Depleted Red Bulls need boost to come from back line

After coughing up a season-high five goals last weekend and seeing their four-game undefeated streak snapped by Chicago, the Red Bulls look to get back on track Saturday in Toronto (4:30 p.m., MSG Plus), and that starts with defense.

They will have to play without stalwart Costa Rican left back Roy Miller and dogged Australian midfielder Tim Cahill, both away for World Cup duty with their respective national teams. Miller is their longest-tenured player and having his best MLS season, and Cahill brings strong midfield work. Both are expected to miss four games.

To make matters worse, Japanese right back Kosuke Kimura struggled mightily against the Fire, committing several costly mental gaffes. Unless theyre banking on getting hat-tricks from Bradley Wright-Phillips every week, the Red Bulls need to tighten things in the back line if they want to contend.

One persons absence, whether it be through injury, World Cup, whatever it is, is another players opportunity, and we have some guys that are raring to go and are hungry, coach Mike Petke said. So thats really how you deal with that, you put it in the guys heads that they have an opportunity now to show and then you move on from there.

Replacing Cahill is the most straightforward. With Peguy Luyindula doubtful because of a calf injury he suffered Thursday, they can move Eric Alexander back inside and start Jonny Steele wide left. Bobby Convey or Connor Lade could step in for Miller, or Petke could move Kimura to the left and pick between Richard Eckersley and Chris Duvall.

Whoever starts, theyll deal with an improved Toronto FC team, which won on Wednesday to advance to the Canadian finals. Yes, star midfielder Michael Bradley is away with the U.S. national team, but the squads other expensive additions English international Jermaine Defoe, Brazilian National Team keeper Julio Csar and countryman Gilberto will all be there.

Its going to be a difficult game. [Toronto is] doing well this year. Theres a difference. They used to struggle, but this year theyre doing well, so its going to be another important game for us, Thierry Henry said. Obviously after what happened with Chicago, were going to have to do well and make sure we dont concede early and try to go back to [defending] as a unit.

Wright-Phillips, Henrys red-hot strike partner, has poured in an MLS-high nine goals all but one coming in the last four games. But he agreed that the key to a result at BMO Field will come on the other end.

I feel like me personally that when we go there, just try and keep a clean sheet. Just keep it tight at the back because, with the players we got, with all our attacking threats were bound to get a chance, Wright-Phillips said. If we keep it tight as a team and not just defenders as a team, well be all right.

The fourth-round pairings for the U.S. Open Cup have the Red Bulls facing the winner of the May 28 tilt between the New York Cosmos and Brooklyn Italians. The game would be between June 10-18, the Red Bulls hosting the Italians or playing at Shuart Stadium in Hempstead if against the Cosmos.

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Depleted Red Bulls need boost to come from back line

Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds make rare red carpet appearance

17 MAY 2014 Blake Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds made a rare red carpet appearance on Friday.

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The low-key couple, who married in a secret ceremony in 2012, were every inch the glamorous Hollywood duo when they attended The Captive premiere at the Cannes Film Festival.

Blake turned heads in a show-stopping strapless monochrome gown which she accessorised with a glittering diamond necklace, earrings and a cuff bracelet.

Ryan, 37, echoed his wife's black and white outfit in a smart tuxedo, complete with a white bow tie.

The duo were out to support Vancouver-born Ryan's latest silver screen venture, The Captive, in which he plays a landscape gardener whose daughter Cassandra was kidnapped while walking through a car-park eight years previously.

The film, which also stars Rosario Dawson, Scott Speedman and Mireille Enos follows Cassandra's parents as they try to work out the mystery of her disappearance and discover if she is still alive.

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On Thursday the former Gossip Girl star chose a stunning, intricately embellished, dress from French fashion house Chanel for the premiere of Mr Turner.

Despite appearing self-assured on the red carpet, however, Blake recently revealed that she lacks confidence when it comes to events she will be photographed at.

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Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds make rare red carpet appearance

Blanchett shocked by red carpet intruder

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Blink and you'll miss it, but a trespasser found his way onto the Cannes Film Festival red carpet and dived under actress America Ferrera's dress before security pulled him away.

Cate Blanchett was a shocked bystander as a man climbed under the dress of fellow actress America Ferrera on the Cannes red carpet.

The pair had arrived for the world premiere of How To Train Your Dragon 2 and were posing for a photo when the ugly incident occurred on Friday.

Festival security had to drag the man away after he rushed the red carpet wearing a suit and tie, jumped behind former Ugly Betty star Ferrera and slipped under her dress.

A man is arrested by security as he tries to slip under the dress of actress America Ferrera. Photo: Reuters

Ferrera was unhurt but clearly shaken up while Blanchett and Dragon co-stars Jay Baruchel, Kit Harington and Djimon Hounsou, all posing for the photo, were left shocked and shaking their heads.

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Several reports claimed the man was Ukrainian journalist Vitalii Sediuk, a serial "prankster" at entertainment events.

Sediuk has in the past tried to kiss Will Smith on a red carpet, hugged the crotches of Leonardo DiCaprio and Bradley Cooper, and crashed the Grammys stage during Adele's acceptance speech.

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Blanchett shocked by red carpet intruder

Latest NASA Cargo Launches to Space Station Aboard SpaceX 3 Mission – Video


Latest NASA Cargo Launches to Space Station Aboard SpaceX 3 Mission
Approximately 2.4 tons of NASA science investigations and cargo were launched to the International Space Station aboard SpaceX #39;s Dragon spacecraft. The launch aboard the company #39;s Falcon 9...

By: NASAtechnology

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Latest NASA Cargo Launches to Space Station Aboard SpaceX 3 Mission - Video

NASA: Accelerating Innovation Through Prize Competitions with Sam Ortega – Video


NASA: Accelerating Innovation Through Prize Competitions with Sam Ortega
NASA #39;s Centennial Challenges brings together inventors, makers, academia and business to spur advances by offering monetary prize incentives. Let us show you opportunities to solve tech challenges...

By: MAKE

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NASA: Accelerating Innovation Through Prize Competitions with Sam Ortega - Video

NASA Robot, Precision Manufacturing Capabilities Showcased at O'Reilly Solid Conference

NASA precision manufacturing and a NASA volleyball-sized robotic satellite equipped with a smartphone will be featured during the first Solid Conference at Fort Mason Center at 2 Marina Boulevard in San Francisco, Wednesday, May 21 and Thursday, May 22, 2014. Solid will bring together more than 100 speakers, a Demo Pavilion filled with connected hardware, and a community of business leaders, engineers and designers exploring the opportunities of a connected future.

Robotic technology from the Intelligent Robotics Group at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, will be on display, including NASA's Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, Reorient Experimental Satellites (SPHERES) integrated with a Google Project Tango prototype smartphone. O'Reilly's Solid offers participants the first chance to see one of these "Smart SPHERES" space robots.

A pair of Tango phones, which include custom sensors and multiple cameras, is scheduled to launch to the International Space Station from Virginia on June 10 aboard the second NASA-contracted Orbital Sciences cargo resupply flight. Astronauts will integrate the Tango phones with the SPHERES already in space. Later this summer, NASA will use the Smart SPHERES to test free-flying 3-D mapping and navigation inside the space station. NASA is developing the Smart SPHERES to perform work on the space station that requires mobile sensing, such as environmental surveys to monitor levels of radiation, lighting and air quality. They also will be used to monitor inventory and conduct experiments.

Solid participants can see the first public display of the Tango-integrated Smart SPHERES and also can learn more about NASA Ames' precision manufacturing capabilities.

Attendees will be able to view a display featuring high-performance fabrication, manufacturing, rapid prototyping and evaluation methods, including subtractive, additive and assembly-based processes. The display will include examples of flight-quality fabrication work, such as precision-machined structural components for satellites, space probes, aerodynamic experiments and nanosatellite engineering models. Many of these examples are provided courtesy of the Ames Machine Shop and Mission Design Center. Ames' Office of the Center Chief Technologist serves as a technology and innovation focus in disciplines of interest to the agency and the nation.

For more information about SPHERES, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/spheres

For more information about the Intelligent Robotics Group at Ames, visit:

http://irg.arc.nasa.gov

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NASA Robot, Precision Manufacturing Capabilities Showcased at O'Reilly Solid Conference

NASA-funded study looks at how our civilization could collapse

Karolyn Coorsh, CTVNews.ca Published Saturday, May 17, 2014 8:15AM EDT Last Updated Saturday, May 17, 2014 9:35AM EDT

A new study partially funded by NASA suggests heavy demands on the world's natural resources and extreme economic imbalances could spell a premature end for modern human civilization.

The research paper, titled "Human and nature dynamics (HANDY): modeling inequality and use of resources in the collapse or sustainability of societies," was published this month in the journal Ecological Economics.

Led by Dr. Safa Motesharrei, a mathematician at the University of Maryland, the study's authors applied human factors such as wealth, economic disparities and use of natural resources to a scientific model typically used to study the interaction of animal populations.

With this model, the researchers say they are able to estimate a human society's "carrying capacity," which is a method, they say, for determining its overall destruction.

UMD professor and study co-author Eugenia Kalnay says the model shows that sustained exploitation of natural resources can eventually lead to a catastrophic societal breakdown.

"And if inequality continues such that the rich consume far more than the poor, the system eventually collapses," Kalnay said.

However, the authors emphasize that HANDY is "not a forecasting model," and is not intended to explain any specific societies' collapse, "but rather to provide a general framework that allows carrying out 'thought experiments' for the phenomenon of collapse and to test changes that would avoid it."

Says Motesharrei: "It cannot be used to predict the future of any society. It can, however, help us understand the possible underlying mechanisms in the evolution of society."

Putting a positive spin on the study's results, the authors says that human societies are able to reach a sustainable state when they avoid economic inequality and limit resource use.

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NASA-funded study looks at how our civilization could collapse

NASA shares good photo, bad facts about San Diego wildfires

NASA knows the importance of getting every detail right. That's why it was so surprising to see them pass along bad information about the San Diego County wildfires in a post that shared a stunning satellite image of smoke from this week's firestorm.

The text below the amazing photo (all that smoke! visible from space!) begins like so:

What's wrong? It's not accurate, at least yet, to say arson is suspected as the origin of these fires because it is merely one of many possibilities that investigators are pursuing. Also, those teens? Police arrested them for allegedly trying to start two brushfires Thursday but have not connected them to the major wildfires ravaging the county.

We've alerted NASA on Twitter and will see if they respond or change a blog post likely to be seen by thousands of people. A NASA tweet containing the image and a link to its post was retweeted 373 times and favorited 188 times in an hour.

About the picture? NASA reports its Aqua satellite collected the "natural-color" image with a Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer Thursday. Actively burning areas, detected by MODISs thermal bands, are outlined in red.

It credits Jeff Schmaltz LANCE/EOSDIS MODIS Rapid Response Team, GSFC, with the image and Lynn Jenner with writing the caption, based on information from CNN.com, San Diego CBS affliate Channel 8, and San Diego ABC affliate Channel 10.

Your photo's great, NASA. But you're too big an agency to post incorrect information that can get recirculated so widely.

See also:

Prospect of arson stokes fear, suspicion in San Diego

Watch time-lapse video of Cocos Fire's gathering strength

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NASA shares good photo, bad facts about San Diego wildfires

Xing Wang, Biochemist and Researcher in DNA/RNA Bio-Nanotechnology, Joins Rensselaer

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Newswise Troy, N.Y. Xing Wang, a biochemist investigating the bio-nanotechnology potential of DNA and RNA, has been appointed as an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Wang joins Rensselaer from the University of South Florida, where he served as an assistant professor.

Xings research offers broad promise in drug delivery, bio-imaging, as a platform for research, and for other therapeutics and diagnostics, said Laurie Leshin, dean of the School of Science. We are thrilled he is joining the School of Science, and we welcome him to Rensselaer.

DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid) are familiar to us as the molecules that encode and transcribe the genetic instructions for building and sustaining all living organisms. Both DNA and RNA are composed of simple units called nucleotides that function as modular units, strung together in a genetic code much as dots and dashes are strung together in Morse code. Wangs research seeks to repurpose the modular nucleotides as building blocks for self-assembled nanoscale (one billionth of meter) structures and machinery.

DNA and RNA have a lot of advantages as bio-nanotechnology materials, said Wang. Among the advantages, DNA and RNA are bio-compatible, they can be readily synthesized or cloned, the rules that govern the interactions between nucleotides are highly predictable, and chemical properties of nucleotides are easily modified using current lab techniques.

In previous research, Wang investigated programming sequences of DNA strands that can self-assemble into two- or three-dimensional structures.

You can draw something on paper, a two- or three-dimensional structure, and then you can program sequences of DNA strands that will form your design, said Wang. Currently, this design process can even be assisted by semi-automated computer programs.

Self-assembled DNA nanostructure can serve as a prototyping breadboard to study the interactions of elements such as proteins, drugs, nanoparticles, or semiconducting quantum dots attached to the platform. A similar platform might serve as a sort of circuit board for nanoparticles aligned to form an electrical device. DNA might also be used in a drug delivery system, designed to enclose and protect a drug as it travels in the body, and bind to molecular receptors found only on the drug target.

Wang also researches RNA, which uses a slightly different set of nucleotides. Interactions among RNA chains are more complex than those among DNA chains.

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Xing Wang, Biochemist and Researcher in DNA/RNA Bio-Nanotechnology, Joins Rensselaer

City to get $1M on nano tax deal

Albany

The city's economic development arm could reap more than $1 million by helping the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering finance its new $191 million hub for renewable energy and clean-technology research, officials said Friday.

Under the proposed arrangement, neither the city nor its Capital Resource Corp., would fund construction of the six-story Zero Energy Nanotechnology building planned for the college's Fuller Road campus.

But in exchange for a transaction fee estimated between $1.4 million and $1.5 million, the CRC would grant the college access to its borrowing power and an estimated $2.3 million break on mortgage taxes, which are split between the state, county, city and Capital District Transportation Authority.

The mortgage tax is 1.25 percent, with one-fifth going to the city. That means a roughly $465,000 mortgage tax break would net Albany about $1 million if the deal is approved, city officials said.

Though the CRC is providing access to the financing, neither it nor the city would be on hook for the $186 million debt should the college default, Mayor Kathy Sheehan said.

"It's really a win all the way around for taxpayers," Sheehan said, noting such transaction fees are one of the city's main sources of development money. "This is a pretty straightforward transaction that results in a significant fee that the city can use for economic development."

Sheehan, who served on the CRC's board as city treasurer, also noted the college is projecting a "pretty remarkable" 1,150 jobs at the site within five years.

The college's application says it will seek bonds that would be subject to income taxes but notes it "may request conversion" to tax-free status in the future.

NanoCollege spokesman Jerry Gretzinger said whether the bonds are taxable depends on whether any of the space is leased to private companies, as the NanoCollege sometimes does.

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City to get $1M on nano tax deal