Dozens of US clinics sell unproven stem cell therapies for heart failure – Fox News

Stem cell therapy isn't approved to treat heart failure in the U.S., but dozens of clinics nationwide advertise the treatments anyway, often charging thousands of dollars for procedures that may not be safe or effective, a new study suggests.

Researchers found 61 centers offering stem cell therapies for heart failure as of last year in the U.S. alone, including five that claimed to have performed more than 100 procedures. Only nine centers required copies of patients' medical records and just one facility said it had a board certified cardiologist on staff.

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"We simply do not know anything about the quality of the treatment delivered at these centers," said senior study author Dr. Paul Hauptman director of heart failure at Saint Louis University Hospital.

"These centers are not regulated in any way," Hauptman said by email.

Almost 6 million Americans have heart failure, and it's one of the most common reasons older adults go to the hospital, according to the American Heart Association.

It happens when the heart muscle is too weak to effectively pump enough blood through the body. Symptoms can include fatigue, weight gain from fluid retention, shortness of breath and coughing or wheezing. Medications can help strengthen the heart and minimize fluid buildup in the body.

While some experimental stem cell therapies for heart failure are currently being tested in late-stage human trials, none have won approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

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In theory, after a transplant, stem cells could permanently become part of the diseased heart and either help grow new healthy heart tissue or tell existing cells to work better, said Paul Knoepfler, a cell biology researcher at the University of California Davis School of Medicine in Sacramento who wasn't involved in the study.

It's also possible stem cells could temporarily visit the heart and stimulate a positive response in cells already there, he said.

Even though there's no conclusive proof yet that any stem cell treatments are safe and effective for heart failure, centers contacted for the study charge an average of $7,694 for each treatment using patient's own stem cells and $6,038 for each procedure with donor stem cells.

In one instance, though, a clinic staff member said, "If you have a million dollars to spend we will set you up with weekly infusions."

Hauptman's team had used a standard script when contacting each center, asking about the stem cell treatment itself, medical exams before and afterward and pricing.

Among the other responses they received from clinic staff were remarks such as, "If you know anyone that can start an IV, a neighbor that is a nurse for example, we can send you the stem cells and that person can administer them to you" and "We hope you don't believe your doctor when they tell you there is nothing they can do, you were smart to call us."

None of the sites in the study discussed what methods they used to isolate or identify stem cells, though most claimed to use patients' cells and 24 said they got cells from fat tissue.

Most centers claimed to deliver cells intravenously, researchers report in JAMA Internal Medicine.

"This approach has been associated with complications such as stroke, in which infused cells block blood vessels in the brain," said Douglas Sipp, a researcher at RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology in Kobe, Japan, who wasn't involved in the study.

"The biggest risk is that patients will waste their money, time and hopes on an unnecessary and useless invasive procedure," Sipp said by email.

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If any stem cell treatment did ultimately prove safe and effective enough to win FDA approval, it would likely offer a significant improvement over the limited treatment options currently available, said Leigh Turner, a researcher at the University of Minnesota Center for Bioethics who wasn't involved in the study.

But it's impossible to say what patients would get at unregulated clinics offering unapproved stem cell therapies, Turner said by email. In at least two cases unrelated to the current study, patients died after getting stem cell procedures at a clinic in Florida, and in another case at a different Florida clinic, a woman went blind, Turner noted.

"Clinics marketing stem cell treatments to patients suffering from heart failure might be administering anything from slurries of mixed cells, some of which might be stem cells, to nothing more than cellular debris," Turner said. "Often one can only speculate."

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Dozens of US clinics sell unproven stem cell therapies for heart failure - Fox News

Clinics Sell Unproven Stem Cell Therapies to Treat Heart Failure: Study – Newsmax

Stem cell therapy isnt approved to treat heart failure in the U.S., but dozens of clinics nationwide advertise the treatments anyway, often charging thousands of dollars for procedures that may not be safe or effective, a new study suggests.

Researchers found 61 centers offering stem cell therapies for heart failure as of last year in the U.S. alone, including five that claimed to have performed more than 100 procedures. Only nine centers required copies of patients medical records and just one facility said it had a board certified cardiologist on staff.

We simply do not know anything about the quality of the treatment delivered at these centers, said senior study author Dr. Paul Hauptman director of heart failure at Saint Louis University Hospital.

These centers are not regulated in any way, Hauptman said by email.

Almost 6 million Americans have heart failure, and its one of the most common reasons older adults go to the hospital, according to the American Heart Association.

It happens when the heart muscle is too weak to effectively pump enough blood through the body. Symptoms can include fatigue, weight gain from fluid retention, shortness of breath and coughing or wheezing. Medications can help strengthen the heart and minimize fluid buildup in the body.

While some experimental stem cell therapies for heart failure are currently being tested in late-stage human trials, none have won approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

In theory, after a transplant, stem cells could permanently become part of the diseased heart and either help grow new healthy heart tissue or tell existing cells to work better, said Paul Knoepfler, a cell biology researcher at the University of California Davis School of Medicine in Sacramento who wasnt involved in the study.

Its also possible stem cells could temporarily visit the heart and stimulate a positive response in cells already there, he said.

Even though theres no conclusive proof yet that any stem cell treatments are safe and effective for heart failure, centers contacted for the study charge an average of $7,694 for each treatment using patients own stem cells and $6,038 for each procedure with donor stem cells.

In one instance, though, a clinic staff member said, If you have a million dollars to spend we will set you up with weekly infusions.

Hauptmans team had used a standard script when contacting each center, asking about the stem cell treatment itself, medical exams before and afterward and pricing.

Among the other responses they received from clinic staff were remarks such as, If you know anyone that can start an IV, a neighbor that is a nurse for example, we can send you the stem cells and that person can administer them to you and We hope you don't believe your doctor when they tell you there is nothing they can do, you were smart to call us.

None of the sites in the study discussed what methods they used to isolate or identify stem cells, though most claimed to use patients cells and 24 said they got cells from fat tissue.

Most centers claimed to deliver cells intravenously, researchers report in JAMA Internal Medicine.

This approach has been associated with complications such as stroke, in which infused cells block blood vessels in the brain, said Douglas Sipp, a researcher at RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology in Kobe, Japan, who wasnt involved in the study.

The biggest risk is that patients will waste their money, time and hopes on an unnecessary and useless invasive procedure, Sipp said by email.

If any stem cell treatment did ultimately prove safe and effective enough to win FDA approval, it would likely offer a significant improvement over the limited treatment options currently available, said Leigh Turner, a researcher at the University of Minnesota Center for Bioethics who wasnt involved in the study.

But its impossible to say what patients would get at unregulated clinics offering unapproved stem cell therapies, Turner said by email. In at least two cases unrelated to the current study, patients died after getting stem cell procedures at a clinic in Florida, and in another case at a different Florida clinic, a woman went blind, Turner noted.

Clinics marketing stem cell treatments to patients suffering from heart failure might be administering anything from slurries of mixed cells, some of which might be stem cells, to nothing more than cellular debris, Turner said. Often one can only speculate.

2017 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.

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Clinics Sell Unproven Stem Cell Therapies to Treat Heart Failure: Study - Newsmax

The spirituality of iconoclastic metal band Neurosis – Detroit Metro Times

To listen to the music of metal band Neurosis is to surrender surrendering to heaviness, to being pummeled with emotion through sound, to being carried away beyond space and time. To see Neurosis is to welcome this furious intensity most expressly; the experience is a commitment.

That word, commitment, is also a perfect encapsulation of a band that just saw its 30-year anniversary in 2015, has maintained the same lineup for more than two decades, and is still fresh off the release of its eleventh studio album last year's Fires Within Fires, released on their own label Neurot Recordings (another example of commitment, this one to DIY practices and business ethics). Fires Within Fires is music that extends far beyond metal, wrapping around ideas from folk, ambient, industrial, and psychedelic music to create something deeply, painfully, and beautifully their own.

Neurosis sprang out of the '80s hardcore punk scene in Oakland, Calif., but within a few years the band's style had evolved into a singular form of dark, heavy, uncompromising music they are still finding new ways to explore to this day. Since 1995, the core lineup has been guitarist and vocalist Steve Von Till, guitarist and vocalist Scott Kelly, bassist Dave Edwardson, keyboardist Noah Landis, and drummer Jason Roeder.

Neurosis elevated the concept of heaviness to an art form one that, although it often is, didn't necessarily need to be brutal in order to convey that heaviness. The breadth of their influences shows this; a short list includes everyone from Swans and Amebix to Hawkwind and Hank Williams.

At one point, a sixth member controlled visuals during their shows, which added yet another layer to the immersive Neurosis live experience on top of the earthshaking music and unnerving samples, but that component was officially retired in 2012. That's another hallmark of Neurosis when something is done, it's done. This is not a band with a soft spot for nostalgia.

"Forward-moving" is an expression guitarist Von Till uses to describe the band's approach, and it's not hard to see its truth when considering their musical output: 1992's Souls at Zero changed the landscape of modern metal forever with total destruction of genre expectations; 2001's A Sun That Never Sets delved even further into experimentation with an embrace of folk influences; 2004's The Eye of Every Storm, while as massive as everything else they've done, is downright quiet at times, even merciful.

The band visited Detroit in 2015 its first time back in the city since the '90s but expansive tours of this nature have been a rare treat in recent years. These days, the members are scattered across the United States with families and day jobs; it's not easy to get to certain parts of the country, making us very lucky indeed to have the opportunity to see them again only two years later, especially at a time when old songs rediscovered for their 30th anniversary are still fresh in their minds (and bones).

In advance of the show, Von Till (who remembers getting tattooed during tour stops in Detroit on two separate occasions in the '90s) took time to speak with us about their most recent work, his evolution as a guitarist, and the role of spirituality in the music, among other things.

Metro Times: Tell me about Fires Within Fires.

Steve Von Till: That album felt like a gift from the universe as a 30th anniversary present. It sounds goofy but it really came like that. We live quite far apart, we don't rehearse, we don't get together very often. ... I think it was February 2015, we realized we had a weekend available. Instead of booking gigs, even though we had no riffs and nothing we were working on, we decided to get together and see what would happen. By the time that Sunday rolled around, we had the skeleton for that entire record, within a matter of 48 hours. It felt really powerful, perfect, and blessed just the way it was. We got together once before we recorded it, just to fine-tune and arrange it, but it was basically there, right from the beginning. That had never really happened to us before. Bits and pieces of certain songs here and there, but not an entire work.

MT: What has shaped you as a guitarist and songwriter?

Von Till: In Neurosis, I don't think we feel like we're songwriters so much as channelers. Neurosis is a driven beast. I can't sit and write a song for Neurosis. I can generate interesting riffs and sonic ideas or concepts to discuss but it only really takes shape when we find the time and space to surrender to the bigger energy, the thing that's bigger than us as individuals, where each person has their own unique input and where we go through the process of creation and destruction. Nothing is sacred until it's on tape. We take turns speaking for what we feel the spirit of the music is demanding from us, and it takes shape in different ways.

As far as a guitarist [laughs], I often joke that I'm probably a worse guitarist now than I was before, as far as traditional chops, because I've only been playing this strange music my entire adult life. And it's only been with these dudes in this style. If you're sitting and jamming some classic rock or blues, I wouldn't know what to do. I can make noise and sound on anything given the right opportunity, a sledgehammer and an oil drum or whatever, but as far as skills, I think I've become increasingly idiosyncratic, which probably contributes to a lot of originality and unique approaches to things, but it's also probably limiting in a traditional sense. I always think it might be nice to force myself to learn other people's music just to make my fingers do different things.

MT: I read that you, at least at one point, called your rig the "chain of death."

Von Till: That's actually not true, necessarily. I said it once and it caught on but it wasn't by any means supposed to be a pet name or anything. I like finding ways to completely destroy and mutate a perfectly good guitar signal. I like to be able to have clean, really nice, classic, beautiful warm tones, and piano and bell-like stuff when I need it, and more traditional hard rock and heavy tones as well, but I spend a lot of time and effort trying to make things sound perfectly broken. That's probably what I meant, the mutating and destruction of signals which is part of the joy I get out of guitar gear, finding combinations of things that cause that unique fluctuation between dissonance and harmony.

MT: Do you have anything that you use that is not normally a part of someone's rig?

Von Till: Probably the most unusual stuff I have is the fact that I don't have pickup selectors on my guitars. I run both pickups out of a stereo cable and I choose my pickup signal based on a custom audio electronics switcher rig built by Bob Bradshaw. That's another thing, the custom audio electronics switching allows me to make a lot of choices on a lot of things with a single touch of a button, not having to tap dance around all my pedal boards because I have a lot of shit going on in there. I've always used two amps, all the time. Several different channels on one amp and several different pedals on the other amp and different combinations of dirt which are unique to each of the two.

MT: On a very broad level, what would you say has been an unconventional influence on Neurosis?

Von Till: It depends on how you look at it. The world, and the way we grew up, and the things that we were interested in, it all just makes perfect sense and is totally conventional. Of course we would be inspired equally by nature, film, psychology, shamanism, psychedelics, punk rock, Black Sabbath, Throbbing Gristle, Joy Division it all makes sense to us. It's either all unconventional, or it's all standard from whatever your perspective is. We're influenced and inspired by everything we see and hear. And trying to never limit ourselves. When we were coming up, it was a time in independent music when, to us, what it meant to be punk rock or to be DIY meant "fuck you." We do what we want, but then it turned out that every little genre had rules and blinders on about what was acceptable. When we got keyboards, people just shit, like 'What? You can't have keyboards in heavy music.' I'm like, 'What are you talking about? [Laughs.] Joy Division's not heavy? Throbbing Gristle's not heavy? Deep Purple's not heavy? [Laughs.]'

MT: What is your spiritual relationship to the music?

Von Till: If I could put that into words, I'd be a writer, not a musician. It's really difficult to explain. It's a feeling. It's an emotion. It's everything all at once. It's everything within and outside of ourselves. It's everything within and outside of the Earth. It's the entire human experience, from the macro lens to the personal trials and tribulations, traversing our way through that maze in myriad different ways, and really it becomes surrendering to this sonic wave of purification, a way to cope with all those thoughts and feelings and move past the mundane for a while.

Neurosis plays St. Andrew's Hall with Converge and Amenra on Saturday, July 29; Doors at 7 p.m.; St. Andrew's Hall, 431 E. Congress St., Detroit; saintandrewsdetroit.com; $27.50 and up.

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The spirituality of iconoclastic metal band Neurosis - Detroit Metro Times

Religion and Spirituality Events: 7/26 – Cecil Whig

Low-cost, local events happening this week. To be included, your event must be family friendly, cost less than $25 per person and take place in Cecil County as well as adjoining areas within a 20-minute drive. Please submit the event title, time, address to accent@cecilwhig.com. Once approved by an editor, the event will be listed until its completion date. It will run in the print edition as space allows. You can also submit to a separate online calendar at cecildaily.com.

THURSDAY 27

YOGA,9 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Ongoing $15 drop-in. Multi-level for everyone. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296.

CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS,6 to 7 p.m. at Janes United Methodist Church, 213 N. Walnut St., Rising Sun. Clutterers Anonymous is a 12-step program to help people solve their problems with clutter/hoarding. There are no dues or fees. Contact Martha H. 443-350-1483.

YOGA,7 p.m. weekly classes at Cecil County Arts Council, 135 E. Main St., Elkton. Intro class is free. Then pay $10 per class or buy five classes for $45. Classes are designed for new and experienced yogis. Contact class instructor Sarah Mester at smester@comcast.net.

IMPROVE MENTAL HEALTH,7 p.m. at 229 E. Main St., Elkton. Panic, fear, anxiety, depression. Attend a free weekly meeting with Recovery International.

SPEAKER, 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. at the North East Fire Hall, 210 Maudlin Ave., North East. Speaker John Price will speak about the Rapture.

FRIDAY 28

FREE LUNCH,12 to 1 p.m. every Friday at Elkton Presbyterian Church, 209 E. Main St. provided by Elkton Community Kitchen. All are welcome. For more information contact elktoncommunitykitchen@gmail.com.

SATURDAY 29

SMART RECOVERY,10 to 11:30 a.m. at Janes UMC in Rising Sun. This meeting is for those recovering from the disease of addiction. This is an open support group that meets every Saturday.

SATURDAY EVENING SERVICE,5 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 105 N. Bridge St., Elkton. Will recur every week at this time.

PUPPETS AND PEACH ICE CREAM, 6 p.m. at Harts UMC Amphitheater, 3203 Turkey Point Road in North East. Puppets and music performance by Jack Foreaker. Free admission. Refreshments will be on sale, including Harts famous Turkey Point Peach Ice Cream.

ARTS, CRAFTS, and COUNTRY MARKET10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at West Nottingham Presbyterian Chuch, 1195 Firetower Road, Colora. Seeking vendors willing to participate. A 10' by 5' space is $10. Call 410-658-6366 for more details.

COMMUNITY DAY, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Abundant Life Worship Center, 250 Booth St., Elkton. Annual community day filled with activities and food for kids and adults. Call 410-398-0095 for more info.

SUNDAY 30

OUTDOOR WORSHIP, 9:30 a.m.grain or shine outdoor interdenominational service at Elk Neck State Park hilltop shelter, 4395 Turkey Point Road (Route 272, 9 miles south of NEUMC). Gil Nagle.

PARISH SUNDAY SCHOOL, 9:45 a.m. at Zion UMC in Cecilton. Recurs weekly.

MUSICAL MINISTRY,3:30 p.m. at Griffith AUMP Church, 95 Cedar Hill Church Road, Elkton. The Sensational Stars of Kent County will be the guest group, and all are welcome to join. Contact 410-398-1136 or 410-620-4940 for info.

SUMMER CONCERT,3 p.m. at Memorial Park, 100 Lancaster Pike, Oxford PA. The Hamm Family performs a show followed by refreshments. For info call Oxford UMC at 610-932-9698 or Union UMC at 610-932-2585.

MONDAY 31

DEBTORS ANONYMOUS,6 to 7 p.m. at Janes United Methodist Church, 213 N. Walnut St., Rising Sun. Debtors Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who help each other solve their problems with debt. DA is a 12-step program. There are no dues or fees. Contact Martha H. 443-350-1483.

NARANON MEETING,7 p.m. at Bethel Lutheran Church, North East. Hope and Peace every Monday. Contact Lorri: 443-250-0909.

WOMENS NA MEETING,7 p.m. at Bethel Lutheran Church, North East.

TUESDAY 1

YOGA 4 SENIORS,9 to 10 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Pre-registration is required. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296. $12 per class if all six are pre-paid or $15 drop-in.

SENIOR MEETING, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at St. Stephens Parish Hall in Earleville. Anyone 55 or older is invited to attend. Come and meet your neighbors. No membership fee. Lunch is served. Come for the fellowship, speaker, see what events we are planning. Questions call 410-275-8150. Recurs weekly.

MENS YOGA CLASS,11 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Pre-registration is required. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296. $12 per class if all six are pre-paid or $15 drop-in.

COMMUNITY ARTS AND CRAFTS,1 p.m. free instruction at St. Stephens Church, 10 Glebe Road, Earleville. Ongoing drawing and painting classes for beginner or serious artists. bspelled123@gmail.com. http://www.communityartandcrafts.com. Call Jerry at 410-275-2945.

TOPS,5:30 p.m. at Rosebank UMC, Rising Sun. Nonprofit weight-loss support group, meets weekly. $6 monthly fee. First meeting free. topsrosebank@gmail.com.

NARANON,7 p.m. every Tuesday at Elkton United Methodist Church. A Nar-Anon adult support meeting for those with addicts in the family.

MEDITATION,7 p.m. every Tuesday with Three Roots Wellness at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Learn basics of meditation practices and how to make it useful in your everyday life. Donation based. Registration is required email to angela@threerootswellness.com.

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Religion and Spirituality Events: 7/26 - Cecil Whig

Study: Physicians Willing to Assess Patients’ Spiritual Needs, More Likely to do so with Education and Training – GlobeNewswire (press release)

July 26, 2017 10:10 ET | Source: Adventist Health System

photo-release

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla., July 26, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Research has long shown that people who are more religious and spiritual have better health and adapt more quickly to health problems compared to those who are less so. Now, the results of a year-long study of health care providers, including physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants across Midwestern and Southeastern states, indicate that a majority of providers are willing to assess the spiritual needs of patients, and that providers who receive training on how to appropriately engage patients on spirituality are twice as likely to regularly conduct spiritual assessments.

The study, called Faith in Practice, was conducted by Adventist Health System, one of the largest faith-based health care systems in the U.S., and Duke Universitys Center for Spirituality, Theology and Health. It was designed to examine the attitudes and practices of care providers as they relate to the integration of spirituality into patient care, while introducing practical strategies for the application of spiritual care in the outpatient setting.

The study makes clear that physicians are willing to address the spiritual needs of patients, and that education and training programs can significantly increase the integration of spirituality in outpatient medical practices, said Harold G. Koenig, MD, director of the Center for Spirituality, Theology and Health at the Duke University School of Medicine and a leading researcher who has dedicated more than 30 years to studying the effects of spiritual and religious involvement on human health.

In all, 520 care providers from more than two dozen Adventist Health System facilities across Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Illinois took part in the study. Participants had varying faiths, and some had no religious affiliation whatsoever.

The findings of this study show that spirituality is not only important to many patients, but that providers also see patients spiritual needs as an important aspect of their overall health and are open to addressing those needs, said Terry Shaw, president/CEO for Adventist Health System. I am proud that our organization is helping lead the way in this important aspect of care delivery, and in doing so, we can better meet the needs of the patients we serve.

Some of the studys key findings include:

Providers who received education and training were twice as likely to regularly conduct spiritual assessments in their patients.

There were significant increases in how frequently providers prayed with patients, were willing to pray with patients, shared their faith with patients and encouraged patients own religious faith over the 12 months.

Patient acceptance of and appreciation for the spiritual assessments increased over the span of the study.

The frequency with which spiritual assessments were conducted increased among both religious and non-religious providers.

Providing whole-person care, mind, body and spirit, is at the core of our mission of Extending the Healing Ministry of Christ, said Ted Hamilton, MD, chief mission integration officer and senior vice president of mission and ministry for Adventist Health System. Many patients would welcome a discussion about their spiritual needs with their physicians as part of their care, so providing the appropriate resources and support for doctors to meet this need is one way we can take better care of our patients.

Providers began the study by completing a survey to evaluate their attitudes and practices related to addressing the spiritual needs of patients in clinical practice, which was followed by an orientation that focused on identifying and addressing those needs. The survey was taken again one month after the orientation, and once more a year into the training program. During the study, providers asked their patients three questions:

Do you have a faith-based support system to help you in times of need?

Do you have any religious beliefs that might influence your medical decisions?

Do you have any other spiritual concerns that you would like someone to address?

If a patient had spiritual needs, they were documented in the electronic medical record. From there, those patients were assigned spiritual care coordinators who could help address concerns or connect patients with a chaplain for further support.

Providers strive to honor and respect patients values, beliefs and preferences. This study opens the door to one approach that may help caregivers feel more comfortable assessing whether or not a patient would prefer spiritual support and connecting them with the resources to receive that support in those cases, added Koenig.

About Adventist Health System

Adventist Health System is a faith-based health care organization headquartered in Altamonte Springs, Florida. A national leader in quality, safety and patient satisfaction, Adventist Health System's more than 80,000 employees maintain a tradition of whole-person health by caring for the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of patients. With 45 hospital campuses and more than 8,300 licensed beds in nine states, Adventist Health System facilities incorporate the latest technological advancements and clinical research to serve more than 5 million patients annually. The full continuum of integrated care also includes urgent care centers, home health and hospice agencies, physician practices and skilled nursing facilities. Each Adventist Health System facility operates independently in delivering care and services to best meet the needs of the local communities they serve.

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A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/b5beba5f-9c7d-45fa-8b87-79df121c32ef

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Study: Physicians Willing to Assess Patients' Spiritual Needs, More Likely to do so with Education and Training - GlobeNewswire (press release)

Spirituality and financial life planning – Dunwoody Crier

The phone interview lasted an hour and raised interesting questions.

The gentleman was gathering ideas for his thesis at Creighton University in Omaha the subject dealing with the question, Does spirituality play a role in financial life planning?

When you think about a financial planner, you tend to focus on money issues. But an advisor who thinks holistically frames money in terms of your life and the lives of those you love and who depend on you.

Money is but a tool to finance necessities and meet obligations, but it also revolves around life issuesbuying a home, marriage, raising of children, educations, caring for aging parents or other loved ones, building a business, career changes, confronting adversity, independence and choices in life and in retirement, meaning, purpose, and all of the emotions and anxieties that accompany life transitions, both positive and negative. Financial life planning recognizes that life issues guide money issues.

So does spirituality belong as part of financial life planning conversations? he asked. And is there a difference between spirituality and religion?

The answer to both queries is, Yes.

Consider the second question first. Studies from the University of Virginia and Pew Research Center point to the trend seen in the frequent comment, I am spiritual but not religious. (See Why Millennials Are Leaving Religion But Embracing Spirituality). Only about 40 percent of millennials say that religion is important in their lives. They are less attached to organized religion than their parents or grandparents were at the same age.

The survey indicated, however, that 80 percent of those surveyed believe in God. Many made statements like, I experience a deep sense of wonder about the universe, or I feel a deep sense of spiritual peace and well-being.

Those of any generation who do not attend religious services, or do so infrequently, do seek peace, well-being, purpose, and meaning in their lives. Those deeply involved in organized religion have beliefs and life direction nurtured by religious principles.

The goal of an advisor is to understand what your values are and what you are trying to accomplish in life and how money and risk management play into your aspirations.

What you believe relative to eternal life and accountability to a Supreme Being may govern what you do with money, assets, and your gifts (including human capital) over your lifetime.

Understanding your groundings helps an advisor to ask the right questions and work with you to frame plans tailored to your values.

Those who do not believe in God have values that must be understood by a financial life planner. The search for meaning and purpose, a desire for peace and well-being, legacy and a sense of social justice and obligation to your fellow humans tend to be universal guidelines for most. Mother Teresa of Kolkata (Calcutta) has been canonized to sainthood. A series of quotes attributed to her sum up a prescription for a good life, whether you are spiritual or spiritual and actively religious.

People are often unreasonable, irrational, and self-centered. Forgive them anyway. If you are kind, people may accuse you of selfish, ulterior motives. Be kind anyway. If you are successful, you will win some unfaithful friends and some genuine enemies. Succeed anyway.

If you are honest and sincere, people may deceive you. Be honest and sincere anyway. What you spend years creating, others could destroy overnight.

Create anyway. If you find serenity and happiness, some may be jealous.

Be happy anyway. The good you do today will often be forgotten. Do good anyway.

Give the best you have, and it will never be enough. Give your best anyway. In the final analysis, it is between you and God. It was never between you and them anyway.

If you do those things, you will handle the vagaries of life, traversing valleys as you seek the next peak, until the last day when you long to hear, Well done, my good and faithful servant!

How does money, spirituality and religion play into your journey?

That is the stuff of meaningful conversations.

Lewis Walker is a financial planning and investment strategist at Capital Insight Group; 770-441-2603. Securities and advisory services offered through The Strategic Financial Alliance, Inc. (SFA). Lewis Walker is a registered representative and investment adviser representative of SFA which is otherwise unaffiliated with Capital Insight Group. Lewis Walker is a Gallup Certified Strengths Coach and Living Your Strengths is a growing theme in faith-based organizations.

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Spirituality and financial life planning - Dunwoody Crier

Acquisitions Editor, Spirituality and Parish Resources Job Opening … – Publishers Weekly

Description Twenty-Third Publications, a Division of Bayard, Inc. is seeking an Acquisitions Editor to work as a contractor from their home office. The primary responsibility for the Acquisitions Editor for Spirituality and Parish Lines is to provide 20 publishing projects per term of Agreement (a combination of books and small booklets) that will support the mission of Twenty-Third Publications in these categories. This role is carried out in collaboration with the Publisher and the Acquisitions Team. Qualified candidate should have five years editorial experience, three in book acquisitions preferred. Responsibilities

Seeks and actively acquires manuscripts and/or authors that match these editorial lines.

Maintains an updated working docket of proposals discussed by the Acquisitions Team in the spirituality and pastoral lines and collaborates in building seasonal lists from this docket.

Evaluates incoming proposals and manuscripts.

Obtains author questionnaire and reviewer recommendations (as needed) regarding manuscripts or proposals under consideration.

Participates in a weekly acquisitions meeting: prepares Potential Project Report for manuscripts under consideration and presents these to the Acquisitions Team members; uses this feedback in weighing project viability.

Offers standard terms to author; requests author contracts.

Collaborates with the author in the development of a project, bringing the manuscript to a point where it may be sent for copy editing, or in some case further developmental editing as needed.

Seeks imprimatur when needed or when appropriate, asks author to obtain.

As needed, makes suggestions for endorsements, foreword or preface and obtains these where appropriate, and forwards information for back cover write up to marketing.

When possible, attends annual conferences and conventions to maintain relationships and make new contacts with other publishers and authors.

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Acquisitions Editor, Spirituality and Parish Resources Job Opening ... - Publishers Weekly

Who is Justin Bieber’s hot, shirtless pastor? Details emerge on their relationship – AOL

Did Justin Bieber cancel his tour because of his "spiritual awakening"?

Sources close to the singer have indicated that the "Sorry" singer suddenly cancelled the remainder of his Purpose World Tour this week after "spiritual soul-searching and his own view of the path in life he should be taking."

SEE ALSO: Kate Hudson shaves her head for new role -- see the close-cropped look!

His newfound spirituality stems from his increasingly "intense" relationship with a pastor. In recent months, Bieber has become heavily involved with Hillsong Church and one of its twelve lead pastors, Carl Lentz. Though insiders told TMZ that Lentz didn't recommend Bieber cancel the rest of his tour, he has definitely gained influence over the erratic star.

Though Bieber himself denied that religion played any role in his decision to cancel the Purpose World Tour, a couple of buzzed-about outings with Lentz have had fans speculating otherwise.

In pictures that have gone viral on social media this week, Bieber and Lentz are seen looking buddy-buddy while out and about in Los Angeles. In one photo, Bieber is all smiles as he walks next to a shirtless Lentz in very low-rise camo shorts. In another photo, Lentz wraps his arm familiarly around Bieber.

See more photos of Carl Lentz:

8 PHOTOS

Carl Lentz, Hillsong Church pastor

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LOS ANGELES, CA - SEPTEMBER 13: Pastors Lauren Lentz and Carl Lentz attend the 'Hillsong - Let Hope Rise' premiere at the Westwood Village theater on September 13, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Pure Flix)

NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 25: Carl Lentz attends the 1st Annual Casino Night hosted by J.R. Smith at Stage 48 on March 25, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Shareif Ziyadat/WireImage)

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JULY 3: (EUROPE AND AUSTRALASIA OUT) Hillsong NYC Pastor Carl Lentz pictured backstage at the Hillsong Conference at Allphones Arena in Sydney, New South Wales. (Photo by Toby Zerna/Newspix/Getty Images)

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JULY 3: (EUROPE AND AUSTRALASIA OUT) Hillsong NYC Pastor Carl Lentz pictured backstage at the Hillsong Conference at Allphones Arena in Sydney, New South Wales. (Photo by Toby Zerna/Newspix/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 12: EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE/SPECIAL RATES APPLY Pastor Carl Lentz is interviewed during the 'Elvis Duran Z100 Morning Show' at Z100 Studio on February 12, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 12: EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE/SPECIAL RATES APPLY Pastor Carl Lentz attends the 'Elvis Duran Z100 Morning Show' at Z100 Studio on February 12, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 10: Carl Lentz attends Hard 2 Guard at Baruch College on February 10, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Shareif Ziyadat/Getty Images)

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To be sure, Lentz and Bieber's relationship isn't new. The star allegedly holed up at Lentz's home, which he shares with his wife, back in 2014 before his major Purpose-led career comeback, which the star has repeatedly said was fueled by a newfound spirituality. Bieber also attended a Hillsong conference in Sydney with Lentz earlier this year.

Sources say that Lentz is "not a typical pastor" and that Bieber is "becoming the Tom Cruise of that church," alluding to Cruise's de facto status as the celebrity face of the Church of Scientology.

Bieber's manager Scooter Braun maintains that Bieber cancelled his tour to benefit his "soul and well-being," and Bieber responded with a resounding "no" when paparazzi asked him if religion played a role in his decision. That being said, there's no denying that the Carl Lentz could be influencing Bieber's career decisions.

Bieber also isn't the only young star to be involved in Hillsong. Two of his ex-girlfriends, Selena Gomez and Hailey Baldwin, have also routinely posted about the church on social media, though it's unclear whether or not Bieber was the one to introduce them to the church.

Earlier this year, Gomez actually sang with Hillsong Young & Free earlier this year while leading a worship for the church in Los Angeles.

See photos of Justin Bieber on the Purpose World Tour:

35 PHOTOS

Justin Bieber Purpose World Tour

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SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Justin Bieber performs on stage during opening night of the 'Purpose World Tour' at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Mat Hayward/Getty Images)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Justin Bieber performs on stage during opening night of the 'Purpose World Tour' at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Mat Hayward/Getty Images)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Justin Bieber performs on stage during opening night of the 'Purpose World Tour' at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Mat Hayward/Getty Images)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Justin Bieber performs on stage during opening night of the 'Purpose World Tour' at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Mat Hayward/Getty Images)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Justin Bieber performs on stage during opening night of the 'Purpose World Tour' at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Mat Hayward/Getty Images)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 20: Recording artist Justin Bieber performs at the 2016 Purpose World Tour at Staples Center on March 20, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: (EDITORS NOTE: This image has been converted to black and white.) Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

SEATTLE, WA - MARCH 09: Singer/songwriter Justin Bieber performs onstage at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 20: Recording artist Justin Bieber performs at the 2016 Purpose World Tour at Staples Center on March 20, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 20: Recording artist Justin Bieber performs at the 2016 Purpose World Tour at Staples Center on March 20, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 20: Recording artist Justin Bieber (L) and Chance The Rapper perform at the 2016 Purpose World Tour at Staples Center on March 20, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 20: Recording artist Justin Bieber (L) and rapper Big Sean perform at the 2016 Purpose World Tour at Staples Center on March 20, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

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For more on Justin Bieber's denial, watch the video above.

More from AOL.com: Robert Pattinson reveals he got expelled from school for selling porn & dishes on almost getting fired from 'Twilight' Nicolas Cage criticized by human rights group for propping up 'brutal' Kazakh dictator Abby Lee Miller cries, eats mac and cheese during her last moments before heading to jail

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Who is Justin Bieber's hot, shirtless pastor? Details emerge on their relationship - AOL

A Spiritual Message from the Late Chinese Activist Liu Xiaobo – The Liberty Web English

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A Spiritual Message from the Late Chinese Activist Liu Xiaobo - The Liberty Web English

Flyover of the Intl. Space Station Tues. Evening – WOODTV.com (blog)

We have another very nice flyover of the International Space Station tonight here in West Michigan at 9:48 pm. Look to the SW and the Space Station will appear just a little above the horizon. Itll climb to high in the sky (56 degrees) and then move to the east-northeast, where it will fade into the Earths shadow as it gets close to the horizon. The Space Station should be visible for nearly six minutes and skies should be clear to partly cloudy. Jupiter is the bright star in the southwest in the early evening sky and well have a crescent moon for a little while after sunset before it sets.

Check out the schedule at flyovers of the Intl. Space Station in West Michigan at this link. Heres a link to a map that shows where the space station is right now (takes a little while to open the page). Heres the NASA Intl. Space Station webpagewith the position of the sun. The Space Station circles the globe about every 93 minutes. Its about the size of a football field and flies about 220 miles above the ground, about the distance between Grand Rapids and Indianapolis.

Check out http://www.spaceweather.com for details on auroras, the number of sunspots, asteroid approaches and more. Sky and Telescopes Sky at a Glance will show you the current position of the moon and planets. You can also get the latest on West Michigan astronomical events from the Grand Rapids Amateur Astronomical Assn.

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Flyover of the Intl. Space Station Tues. Evening - WOODTV.com (blog)

How to see the International Space Station over Hull this week – Hull Daily Mail

Stargazers will be in for a treat as they will be able to glimpse the International Space Station in the night sky.

People in Hull will be able to see the incredible space station from this week, with bright passes by the station visible in the UK until August 9.

The best part is you wont even need any special equipment to see it overhead amongst the stars.

The ISS is the biggest space station and laboratory ever built, which means that at certain times it can even be visible with the naked eye.

Space enthusiasts will be able to easily spot the station as it orbits the Earth travelling at 175,00mph at an altitude of roughly 200 miles.

People should be able to see the station on numerous occasions this week.

These are brightest overhead passes by the station although passes will be fainter by August 9.

Passes will take place at the following dates and times:

There may also be other objects visible in the sky too while you are watching, like Perseid Meteors or satellites.

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The International Space Station will always start passing from a westerly direction so keep your eyes peeled for it gliding across the sky.

Sometimes a pass can last as long as five minutes, but it looks like a bright, fast-moving star so be careful not to mistake it for a passing aircraft.

It takes 90 minutes to orbit so you may be able to catch it passing more than once if you dont mind spending a couple of hours outside at night.

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How to see the International Space Station over Hull this week - Hull Daily Mail

Wednesday evening is a good opportunity to watch the International Space Station over Richmond – Richmond.com

Wednesday evening should be the best time of the week for getting a look at the International Space Station over Richmond.

The station should be visible starting at 8:56 p.m. as a bright dot above the west-southwest horizon, between Jupiter and the setting crescent moon. It will peak three minutes later as it crosses through the Ursa Major constellation, or Big Dipper, and set in the northeast sky by 9:02 p.m.

Though the sky may feature a few clouds, it ought to be clear enough to catch the bright reflection of the sun by then, slightly below our horizon off the stations solar panels.

There are a few other opportunities to spot the station this week, but this one will be the highest and brightest for our area until the middle of August.

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Wednesday evening is a good opportunity to watch the International Space Station over Richmond - Richmond.com

Ground Control to Major Google: Space Station Street View Is Here – Scientific American

Forget views of side streets and poorly parked cars why not explore the International Space Station (ISS) instead? Earlier this week Google Maps released its first-ever Street View in space, and now, Earthlings can virtually navigate through astronauts home away from home. Because no one could drive a van and camera around the ISS, Thomas Pesquet, a European Space Agency astronaut, collaborated with NASA and Google to take images with DSLR cameras already aboard the craft. The tunnel-like interior is filled with wall-to-wall cables and equipment, so navigation is trickier than on Earth. But a scattering of helpful tags identify locations and equipment that people unfamiliar with astronaut life might not recognize. Yours truly ended up in a bathroom on one of her first navigational clicks, but maybe you will have better luck.

If the blurbs of information only increase your curiosity about daily life on the ISS, NASA astronaut Suni Williams explains all about sleeping, eating and manipulating that strange toilet in this video from 2014, below. Pair her explanations with the immersive Street View and maybe you will feel like an astronaut yourself.

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Ground Control to Major Google: Space Station Street View Is Here - Scientific American

The Seasteading Institute’s floating cities are designed for unregulated innovation – Dezeen

A plan to build self-sufficient floating cities outside of national borders features in thelatest movie from our Dezeen x MINI Living video series.

The Seasteading Institute is a non-profit organisation founded by political economic theorist Patri Friedman and Paypal co-founder Peter Thiel.

The organisation aims to build "start-up countries" at sea, known as "seasteads", that offer greater freedom for innovation in science, technology and politics.

According to its website, the institute's goal is to develop "open spaces for experimenting with new societies" in order to "allow the next generation of pioneers to peacefully test new ideas for how to live together".

The company claims that building floating cities will offeran alternative to conventional models of governance, with few regulations.

The government of French Polynesia has signed an agreement with The Seasteading Institute to cooperate on the creation of a pilot city in a lagoon near Tahiti.

The test city, entitled the Floating City Project, will act as proof-of-concept for the organisation's plan to build further settlements at sea.

The Seasteading Institute plans to build the city using existing floating architecturetechnology developed by Dutch engineering firm Deltasync.

The city would be built on amodular networkof rectangular andpentagonalplatforms sothat itcould bereconfiguredaccording tothe needs of its inhabitants.

The reinforced concrete platforms will support three-storey buildings includingapartments, offices and hotels for up to 100 years, according to a feasibility report produced by Deltasync.

It is expected thatbetween 250 and 300 people will live aboard the settlement. Development of the city is expected to beginin early 2018.

This movie is part of Dezeen x MINI Living Initiative, a year-long collaboration with MINI exploring how architecture and design can contribute to a brighter urban future through a series of videos and talks.

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The Seasteading Institute's floating cities are designed for unregulated innovation - Dezeen

"Unregulated scientific innovation on an isolated island? Sounds like a very bad thing" – Dezeen

A proposal to construct self-sufficient cities that would operate outside of national borders sparked a discussion between readers around governance and regulation in this weeks comments update.

Utopia:The Seasteading Institute's plans to offer deregulatedinnovation infloating "start-up countries" were met with a combined response of concern and praise by commenters.

Geofbob was less than optimistic about a future drafted by Silicon Valley: "So, the foolhardy (or simply foolish) now have an intriguing choice settling on Mars with Elon Musk or on a floating city off Tahiti with Peter Thiel."

But Matt welcomed the forward-thinking project: "I'm not sure why so many have bashed this concept. It takes an incredible amount of thought, talks and engineering, which we should be encouraging. If someone wants to be the guinea pig, it should be their choice."

"This is the future. There are many highly intelligent and trained people innovating for this industry," agreed RuckusAmsel.

Ck was uncertain about the intentions of Peter Theil, co-founder of The Seasteading Institute and Paypal: "Unregulated scientific 'innovation' on an isolated island not subject to the laws of any country funded by a tech billionaire? This sounds like a very bad thing."

"Also sounds like many a James Bond film!" repliedGeofbob.

One reader was reminded of the setting for a gaming classic:

Would you leave your life behind to live on the Floating City Project? Have your say in thecomments section

Low grade: agraduate project aiming to tackle London's housing crisis, withlong cantilevered structures on undeveloped brownfield sites,stirred up a discussion about the quality of teaching in architecture.

"I believe technical knowledge should be improved dramatically in architecture schools. As we can see in this proposal, the student has no clue about how the structure that he is suggesting would work," pointed out Mp.

Rogan Joshsuggested it wasn't the student's fault. "Beautiful drawings. Probably left little time to develop depth of thought and realism in the ideas proposed... this isn't a personal problem, rather a symptom of our architectural education," he said.

"Not sure this makes any sense as an affordable housing solution, which is as much the professor's fault as the student's," agreed HeywoodFloyd, before adding:"But this is far from the most offensive project we've seen coming out of RCA or Bartlett recently."

Jeroen van Lith was more worried about the issue at hand: "Seeing these kinds of artistic solutions to such a serious problem, I am only convinced a much more scientific approach is needed."

Not everyone harboured such negative feelings, however:

Read the comments on this story

School of knocks:aconcept construction system designed to create low-cost modular apartments by Bartlett graduate Julia Baltsavia also came under scrutiny from readers this week.

"As with other modular apartment proposals, what about water, gas and electricity and waste? How are they planned and coordinated if each flat is custom and self-built?" quizzed Geofbob.

"Details, details, details... such things hamper creativity," answered apsco radialesdevilishly.

ABruce felt the proposal revealed a deeper issue. "I'm not as concerned about the planning/zoning issues as much as the fact that we are pumping out 'architects' without a faint understanding of reality."

HeywoodFloyd made a joke out of the other readers' comments:

Read the comments on this story

Bin it:Loughborough University graduate Benjamin Cullis Watson fared better with Dezeen readers, who embraced his smell-free rubbish bin that can quickly compost waste from the kitchen.

Thepixinator was impressed by the cleanliness of the design: "The giant bin/worms/turning mess has always turned me off composting. This is brilliant."

"I also love how easy the whole system seems, that integrated watering can is a great idea. A lot of good thinking here, I'd love to have one" said Andre C, joining in with the high praise.

And this reader nearly ran out of compliments for the student's work:

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"Unregulated scientific innovation on an isolated island? Sounds like a very bad thing" - Dezeen

A Sperm Bank Is Desperate For Redheads To Donate, So You’d Better Get To It – Crave Online

The beginning. Photo: Raycat (Getty).

For whatever reason, society has poked fun atredheads for a long time. Gingers cant seem to catch a break.

Until today.

Apparently, the redheaded are the new hot tamale when it comes to women seekingdonors to make babies.And now a sperm bank isaskingfor their help to meet demands.

Sperm-donor service Co-ParentMatch says that its members are looking for ginger donors, revealing that only two percent of their swimmersare of the red variety. The situation is so bad that they went to Facebook with an ad that asks redheads to donate NOW. All caps means its serious business, yall.

Home insemination? How convenient!

According to Newshub.com, the demand for red semen is waaaaaay up from where it was back in 2011. One sperm bank out in Denmark was turning redheads away because nobody waanted babies who would one day have fire crotches. What the hell happened in the last six years to change minds? Your guess is as good as ours.

This news cant be any better for all you ginger guys out there. All it takes is signing up with Co-ParentMatch, giving them your information, and spanking out donating your little guys for the good of red-kind. So what are you waiting for, gingers? Best to get to work. Countless women aredepending on you.

h/t Maxim

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A Sperm Bank Is Desperate For Redheads To Donate, So You'd Better Get To It - Crave Online

Roybal to be inducted into state coach hall of honor – Santa Fe New Mexican

Cindy Roybal doesnt feel like shes at the end of her coaching career.

It just seems like the accolades are coming in like she is on the final stretch.

Over the past six years, Roybal was a part of the induction ceremony for the All-American Red Heads, the all-women traveling team, and a finalist for the National High School Athletic Coaches Associations girls basketball coach of the year last year.

Roybals rsum will grow when she is inducted into the New Mexico High School Coaches Associations Hall of Honor at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Albuquerque Crowne Plaza Hotel. Roybal, who was hired as head coach at Santa Fe High in April, will be joined by Floyd head boys basketball coach Rafael Roybal and recently retired Lordsburg head football coach and current athletic director Louie Baisa.

Cindy Roybal said Monday, the first day of the weeklong NMHSCA Coaches Clinic, was filled with even more accolades.

Everyone was handing out congratulations like it was candy, Roybal said.

Its yet another cherry on top of the coaching sundae Roybal accumulated over five decades of teaching and coaching. She thought a lot about her career path, which started at St. Catherine Indian School in the mid-1970s, continued to the Institute of American Indian Arts and then shifted into high gear at Santa Fe Indian School from 1979-86.

Roybal recalls that the place where she earned her degree at College of Santa Fe and her first two coaching stops no longer exist or no longer have high school programs.

Its amazing to think that I outlived all of those places, Roybal said.

Shes lasted long enough to coach the first game at SFIS Francis L. Abeyta Memorial Gymnasium and Pueblo Pavilion. And she also was a part of the first basketball game at the John A. Wilson Complex, where she coached at New Mexico Highlands University from 1985-2002.

Aside from her time at NMHU, Roybal compiled a 377-104 record during stops at St. Catherine, IAIA, SFIS (twice), Pojoaque Valley, Espaola Valley and Santa Fe High. She guided the Lady Braves to 3A titles in 2010 and 2011 and a runner-up spot in 2012.

Roybal recently spent the past three seasons at Espaola, compiling a 71-16 mark and three straight appearances to the 5A semifinals. She took on the job at Santa Fe High because of the task of a small big school taking on some of the top programs in the state appealed to her.

This is challenging, and I like challenges, Roybal said. When I went over [to Espaola], I was aware of the challenge, and I was happy about what we did three straight district titles and three semifinal appearances and the best record Espaola ever had.

I wanted to get closer to home, and Santa Fe High is another challenge that I think we will take on head on and be successful. I feel this second wind of energy, and I am eager to get started there.

Most of all, Roybal recalls all the students, athletes, coaches and parents she encountered during her teaching and coaching career with a fondness that grows with time.

Ive been thinking about them a lot, the humble beginnings from where we started where we had to cut Christmas trees to fund raise, Roybal said. What really comes to my mind is how many kids I have coached who came back and said, If it wasnt for you, the discipline we had, the work ethic we developed That is how I am running my program.

Thats whether they are a nurse, a lawyer, a teacher. Thats what makes me stay in this profession.

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Roybal to be inducted into state coach hall of honor - Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Heads Should Roll’ Over Red-Light Ticket Settlement, Alderman … – DNAinfo

A sign warns driver of red light camera enforcement at Foster and Broadway. View Full Caption

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CITY HALL "Heads should roll" over the need for the city to pay $38.75 million to settle claims it failed to allow motorists to challenge tickets issued by red-light and speed cameras, Ald. Anthony Beale (9th) said.

Beale, the chairman of the council's transportation committee and a long-time critic of the city's red-light and speed cameras, called the settlement "disturbing" and said the system was "corrupt from the very beginning."

"I'm excited that "residents are going to get their just due," Beale said. "However, this was designed not for public safety but to generate hundreds of millions of dollars. This system was designed to hurt the people who can least afford to pay these tickets."

Under the settlement endorsed Monday by the finance committee and expected to be approved Wednesday by the full council 1.2 million people who paid fines, but didn't get a chance to contest 1.5 million citations, could get a refund of half of what they paid the city, officials said.

Beale said the city employees who failed to follow the law in effect from 2010 to 2015 that required the city to send drivers a second notice about the violation and given 14 days to pay or contest the ticket before declaring that they were guilty and imposing a $100 fine on tickets not paid on time should be fired.

"Heads need to roll," Beale said. "A bunch of heads need to roll."

However, Corporation Counsel Ed Siskel, the city's top attorney, said a "confluence of events" led to the problem that could have put the city on the hook for $250 million.

The settlement will send $26.75 million back to drivers who paid their fines between March 2010 and May 2015 and wipes out $12 million owed to the city by motorists. Those eligible for a refund will be notified by mail, officials said.

The city plans to pay the settlement with $10 million from the $20 million the city got from its lawsuit that alleged the initial red-light camera contract was obtained by bribing city officials, Siskel said.

The rest of the settlement will be paid for with $18 million the city is set to receive from hotel reservation websites to settle a lawsuit alleging the websites did not pay the proper amount of taxes to the city, Siskel said.

Beale said it was "amazing that we can find all this extra money" at a time when he and other aldermen are scrambling to find extra funds for programs.

"There's a pot of gold over here, a pot of gold over here," Beale said. "But I can never put my hand in the pot of gold."

Attorney representing the drivers who sued the city could earn $11.5 million from the settlement agreement, Siskel said.

City officials changed the rules in 2015, and gave drivers who got a ticket but no second notice giving them a chance to challenge it an opportunity to challenge the old violations.

The settlement includes a provision that prohibits any of the tickets in question from being used to suspend a drivers license or to boot a vehicle.

The city's red-light camera program has long been troubled.

In March, city officials agreed to ticket drivers only if they enter a camera-monitored intersection three-tenths of a second or more after the light turns red.

A Northwestern University Traffic Center study found the old rule forced "people to make a split-second decision about whether to brake or go through the intersection" and could have led to rear-end crashes.

In February, the company that installed the red-light cameras at hundreds of intersections will pay Chicago $20 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged the contract was obtained by bribing city officials.

At an unrelated event Monday afternoon, Mayor Rahm Emanuel defended the red-light camera program, but declined to directly answer questions about the settlement.

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'Heads Should Roll' Over Red-Light Ticket Settlement, Alderman ... - DNAinfo

China’s quest to become a space science superpower – Nature.com

VCG/Getty

This Long March-7 rocket carried a cargo craft to the Tiangong-2 space lab in April.

Time seems to move faster at the National Space Science Center on the outskirts of Beijing. Researchers are rushing around this brand-new compound of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) in anticipation of the launch of the nation's first X-ray telescope. At mission control, a gigantic screen plays a looping video showcasing the country's major space milestones. Engineers focus intently on their computer screens while a state television crew orbits the room with cameras, collecting footage for a documentary about China's meteoric rise as a space power. The walls are festooned with motivational slogans. Diligent and meticulous, says one. No single failure in 10,000 trials, encourages another.

For director-general Wu Ji, this 19.4-hectare, 914-million-yuan (US$135-million) campus represents the coming of age of China's space-science efforts. In the past few decades, Wu says, China has built the capacity to place satellites and astronauts in orbit and send spacecraft to the Moon, but it has not done much significant research from its increasingly lofty vantage point. Now, that is changing. As far as space science is concerned, he says, we are the new kid on the block.

China is rushing to establish itself as a leader in the field. In 2013, a 1.2-tonne spacecraft called Chang'e-3 landed on the Moon, delivering a rover that used ground-penetrating radar to measure the lunar subsurface with unprecedented resolution. China's latest space lab, which launched in September 2016, carries more than a dozen scientific payloads. And four additional missions dedicated to astrophysics and other fields have been sent into orbit in the past two years, including a spacecraft that is conducting pioneering experiments in quantum communication.

These efforts, the work of the CAS and other agencies, have made an impact well beyond the country's borders. The space-science programme in China is extremely dynamic and innovative, says Johann-Dietrich Wrner, director-general of the European Space Agency (ESA) in Paris. It's at the forefront of scientific discovery. Eagerly anticipated missions in the coming decade include attempts to bring back lunar samples, a joint CASESA project to study space weather and ground-breaking missions to probe dark matter and black holes.

But despite the momentum, many researchers in China worry about the nation's future in space science. On 2 July, a Long March-5 rocket failed during the launch of a communications satellite, raising concerns about an upcoming Moon mission that will use a similar vehicle. And broader issues cloud the horizon. The international and domestic challenges are formidable, says Li Chunlai, deputy director at the CAS's National Astronomical Observatories in Beijing and a senior science adviser on the country's lunar programme. China is often sidelined in international collaboration, and in recent years it has had to compete with the United States for partners because of a US law that prohibits NASA from working with China. Within China, the government has not conducted strategic planning for space science or provided long-term financial support. The question is not how well China has been doing, says Li. But how long this will last.

China's entry into the space age started with a song. In 1970, the country's first satellite transmitted the patriotic tune 'The East is Red' from low Earth orbit. But it was only after the cultural revolution ended in 1976 that the nation made serious progress towards establishing a strong presence in space. The first major milestone came in 1999 with the launch of Shenzhou-1, an uncrewed test capsule that marked the start of the human space-flight programme. Since then, the country has notched up a series of successes, including sending Chinese astronauts into orbit and launching two space labs (see 'Earth orbit and beyond').

After achieving major space-flight milestones, China has put more support behind missions with scientific aims.

NSSC

1970 China launches its first satellite, Dongfanghong-1 (pictured, above).

1999 The launch of the uncrewed Shenzhou-1 test capsule kicks off China's human space-flight programme.

2003 Astronaut Yang Liwei flies aboard Shenzhou-5 on China's first crewed mission to orbit.

2007 Chinas first lunar orbiter, Change-1, is launched.

2011 Chinas first space lab, Tiangong-1, reaches orbit.

2013 The lunar spacecraft Change-3 makes the countrys first soft landing on the Moon.

2015 The Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) reaches Earths orbit.

2016 The Tiangong-2 space lab launches, carrying 14 science experiments.

2017 China launches its first X-ray telescope, the Hard X-Ray Modulation Telescope (HXMT).

2017 China plans to launch Change-5 (pictured, below) on a mission to bring lunar samples to Earth.

Liang Xu/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire

China's space programme has made tremendous advances in a short period of time, says Michael Moloney, who directs boards covering aerospace and space science at the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in Washington DC. And science has progressively become a bigger part of missions run by both the China National Space Administration (CNSA), which governs lunar and planetary exploration, and the China Manned Space Agency. The country's newest space lab, Tiangong-2, for example, hosts a number of scientific payloads, including an advanced atomic clock and a $3.4-million detector called POLAR for the study of -ray bursts blasts of high-energy radiation from collapsing stars and other sources.

The country's first lunar forays orbiters launched in 2007 and 2010 were more engineering demonstrations than scientific missions, but that changed with the first lander, Chang'e-3. The mission made China the third nation to accomplish a soft landing on the Moon. More importantly, Chang'e-3 touched down in an area that had never been studied up close. Radar measurements and geochemical analyses unveiled a complex history of volcanic eruptions that could have happened as recently as 2 billion years ago1. It has really helped to bridge the gap in our understanding of the Moon's past and deep structure, says study leader Xiao Long, a planetary geologist at the China University of Geosciences in Wuhan.

The results have captured the attention of planetary scientists in other countries. There is an urgent need to determine the precise age and composition of the Moon's youngest volcanism, says James Head, a specialist in planetary exploration at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. This might soon be possible. As early as December, the Chang'e-5 spacecraft will launch on a mission to return samples from near Mons Rmker, a region known to host volcanic rocks much younger than those obtained from the Apollo landing sites. It would be a fantastic addition to lunar science, Head says.

The rising fortunes of Chinese space science have come in part from efforts by the CAS, which worked through the 2000s to convince China's government to boost the scientific impact of its missions. The academy's efforts were eventually rewarded with a pot of money: the five-year Strategic Priority Program on Space Science kicked off in 2011 and provided $510 million for the development of four science satellites.

One of the missions that has yielded early results and garnered worldwide attention is the $100-million Quantum Experiments at Space Scale (QUESS) mission. The spacecraft launched in August 2016 and has been testing a peculiar phenomenon called entanglement, in which the quantum states of particles are linked to each other even if the particles are far apart. Last month, the QUESS team reported that it had used the satellite to beam a pair of entangled photons to two ground stations spaced 1,200 kilometres apart2 far exceeding an earlier record of 144 kilometres (ref. 3).

NSCC

The European Space Agencys director-general, Johann-Dietrich Wrner, and Wu Ji, director-general of the National Space Science Center, discussed space science at a meeting in 2016.

The team is also using the satellite to test the possibility of establishing a quantum-communication channel between Graz, near Vienna, and Beijing. The aim is to transmit information securely by encrypting it with a key encoded in the states of photons. If successful, a global quantum-communication network will no longer be a science fiction, says Pan Jian-wei, a physicist at the CAS's University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei and the mission's principal investigator.

Researchers are also expecting great things from the $300-million Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE). The detector, which launched in 2015, is the most cutting-edge equipment for picking up high-energy cosmic rays, says Martin Pohl, an astrophysicist at University of Geneva in Switzerland and a co-principal investigator of the mission.

DAMPE's data could help to determine whether a surprising pattern in the abundance of high-energy electrons and positrons detected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) aboard the International Space Station comes from dark matter or from astronomical sources such as pulsars, says Pohl, who also works on the AMS. Because DAMPE is more sensitive than the AMS to high-energy particles, Pohl says, it will make a significant contribution.

The dark-matter and quantum missions launched just before the CAS's space-science funding expired. Scientists, including Wu, had to battle for continued support. The Chinese government has lately prioritized applied research, and it took intense lobbying for the better part of 2016 before researchers convinced the government to allocate an additional $730 million to the CAS for space science over the next five years. It was not without a fight, Wu says. But we've managed to pull it off.

The new plan, which began this year, funds a number of missions slated for launch in the 2020s, including China's first solar exploration mission and a remote-sensing spacecraft to study Earth's water cycle.

The CNSA and the China Manned Space Agency have also been ramping up their space-science efforts. One source of excitement is a $440-million X-ray telescope led by the CNSA, called Enhanced X-ray Timing and Polarimetry (eXTP). Planned for launch by 2025, the mission is being financed in part by European partners and involves hundreds of scientists from 20 countries. It is designed to study matter under extreme conditions of density, gravity and magnetism that can be found only in space in the interior of neutron stars or around black holes, for instance.

NSCC

The Double Star mission launched a pair of satellites in 2003 and 2004 to study Earth's magnetosphere.

The most innovative aspect of the satellite is its ability to simultaneously measure with high precision the timing, energy distribution and polarization of X-ray signals, which will provide insight into a range of X-ray sources, says co-principal investigator Marco Feroci, an astrophysicist at the Institute of Space Astrophysics and Planetology in Rome. eXTP will also carry a wide-field telescope to hunt for unusual, transient signals. Once it finds a potentially interesting source, all the other instruments will be zoomed in that direction, says Zhang Shuangnan, an astrophysicist at the CAS's Institute of High Energy Physics in Beijing, who is leading the mission. It's the total weapon for X-ray astronomy.

Work is also progressing on projects led by the China Manned Space Agency. One is a dark-matter detector that has 15 times the sensitivity of DAMPE; it's set to be installed on China's permanent space station, which is slated for completion by 2022. There are also plans for a $730-million optical telescope to orbit near the space station. With a field of view 300 times that of the Hubble telescope, it will produce survey data that could be ideal for studying dark matter and dark energy as well as hunting for exoplanets, says Gu Yidong, a physicist at the CAS's Technology and Engineering Center for Space Utilization in Beijing and a senior science adviser to the China Manned Space Agency.

Such projects suggest that collaboration is strengthening between the CAS and China's other agencies involved with space. And a similar spirit is reflected abroad. China's space programme has become increasingly confident and outward looking, says Wrner. In the past, announcements were made only after a mission was successful; now, China routinely broadcasts launches as they happen. And Chinese scientists are increasingly reaching out to their international colleagues, building ties through small-scale partnerships.

Most major CAS-led missions have European partners, with collaborations initiated by researchers on both sides. But ESA hopes to establish high-level cooperation with the rising space power. In early 2015, ESA and the CAS issued a call for proposals for space-science missions. They selected a project called Solar Wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer (SMILE), to be led jointly and funded with $53 million from each group. The agencies work intimately together at every stage of the development, says Wu.

ESA and China collaborated more than a decade ago on a project called Double Star to study magnetic storms, but it was a China-led mission. Through SMILE, the agencies are testing a new, more intimate cooperation model. It's about building trust and bridges, so we could better understand each other, says Fabio Favata, head of strategy planning and coordination at ESA. Hopefully, this will open the way for larger-scale cooperation in the future.

Xinhua via ZUMA Wire

Arriving in 2013, Chinas lunar rover Yutu carried out measurements of the Moons subsurface with ground-penetrating radar.

A nation that is notably absent from China's current list of collaborators is the United States. In the past, China contributed key components to NASA missions. But NASA is now forbidden from such collaboration by a US law passed in 2011, and as a result China is excluded from participation in the International Space Station. On board is a product of earlier collaboration between the United States, China and a number of other countries the AMS.

Representatives from NASA and Chinese agencies still visit each other regularly. But with no official cooperation possible, there may be some inevitable replication of effort. In March, STROBE-X (Spectroscopic Time-Resolving Observatory for Broadband Energy X-rays) a project similar to China's eXTP mission was selected by NASA for further study. STROBE-X could launch by 2030, some five years after eXTP. Having two very similar missions at the same time is not ideal, says Colleen Wilson-Hodge, an astrophysicist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and a member of the STROBE-X team. I wish there were a way we could all work together rather than competing with each other.

For China's space scientists, however, the main challenge is to convince their own government of the need for long-term investment. Zhang, the leader of several astrophysics missions including eXTP, refers to the situation as a constant state of zhaobu baoxi, which translates as not knowing where the next meal will come from. We'll be safe for another five years, he says. But nobody knows what will happen afterwards.

Feats of engineering and exploration still get priority over science. The Chinese space station, for instance, has a budget of $14.5 billion. But even though Chinese President Xi Jinping has said that the station will be China's national laboratory in space, there is no dedicated fund for the development of its scientific payloads. The station might support science as Tiangong-2 does, providing power and communications to various experiments. But there is also the danger, Zhang says, that it will be a house without furniture.

At China's sprawling National Space Science Center, the furniture is new, and the air still smells of fresh paint. Having secured the next bout of funding, Wu looks relaxed as he settles into a big leather armchair behind his desk. He acknowledges the institutional flaws but is optimistic about the future. So far, so good, he says, glancing at the satellite models that line his shelves. We can't expect things to change overnight.

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China's quest to become a space science superpower - Nature.com