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Great Conversations Are Coming April 28!

Dr. Erin Bouquin

LAPSF News:

Great Conversations is an afternoon of delicious appetizers and desserts and an in-depth conversation with a subject area expert.

This is the 4th Annual Great Conversations hosted by the Los Alamos Public Schools Foundation.

It will take place 2-5 p.m., April 28 at Los Alamos High School in the new building. This is the first in a series about the conversations that will take place.

Be Patient; It’s Healthcare!” featuring Dr. Erin Bouquin. 

Bouquin is currently the Chief Medical Officer for a multi-site medical office that concentrates on the Medical Home Read More

Dog Jog T-Shirt Logo Winner: Kristen Carrara

DOG JOG News:

2013 Dog Jog Logo Contest Results

The winner of this year’s contest is Kristen Carrara, a fifth grader from Pinon Elementary School.

The Dog Jog committee would like to thank all of the young artists who participated in the contest to design the 2013 Dog Jog t-shirt logo.

The entries this year were especially inventive and creative, so we congratulate all of the artists on their talent and imagination.

Second place goes to Malea Joyce, third place to Makenna Ellsworth, and fourth place to Paige Power.

The committee chose to award 12 honorable mentions this year to the following artists Read More

LANL: ChemCam Data Abundant at Planetary Conference

This image shows the ChemCam mast unit mounted on the Curiosity rover as it is being prepared in the clean room prior to the launch of NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory mission. ChemCam fires a powerful laser that can sample Martian rocks and provide critical clues about the Red Planet’s habitability. Courtesy/LANL

LANL News:

  • Laser instrument aboard Curiosity rover provides well over 40,000 shots so far

Members of the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover ChemCam team will present more than two dozen posters and talks next week during the 44th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference Read More

How The Hen House Turns: DeeDee and Scooter

How The Hen House Turns: DeeDee and Scooter
By Carolyn A. (Cary) Neeper, Ph. D.

Sometime in the mid 1980’s, our daughters went off to college and the dog (Poncho) died–the classic scenario.

Our nest was empty for a while. The daughters’ pets had also met their assorted fates. Work at the lab and the excavation of dinosaur Seismosaurus filled the gap.

Apparently, still feeling that gap, I adopted a turtle or two. Husband Don gave me a proper aquarium.

In the summer of 2000 I rescued Freddy the water dragon from Pete’s Pets, our local pet store prior to Pet Pangaea. Other dragons

Read More

Obituary: Elaine Teresa Doyle Stratton March 23, 1929 – March 5, 2013

ELAINE TERESA DOYLE STRATTON March 23, 1929 – March 5, 2013

Elaine Teresa Doyle Stratton, 83, passed away Tuesday, March 5, 2013 at the family home in Los Alamos from complications of leukemia.

She was born March 23, 1929, to Colonel Hugh and Gertrude Mayr Doyle in Fort Totten, NY. Her father was later transferred to Fort Hamilton, New York, and she called Brooklyn home until, at the age of 20.

She came to Los Alamos from Oswego State Teachers College (NY) to teach primary grades in the Los Alamos Public Schools. She later earned a Masters in Education from New York University.

She met her husband, Read More

County Line for Week of March 18

COUNTY LINE:

EVENTS:

No Council Meeting Next Week

They’ll take a week off and be back in Regular Session Tuesday, March 26 (7 p.m., Council Chambers.) Watch for details on their agenda in the next issue of the County Line.

LAPD Volunteers: Info Meeting on Monday

We mentioned this meeting in last week’s newsletter – the Police Department is looking for some volunteers to help out with administrative tasks, so they can keep officers out in the community doing police work instead of paper work! Do you have the time to help out? Great! Attend this meeting at 5:30 p.m., March 18 Read More

Obituary: Newby Gene Ellington Sept. 29, 1933 – Feb. 27, 2013

NEWBY GENE ELLINGTON

Newby Gene Ellington, 79, of Los Alamos, New Mexico, died peacefully on Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013 after a long and difficult battle with cancer. 

He spent his last weeks, days and hours in the loving embrace of his wife Susan, his children and grandchildren. 

Newby was the third child born to John Robert “Uncle Bob” Ellington and Martra Leila Ellington. He was born Sept. 29, 1933 and raised in Saxapahaw, North Carolina. 

He graduated from Eli Whitney High School in Alamance County,  and has a large and loving extended family.

Newby joined the U.S. Navy Read More

Good Samaritans Help Motorcycle Crash Victims on N.M. 4

Two Albuquerque residents crashed on N.M. 4 Thursday. Photo by Greg Kendall/ladailypost.com

 

By GREG KENDALL
Los Alamos Daily Post

Two Albuquerque residents riding a motorcyle down N.M. 4 toward Los Alamos hit the guardrail and were thrown over the side at approximately 5:20 p.m. Thursday and were transported to Los Alamos Medical Center.

The Los Alamos Daily Post spoke to eyewitnesses who rendered assistance to the accident victims at the scene.

Los Alamos resident, Matt Filer was driving with his three children, Samantha, Bethany and Nathan, toward the Jemez Mountains when they Read More

Two Openings are Part of ‘We Who Are Clay’ Events

‘Sabinoso’ is one of the photographs of New Mexico churches by Jim Gautier on display at the Historical Museum’s ‘Adobe’ exhibit. Phto by Jim Gautier

John Nathan Hains has studied micaceous clay pottery for 10 years at Northern New Mexico College. His pots are hand-built and fired in an open pit. This example, ‘Out of the Fire’ is part of the Fuller Lodge Art Center’s ‘We Who Are Clay’ exhibit. Photo by Bonnie J. Gordon/ladailypost.com

 
By BONNIE J. GORDON
Los Alamos Daily Post

Los Alamos gets down and dirty as nearly a dozen Read More

Fire Stations and Law Enforcement Sites To Become Safe Havens

 

STATE News:

  • HB 374 waiting for Governor’s Signature

SANTA FE – Distraught parents who want to give up their unwanted infants now have another place where they can drop them off and keep them safe.

 

Legislation sponsored by Rep. Emily Kane (D-Bernalillo-15) expands Safe Haven sites to include fire stations and law enforcement locations such as police or sheriff’s departments.

 

House Bill 374a “Safe Haven for Infants Site Definition” is now awaiting the Governor’s signature after passing the Senate on Wednesday.

 

“It’s a very compassionate bill,” Kane said. “We wanted Read More

Free Child Safety Seat Clinic March 20

NMDOT News:

Hundreds of child passenger safety technicians will meet March 20-21 at Sandia Resort for the NMDOT Traffic Safety Division’s and Safer New Mexico Now’s Annual Buckle Up New Mexico Recertification Training.

The event is designed to bring New Mexico’s child passenger safety technicians and instructors together for two days of intensive classroom and applied activities that address the most current issues in the field of child passenger safety. 

In addition, a child safety seat clinic will be held 8:30-10:30 a.m. March 20 in the Sandia Resort’s parking lot, Section C6-C8. Read More

Charger Aquatics Team Brings Los Alamos Another State Banner!

Charger Aquatic swimmers and coaches with state banner. Courtesy/LACA

CHARGER AQUATICS News:

At the end of last weekend’s meet, the Los Alamos Charger Aquatics repeated its sweep taking home another state banner.

Age-group club swimmers from Los Alamos competed March 6-10 in the New Mexico State Short Course Championship meet at West Mesa Aquatic Center in Albuquerque. 

This meet set a new record for the number of swimmers participating in the event, which exceeded 650 kids from across the state. 

The four clubs that train at the Los Alamos Larry Walkup Aquatic Center – Charger Read More

Pet of the Week: Turbo the Dog

Turbo the 2-year-old dog. Courtesy/FOS

SHELTER News:

Pet of the Week: Handsome and friendly 2-year-old Turbo arrived at the Los Alamos County Animal shelter because his owner moved to a place that would not allow dogs.

Turbo likes adult humans, female dogs and some male dogs. He does not know any cats.

His size and energy are not conducive to children, and it is not known how he relates to them.

Turbo loves tennis balls and wants to retrieve them for you. Turbo has recently been diagnosed with thyroid issues.

The medication is inexpensive and easy to administer. Turbo’s care should ideally Read More

DPU Charter Review Committee Holding First Meeting

COUNTY News:

The Department of Public Utilities Charter Review Committee will hold its first meeting 5:30-6:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 27 in the Community Building’s Training Room, 20th Street and Central Avenue.

This will primarily be an organizational meeting to appoint a chair and vice-chair and review the scope of work.

This is an open meeting and the public is welcome to attend.

  Read More

LANL’s New Culturing Tool Reveals a Full Genome From Single Cells

Two GMD containing gut-community microcolonies are shown, with green fluorescence marking the DNA. Photo by A. Dichosa/LANL

LANL News:

  • Gel microdroplet culturing reveals intraspecies genomic diversity within the human microbiome

A new technique for genetic analysis, “gel microdroplets,” helps scientists generate complete genomes from a single cell, thus opening the door to understanding the complex interrelationships of bacteria, viruses and eukaryotes that form “microbiome” communities in soil, in humans, and elsewhere in the natural world.

Microbes live in complex communities Read More

Geeks Take the Challenge at New Dixie Pub

The Dixie Girl Restaurant in downtown Los Alamos hosted a ‘Geeks Who Drink’ trivia contest Thursday night. From left, Isaac Martinez, Jordan Garcia, Crystal Clearwater, Ryan Adams, Cody Martin and Nels Webber toast the opening of the new trivia game night. ‘Geeks Who Drink’ is a Denver-based company that hosts bar trivia at more than 200 pubs and restaurants in 21 states. Photo by Greg Kendall/ldailypost.com

Taylor Wynn of the Denver-based company, ‘Geeks Who Drink’, moderates the trivia concert Thursday night in the new Dixie Pub room of the Dixie Read More

Traveling the World on $100 a Day

Kerri (Foxx) Frazier, Jason Frazier and Sydney Frazier Riding bikes in Paris, France. Courtesy photo

Kerri (Foxx) Frazier, Sydney Frazier and Jason Frazier in Denia, Spain. Courtesy Photo

 

Traveling the World on $100 a Day
By TERALENE FOXX
Los Alamos

Travel can be expensive. Can you travel around the world on $100/day/person? 

Jason, Kerri (1991 graduate of Los Alamos High School) and their daughter Sydney, 8, are on a Round the World Trip (https://ladailypost.comcontent/traveling-world.)

Before going, they researched costs and found the estimated $25,000 per person per Read More

Hannemann’s Music Corner: The Hook

Hannemann’s Music Corner: The Hook
Column by RICHARD HANNEMANN
 
A chord is any three or more different letter notes, either in a stack or in melodic sequence. This definition reflects modern usages and spellings.
 
Certainly Bach would not have been quite so liberal in his definition. In the Common Practice period – appx. 1700-1900, Bach to Wagner, a chord would have been specifically a triad with, or without, the addition of the 7th (and, later, the 9th and the 11th.)
 
Other than the 7th, any note which was not part of a triad would have been considered a non-chord tone.
 
Read More

Luján Questions DOE Officials About Hanford Waste Going to New Mexico

U.S. CONGRESSIONAL News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico’s Third District and a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee questioned officials from the Department of Energy Wednesday. https:////www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBY9C4ZHQR4&feature=youtu.be

He questioned the officials on their plans to move millions of gallons of highly radioactive waste from the Hanford site in Washington state to New Mexico for storage at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plan (WIPP.)

While the leaks at Hanford are an environmental disaster, moving this waste to Read More

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