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Weekly Alibi
 V.17 No.39 | September 25 - October 1, 2008
Why aren't some people going to vote this November? The Alibi speaks with the much-ignored category of Americans known as nonvoters.
And, Action: The state's first media arts school is set to train New Mexico's future screenwriters, producers and directors. Libertarian presidential candidate Bob Barr wants to slash government spending. Plus, getting burned-out on election coverage.
Tilly and the Wall taps its way to the top. RTX's JJ Got Live RATX is tight-pants-wearing rock that keeps it real and very loud.
Western View Diner & Steakhouse is exactly the breed of restaurant that's slowly being replaced by sterilized, nostalgic imitations. Plus, the benefits of illegally plucked fruit.
The sixth annual Southwest Gay and Lesbian Film Festival gains viewers every year. This time around, eyeballs will be especially pleased. And Nights in Rodanthe is the newest cinematic adaptation of Nicholas Sparks’ quickly digested romances.
The Homecoming is like an episode of "Jerry Springer" that challenges the performers and the audience. Plus, Philip Roth's Indignation recalls the sexual repression of the '50s.

RSSRaw posts and updates from our writers with info too timely or uncategorizable for print. What, we said something stupid? Chime in, buddy.
Science

The Kinda Good News About Coral Peril

¡Viva la Science!

Springs underwater and the coral reefs that live near them sustain other species.
Elizabeth Crook
Springs underwater and the coral reefs that live near them sustain other species.
Rising carbon dioxide levels— and oh boy, do we haz them—lead to lower pH in our oceans. The lower the pH, the more acidic the water. Coral reefs, underwater structures notoriously unwilling to relocate, are stuck dealing with the result. A new paper shows that coral reefs that have been exposed to acidic waters are less dense and more fragile.

Marine scientist and paper co-author Adina Paytan points out that it could’ve been worse. “The good news is that they don't just die,” she says, in what one can only imagine to be a hollowly perky tone of voice. “They are able to grow and calcify, but they are not producing robust structures.”

Fortunately, what she’s not saying is that the whole wide world of coral has gone rickety. Scientists, being scientists, work hard to gather data that lets them make predictions about what will happen. In this case, the study focused on coral located near underwater springs off of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, where the ocean water becomes naturally more acidic.

Vibrant coral community at submarine springs along the Caribbean Coast of Mexico.
Elizabeth Crook
Vibrant coral community at submarine springs along the Caribbean Coast of Mexico.

Because, though they can simulate conditions in a laboratory, scientists can’t be deliberately acidifying coral environments in the wild, now can they? By looking at a place where coral is already surviving in conditions of higher acidity, the paper’s authors found a site “where nature is already doing the experiments for us,” explains Don Rice, program director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Ocean Sciences.

For Paytan, the results mix not-terrible news with a concise course of action. "We need to protect corals from other stressors, such as pollution and overfishing. If we can control those, the impact of ocean acidification might not be as bad."

Source: nsf.gov

    dreams

    Rowdy’s Dream Blog #299: How to conjure spirits with a hammer.

    I continuously smash flat rocks with my rubbery sledge hammer, forcing an old sailor to tell me about the spirits I am conjuring by doing so.

      news

      The Daily Word in a "Lone Ranger" press junket, world cup protests in Brazil and bringing squirrels across a body of water

      The Daily Word

      Is Farmington really the 59th most dangerous U.S. city?

      Some folks are really excited about a special screening of and party for "The Lone Ranger" in Santa Fe. Other folks are not so excited.

      Old Santa Fe store Packard's is closing.

      Letter from Yahoo!

      The G-8 look "like men who forgot their ties because they overslept."

      Angelina Jolie's stunt double brings the first American lawsuit against News Corporation, accusing them of hacking her phone.

      Brazil is pissed.

      Squirrel lore.

      Fox News is being sued by the mother of three kids who unwittingly watched their father eat the pipe on You Tube.

      When hijacking a plane and flying to Cuba was commonplace.

      Here is some handy info regarding light sabers and airline luggage restrictions.

      Anti-pervert stockings.

      On this day in 1873 Susan B. Anthony was fined $100.00 for voting the previous year. She didn't pay.

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