Attackers Mining Cryptocurrency Using Exploits for Samba Vulnerability – Threatpost

Unknown attackers are using a recently patched vulnerability in Samba to spread a resource-intensive cryptocurrency mining utility. To date, the operation has netted the attackers just under $6,000 USD, but the number of compromised computers is growing, meaning that a significant number of Samba deployments on *NIX servers remain unpatched.

The attack also demonstrates that the vulnerability in Samba, CVE-2017-7494, can extend EternalBlue-like attacks into Linux and UNIX environments. Samba is a software package that runs on Linux and UNIX servers and sets up file and print services over the SMB networking protocol, integrating those services into a Windows environment.

The Samba vulnerability is similar to the SMB bug exploited on May 12 by attackers using the NSAs EternalBlue exploit to spread WannaCry ransomware. Experts warned that EternalBlue can be fitted with any measure of attack, and they have a similar message about this flaw, which has been nicknamed SambaCry.

Researchers at Kaspersky Lab said that one of their honeypots snagged on May 30 some of the first exploits targeting the Samba vulnerability. The payload was a two-headed threat: a Linux backdoor and a mining utility called Cpuminer that is leveraging the processing power of its victims to create Monero cryptocurrency.

The attacked machine turns into a workhorse on a large farm, mining crypto-currency for the attackers, Kaspersky Lab said in a report published on Securelist.com.

The researchers said the attackers Monero wallet and pool address are hardcoded in the attack.

According to the log of the transactions, the attackers received their first crypto-coins on the very next day, on April 30th, Kaspersky Lab said. During the first day they gained about 1 XMR (about $55 according to the currency exchange rate for 08.06.2017), but during the last week they gained about 5 XMR per day. This means that the botnet of devices working for the profit of the attackers is growing.

As of Friday, the attackers had mined about $6,000 USD, and Kaspersky Lab said it was unsure about the scale of the attack. Upon disclosure of the Samba vulnerability almost three weeks ago, Rapid7 said an internet scan using its ProjectSonarsoftware found more than 104,000 endpoints running vulnerable versions of Samba over port 445, the SMB port. More than 92,000 are running versions of Samba that have no patches available. The vulnerability was introduced into Samba in 2010 in version 3.5.0; admins should upgrade to patched versions: 4.6.4, 4.5.10 and 4.4.14.

Kaspersky Lab said the exploit is assembled as a Samba plugin, below. After running a checka file containing random symbolsto see whether the server has write permissions for the network, the attack must then brute-force the full path to dropped file. The most obvious paths are laid out in Samba instruction manuals, Kaspersky Lab said. Once it finds the path, the exploit is loaded and executed in the context of the Samba server process using the vulnerability; it runs only in virtual memory.

Kaspersky Lab said the attacks captured by its honeypot contained two files, a Linux backdoor and the miner. INAebsGB.soandcblRWuoCc.so respectively. INAebsGB.sois a reverse shell that connects to the port of the IP address specified by the owner giving it remote access to the shell.

As a result, the attackers have an ability to execute remotely any shell-commands. They can literally do anything they want, from downloading and running any programs from the Internet, to deleting all the data from the victims computer, Kaspersky Lab said, adding that this is similar to the SambaCry exploit in Metasploit.

The other file, cblRWuoCc.so, downloads and executes Cpuminer from a domain registered on April 29.

Coincidentally, another set of attackers used EternalBlue to spread a cryptocurrency miner called Adylkuzz for Monero on Windows machines. Monero is marketed as a privacy conscious cryptocurrency, and goes to great lengths to obfuscate its blockchain making it a challenge to trace any activity.

The Adylkuzz attacks pre-date WannaCry with the first samples going back to April 24, researchers at Proofpoint said. More than 20 virtual private servers were scanning the internet for targets running port 445 exposed, the same port used by SMB traffic when connected to the internet, and the same port abused by EternalBlue and DoublePulsar.

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Attackers Mining Cryptocurrency Using Exploits for Samba Vulnerability - Threatpost

Europe’s First Cryptocurrency Fund Launching From Zug Valley – ETHNews

News business and finance

For the first time, Europeans will have the option to trade in a diversified index fund based on cryptocurrencies.

On June 12, 2017, from Zug, Switzerland, Crypto Fund AG announced it is launching the Cryptocurrency Fund, based on the Cryptocurrency Index, to be registered with FINMA (Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority), and will be first investment vehicle of its kind to manifest in the European market.

The Cryptocurrency Index is calculated by an index provider known for investing in virtual currencies with significant market caps, including Ether, bitcoin, Ripple, and other cryptocurrencies. The index's diversification reduces volatility for investors reacting to the surge of emergent currencies in the marketplace, and its growth rate easily outpaces that of traditional equities and securities markets.

Jan Brzezek, CEO of Crypto Fund AG and former president of UBS Asset Management and UBS Group EMEA, spoke of the differences between the new fund and predecessors, which failed to gain approval from regulators:

"We recognized the growing demand of qualified investors for a regulated and transparent gateway to cryptocurrencies and realized that we need a proven and recognized legal framework allowing qualified investors to invest in cryptocurrencies. Unlike the Winkelvoss-ETF, which was rejected by the SEC, we use the regulated and proven Swiss fund structure according to KAG [Swiss Collective Investment Schemes Act], where the asset manager, the fund management company and the custodian bank are legally separate from each other. The Fund will be highly diversified and will not list on an exchange and exclusively target qualified investors.

In March 2017, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rejected an application by the Gemini Exchange founders, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, to launch the first ever bitcoin exchange traded fund (ETF). However, since then, the SEC reopened the matter for public commentary and continues to deliberate on the fate of the fund. The SEC is also currently considering a similar application of an Ether-based ETF proposed by EtherIndexEtherTrust.

For this endeavor, Brzezek has teamed up with Dr. Tobias Reichmuth, who acts as chairman of the board for Crypto Fund AG and is the founding investor. In addition, FinTech expert Marc P. Bernegger joins the board, providing his expertise.

Reichmuth expressed that desires to invest in cryptocurrency come from across the board. He said:

"Private and institutional investors alike show a keen interest for cryptocurrencies as a deflationary value storage medium independent of central banks. Access via a regulated vehicle, to execution and safe storage were so far missing. The Cryptocurrency Fund will be the first regulated fund globally which provides a safe and easy access to the rapidly growing cryptocurrency world.

Bernegger noted that it is no coincidence Zug Valley was chosen as a base, citing regulatory clemency and overall regional stability.

"The term Crypto Valley has quickly gained acceptance and demonstrates the concentration and growth of Cryptocurrency companies and foundations in the region of Zug and Zurich. It is also important to mention that Switzerland with its good reputation in asset management and stable regulation has already accepted virtual currencies as an asset class. In addition, the Swiss mountains offer safe and tested warehouses for digital assets.

Crypto Fund AG is advised by the law firm MME Legal, which specializes in blockchain technology and token offerings. The fund is slated to launch in Q4 2017 and an initial dialogue with FINMA has been established.

Jeremy Nation is a writer living in Los Angeles with interests in technology, human rights, and cuisine. He is a full time staff writer for ETHNews and holds value in Ether.

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Europe's First Cryptocurrency Fund Launching From Zug Valley - ETHNews

Comets’ loss is one tough pill to swallow – YourGV.com

There were very few, if any, words spoken as the Halifax County High School baseball team returned to its dugout for the final time.

With two runners on base with one out in the bottom of the 14th inning, Briar Woods High Schools Sean Clark delivered a hard-hit ground ball through the middle of the infield to score the game-winning run to top the Comets 5-4 in Saturdays Virginia High School League 5A State Tournament championship game at James Robinson Secondary School in Fairfax.

Clarks hit was the biggest of two shocks the Comets experienced in the state title game, the first coming in the bottom of the seventh inning when the Comets held a 4-2 lead and were within two outs of victory only to see the Falcons rally to score twice to tie the game and send it into extra innings.

The loss left the Comets, who were seeking to bring home what would have been only the second state title in Halifax County High School history, finishing with a 21-4 for the season.

Its a tough pill to swallow, remarked Comets junior outfielder and pitcher Brayden Moore.

That was the longest game Ive played in my life. We battled hard for 14 innings. You cant say enough about the heart of this team.

Comets sophomore pitcher Alex Lowery, who was on the mound at the end of the game, said he was proud of the team and the effort during the marathon 14-inning contest.

We had a really good game, Lowery pointed out.

We played 14 solid innings. It was a game that one hit at the right time could win it all for either team. Thats all they (Briar Woods High School) did, they got one simple hit, a ground ball through the hole.

It was a tough loss for the Comets in the game that was a rematch of the 5A North Region Tournament championship game a week earlier that the Falcons won 10-0.

This weekend marked only the fourth time in the history of the Halifax County High School baseball program that a Comets baseball team will have played in a state championship game.

Im just proud of the way the kids played all season, said Comets Head Coach Kenneth Day.

You couldnt have asked for any more from these kids. They battled all day. We were right there, just this close.

See the article here:

Comets' loss is one tough pill to swallow - YourGV.com

No. 15 Comets taking shape – Marshalltown Times Republican

Local Sports

Jun 11, 2017

T-R PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE BCLUW second baseman Samantha Ubben, right, awaits the throw as Cedar Falls baserunner Ashton Syharath dives back to the bag during the second inning of Saturdays game at the BCLUW Comet Softball Invitational Tournament in Conrad.

CONRAD It starts as a collection of pieces.

By the time the season ends, head coach Dave Lee has fit the BCLUW softball team together into what he wants the picture to look like.

On Saturday, the Class 2A No. 15 Comets slid a couple more shapes into place by beating Cedar Falls, 10-2, and 3A No. 13 Union, 8-1, in the BCLUW Comet Softball Invitational Tournament that annual coincides with the towns Black Dirt Days celebration.

Junior Lauren Anderson pitched in back-to-back games for the first time this season, senior Samantha Ubben shined against a ranked opponent and the Comets (13-4) did the things that have made them successful under Lees tenure.

Even when a runner got hung up or cut down, Lee acknowleged the trial-by-fire approach he takes with his younger players and how it helps mold them for future roles with his squad.

T-R PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE BCLUWs Jenna Willett, center, runs up the first-base line as teammate Lizzy Garber, left, prepares to slide in safely ahead of the throw home by Cedar Falls pitcher Tjaden Petersen during the Comets eight-run fourth inning.

Everybody who becomes anything for us starts as a runner, said Lee.

BCLUW beat up on Cedar Falls (2-13) to the tune of an eight-run fourth inning that featured 12 batters, six hits, a pair of walks and perfectly executed small-ball. Jordyn Beeghlys two-run double to deep left field was the highlight of the Comets eruption, chasing Tigers starting pitcher Tjaden Petersen from the circle.

Easton Swanson and Kate Goecke greeted reliever Tehya Tournier with back-to-back singles, but a baserunning blunder kept the Comets from piling on even more.

Cedar Falls scratched together a pair of hits in its ensuing at-bat, but Anderson limited the damage despite having less-than-100 percent of her best, according to Lee.

We threw Lauren back-to-back because we wanted to have Sam for the Union game, and Lauren fought through the trouble spots she had, said Lee. And I thought our defense helped her get out of some stuff. It was a good day for our team in everything we do.

T-R PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE

Beeghly, Swanson, Goecke, Ubben and Olivia Hughes had two hits apiece as the Comets totaled 13 in the five-inning win. Anderson struck out three, walked two, hit two batters and allowed just three singles.

And after opening Saturday with a convincing win, BCLUW made even more of a statement by beating a ranked Union Community club by a convincing margin. The Knights (10-5) did not throw their top pitcher, Lee said, but that didnt seem to bother him too much.

I would have liked to have seen her against us, but the good thing was they only got one run on us for all the runs theyve scored this year, said Lee.

Union, averaging more than seven runs per game going into the ranked showdown with BCLUW, held Peyton Parker out of the circle. Instead, the Comets reached Justine Nagel for five runs in three innings and added three more against Natalie Tecklenburg.

Beeghly had a pair of run-scoring doubles and finished 3-for-4 with three RBIs to lead the Comets, who scored once in the first, four times in the third and added three more in the sixth before Union finally got to Ubben. Parker connected on an 0-2 pitch out of the park for a solo home run, one of only five Knights hits in their first loss in a week.

Ubben got the last word, however, by striking out 11, including the days final batter.

BCLUW rides a six-game win streak into Mondays NICL West Division showdown with 3A No. 14 West Marshall. The unbeaten Trojans (14-0) are the only other team in the conference without a loss.

BCLUW Comet Invitational

At Conrad

Fridays Games

Waterloo West 16, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 6

Sumner-Fredericksburg 5, Cedar Falls 4

BCLUW 4, Marshalltown 3

Saturdays Games

BCLUW 10, Cedar Falls 2

Cedar Falls 14, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 4

Marshalltown 4, Sumner-Fredericksburg 2

Union 7, Waterloo West 3

Sumner-Fredericksburg 9, Waterloo West 7

BCLUW 8, Union 1

Marshalltown 14, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 3

All-Tournament Team (locals only)

BCLUW: Lauren Anderson, Jordyn Beeghly, Samantha Ubben

Marshalltown: McKaylee Dawson, Regan Mazour, Aspen Chadderdon

Gladbrook-Reinbeck: Haleigh Berendes, Rachel Cooley, Reagan Skovgard.

BCLUW 10, Cedar Falls 2

BCLUW 110 80 10 13 2

Cedar Falls 000 20 2 3 4

Lauren Anderson and Kate Goecke; Tjaden Petersen, Tehya Tournier (4) and Cara Forsblom. WAnderson. LPetersen. 2BBCLUW: Jordyn Beeghly. LOBBCLUW 4, CF 4.

Cedar Falls 14, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 4

G-R 013 00 4 9 4

Cedar Falls 019 13 14 10 2

Rachel Cooley and Taylor Gienger; Avery Canfield and Lex Hesse. WCanfield. LCooley. 2BG-R: Haleigh Berendes; CF: Lean Forsblom. 3BCF: Lily Becker, Ashton Syharath. LOBG-R 6, CF 4.

Marshalltown 4, Sumner-Fredericksburg 2

S-F 000 020 0 2 5 1

MHS 200 200 X 4 5 5

Kaylyn Hoth, Mariah Nuss (4) and Kylie Hoth; McKaylee Dawson and Erica Johnson. WDawson. LNuss. 2BMHS: Ciara Feldman. HRMHS: Aspen Chadderdon (1). LOBS-F 9, MHS 4.

Marshalltown 14, Gladbrook-Reinbeck 3

MHS 2(10)2 0 14 5 1

G-R 030 0 3 7 2

Dawson, Kailee Pollard (2) and Johnson, Kyra Feldman (2); Sasha Nagle, Gracey Nagle (2), Alyssa Morgan (3) and Gienger. WPollard. LS.Nagle. 2BMHS: McKenna Major. HRMHS: Feldman (1). LOBMHS 1, G-R 5.

BCLUW 8, Union 1

BCLUW 104 003 0 8 9 2

Union 000 001 0 1 5 3

Samantha Ubben and Goecke; Justine Nagel, Natalie Tecklenburg (4) and Jordyn Nagel. WUbben. LJu.Nagel. 2BBCLUW: Beeghly 2. HRU: Peyton Parker (3). LOBBCLUW 7, Union 7.

INDIANAPOLIS LaVall Jordan is getting another chance to make his imprint at Butler. The Bulldogs former ...

GARWIN The GMG activities department is holding its inaugural four-person best shot golf fundraiser Saturday at ...

JOHNSTON Fresh off its first two wins of the season, the Marshalltown softball team got snapped back to the ...

The Marshalltown High School athletics fundraiser golf outing will be held Tuesday at the American Legion Memorial ...

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No. 15 Comets taking shape - Marshalltown Times Republican

Earth in danger? NASA reports comet swarm, Earth-crossing … – Catholic Online

NEOWISE mission has revealed more dangerous objects sharing our space.

NASA has announced the discovery of ten new asteroids in space which pose a threat to life on Earth. The ten objects were discovered over the past year by the "Near-Earth Orbit Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer" (NEOWISE). The threats are still being assessed.

Earth is close to the center of a cosmic shooting gallery, and sooner or later, we will be hit.

LOS ANGELES, CA (California Network) -- The Solar System is filled with rocks, all hurtling around the sun at speeds many times faster than a bullet. Most of these rocks are tiny, too small to cause harm to life on Earth. When these objects collide with our atmosphere, they burn brightly causing what we call a "meteor" or more commonly, a "shooting star."

Most other objects are too far away, and their orbits don't intersect Earth's, so they pose no danger.

Scientists unanimously agree that it is only a matter of time before one of these objects strikes the Earth. The extent of the damage will depend on its size and the location of impact.

Missions, such as NEOWISE are dedicated to locating more of these objects, and in the past year, they have discovered ten new asteroids. Those asteroids are still being evaluated to see if any will collide with Earth in the future.

So far, no asteroid has been observed on a collision course, but that could change. A new one could be discovered on a dangerous course, or an old one may have its orbit disturbed and as a result, could be set on a new collision course.

A large asteroid impacting the Earth could do as little as destroy a city or as much as destroying all life on Earth. If scientists detect one such threat in advance, they could develop some way to change its orbit. The slight nudging of an asteroid might be all it takes, but this is only possible if the asteroid is detected far enough in advance.

In addition to the new asteroids, NEOWISE has also located five new comets, which pose a similar threat to Earth. Comets usually come from deep space and often have highly elliptical orbits that cause them to swing past the Sun once every several decades. Comets can have variable orbits, and some swing past the Sun once and are ejected from the Solar System, while others plunge directly into the Sun itself. A few, however, can pass close to Earth and become visible in the night sky. And once, every hundred million years or so, one may hit Earth.

According to NASA, an unprecedented swarm of comets has been detected passing through the inner Solar System. Nobody knows why there has been an uptick in comet activity, but it's usually thought to come from the close approach of other stars, or unseen objects in deep space that causes disruption in the Oort Cloud, a halo of comets at the farthest reaches of our Solar System. It can take decades for a comet from the Oort Cloud to make the journey all the way to the inner Solar System.

Despite the discoveries of the ten asteroids, five comets, and over a hundred other, less dangerous objects, there is no immediate risk to Earth. Even the inner Solar System is a vast place, and there's plenty of room for a lot of asteroids to swirl without hitting Earth. But the danger from a single event is so great, we cannot afford to wait and hope we get missed every time.

The search continues.

---

The California Network is the Next Wave in delivery of information and entertainment on pop culture, social trends, lifestyle, entertainment, news, politics and economics. We are hyper-focused on one audience, YOU, the connected generation. JOIN US AS WE REDEFINE AND REVOLUTIONIZE THE EVER-CHANGING MEDIA LANDSCAPE.

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Earth in danger? NASA reports comet swarm, Earth-crossing ... - Catholic Online

Tofacitinib may be an effective treatment for nail psoriasis – 2 Minute Medicine

1. In a posthoc analysis of 2, phase 3 randomized controlled trials of over 1000 patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, tofacitinib (an oral Janus kinase inhibitor) treatment demonstrated significantly improved clinical nail psoriasis severity scores at 16 weeks compared to placebo.

Evidence Rating Level: 1 (Excellent)

Study Rundown: Psoriasis is a chronic, inflammatory skin disease associated with clinical manifestations of the nail that include pitting, onycholysis, subungual hyperkeratosis, and discoloration. Nail psoriasis may severely impair function and is associated with significantly greater disease severity and impact on patient quality of life than psoriasis without nail involvement. Tofacitinib is an oral Janus kinase inhibitor that has previously demonstrated efficacy and tolerability in phase 3 clinical trials of moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis. The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of tofacitinib on nail psoriasis.

This study is a post-hoc pooled analysis of two phase 3 clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of tofacitinib in 1196 patients with nail psoriasis. At the conclusion of the study, both the 5mg and 10mg twice-daily administrations of tofacitinb demonstrated clinically significant improvement in nail psoriasis compared to placebo at 16 weeks with effects maintained at 52 weeks. The results of this study support the use of tofacitinib as a potential treatment modality for nail psoriasis. This study is strengthened by its large sample size, multiple trial sites, randomization, double blinding, and comparison to placebo. The interpretation of study results is limited by the use of only objective measures to assess severity without incorporating subjective patient-reported outcomes. Moreover, non-responders were discontinued from the study at 28 weeks and not included in analysis. Multi-center prospective trials that include patient-reported outcome measures to assess improvements in severity may help improve the validity and of the study.

Click to read the study in JAAD

Relevant Reading: Tofacitinib, an oral Janus kinase inhibitor, for the treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis: results from two randomized, placebo-controlled, phase III trials

In-Depth [randomized controlled trial]: This study conducted a pooled posthoc analysis of two identical 52-week multi-site phase 3 randomized controlled trials evaluating the efficacy of tofacitinib in patients with moderate-to-severe chronic plaque psoriasis with nail involvement. Patients in both trials were randomized 2:2:1 to receive tofacitinib 5mg or 10mg, or placebo twice daily. Overall, this study identified 1196 patients with nail involvement of the original 1859 patients with psoriasis recruited in the initial studies. Patients were determined to be moderate-to-severe via a Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score 12, Physicians Global Assessment of moderate or severe, and affected body surface area 10%. Improvements in severity were assessed using the Nail Psoriasis Severity Index (NAPSI). The proportion of patients that demonstrated a 50%, 75% or 100% reduction from baseline in NAPSI score (NAPSI50, NAPSI75 and NAPSI100) were calculated and compared between treatment arms. Patients treated with tofacitinib demonstrated improvement in pitting, onycholysis, subungual hyperkeratosis, and discoloration. Moreover, treatment with tofacitinib demonstrated significantly greater proportions of patients that achieved NAPSI50, NAPSI75 and NAPSI100 compared to placebo at 16 weeks (p < 0.05). Furthermore, the mean number of affected nails decreased from 7.3 at baseline to 3.5 and 2.7 at 52-weeks for the 5mg and 10mg doses, respectively.

Image: PD

20172 Minute Medicine, Inc. All rights reserved. No works may be reproduced without expressed written consent from 2 Minute Medicine, Inc. Inquire about licensing here. No article should be construed as medical advice and is not intended as such by the authors or by 2 Minute Medicine, Inc.

2 Minute Medicines The Classics in Medicine: Summaries of the Landmark Trials is available now in paperback and e-book editions.

This text summarizes the key trials in:General Medicine and Chronic Disease, Cardiology, Critical and Emergent Care, Endocrinology, Gastroenterology, Hematology and Oncology, Imaging, Infectious Disease, Nephrology, Neurology, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Pulmonology, and Surgery.

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Tofacitinib may be an effective treatment for nail psoriasis - 2 Minute Medicine

China rakes in prizes at World Travel Awards – Independent Online

The 24th installment of the World Travel Awards Asia and Australasia took place in Shanghai, China this year. The official gala ceremony was held in Chinas economic capital, at the Grand Kempinski Hotel last weekend.

The gala ceremony also showcased some of Chinas finest traditions, including Kirin - a celebration, through song, of the mythical animals of Kylin who promote peace and prosperity.

Prior to the ceremony, media and guests were treated to a tour of the citys famous attractions, which included Yu Garden, the Old City Town, Jade Buddha Temple and Tian Zi Fang area.

The 24th installment of the World Travel Awards Asia and Australasia took place in Shanghai.

Here are some of the winners:

Australia

* Australias Leading Boutique Hotel 2017: Emporium Hotel

* Australias Leading Business Hotel 2017: Grand Hyatt Melbourne

* Australias Leading Car Rental Company 2017: Sixt

* Australias Leading Hotel 2017: InterContinental Sydney

* Australias Leading Hotel Residences 2017: Hilton Surfers Paradise Residences

* Australias Leading Hotel Suite 2017: Presidential Suite @ Surfers Paradise Marriott Resort & Spa

* Australias Leading Lodge 2017: Sal Salis Ningaloo Reef

* Australias Leading Resort 2017: One& Only Hayman Island, Great Barrier Reef

* Australias Leading Travel Agency 2017: Flight Centre

New Zealand

* New Zealands Leading Boutique Hotel 2017: The George Christchurch

* New Zealands Leading Business Hotel 2017: Crowne Plaza Auckland

* New Zealands Leading Car Rental Company 2017: Sixt

* New Zealands Leading Hotel 2017: Hilton Queenstown Resort & Spa

* New Zealands Leading Hotel Residences 2017: Residences at Pullman Auckland

* New Zealands Leading Hotel Suite 2017: Penthouse @ Hotel Montreal

* New Zealands Leading Resort 2017: Eagles Nest

China

* Chinas Leading Airport Hotel 2017: Hilton Beijing Capital Airport

* Chinas Leading Beach Resort 2017: InterContinental Sanya Haitang Bay Resort

* Chinas Leading Boutique Hotel 2017: Cachet Boutique Shanghai

* Chinas Leading Business Hotel 2017: Grand Kempinski Hotel Shanghai

* Chinas Leading Car Rental Company 2017: Europcar

* Chinas Leading City Hotel 2017:The Peninsula Shanghai

* Chinas Leading Conference Hotel 2017:JW Marriott Hotel Shanghai at Tomorrow Square, China

* Chinas Leading Design Hotel 2017: Hotel clat Beijing

* Chinas Leading Destination Management Company 2017: China International Travel Service

* Chinas Leading Family Resort 2017: MGM Grand Sanya

* Chinas Leading Hotel 2017: Four Seasons Hotel Shanghai

* Chinas Leading Hotel Brand 2017: Marriott Hotels

* Chinas Leading Hotel Residences 2017:THE ONE Executive Suites Shanghai

* Chinas Leading Hotel Suite 2017: Presidential Suite @ Four Seasons Hotel Shanghai

* Chinas Leading Lifestyle Hotel Brand 2017: HNA Hospitality Group

* Chinas Leading Low-Cost Airline 2017:West Air

* Chinas Leading New Hotel 2017:Shanghai Disneyland Hotel, China

* Chinas Leading Online Travel Agency 2017: Tuniu

* Chinas Leading Private Jet Charter 2017 : Deer Jet

* Chinas Leading Resort 2017: InterContinental Sanya Haitang Bay Resort

* Chinas Leading Serviced Apartment Brand 2017: Frasers Hospitality

* Chinas Leading Serviced Apartments 2017: Ascott Raffles City Chengdu

* Chinas Leading Travel Agency 2017: Tuniu

* Chinas Leading Travel Management Company 2017:HNA Tourism Group

* Chinas Leading Villa Resort 2017:Pullman Sanya Yalong Bay Villas and Resort

* Chinas Leading Wedding Venue 2017:Renaissance Sanya Resort & Spa

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China rakes in prizes at World Travel Awards - Independent Online

Trump travel ban suffers new court defeat – BBC News


BBC News
Trump travel ban suffers new court defeat
BBC News
A US appeals court has upheld a decision blocking President Donald Trump's revised "travel ban" on people from six mainly Muslim nations. Ruling on a case brought by the state of Hawaii, the appeal judges found that the executive order violated ...
Federal appeals court upholds freeze on Trump's travel banWashington Post
9th Circuit refuses to reinstate Trump's travel banThe Daily World
US appeals court upholds block on Trump travel banTRT World
Daily Astorian -Geo News, Pakistan -U.S. News & World Report
all 421 news articles »

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Trump travel ban suffers new court defeat - BBC News

Travel mag calls Cincinnati one of the best places to visit in the world – WLWT Cincinnati

CINCINNATI

If youre planning a big trip this year, you may want to consider a stay-cation.

Travel and Leisure magazine put out a list of the 50 best places to travel in the world and Cincinnati made the cut.

On the list, its sandwiched between Cape Town, South Africa and Devon, England.

The writers said in the article that food and drink were heavy factors in this years ranking.

So what put Cincinnati on the map? The writers first note the transformation of Over-the-Rhine. As far as food and drink, they gave shout-outs to Holtmans Donuts, Boca and Sotto.

Other factors mentioned were the streetcar and Music Hall.

A big portion of the areas description was given to Covington and its new, boutique hotel. They described Hotel Covington in great length as a beautifully repurposed space.

See what else they think makes Cincinnati so special

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Travel mag calls Cincinnati one of the best places to visit in the world - WLWT Cincinnati

Scientists Have Created The Largest Ever Virtual Universe Inside a Supercomputer – ScienceAlert

As well as studying what we can observe today, scientists rely on simulations to understand more about the past and future of the Universe and we have a new record for the largest Universe simulation ever computed.

A giant supercomputer has been used to model some 25 billion virtual galaxies, put together from calculations involving around 2 trillion digital particles. And it's holding a brain-popping amount of data.

The simulation, developed by astrophysicists at the University of Zurich in Switzerland, is going to be used to calibrate experiments on board the Euclid satellite due to launch in 2020 and tasked with investigating the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy.

"The nature of dark energy remains one of the main unsolved puzzles in modern science," explains one of the team, Romain Teyssier.

Part of the simulation, with dark matter halos shown as yellow clumps. Image: Joachim Stadel, UZH

Euclid won't be able to see dark matter directly it's notoriously elusive but it will be able to observe dark matter's effects on the rest of the Universe, and the calculations from our virtual model will help the satellite to know what it should be looking for.

"The more accurate these theoretical predictions are, the more efficient the future large scale surveys will be in solving the mysteries of the dark Universe," write the researchers.

To achieve the best possible accuracy for the simulation, scientists spent three years developing a new type of code called PKDGRAV3, specifically designed to run smoothly on the architecture of the latest supercomputers.

By carefully optimising the algorithms used to simulate the Universe, the team was able to cut down on the time needed to imagine some 13.8 billion years of deep space history since the Big Bang.

When tested on the Piz Daint supercomputer at the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre, the code came up with its record-breaking simulation in just 80 hours.

The calculations it runs analyse the way dark matter fluid evolves under its gravity, forming what are known as dark matter halos small concentrations of matter that astronomers think surround galaxies like our own Milky Way.

As Euclid makes its way through space in the next decade, it will capture the light from billions of galaxies, but what it will really be looking for is slight changes to that light caused by the invisible mass that is dark matter.

It's like looking for distortions of light through an uneven glass pane, say the researchers.

Based on observations of the way the expansion of the Universe is accelerating, scientists think dark matter and dark energy make up around 95 percent of our Universe, with the other 5 percent what we can actually see.

When it gets into orbit, Euclid will be taking a closer look, and the new simulation code from Switzerland will help it make sense of what it's measuring.

Thanks to the advances we're seeing in how far into space we can see and how quickly we can process the data we get back, the net is closing in the hunt for dark matter.

"Euclid will perform a tomographic map of our Universe, tracing back in time more than 10 billion year[s] of evolution in the cosmos," says one of the team, Joachim Stadel.

The research has been published in Computational Astrophysics and Cosmology.

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Scientists Have Created The Largest Ever Virtual Universe Inside a Supercomputer - ScienceAlert

Scientists use a supercomputer to build a simulation of the known … – Digital Trends

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Scientists use a supercomputer to build a simulation of the known ... - Digital Trends

Even An AI Supercomputer Found This College Entrance Exam Tough – IFLScience

If you are getting stressed about upcoming exams then youre not alone, so is this artificially intelligent (AI) machine.

Last week, a top AI system was pitted against nearly 10 million students to face the maths paper for a much-feared Chinese university entrance exam, known as gaokao. Unfortunately for robotkind, its results were pretty mediocre.

The computer a humming tower of eleven servers with no Internet connection called AI-MATHS scored 105 points out of 150 points. On another version of the test, it scored 100. Although that beats the passing score of 90, humanities students had previously scored an average of 109 last year.

That said, the machine finished the exam in 10 minutes when humans are given two hours to complete the exam.

Scientists recently saidartificial intelligence will be able to beat humans at everything by 2060, whether that'squizzes, exams, chess, or the game Go. In response to the study, Elon Musk then tweeted that he believes AI-superiority will actually be earlier, around 2030 or 2040.

That doesnt mean this AI is slow off the mark, however. The computer itself would be able to deal with raw numbers with no problem. Instead, the purpose of this task was to understand the examination in terms of language, something that computers are not so sharp with at the moment.

"This is not a make-or-break test for a robot. The aim is to train artificial intelligence to learn the way humans reason and deal with numbers," said Lin Hui, CEO of Chengdu Zhunxingyunxue Technology, who developed the AI, according to Chinese news agencyXinhua.

For example, the robot had a hard time understanding the words 'students' and 'teachers' on the test and failed to understand the question, so it scored zero for that question.

Gaokao isinfamously rigorous and renowned for being overwhelming stressful for the young people that take it. Made up of four three-hour papers in Chinese, English, mathematics, and a choice of either sciences or humanities, the series of tests rely on an extensive range of knowledge, problem-solving skills, and obscure creative thinking. The mathematics exam itself is said to be about as tough as the same level college exam in the West.

Nevertheless, the researchers continue to work with China's Ministry of Science and Technology and remain optimistic their AI will improve in the exams in no time at all.

I hope next year the machine can improve its performance on logical reasoning and computer algorithms and score over 130," Lin added.

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Even An AI Supercomputer Found This College Entrance Exam Tough - IFLScience

Early Benchmarks on Argonne’s New Knights Landing Supercomputer – The Next Platform

June 12, 2017 Nicole Hemsoth

We are heading into International Supercomputing Conference week (ISC) and as such, there are several new items of interest from the HPC side of the house.

As far as supercomputer architectures go for mid-2017, we can expect to see a lot of new machines with Intels Knights Landing architecture, perhaps a scattered few finally adding Nvidia K80 GPUs as an upgrade from older generation accelerators (for those who are not holding out for Volta with NVlink ala the Summit supercomputer), and of course, it all remains to be seen what happens with the Tianhe-2 and Sunway machines in China in terms of new development.

While we are not expecting any major new architectural surprise shakeups on the Top 500 list when it is announced next Monday, there is progress for some of the pre-exascale machines being installed and put into early production, including the Cori supercomputer at NERSC (more on that later today) and the Theta system at Argonne National Lab. Both of these machines sport an Intel Knights Landing (and Haswell in Coris case) base with the Cray Aries interconnect via the XC40 supercomputer architectureand both are reporting early results with key applications and how they might help centers adapt to the much larger systems.

As we pointed out last week, there are some questions about the future of the Aurora supercomputer at Argonne, an Intel and Cray based system that has been expected to arrive at the lab in 2018 sporting Intels Knights Hill and Cray architecture. However, work has been progressing on one of the systems designed to prepare users and codes for such a scale-shiftthe stepping-stone Theta supercomputer, which will introduce the lab to the Cray XC40 architecture and help users make the shift from an IBM systems focus to a completely new approach altogethersomething we talked about with one of the labs leads when Aurora was announced.

Even though part of its purpose is to provide an on-ramp to the next-generation Intel architecture (Knights Hill) and Cray architecture after so many years as a BlueGene-centric lab, Theta is still very powerful. In terms of capability, it is very similar to Argonnes current leadership-class supercomputer, the 10 peak petaflop Mira supercomputeran IBM BlueGene machine at still holds steady at #9 on the Top 500 list alongside a few other IBM BlueGene systems that will be retired in the next couple of years, bringing an end to that architectural era. The Knights Landing and XC40 (Cray Aries network-based) combination will deliver (along peak Linpack benchmark performance lines) in 3,624 nodes what takes Mira 49,152 nodes (although the architecture differences dont allow for true apples-to-apples compare).

With Theta up and running now, we can presume in time for the upcoming Top 500 ranking (although some labs eschew this benchmark because of its lack of relevance to real-world HPC applications) researchers are running microbenchmarks to evaluate performance. On the list for a recent report were DGEMM for peak floating point performance metrics and for more component-centric evaluations, LAMMPS, MILC, and Nekbone were measured. If the team ran the Top 500 Linpack benchmark to obtain peak theoretical performance, we wont know until next week.

For DGEMM and the evaluation of the peak floating point performance of the KNL core and nodes, the team found that they were able to achieve 86% of the peakan impressive number considering each node was expected to reach 2.25 teraflops (35.2 Gflops per core).

The research team adds that while the KNL core has a theoretical peak throughput of 2 instructions per clock cycle), actual throughput can be limited by factors such as instruction width and power constraints. They explain that power measurements show better computational efficiency when using fewer hyperthreads. OS noise and the shared L2 cache contention have been identified as the sources of core to core variability on the node but note that Crays core specialization can target the noise issues that have an impact on the timing of microkernels.

Theta results on the DGEMM matrix multiplication kernel. This benchmark achieves over 1.9 teraflops on a Theta node, or 86% of peak for a relatively small matrix size. The team points out that on this compute-intensive benchmark, running more than one thread per core does not improve the performance. Further, using more than one hyperthread can issue the core limit of two instructions per cycle. While this is not the case with the DGEMM kernel,using more than one hyper-thread can in some cases reduce performance due to threads sharing resources such as L1 and L2 caches and instruction re-order buffers.

In terms of other trouble spots, it is actually OpenMP that introduced some of the latencies. The Barrier and Reduce construct was found to be related to the latency of main memory access due to the lack of shared last level cache. A simple performance model was developed to quantify the overhead of OpenMP pragmas which scale as the square root of the thread count, Argonne researchers note.

The team also ran the STREAM Triad benchmark to evaluate memory bandwidth. They found that considerable variation was found in memory bandwidth between the flat and cache memory mode configurations.

Included is the power consumption and efficiency for STREAM on one node in flatquadrant mode. The IPM and DDR4 are evaluated separately. For both tests, 15GB memory was used across 100 iterations. The thing to note here is that the IPM gets a 4.3X gain in memory bandwidth power efficiency and a 1.2X increase in overall power consumption.

LAMMPS, MILC, and Nekbone all showed positive scaling characteristics (for strong and weak scaling) on Theta and were comparable to what teams were able to achieve on Mira, which is known for scalability via the BlueGene architecture. In short, so far, KNL is delivering on its promises in the wildit will be interesting to see scaling, performance, and efficiency on real-world applications as these roll out by SC17 for Gordon Bell, for instance.

We can expect a number of stories leading into ISC around the early benchmark results and production tales from other supercomputers with similar architectures (Trinity, Cori, Stampede2, etc) and will write these up as we get them. The full benchmark results and details from Theta can be found here.

Categories: HPC, ISC17

Tags: Argonne, Aurora, ISC17, Knights Landing, Theta

Clever RDMA Technique Delivers Distributed Memory Pooling

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Early Benchmarks on Argonne's New Knights Landing Supercomputer - The Next Platform

Tracking the World’s Top Storage Systems – TOP500 News

When assessing the fastest supercomputers in the world, system performance is king, while the I/O componentry that feeds these computational beasts often escapes notice. But a small group of storage devotees working on a project at the Virtual Institute for I/O (VI4IO) want to change that.

VI4IO is a non-profit organization, whose mission is to is build a global community of I/O enthusiasts devoted to lifting the visibility of high-performance storage and provide resources for both users and buyers. It does this through outreach and information exchanges at conferences like ISC and SC, and maintains a website to help spread the word.

An important element of VI4IOs mission now involves the creation of a High Performance Storage List (HPSL), also known as the IO-500. Like its TOP500 counterpart, the list purports to tracks the top systems in the world, but in this case from the perspective of storage. The TOP500, youll note, collects no information on this critical subsystem.

Essentially the IO-500 provides a collection of I/O metrics and otherdata associated withsome of the largest and fastest storage systems on the planet. The effort is being spearheaded by Julian Kunkel, a researcher at DKRZ (the German Climate Computing Center), along with Jay Lofstead, at Sandia National Labs, and John Bent, fromSeagate Government Solutions.

Both performance and capacity data is captured, as well as other relevant information.. Since the work to compile this data beganjust over a year ago, the list today contains a mere 33 entries. The eventual goal is to provide a knowledge base for 500 top storage systems and track them over time to provide a historical reference, as has been done in the TOP500 list.

Kunkel says the motivation to compile the list came from the desire to provide a central data repository for these big storage systems-- information that is now spread across hundreds of websites in different formats, languages, and levels of detail. Another incentive for the list was to create some standard I/O benchmarks that would be widely accepted by storage makers and users. According to Kunkel, a lot of people are doing great work in measuring and analyzing storage systems, but they tend to be isolated and work off their own metrics,

Although its loosely based on the TOP500 concept, the IO-500 data is compiled quite differently. For starters, there is no formal submission process. Individuals familiar with the storage at their own sites can input and edit the metrics and other data via a wiki website. So rather than a new list getting released every six months, the list is being continuously updated.

Such data, by definition, is difficult to verify, but the list makers encourage submitters to include references to web pages or public presentations to back up the credibility of their submission. The integrity of the people is the key, admitsKunkel.

The current list is very much a work in progress. Much of it has been compiled by Kunkel himself, along with some graduate student help, based on online material or correspondence with system owners. Even in the 33 current entries, none have complete profiles. Part of this is because many of these storage systems arent documented in much detail. But most of the missing data can be attributed to the fact that the list allows for just about any attribute you can think of from metadata rate and cache size to procurement costs and annual TCO.

Mandatory data is limited to things like the name of the institution, the name of the supercomputer, the storage capacity, and the storage system name (actually the file system name, since, unlike the supercomputers themselves, storage systems are usually unnamed).

One of the unique strengths of the IO-500 list is that its interactive. You can click on the site, the system, or the file system to reveal more detailed aspects of those areas. These secondary pages are not just a collection of metrics, but also can provided explanations of how those metrics were derived. You can also select non-mandatory data fields to be include in the list, like sustained read performance and cache size.

What is especially useful is the ability to re-sort the list by clicking on any one of the metrics-based fields storage capacity (the default) or any of the non-mandatory metrics selected. Even if youre not interested in storage per se, you can re-sort the list based on metrics like system peak performance or memory capacity.

Theres also a derived metrics page where you generate correlations between different storage aspects or other elements of the system. So, for example, you could compute things like the ratio of storage to memory capacity or the I/O performance per drive, and then sort on that metric. Theres a wealth of possibilities for different types of analysis.

The current weakness of the list, beside the paucity of entries, is the lack of standard metrics. Unlike the TOP500 with its High Performance Linpack (HPL), there is no standard set of storage performance benchmarks mandated by the list. Therefore, comparisons between the various submitted metrics, like peak I/O or sustained reads and writes, may not be directly comparable.

To rectify that, the IO-500 team have come up with three performance benchmarks: a metadata or small object benchmark, an optimistic I/O benchmark, and a pessimistic I/O benchmark. The pessimistic benchmark is still under development.

At some point, they would like to distill all this work into a single metric, which would likely combine the three benchmarks, weighted in some manner that made sense. That would provide a standard performance measurement on which to rank storage systems, analogous to HPL in theTOP500 rankings.

The immediate challenge, though, is to get more people involved in submitting storage entries, since their principle focus right now is to collect enough data to provide the list with enough critical mass to make it a worthwhile resource. Thats one reason why he and his two IO-500 cohorts are hosting a BoF session at the ISC High Performance conference next week. Also to be discussed will be how the standard benchmark efforts are progressing, although according to Kunkel, theres no rush to force something on the community.

There have been previous efforts at developing an I/O benchmark, and they all failed, he says. And thats why we are going a bit slower. We dont want this one to fail.

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Tracking the World's Top Storage Systems - TOP500 News

Tyler’s Rose City Summer Camp program merges academics, spirituality and fun – Tyler Morning Telegraph

Hundreds of children flooded into the hallways, dancing their hearts out as Education Commissioner Mike Morath got his first glimpse of a day in the life of students at Rose City Summer Camps at Dixie Elementary School.

Its so great to be in Texas classrooms watching teachers pour love into our kids, he said.

Morath has been traveling to Texas school districts ahead of changes to STAAR test results and has tried to work in campus visits to get to know the families he is serving.

Tyler ISD partners with the Mentoring Alliance to offer the camps each year. The faith-based nonprofit seeks to help grow students spiritually and academically.

Program director Matthew Honeycutt said the program uses STAAR test results to help tailor the learning plans for attendees.

From our side, its about getting to learn about the gospel of Jesus Christ, but we also get to help fight summer regression, he said.

Honeycutt said the program focuses on intentionality. Everything they do with students is targeted. This year, they have transitioned away from worksheets that might not interest students to more engaging project-based learning.

Honeycutt said data from last summer showed they were able to cut reading loss over the break in half and expected losses in math actually became improvements.

Students at the camp are separated into cabins made up of two large tents set up in the classroom. Eight students are assigned to each cabin, with one teacher and two camp staff members per class. The camp staff is comprised of high school and college students.

Throughout the day, as students transition to other activities, the halls become a dance party with music and fun to keep their energy levels high.

Three Lakes Middle School teacher Susi Savage joined the team this year after being told she was sure to have a good time and get to make a real difference with the students.

Learning is supposed to be a joy, she said. I substituted last year and I just loved the energy.

Savage also enjoys engaging with students on a more personal level and finding lessons they connect with.

Its much more hands on and creative, she said. I get to find more things the students are interested in.

One recent lesson was on how Guam solved a snake infestation on a small island when the snakes had no natural predators. She said the students were enraptured as they learned how the government eventually solved the problem.

Savage said she would love to see these effective lessons implemented in her teaching year round. She said small touches such as letting the students have fun during transitions helps keep them in the right mindset to engage and learn.

As a school, why dont we do these things? Why dont we have music on and why dont we dance? she said. If lifts your spirits and puts you in the right attitude.

Rose City Summer Camps run weekly from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday at Dixie Elementary School and Three Lakes Middle School. The program costs $99 per week, which includes daily breakfast, lunch and snacks. The Mentoring Alliance does offer financial assistance to parents who qualify.

For more information, visit rosecitysummercamps.com

Twitter: @TMT_Cory

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Tyler's Rose City Summer Camp program merges academics, spirituality and fun - Tyler Morning Telegraph

A new way of thinking about evolution and spirituality developed behind bars – KALW

Gary Shepherd has spent more than half of his 45 years incarcerated his entire adult life. In that time hes become a self-taught scholar and a self-described spirit warrior, putting into action a deeply-held belief in the power of altruism and cooperation. All of this springs from Shepherds study of evolution. Its made him what he calls an evolutionary.

It doesnt mean just evolution, Shepherd says of the term. It means revolutionary, because theres a spirit of action and theres change.

Shepherd is incarcerated in the East Unit at the Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence. Through years of good behavior, hes worked his way up to the honor dorms, the coveted place to live in East Unit. In the center of the yard, surrounded by what look like army barracks, is a cluster of double wide trailers lined up end to end. There Shepherd has his own room and a door he can close and open whenever he wants. But its still prison: the yard is surrounded by two layers of chain link fence, both topped by concertina wire.

The Road to East Unit

Shepherd had been a heavy drug user as a teenager, and he was no stranger to the law. But his real trouble didnt begin until 1991, when he was 20 years old. Hed done a little time for burglary and he was on parole, which he promptly violated. When his parole officers tried to arrest him at a mall in Tucson, he fired a gun into the ground to create a distraction. At the time, the offense carried a mandatory sentence of life in prison.

[Its] so much time when I didnt hurt anybody, nor did I intend to hurt anybody, Shepherd says. To me, that seemed instinctively very wrong.

After only a month in prison, Shepherd tried to escape, assaulting two guards in the process. That earned him a year in solitary confinement inmates call it the hole.

I would just walk back and forth and just think, What happened in my life? What really went wrong? Whats wrong with the system? he remembers. It just seemed so bizarre to me. It seemed like the problem was much bigger even than me.

Figuring out this problem, despite its immensity, became Shepherds lifeline. He started reading voraciously, trying to make sense of everything that had happened to him. He wasnt studying case law or learning a vocation like many prisoners do. Instead, he devoured books on anthropology, history, biology, philosophy. He was trying to understand how the whole world works.

Then from an unexpected source, came an epiphany. Watching TV one day, Shepherd saw a PBS special on early hominids and how they evolved into modern humans.

It completely changed me, he says. Its almost like a light went on and I felt like thats absolutely where we came from, and it was a fact. And it was very quickly that I foresaw the purpose of life. It almost gave me like a faith.

A spiritual scavenger

Shepherds parents werent religious, and he says he didnt have much of a moral framework growing up. Since hes been in prison though, hes become a spiritual scavenger, gathering concepts and practices that can help him survive.

Early on in his sentence, in solitary, a Sikh chaplain taught Shepherd the basics of meditation: how to control his breathing and clear his mind. Later, that led him to look into other mindfulness practices. He started learning yoga and tai chi from books and mail-order DVDs. He read books on Eastern philosophy.

He says Sun Tzus The Art of War is his favorite, because it provides practical advice on how to survive in a violent situation for example, everyday life in prison.

Its not like most people think, Shepherd says. They hear that word war so they automatically think violence. [The idea is actually] to do the most with the least, to resolve problems before they occur, and ultimately to try to make conflict altogether unnecessary.

Shepherd hasnt always been so cool and collected. His nickname in prison is Scrappy, and not for nothing. When he first got to prison, he fought anyone who interfered with him, even guards. But as his worldview began to shift, Shepherd used this reputation and the concepts he was learning to take on a kind of philosophical crusade.

If he saw a potentially violent situation unfolding, hed intervene, often putting his life at risk to confront fellow inmates who were on the verge of hurting or killing someone else.

In a very respectful way, I would let them know that that wasnt going to happen, he says. And that it wouldnt be allowed to happen without there being a response.

Shepherd also started debating his fellow inmates about things like the origin of life challenging their beliefs, or in some cases introducing them to the idea of evolution for the first time. Surprisingly, people were interested, even seeking him out to hear what he had to say.

It almost [made] me an authority figure on certain things, he says. They looked to me almost like a leading personality because of my knowledge.

Wading into an evolutionary debate

The concept he tried hardest to impress on his fellow inmates was something called group selection, a subcategory of natural selection. This is where Shepherd is wading into a somewhat controversial scientific debate.

The traditional view is that evolution depends on the strength or intelligence of individual animals, and that competition between those individuals is the main driver of natural selection. But some scientists theorize that cooperation is equally, or even more important than competition, and that natural selection happens at the group, as well as the individual level. For humans, that means groups of people who work together can survive to procreate those who fight amongst themselves eventually die out. Groups that cooperate with other groups fare even better.

As crazy as it sounds, Shepherd says he would pitch this idea to the gang leaders in prison, in an effort to get them to be more community-minded.

These conversations werent just about convincing his fellow inmates to be more peaceful, they came from a deep-seeded belief Shepherd holds about the nature of evolution. In his studies, he had come across the writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, a 20th-century Jesuit priest who theorized that evolution is a conscious process, that the universe wants to perfect itself, and that humans can actively participate through the choices we make. It was, and still is, a fringe concept in the mainstream science world, but it fit perfectly with Shepherds image of himself as an evolutionary spirit warrior.

Im filled with this sense of injustice, and unfairness, and I didnt like to see prisoners mistreated by other prisoners or getting hurt, when I feel like we should be focusing on working together more as a team, he says.

Altruism is what Shepherd really found in the science a sense that we have to take care of each other in order to succeed as a group, whether its a small group of prison inmates or the whole species. And thats what he means when he says that evolution gave him a sense of purpose.

By way of explanation, he quotes Matthew 6:33: Seek ye first the kingdom of God and all these things shall be added unto you.

Spreading the word

Over time, Shepherd found more ways to live out this sense of purpose that hed found. Around 2003, 12 years into his sentence, he got together with a couple of other inmates and started a peer education program they called B-Free. They would teach basic skills in the prison, health and hygiene, and tips for survival after release. The prison gave them an office to work out of, and a little bit of pay, about $3 a day.

Shepherd also saw the classes as an opportunity to educate fellow prisoners on his developing blend of science and philosophy.

We would start with the Big Bang, he says. Wed go through quantum realms. Ill talk about what creates cultural evolution, Ill get into the evolution of our morals, multi-level selection.

Shepherd was also sharing his own special blend of yoga and mindfulness practices, including something he calls poet-chi. Its basically the tai chi he learned, but he adds stream-of-consciousness ruminations on evolution and spirituality to go along with the movements.

Colleen Fitzpatrick-Rogers worked as a substance abuse counselor in the state prison complex in Florence. Shes retired now, but she knew the guys running the B-Free program, and she would help them get materials or information they needed for their classes. She also invited Shepherd to teach yoga and mindfulness to her addiction groups.

When I brought somebody like Gary Shepherd in front of my class, and he spoke to these inmates, they listened, she says. It was new to them. You dont have some guy talking to you and doing yoga and teaching you in a crack house.

Fitzpatrick-Rogers says that Shepherd commanded respect from other inmates partly because he lived by his philosophy. He practiced what he preached. And also because doing so had so clearly changed his life.

He just found what he needs, as far as peace inside of him, she says. And not many people outside even ever get that.

The Work

Troy Froehlich was profoundly influenced by Shepherds ideas, and his friendship. He worked with Shepherd on the B-Free program until he was released in 2014, having served a total of 24 years for bank robbery and assaulting guards in jail. He says the things he learned from Shepherd helped him find inner peace, too.

Whenever it looks like it may be a stressful situation, or something that could raise an anxiety in me, says Froehlich, I just realize that Im a part of evolution, that this is the way its supposed to be. I look around and I think, Wow, this is wonderful.

Froehlich lives in Tucson now, just an hour and a half down the road from the prison where he met Shepherd, who he calls his best friend. Hes been fixing up his little rental house, which he shares with a shy black mutt he rescued from the street. He named her Scrappy, after Shepherd.

Like Shepherd, Froehlich experienced an awakening in solitary, after which he started studying history, psychology, religion, and melding it all into something that worked for him. He gravitated toward Joseph Campbells comparative mythology, and started observing the Jewish Sabbath as a mindfulness practice. When he met Shepherd one day in the chow hall, they instantly recognized each other as kindred spirits. For the next ten years the two collaborated every day on what they call the work.

As soon as he would come up with a concept, he would come down to my room immediately and start sharing it with me, says Froehlich. We would walk laps on the yard, discussing evolutionary possibilities.

Shepherd says that he and Froehlich clicked because they shared an extreme form of altruism, both willing to risk their own safety to prevent violence in the prison, and to stand behind the concepts of cooperation and fairness they believed in so fervently.

We became like one unit, Shepherd says. If you dealt with either one of us youd have to deal with us both as one. And I would lay down my life for him and hed lay down his life for me.

Froehlich was granted parole. Shepherd helped him with his speech for the parole board and before he left, Shepherd made him a handwritten manual on how to function in the outside world. It was based on everything theyd learned and taught to other inmates for ten years. The manual was the only possession Froehlich took with him.

I didnt tell Gary this, says Froehlich, but when I got into the staff vehicle at the prison, you know, four oclock in the morning Im just sitting there and a tear rolled out of my eye.

He says that even though he had his own epiphany before meeting Shepherd, its really Shepherds influence that turned his life around.

It is entirely possible that without slowing down my brain and starting to accept these concepts that we talk about and knowing that theres a different way, he says, I may have just continued on the life that I was living before, which led me to bank robbery. Why would I change?

Widening the circle

These days, Shepherds community is expanding beyond those hes met in prison. Last year, with help from Fitzpatrick-Rogers, he reached out to David Sloan Wilson, a professor of evolutionary biology in Binghamton, New York. Wilson is a central player in the evolutionary altruism field, and Shepherd had read his book The Neighborhood Project, which argues that people can improve their communities by using evolutionary theory as a guide for cooperative behavior.

By the first letter, or exchange of a few letters, it was clear that in some ways, what we were doing was quite similar, says Wilson.

The two men struck up a kind of academic friendship, talking on the phone every week. Wilson even recorded one of their conversations and published the transcript in his online evolution magazine, This View of Life.

In the meantime, he was sending Shepherd more books, becoming Shepherds evolutionary mentor.

Im his instructor in a sense, if he was a college student, says Wilson. But of course, hes much more voracious and passionate than almost any of my actual students.

Wilson doesnt quite agree with some of Shepherds ideas, like the one about a ubiquitous force thats deliberately trying to improve itself through evolution.

Gary has been influenced by lots of trends, including Eastern religious and spiritual traditions, says Wilson. Its just part of human nature to hold beliefs that are false in the scientific sense of the word, and the reason that we do is that those beliefs are useful. Those are the beliefs that help us get by.

As for Shepherds belief that we have the ability, even the obligation, to help evolution along Wilson says thats not so far-fetched.

The reason that science often doesnt function in the same capacity as a religion is that it merely tells you what is. It doesnt tell you what to do, he says. Its up to academic science actually, to catch up to Gary in an interesting way, as to is there some sense in which a person, or people, or all of us as a society, can be agents of evolution.

I asked Wilson whether Shepherds journey is itself an example of cultural evolution a whole school of thought developed in an isolated environment, like an academic Galapagos Island.

Most novelties arise in isolated populations, he answered. Thats where new things happen. [Shepherd has] come up with something that hangs together for himself. Then of course, whether it spreads and survives in other contexts remains to be seen.

Shepherds whole goal in life now is for his ideas to spread and survive.

He says that if hes ever able to get out of prison, hell link up with Froehlich and continue with the work. Hes thought about starting a business creating internet courses that explain in simple terms, the ideas theyve spent all these years developing.

Shepherd is also working with a lawyer from the Arizona Justice Project to see if his sentence could be appealed. The law that mandated his life sentence was changed shortly after he went to prison, and that may provide a way for him to get out sooner. If that doesnt happen, Shepherds first chance for parole isnt until 2028.

Because he can't control when or whether he gets out, Shepherd doesn't think about it too much. But he does look forward to joining a community on the outside that shares his beliefs, and his sense of purpose.

I can find people like David to be around, and these other people that I consider to be the most intelligent and altruistic people in the world, that are a force for positive change, he says. And I want to help them and make sure theyre secure, and their families are secure, and that we can do all that we can to make them successful. And I want to barbecue and eat with them. I just want to be part of that whole family, you know?

I asked Shepherd whether, given the unfairness he saw in his sentencing, he regrets ending up in prison. He answered, without hesitation, No.

Im glad that it happened to me, he explains. Because I wouldnt be who I am without the experience. But more importantly, I have found what I believe to be the truth of where we came from, and why were here, and what we need to do in the future. And the feeling of fighting for that and contributing to that, I wouldnt trade it for anything. Everything that happened to me was worth it.

Comments? You can reach us at The Spiritual Edge at thespiritualedgeradio@gmail.com.

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A new way of thinking about evolution and spirituality developed behind bars - KALW

Look At What I’m Doing (It’s Probably Better Than What You’re Doing) – Huffington Post Australia

Spiritual enlightenment in India, buckets on the beach in Thailand, soft tacos from streets stalls in Mexico, partying like a rockstar in Mykonos or volcano boarding in Nicaragua. The frequency with which this stuff circulates on Instagram, Snapchat and Facebook demonstrates how accessible world travel has become for the kids of the middle class.

Decades ago, cheap, lengthy world travel was something only people of a more radical mind-set embarked on. If your mum and dad backpacked in the '60s, they probably also took acid, had dreadlocks and continue to remind you they went to Woodstock (whether or not they actually did). If they didn't go backpacking, they probably didn't take acid, and probably don't claim to have attended Woodstock.

Nowadays, if you don't set off on at least one backpacking trip during your twenties, people begin to judge; you haven't lived, you're a square, you're boring, and you won't ever understand the world, or yourself.

Wanderlust is all over the interwebs. This German-derived noun has become a 21st-century cliche, carrying slightly varying definitions of "(n.) a strong desire to roam or travel the world". Its connotations are of authenticity, uniqueness and passion. The people who use the word will probably also describe themselves at some point as "gypsies", ignorant of the history of racism that underpins that term.

Now, I'm a strong advocate of world travel. I've been known to get pretty pushy with friends as they toss up between full-time work or jumping on the global party bandwagon. "Man, what's wrong with you? Do it while you can!" And I have never refrained from posting on social media while gallivanting around the world; look where I am, look what I'm doing (it's probably better than what you're doing).

But this is exactly my point. With the expansion of social media, travel becomes less about learning and understanding the world, and more about show. The bigger the show becomes, the more it makes me think about the things we don't see.

The shit parts of travel are the parts that truly change and challenge you as a person. Simultaneously, they should make us realise what a privilege it is to be able to return home to a country with clean water, a stable energy supply, reliable food sources, and a police force who can't be bought (most of the time).

MORE ON THE BLOG:

Think Bali Is Too Bogan? Think Again.

There's also the deep isolation you feel when you are alone in a country where you don't speak the language. Sitting in a supermarket crying because your bus driver said he was going for a lunch break four hours ago and hasn't returned (he happens to have your entire luggage, including your passport and bankcard). Grumbling because you've spent four days straight in a mouldy hostel room without Wi-Fi and the torrential rain won't let up. Realising, after boasting about your strong stomach for weeks, that you've finally got that infamous Indian gastro bug five hours into a mountain trek.

These kinds of experiences make their way into every overseas trip and, more often than not, will leave a greater imprint on your memory than whatever "hot-dogs-or-legs" moment you decided to share on Instagram.

So keep travelling, but stop boasting. Don't use travel as a way to implicitly pit your exciting life against the boring lives of the people you left in your hometown. Realise that it is only the luck of your relative wealth that allows you to travel. Be thankful for the experiences travel gives you, but mostly, be thankful that you have safe, comfortable hometowns to return to.

Oh -- and stop saying "wanderlust".

This post first appeared at Global Hobo.

ALSO ON HUFFPOST AUSTRALIA

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Look At What I'm Doing (It's Probably Better Than What You're Doing) - Huffington Post Australia

Basking in spiritual glory – Times of India

Ahmedabad: It was a festival of enlightenment - Prakash Parv - that saw congregation of thousands of devotees at Sabarmati Riverfront behind NID on Sunday to mark 350th birth anniversary of Guru Gobind Singh. Gujarat CM Vijay Rupani inaugurated the event with Nitin Patel, deputy CM, being the chief guest. The CM donned a Sikh turban for the event while visiting the Gurudwara shrine made on the venue and met Sikh community leaders. "Persons of all faiths had gathered for the event as it was a celebration of humanity. We had especially invited noted kirtankaar and performers from Punjab and Delhi for the cultural programmes," said an organizer. "The performances gave a glimpse of Sikh history and told the tales of gurus and struggles." "While young performers enthralled with their Gatka (Sikh martial art) demonstration, audience was mesmerized with Saheb-e-Kamaal performance by Patiala Rangmanch," he added. The langar prasad (community meal open for all) started early in the morning and continued throughout the day.

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Basking in spiritual glory - Times of India

Edinburgh International Film Festival remembers Tom McGrath, the … – Herald Scotland

MAKING connections was everything for Tom McGrath, the late poet, playwright, jazz pianist and all round seeker of artistic and spiritual enlightenment, who passed away in 2009 at the age of 68. This is something Edinburgh International Film Festival senior programmer Niall Greig Fulton recognised as a young actor in the 1990s. Then, McGrath took Fulton under his wing after seeing him play his old friend and fellow traveller of the 1960s counter-culture, novelist Alexander Trocchi, in a one-man show.

This came at a period when a new wave of Scottish writers, actors and thinkers were exploring counter-cultural thought and reinventing it in their own image through a fusion of punk-inspired lit-zines such as Rebel Inc and a free-thinking rave scene. Theatrically speaking, in Edinburgh this manifested itself in what would now be known as a pop-up venue, where Fulton first crossed paths with McGrath.

Tom turned up at the first performance, says Fulton, and someone said there was someone who wanted to talk to me. That was Tom, and the first thing he said to me was 'This is an evening of great triumph.'

McGrath went on to work closely with Fulton to develop the show, giving notes, telling old stories of the sixties involving himself, Trocchi and R.D. Laing, the radical psychiatrist who formed the third part of Scotland's counter-cultural un-holy trinity.

My clearest memory is of being in the Lyceum with Tom, says Fulton, and him saying, okay, you're Alex, you're at a party in New York in the 60s, and there's a woman on the other side of the room you want to get to, but you have to negotiate with room full of people to get there. I'd act it out, and then Tom would say, there's quite a few things Alex wouldn't have done. There was a generosity there, a gently provocative mentoring.

More than two decades on, Fulton is squaring the circle with Electric Contact: The Visionary Worlds of Tom McGrath, a programme of play readings, screenings and talks either by, about or inspired by McGrath. The former will feature a new look at The Hard Man, McGrath's controversial prison drama co-written with former Glasgow gangster turned artist Jimmy Boyle. This will be given a new twist, with director Tam Dean Burn casting acclaimed actress Kate Dickie in the title role. Also on show will be a look at The Android Circuit, McGrath's rarely seen science-fiction play, which was performed at the then Grassmarket-based Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh, where The Hard Man had premiered the year before.

In keeping with a science-fiction theme, the season will feature a screening of The Nuclear Family, McGrath's 1982 TV work for the BBC's short-lived Play For Tomorrow strand of stand-alone dramas. With its mind-expanding look at both dystopian and utopian futures, science-fiction was as much a liberating force for change adopted by the hippy underground as sex, drugs, poetry and jazz.

There is a programme of TV interviews with McGrath alongside a screening of Wholly Communion, Peter Whitehead's film of the 1965 gathering of the counter-cultural clans at the Royal Albert Hall in London, where a young McGrath read his poetry alongside Allen Ginsberg in an event hosted by Trocchi.

Two lectures see historian and lecturer Angela Bartie look at McGrath's 1960s and 1970s past, while Scott Hames analyses how McGrath used language in The Hard Man. McGrath's poetry comes under the spotlight in a concert by jazz saxophonist Tommy Smith and the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra. The band will play work by Miles Davis and Duke Ellington, both of whom McGrath brought to Glasgow in the 1970s while director of the Third Eye Centre, now the site of the CCA, and Tam Dean Burn will read some of McGrath's hard-to-find poetry. Linking all this together suitably loosely will be a screening of Shirley Clarke's film of The Connection, Jack Gelber's jazz and drugs steeped 1959 play, first produced by Julian Beck's beat-inspired Living Theatre.

I first saw the film in 1996, when Tom was launching his book, Birdcalls, says Fulton, and he was asked by the Shore Poets, who were putting on the event, to choose a film to go with it. That introduced me to the work of Shirley Clarke, and I ended up programming a season of her work at the Film Festival. So there are all these links that all go back to Tom.

Another link in the chain comes through Burn, whose role in proceedings stems from appearing in McGrath's version of Quebecois writer Daniel Danis' play, Stones and Ashes, at the Traverse.

It meant so much to Tom to get that play on, says Burn. He was all about being in the moment, and was enthusiastic for whatever was going on there and then. He was enthusiastic for other writers as well. He was very selfless.

Burn's work has straddled several generations of the counter-culture, ever since he was a young punk fronting Edinburgh band Dirty Reds, who, with Burn departing for an acting career, later morphed into Fire Engines. How things connect up is illustrated further by the fact that Fire Engines records were released by Bob Last. Now the producer behind successful films including Terence Davies' version of Sunset Song, Last co-founded concept-based record label Fast Product. A few years earlier, he had been the set designer of the original Traverse Theatre production of The Hard Man. McGrath would have loved such connections.

Music was such a driving force for Tom, says Burn. That was where he came from, and that was what we had in common. In that way he wasn't of the same ilk of a lot of people in theatre at the time.

Fulton concurs with Burn's observation, particularly in relation to jazz.

There were traces of jazz in everything he did. It was all about rhythm, and one thing leading to another without you ever being quite sure where you were going with it.

Fulton tells a story which McGrath related to him about when he brought Miles Davis to Glasgow, and how he was heartbroken when Davis refused to acknowledge him, leaving all niceties to a middle-man while he just stood there smoking. This continued until just before Miles' departure, when, on the way up the stairs as Miles and his middle man were going down them, he heard a voice.

Hey, said Miles, who had stopped and turned to face McGrath. It's not a bad suit for a white man.

Electric Contact forms part of The Future is History, a post Brexit nod to the 1970s and 1980s through the filmic identities of Great Britain, Scotland and the grandly named Western World of the Future. This will feature screenings of key films made by former Beatle George Harrison's HandMade Films, including A Sense of Freedom, John Mackenzie's take on Jimmy Boyle's life story, and Bruce Robinson's ultimate look back in languor, Withnail and I. A season of science-fiction films will feature the Glasgow-shot Deathwatch.

It's very personal to me, says Fulton about the season. Tom did so much, and trying to draw all those things together has been quite a job. What fascinates me about Tom is what he could see that others couldn't. Whether he ever fulfilled what he wanted to fulfil creatively I'm not sure, because everything he did fed into something else. He couldn't stop creating. I used to say playing Trocchi changed my life, but actually it was changed by Tom McGrath.

Electric Contact: The Visionary Worlds of Tom McGrath runs as part of The Future is History at Edinburgh International Festival from June 21-July 2.

http://www.edfilmfest.org.uk

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Edinburgh International Film Festival remembers Tom McGrath, the ... - Herald Scotland

Next Wallops mission to International Space Station set for September – Delmarva Daily Times

Carol Vaughn, cvaughn@delmarvanow.com Published 5:56 p.m. ET June 12, 2017 | Updated 11 hours ago

Wallops executives give an update concerning Antares and Cygnus missions. Produced by Ralph Musthaler

Dan Givens, Anteres Field Site Manager, speaks to the media during a press event at the Horizontal Integration Facility on Wallops Island on Monday, June 12, 2017. (Photo: Staff photo by Ralph Musthaler)Buy Photo

Orbital ATK's next cargo supply mission to the International Space Station, OA-8, is set to launch from NASA Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia in September, officials said at a briefing thereMonday.

Another mission, OA-9, is slated for later this year, likely in November.

Orbital ATK currently has contracts with NASA for a total of 10 cargo missions, all of which are set to be launched from Wallops.

"Right now, all the missions we have on the schedule are intended to go on the Antares (rocket) and go out of the Wallops Flight Facility," said Frank Culbertson, Orbital ATK Space Systems Group president.

Orbital ATK's most recent cargo supply mission, OA-7, was launched from Florida in April.

The Wallops facility is one of two spaceports in the United States from which the commercial cargo supply missions are launched, along with Cape Canaveral in Florida.

READ MORE: NASA Wallops: Predawn sounding rocket launch a success

The date set for the launch of the OA-8 mission is Sept. 12, but the rocket could be ready for launch earlier than that if NASA needs to bump up the date, said Kurt Eberly, Orbital ATK Antares vice president.

The last mission to the International Space Station launched from Wallops was OA-5 in October 2016.

That mission was the first to the space station launched from Wallops since an Antares rocket exploded shortly after liftoff on Oct. 28, 2014, after amotor malfunction happenedas the spacecraft began to clear the launchpad. After that, Orbital ATK replaced the first-stage engines on the rocket.

Dale Nash, executive director of Virginia Space, speaks to the media in front of a launch pad on Wallops Island on Monday, June 12, 2017.(Photo: Staff photo by Ralph Musthaler)

"Wallops continues to be a neat place where we do a wide variety of things for both commercial and government customers," said Bill Wrobel, NASA Wallops Flight Facility director.

The facility "at any given time (has) about 50 different missions" in the works, ranging from balloon missions to sounding rocket launches, among others.

Wrobel called Orbital ATK "a strong partner with us here for a number of years now," noting the company, in addition to the more widely publicized missions to the International Space Station, also handles the sounding rocket and balloon programs at Wallops.

Wrobel also noted the first small satellite built at Wallops recently was deployed off the International Space Station.

"We look forward to a lot more of these things coming up in the future," Wrobel said of the upcoming cargo mission.

"It is a real pleasure to be back here at Wallops ... It's a great place to be," Culbertson said.

The company is "very much committed to completing our CRS-1 contract," Culbertson said, noting there are four more flights to be completed under that contract.

Additionally, six flights are slated to happen under the CRS-2 contract with the first of those planned for 2019.

A view of the inside of the Horizontal Integration Facility on Wallops Island on Monday, June 12, 2017. (Photo: Staff photo by Ralph Musthaler)

The company in that second phase will be able to carry more cargo on each mission, he said. "That's going to really help ... keep things here at Wallops moving," Culbertson said.

The Horizontal Integration Facility on Wallops Island currently holds two Antares rockets slated for the OA-8 and OA-9 missions.

Orbital's plan is "to build two at a time, basically, and we plan to have them ready in advance of when they are needed," Eberly said.

The rocket for the OA-8 mission is ready for the Cygnus cargo module to be installed, putting it at about the three-week mark from readiness for launch.

"We're at that milestone now, so we'll be ready for September; we'll even be ready a little earlier if they need us in the August time frame," he said.

Data from the last ISS mission launched from Wallops in October the first mission using the Antares' new stage one engines has been analyzed and the verdict is "it was a very clean mission," Eberly said.

The engines have 13 percent higher thrust than the ones formerly used on Antares and they come with 10 seconds of additional specific impulse a measure of how efficiently the propellants are burned.

The improved performance will allow each future mission to carry more cargo the next two missions are each scheduled to carry 3,350 kilograms of cargo and by the OA-11 mission, the goal is to carry 3,500 kilograms.

In addition to the cargo supply missions, the company is hoping Antares will be on track to perform other NASA missions in the future, Eberly said.

Dale Nash, executive director of Virginia Space, said the launch pad for OA-8 should be in launch configuration by the end of July.

"The Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport ... is ready to support the upcoming OA-8 mission," said Nash.

READ MORE:1st in flight: Va. governor opens Wallops drone facility

Launch pad O-A, the pad used for the Antares launches, after the last mission in October, "came through that very well," Nash said, adding, "There's always some wear and tear as you come through the mission, but it came through in remarkably good shape."

Among reasons for the good result is that with the new, more powerful engines, the rocket got off the launch pad "very fast the faster it can get off, the less damage you have," Nash said.

Additionally, the spaceport goes through a thorough analysis after each launch, including looking at where the pad was damaged, and "we harden the launch pad."

The spaceport advertises that it can support a 30-day turnaround between launches from both launchpads it operates one for liquid-fueled rockets like Antares and the other for solid-fueled rockets.

"We probably could have done it quicker on the last one," Nash said.

The spaceport is at the point now where it has proven performance under its belt.

Nash mentioned by way of example two successful high-profile missions launched there within days of each other in September 2013.

"We have already proven that we can launch off launchpad A to the International Space Station and then, 12 days later, launch a mission to the moon off launchpad B."

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Next Wallops mission to International Space Station set for September - Delmarva Daily Times