Tag Archives | A Tale of Ten Slugs

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Crab pot corrosion control

We went on a class outing to the Santa Cruz Harbor last week. Our goal: Find crab fishermen and learn about their catch during the first two weeks of crab season. Biggie, a friendly sport fisherman in the bait shop, declared himself our teacher and gave us a lesson about the features of a crab pot….

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A perfect Thanksgiving finale, Photo by: Peggy Greb

The science of a flaky crust

I love pie, both the baking and the eating of it.  I also love pumpkin, and so Thanksgiving always provide a wonderful opportunity to combine my two loves into one glorious dish. This morning, I happily pulled out my pumpkin-pie-making ingredients and started the preparation process.  I use vegetable shortening in my pie crusts.  It…

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Family wisdom: How to write stories that sell

My mother gave me this wonderful old slip of paper hand typed by my grandmother many decades ago. It is a set of guidelines for “Writing Stories that Sell.” The advice proffered is still valid, so I wanted to share. The charming exception is the section detailing how to prepare your manuscript for submission. What…

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Switching Gears

I started today with a plan. I would go into my internship and finish up an article about robots that never showed up. Then I would write a short piece about a local girl scout troop that won a robotics competition. But, an hour into my day, I got tasked to write about an instructor…

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Happy Thanksgiving: TurkeyGobbleGobble.

Ben Franklin had a thing for turkeys, and thought they — not the bald eagle —  ought to be the national symbol: “For the Truth the Turkey is in Comparison a much more respectable Bird, and withal a true original Native of America . . . He is besides, though a little vain & silly,…

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You Promised Me A Robot

I had a chance to cover a demonstration last week involving the military and unmanned autonomous vehicles (a.k.a. robots) for my internship. The robots were designed to fly out, locate wounded soldiers on a battlefield, and relay the soldier’s vitals like heart rate and blood pressure back to doctors and medics at a base. Since…

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Seymour Center Field Trip

As our first quarter as SciCom students nears its end, I realize I’ve been spending a lot of time staring at my computer screen.  This weekend, a visit from my parents provided a much needed excuse to leave the digital world and go out exploring.  Here are some photos from one of our stops, the…

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The worst travel day of the year

Anyone flying on November 24th this year should probably plan to get to the airport extra early: A group of travelers’-rights advocates are organizing a nationwide boycott of the full-body scanners used in security checks in airports. The Wednesday before Thanksgiving is usually the busiest travel day of the year, and an organized protests of…

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Magicology

Scientific American is all about the intersection of magic tricks and neuroscience this month. I’m sure some of you may know about it already, but I thinks it’s too interesting to not post about. I found it on Twitter (thank you, @sciam_live): SciAm video “Neuroscience Meets Magic” I think it’s more than worth the 11…

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My first encounter with a newsroom

photo © 2008 Fang Guo | more info (via: WylioWhile at my Salinas Californian newspaper internship yesterday, we were visited by school kids taking a tour of the building. “This is where our reporters work,” said the tour guide, as she walked by me. It brought back flashbacks of my first visit to a newspaper,…

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