Commentary: Red-headed Woodpeckers are a remarkable species … – SW News Media

Recently I had a wonderful opportunity to study and photograph a pair of Red-headed Woodpeckers nesting in an old tree and feeding their young. All of this happened because a reader of this column gave me a shout to share the exciting news of this cool woodpecker.

The Red-headed Woodpecker (Melanerpes erythocephalus) was once a very common woodpecker. In the mid 1800's John James Audubon stated that the Red-headed Woodpecker was the most common woodpecker in North America. He called them semi-domesticated because they weren't afraid of people. He stated that they were camp robbers and also a pest.

According to the National Audubon Society, Christmas Bird Count data, between the 1950's and the year 2010 the population of Red-headed Woodpeckers dropped dramatically. Over 80 percent of the population died out in just over 50 years. Currently we continue to lose approximately 2 percent each year. That means within a couple decades we could see this bird become extinct if the trend continues.

The reason behind this decline is not understood. Many are quick to blame loss of habitat for their decline. While it is true that we have had a decline in mature tree habitat, no conclusive study indicates this to be the cause. I would point to the fact that the similar size, shape and habitat requirement Red-bellied Woodpecker populations are exploding across the country. If it were truly a habitat issue it should affect both species equally since they both have the same habitat requirements.

Competition with European Starlings for the nest cavity has also been implicated in the decline of the Red-heads. While no doubt competition for the nest cavity with the starling will impact the Red-heads, the population of the European Staring is also dropping across the country at the same time. Also, if the starling usurps the Red-head the woodpecker can always excavate a new cavity.

It has been proposed that Red-headed Woodpeckers are habitat specialists and require a very unique habitat called the oak savanna. The argument goes that as oak savanna habitat is reduced so goes the woodpecker. I would maintain that the amount of oak savanna habitat was never very large and perhaps the reason why we find Red-heads in this habitat now is because it's the last hold out where the woodpeckers can still live. All you need to do is ask anyone over the age of 50 who grew up on a farm if they remember Red-headed Woodpeckers and they didn't have oak savanna habitat.

Over the past 30 years of studying and photographing Red-headed Woodpeckers the vast majority have not been in oak savanna habitat. In fact the nest I was photographing recently was in a dead birch tree in a mixed deciduous forest.

There are over 200 species of woodpecker in the world and only 4 species cache food. Caching food is a process of storing nuts such as acorns in a cavity for later consumption. This might be a clue. For example the number of nut bearing trees has declined dramatically over the past 100 years. The number of oak trees, hickories and beech trees have declined and the American Chestnut is completely gone. Whether or not this is the cause of the decline is not known.

The Red-headed Woodpecker has many interesting aspects. In nearly all of the woodpeckers species it is easy to see the difference between the male and female. Usually the male has some kind of marking on its head. However the Red-headed Woodpecker male and female look exactly the same. Even if you have these birds in your hands and you can examine them, you won't be able to tell the difference between the male and the female. This is an interesting difference between the Red-headed Woodpeckers and the rest of the woodpeckers.

Red-headed Woodpeckers are remarkable species and I always feel honored to be able to see and film this bird. If you have a nest in your yard, no matter how common the species, give me a shout. You never know, I might come visit. Until next time...

Stan Tekiela is an author/naturalist and wildlife photographer who travels the U.S. to study and photograph wildlife. He can be followed on Facebook and Twitter. He can be contacted via his web page at http://www.naturesmart.com.

The rest is here:

Commentary: Red-headed Woodpeckers are a remarkable species ... - SW News Media

A 9-year-old ‘Guardian of the Galaxy’ applies for NASA job – CNN

Jack Davis, a self-proclaimed "Guardian of the Galaxy" from New Jersey, piqued NASA's interest.

"I may be nine but I think I would be a fit for the job," Jack said in the handwritten letter.

He went on to list his interstellar work experience.

"I have seen almost all the space and alien movies I can see," the 9-year-old explained.

He also showed he's on the case when it comes to career development.

"I have also seen the show Marvel Agents of Shield and hope to see the movie Men in Black."

Jack also described his fine motor skills and the ability to quickly learn and apply new concepts. "I'm great at video games," he said. "I am young, so I can learn to think like an Alien."

NASA replied to the letter and Jack even got a phone call from Planetary Research Director Jonathan Rall.

In the letter, they congratulated Jack on his interest and offered some extra insights about the job.

"It's about protecting Earth from tiny microbes when we bring back samples from the Moon, asteroids and Mars. It's also about protecting other planets and moons from our germs as we responsibly explore the Solar System," wrote James L. Green, director of NASA's planetary science division.

While NASA ended up not offering him the job, it wasn't an outright rejection.

"We are always looking for bright future scientists and engineers to help us, so I hope you will study hard and do well in school," Green said.

"We hope to see you here at NASA one of these days," Green added.

Read more here:

A 9-year-old 'Guardian of the Galaxy' applies for NASA job - CNN

9-year-old applies for planetary protection job at NASA – New York Daily News

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Saturday, August 5, 2017, 7:13 PM

When NASA announced it was hiring a planetary protection officer, a role designed to protect the planet from aliens, the space agency received applications from candidates of all ages.

Nine-year-old Jack Davis, a self-described Guardian of the Galaxy, was among them.

He threw his hat in the ring, undeterred by the job requirements, which include advanced knowledge of Planetary Protection and a degree in physical science, engineering, or mathematics.

I may be nine but I think I would be fit for the job, he wrote in a handwritten letter addressed to NASA.

Aaron Judge defied NASA equations by hitting roof of Marlins Park

The job posting describes planetary protection as the protection of earth from alien organisms, as well as the protection of other planets from earthly germs.

Davis listed his job qualifications in his letter. One of the reasons is my sister says I am an alien...also, I have seen almost all the space and alien movies I can see, he wrote.

He touted his age as an asset, too.

I am young, so I can learn to think like an Alien, he said.

NASA tracking sunspot as it becomes visible

NASA officials were impressed and reached out to Davis to say so.

Dr. James L. Green, the director of NASAs planetary science division told Davis its great that hes interested in being a NASA planetary protection officer.

He described the work as really cool and very important.

Its about protecting Earth from tiny microbes when we bring back samples from the Moon, asteroids and Mars. Its also about protecting other planets and moons from our germs as we responsibly explore the Solar System, Green wrote from NASAs Washington headquarters.

Gwyneth Paltrow's $120 stickers get smacked down by NASA brain

He encouraged Davis to study hard, and said he hoped to see him at NASA one day.

The daring New Jersey fourth-grader also received a congratulatory phone call from NASAs planetary research director Jonathan Rall.

A NASA press release said that although the position may not be in real-life what the title conjures up, it does play an important role in promoting the responsible exploration of our solar system by preventing microbial contamination of other planets and our own.

NASA is accepting applications for the role through Aug. 14.

The rest is here:

9-year-old applies for planetary protection job at NASA - New York Daily News

After 5 Years on Mars, NASA’s Curiosity Rover Is Still Making Big Discoveries – Space.com

NASAs Mars rover Curiosity took this selfie in the Murray Buttes area, on the lower flank of Mount Sharp.

Five years after touching down on Mars, NASA's Curiosity rover mission is still making big discoveries.

On the night of Aug. 5, 2012, the car-size robot aced a dramatic and harrowing landing, settling softly onto the Red Planet's surface after being lowered on cables by a rocket-powered "sky crane." The success of this unprecedented (and seemingly improbable) maneuver sparked eruptions of emotion at mssion control at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California and at late-night viewing parties all over the world.

Curiosity landed on Mars at 10:17 p.m. PDT on Aug. 5, that's 1:17 a.m. EDT on Aug. 6 (0517 GMT), with the signal of its success reaching Earth 14 minutes later after crossing the 154 million miles between Mars and Earth.

Within weeks of its arrival inside Mars' 96-mile-wide (154 kilometers) Gale Crater, Curiosity hit scientific pay dirt, rolling through an ancient streambed where water once flowed. And, not long after that, mission scientists revealed a bombshell: Billions of years ago, a nearby area known as Yellowknife Bay was part of a lake that could have supported microbial life. [The 10 Biggest Moments from Curiosity's First 5 Years on Mars]

But that's not where Curiosity's story ends. The rover has continued to piece together details about the ancient Gale Crater environment work that has led to another exciting find.

"I feel like we're arriving at a second conclusion from the mission that's just as powerful as the first, which is that habitable environments persisted on Mars for at least millions of years," Curiosity project scientist Ashwin Vasavada, of JPL, told Space.com.

Curiosity worked near its landing site on Gale's floor for its first year on Mars. Then, the nuclear-powered rover began a 5-mile (8 km) trek to the towering Mount Sharp, which rises about 3.4 miles (5.5 km) into the Red Planet sky from Gale's center.

The mountain's foothills had long been Curiosity's main science destination, even before the rover's November 2011 launch. Mission team members wanted the six-wheeled robot to work its way up through Mount Sharp's lower reaches, studying the rock layers there for clues about Mars' long-ago transition from a relatively warm and wet world to the cold, arid place it is today.

And that's what Curiosity has been doing for the past three years. Since arriving at Mount Sharp in September 2014, the robot has climbed about 600 vertical feet (180 meters), drilling, sampling and studying numerous rocks that are part of a geological division that mission scientists call the Murray Formation.

Curiosity found that most of this rock is fine-grained mudstone classic lake-bed deposits, Vasavada said. Such deposits on Earth generally take millions of years to accumulate, leading the team to conclude that Gale Crater's lake system was long-lasting.

That's a big deal, because Curiosity's work at Yellowknife Bay captured just "a snapshot in time," Vasavada said.

Based on the initial findings, "that lake may only have been around for 100 or 1,000 years at the minimum," he said. "There was a risk that our habitability discovery only applied to a short amount of time." [Photos: Ancient Mars Lake Could Have Supported Life]

Curiosity has already seen some changes during its climb up Mount Sharp. For example, the mudstone was pretty much continuous at and near the mountain's base, but that finely grained stuff gets broken up by other deposits closer to the top of the Murray Formation, Vasavada said.

"There are intervals of deposits that are consistent with forming in near-shore environments where rivers are reaching the edge of the lake, or even in dry environments where the lake has presumably receded," he said. "But the lake then reappears."

And Gale Crater likely remained habitable even through such periodic dry spells, Vasavada added. That's because groundwater probably remained, even if the lake site was dry on the surface.

This groundwater also outlasted the lakes, he said. Mission scientists know this because Curiosity has spotted evidence that liquid water flowed through Gale's lake deposits after they dried out and were buried, compressed and fractured.

"So there's a whole other era of water that's, by definition, after the lakes," Vasavada said. "It suggests that the water was there even longer than the timescale of the lakes."

Vasavada and his colleagues hope to learn more about this other era, and Gale's early history in general, as Curiosity goes higher up the mountain. Ideally, mission scientists would like to reach three other rock layers that are above the Murray Formation. The first is Vera Rubin Ridge, a feature with lots of the iron-containing mineral hematite; the second is a clay-rich unit; and the third is one dominated by sulfates.

The clay unit was probably exposed to lots of liquid water in the ancient past, whereas sulfates imply that water was scarcer, Vasavada said.

"There's this idea that you go from the clays to the sulfates, and you're going to be witnessing some kind of drying out of the environment at Gale Crater," he said. "Whether that has anything to do with the global drying out of Mars we'd love to figure out. But at the very least, it's a major environmental change within Gale Crater."

Curiosity has already been eyeing Vera Rubin Ridge and should start studying the formation in earnest in the next month or two, Vasavada said. If everything goes according to plan, the rover should get to the clay unit by the end of the year and arrive at the sulfate region, which is about 650 feet (200 m) above Curiosity's current location, a year or two after that.

"In the next three years or so, we'll probably see all of those units," Vasavada said.

Curiosity has already far outlasted its warranty; the rover's $2.5 billion mission was originally scheduled to last just two Earth years.

But there's no reason to think Curiosity won't be able to power through three more years on the Red Planet; the rover is in good shape overall, Vasavada said. (The mission team has been able to slow an initially worrying rate of wheel damage, primarily by choosing routes with softer ground, he added.)

But one major health problem continues to afflict Curiosity: The rover has been unable to use its drill since December 2016. This is a big blow, because the drill which sits at the end of Curiosity's 7-foot-long (2.1 m) robotic arm allows the robot to access the pristine interiors of rocks and, therefore, characterize ancient environments. (Without this capability, the rover is mostly limited to analyzing surface material such as sand, which was shaped and altered in the recent past.)

The issue lies in the drill feed mechanism, which moves the drill bit forward and backward. Until about a month ago, Curiosity engineers were focused primarily on diagnosing the problem and fixing it in a way that would restore normal drill operations, Vasavada said. But the team is now investigating an alternative drilling method using the arm itself, not the feed motor, to move the drill.

"That requires a lot of work to figure out if that's safe, and to figure out how to do it, and how to command it," Vasavada said. "But it's promising, and that may be where we concentrate our efforts going forward."

Though he and other mission team members are chiefly concerned with the future fixing the drill and continuing Curiosity's climb up Mount Sharp, for example the events of Aug. 5, 2012, still have a special place in Vasavada's heart.

"When I look at the landing video, I still get really emotional; I have a hard time giving talks when I show the video, because it takes me like a minute to recover," he said. "It's remembering the emotion of that night, where your whole career is depending on seven minutes of this stuff going right and when it actually did work, realizing that you had a future."

Note: Space.com Senior ProducerSteve Spaletacontributed to this report.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter@michaeldwallandGoogle+.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookor Google+. Originally published onSpace.com.

Read more from the original source:

After 5 Years on Mars, NASA's Curiosity Rover Is Still Making Big Discoveries - Space.com

Hampton History Museum to host Daily Press panel on book about NASA Langley’s 100-year history – Daily Press

Three Daily Press reporters are taking on the 100-year history of NASA Langley and the book they wrote about it in a panel discussion Monday.

Tamara Dietrich, Mark St. John Erickson and Mike Holtzclaw, who collaborated on "The Unknown and Impossible: How a Research Facility in Virginia Mastered the Air and Conquered Space," will participate in a panel discussion about the book at the Hampton History Museum at 7 p.m. Monday.

The book, released in July, chronicles the centennial at NASA Langley in Hampton, where some of the most prominent astronauts, including John Glenn, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, trained for their missions. At Langley, engineers and astronauts played roles in designing the space shuttle and developing the Viking program, which took photos of Mars in the 1970s.

The lab broke ground in July 1917.

"This was the cutting edge of aviation, right here in Hampton," Holtzclaw said. "Anybody who was in aviation and wanted to know what is the latest or if they wanted to test their design at the place to test it, they came here."

The book took at least six months to write, Holtzclaw said. Monday night, books will be on sale for $15.99, and the writers will be signing copies of the book.

Museum members get a 10 percent discount on the book.

Hopefully, the event will inspire people to learn more, said Seamus McGrann, promotions director for the museum.

"It's just another way to showcase the city's past, and for a city that is so integral to the story of America itself, it's just a wonderful way to bring history to people," he said.

A newly minted rule is still in place, Holtzclaw said: "If your footprints are on the lunar surface, you get a free copy."

Mishkin can be reached by phone at 757-641-6669.

What: Panel discussion and book signing of "The Unknown and Impossible."

Where: 120 Old Hampton Lane in Downtown Hampton. Free parking is in the garage across the street.

When: 7-8 p.m. Monday.

Cost: Free.

Buy the book

"The Unknown and Impossible" is available online at BarnesandNoble.com, Amazon.com and dailypress.com/langley. Copies also are available in the Daily Press lobby at 703 Mariners Row in Newport News.

Continued here:

Hampton History Museum to host Daily Press panel on book about NASA Langley's 100-year history - Daily Press

A Fourth-Grader Made A Convincing Handwritten Pitch Explaining Why NASA Should Hire Him – GOOD Magazine

NASA recently made waves online with the news that theyre in the market to fill the position of planetary protection officer. While the job title might sound like something ripped from the script of a sci-fi movie, the reality of the position is a little less exciting. The job actually entails ensuring that the stuff we send to outer space is clean and germ-free so humans dont end up contaminating planets when they land rovers, ships, and such.

Fourth-grader Jack Davis was one of many to jump at the opportunity based on the title alone. Hell probably balk at the reality of the job (scrubbing spaceships?), but its nice to know hes at the ready should we ever need to protect our planet from aliens.

He quickly sent NASA a letter applying for the gig, and, preteen or not, he makes a convincing case for employment.

Image via millamber/Reddit.

I think we can also add "nice handwriting" to the list of qualifications young Jack has going for him.

The letter reads:

Dear NASA:

My name is Jack Davis and I would like to apply for the planetary protection officer job. I may be nine but I think I would be fit for the job. One of the reasons is my sister says I am an alien alsoI have seen almost all the space and alien movies I can see. I have also seen the show Marvel Agents of Shield and hope to see the movie Men in Black. I am great at video games. I am young, so I can learn to think like an Alien.

Sincerely,

Jack Davis

Guardian of the Galaxy

Fourth Grade

Can we just create a position for this kid? Failing that, NASA, can you ship him a copy of Men in Black? Sure, hes allegedlyan alien, according to his (unreliable?) sister, but I say wegive this human/alien enigma the benefit of the doubt.

I mean, hes more qualified than this rocket scientist, right?

Share image via millamber/Reddit.

Excerpt from:

A Fourth-Grader Made A Convincing Handwritten Pitch Explaining Why NASA Should Hire Him - GOOD Magazine

Do You Have What It Takes To Be NASA’s Next Planetary Protection Officer? – NPR

The goals of the planetary protection officer are to protect the Earth and to protect other planets from being contaminated by substances from Earth during exploration. NASA hide caption

The goals of the planetary protection officer are to protect the Earth and to protect other planets from being contaminated by substances from Earth during exploration.

The survival of life of Earth (and elsewhere) may rest on the shoulders of NASA's next planetary protection officer and they're taking applications.

The job posting has elicited headlines about how the space agency is seeking a person to defend our planet from aliens. But it's more concerned with microorganisms than little green men.

And while it's true that the role is trying to prevent Earth from being contaminated by extraterrestrial materials, say from samples collected on missions, the job is just as focused on preventing contamination from Earth on planets and moons that humans explore.

NPR's Ari Shapiro chatted about the job with someone who would know what it takes former Planetary Protection Officer Michael Meyer. He's now the lead scientist for NASA's Mars Exploration Program.

As researchers explore places that could harbor life, "when you bring samples back there's the possibility that you're bringing something alive from another planet," Meyer says. "In which case, you ought to be cautious and keep those samples contained until you can determine whether or not there's anything perhaps hazardous in those samples."

He explains that "the very nature of the job is that you have to be conservative," because we may not know whether an extraterrestrial sample is dangerous or not.

By the same token, as scientists search for life, they don't want to confuse a stowaway microbe from Earth with a groundbreaking discovery of life on another planet.

That's why Meyer spent his time "making sure that the spacecraft going somewhere else was actually of a clean enough nature so that we're not worried about contaminating the planet that we're trying to explore."

He also points out a potentially unexpected set of skills that come in handy: diplomacy.

The planetary protection officer is "dealing with other countries that are also sending spacecraft to targets of opportunity such as Mars and [Jupiter's moon] Europa." The European Space Agency also has a similar role, but other countries with space programs do not.

"We're not in the business of telling other countries how to conduct their business but we do have to pay attention to what they're doing because when we're collaborating with them it's incumbent on us, on NASA, to make sure that they're exploring safely," Meyer added.

Not all missions require the same level of cleanliness, however. He explains that "planetary protection has a gradation of bodies of concern."

For example, sending a spacecraft to an asteroid that is not deemed to have potential for life requires a less conservative approach than sending a spacecraft to Mars. In places that could potentially support life, Meyer says, "we have to sterilize the spacecraft or sterilize the instruments that might touch that region."

Still interested in the job? Here are a few specifics. The application period closes on Aug. 14. It pays $126,406-$187,000 annually. You need a "broad engineering expertise" and must be a "recognized subject matter expert." And "demonstrated experience planning, executing, or overseeing elements of space programs of national significance" is also a must.

The job is open only to U.S. citizens and residents of American Samoa. It also explicitly mentions eligibility of the several dozen residents of Swains Island, a U.S.-administered island in the South Pacific.

Continue reading here:

Do You Have What It Takes To Be NASA's Next Planetary Protection Officer? - NPR

Will NASA’s Ruined Apollo Mission Control Room Rise Again … – NBCNews.com

Aug.04.2017 / 2:27 PM ET

Let our news meet your inbox.

HOUSTON The storied room that first saw humans land on the moon has fallen into a shocking state of disrepair. Once a gleaming state-of-the-art facility, Apollo Mission Control at Johnson Space Center here has become a place of flickering lights and worn carpet held together with tape. The keyboards of its old flight consoles are missing buttons.

NASA says it lacks the money to renovate the room, which was decommissioned in 1992. In recent years, it's been a stop on guided tours of the space center and in 2015 was designated a "threatened facility" by the National Park Service.

But Space Center Houston and other philanthropic groups have stepped in to fill the void, starting a Kickstarter campaign that aims to renovate the facility in time for the 50th anniversary of the first manned mission to the moon. That comes in 2019.

Your Video Begins in: 00:00

What we envision is when you step into the visitor viewing area to see the mission control center, it will be as if the men who worked here had just gone on break, said William Harris, president of Space Center Houston.

The campaign has garnered support from more than 3,000 people from around the world. Its estimated that $5 million will be enough to bring the room back to its original state, as seen on television back in the day and as depicted in the 1995 movie "Apollo 13."

Behind the effort to restore mission control is a handful of NASA workers who spent countless stressful hours working in the room, including the former Apollo flight director, Gene Kranz.

Kranz, 84, believes not enough was done to prevent the room's deterioration.

"This is frustrating to me that NASA allowed this room to deteriorate to the condition it was in, he said. They did not have the feeling that comes from having worked and lived...in this room. We saw incredible tragedy, but we also triumphed.

Kranz and his colleagues were in the room for Apollo 11 and the other successful manned missions to the moon. They were also there when three astronauts died during testing for the first Apollo mission in 1967 and in 1970 when the Apollo 13 astronauts returned safely to Earth after their space capsule was disabled by an explosion.

Among the contributors to the Kickstarter campaign is the City of Webster, Texas, which was home to many of the flight controllers and other personnel who worked in the room during the during the Apollo era. In early 2017, the city stepped forward with a gift of $3.1 million on top of a dollar-for-dollar matching campaign.

We hope that by restoring this room, it will make create greater awareness about the incredible work, achievements, of the U.S. space program," Harris said. "We are really standing on the shoulders of those who have gone before us.

FOLLOW NBC MACH ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK, AND INSTAGRAM.

Let our news meet your inbox.

View post:

Will NASA's Ruined Apollo Mission Control Room Rise Again ... - NBCNews.com

NASA Invites You to Become a Citizen Scientist During Solar Eclipse – WCYB

NASA is inviting citizens across the US to participate in a nationwide science experiment by collecting cloud and air temperature data and reporting it via their phones.

The experiments are part of the Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment, or GLOBE Program. GLOBE is a NASA-supported research and education program that encourages students and citizen scientists to collect and analyze environmental observations. Observers gather their data through a free, easy to use app which guides you through the experiment.

On Aug. 21, a total solar eclipse will occur across the entire continental United States. Crossing the country from Oregon to South Carolina over the course of an hour and a half, 14 states will experience night-like darkness for approximately two minutes in the middle of the day. The eclipse enters the U.S. at 10:15 a.m. PDT off the coast of Oregon and leaves U.S. shores at approximately 2:50 p.m. EDT in South Carolina.

All of North America will experience at least a partial eclipse, including here in the Tri-Cities.

For more about what we'll see in the Tri-Cities, click here.

No matter where you are in North America, whether its cloudy, clear or rainy, NASA wants as many people as possible to help with this citizen science project, said Kristen Weaver, deputy coordinator for the project. We want to inspire a million eclipse viewers to become eclipse scientists.

In order to participate, first download the GLOBE Observer app and register to become a citizen scientist. The app will instruct you on how to make the observations. Second, you will need to obtain a thermometer to measure air temperature.

To join in the fun, download the GLOBE Observer apphttps://observer.globe.gov/about/get-the-app. After you log in, the app explains how to make eclipse observations.

Observations will be recorded on an interactive map.

To learn more about how NASA researchers will be studying the Earth during the eclipse visithttps://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/nasa-looks-to-the-solar-eclipse-to-help-understand-the-earth-s-energy-system

News 5 will provide special coverage of the eclipse starting at 2pm on August 21st. Join the StormTrack 5 Weather Team and News 5's reporters as they bring you live reports from the path of totality and across the Tri-Cities. Nature's Blackout: Tracking the 2017 Solar Eclipse begins at 2pmon News 5, WCYB.

Have a question about the eclipse? Send our weather team an email at weather@wcyb.com or contact them on social media.

Read more:

NASA Invites You to Become a Citizen Scientist During Solar Eclipse - WCYB

Low-cost, sensitive CO sensor from IISc – The Hindu

Indian Institute of Science researchers have developed a highly sensitive nanometre-scale carbon monoxide sensor by employing an innovative fabrication technique. It is known that carbon monoxide (CO) can have adverse effects on the health of people exposed to it. Hence, it becomes necessary to have good, low-cost carbon-monoxide sensors. The research is published in Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical.

Right size

Typically, a sensor would be a thin, current carrying plate whose resistance changes on exposure to carbon monoxide. This in turn changes the value of the current flowing through it. This change when measured indicates the level of carbon monoxide in the air. Most available sensors are in the micrometer range, a nanometer-sized detector would have a higher sensitivity, but the cost of manufacturing it goes up as the size decreases. This is where the work of C.S. Prajapati and coworkers of Indian Institute of Science comes in.

To build this zinc-oxide (ZnO) nanostructure on a silicon wafer substrate, the researchers first placed tiny polystyrene beads on the wafer. These beads arrange themselves into what is called a hexagonal close-packed structure on the oxidised silicon wafer.

Maintaining a reasonable level of vacuum, a high voltage is applied which etches away the surfaces of the beads until a gap of desired thickness is formed between adjacent beads. Then zinc oxide is deposited on the system.

This occupies the spaces between the beads, forming a honeycomb like nano-mesh that can function as a nanosenor.

Scaling down from 10 micrometer feature size to 10 nanometer feature (used in this work) can enhance the efficiency 1,000 times. However, the development cost of nanostructured gas sensors using existing lithography tools is really very high, which eventually impacts the overall cost of the device, explains Navakanta Bhat, Chair and Professor, Centre for Nano Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Science, an author of the paper, in an email to The Hindu.

This device is also easy to scale for mass production. Nanostructure-based gas sensors are very promising in their performance due their high surface-to-volume ratio. The existing techniques to create honeycomb nanostructures using photolithography and e-beam lithography are expensive and time-consuming. The proposed technique can potentially reduce the cost by more than 50%, says Prof. Bhat.

Smart cities

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology has a vision of deploying such sensors in large scale for pollution monitoring in large cities like Delhi and Bengaluru. For instance, if the sensors are installed in all traffic intersections, we can do real time mapping of pollution hot-spots in a city. This would be an enabler in realizing smart cities, says Prof. Bhat.

Continued here:

Low-cost, sensitive CO sensor from IISc - The Hindu

New Haven doctor works to repair central nervous system injuries – New Haven Register (blog)

Photo: Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticut Media

Erika R. Smith, CEO of ReNetX Bio Inc., is photographed with Dr. Stephen M. Strittmatter, founder of the company, in his lab at the Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine in New Haven.

Erika R. Smith, CEO of ReNetX Bio Inc., is photographed with Dr. Stephen M. Strittmatter, founder of the company, in his lab at the Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine in New Haven.

New Haven doctor works to repair central nervous system injuries

NEW HAVEN >> There is now no way to regenerate severed nerves in the central nervous system, but Dr. Stephen M. Strittmatter is confident hes found a way to repair them.

Hes even founded a company, ReNetX Bio Inc., to shepherd his new therapy through the maze of regulations, clinical trials and manufacturing processes, ultimately hoping to cure patients with devastating injuries.

We have this amazing, complex neural network that manages all our functions, stemming from the brain and spinal cord, said Strittmatter, professor of neurology and neuroscience in the Yale School of Medicine.

When a nerve fiber, or axon, in the central nervous system is damaged, such as in a paralyzing spinal cord injury, it doesnt grow back. Even though the nerve cell is still healthy in the adult brain or spinal cord, it cant grow and therefore function doesnt come back, he said.

(The central nervous system, which manages all our functions, is separate from the peripheral nervous system, which performs other tasks, such as carrying stimuli from our senses, and which can regenerate.)

The axon, which starts at the cell body, or soma, can extend up to a meter in length, Strittmatter said. If the cell were the size of a baseball, the extension, the nerve fiber, would be the width of a pencil and be a quarter of a mile long, he said.

Strittmatter said he has investigated why nerve fibers cant grow in adults, and that led us to the idea that there are inhibitors that are present in the adult brain and spinal cord. They stop the axons from growing back to where theyre supposed to be.

In fact, there are three such inhibitors, called Nogo, MAG and OMgp, which exist in the myelin that coats the nerve fibers. They stick to the axon and tell it not to grow, Strittmatter said.

He and the researchers in his lab studied ways to stop the inhibitors from attaching to the axon. So we developed this protein, which we call Nogo Trap Its sort of like a double negative; it blocks the inhibitors [and] those new connections allow function to be recovered, he said.

So far, the therapy looks promising. Weve done experiments here that have shown that that works after rats and mice have spinal cord injuries, he said.

Now, ReNetX Bio, a new name for a company founded in 2010 as Axerion Therapeutics, faces the long process of turning an experimental therapy into a marketable drug, which they hope also will be effective for stroke and glaucoma.

Thats what the company is about, bringing it out of the lab and into the clinic, Strittmatter said.

The next step is getting Food and Drug Administration approval of Nogo Trap, also known as Axer-204, as an investigative new drug, which allows phase one clinical trials. That initial phase is only concerned with the drugs safety. The second and third phases test whether or not the drug is effective.

Erika R. Smith, named CEO of ReNetX in July, said there is a long list of other tasks to be addressed, including toxicology testing, scaling up manufacture of the drug and lots of paperwork. A lot of boxes get checked to make sure its OK to try in a clinical setting, she said.

Both Smith and Strittmatter said there are advantages to forming their own company.

I guess I feel like being involved I can help make sure that the right clinical trials are done, Strittmatter said.

Smith added, Theres a lot of challenges in early research that a lot of pharma companies arent willing to take the risk themselves. A lot of times companies wont come in really early.

Along the way, theres all kinds of roadblocks, things we cant expect, Strittmatter said. Drugs might get degraded faster in one species than another or there could be secondary complications like infections.

Were very excited that the experiments that have happened in the lab have gone very well, he said. However, there is a risk. Experimental animal studies can look great but maybe only 20 percent of the time can that be turned into a drug that can be used in people, he said.

But Smith noted the substantial funding that has come into the company to this point were estimating $15 million that has gotten the program to where it is. Much of that support has come from the National Institutes of Health, she said.

The company has a staff of five and is seeking to hire a chief medical officer, Smith said.

Yale University holds intellectual property rights and is a part owner of ReNetX. The company has licensed those patents from Yale so they can go on to do sales and clinical development, Strittmatter said. Yale would receive royalties if it were eventually sold as a drug.

The end goal that it gets to people and it makes a difference in their lives, Strittmatter said.

Smith said, The big picture of this is its a whole new paradigm change for any kind of injury in the central nervous system.

Call Ed Stannard at 203-680-9382.

More:

New Haven doctor works to repair central nervous system injuries - New Haven Register (blog)

Former CDC Director: Medicine Should Look Beyond Randomized … – Regulatory Focus

Posted 04 August 2017 By Michael Mezher

In an article in the New England Journal of Medicine on Thursday, former director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Thomas Frieden calls for greater use of alternative data sources, other than randomized controlled trials (RCTs), for health care decision making.

"For much, and perhaps most, of modern medical practice, RCT-based data are lacking and no RCT is being planned or is likely to be completed to provide evidence for action. This 'dark matter' of clinical medicine leaves practitioners with large information gaps for most conditions and increases reliance on past practices and clinical lore," Frieden writes.

The article comes as the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) looks to flesh out a framework for the use of so-called real world evidencesuch as data from observational studies, routine safety surveillance, patient registries and insurance claimsto evaluate drugs and medical devices.

Last week, FDA announced it will hold a public workshop in collaboration with the Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy in September focused on the development of such a framework.

While RCTs are considered the "gold standard" for generating evidence to support the approval of new drugs, Frieden argues that in some cases, observational studies may be more appropriate for determining health outcomes.

"Although they can have strong internal validity, RCTs sometimes lack external validity; generalizations of findings outside the study population may be invalid," Frieden writes.

But, Vinay Prasad, a hematologist-oncologist and assistant professor of medicine at the Oregon Health and Sciences University, told Focus that this assertion somewhat misses the mark.

"When are randomized trials desperately needed? To prove that at least in some circumstances a therapy can work you have to show that something can work under some circumstances to move forward. You cannot assume this. Only an RCT can tell you this unless the effect size is huge," Prasad said. Prasad also said that sponsors can increase the external validity of RCTs by loosening their inclusion criteria to allow for a more varied patient population.

Frieden also argues that RCTs often have insufficient study periods and small sample sizes, which can lead to unanswered questions about treatment effect duration and rare adverse events that are only answered after a product enters the market.

As an example, Frieden points to the case of FluMist, the live attenuated influenza vaccine nasal spray, which was shown to be superior to inactivated influenza vaccine in children in multiple RCTs. Despite the effect shown in those studies, a later observational study found that FluMist was less effective than previous studies showed.

Here, Prasad argues that RCTs are still necessary to hash out the effect of the two treatments. "Most interventions, including the ones discussed by Frieden have modest effect sizes. For these things you need RCTs to separate true effect from your bias," Prasad said.

Frieden also points to a number of issues that limit the practicality of conducting RCTs, including their high cost and difficulty to plan and implement. As a tradeoff, Frieden says these constraints can lead sponsors to rely on surrogate markers or recruit patients from high-risk patient populations that might not reflect the broader patient population to speed along their studies.

But, Prasad says these issues are not inherent with RCTs, arguing that innovations could be made to bring down their costs and startup times.

Despite these issues, Frieden says that "current evidence-grading systems are biased toward RCTs, which may lead to inadequate consideration of non-RCT data." Though, while advocating for greater use of other data sources, Frieden says FDA's standards for evaluating safety and efficacy should be lowered.

Rather, "there should be rigorous review of all potentially valid data sources," Frieden writes.

NEJM

See the rest here:

Former CDC Director: Medicine Should Look Beyond Randomized ... - Regulatory Focus

UMass Medical School welcomes largest class ever, but future … – Worcester Telegram

Scott O'Connell Telegram & Gazette Staff @ScottOConnellTG

WORCESTER Once again, UMass Medical School has welcomed a historically large class of medical students, as 162 future doctors arrived on campus this week.

But after years of growth the schools enrollment cap used to be 100 students not long ago Chancellor Michael F. Collins said he doesnt expect new records to be set anytime soon.

Im not seeing the enrollment rising beyond that (162) at the moment, he said, explaining the lack of available clinical assignment spaces for additional students, as well as the potential reduction in instructional quality that could come from straining the medical schools staff and facilities, are the two main arguments against further expansion.

But Mr. Collins said the medical schools relatively fast enrollment growth since 2009, when its enrollment maximum increased to 125, has been managed well so far, which he credited in large part to the extraordinary commitment from UMasss faculty. In the last couple years in particular the medical school began accepting out-of-state students for the first time in 2016 the school has had to stretch its capacity to take on 150 students last year and now 162 this summer.

Nearly half of those students will go into primary care, Mr. Collins said, which is one of the reasons UMass the states lone public medical school has sought to expand its enrollment recently.

Obviously the nation needs more doctors, he said, especially in primary care. We feel a responsibility its good weve been able to increase the class size. We have the facilities and competent faculty to do it.

The true challenge of accommodating this years additional students wont come until their third year, however, when theyll be placed in clinical assignments.

Its easy to put a row of chairs in a classroom, Mr. Collins said. Its not so easy to find clinical placements for everybody.

Some students will be going to Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, which UMass partnered with two years ago for the purpose of creating more clinical opportunities for medical students. Others will go to the medical schools new Baystate campus in Springfield; 22 from this years class, in particular, will participate in the new Urban and Rural Community Health track, which will take them to Springfield after two years to train to become primary care doctors in an urban or rural setting.

Most of this years record-setting class has come from within the state. According to UMass, 131 are Massachusetts residents, while the other 31 are from out of state, which is up from 19 a year ago. Technically, the new out-of-state acceptance policy is supposed to be capped at 25 students. But James Fessenden, a spokesman for UMass, said the acceptance process is ultimately an inexact science we manage it the best we can, which sometimes leads to slightly more or fewer students being accepted.

Mr. Collins said opening up the medical school to non-Massachusetts residents a move driven by UMasss desire for more high-quality candidates, as well as more revenue, since it can charge out-of-staters a higher rate has not in his view led to any changes to the culture or environment at the school.

Its imperceptible, he said. These are just students going to medical school.

But Mr. Collins said accepting large numbers of new students could negatively affect the program, which is why UMass has tried to keep year-over-year increases below 10 percent.

If we all of a sudden took 50 more students, it would be a different place here, he said.

See more here:

UMass Medical School welcomes largest class ever, but future ... - Worcester Telegram

Twists, turns and maybe TMI about USC – Los Angeles Times

The unfolding saga of the downfall of ex-USC medical school dean Dr. Carmen A. Puliafito has saddened, surprised and angered readers. Dozens of Times letter writers have reacted to the many angles of the developing scandal, with the weekend article detailing the history of internal complaints about Puliafitos drinking and abusive behavior eliciting especially sharp replies.

Here are a few of the responses.

Sandra Perez in Santa Maria has praise:

I cant thank your reporters enough for so doggedly pursuing the appalling story of how USC all but ignored Puliafitos egregious conduct while continuing to exploit his fund-raising prowess.

In Culver City, Meta Valentic is direct:

I read the article and wondered how USC could keep Puliafito at the helm of the Keck School of Medicine despite the many complaints logged about his behavior. Then, I found the answer in one short quote from former HR director James Lynch: Hes kind of a pain in the ass, but he gets results.

That's entitled privilege laid bare. Until USC looks at its problem with enabling people like Puliafito, they won't find any answers in this embarrassing debacle.

From Sherman Oaks, Nick Batzdorf questions The Times priorities:

We are living in tumultuous times with all kinds of vitally important things going on locally, nationally, and internationally. It's remarkable how uninterested I am in knowing more about the crazy former dean of the USC medical school. Is it possible that these many above-the-fold stories about this idiot is excessive?

Observes Nancy A. Stone from Santa Monica:

The lengths to which USCs administrators went to bury the Puliafito story speaks volumes about the universitys misplaced priorities. Obviously, money is far more important than integrity to the Trojan brand.

Cheryl Clark-O'Brien of Long Beach offers:

When I first read about the allegations against Dr. Puliafito, I thought he must be some kind of superhuman, raging with 20-year-olds by night, saving eyesight by day. Grudging respect.

Now it seems his colleagues already thought he was a bully and were concerned about his drinking. They tried to go through channels, but the doctor remained an honored employee. What a surprise.

Please fill in your full name, mailing address, city of residence, phone number and e-mail address below. Submissions that do not include this information cannot be published. This information is seen only by the letters editors and is not used for any commercial purpose. We generally do not publish...

Please fill in your full name, mailing address, city of residence, phone number and e-mail address below. Submissions that do not include this information cannot be published. This information is seen only by the letters editors and is not used for any commercial purpose. We generally do not publish...

Added Armen Goenjian, a physician from Long Beach:

Missing in these reports was a salient feature of the narrative, that the dean was suffering from a progressive disease.

The humiliating repetitive description of his inappropriate behavior adds insult to his psychological injuries, reduces the chances of his recovery and ability to find decent employment in the future.

Nancy Becklund Spencer in Glendale sees it differently:

Once again, a very good article ... My anger is that he is now portrayed as a victim. The victims are the great doctors and nurses at USC and those who left.

Follow the Opinion section on Twitter @latimesopinion and Facebook

See the rest here:

Twists, turns and maybe TMI about USC - Los Angeles Times

Thousands flocked to see Liberty Bell in Austin during World War I – MyStatesman.com

On Nov. 17, 1915, the Liberty Bell landed in Austin for 40 minutes. An estimated 18,000 people viewed it at the Missouri, Kansas & Texas freight depot at East Fourth and Brazos streets. The occasion was a national tour of the famously cracked Revolutionary War bell.

Austin history advocate Bob Ward got curious about the road tour when he read How the Liberty Bell won the Great War, an article in the April 2017 edition of the Smithsonian magazine. The fragile instrument which announced the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776, but was left almost to ruin for decades was sent around the country in 1915 to whip up patriotic frenzy. It was later rung along with thousands of other bells 13 times, once for each of the colonies, in 1917 after the U.S. had entered World War I in a stunt to raise desperately needed money through bonds.

Ward dug up articles about the Austin stop from the Austin Statesman and Tribune from 1915. It was supposed to arrive at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 17 and remain at the freight yard until 6 p.m. Ramps were set up for a gondola to be separated from its touring train.

The committee in charge of the bell desires that the school children be given the first opportunity to see it, the newspaper reported about the preparations. It is probable that the school children will march to the railway station to see the bell. University students will place two wreaths upon the bell.

In fact, the train was late. The march did not begin until 6:30 p.m. and the train pulled away from the depot at 7:10 p.m.

Various officials, including Mayor A.P. Wooldridge, spoke from a platform.

A long series of hurrahs greeted the old bell as it was slowly pushed into sight from behind the Katy freight depot, goes one newspaper report. The special train carrying the bell was occupied by 41 persons. The next stop after the bell left Austin was Georgetown.

You cant understand New Austin without delving into Old Austin. One digital avenue for that quest is Austin Found, a series of historical images of Austin and Texas published at statesman.com/austinfound. Well share samples here regularly.

Original post:

Thousands flocked to see Liberty Bell in Austin during World War I - MyStatesman.com

Statue of Liberty as a Muslim? Painting in Rep. Lou Correa’s office sparks complaints – OCRegister

A student painting that depicts the Statue of Liberty wearing a Muslim hijab, displayed in congressman Lou Correas Santa Ana office, is being attacked as an unpatriotic violation of the separation of church and state by members of We the People Rising, a Claremont-based activist group that advocates stricter enforcement of immigration laws.

The group, including several Orange County participants, has asked without success that Correa remove the painting hanging with other finalists from the Democratic congressmans student art competition.

Because of the complaint, Correa said he asked the House Office of Legislative Counsel for advice and was told there was no legal issue. That has not appeased the activists, who are tentatively planning a Sept. 11 protest at Correas district office.

A student painting of the Statue of Liberty in a Muslim hijab, hanging in Congressman Lou Correas Santa Ana office, is being attacked as an unpatriotic violation of the separation of church and state by members of We the People Rising, a Claremont-based activist group that advocates stricter enforcement of illegal immigration laws in Santa Ana on Thursday, August 3, 2017. (Photo by Sam Gangwer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

A student painting of the Statue of Liberty in a Muslim hijab, center, is one of six student works hanging in Congressman Lou Correas Santa Ana office. The image is being attacked as an unpatriotic violation of the separation of church and state by members of We the People Rising, a Claremont-based activist group that advocates stricter enforcement of illegal immigration laws in Santa Ana on Thursday, August 3, 2017. (Photo by Sam Gangwer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

A student painting of the Statue of Liberty in a Muslim hijab, hanging in Congressman Lou Correas Santa Ana office, is being attacked as an unpatriotic violation of the separation of church and state by members of We the People Rising, a Claremont-based activist group that advocates stricter enforcement of illegal immigration laws in Santa Ana on Thursday, August 3, 2017. (Photo by Sam Gangwer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

A student painting of the Statue of Liberty in a Muslim hijab, hanging in Congressman Lou Correas Santa Ana office, is being attacked as an unpatriotic violation of the separation of church and state by members of We the People Rising, a Claremont-based activist group that advocates stricter enforcement of illegal immigration laws in Santa Ana on Thursday, August 3, 2017. (Photo by Sam Gangwer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Its a bad example for our congressman, said Orange resident Mike McGertrick, an activist with We the People Rising. He shouldnt have anything religious in his office. I would like to see our Congress people be right-down-the-line patriotic.

McGertick went farther in his condemnation during a July 3 meeting with Correas district director, Claudio Gallegos, calling the hanging of the painting in the office reprehensible and disrespectful.

In this day and age, we want to see that our elected officials are the utmost of patriotism, McGertick says in a video the group recorded and posted on YouTube.

Correa sees nothing objectionable in the painting, which comes at a time of controversy over Donald Trumps efforts to ban the entry to the U.S. of people from Muslim countries and about the treatment of Muslims in this country.

You take it in the context of a lady, probably a Muslim American with all thats going on, shes a proud American, Correa said by phone from Jerusalem, where he was attending meetings as part of a congressional information-gathering trip. Thats what it says to me.

Correa said it was important to not remove the painting because of a few complaints.

This is an art competition for our high school students, he said. I want out students to express themselves through art. To take it down would signal that this is not welcome and that would send the wrong message.

Nearly all House members hold the competition in their districts, with the winners displayed in a Capitol Building corridor. Correas district winner, selected by his staff and local artists, was a photograph of a mural featuring Mexican American veterans from WWII. The Statue of Liberty painting finished fourth.

The freshman congressman noted that activists from We the People Rising attended a May 30 town hall he held to provide information to immigrants concerned about being deported.A disruption resulted in the event being stopped for a while and three people were arrested for assault or suspicion of assault, two of whom were fighting each other. Its unclear whether any of those arrested were part of the activist group or part of a pro-Trump group that was also on hand.

McGertick and Robin Hvidston, executive director for We the People Rising, both said that their complaint was not anti-Muslim that they would have had the same concerns if the Statue of Liberty had been depicted with a cross or a Star of David.

Hvidston said the idea to hold a protest on Sept. 11, the day memorializing the Twin Tower terrorist attacks of 2001, came from The Remembrance Project, a group that bills itself as A Voice for Victims Killed by Illegal Aliens.

Correas office would not release the name or school of the female artist responsible for the painting, citing unspecified threats made to his office that are being investigated by the Capitol Police and a request by the police not to release information that could jeopardize the artists safety.

Hvidston condemned the threats and said that her groups issue was not with the painting itself, but with its placement in a congressional office.

We have absolutely nothing against this young lady, Hvidston said. Shes obviously very talented and we wish her the best.

More:

Statue of Liberty as a Muslim? Painting in Rep. Lou Correa's office sparks complaints - OCRegister

A Turning Point on the Left? Libertarian Caucus Debuts at Democratic Socialist Conference – Truth-Out

Roughly 100 anti-Trump protesters demonstrate peacefully in Market Square on February 19, 2017, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Jeff Swensen / Getty Images)

The Democratic Socialists of America, a traditionally progressive socialist organization founded in 1982, has seen it's membership increase multiply from roughly 5,000 to 25,000 members in the past year following the Bernie Sanders campaign and the subsequent election of Trump. Now, many on the left are looking at the organization as a barometer of sorts for the fate of the larger left. In addition, many are viewing the DSA convention this week in Chicago as a key turning point within the organization. Coming out of the DSA is a new caucus called the Libertarian Socialist Caucus. The LSC promotes a vision of "libertarian socialism" -- a traditional name for anarchism -- that goes beyond the confines of traditional social democratic politics. I asked John Michael Coln, a member of the group's provisional organizing committee, to talk about its vision and goals.

Adam Weaver: The DSA has a range of tendencies and is sort of a "big tent" of socialist politics. What made you want to form a Libertarian Socialist Caucus (DSA-LSC)? Tell us about yourself and what you see as the political influences of the group.

John Michael Coln: I've been a member of DSA for over a year; some of us involved have been members before the "Bernie and Trump bump." So it's not a matter of anarchists infiltrating and joining DSA ... but anarchists who have been members of DSA all along. We want to organize them as we believe that libertarian socialism is democratic socialism.

Once upon a time, before Trump and Bernie Sanders, there had been a thing called the Left Caucus which aimed to organize all the DSA members who wanted to push the organization to the left. It was good, I was part of it, but it's now basically defunct because with so many new members joining DSA, many are already to the left of the DSA. But what the existence of the Left Caucus proved was that caucuses based on ideological interests had a place in DSA. We want to be the first caucus within the DSA that had a more specific vision, that openly talks about a specific political direction that they would move towards. Rather than say we want to move the DSA to the left, we [are saying we] want to move to the left with specific positions and a specific manner. And not everyone who identifies with the left is going to agree.

Speaking for myself here, I believe that the LSC has an especially important role not just in promoting its own ideas, but also in setting an example for others for how to do caucuses right in being internally democratic, in co-existing, cooperating with and having cross-membership with other caucuses. Caucuses can be hubs of organizing activity, hubs of political education, hosting reading groups, etc. There's a dimension of caucuses that are akin to being political parties within the larger DSA.

It's important to note that you can't be in the LSC unless you are a dues-paying member of DSA. Most of our members were people who were already members of the DSA. There are some people who, because we announced our existence, joined DSA, and that's a consequence of the libertarian socialists already in DSA who were getting organized.

At the end of the day, the Libertarian Socialist Caucus, or any other caucus for that matter, is not an alien entity within DSA; rather it's a caucus of DSA members united around a shared interest.

What do you see as the commonalities and differences between the politics that you are looking to put forward and DSA's current politics and organizing? What are you looking to change?

I would contest the framing of the question a little bit. It's important to note that beyond the idea of big-tent socialism, the DSA doesn't actually have a party line. Outside observers, though, act as if DSA does, but the reality is it doesn't have a set of positions that you have to accept. Rather, the DSA is an internally democratic organization of socialists that adjudicate their disputes through liberal parliamentary norms of conflict resolution. In other words, if we disagree, like on the convention floor, it will be argued out on the floor between delegates. It's not a centralist organization where there's a party line and if you disagree you have to leave.

The problem is that, at this point, it's difficult to say exactly what LSC stands for because we don't have official positions. We just finalized our membership, and because we are democratic we haven't reached positions yet. There are probably shared values that we have that people in DSA don't have, and we want to promote those values and make them more popular.

These [values include] skepticism of the state, a critique of the state and seeing the state as going hand-in-hand with capitalism. A second component is a belief in radical democracy with a higher standard of democracy, one which is more rigorous. A lot of people believe that democracy is just elections. But we believe democracy means more than electionsthat it is participatory.

We want to advocate and convince people by the strength of our ideas that there are things DSA should be doing and should be promoting. We want to see more things like directly democratic neighborhood assemblies, worker cooperatives, participatory budgeting, radical syndicalism and municipalism that DSA is currently not promoting, as well as the things DSA is already doing, like organizing workplaces and fighting bosses and landlords. We see these as the fullest embodiment of the values that unite the different kinds of socialism within the DSA under its banner.

The DSA's convention is happening in Chicago this weekend. With over 40 proposals and with the huge influx of new members who have entered the organization, many observers see this convention as a turning point. Can you tell us what you see as the key issues at stake that will be debated at the coming convention? How is DSA-LSC leaning on these issues?

I do want to answer this one by saying, like I said before, LSC doesn't have an official position yet. The very first event that we are organizing [Friday] morning is our first general assembly where members of LSC will follow a procedure presented to our membership to make decisions about convention debates. We are going to go one-by-one through all of the floor debate questions that will happen at the convention. If our assembly can arrive at a consensus, we are going to ask the delegates present to vote in accordance with that.

We don't know how many will show up exactly, but we are expecting, based on our listserve, something like 20 confirmed delegates, and we are allowing any DSA member to attend.

A major decision at the convention will be elections for the 16-member National Political Committee of DSA, which acts as a sort of national level policy and steering committee for the organization. Right now there's the competing Momentum/Spring Platform and Praxis slates, individuals drafted and signed onto a "Unity Platform" document, and now members of DSA-LSC are putting forward their candidates as well, called DSA Friends and Comrades. What do you see as the competing visions represented?

I can't say anything on our official position on them. Speaking only for myself, I think that Momentum and Praxis both have some pros and they both have some cons. They are all good organizers and comrades that have done good work. But I personally disagree very strongly with what I would see as the centralizing tendencies in Momentum's positions. But I'm only speaking for myself, and I know for a fact that other LSC members have different opinions.

What I would say about both Momentum and Praxis is that the way they came about is that [their candidates] only represent themselves. My hope is that in the future LSC sets an example where candidates are selected by caucuses and are accountable to them rather than self-selecting. And I think that's important because the platforms of the slates have shaped the convention as a whole, and it's more democratic if those conversations arise from larger groups of members within the DSA.

The DSA Friends and Comrades coalition is something that came out of LSC members and was organized by LSC members informally and hasn't been approved by the group. We wish them well, and some of us will vote for them and promote them on our social media, but they don't represent the LSC. Next convention we aim to organize a primary and democratic process to put forward a slate.

More:

A Turning Point on the Left? Libertarian Caucus Debuts at Democratic Socialist Conference - Truth-Out

Outer Banks Islands Expect Busy Saturday After Power Outage – NBC4 Washington

The beach at Ocracoke, part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. Ocracoke was one of two islands evacuated after a construction accident cut power; residents are now able to return.

Rental houses and condos were expected to fill up Saturday on two North Carolina islands where a bridge construction accident cut power for a week and threatened seasonal businesses' bottom lines.

The first day of the weekend is a typical starting point for weeklong rentals, and stores and restaurants were expecting brisk business. Both islands reopened to tourists Friday.

"We want everyone to know that we are open for business," said Tommy Hutcherson, the owner of the Ocracoke Variety Store.

The business, which is the island's only grocery store, had its own generator to keep the doors open but saw few customers during the past week.

"We're in the height of our summer season. We're just happy to see people back," Hutcherson said.

Maryland resident Colleen Sax planned to start her eight-hour drive to Hatteras Island on Saturday morning for a vacation with her husband, two adult daughters and extended family. She's relieved after nervously monitoring updates on the situation. An initial estimate that the problem would take weeks to fix was whittled each day until officials announced visitors could return Friday.

"That changed quickly. ... Then it was Friday. I was like: 'Wow!'" she said.

The kitchen staff at the Back Porch Restaurant on Ocracoke Island was busy chopping vegetables and doing other prep work ahead of a Saturday reopening. Owner Daphne Bennink said generator power allowed them to save some high-priced meat and seafood, but they had to order all new fresh produce.

She said her staff also did a deep clean of the kitchen and tried to stay ready because of the uncertain timeframe for reopening.

"While we're used to having an evacuation, there's almost always a weather event that sort of gives us a tangible, visible timeline," she said. But because of the uncertainty about the outage, she said: "We've been perched, sort of ready."

Power was cut to the two islands early on the morning of July 27 when workers building a new bridge drove a steel casing into underground transmission lines. An estimated 50,000 tourists were ordered to leave during a make-or-break period for seasonal businesses, many of which close during the cold-weather months.

Dare County officials estimate that Hatteras Island businesses easily lost $2 million overall for each day of the outage, county spokeswoman Dorothy Hester said. She said the rough estimate is based on last year's tourism figures and could change.

Meanwhile, about 100 people attended a meeting Friday for business owners to begin tallying losses on Ocracoke, which is in Hyde County. County spokesman Donnie Shumate said one restaurant owner calculated that the power outage was likely to cost the business about 11 percent of its yearly revenue. Shumate said the county attorney will be leading negotiations to recoup business losses from the company that caused the accident, PCL Construction.

The company already faces at least four lawsuits by local business owners. Separately, those who had vacations cut short or canceled are working with property owners and travel insurance underwriters to try to recoup losses.

PCL Construction spokeswoman Stephanie McCay said in an email that the company has started a claims process to offer assistance to those affected by the outage.

Visitors with upcoming vacations spent the past week closely watching updates from Cape Hatteras Electric Cooperative.

Jessie-Lee Nichols, of Annapolis, Maryland, said she stayed glued to social media, following utility and county officials.

"I was getting notifications and reading all of the transmission updates three and four times a day," she said.

Six adults and two children from her family are scheduled for a vacation on Ocracoke Island the second week of August. She said the adults, who paid for the vacation as a Christmas present to one another, were ecstatic to find out Thursday that power had been restored.

"I posted to Facebook that the vacation was back on and tagged everyone we were going with," she said. "I definitely texted my mom and my sister, and they were like: 'Fantastic!' and 'Yay!'"

Published at 10:05 AM EDT on Aug 5, 2017

View post:

Outer Banks Islands Expect Busy Saturday After Power Outage - NBC4 Washington

St. Paul bartender’s swim encompasses nearly all of the Apostle Islands – TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

Only a single word is necessary to describe how Daniel OKanes recent tour of the Apostle Islands went.

Swimmingly.

OKane, a 36-year-old bartender from St. Paul, swam to 19 of the 22 Apostle Islands and paddled a stand-up paddleboard to three others in 18 days. He finished Wednesday afternoon.

He was accompanied by Duluths Paul Voge, 57, who kayaked alongside OKane for safety purposes, towing the paddleboard in case OKane needed to climb on.

He had the hard job, OKane said. All I had to do was swim. I dont know if you can swim anyplace else that lets you feel as blessed as Lake Superior.

The man likes to swim. He took up swimming eight years ago to help himself quit smoking. He took to it like well, you know the rest.

Hes very adventurous and an upbeat guy, Voge said. He loves being out in the water. He loves the Apostles.

Its OKanes understanding that others have swum among a few of the Apostle Islands, but that no one has done all of them in a single trip.

He and Voge, a Duluth attorney, left Little Sand Bay on the mainland near Bayfield, Wis., on July 16. Early in the trip, due to frigid 52-degree water, OKane used his stand-up paddleboard to cover legs between three islands. Then the water began to warm, eventually reaching the upper 60s.

The original plan was to swim to them all, OKane said. Plan B was the paddleboard.

He found Plan B plenty challenging.

I didnt expect paddleboarding to be as difficult as it was, he said. Its really hard to stay on that thing in a crosswind.

He started6 by traveling to Sand, York, Bear and Devils islands, then worked through the heart of the Apostles down to Stockton. From there he made about a 4-mile crossing to Madeline and on to Long Island, eventually returning by way of Madeline, Hermit and Basswood to the mainland at Red Cliff. Most of the crossings he swam were from 2 to 2 miles long, OKane said.

Averaging about 2 mph using a freestyle technique, OKane figures he swam 37 miles and paddleboarded 37 more in the 18 days. He hiked trails to cross some islands. Much of his paddleboarding was done to get from one point to another around an island to keep his swims shorter.

With a slow, steady pace and a good song in your head, youd be surprised how far you can go, OKane said. Its like being your own boat. Its nice to know you can get yourself somewhere.

The two men camped on the islands at night and took four days off during their quest.

Twenty-one of the 22 Apostles are in Apostle Islands National Lakeshore. Park officials issued OKane and Voge a special permit that allowed them to be in the park longer than the 14-day limit and to use a stand-up paddleboard, otherwise prohibited.

Friends brought the pair food resupplies at various stops.

Weather conditions were near perfect after the first three days of the trip.

We were striking gold every day, OKane said.

He ate a vegan and calorie-laden diet that propelled him with 3,500 to 5,000 calories a day spoonfuls of peanut butter, freeze-dried black bean burritos, custom trail mix and ramen noodles.

Still, toward the end, OKane felt himself wearing down.

I knew there was a wall on the horizon, but I never hit it, he said. And by then, I had the excitement factor.

The last day dealt OKane and Voge a small-craft advisory and 3- to 4-foot waves. But they forged on OKane swimming from Madeline to Hermit to Basswood.

It was a little scary, he said.

For the final leg to Red Cliff on the mainland, he paddled the SUP while being towed behind Voges kayak.

Read more from the original source:

St. Paul bartender's swim encompasses nearly all of the Apostle Islands - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press

Charmed on islands, spellbound in water – Inquirer.net

UNDERWATER MARVELS The waters off the village of Tangnan on Panglao Island in Bohol host a healthy marine life that allows species like whale sharks and sardines to thrive. PHOTO COURTESY OF IAN UY AND KEITH SEPE OF DIVE TA BAI

TAGBILARAN CITY Bohols charm lies in its culture, heritage and rich natural resources. Attractions are aplenty that visitors will need days to fully appreciate how this province in Central Visayas has been blessed with unique spots and warm people.

But a sampling of Bohols best can be packed in 48 hours.

For two days, tourists can visit the Chocolate Hills, interact with a tarsier, experience calm in a manmade forest, forget time while frolicking on the islands white sand beaches, and more.

There are two ways to explore Boholhire a van or go around the island on a motorcycle. But whichever way one chooses to go, or by whatever means, always start the tour in the capital city of Tagbilaran, specifically at St. Joseph the Worker Cathedral.

Built in 1595, the cathedral has retained its Baroque and Neoclassical features despite having undergone several renovations.

Tourists can also explore Spanish and American colonial houses and the Tagbilaran wharf, or visit the house of the late President Carlos P. Garcia, the countrys eighth President, right in the heart of the city.

About a five-minute drive away, in Bool district, is the Sandugo Blood Compact monument, one of the historic spots on the island. It was here where an alliance was sealed between Datu Sikatuna and Spanish explorer Miguel Lopez de Legazpi on March 6, 1565.

Moving north, tourists can stop at Immaculate Conception Parish Church in Baclayon town, which was among the heritage churches damaged by the 7.2-magnitude earthquake in 2013.

Proceed to Loay town to visit the Clarin ancestral home. Built in 1844, it was the only wooden house that survived the burning of Bohol in 1901.

While in Loay, watch local bolo makers turn slabs of metal into tools and weapons the traditional way, without the aid of machines.

Downtime can be spent in Loboc town, the music capital of Bohol, and home of the world-famous Loboc Childrens Choir.

If they come on a Sunday, tourists will have a chance to hear the choirs angelic voices during Mass.

For P450, visitors can enjoy a buffet lunch at the Loboc floating restaurant, featuring an hourlong river cruise that skirts around small waterfalls. Singers and folk dancers entertain them during the cruise.

After Loboc, visitors can commune with nature and spend quiet time at a manmade forest between Loboc and Bilar towns.

They can also drop by Sevilla town and cross a footbridge thats not for the fainthearted. Made of woven bamboo slats and steel, Sipatan Twin Hanging Bridge is suspended over a river 25 meters (82 feet) below.

EDWIN BACASMAS

Nature trip

In Bilar town, tourists can marvel at the life stages of a butterfly, a science refresher inside Simply Butterflies Conservation Center.

Nature lovers can go bird watching or feed the long-tailed macaques inside Rajah Sikatuna National Park in Barangay Riverside.

After a long walk, they can take a dip in nearby Logarita and Duangon springs. They can also proceed to the tarsier conservation area, where they get to see the worlds smallest primate (entrance fee of P60 for regular visitors and P50 for seniors and students).

A visit to Bohol is not complete without seeing the postcard-pretty Chocolate Hills composed of 1,268 cone-shaped hills. During the dry months, the hills look like mounds of chocolates as grasses wilt and turn brown.

To get a good view of the hills, tourists can choose from among three places: Chocolate Hills Complex and Chocolate Hills Adventure Park in Carmen town, and Sagbayan Peak in Sagbayan town.

For dinner, sample organic food at Bohol Bee Farm in Dauis town.

Beaches, dive spots

Tourists can spend the next day at the beaches of Panglao Island and Dauis for swimming and water sports.

A must-try attraction is the recently discovered school of sardines in Panglao.

The sardines, locally known as malangsi, were found in the waters off Barangay Tangnan and have been attracting bigger species of fish like thresher sharks and mackerel.

For island hopping, go to the islands of Balicasag, Virgin and Pamilacan, which are close to Panglao.

Balicasag Island is one of the top diving and snorkeling destinations in the country, featuring thriving reefs and drop-off (underwater wall) up to 60 meters deep.

Virgin Island, an uninhabited islet, features a string of white sand beaches and sandbars.

Pods of dolphins can be seen in the waters off Pamilacan Island, which also hosts a Spanish watchtower and a fish sanctuary.

The towns of Loon (Cabilao Island), Bien Unido, Anda and President Carlos P. Garcia, formerly known as Pitogo) also have waters rich in marine life.

In Danao town, tourists may try the Extreme Adventure Tour at Danao Adventure Park featuring a zipline, all-terrain vehicles, rock climbing and caving adventures. The park also offers river kayaking and river trekking.

For P15, visitors can go up Laguna mountain in Barangay Concepcion to savor a view of fog-covered mountains.

There are other spots worth visiting, such as the white sand beach in Anda town, the watch tower in Maribojoc town, Inang-angan stairway in Loon town, the flying foxes on Cabgan Island in Tubigon town, and St. Nicholas Tolentino Church and Ermita Ruins (a wall of tombs arranged like a honeycomb) in Dimiao town.

But save these sites for a longer, unhurried visit to Bohol.

Itinerary

Day 1 (Bohol countryside)

Tour duration: 8 hours

Sandugo/Blood Compact site

Baclayon Church

Bolo-making in Loay

Loboc River cruise

Tarsier watching

Manmade forest

Hanging bridge

Chocolate Hills

Souvenir shops

Day 2 (Island hopping)

Wake-up call: 5:30 a.m.

Tour duration: 5 to 8 hours

Dolphin watching and island hopping: Pamilacan, Balicasag and Virgin islands

Snorkeling (Balicasag Island)

Swimming (Virgin Island)

Subscribe to INQUIRER PLUS to get access to The Philippine Daily Inquirer & other 70+ titles, share up to 5 gadgets, listen to the news, download as early as 4am & share articles on social media. Call 896 6000.

Read more:

Charmed on islands, spellbound in water - Inquirer.net