The risks of unproven stem cell treatments – Radio New Zealand

An expert in stem cell treatment is warning of dodgy operators in New Zealand offering unproven and potentially dangerous treatments.

Auckland University Medical School lecturerBronwen Connor's warning comesafter arecently-released scientific paper documented a case of three women in the United States who were blinded by an experimental treatment for macular degeneration.

She said many people had stem cell therapy in the belief it was scientifically valid, but that was not often the case.

Dr Connor told Nine To Noon the cells used most often for the treatments were known as adipose cells, which were obtained from fat tissue in the body. They were popular because they couldbe obtained from a patientby liposuction, isolated out, then re-injected for supposed therapeutic use.

"Adipose stem cells obviously have a very important job, but predominantly their job is to make bone and cartilage. They also do have some anti-inflammatory properties. But they, to date, have not been shown to have any potential or ability to generate brain cells, for example, or new kidney cells or heart cells."

Websites for clinics offering the treatments listed up to 20 or 30 different types of diseases, disorders or conditions that one source of cells could supposedly treat. That was worrying, she said.

Adipose stem cells might be the right choice to help repair cartilage damage in the knee. "However, it wouldn't be your stem cell choice if you ... had Parkinson's disease and you were going to try and replace some of those lost cells in your brain."

Dr Connor said people needed to be sceptical and check if, for example, there hadbeen any human clinical trials involving the treatment.

"There are always dangers around treatments that we haven't taken out long-term and which there haven't been sufficient rigorous human clinical trials undertaken [on]. This is the purpose of clinical trials, to see what is the safety aspect and the efficacy of this procedure."

She advisedpeople to think about it in terms of medicines and drugs that people were used to taking, like aspirin. "If you inject yourself with a stem cell population and you have a bad side effect, you can't get those cells out. So ... we really need to know what those cells are going to do long-term and what any potential risk is, because they cannot be retrieved."

The Ministry of Health did not regulate stem cell therapy in this country because the cells were not regarded as medicine. She said it was a grey area, because cells were being taken from a patient and re-injected into the same patient with their consent. "But really, moving forward in the next 10 to 20 years, we're going to see more and more of these type of therapies that don't involve a pill or a tablet or our traditional thought of a medicine, and we really need to get regulations around that type of therapy."

She had spoken to people who paid large sums of money for the treatments.

"When I questioned them a little bit more ... did it help, they would sort of sheepishly say 'well, no not really'."

Dr Connor said clinics offering the treatments often emphasised the benefits according to the scientific literature, but it might be benefits in animals - not from human trials. She wanted quality control addressed and standardisedprocedures, along with safety and efficacy.

Dr Connor wanted to see clinical trials of many of the therapies,as they hadpotential. "Our fear is that, as with the three women with the macular degeneration, is that anything that goes wrong will really hinder the field because people will just see it as stem cell therapy."

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The risks of unproven stem cell treatments - Radio New Zealand

Workplace missing spirituality – Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In Latin, there are two words for education, but they have very different meanings and different worldviews. One word is "educare," which means to bring up. The other word is "educere," which means to bring forth.

Most of American society sees the purpose of education as "bringing up" our children and young people. The educare worldview is that young people are blank slates (tabula rasa) and that the teacher's job is to write knowledge on that slate. This leads to a "memorize and regurgitate" form of education, which has its purpose, but it doesn't lead to "spiritually and developmentally mature leaders" my friend and mentor, Andre Delbecq, described as needed in today's complex and challenging environment. Rather, it leads to an "expert" model of teaching, in which the teacher is the expert and the role is to assure this knowledge is transferred to the student.

Spirituality in the Workplace

What: Leadership, Spirituality and Education conference

Who: International Association of Management, Spirituality and Religion

When: May 18-20

Where: University of Arkansas

Host: Tyson Center of Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace

Information: eventmobi.com/iamsr2017info

I find myself more drawn to the educere form of education, that of "bringing forth" the wisdom that already exists in the person. This worldview assumes the teacher is on a journey of discovery with the student and his role is to serve as a guide rather than an expert. The teacher gets to know the student's dreams and talents, and they co-create a curriculum that "brings forth" the essence or soul of the student. An important part of this learning journey is getting clearer about one's faith and spirituality -- both for the student and the teacher. When we can bring our complete selves -- body, mind, heart, and spirit -- to the learning process, we have the potential to transform into what we are meant to be.

We are each put on Earth with unique gifts and with special callings that only we can answer. Life is richer, and we have a more positive impact on others when we develop our gifts and respond to our calling. This is a very important aspect of living in alignment with our faith and spirituality.

Half my career has been in university settings and the other half in the corporate world, but all my work was -- and still is -- about education. When I worked for Honeywell, I once had a boss who told me I needed to run a training session for employees, to teach them not to speed on the military base where our ammunition plant was operating. I asked him, "If you put a gun to their heads, would they know how to stop speeding?" Shocked at my question, he nodded his head, "Yes." I responded, "Well, then it is not a training issue, it is a motivational issue. They already know how to do what you want them to do, they are just choosing not to." All too often, we train or teach people to do what they already know how to do.

In organizational life, it is completely appropriate to train people in various skills required by their jobs. This is educare, "bringing up" -- that is, bringing them up to the level of performance required by the organization to serve customers. I ran training sessions on statistical process control to improve productivity and quality, and I taught sessions on team building and conflict resolution, but we never did any kind of development work that tapped into something deeper and more transformational.

What is missing is educere, "bringing forth" the dreams, passions, visions and spirit that energize and enliven a person to make his contribution to the workplace. Somehow, those kinds of things have become undiscussable at work. They also are undiscussable in the classroom and often undiscussable in our places of worship -- which are also places that have the potential to "bring forth" our wisdom and our gifts.

John Tyson, chairman of the board of Tyson Foods, and benefactor of the Tyson Center for Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace at the University of Arkansas, likes to say, "When you come to work on Monday, why is it OK to talk about the football game on Sunday, but not what you heard at church?" Tyson is attempting to "bring forth" the expression of our whole selves in the classroom and workplaces, where it ought to be OK to talk about our faith and our spirituality without worrying about someone judging us or trying to convert us.

What would schools and workplaces be like if we were free to express our beliefs, our spiritual practices, our doubts and our questions about our faith journey? What would they be like if people felt free to be kinder, more compassionate, more forgiving? How can we bring this forth? That is the role of the spiritually and developmentally mature leader described by Delbeq. What are we doing to support the development of these kinds of leaders?

The educere approach to education is Socractic in its method. The Greek philosopher Socrates was the child of a midwife and a sculptor, and he compared his teaching to midwifery rather than sculpting. He helped his students give birth to their true selves, as all spiritual teachers do. There is a new movement in academia called "transformative teaching" that is finding educators developing methods and curriculum that support learners in a deeper journey of self-exploration and truth. This gives me hope.

I'm very excited these kinds of questions will be explored in Fayetteville at an international gathering I'm helping to coordinate, taking place May 18-20. Participants will include scholars, change agents, chaplains, faith leaders and business leaders. Dan Harris, director of the Tyson Center of Faith and Spirituality in the Workplace, is hosting the International Association of Management, Spirituality and Religion conference on "Leadership, Spirituality and Education." You can find details at eventmobi.com/iamsr2017info. We hope you will, and you will join us on this spiritual journey of bringing forth what wants to emerge through us and our Higher Power.

NAN Religion on 04/08/2017

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Workplace missing spirituality - Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Creative Family Spirituality Workshop, a Big Success in Latvia – Adventist Review

Posted April 6, 2017

By: Karen Holford, Trans-European Division

The basement of the Central Riga Seventh-day Adventist Church was recently transformed into a colorful hub of activity, during a series of workshops on Creative Family Spirituality on March 18-19.

The workshop became a follow-up program led by Karen Holford, Trans-European Division Family Ministries director. A year ago, she had left a set of her 100 Ideas books[*] at a regional advisory for Womens, Childrens, and Family Ministries directors. The book is packed with creative activities for Sabbath and family worship times. It also includes tips on how to teach and learn memory verses, and pray together.

After the 2016 workshop, Marite Lipska, Childrens Ministry director for Latvia, felt inspired. She asked for permission to translate the books into Latvian, and planned a special weekend to introduce the materials to families and church members from all over Latvia.

Lipskas dream finally came true. All five books have been translated into text documents that we shared with every family by email, said Lipska. The creative activity instruction cardswhich Holford uses to introduce people to some of the ideas in her bookswere also translated for churches to use.

Lipska prepared and organized the materials for dozens of activities, so they were ready for the participants to use and explore.

These seminars were Gods answer to my prayers.

About 50 people attended the workshops over the weekend. They learned how to integrate creativity into their everyday family spirituality and church communities. A handful of children came with their parents. They became totally absorbed in different activities, as they wonderfully showed the difference and delight that creativity can make in a childs relationship with God.

I have been searching online for ways to make family worships more interesting and special for my 3-year-old daughter, said one participant in her feedback form. These seminars were Gods answer to my prayers. The young mother said her goal is to find ways to introduce her daughter to God and His big love through family worships. Now I found wonderful ideas, answers to questions, practical examples, and an opportunity to explore some of the activities for myself, she said.

Another lady said that the activities significantly developed my creative thinking, so that I can now look at spirituality through the eyes of a child. She added that she discovered fresh ways to tell children about God through our everyday lives together, so that they can get to know Him even better.

Now I can suggest new ideas in church, for teaching children and teenagers, said another participant. This seminar has inspired me.

[*] The titles of Karen Holfords collection are 100 Creative Activities for Sabbath; 100 Creative Prayer Ideas for Kids; 100 Creative Worship Ideas for Busy Families; 100 Quick and Easy Worship Ideas for Kids; and 100 Creative Ways to Learn Memory Verses.

Continued here:

Creative Family Spirituality Workshop, a Big Success in Latvia - Adventist Review

How can Ignatian spirituality help you with your teen? – Aleteia EN

Aleteia posed six questions to authors, educators, and parents-of-teens Tim and Sue Muldoon about their newly-released book, The Discerning Parent: An Ignatian Guide to Raising Your Teen.

1) What inspired the book?

Two things: our professional lives and our parenting teens. Tim is a theologian who has taught Ignatian spirituality for years at Boston College, and Sue is a therapist and religious educator who has counseled many young adults over the years. We saw a need as parents to reflect intelligently on how we parent our teens, and drew inspiration from the same Ignatian tradition that gave rise to our first book, Six Sacred Rules for Families.

2) What story or anecdote (or piece of advice) in this book most personally resonated with you?

We wanted to write this because we thought that thinking about this topic would spill over into prayer and practical considerations for our parenting style. One key fruit of that time has been a greater sense of intention in really parenting our teens, not just assuming that since they are older they dont need us anymore. Taking the long view of our oldest daughters well-being in the midst of a college search, for example, has yielded greater patience and compassion for what is a stressful time of life.

3) Did writing this book teach you anything?

Absolutelyand its related to the above point. Teens need careful love and attention just as much as toddlers do, though of course in very different ways. We have to make time for them, be thoughtful and positive. We made the comparison with marriage research, which suggests (to use one example) that a successful relationship involves five positive interactions for every negative one. We carry that same logic into our interactions with our teens now.

4) If there is one person you want to reach with this book, who would that be?

The mom or dad who is becoming frustrated at how poorly they and their teens communicate. Weve experienced that.

5) What is the ideal beverage to have in hand while reading your book?

Sweet tea, with caffeine. You lose a lot of sleep when you have teens.

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How can Ignatian spirituality help you with your teen? - Aleteia EN

Christian Spirituality in a Rapidly Changing World – Crux: Covering all things Catholic

The Jesuit scholar Philip Endean asks a profound and beautiful question that highlights the relevance of Christian spirituality for contemporary men and women: What does it mean for the human person to be confronted by an unknown, lovely power that transforms us into its own loveliness?

Endeans question points to the heart of Christian spirituality: the progressive transformation of the human person in God. All the great Christian mystics, including Meister Eckhart, Julian of Norwich, Ignatius of Loyola, Teresa of Avila, Thomas Merton, and Henri Nouwen, have witnessed to this possibility of human transformation in God in both their lives and their writings.

The insights and practices of these Christian mystics and spiritual virtuosi are needed now more than ever. Twenty-first-century society is undergoing massive and accelerated change and dislocation at all levels social, economic, political, cultural, and religious. In this rapidly changing world, the pace and pressures of everyday life can lead to feelings of anxiety, futility, and social isolation.

In response, many of us hunger for a deeper intimacy with God and a more meaningful connection with fellow seekers on the spiritual path and with the natural world. It is this hunger that led Oblate School of Theology to launch a new ATS (Association of Theological Schools) accredited Master of Arts in Spirituality in 2006. In Summer 2012, Oblate secured full ATS accreditation to offer the entire Master of Arts in Spirituality online as well. Now students from all over the world can study with Oblates world-class faculty led by Fr. Ron Rolheiser, Dr. Philip Sheldrake, Dr. Steven Chase, and Dr. Wendy Wright.

Oblates Master of Arts in Spirituality is a graduate level academic program designed to help students from a variety of Christian religious traditions deepen their understanding of Christian spirituality. As Oblates current President, Fr. Ronald Rolheiser, notes: The purpose of our Master of Arts in Spirituality is to immerse the student in the deep wells of the Christian mystical tradition as well as have him or her conversant with contemporary developments within Spirituality.

Students at Oblate School of Theology can take courses on Desert Spirituality, Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Ignatian Spirituality, Spiritual Direction, Julian of Norwich, the Integration of Psychology and Spirituality, Thomas Merton, Henri Nouwen, and others. All Oblate spirituality courses seek to help students integrate their own spirituality with fundamental principles and insights from the Christian spiritual tradition.

Oblates student body is a diverse group of men and women from all over the world. Some of Oblates students are training for professional ministry or further academic study; some are seeking to prepare for various lay ministries including faith formation, retreat work, or spiritual direction. All our students are seeking to deepen their own spiritual life and practice.

Our graduates will be equipped to better understand their own spiritual journey and the mystery of human transformation in God. They will also be prepared to be valuable resources for spirituality and renewal centers, parish and retreat work, as well as other spirituality-related faith formation and educational programs in a culturally diverse and globalized world.

Oblate School of Theology (OST) was founded in San Antonio, Texas in 1903 by the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Since then OST has served South Texas, the United States, and the world by preparing persons for pastoral ministry. Over the last quarter of a century, OSTs mission has expanded to include the education and formation of pastoral and lay students within an ecumenical milieu.

The Institute for the Study of Contemporary Spirituality (ISCS)at Oblate School of Theology was founded in Fall 2013 in response to the growing awareness of the need for spirituality scholarship in both the academy as well as theological and religious institutions. Today the ISCS is the only concentrated, integrative program of its kind in the United States offering ATS accredited PhD, DMin, and MA degrees in Contemporary Spirituality. The mission of the ISCS is to serve as an international center of study to connect the contemporary quest for spirituality with the deep wells of the Christian spiritual and mystical traditions.

Cliff Knightenis Director of the MA in Spirituality at Oblate School of Theology

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Christian Spirituality in a Rapidly Changing World - Crux: Covering all things Catholic

Sisters in Ireland foster practical way of living out spirituality in an evolving universe – National Catholic Reporter (blog)

An Tairseach is the Dominican Sisters Farm and Ecology Center in Wicklow, an area known as the garden of Ireland. The small town lies on the east coast, south of the Irish capital, Dublin. Perched on a hill overlooking the main street of the town of 10,000 inhabitants, the convent has a splendid view of Wicklow harbor and its expansive bay.

The sizeable red-brick Dominican convent evokes times past when the building served as a boarding school established in 1870 and had a thriving community of 50 sisters. Today, the boarders are long gone, and the community of sisters has shrunk to seven, but education is still very much at the heart of the mission. A busy day school serves the local community, while some of the convent buildings are now used by An Tairseach, an ecology and spirituality center with an organic farm that was established in 1998 on the 70-acre property.

An Tairseach is the Gaelic word for threshold. The sisters who founded the project wanted a name that would suggest a new beginning linked to a more sustainable way of working with the land and a renewed relationship with the whole community of life, human and non-human.

At the Dominican Sisters general chapter in 1992, the order chose care of the Earth as a priority for their life and mission. Arising from this, the Irish region decided to establish an initiative that would be a practical expression of this commitment.

Dominican Sr. Miriam Therese MacGillis, who founded Genesis Farm in New Jersey in 1980 as a center where people could learn about more authentic ways of living in harmony with the natural world, was invited to visit Ireland. A devotee of eco-theologian Passionist Fr. Thomas Berry, she was pivotal in the Dominican Sisters decision to use land they inherited in New Jersey to establish a farm promoting sustainable living, rather than selling it for real estate development.

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Sisters in Ireland foster practical way of living out spirituality in an evolving universe - National Catholic Reporter (blog)

Spirituality center marks Good Friday with walk – La Crosse Tribune

The Franciscan Spirituality Center invites the public to join in its 8th annual Justice and Peace Stations of the Cross on Good Friday, April 14.

This form of the Way of the Cross is a two-mile silent prayer walk from the heart of the city to the Mississippi River, stopping at 10 stations along the route to sing, pray and reflect on injustices and suffering in our community and the world. Prayer leaders at each station will include people who work at or are otherwise affiliated with those stops.

The walk, which recalls the journey of Jesus as he carried his cross to Calvary, will take about two hours. People of all ages and faith backgrounds are invited to participate.

Participants will meet at 10 a.m. in front of the St. Rose Convent sign at the corner of Market Street and Franciscan Way (near Ninth Street). This first station recognizes a community dedicated to peace and welcoming of immigrants.

St. Clare Health Mission, 916 Ferry St.affordable, accessible health care for all people

Lincoln Middle School, 510 Ninth St. S.racial harmony and justice in accessing a good education

Our Saviors Lutheran Church, 612 Division St.a Reconciling in Christ congregation offering free weekly community meals

Cameron Park, King and Fifth streetshuman trafficking and respect for life

Franciscan Hospitality House, 114 Sixth St. N.hospitality to the homeless

Salvation Army, State and Eighth streetsshelter and services to end homelessness

La Crosse County Jail, Vine and Fourth streetsrestorative justice, mental health and addiction care for offenders

Riverside Park (near cannon on north side)full employment and supportive care for our returning veterans

Mississippi River (Riverside Park, near roundabout at south end)water protection and care of the earth, our common home

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Spirituality center marks Good Friday with walk - La Crosse Tribune

US, Russian Astronauts Prepare for April Crew Swap on Space Station – Space Daily

NASA announced that Astronaut Jack Fischer and Cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin are heading to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan for final preparations to join the International Space Station with an April 20 flight atop a Soyuz rocket.

US Astronaut Jack Fischer and Russian Cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin are heading to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan for final preparations to join the International Space Station with an April 20 flight atop a Soyuz rocket, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced in a press release on Tuesday.

"[The new] crew members... are in Russia finalizing their mission preparations," the release stated. "They will fly to Kazakhstan on Wednesday for ceremonial duties, check out their Soyuz MS-04 rocket and wrap up mission training."

Meanwhile, commander Shane Kimbrough and flight engineers Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrey Borisenko, who have been living in space since October 19, will enter the Soyuz MS-02 spacecraft on Monday to return to Earth, the release explained.

The departing crew is slated to land in Kazakhstan on Monday evening after 173 days in space, the release noted.

NASA's Whitson's Stay to be Extended at ISS by 3.5 Months - Roscosmos A question of extending the stay of NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson on board the International Space Station (ISS) for another 3.5 months is almost solved, Russia's space corporation Roscosmos head Igor Komarov told Sputnik on Tuesday.

"The question of Peggy Whitson's stay at the ISS for another 3.5 months is almost solved, only some technical matters and formalities remain," Komarov said on the sidelines of the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs.

Whitson, along with Russia's Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy and European Space Agency's Thomas Pesquet, docked to the ISS at on November 20, 2016.

In the end of March, Whitson set a world record for the most spacewalks done by a female astronaut - she has performed eight, and the most accumulated time spent spacewalking - 53 hours and 22 minutes.

Source: Sputnik News

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US, Russian Astronauts Prepare for April Crew Swap on Space Station - Space Daily

See a lost thermal shield zip ahead of the space station – CNET

Last week, NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson set a new record for spacewalks by a female astronaut when she and International Space Station commander Shane Kimbrough floated outside the ISS. During the spacewalk, a thermal shield meant to be installed on the station got loose and floated away. Dutch astronomer Marco Langbroek managed to catch an impressive video of the shield cruising ahead of the ISS through space.

Langbroek posted the video on Wednesday. You can see the shield as a small streak of light cutting at an angle across the camera's view. The International Space Station follows its trajectory just under two minutes later and appears as a much larger ball of light.

The shield was one of four intended to protect the station's Tranquility module, which, among other things, houses control systems. The shields offer thermal protection and guard the module from micrometeoroids and debris in orbit. NASA notes the "loss posed no immediate danger to the astronauts."

The European Space Agency highlighted Langbroek's space-debris photography and says the shield should drop from orbit and burn up in Earth's atmosphere within a few months.

"The item poses very little risk to navigation, and an accidental release like this is not unexpected given the complexity and challenges of working outside during a spacewalk," said Holger Krag from the ESA's Space Debris Office.

Does the Mac still matter? Apple execs tell why the MacBook Pro was over four years in the making, and why we should care.

Solving for XX: The industry seeks to overcome outdated ideas about "women in tech."

10

Space cheese and 9 other weird items we've sent into orbit (pictures)

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See a lost thermal shield zip ahead of the space station - CNET

NASA Wants A Space Station Around Mars By 2028, But Major Scientists Aren’t So Sure [VIDEO] – Daily Caller

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A space station could be circling the Red Planet by 2028 to serve as a Mars Base Camp for wayward explorers, according to plans published by a major NASA contractor.

Lockheed Martin plans to construct a 132-ton space station around Mars capable of hosting six astronauts for a year, according to plans released by the company Monday. For comparison, the International Space Station(ISS)weighs about 440 tons.

The six astronauts at the Lockheed station would remotely operate rovers, analyze samples of dirt and rock and even make short trips to Marss two moons. Having humans in an orbiting station would simplify rover operations and eliminate the delay of up to 24 minutes of sending a signal between Earth and Mars.

One scientist, however, is skeptical the stations benefits will be enough to justify building the station.

It might make sense to do a Mars orbital mission, or even a Mars flyby mission, before a Mars landing, to mature the flight technology, in the same sense that Apollo 8 was a useful prelude to the Moon landing, Dr. Robert Zubrin, who helped design plans for NASAs manned mission to Mars and wrote the The Case For Mars, told The Daily Caller News Foundation.

But it does not make sense to devise a human Mars exploration program around basing humans in Mars orbit to operate rovers on the surface, Zubrin said. Human explorers are needed on the surface of Mars, not in orbit.

WATCH:

Lockheed Martin claims a space station around Mars would be affordable, but the company did not include any cost estimates for the program. The station could be reused and serve as a staging point to collect imagery and scientific data from multiple sites.

Zubrin told TheDCNF astronauts will be going to Mars in either a search for knowledge or as a prelude to eventual human settlement. Determining if Mars has or has had life would require a human astronaut on the surface, he said.

A human explorer on the surface of Mars can do a thousand times as much as a robotic rover, regardless of from where the rover is being controlled, Zubrin said. In short, if you want to go to Mars, you need to go to Mars. Hanging out in orbit doesnt cut it.

NASA plans to send astronauts on several missions to orbit the moon in the 2020s to help train astronauts for a manned mission to Mars. Zubrin previously told TheDCNF that if given proper direction by President Trump, NASA could probably send astronauts to Mars by the end of his second term, as opposed to 16 years in the future.

Trump vowed to unlock the mysteries of space in his inaugural address and has met with billionaire Elon Musk, who founded the private space company SpaceX.

Vice President Mike Pence met with Apollo 11 astronaut and Mars mission advocate Buzz Aldrin in March to talk about the future of U.S. space programs.

Trumps Mars and moon missions will likely utilize the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket. President Barack Obama tried for years to eliminate the SLS, but Congress kept money flowing to the project.

Obama took money from space exploration programs to fund earth science and global warming programs. Trump could free up money for his space plans by slashing the more than $2 billion NASA spends on these programs.

The U.S. is better prepared to visit Mars than it was to visit the moon in the 1960s, according to a study by NASAs Johnson Space Center. Current plans to send astronauts to Mars are projected to cost about $35 billion by 2025 to arrive at the Red Planet in 2030.

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NASA Wants A Space Station Around Mars By 2028, But Major Scientists Aren't So Sure [VIDEO] - Daily Caller

Robotic Refueling Mission leaves ISS – SpaceFlight Insider

Heather Smith

April 8th, 2017

NASA astronaut Mike Fossum transfers the Robotic Refueling Mission to the ISS during STS-135 in 2011. Photo Credit: NASA

After a six-year stay attached to the International Space Station (ISS), NASAs Robotic Refueling Mission (RRM) payload made its way back to Earth March 19, 2017, to burn up in the atmosphere inside the trunk of SpaceXs CRS-10 Dragon spacecraft.

Launched in 2011 on the final Space Shuttle flight, Atlantis STS-135 mission, RRM was a multi-phased demonstration mission that developed technologies and techniques to remotely refuel and service satellites in space.

RRM was washing machine-sized box covered with activity boards and had four tools stowed inside that could be grabbed and used by the stations Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator, also known as Dextre.

The technologies, tools, and techniques studied on this mission could eventually give satellite owners the resources to diagnose problems on orbit, fix anomalies, and keep certain spacecraft instruments performing longer in space.

Our team worked very hard to develop the suite of RRM tools and experiments and are extremely pleased to see what they accomplished, said Ben Reed, the deputy division director for the Satellite Servicing Projects Division (SSPD), which operates out of NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center.

The Robotic Refueling Mission is stored on a temporary location after being moved from the Space Shuttles payload bay in 2011. In September of that year, it was moved to its permanent location at ELC-4 where it remained until March 2017. Photo Credit: NASA

RRM had to be removed to make way for Raven, an experiment that will test autopilot technologies for future spacecraft. It was launched Feb. 19, 2017, aboard CRS-10. Both were developed by the SSPD, the same division that developed astronaut tools for the Hubble servicing missions.

The mission was created by a group of engineers at Goddard who were concerned about how future spacecraft would be serviced after the absence of the Space Shuttle. Led by Frank Cepollina, the father of servicing and previous director of the SSPD, the team determined the future of servicing would rely on robotics. They decided to use the ISS as a test bed.

The space station is on-orbit and already has a robot, said Cepollina. Space station was tailor-made for RRM and worked beautifully as a test bed for servicing.

It took the team 18 months to design and build RRM, just in time for Atlantis final launch on July 8, 2011.

Once Atlantis was docked to the ISS a couple days later, RRM was transferred to a temporary platform during a spacewalk by NASA astronauts Mike Fossum and Ron Garan. It was the last payload to be removed from a Space Shuttle payload bay by an astronaut.

In September 2011, the stations robotic Canadarm2, with Dextre attached, transferred RRM to its permanent location on the space station: ExPRESS (Expedite the Processing of Experiments of the Space Station) Logistics Carrier 4, located on the Earth-facing side of the S3 truss segment.

During the operations of phase 1 of the mission, flight controllers on the ground at Goddard remotely commanded Dextre to reach into the RRM module and pick up tools to use on the experiments activity boards.

The missions tasks included cutting and peeling back thermal blankets, unscrewing multiple caps, accessing valves to transfer a simulated satellite fuel.

In January 2013, RRM confirmed that current robotic technology could refuel a triple-sealed satellite valve by transferring 1.7 liters of ethanol.

For Phase 2, hardware delivery was split into two batches, which occurred in August 2013 and August 2014. Two new task boards and a new tool were sent to the space station.

These task boards demonstrated activities that would occur during the servicing of a free-flying satellite. The tool that was sent up, the Visual Inspection Poseable Invertebrate Robot or VIPIR, was a state-of-the-art near and mid-range inspection tool using an articulable, snake-like borescope.

The team is currently designing and developing equipment for a third phase of the mission that will be launched sometime in the future. It will focus on servicing cryogenic fluid and xenon gas interfaces, which will support future scientific missions into the Solar System

According to NASA, the RRM was an essential bridge between the crewed Hubble servicing missions and future robotic servicing that will be demonstrated on the Restore-L mission, a free-flying spacecraft designed to rendezvous and repair satellites.

Space station was a wonderful facility to test our technologies, and we know that RRMs departure will make room for another great experiment, said Jill McGuire, RRM project manager. We are proud of what we accomplished with RRM, and are excited to contribute to the next stages of enabling robotic satellite servicing.

Video courtesy of NASA

Tagged: CRS-10 Goddard Space Flight Center International Space Station Robotic Refueling Mission Satellite Servicing Projects Division The Range

Heather Smith's fascination for space exploration started at the tender age of twelve while she was on a sixth-grade field trip in Kenner, Louisiana, walking through a mock-up of the International Space Station and seeing the space potty (her terminology has progressed considerably since that time) she realized at this point that her future lay in the stars. Smith has come to realize that very few people have noticed how much spaceflight technology has improved their lives. She has since dedicated herself to correcting this problem. Inspired by such classic literature as Anne Franks Diary, she has honed her writing skills and has signed on as The Spaceflight Groups coordinator for the organizations social media efforts.

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Robotic Refueling Mission leaves ISS - SpaceFlight Insider

[ April 8, 2017 ] NASA, Roscosmos open to extending station operations to 2028 News – Spaceflight Now

Top officials from NASA and Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, could decide soon to commit to keeping the International Space Station staffed and flying through at least 2028, four years after the research labs current retirement date.

The head of Roscosmos told reporters Tuesday that the Russian space agency is ready to discuss plans to keep operating the huge research complex another four years until 2028.

We think that we should continue working in low Earth orbit, said Roscosmos chief Igor Komarov in a press conference Tuesday at the 33rd Space Symposium in Colorado Springs.

Komarovs comments came after NASAs senior human spaceflight manger, Bill Gerstenmaier, said March 29 that a decision by Congress and the Trump administration whether to commit to continuing space station operations through 2028, one way or another, will create certainty for scientists, engineers and businesses working on the program.

Getting another decision about what we do beyond 2024 with station is really important, Gerstenmaier said in a presentation to the NASA Advisory Councils human exploration and operations committee .

With an eye toward construction of a deep space habitat around the moon in the mid-to-late 2020s, NASA intends to test out new life support systems on the space station that are not as prone to failure and do not require as much maintenance as the technologies currently on the outpost.

NASAs goal is to iron out the kinks of the next-generation life support system, and learn more about how humans respond to long-duration spaceflight, before abandoning the space station and turning attention to deep space exploration.

The life support system on the station today is not of the reliability or the low maintenance that is needed for a Mars-class mission, Gerstenmaier said March 30. We need to really step that up. A great place to test that, in fact the only place to really test that kind of stuff, is on-board the space station.

The Obama administration announced in early 2014 its intention to extend the U.S. commitment to the space station through 2024, a decision that Gerstenmaier lauded as allowing NASA to cement plans to deploy new technology and develop new experiments for the space station.

The decision also helped close the business case for commercial companies working on crew and cargo capsules flying to the space station, giving the service providers a steady stream of business until a potential commercial space station is built in Earth orbit.

If the White House and Congress wait too long extend the space station program, it really limits what the commercially companies are willing to experiment with on space station, Gerstenmaier said. It limits what we need to do with cargo resupply and crew resupply. It changes plans for what we test on station.

The sooner we know that, the better off we are, and waiting until just four years before end of station, I personally think is not as helpful as if we can decide a lot earlier, like soon, Gerstenmaier said.

He added that there is little margin in NASAs schedule to complete the biological and technological experiments needed for deep space missions by 2024.

It took three years for all of the space stations partners to endorse the last extension, with the European Space Agency last year becoming the final participant to lengthen its commitment from 2020 to 2024.

Russia announced in 2015 that it would keep up its support of the space station through 2024, and Komarov said Tuesday that the Russian government will maintain a complex in low Earth orbit throughout the 2020s, whether its the International Space Station or a Russian-led vehicle.

But he implied that Russias preference is to keep the International Space Station going.

As long as we have this instrument, the ISS, its logical to continue this work, Komarov said.

He said the Russian government, like the other space station partners, wants more experiments, more results and more efficiency from the space station.

Roscosmos has a contingency plan that could involve detaching some of its newer modules from the International Space Station, including a research lab set for launch next year, to form a standalone outpost.

It doesnt mean that we dont want to continue our cooperation, Komarov said. We just want to be on the safe side, and in any case, and in any decision, to continue our research in low Earth orbit.

Komarov echoed Gerstenmaiers concerns about using the International Space Station to evaluate astronaut and cosmonaut health and radiation shielding before launching a crewed mission to Mars.

NASA has spent about $67 billion on the space station to date, according to Gerstenmaier. With the contributions of international partners, the orbiting research labs total cost likely reaches above $100 billion.

We ought to be planning, from an policy standpoint, an approach that allows us to maximize the utility of our $67 billion investment in low Earth orbit, and not pick an arbitrary (retirement) date for some other concerns, Gerstenmaier said.

NASA spends more than $3 billion to operate the space station each year, and most of that cost goes toward crew and cargo transportation to and from the complex. The outposts sustaining operating budget is closer to $1 billion per year, Gerstenmaier said.

Engineers have concluded the space station is structurally sound to keep flying through 2028. Some repairs, such as replacement of the research labs oldest power-generating solar arrays, may be required if the program is extended longer than 2028, Gerstenmaier said.

Besides the scientific justification, Gerstenmaier floated two other considerations for U.S. government decision-makers.

Around 15 percent of the global orbital launch attempts in 2015 and 2016 targeted the space station.

Lets say we pick the end, and were now going to pull (15 percent) out of the global launch market. Do you think Im going to be allowed to do that? Probably not.

The other wild card is in 2023 potentially the Chinese will have their space station, Gerstenmaier said. What is the dynamic with the U.S. with a space station thats going away in 2024, with the Chinese having a government-operated space station in 2023? Is that the right time to cede and hand over national and global human spaceflight to another country? You should ponder some of these things.

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[ April 8, 2017 ] NASA, Roscosmos open to extending station operations to 2028 News - Spaceflight Now

Cassini prepares for ‘grand finale’ – SpaceFlight Insider

Paul Knightly

April 8th, 2017

This illustration shows NASAs Cassini spacecraft above Saturns northern hemisphere beforeone of its 22 grand finale dives. Caption and Image Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech

On April 26, 2017, NASAs Cassini spacecraft will conduct the first in a series of 22 dives between Saturns atmosphere and its rings as a part of the missions grand finale.

Cassinis flight team ismaking preparations to begin the spacecrafts final chapter in its 13-year history orbiting Saturn.The mission will end Sept. 15, 2017, when Cassini enters the ringed planets atmosphere, which will in turn destroy the storied vehicle, as visualized in a new video released by NASA.

An illustration of the final orbits of the Cassini spacecraft show the robotic explorer diving between the rings and the planet. The blue lines represent the 22 close flybys while the orange shows the final plunge into Saturns atmosphere. Image Credit: NASA

No spacecraft has ever gone through the unique region that well attempt to boldly cross 22 times, said Thomas Zurbuchen, the associate administrator for NASAs Science Mission Directorate, in a news release. What we learn from Cassinis daring final orbits will further our understanding of how giant planets, and planetary systems everywhere, form and evolve. This is truly discovery in action to the very end.

The dives represent the closest that Cassini has traveled to Saturn since arriving at the ringed planet in 2004. By exploring the region of space between the atmosphere and the rings, it aims to gain a new understanding into how gas giant planets and their associated ring systems form and evolve through time. The flight plan, which has been under development since a 2010 NASA decision to end the mission this year, uses expertise that has been gained over the course of the mission.

The plan to send Cassini into Saturns atmosphere was devised over concerns that once the spacecraft runs out of fuel that it could hit one of the potentially habitable moons orbiting the planet, including Enceladus.

Designing the flight plan to pass between Saturns atmosphere and rings will allow Cassini to refine its orbit over the coming months while also maximizing the scientific return of its final maneuver.

This planned conclusion for Cassinis journey was far and away the preferred choice for the missions scientists, said Linda Spilker, Cassini project scientist at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. Cassini will make some of its most extraordinary observations at the end of its long life.

During the final months, the mission team hopes to gain insight into Saturns internal structure, the origin of its rings, obtain the first-ever sampling of the planets atmosphere and ring particles, and capture close-up views of the gas giants clouds and innermost rings.

The mission team is doing a final check of commands to be sent to the probe on April 11, which will direct Cassini to begin its final orbitsfollowing its final close pass of Titan on April 22. The gravity of Titan will bend Cassinis flight path and shrink its orbit toward Saturn with the first close flyby of the grand finale.

Based on our best models, we expect the gap to be clear of particles large enough to damage the spacecraft, said Earl Maize, Cassinis project manager at JPL. But were also being cautious by using our large antenna as a shield on the first pass, as we determine whether its safe to expose the science instruments to that environment on future passes. Certainly there are some unknowns, but thats one of the reasons were doing this kind of daring exploration at the end of the mission.

Following a distant flyby of Titan in mid-September, Cassinis flight path will be bent further to dive into Saturns atmosphere.

As Cassini enters the atmosphere, its thrusters will its the remaining fuel to keep its antenna pointed toward Earth for as long as possible, transmitting data from several instruments to provide data until the signal is lost.

Cassinis grand finale is so much more than a final plunge, said Spilker. Its a thrilling final chapter for our intrepid spacecraft, and so scientifically rich that it was the clear and obvious choice for how to end the mission.

Video courtesy of JPL

Tagged: Cassini Grand Finale Jet Propulsion Laboratory Lead Stories NASA Saturn

Paul is currently a graduate student in Space and Planetary Sciences at the University of Akransas in Fayetteville. He grew up in the Kansas City area and developed an interest in space at a young age at the start of the twin Mars Exploration Rover missions in 2003. He began his studies in aerospace engineering before switching over to geology at Wichita State University where he earned a Bachelor of Science in 2013. After working as an environmental geologist for a civil engineering firm, he began his graduate studies in 2016 and is actively working towards a PhD that will focus on the surficial processes of Mars. He also participated in a 2-week simluation at The Mars Society's Mars Desert Research Station in 2014 and remains involved in analogue mission studies today. Paul has been interested in science outreach and communication over the years which in the past included maintaining a personal blog on space exploration from high school through his undergraduate career and in recent years he has given talks at schools and other organizations over the topics of geology and space. He is excited to bring his experience as a geologist and scientist to the Spaceflight Insider team writing primarily on space science topics.

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Cassini prepares for 'grand finale' - SpaceFlight Insider

[ April 6, 2017 ] Photos: Blue Origin’s New Shepard booster on display News – Spaceflight Now

Credit: Stephen Clark/Spaceflight Now

Scarred from five trips to the edge of space and back, Blue Origins privately-developed New Shepard rocket was on vertical display this week at the 33rd Space Symposium in Colorado Springs.

The single-stage rocket is now retired and will eventually go into a museum after a traveling road show around the country, according to Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos.

The New Shepard was the first vehicle to fly above the Karman line around 62 miles (100 kilometers) above Earth, the internationally-recognized boundary of space, then return to the ground with a vertical landing using rocket thrust.

Engineers were not sure the New Shepard would survive its last mission in October, when a prototype crew capsule mounted atop the rocket fired a solid rocket motor in a test of the escape system that would whisk passengers away from a failing launcher.

The New Shepard was not designed to survive such a maneuver, but the rockets BE-3 main engine continued firing, propelling the rocket into space and then reigniting for landing at Bezoss West Texas ranch.

The images show the BE-3 engine, which can throttle up to 110,000 pounds of thrust, the New Shepards four landing legs, and the ring attach point for Blue Origins crew capsule.

Blue Origin hopes to begin test flights on another New Shepard rocket now under construction with passengers on-board as soon as next year.

Read our full story for more details.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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[ April 6, 2017 ] Photos: Blue Origin's New Shepard booster on display News - Spaceflight Now

Virgin Galactic Aiming for 1st Spaceflight This Year, Branson Says – Space.com

Virgin Galactic's second SpaceShipTwo vehicle, known as VSS Unity, soars on its first-ever glide flight on Dec. 3, 2016.

Virgin Galactic should be ready to launch its first flight to suborbital space later this year, company founder Sir Richard Branson said.

"I think I'd be very disappointed if we're not into space with a test flight by the end of the year and I'm not into space myself next year and the program isn't well underway by the end of next year," Branson told London-based newspaper The Daily Telegraph, breaking an unofficial Virgin Galactic rule about giving dates when discussing the company's spaceflight plans.

Branson has said that he, and some of his family members, will be aboard Virgin Galactic's first passenger spaceflight.

Virgin Galactic aims to fly customers aboard the six-passenger SpaceShipTwo, at a cost of $250,000 per seat. A plane called WhiteKnightTwo will carry SpaceShipTwo to an altitude of 50,000 feet (15,000 meters), then drop it; at that point, the spacecraft's onboard rocket engine will kick on, blasting the vehicle to suborbital space.

Virgin Galactic's first SpaceShipTwo vehicle, called VSS Enterprise, performed four rocket-powered test flights in Earth's atmosphere. But the last of these flights, which took place on Oct. 31, 2014, ended in disaster; the space plane broke apart in midair after its "feathering" descent system deployed too early. Co-pilot Michael Alsbury was killed, and pilot Peter Siebold was seriously injured.

Virgin Galactic regrouped after the tragic accident. The company unveiled its second SpaceShipTwo, VSS Unity, to the public in February 2016; the vehicle has since performed several unpowered "glide flights" and should be ready to begin the rocket-powered phase of its test campaign soon, Virgin representatives have said.

"The test program is going really well, and as long as we've got our brave test pilots pushing it to the limit, we think that after whatever it is, 12 years of hard work, we're nearly there," Branson told The Telegraph.

Read the full story at The Daily Telegraph here.

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

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Spaceflight Industries offers images from space on demand – Seattle Times

Seattle-based Spaceflight Industries announced Wednesday a new Web-based satellite imagery service called BlackSky Spectra that enables customers to access satellite images on demand.

Seattle Times aerospace reporter

Seattle-based Spaceflight Industries announced Wednesday a new on-demand satellite imagery service called BlackSky Spectra that enables customers to access imagery online.

The Web-based service allows searching of BlackSkys imagery archive database, containing high-resolution satellite images. Users can also select a specific place on a map and order customized satellite imagery of that location.

Spaceflight said it has now added new imagery to its existing database from a variety of multi-spectrum and higher-resolution satellites built and deployed by European aerospace giant Airbus.

The imagery includes not only photos but also radar and radio frequency images. Radar images can supplement visible satellite imagery in areas with cloud cover or after dark.

BlackSky is transforming how we look at the world by integrating the widest variety of sensors into a revolutionary, easy to use service, said Spaceflight chief executive Jason Andrews.

Blacksky was formed in 2015 with the goal of launching a constellation of 60 imaging satellites, the first of which launched last fall.

At that time, Andrews said the company would builda Web-based platform that will enable easy access to images of anywhere on earth from both its own satellites and those operated by other companies such as Airbus.

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Spaceflight Industries offers images from space on demand - Seattle Times

Peggy Whitson’s ISS stay gets 3-month extension – SpaceFlight Insider

Derek Richardson

April 5th, 2017

Peggy Whitson helps fellow astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Thomas Pesquet get into their spacesuits for EVA-40 in late March, 2017. Photo Credit: NASA

NASA astronaut Peggy Whitsons stay aboard the International Space Station has been extended by three months through Expedition 52, adding to her already record-breaking mission.

Instead of returning to Earth in June 2017 with the Soyuz MS-03 capsule she launched in along side Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky and European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet, 57-year-old Whitson will remain aboard the ISS and fly home in September 2017 with the crew of Soyuz MS-04, which will have a vacant seat.

This is great news, Whitson said. I love being up here. Living and working aboard the space station is where I feel like I make the greatest contribution, so I am constantly trying to squeeze every drop out of my time here. Having three more months to squeeze is just what I would wish for.

Peggy Whitson performs an experiment in the Microgravity Sciences Glovebox on the International Space Station. Photo Credit: NASA

Soyuz MS-04, which will launch Russias Fyodor Yurchikhin and NASAs Jack Fischer, will have a vacant seat because of Russias decision to temporarily reduce the size of its ISS crews from three to two. This is in a bid to save money on Progress resupply launches until the long-delayed Nauka science module is launched. That is expected sometime in 2018 at the earliest.

According to NASA, Whitsons extra time in orbit will ensure a full complement of six astronauts on board the station and increase the amount of time available for astronauts to conduct experiments.

Peggys skill and experience makes her an incredible asset aboard the space station, said Kirk Shireman, NASAs International Space Station Program Manager. By extending the stay of one of NASAs most veteran astronauts, our research, our technology development, our commercial and our international partner communities will all benefit.

Whitson is on her third long-duration stay aboard the ISS. She flew as part of Expedition 5 and Expedition 16 in 2002 and 2007 respectively. Those two missions gave her 377 days of spaceflight experience.

She has been in space since Nov. 17, 2016, for Expedition 50. On April 24, 2017, she will break retired astronaut Jeff Williams record of 534 cumulative days in space the most for any American.

With the three-month extension to September 2017, she will accumulate at least 663 days of total spaceflight time. This will put her in a solid seventh place behind retired cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov, who spent some 679 days aboard the Mir space station over two long-duration missions in 1988 and 1994.

The person with the most cumulative days in space is Gennady Padalka at 879 days over five missions. He is scheduled to launch to the space station again in September 2018 aboard Soyuz MS-10. At the end of that six-month flight, he will become the first person to cross 1000 days in orbit.

Whitsons extended flight will mean her current stay should last at least 287 days. This will make it the longest single spaceflight by a woman, surpassing the 200 days set by ESAs Samantha Cristoforetti.

Just recently, Whitson broke the record for the most spacewalks by a woman, beating Sunita Williams seven EVAs by one for a total of 53 hours, 22 minutes outside the station.

That record is set to grow by about six more hours in late April when Whitson leads EVA-42. If that spacewalk goes as planned, it should put her in third place for the most spacewalking time, behind retired astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegrias 67 hours, 40 minutes.

The person with the most spacewalking time is retired cosmonaut Anatoly Solovyev at 82 hours, 22 minutes of experience.

On April 10, the crew of Soyuz MS-02 will leave the outpost. That includes Russian cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrei Borisenko, and NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough, who is the commander of Expedition 50.

Kimbrough will hand over command of the ISS to Whitson the day before he leaves, making her the first woman to command the orbiting lab twice. Expedition 50 will switch over to Expedition 51 as soon as Soyuz MS-02 undocks from the Poiskmodule.

Peggy Whitson as seen during her seventh spacewalk in January 2017. With fellow astronaut Shane Kimbrough, she worked to finish installing new lithium-ion batteries on the International Space Station. Photo Credit: NASA

Tagged: Expedition 50 Expedition 51 Expedition 52 International Space Station Lead Stories Peggy Whitson Soyuz MS-03 Soyuz MS-04

Derek Richardson is a student studying mass media with an emphasis in contemporary journalism at Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas. He is currently the managing editor of the student run newspaper, the Washburn Review. He also writes a blog, called Orbital Velocity, about the space station. His passion for space ignited when he watched space shuttle Discovery leap to space on Oct. 29, 1998. He saw his first in-person launch on July 8, 2011 when the space shuttle launched for the final time. Today, this fervor has accelerated toward orbit and shows no signs of slowing down. After dabbling in math and engineering courses in college, he soon realized that his true calling was communicating to others about space exploration and spreading that passion.

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Peggy Whitson's ISS stay gets 3-month extension - SpaceFlight Insider

A floating techno-libertarian city might be coming to the Pacific – Mashable


Mashable
A floating techno-libertarian city might be coming to the Pacific
Mashable
In May, a group will gather in Tahiti to discuss building floating cities off the French Polynesian coast. That's right. The men of the Seasteading Institute (and something suggests, it will be mostly men) dream of building extra-national platforms in ...

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A floating techno-libertarian city might be coming to the Pacific - Mashable

Real Utopia: The World’s First Floating City May Be Built in the Pacific – Sputnik International

Life

19:15 06.04.2017(updated 21:38 06.04.2017) Get short URL

People have always dreamt ofmoving toa better place forlife. Some prefer an easy way toescape noisy dusty cities and live inthe countryside, while others dream big and work onUtopia-like projects, such asthe resurrection ofthe Russian Empire inKiribati and the creation ofseasteading communities floating cities which will allow the next generation ofpioneers topeacefully test new ideas forhow tolive together. The term "seasteading" is a combination ofthe words "sea" and "homesteading."

In the spring of2013, TSI launched The Floating City Project, which proposed tocreate a floating city withinthe territorial waters ofan existing nation, rather thanthe open ocean. According tothe institute, this proposal had several advantages: it would be easier toengineer a seastead inshallow waters, easier forresidents totravel toand fromthe "mainland" and easier toacquire goods and services fromexisting supply chains.

Later year, TSI raised $27,082 throughthe IndieGoGo crowdfunding platform and hired the Dutch marine engineering firm DeltaSync, a leading specialist inthe field offloating urbanization.

Artisanopolis - Floating City Project Animation

Things got more serious in2016, when The Seasteading Institute representatives met withFrench Polynesian officials and discussed building a prototype seastead ina sheltered lagoon. Just recently, onJanuary 13, 2017, the government officially signed an agreement withTSI tocooperate oncreating a legal framework toallow forthe development ofThe Floating Island Project. The legislation will give the Floating Island Project its own "special governing framework" creating an "innovative special economic zone."

The creation ofa "special economic seazone" would give floating islands considerable autonomy, according tothe company's official website. In return, TSI is required toproduce an environmental and economic analysis beforeit can get started.

The institute's Australian ambassador Ashley Blake, who spoke atthe Myriad startup festival held betweenMarch 29-31 inBrisbane, described the project asa startup and a place totest new technologies and ways ofliving. However, this "social enterprise" is not foreveryone. "It's not a solution fora complete full stack ofsociety," he said. "Maybe the model that ends upworking is a floating aged care home, we don't know. Or maybe it's a place where young entrepreneurs can go."

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Real Utopia: The World's First Floating City May Be Built in the Pacific - Sputnik International

All American Red Heads inducted into Missouri Sports Hall of Fame – Joplin Globe

Decades before Title IX legislation was approved in 1972, businessman Connie Mack (C.M.) Olson provided an equal opportunity for women's basketball.

At the suggestion of his wife, Doyle, the All American Red Heads came into existence in 1936 in Cassville.

"Mr. Olson had his own professional men's team that traveled across the USA known as the Terrible Swedes," said Willa Faye Mason. "His wife had a beauty shop. She had several operators in the beauty shop, and they liked to play basketball. When they weren't at work, they were up at the gym in Cassville shooting baskets.

"One day she said to Mr. Olson, 'My girls sure like to play basketball. It's too bad they don't have a team.' He said, 'That's an excellent idea. I could field a team of girls.' And she said, 'You sure could, and call them Red Heads.' And he said 'All American Red Heads.' And that was the birth of the name."

The All American Red Heads, who played 50 years from 1936-86, were inducted into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame last week in Springfield.

The Red Heads, playing in dyed red hair and red, white and blue uniforms, barnstormed the country with seven-player teams traveling in station wagons or limousines. Their popularity and success continued after Orwell Moore, an English teacher and girls basketball coach in Caraway, Arkansas, bought the team in 1955. The franchise grew to three traveling teams in the 1970s.

"We played the 6-player game three and three (offensive and defensive players on each half of the court) in high school," said Mason, who played for the Red Heads from 1949-56. "But with the Red Heads, they started in 1936 and they always played the five-player, full-court basketball.

"My heart is just full of memories of basketball with the Red Heads. The seven seasons I played, I played in every state but Maine. We played six months out of the year. We played every night, and we traveled in the daytime and played at night. You had to love the game."

Many of their games were fundraisers for organizations that booked them in the town the VFW, Lions Club, Kiwanis Cub to name a few. And not all the games were against women.

"People turned out to see the girls play against the guys, and it wasn't just women against men for a show," Mason said. "You saw basketball when you came out to see the Red Heads. We won around 70 percent, and we played about 180 games a season. Someone said to me one time the boys just let you win, and I said 'you're kidding.' The boys or the men did not just let us win. We worked for every basket we could get."

The Red Heads generally played two quarters of regular basketball and two quarters of basketball that resembled the Harlem Globetrotters, complete with fancy dribbling and trick shots. The organization was inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame on Sept. 7, 2012.

After retiring from the Red Heads, "I always wanted to be a physical education teacher and a coach," Mason said. "I finished my degree and went on and coached basketball for 27 years at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah (Oklahoma). I achieved my doctor's degree while I was there. The Red Heads just really added a lot to my life."

Mason coached basketball at NSU from 1963-80, and she also coached tennis for nine seasons and softball for seven years. She was the first woman inducted into the NSU Athletics Hall of Fame.

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All American Red Heads inducted into Missouri Sports Hall of Fame - Joplin Globe