North Coast counties receive California Counties Collaboration Award

October 07, 2015

Alert PhotoOn September 8, 2015, the North Coast counties of Del Norte, Lake, Humboldt, Mendocino, Sonoma and Trinity received the California Counties Collaboration Award…… Read on

 

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Jim Crow is back in Alabama

Dear MoveOn member,Alabama just closed 31 drivers license bureaus in counties with the highest percentage of Black voters. Every county with over 75% of registered voters that are African American will have their DMV office closed.1

That’s why I started a petition to U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch and President Obama, which says:

Please investigate and put a stop to the voter suppression.

Alabama requires voters to have photo ID to vote, so this will disenfranchise the voters in those counties. The Justice Department can put a stop to this; they are the best hope for upholding the rights of all Alabama voters.

MoveOn members have worked in all 50 states and run hundreds of campaigns to defend voting rights. This attack is particularly egregious, and we’re committed to fight back. We’ll deliver this petition directly to the Department of Justice, continue to organize, and also elevate the issue in the media.

Gerry Hebert, a former top official at the Department of Justice with decades of experience on voting rights, said this week that Alabama’s action is “absolutely” something the department might investigate especially if the case “has drawn a lot of attention.†2

Click here to add your name to this petition, and then pass it along to your friends.

Thanks!

–Laura Packard

Sources:

1. “Alabama sends message: We are too broke to care about right and wrong,” AL.com, September 30, 2015
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=307700&id=133286-19252191-3ZsCeox&t=1

2. “Alabama DMV closings draw call for federal voting rights probe,” MSNBC.com, October 5, 2015
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=307705&id=133286-19252191-3ZsCeox&t=2

You’re receiving this petition because we thought it might interest you. It was created on MoveOn.org, where anyone can start their own online petitions. You can start your own petition here. http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=306934&id=133286-19252191-3ZsCeox&t=3

Want to support our work? MoveOn member contributions have powered our work together for more than 17 years. Hundreds of thousands of people chip in each year—which is why we’re able to be fiercely independent, answering to no individual, corporation, politician, or political party. You can become a monthly donor by clicking here, or chip in a one-time gift here.


This email was sent to Ralph W. McCarthy on October 6, 2015. To change your email address or update your contact info, click here. To remove yourself from this list, click here.

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CSU veterinary professor Michael Lappin wins international scientific award

CSU veterinary professor Michael Lappin wins international scientific award

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For Immediate Release
Wednesday, October 07, 2015

Contact for Reporters:
Jeff Dodge
970.491.4251
Jeff.Dodge@colostate.edu

CSU veterinary professor Michael Lappin wins international scientific award

FORT COLLINS – Dr. Michael Lappin, a veterinary professor at Colorado State University, recently won the 2015 World Small Animal Veterinary Association’s International Award for Scientific Achievement for significant contributions to knowledge about the cause, detection and control of infectious diseases in pets.

“This award is really exciting because it recognizes the things that are most important to me – improving the lives of pets and their owners, international collaboration, and mentoring the next generation of veterinarians. It’s a great honor,” said Lappin, who was honored with the award at the 40th World Small Animal Veterinary Congress in Bangkok, Thailand.

With 96 members representing more than 158,000 veterinarians, the association aims to improve the quality and availability of small animal medicine around the world. Lappin earned the award for improving global veterinary knowledge of small animal infectious disease.

Lappin is a member of the association’s One Health committee, which advocates for collaboration among human and animal medicine practitioners.

Three decades of research

At CSU, he recently won a One Health seed grant from the Office of the Vice President for Research to study toxoplasmosis transmission in humans, domestic animals and wildlife. Toxoplasmosis is a disease caused by a protozoan parasite, Toxoplasma gondii, that is hosted in wild and pet cats and can sicken people and other warm-blooded animals. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls toxoplasmosis a leading cause of death attributed to foodborne illness in the United States.

That’s just one of Lappin’s interests.

A professor of small animal clinical veterinary medicine and infectious disease, Lappin has taught and conducted research at CSU since 1988. His laboratory studies immune responses to respiratory virus vaccines and other vaccinations in cats. He oversees a large diagnostic service for feline infectious agents at the James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital. As director of shelter medicine, Lappin also investigates disease outbreaks and management at animal shelters.

He holds the Kenneth W. Smith Professorship at Colorado State, an endowment honoring the life and work of Dr. Kenneth Smith, a 1932 CSU graduate and a longtime professor and veterinarian. Investment income from the $375,000 endowment supports Lappin’s infectious disease research, helping him to seek solutions that help pets and people. The professorship is awarded to a senior faculty member specializing in small animal care, and Lappin is the first and only recipient of the professorship.

“I am grateful to the Smith family, whose generosity has enabled me to pursue, and now, achieve my goals,” Lappin said.

In 2007, Lappin used professorship funds to create the Center for Companion Animal Studies, which aims to promote quality of life for pets and their owners by supporting research into new veterinary tests, vaccines and treatments. The center distributes industry-donated research dollars to CSU veterinary students, clinical interns and residents, graduate students and faculty members. Through project grants, the center’s Young Investigator Award program supports the ambitions of aspiring veterinarians, and through their research, pet health.

“I’ve gotten to know Mike over the years and he’s doing very productive, practical kinds of research. He’s an excellent teacher who really stimulates the students to go on and do great things,” said Dr. James Smith, a retired physician and son of veterinarian Kenneth Smith. “My dad was a pioneer in small animal medicine, and Mike has made significant contributions to that field.”

To support the Center for Companion Animal Studies, visit http://col.st/iVh9f.

-30-

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA

CSU News Highlights

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CSU News Highlights

CSU in the News

NSF, NBC Learn and The Weather Channel showcase research to protect against nature’s fury
The Weather Channel
9/29/2015

Flash Floods – Russ Schumacher, an atmospheric scientist at Colorado State University, studies areas with combined factors such as heavy precipitation, particular geography and soil conditions that put them at risk for flash floods, one of the most common and deadly natural disasters.
Read More…

CSU gets grant to place engineers into teaching positions
Denver Business Journal
10/5/2015

But Colorado State University’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering ? with the help of a new, $593,000 grant from the National Science Foundation ? hopes to change that.
Read More…

CSU researchers awarded $1M to study crop rotation strategies for dry climates
BizWest
9/30/2015

A team of Colorado State University researchers has received a $1 million grant from the Natural Resources Conservation Service to study how crop rotations and management can improve soils through the retention of carbon and water in drier growing regions of the Great Plains.
Read More…

US Experts, PSG Institute to Team Up to Develop New Low-cost Heart Valve
New Indian Express
10/2/2015

The two US universities are the Colorado State University and the Ohio State University. The research will get a grant for two years from the National Institutes of Health in the US and Department of Biotechnology in India.
Read More…

Colorado State University’s international poster exhibition announces winners
Cherry Creek News
9/29/2015

The 19th biennial Colorado International Invitational Poster Exhibition, a collection from the world’s top poster artists and designers hosted by Colorado State University’s Department of Art and Art History, has announced its winners.
Read More…

Why did the tarantula cross the road?
Channel 9 News
10/4/2015

Colorado State University professor Whitney Cranshaw was out along a rural road south of La Junta on a recent evening as furry spiders crept across the macadam.
Read More…

USDA Finds ‘Local’ and ‘Organic’ Closely Tied in America’s Grocery Basket
High Plains Public Radio
10/5/2015

More consumers are demanding organic options at retail outlets, and grocery stores are responding, says Dawn Thilmany, a Colorado State University economist who studies the organic food sector.
Read More…

Larimer County seat belt usage among highest in state
Coloradoan
10/6/2015

According to a joint Colorado Department of Transportation and Colorado State University study, Larimer County has a 90.3 percent seat belt usage rate, which ranks tied for fifth among the 30 counties where surveys are done and tops among the most populated counties.
Read More…

Robbie Myers Breaks Down the DNA of Elle
Business of Fashion
10/5/2015

A graduate of Colorado State University, Myers began her career in journalism in the mid-1980s, around the time Elle entered the US market. Her first job was at Rolling Stone, when the seminal rock magazine was still settling into its New York headquarters, having been relocated from San Francisco in 1977.
Read More…

Colorado State announces 2015 Hall of Fame Class
Loveland Reporter-Herald
10/2/2015

Clark Haggans (football), Mike Newell (football), Richard Cooley (men’s swimming), Loree Smith (women’s track and field), Jessica Cole (softball) and Catie Mintz (volleyball) will make up the Colorado State Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2015, the university announced Friday.
Read More…

Sorghum good fit for region
Journal-Advocate
10/5/2015

In 2014 Colorado State University conducted performance trials on the plains of hybrid sorghum varieties submitted by seven different seed companies. On Tuesday Jerry Johnson and Sally Sauer, two of the researchers who conducted the project, hosted a “sorghum field day” in Akron in order to show farmers their results.
Read More…

Colorado State University’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratories relate animals and humans
Collegian
10/6/2015

Colorado State University is a place where Rams take care of Rams? this doesn’t just mean students, but animals as well.
Read More…

CSU in the Blogosphere

Old MacDonald Had an App
Hp.com
10/1/2015

Rajiv Khosla, a professor of precision agriculture at Colorado State University, says the seeds of the modern smart farm were planted about 25 years ago, when farmers were given access to military-grade technology, like GPS-guided tractors and satellite imaging.
Read More …

After-School Exercise Yields Brain Gains: Study
Medicine.net
9/29/2015

Nathaniel Riggs, an associate professor of human development and family studies at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, said, “One important direction for future research is to actually measure physiological processes that may be able to explain these associations.”
Read More …

Higher Ed News

Army U
Inside Higher Ed
10/6/2015

Everyone in the U.S. Army, from top officers to new recruits, gets some kind of training. Soon, many of those trainees will also be in college. Sort of.
Read More …

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523 USA
© 2014 Colorado State University
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Bernie 2016

From Bernie Sanders <info@BernieSanders.com>

To Ralph McCarthy/ Westerlypost.com
Oct 5 at 9:35 AM

Save Animals from Extinction

 

Ralph —

With our fundraising deadline TONIGHT we need your help NOW. If we want to pass our ballot initiative on November 3rd, we need every ounce of support we can get to save these precious animals from extinction.

This is your Final Chance to donate to Save Animals Facing Extinction before the deadline.

Ralph Mccarthy
SUGGESTED SUPPORT: $5.OO
Deadline Sep 30 2015
DEADLINE

Donate $5 or more before MIDNIGHT to help us reach our goal:

$5 >> $35 >>
$50 >> $100 >>
$250 >> Other >>

With only 3,2OO tigers left in the wild, more than 1OO million sharks killed every year, and an estimated average of three African rhinos killed every day — we can’t wait any longer to act.

We know you care about this movement Ralph. That means we need your help — before it’s too late.

Please, donate $5 or more right now to Save Animals Facing Extinction >>

Thanks for joining us in the fight,

-SaveAnimalsFacingExtinction.org

 

From the desk of the President

Friend —

I’ll be at OFA’s summit in a few weeks to talk to organizers from across the country about why this work matters.

You could be there, too. Before their deadline tonight, add your name with OFA to be automatically entered for a chance to meet me in Washington, D.C.

In the coming months, organizers across the country will be fighting for progress on urgent issues — not just at the federal level, but on state and local initiatives that often don’t get the same focus.

Summits like the one OFA is hosting are a great way of shining a spotlight on that work. I hope we can meet there:

https://my.barackobama.com/Organizing-Basics

Thanks,

Barack Obama

Elect Hillary from Bill

Hey —

I’ve said this before, but it bears repeating:

Hillary is the most capable public servant I’ve ever worked with.

She’d make us proud as president — focusing on finding solutions to the the challenges that keep families across America up worrying at night.

Will you help elect her by donating $1 before midnight tonight?

Jeanne Shaheen U. S. Senate….Minimum Wage or a True Living WAGE

 

Shaheen for Senate

Tell Congress: It's time to raise the minimum wage!This is alarming, Ralph:

A single mother working full time does not earn enough on the minimum wage to keep her family out of poverty.

Let me be clear: When adults working full time cannot support their families, it’s long past time to raise the minimum wage.

Every year, the costs for food, transportation and childcare climb – but the minimum wage for American workers has been $7.25 since 2009. That means hardworking families are struggling daily to make ends meet, but each year the chips are stacked higher and higher against them.

Today, my colleagues and I are signing on to cosponsor the Raise the Wage Act – pushing for a $12 minimum wage by 2020. I urge you and citizens everywhere to join us by supporting this raise for 38 million workers in New Hampshire and across the country.

Click here to add your name and become a citizen cosponsor of the Raise the Wage Act!

Minimum wage workers are parents to 34,000 children in the Granite State. They are the 4,500 New Hampshire veterans who returned home from serving our country, only to earn $7.25 per hour. They are 38 million hardworking Americans across the country.

We have to give every American worker a fair shot at success, and that starts with raising the minimum wage to $12 by 2020. You have the chance today to bring your voice to Congress by signing on to be a citizen cosponsor of the Raise the Wage Act. I hope you’ll join us today:

Add your name and become a citizen cosponsor of the Raise the Wage Act: Lift the minimum wage to $12 by 2020!

Thank you,

Jeanne

 

 

 

 

A letter to Ralph McCarthy from Jeanne Shaheen..Are you Ready for Hillarey?

Ralph’s answer: “YES”

Shaheen for Senate

Are you on team Hillary? Join Jeanne & tell Hillary you're in! Take action. Hillary’s in, Ralph!

Hillary Clinton just announced her campaign for president – and to elect her as our first woman president, we all have to rally behind her starting right now.

New Hampshire holds the first-in-the-nation primary – it’s up to us to jump-start Hillary’s race for the White House, giving her an unshakable advantage. She stood with us in 2008 and 2014, helping us mount challenging victories – now will you join me right now in showing the country that New Hampshire is standing with Hillary?

Click here to automatically add your name to stand with Hillary Clinton for President of the United States!

The same year that Hillary left 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling, she helped me become the first woman elected as both a governor and U.S. senator. No doubt, I couldn’t have done it without her support.

Hillary recently said, “When women participate in politics, the effects ripple out far and wide.”We’ve seen the ripples here in New Hampshire, where this team’s led the way in electing women to higher office and pushing forward our shared values of equal pay, affordable health care, and growing America’s middle class.

Now we have the chance to elect the first woman to the highest office in our country, but it won’t be easy. In 2014, we won a tough election because we assembled the strongest grassroots team in the country. Let’s do it again now: Join me in showing your support for Hillary and help give her the strong start she needs to win the White House in 2016!

Add your name now and show the country New Hampshire stands with Hillary!

Let’s make history together, again!

Jeanne