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NCSU insect museum among stimulus report targets

Several initiatives at local universities take a beating this week in a new congressional report on stimulus funding.

The report, Summertime Blues, is at a small handful of projects funded by the $862 million American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 that its authors, U.S. senators Tom Coburn and John McCain, feel are wasteful.

"We owe it to all Americans that are paying taxes and struggling to find jobs, to rebuild our economy without doing additional harm, and to do it in a way that expands opportunities for future generations," Coburn and McCain wrote in the report. "Too many stimulus projects are failing to meet that goal."

Some local notables:

  • From Duke University, a $498,176 grant from the National Science Foundation to look for ways to improve privacy and functionality for social networking sites like Facebook and Myspace. This is number 41 on the report's list, on page 29.

 

  • At N.C. State University, a $253,123 grant to an insect museum. The report claims the museum has "virtually no public presence" by virtue of the fact that it averages 44 visitors a year. The stimulus funding would be used for bug storage - the purchase of new cabinets, drawers and units for bug specimens, and for new computer equipment. The museum is number 68 in the report, on page 37.

 

  • UNC Charlotte received $762,372 to develop a computerized choreography program to help design and produce interactive dance performances. This is number 2 on the report's list, page 6.

 

  • NCSU makes the list again, along with Georgia Tech, for video game research. NCSU received $770,856, and Georgia Tech received $427,824, each from the National Science Foundation to examine how video games like the Nintendo Wii can "help improve mental health for the elderly."  That's number 39 on the list, page 28 of the report.

Follow this link to the full report.

Waiter, there's some soup on my flies!

The greatest recurring pleasure of having a Google Alert set up for N.C. State University is the Insect of the Week blog posting from the university's gem of an Insect Museum, perhaps the most unjustifiably under-noticed institution in all of the Triangle. With the exception of that food trailer at the State Fair that sells 2-pound eclairs.
Speaking of tasty treats, today's Insect of the Week entry is about nibbling on creepy crawlies. It touts insects as often being "high in protein, unsaturated fats, and vitamins and minerals."
Not to mention the highest content of squirms and kicks per serving of any known food group. 
Never going to eat a bug? Bad news: You do it all the time.
"For example, (per 100g) there are about 80 insect fragments in chocolate, 20 maggots in canned mushrooms, 60 insect fragments in peanut butter, 2 full insects in cornmeal and 150 insect fragments in wheat flour."
With also those extra legs it probably shouldn't be a surprise that some end up where they shouldn't be.
Of course, eating bugs won't kill you. Most of the time. Your trusty Campus Notes blogger is proof: In addition to the kind of inadvertent intake mentioned by the Insect Museum blog, I have eaten three unidentified bugs in the past two weeks while cycling, though being unable to name them takes the edge off the bragging possibilities.
I also have eaten grasshoppers in Oaxaca, Mexico several times (they are available on menus and from street vendors), though I never really enjoyed them.  If you go there, and feel you must, check someone else's plate first. Those sauteed in oil but served still soft are not a good idea. Try the crunchy ones with a little lime.
That new Insect Museum blog entry can be seen in its entirety at http://blog.insectmuseum.org/?p=1190
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