...

Reporting to the dean of University College, the director of the international center oversees international activities on campus including, but not limited to, international student services, some aspects of international undergraduate admissions, study abroad and exchange programs, exchanges and partnerships with international institutions and organizations, and international/cultural programming.

Major Responsibilities:
? Stays abreast of best practices in international education
? Supervises International Center staff, including study abroad coordinator, international student advisor, office manager, and student workers
? Works collaboratively with a variety of university groups to support the academic and personal success of international students
? Supervises and supports international activities on campus
? Develops programs, services, and resources for international students and faculty
? Develops, monitors, and updates partnerships and agreements with international institutions and organizations including bilateral exchanges
? Develops resources to assist students engaging in international experiences
? Develops international resources for Winthrop faculty development
? Directs professional development and cross-training among International Center staff
? Supervises and supports aspects of faculty exchange programs when appropriate
? Chairs the International Advisory Committee
? Serves on the Global Learning Initiative Coordinating Committee
? Oversees International Center budgets

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Position Availability: April 15, 2013

Application Deadline: March 18, 2013; application material received after the deadline may be considered if a suitable candidate has not been selected.

Employment Conditions: A 12-month, full-time appointment. Salary commensurate with qualifications.

Application Procedures:
Applications should consist of:

? A letter of application describing qualifications in the context of the position
? Current curriculum vitae or resume
? Official transcripts of highest college degree (copies acceptable during application process)
? Names, addresses, e-mail addresses and phone numbers of three professional references

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Applications should be addressed to:
Dr. Gloria Jones, Dean
University College
Winthrop University
209 Dinkins Hall
Rock Hill, SC 29733

Source: http://jobregistry.nafsa.org/jobs/5243136/international-center-director

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Winooski extends mayor's term, approves local option tax

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Source: http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/article/20130305/NEWS02/303050039/1007/RSS02

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Monday, March 4, 2013

Kate Phizackerley Means Business: Customer Service

One mistake some bricks and mortar companies make when transferring
online is to treat Monday to Friday only a work days. If customers have
problems it is just as likely to be at the weekend or after 'office
hours'. Not answering queries from Friday evening until Monday is not
going to give a good impression in a fast moving consumer goods
business, although it may well be acceptable for b2b services.

Source: http://business.phiz.eu/2013/03/customer-service.html

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Skin cancer risk rises | Otago Daily Times Online News : Otago ...

The record-breaking sunny weather this summer has led to an increased risk of skin cancer, with a big increase in the amount of dangerous ultraviolet radiation.

NIWA data analysed by dermatologists at MoleMap showed the 35 per cent increase in sunlight hours this summer brought a 17 per cent increase in UV radiation, which was the main factor responsible for skin cancers.

MoleMap medical director and skin cancer specialist Mark Gray said the increase meant New Zealanders had been subjected to much more of the dangerous UVA and UVB wavelengths.

He said the long UVA wavelength accounts for the vast majority of solar UV radiation which reaches the earth.

"UVA can penetrate glass and clouds and can initiate and also increase the growth of skin cancers. UVB is responsible for burning, tanning, the acceleration of skin ageing and plays a significant role in the development of skin cancer."

Dr Gray said skin cancer was the most common form of cancer in New Zealand with more than 45,000 Kiwis affected by it each year and about 400 dying from the disease each year.

He said greater exposure to both UVA and UVB radiation was a timely reminder for New Zealanders to have their moles mapped.

"We need to be vigilant about protecting ourselves from the sun, limiting exposure along with regular and long term skin monitoring with your health professional, which is crucial in preventing the development of melanoma."

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Source: http://www.odt.co.nz/news/national/247978/skin-cancer-risk-rises

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Seven things to love about the Washington School House Hotel in Park City, Utah

The Washington School House Hotel in Park City, Utah, is the closet thing to a perfect hotel that you are likely to find. It is easy to see why gay folk are fond of the property. It very much has a resort feel, complete with a heated pool, patio and spa out back.

The hotel also offers the best of both worlds. You are just steps from the heart of downtown but yet you are on a hill above the street so you won't be bothered by overly enthusiastic celebrants during big events.

With a total of 12, rooms, this boutique hotel has room sizes that range from a standard sized room to a spacious two-bedroom suite.

A word of caution, if you want a room during the busy winter ski season, be sure to book well in advance. Those 12 rooms fill fast. Also, as with all hotels in Park City, expect to pay more during the busy times. If you want a deal, check out the so-called shoulder seasons in the spring and fall, before and after ski season. The summers are sometimes busy with tourists from Salt Lake City and beyond.

The hotel's attention to detail would satisfy even the most finicky among us. The property is impeccably maintained and the staff is very friendly and efficient.

Park City is incredibly easy to navigate and you don't need a car. Free buses go to the surrounding ski resorts and the hotel provides a free car service to take you where every you want to go in the surrounding area.

Source: http://www.examiner.com/list/seven-things-to-love-about-the-washington-school-house-hotel-park-city-utah?cid=rss

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TI-84 Plus C Silver Edition Review: Math in Color!

The new TI-84 Plus C Silver Edition isn't the first color-screen graphing calculator. It isn't even TI's first color graphing calculator, a distinction claimed by the TI-Nspire CX and its sibling the TI-Nspire CX CAS. However, the TI-84+CSE, as we're abbreviating it, is a major milestone in the 17-year-old TI-83 and TI-84 Plus family of calculators. Although it retains the look and feel of the TI-84 Plus operating system, and keeps the familiar case shape and key layout, the outstanding feature of the TI-84+CSE is a bright, glossy color LCD screen. No longer will math and programs need to squeeze into 96 by 64 monochrome pixels; the new screen is 320x240 and can display 65,000 different colors. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/jeylxtDWcJM/ti+84-plus-c-silver-edition-review-math-in-color

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Genetic study pursues elusive goal: How many humpbacks existed before whaling?

Feb. 13, 2013 ? Scientists from Stanford University, the Wildlife Conservation Society, the American Museum of Natural History, and other organizations are closing in on the answer to an important conservation question: how many humpback whales once existed in the North Atlantic?

Building on previous genetic analyses to estimate the pre-whaling population of North Atlantic humpback whales, the research team has found that humpbacks used to exist in numbers of more than 100,000 individuals. The new, more accurate estimate is lower than previously calculated but still two to three times higher than pre-whaling estimates based on catch data from whaling records.

Known for its distinctively long pectoral fins, acrobatics, and haunting songs, the humpback whale occurs in all the world's oceans. Current estimates for humpback whale numbers are widely debated, but some have called for the level of their international protection to be dropped.

The study appears in the recently published edition of Conservation Genetics. The authors include: Kristen Ruegg and Stephen Palumbi of Stanford University; Howard C. Rosenbaum of the Wildlife Conservation Society and the American Museum of Natural History; Eric C. Anderson of the National Marine Fisheries Service and University of California-Santa Cruz; Marcia Engel of the Instituto Baleia Jubarte/Humpback Whale Institute, Brazil; Anna Rothschild of AMNH's Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics; and C. Scott Baker of Oregon State University.

"We're certain that humpback whales in the North Atlantic have significantly recovered from commercial whaling over the past several decades of protection, but without an accurate size estimate of the pre-whaling population, the threshold of recovery remains unknown," said Dr. Kristen Ruegg of Stanford University and the lead author of the study. "We now have a solid, genetically generated estimate upon which future work on this important issue can be based."

"Our current challenge is to explain the remaining discrepancy between the historical catch data and the population estimate generated by genetic analyses," said Dr. Howard Rosenbaum, study co-author and Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Ocean Giants Program. "The gap highlights the need for continued evaluations of whale populations, and presents new information informing the debate and challenges associated with recovery goals."

"We have spent a great deal of effort refining the techniques and approaches that give us this pre-whaling number," said Dr. Steve Palumbi of Stanford. "It's worth the trouble because genetic tools give one of the only glimpses into the past we have for whales."

Reaching some 50 feet in length, the humpback whale was hunted for centuries by commercial whaling fleets in all the world's oceans. Humpbacks had predictable migration routes and were reduced to several hundred whales in the North Atlantic. The global population was reduced by possibly 90 percent of its original size. The species received protection from the International Whaling Commission in North Atlantic waters in 1955 due to the severity of its decline.

Since that time, the humpback whales of the North Atlantic have made a remarkable comeback; experts estimate the current size of the North Atlantic's humpback whale population to be more than 17,000 animals. North Atlantic humpback whales are now one of the best-studied populations of great whales in the world and the mainstay of a multi-million dollar whale-watching industry.

But estimating the number of whales that existed prior to commercial whaling is a far more difficult problem, critical in determining when the total population has recovered. Historical catch data from the logs of whaling vessels suggest a population size between 20,000-46,000 whales, but the current genetic analysis indicates a much larger pre-whaling population. The results of the genetic analysis indicate that the North Atlantic once held between 45,000 -- 235,000 humpback whales (with an average estimate of 112,000 animals).

A previous study using the mitochondrial DNA of humpbacks in the North Atlantic suggested a higher pre-whaling population size; an average of 240,000 individuals. To increase the accuracy of the current analysis, the team measured nine segments in the DNA sequences throughout the genome (as opposed to just one DNA segment used in the previous study).

Palumbi, who participated in the first humpback genetic analysis, added: "The International Whaling Commission reviewed the results of the first study and recommended we improve the method in six specific ways. We've done that now and have the best-ever estimate of ancient humpback populations."

Scott Baker, Associate Director of Oregon State University's Marine Mammal Institute and a co-author said: "These genetic estimates greatly improve our understanding of the genetic diversity of humpback whales, something we need to understand the impact of past hunting and to manage whales in the uncertain future."

The research team analyzed genetic samples from whales in the North Atlantic as well as the Southern Hemisphere. Southern Atlantic whales were used to answer one of the six IWC questions: was there intermixing of whale populations across the equator? The samples were analyzed by sequencing specific regions of DNA in known genes. By comparing the genetic diversity of today's population to the genetic mutation rate, Ruegg and colleagues could estimate the long-term population size of humpbacks. They also showed no substantial migration of humpbacks whales across the Equator between the Southern and Northern Atlantic, and no movement from the Pacific to the Atlantic.

The team recently used the same techniques to estimate pre-whaling numbers for the Pacific gray whale and the Antarctic minke whale. A difference of two to three times also was recorded between the genetic and catch estimates for the grey whale population, but were exactly on target for the Antarctic minke whale, which has not been extensively hunted.

This work was supported by a grant from the Lenfest Ocean Program.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wildlife Conservation Society.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kristen Ruegg, Howard C. Rosenbaum, Eric C. Anderson, Marcia Engel, Anna Rothschild, C. Scott Baker, Stephen R. Palumbi. Long-term population size of the North Atlantic humpback whale within the context of worldwide population structure. Conservation Genetics, 2012; 14 (1): 103 DOI: 10.1007/s10592-012-0432-0

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/CpvJJByGoWI/130213152416.htm

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