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  • Dr. Michael LeFevre, who stepped down as chairman of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force in March, describes how the health law changed how the group works and communicates its findings.
  • The back wall of the Freemont Theatre in downtown San Luis Obispo is now home to a mural by artist Maria Molteni! Maria will be giving a talk about her work during Art & About from 5-6.
  • NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Pamela White, who served as the U.S. ambassador to Haiti from 2012 to 2015, about why she thinks the call for outside help is necessary.
  • More people look to the Web for information about religion than for auctions or online banking. Commentator Steve Waldman thinks that this is because the Internet offers anonymity.
  • NPR's Karen Grigsby Bates reports on the increased influence of Internet Web loggers — known as "bloggers" — in the book publishing world.
  • NPR's Nancy Marshall reports on how Internet advertisers are trying to overcome web surfers' aversion to clicking on their banner ads.
  • Santa Barbara Permaculture Network Presents Beavers in the Landscape -

    An Evening with Dr. Emily Fairfax

    FREE - Farmer & the Cook Restaurant / Outdoor Patio (Wood-fired Pizza available)

    Beaver dams are gaining popularity as a low-tech, low-cost strategy to build climate resiliency at the landscape scale.

    Join Santa Barbara Permaculture Network for an evening with Dr. Emily Fairfax, PhD. as she shares her research focused on beaver, a keystone species, that until very recently was a vastly underrated ecosystem restoration hero.

    Passionate about science from a young age, Dr. Fairfax was happy when nature and science came together with her interest in beavers. As a geoscientist who studies ecohydrology of wetlands and riparian areas, it was a perfect academic and vocational match. Beavers are native to North America (Castor canadensis), in populations topping 600 million before trappers in the 1800’s decimated their numbers almost to extinction. They were responsible for a landscape most early settlers and farmers took for granted--- deep soils built up over centuries--- in wetlands they created. These wetlands then and now function as natural sponges trapping silt and water, which are excellent carbon sinks.

    With extended droughts and catastrophic fires plaguing California and the West in recent years, Dr. Fairfax began focusing her research on the impact of beaver on wildfires. Squishy, wet landscapes simply don’t burn. And where beaver are, with multiple dam and pond complexes, squishy land abounds. These observations of the positive impact of beavers on wildfires prompted Dr. Fairfax to coin the phrase “Smokey the Beaver”.

    As a part of the evening event we will share the work of, Cooper Lienheart a recent engineering grad of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, who currently works as a SLO Beaver Brigade Restoration Specialist, and has decided to make beaver and wetland restoration his life work.

    Dr. Emily Fairfax is an Assistant Professor of Environmental Science and Resource Management at California State University Channel Islands. D She uses a combination of remote sensing and field work to research how beaver activity can create drought and fire resistant patches in the landscape under a changing climate.

    The event takes place on Thursday, November 11, 5-8pm, at the Farmer & the Cook Restaurant, outdoor patio, 339 W. El Roblar Dr, Meiners Oaks (near Ojai). Woodfired Pizza available for purchase.

    For more info contact margie@sbpermaculture.org, 805-962-2571, www.sbpermaculture.org. Hosted by Santa Barbara Permaculture Network Co-sponsors: The Farmer & the Cook; San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, & Ojai Beaver Brigades
  • Karl Zinsmeister, the new domestic policy advisor to President Bush, was quoted as calling people in the nation's capital "morally repugnant, cheating, shifty human beings." He tried to alter those remarks at a Web site that posted those original comments. Madeleine Brand discusses the controversy surrounding Zinsmeister's comments -- and his attempt to soften them -- with Slate White House correspondent John Dickerson.
  • After resisting for some time, Starbucks has agreed to pay corporate taxes in Britain. It was revealed earlier that the coffee company has paid no such taxes in the past three years.
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