Thursday, February 28, 2013

Effective Ways For Small Business Marketing Tips | Savewrko

Have you find out effective ways to find your customers and to sale quickly? Is not a simple way to find out effective way in your business marketing. When you start with small business you often find difficult in how to marketing your business in how to quickly get advantages from your small business. Here, i will tell you some business marketing tips especially for small business marketing tips. First, don?t advertise and future sales your small business like a big business, it is because you don?t have big and large your customer and market sales like big business. You can design your advertising to produce sales. It would be better for you to avoid. You can start by offering your product at lower cost. Some prospective customers are not willing to pay by asking for your product or service.

Effective Ways For Small Business Marketing Tips

business marketing tips

The second tips in small business marketing tips are you can boost your average size sale and your total revenue by offering more comprehensive your product. Your small business can drive with high volume of sales leads with very small price. It is because not all the costumer are looking for some product with low price. You can looking for some unconventional marketing methods from your competitors are overlooking. In addition, small business marketing tips are it is the most important for you to get your customer trust with your product and service. It is basic tips and very important for your small business. These are some tips for small business marketing tips.

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Source: http://www.savewrko.com/effective-ways-for-small-business-marketing-tips

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Breast cancer among young women increasing

A new study appears to show advanced breast cancer is increasing among young women between ages 25 and 39.

Rebecca Johnson was 27 years old and had just graduated from medical school when she got the diagnosis: breast cancer. She thought she was a rare case, but then a few of her friends got it too. So did some friends of friends.

Was it all just a coincidence, or was breast cancer becoming more common in younger women?

"I really wondered," said Johnson, now 44 and the director of the Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology program at Seattle Children's Hospital. So she examined decades' worth of data from the National Cancer Institute and made a disturbing find: Cases of younger women with advanced breast cancer have increased about 2% each year since the mid-1970s and show no signs of abating.

The results, published in Wednesday's edition of the Journal of the American Medical Assn., confirmed the suspicions of many oncologists who had noticed an uptick in patients younger than 40 with cancer that had spread to the bones, brain or lungs.

In 1976, 1.53 out of every 100,000 American women 25 to 39 years old was diagnosed with advanced breast cancer, the study found. By 2009, the rate had almost doubled to 2.9 per 100,000 women in that age group ? a difference too large to be a chance result.

"Most studies have failed to show an absolute increase," said Dr. Benjamin Paz, a City of Hope Cancer Center surgeon who was not involved in the study. "Now, looking at a longer period of time, this study shows there's clearly been an increase. It's the first to do so."

The trend, which has yet to be explained, has raised real concerns about future efforts to treat the disease. Survival rates for young women with metastatic breast cancer are much lower than they are for older women, because the cancer tends to behave more aggressively in the young.

The data from the U.S. Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results, or SEER, database detected a significant increase among black and white women in both urban and non-urban areas, suggesting that the root cause or causes were widespread.

"An increasing number of young women in the United States will present with metastatic breast cancer in an age group that already has the worst prognosis, no recommended routine screening practice, the least health insurance, and the most potential years of life," Johnson and her coauthors wrote.

To be sure, it remains uncommon for a young woman to be diagnosed with breast cancer. About 7% of all breast cancers diagnosed in the United States involve women younger than 40, and on average, 1 in 173 women in this age group risks developing some type of breast cancer.

Johnson and her coauthors said they hoped that other Western nations would corroborate their findings using their own data. If a trend is established, research should investigate the reason for the increase, they added.

They hypothesized that the trend was due to a variety of lifestyle changes that have occurred during the study period. Diet, exercise, obesity, earlier onset of menstruation, use of birth control, delayed pregnancy and other factors all might play a role.

A few smaller studies have examined risk factors such as obesity, sedentary lifestyle and high caloric intake and concluded that when combined, they do predispose to young adult breast cancer.

However, it is still unknown exactly why cancers can behave so much more aggressively in younger patients, and why estrogen ? or the blocking of it ? has a very different effect on cancer cells in younger and older women.

"There's something different about breast cancers in young adults than in older people," Johnson said. "Researchers that are focusing on cancer in young adults are trying to tease out what those biological differences are."

In the meantime, she said she hoped the study would alert young women to the risks of breast cancer.

"There's no evidence that 29-year-olds should go out and get mammograms or anything like that," Johnson said. "But if there's a take-home message, I would say that it would be awareness of the fact that breast cancer can happen even in young women and that it's important for both young women and their doctors to be aware of this."

monte.morin@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/P8dJhwBtdTg/la-sci-breast-cancer-younger-women-20130227,0,2729640.story

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Suggested Events for March 2nd ? 8th, 2013 | Hilltown Families

Discover fun and educational events happening this week in Western Mass, along with announcements, upcoming events, links, resources and the HFVS podcast.

SUGGEST AN EVENT

Looking for a whiff of spring? Starting this Saturday, March 2nd, both Smith College Botanic Garden and Mount Holyoke College?s Botanic Garden spring flower shows open featuring hundreds of spring-blossoming bulbs! (Photo credit: Sienna Wildfield)

Suggest EventIf you have a community event, educational program or service opportunity for youth/families happening in Western Massachusetts that you?d like to let us know about, post your event on our ?Suggest An Event? page. The events below are ?suggested.? Please take the time to confirm that these events are happening, along with time, place, age appropriateness and costs before attending.

Enhanced PublicityServing Western Massachusetts since 2005, Hilltown Families supports development and enhancement of our local economy and community. Local businesses, individuals, schools and non-profits are encouraged to partner with Hilltown Families through sponsorship and advertising. Let us help get the word out about your after school/homeschool class, event, camp, workshop, fundraiser, business/school, service, open house, volunteer opportunity or general announcement. Deliver your message to thousands of families living throughout the four counties of Western MA while supporting the community development work of Hilltown Families. Click HERE to find out more.

BEST BETS

Winter Bucket ListSaturday, March 2nd from 10am-4pm in Hampden County ? MUSEUM ADVENTURE: Happy 109th birthday, Dr. Seuss! ?Celebrate today with the Springfield Museums, home of the Dr. Seuss sculpture garden. ?Celebrations will take place all day long, including MYO Cat in the Hat bowties and birthday cards for Dr. Seuss, a chance to meet the Cat in the Hat himself, family science adventures, planetarium shows (additional charge), and a Dr. Seuss cake contest where visitors can vote for their favorite, most Seuss-est cake! ?413-263-6800. ?21 Edwards Street. ?Springfield, MA. ?($)

Saturday, March 2nd at 10:30am in Hampshire County ? FAMILY PERFORMANCE: Grammy-nominated folk musician David Grover performs this morning at the Jones Library! ?His beautiful music is unique amongst folk-style family music in that it speaks to people of all ages, and not just children. ?413-259-3090. ?43 Amity Street. ?Amherst, MA. ?(FREE)

Saturday, March 2nd at 1pm in Berkshire County ? MUSEUM ADVENTURE: It?s Family Curiosity Day at the Williams College Museum of Art! ?Visit the museum to learn all about art ? there will be gallery activities, artistic experiments, and lots of art projects! ?413-597-3131. ?15 Lawrence Hall Drive. ?Williamstown, MA.?

Saturday, March 2nd from 11am-12:30pm in Franklin County ? LITERACY: Families with kids ages 6+ are invited to take part in a 6-week workshop series with professional storyteller John Porcino at the Dickinson Library! ?Porcino will share beautiful children?s books with families, and the events are a celebration of stories ? each week will focus on a new theme. ?Registration required. ?413-498-2455. ?Main Street. ?Northfield, MA. ?(FREE)

MARK YOUR CALENDARS

Mark Your Calendars: March 16th Hilltown Families & Flywheel present another Saturday Morning Music Party in Easthampton!

Next Saturday, March 9th from 9am-12pm in Hampshire County? ? KIDS? STUFF SWAP: Northampton Dept. of Public Works is holding a Kids? Stuff Swap and Art Workshops, PopUp Artists? Shop and Environmental Info table at Smith Vocational School. Pre-registration.? 80 Locust St. Northampton, MA (FREE)?

Next Saturday, March 9th from 11am-2pm Berkshire County ? MAPLEFEST: Maple sugaring season has arrived once again, and Hopkins Memorial Forest host its annual celebration to usher in the new season. The celebration will allow people to both observe and take part in the maple syrup production process, from tapping a tree to checking out the finishing and bottling of the final product.? Participants will also be able to visit a working sugar house, assist with sap gathering, and taste the homemade syrup on pancakes and ?sugar on snow.? In addition, there will be demonstrations of old-time evaporating methods, dating back to the pre-colonial era, as well as maple sugaring exhibits, videos, and more. Intersection of Bulkley Street & Northwest Hill Road. 413-597-4277. Williamstown, MA (FREE)

Next Sunday, March 10th from 11am-3pm in Hampden County ? MAPLE HARVEST DAY: Storrowton Village Museum?s 8th annual Maple Harvest Day? will showcase the history and lore of maple sugaring in the Gilbert Farmstead?s front yard with Sugar Maple tree tapping, sumac spile making and sap boiling over an open fire, to educate the public about the origin and legend of the tradition. Inside the historic home, docents will demonstrate 19th century open hearth cooking at the cozy kitchen fireplace as well as quilting and spinning wool. 413-205-5051. Eastern States Expo. West Springfield, MA (FREE)?

BULLETIN BOARD

March 3

Teen Social Justice Workshop: How Did Young People Lead the Drive for Workers? Rights? Join Temple Israel (27 Pierce St.) in Greenfield on Sunday, March 3 from 12:30-2:30pm for the next in their series of teen social justice workshops exploring Jewish history and ethics. This week they will be learning about the essential role young people played in organizing the garment workers? strikes in New York City. There will be history, study of Jewish ethical identity as expressed across the spectrum of religious observance, critical thinking activities and a special segment on learning Yiddish workers? songs. Free and open to everyone. Refreshments will be provided. For more info contact Samantha Wood: cornerrobot@gmail.com. 413-522-3832

March 3

Come celebrate St. Patrick?s Day with the Celtic Heels Irish Dance Company at the Academy of Music Theatre, this Sunday, March 3rd, at 2pm. This vibrant performance will feature over 70 dancers of all ages as well as guest musicians Emerald Rae (a National Scottish Fiddle Champion) and Liz Simmons (a Honey Voiced Singer). Tickets are $12/adults, $10/seniors, $10/children and are available through the Academy of Music Theatre at www.academyofmusictheatre.com or by phone at 413-584-9032 ext. 105 (box office fees may apply). Join in the fun of the jigs and reels with your children at this toe tapping hand clapping afternoon of family fun!

March 9

Piti Theatre presents 4th Annual SYRUP: One Sweet Performing Arts Festival on Sat., March 9 at Memorial Hall in Shelburne Falls. Family show at 2pm with Piti?s ?To Bee or Not to Bee,? leading U.S. mask artist Larry Hunt of Masque Theater, children?s mask parade, syrup tasting, free Real Pickles and more! Evening show at 7pm for ages 8+ with Masque Theater?s 20 mask variety show, juggling/comedy with national touring actor Jack Golden, brother-sister duo June and the Bee. Family show $5, Evening $12/$8 under 16. Fri., 3/8: paper pattern mask making workshop for grades K ? 5, 4:30 ? 5:30 pm at Mem. Hall. Children can be in next day?s mask parade. Sun. 3/9: Mask Movement for ages 15+ at Hart Yoga, 1-4pm. info@ptco.org, www.ptco.org/shows/syrup

Beginning Feb 25

FMC Ice Sports offers a fun and unique learning environment for all ages. Participants in our Step 1 Learn to Skate programs are taught the basics of ice skating without relying on skating aids. This method of teaching increases a skater?s independence on the ice and encourages their learning of balance and maneuverability. Students eventually graduate to our Step 2 and Step 3 programs that focus on the more sport specific skills required in hockey and figure skating. FMC Ice Sports programs can be found at the Smead Arena in Springfield and the Collins Moylan Arena in Greenfield. Class information and registration are available online at www.fmcicesports.com or by calling 1-888-74-SKATE.

Advertise your Summer Camp with Hilltown FamiliesMARKET YOUR SUMMER CAMP: In an effort to connect families with summer camps & programs in the region, Hilltown Families is offering camps and programs a chance to partner with us in their online marketing with a special enhanced publicity offer. On Sunday, March 24th, Hilltown Families will be featuring camps in the region on Hilltown Families with a special post titled: 2013 Summer Camps and Programs in Western MA. Find out more about our marketing package and early bird discounts HERE.

ADVERTISE HERE: Reach thousands of families in Western MA while supporting the community development work of Hilltown Families! See your community event, open house, auditions, afterschool class, homeschool program, workshop, school, wellness program or business featured here in the bulletin board section of our list of Weekly Suggested Events and eNewsletter, reaching thousands of families living throughout the four counties of Western MA! Find out more about our enhanced publicity packages and options and how we can help with your online marketing by emailing us at hilltownfamilies@gmail.com.

MotherWoman is coming to the Hilltowns, offering two support groups to Hilltown mothers. ?The first group meets on Mondays in Ashfield at St. John?s Corner House from 11am-12:30pm, offering a free, safe, confidential drop-in group for mothers of infants & young children a place to feel heard, valued, understood, nurtured and energized. ?Expectant mothers welcome. Free childcare is available for children up to age four. Contact Anna Westley for more info at 413-625-6948. A second group will be hosted by the Cummington Family Center at the Cummington Community House on the 2nd Thursday each month from 10-11:30am. ?Contact Stacey Mackowiak for more info at 413-634-8853. ?More info on both at www.itavillage.com.

Volunteers wanted for Salamander Tunnel Maintenance Day in Amherst on a Saturday in March (determined by the weather). One of Amherst?s many claims to fame are the Henry St. amphibian tunnels, North America?s first, designed to direct spotted salamanders under the road, thus avoiding the tires of passing autos. All are invited to ready the tunnels for the annual spring migration. The Hitchcock Center for the Environment will be raking leaves, shoveling sand and debris, clipping brush, repairing plastic mesh fences, pounding in wooden stakes, and picking up litter and will have some tools and gloves available for families to help out (but please bring your own if you have them.). All ages are welcome! FREE ? Please call 413-256-6006 to be added to the call/email list to volunteer.


LIST OF WEEKLY SUGGESTED EVENTS
March 2nd-8th, 2013

Saturday ? Sunday
Monday ? Tuesday ? Wednesday ? Thursday ? Friday

Suggest an Event | Forecast | Museum Passes | Weekly eNewsletter

Berkshire Family Fun

Events Happening in the Hilltowns | ? On-going Events

Saturday, March 2nd, 2013

?Cross-country ski at Notchview in Windsor, go sledding at JFK Middle School (Northampton, MA), and in late winter, have breakfast at a maple sugar shack in the hilltowns.? ? Mimi Kaplan

6-10am ? FAMILY RADIO: Valley Free Radio (WXOJ-LP 103.3FM Northampton, MA) offers 4-hours of commercial-free family programing every Saturday, including the Hilltown Family Variety Show and Spare the Rock. Tune in on your FM dial, or listen live via streaming audio at www.valleyfreeradio.org.

Hilltown Family Variety Show9-10am ? HILLTOWN FAMILY VARIETY SHOW: Tune in on your FM dial, or listen live via streaming audio at www.valleyfreeradio.org. - Guest DJ Julianna Bright, the Portland based artist and musician and mom with the kids? music moniker Cat Doorman gathers together a passel of tunes from her family?s record collection, dotting the playlist with a few tunes from her recent release Cat Doorman Songbook. Other songs hop from Andalusia to Paris, from the 1930?s through today with a common thread of playfulness and joy. - Listen to the Hilltown Family Variety Show podcast anytime. Click here to see over 5 years of archived shows.

10am-8pm ? AUDITIONS: Youth ages 13-19 are invited to audition for Barrington Stage?s Youth Theater production of Disney?s The Little Mermaid, Jr. ?Auditions are by appointment only, and those interested in being part of the show should prepare at least 16 bars of two contrasting songs from published Broadway shows, and must also bring a headshot. ?Auditions will take place at Barrington?s Stage?s mainstage. ?413-499-5446. ?30 Union Street. ?Pittsfield, MA. ?(FREE)

9-11am ? PLAYGROUP: South Berkshire Kids, Community Healthy Programs, and the Montessori School of the Berkshires are offering families a special playgroup this morning! ?Kids will enjoy playing with learning materials, making art, and enjoying music and stories. ?413-637-3662. ?21 Patterson Road. ?Lenoxdale, MA. ?(FREE)

9am-1pm ? CRAFTS: Learn to do your own pisanski ? a traditional Easter activity done in eastern Poland and Ukraine. ?Pisanski is the art of dying eggs ? but not with the usual cloudy dye tablets! ?Pisanski eggs are made using wax and brilliant colored dyes in order to create beautiful and intricately decorated eggs that are true works of art. ?Open to ages 12+, the workshop will be lead by local pisanski artist Carol Kostecki. ?Hosted by the Wistariahurst Museum. ?Registration required. ?413-322-5660. ?238 Cabot Street. ?Holyoke, MA. ?($$)

9am-3:30pm ? CRAFTS: Make winter-themed crafts today at the Holyoke Public Library! ?Crafts are drop-in and will be available as supplies last ? try some sketch art or make a snowflake ornament! ?413-322-5635. ?Maple Street. ?Holyoke, MA. ?(FREE)

9:30am-4pm ? HISTORY: Old Sturbridge Village is hosting Native American Weekend! ?Along with the village?s ongoing opportunities to learn about life and culture in early New England, this special weekend offers families a chance to learn about Native American history and cultural traditions, something often left out of studies of American history. ?The village hosts Native American doctress Molly Geet, who will share winter stories and tales of Native American maple sugaring, snowshoeing, and more. ?There will also be flute-making demonstrations, and demonstration of other traditional crafts and skills. ?The event is a great way for families to supplement their studies of American history, and to build knowledge about the rich history of Native American traditions and their influence on the development of New England culture. ?800-733-1830. ?Sturbridge, MA. ?($)

10am-12noon ? OUTDOOR ADVENTURE: Take a snowshoe trek at Bartholomew?s Cobble! ?Join the Trustees of Reservations in exploring the beautiful fields, forests, and streams of the cobble. ?413-229-8600. ?Weatogue Road. ?Sheffield, MA. ?($)

10am-12noon ? LIBRARY ADVENTURES: The Edwards Library hosts a Dr. Seuss birthday celebration for children of all ages. ?There will be Seussian stories read by local moguls, arts and crafts to make and even a birthday cake and punch! 413-529-9480. 30 East Street. Southampton, MA (FREE)

10am-12noon ? FAMILY DANCE PARTY: Shake, rattle, and roll to some great tunes at the 2nd annual Family Dance Party at the Northampton Center for the Arts! ?The event is a fundraiser for Nonotuck Community School, and will feature DJ Joan Holliday from 93.9 The River. ?Great fun for families ? start off the weekend on an exciting note! ?17 New South Street. ?Northampton, MA. ?(<$)

10am-1pm ? OUTDOOR ADVENTURE: Snowshoe through the Windsor Jambs State Forest with Mass Audubon and Aimee Gelinas of Tamarack Hollow! ?The three mile trek will help participants learn about the unique ecology and landscape of the area. ?Registration required. ?413-584-3009. ?Windsor, MA. ?($)

10am-2pm ? ART: Artspace?s annual Pottery and More seconds sale takes place today at Greenfield High School! ?The event is a great opportunity to view and buy some pieces from talented local artists and artisans. ?Lenox Avenue. ?Greenfield, MA. ?(SALE)

10am-2pm ? PREGNANCY: ?Dani Fine Photography will be hosting an event to celebrate motherhood and pregnancy at their studio in Thornes Marketplace, featuring a dozen businesses, complimentary services, and samples. ?Northampton, MA (FREE)

10am-3pm ? MUSEUM ADVENTURE: Explore the art of Asia at the Smith College Museum of Art?s Free Family Day! ?Families can visit the museum?s current exhibit, Collecting the Art of Asia, to learn about artistic techniques and traditions from a handful of Asian cultures. ?There will be drop-in activities throughout the day, too! ?It?s a great chance for families to learn about art appreciation and world cultures. ?413-585-2760. ?Elm Street at Bedford Terrace. ?Northampton, MA. ?(FREE)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: Visit Mt. Holyoke?s Talcott Greenhouse for the botanic garden?s 2013 bulb show! ?With a Mediterranean theme, the show features a wide variety of spring-blooming bulbs, as well as other beautiful flowering plants and shrubs. ?Families can learn about unique types of plants, and a visit to the show can be used to supplement studies of biodiversity and plant anatomy. ?413-538-2116. ?50 College Street. ?South Hadley, MA. ?(FREE)

10am-4pm ? MUSEUM ADVENTURE: Happy 109th birthday, Dr. Seuss! ?Celebrate today with the Springfield Museums, home of the Dr. Seuss sculpture garden. ?Celebrations will take place all day long, including MYO Cat in the Hat bowties and birthday cards for Dr. Seuss, a chance to meet the Cat in the Hat himself, family science adventures, planetarium shows (additional charge), and a Dr. Seuss cake contest where visitors can vote for their favorite, most Seuss-est cake! ?413-263-6800. ?21 Edwards Street. ?Springfield, MA. ?($)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: The Smith College Botanic Garden?s annual spring bulb show begins today! ?Visit the garden to see beautiful flowers and to learn about the growing process of bulbs. ?Pair a visit to the show with a family study of how plants grow and compare seed growth to bulb growth. ?413-585-2740. ?16 College Lane. ?Northampton, MA. ?(DONATION)

10:30am ? FAMILY PERFORMANCE: Grammy-nominated folk musician David Grover performs this morning at the Jones Library! ?His beautiful music is unique amongst folk-style family music in that it speaks to people of all ages, and not just children. ?413-259-3090. ?43 Amity Street. ?Amherst, MA. ?(FREE)

11am-12noon ? KIDS? PERFORMANCE: Bowey the Clown visits Spectrum Playhouse today! ?Enjoy Bowey?s silly jokes and tricks. ?413-394-5023. ?20 Franklin Street. ?Lee, MA.

11am-12:30pm ? LITERACY: Families with kids ages 6+ are invited to take part in a 6-week workshop series with professional storyteller John Porcino at the Dickinson Library! ?Porcino will share beautiful children?s books with families, and the events are a celebration of stories ? each week will focus on a new theme. ?Registration required. ?413-498-2455. ?Main Street. ?Northfield, MA. ?(FREE)

11:30am-1pm ? NUTRITION: The Storrs Library hosts Kids Cuisine, a fun, nutrition-focused workshop where kids will learn about making healthy (yet still delicious!) choices about food. ?Participants will get to prepare lunch and some snacks, too! ?Admission is granted by a donation for the local food bank. ?413-565-4181. ?693 Longmeadow Street. ?Longmeadow, MA. ?(DONATION)

12noon-3pm ? PROM PREP: Cenderelli?s Consignment Boutique is hosting a special event for teens preparing for prom season: ?Prom for Pennies!?? The shop sells clothes of all kinds, but the focus for the event is the dress selection ? families can buy gently used dresses on the cheap! ?Recycled dresses are a practical way to go for prom ? much cheaper than new dresses, and buying consignment is a great way to find unique, interesting clothes. ?There will also be a raffle for prom-related prizes and information on prom-related services available locally. ?413-540-0693. ?480 Newton Street. ?South Hadley, MA. ?(SALE)

12noon-4pm ? SOCIAL STUDIES: Have you ever wished that a book would converse with you, instead of just laying there waiting to be read? ?What if checking out a book meant getting your questions answered rather than searching through pages? ?Visit Williams College?s Human Library! ?Instead of checking out books, patrons will check out actual people, who have been pre-designated to talk about specific topics ? mainly based on unique life experiences. ?Visitors to the library can check out their human books for 15-20 minutes each, and will be able to gain firsthand information from each interaction. ?880 Main Street. ?Williamstown, MA. ?(FREE)

12:30pm ? HIKE: Join DCR MassParks staff and Great Barrington Trails & Greenways volunteers for a guided hike along the Benedict Pond Loop Trail in Beartown State Forest. The hike is an easy 1.7 miles, about 1.5 hours in duration. For Ages 12 and up. Meet at the day-use parking lot near the boat ramp on Benedict Pond Road (off Blue Hill Road). 413-528-0904. Monterey, MA (FREE)

1pm ? MUSEUM ADVENTURE: It?s Family Curiosity Day at the Williams College Museum of Art! ?Visit the museum to learn all about art ? there will be gallery activities, artistic experiments, and lots of art projects! ?413-597-3131. ?15 Lawrence Hall Drive. ?Williamstown, MA.?

1-3pm ? WINTER OPEN HOUSE: Kick off maple season at Sheep Hill?s Winter Open House! ?Hosted by the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation, the event will feature a winter ecology hike, animal tracking, sledding and snowshoeing, seasonal crafts, and maple treats! ?413-458-2494. ?Cold Spring Road. ?Williamstown, MA. ?(<$)

1-3pm ? DOG SHOW: Holyoke parks and Recreation?s second annual dog show ? Hot Dogs on a Cold Winter Day ? takes place today at Holyoke High School! ?All local dogs, regardless of pedigree, are invited to participate, and families can attend the show to see the well-behaved pups compete for titles like Best Mystery Mutt, Best Dog Trick, and Most Obedient! ?The event is part of Holyoke?s Winter Carnival ? registration forms are available for competitors online. ?413-322-5620. ?500 Beech Street. ?Holyoke, MA.?

2-3:45pm ? MOVIE: The Westfield Athenaeum screens the movie version of Dr. Seuss? The Cat in the Hat this afternoon ? celebrate Dr. Seuss? birthday by watching the film! ?Snacks and drinks provided. ?413-568-7833. ?6 Elm Street. ?Westfield, MA. ?(FREE)

3pm ? WOMEN?S HISTORY: Celebrate National Women?s History Month with Western Gateway Heritage State Park! ?The park is offering a special program on women?s role in the field of science throughout history. ?413-663-6312. ?115 State Street, Building 4. ?North Adams, MA. ?(FREE)

4-6pm ? LOCAL HISTORY: Throughout history, communities have grown and changed all over the world as a result of their physical surroundings. ?Our communities here in Western Massachusetts are not exception! ?Tonight, families can learn about the history of the town of Conway?s relationship with the South River at Conway Town Hall! ?The Historical Society and Historical Commission are presenting the talk, which will share lots of interesting information about the town?s past. ?Discussion will follow. ?413-369-4725. ?5 Academy Hill Road. ?Conway, MA. ?(FREE)

4:30-5:30pm ? FOOD: View beautifully decorated cakes and try out lots of different types of chili at the Holyoke Winter Carnival?s Chili Cook-off and Cake Decorating Contest! ?Cakes will not be for tasting, but visitors can see the unique, beautiful, and creative designs that competitors have made. ?Official judging of the contest will begin at 5:30pm. ?Takes place at Gateway City Arts. ?92-114 Race Street. ?Holyoke, MA. ?(FREE)

6-8pm ? FAMILY ACT OF KINDNESS: Show some support for a local family who lost their home to a fire ? Bread Euphoria is hosting a benefit concert, featuring Vince Snyder and the Rocky Hill Band! ?15% of the evening?s sales will be donated to the family, as well as proceeds from a silent auction and other donations. ?Enjoy a great evening out and help a local family in need! ?206 Main Street. ?Haydenville, MA. ?(FUNDRAISER)

8pm ? THEATER: Spring production at Bay Path College: Steel Magnolias, directed by Fred Sokol. The quintessential story of friendship and trust, Steel Magnolias serves up a southern slice of life. From weddings to divorces, babies to funerals, new beginnings to happy endings, they share each moment in their lives with grace, determination and perfectly coiffed hair. When tragedy strikes, it is to the familiar comfort of Truvy?s salon that the characters converge for solace and support. This is a terrific show for the entire family. ?413-565-1307. Mills Theatre, Carr Hall. Longmeadow, MA ($)

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Sunday, March 3rd, 2013

?My 3 and 5 yr old daughters and I LOVE to warm up inside the Smith College greenhouses! The bulb show in March is refreshing and vibrant. It?s fun to be in the humid greenhouses while its a winter wonderland outside.? ? Heather Johnson

Hilltown Family Variety Show7-8am ? FAMILY RADIO: Valley Free Radio (WXOJ-LP 103.3FM Northampton, MA) airs encores the Hilltown Family Variety Show every Sunday morning. commercial-free family radio. Tune in on your FM dial, or listen live via streaming audio at www.valleyfreeradio.org. Listen to the Hilltown Family Variety Show podcast anytime. Click here to see over 5 years of archived shows.

10am-12noon ? AUDITIONS: Youth ages 13-19 are invited to audition for Barrington Stage?s Youth Theater production of Disney?s The Little Mermaid, Jr. ?Auditions are by appointment only, and those interested in being part of the show should prepare at least 16 bars of two contrasting songs from published Broadway shows, and must also bring a headshot. ?Auditions will take place at Barrington?s Stage?s mainstage. ?413-499-5446. ?30 Union Street. ?Pittsfield, MA. ?(FREE)

8:30am-3pm ? SUGAR SHACK: South Face Farm?s sugar shack is open for the season! ?Enjoy the best Sunday breakfast ever ? a big plate full of pancakes, doused in delicious local maple syrup! ?Learn about maple sugaring before visiting the shack to make the trip even more memorable. ?413-628-3268. ?755 Watson-Spruce Corner Road. ?Ashfield, MA. ?($)

9-11:30am ? COMMUNITY BREAKFAST: Enjoy a delicious pancake breakfast this morning as part of Holyoke?s Winter Carnival! ?Students in Dean Technical School?s culinary program will be whipping up endless piles of pancakes for all to enjoy. ?413-244-6766. ?1045 Main Street. ?Holyoke, MA. ?(FREE)

12noon-5pm ? WINTER FESTIVAL: With the Thunderbolt Ski Race this weekend comes ThunderFest, an annual winter celebration featuring food, music, and fun! ?The event takes place at the visitors center in downtown Adams, and will feature live music all afternoon from the Northshire String Band (classic bluegrass) and the Rev Tor Band (original rock and covers). ?Eight local vendors will provide delicious warm foods, and families can visit the new ski museum, warm up around a campfire, and participate in other fun activities. ?4 Hoosac Street. ?Adams, MA. ?(FREE)

9:30am-4pm ? HISTORY: Old Sturbridge Village is hosting Native American Weekend! ?Along with the village?s ongoing opportunities to learn about life and culture in early New England, this special weekend offers families a chance to learn about Native American history and cultural traditions, something often left out of studies of American history. ?The village hosts Native American doctress Molly Geet, who will share winter stories and tales of Native American maple sugaring, snowshoeing, and more. ?There will also be flute-making demonstrations, and demonstration of other traditional crafts and skills. ?The event is a great way for families to supplement their studies of American history, and to build knowledge about the rich history of Native American traditions and their influence on the development of New England culture. ?800-733-1830. ?Sturbridge, MA. ?($)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: Visit Mt. Holyoke?s Talcott Greenhouse for the botanic garden?s 2013 bulb show! ?With a Mediterranean theme, the show features a wide variety of spring-blooming bulbs, as well as other beautiful flowering plants and shrubs. ?Families can learn about unique types of plants, and a visit to the show can be used to supplement studies of biodiversity and plant anatomy. ?413-538-2116. ?50 College Street. ?South Hadley, MA. ?(FREE)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: The Smith College Botanic Garden?s annual spring bulb show begins today! ?Visit the garden to see beautiful flowers and to learn about the growing process of bulbs. ?Pair a visit to the show with a family study of how plants grow and compare seed growth to bulb growth. ?413-585-2740. ?16 College Lane. ?Northampton, MA. ?(DONATION)

12:15-1:15pm ? ANIMAL STUDIES: Explore animal adaptations with the Hitchcock Center?s Helen Ann Sephton at the Leverett Library! ?Kids will learn about the ways that animals have adapted in order to survive New England winters. ?75 Montague Road. ?Leverett, MA. ?(FREE)

12:30-2:30pm ? TEEN: How did young people help to drive the movement for workers? rights? ?Learn about life as a young person in New York City during the garment workers? strikes with Temple Israel. ?The workshop will use a curriculum from the Jewish Women?s Archive, but teens are welcome to attend regardless of religious affiliation or level of Jewish education. ?Great for teens interested in social justice and/or the role of youth and young adults in cultural change. ?413-522-3832. ?27 Pierce Street. ?Greenfield, MA. ?(FREE)

1pm ? OUTDOOR ADVENTURE: Explore Mount Tom and learn about how plants and animals have adapted to survive to cold, snowy winter here in Massachusetts! ?The program is sponsored by the Massachusetts DCR. ?Meet at the Stone House Visitors Center. ?413-584-6788. ?Reservation and Christopher Clark Roads. ?Holyoke, MA. ?(FREE)

1:30pm ? DOMINOES: Dominoes are a great way to pass time, and playing the game can help kids work on matching and number skills. ?Taken more seriously, dominoes can be a serious, competitive game! ?Holyoke?s Winter Carnival includes a domino tournament ? teams and/or individual players can sign up to participate in the fun but intense game! ?Registration begins at 12noon, and the tournament takes place at the Salsarengue Restaurant. ?413-320-3148. 392 High Street. ?Holyoke, MA.?

2pm - CULTURAL STUDIES: Get in the spirit of St. Patrick?s Day this afternoon ? the Academy of Music hosts Celtic Heels Irish Dance Company! ?The group will be accompanied by Emerald Rae, a Scottish fiddle champion, and the performance is sure to provide lots of hand-clapping, toe-tapping traditional Irish entertainment. ?413-584-9032. ?Main Street. ?Northampton, MA. ?($$)

2pm ? THEATER: Spring production at Bay Path College: Steel Magnolias, directed by Fred Sokol. The quintessential story of friendship and trust, Steel Magnolias serves up a southern slice of life. From weddings to divorces, babies to funerals, new beginnings to happy endings, they share each moment in their lives with grace, determination and perfectly coiffed hair. When tragedy strikes, it is to the familiar comfort of Truvy?s salon that the characters converge for solace and support. This is a terrific show for the entire family. ?413-565-1307. Mills Theatre, Carr Hall. Longmeadow, MA ($)

2pm ? FILM FESTIVAL: Miyazaki Festival. Throughout the month of March and into April, Amherst Cinema celebrates the singular storytelling vision of Hayao Miyazaki, with restored 35mm prints of his most treasured films, presented in their original Japanese with English subtitles.? Today they will screen ?Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind? from 1984 (PG).? 413-253-2547. 28 Amity Street. Amherst, MA ($)

4pm ? COMMUNITY DINNER: Cajun traditions and Italian food mix tonight at the Holyoke Winter Carnival?s spaghetti dinner! ?Zydeco Connection will perform music straight from Louisiana, and the pasta will be plentiful. ?Takes place at the Elks Lodge. ?250 Whitney Avenue. ?Holyoke, MA. ?($)

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Monday, March 4th, 2013

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: The Smith College Botanic Garden?s annual spring bulb show begins today! ?Visit the garden to see beautiful flowers and to learn about the growing process of bulbs. ?Pair a visit to the show with a family study of how plants grow and compare seed growth to bulb growth. ?413-585-2740. ?16 College Lane. ?Northampton, MA. ?(DONATION)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: Visit Mt. Holyoke?s Talcott Greenhouse for the botanic garden?s 2013 bulb show! ?With a Mediterranean theme, the show features a wide variety of spring-blooming bulbs, as well as other beautiful flowering plants and shrubs. ?Families can learn about unique types of plants, and a visit to the show can be used to supplement studies of biodiversity and plant anatomy. ?413-538-2116. ?50 College Street. ?South Hadley, MA. ?(FREE)

5:30-7pm ? COMMUNITY DINNER: Hope and Olive hosts Soup and Games Night tonight to benefit programming at the Montague Public Libraries! ?Enjoy a delicious dinner, some great games, and help to support important community opportunities. ?413-863-3214. ?44 Hope Street. ?Greenfield, MA. ?(DONATION)

6pm ? SCIENCE: Older students interested in interesting and obscure science can learn fascinating facts at OEB Science Cafe events! ?This month?s topic is animal communication. ?Hampshire College?s Sarah Partan will share information on everything from the meaning of squirrels? tail waving to the challenges that urban birds face in mating. ?Takes place at Esselon Cafe. ?99 Russell Street. ?Hadley, MA. ?(FREE)

6-7pm ? LOCAL HISTORY: The Wistariahurst Museum is hosting a lecture series on the history of transportation in the Pioneer Valley! ?Tonight?s lecture is on the role of Westover Field in the Cold War. ?Author Steve Jendrysik will speak about the three-decade relationship that local communities had with the US effort in the Cold War as a result of the Air Force?s presence in Western Massachusetts. ?Best for older students, the event can help to supplement studies of modern American history. ?413-322-5660. ?238 Cabot Street. ?Holyoke, MA. ?(<$)

6-7pm ? CHEMISTRY: The Williston Library is hosting their annual Chemistry Passport event tonight! ?Kids can learn from Mt. Holyoke students all about electromagnetic radiation outside of the visible spectrum. ?The workshop will include a look at infrared technology and its use in the field of art history and art restoration! ?Registration required. ?413-529-1605. ?9 Park Street. ?Easthampton, MA. ?(FREE)

7pm ? FILM: Amherst Cinema screens, ?Anita O?Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer,? as part of the Jazz a la Mode Film Series! ?The film tells the life story of the iconic jazz singer, whose unique style inspired an entire type of jazz to be born. ?413-253-2547. ?28 Amity Street. ?Amherst, MA. ?($)

ONGOING FOR MONDAYS (As always, please confirm before heading out to these suggestions.)

  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Northampton Parent Center is a drop-in Center for children (birth-K) and their caregivers. Everyone is welcome. Located in the lower level of Edwards Church at the corner of State and Main Streets in Northampton. Please use the back door and public parking. Northampton, MA (FREE)
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: At the South Hadley Family Center. 413-533-7096. 7 Woodbridge Street. South Hadley, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11am ? STORYTIME: At the MN Spear Memorial Library, sponsored by the Community Network for Children through June 2013! 413-259-1213. 10 Cooleyville Road. Shutesbury, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: At the Williamstown Youth Center! Sponsored by Childcare of the Berkshires. 413-458-5925. 270 Cole Avenue. Williamstown, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10am-12noon ? PLAYGROUP: Hosted by the Easthampton Family Center at the Flywheel space in the Old Town Hall building. 413-527-5496. Main Street. Easthampton, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10:30am-12:20pm ? ICE SKATING: Smead Arena offers a public skating session this morning ? great for families with kids who are still learning to skate, daytime skating sessions offer low-key and less crowded ice time. Open ice times take place at the same time Monday-Friday. 413-781-2599. 1780 Roosevelt Avenue. Springfield, MA. (<$) ?
  • 11am ? 12:30pm ? SUPPORT GROUP: There is a new MotherWoman group forming in the Hilltowns! Today is the first meeting, which will take place at St. John?s Corner. The support group is for pregnant and postpartum mothers, and childcare is available for kids up to age 4. Meetings will be weekly. 413-625-6948. 469 Main Street. Ashfield, MA. (FREE)
  • 2:30-4pm ? PLAYGROUP: Toddler group (siblings welcomed) at Shima Boutique. 413-346-1055. 65 Main St. North Adams, MA (FREE)
  • 2:30-5pm ? TEEN/TWEEN: Meekins Library?s Teen/Preteen Time takes place this afternoon! Teens can visit the library to hang out with friends, work on homework, play games, use computers, and check out awesome new books, movies, and music. 413-268-7473. 2 Main Street. Williamsburg, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 3:30-4:30pm ? BREAK DANCE: Learn to break like a b-boy! The Lichtenstein Center for the Arts offers a weekly break dance class, taught by Joshua McHugh, accomplished dancer and dance teacher. 413-499-9348. 28 Renne Avenue. Pittsfield, MA. ($) ?
  • 3:30-5pm ? ANIME: The Springfield Central Library hosts Anime and Manga Club on Monday afternoons! Kids enthusiastic about the popular Japanese style of animation and cartooning can visit the library to read new manga and watch great anime! 413-263-6828. 220 State Street. Springfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 5:30-7pm ? SCRABBLE: Enjoy an evening of friendly Scrabble at the Berkshire South Regional Community Center! Open to anyone ages 8+, the game night offers families an opportunity to practice fair play and basic sportsmanship while allowing kids to expand their spelling, vocabulary, and basic practical math skills. Sponsored by Bobbie Halig and Jenny and Adam Hersch. 413-528-2810. 15 Crissey Road. Great Barrington, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 5:30pm ? PLAYGROUP: Childcare of the Berkshires holds gym group at the Haskins Center! 413-664-4821. 210 State Street. North Adams, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 6-7pm ? MUSIC: Learn to drum, Afro-Carribbean style! The Lichtenstein Center for the Arts offers a weekly drum class, lead by Aimee Gelinas of Gaia Roots. Drums available to borrow. 28 Renne Avenue. Pittsfield, MA. ($) ?
  • 6-8pm ? BIRTH CIRCLE: Gathered Resources of Women (GROW) offers a drop in support group for pregnant women and their support team to explore the different aspects of pregnancy, birth and postpartum. Hosted at Shima Boutique. 413-346-1055. 65 Main St. North Adams, MA (FREE)
  • 7pm ? MOTHER SUPPORT: MotherWoman bi-monthly meetings at Cradle, 3rd floor of Thornes Marketplace. 413-341-5282. Main Street. Northampton, MA. (FREE)
  • 7-8:30pm ? TEEN: Visit Longmeadow High School for open gym time! Basketball equipment will be provided by Longmeadow Rec Dept, and the event is open to anyone ages 13-20. Runs through 11/12. 413-565-4163. 95 Grassy Gutter Road. Longmeadow, MA. ($) ?

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Tuesday, March 5th, 2013

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: Visit Mt. Holyoke?s Talcott Greenhouse for the botanic garden?s 2013 bulb show! ?With a Mediterranean theme, the show features a wide variety of spring-blooming bulbs, as well as other beautiful flowering plants and shrubs. ?Families can learn about unique types of plants, and a visit to the show can be used to supplement studies of biodiversity and plant anatomy. ?413-538-2116. ?50 College Street. ?South Hadley, MA. ?(FREE)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: The Smith College Botanic Garden?s annual spring bulb show begins today! ?Visit the garden to see beautiful flowers and to learn about the growing process of bulbs. ?Pair a visit to the show with a family study of how plants grow and compare seed growth to bulb growth. ?413-585-2740. ?16 College Lane. ?Northampton, MA. ?(DONATION)

6pm ? FILM: The Berkshire Athenaeum is hosting a film series titled, ?Cinema of Law: The Law as Seen by Hollywood Movies.? ?The series will include well-known movies with law-related themes, each one introduced by a member of the Berkshire Bar Association. ?Tonight?s screening is The Last Campaign, a documentary about a West Virginia Supreme Court justice?s 2004 campaign for re-election. ?Best for older students interested in law! ?413-499-9480. ?1 Wendell Avenue. ?Pittsfield, MA. ?(FREE)

6-8pm - PARENT WORKSHOP: The Collaborative for Educational Services is offering a parent workshop titled, ?The Active Child.? ?Taking place at the Palmer-Monson Family Network, the workshop is designed for parents with kids who are very energetic and high-spirited! ?Parents will learn tips and tricks for dealing with children?s behavior, as well as strategies for creating a positive home environment! ?Registration required. ?413-570-3061. ?4 Springfield Street. ?Three Rivers, MA. ?(FREE)

ONGOING FOR TUESDAYS (As always, please confirm before heading out to these suggestions.)

  • 9am-12noon ? PLAYGROUP: Drop-in playgroup at the Amherst Family Center. 413-545-0865. 428 Student Union Building (Campus Center Way). Amherst, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:30-10:30am ? PLAYGROUP: The Community Health Coalition hosts Toddler Steps Playgroup at the CHP building. 413-644-0104. 442 Stockbridge Road. Great Barrington, MA. (FREE)
  • 9:30-11am ? PLAYGROUP: At Farmington River Preschool for kids 5 and under, sponsored by the Community Health Coalition. 413-664-0104. 555 North Main Road. Otis, MA. (FREE)
  • 9:30 or 11am ? STORYTIME: The Westfield Library hosts storytime for kids 6 months ? 3 years today. Registration required. 413-568-7833. 6 Elm Street. Westfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Northampton Parent Center is a drop-in Center for children (birth-K) and their caregivers. Everyone is welcome. Located in the lower level of Edwards Church at the corner of State and Main Streets in Northampton. Please use the back door and public parking. Northampton, MA (FREE)
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: At the Belchertown Family Center! 413-283-7594. 720 Franklin Street. Belchertown, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:30-11:30 ? PLAYGROUP: It?s Baby Day at the South Hadley Family Center! 413-533-7096. 7 Woodbridge Street. South Hadley, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10am ? STORYTIME: At the Berkshire Athenaeum! 413-499-9480. 1 Wendell Avenue. Pittsfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10am ? STORYTIME: At the Dickinson Library! 413-498-2455. 115 Main Street. Northfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11am - PARENT GROUP: MotherWoman hosts a mother?s group for Spanish-speaking moms at Brightwood Health Center. 413-796-8365. 380 Plainfield Street. Springfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Preschool playgroup learning experiences at the Haskins Center! Takes place on the lower level. 413-664-4821. 210 State Street. North Adams, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11am ? STORYTIME: At the Greenfield Library. 413-772-1544. 402 Main Street. Greenfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Sponsored by the Palmer-Monson Family Network. 413-283-6246. 4 Springfield Street. Three Rivers, MA. (FREE) ?10am-12noon ? PLAYGROUP: Hosted by the Easthampton Family Center at the Flywheel space in the Old Town Hall building. 413-527-5496. Main Street. Easthampton, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10:15am ? STORYTIME: At the Lanesborough Library! Stories, crafts, and music for all ages. 413-499-5981. 83 North Main Street. Lanesborough, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10:15am-12:15pm ? SUPPORT GROUP: MotherWoman hosts a Postpartum Support Group for mothers. The group is a safe space for those adjusting to motherhood and is lead by trained facilitators. Takes place at Berkshire Children and Families. Childcare available. 413-253-8990. 220 Russell Street. Hadley, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10:30-11:30am ? ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE: Visit the Great Falls Discovery Center for Kidleidescope, an environment-themed program for kids! Interactive learning opportunities and crafts always included. 413-863-3221. 2 Avenue A. Turners Falls, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10:30am ? STORYTIME: Springfield Central Library?s preschool storytime takes place this morning. 413-263-6828. 220 State Street. Springfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 11am ? STORYTIME: The Lenox Library offers storytime for kids 18 months-3 years. 413-637-0197. 18 Main Street. Lenox, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 2:30-6pm ? TEEN: The Belchertown Teen Center is open this afternoon, offering a safe, drug-free, semi-supervised environment where kids can play games, socialize, watch movies, etc. 413-323-8728. 66 State Street. Belchertown, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 3:30-5pm ? PARENT GROUP: MotherWoman hosts a support group for young mothers and expecting women between the ages of 13 and 19. Group meetings are held bi-weekly and are drop-in. Babies welcome! Takes place at Mercy Care Holyoke. 413-886-0410. 306 Race Street. Holyoke, MA. (FREE)
  • 4pm ? READING: Do you ever wish that you could recommend your favorite books to other library visitors? The Forest Park Branch Library invites Forest Park Reads, a special series where families can read new books (or chapters of books) and then rate them using a star system so that other library visitors can choose great new things to read! Takes place on the fourth Tuesday of each month. 413-263-6843. 380 Belmont Avnue. Springfield, MA. (FREE)
  • 5:30pm ? PLAYGROUP: Sponsored by Childcare of the Berkshires in the gym at the Abbot School. 56 North Country Road. Florida, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 6:30pm ? BREASTFEEDING: The La Leche League of North/Central Berkshires meets every third Tuesday at The Montessori School of the Berkshires. 21 Patterson Road. Lenox Dale, MA. (FREE)
  • 6:30-8pm ? MUSIC: The Berkshire South Regional Community Center hosts a free ukulele group tonight! Beginners and kids without any knowledge of music reading can join in ? the class will teach basic chord progressions and styles of playing from around the world. Registration requested but drop-in is OK. Sponsored by Bobbie Hallig and Jenny and Adam Hersch. 413-528-2810. 15 Crissey Road. Great Barrington, MA. (FREE) ?

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Wednesday, March 6th, 2013

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: The Smith College Botanic Garden?s annual spring bulb show begins today! ?Visit the garden to see beautiful flowers and to learn about the growing process of bulbs. ?Pair a visit to the show with a family study of how plants grow and compare seed growth to bulb growth. ?413-585-2740. ?16 College Lane. ?Northampton, MA. ?(DONATION)

10am-4pm ? BOTANY: Visit Mt. Holyoke?s Talcott Greenhouse for the botanic garden?s 2013 bulb show! ?With a Mediterranean theme, the show features a wide variety of spring-blooming bulbs, as well as other beautiful flowering plants and shrubs. ?Families can learn about unique types of plants, and a visit to the show can be used to supplement studies of biodiversity and plant anatomy. ?413-538-2116. ?50 College Street. ?South Hadley, MA. ?(FREE)

10:30-11:30am ? MUSEUM ADVENTURE: The Norman Rockwell Museum hosts Kids Create, a special art-making event for preschool kids and their accompanying adults. ?Kids can create masterpieces of their own, while helping their young brains to grow! ?413-298-4100. ?9 Route 183. ?Stockbridge, MA. ?(<$)

6-7:30pm ? PARENT WORKSHOP: Author Bill Corbett offers parents advice on some of the challenging behaviors that kids present. ?Titled, ?Positive Solutions for Getting Children to Cooperate,? the workshop will offer tips, strategies, skills, and more. ?Registration required. ?413-637-3662. ?21 Patterson Road. ?Lenoxdale, MA. ?(<$)

7pm ? FILM FESTIVAL: Miyazaki Festival. Throughout the month of March and into April, Amherst Cinema celebrates the singular storytelling vision of Hayao Miyazaki, with restored 35mm prints of his most treasured films, presented in their original Japanese with English subtitles.? Today they will screen ?Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind? from 1984 (PG).? 413-253-2547. 28 Amity Street. Amherst, MA ($)

7pm ? TEENS/DATING: A community event for teens to promote safe and healthy dating relationships takes place Monument Mt. Regional High School Auditorium. Deana?s Educational Theater will put on a one-woman play, The Yellow Dress, based on true stories of victims of domestic? violence, including a young woman from Massachusetts named Deana. The play? raises awareness about healthy and unhealthy relationships and helps to identify? the early warning signs of dating violence. This thought-provoking production? will move students and adults alike. 413-443-5951. 600 Stockbridge Rd. Great Barrington, MA (FREE)

7pm ? PARENT WORKSHOP: Great Barrington Waldorf High School hosts an evening talk, ?Keeping Ideals Intact,? with David Sloan. ?Author of ?Stages of Adolescents? and ?Life Lessons: Reaching Teenagers through Literature,? David will speak about fostering the natural idealism of youth as an antidote to cynicism and apathy. 413-528-8833. Great Barrington Rudolf Steiner School Auditorium. Great Barrington, MA (FREE)

7pm ? PARENT WORKSHOP: Tim Hope presents a talk for preschool parents and guardians, ?Preschool Friendships: Supporting Your Child?s First Relationships.? ?Happens at The Little Red Schoolhouse. 413-253-5259. Amherst College.? Amherst, MA

PARENTS? NIGHT OUT

6-8pm ? FUNDRAISER: Spend the evening tasting delicious wine and microbrews (plus fancy sodas!) at Chandler?s Restaurant! ?The event is a fundraiser for the Tilton Library, and will also feature appetizers and a silent auction. ?Beverages will be provided by the South Deerfield Spirit Shoppe. ?Advance tickets suggested ? it?s a popular event! ?413-665-4683. ?25 Greenfield Road. ?Deerfield, MA. ?($$)

ONGOING FOR WEDNESDAYS (As always, please confirm before heading out to these suggestions.)

  • 9am-12noon ? PLAYGROUP: Drop-in playgroup at the Amherst Family Center. 413-545-0865. 428 Student Union Building (Campus Center Way). Amherst, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9-10:30am ? PLAYGROUP: The Palmer-Monson Family Network hosts infant and toddler play group! 413-283-6246. 4 Springfield Street. Three Rivers, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Bi-weekly in the community room at Becket Town Hall, sponsored by Community Health Programs. 413-664-0104. 65 Walker Street. Becket, MA. (FREE)
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: At the Lenox Community Center, sponsored by Community Health Programs. 413-644-0104. 65 Walker Street. Lenox, MA. (FREE)
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Northampton Parent Center is a drop-in Center for children (birth-K) and their caregivers. Everyone is welcome. Located in the lower level of Edwards Church at the corner of State and Main Streets in Northampton. Please use the back door and public parking. Northampton, MA (FREE)
  • 9:30am or 1:30pm ? STORYTIME: Fantastic Fours and Fives takes place today at the Westfield Library! Registration is required for storytime. 413-568-7833. 6 Elm Street. Westfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:30-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: At the Belchertown Family Center! 413-283-7594. 720 Franklin Street. Belchertown, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:30-11:30 ? PLAYGROUP: At the South Hadley Family Center. 413-533-7096. 7 Woodbridge Street. South Hadley, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 9:45-11:15am ? SUPPORT GROUP: MotherWoman hosts, ?Getting Real about Motherhood,? a support group designed to help mothers share the stress and adjustments of motherhood and work to find ways to feel renewed, valued, and energized. Takes place at the Amherst Family Center, in the basement of the Unitarian Society. Childcare available. 413-256-1145. 121 North Pleasant Street. Amherst, MA. (FREE)
  • 10-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: At the Wendell Free Library hosted by the Community Network for Children through June 2013. 978.544.5157. 7 Wendell Depot Road. Wendell, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10am ? STORYTIME: Preschool storytime at the Westhampton Library! 413-527-5386. 1 North Road. Westhampton, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10am - PARENT GROUP: Enjoy coffee and a chat with other parents at the Westhampton Library ? stop in after dropping kids off at school through the end of Sept.! 413-527-5386. 1 North Road. Westhampton, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11am ? STORYTIME: The Greenfield Library hosts Sunshine Storytime! 413-772-1544. 402 Main Street. Greenfield, MA. (FREE) ?
  • 10-11:30am ? PLAYGROUP: Sponsored by the Palmer-Monson Family Network. 413-283-6246. 4 Springfield Street. Three Rivers, MA. (FREE) ?Source: http://hilltownfamilies.wordpress.com/2013/02/28/030213030813/

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Loss Of Online Privacy Kills Free Speech - Business Insider

A few months back, an advertising executive argued that more online privacy would kill free speech.

Richard Frankel, president of the advertising company Rocket Fuel, titled the post ?How the Do Not Track Plan Will Ultimately Kill Free Speech.?

It?s understandable that advertisers are so resistant to the concept of Do Not Track ? it could change the way they access data, which would force them to innovate their business models and practices.?

Just because DNT could impact the advertising industry in the short-term, however, doesn?t warrant its intense broadcasting of fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD), and at times, outright deception. Frankels?s piece was one in a string of ad exec attacks on privacy that claim that the Internet will be doomed if consumers get more of the privacy they want.

In the interest of transparency, let me explain my angle here. I?m an attorney, privacy advocate, and analyst at Abine, an online privacy company in Boston. We make simple tools that give people a choice over whether their personal info is collected, stored, and sold online.

Unlike the advertising companies, we don?t collect or sell any user data. We only get paid if users like our free products and choose to buy our premium ones. It?s an up-front relationship that?s clear to our customers.

And beyond my role at Abine, I care deeply about preserving the web as a place where we can say and explore interesting, sometimes controversial, things. As a fan of free speech and expression, I have a vested interest in keeping the Internet open and uncensored.

Make no mistake about it: we live in a state of surveillance. Hundreds of advertising and tracking companies follow everything we do online -- the articles we read, the videos we watch, the sites we always visit, the Facebook comments we make, and more.

They combine that online data with offline data like our voting record, employment history, and marriage licenses, and use it to build an extremely detailed profile. Companies like Facebook scan the contents of photos and private messages for Homeland Security ?risk words? like ?infection,? ?body scanner,? or ?hacker? and turn them over to law enforcement.

Even if you delete your embarrassing Facebook posts, companies like Social Intelligence sell the past 7 years of posts to hiring managers. The wireless companies you pay for mobile service turn over 1.3 million customer records to law enforcement each year, which include texts and your phone?s GPS location wherever it went.

The divide between public and private surveillance is virtually nonexistent, and advertising companies are part of this ecosystem.

When you?re constantly being watched, you necessarily lack privacy. And when you?re constantly being watched, you act differently. That seems like an obvious point to those of us who?ve belted out song lyrics alone in our cars but would be terrified to do the same on stage in front of thousands or who laugh at things with their friends that they?d never say in front of their bosses, but observation effects are also well-established in scientific research, law, and popular culture (Big Brother, anyone?).

Privacy scholar Neil M. Richards writes that ?surveillance inclines us to the mainstream and the boring?when we are watched while engaging in intellectual activities, broadly defined?thinking, reading, web-surfing, or private communications?we are deterred from engaging in thoughts or deeds that others might find deviant.?

Deviance just means difference: deviation from the norm, creativity, standing out from the crowd. If you knew you were being watched and that your activities may resurface down the road in a job interview, on a date, in a newspaper, you?d be less likely to go that political rally, that Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, that gay bar, or that protest, all things that you have a right to do that are valued parts of a free, democratic society.

With privacy, you have control over who gets to see what you?re doing and where you are. You get to be one way around your boss, another around your kids, another around your best friends since elementary school. You get to pick that divide.

But when you?re watched all the time and you never know how that information will be used or where it?ll turn up, you censor yourself everywhere. This is called the Panopticon Effect. All this openness that social networks insist we want by default, the pervasive data collection that advertisers argue is good for us: they make anyone who?s paying attention censor themselves.

A key part of free speech is anonymous speech. Anonymous speech is a constitutionally protected First Amendment right, and as the Supreme Court stated in McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission, ?an honorable tradition of advocacy and of dissent.?

Online advertising constantly fights against anonymity and pseudonymity, trying to learn everything about web users to unmask them and peel away layers of demographic info, interests, and behaviors. Many social networks like Facebook have real name policies, insisting that members use their full, legal names on their accounts or be banned.

Frankel says that ?With higher ad revenues comes more rich content that spurs vibrant discussion.? I disagree. You know what spurs vibrant discussion? People, especially people behind pseudonyms. Ever been on a message board? A Reddit thread?

The most ?vibrant? discussions happen when people feel sufficiently protected to be honest. Sure, some people hide behind pseudonyms to harass others, but the core of the First Amendment avoids censoring the positive, protected uses of speech just because certain bad actors may abuse it.

To say that advertising is the only thing driving creative content doesn?t give credit to humanity?s ingrained creativity. First, plenty of content providers get paid for their work directly, from recording artists to bestselling authors to journalists. 43% of Americans pay content creators?authors of magazine articles and books?for e-books, and there are 400,000 paid subscribers to the Wall Street Journal alone.

The majority of people blogging and posting on social media today create content out of a desire to express themselves that?s unrelated to money. Just talk to any one of the thousands of bloggers and podcasters, particularly the anonymous ones, who pay to host their own websites just to get their message out to the public.

Most of these people don?t blog or podcast for a living; they do it because they love it and because their message is important to them. There?s power?and satisfaction?in speaking one?s mind, and it exists independently from ad money.

Privacy isn?t a hindrance to free speech; it?s the driving force behind it. Privacy provides both the boundaries of and protection for the space in which we can be ourselves. Privacy nurtures self-expression, creativity, speaking your mind, associating with whomever you wish, and exploring your interests.?

These are the First Amendment?s protections:? freedom of speech, of association, and of assembly.? They?re so important for self-actualization and self-determination that our founders immortalized them in the Bill of Rights. Privacy isn?t about having something to hide; it?s about having something to live for.

Why the ad industry is wrong about Do Not Track

A few months back, an advertising executive argued that more online privacy would kill free speech. Richard Frankel, president of the advertising company Rocket Fuel, titled the post ?How the Do Not Track Plan Will Ultimately Kill Free Speech.?

It?s understandable that advertisers are so resistant to the concept of Do Not Track ? it could change the way they access data, which would force them to innovate their business models and practices.? Just because DNT could impact the advertising industry in the short-term, however, doesn?t warrant its intense broadcasting of fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD), and at times, outright deception.

Frankels?s piece was one in an ongoing string of ad exec attacks on privacy that claim that the Internet will be doomed if consumers get more of the privacy they want.

In the interest of transparency, let me explain my angle here. I?m an attorney, privacy advocate, and analyst at Abine, an online privacy company in Boston. We make simple tools that give people a choice over whether their personal info is collected, stored, and sold online. Unlike the advertising companies, we don?t collect or sell any user data.

We only get paid if users like our free products and choose to buy our premium ones. It?s an up-front relationship that?s clear to our customers. And beyond my role at Abine, I care deeply about preserving the web as a place where we can say and explore interesting, sometimes controversial, things.

As a fan of free speech and expression, I have a vested interest in keeping the Internet open and uncensored.

Make no mistake about it: we live in a state of surveillance. Hundreds of advertising and tracking companies follow everything we do online -- the articles we read, the videos we watch, the sites we always visit, the Facebook comments we make, and more.

They combine that online data with offline data like our voting record, employment history, and marriage licenses, and use it to build an extremely detailed profile. The divide between public and private surveillance is virtually nonexistent, and advertising companies are part of this ecosystem.

In this post, I?ll address Frankel?s argument - and the other advertisers using similar arguments - which goes something like this: 1) behavioral (or tracking-based) advertising is how online advertisers make money; 2) without advertising, content providers like online newspapers won?t be able to survive; 3) with paid subscriptions; only rich people who can afford content will get it, creating class segmentation.

In brief, here?s why they?re wrong:

1) the majority of online advertising revenue comes from contextual ads, which don?t pose any personal privacy risks;
2), the online advertising industry?s move to real-time bidding platforms are actually hurting content providers far more than a shift from behavioral advertising to contextual advertising ever could; and
3), beyond this being a reductio ad absurdum argument (?everything will be locked behind a paywall if we stop tracking!?), this segmentation already exists through the filter bubble that the advertising industry and its tracking has caused.

Realistically, online privacy isn?t going to hurt anything but these advertisers? antiquated business models, which will have to adapt to respect the privacy of their target audiences.

Let?s first examine the fallacy that online tracking doesn?t use personal information. Frankel argues that ?Targeted, relevant ads don?t harm consumers?personal information is not necessary, or collected, to produce them.?

This statement is less than fully honest when we look at Rocket Fuel?s own website, which boasts that it can ?zero in on? people based on ?age, gender, profession, ethnicity, and relationship status,? among many other personal characteristics. They have more than 20,000 audience segments, including soccer moms and caregivers:

The company goes on to say that they can find ?users engaged in highly targeted activities that define their interests and personalities? by going ?beyond behavioral, contextual, or geo-targeting by combining intelligent demographic, lifestyle, purchase-intent, and social data with our own suite of targeting algorithms, blended analytics, and expert analysis.?

And they?re not just using your online activity here:? ?Online data has evolved from simply providing insights like browsing activity, shopping cart info, sign ups, etc. into an incredible selection of more than 20,000 unique audience segments. Advertisers can even leverage offline purchase and consumption data for their online campaigns.?

Obviously, significant amounts of personal information are being collected. And the traditional advertiser counter-argument that ?it?s not personally identifiable; it?s only aggregate info? has been debunked time and time again by researchers like Stanford?s Arvind Narayanan and Jonathan Mayer (also see privacy professor Paul Ohm?s excellent summary of the failure of anonymization) and publications like the Wall Street Journal, which found in a December 2012 study that nearly 25% of the web?s 70 most popular sites shared personal data, like name and email address, with third-party companies.

Ad companies like Mixpanel come right out and say ?Now you can tie any kind of data to your users to see exactly who they are and what they have done.? The myth that de-identified data is private is even weaker now with the rise of ?data enhancement? that matches online info with offline data sets.

The only reason these ads can be personalized is because of the personal information, the data collection, that powers them. That?s the real harm here, and that?s always been the harm, despite advertisers trying to shift the focus to targeted ads. No one cares about targeted ads: at worst, they?re annoying or creepy. Let?s just drop it.

The thing people don?t like is having their personal info harvested, mined, sold, and used in ways they can?t even imagine: for determining their credit limits or creditworthiness, playing into whether they get a job, showing them different prices than other people see for the same online shopping items, or influencing their insurance rates.

Even Frankel seems to doubt himself: he says that ?consumers have become more open to [ads],? and then contradicts himself 6 paragraphs later when he says ?Everyone claims to hate online advertising.? His second statement is more accurate: an October 2012 UC Berkeley study found that most people--69%--never or hardly ever find ads useful, and 85% never or hardly ever click them; and a 2012 Pew phone survey of 2,253 participants found that 68% of them were ?not okay with targeted advertising because [they] don?t like having [their] online behavior tracked and analyzed.?

Microsoft surveyed their users about privacy in 2012 and found that 83% of Americans, 84% of Germans, and 81% of UK residents think that ?tracking of personal information is out of hand and consumers need easier ways to block it.? I won?t keep going; you get the picture. The advertising industry keeps preaching about how great data collection is for all of us. If the benefits are so clear, then why not let consumers choose to enable it? Overwhelmingly, the opposite is happening.

Let?s fact-check some of Frankel?s, and the advertising industry in general?s, more unsubstantiated statements:

Online ads have become ?less invasive?

If by ?invasive? he means ?in your face? like pop-ups, then he?s right. But just because data collection is invisible doesn?t mean it?s somehow safer or less intrusive. Advertisers employ a massive array of secret tracking techniques, collecting far more personal information than ever before in history, and they haven?t had the best rap while doing it: remember KISSmetrics creating undeletable cookies?

Google circumventing privacy controls in Safari and getting a $22.5 million FTC fine? Ad network Chitika?s opt-out that only lasted 10 days in contrast to any reasonable consumer?s expectations? Facebook tracking logged-out users anywhere there?s a Like button on the web?

Online tracking is only getting worse: UC Berkeley?s Web Privacy Census, powered by Abine?s privacy software, found an alarming increase in tracking on the top US websites, showing that online tracking will double in 2.5 years if present trends continue.

?The alternative to an ad-supported Internet is a pay-for-play world supported by subscriptions or private ownership. Consumers may think they want an ad-free Internet, but do we really want to pay subscription fees to access all the sites we currently visit for free??

Frankel wrongly equates ?behavioral advertising? with ?all advertising? and offers a false choice between an ad-supported Internet and an all-paid subscription Internet. He neglects to mention that the vast majority of advertising revenue comes from contextual ads, ads that relate to the content the viewer sees and not the personal characteristics of the viewer.

Contextual ads don?t present a privacy problem, and they make up the majority of online advertisements. The reality is that privacy controls will not have a negative impact on the economics of the Internet (at least not past this short-term period of transition), as I?ve argued elsewhere.

And it?s not as though advertisers are truthfully concerned about publishers? bottom lines. Significant evidence suggests the opposite: although online advertising is getting cheaper for advertisers, it?s getting more costly for publishers.

In the past, publishers had the power when pricing ads. You wanted a full-page New York Times ad? There?s a set price for that. With the recent advent of real-time online bidding platforms, advertisers hurt content providers by competing more effectively and cutting down the content provider?s take and involvement.

And at bottom, there?s plenty of research showing that plenty of people will pay small price increases for more privacy. A few dollars is all that?s needed to make the difference, so we?re not talking about a prohibitive expense. Offer people a choice: those who don?t mind surrendering their privacy can keep the status quo, but people who want to avoid it can throw in a few bucks to do so.

The Do Not Track option could serve as the dividing line to signal a consumer?s choice about privacy. Of course, it would need to live up to consumer expectations and actually stop tracking on websites, which notable websites like Twitter have done.

Do Not Track would ?reduc[e] the effectiveness of advertising?

To the contrary. Do Not Track has great potential to increase the effectiveness of advertising. Why? Because Do Not Track lets people tell advertisers not to use certain personalized ads that they find ineffective, usually because they find them creepy or annoying.

Do Not Track is a clear communication from web users to advertisers about which ads those users prefer; which ads work better for them. If ads annoy people and make them build negative associates with the things advertised, they?re not effective advertising.

Even with Do Not Track, advertisers still get to collect and sell user data for advertising: they just can?t show personalized online ads. According to the definition of Do Not Track offered by advertisers (which is at odds with what real people want), people who don?t want to be tracked will still see ads, but not personalized ones. Meanwhile, all other web users will keep seeing behaviorally targeted ads.

Across the board?regardless of whether a consumer clicked Do Not Track?advertisers will still collect all consumers? personal data exactly as before. Again, their definition, not ours.? This definition means that consumers get to voice which type of ads they prefer?personalized or not?and advertisers can still collect and sell everyone?s info. It?s a win-win for advertisers, far from the end of the Internet economy and a blow to advertising effectiveness.

?If independent publishers lose a large percentage of their ad revenues because Do Not Track or other initiatives restrict the free flow of information on the web, they?ll have less money to fund unbiased, journalistic content creation?

We already have a restricted flow of free information on the web, thanks to advertising. Ever heard of a filter bubble? It?s ?a situation in which a website algorithm selectively guesses what information a user would like to see based on information about the user (such as location, past click behavior and search history) and, as a result, users become separated from information that disagrees with their viewpoints, effectively isolating them in their own cultural or ideological bubbles.?

In other words, the more that advertisers or websites (or both, in the case of sites like Google and Facebook) know about you, the more they envelop you with targeted content. You don?t see the same Google search results as everyone else, or the same Amazon home page. Even news sites are targeted to show you articles they think you?ll like. Personal data collection fuels filter bubbles.

Frankel says that greater privacy will ?muffle the voices of many consumers who can?t or won?t pay to express their opinions.? You know what muffles voices? Surveillance, tracking, and the threat that what you say today will be used against you in the future.

That?s why anonymous speech is constitutionally protected and why many people choose to mask themselves when they make political comments. Online advertising works extremely hard to unmask those people, identify them, sell their data, and barrage them with ads. And that?s not what people want.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/loss-of-online-privacy-kills-free-speech-2013-2

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Cryopreservation: A chance for highly endangered mammals

Feb. 27, 2013 ? Oocytes of lions, tigers and other cat species survive the preservation in liquid nitrogen. Scientists of the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW) in Berlin succeeded in carrying out cryopreservation of felid ovary cortex.

"We have successfully frozen and thawed oocytes in the ovary cortex of different cat species at minus 196 degrees Celsius. This freezing process and the storage of living cellular material in liquid nitrogen is called cryopreservation," said Caterina Wiedemann, doctoral candidate at the IZW.

The ovarian cortex is regarded as a reservoir of reproductive cells. It contains thousands of immature oocytes. Successful cryopreservation of ovarian tissue of wild cats is therefore a key element for the establishment of genome resource banks, an important tool for the preservation of genetic diversity. All felid species except for the domestic cats are listed on the Red List for endangered species of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Taking a freezing procedure developed in human medicine as their model, scientists at the Department of Reproduction Biology of the IZW developed a method for cryopreserving the ovarian cortex of different cat species. In the original procedure, ovarian tissue of women who suffer from cancer is removed to avoid its damage by chemotherapy or radiotherapy. After successful tumor treatment the tissue is re-transplanted so that the normal female cycle, including fertility, can be restored. In the meantime, the tissue is conserved in liquid nitrogen. The IZW adapted this method to preserve female germ cells from feline species.

The particular challenge in the cryopreservation of ovarian cortex tissue comes from the fact that the cells are embedded in a very complex system. Ovarian cortex is composed of immature oocytes surrounded by small somatic cells, different connective tissue and blood vessel cells. In addition, the cellular properties of every species are unique, thus it not possible to develop a common freezing procedure applicable to all species. For the cat cells, the scientists of the IZW worked out a "slow" freezing protocol. The cortex was dissected into evenly chopped pieces, each 2 mm in diameter. The cellular material was frozen at a speed of 0.3 degrees per minute. Ethylene glycol and saccharose were used as cryoprotectant agents. To demonstrate their survival after thawing the ovaries, the cortex was cultured in a medium for up to 14 days before and after the freezing.

The IZW owns the genome resource bank ?Arche," which contains, inter alia, a variety of sperm samples of various wildlife species. The newly developed cryopreservation method will substantially improve the future storage of feline germ cells. ?This is a large step towards preserving biodiversity. In particular to endangered cat species the successful cryopreservation of female and male gametes is a ray of hope," commented the head of the department, Prof Dr Katarina Jewgenow (IZW).

In 2007 the IZW initiated the "Felid Gametes Rescue Project" in order to build up an European network for the extraction and storage of feline gametes, which are made available to breeding programmes of zoos. Within the framework of this project, different European zoos are sending ovaries and testes of big and small cats to the IZW in Berlin for research. The scientists involved are confident that these good results will encourage even more zoos to participate in the network.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V. (FVB).

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Journal Reference:

  1. Caterina Wiedemann, Jennifer Zahmel, Katarina Jewgenow. Short-term culture of ovarian cortex pieces to assess the cryopreservation outcome in wild felids for genome conservation. BMC Veterinary Research, 2013; 9 (1): 37 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-9-37

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/gD-2iNyP-Jk/130227101951.htm

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