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Bears visit Sudbury university

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 Mei 2014 | 22.55

CBC News Posted: May 28, 2014 3:50 PM ET Last Updated: May 29, 2014 9:15 AM ET

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Bears up at Thorneloe University 5:40

Bears up at Thorneloe University 5:40

Two black bears have been seen wandering around campus at Thorneloe University in Sudbury this week.

Guy Chamberland is a professor in the classic studies department at the school.

He has been snapping photos from his office.

"From my window, I can see … the dumpsters," he said.

"That's very clearly what's attracting them to Thorneloe."

Campus security has been informed about the bears, he said.

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What makes bacon smell so amazing?

What makes bacon smell so irresistible? The American Chemical Society has put out a two-minute video revealing the answer.

The video, released this week, uses animation to illustrate the chemistry that happens in your frying pan when you add heat and bacon, and ultimately pinpoints the main source of that alluring aroma. (By the way, if you've ever worked with this compound in a chemistry lab, you will probably be surprised because on its own, it smells pretty horrible.)

The video is part of the society's Reactions series about the chemistry of everyday life. The series has previously covered topics such as:

  • The science of Siracha hot sauce.
  • The cause of morning sickness.

On mobile and unable to see the video below? Click here.


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Smart swallows caught on YouTube opening parkade doors

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 28 Mei 2014 | 22.56

Nesting swallows at the University of Victoria are becoming an online sensation as a YouTube video showing them operating motion sensor doors to a new campus bike centre goes viral.

Grant Hughes, who uploaded the video, posted that the birds may have been locked in when the doors were added to a former parkade as part of the construction of the new centre.

The swallows can be seen swooping in front of the door sensors, and entering and exiting at will, with not an angry bird in sight.

On mobile? Click here to watch the YouTube video


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Google plans to build self-driving car with no steering wheel

Google will build a car without a steering wheel.

It doesn't need one because it drives itself.

The two-seater won't be sold publicly, but Google said Tuesday it hopes by this time next year, 100 prototypes will be on public roads. Though not driving very quickly — the top speed would be 40 km/h.

The cars are a natural next step for Google, which already has driven hundreds of thousands of kilometres in California with Lexus SUVs and Toyota Priuses outfitted with a combination of sensors and computers.

USA/

Chris Urmson, director of Google's Self-Driving Car Project, stands in front of a self-driving car at the Computer History Museum after a presentation in Mountain View, California earlier this month. (REUTERS)

Those cars have Google-employed "safety drivers" behind the wheel in case of emergency. The new cars would eliminate the driver from the task of driving.

No steering wheel, no brake and gas pedals. Instead, buttons for go and stop.

"It reminded me of catching a chairlift by yourself, a bit of solitude I found really enjoyable," Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, told a Southern California tech conference Tuesday evening of his first ride, according to a transcript.

The electric-powered car is compact and bubble-shaped — something that might move people around a corporate campus or congested downtown.

Google is unlikely to go deeply into auto manufacturing. In unveiling the prototype, the company emphasized partnering with other firms.

The biggest obstacle could be the law.

USA/

A sensor spins atop a Google self-driving vehicle. The vehicle will have a top speed of 40 km/h. (Stephen Lam/Reuters)

Test versions will have a wheel and pedals, because they must under California regulations.

Google hopes to build the 100 prototypes late this year or early next and use them in a to-be-determined "pilot program," spokeswoman Courtney Hohne said. Meanwhile, by the end of this year, California's Department of Motor Vehicles must write regulations for the "operational" use of truly driverless cars.

The DMV had thought that reality was several years away, so it would have time to perfect the rules.

That clock just sped up, said the head of the DMV's driverless car program, Bernard Soriano.

"Because of what is potentially out there soon, we need to make sure that the regulations are in place that would keep the public safe but would not impede progress," Soriano said.


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Mystery solved: Object over iceberg likely a mirage

Written By Unknown on Senin, 26 Mei 2014 | 22.56

A meteorologist with Environment Canada says a mysterious object which appeared to be hovering over an iceberg in Bonavista Bay isn't much of a mystery afterall.

YouTube user 235FireFly uploaded a video of icebergs spotted off Salvage this week.

"I noticed what appeared to be a chunk of ice just barely attached to an iceberg. Hoping to catch it collapse, I took out the camera and zoomed in," the user commented below the YouTube post.

"What you can see is a white object not attached to the iceberg, but rather spinning around and changing shape. There was no fog and it was a perfectly clear day so I'm up for debate. So any ideas what this could be? I'm open to all opinions, UFO, illusion or what? This is easily the strangest thing I have ever witnessed in my life."

Is it part of the iceberg? Is it fog playing tricks with your eyes?

None of the above, said Environment Canada's Rodney Barney.

"Mirage effect due to marine layer temperature inversion," Barney said via Twitter, shortly after the video was posted by CBC News.

Barney directed those curious to the Cliff Mass weather blog, which provides numerous examples of similar anomalies.

"They are dependent on the existence of large temperature differences (increases) above the surface ... with cold water near the surface chilling the surface air, and much warmer air above, resulting in a strong inversion," the blog states.

"Cold air near the surface is more dense than the warmer air above, and the change in densities create a lens-like effect in the atmosphere which produces the mirage."


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99-year-old receives diploma 75 years late over $5 fee

Stenography, bookkeeping degree awarded to Jessie White at special ceremony

The Associated Press Posted: May 25, 2014 10:57 PM ET Last Updated: May 25, 2014 10:57 PM ET

A 99-year-old Maine woman has graduated from college 75 years after a $5 fee kept her from getting her diploma on time.

Beal College in Bangor awarded Jessie White her degree during a special ceremony on Friday hosted by Alan Stehle, the college's president.

White told ABC News that the special ceremony was wonderful and a lot of fun.

White was supposed to graduate in 1939, but couldn't afford the $5 transcript fee.

A friend who recently learned of her decades-old predicament called Stehle, who paid her balance and set up the ceremony.

White, a Maine native, received her degree in stenography and bookkeeping.

White suffered a disability from a polio infection, but she persisted until she landed a job and worked for years as a bookkeeper.

White said finally getting her degree made her feel "great."

"Never give up learning. They say when you give up learning you grow old," she said, according to ABC News. "So I don't intend to give up learning."


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Oregon police detain very unusual, but adorable, inmate

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 25 Mei 2014 | 22.56

U.S. police in southern Oregon held an unlikely suspect overnight: an adorable black bear cub.

Myrtle Creek police Chief Don Brown says a teen boy and his parents dropped off the cub in a large plastic storage bin at the police station Monday. The teen found the small animal whimpering in the bushes outside his house on the outskirts of town.

He told police the bear's mother was nowhere in sight.

Still, Brown said it was dangerous for the teen to pick up the cub, because the mother bear could have spotted him and attacked. Adult female black bears can weigh up to 300 pounds.

The 12-pound cub was "very well behaved" while spending the night at the station, Brown said.

Bear Cub

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife transferred the cub to a wildlife centre and said she will likely end up going to a zoo. (KPIC-TV/Associated Press)

Police and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials looked for the cub's mother the next day using a device that mimics a cub distress call, but couldn't find her.

The orphaned cub is now at the University of Oregon receiving a veterinary checkup. Fish and Wildlife officials said the cub is a female and is in generally good health, other than being underweight.

They said the cub will be placed at a zoo, but they didn't yet know which one.

Oregon is home to 25,000 to 30,000 black bears. Myrtle Creek, 145 kilometres south of Eugene, has an abundance of wildlife, the police chief said. Residents often call authorities about bear and cougar sightings.

"We've had two baby rattlesnakes brought into the station, but nobody has brought in a bear in the last nine years I've been here," Brown said.

Wildlife officials say they do not know what happened to the cub's mother. Spring bear hunting season kicked off April 1 in Oregon, but it's illegal to kill sows with cubs that are less than a year old.

Officials say no dead bear has been found in the area, no hunter has reported killing one, and there have been no reports of a bear being hit by a car.


22.56 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mystery solved: Object over iceberg likely a mirage

A meteorologist with Environment Canada says a mysterious object which appeared to be hovering over an iceberg in Bonavista Bay isn't much of a mystery afterall.

YouTube user 235FireFly uploaded a video of icebergs spotted off Salvage this week.

"I noticed what appeared to be a chunk of ice just barely attached to an iceberg. Hoping to catch it collapse, I took out the camera and zoomed in," the user commented below the YouTube post.

"What you can see is a white object not attached to the iceberg, but rather spinning around and changing shape. There was no fog and it was a perfectly clear day so I'm up for debate. So any ideas what this could be? I'm open to all opinions, UFO, illusion or what? This is easily the strangest thing I have ever witnessed in my life."

Is it part of the iceberg? Is it fog playing tricks with your eyes?

None of the above, said Environment Canada's Rodney Barney.

"Mirage effect due to marine layer temperature inversion," Barney said via Twitter, shortly after the video was posted by CBC News.

Barney directed those curious to the Cliff Mass weather blog, which provides numerous examples of similar anomalies.

"They are dependent on the existence of large temperature differences (increases) above the surface ... with cold water near the surface chilling the surface air, and much warmer air above, resulting in a strong inversion," the blog states.

"Cold air near the surface is more dense than the warmer air above, and the change in densities create a lens-like effect in the atmosphere which produces the mirage."


22.56 | 0 komentar | Read More

Oregon police detain very unusual, but adorable, inmate

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 24 Mei 2014 | 22.55

U.S. police in southern Oregon held an unlikely suspect overnight: an adorable black bear cub.

Myrtle Creek police Chief Don Brown says a teen boy and his parents dropped off the cub in a large plastic storage bin at the police station Monday. The teen found the small animal whimpering in the bushes outside his house on the outskirts of town.

He told police the bear's mother was nowhere in sight.

Still, Brown said it was dangerous for the teen to pick up the cub, because the mother bear could have spotted him and attacked. Adult female black bears can weigh up to 300 pounds.

The 12-pound cub was "very well behaved" while spending the night at the station, Brown said.

Bear Cub

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife transferred the cub to a wildlife centre and said she will likely end up going to a zoo. (KPIC-TV/Associated Press)

Police and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials looked for the cub's mother the next day using a device that mimics a cub distress call, but couldn't find her.

The orphaned cub is now at the University of Oregon receiving a veterinary checkup. Fish and Wildlife officials said the cub is a female and is in generally good health, other than being underweight.

They said the cub will be placed at a zoo, but they didn't yet know which one.

Oregon is home to 25,000 to 30,000 black bears. Myrtle Creek, 145 kilometres south of Eugene, has an abundance of wildlife, the police chief said. Residents often call authorities about bear and cougar sightings.

"We've had two baby rattlesnakes brought into the station, but nobody has brought in a bear in the last nine years I've been here," Brown said.

Wildlife officials say they do not know what happened to the cub's mother. Spring bear hunting season kicked off April 1 in Oregon, but it's illegal to kill sows with cubs that are less than a year old.

Officials say no dead bear has been found in the area, no hunter has reported killing one, and there have been no reports of a bear being hit by a car.


22.55 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mystery solved: Object over iceberg likely a mirage

A meteorologist with Environment Canada says a mysterious object which appeared to be hovering over an iceberg in Bonavista Bay isn't much of a mystery afterall.

YouTube user 235FireFly uploaded a video of icebergs spotted off Salvage this week.

"I noticed what appeared to be a chunk of ice just barely attached to an iceberg. Hoping to catch it collapse, I took out the camera and zoomed in," the user commented below the YouTube post.

"What you can see is a white object not attached to the iceberg, but rather spinning around and changing shape. There was no fog and it was a perfectly clear day so I'm up for debate. So any ideas what this could be? I'm open to all opinions, UFO, illusion or what? This is easily the strangest thing I have ever witnessed in my life."

Is it part of the iceberg? Is it fog playing tricks with your eyes?

None of the above, said Environment Canada's Rodney Barney.

"Mirage effect due to marine layer temperature inversion," Barney said via Twitter, shortly after the video was posted by CBC News.

Barney directed those curious to the Cliff Mass weather blog, which provides numerous examples of similar anomalies.

"They are dependent on the existence of large temperature differences (increases) above the surface ... with cold water near the surface chilling the surface air, and much warmer air above, resulting in a strong inversion," the blog states.

"Cold air near the surface is more dense than the warmer air above, and the change in densities create a lens-like effect in the atmosphere which produces the mirage."


22.55 | 0 komentar | Read More

Camera lost in shipwreck found after 2 years with photos intact

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 23 Mei 2014 | 22.56

A camera lost in a shipwreck off the west coast of Vancouver Island two years ago is finally to be returned to its owner — with the memory card and its images intact.

Vancouver artist Paul Burgoyne lost the camera in 2012, when his boat the Boot Legger was shipwrecked on a 500-kilometre voyage from Vancouver to his summer home in Tahsis, B.C. His camera and treasured photos went down with the ship.

"That just shocked me," said Burgoyne. "Getting the camera, or the photos back, that's really quite wonderful."

Two years on, earlier in May, Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre university students Tella Osler and Beau Doherty were conducting research dives with BMSC Diving and Safety Officer Siobhan Gray off Aguilar Point, B.C., where they discovered Burgoyne's camera 12 metres down.​

According to Isabelle M. Côté, Professor of Marine Ecology at Simon Fraser University, there were multiple marine species, from two kingdoms and at least seven phyla, living on the camera when it was found. 

The Lexar Platinum II, 8 GB memory card still worked and Côté was able to post online a family portrait she found among the photos, in hopes of finding the owner.

As luck would have it, a member of the Bamfield coast guard station, who had rescued Burgoyne when he was shipwrecked, recognized him posing in the centre of the photo, and he is due to be reunited with his photos soon.

"I have a new respect for, you know, these electronics," Burgoyne said. "You throw most of it away every two years, but that little card is an amazing bit of technology."

Burgoyne said memories of the shipwreck came flooding back after being told Wednesday night that his camera had been found.

"Right away I thought about that bliss that I felt when the ocean went calm and I was sitting at the back of the boat all by myself and thinking, you know,  'What could be better than this?" said Burgoyne.

"I thought I had the boat on auto pilot but clearly I had made a mistake. The next thing all hell was breaking loose."

Burgoyne's shipwreck occurred less than an hour after the last photos were taken, and his camera was lost at sea with some irreplaceable images on the card.

The pictures include a family gathering to scatter his parents' ashes at Lake of the Woods in Ontario and a video showing the choppy seas his boat was facing before it wrecked.

MAP: See Aguilar Point on Google Maps


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Camera lost in shipwreck found after 2 years with photos intact

A camera lost in a shipwreck off the west coast of Vancouver Island two years ago is finally to be returned to its owner — with the memory card and its images intact.

Vancouver artist Paul Burgoyne lost the camera in 2012, when his boat the Boot Legger was shipwrecked on a 500-kilometre voyage from Vancouver to his summer home in Tahsis, B.C. His camera and treasured photos went down with the ship.

"That just shocked me," said Burgoyne. "Getting the camera, or the photos back, that's really quite wonderful."

Two years on, earlier in May, Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre university students Tella Osler and Beau Doherty were conducting research dives with BMSC Diving and Safety Officer Siobhan Gray off Aguilar Point, B.C., where they discovered Burgoyne's camera 12 metres down.​

According to Isabelle M. Côté, Professor of Marine Ecology at Simon Fraser University, there were multiple marine species, from two kingdoms and at least seven phyla, living on the camera when it was found. 

The Lexar Platinum II, 8 GB memory card still worked and Côté was able to post online a family portrait she found among the photos, in hopes of finding the owner.

As luck would have it, a member of the Bamfield coast guard station, who had rescued Burgoyne when he was shipwrecked, recognized him posing in the centre of the photo, and he is due to be reunited with his photos soon.

"I have a new respect for, you know, these electronics," Burgoyne said. "You throw most of it away every two years, but that little card is an amazing bit of technology."

Burgoyne said memories of the shipwreck came flooding back after being told Wednesday night that his camera had been found.

"Right away I thought about that bliss that I felt when the ocean went calm and I was sitting at the back of the boat all by myself and thinking, you know,  'What could be better than this?" said Burgoyne.

"I thought I had the boat on auto pilot but clearly I had made a mistake. The next thing all hell was breaking loose."

Burgoyne's shipwreck occurred less than an hour after the last photos were taken, and his camera was lost at sea with some irreplaceable images on the card.

The pictures include a family gathering to scatter his parents' ashes at Lake of the Woods in Ontario and a video showing the choppy seas his boat was facing before it wrecked.

MAP: See Aguilar Point on Google Maps


22.56 | 0 komentar | Read More

Oregon police detain very unusual, but adorable, inmate

U.S. Police in southern Oregon held an unlikely suspect overnight: an adorable black bear cub.

Myrtle Creek Police Chief Don Brown says a teen boy and his parents dropped off the cub in a large plastic storage bin at the police station Monday. The teen found the small animal whimpering in the bushes outside his house on the outskirts of town.

He told police the bear's mother was nowhere in sight.

Still, Brown said it was dangerous for the teen to pick up the cub, because the mother bear could have spotted him and attacked. Adult female black bears can weigh up to 300 pounds.

The 12-pound cub was "very well behaved" while spending the night at the station, Brown said.

Bear Cub

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife transferred the cub to a wildlife centre and said she will likely end up going to a zoo. (KPIC-TV/Associated Press)

Police and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials looked for the cub's mother the next day using a device that mimics a cub distress call, but couldn't find her.

The orphaned cub is now at the University of Oregon receiving a veterinary checkup. Fish and Wildlife officials said the cub is a female and is in generally good health, other than being underweight.

They said the cub will be placed at a zoo, but they didn't yet know which one.

Oregon is home to 25,000 to 30,000 black bears. Myrtle Creek, 145 kilometres south of Eugene, has an abundance of wildlife, the police chief said. Residents often call authorities about bear and cougar sightings.

"We've had two baby rattlesnakes brought into the station, but nobody has brought in a bear in the last nine years I've been here," Brown said.

Wildlife officials say they do not know what happened to the cub's mother. Spring bear hunting season kicked off April 1 in Oregon, but it's illegal to kill sows with cubs that are less than a year old.

Officials say no dead bear has been found in the area, no hunter has reported killing one, and there have been no reports of a bear being hit by a car.


22.56 | 0 komentar | Read More

Oregon police detain very unusual, but adorable, inmate

U.S. Police in southern Oregon held an unlikely suspect overnight: an adorable black bear cub.

Myrtle Creek Police Chief Don Brown says a teen boy and his parents dropped off the cub in a large plastic storage bin at the police station Monday. The teen found the small animal whimpering in the bushes outside his house on the outskirts of town.

He told police the bear's mother was nowhere in sight.

Still, Brown said it was dangerous for the teen to pick up the cub, because the mother bear could have spotted him and attacked. Adult female black bears can weigh up to 300 pounds.

The 12-pound cub was "very well behaved" while spending the night at the station, Brown said.

Bear Cub

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife transferred the cub to a wildlife centre and said she will likely end up going to a zoo. (KPIC-TV/Associated Press)

Police and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials looked for the cub's mother the next day using a device that mimics a cub distress call, but couldn't find her.

The orphaned cub is now at the University of Oregon receiving a veterinary checkup. Fish and Wildlife officials said the cub is a female and is in generally good health, other than being underweight.

They said the cub will be placed at a zoo, but they didn't yet know which one.

Oregon is home to 25,000 to 30,000 black bears. Myrtle Creek, 145 kilometres south of Eugene, has an abundance of wildlife, the police chief said. Residents often call authorities about bear and cougar sightings.

"We've had two baby rattlesnakes brought into the station, but nobody has brought in a bear in the last nine years I've been here," Brown said.

Wildlife officials say they do not know what happened to the cub's mother. Spring bear hunting season kicked off April 1 in Oregon, but it's illegal to kill sows with cubs that are less than a year old.

Officials say no dead bear has been found in the area, no hunter has reported killing one, and there have been no reports of a bear being hit by a car.


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Tricorder X Prize eyed by Toronto-based Biosign

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 22 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Almost 50 years ago, TV viewers were introduced to a nifty little sci-fi gadget on the series Star Trek that could read a patient's vital signs and diagnose diseases with a mere swipe above the surface of the body.

Now a Canadian company and 20 other teams from around the world are vying for a $10-million XPrize by trying to replicate Dr. McCoy's "tricorder" and go where no real-world medical device has gone before.

The entry by the Cloud DX team from the Toronto-based medical devices company Biosign (TSX-V:BIO) is based on an existing product called Pulsewave, a wrist-worn monitor that measures blood pressure, heart rate and pulse rhythm irregularities, as well as divining the wearer's respiration rate. Readings from the USB-powered wrist monitor appear on a small computer screen.

hi-tricorder-getty-71566431

The tricorder was a gadget on the science fiction series Star Trek that could read a patient's vital signs and diagnose diseases with a mere swipe above the surface of the body. (Getty Images)

"For the XPrize, however, really the goal is to have something that's much more mobile, much more powerful," said chief medical officer Dr. Sonny Kohli. "So we're using that current platform and evolving it so it's XPrize ready."

Kohli, who works as a critical care physician at Oakville-Trafalgar Hospital just west of Toronto, said team Cloud DX is also designing a "home-based lab" component for its submission, which would be able to analyze blood, urine and saliva samples.

The goal of the tricorder competition, sponsored by the Qualcomm Foundation, is to create a lightweight, portable "doctor in the palm of the hand" that would allow consumers to check vital signs and to diagnose a set of 15 disorders, among them Type 2 diabetes, urinary tract infection, high cholesterol and HIV. The device would also take key measurements: blood pressure, heart rate and variability, temperature, respiration and oxygen saturation.

"Incorporating these technologies into a hand-held device will ultimately be opening up the opportunity for these devices to be sold directly to consumers," said Grant Campany, a senior director with the Los Angeles-based XPrize Foundation and lead for the Qualcomm competition.

In August, after scrutinizing the 21 teams' paper-based specifications, the non-profit XPrize Foundation will whittle down a short list of up to 10 competitors, who will then have to submit prototypes for testing by real-life patients.

"The winner will be the team whose technology most accurately diagnoses a set of diseases independent of a health-care professional or facility, and that provides the best consumer user experience with their device," the foundation says on its website.

Such an instrument could also be used by medical professionals in developing areas of the world with limited health-care resources, said Kohli.

"So a portable, mobile device that partners with your smartphone or tablet and that you can carry with you ... it becomes very powerful for remote settings," said Kohli, adding that he and other volunteers in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake could have used such a tool.

"You can imagine (using it in) low-income settings, disaster zones or on a flight, on a boat — anywhere where you can't normally access high-quality medical information and diagnostic capabilities."

Three teams will share in the prize money, with $7 million going to the winner and $2 million and $1 million to the runners-up.

If the Canadian team were to win top prize, Kohli said the money would be plowed into commercially developing the device, which he said is one of the few dreamed up by the creator of "Star Trek" that haven't become everyday reality.

"When you look back at the old TV show, you'll see that they had the concept of the cellphone nailed down, they had the Internet nailed down ... and they had the tricorder," he said. "So every one of Gene Roddenberry's visions have been achieved, except the tricorder."

The successful XPrize team was to be announced in September 2015, but Campany said the foundation is considering whether to wait to name the winner in January 2016 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the genesis of "Star Trek."


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Rare seahorse spotted in Nova Scotian waters

Two citizen scientists scuba diving off the coast of Nova Scotia recently spotted a species of seahorse rarely documented in Canadian waters.

Nédia Coutinho and Martin Roy made the discovery during a dive in St. Margarets Bay, located about 40 kilometres from Halifax.

"I was obviously not looking for a seahorse, but when I saw it, I could not believe my eyes," said Coutinho on the University of British Columbia's website.

"I was so excited, even without knowing that it's not common around Nova Scotia. I have dived on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia and in the Caribbean and this is the first time I have ever seen a seahorse."

The pair reported the discovery to Project Seahorse, UBC's online seahorse tracking website.

UBC researchers Amanda Vincent and Heather Koldewey started the program in 1996 to study and help protect vulnerable seahorse species across the globe. 

"This is a thrilling discovery," said Vincent in a release.

"These charismatic and mysterious animals are so highly cryptic — and, in many places, so threatened — that we often have to be very lucky to find them."

Lined seahorses typically live in coastal waters along North and South America, the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. They're listed as vulnerable to extinction under the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

The seahorses, which grow in length to be about 19 centimetres, can develop elaborate skin fronds in order to camouflage themselves within seaweed.

According to the Project Seahorse website, many species are threatened by harmful overfishing. Part of the problem is that millions of the animals are caught and used in traditional Chinese medicine, caught for aquariums or dried for decorative purposes. Loss of habitat also poses a problem for seahorse populations. 

"Seahorses face so many challenges that they desperately need new allies," said Vincent. "Globally, there are fewer than 15 scientists studying seahorses in the wild, which is why citizen science initiatives like iSeahorse are so important, and why divers like Nédia and Martin are so integral to their conservation."

There are dozens of seahorse species scattered in coastal waters across the globe. The specific number of species is difficult to pinpoint since seahorses have the ability to change their skin colour and grow skin filaments to blend in with their surroundings. 

Divers and snorkellers who spot seahorses are encouraged to upload information to the iSeahorse website, or use the handy iPhone app. 


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'Hero cat' throws out 1st pitch

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 21 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Video

CBC News Posted: May 21, 2014 8:51 AM ET Last Updated: May 21, 2014 8:56 AM ET

Tara, the cat that saved a small boy from a dog attack, got a hero's welcome at a California baseball game Tuesday.

After video of Tara's rescue of her owners' four-year-old son went viral, the Bakersfield Blaze invited the family to a game to throw out the ceremonial first pitch.

Tara, with some help from owner Roger Triantafilo, did the honours.

Watch video from the pregame ceremony in the player above.

Stay Connected with CBC News

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Queen impersonation for Prince Charles: Scandal or not?

Poll

By Kevin Yarr, CBC News Posted: May 21, 2014 11:34 AM AT Last Updated: May 21, 2014 11:34 AM AT

When Prince Charles and Camilla arrived on P.E.I. Monday night, their first public event featured local actor Wade Lynch performing an impersonation of Queen Elizabeth.

There was some negative reaction on social media when the plan was announced a week before the event, and grumblings continued after the show. By Wednesday morning, national media had picked up the story.

  • Prince Charles, Camilla, not amused by impersonation of Queen Elizabeth  - Montreal Gazette
  • Performance for Prince Charles Goes Horribly Wrong in PEI – Huffington Post
  • Performance of "The Queen" in P.E.I. causes uproar – Cape Breton Post
  • PEI 'treats' Prince Charles to cross-dressing impersonation of the Queen, which is exactly as awkward as you would expect – National Post

What do you think of the impersonation of the Queen performed for Prince Charles and Camilla in Charlottetown?

There has been no word from Prince Charles or any of his representatives since Monday night, but Clarence House did approve the script before it was performed.

It is difficult to find anyone with something positive to say about it on social media. Then again, social media is not known to be the most positive of forums.

CBC's full video of the performance is posted above. What do you think? Do the royals appear upset? Does it offend you? Was it a bad idea from the start? Leave a comment below, or just click a quick vote in our poll.

For mobile device users: Queen impersonation for Prince Charles: Scandal or not?

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Obama throws out 1st pitch at kids' baseball game

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 20 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Video

CBC News Posted: May 20, 2014 8:52 AM ET Last Updated: May 20, 2014 8:52 AM ET

U.S. President Barack Obama made a surprise visit to a youth baseball game in Washington on Monday.

Obama was on his way to a fundraiser when his motorcade stopped at a local ball field. The daughter of White House press secretary Jay Carney is on one of the teams.

Obama told Carney he "had to bring your dad to the game; he was going to be late."

He also posed for photos with both teams and threw out the first pitch before heading to the fundraiser.

Watch video of the appearance in the player above.

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11-year-old golfer qualifies for U.S. Women's Open

Tournament takes place on June 19

The Associated Press Posted: May 20, 2014 8:23 AM ET Last Updated: May 20, 2014 9:12 AM ET

Lucy Li has become the youngest player to qualify for the U.S. Women's Open by winning the sectional qualifier at Half Moon Bay in California.

The 11-year-old Li shot rounds of 74 and 68 on the par-72 Old Course on Monday and will surpass Lexi Thompson as the youngest competitor in a U.S. Women's Open when she tees off at Pinehurst on June 19.

Thompson was 12 when she qualified for the 2007 event.

Li, of Redwood City, California, already has a big win on her resume, capturing the girls 10-11 division at the inaugural Drive, Chip and Putt contest at Augusta that preceded the Masters this year. She beat second-place qualifier Kathleen Scavo by seven strokes at Half Moon Bay.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Medicine Hat snake mystery solved after 2-metre long skin found

Written By Unknown on Senin, 19 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Riverside boa

Newspaper carrier Randi Rissling found the skin of a boa constrictor, estimated to be about seven feet long, while she was delivering on Wednesday morning in Riverside. (Emma Bennett/Medicine Hat News)

It appears the mystery of the boa constrictor skin in Medicine Hat, Alta., has been solved.

There were concerns raised of a snake on the loose after the more than two-metre long skin was found Wednesday in a residential area.

But Heather Trail from Bylaw Services says she learned from Facebook that the boa was a pet.

She said the owner put the skin outside to dry after the snake moulted — and it simply blew away.

The City of Medicine Hat received several nervous phone calls after the boa constrictor skin was found.

Trail says conditions in the southern Alberta city are not conducive to a boa.

She said bylaw officers had questions right from the start because the skin was so perfectly intact.


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Suspected runaway bobcat returned to owner, DNA tests inconclusive

Rocky's mother was 98 per cent bobcat. 

But because a DNA test couldn't determine the 38-pound feline's father's lineage, a judge ruled Friday that the runaway cat be returned to a New Jersey woman. 

Municipal Court Judge Damian Murray ruled that Ginny Fine can regain custody of Rocky after a mitochondrial DNA test found that the cat's mother was 98 percent bobcat, but couldn't determine its father's lineage, the Asbury Park Press reported.

Mitochondrial DNA is inherited solely from the mother. 

"The bottom line is, Rocky goes home," Murray said.

Fine, who has maintained that Rocky is a hybrid bobcat and Maine coon, said she was shocked by the ruling.

"I don't even know what to say. I was not expecting that," she said outside of court.

She would have needed a special permit from the state Department of Environmental Protection to get Rocky back if it was determined to be a purebred bobcat. The permit is only issued for zoos, animal exhibitors, for scientific purposes or for agencies that own animals for advertising or acting, according to the DEP.

Fine pleaded guilty to letting the animal get loose and was fined $1,000 after Rocky ran away from her home for a second time in March.

The cat was missing for 12 days, leading police to hunt through the woods. It was lured back on April 7 and has been at the Popcorn Park Zoo in Lacey since then. 

Murray ordered that the cat be kept in an enclosure that will be periodically inspected by the state.


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Suspected runaway bobcat returned to owner, DNA tests inconclusive

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 18 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Rocky's mother was 98 per cent bobcat. 

But because a DNA test couldn't determine the 38-pound feline's father's lineage, a judge ruled Friday that the runaway cat be returned to a New Jersey woman. 

Municipal Court Judge Damian Murray ruled that Ginny Fine can regain custody of Rocky after a mitochondrial DNA test found that the cat's mother was 98 percent bobcat, but couldn't determine its father's lineage, the Asbury Park Press reported.

Mitochondrial DNA is inherited solely from the mother. 

"The bottom line is, Rocky goes home," Murray said.

Fine, who has maintained that Rocky is a hybrid bobcat and Maine coon, said she was shocked by the ruling.

"I don't even know what to say. I was not expecting that," she said outside of court.

She would have needed a special permit from the state Department of Environmental Protection to get Rocky back if it was determined to be a purebred bobcat. The permit is only issued for zoos, animal exhibitors, for scientific purposes or for agencies that own animals for advertising or acting, according to the DEP.

Fine pleaded guilty to letting the animal get loose and was fined $1,000 after Rocky ran away from her home for a second time in March.

The cat was missing for 12 days, leading police to hunt through the woods. It was lured back on April 7 and has been at the Popcorn Park Zoo in Lacey since then. 

Murray ordered that the cat be kept in an enclosure that will be periodically inspected by the state.


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Medicine Hat snake mystery solved after 2-metre long skin found

Riverside boa

Newspaper carrier Randi Rissling found the skin of a boa constrictor, estimated to be about seven feet long, while she was delivering on Wednesday morning in Riverside. (Emma Bennett/Medicine Hat News)

It appears the mystery of the boa constrictor skin in Medicine Hat, Alta., has been solved.

There were concerns raised of a snake on the loose after the more than two-metre long skin was found Wednesday in a residential area.

But Heather Trail from Bylaw Services says she learned from Facebook that the boa was a pet.

She said the owner put the skin outside to dry after the snake moulted — and it simply blew away.

The City of Medicine Hat received several nervous phone calls after the boa constrictor skin was found.

Trail says conditions in the southern Alberta city are not conducive to a boa.

She said bylaw officers had questions right from the start because the skin was so perfectly intact.


22.55 | 0 komentar | Read More

Medicine Hat snake mystery solved after 2-metre long skin found

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 17 Mei 2014 | 22.56

Riverside boa

Newspaper carrier Randi Rissling found the skin of a boa constrictor, estimated to be about seven feet long, while she was delivering on Wednesday morning in Riverside. (Emma Bennett/Medicine Hat News)

It appears the mystery of the boa constrictor skin in Medicine Hat, Alta., has been solved.

There were concerns raised of a snake on the loose after the more than two-metre long skin was found Wednesday in a residential area.

But Heather Trail from Bylaw Services says she learned from Facebook that the boa was a pet.

She said the owner put the skin outside to dry after the snake moulted — and it simply blew away.

The City of Medicine Hat received several nervous phone calls after the boa constrictor skin was found.

Trail says conditions in the southern Alberta city are not conducive to a boa.

She said bylaw officers had questions right from the start because the skin was so perfectly intact.


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Suspected runaway bobcat returned to owner, DNA tests inconclusive

Rocky's mother was 98 per cent bobcat. 

But because a DNA test couldn't determine the 38-pound feline's father's lineage, a judge ruled Friday that the runaway cat be returned to a New Jersey woman. 

Municipal Court Judge Damian Murray ruled that Ginny Fine can regain custody of Rocky after a mitochondrial DNA test found that the cat's mother was 98 percent bobcat, but couldn't determine its father's lineage, the Asbury Park Press reported.

Mitochondrial DNA is inherited solely from the mother. 

"The bottom line is, Rocky goes home," Murray said.

Fine, who has maintained that Rocky is a hybrid bobcat and Maine coon, said she was shocked by the ruling.

"I don't even know what to say. I was not expecting that," she said outside of court.

She would have needed a special permit from the state Department of Environmental Protection to get Rocky back if it was determined to be a purebred bobcat. The permit is only issued for zoos, animal exhibitors, for scientific purposes or for agencies that own animals for advertising or acting, according to the DEP.

Fine pleaded guilty to letting the animal get loose and was fined $1,000 after Rocky ran away from her home for a second time in March.

The cat was missing for 12 days, leading police to hunt through the woods. It was lured back on April 7 and has been at the Popcorn Park Zoo in Lacey since then. 

Murray ordered that the cat be kept in an enclosure that will be periodically inspected by the state.


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Has the Squamish 'Sasquatch' been identified?

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 16 Mei 2014 | 22.56

A White Rock, B.C., man believes he may be the "Sasquatch" caught on a viral video filmed by wildlife biologist Myles Lamont while hiking Tricouni Peak in the Tantalus mountain range near Squamish, B.C., more than two years ago.

The video shows a black dot of a figure apparently moving up the slope of a snow-covered mountain in a remote area of the range. Lamont estimated his altitude at 2,000 metres.

In the video, Lamont wonders why a human would walk up the side of a mountain "in the middle of nowhere" without a backpack or gear.

Peter Tennant

Peter Tennant, a.k.a. Ridgewalker Pete, says he believes he was the 'Sasquatch' captured on video. (CBC)

Since he posted it last month on YouTube, the video has more than a million views. And even though it was shot more than two years ago, the wildlife biologist is still wondering today what it was he saw.

"What we saw was not wearing any gear and no snowshoes and covering ground very quickly," he says.

"I'm familiar with bears and other wildlife and seeing other backpackers in the bush and this was not quite like any of those, so it was a bit different."

Ridgewalker Pete hikes solo

Enter Peter Tennant, a.k.a. Ridgewalker Pete. The 56-year-old from White Rock believes his admittedly odd hobby of walking by himself across remote B.C. mountainsides put him in the cross-hairs of Lamont's lens.

Peter Tennant

Peter Tennant is pictured hiking on Tricouni Peak in July 2011. (CBC)

Tennant says he does a lot of solo hiking, shoots pictures and video of his walks, then sets them to music. And Tennant says he was on Tricouni Peak in July 2011, the same month Lamont shot his video.

The hiker says he ran across the Sasquatch story on the CBC website and recognized the valley as the same one he'd been exploring that July.

"[Lamont] did this little pan [around in the video] and I started laughing, because I recognized that valley," says Tennant. 

"That's where I was walking all around. And then I looked more, and then I stopped and looked in my hiking notes, and I realized, Tricouni Mountain, 2011. I think that was me."

Mystery solved ... or is it?

Tennant recalls he was doing little day hikes on his weeklong walkabout on the mountain.

"There was a huge amount of snow left over from the winter that year and I was shocked," he says. "Even though it was summertime down in the valley, up high it sort of felt like winter."

"I was by myself and I wasn't really set up for avalanche stuff, so I decided to just stay in the sort of higher elevation but not go up to the peak."

Peter Tennant

Peter Tennant took this shot of his high camp on Tricouni Peak. (CBC)

Tennant says he didn't have a backpack or snowshoes, but did have an emergency locator. "The snow had melted on the surface so I was just walking on top of the snow."

But Lamont's not buying it. He says to be that high up with no backpack or snowshoes is "bizarre."

Ridgewalker Pete says his hiking diary confirms he was on Tricouni Mountain the last week of July.

Mystery solved ... until we asked Lamont, the wildlife biologist who shot the video, "When were you on Tricouni Peak?"

"We were there July 2," he said.

And that's at least three weeks before Ridgewalker Pete.

On mobile? Click here to watch Lamont's 'Sasquatch' video

On mobile? Click here for a map of Tricouni Peak

'Monsters in our midst' photogallery

On mobile? Click here for a photogallery of Sasquatch and other monsters


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'Well-behaved kids' restaurant discount sparks online debate

A Calgary family's surprise experience at a local restaurant has exploded online and sparked a debate about the behaviour of children in restaurants.

Alicia Welsh and her husband took their one year-old daughter Evie for brunch on Mother's Day at Carino Japanese Bistro  a small eatery in northeast Calgary.

When it came time to get the bill, the family received a $5 reduction on the tab. It was listed on the bill as a "well-behaved kids" discount.

  • Should restaurants offer discounts for "well-behaved kids"? Let us know in the comment section below.

"I'd never seen that before," Alicia Welsh told the CBC. "It was a really, really nice surprise to top off a really nice brunch." 

Restaurant owner Toshi Carino told CBC News he has had the "well-behaved kids" policy for about a year.

"We are so tiny place, only 35 seats. So between table and table, it is very close," said Carino.

Welsh's husband Daley was impressed by the restaurant's gesture and posted a picture of the receipt on the popular website Reddit.

From there it hit Twitter, and the story has been picked up by news organizations in the United States and U.K.

The small Calgary eatery's policy is getting widespread attention, but the story has also prompted a debate online.

Welsh doesn't think all restaurants should start offering discounts for well-behaved kids, but believes they should consider ideas like "family-friendly" times for diners with children.

But either way, she plans to continue dining out with Evie.

"We're just really lucky parents. We have a happy, seems to be well-adjusted little girl. Every time we take her (to a restaurant) she seems to be a bit of a hit," said Welsh.


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Giant planet around dwarf star a surprising discovery

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 15 Mei 2014 | 22.55

A gigantic planet-like object like no other has been found circling a tiny star at a record distance.

The object is a kind of "super Jupiter" – a gas giant about 10 times bigger than the biggest planet in our solar system, says Marie-Eve Naud, a PhD student at the University of Montreal and lead author of a scientific report describing the planet. The study is being published in the Astrophysical Journal this week.

GU PSc b is 2,000 times farther from its star than the Earth is from the sun, 67 times farther than Neptune and 50 times farther than Pluto — more distant than any planet ever discovered by a long shot, said René Doyon, a University of Montreal professor who is Naud's co-supervisor and co-author of the report.

But despite the vast distance between them, the planet is bound to its star via gravity, Doyon told CBCNews.ca. "The planet is actually moving with its star."

The researchers estimate that the planet completes its orbit around the star about once every 80,000 years. The star itself is located about 155 light years away, in the constellation Pisces, and is a small, young one, with just a third the mass of our sun.

May not be a planet

"Usually you don't expect big planets around small stars," Naud said.

The planet GU Psc b and its star GU Psc

The planet GU Psc b and its star GU Psc appear in visible and infrared images from the Gemini South Observatory and an infrared image from the CFHT. Because infrared light is invisible to the naked eye, astronomers use a colour code in which infrared light is represented by the colour red. (University of Montreal)

On the other hand, the unusual object is so big that it may not be a planet at all. It may instead qualify as a brown dwarf or a "failed star" too small to ignite the nuclear reactions that power stars.

"Either way this is exciting," Doyon said. If it's a planet, it shows that planets can form farther away from stars than previously thought, and may not always form from the "planetary disk" of dust near a star. If it's a brown dwarf, it shrinks the known size limit of objects that can form in a way similar to the way stars form.

Regardless of what it is, it is physically similar to a planet and is very valuable to scientists seeking to know more about planets outside our solar system, Doyon said.

"These are truly jewels in the sky. We can study them in gory detail."

Young hot and bright

Because it is so far from its star, the planet can be easily observed without interference from the star's glare. That means it was much easier to determine things like the planet's size and temperature, said Naud.

The scientists also looked for "fingerprints" in different colours of light coming from the planet. Some of those indicated it is so young that it is still cooling and contracting to its final size, Naud said.

The researchers even detected water and methane in the planet's atmosphere, Doyon added.

The team found GU PSc b during a survey of young stars launched by Naud's primary supervisor, Étienne Artigaud. He hoped that those stars might be circled by young planets, which are warmer, brighter and easier to see than older planets.

The new planet itself has a temperature of about 700 to 800 C despite the distance from its star. But because it is big and gassy, it wouldn't be habitable even after it cools to a more comfortable temperature.

"What could be habitable is a moon around that planet," said Doyon. He added that Jupiter's moon Europa would have liquid water on its surface if it orbited Gu PSc b. However, the comfortable conditions wouldn't last long, as the planet would continue to cool rapidly as it got older.

The team found and studied the new object using the Observatoire Mont-Mégantic in Quebec, the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope and the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii and the Gemini Observatories in Chile and Hawaii.

Although the discovery is unlike any planet seen before, similar objects may be common in the universe, Doyon said. He added that researchers have already found another object much like it around another star.


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Chinese beekeeper covered in bees for record 53 minutes

Video

CBC News Posted: May 15, 2014 9:09 AM ET Last Updated: May 15, 2014 9:09 AM ET

Ruan Liangming generated some real "buzz" with a new world record Wednesday.

The Chinese beekeeper allowed bees to cover his upper body for 53 minutes and 34 seconds.

Ruan says he has become immune to bee venom during his 19 years as a beekeeper, and that his feat only left him feeling tired and itchy.

Watch video highlights of his record-setting sit-in in the player above.

Stay Connected with CBC News

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Underwear with cellphone pockets for sale in New Brunswick

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 14 Mei 2014 | 22.56

Danieal Cormier of Quispamsis, N.B., is hoping to revolutionize the men's underwear industry with a new design that provides pockets for cellphones and other gadgets.

Cormier, 20, came up with idea while sitting around alone at home in his boxers one day.

"I had my cellphone and I kept doing the hand motion to put my cellphone in my pocket, but my underwear didn't have any pocket," he said.

"So that's when it kind of sparked in my head  'Why don't underwear come with pockets?'"

Danieal Cormier has designed men's underwear with pockets

Danieal Cormier of Quispamsis, N.B., has designed men's underwear with pockets. (CBC)

​Cormier, who works in marketing for a hotel chain, says he searched for underwear with pockets on the internet and couldn't find any.

"I decided, 'Well, if no one else is making them, then I'm going to make them.'"

That same day, Cormier, who had never sewn before, went out and bought a sewing machine and some fabric and starting working on a prototype, taking apart a pair of his own underwear to use as a template.

"It took me like two hours just to do one pair, and they were not the best," he said.

But Cormier has since perfected the design, finding the best position for the pocket and strengthening the waistband to carry additional weight.

'I really wanted other people to know and to experience the convenience of it.'— Danieal Cormier

Now his underwear is being manufactured in India and marketed as Danieal: Underwear with pockets. The underwear is available online, starting at $15.95 for pre-orders, and at a growing number of stores for $21.

"I really wanted other people to know and to experience the convenience of it," he said. "It's changed my life a lot."

Retailer Keira Fraser said she jumped at the opportunity to carry the underwear at her shop, Ready Man, in Saint John.

"It makes so much sense, it really does. It's something — 'Why didn't I think of that?'" she said.

"Customers love the idea. You know, it's not specifically for men either. We've had a lot of women buy them for casually hanging around the house too."

Cormier said orders have been pouring in from across North America.

"I was really impressed and proud and happy about how excited these shops are and these stores are to have these underwear on their shelves. They're almost just as excited as I am about it," he said.

"And that's just a motivation for me to keep going and work harder and think of more ideas and what more I can do."

Cormier said he's already working on new designs, based on feedback from people who need underwear pockets for other items, including diabetics with portable insulin pumps, and emergency personnel who carry pagers.

The pockets also work for valuables, such as wallets, he said.

"It can't fall out and no one can take it out, because they won't go under your pants to steal something."


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Giant planet around dwarf star a surprising discovery

A gigantic planet-like object like no other has been found circling a tiny star at a record distance.

The object is a kind of "super Jupiter" – a gas giant about 10 times bigger than the biggest planet in our solar system, says Marie-Eve Naud, a PhD student at the University of Montreal and lead author of a scientific report describing the planet. The study is being published in the Astrophysical Journal this week.

GU PSc b is 2,000 times farther from its star than the Earth is from the sun, 67 times farther than Neptune and 50 times farther than Pluto — more distant than any planet ever discovered by a long shot, said René Doyon, a University of Montreal professor who is Naud's co-supervisor and co-author of the report.

But despite the vast distance between them, the planet is bound to its star via gravity, Doyon told CBCNews.ca. "The planet is actually moving with its star."

The researchers estimate that the planet completes its orbit around the star about once every 80,000 years. The star itself is located about 155 light years away, in the constellation Pisces, and is a small, young one, with just a third the mass of our sun.

May not be a planet

"Usually you don't expect big planets around small stars," Naud said.

The planet GU Psc b and its star GU Psc

The planet GU Psc b and its star GU Psc appear in visible and infrared images from the Gemini South Observatory and an infrared image from the CFHT. Because infrared light is invisible to the naked eye, astronomers use a colour code in which infrared light is represented by the colour red. (University of Montreal)

On the other hand, the unusual object is so big that it may not be a planet at all. It may instead qualify as a brown dwarf or a "failed star" too small to ignite the nuclear reactions that power stars.

"Either way this is exciting," Doyon said. If it's a planet, it shows that planets can form farther away from stars than previously thought, and may not always form from the "planetary disk" of dust near a star. If it's a brown dwarf, it shrinks the known size limit of objects that can form in a way similar to the way stars form.

Regardless of what it is, it is physically similar to a planet and is very valuable to scientists seeking to know more about planets outside our solar system, Doyon said.

"These are truly jewels in the sky. We can study them in gory detail."

Young hot and bright

Because it is so far from its star, the planet can be easily observed without interference from the star's glare. That means it was much easier to determine things like the planet's size and temperature, said Naud.

The scientists also looked for "fingerprints" in different colours of light coming from the planet. Some of those indicated it is so young that it is still cooling and contracting to its final size, Naud said.

The researchers even detected water and methane in the planet's atmosphere, Doyon added.

The team found GU PSc b during a survey of young stars launched by Naud's primary supervisor, Étienne Artigaud. He hoped that those stars might be circled by young planets, which are warmer, brighter and easier to see than older planets.

The new planet itself has a temperature of about 700 to 800 C despite the distance from its star. But because it is big and gassy, it wouldn't be habitable even after it cools to a more comfortable temperature.

"What could be habitable is a moon around that planet," said Doyon. He added that Jupiter's moon Europa would have liquid water on its surface if it orbited Gu PSc b. However, the comfortable conditions wouldn't last long, as the planet would continue to cool rapidly as it got older.

The team found and studied the new object using the Observatoire Mont-Mégantic in Quebec, the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope and the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii and the Gemini Observatories in Chile and Hawaii.

Although the discovery is unlike any planet seen before, similar objects may be common in the universe, Doyon said. He added that researchers have already found another object much like it around another star.


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Planet portrait captured by Gemini Planet Imager is the best ever

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 13 Mei 2014 | 22.56

A crisp portrait of a planet 56 light years away has been captured by a new high-tech planet-hunting camera developed largely by Canadians.

The Gemini Planet Imager snapped an "amazingly clear and bright" image of the gas giant Beta Pictoris b after an exposure of just one minute, said Quinn Konopacky, a University of Toronto researcher who co-authored a new scientific paper describing the feat.

"I was very, very excited," recalled Konopacky of her first time seeing the planet's portrait, in an interview with CBC News Monday.

Beta Pictoris b

The Gemini Planet Imager produces clear images of planets such as Beta Pictoris b (bright spot) by removing glare from the star they orbit (centre). The light from the star has been subtracted from this image, which was published in the journal PNAS. (Gemini Planet Imager/Image processing by Christian Marois, NRC Canada)

Beta Pictoris b is several times larger than Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system.

The new image and information about the planet teased out of the image data are being published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences this week by an international team led by Bruce Macintosh of Stanford University and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.

The Gemini Planet Imager, billed as the "world's most powerful exoplanet camera" captured its first portrait of an exoplanet — a planet outside our solar system — shortly after it was installed on the Gemini South telescope in Chile in November.

"It was almost straight out of the box," said Konopacky, who used the data from the instrument to confirm the planet's distance from its star – about the same as the distance between the sun and Saturn.

The way the planet stands out from the background in the images "is basically unprecedented," she added.

Beta Pictoris b was first imaged by Canadian scientists in 2008, but previous images were "noisy" — that is, they were fuzzy the way analog TV images used to be if the signal wasn't good.

In comparison, the images from the Gemini Planet Imager are like high-definition TV where "everything just pops," Konopacky said.

Cutting the glare

Typically, it's hard to see planets with a telescope and camera because of the glare from the stars they orbit, said René Doyon, an astrophysicist at the University of Montreal who also co-authored the paper.

"This instrument is designed to reduce glare and it reduces by a factor of 10," said Doyon, who helped build part of the device in his lab. Other parts were built at the National Research Council of Canada in Victoria, B.C., and at the University of Laval.

The camera cuts glare by using a device called a coronagraph to block the light from the star. In this case, the star was very bright because it is much younger than our sun and twice as massive. Beta Pictoris b is located slightly closer to its star than Saturn is to our sun.

The device didn't find any new planets orbiting the same star as Beta Pictoris b.

600-star survey

But astronomers are hoping it will make some new planetary discoveries around 600 other nearby stars that it will start surveying this year.

Current techniques for discovering planets rely on them to either:

  • Block part of the light from a star as they pass in front of it.
  • Or use their gravity to pull on the star and make it wobble detectably.

Those techniques can only detect planets with orbits in certain orientations relative to Earth and generally require planets to be close to their stars. That's not only because being close to their star allows them to exert a bigger pull and block more of the light from their star. It's also because more distant planets take longer to complete their orbits and therefore pass in front of their star less frequently.

Doyon noted that Jupiter orbits the sun once every 12 years. Beta Pictoris b orbits every 20.5 years. That's not very convenient for astronomers waiting for them to pass in front of their stars.

Meanwhile, Neptune, the furthest planet in our solar system, completes its orbit only once every 165 years.

"You can see that detecting planets at those distances [from a star] is essentially impossible" using the usual methods, Doyon said.

The Gemini Planet Imager should be better able to find planets further away from their stars.

The device can also distinguish between different colours of light that are the fingerprints of certain molecules in the atmospheres of planets, such as oxygen or carbon dioxide.

Konopacky said its discoveries about Beta Pictoris b's atmosphere will be reported in another soon-to-be published paper.


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Got $40K? You could cross the Atlantic in a Lancaster bomber

Written By Unknown on Senin, 12 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Close

Raw video shot on the Lancaster bomber's final approach and touchdown at Hamilton's airport

Lancaster landing 4:06

Aviation buffs have a shot at a once-in-a-lifetime intercontinental flight on a famous Second World War bomber — and it will only cost you $40,000 or so.

Hamilton's Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum is auctioning off the opportunity on eBay to fly as a crew member on the Avro Lancaster when it goes to England in August. Together with the Royal Air Force's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) Lancaster, it will be involved in a month-long flying tour in the U.K., before returning home to Hamilton in September. It will be the last Lancaster to ever make the trip, says museum CEO David Rohrer.

"You'll never be able to do anything like this ever again," he told CBC Hamilton. "So we thought why not put it out there? Somebody must have this on their bucket list."

'We won't have meal services or in-flight movies, but we will have an outside one.'- David Rohrer, Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum CEO

No bids have been placed on the trip just yet, with the reserve bid placed at a lofty $40,000. But there's "a lot of chatter" about the trip, Rohrer said, and people are likely just waiting until the last minute to bid (as is the norm on eBay).

"I'm very confident there are people out there."

lancaster-landing

Hamilton's Lancaster bomber is a flying monument to the Second World War's Allied bomber crews. It was bought in 1977 for about $10,000 and a team of volunteers led by Norm Etheridge spent 11 years restoring it to airworthiness. (Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum)

The cash will be put towards the trip's $650,000 costs, as appearance fees the crew will make in England won't cover the costs of getting there and back. The person who wins one of the eight seats on the flight will be trained as a crew member a couple of days before the flight, so they can actually participate when aboard. The plane will be soaring down below 10,000 feet because the cabin isn't pressurized, which will no doubt make for a less comfortable experience than a commercial flight.

"We won't have meal services or in-flight movies, but we will have an outside one," Rohrer said.

The Mynarski Memorial Lancaster is scheduled to leave Canada Aug. 4. The five-day transatlantic trip to England is being done in four- to five-hour hops, with refuelling and rest stops in Goose Bay, N.L.; Narsarsuaq, Greenland; and Keflavik, Iceland. According to the eBay post about the flight, the museum reserves the right to assess the winning bidder's physical ability to go on the trip. You can't be more than 250 pounds, and you have to be able to climb a ladder and manoeuvre in tight spaces.

The winner also has to sign a waiver for a documentary being filmed about the trip.

Bids on the trip are being accepted until May 10. As of Friday afternoon, the museum's eBay post had almost 5,500 views.

The last time Lancasters flew together was 50 years ago over Toronto, at RCAF Station Downsview. The RCAF flew a special formation of three of the bombers in April 1964 to mark their retirement from service.


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French runners trek through 13 km of mud, barbed wire

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CBC News Posted: May 12, 2014 11:24 AM ET Last Updated: May 12, 2014 11:24 AM ET

More than 20,000 runners navigated an obstacle course that included mud, barbed wire and smoke on the outskirts of Paris on Saturday.

Participants faced more than 40 different obstacles over the course of the 13-kilometre route and were rewarded with a shower after crossing the finish line.

Watch highlights from the event in the player above.

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Pothole vigilante ordered to remove gravel, could face fine

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 10 Mei 2014 | 22.55

A Saint John man who filled in some potholes with gravel has been ordered by the city to undo the work and has been told he could be fined.

Mike Defazio, who owns Defazio Autobody, says he recently blew a tire on one of several large potholes on Broadway Avenue at Simpson Drive.

Mike Defazio

Mike Defazio, who filled in some potholes on Saint John's Broadway Avenue, has been ordered by the city to remove the gravel. (CBC)

"Some of them were eight or 10 inches wide and two feet long and almost a foot deep," he told CBC News.

"I just got fed up because they had been here for quite some time and nobody looked like they were doing anything."

So Defazio decided to take matters into his own hands last Saturday and spent half the day filling in the potholes using his tractor.

"I've had numerous people saying, 'What you did was a good thing.' I've never had anybody saying it was a bad thing," he said.

But on Wednesday, he got a call from the city's deputy commissioner of transportation and environment services Kevin Rice, informing him he had broken the city's bylaws and could face a fine.

"I thought that I wasn't really doing anything wrong, but he sure straightened me out on that matter," said Defazio.

The city does not allow private citizens to do road work.

Potholes on Broadway Avenue in Saint John

Some of the potholes on Broadway Avenue that Mike Defazio filled with gravel. (CBC)

​Defazio says Rice also told him some people had complained about possible damage from the gravel and city officials had expressed concerns about insurance claims.

"He said people were saying that a rock could be kicked up, or, you know, it could chip your windshield, it could scratch your paint, or whatever," said Defazio. "I said, 'Has it happened?' He says, 'Well, I don't know if it's happened, but it could happen.'"

Defazio says he was told city crews would be out to remove his work and he would have to cover the costs.

But he was worried about how much the price tag might end up being, so he offered to return the street to its original pot-holed state himself.

"He said, 'Fine. If you look after it, we'll come out tomorrow morning and we'll do an inspection and if it's up to our standards, then fine. If not, we're still gonna bring a crew in and you're gonna be charged,'" Defazio said.

Defazio hired a local contractor to remove most of the gravel, but he and one of his employees were out on Thursday digging and sweeping.

He says he's out the cost of the original pothole work, plus $450 to pay the contractor.


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Romanian shepherds fight city hall – with sheep

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CBC News Posted: May 09, 2014 2:54 PM ET Last Updated: May 09, 2014 2:54 PM ET

Shepherds in the southern Romanian town of Doftanei protested a land auction result today by using sheep to block the town hall.

The shepherds say the mayor of Doftanei rigged an auction for grazing pastures in favour of people he knows.

The mayor says he wasn't even on the auction committee.

Watch video of the protest in the player above.

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Closure of N.B. bridal shop draws ire of brides left without gowns

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 09 Mei 2014 | 22.55

Fredericton police were called today to a local bridal boutique to deal with a crowd of upset customers.

Sparkle Bridal Boutique shut its doors Tuesday and posted a sign in the window, apologizing for any inconvenience.

Fredericton Police deal with angry brides at Sparkle Boutique

Fredericton police were called to the Sparkle Bridal Boutique on Thursday to deal with a crowd of upset customers. The boutique closed Tuesday. (CBC)

Two days later, several brides and bridesmaids lined up outside the store at 88 York St. to find out about their gown orders.

Melissa Rogers ordered a wedding dress in July for her August nuptials. It was scheduled to arrive in December, but she still doesn't have it.

"We're out about $2,000 for a dress and we're not sure if we're going to be able to receive the dress or have our money back," said Rogers. "As of right now, I have no dress and the wedding is less than three months away.

"I have no idea where I can purchase a dress, who is going to let me buy off the rack or what I'm going to do," she said. "I'm at wit's end.

"Some weddings are coming up quickly and we're all at wit's end. We have no idea what to do."

Const. David Beck of the Fredericton Police Force went into the boutique, spoke to its owners, and came outside to tell the group the boutique is going out of business.

The boutique owners were contacting the vendors who were to provide them with the ordered dresses, to give them the contact information of the customers, said Beck.

"They feel absolutely horrible about the situation they're in," he said. "They were back there in tears because they understand the situation you guys have been put in and they are desperately, desperately trying hard with the vendors right now to make sure you guys are taken care of.

"That's the best they can do at this point in time," said Beck.

An officer who was speaking to a woman inside the shop told the crowd the boutique is going out of business and that it is not a police matter.

Some brides have been complaining about the boutique in recent weeks through social media.

On April 26, Natalie Phillips posted on Facebook the top 10 reasons she "hates" Sparkle Bridal Boutique and "why they should not be in business."

Phillips says the boutique almost ruined her wedding.

A week before the big day, five of her bridesmaids still didn't have their dresses, Phillips wrote in the post, which has received nearly 200 shares to date.

"You assume that by ordering your dresses five to six months in advance, when you're told they'd take three to four months max, that you're in the clear! Wrong," she wrote.

Angry brides

Brides gathered outside the Sparkle Bridal Boutique in Fredericton, demanding to know what has happened with their orders after the store said it had closed its doors. (CBC)

Phillips said she tried to contact the shop by phone, email and Facebook for weeks, and when she finally heard from the owner, she got "excuse after excuse."

"You never once said you were sorry. You never took any kind of ownership for [almost] ruining my special day," she wrote.

Her bridesmaids eventually demanded their money back and found dresses at a different store instead, according to the post.


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Obama to heckler: 'You kind of screwed up my ending'

Video

CBC News Posted: May 09, 2014 9:20 AM ET Last Updated: May 09, 2014 9:20 AM ET

U.S. President Barack Obama faced down a heckler during a speech at a California fundraiser Thursday.

Obama was wrapping up his speech when a man in the audience began yelling "freedom for Ethiopia."

Obama said he agreed with the heckler, who "kind of screwed up my ending, but that's OK."

He also elicited applause from the audience when he said, "We've got free speech in this country, and that's great too."

Watch video of the incident in the player above.

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The new glasses that could change how we watch movies

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 08 Mei 2014 | 22.56

Imagine watching a movie from the perspective of two different characters, or reading subtitles while your friend takes in the film without the words on the screen.

They're among the possibilities with Invisivision, a new patent-pending eyewear technology from Waterloo, Ont.-based startup Pipe Dream Interactive.

"It's a set of eyewear that allows the user who wears it to choose between two different streams of footage that they see on a screen or on a TV. It applies to gaming, advertising, film education, the works," said Robert Bruski, chief financial officer and one of the founders of Pipe Dream Interactive.

CEO Ryan Brooks conceived the idea last July, and along with Josh Brooks and Bruski, started working on bringing the technology to life. 

"If you go see a film and you'd like to see an action sequence or a racing sequence from two different characters' perspectives, you can choose that. You can select which character to view from, rather than just from one character or a third-eye perspective," said Bruski.

Robert Bruski

Robert Bruski is one of the founders of Pipe Dream Interactive, a Waterloo, Ont.-based startup that makes Invisivision glasses. The technology allows the wearer to flip back and forth between two different video streams. (Andrea Bellemare/CBC)

"Another example would be dual ratings. An adult can go see a film that's rated R with blood and guts and all that, while their child that's sitting right next to them can see the PG-rated version of that film."

Multiple layers of images are broadcast onto the screen, and the glasses separate those layers into something the viewer can perceive. The process is similar to 3D technology, where two visual streams are projected to the viewer, and with the help of glasses, the viewer perceives them to be a single image. Currently, the Invisivision displays two 2D visual streams, but according to Bruski, another set of lenses could be added to make both visual streams 3D.

The technology is similar to that already used by video-game makers, for example Sony's SimulView, or LG's Dual Play. 

Samsung is working on a similar pair of glasses for a special LED TV, to allow viewers to flip between two different streams. Their glasses use a button to flip between the streams, and have built-in headphones. 

Pipe Dream Interactive is launching a Kickstarter campaign Wednesday to fund a short film showing off its technology, starring Canadian actor Aaron Ashmore, whose credits include Smallville and Lost Girl, and J.P. Manoux, of E.R. and Community fame.  

Invisivision glasses

Invisivision glasses have lenses that flip up and down, allowing the wearer to choose between two different visual streams. (Andrea Bellemare/CBC News)

"We're going to use that short film that we create to take down to Hollywood, and show it to the directors and producers and studio houses that have already expressed interest," said Bruski.

The startup has a signed letter of intent from Universal, pending the successful completion of an introductory film. The company is also awaiting patent approval for the eyeglass technology.

'There's also been a few directors that have expressed interest, and a company out of Germany that actually wanted exclusive rights to use it, indefinitely, so there's definitely interest for this," said Bruski.

The technology is likely to be attractive to movie studios hoping to lure audiences back to theatres, and according to Bruski, it doesn't take any special new devices or extra work for film studios to be able to produce films using Invisivision. 

Invisivision sample

An example showing two different perspectives of the same concession screen using Invisivision glasses. The top right corner shows a sample of films available at a movie theatre, while the bottom left corner show the concession menu. (Andrea Bellemare/CBC)

'Actually a lot of films are already filmed from multiple perspectives so that afterwards in post-production when they're choosing which clips to use, now they can choose multiple clips. Directors have more creativity, so they can choose which way to film the film and how it'll work out better in the end," he said.

"Same with video-gaming as well. A lot of video games, the two-player games are already split the correct way, I mean there's always some content augmentation you can do, but more or less everything's already ready to go."


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TV panel spat erupts into desk-smashing melee

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CBC News Posted: May 08, 2014 9:24 AM ET Last Updated: May 08, 2014 9:59 AM ET

Tempers flared and a studio desk was smashed when a Jordanian TV panel debated the conflict in Syria Thursday.

Saker al-Johari and Mohammad al-Jayousi were guests on Seven Stars TV show when their discussion became heated.

They picked up the desk between them and began shoving it at each other. The desk came apart, and studio staff ran onto the set to stop the altercation.

Watch video of the incident in the player above.

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Why you should stop using your phone in the bathroom

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 07 Mei 2014 | 22.56

You should probably stop bringing your phone into the bathroom with you, because there's more growing on it than you think. 

Anne Bialachowski, manager of infection control at St. Joseph's Healthcare in Hamilton, was testing smartphones and tablets at St. Joseph's on Monday as part of World Hand Hygiene Day, and found that some devices were more than just grimy.

'It's probably not a good idea to take your phone into the bathroom with you.'- Anne Bialachowski, manager of infection control at St. Joseph's Healthcare in Hamilton

Using an ATP test, which measures organic material that gets left behind on surfaces, Bialachowski found some phones and tablets had scads of things living on them — that organic material could be anything from fecal matter and E. coli, to the virus that causes the flu.

"It's pathogens — so things that we worry about daily," Bialachowski told CBC Hamilton. "And no, it's probably not a good idea to take your phone into the bathroom with you."

A clean reading on the ATP test is a score of 30, but some of the devices swabbed at St. Joseph's had readings of over 100 — one person's cellphone even had a reading of 400.

It's hard to say exactly what part the rise of hand-held devices has played in the spread of pathogens, as few studies have been conducted on the issue, Bialachowski says. But it has added a new level of concern at hospitals, she adds. "With every new example of technology, it adds a layer of intricacy to our work."

According to a U.K.-wide study by scientists from the London School of Hygiene and Topical Medicine and Queen Mary University of London, one in six mobile phones in Britain was contaminated with E. coli bacteria. Fecal bacteria and viruses like the flu can survive on someone's hands and on surfaces for hours at a pop, especially in warm temperatures away from sunlight.

Pathogens like C. difficile can even live on a device for days, Bialachowski says.

And if people really want to use their phone as a replacement for a magazine or bathroom reader, you should get into the habit of wiping it down with a cloth after washing your hands, she says. A test with a simple dry cloth also performed at the hospital removed most problem germs.

But stay away from chemicals and sprays — they're generally harmful for electronics.


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Canadian selling original 1936 Olympic gold-medal basketball

A Canadian is auctioning off the game ball used in the first Olympic gold medal basketball game.

Jimmy Stewart, 74, owns the ball. Stewart's father, James, was a member of team Canada, the Ford V8's from Windsor, Ont. They placed second, losing to the United States in a game played outdoors in the rain on a muddy tennis court.

After the game, Stewart's mother discretely walked off the muddy Berlin court with the ball wrapped in a blanket.

"The weather caused the spectators to wear Hudson Bay blankets for protection from cold and protection from the rain," Stewart said. "[My father] walked over to my mother and told her to put it under the blanket and keep it as a souvenir."

The story goes that James Stewart showed his teammates the ball while steaming back to Canada on a ship.

The ball — a lumpy, oblong piece of leather that looks more like a volleyball than a basketball — has been in the Stewart family ever since. It's marked with the manufacturer's name, "Berg," on one side and the word "Basket-Ball."

"It has not been handled in many, many years – 75 now," Stewart said. "It has been on display a few times."

Otherwise, it's also been stored safely in a vault, said Stewart, who now lives in Pickering, near Toronto.

Ford V8's

The Ford V8's, a team from Windsor, Ont., and sponsored by the Ford Motor Co., placed second at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin. (Ford Motor Co.)

Stewart said he thought of giving the ball to a museum or hall of fame, including the Windsor-Essex Sports Hall of Fame, now that it has a permanent home and display in the Windsor's new $78-million aquatic centre.

"But I changed my mind," he said.

"Our family never became very interested in the game, other than myself. We got to the point it was not being shared with people," Stewart said. "We've come to the point now, with the [original] rules of basketball going for $4 million, I thought it was time to put it to auction and see what we can get for the ball."

The rules penned by Canadian James Naismith sold for $4.4 million US. It was subject of an ESPN 30 for 30 documentary, for which sports marketer Keith Zimmerman was interviewed.

Zimmerman worked with the Naismith family for years.

Rich Hughes, author of Netting Out Basketball 1936, a book that details the sport at the 1936 Olympic Games, put Stewart in touch with Zimmerman.

Zimmerman is helping Stewart sell the ball through Golden Auctions. Zimmerman says at least one auction house has previously authenticated the ball but says the story alone is enough — the way it was acquired and the fact James Naismith handed out the medals after the game.

"There is plenty of provenance on the ball. That ball has been been with the family from the day it left Berlin to the day it got back to Canada. There is story after story. There are all kinds of tracings," Zimmerman said.

He expects the ball to net "six figures."

"But when it's one of a kind like this, really, nobody knows," Zimmerman said.

A 1936 gold medal won by Jesse Owens recently sold for $1.47 million US. Zimmerman doesn't expect the ball to fetch quite that much.

'I don't want to be disappointed.'- Jimmy Stewart

"We'd be really happy if it was in that $250,000 to $750,000 range," he said.

Stewart won't say what he hopes to get.

"I'm hoping that it's quite high. But I'd rather not say," he said "I don't want to be disappointed."

Zimmerman said almost no one in the U.S. knows the ball even exists, but the story is starting to make the rounds. Stewart said he was just interviewed by Sports Illustrated.

The ball will be auctioned off July 12.


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