Holly Holm meets Brazil's Erica Paes, who defeated 'Cyborg,' at Legacy FC 24

Holly Holm signed with Legacy Fighting Championship a week ago hoping to stay unbeaten at the next level of MMA.

Now the former pro boxer has her opponent. Holm (4-0) will fight Brazilian Erica Paes (2-2) at Legacy FC 24. Legacy FC promoter Mick Maynard today confirmed the booking with MMAjunkie.com.

Legacy FC 24 takes place Oct. 11 at Allen Event Center in Allen, Texas. The night's main card, including Holm vs. Paes, airs on AXS TV.

"We offered the fight to around 40 people or more, and all declined for one reason or another," Maynard said in an email. "For the naysayers, Holly is willing to fight anyone."

Paes fought twice in 2005, but then took a lengthy hiatus. But more than eight years ago, the first fight of her career was a kneebar submission of former Strikeforce championCristiane Justino. Starting your career with a tapout win over the woman who would become "Cyborg" Santos is an impressive feat. But after a loss in her second fight, Paes didn't fight again until April of this year, when she returned with a submission win. In June, though, she lost a decision at Jungle Fight 54 in her home country. Now she'll fight in America for the first time.

Holm went 33-2-3 during her pro boxing career. In her promotional debut at Legacy FC 21 in July, she scored picked up a second-round knockout win with a head kick against Allanna Jones. All of Holm's MMA wins have come by knockout. She trains at the Jackson-Winkeljohn camp in Albuquerque, N.M.

With the addition, the Legacy FC 24 card now includes:

MAIN CARD (AXS TV, 10 p.m. ET)

(Pictured: Holly Holm)

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Holly Holm meets Brazil's Erica Paes, who defeated 'Cyborg,' at Legacy FC 24

STPSat-3 built by Ball Aerospace Arrives at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia

The STPSat-3 satellite built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. has arrived at Wallops Flight Facility located on Wallops Island, Virginia. Slated to launch November 4, 2013 aboard a Minotaur I, STPSat-3 is the primary satellite for the U.S. Air Force Operationally Responsive Space (ORS)-3 enabler mission.

STPSat-3 is the second spacecraft Ball has built for the Department of Defense, Space Test Program, Standard Interface Vehicle (STP-SIV) program, managed by the U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center, Space Development & Test Directorate at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico.

"STPSat-3 will demonstrate the robust SIV spacecraft by carrying five payloads and a de-orbit module," said Rob Strain, Ball Aerospace president. "Ball's first SIV satellite, STPSat-2, launched in November 2010 and has exceeded its mission requirements and continues to operate three onboard experiments."

Utilizing the Ball Aerospace flight-proven common spacecraft bus platform, STPSat-3 bus was built in 47 days and has standard payload interfaces for its five payloads, which include:

- iMESA-R (Integrated Miniaturized Electrostatic Analyzer Reflight), a U.S. Air Force Academy mission designed to measure plasma densities and energies

- J-CORE (Joint Component Research), a space phenomenology mission sponsored by the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL)/EO Countermeasures Technology Branch (RYMW) and Army Space and Missile Defense Command (SMDC)

- SSU (Strip Sensor Unit), an AFRL Directed Energy (RD) experiment to provide risk reduction through on-orbit testing and operation of a sensor assembly

- SWATS (Small Wind and Temperature Spectrometer), a Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) mission to provide in-situ measurements of the neutral and plasma environment to characterize the Earth's ionosphere and thermosphere

- TCTE (TSI Calibration Transfer Experiment), a NASA/NOAA mission to collect high accuracy, high precision measurements of Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) to monitor changes in solar irradiance incident at the top of the Earth's atmosphere with the TCTE instrument provided by the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics.

"The SIV is now part of the Ball Configurable Platform cost-effective product line that can be appropriately scaled from initial technology development missions like STPSat-3, to fully operational systems such as NOAA's Joint Polar Satellite System," added Strain.

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STPSat-3 built by Ball Aerospace Arrives at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia

Lloyd Mayer, MD, Renowned Researcher and Leader of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America Passes Away

NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - September 06, 2013) - It is with great sadness that the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America (CCFA) announces the passing of immediate past Chairman of their National Scientific Advisory Committee (NSAC) Lloyd Mayer, MD. Dr. Mayer was also Professor and Co-Director of the Immunology Institute, the Dorothy and DavidMerksamer Professor of Medicine, and Professor of Microbiology at the Mount Sinai Medical Center.

"Lloyd was a visionary leader and a brilliant researcher who was involved with CCFA for almost 30 years," said Richard Geswell, President & CEO of the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America. "He was fundamental in helping us set our research agenda. His passion, leadership, scientific expertise, and commitment to improving the lives of patients, will be his legacy here at CCFA."

Dr.Mayer's research focused on mucosal immunoregulation, inflammatorybowel disease and cytokine regulation of human B-cell differentiation with special attention on the role of intestinal epithelial cells(IEC) in regulatory T-cell responses in the gut. He and his team were the first to show that the epithelial lining cells of the intestine are active regulators of mucosal immune responses that are distinct from those that regulate systemic immunity. These findings had a profound significance in the development of highly effective anti-inflammatory drugs for IBD.

Dr. Mayer had been a part of CCFA's research programs since the mid 1980s and he held several key leadership positions including Chair of the Research Training Awards Committee, Chair of the Grants Review Committee, a member of the Research Initiative Committee and most recently Chair of the National Scientific Advisory Committee. As Chair, Dr. Mayer revived CCFA's Clinical Research Alliance, was a force in the Microbiome initiative and laid the foundation for the CCFA Partners in Research Program (ccfapartners.org) which is a groundbreaking, online research database.

"Lloyd always said that he grew up scientifically with CCFA and he was particularly committed to sharing his expertise by training the next generation of young IBD investigators," said Marjorie Merrick, Vice President of Research & Scientific Programs. "He was a dedicated and awe-inspiring teacher, mentor and colleague to IBD researchers worldwide and a staunch friend to all he knew. He will be sorely missed."

Dr. Mayer graduated from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in 1976 and received the Mosby Award for Clinical Excellence at that time. From 1980 through 1984, Dr. Mayer held joint appointments at Rockefeller University and Mount Sinai.

He pursued his immunology interests in the laboratory of the late Dr. Henry Kunkel. In 1985, he became Associate Professor of Medicine and Microbiology at Mount Sinai. In 1986, he became the Director of the Division of Clinical Immunology. Shortlyafter achieving full Professorships in Medicine and Microbiology in1990, Dr. Mayer became Vice Chair of Medicine at the Mount Sinai Medical Center.He also received the Jeffrey Modell Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award.In1994, Dr. Mayer was named the David and Dorothy Merksamer Chair ofMedicine and in 1997 became Professor of Immunobiology and Chair of the Immunobiology Center at the Mount Sinai Medical Center.In 2007, he became Professor and Co-Director of the ImmunologyInstitute. He was also the Director of the Division of Gastroenterology(2003-2010).

Dr. Mayer received many awards for a life time of outstanding work including the Saul Horowitz Award and the Irma T.Hirschl Trust Career Development Award, the Jeffrey Modell Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award, the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute Award for Scientific Excellence, and the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America (CCFA) Scientific Achievement Award in Basic IBD Research. He spoke and published widely, and his research was consistently funded by the National Institutes of Health. He also leaves behind multiple generations of physicians who trained with and were mentored by him.

The Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America staff and volunteers extend our deepest sympathy to the Mayer family. He is survived by his wife Dr. Jill Fishbane-Mayer and three children, Sara, Marisa and Josh.

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Lloyd Mayer, MD, Renowned Researcher and Leader of the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America Passes Away

Astronaut Reveals 'Lucky Charm' Floating on Space Station

An astronaut working onboard the International Space Station (ISS) has revealed his "lucky charm" a miniature toy astronaut figurine in a video recently sent down to Earth.

"I was going through personal things [that] I have flown for people and came across my own personal item I'd like to share with everybody," NASA astronaut and Expedition 36 flight engineer Chris Cassidy said in the video, which was released online Wednesday (Sept. 4). "This little astronaut guy has seen better days but he has special meaning."

In the video, Cassidy holds up and lets float the 3-inch-tall (7.6 centimeters) toy, which was sculpted to appear to be wearing the same type of spacesuit that Cassidy has worn on spacewalks outside the space station.

"Before I was selected as an astronaut, I knew I wanted to become one and I somehow came across this guy in a toy set for my kids, or something like that," Cassidy recalled.

Flying to the space station is just the latest adventure for the plastic figure, Cassidy said.

As a Navy SEAL, Cassidy was deployed on four 6-month missions, including being sent to Afghanistan two weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

"I took him with me to Afghanistan every time and he was always in my pocket on every mission that I did," Cassidy said from aboard the space station.

Cassidy was chosen to join NASA's ranks in 2004 with the agency's 19th group of astronaut candidates.

"When I was selected to become an astronaut, I felt like [the figurine] was a good luck charm, so he has been with me every step of the way," Cassidy said. "He often flies in T-38 [training jets] with me and various other places. I just leave him in the pocket of my flight suit and I often kind of forget that he is there."

"It [also] flew on the space shuttle," Cassidy, who made his first visit to the space station on space shuttle Endeavour's STS-127 mission in 2009, added.

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Astronaut Reveals 'Lucky Charm' Floating on Space Station

Cosmonaut due to command space station resigns for 'better job'

Russian cosmonaut

Robert Z. Pearlman Space.com

9 hours ago

NASA

Cosmonaut Yuri Lonchakov, seen here on board the International Space Station in 2008, resigned from the Russian federal space agency, despite being assigned to a 2015 mission.

A veteran Russian cosmonaut who was assigned to command the International Space Station in 2015 has unexpectedly resigned.

Cosmonaut Yuri Lonchakov tendered his resignation to the Russian federal space agency, Roscosmos, on Thursday. Russian news agencies, quoting the head of the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, reported Lonchakov will be "formally discharged" on Sept. 14.

"He came and told me that he had found a better job than working in space," Sergei Krikalev, the training center's chief and the current record holder for most time in space by any human, told the Interfax news service. "Frankly, we were counting on him because he was not just in the unit, (but) he was assigned to a crew." [Quiz: Do You Know the International Space Station?]

Lonchakov was scheduled to fly as the commander of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-16M, launching in March 2015 with Roscosmos cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko and NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, the space station's first two yearlong crew members.

Once on board the orbiting laboratory, Lonchakov was set to join the Expedition 43 crew as a flight engineer before taking over command of the space station as the leader of Expedition 44 in May 2015. He was then to return to Earth in October 2015.

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Cosmonaut due to command space station resigns for 'better job'

Russian Quits Space Station

A veteran Russian cosmonaut who was assigned to command the International Space Station in 2015 has unexpectedly resigned.

Cosmonaut Yuri Lonchakov tendered his resignation to the Russian federal space agency, Roscosmos, on Thursday. Russian news agencies, quoting the head of the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, reported Lonchakov will be "formally discharged" on Sept. 14.

"He came and told me that he had found a better job than working in space," Sergei Krikalev, the training center's chief and the current record holder for most time in space by any human, told the Interfax news service. "Frankly, we were counting on him because he was not just in the unit, [but] he was assigned to a crew."

- Sergei Krikalev, chief of Russia's Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center

Lonchakov was scheduled to fly as the commander of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-16M, launching in March 2015 with Roscosmos cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko and NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, the space station's first two yearlong crew members. [Quiz: Do You Know the International Space Station?]

Once on board the orbiting laboratory, Lonchakov was set to join the Expedition 43 crew as a flight engineer before taking over command of the space station as the leader of Expedition 44 in May 2015. He was then to return to Earth in October 2015.

Lonchakov's replacement on the crew was not announced. Backing him up on the Soyuz TMA-16M crew was Alexei Ovchinin, a fellow Roscosmos cosmonaut.

Lonchakov, 48, joined the cosmonaut corps in 1997 and flew three spaceflights to the International Space Station. He first launched on NASA's space shuttle Endeavour as a member of the STS-100 crew in 2001, helping to deliver the Canadarm2 robotic arm during the 12-day mission.

The next year, he flew on board the first Soyuz TMA-class spacecraft, Soyuz TMA-1, for a 10-day flight to the space station.

Lonchakov's third and now final spaceflight began in October 2008 with the launch of Soyuz TMA-13, the 100th crewed Soyuz spacecraftto fly. Serving as an Expedition 18 flight engineer, Lonchakov spent 178 days in space, bringing his career total to 200 days (and 19 hours) off the planet.

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Russian Quits Space Station

Comet ISON to Make a Close Pass of Mars This Month | September 2013 | NASA JPL Space Science HD – Video


Comet ISON to Make a Close Pass of Mars This Month | September 2013 | NASA JPL Space Science HD
Visit my website at http://www.junglejoel.com - the LADEE (Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer) mission is scheduled for a night launch on Sept 6,...

By: CoconutScienceLab

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Comet ISON to Make a Close Pass of Mars This Month | September 2013 | NASA JPL Space Science HD - Video

NASA launching robotic explorer to moon from Va.

This image provided by NASA shows the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer aboard a Minotaur V rocket after a rollout at NASA's Wallops Island test flight facility in Wallops Island, Va., Thursday Sept. 5, 2013. The LADEE spacecraft is set to launch from Wallops Island Friday evening. NASCAR fans in Virginia will have an opportunity to learn about an upcoming NASA mission to the moon during races at Richmond International Raceway. NASA's Langley Research Center says education... (Patrick Black/AP)

NASA is poised to return to the moon.

An unmanned rocket is scheduled to blast off late Friday night (11:27 p.m. EDT) from Virginia's Eastern Shore with a robotic explorer that will study the lunar atmosphere and dust. Called LADEE (LA'-dee), the moon-orbiting craft will measure the thin lunar atmosphere.

Scientists want to learn the composition of the moon's ever-so-delicate atmosphere and how it might change over time. Another puzzle: whether dust actually levitates from the lunar surface.

Unlike the quick three-day Apollo flights to the moon, the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer, or LADEE, will take a full month to get there. An Air Force Minotaur rocket, built by Orbital Sciences Corp., is providing

This image provided by NASA shows the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer aboard a Minotaur V rocket after a rollout at NASA's Wallops Island test flight facility in Wallops Island, Va., Thursday Sept. 5, 2013. The LADEE spacecraft is set to launch from Wallops Island Friday evening. NASCAR fans in Virginia will have an opportunity to learn about an upcoming NASA mission to the moon during races at Richmond International Raceway. NASA's Langley Research Center says education... (Patrick Black/AP)

It's the first moonshot from Virginia. All but one of NASA's approximately 40 moon missions, including the manned Apollo flights of the late 1960s and early 1970s, originated from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The most recent were the twin Grail spacecraft launched two years ago. The lone exception, Clementine, a military-NASA venture, rocketed away from Southern California in 1994.

The soaring Minotaur rocket should be visible along much of the East Coast as far south as South Carolina, as far north as Maine and as far west as Pittsburgh.

The $280 million mission will last six months and end with a suicide plunge into the moon for LADEE, which is about the size of a small car.

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NASA launching robotic explorer to moon from Va.