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LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) ? The nation's midsection again dealt with blizzard conditions Monday, closing highways, knocking out power to thousands in Texas and Oklahoma and even bringing hurricane-force winds to the Texas Panhandle. Two people have died.
Already under a deep snowpack from last week's storm, Kansas was preparing for another round of heavy snow Monday evening and overnight, prompting some to wonder what it could do for the drought.
"Is it a drought-buster? Absolutely not," National Weather Service meteorologist Victor Murphy said. "Will it bring short-term improvement? Yes."
The storm is being blamed for two deaths on Monday. In northwest Kansas, a 21-year-old man's SUV hit an icy patch on Interstate 70 and overturned. And in the northwest town of Woodward, Okla., heavy snow caused a roof to collapse, killing one inside the home.
Earlier on Monday, blizzard warnings extended from the Oklahoma and Texas panhandles into south-central Kansas. The blizzard warnings were dropped Monday evening for the far western portion of the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles.
Meanwhile to the east, lines of thunderstorms crossed Arkansas, Louisiana and Florida, bringing heavy rain and an occasional tornado warning.
As many as 10,000 people lost power in Oklahoma, as did thousands more in Texas.
"I have a gas cooking stove and got the oven going," said Ann Smith, owner of the Standifer House Bed and Breakfast in Elk City, Okla., late Monday afternoon. Her daughter and grandchildren had come over because they lost power.
"If it gets cold tonight, I guess we'll have to put pallets in the kitchen," Smith said with a laugh.
Colorado and New Mexico were the first to see the system Sunday night, with up to 2 feet falling in the foothills west of Denver.
As it moved into the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles Monday, the storm ground travel to a halt, closing miles of interstates and state highways.
Texas Department of Public Safety Trooper Daniel Hawthorne said about a dozen motorists had to be rescued, but no one was injured. The National Weather Service in Lubbock reported at one point that as many as 100 vehicles were at a standstill on Interstate 27.
Extremely strong winds whipped around at least a foot or more of snow in the Texas Panhandle, and a hurricane-force gust of 75 mph was recorded at the Amarillo airport. Amarillo recorded the biggest snowfall total in Texas ? 19 inches, just short of the record of 19.3 ? while Fritch was second with 16.
The Oklahoma Highway Patrol closed all highways in the Panhandle and much of the state's northwest because of blizzard conditions. Trooper Betsy Randolph said several dozen motorists have reported being stranded or have abandoned their vehicles.
Chris McBee, a storm chaser, got stuck outside Woodward in northwest Oklahoma in the mid-afternoon. By then, the city was leading Oklahoma's snow totals with 15 inches of snow.
"We were planning to go back to Oklahoma City tonight, but the road was just impassable," McBee told The Associated Press. "You couldn't see 50 feet in front of you." A man with a bulldozer dug out McBee's vehicle.
"He's just helping people," McBee said, adding he assumed the man was still out there. "We tried to pay him and he refused."
While the wintry precipitation is "a shot in the arm," National Drought Mitigation Center climatologist Mark Svoboda said, the drought in the Plains and Midwest is far from over. Svoboda, speaking from Lincoln, Neb., said 12 inches of snow is equivalent to about 1 inch of rain.
"We would need 2-4 feet of snow to just erase the October to present deficits," in Kansas, he said.
Jim Shroyer, a wheat specialist with Kansas State University Extension, said snow is more efficient than summer rain in replenishing soil moistures because rain tends to run off or evaporate during the summer months.
But it can take months or years for pastures and rangeland to recover to the point where there is good forage there for livestock.
"There is a lag coming out of drought where some of these impacts will linger on long after 'climatological drought' is gone," Svoboda said. "And there is always a sense of false security there."
Texas rancher Jay O'Brien warned the storm could be deadly for grazing cattle, with the wind pushing animals into a fenced corner where they could suffocate from the drifts.
"This type of snow is a cattle-killer," he said.
Parts of Kansas are bracing for anywhere from 8 to 24 inches of snow as the system moves through the state overnight. Wichita figures to take another hit after last week's storm that dumped about a foot and a half of snow.
In preparation, many Kansas school districts already have called off Tuesday classes, as has the University of Missouri-Columbia. And Kansas City, Mo., Mayor Sly James declared a state of emergency Monday, as another foot or more could fall, adding to last week's 10 or so inches.
"This one has the potential to be quite serious," James said at a news conference.
Through the day Tuesday, the storm is forecast to spin toward the upper Midwest, bringing snow to Chicago and eventually Detroit before heading toward Buffalo, N.Y, and northern New England in the middle of the week.
___
Associated Press writers Jill Zeman Bleed and Kelly P. Kissel in Little Rock, Ark., Daniel Holtmeyer in Oklahoma City, and Roxana Hegeman in Wichita, Kan., Bill Draper in Kansas City, Mo., and John Milburn in Topeka, Kan., contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2nd-round-heavy-snow-plains-midwest-2-dead-002811293.html
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For years researchers have been searching for a way to treat diabetics by reactivating their insulin-producing beta cells, with limited success. The "reprogramming" of related alpha cells into beta cells may one day offer a novel and complementary approach for treating type 2 diabetes. Treating human and mouse cells with compounds that modify cell nuclear material called chromatin induced the expression of beta cell genes in alpha cells, according to a new study that appears online in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
"This would be a win-win situation for diabetics - they would have more insulin-producing beta cells and there would be fewer glucagon-producing alpha cells," says lead author Klaus H. Kaestner, Ph.D., professor of Genetics and member of the Institute of Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. Type 2 diabetics not only lack insulin, but they also produce too much glucagon.
Both type 1 and type 2 diabetes are caused by insufficient numbers of insulin-producing beta cells. In theory, transplantation of healthy beta cells ? for type 1 diabetics in combination with immunosuppression to control autoimmunity - should halt the disease, yet researchers have not yet been able to generate these cells in the lab at high efficiency, whether from embryonic stem cells or by reprogramming mature cell types.
Alpha cells are another type of endocrine cell in the pancreas. They are responsible for synthesizing and secreting the peptide hormone glucagon, which elevates glucose levels in the blood.
"We treated human islet cells with a chemical that inhibits a protein that puts methyl chemical groups on histones, which - among many other effects - leads to removal of some histone modifications that affect gene expression," says Kaestner. "We then found a high frequency of alpha cells that expressed beta-cell markers, and even produced some insulin, after drug treatment.
Histones are protein complexes around which DNA strands are wrapped in a cell's nucleus.
The team discovered that many genes in alpha cells are marked by both activating- and repressing-histone modifications. This included many genes important in beta-cell function. In one state, when a certain gene is turned off, the gene can be readily activated by removing a modification that represses the histone.
"To some extent human alpha cells appear to be in a 'plastic' epigenetic state," explains Kaestner. "We reasoned we might use that to reprogram alpha cells towards the beta-cell phenotype to produce these much-needed insulin-producing cells."
###
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine: http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/news/
Thanks to University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine for this article.
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Feb. 22, 2013 ? In January 2012, the United States Department of Agriculture passed a series of regulations designed to make school lunches more nutritious, which included requiring schools to increase whole grain offerings and making students select either a fruit or vegetable with their purchased lunch. However, children cannot be forced to eat these healthier lunches. In a new study scheduled for publication in The Journal of Pediatrics, researchers determined that small, inexpensive changes to school cafeterias influenced the choice and consumption of healthier foods.
Andrew S. Hanks, PhD, and colleagues from the Cornell Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs (B.E.N. Center) studied the effects of multiple small interventions, called the smarter lunchroom makeover, in the cafeterias of two junior-senior high schools (grades 7-12) in western New York. In the lunchroom, changes were implemented to improve the convenience and attractiveness of fruits and vegetables (e.g., fresh fruit next to the cash register in nice bowls or tiered stands) and make the selection of fruits and vegetables seem standard through verbal cues from cafeteria staff (e.g., "Would you like to try an apple?"). The smarter lunchroom makeover took no more than 3 hours in one afternoon and cost less than $50 to implement. These types of changes are applications of the behavioral science principle termed "libertarian paternalism," which promotes influencing choice through behavioral cues, while preserving choices.
To measure the impact of the smarter lunchroom makeover, researchers recorded what was left on trays after lunch, both before and after the intervention. After the smarter lunchroom makeover, students were 13% more likely to take fruits and 23% more likely to take vegetables. Actual fruit consumption increased by 18% and vegetable consumption increased by 25%; students were also more likely to eat the whole serving of fruit or vegetables (16% and 10%, respectively).
These low-cost, yet effective interventions could significantly influence healthier behaviors, potentially helping to offset childhood obesity trends. Dr. Hanks notes, "This not only preserves choice, but has the potential to lead children to develop lifelong habits of selecting and consuming healthier foods even when confronted with less healthy options." These simple changes could also be effective in the cafeterias of other organizations, including hospitals, companies, and retirement homes.
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The stories of the football influences on Jim Harbaugh were well told and often during the weeks leading up to the Super Bowl. But perhaps the biggest impact on his NFL Scouting Combine preparation isn?t Bo Schembechler or Jack Harbaugh, but Judge Judy.
While discussing the need for draft prospects to be forthcoming during interviews, Harbaugh admitted being a fan of the syndicated television jurist.
Because of course he did.
?Somebody that?s not truthful, that?s big, to me,? the 49ers coach said. ?I?m a big fan of the Judge Judy show. And when you lie in Judge Judy?s courtroom, it?s over. Your credibility is completely lost. You have no chance of winning that case. So I learned that from her.
?It?s very powerful, and true. Because if somebody does lie to you, how can you ever trust anything they ever say after that? Ronald Reagan, another person of great wisdom and advice, ?Trust but we will verify.? ?
Of course, the discussion of trust centers on tomorrow?s arrival of Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te?o, of the fake dead girlfriend fame.
But when Harbaugh was asked if the trust factor made Te?o undraftable, he replied: ?No. I wouldn?t say that.?
That?s why even though the interview Te?o does with the assembled media tomorrow will draw plenty of eyeballs, the meetings he holds with teams this week will carry more weight.
?I think there?s certainly a part of being with somebody for a half an hour or 15-minutes or an hour or two that you can know somebody,? Harbaugh said. ?Some people have that ability to have a 30-minute conversation with them and you walk away thinking you really know that person. Others, you can?t.
?You have to validate a meeting with a person or two or three conversations with their track record, their relationships with other people at their school, their teammates, their trainers, equipment managers, teachers, professors, their family. People usually leave a track record of success or failure or success and failure.?
Or in the case of Judge Judy, 17 years of television fame, and the admiration of a professional football coach.
Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/22/tom-coughlin-shuts-down-retirement-talk/related/
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By Claudia Assis, MarketWatch
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) ? Shares of Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. rallied Friday, in contrast with lackluster performance from the rest of the sector, after the company reported increased production and fourth-quarter results that beat market expectations.
Shares of Cabot /quotes/zigman/221094/quotes/nls/cog COG +10.38% ?rallied 8%, the top gainer among stocks in the S&P 500 index /quotes/zigman/3870025 SPX +0.65% . Read: U.S. stocks rebound to trim weekly losses. .
The company late Thursday reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 27 cents a share, compared with expectations of 22 cents a share.
Steven Russolillo joins the News Hub to tell investors why he's watching stock from AIG, Abercrombie & Fitch and Hewlett Packard in the markets today.
Profits reached $40.9 million, from $26.4 million a year earlier. Production in the quarter was higher than expected and reserves expanded, paced by strong performance in the key Marcellus shale formation.
Cabot also unveiled a $1 billion capital expenditure program for this year, foretelling ?aggressive production growth in 2013,? analysts at GHS Research said in a note.
Shares of Exxon Mobil Corp. /quotes/zigman/203975/quotes/nls/xom XOM +0.43% ?declined 0.1%, while shares of ConocoPhillips /quotes/zigman/294662/quotes/nls/cop COP -0.07% ?declined 0.7%. Chevron Corp. /quotes/zigman/289939/quotes/nls/cvx CVX +0.83% ?shares were flat.
U.S.-listed shares of Royal Dutch Shell PLC /quotes/zigman/379078/quotes/nls/rds.a RDS.A +0.91% ?rose 0.5%. Shell said late Thursday it is reassessing its development plan for the North Sea?s Fram oil and gas field after initial drilling showed ?unexpected well results.? The company had planned an average of 35,000 barrels of oil equivalent out of Fram, with first production expected within three years. Exxon?s U.K. unit is a partner at the field.
/conga/story/misc/investing.html 250568Shares of refiner PBF Energy Inc. /quotes/zigman/13139747/quotes/nls/pbf PBF +4.95% ?rose 2.2%. Analysts at Simmons & Co. upgraded PBF Energy to overweight, on ?early signs of success? from the company?s crude procurement strategy.
?PBF recently increased its expectations for crude deliveries by rail and has shown success procuring crudes at substantial discounts to Brent,? the analysts said.
?PBF is the high reward/risk stock in the refining universe in our view,? with the cheapest valuation and most upside potential, the analysts added.
PBF debuted on the New York Stock Exchange in late January, and reported adjusted earnings of $1.70 a share compared with expectations of $1.63 a share.
Refiners were mixed Friday, with Phillips 66 /quotes/zigman/9483013/quotes/nls/psx PSX +2.23% ?up 0.7%. Tesoro Corp. /quotes/zigman/243084/quotes/nls/tso TSO +1.43% ?and Valero Energy Corp. /quotes/zigman/186158/quotes/nls/vlo VLO +0.93% ?, however, were among the top decliners of the day, with shares off 0.8% a piece.
The SPDR Energy Select Sector /quotes/zigman/246199/quotes/nls/xle XLE +0.79% ?exchange-traded fund declined 0.1%. Crude futures were off 0.2%, with April crude /quotes/zigman/2291772 CLJ3 +0.36% ?at $92.64 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
/quotes/zigman/221094/quotes/nls/cogUS : U.S.: NYSE
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Market Cap$398.83 billion
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Claudia Assis is a San Francisco-based reporter for MarketWatch. Follow her on Twitter @ClaudiaAssisMW.
Source: http://feeds.marketwatch.com/~r/marketwatch/financial/~3/Pb1JJvM6-y0/story.asp
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Alan Simpson, along with Erskine Bowles, represents a well-funded cadre of spokespeople who are only willing to present a narrow band of corporate- and billionaire-friendly ...
Today | Opinion (Article)
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Following revelations of hackers accessing files at companies including Apple and Facebook, Microsoft revealed today it also found evidence of intrusions. In a blog post on the Microsoft Security Response Center, general manager Matt Thomlinson indicated "a small number of computers, including some in our Mac business unit" were affected by malware of the type described in the other attacks. As he mentions, such cyberattacks are no surprise to a company with Microsoft's profile, however one wonders if the folks in Redmond aren't having a chuckle that Macs appear to have been exploited in this case. He continued to state that the investigation is ongoing, however it does not appear that any customer data was at risk.
Filed under: Software, Microsoft
Source: Technet Blogs, Reuters
Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/22/microsoft-reveals-hackers-attacked-it-too-no-customer-data-aff/
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By Tara Brady
PUBLISHED: 08:23 EST, 17 February 2013 | UPDATED: 11:26 EST, 17 February 2013
As many as 3,500 couples from all over the world tied the knot at a mass wedding in South Korea organised by the controversial Unification Church a year after its founder died.
Row upon row of couples, dressed in white dresses and tuxedos, met at the Cheongshim Peace World Centre in Gapyeong, about 37 miles northeast of Seoul, the capital of South Korea, for their big day.?
A further 24,000 followers, who have been dubbed 'Moonies' after the church's founder Sun Myung Moon, were also married in other countries via video link.
Celebrations: Newlyweds tie the knot at the Unification Church wedding ceremony in Seoul
Big day: A happy couple hug after marrying in Cheongshim Peace World Centre in South Korea during a Moonie wedding
Followers: Happy couples from 200 countries met in South Korea for the Moonie wedding - the first one since the Unification Church's founder died
The ceremony was presided over by Hak Ja-han - the widow of Sun Myung Moon, who died in September.??
Moon founded the church, officially called the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, in 1954 and it is considered one of the world's most controversial religious organisations.? In 1992 he declared that he and his wife were messiahs.
?
He presided over mass weddings from the early 1960s and in 1997, 30,000 couples were married in Washington.?
One of Moon's sons, Hyung Jin, took over the day-to-day leadership of the church which considers the Korean peninsula sacred.
Cosy: Couples line up side by side during the Moonie service which was watched around the world
Intimate: Some 3,500 couples exchanged or reaffirmed marriage vows in the Unification Church's mass wedding arranged by Hak Ja Han Moon, wife of the late Sun Myung Moon
It was all a bit too much for this couple who had a snooze during their wedding ceremony which was attended by thousands of other couples
Memorable: They say you should never upstage the bride but that might be a bit hard when 3,500 wore identical white dresses for their big day
True love: Couples exchange their wedding rings at the mass marriage ceremony in South Korea
Critics have vilified the group in the past as heretical and a dangerous cult, questioning its murky finances and accusing it of indoctrinating followers which the church denies.?
Thousands of followers gathered at the funeral of Moon in September and he was buried at a church-owned mansion modelled on the White House after a two-week mourning period.?
The Unification Church claims to have 3million followers around the world, although critics say the figure is no more than 100,000.
Devoted: A happy couple who tied the knot at the church which was founded in 1954
Last minute nerves: A bride checks her make-up before she is married to her husband at the Unification Church's mass wedding in South Korea
Critics have vilified the group as heretical and a dangerous cult, questioning its murky finances and accusing it of indoctrinating followers which the church denies
Vows: The Unification Church claims to have 3 million followers around the world, though critics say the figure is no more than 100,000
For better or for worse: The ceremony was presided over by Hak Ja-han - the widow of Sun Myung Moon, who died in September
Mass following: Thousands of couples travelled from all over the world to the church in South Korea to get married at the Moonie wedding
Row upon row of couples, dressed in identical white dresses and tuxedos, met at the Cheongshim Peace World Centre in Gapyeong
Going to the chapel: Moon founded the church, officially called the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, in 1954 and is considered one of the world's most controversial religious organisations
Hak Ja Han Moon, right, sprinkles the church's holy water onto newly-married couples in a mass wedding ceremony at the CheongShim Peace World Center in Gapyeong, where 3,500 couples were hitched
Moon, a staunch anti-communist who ran a business empire as well as a church and spent 30 years living in the United States, was born in what is now North Korea in 1920 and escaped to the South in 1950 after being sentenced to hard labour.
He died aged 92 on September 3 of complications due to pneumonia.
His wife remains the symbolic head of the mission that oversees the entire Tongil, Korean for 'Unification' group.
?
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Spotted at the State of the Union address, Bobak Ferdowsi, the Mars Curiosity flight engineer famous for his hairstyle, describes his role as an ambassador for Mars
By Philip Yam
Image: NASA JPL
WASHINGTON, D.C.-- Not too many NASA engineers get to sit with the First Lady at the State of the Union address. But having an unusual haircut certainly doesn't hurt in getting you noticed, especially if you are the flight director for the Mars Curiosity mission. Bobak Ferdowsi, better known as Mohawk Guy, caught many people's attention, including that of Michelle Obama, when television cameras caught the 33-year-old in the control room as Curiosity made its spectacular landing last August 6, 2012.
His distinctive look and infectious enthusiasm has led him to reach out to the public to spread the word on the excitement of Martian exploration. At a briefing organized by the White House office of digital strategy on February 13, he revealed how he got into Mars research and the reason for his hair.
?
[An edited transcript follows.]
?
What inspired you to become involved in the exploration of other planets?
?
As a child, it was the kind of thing I dreamed of doing. I saw the 1997 Pathfinder mission. It was the first time I had really seen live pictures of Mars. There was something amazing about seeing the human effort involved, to have something sitting there on another planet, that made me want to do it.
?
How did you get on the Mars Curiosity team?
?
In school, I wasn't sure what I wanted to do. ?I went down the path of physics and aerospace engineering. At the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL), I was lucky that they put me on the Mars Curiosity project at the very start. But I still didn?t know what I would do on it.
?
I told my boss, hey, I really want to work on this stuff, but I don?t even know what I?m good at yet. So I took an apprenticeship approach. Over the course of a few years, I did mission planning, some requirements development, testing, and operations. Along the way, without realizing it, I learned so much and learned a lot about myself. I learned I loved testing the rover. Trying to get one of these things to break is one of the best jobs I?ve ever had.
?
To name the rover, NASA conducted a contest. How do you think it turned out?
?
I thought the name, Curiosity, was a little cheesy at first. And now I absolutely love it. Curiosity is actually the perfect ?name. ?Here we are, and we?re using our own curiosity to explore the planet.
?
You have a full-time job operating the rover as flight director. How did you handle all the educational outreach?
?
It?s just a matter of a little time management. I love the outreach. I feel really fortunate for the opportunities to do more of it, like working with the Office of Science Technology Policy. When I give a tour of JPL, it's super exciting. It gives you energy to bring someone else into the picture and show them what you?re working on. And you realize, yeah, this is amazing; it?s not just a job. It helps motivate me and gets me pumped.
?
Concerning the Curiosity mission, what are you most looking forward to?
?
Until last week, it was the drillling into the Martian surface. The thing I'm really excited for now is that we?ve laid out the path we?re going to drive on and the places where we are gong to drill. We're seeing at least three or four different types of terrain there. I?m excited to analyze each of those terrains and get the story of Mars pieced together, because each of those terrains represents a different era and a different Martian environment. And we can get down to answering the question of whether Mars was habitable.
?
What are the odds of life on Mars?
?
I don't believe there's life on Mars today. I'm optimistic that maybe in the past there were some sort of simple-celled organisms.
?
What's the deal with your hair?
?
The hair became an ongoing tradition for me about five, six years ago, when we started doing these things called system tests. I was doing the software testing of the hardware.
?
Testing is kind of stressful. So with the system test coming up, I thought I'd do something fun. I decided I was young enough to have a Mohawk once in my life. And I also put an ST on my head for system test.
?
For launch, I went a little crazy. I dyed my hair so that the hawk went from gold to red, like a rocket flame.
?
For landing, my boss sent an email poll to the team asking what my hair should look like. Some of the options were pretty bad. One suggestion was a reverse Mohawk. Ultimately, the team came up with red, white and blue.
?
Any plans to change your Mohawk hairstyle?
?
I think I was 26 when I first started it. I like to change things up, as you can tell from the colors in my hair that are changing. I?m sure there?ll be a point when it?s gone. No one wants to see an old grey-haired Mohawk guy.
?
Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=c7ec28688d5e0178bbb89016b3f24c7d
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Finally, after five years, I have perfected injera!
Thanks to innumerable lessons from my friend M and countless times practicing, I had managed to get to the point of good tasting, nicely floppy injera.
But the darn stuff evaded me. I couldn?t get the eyes? the holes? for the life of me. M kept saying that my pan wasn?t hot enough, but as much as I cranked my big round injera pan, I couldn?t get it hotter.
Well, I was in a rush when I made injera for the girls? school day this week, and decided to try my new pan. It worked! It got so much hotter than my injera pan, and all the eyes were there. It was perfect injera!
It?s a Green Gourmet pan from Cuisinart ? And it?s lined with ceramic instead of nasty-emitting Teflon. And it worked AWESOMELY for making injera! I totally recommend it.
Source: http://rowanfamilytree.com/2013/02/16/my-injera-is-perfect/
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