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The Roanoke Star-Sentinel February 10 - 16, 2012

NewsRoanoke.com

Community | News | Per spective

[Economic Development]

Bowers Wins Firehouse Primary

1 State Flag - 75 New Jobs

Incumbent Mayor David Bowers handily defeated his Democrat challenger Sam Rasoul by a vote of 867 to 526. The total votes in the primary were 1396 according to Roanoke City Party Chair Joann Edmunds. Commonwealth Attorney Don Caldwell closed the doors promptly at 3:00 p.m. Each candidate had an observer during the count. Bowers had councilman Ray Ferris and Rasoul had his sister Sue Rasoul. According to one voter, Susan Hall, two women argued and did not want to sign the oath. They said they were “not Democrats” City Gov’t they were “Americans” and they voted for the person. They eventually conceded and signed the oath marking through the part that said, “I am a Democrat.” Two other women who called themselves Republicans were turned away when they refused to sign the loyalty vote. One made it through to the registration table, said Gary Crawford, 6th district chair. He said that all in all things went smooth, but that there were some “nasty remarks” made to both candidates by a few voters. In the 2008 firehouse primary where Councilman Court Rosen was the top vote-getter, 1700 participated at Patrick Henry High School

A Known Known P8– Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfield answered some tough questions at last week’s sold-out Jeff-Center interview.

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Photo by Valerie Garner

Valentine Pages P18–19 Looking for that perfect way to show your affection? Check out our Special Valentine’s Day Section

VA Secretary of Trade and Commerce, Jim Cheng (left), along with Mayor David Bowers presents a flag to Advance Auto Parts Inc. Senior Vice President Donna Broome. Advance Auto will invest over $8 million by adding a Financial Services Customer Care Center to their headquarters at Crossroads Mall. See Full Story P:3

Brian Gottstein, communications director for Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, in response to a Star-Sentinel inquiry this week said, “Ultimately, if it’s decided that the [General Assembly] does not have the authority to redistrict, it would then be left to the courts.” The Richmond Circuit Court last week could not definitively conclude in its decision whether Virginia’s General Assembly had the authority to pass a congressional redistricting plan in 2012

versus the end of 2011. the Constitution’s separation-of-powers Cuccinelli then sought “immediate provisions. The state is paying Troy’s fee intervention by the Supreme Court of of $195 per hour. Virginia, given the impending elections But on Tuesday the Virginia Supreme and deadlines associated with the federal Court said that the circuit court’s ruling Voting Rights Act.” was not sufficiently definitive He appointed former 1977 to permit immediate review. State Gov’t Virginia Attorney General The Supreme Court also exAnthony F. “Tony” Troy of plicitly declined to read the the firm Troutman Saunders. He had merits of the underlying case. planned to argue that by precluding the Five Virginia voters brought suit conGA from drawing the maps it violates tending that the General Assembly did

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not have the authority to pass redistricting in 2012. Virginia’s constitution states that “The General Assembly shall reapportion the Commonwealth into electoral districts in accordance with this section in the year 2011 and every ten years thereafter.” Richmond Circuit Court Judge Richard D. Taylor wrote, “If the Court concurs with the Defendants’ proposition > CONTINUED P2: Redistricting

Young Roanoke Scientists Engage in Sumo Robot Wars

P20– At age 74, former Corporate Exec and Writer Darlene Quinn says it’s never too late to reinvent yourself and change careers.

Deborah Kelly in her office at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute.

VT Carilion Develops Cancer Viewing Technology

P22– Event Zone Director Larry Landolt says it’s time to add a new layer of activities and events to Roanoke’s Festival in the Park.

> CONTINUED P2: Primary

Redistricting Lines Uncertain, Primaries May Move to August

Never Too Late

A New Vision

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A photograph of a polar bear in captivity, no matter how sharp the resolution, can never reveal as much about behavior as footage of that polar bear in its natural habitat. The behavior of cells and molecules can prove even more elusive. Limitations in biomedical imaging technologies have hampered attempts to understand cellular and molecular behavior, with biologists trying to envision dynamic processes through static snapshots. Deborah Kelly, an assistant professor in the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute in Roanoke has developed a novel technology platform to peer closely into the world of cells and molecules within a native, liquid environment. Kelly and colleagues have developed a way to isolate biological specimens in a flowing, liquid environment while enclosing those specimens in the high-vacuum system of a transmission electron microscope (TEM). The TEM liquid-flow holder, developed by Protochips Inc. of Raleigh, N.C., accommodates biological samples between two > CONTINUED P2:Technology

People of a certain one I really ever built age may remember for this.” Rock’ Em, Sock ‘Em It was Kaplan’s secRobots, made popular ond competition. He in the 1960s. The toys says he did well in his looked like people with first contest but not so arms that jabbed at the well on this particuother robot’s head. You lar day, due to robot won by landing one and human error. He punch hard enough to was constantly being make the other robot’s Two Robots battle during last flipped over by the week’s competition. head pop up. other robot. A Sumo Robot Sarah Salzberg from competition at the Science Museum of Blacksburg and her 7 1/2-year-old son Western Virginia’s temporary location Nate were two of the observers. Nate at Tanglewood Mall recently featured even tried his hand at operating one of modern day homemade robots. They the robots. His mother says her son “is were lightweight (under 2 1/2 pounds) really into science” and he’s built “many and resembled a dune buggy a Lego robot.” They have an without a seat. The robots Erector set but it doesn’t have Community were fitted with large wheels any motorized parts. that helped them maneuver “He’s naturally drawn to around a tabletop, and the goal was to this kind of stuff. He’s doesn’t care about knock a small rubber duck off the table. sports. All his friends play soccer and David Kaplan’s robot battled it out with baseball . . .and he’s naturally drawn to another. It took the Roanoke resident be- science and animals.” tween three and four hours to make the She’s looking forward to getting her 1 1/4 pound robot out of Plexiglas and son involved in a Lego club at school and servo motors. possibly through the Rec Center when “It’s just a design I did; used some Nate turns eight. computer software to do the basic deKevin Hines > CONTINUED sign. I built it from scratch. It’s the first was in charge of P3: Sumo

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