Shattering the First Amendment – The Riverdale Press

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., was 90 years old when he finally retired from the U.S. Supreme Court in 1932 the only Supreme Court justice to reach that age on the bench until John Paul Stevens in 2010.

In his 30 years on the bench, Justice Holmes would ink his legacy on a number of legal interpretations that shaped the 20th century. The biggest? The clear and present danger test, ultimately championed by the court for decades that declared certain types of speech as not protected by the First Amendment if such speech could be deemed to damage the public welfare.

One of the earliest cases affected by clear and present danger was a 1919 case challenging the conviction of Charles Schenck, a member of Philadelphias Socialist Party, who mailed out thousands of flyers to young men encouraging them to resist the military draft, claiming it was a violation of the 13th Amendment which prohibited involuntary servitude.

Schenck and another Socialist Party member, Elizabeth Baer, were convicted of violating the Espionage Act that prohibited any interference in the U.S. military, including its recruitment efforts.

Schencks lawyers argued his flyers were an expression of free speech. The Supreme Court, however, disagreed unanimously. In writing the opinion supporting the majority, Justice Holmes acknowledges that in many places and in ordinary times the claims made my Schenck and Baer would have been within their constitutional rights.

But these were not ordinary times. The country was in the midst of World War I, and soldiers were needed in the European trenches. And because of that, the character of every act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done, Holmes said.

The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic. It does not even protect a man from an injunction against uttering words that may have all the effect of force.

No, Justice Holmes didnt tap into his Book of Old Cliches for that line. Hes the one credited for originating it. And it would serve to headline a policy that would stifle anti-war speech all the way through Vietnam. It was there, in 1969, the court ruled the government cant target speech unless its directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action, instead of the previous approach of speech that simply advocates violence.

So why such a long-winded history lesson on free speech? Because this is a lesson we cant lose sight of, especially when phrases like you cant shout fire in a crowded theater are more popular than ever when it comes to First Amendment debate.

And it begs the question: Where is the line where protected speech ends? Should such a line exist?

The First Amendment is intended to protect all of us from punishment or retaliation of any sort over our free speech from the government. But it doesnt require you or I to grant anyone were talking to those same freedoms. In fact, freedom of speech is never the same as freedom from rebuttal or even consequence. And there could indeed be some speech that ultimately results in that from people or entities who are not government related.

Thats highlighted even more today through social media platforms. In what was once speech limited to how many barrels of ink one owned, it seems just about anyone can have their words go viral and become part of the public discussion.

There are many positive aspects of that especially since it opens conversations that information gatekeepers would rather remain closed. But it also means that even everyday people like you, us, and our neighbors are under greater scrutiny for the things that we say.

Last year, Ethical Culture Fieldston School took some heat after a speaker from Columbia Law School, A. Kayum Ahmed, who reportedly said the victims of the Holocaust and violence who have since established control of Israel have become perpetrators of violence against Palestinians.

This is Ahmeds opinion, and whether we agree with it or not, he has the right to express that opinion. Whether doing so in front of teenagers at a school event was the proper venue for that is up for debate. But even dissenting opinions are worthy of exploration and discussion, as part of the free exchange of ideas that our Founding Fathers had hoped to perpetrate in the establishment of this country.

Some media outlets not so balanced in their political leanings had pressured Fieldston school officials to do something about it, and that something seems to have come in the firing of history teacher J.B. Brager.

Brager took to Twitter not only to speak out against Israels reported treatment of Palestinians, but also over how Fieldston handled the Ahmed statement, saying that when institutions of learning bow to political pressure to disavow historical reality, what can educators do within that institution?

One might argue thats a discussion best had internally with the schools administration, even Fieldstons board of directors. Brager, however, chose to air it publicly on social media. And its because of that at least according to those trying to get Brager reinstated this teacher lost their job. (Brager uses the "they/them" pronouns.)

Its unfortunate what happened to Brager. Its unfortunate that a member of Fieldstons faculty didnt feel they could start a conversation with the schools administration on how it would deal with hot-button discussions like those of Israel and Palestinians.

But then again, freedom of speech is not equivalent to the freedom of rebuttal or consequence. Many have been martyred (both figuratively and literally) for expressing unpopular opinions. Look at those being arrested in rallies and protests across the country.

While the government might dance around free speech in these arrests (handcuffing protesters for other issues unrelated to speech), the fact is that we are never free of consequence for speaking how we feel.

But we must stop punishing each other for the opinions we hold, and just listen. Even if we dont change our minds, every single person has a right to express their opinion, whether we agree with it or not.

There are limits to free speech, even when it comes to the First Amendment. But those limits should be as narrow as possible, because with every crack we create in the foundation of free speech, thats one crack closer to shatter.

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Shattering the First Amendment - The Riverdale Press

First Amendment panel to take place in Paducah – WPSD Local 6

...THE FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING RIVERS INILLINOIS...KENTUCKY...MISSOURI...OHIO RIVER AT SHAWNEETOWN, PADUCAH, OLMSTED LOCK AND DAM AND CAIRO.THE RIVER WILL CONTINUE TO SLOWLY FALL, DROPPING BELOW FLOOD STAGE ATSHAWNEETOWN AND PADUCAH LATE THIS WEEK, AND AT OLMSTED AND CAIRO EARLYNEXT WEEK.PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...SAFETY MESSAGE...NEVER DRIVE CARS...TRUCKS OR SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES THROUGH FLOODEDAREAS. THE WATER MAY BE TOO DEEP TO ALLOW SAFE PASSAGE. NEVER ALLOWCHILDREN TO PLAY IN OR NEAR FLOOD WATERS. STAY TUNED TO NOAA WEATHERRADIO OR YOUR LOCAL MEDIA FOR FURTHER STATEMENTS AND POSSIBLE UPDATEDFORECASTS.ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE ATHTTP://WWW.CRH.NOAA.GOV/AHPS2/INDEX.PHP?WFO=PAH /LOWER CASE/&&THE FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FORTHE OHIO RIVER AT PADUCAH* UNTIL FRIDAY AFTERNOON.* AT 7:00 PM WEDNESDAY THE STAGE WAS 39.9 FEET.* FLOOD STAGE IS 39.0 FEET.* MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND MINOR FLOODING IS FORECAST.* FORECAST...THE RIVER WILL CONTINUE TO FALL TO BELOW FLOOD STAGE BYFRIDAY MORNING.* IMPACT...AT 39.0 FEET...MINOR FLOODING OCCURS AFFECTING MAINLYBOTTOMLAND AND SURROUNDING LOW LYING AREAS.&& ...VERY LIGHT WINTRY MIX POSSIBLE EARLY THIS MORNING...A LIGHT WINTRY MIX REMAINS POSSIBLE OVER PORTIONS OF THE QUADSTATE REGION EARLY THIS MORNING.TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN THE LOWER AND MIDDLE 30S THROUGH 9 AMCST, AS POCKETS OF PRECIPITATION SLOWLY MOVE FROM WEST TO EAST.AT THIS TIME, ANY ACCUMULATIONS OF SNOW, SLEET, OR FREEZING RAINARE EXPECTED TO BE EXTREMELY ISOLATED AND SHOULD NOT POSE ASIGNIFICANT TRAVEL CONCERN.REGARDLESS, DRIVERS SHOULD STILL BE WATCHFUL FOR ANY SLICK SPOTSON ELEVATED ROAD SURFACES, SUCH AS BRIDGES, THROUGH THE MORNINGCOMMUTE.THE BEST CHANCE FOR SEEING ANY WINTRY MIX WILL BE ALONG AND WESTOF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER IN SOUTHEAST MISSOURI, AND IN SOUTHERNILLINOIS, ALONG AND WEST OF INTERSTATE 57.ACCORDING TO THE MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, SOME ROADSOVER PARTS OF SOUTHEAST MISSOURI WERE PARTIALLY COVERED WITH AWINTRY MIX OVERNIGHT. DRIVERS HEADING OUT THIS MORNING INSOUTHEAST MISSOURI SHOULD EXERCISE CAUTION AND ALLOW EXTRA TIME TOREACH THEIR DESTINATION.TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED TO GRADUALLY WARM AS THE MORNINGPROGRESSES, SO ANY WINTRY MIX SHOULD TURN BACK TO RAIN BY THEMIDDLE OF THE MORNING, LESSENING ANY FURTHER TRAVEL CONCERNS.

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First Amendment panel to take place in Paducah - WPSD Local 6

Guest column: First Amendment on the docket at the Supreme Court – The Mercury

Kendra Espinoza, a single mother of two young girls, never dreamed that sending her daughters to a Christian school in Kalispell, Montana, would lead her to the national stage. But on Wednesday, her lawsuit, Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, will be argued before the U.S. Supreme Court, and its far-reaching implications could impact Pennsylvanians education options.

Espinoza homeschooled her daughters until her husband unexpectedly left, forcing her to enroll them in the local public school. The school wasnt a good fit for her daughters they werent thriving. Stillwater Christian School seemed like the perfect solution, but tuition was more than she could afford. Still, she worked extra jobs, held a big yard sale, and raffled quilts to come up with the money. Her older daughter even mowed lawns to contribute.

It was barely enough.

Then, Espinoza learned of a recently enacted program in Montana, similar to Pennsylvanias tax credit scholarships, that could help her afford tuition for future schoolyears. Her glimmer of hope was short lived, though. Montanas program bars religious schools, and the state refused to grant her daughters scholarships.

Espinoza felt that amounted to discrimination. She and two other moms in similar situations sued the department with the help of nonprofit law firm, the Institute for Justice. But the Montana Supreme Court doubled down, ruling the entire scholarship program unconstitutional in 2018.

The families appealed and are now before the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that ending the scholarship program because it included religious schools violates the First Amendment.

At issue is the Montana constitutions Blaine Amendment, which prohibits the government from giving public funds to religious schools. There are similar provisions in 36 other state constitutions, including right here in Pennsylvania. These amendments trace their roots to the late 1800s, when anti-Catholic sentiment was rampant and protestant legislators sought to starve them of public funds. Congressman James Blaine and many other anti-Catholic legislators required prospective states to adopt Blaine Amendments in order to be admitted to the union and persuaded many existing states to adopt similar amendments.

Now, the Supreme Court will decide if these provisions violate the U.S. Constitution.

The issues presented in Espinoza are not new to the Court. In Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, the Supreme Court upheld an Ohio school voucher program, ruling that it was neutral with respect to religion since parents not the government are the ones directing government aid to the schools.

And in Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Inc. v. Comer, the Court found that Missouris denial of a church application for new playground surfacing was a violation of the churchs First Amendment protections by denying a generally available benefit solely on account of the [applicants] religious identity.

If the Court follows the same logic, Espinoza and the other Montana moms stand a good chance of winning. Similar to the situation in Zelman, the Montana program was impartial to religion and was designed to help disadvantaged students. Moreover, the ruling in Trinity Lutheran created a precedent for greater scrutiny when the state excludes a church from public benefits.

With these cases setting the stage, the Supreme Court has the opportunity in Espinoza to defend the rights of parents to access public programs without comprising their constitutional rights. As a result, anti-Catholic Blaine Amendments in Montana and dozens of other states, may be laid to rest.

Such an outcome will liberate students across the country including in Pennsylvania to pursue broader educational choices that satisfy their needs. While Pennsylvanias tax credit scholarships pass constitutional muster, removing our Blaine Amendment will open the door to new educational freedoms for students.

If we win at the Supreme Court, it makes a difference for my girls and for so many other families, says Kendra Espinoza. I believe school choice is important for all families, not just for myself and my children. Its my right as a parent to choose how my children are educated not the governments right.

Colleen Hroncich is a senior policy analyst for the Commonwealth Foundation (CommonwealthFoundation.org), Pennsylvanias free market think tank.

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Guest column: First Amendment on the docket at the Supreme Court - The Mercury

City of Scottsdale and The Satanic Temple take the stands in First Amendment-based case – FOX 10 News Phoenix

City of Scottsdale and satanic temple group take the stands in First Amendment-based case

The trial between the city of Scottsdale and the satanic temple is underway. Three years ago, the Scottsdale City Council denied a satanic temple member's request to deliver an invocation at its meeting. Now, the satanic temple argues Wednesday in court that its First Amendment right was violated.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - The trial between the city of Scottsdale and The Satanic Temple is underway.

Three years ago, the Scottsdale City Council denied arequest by a member ofThe Satanic Temple to deliver an invocation at its meeting. Now, The Satanic Temple argues Wednesday in court that its First Amendment right was violated.

The group had no ties to the city, which is required to be able to give that invocation. Michelle Short, a group member, was supposed to give that prayer. She was on the stand and claimed several other groups outside of the city were able to give their prayers.

She listed a few churches that did not have addresses within the city limits there.

Short admitted that during cross-examination thatshe is not a member of the Scottsdale community. She also admitted to never contacting anyone within the city, any representative, about her beliefs and what type of invocation that she was wanting to give.

She argues that she feared for her safety should she havedisclosed it prior to the meeting.

Scottsdale City Manager,Jim Thompson, also took the stand, saying that other groups had substantial connections to the city, which is why they were able to say their prayers, and claims the satanic temple group didn'thave a substantial connection to the city.

He says others in the past did not live withinthe city limits at the time, but they did have those strong ties.

The court session will resume Thursday morning.

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City of Scottsdale and The Satanic Temple take the stands in First Amendment-based case - FOX 10 News Phoenix

Education choice could shift the black vote | Editorial Columns – Brunswick News

Sometimes the timing of events is so auspicious that it is hard to attribute it to coincidence.

The week of Jan. 26 is National School Choice week.

First observed in 2011, for the 10th time, events will take place around the nation that are focused on raising awareness about parental choice in K-12 education and the options available to parents and children.

A few days before National School Choice week, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, which will address the constitutionality of the so-called Blaine Amendments, arguably the greatest obstacle to school choice the nation faces.

Named after Rep. James G. Blaine, who attempted but failed to enact a federal ban on funding religious schools, 37 states subsequently adopted the provision in their state constitutions.

In the case of Espinoza, the state of Montana passed a law allowing dollar-for-dollar tax credits for funds contributed to scholarship programs that parents could use for paying for education in private schools. In that some of these funds would be used for religious schools, the constitutionality of the program was challenged, and the state wound up trashing the whole program.

The hope of many, including me, is that the court will find the rationale behind the Blaine Amendments unconstitutional. It will be a victory for both religious freedom and education freedom.

It is perverse that the First Amendment, which is meant to guarantee religious freedom, has become a tool for discrimination against religion.

After all, when public funds are available for education of any kind and some parents use those funds for a religious school, this is a private choice, not a government mandate. How can this in any way be understood as government establishing religion? It most certainly interferes with the free exercise of religion, which the First Amendment protects.

A decision wiping out the Blaine Amendment prohibitions will also be another reason to congratulate President Donald Trump, who has given us this solidly conservative Supreme Court.

Its also another factor in why black voters may realign their political allegiances.

Education freedom is an issue that deeply divides Republicans and Democrats. And it is an issue on which blacks are more aligned with Republicans.

In a May 2019 poll by Education Next, 70% of black Democrats expressed support for targeted vouchers, 60% for universal vouchers and 55% for charter schools.

It makes sense. Black parents understand the importance of education. Yet their kids are trapped in the worst public schools in the country.

Black parents understand the simple logic of education freedom and the benefits of parents having the power to choose where to send their children to school.

President Trump is now advancing Education Freedom Scholarships, which would provide for up to $5 billion in annual tax credits for donations made to scholarships that fund education-choice opportunities.

The Democratic presidential candidates across the board want to slam the door on charter schools and education choice. They all see one answer to K-12 education: more federal dollars for public school monopolies. Democrats have their eye on political contributions from teachers unions, not on what children, particularly black children, need.

The electoral model that Republicans need to follow for 2020 is that of the 2018 Florida governors race. Ron DeSantis defeated his black opponent, liberal Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum, by a margin of 0.4%. DeSantis got 14% of the black vote and 18% of the black female vote. By most analyses, the explanation for this unusually high black support is that DeSantis is a stalwart on education freedom and parental choice.

Education could, and should, be a defining issue in 2020, and be what makes a critical difference in moving black votes into the Republican column.

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Education choice could shift the black vote | Editorial Columns - Brunswick News

Hearing Wednesday: EFF Urges Court To Rule That Blogger’s Opinion of Open Source Licensing Agreement is Protected by the First Amendment – EFF

San Francisco, CaliforniaOn Wednesday, January 22, at 9 am, EFF Staff Attorney Jamie Williams will tell a federal appeals court that a lower court correctly dismissed a defamation lawsuit against a blogger, finding that his criticisms of a companys business practices were opinions about an unsettled legal issue protected by the First Amendment.

EFF is representing Bruce Perens, founder of the Open Source movement, who criticized restrictions Open Source Security Inc. (OSS) placed on customers of its security patch software for the Linux Operating System. OSS sued Perens in response. The lower court found that OSSs lawsuit not only failed to plausibly state a claim for defamation, but also that it ran afoul of a California statute that protects defendants from SLAPPs, short for Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation. SLAPPs are malicious lawsuits that aim to silence critics by forcing victims to spend time and money to fight the lawsuit itselfdraining their resources and chilling their right to free speech.

At the hearing on Wednesday, Williams will tell a panel of Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals judges that Perenss blog post merely expressed his opinion about an unsettled legal issue of concern to a worldwide Open Source community, and that Perens disclosed the factual basis for that opinion. OSS, which disagrees with Perens, was free to state its disagreement publicly, but it was not free to sue Mr. Perens for exercising his First Amendment right, Williams will tell the court.

Read EFFs filing in the Perens case:https://www.eff.org/document/oss-v-perens-answering-brief

WHO: EFF Staff Attorney Jamie Williams

WHAT:OSS v. Perens

WHERE:Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals-James R. Browning CourthouseCourtroom 1, 3rd Floor, Room 33895 7th Street, San Francisco CA 94103

WHEN:WednesdayJanuary 219 am

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Hearing Wednesday: EFF Urges Court To Rule That Blogger's Opinion of Open Source Licensing Agreement is Protected by the First Amendment - EFF

Citizens United and the Big Picture – Wisconsin Examiner

As this weeks floor sessions began in both the Senate and the Assembly on Tuesday, a group of legislators and campaign finance reform advocates held a sparsely attended press conference in the Capitol to mark the 10th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Courts Citizens United decision, and to point out how money in politics has hijacked our democracy.

A resolution introduced by Assembly Democrats from Madison, Rep. Chris Taylor and Rep. Lisa Subeck, joined by Rep. Melissa Sargent, would amend the Wisconsin Constitution to make it clear that money is not speech, and corporations do not have a First Amendment right to unlimited political spending.

The resolutions authors dont have any illusions that it will make it to the floor this session. But it is directly tied to pretty much every issue that comes up and doesnt in our state Legislature.

This is the backdrop to the frustrating politics here in Madison and across the nation.

Citizens United opened the floodgates to money in politics. In Wisconsin, Matt Rothschild of the campaign finance watchdog group Wisconsin Democracy Campaign pointed out, independent expenditure groups have increased their spending by 1700% in state governors races over the last 10 years. Meanwhile expenditures by outside groups has grown five-fold.

That means that the voices of the citizens of Wisconsin are completely drowned out, Rothschild said.

Sen. Dave Hansen (D-Green Bay) pointed out the link between Citizens United and Legislative inaction on a variety of issues that are important to the public.

If you want to know why common sense gun safety measures favored by a majority of Wisconsinites of every political stripe have not passed, its because the NRA has blocked the way, Hansen explained.

Wisconsinites also support universal, affordable health care. That wont happen as long as the insurance industry is opposed, Hansen said. People want clean drinking water, safe places for their kids to swim and fish. But before you get your hopes up that all that talk of clean water will amount to anything, you may want to talk to WMC [Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce] first, because they would be the one that would have to allow it and its highly unlikely that theyll do that.

Why are we siphoning money out of our cash-strapped public school system to cover tuition at private schools? Among other school-privatization lobbyists, Betsy de Vos group American Federation for Children spent $7 million over the last 10 years to try to elect officials here who will do their bidding, Rothschild explained. State legislators, he added, have become water boys for the Koch brothers and Betsy De Vos.

The Koch brothers, Charles and David, who died last year, were the billionaires who businesses helped them finance Americans for Prosperity, a political advocacy group, and the political aspirations of numerous Republicans

Taylor connected the flood of money into political campaigns to other efforts to hijack democracy, including Wisconsins partisan gerrymandering, the voter purge, voter ID, and other obstruction laws that prevent people who should be able to vote from voting.

Taylor asked people to imagine if the Founders had drafted language in the U.S. Constitution that said your free speech rights are conditioned on how much money you have. That, she said, is the effect of Citizens United.

Taylor and Subeck are circulating their resolution, seeking cosponsors. Hansen and Sen. Chris Larson (D-Milwaukee) will sponsor a Senate version.

Its only in the halls of this building that this is a partisan issue, said Subeck, acknowledging that the measure has precious little chance of moving forward under the current Republican leadership.

Its the ultimate Catch 22, she said. As long as you have big money in politics, its hard to make change. But its hard to get the money out of politics without changing the leadership.

Still, she is optimistic about the long term.

She compared the state constitutional amendment effort to bills in other states that seek to make abortion illegal, in case Roe v. Wade is overturned.

But in this case, should Citizens United be overturned, we dont want to be in the position to say, Well, well allow it in our state. This would protect us.

Were passing something thats looking at a what-if, Subeck added. But we also believe that Citizens United Will be overturned. People are getting more and more fed up about government being controlled by financial interests.

Evidence of that discontent includes the 15 referenda across Wisconsin on the April 7 ballot supporting overturning Citizens United.

One hundred years ago, Fighting Bob La Follette said the cure for the ills of democracy is more democracy, Matt Rothschild concluded. We need more democracy in this country. We need more democracy in Wisconsin. We need more democracy right now. Lets take the cure.

And with that, the reporters in attendance filed out to cover the low-key discussion of noncontroversial issues in the Assembly and Senate.

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Citizens United and the Big Picture - Wisconsin Examiner

Michelle Carter, convicted in texting-suicide case, to be released – ABC News

January 22, 2020, 5:15 PM

4 min read

Michelle Carter, the woman who sent texts to her boyfriend urging him to kill himself when they were both teenagers, is scheduled to be released from prison early due to good behavior.

Carter, now 23, has been a "model inmate" at the Bristol County House of Correction in Dartmouth, Massachusetts, since she arrived in February 2019, Jonathan Darling, public information officer for the Bristol County Sheriff's Office, told ABC News. Carter is expected to be released Thursday during jail business hours -- between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Inmates can earn "good time" -- up to 10 days a month -- by attending programs, having a job and avoiding disciplinary problems, Darling said. Carter would attend some vocational and educational programs and held a job serving meals in the cafeteria.

In addition, she was "polite" to jail staff and volunteers and got along well with fellow inmates, Darling said.

"We've had no problems with her at all," he added.

Carter was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2017 after texts she sent to her then-boyfriend, Conrad Roy, before he died by suicide in 2014, were deemed "reckless" by a Massachusetts juvenile court judge.

Carter was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison with 15 months served and the rest suspended. She'll remain on probation for five years after she's released.

Her case was the first in which someone was convicted of manslaughter for using his or her words.

The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal for Carter last week after her attorneys argued that a conviction based on her words alone was a violation of the First Amendment.

In September, Carter was denied parole by the Massachusetts Parole Board, as members stated they were "troubled that Ms. Carter not only encouraged Mr. Conrad to take his own life, she actively prevented others from intervening in his suicide."

An attorney for Carter did not immediately provide comment to ABC News regarding her release.

ABC News' Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.

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Michelle Carter, convicted in texting-suicide case, to be released - ABC News

It’s time to say goodbye to NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope. Here’s why. – Space.com

How does NASA know it's time to end a mission? For the Spitzer Space Telescope, the agency can blame it on the spacecraft's juice.

Specifically, Spitzer's struggle comes from trying to balance charging its battery, communicating with Earth and keeping its instruments cool. When it launched in 2003, those tasks didn't interfere much with each other, but the longer the mission continued, the bigger a challenge it became. And so, on Jan. 30, more than 16 years after its launch, NASA will send the spacecraft its final commands.

"There is a natural end to the mission and we are reaching it," Luisa Rebull, an astronomer at the NASA Infrared Science Archive at the California Institute of Technology, which hosts Spitzer's data, told Space.com.

Related: Gallery: The Infrared Universe Seen by Spitzer Telescope

Spitzer was designed to focus on infrared light, which lets scientists see through dust that obscures the view of other types of telescopes. During its tenure, it has used that talent to tackle astronomical puzzles like how stars and planets form.

"We see star-forming regions, we see galaxies forming and merging and just a whole cornucopia of objects in space that are not visible to our eyes in the optical, but are visible in the infrared," Suzanne Dodd, former mission manager for Spitzer, said during a news conference held today (Jan. 22).

That's because of something special about Spitzer.

"One of the unique things about Spitzer that makes this all possible is its orbit," Dodd said. Spitzer orbits the sun, tagging along behind Earth and slipping a bit farther away from us each year. "It's drifting from the Earth and the moon, so it's not getting the infrared radiation that the Earth and moon system create." Without that interference, Spitzer can gather better data.

But eventually, that orbit means the spacecraft will be on the opposite side of the sun from Earth for a long period of time a clear no-go for space communications. Right now, Spitzer is about a third of an orbit behind Earth, so the sun isn't yet blocking communications.

But even now, the logistics of the mission are becoming challenging. The farther Spitzer lags behind Earth, the more dramatically the spacecraft has to twist itself in order to communicate back to its scientists. That stresses the spacecraft's solar-charged batteries, Rebull said, and when they finally get to recharge, the batteries warm up.

"That's not good when you're trying to detect little bits of heat," she said that would be the infrared light Spitzer targets, which is essentially radiated heat.

There's a second hot problem with the maneuver: The more the spacecraft twists, the more sunlight reaches part of the spacecraft that are supposed to stay cool. The longer the mission continues, the more time Spitzer scientists lose to this process. "You have to wait for the batteries to recharge and then everything to cool down again before you can keep observing," Rebull said.

Eventually, the spacecraft won't be able to make that maneuver at all, she added it would run out of power while sending data back to Earth. That's why NASA made the decision to shut the telescope down. Spitzer will gather its last observations on Jan. 29 and turn off the next day.

Then, scientists will be left with hopes that another space telescope dedicated to the infrared will someday take its place and, of course, with the data Spitzer has gathered over 16 years. It's a melancholy time for mission scientists, but not an unexpected one.

"I know it's just a space robot," Rebull said. "But he's our space robot."

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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It's time to say goodbye to NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Here's why. - Space.com

Solar Orbiter, a new mission to the sun by Europe and NASA, to launch next month – Space.com

A new sun-studying spacecraft is set to get off the ground soon.

Solar Orbiter, a mission led by the European Space Agency (ESA) with NASA participation, is scheduled to launch atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket on Feb. 5 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.

The liftoff will come just 18 months after NASA's Parker Solar Probe (PSP) took to the skies, kicking off its historic sun-kissing mission. PSP has set the all-time spacecraft speed record and gotten nearer to our star about 15 million miles (24 million kilometers) than any other mission in history.

Related: NASA's Parker Solar Probe Mission to the Sun in Pictures

And PSP will continue to break these records; it will get closer and closer to the sun over its seven-year scientific life, ultimately zooming within a mere 3.8 million miles (6.1 million km) of the solar surface.

Solar Orbiter won't try to match those superlatives; on the closest-approach phases of its highly elliptical orbit, the probe will still be about 26 million miles (42 million km) from the sun. But the ESA-NASA spacecraft will do some special things of its own.

For starters, Solar Orbiter will look directly at the sun, something that PSP doesn't do (and you shouldn't, either). In addition, the ESA-NASA probe will zoom through space substantially out of the ecliptic, the plane in which the solar system's big planets circle.

This unique perspective will allow Solar Orbiter to get good looks at our star's polar regions, said Holly Gilbert, NASA deputy project scientist for Solar Orbiter.

"We've never been able to image the poles of the sun," Gilbert said last month during a news conference at the annual fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) in San Francisco. "That is extremely important for helioseismology, but also for looking at the global magnetic field of the sun. In order to model space weather activity and activity in general on the sun, we need that full global picture of the magnetic field."

Solar Orbiter should flesh out our understanding of the sun in multiple ways. The 3,970-lb. (1,800 kilograms) spacecraft is outfitted with 10 different science instruments, which it will use "to examine how the sun creates and controls the heliosphere, the vast bubble of charged particles blown by the solar wind into the interstellar medium," ESA officials wrote in a mission description.

"The spacecraft will combine in situ and remote sensing observations to gain new information about the solar wind, the heliospheric magnetic field, solar energetic particles, transient interplanetary disturbances and the sun's magnetic field," they added.

There are numerous parallels between the PSP and Solar Orbiter missions. Like PSP, for example, the ESA-led probe will use a series of Venus flybys (plus one of Earth) to reach its operational orbit, which will range from inside Mercury's path to beyond the orbit of Earth. Solar Orbiter will gather most of its data during its close-approach "perihelion passes," as PSP does, and the primary missions of both craft are scheduled to last seven years.

The data gathered by the two probes should mesh well, members of both mission teams have stressed. For example, PSP and Solar Orbiter will enable researchers to study the same solar plasma in detail at two very different points in space close to the sun's surface and much farther out, in Earth's neighborhood.

"And the fact that [Solar] Orbiter can also measure composition will allow us to determine where on the sun the events happened that created the solar wind that we will be seeing," Marco Velli of UCLA, the PSP observatory scientist, said during the AGU news conference.

Similarly, measurements by the two probes should result in a better understanding of the solar magnetic field, Velli added.

"So, we're really facing a decade, I think, with these two missions and, of course, the new ground-based instrumentation, the high-resolution solar telescopes that are about to be operated by the NSF [the U.S. National Science Foundation] and, a little bit further in time, in Europe that we will really unravel solar magnetism in itself," Velli said.

"Magnetism is fundamental to all of astrophysics and the universe itself," he added. "And therefore, I think we can safely say that, with the accomplishment of these two missions, our understanding of what's called the basic astrophysical plasma of the solar system and the universe will have changed entirely."

Solar Orbiter is a medium-class mission, which means that ESA's contribution will be about 500 million euros ($554 million at current exchange rates). PSP's total price tag is around $1.5 billion.

Mike Wall's book about the search for alien life, "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), is out now. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

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Solar Orbiter, a new mission to the sun by Europe and NASA, to launch next month - Space.com

Meet the students helping NASA collect water on the Moon and Mars – Mustang News

The odds were against the team of five students when they submitted their project proposal to NASAs Moon to Mars Ice & Prospecting Challenge last month. They were a first-time team that had found out about the challenge last October, putting them at a disadvantage to applicants from other universities who had been preparing in advance.

Yet despite these obstacles, Cal Poly became one of 10 finalists selected among 28 schools to participate in the competition.

The team consists of five mechanical engineering seniors Alex Krenitsky, Chris Boone, Westin McHaney, Aaron Erickson and Ryan Locatelli who applied to the competition as part of their senior project. Their mission? To build a robot that can drill through rocks and sand, and extract clean water from the ice beneath it while simultaneously taking measurements.

The goal is for the robot to allow NASA to put humans back on the moon, and eventually on Mars.

Being able to work with NASA is kind of an honor in itself, Krenitsky said.

In addition to finishing an aerospace internship with Boeing, Krenitsky said he has gained hands-on experience building things as a shop technician in the mechanical engineering department.

I think one of the advantages [our] team has over other colleges is we have actually made things with our hands before and we have an intuitive knowledge of how long its going to take to put this together, Krenitsky said.

Locatelli said he is interested in system controls and automation, and is excited to explore that area through the NASA challenge.

Theres a lot of programming a lot of moving parts and I think dealing with that will give me a good idea if thats something I want to continue doing, Locatelli said.

Initially strangers who were placed on the same team, the students said they have been able to work together seamlessly from the start. After many sleepless nights spent working together, they have formed close friendships.

According to project advisor and College of Engineering professor Peter Schuster, the team totally impressed him.

They have had to navigate the differences [between the structure of the class and the NASA challenge] and theyve been very good about that, Schuster said. Theyre kind of overachievers.

He said he noticed the different working styles of the team members have not been an obstacle like he has seen in previous teams.

Theyre flexible with each other, they give each other the space that they need, but they also collaborate and theyve divided the project up into parts, Schuster said.

The team submitted their project proposal for their system, Sub-lunar Tap-Yielding eXplorer (STYX), to NASA in an eight-page report in December 2019. Instead of using one tool to drill and extract water, their design featured several tools and a tool changer, which team members say caught NASAs attention for creativity and originality.

The students received an initial $5,000 from NASA, a $3,100 grant, and $1,000 from the College of Engineerings Mechanical Engineering department to fund the project.

If selected, the team must assemble their design and submit another report in March. If they are approved then, the students will receive an additional $5,000 from NASA, and the opportunity to demonstrate their prototype in the competition at NASAs Langley Research Center in June.

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Meet the students helping NASA collect water on the Moon and Mars - Mustang News

NASA’s Spitzer Telescope Revealed Colors Unseeable By The Human Eye. It Retires Next Week – LAist

This infrared image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows a cloud of gas and dust full of bubbles. (NASA / JPL-Caltech)

Next week, the last of four NASA space-based observatories will retire. The Spitzer Space Telescope brought the universe into a new light (literally), revealing images of planets, solar systems, stars and more in infrared renderings that human eyes aren't able to see otherwise.

"Infrared light provides unique perspectives on the universe," said Michael Warner, a project scientist for Spitzer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. "In the infrared, we have some unique things we can do to augment our understanding."

To that end, Spitzer - which launched in 2003 - allowed scientists to see stars in distant galaxies, planets that might be too cool to produce much light, and parts of the universe that are otherwise blocked by small particles.

"We call these the old, the cold, and the dirty," said Warner.

The other space observatories in Spitzer's class include the Hubble Space Telescope, Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. In 2016, NASA announced that Spitzer and Hubble had identified GN-z11, the most distant galaxy scientists had observed to date.

Spitzer will retire on Jan. 30. Here are some of the images it has taken over the years. Live long and prosper, old friend.

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NASA's Spitzer Telescope Revealed Colors Unseeable By The Human Eye. It Retires Next Week - LAist

What will NASA’s Mars 2020 rover be called? There’s 155 names on the shortlist. – Space.com

And then there were 155.

The competition to name NASA's next Mars rover has entered the home stretch, with the space agency culling the field from 28,000 student entries to 155 semifinalists.

The 2,300-lb. (1,040 kilograms) robot, which currently goes by Mars 2020, is scheduled to launch this July and touch down inside the Red Planet's Jezero Crater in February 2021. Mars 2020 will search for signs of ancient life, characterize the geology of its surroundings, collect and cache samples for eventual return to Earth and test out tech that will aid human exploration of the Red Planet, among other tasks.

Related: NASA's Mars Rover 2020 Mission in Pictures

And it will do this work with a much catchier name.

"This rover is the first leg of a round-trip mission to Mars that will advance understanding in key science fields like astrobiology," Lori Glaze, director of NASA's Planetary Science Division, said in a statement Monday (Jan. 13). "This contest is a cool way to engage the next generation and encourage careers in all STEM [science, technology, engineering and math] fields. The chosen name will help define this rover's unique personality among our fleet of Martian spacecraft."

NASA selected 4,700 volunteer judges to sort through the deluge of submissions from K-12 students around the country. The newly announced semifinalists proposed a wide variety of names, from the grand (Excelsior) to the playful (Dusty).

NASA's three previous Mars rovers Spirit, Opportunity and Curiosity were also named by students. Many of the Mars 2020 semifinalists went down a similar path as those winners, proposing monikers such as Ingenuity, Imagination, Inspiration and Courage.

You can find all 155 semifinalists on the Mars 2020 naming-contest website here.

The next cull will whittle the field down to nine finalists, who will get a nice intellectual reward for making it that far. The nine students "will talk with a panel of experts, including Glaze, NASA astronaut Jessica Watkins, NASA JPL [Jet Propulsion Laboratory] rover driver Nick Wiltsie and Clara Ma, who proposed the name for the Mars Science Laboratory rover, Curiosity, as a sixth-grade student in 2009," NASA officials wrote in the statement.

The public will be able to vote for their favorite of the nine finalist names starting in late January, NASA officials added. This public vote will be one factor considered in the selection of the final name, which will be announced in early March.

Mike Wall's book about the search for alien life, "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), is out now. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

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What will NASA's Mars 2020 rover be called? There's 155 names on the shortlist. - Space.com

NASA news: Beautiful Hubble snap reveals a colossal galaxy heading to the Milky Way – Express.co.uk

Andromeda can be seen in exquisite detail in the NASA photograph. This is because the image is actually the result of a total of 7,398 exposures taken over 411 individual pointings made by the Hubble Space Telescope.

NASA wrote in a statement: This image of our nearest major galactic neighbour, M3 also known as the Andromeda galaxy is the largest Hubble mosaic to date.

This image of our nearest major galactic neighbour, M3 also known as the Andromeda galaxy is the largest Hubble mosaic to date

NASA

The 1.5 billion pixels in the mosaic reveal over 100 million stars and thousands of star clusters embedded in a section of the Andromeda galaxy.

Despite the fact Andromeda is more than two million light-years away, constant upgrades to Hubble allow the telescope enough power to resolve individual stars in this 61,000-light-year-long stretch of the disk.

NASA added: Its like photographing a beach and resolving individual grains of sand.

READ MORE:NASA unveils stunning photo of ISS transiting Sun

The image shows Hubble tracing densely-packed stars extending from the innermost hub of the galaxy, to the left of the photo.

Moving out from this central galactic bulge, the panorama sweeps across lanes of stars and dust to the sparser outer disk.

Cooler, yellowish stars dominate the galaxys core, toward the lower left.

The blue, ring-like feature wrapping from the upper left to the lower right is a spiral arm with numerous clusters of young, blue stars and star-forming regions.

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And the dark silhouettes trace out complex cosmic dust structures.

M31 is located in the constellation Andromeda and is best observed in November.

Boasting an apparent magnitude of 3.1, the galaxy can be seen with the naked eye, even in areas with moderate light pollution.

Because the star cluster is such an easily observed feature in the night sky, no-one knows who discovered the Andromeda galaxy.

However, Persian astronomer Abd al-rahman al-Sufis The Book of Fixed Stars from the year 964 contains the first known report of the object.

The emergence of the cosmic mosaic coincides with the news two ancient migration events took place in the Andromeda galaxy.

Astronomers have uncovered two historic events in which the Andromeda Galaxy underwent major changes to its structure.

The findings shed light not only on the evolution and formation of the Andromeda Galaxy, but also to our own Milky Way.

Large galaxies such as ours are believed to grow through repeated merging with smaller, dwarf galaxies.

Astronomers have uncovered evidence for two major migration events in the history of our large galactic neighbour.

The more recent migration event occurred a few billion years ago and the older event many billions of years prior.

The evidence for the two events comes from galactic archaeology the use of the motions and properties of stars and stellar clusters to reconstruct the formation and evolutionary history of galaxies.

Professor Geraint Lewis of the University of Sydney, a co-author of the study, said: By tracing the faint remains of dwarf galaxies with star clusters, weve been able to recreate the way the Andromeda Galaxy drew them in at different times, from whats known as the cosmic web of matter that threads the Universe.

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NASA news: Beautiful Hubble snap reveals a colossal galaxy heading to the Milky Way - Express.co.uk

NASA, SpaceX and Boeing in Twitter love-in as space rivals put tensions to bed – Express.co.uk

On January 19, SpaceX and NASA conducted a launch of the Crew Dragon, which will one day ferry astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS), to demonstrate its lift-off capabilities. The mission was a resounding success, with NASA chief Jim Bridenstine stating he was thrilled with the outcome.

SpaceX boss Elon Musk added it was a picture perfect mission, saying it went as well as one can possibly expect.

Now, SpaceX, NASA and Boeing, another of the space agencys clients helping to get astronauts to the ISS and competing with Mr Musks firm, have become embroiled in a Twitter love-in as they all take turns to praise one another.

Following the success of the launch, Boeing sent out a tweet to its 58,800 followers, stating: Congratulations, @SpaceX team! @Commercial_Crew is that much closer to returning crew launch capabilities to the US in support of our @NASA customer.

Mr Bridenstine appreciated the camaraderie between NASAs two clients, responding to the Boeing tweet saying: This is the America I know and love! Great competitors congratulating each other.

Many fans were also thrilled with the love-in, with one appreciating the stark differences with the space race of the 1960s at the height of the Cold War between the US and Russia.

David Willis said on Twitter: A space race where the two sides congratulate each other instead of threatening to nuke each other. A lot better than the 60s!

Another said this sort of competition will help the US re-establish itself as the dominant force in the space race.

Brett Messinger said on Twitter: Space launches are very good money and I am sure if one or the other could win out they would try too.

Competing is good and strong competition is better so glad we have the best in the world. China may have pulled ahead but we will catch up soon.

However, it has not always been so peaceful between NASA and its clients.

READ MORE:NASA reveals Puerto Rico earthquake damage in satellite images

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NASA, SpaceX and Boeing in Twitter love-in as space rivals put tensions to bed - Express.co.uk

LPGA: No breach in the way Nasa Hataoka marked her ball at TOC – Golfweek

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. As Nasa Hataoka finished up regulation play at the Diamond Resorts Tournament of Champions, Twitter was aflutter about the way she marked her ball on the 11th hole.

A viewer had taped part of what transpired on the green at Tranquilo Golf Course and questioned whether or not the 21-year-old had replaced the ball on the wrong side of the coin.

The LPGA confirmed there was no breach, saying that the rules official watching the telecast saw no violation. In fact, the fans video cut off part of Hataokas routine, in which she moves the ball from in front of the coin to behind the coin and then back to in front of the coin.

Tournament of Champions:Photos|Leaderboard|Celebrities

Hataoka, a three-time winner on the LPGA who is currently No. 6 in the world, was never questioned about it as the official said no rule was broken. The Japanese player went into a playoff against Inbee Park and Gaby Lopez. Park was the first to bow out after making a bogey on the par-3 18th.

The playoff was suspended at 6:04 p.m. due to darkness. Hataoka and Lopez will return at 8 a.m. on Monday to resume play.

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LPGA: No breach in the way Nasa Hataoka marked her ball at TOC - Golfweek

NASA spacewalk LIVE stream: How to watch NASA’s all-female spacewalk live online today – Express.co.uk

Todays spacewalk marks the second time this year astronauts will brave the vacuum of space outside the International Space Station (ISS). You can watch the action unfold in the embedded NASA TV stream below.

Live coverage of the spacewalk will see astronauts Jessica Meir and Christina Koch don their bulky spacesuits.

The NASA astronauts last ventured outside of the orbital laboratory on Wednesday, January 15.

The all-female team is tasked with replacing the batteries that store and distribute the space stations power.

NASA will stream the spacewalk live online from around 10.30am GMT (5.30am EST) today (January 20).

READ MORE:NASA proposes using MUSHROOMS for Mars habitats

The NASA spacewalk will be broadcast on NASA TV, through the space agencys website and YouTube channel.

You can tune in to NASA TV via the embedded video player above, courtesy of NASA.

In addition, NASAs round-the-clock broadcasts are free to watch on UStream and terrestrial television.

Live coverage will begin 10.30am GMT (5.30am EST) and the spacewalk itself will kick off at 11.50am GMT (6.50am EST) today.

Starting in October 2019, astronauts on the ISS have embarked on a series of spacewalks to upgrade the space stations batteries.

The stations solar arrays collect energy during the brief periods of daylight and the batteries then redistribute that power when in the nightside.

NASAs Mark Garcia said: This is the second of two battery replacement spacewalks in five days to complete the upgrade of batteries that store and distribute power generated by the stations solar arrays on the stations port truss.

Meir and Koch will replace nickel-hydrogen batteries with newer, more powerful lithium-ion batteries for the power channel on one pair of the stations solar arrays.

The batteries were delivered to the ISS in September last year on board a Japanese H-II Transfer Vehicle.

A similar set of battery replacements was last carried out in January 2017.

Before todays event, Mrs Koch shared some of the behind-the-scenes preparations.

The astronaut tweeted from space photos of her braiding Dr Meirs hair to fit in their NASA-issue spacesuits.

Mrs Koch tweeted: Spacewalk time! After all the technical studying, airlock prepping, and conferencing, @Astro_Jessica and I multitask as we do our final briefing.

Spacewalk hair pro tip: Double braid is the way to go fits snug under the com cap, out of the helmet seal, and no flyaways!

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NASA spacewalk LIVE stream: How to watch NASA's all-female spacewalk live online today - Express.co.uk

NASA think we may have been reading the wrong star signs and horoscopes for years – Daily Post

Whether you take astrology seriously or not, we all know what star sign we are.

But a recent mathematical calculation by an expert in astrology, followed by a report from NASA, has put that all into question.

Revealing the constellations are no longer in the same place as they were during the Babylonian period around 3,000 years ago, it was suggested the zodiac should have new dates.

This meant people thought their horoscope might not be what they thought it originally was.

But some astrologers have since shut the theories down, and have reassured horoscope fans there is nothing to fear.

Here, we explain it all.

Fears were originally raised in 2011 when astrologist Professor Parke Kunkle calculated an astrological phenomenon.

He suggested the zodiac system was all wrong and that the zodiac should have new dates.

He said the Earth's "wobbly" orbit meant it no longer aligned to the stars in the same way it did during the Babylonian period, 3,000 years ago - when the signs of the zodiac were first drawn up.

His theory went viral - with people worrying about what it meant for them and sparking concerns they had possibility spent years checking the wrong horoscope.

Five years after Kunkle's theory was published, NASA sparked even more concern in January 2016 when it published an information piece based on the same theory.

It revealed how scientists have discovered that today, the sky has shifted since the Babylonian period.

It also explained how the Earth's axis - the North Pole - doesn't point in quite the same direction as it did 3,000 years ago - meaning the constellations are no longer in the same place they were.

As a result, NASA revealed how some would have been born under a sign that was in fact one constellation earlier.

Over the years, astrologers have discovered that stars do appear to move because of the wobble in the rotation of the Earth.

Because of this, over thousands of years, the dates where the sun appears to move in front of each constellation of stars has altered by a few days.

The process is known as 'precession'.

Astrologist's have to include the effects of precession to make sure long term predictions are accurate.

However, experts say the shift has no bearing on the 'tropical zodiac' system - based on seasons and their relationships to the cycles of the sun - which is typically used by western astrologers.

So in a nutshell, the stars don't move, but can appear as though they have over the course of centuries - which lead to Kunkle to calculate that the Zodiac should have new dates.

The suggestion of a 13th constellation has also been dismissed by astrologers.

According to the Babylonians' own ancient stories, there was in fact a 13th constellation - Ophiuchus. However, it is said they consciously chose to ignore it.

From a scientific point of view, NASA explains how the constellations are all different shapes and sizes - meaning the sun spends different lengths of time lined up with each one.

For example, the line from Earth through the sun points to Virgo for 45 days, while only pointing to Scorpius for seven.

However, to make a tidy match with their 12-month calendar, NASA claim the Babylonians ignored the fact the sun actually moves through 13 constellations.

It says they assigned each of those 12 constellations equal amounts of time - despite the sun being aligned with Ophiuchus for about 18 days each year.

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NASA think we may have been reading the wrong star signs and horoscopes for years - Daily Post

Barbara Jordan Once Won the Australian Open. Really. – The New York Times

On a staircase landing in Barbara Jordans Northern California home, encased in a wide glass frame, is a round silver platter, largely tarnished by age. In simple arced engraving, the plate reads, 1979 Australian Open, Womens Champion, Barbara Jordan.

But the memento is a fake, made by her parents to commemorate their daughters achievement because, in those days, winners did not take home a trophy.

They were appalled that the tournament never gave me a trophy, said an amused Jordan, now 62. So, they found a silver platter at an antique auction and had it engraved for me.

When Jordan won the tournament more than 40 years ago, the Australian Open was the final major of the season, not the first, and a largely ignored stepchild. It has since become a major event, attracting hundreds of thousands of spectators and top players.

But with the tournament about to start, it has been overshadowed by the devastating bushfires that have ravaged the continent, killing people and animals, driving residents from their homes and destroying millions of acres of property.

Smoke from the fires extended to the cities hosting Australian Open warm-up events and prompted concern over the air quality. Australian Open officials were forced to consider contingency plans, including moving matches indoors and altering start times.

Craig Tiley, the Australian Open tournament director and Tennis Australias chief executive, said in a statement that they have committed substantial extra resources to monitor the air quality.

Assessing the likelihood of smoke-induced interruptions is a bit like how we treat heat and rain, he said. We have experts who analyze all available live data as specific to our sites as possible and consult regularly with tournament officials and, in the case of heat and smoke, medical experts.

Players, including Nick Kyrgios of Australia, the former champion Maria Sharapova and the seven-time winner Novak Djokovic, have also responded, donating money for aces served during the Australian summer swing. Another Australian, Ashleigh Barty, who is No. 1 in the world, donated all of her prize money from the Brisbane International.

About 250 players are scheduled to compete starting this week, but years ago players often dismissed the tournament because, until 1987, it was held over the Christmas and New Years holidays; they passed on the extended flight to Melbourne in favor of time at home.

I have a big family, and Christmas was important to us, said Chris Evert, who lost to Evonne Goolagong in the 1974 final and didnt return until 1981. And back then, the Grand Slams didnt hold the importance that they do today It was all about the Virginia Slims tournaments, about us building a tour and proving ourselves. For us, it was more important to win 10 tournaments a year rather than one Grand Slam. Now its the opposite.

For Jordan, a three-time All-American at Stanford, being away from her suburban Philadelphia home during the holidays was not such a big deal, especially because in those days players stayed with host families while on the road, so she knew she would not be alone for Christmas dinner.

Despite losing early at Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the United States Open in 1979 and being ranked No. 68 in the world, Jordan was optimistic about the Australian Open. The year before, Chris ONeil of Australia, ranked No. 111, had captured the title over Betsy Nagelsen of the United States.

I had only recently turned pro, and the year before I had taken Martina [Navratilova] to three sets in my first Wimbledon, Jordan said. That was the only set she lost that year on the way to her first Wimbledon title. So I liked my chances at the Australian, which was also played on grass.

There were only 32 women, including three Americans, entered in the Australian Open singles in 1979 compared with the 128 draw this year and Jordan was the No. 5 seed. After beating two Australians in the first two rounds, Jordan upset the second seed, Hana Mandlikova, a 17-year-old Czech who would go on to win the title the next year, and in 1987, and become a future hall of famer. Jordan then outlasted another Czech, the No. 3 Renata Tomanova, before beating a fellow American, the fourth-seeded Sharon Walsh, 6-3, 6-3 in the final.

To be honest, I dont remember anything about that match, said Mandlkikova. I guess I dont want to remember.

For Jordan, the win was one for the ages, especially because it was the only singles title she won. She played the Australian Open only one more time, losing in the first round to Mandlikova in 1983, and never again advanced beyond the third round at a major. Her highest career ranking was No. 37.

For her win, Jordan received $10,000 in prize money, in contrast to the $50,000 awarded to the mens singles champ, Guillermo Vilas of Argentina.

Jordan can take pride that she is just one of seven American women to have won the Australian during the Open era dating from 1969. The others are Navratilova, Evert, Monica Seles, Lindsay Davenport, Jennifer Capriati and Serena Williams.

Jordan, who recently retired as an attorney for the city of San Jose, Calif., said she had not been back to Melbourne since 1983. She has attended Womens Tennis Association reunions in the United States and, as a former member of the W.T.A.s board of directors, she has been involved in helping the organization set up a pension fund for the games earliest pros.

Jordan does not dwell on her lone major title and, in fact, rarely tells friends and colleagues about it because she does not want to brag. She jokes that she used to be the answer to a trivia question at an Australian bar. Anyone who could identify her as the 1979 champ would win a free drink. She said hardly anyone did.

Several years ago, Jordan watched on television as a parade of former champions was honored on court and realized that tournament organizers had forgotten to invite her. She was not happy.

Then, three years ago, she learned that Diane Evers of Australia and Judy Chaloner of New Zealand, who won the womens doubles title in 1979, were presented with championship plates by Tennis Australia. Last year, the women were invited by Tennis Australia to attend the tournament. Jordan is still waiting for her invitation.

Once she realized that there were replica trophies being given out, Jordan contacted Tiley, the tournament director, to see if she could get a memento. She said Tiley responded by email, saying he would look into it and get back to her, but that he never did. He did not respond to several requests for comment.

Jordan recognizes that her request is trivial compared with what the country is dealing with.

The images of what is going on there now are utterly heartbreaking, she said. I hope they have rain soon to get some relief from this incomprehensible tragedy.

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Barbara Jordan Once Won the Australian Open. Really. - The New York Times

Rep. Jim Jordan says if he knew about Strauss abuse, he would have reported it – NBC4 WCMH-TV

COLUMBUS (WCMH) In an interview with NBC4s Colleen Marshall Tuesday, Rep. Jim Jordan calls the idea that he wouldnt stand up for abused athletes ridiculous.

Colleen Marshall has reported extensively on a culture of cover-up at Ohio State that resulted in hundreds of cases of abuse over two decades at the hands of Dr. Richard Strauss.

At least four former wrestlers and one referee are on record saying they complained about Strauss to then-assistant wrestling coach and now Congressman Jim Jordan. The high-profile representative insists he knew nothing.

In an interview Tuesday morning with Colleen Marshall, Jordan insisted he knew nothing, and sought to discredit those who say otherwise.

Colleen: Congressman, I have to ask you, weve done a number of stories on the Doctor Strauss situation at Ohio State. And Ive talked to athletes who said they were there when you were there that you were aware that he was showering daily that you were aware of sexual abuse and one of the referees said he personally told you. Has any of that refreshed your memory about what was going on with Dr. Strauss?

Jordan: Look. Every single coach has said the same thing Ive said. All kinds of athletes have said the same thing Ive said. And the reason theyve said that is because its the truth. The idea that I wouldnt stand up for our athletes if I thought there was some kind of harm happening to them is ridiculous. Ive stood up to the to the FBI. Ive stood up to the IRS. Ive stood up to Adam Schiff. Ive stood up to John Boehner, the Speaker of the House from our own state in our own party. So, if I think, there was, if I thought there was something wrong or if I knew there was something wrong happening, I would have stood up for him. But like I said, everyone, every single coach has said the same thing I have because the reason theyve said that just because thats the truth.

Colleen: Well, the fencing coach didnt say that in fact she wouldnt let her athletes go to him anymore. Coach Remenyik, she said that all the coaches were aware, and Ive talked to other coaches who were there at the time and athletes like Dan Ritchie says Dr. Strauss had a locker two down from yours. How were you not aware that he was in there taking a shower every day and pleasuring himself in front of these students when they all knew about it?

Jordan: Well, I mean look, if someone would have reported some kind of abuse to me if I had known about it, I would have reported it. I would have taken on anyone. I would have defended our athletes just like I defend the taxpayers when when the IRS targeted taxpayers, just like I stood up to all kinds of folks in Washington, I would have done it. But no one reported anything and then wed never heard of any type of abuse, thats why

Colleen: And you didnt see anything?

Jordan: and that thats why every, no, I did not. and thats why every single coach and all kinds of athletes have said the same thing I have.

Reporter: Where do you think the disconnect is there? Who you think many of these people that were at Ohio State around the same time you were why they say something different than what youre saying?

Jordan: Youd have to ask them. And and if there was something that that happened to them, we certainly want, we certainly want to address that now. And and I know Ohio State is working with the folks who have come forward. All I know is theres been two individuals who said that somehow that I knew. The two individuals who said that, one has spent years in prison for fraud and the other one was this this referee who I think is is completely lying about what he said, that never happened. Both myself and the other coaches have said the same thing.

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Rep. Jim Jordan says if he knew about Strauss abuse, he would have reported it - NBC4 WCMH-TV