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  • The Federal Reserve Raises Federal Funds Rate For the First Time in Nine Years

    Janet Yellen [the chairwoman of the Federal Reserve] says the “somewhat abnormally high level of part-time employment”* is one of the markers that continues to concern her, and the Fed wants to watch what happens next with unemployment and inflation before taking action.

    She repeats that it was very important to her not to wait too long and be “forced to tighten abruptly.”

    That would risk “aborting what I would like to see as a very long-running and sustainable expansion”, she says.

    “We recognize that inflation is well below our 2% goal,” she says, but the committee has a theory for how inflation should behave. “We’re reaonably close, not quite there, but reasonably close to our maximum employment objective, but we have a significant shortfall on inflation.”

    — Chairman Janet Yellen’s quotes from The Guardian

    Release Date: December 16, 2015Fed Reserve Building Front, Washington

    Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in October suggests that economic activity has been expanding at a moderate pace. Household spending and business fixed investment have been increasing at solid rates in recent months, and the housing sector has improved further; however, net exports have been soft. A range of recent labor market indicators, including ongoing job gains and declining unemployment, shows further improvement and confirms that underutilization of labor resources has diminished appreciably since early this year. Inflation has continued to run below the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run objective, partly reflecting declines in energy prices and in prices of non-energy imports. Market-based measures of inflation compensation remain low; some survey-based measures of longer-term inflation expectations have edged down.

    Tim Evanson, Wikimedia Commons; Federal Reserve Building, Washington, DC

    Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee currently expects that, with gradual adjustments in the stance of monetary policy, economic activity will continue to expand at a moderate pace and labor market indicators will continue to strengthen. Overall, taking into account domestic and international developments, the Committee sees the risks to the outlook for both economic activity and the labor market as balanced. Inflation is expected to rise to 2 percent over the medium term as the transitory effects of declines in energy and import prices dissipate and the labor market strengthens further. The Committee continues to monitor inflation developments closely.

    The Committee judges that there has been considerable improvement in labor market conditions this year, and it is reasonably confident that inflation will rise, over the medium term, to its 2 percent objective. Given the economic outlook, and recognizing the time it takes for policy actions to affect future economic outcomes, the Committee decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate to 1/4 to 1/2 percent. The stance of monetary policy remains accommodative after this increase, thereby supporting further improvement in labor market conditions and a return to 2 percent inflation.

    In determining the timing and size of future adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will assess realized and expected economic conditions relative to its objectives of maximum employment and 2 percent inflation. This assessment will take into account a wide range of information, including measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial and international developments. In light of the current shortfall of inflation from 2 percent, the Committee will carefully monitor actual and expected progress toward its inflation goal. The Committee expects that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate; the federal funds rate is likely to remain, for some time, below levels that are expected to prevail in the longer run. However, the actual path of the federal funds rate will depend on the economic outlook as informed by incoming data.

    The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction, and it anticipates doing so until normalization of the level of the federal funds rate is well under way. This policy, by keeping the Committee’s holdings of longer-term securities at sizable levels, should help maintain accommodative financial conditions.

    Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Janet L. Yellen, Chair; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Lael Brainard; Charles L. Evans; Stanley Fischer; Jeffrey M. Lacker; Dennis P. Lockhart; Jerome H. Powell; Daniel K. Tarullo; and John C. Williams.

    * From the US Department of Labor, Friday, December 4, 2015

    “The number of persons employed part time for economic reasons (sometimes referred to as involuntary part-time workers) increased by 319,000 to 6.1 million in November, following declines in September and October. These individuals, who would have preferred full-time employment, were working part time because their hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find a full-time job. Over the past 12 months, the number of persons employed part time for economic reasons is down by 765,000.

     
  • Everything’s Just Peachy: Salvaging An Infuriating Day

    peach orchard

    Peach flowers by Fan Wen, Wikipedia

    by Roberta McReynolds

    The autumn colors had been slow to emerge in my region of drought-stricken central California this year; the temperatures ranged in the 70s-80s throughout October. My mood lifted at the first sight of welcome rain clouds riding the jet stream, generating cooler days. Like me, the leaves also began to respond to the seasonal changes.

    Many of my errands take me past a peach orchard about two miles from home. I’d been admiring the color for weeks and each time I travelled past those trees I regretted that I hadn’t remembered to shove my camera in my purse. I should probably mention that don’t own a smart phone with fancy capabilities. I have a little not-so-smart pre-paid phone that I keep handy in case of emergencies. While it does have a camera function, the resulting pictures lack any quality.

    The orchard eventually turned vibrant golden yellow ochre. Nearly half of the foliage had dropped, forming a carpet of color between the rows of trees. The scene had been changing gradually and now reached its peak. We had a blustery storm on the way and I knew this perfect image wouldn’t last even a few more hours, so I just had to go back and capture it. 

    Go back?  Yeah … it’s been one of those days.

    I took my husband to an appointment with his doctor first thing in the morning, only to discover they had no record of it in the computer. His appointment card was at home, naturally, so I couldn’t convince the receptionist that we were supposed to be there. I assume she was recently hired since we’d never met before. Instead of offering a solution, she initiated a long, pointless dialogue about the dates of Mike’s previous visits. She appeared to go deaf whenever I endeavored to explain why Mike had an appointment. We were just wasting time, so we abandoned our mission.

    We had passed that stunning orchard on the way through the countryside, and again on our departure, still without a camera.

    The outing was not totally a lost cause. Our list of errands included a stop at the credit union to take care of a little business. Then we headed to the office supply store because I had a coupon for ‘$10.00 off any purchase’ and Mike needed ink for his printer (yes, we have ‘his & hers’ computers and printers, but no smart phones; I never claimed that our cognitive processes would make any sense to anyone else). As soon as we got in the store, he realized he couldn’t remember the number for the ink cartridge. I can’t blame him. We’ve all been there, right? It was partially my fault, because he had a bag of used cartridges to recycle that had the product number on them, but I had already turned in a bag of my cartridges earlier that month which maxed out our monthly quota. So, I told him to leave his empty cartridges at home. It made perfect sense at the time.

    Mike was certain the product number included the number ‘9’ in it somewhere. Process of elimination left us with only two choices: #69 or #79. He selected #69. Our next stop was to use a ‘20% off Everything!’ coupon at the pet store where we restocked our inventory of canned cat food and scooped bulk cat litter into two recyclable buckets for a savings of $11.30. Our final stop was lunch accompanied with a coupon that saved us another $6.99. All the money we saved helped to mollify some of my nagging irritation regarding that futile trip to the doctor’s office.

  • My World Interrupted: It Is More Than a Loss of Place, It Is a Loss of Identity

    By  Esau Sinnok, Arctic Youth Ambassador

    Close your eyes and picture your best memory with your family and friends. If you’re like me, that memory is filled with the warmth and comfort of a familiar home. I hope that, unlike me, you are never asked to put a price on that home because of the effects of climate change.

    Esau Sinnok, Arctic Youth Ambassador in Shishmaref, Alaska

    Welcome to Shishmaref, Alaska, population: 650. We’re a small Iñupiaq community where everyone knows each other. Shishmaref is a barrier island that has been eroding and flooding for the past 50 years — even before disruption from climate change was widely recognized.

    Over the past 35 years, we’ve lost 2,500 to 3,000 feet of land to coastal erosion. To put this in perspective: I was born in 1997, and since then, Shishmaref has lost about 100 feet. In the past 15 years, we had to move 13 houses — including my dear grandma Edna’s house — from one end of the island to the other because of this loss of land. Within the next two decades, the whole island will erode away completely.

    Coastal erosion in Shishmaref

    During my lifetime, I’ve seen unusual weather patterns that villagers have never witnessed before. It rained during winter last year and ice formation is coming later in the year. My grandfather remembers when 30-35 years ago ice used to form fully in late September or the middle of October. It is December, and the ice barely formed enough for us to safely cross it.
     
    The lack of ice has affected our hunting, fishing and other traditions. We use handmade wooden boats to hunt and fish in the surrounding areas of Shishmaref as well as  snow machines to get around in the winter time. Every year it gets harder and harder to collect enough meat for the winter. Tomcod and whitefish are a large part of our winter diet, but since the ice forms later in the year, it’s more difficult for us to gather enough food.

    Members of the Iñupiaq community ice-fishing

    Our village is so remote that it is only accessible by airplane, and we only get fresh food products from other parts of Alaska every one to two months. If we can’t hunt and fish to feed ourselves in the winter, we will starve.

    In 2001, my people voted to relocate along the coast of mainland Alaska, but the estimated cost is $200-250 million. The reality of moving is very complicated. There is not enough funding for relocation efforts.  And even though we made this decision, everyone wants to stay — especially the older generations who have spent their whole lives in Shishmaref.

    But we realize we have no choice. It really hurts knowing that your only home is going to be gone, and you won’t hunt, fish and carry on traditions the way that your people have done for centuries. It is more than a loss of place, it is a loss of identity.  Once you see how vulnerable my community is to sea-level rise and erosion, you won’t be able to deny that Arctic communities are already feeling the impacts of climate change. 

    Aerial view of Shishmaref

    Despite this reality, I appreciate every day that I get to wake up and see the scenery that’s still here and that I’m able to call this place home. For now. While it’s too late to save the island of Shishmaref, we still have a little bit of hope that we’ll be able to preserve our traditions and stay united as a culture. That’s why I am determined to speak up for my community.

    This year, I became an Arctic Youth Ambassador — a program started by the Interior and State Departments in partnership with Alaska Geographic. It gives Alaskan youth the chance to share our perspectives on issues in our communities. As an ambassador, I not only attend the Arctic Council meetings, but I’m also invited to travel with the Arctic Council.

    This week, I am in Paris, France, for the United Nations climate talks. It’s only the second time in my life that I have left Alaska, and its been a powerful experience. This week, I met with Secretary Jewell and other indigenous people. This meeting gave me insight into how issues of the Arctic and climate change are being handled by our world leaders.

    My reason for attending the 21st Conference of Parties in Paris — COP21 —is to tell leaders that climate change is affecting the Arctic more than other places of the world, and if the ice in Greenland melts, these villages and islands will be under water.

    I hope that world leaders will hear my message and rise to the challenge because it is not just a political issue to me. It’s my future.

    Editor’s Note:  Nations Approve Landmark Climate Accord in Paris (NYTimes)

    From the White House: US Leadership and the Historic Paris Agreement to Combat Climate Change

    A blog post from the US Department of the Interior

  • Seeing Nature In Landscape Masterworks and the Artists’ Collaboration, Fallen Fruit

    Australian The Grand Canyon by Hockney

    David Hockney, The Grand Canyon, 1998, Oil on canvas, 48 1/2 x 169 1/2 inches, Paul G. Allen Family Collection

    The Portland Art Museum is presenting an exhibition exploring the evolution of European and American landscape painting.  Seeing Nature: Landscape Masterworks from the Paul G. Allen Family Collection features 39 paintings from five centuries of masterpieces drawn from the collection of Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Paul G. Allen.

    This exhibition is co-organized by Portland Art Museum and the Seattle Art Museum presenting masterpieces spanning nearly four hundred years  from Jan Brueghel the Younger’s series devoted to the five senses to Canaletto’s celebrated views of Venice; landscapes by innovators ranging from Joseph Mallord William Turner, Paul Cézanne, and Gustav Klimt to David Hockney and Gerhard Richter. Paintings by Thomas Moran, Edward Hopper, and Georgia O’Keeffe, and others provide an American perspective on landscapes at home and abroad.  Seeing Nature includes five Impressionist canvases painted in France, London, and Venice by the French master Claude Monet.moran, grand canyon

    Thomas Moran, Grand Canyon of Arizona at Sunset, 1909, Oil on canvas, 30 x 40 inches, Paul G. Allen Family Collection

    Seeing Nature explores the development of landscape painting from a small window on the world to expressions of artists’ experiences with their surroundings on land and sea. The exhibition reveals the power of landscape to locate the viewer in time and place — to record, explore, and understand the natural and man-made world. Artists began to interpret the specifics of a picturesque city, a parcel of land, or dramatic natural phenomena.

    In the 19th century, the early Impressionists focused on direct observation of nature. This collection is particularly strong in the works of Monet. Five landscapes spanning thirty years are featured, from views of the French countryside to one of his late immersive representations of water lilies, Le Bassin aux Nymphéas of 1919.  Cézanne and his fellow Post-Impressionists used a more frankly subjective approach to create works such as La Montagne Sainte-Victoire(1888-90). The exhibition also features a rare landscape masterpiece by the Austrian painter Gustav Klimt, Birch Forest of 1903.

    The last part of the exhibition explores the paintings of artists working in the complexity of the 20th century. In highly individualized ways, artists as diverse as Georgia O’Keeffe, Edward Hopper, David Hockney, Gerhard Richter and Ed Ruscha bring fresh perspectives to traditional landscape subjects. The exhibit will travel to The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and the New Orleans Museum of Art before closing at the Seattle Art Museum in early 2017.

    The Museum will present a variety of related programs in conjunction with Seeing Nature. The Museum is collaborating with Oregon Health & Science University’s Brain Institute and Northwest Noggin, as well as other regional partners, to bring a neuroscience lens to the Museum’s featured exhibition. Through “The Nature of Seeing,” an interpretive gallery inside the exhibition and a series of public programs, visitors will have unique opportunities to explore what emerging research tells us about how our brains respond when we view landscape paintings and the natural world.https://i2.wp.com/blog.phillipscollection.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Turner_la-chiesa-redentore.jpg?ssl=1

    Joseph Mallord William Turner, Depositing of John Bellini’s Three Pictures in La Chiesa Redentore, Venice. Paul G. Allen Family Collection

    “Seeing Nature offers an extraordinary opportunity to perceive the world through the gaze of some of the most important artists in history,” said Brian Ferriso, the Director of the Portland Art Museum, who is curating the exhibition. “These masterpieces have never before been on display together. Paul Allen is one of the Northwest’s most significant art collectors and philanthropists, and his willingness to share his landscape masterpieces with our visitors offers an unprecedented chance to be inspired by works of art.”

    Fallen Fruit

     
    “… I was upon the summit of a tall mountain which commands a bewildering prospect of that loved valley… The birds of autumn caroled their soft melodies around, and the blushing flowret bent at the feet of the intruder… Away to the north was the smoke wreathing above the trees which clustered around the lone mission-house and I thought there was an altar to God, and incense from the bosom of the wilderness.”

    — Excerpt from A Sketch of the Oregon Territory, or Emigrant’s Guide, Philip L. Edwards, 1842.

  • The Political Impact of Terrorism

    Editor’s Note: Trending now, from the Oxford Dictionaries:

    Stanford sociologist

    Most popular [searches] in the US

     

    By Clifton B. Parker

    Sociology Professor Robb Willer says the 2016 election brings scholars into uncharted territory, since past research on the political impact of terrorism has focused on incumbents. (Photo: 

    Terrorism typically ratchets up nationalistic impulses in presidential campaigns, a Stanford sociologist says.

    But which candidate benefits from this dynamic is more nuanced than most political observers realize, said Robb Willer, a Stanford professor of sociology. Stanford News Service interviewed him recently about how terrorism may impact the 2016 presidential campaign, which has all challengers and no incumbent vying for the nation’s top office.

    What does research say about how the war on terror will influence presidential elections?

    Probably the most reliable finding from research on the political impact of terrorism is that the threat of terrorism increases support for standing leaders. This is one example of a larger dynamic called the rally-around-the-flag effect, or simply, rally effect. A rally effect occurs when war, terrorism or some other security threat leads citizens to support incumbent leaders more. For example, I found in this study that between 2001 and 2004 governmental announcements of terror threats to the US tended to lead to significant increases in President George W. Bush’s approval rating. The support Bush derived from the threat of terror and his policy responses to it likely played a key role in his reelection in 2004.

    The takeaway for incumbents is that their support will go up — potentially to a tremendous extent — following terror threats if their policies on terrorism are viewed positively or at least neutrally. But they also risk losing support if their policies are viewed negatively. For example, support for President Jimmy Carter initially rose following the 1979 attack on the US embassy in Iran, but subsequently fell as his handling of the hostage crisis came to be viewed negatively, finally contributing to his loss to Ronald Reagan in the 1980 presidential election. Generally, incumbents get the benefit of the doubt following security events, but they risk big losses if they are seen as ineffective in fighting the threat.

     

    In your opinion, how might the ISIS threat play out in this year’s presidential election?

    My own take is that terror threats have two main psychological effects. First, they sharpen national boundaries and increase nationalist spirit. This drives the rally-around-the-flag effect. In the context of an election, this means that the candidates who will derive the most increased support from such threats are those seen as unambiguously patriotic, who support national symbols and who support maintaining and/or restoring America’s global standing.

    Secondly, terror threats increase fundamental security concerns. This leads to greater support for leaders who are seen as most able and motivated to defend the nation. So, candidates who are perceived to be associated with strong foreign policy, who support the military and who take positions seen as likely to reduce the threat will be supported more. Candidates who are not as clearly pro-military, who do not project a strong and powerful persona or who are seen as backing policies that could compromise national security risk losing favor in such periods.

    But in understanding the impact of terror threats on the 2016 election, we are to a great extent in uncharted territory. Most past research has focused on views of incumbents. And there is good reason to think that whatever advantage an incumbent experiences does not necessarily transfer to candidates of the same party. For example, we found in a large-scale experiment in 2008 that presenting Americans with a news report about the threat of terrorism led to decreased support for Sen. John McCain among political moderates. The support Bush derived from terrorism in 2004 did not extend to McCain in 2008, though this may have been in part because the conservative-led Iraq War had become very unpopular by 2008.

  • Culture Watch Review By Joan L. Cannon: The Social Sex, A History of Female Friendship

    Two Women Under the Willows












    Two Women Asleep in a Punt Under the Willows by John Singer Sargent; 1887. Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon

    The Social Sex, A History of Female Friendship 

    By Marilyn Yalom and Theresa Donovan Brown

    Published by Harper Perennial, 2015

    Paperback, 348 pp. plus notes

      Marilyn Yalom has written many studies of subjects discussed for and from the perspective of women. This lively, engaging history is a worthy addition to her list. If a reader remembers school friends and considers those women who enriched her maturity, she will recognize both here, along with the astute descriptions of subtle differences most of us never think of.

    There is a distinct academic flavor to the book, but it reads easily and without pretentiousness, lightened with a sense of how sympathetic these historians are to their long-gone sisters.

    Marilyn Yalom by Reid Yalom

    Marilyn YalomOpening with references to western European foundations of social and ethical discourse derived from Aristotle et al., feminine experience in friendship unfold through the Middle Ages, the ascendance of the Church, the Enlightenment, the Victorian era, to our much more complicated modern times, with numerous examples drawn from primary sources, that will be new to most readers.

    There are no surprises regarding the economic and social positions of females that forced them into relationships essential to both physical and emotional survival. Those pressures are much fewer today, since recent advances in the social and economic status of females vs. males has undergone so many changes.

    The final chapter of the study was most interesting of all, and suggests more discussion than most of what precedes it. Still unresolved is the question of friendships between women and men. The difficulty of engaging in this fashion is emphasized by the need repeatedly to declare to doubters that sex is not a component of such a relationship.

    With regard to a relationship between two women, “Social media is (sic.) more important to women in part because it can accommodate the expression of affection and self-revelation that often characterizes female friendships.” After numerous quotations from (to modern eyes) extravagant declarations of love from letters written by earlier generations, this statement rings true.

    Theresa Donovan Brown

    The Twentieth, and now the Twenty-first centuries have seen a rapid change in the status of women, especially in access to educational opportunities. This book reminds us how far we have come when there are more highly educated women everywhere than at any other time in history. This, along with legal factors such as Title IX requiring fewer obstacles to women’s ambitions in all fields, even the military, seem to assure an ongoing change in the actual practice of friendship among women.

    Theresa Donovan Brown

    It would be difficult to avoid making personal comparisons between the women who wrote the letters quoted at length in times when self-expression was so different to what we are accustomed to today with our personal histories and our own friends. This assurance that a reader will find instant resonances is doubtless also assurance of the book’s success. How men might react would be interesting to find out.

    The Social Sex is worth reading, especially for women, in order to appreciate yet again how much today’s females owe to the courage and tenacity of their sex over millennia.

    Consider it a worthy gift for this season.

    ©2015 Joan L. Cannon for SeniorWomen.com

  • Stretchable Hydrogel Electronics Water-based ‘Band-Aid’ Senses Temperature, Lights Up, and Delivers Medicine to the Skin

    A new stretchy hydrogel can be embedded with various electronics. Here, a sheet of hydrogel is bonded to a matrix of polymer islands (red) that can encapsulate electronic components such as semiconductor chips, LED lights, and temperature sensors.

    A new stretchy hydrogel can be embedded with various electronics. Here, a sheet of hydrogel is bonded to a matrix of polymer islands (red) that can encapsulate electronic components such as semiconductor chips, LED lights, and temperature sensors. Credit: Melanie Gonick/MIT

     MIT engineers have designed what may be the Band-Aid of the future: a sticky, stretchy, gel-like material that can incorporate temperature sensors, LED lights, and other electronics, as well as tiny, drug-delivering reservoirs and channels. The ‘smart wound dressing’ releases medicine in response to changes in skin temperature and can be designed to light up if, say, medicine is running low. When the dressing is applied to a highly flexible area, such as the elbow or knee, it stretches with the body, keeping the embedded electronics functional and intact. The key to the design is a hydrogel matrix designed by Xuanhe Zhao, the Robert N. Noyce Career Development Associate Professor in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. The hydrogel, which Zhao detailed earlier this month, is a rubbery material, mostly composed of water, designed to bond strongly to surfaces such as gold, titanium, aluminum, silicon, glass, and ceramic.

    In a new paper published in the journal Advanced Materials, the team reports embedding various electronics within the hydrogel, such as conductive wires, semiconductor chips, LED lights, and temperature sensors. Zhao says electronics coated in hydrogel may be used not just on the surface of the skin but also inside the body, for example as implanted, biocompatible glucose sensors, or even soft, compliant neural probes.

    Viedo of Video: Melanie Gonick/MIT; Hydrogel demo clips: Shaoting Lin and Hyunwoo Yuk
    https://news.mit.edu/2015/stretchable-hydrogel-electronics-1207#news-video-block

    “Electronics are usually hard and dry, but the human body is soft and wet. These two systems have drastically different properties,” Zhao says. “If you want to put electronics in close contact with the human body for applications such as health care monitoring and drug delivery, it is highly desirable to make the electronic devices soft and stretchable to fit the environment of the human body. That’s the motivation for stretchable hydrogel electronics.”

    Zhao’s co-authors on the paper are graduate students Shaoting Lin, Hyunwoo Yuk, German Alberto Parada, postdoc Teng Zhang, Hyunwoo Koo from Samsung Display, and Cunjiang Yu from the University of Houston. 

    Typical synthetic hydrogels are brittle, barely stretchable, and adhere weakly to other surfaces. “They’re often used as degradable biomaterials at the current stage,” Zhao says. “If you want to make an electronic device out of hydrogels, you need to think of long-term stability of the hydrogels and interfaces.”  To get around these challenges, his team came up with a design strategy for robust hydrogels, mixing water with a small amount of selected biopolymers to create soft, stretchy materials with a stiffness of 10 to 100 kilopascals — about the range of human soft tissues. The researchers also devised a method to strongly bond the hydrogel to various nonporous surfaces.

    In the new study, the researchers applied their techniques to demonstrate several uses for the hydrogel, including encapsulating a titanium wire to form a transparent, stretchable conductor. In experiments, they stretched the encapsulated wire multiple times and found it maintained constant electrical conductivity. Zhao also created an array of LED lights embedded in a sheet of hydrogel. When attached to different regions of the body, the array continued working, even when stretched across highly deformable areas such as the knee and elbow.

    Finally, the group embedded various electronic components within a sheet of hydrogel to create a “smart wound dressing,” comprising regularly spaced temperature sensors and tiny drug reservoirs. The researchers also created pathways for drugs to flow through the hydrogel, by either inserting patterned tubes or drilling tiny holes through the matrix. They placed the dressing over various regions of the body and found that even when highly stretched the dressing continued to monitor skin temperature and release drugs according to the sensor readings.

    Yuk says an immediate application of the technology may be as a stretchable, on-demand treatment for burns or other skin conditions. “It’s a very versatile matrix,” Yuk says. “The unique capability here is, when a sensor senses something different, like an abnormal increase in temperature, the device can on demand release drugs to that specific location and select a specific drug from one of the reservoirs, which can diffuse in the hydrogel matrix for sustained release over time.”

    Delving deeper, Zhao envisions hydrogel to be an ideal, biocompatible vehicle for delivering electronics inside the body. He is currently exploring hydrogel’s potential as a carrier for glucose sensors as well as neural probes. Conventional glucose sensors, implanted in the body, typically spark a foreign-body response from the immune system, which covers the sensors with dense fibers, requiring the sensors to be replaced often. While various hydrogels have been used to coat glucose sensors and prevent such a reaction, the hydrogels are brittle and can detach easily with motion.  Zhao says the hydrogel-sensor system his group is developing would likely be robust and effective over long periods. He says a similar case might be made for neural probes.

    “The brain is a bowl of Jell-O,” Zhao says. “Currently, researchers are trying different soft materials to achieve long-term biocompatibility of neural devices. With collaborators, we are proposing to use robust hydrogel as an ideal material for neural devices, because the hydrogel can be designed to possess similar mechanical and physiological properties as the brain.” This research was funded, in part, by the Office of Naval Research, the MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies, and the National Science Foundation.


     

  • The Great N.C. Wyeth Caper: “Go, Dutton, and That Right Speedily”

    NC Wyeth painting

    N.C. Wyeth (United States, 1882–1945), Would the Clock Never Strike? Nerves were snapping, but faces gave no hint of it, 1922, oil on canvas, 32 3/8 x 40 1/4 inches. Private collection, 9.2015.6

    Paintings by America’s Storyteller

    Six historically significant paintings by beloved American painter and illustrator N.C. Wyeth were recently secured and reunited after being stolen 18 months ago in what the Federal Bureau of Investigation calls one of the largest property thefts in Maine’s history. The recovered artworks are now returned to their home state and are on view at the Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME  through January 3, 2016.

    The exhibition, The Great N.C. Wyeth Caper: Paintings by America’s Storyteller, features six artworks that were the focus of the state’s largest art heist and an 18-month criminal investigation. After the paintings were taken from a private collector’s home in Portland, Maine, four were removed from their frames and endured a perilous cross-country journey to a pawn shop in Beverly Hills, California, where they were identified and returned to authorities in December 2014. The remaining two paintings were recently recovered in the Greater Boston area, still in their original frames.

    “The owner is incredibly relieved to have these irreplaceable works returned to his family. Now that the ordeal is nearly over, he’s entrusted the museum to share them with the public,” announced PMA Director Mark Bessire. “Art heists hold a certain romantic allure, yet the reality is that many pieces of art are extremely fragile, and in the wrong hands, they could be lost forever. Thanks to a collaborative effort — between the FBI, the US Attorney’s offices in the District of Maine and Los Angeles, the Portland Police Department, and the Beverly Hills Police Department — the ending to this story is a happy one.”

    N.C. (Newell Convers) Wyeth (1882–1945), best known for his illustrations of literary classics such as Treasure IslandThe Last of the Mohicans, and The Yearling, is the patriarch of three generations of important American painters, including his son Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009) and his grandson Jamie Wyeth (born 1946). The works of all three artists are deeply influenced by the rugged, natural beauty of Maine, where the family summered for many decades, and where the youngest, Jamie, still resides. The PMA holds significant works by each artist in its collection.

    N.C. Wyeth painting, “Go, Dutton, and That Right Speedily.”

     The FBI press release about the investigation and recovery: https://www.fbi.gov/boston/press-releases/2015/fbi-recovers-all-six-n.c.-wyeth-paintings

     

     
  • Bills Introduced and Defeated: Denying Firearms, Child Protection, Women’s Health Care, Eating Disorders, Family and Medical Leave

    Senator Dianne Feinstein in SF

    Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) released the following statement after the Senate failed to advance legislation [Denying Firearms and Explosives to Dangerous Terrorists Act of 2015, sponsored by Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who had introduced the bill in February ]to prohibit known or suspected terrorists from buying weapons:

    “If you need proof that Congress is a hostage to the gun lobby, look no further than today’s vote blocking a bill to prevent known or suspected terrorists from buying guns and explosives.

    Senator Dianne Feinstein during her term as San Francisco mayor (1978 – 1988)

    “If you’re too dangerous to board a plane, you’re too dangerous to buy a gun. Unfortunately that commonsense idea failed to attract enough votes to pass the Senate. Police chiefs and law enforcement groups have unequivocally stated that closing this loophole is critical to strengthening our national security. And common sense tells us we’re less safe until we do so.

    “Congress has been paralyzed by the gun lobby for years, while more and more Americans are killed in mass shootings. The carnage won’t stop until Congress finds the courage to stand up to the gun lobby and protect the nation.”

    The Department of Justice under President George W. Bush initially proposed the legislation 2007. The Obama administration also supports the bill.

    According to information prepared by the Government Accountability Office, individuals on the consolidated terrorist watch list, which includes the no-fly list, cleared a background check for a gun transaction in 94 percent of attempted transactions in 2013 and 2014 (455 out of 486 times).

    Between February 2004 and December 2014, individuals on the consolidated terrorist watch list cleared a background check in 91 percent of attempted transactions (2,043 of 2,233 times), according to GAO data.

    The Denying Firearms and Explosives to Dangerous Terrorists Act would:

    • Allow the attorney general to deny the purchase or transfer of a firearm or explosive to a known or suspected terrorist if the prospective recipient may use the firearm or explosive in connection with terrorism.
    • Maintain protections in current law that allow a person who believes he has been mistakenly prevented from buying a firearm to learn of the reason for the denial, and then to challenge the denial, first administratively with the Department of Justice, and then through a lawsuit against the Justice Department.

    Bills Introduced

    Child Protection

    S. 2352—Sen. Robert Casey (D-PA)/Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (12/3/15)—A bill to require mandatory reporting of incidents of child abuse or neglect, and for other purposes.

    Crime

    S. 2348—Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT)/Judiciary (12-3-15)—A bill to implement the use of Rapid DNA instruments to inform decisions about pretrial release or detention and their conditions, to solve and prevent violence crimes and other crimes, to exonerate the innocent, to prevent DNA analysis backlogs, and for other purposes.

    S. Res. 327—Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)/Judiciary (12/3/15)—A resolution condemning violence that targets health care for women.

    International

    H.R. 4148—Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY)/Foreign Affairs (12/1/15)—A bill to authorize assistance to aid in the prevention and treatment of obstetric fistula in foreign countries, and for other purposes.

    Tax Policy/Employment

    S. 2354—Sen. Deb Fischer (R-NE)/Finance (12/3/15)—A bill to provide a credit to employers who provide paid family and medical leave, and for other purposes.

    Health

    H.R. 4153—Rep. Renee Ellmers (R-NC)/Energy and Commerce (12/2/15)—A bill to establish a pilot program to test the impact of early intervention on the prevention, management, and course of eating disorders.

    Bills Introduced courtesy of Women’s Policy Inc.

  • Holiday Gifts: Books for Childen & Young Adults; Pellerin Vintage Models, Pajamas, Cufflinks and Socks, Soulcycle Certificate, Pour-over Coffee Stand, Petanque Set

    SeniorWomen.com’s writer Jill Norgren recommends:

    “There are a number of interesting books this holiday season:

    “For young adults, Ali Benjamin’s The Thing about Jelly Fish; and Jacqueline Woodson’s Brown Girl Dreaming.”

    “For folks of all ages, Betty Caroli’s Lady Bird and Lyndon: The Hidden Story of a Marriage That Made a President.

    “The New York Historical Society exhibit on the work of Al Hirschfeld has been accompanied by a handsome new publication, available on Amazon, that is bliss to read and look through in these grim times: Al Hirschfeld and David Leopold, The Hirschfeld Century.

    “My teen granddaughters have asked for a gift certificate to a few sessions of jazzed up stationary bike classes. In New York City it is called a Soulcycle class.  SoulCycle is at many locations around the country.” 

    We can add one crafting book we found for all ages: Beautiful Bracelets By Hand by Jade Gedeon, Page Street Publishing.

    Experiment with color, light, and sound, and explore simple, mechanics and energy conversion with these fun, simple hands-on RAFT kits at the Exploratorium Shop. Make your own musical instruments, spinning tops out of CDs, Roller Racers, and more. 

    Scope Constructor Kit:   Build an eclectic assortment of scopes — field scopes, telescopes, microscopes, even binoculars — and learn how their various components function. The kit contains 148 pieces so you can construct 28 different models. Recommended for scope lovers ages 8 and up. Volta Racer

    Volta Racers: Start your engines and get ready for the ultimate race with solar-powered Volta Racers. Zip across the finish line with these DIY solar motorcar kits. They contain everything you need to assemble fully functioning cars, including the world’s first flexible polycrystalline silicon solar cell used for powering toys. No special tools or batteries are required—just your hands and a need for speed. For kids ages 6 and up; adult assistance is recommended for assembly.

    Smart Car Robotics: Test-drive the car of the future — and experiment with driverless-vehicle technologies — with Smart Car Robotics. You can build seven different models — car, helicopter, airplane, airboat, flying car, forklift truck, and motorcycle — and then use a smartphone or tablet to steer your vehicle in any direction you choose. A free, downloadable app lets you program a drive through an augmented reality cityscape. This kit is perfect for kid drivers ages 10 and up.

    Exploring Kitchen Science is your hands-on guide to exploring the tasty chemistry that surrounds us. With more than 30 activities — from making blinking rock candies with LEDs inside to cooking up a wild and wacky goo called oobleck to making ice cream with dry ice — your kids cook up a taste of fun for the whole family.

    journal, lavenderAvailable at Staples, an Eccolo Italian Faux Leather journal, one of a number of variations, including one entitled ‘Be Fabulous’ in purple.. 5 x 7 inches.

    And don’t forget to give your parents, sweethearts and best friends a pair of new windshield wipers for the season! We’ve added the Consumer reports link (above).

    3d cell model

    Call it a model or call it a puzzle. Either way, this delightful demonstration of the inner workings of a plant cell is purely fascinating. Put it together, deconstruct it and reassemble it as many times as you like. The 26 hand-painted components make for a fun and educational building experience. Learn about the spatial and biological relationships between the various plant cell component. A display stand and an assembly guide are included. Stands about 9″ tall. Recommended for ages 8 and up.

    Two small items we found useful this year is the Joseph can opener for $15, always a challenge for those with arthritis. It works with a minimum of  hand athletics. Everything Kitchen is another distributor with a full line Lékué products which we’ve hailed previously for its pasta cooker. It can also be found at Amazon.