Area prepares for the Great American Eclipse – South Bend Tribune

SOUTH BEND Linda Marks has always had a fascination with the sky.

It began as she was growing up on the east coast. Her mother was a small airplane pilot in a time before airplanes had complex navigational systems. Pilots used the position of celestial objects constellations, planets and individual stars to navigate from origin to destination.

"I looked up in the sky a lot," said Marks, of North Liberty. "My mom would take me out and show me different things in the sky. When I was old enough, I joined Girl Scouts and they had a star badge. As you can guess, I dived right into that."

Marks will draw upon her life-long interest in gazing skyward in two weeks as she and millions of others across the nation look to the heavens to catch a glimpse of one of the rarest natural phenomenon a total solar eclipse.

It happens Aug. 21 when the moon's shadow will travel around 10,000 miles across the Earth's surface, from the middle of the Pacific Ocean across the continental United States to the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa.

Weather-permitting, all of North America will have a view of a partial eclipse, when the moon blocks a portion of the sun. In South Bend, the moon is expected to block approximately 86 percent of the sun with the maximum eclipse coming at 2:22 p.m., according to NASA.

Marks, vice president of the Michiana Astronomical Society, said she and a number of other club members will be traveling, to be under the path of totality, the area that will experience the total eclipse.

"We're spread out," she said. "We're pretty much everywhere."

It's a calculated strategy. The group doesn't want everyone bunched together in case their chosen location has less than ideal weather conditions.

Unlike a lunar eclipse, in which the earth casts a shadow across the surface of the moon that is visible to a wide swath along on Earth, a total solar eclipse is very focused.

"You have to be in exactly the right spot," said Peter Garnavich, professor and department chair of Astrophysics and Cosmology Physics at the University of Notre Dame. "It leads to a bit of excitement."

The relative rarity of a total solar eclipse also helps build excitement. There hasn't been one in the United States since Feb. 26, 1979.

This year's event is being billed as the Great American Eclipse because it will occur exclusively in the United States. When it last happened, Woodrow Wilson was president of the United States.

Starting off the coast of Oregon at 9:05 a.m. PDT, the moon's inner shadow, known as the umbra, will cast a 70-mile-wide shadow that will turn day into night across 14 states before exiting off the coast of South Carolina at 4:09 p.m. EDT.

While everyone in Indiana will be able to view a partial eclipse this go-around, there is no spot in the state that will be in the path of the total solar eclipse. For eclipse enthusiasts, there will be an opportunity a little closer to home. On April 8, 2024, the center line of a total solar eclipse will pass just south of Indianapolis. Another total solar eclipse, on Sept. 14, 2099, will place all of the South Bend region in the path of totality.

Garnavich's interest in astronomy and physics began as a boy. He witnessed a partial solar eclipse in the 1970s and received a telescope when he was in the fifth grade.

"The eclipse is what pushed me over the edge and I decided this is what I wanted to do for the rest of my life," he said.

Eclipses used to provide the greatest opportunity for scientists to study the sun and learn more about it and its impacts on the Earth.

"The scientific yield is not as great as it used to be," Garnavich said. "Nowadays, there are really specialized satellites where we can continually monitor the sun and take measurements."

Jerry Hinnefeld, a professor of physics at Indiana University South Bend, said the appeal of solar eclipses now is the ability to garner interest in science and mathematics.

"It is very exciting. It's an opportunity to generate interest and enthusiasm in astronomy," Hinnefeld said. "It piques people's curiosity and gets people thinking about things they may not ordinarily think about."

Students will just be returning to the IU South Bend campus for the first day of classes when the eclipse happens, Hinnefeld said. There will be a number of activities on campus as part of welcome week festivities tied into the eclipse, including eclipse viewing from the green mall.

Though Notre Dame students don't start classes until the day after the eclipse, there will be activities there as well. Garnavich said the university will have viewers set up outside the Jordan Hall of Science for people to safely view the eclipse. The university's Digital Visualization Theater will host a simulation of the eclipse on Aug. 9 and Aug. 12.

One area organization has a unique connection that is paying dividends for the upcoming eclipse.

The Elkhart Public Library is one of 75 public libraries nationwide to partner with NASA as part of the NASA@ My Library program, a partnership between NASA, the libraries, the Ameircan Library Association and the Space Science Institute. The program offers materials and training to help the libraries lead fun, educational science, technology, engineering and mathematics-based programming.

"We were thrilled to be chosen for this program," said Allison McLean, head of young people's services at the library and the project director for the NASA grant. "The timing couldn't have been better. The eclipse will be our first big event with the program."

McLean said the library has already held one eclipse-related event for adults back in July. On Monday at 4:30 p.m., the library will host an Eclipse 101 program for kids ages 5 and up. The library is also hosting a viewing party on Aug. 21 at Central Park in downtown Elkhart, complete with eclipse glasses.

"We can see the excitement building everywhere," McLean said. "We've definitely seen an uptick in people looking for eclipse-related materials."

While most people will have to be content to view the eclipse from the ground, or view images from organizations like NASA, Dave Bohlmann, an engineer who teaches part-time at Ivy Tech Community College's South Bend campus, will have another perspective.

Bohlmann has spent the last several years sending balloons to the very edge of space. He's had four practice runs preparing for a launch the day of the eclipse from Perryville, Mo., inside the path of totality. Bohlmann's mission is simple, he's sending the balloons up to a height of 100,000 feet or more where the curvature of the earth is visible in an effort to capture images and video of the moon's shadow as it traverses the earth.

"Right now, we're just doing some final preparations," Bohlmann said. "We're almost ready."

Bohlmann's group is one of several planning to do launches from the Perryville area. In addition to amateur high altitude balloon enthusiasts like Bohlmann, there are also more than 50 NASA-funded balloons and numerous ground-based observations planned to gather a host of images and data.

After four test flights, Bohlmann knows his balloons take about two hours to get up to altitude. He's planning to launch about an hour and 40 minutes before totality in Perryville in order to make sure his balloon is in position.

"It's going to be exciting," Bohlmann said.

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Area prepares for the Great American Eclipse - South Bend Tribune

2017 Oshkosh air show puts ‘space’ in Aerospace – SpaceFlight Insider

Jason Rhian

August 6th, 2017

Photo Credit: Mark Usciak / SpaceFlight Insider

OSHKOSH, Wis. When one thinks of air shows, images of sleek fighter planes, aerial acrobats spinning plumes of smoke and old warbirds majestically flying past spectators. However, with ever-increasing regularity, spacecraft and astronauts are becoming key participants in these shows. The recent EAA Airventure Oshkosh 2017 air show was no exception.

Guests at Oshkosh 2017 can be seen circling round Blue Origins New Shepard display. Image Credit: Jeff Bezos / Twitter

NASAs new super heavy-lift Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion programs were represented at Oshkosh, with prime contractors Orbital ATK, Aerojet Rocketdyne, Lockheed Martin and Boeing attending. However, without a doubt, the biggest draw at this years air show was Blue Origins New Shepard rocket and capsule.

Blue Origins Founder Jeff Bezos posted an aerial picture from Oshkosh 2017 showing attendees lining up to tour New Shepard on Twitter the line can be seen stretching and arcing around and around. However, hardware wasnt the only draw for the show.

With Apollo astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Frank Borman, Walt Cunningham, Fred Haise, Jim Lovell and Al Worden, and retired NASA Flight Director Gene Kranz Oshkosh 2017 had some serious star power from the brave men and women who kicked open the door of the Space Age more than 50 years ago. Some more recent members of this elite cadre were on hand for Oshkosh 2017.

The Space Launch System and Orion industry team was pleased by the excitement at EAA AirVenture for the SLS and Orion programs, Charlie Precourt, general manager and vice president, Orbital ATKs Propulsion Systems Division, and four-time space shuttle astronaut told SpaceFlight Insider. Its great to see our youth planning to be the first people on Mars, and they know the rocket theyre going to fly is NASAs Space Launch System.

Precourts involvement with this years Oshkosh was beneficial in terms of promoting NASAs long term space ambitions. With the space agency planning on sending crews to deep space destinations within the next decade, the four-time shuttle veteran was joined bySLS Strategic Communications Manager Marcia Lindstrom who moderated a discussion that detailed the new rockets capabilities. He was joined on the panel discussion byBoeings Tony Castilleja, Kim Couch, and Orbital ATKs Jeremy Redden. By all accounts, Oshkosh 2017 helped provide the public with more information about the new rocket and spacecraft.

The SLS/Orion exhibit was in NASAs building at Oshkosh (some 881 commercial exhibitors were at this years air show) and saw more foot traffic than in the last five years at the airshow.When one considers the volume of attendees at Oshkosh 2017, that is substantial.

More than 10,000 aircraft arrived for the air show (with some 2,991 showplanes), with an estimated 590,000 guests attending. With each passing year, Oshkosh continues to increase its aeronautical and space flight awareness efforts, something the shows producers have worked to emphasize.

What an incredible year it was at Oshkosh. From the U.S. Navy Blue Angels and Apollo reunion, to new aviation innovations on display and two B-29s flying formation as part of 75 years of bombers on parade, it was a week filled with OnIy at Oshkosh moments, said the EAAs Chairman Jack Pelton via a release. You could feel the energy as thousands of airplanes arrived early and stayed longer, pushing aircraft camping to capacity for most of the event. The aviators and enthusiasts who attended were engaged, eager, and passionate, demonstrating how Oshkosh is the best example of why general aviation is so vitally important to the country. I believe its the best AirVenture week that Ive ever seen.

Airshows often highlight the past, present and future of space exploration initiatives and the EAA Airventure 2017 Oshkosh festival - was no exception. Held in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, the event ran from July 24-30, 2017 and saw scores of personal aircraft, military jets, war birds, rockets, spacecraft and even Apollo-era astronauts attend. Photos courtesy: Patrick Franklin, Mark Usciak

Tagged: Blue Origin Charlie Precourt EAA Airventure Oshkosh 2017 Jeff Bezos NASA Orbital ATK The Range

Jason Rhian spent several years honing his skills with internships at NASA, the National Space Society and other organizations. He has provided content for outlets such as: Aviation Week & Space Technology, Space.com, The Mars Society and Universe Today.

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2017 Oshkosh air show puts 'space' in Aerospace - SpaceFlight Insider

‘Nanomedicine’: Potentially revolutionary class of drugs are made-in-Canada – CTV News

It's rare for researchers to discover a new class of drugs, but a University of Calgary microbiology professor recently did so -- by accident and now hopes to revolutionize autoimmune disease treatment.

In 2004, Dr. Pere Santamaria and his research lab team at the Cumming School of Medicine conducted an experiment to image a mouse pancreas, using nanoparticles coated in pancreatic proteins.

The work didnt go as planned.

Our experiment was a complete failure, he recently told CTV Calgary. We were actually quite depressed, frustrated about the outcome of that.

But the team was surprised to discover the nanoparticles had a major effect on the mice: resetting their immune systems.

The team realized that, by using nanoparticles, they can deliver disease-specific proteins to white blood cells, which will then go on to reprogram the cells to actively suppress the disease.

Whats more, the nanoparticles stop the disease without compromising the immune system, as current treatments often do.

Santamarias team believes nanomedicine drugs can be modified to treat all kinds of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, including Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis.

Convinced that nanomedicine has the potential to disrupt the pharmaceutical industry, Santamaria founded a company to explore the possibilities, called Parvus Therapeutics Inc.

This past spring, Novartis, one of the worlds largest pharmaceutical companies, entered into a license and collaboration agreement with Parvus to fund the process of developing nanomedicine.

Under the terms of the agreement, Parvus will receive research funding to support its clinical activities, while Novartis receives worldwide rights to use Parvus technology to develop and commercialize products for the treatment of type 1 diabetes.

Its a good partnership, Santamaria said in a University of Calgary announcement. Bringing a drug to market requires science as well as money.

Santamaria cant say how long it might be before nanomedicine can be used to create human therapies, but he says everyone involved is working aggressively to make it happen.

With a report from CTV Calgarys Kevin Fleming

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'Nanomedicine': Potentially revolutionary class of drugs are made-in-Canada - CTV News

UCalgary researcher signs deal to develop nanomedicines for treatment of Type 1 diabetes – UCalgary News

When Dr. Pere Santamaria arrived in Calgary in 1992 to join the Cumming School of Medicine, he never could have imagined he would make a groundbreaking discovery that would lead to a spinoff company. When I arrived, I found out that the grant money I was expecting hadnt come through, says Santamaria, a professor in the Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Infectious Diseases and member of the Snyder Institute for Chronic Diseases. So I had an empty lab with no research assistants and no salary. I had to beg my supervisor to give me $10,000 to start my research.

Despite the rocky start, Santamaria has achieved something many scientists dream of making a discovery that has practical applications for health care. Santamarias discovery revolves around the use of nanoparticles coated in proteins to treat autoimmune and inflammatory disorders.

They can be modified for different diseases, such as Type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis without compromising the entire immune system, Santamaria explains. Instead, they basically work to reset the immune system.

Nanomedicines unique mechanism has the potential to disrupt the pharmaceutical industry entirely. Developing a new class of drugs is rare. With the assistance of Innovate Calgary, Santamaria started a company, Parvus Therapeutics Inc., to represent the technology and explore ways of bringing it to market. Announced in April 2017, Parvus entered into an exclusive deal with the Swiss pharma giant Novartis, hopefully leading to the development and commercialization of Parvuss nanomedicine to treat Type 1 diabetes.

Its a good partnership, Santamaria says. Bringing a drug to market requires science as well as money.

Supporting commercialization should be a top priority for all research, he continues. Our biggest responsibility is to the patients and making sure they have access to the medicine they need. With that in mind, Santamaria shares his insight for other researchers who may be interested in bringing their discoveries from the lab bench to the market.

If youre interested in investigating spin-out opportunities, get in touch with Innovate Calgary, which offers mentors, coaching, business skill development programs, intellectual property services and other back-office support.

Throughout the years, Santamarias work has been funded by numerous organizations, including Diabetes Canada, the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Diabetes Association, Foothills.He is a member of the Snyder Institute and associate member of the Hotchkiss Brain Institute.Santamaria named his company Parvus from the Greek word meaning small.

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UCalgary researcher signs deal to develop nanomedicines for treatment of Type 1 diabetes - UCalgary News

UCC Norwell hosts special needs forum – Wicked Local Norwell

By Janet JohnsonSpecial to the Mariner

It was on a cool, rainy morning when guests arrived at the United Church of Christ in Norwell to attend a forum with clergy from numerous South Shore faith communities. Guests gathered to enjoy an early breakfast hosted by UCC Norwells Friends of Special Needs who believe that people with developmental disabilities thrive when they are fully included into their church community, thereby enjoying friendships and support beyond their daily work and activities. The purpose of the forum was to reveal a deeper understanding of the difficulties faced by families of children with disabilities. As people of faith, we believe it is our privilege and responsibility to develop and expand more intentional opportunities for engagement with all people in our homes of worship.

Several speakers were invited to share their experiences that helped to inform the forum guests. Emily Colson, noted speaker and author of Life with Max, shared the experiences and the challenges she encountered while being a single parent and raising her son who has autism. She spoke of her desire to attend church when Max was growing up, but found it almost impossible due to his often disruptive behavior. Emily also shared the heartwarming news that her church - North River Community Church of Pembroke never gave up trying to welcome Max in a way that would work for him. The ingenuity shared by a loving church community enabled Max and Emily to feel valued and loved, and to know that they truly belonged! This welcoming created a feeling of inclusiveness within the hearts of a loving church family and enriched everyones lives.

State Sen. Patrick OConnor, R-Weymouth,was invited to share his thoughts about how the special needs community is being served in Massachusetts. He reinforced his ongoing commitment to serve and advocate for people with disabilities and confirmed that his door is always open to his constituents.

Two participants at Friendship Home in Norwell, Martha Willson and J.R. Foley, who attend its social and work related programs, spoke of the positive impact that acceptance and welcoming in both the secular and the church community have had on their lives. Their desire, like those of so many people with special needs, is to be fully contributing members of their own communities and beyond. People soon focus on their abilities rather than challenges and learn and love the gifts that they share with others.

Jack Spurr, a business leader and long-time chairman of Friendship Home, shared how he became involved with people with disabilities many years ago and how he now is the proud grandparent of five children, one of whom is a 9-year-old boy who has Aspergers syndrome and legally blind. His relationship with people of differing abilities is powerfully meaningful and has added a very special dimension to Jacks life.

Thefinal speaker was Mary Kate Gallagher, a 2017 graduate of Notre Dame Academy, who at age 11 attended a Friendship Home Ice Cream Social and became friends with Sophie, a girl her age who has autism. Mary Kate was very moved and said to her mom, We have to do something for Sophie. Within a year, she and her mom, along with two dear friends, started the Friendship Home Middle School program which is now in its sith year. One young person made an incredible difference!

Toward the end of the mornings program, there was a time of open sharing among the guests when questions, personal experiences and future insights about moving forward were explored. As the closing of the breakfast forum drew near, it was clear to all that faith communities have a unique opportunity to be places of welcome and that we are called by our faith to do this. Expanding and moving this desire forward is what the Friends of Special Needs hopes to do. For anyone wishing additional information about this program, through August, please call Wilma Goodhue 781 659-7233 - after that, contact Reverend Leanne Walt, Lead Pastor of the United Church of Christ in Norwell at 781-659-2887. Leanne was instrumental in sponsoring this program and moderated the event. It is her belief that it is Gods will that everyone is welcome and that it is our obligation to make church a place of understanding, acceptance and loving engagement.

As the forum guests left, the rain had abated, the morning chill was gone and the sun was shining - a very good sign for the future!

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UCC Norwell hosts special needs forum - Wicked Local Norwell

Black police concerned by Trump quips on handling suspects – Minneapolis Star Tribune

By LISA MARIE PANE and KATE BRUMBACK , Associated Press August 01, 2017 - 2:30 PM

ATLANTA The Trump administration's tough talk on crime and the treatment of suspects has left black police officers worried that efforts to repair the fraught relationship between police and minority communities could be derailed.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday addressed a major black law enforcement group, just days after President Donald Trump said police shouldn't be "nice" to suspects by shielding their heads as they are lowered, handcuffed, into police cars. The comment, now described by the White House as a joke, angered some cops who said it only served to dial back progress they'd made with the people they serve.

In addition, the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration said Saturday in an email to employees that Trump's comments "condoned police misconduct regarding the treatment of individuals placed under arrest by law enforcement." DEA chief Chuck Rosenberg said he thought it important to emphasize the drug agency's operating principles, which include rule of law, respect and compassion and integrity.

Sessions did not directly address the president's comments in his remarks Tuesday, but said police officers need the support of the community as they do a dangerous job.

"You deserve the support and respect of every American, and I'm here today on behalf of President Trump and the Department of Justice to say, 'Thank you.' I am proud to stand with you. The Department of Justice is proud to stand with you," Sessions said, drawing applause from the crowd. "We have your back. We are in this together."

Seattle Assistant Police Chief Perry Tarrant, president of the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, told reporters Sessions also spoke privately with the organization's leadership. Sessions didn't apologize for the president's comment and said he believes it was made in jest, but said he understands the effect such comments can have and underscored the Department of Justice's commitment to protecting everyone's civil rights, Tarrant said.

When asked if he believes Trump was joking, Tarrant said, "Whether intentional or unintentional, it was heard around the country by the folks, by the very communities that we're trying to build relationships with and I believe it had an impact."

Other conference attendees approached by The Associated Press declined to discuss Trump's comments or Sessions' address.

Black police officers talk of straddling two worlds: the communities where they live, and the police departments where they work. They take seriously their oath to uphold the law and to go after criminals, but they also worry about their own friends, relatives and neighbors who fear the police.

"We live in some of the same communities that are affected by this disparate treatment. We go to church in those neighborhoods. We go to the barbershops. Certain things people don't realize: It's really hard being black and being a police officer when these things happen," said Clarence E. Cox III, former chief of Clayton County Schools in Georgia and incoming president of NOBLE.

Sessions has questioned the federal civil rights investigations that marked the Obama administration's efforts to overhaul troubled police departments, often after high-profile deadly police encounters with black men inflamed tensions and reignited debates over police-community relations.

"We cannot let the politicians and sometimes they do run down the police in communities that are suffering only to see crimes spike in those communities," Sessions said. "In the very neighborhoods that need proactive, community-based policing the most, we don't need to be telling police not to do their job in those communities."

Sessions has said aggressive federal intervention in local law enforcement can malign entire agencies and make officers less effective on the streets, but he has promised to prosecute individual officers who break the law.

Sessions has been traveling the country touting his tough-on-crime agenda. He believes rising violence and the nation's opioid epidemic require a return to tougher tactics, vowing to make fighting ordinary street crime a top priority for a Justice Department.

Tarrant has also expressed concern about Sessions' pledge to dial back civil rights investigations. While some effective interim steps can help address bad departments, he said, "at the end of the day if you have systemic issues in any organization, the Department of Justice has an obligation to intervene."

Trump's remarks came last Friday before law enforcement officers in Suffolk County, New York, during a visit to highlight his administration's efforts to crack down on a street gang known as MS-13.

He spoke dismissively of the practice of shielding the heads of handcuffed suspects as they are placed in patrol cars.

"Don't be too nice," Trump said. "I said, 'You could take the hand away, OK,'" he said.

His remarks were later denounced by the Suffolk County Police Department, which issued a statement saying it has strict rules and procedures about how prisoners should be handled and "we do not and will not tolerate roughing up of prisoners."

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Black police concerned by Trump quips on handling suspects - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Mars Rover Tour Shows The Future Of Space Travel – CBS Minnesota / WCCO

Mars Rover Tour Shows The Future Of Space Travel

The concept vehicle shows what a manned Mars rover might look like, Nikki Battiste reports (1:51). WCCO 4 New At 5 Aug. 5, 2017

Men March In High Heels To Stop Sexual AssaultMen in Anoka got a taste of what it's like to walk in high heels, and they did it for a good cause, Liz Collin reports (0:31). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Better Business Bureau Warns Homeowners Of Alarm Company ScamIt's common for security companies to go door-to-door to look for new business. But the Better Business Bureau is sending a warning after fraudulent claims, Kurtis Ming reports (1:21). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Jockeys In Love: Meet Canterbury Parks Power CoupleThe horse barns of a race track may not seem like the most romantic backdrop. But for two jockeys, it's the setting for their love story, Rachel Slavik reports (2:05). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Hundreds 'Rally For Research' At State CapitolHundreds of Minnesotans gathered at the State Capitol urging the federal government not to cut funding for medical research, Liz Collin reports (0:56). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Bomb Squad Called To St. Paul Cathedral After Man Set FiresPolice say a homeless man walked into the cathedral and set papers on fire just before 1 this afternoon, Liz Collin reports (0:27). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Community Members Rally After IED Explodes At Islamic CenterWithin hours of the explosion, community members of all faiths rallied around their Muslim neighbors, Nina Moini reports (2:41). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Better Business Bureau Warns Homeowners Of Alarm Company ScamIt's common for security companies to go door-to-door to look for new business. But the Better Business Bureau is sending a warning after fraudulent claims, Kurtis Ming reports (1:21). WCCO 4 News At 6 Aug. 5, 2017

Mars Rover Tour Shows The Future Of Space TravelThe concept vehicle shows what a manned Mars rover might look like, Nikki Battiste reports (1:51). WCCO 4 New At 5 Aug. 5, 2017

Sessions Warns Would-Be White House LeakersPresident Donald Trump is on vacation for the next couple of weeks -- but his administration is cracking down on government leaks, reports Mola Lenghi (1:41) WCCO 4 News At 10 August 4, 2017

Mars Rover Tour Shows The Future Of Space TravelThe concept vehicle shows what a manned Mars rover might look like, Nikki Battiste reports (1:51). WCCO 4 New At 5 Aug. 5, 2017

New Gadgets To Make Dorm Life More BearableCollege life in 2017 is a little different, Kim Johnson and Jason DeRusha report (2:02). WCCO This Morning Aug. 4, 2017

New Fast Food Tech Could Lead To Job CutsFast food restaurants are getting even faster as they bypass traditional methods to take and even make orders, Wendy Gillette reports (2:53). WCCO This Morning Aug. 4, 2017

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Mars Rover Wrapping Up US Tour To Showcase Future Of Space … – CBS Miami

August 4, 2017 4:46 PM

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CAPE CANAVERAL (CBSMiami) The Kennedy Space Centers Mars rover is wrapping up its U.S. tour. The concept vehicle shows what a manned Mars rover might look like.

Carter and Marshall Demars got their first taste of the future of space travel meeting former astronaut Mike Massimino and getting up close to a prototype of NASAs newest Mars rover.

The size of the rover is just humongous. I thought it would be one of those puny rovers, but its just so big, said Marshall.

The nearly three-ton monster mobile looks like its made for Hollywood, but its meant for the Red Planet.

(Source: CBS Newspath)

NASA engineers did, in fact, team up with movie props designers to create the 11-feet high, 24-feet long vehicle.

Since it wont ever really travel to the Mars, the mission here is earthbound.

I think the major purpose of it is probably to create excitement, get ideas going, get people excited about going, said Massimino.

With six massive wheels, it can only travel up to 6 mph.

The rover has four seats in the front and drives like an SUV. Theres detachable lab where astronauts can do experiments.

Massimino says the challenge in sending people to mars is the cost.

The Kennedy Space Center funded this rover, but it doesnt have the expensive life support needed to make a months-long trip possible.

To ensure a safe journey and a safe return of people is really expensive and thats going to take a budget, a commitment from government that is very significant, said Massimino.

Marshall says hes game to be the first man on Mars.

Ive always been the guy that wants to discover things, so I would go for sure, he said.

And hes just the right age. NASA hopes to send a man or woman to mars around the year 2030.

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The World’s First Autonomous Ship Will Set Sail In 2018 – Singularity Hub

What

A Norwegian container ship called the Yara Birkeland will be the worlds first electric, autonomous, zero-emissions ship.

With a capacity of up to 150 shipping containers, the battery-powered ship will be small compared to modern standards (the biggest container ship in the world holds 19,000 containers, and an average-size ship holds 3,500), but its launch will mark the beginning of a transformation of the global shipping industry. This transformation could heavily impact global trade as well as the environment.

The Yara Birkeland is being jointly developed by two Norwegian companies: agricultural firm Yara International, and agricultural firm, and Kongsberg Gruppen, which builds guidance systems for both civilian and military use.

The ship will be equipped with a GPS and various types of sensors, including lidar, radar, and camerasmuch like self-driving cars. The ship will be able to steer itself through the sea, avoid other ships, and independently dock itself.

The Wall Street Journal states that building the ship will cost $25 million, which is about three times the cost of a similarly-sized conventional ship. However, the savings will kick in once the ship starts operating, since it wont need traditional fuel or a big crew.

Self-driving cars arent going to suddenly hit the streets straight off their production line; theyve been going through multiple types of road tests, refining their sensors, upgrading their software, and generally improving their functionality little by little. Similarly, the Yara Birkeland wont take to the sea unmanned on its first voyage, nor any of its several first voyages, for that matter.

Rather, the ships autonomy will be phased in. At first, says the Journal, a single container will be used as a manned bridge on board. Then the bridge will be moved to shore and become a remote-operation center. The ship will eventually run fully on its own, under supervision from shore, in 2020.

Kongsberg CEO Geir Haoy compared the ships sea-to-land bridge transition to flying a drone from a command center, saying, It will be GPS navigation and lots of high-tech cameras to see whats going on around the ship.

Interestingly, theres currently no legislation around autonomous ships (which makes sense since, well, there arent any autonomous ships, either). Lawmakers are getting to work, though, and rules will likely be set up by the time the Yara makes it first fully-autonomous trip.

The ship will sail between three ports in southern Norway, delivering Yara International fertilizer from a production facility to a port called Larvik. The planned route is 37 nautical miles, and the ship will stay within 12 nautical miles of the coast.

The United Nations International Maritime Organization estimates over 90 percent of the worlds trade is carried by sea, and states that maritime transport is By far the most cost-effective way to move en masse goods and raw materials around the world.

But ships are also to blame for a huge amount of pollution; one study showed that just 15 of the worlds biggest ships may emit as much pollution as all the worlds cars, largely due to the much higher sulfur content of ship fuel. Oddly, shipping emission regulations werent included in the Paris Agreement.

Besides reducing fuel emissions by being electric, the Yara Birkeland will supposedly replace 40,000 truck drives a year through southern Norway. Once regulations are in place and the technology has been tested and improved, companies will start to build larger ships that can sail longer routes.

Image Credit:KONGSBERG Gruppenvia YouTube

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The World's First Autonomous Ship Will Set Sail In 2018 - Singularity Hub

Ascension 4-Hers Master their Project Area – Gonzales Weekly Citizen – Weekly Citizen

Record keeping is an important life skill for youth to attain. Many Ascension 4-Hers are working hard to create, maintain and update their records through writing and pictures, which helps 4-Hers to track their activities and experiences, set and achieve personal goals and aids in building resumes and scholarship applications.

This school year, over 130 4-Hers mastered their 4-H project area by setting and completing personal and project goals, completing their 4-H projects outlined tasks, recording their efforts and achievements, both in and out of 4-H, and submitting their completed 4-H portfolios and project books for the Ascension 4-H parish record book competition. Of those participating, 26 youth earned blue ribbon awards, with 10 record books being sent on to compete in the State 4-H Record Book competition.

The 4-Hers earning a blue ribbon in the Ascension Parish 4-H Record Book Competition were Katelyn Frank, Stacey Kloosterman, Seth Amedee, Kylie Cliburn, Ben Clingfost, Jenna Einsel, Hannah Godchaux, Alyssa Hymel, Ava Klieferle, Abby Lobell, Karlie Lobell, Walker Morrill, Avery Robinson, Ava Surla, Hannah Woodring, Case Bastin, Bryce Binning, Brodie Bourgeois, Shawn Comminey, Grace Ostermiller, Anthony Comeaux, Anna Frazier, Brady Houston, Allie Cliburn and Kinslei Scroggs.

The 10 following 4-Hers from Ascension Parish for being selected to move on to the State 4-H Record Book Competition: Seth Amedee, Kylie Cliburn, Katelyn Frank, Hannah Godchaux, Stacey Kloosterman, Abby Lobell, Kinslei Scroggs, Racheal Stewart, Alex Sullivan and Ava Surla.

The State 4-H Record Book winners from Ascension Parish 4-H were as follows:

National 4-H Congress Trip Award Winner to Atalnta, GA- Stacey Kloosterman

Seventh and eighth Grade Achievement Award Winners for the Louisiana Educational Trip to New Orleans and Baton Rouge- Kylie Cliburn; fifth alternate- Racheal Stewart; eighth Alternate- Abby Lobell

Sixth Grade Achievement Blue ribbon winners- Seth Amedee, Katelyn Frank, Ava Surla

Jr. Wildlife Tour Educational Trip to Grand Isle, LA- Kinseli Scroggs, Eighth Alternate- Hannah Godchaux

Superintendents Livestock Award Blue ribbon winner- Kylie Cliburn

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Ascension 4-Hers Master their Project Area - Gonzales Weekly Citizen - Weekly Citizen

Helsley’s ascension to the pros infused with heartbreak, triumph and promise – Tahlequah Daily Press

TULSA He sat in his Sequoyah High School classroom, wondering what would become of his next 12 hours. Further in town, in a stuffy courtroom, Ryan Helsley was having his short-term future pleaded over.

Same went for some of his closest friends and teammates.

Turns out, Nov. 2, 2012 was an unusual day from beginning to end.

A small collection of Sequoyah football players was having temporary court injunctions filed on their behalves, after the Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Association ruled that Sequoyah players had violated its summer camp policy. The governing body over Oklahomas high school sports had all but neutered Sequoyahs 2012 football season.

The Indians were 8-1 and steamrolling to the Class 3A playoffs with the likes of Brayden Scott at quarterback and Kyle Helsley at running back. Mix in Ryan Helsley, all over the field, Karter Woodruff, Robert Smith, Cody Hooper, Nick Kingfisher, Greyden Elrod and others, and the Indians were well-equipped to wreck havoc on the 3A playoff field.

The Helsley brothers, and their Sequoyah teammates, were granted permission to play in the regular season finale by Cherokee County District Judge Douglas Kirkley. The Indians went out and ambushed Lincoln Christian on Thompson Field, 63-40, thanks to Kyle Helsleys 265 yards and three touchdowns on only 14 carries.

It would be the last time Sequoyah fielded a football team during the 2012 campaign. The OSSAA released a 3A playoff bracket the next day, leaving the Indians off while forcing Sequoyah to forfeit all of its victories it had amassed during the season.

Nearly a year later, the state supreme court ruled the OSSAA acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner, while interpreting and enforcing its rules. By that time though, it was a moot point related to the Indians run that season.

It still irks Ryan Helsley to this day.

At the time, it was heartbreaking, Helsley said. We knew how good we were, and we had a chance to do something special.

Thus, Helsleys football career was over. But as it turns out, baseball has worked out quite well for the Sequoyah graduate.

After a collegiate career at Northeastern State, Helsley was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals. On Tuesday night, he made his Double-A debut with the Springfield Cardinals, throwing 92 pitches over four innings while not factoring into the decision in what became a 5-4 Tulsa win.

Its been an awesome journey so far, said Helsley, who gave up one run on five hits with six strikeouts and four walks against the Drillers at ONEOK Field, where several hundred loyal Sequoyah followers flocked on Tuesday.

Monday was trade-deadline day for major league ball clubs, but it was a relatively quiet day for the Redbirds. With trade winds swirling, minor league promotions went under the radar, much like Helsleys promotion from Single-A Palm Beach in Florida.

I got the call-up, and I looked at the schedule and saw the team was here in Tulsa, Helsley said. I called my mom and was a little emotional, just because I hadnt seen them in so long since I was so far from home. But it was a great blessing to be able to debut here in front of my own family.

Helsley, a 6-foot-1 right-handed hurler, began his rapid ascension through the Cardinals minor league system in 2015 after being drafted in the fifth round by St. Louis. In 2015, he pitched at the rookie-league ranks in Johnson City, Tennessee, and that segued into a 2016 season at Class A Peoria last year.

In 17 starts last season, Helsley registered a 1.61 earned run average while logging 109 strikeouts to only 19 walks. That was enough to vault him onto the top 30 list of St. Louis prospects, where he currently resides at No. 25.

For now, Helsley will look to stick with Springfield through the end of this season and re-evaluate from there.

Im going to pitch while Im healthy and make every start I can, said Helsley, who toted a 2.69 ERA in 16 starts for Palm Beach earlier this season. I just want to pitch every five days and see where it goes from there.

And as for the injustice levied by the OSSAA, Helsley sees it as nothing more than a memory now.

For the ruling to come out a year (after we graduated), it was already in the past, he said. It sucked. You think back on it and think, what if? Weve all moved then, even though it sucked then. But it is what it is.

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Helsley's ascension to the pros infused with heartbreak, triumph and promise - Tahlequah Daily Press

Ascension School System ventilating ‘T’ buildings at flooded schools – WBRZ

ASCENSION PARISH- Ascension Parish School System leaders announced temporary buildings at four Ascension Parish Schools are being ventilated after volunteers and teachers complained of throat and eye irritation from a strong ammonia like odor. The complaints came when the buildings were getting prepped for students.

The buildings are located at Galvez Middle, Galvez Primary, Lake Elementary and St. Amant High.

Superintendent David Alexander said the ventilation is being done to rid the odor in the buildings. It was initially discovered at Galvez and Lake Elementary, but the School System decided to do ventilation at St. Amant as a precaution.

Balloon like plastic bags were installed to the windows of the T Buildings after environmentalists, air quality and engineering experts tested the buildings. They were consulted about the mysterious odor, that remains unidentified at this time. The School System said it's not harmful, despite people complaining of the throat and eye irritation.

Parents like Jessica Dufour want to make sure schools are safe for children when they return from summer break next week.

"That worries me," Dufour said. "They are just finding it out? Will it be safe for Wednesday when they start for school?"

Right now, Dufour is also troubled that the School System did not send out notices to the parents to let them know what was going on.

"I'm concerned that I had to find out through the media instead of the school contacting me to let me know what was going on," Dufour said.

Ascension Parish School Leaders were unavailable for an interview, but Superintendent David Alexander said the students' safety is their top priority. He said since the ventilation began, the smell is no longer there, and all will be re-tested before school begins.

The School System provided the following statement:

"While preparing for the return of school, we learned that some of the new temporary buildings that were closed with little to no air conditioning running during the hot summer accumulated a strong odor. We immediately engaged the manufacturer, air quality and engineering experts to assess the issue. As the odor was not present in temporary buildings that were used regularly over the summer, it is believed to be a buildup of new construction smells normally vented out from regular use. Although assessments revealed no dangerous levels in the classrooms, crews are currently venting the buildings to remove the odor and all buildings will be tested by environmental experts before the start of school."

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Ascension School System ventilating 'T' buildings at flooded schools - WBRZ

Iran ranks 22 in nanotech patent publication – Mehr News Agency – English Version

One way to evaluate the progress trend of the countries active in nanotechnology is the overall analysis of patent documents. In this case, the number of annually published patents in the field of nanotechnology can be deemed as one of the most significant indicators.

In accordance with the definition supposed by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO/TS 18110) in 2015, the inventions whose one of claims is at least related to nanotechnology or named with one of the nanotechnology-related classification codes in the International Classification of Patents (IPCs) such as B82, are known as nanotechnology patents. Two of the world's most authentic patent publication offices include USPO and Europe Patent Office (EPO) by which more than half of the nanotechnology-oriented inventions are published throughout the world.

According to INIC's report based on theStatNanos reportfrom the patent database Orbit, in the first six months of 2017, nearly 6400 applications have been recorded by USPO and EPO for the nanotechnology-related patents, whereas 5525 cases are published by USPO.

More than half of these applications, i.e. 2814 cases are owned by the US companies and innovators. After the US as a front-runner, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan and China have also obtained the next statuses, respectively.

In addition, Germany and France have been ranked sixth and seventh. The presence of four countries from East Asia among the top five countries in this categorization indicates that most of East Asian's inventors and assignees pay more attention to the US nanotechnology market than other countries.

In 2017, Iran has published 13 applications for nanotechnology patents at USPTO and ranked 22nd among innovative countries, i.e. a one-step climb in its global ranking compared to the last year. It is noteworthy that in 2017, about a quarter ofIran's total published patent applications are related toNanotechnology. In 2016, Iran has been ranked 23rdat USPTO by publishing 27 patent applications and 10 granted nanotechnology patents.

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Iran ranks 22 in nanotech patent publication - Mehr News Agency - English Version

THE FUTURE OF PSYCHEDELICS: Are LSD and Mushrooms The New Prozac? – Dope Magazine

Magic mushrooms cant cure cancer, but they can alleviate the anxiety and existential dread that come along with the disease.

At least, thats the apparent conclusion from a pair of studies published in late 2016, wherein participants who had been diagnosed with both cancer and clinical depression or anxiety were administered psilocybin mushrooms within a controlled, living room-esque environment.

The psychological effects of psilocybin were not only positive, but enduring. Most participants ranked the experience among the most meaningful of their lives, and six months after taking the dose, 65 percent had almost fully recovered from their depression, and 57 percent from their anxiety. In contrast, antidepressants have been observed to help only 40 percent of terminal cancer patients in past studiesmaking them about as effective as a placebo.

However, as with other psychedelics such as LSD, psilocybin remains a Schedule I drug, deemed by the federal government to have a high potential for abuse and no medical value whatsoever. Yet that hasnt stopped researchers from administering more than 2,000 doses of the much-touted magic mushrooms in clinical settings since the early 90s, during which time no participants have reported any lasting medical or psychiatric issues.

Instead, most studies seem to confirm what recreational users have suspected for some time nowthat psychedelic drugs can help us, at least if taken under the right circumstances, and with this new wave of advanced psychedelic research, were beginning to understand why.

Both mushrooms and LSD, or acid, can reliably inspire religious or otherwise transcendental experiences in users, often resulting in a detachment from worldly concerns and a loss of self-identity called ego death. Another 2016 study suggests LSD accomplishes this by increasing global connectivity in the brain, thus removing perceived boundaries between ones inner and outer world.

Additional studies provide evidence for the drugs effectiveness in treating obsessive-compulsive disorder, alcoholism and other addictions, though the effects dont typically last more than six months after dosing. Perhaps more impressive are the findings that psilocybin can actually alter peoples personalitiesusually thought to be set in stone during adulthoodby making them more open, a trait associated with broad-mindedness and creativity.

Theres a sacredness or a reverence to [the] experience, noted Roland Griffiths, a professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who authored one of the studies. Although the effects of the drugs are gone by the end of the day, the memories of these experiences and the attributions made to them endure.

Indeed, the lasting effects of psilocybin and LSD, as observed in Griffiths study and others, can help anyone, not just those struggling with cancer or clinical depression. Neither drug has much potential for addiction, and the only significant associated risks are from accidents or anxiety attacks, which can be particularly damaging for users with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Researchers screened participants for such risk factors and provided a safe, encouraging environment for their trips.

Thanks to an increased understanding of these controversial hallucinogens and a groundswell movement of pro-psychedelic advocacy groups, it isnt farfetched to imagine a future where mental health patients can drop acid or mushrooms outside of a research setting, perhaps under the supervision of a doctor or other trained professional.

It will no doubt take time for government policy to catch up with these illuminating findings, meaning legal psychedelics will still take yearsor even decadesto hit shelves. But if the research keeps progressing, how long can we ignore the science? Under this administration, that may remain to be seen.

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THE FUTURE OF PSYCHEDELICS: Are LSD and Mushrooms The New Prozac? - Dope Magazine

WATCH: Laidback Luke explains why DJ Mag has gotten this commercial – Trance Hub (satire) (press release) (blog)

The first thing that probably comes to your head when see Laidback Luke and DJ mag together on a Trancehub post, youll must be thinking that we too must have switched around. No, we will never leave trance no matter what happens. But this post is one that needed to be shared with the world. Though Laidback Luke says it, it is very relevant to the current scenario today and he gives us a few points that will actually leave us wondering if we vote right?

What he says is actually true. The poll is for the Top 100 DJs, not for the best producer or the most commercial or whatever it may be tagged as. Then why do we vote for people without considering these aspects? In the end, the ones who actually deserve to be there never make it on the list.

This is worth watching. Please do have a look and then vote!

Trance enthusiast. Armada Ambassador. Content writer. Im not afraid of 138! Making people give Trance a chance.

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Get it here https://imo031.lnk.to/Drowning Feel like Im 20 feet under...

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WATCH: Laidback Luke explains why DJ Mag has gotten this commercial - Trance Hub (satire) (press release) (blog)

Edap Tms SA (EDAP) Moves Below Ichimoku Cloud – Evergreen Caller

Shares ofEdap Tms SA (EDAP) recently touched 3.03, which places the stock belowthe Ichimoku cloud, indicating bearishmomentum and a potential sellsignal for the equity. Shares of Edap Tms SA opened the last session at 2.91, touching a high of 3.03 and a low of 2.90 , yielding a change of0.01.

Ichimoku Kinko Hyo is a technical trend trading charting system that has been used by Japanese commodity and stock market traders for decades and is gaining increasing popularity amongst western stock market traders, being commonly referred to as Ichimoku Cloud charts. Ichimoku Kinko Hyo, which translates to equilibrium at a glance chart, was developed to allow a trader to quickly and easily appraise the trend, momentum, and support and resistance levels of an asset, from a single chart.

The system does include signals but these should never be considered in isolation. It is a visual technical analysis system and the charts are designed to be considered in their entirety to gain a perspective on the overall direction of the share or index and distinguish higher probability opportunities from lower probability ones. The Ichimoku components are introduced in a specific order because that is how you should analyze or trade the market. Once youve confirmed the trend by recognizing price as being below or above the cloud, you can move to the moving averages. The most basic theory of this indicator is that if the price is above the cloud, the overall trend is bullish while below the cloud is bearish, and in the cloud is non-biased or unclear. Lastly, when the price is above the cloud, then the top of the cloud will act as a general support level, and when price is below, the cloud base will act as resistance. But remember the cloud has thickness, and thus resistance does as well, which by making these thicker reduces the risk of a false breakout.

Anotherpopular indicator among technical analysts that can help to measure the strength of market momentum is the Average Directional Index or ADX. The ADX was created by J. Welles Wilder to help determine how strong a trend is. In general, a rising ADX line means that an existing trend is gaining strength. The opposite would be the case for a falling ADX line. At the time of writing, the 14-day ADX for Edap Tms SA (EDAP) is standing at 18.94. Many chart analysts believe that an ADX reading over 25 would suggest a strong trend. A reading under 20 would suggest no trend, and a reading from 20-25 would suggest that there is no clear trend signal.

Edap Tms SA (EDAP)s Williams Percent Range or 14 day Williams %R is sitting at -83.33. Typically, if the value heads above -20, the stock may be considered to be overbought. On the flip side, if the indicator goes under -80, this may signal that the stock is oversold. The RSI, or Relative Strength Index, is a commonly used technical momentum indicator that compares price movement over time. The RSI was created by J. Welles Wilder who was striving to measure whether or not a stock was overbought or oversold. The RSI may be useful for spotting abnormal price activity and volatility. The RSI oscillates on a scale from 0 to 100. The normal reading of a stock will fall in the range of 30 to 70. A reading over 70 would indicate that the stock is overbought, and possibly overvalued. A reading under 30 may indicate that the stock is oversold, and possibly undervalued. After a recent check, the 14-day RSI is currently at 39.66, the 7-day stands at 31.67, and the 3-day is sitting at 21.85.

Investors looking to chalk up healthy returns in the stock market may need to pay attention to avoid common pitfalls. When the good times are rolling, investors may be highly tempted to move a lot of money into certain stocks that have been churning out returns. One problem with this approach is that a stock that has been hot for a few months might not be hot over the next three months. It is always important to remember that past performance does not guarantee future results. Getting into a stock too late may leave the average investor pounding the table as a former winner turns into a current loser.

Taking a look at another technical level, Edap Tms SA (EDAP) presently has a 14-day Commodity Channel Index (CCI) of -134.89. Typically, the CCI oscillates above and below a zero line. Normal oscillations tend to stay in the range of -100 to +100. A CCI reading of +100 may represent overbought conditions, while readings near -100 may indicate oversold territory. Although the CCI indicator was developed for commodities, it has become a popular tool for equity evaluation as well. Moving average indicators are used widely for stock analysis. Many traders will use a combination of moving averages with different time frames to help review stock trend direction. One of the more popular combinations is to use the 50-day and 200-day moving averages. Investors may use the 200-day MA to help smooth out the data a get a clearer long-term picture. They may look to the 50-day or 20-day to get a better grasp of what is going on with the stock in the near-term. Presently, the 200-day moving average is at 2.98 and the 50-day is 3.19.

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Edap Tms SA (EDAP) Moves Below Ichimoku Cloud - Evergreen Caller

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How political correctness led to Islamophobia – The Boston Globe

jeremy traum for the boston globe

When an anti-Muslim activist group organized March Against Sharia rallies in cities across the country in June, it wasnt the first time Americans gathered to fight a suspicious religion from overseas. One August evening in 1834, a small mob gathered with torches and weapons on a dark hillside in what is now Somerville, intent on battling a grave threat: Roman Catholicism. Squinting up at the Mount Benedict Convent of the Ursuline nuns, the crowd swapped stories of outrages committed behind its walls: nuns sexually exploited, novices forced to wear painful corsets, starved, tortured.

These patriots could not understand why their Protestant leaders not only tolerated such evils, but even sent their own daughters up to the convent. The nativists understood they needed to take matters into their hands. So they did. They tore apart the convent, tossing pianos from its upper windows, smashing sculptures, damaging paintings, and scouring the compound for elusive victims. Finding none, they reduced the convent to a smoldering heap, cheered for a while, and went home.

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Mount Benedict Convent is long gone. Americas religious tensions are not as officials in Texas showed this summer, when the state became the eighth to legislate against the infiltration and incursion of foreign laws and foreign legal doctrines, especially Islamic Sharia law. To Muslims, Sharia is form of canonical law meant to govern how believers interact with one another and how their society runs; while there are moderate interpretations of Sharia, American media coverage generally deploys the term in connection with the fundamentalist vision of groups such as ISIS and Al Qaeda.

As a historian of 19th-century Boston, I see parallels between the anti-Sharia activists and the antebellum nativists who claimed that Irish immigrants were loyal to the pope, not the United States; who saw Catholic parochial schools as evidence of an unwillingness to assimilate; and who insisted that the Vatican was preparing to invade America via a tunnel it was digging beneath the Atlantic seabed.

Just as the rumors of abuse at Mount Benedict proved baseless, theres little evidence that American Muslims desire, let alone seek, the implementation of Sharia law. Critics have thus dismissed the anti-Sharia movement as nothing more than a thinly veiled prejudice, part of our habitual suspicion that certain ideologies, religions, and ethnicities are plotting the countrys downfall.

Global trends toward interconnection, economic growth, social progress, and stronger civil society have not completely bypassed the Islamic world.

Yet our history of conspiracy theorizing and racial paranoia doesnt fully explain the timing of all this anxiety about Sharia. Why has Sharia law has become a mainstream preoccupation now, rather than, say, after 9/11? A history of religious bigotry doesnt explain why the most feared weapon of Islamist radicals has shifted from bombings and hijackings to a theological doctrine.

While the anti-Sharia movements growing profile might suggest otherwise, only a slightly larger percentage of Americans suspect US Muslims of anti-Americanism today than in 2002.

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The question is: What has prompted the outcry against Sharia now, nearly a generation after the attack on the World Trade Center, when public suspicions of Islam have increased but little? The case of Mount Benedict suggests that conspiracy beliefs about social minorities often propagate when social majorities themselves become divided. Catholicism became a flashpoint then, just as Islamic law is today, because rapidly evolving standards of politeness were leaving many Americans behind.

As it turns out, shifts within a community for instance, in the way middle-class, native-born citizens treat one another have profound effects on how members of that community view those on the outside.

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The link between etiquette and Islamophobia comes into view in a 2016 Pew Research Center survey, conducted just as conservatives were excoriating the Obama administration for denouncing violent extremism instead of the more pointed radical Islamic terrorism. In that Pew survey, Republicans outnumbered Democrats by 17 percent in believing that religious teachings, not violent people, bear the greater blame for religious violence. However significant, this partisan gap wasnt nearly as large as that elicited by another survey question: How should the incoming president speak about terrorism carried out in the name of Islam? By a margin more than twice larger, Democrats preferred caution; Republicans, bluntness.

Taken together, the two statistics suggest that Americans dont disagree nearly as much about violence and religion as they do about manners. So what do manners have to do with nativist suspicions? Quite a lot, if we reflect on the Mount Benedict episode.

Then and now, constitutional freedoms were thought to be at risk, and fears of an insurgent foreign faith sometimes combined with reigning norms of chivalry. Nineteenth-century nativists used their version of social media, cheaply printed tracts, to swap lurid tales of oppressed young women confined in both dress and spirit by a sexually repressive faith.

Todays anti-Sharia activists attribute the appeal of a dangerous and unsavory faith to poor education and brainwashing. The 19th-century nativists similarly believed that Catholics needed to be taught to read, and think, and act for themselves, or so proclaimed the anti-Catholic Rev. Lyman Beecher before a crowd on Boston Common, shortly before the Mount Benedict incident.

A conspicuous part of the mob, and that most responsible for allowing Mount Benedict to burn, consisted of Bostons volunteer firemen. Unlike todays professional fire departments, antebellum volunteer fire companies were highly fluid and drew members from many walks of life, from successful merchants to humble laborers. What the volunteer firemen did share was a rowdy sense of culture: They felt at home in an older, rougher masculine culture that revolved around drinking, fighting, and displaying physical prowess.

By the 1830s, that culture was on a collision course with a more feminized bourgeois urban society that increasingly eschewed displays of violence, embraced temperance, and, starting that decade, consumed etiquette manuals by the dozens. As the historian Karen Halttunen has shown, the genteel conventions explained in those manuals struck many Protestants as troublingly akin to Catholic ritual. Protestants understood their own religion as one of sincerity and spontaneous feeling. Catholicism and bourgeois manners appeared the opposite: practices of formulaic incantations that impressed the simple-minded but lacked real meaning.

This helps explain why the mob that pulled apart the convent didnt just commit violence, but rudely impersonated priests and inquisitors before it tore the convent apart. Their choice of target was no accident in this regard. The fancy Ursuline Convent was where the richest Protestant Bostonians sent their daughters to learn the very refined social manners that the firefighters disdained.

Anti-Catholic and anti-Irish sentiment bear the greatest blame for the attack, but not all of it. What the Protestant nativists found so alien in the Ursuline Convent wasnt just the Catholic faith, but the affected mannerisms of so many Americans who suddenly thought themselves members of the middle class. While much of the grievance against the nuns of Convent Hill stemmed from prejudices as old as the Reformation, another crucial trigger was an identity crisis within Protestant society.

Charlestown Historical Society

A wood engraving depicts the aftermath of the riots of 1834. Anti-Catholic sentiment and resentment over changing manners had boiled over into violence.

Todays anti-Sharia movement emerges during a similar crisis of manners. In 2017, the issue is not so much dining or handshaking etiquette, but political correctness. A senior editor at The Atlantic recently offered this unflattering comparison: Political correctness requires more than ordinary courtesy: Its a ritual, like knowing which fork to use, by which superior people recognize each other. Other critics of PC culture go further, comparing its rigidity and abstruseness to a form of religious dogma Sharia law for snowflakes, as one Fox News personality memorably put it.

For its champions, political correctness isnt intended to oppress or exclude, but to encourage acceptance and inclusion. Champions of PC culture thus find its critics not only unjustified, but disingenuous and hypocritical. In their view, conservatives (along with occasional liberals such as Bill Maher) who carp about trigger warnings and tone-policing are ultimately concerned with maintaining a safe space in which to air their own retrograde views.

Yet this dismissal may be too cynical. When cultures adopt new scripts, insecurities bubble up, sometimes within social categories but often across them.

Along with a majority of whites, nearly a third of African-Americans believe that Americans are too quick to take offense at remarks made by those of other backgrounds. In Racial Paranoia: The Unintended Consequences of Political Correctness, the anthropologist John L. Jackson found African-Americans unsettled by political correctness, not because it overturns racial attitudes, but because it requires their concealment. When racism was explicit, obvious, and legal, there was little need to be paranoid about it, Jackson explains.

The backlash against political correctness has a social dimension. While popular culture would have us assume that a sense of exclusion fuels conspiracy theories, recent psychological research suggests that such theories are less likely to thrive among solitary, isolated individuals.

Instead, conspiracy beliefs are more likely to propagate when people who feel uncertain about themselves receive messages of inclusion from others with similar concerns. Our polarized society has provided both conditions of late. The specter of PC manners has engendered uncertainty among many Americans, who in turn find inclusion among the like-minded at Trump rallies and other spectacles of anti-Sharia sentiment.

We need to consider that this combination of defensiveness and acceptance may encourage conspiracy beliefs about minority groups such as Muslims, even when the original social suspicions arent especially focused on those minorities. Put simply, the targets of our insecurities arent necessarily their true source.

As one 2015 study on the subject concludes, Conspiracy beliefs actually emerge from social motives namely, a genuine concern for other people that are victimized, endangered, deceived, or otherwise threatened.

The importance of self-uncertainty may be key to understanding the spread of nativist conspiracy theories of the antebellum period and today, and not just in the way suggested by reams of articles analyzing support for President Trump. The Trump phenomenon, most analyses suggest, stems from broad class and racial insecurities: fear of what a black president means for whiteness, or of how Latino immigration threatens white communities. Group status anxiety, according to this view, drives the paranoid style.

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A period map shows the ruins on Mount Benedict in what is now Somerville.

In fact, the collective insecurity we experience in our encounters with other races may provoke less paranoia than the intimate experiences of our still largely intraracial lives. Whatever comfort racially insecure whites find within the homogeneity of their communities and churches is bound to be lost when their own once-trustworthy white acquaintances start questioning their jokes.

The antebellum experience again suggests a parallel. At the peak of anti-Catholicism, anti-Masonry, and anti-Mormonism, social and economic opportunities were not shrinking but expanding for white Protestant men. Slavery remained relatively unchallenged, and Indian removal made land cheap and readily available. In Boston, immigration did little at first to increase competition for skilled labor; the immigrant Irish took pick-and-shovel jobs or worked as domestics. The relative status of non-elite whites had rarely been better.

Yet even under these rosy conditions, a significant number of white Protestants believed the pope was digging that tunnel under the Atlantic. Others believed that Masons were overthrowing the government. Still others swore that Mormons were kidnapping helpless young white women.

In August 1834, one group of these men, set apart from the mainstream of Boston society not by race, class, or religion, but by their increasingly unacceptable manners, acted out a paranoid fantasy.

None of this should encourage us to deny the reality of Islamophobia or its ultimate foundation in our religious, racial, and foreign policy history. But the recent alarm over Sharia may be more than just a knee-jerk response to unfamiliar forces. It as likely originates in the misinterpreted experience of many Americans: having their speech and behavior judged by to a new and apparently alien code.

Dealing with Islamophobia requires more than just refining our manners. It means the difficult and presently unpopular work of empathizing with those who seem to neither desire nor deserve the effort.

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How political correctness led to Islamophobia - The Boston Globe

Here’s the list of some of the famous living creatures that were patented – Economic Times

The United States Patent and Trademark Office considers non-naturally occurring, nonhuman, multicellular living organisms, including animals, to be patentable subject matter. Here are some of the famous living creatures that were patented:

Dolly the sheep She was the worlds first mammal produced by cloning. Instead of being the product of a fertilised egg, her DNA material was taken from the cell of another sheep.

Dolly was cloned in 1996 and lived a normal life until she was euthanised in 2003. The Roslin Institute researchers who did the cloning tried to patent Dolly, her offspring, and the process of cloning her. However, the institute was only allowed to patent the process used in cloning Dolly

OncoMouse This is the worlds first patented animal. Created to study the formation and treatment of cancer in humans, Harvard University was granted a patent in April 1988 for the OncoMouse, which was classified as a Transgenic Non-Human Mammal.

Later, Harvard licensed it to chemical company DuPont, which had been involved in its development. The patent generated some controversy among animal rights activists, who questioned the morality of patenting a living creature.

Pseudomonas Bacteria A new species of oil spill eating Pseudomonas bacteria was the first genetically modified creature ever patented. It was made by inserting into a single species the DNA from four species of oil spilleating bacteria in the Pseudomonas genus

AquAdvantage Salmon This is the first patented and genetically modified salmon that has been approved by the FDA for commercial production and consumption. A product of AquaBounty Technologies, it is made by adding genes to an Atlantic salmon from the Pacific Chinook and the ocean pout. The result is a GM salmon that grows two times faster than regular salmon.

GloFish The GloFish is the worlds first genetically modified pet. It is a patented zebra-fish that glows under ultraviolet light. Initially, the GloFish was not made as a pet but as a sort of biological instrument to detect water pollution. The first GloFish was made by Singaporean scientists who wanted fish that glowed whenever the water they inhabited was polluted.

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Here's the list of some of the famous living creatures that were patented - Economic Times

Houston Astros Report: The evolution of the rainbow uniform revealed – House of Houston

SEATTLE, WA - JUNE 24: Starter Lance McCullers Jr.

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The rainbow uniform design has continued to be one of my favorite Houston Astros uniform design pieces and its right up there with the Shooting Star design of the 1960s. The design of the uniform that I mention of lasted for 21 years from 1975-86 and it has truly stood the test of time.

Paul Lukas of ESPN.com wrote a spectacular piece in regard to the untold story of the uniforms and how one begotten design firm created something that was revolutionary in its own right. Although I wasnt alive when the unis debuted back in 1975, I do recall seeing them at games in the Astrodome before they were modified after the 1986 season, one of the best in team history.

Seeing greats like Nolan Ryan and guys like Mike Scott, Alan Ashby, Jim Deshaies and Billy Hatcher don those uniforms was nothing short of amazing.

I didnt get to go to many games in my early childhood as my family was growing at the time and all my parents resources were focused on keeping a roof over our head and plenty of food to eat. But there were many occasions where I got to go to games and Id just be in awe of the luminosity of the unis as well as the effervescence of our home field, fresh off multi-million dollar renovation where whole interior appeared to be a giant rainbow.

I want to let you read the piece itself but Gary Rollins, the director of Astros TV and radio network, was more in favor of the traditional design like the Detroit Tigers and Los Angeles Dodgers but was steered more in the direction of something more bold. The network was hemorrhaging money at the time and were on the verge of declaring bankruptcy. But it was the new look that staved off such a notion and were a big hit.

Heres a categorization of the evolution by uni expert Paul Lukas:

I do disagree with Lukas in regard to the notion of the 75 jerseys being the best. Im just not a fan of the number being encapsulated in a circle but Im more in favor of the final rehash that continued from 1977-86. Even former Astros president and general manager Tal Smith lobbied hard to get the circle removed.

There were also sorts of designs proposed from a white star on the front to a unique-looking A on the cap of the uniform as well as orange pants. Take a look of those pics None of those wouldve been a good idea because one needs the audacity of such a new concept but not the point of being too tacky. I think the Houston Astros found a perfect medium with the two, hence the design that many of us still wear to this day as a homage to a notable era in franchise history.

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It wouldve been an injustice had this story had not been told and Im glad that a fellow journalist went out to seek the truth and to report it as fully as possible. That is, of course, one of the guiding principles in this business. Lets hope this design continues to stand the test of time like it already has.

Go Astros.

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Houston Astros Report: The evolution of the rainbow uniform revealed - House of Houston

Evolution key as Eddie Jones plots England’s path to World Cup glory – ESPN.co.uk

Eddie Jones says England will need to be the "best prepared team in the world" to return from Japan victorious.

TWICKENHAM -- Fail to prepare, prepare to fail. That is the adage driving England on as Eddie Jones attempts to mastermind 2019 Rugby World Cup glory.

The tournament in Japan does not kick off for another 25 months, but with their Pool C opponents confirmed, England have already begun to plan for their assault on the Webb Ellis Cup.

Eddie Jones believes Manu Tuilagi can "demolish" the All Blacks and branded Leicester's wrecking-ball centre worth every ounce of effort poured into rebuilding his injury-hit England career.

Manu Tuilagi has returned to the England squad for their three-day preseason training session this weekend.

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Jones is constantly looking to improve his side -- both on and off the field -- and with that in mind he and members of his backroom staff have looked to sports as diverse as football, formula one, cycling and bobsleigh for inspiration.

"We need to be the best prepared team in the world because to win the World Cup is going to take an extraordinary performance," Jones told reporters at a media briefing Friday.

"And to have an extraordinary performance, we have to have an extraordinary preparation."

They will also, more than likely, need to beat New Zealand. Jones hinted that he had spotted a weakness in the back-to-back champions over the summer, suggesting the All Blacks are "experiencing problems with their depth" as squad players head to Europe.

England are not scheduled to play the All Blacks prior to the World Cup, but signs from their own June tour were encouraging as a side shorn of 15 British & Irish Lions players sealed a 2-0 series win in Argentina.

Jones is not one to get carried away, though, and he knows there is plenty of work to do if England are to return from Japan victorious. On Friday, he admitted he did not have any players at his disposal who would strike fear in opponents.

"We're developing players who are going to be like that," he said.

Billy Vunipola, back in the training squad announced Thursday as he continues to recover from the shoulder injury that ended his Lions tour before it had begun, is one who Jones predicts has the potential to become world class.

Then there are the nine debutants from Argentina retained for the camp on the outskirts of London, with Tom Curry and Sam Underhill both receiving praise. "They've got a range of skills, a range of toughness to set them up to play Test rugby."

The inclusion of the opensides hints at an evolution in the back row. James Haskell's performances under Jones mean he has credit in the bank but the fight for the No. 7 jersey is on.

And that is, perhaps, the secret to England's success over the last 18 months. Everyone from captain Dylan Hartley to the coaching staff knows that if their level drops then their place in the group is under threat.

"No one's set in stone apart from myself for the next game," Jones said. "Everyone's got to keep improving. That's the challenge ahead."

On the pitch Jones is determined to see an improvement in how well his side uses the ball. He believes pragmatic rugby, building through phases to put the opposition under pressure, is a thing of the past.

"You've got to be able to crack the opposition in the first three phases," he said. "Find the space, use the ball, keep the ball alive, and be accurate in your skill work.

"So, that would be what we'd like to see. But that's not going to happen overnight. It takes time, it takes effort, it takes application."

It is the type of rugby that sets the All Blacks apart from every other rugby playing nation, and Jones' desire to depose New Zealand as the world's No. 1 side is behind his willingness to gamble on the talent of Manu Tuilagi.

The Leicester centre is still some way short of a return to the Test arena, as Jones himself admitted, but he possesses an irresistible ability to break the gain line and put into practice the type of game plan that the England coach craves.

"I know the kid himself is working as hard as he can to get back on the field," Jones said. "At the moment everything looks pretty positive so we've just got to pray that this positivity keeps going and he has a period where he can be injury-free and show what he's capable of."

The memory might be fading but England fans are well aware what Tuilagi is capable of. In 2012 the centre capped a wonderful performance with a try as the All Blacks were beaten 38-21 at Twickenham.

It was a game Jones alluded to Friday as he said: "No one's ripped them [New Zealand] apart, apart from Manu."

Jones added: "He loves rugby and he wants to play for England. He loves playing for England.

"He's doing everything he can to get ready and I'm impressed by his dedication because he's had a tough time. The amount of injuries he's had would be enough to knock people away."

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Evolution key as Eddie Jones plots England's path to World Cup glory - ESPN.co.uk