Daily Archives: June 5, 2017

Pledge to stop illegal tuna fishing, related forced labour on high seas by 2020 – The Nation

Posted: June 5, 2017 at 7:47 am

Launched on World Environment Day at the United Nations first global Ocean Conference, the Tuna 2020 Traceability Declaration aims to stop illegal tuna from coming to market. It is supported by 18 civil-society organisations including the Benioff Ocean Initiative (University of California, Santa Barbara), the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Marine Stewardship Council, the Nature Conservancy, and OceanElders.

The declaration, which is available at http://www.wef.ch/tunadeclaration, sends a clear message to organisations on the tuna supply chain from fishing companies to producers to retailers that the net is closing in on illegally fished tuna and forced labour on the high seas.

To help deliver on the outcomes in the declaration, the World Economic Forum (WEF) says it will mobilise an Ocean Data Alliance, an open-source collaboration among leading tech companies, governments and research institutes. This will bring together the data needed for comprehensive monitoring of ocean resources.

Such traceability of stocks and the elimination of illegal activities are possible through new Fourth Industrial Revolution technologies such as blockchain, big data, machine learning and satellite tracking.

Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing represents a global theft of about 26 million tonnes of fish, or US$24 billion (Bt816 billion), each year. Around a billion people rely on fish as their primary source of animal protein, particularly in developing countries.

Tuna is one of the most overfished and at-risk groups of fish. Many are keystone species, meaning that overfishing can have a significant impact on ocean health. Bluefin tuna have seen their populations collapse by more than 90 per cent and will take decades to recover fully.

IUU tuna fishing is a source of forced labour in many countries, violating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Labour Organisations Conventions and Recommendations.

The Tuna 2020 Traceability Declaration is an unprecedented commitment to stop illegal tuna from coming to market, said Dominic Waughray, WEFs head of public-private partnership and member of the groups executive committee.

Multi-stakeholder collaboration combined with Fourth Industrial Revolution innovations such as advanced remote sensing, the latest generation of satellites and new computing technologies provide real opportunity to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals to make this happen.

Meg Caldwell, deputy director for oceans for the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, a US-based provider of funding to non-profit organisations, said recent analysis showed that IUU fishing might be 50 per cent more than the officially reported catch.

The good news is that there are solutions for responsible and evidence-based marine resource management. This intersection with our strategic priorities is why tackling IUU fishing has become an increasing priority for us, she said.

The Tuna 2020 Traceability Declaration came out of discussions at the WEF Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January among industry stakeholders, governments, civil society and the Peter Thomson, president of the United Nations General Assembly. They called for further collaboration between the public and private sectors to accelerate efforts to address the IUU fishing of tuna in line with Sustainable Development Goal 14 on oceans.

"SDG 14 is critical for the health and economies of many nations, particularly coastal countries and small island states. This declaration is a bold step towards ending illegal fishing and empowering countries to make fisheries more sustainable," said Arni Mathiesen, assistant director-general of the Fisheries and Aquaculture Department, Food and Agriculture Organisation.

The UN Ocean Conference, which began on Monday and runs until Friday, marks the first time since the 1982 passage of the Law of the Sea that so many world leaders are convening to discuss the future of the worlds oceans, including its impact on economic growth, environmental sustainability, human health and the achievement of the SDGs.

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Take 10: Swashbuckling on the high seas of Hyannis – Cape Cod Times (subscription)

Posted: at 7:47 am

Sean F. Driscoll @SeanFDriscoll

HYANNIS When Than Drake initially bought a 30-foot boat with the intention of doing day sailing trips, it didnt catch on. The boat was rough, too rough for the clientele he was trying to capture out of Hyannis Inner Harbor.

So instead of providing posh rides for adults, Drake switched gears to a swashbuckling adventures for young kids. Now he owns Cape Cod Pirate Adventures, a business thats kept him on the high seas for more than 20 years.

I said to myself It looks like a pirate ship, he said. So I credit the boat with helping me with the idea.

Drakes boat, the 40-foot Sea Gypsy VIII, can carry up to 45 passengers, with a typical sailing being a mix of 20 kids and 20 adults, he said. He and his crew run as many as five 75-minute trips a day during the summer, giving kids age 4 to 8 a chance to wear pirate gear, battle a rival crew and find some buried treasure.

What is the most important thing your business does? It opens up (kids) imaginations. We throw a lot of questions at the kids that never get answered about where are we going, where do you think the treasure is, what do you think it is? We really get them to wonder, because for a lot of the kids they think its real and they really strain their brain thinking about whats going to happen.

How long have you been in business? Since 1995.

What did you do before? I wasnt making much money as a carpenter. I painted houses and stuff, but I didnt really have a career going on at all. But I went to a boat-building school that helped with the construction of these sea gypsies and I did other things working with kids, so I saw the importance of focusing and prioritizing on them and making a trip for them and not adults.

How big is your staff? Five to operate the boat, and two in the office.

How has the market changed since your business started? Business fell off in '07-'08, and it never came back to the prerecession years. Now there are more things for the kids to do, there are more kid activities on the Cape. It just gets diluted.

What are your plans for your business' future? I build these boats for other people, and they have a license agreement for Pirate Adventures. Theres seven or eight similar boats up and down the East Coast. It keeps the association going and pays the legal bills for maintaining the license.

What's your most memorable moment with this business? Its that one-on-one with children. One reason we do the face painting is it allows us to get close, to get in that comfort zone with children and make eye contact with them. Its just a precious time. They are full of anticipation and excitement.

Video:Take 10 feature with Than Drake, owner of Cape Cod Pirate Adventures

What advice do you have for someone starting out in business? Focus on the kids. A lot of people get into boats for the sunset cruises and the adult trips, and people think dealing with kids is difficult. I think its more difficult to deal with inebriated adults.

What's the biggest challenge about having a business on Cape Cod? The weather, of course. A hurricane can end the season abruptly. My business has a smaller window than most, so if I miss a day in August, its gone. It never comes back.

What's the best thing about having a business on Cape Cod? That its a short season. Its nice to be done by Labor Day.

Follow Sean F. Driscoll on Twitter: @seanfdriscoll.

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Take 10: Swashbuckling on the high seas of Hyannis - Cape Cod Times (subscription)

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DAVID MURDOCK: On fascinating things – Gadsden Times

Posted: at 7:46 am

By David MurdockSpecial to The Times

There are certain subjects that hold an inexplicable fascination for me. I have no idea why or where or when, for example, I became fascinated with rock strata. I am, though. Love em. Ive actually traveled just to see interesting rock strata. Luckily, Etowah County comes equipped with seemingly endless strata, so I stay pretty well satisfied in that department.

Some of these fascinations become subjects of columns. Ive written two columns on roadkill over the years, for example. How many times Ive rhapsodized about the sky night, cloudy or otherwise lies beyond easy recollection. How many times have I gone on about the birds and animals in my yard or the view from the front porch? I quit counting.

There are others I have never mentioned in the column my endless fascination with whaling, for example. That one, at least, makes some sense since Herman Melvilles Moby-Dick is not only one of my favorite novels, but one I teach several times a year. To mimic Melvilles phrasing, subjects like whaling have become fascinadoes to me seemingly unrelated subjects that trigger endless research. However, I recently decided to do something about some of the more odd ones that dont fit anywhere in the college classes I teach. I usually lead a class at the University of Alabamas Osher Lifelong Learning Institute every term, typically on a literary or cultural topic, but Ive decided to do something more quirky for the summer term. Were calling it Daves Summer Grab Bag, and the course begins at 3 p.m. Wednesday with one of my weirder topics, micronations.

A few years ago, I started tracking micronations in the press. A micronation is a legally non-existent country that has been formed for any of a variety of reasons by ... well ... dreamers, I guess. The most famous one near here is The Conch Republic. Back in the 1980s, the island of Key West seceded from the United States as a protest against a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint that the locals found burdensome. This protest was mostly for the sake of humor, a political satire, but it quickly became a tourist draw, and the Conch Republic currently issues souvenir passports that some people mistakenly believe are real.

Other micronations are sincere attempts to secede from host countries and form ideal governments, and still more were formed for a variety of other reasons (some not always benign). Anyway, I read any article on micronations I stumble across.

Well continue the next week with invasive species plants and animals either knowingly or unknowingly introduced to non-native environments that have since taken over or otherwise become an issue. Think kudzu.

Next up my fascinado with sleeping and dreaming. Im still pursuing the ideal, perfect nap, and I may be on the verge of a breakthrough in my research. Just the other day, I napped past my bedtime. I literally woke up 45 minutes after I usually go to sleep and didnt quite know what to do. So, I watched a movie and went back to sleep. I was just a little exhausted that day. Sleeping and dreaming has been a subject of interest for me since my days as a psychology student, so that ones quite old.

After that, a more recent one the city of Alexandria. Not the one down the highway, the one in Egypt. And not the Alexandria of today, but the Alexandria of antiquity, the one with the ancient worlds most impressive library.

From there, well look at ruins and abandoned places in general. Thats also a recent fascinado for me, dating back to a trip I took a couple of years ago when I stumbled across the Windsor Ruins during my meandering in Mississippi. That experience was profoundly moving, even spiritual, so I never pass up a good ruin or abandoned place now in my travels. Theres even a wish list of places to visit.

Lastly, the granddaddy of all my fascinados dating to my childhood Native American mounds. I wrote an article about them for Gadsden Style a while back, and Ill be giving a talk about my visits to all the nearby mound structures to finish the Grab Bag.

Please come out and join us at OLLI, which offers an opportunity to learn new things, meet new people and go to new places. There are no tests, no homework and no degrees required. For information on how to join OLLI and sign up for sessions, either call 205-348-6482 or contact Shirley Dupont at 256-442-3769. I hope to see yall there.

A correction to last weeks column on the Battle of Midway: Ensign George Gays squadron consisted of 15 Devastator torpedo bombers, not 10 as appeared in the article. Its odd, I had the correct number in the first draft and, for some reason, corrected it. The error is mine.

David Murdock is an English instructor at Gadsden State Community College. He can be contacted at murdockcolumn@yahoo.com. The opinions reflected are his own.

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The coolest rooms in the South Pacific for 2017 – TTG

Posted: at 7:46 am

From luxurious overwater bungalows to a resort on its very own island, Charlotte Cullinan rounds up the coolest rooms in the Pacific Islands for 2017.

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The latest developments in the South Pacific offer your clients even more choice when it comes to a luxurious place to lay their heads. From the Conrad Bora Bora Nui with its newly refurbished villas to traditional bungalows at the Cook Islands Little Polynesian Resort, theres a range of new and recently renovated options for clients looking to make the journey to these beautiful islands. We highlight some of the top properties to have on your radar this year. The Conrad Bora Bora Nui, Tahiti While Bora Bora is famed for its overwater villas, for the ultimate bragging rights suggest the archipelagos only two-storey overwater accommodation, complete with a sauna, bar area and whirlpool.

The presidential villas can be found at the Conrad Bora Bora Nui, which opened in April in a private cove on Motu Toopua, just a short boat ride away from Bora Boras coast. Following a huge refurbishment, the former Hilton property features 114 light and airy villas and bungalows, with the presidential villas offering two bedrooms and three bathrooms.

The Conrad comes recommended by Gold Medals Asia and Australia senior product manager, Rebecca Turner, who explains: The presidential villas have hosted some of Hollywoods most famous faces and the hotel boasts three restaurants, three bars, an infinity pool, mini-golf and a private island known as Motu Tapu, which is only accessible by boat.

Book it: Gold Medal has seven nights B&B at the Conrad Bora Bora Nui, two nights room only at the Intercontinental Tahiti Resort & Spa, flights and transfers from 4,459pp, departing on November 1 or 30, 2017.

Since opening in Waigani the commercial heart of Port Moresby in June 2016, the Stanley Hotel and Suites has tended to attract business clientele. However, it is now targeting leisure travellers with the introduction of a spa, and by highlighting its attachment to the Vision City Mega Mall, which is home to a nightclub, cinema and restaurants.

There are 429 rooms, but book the presidential suite for views of the Stanley Mountain ranges and National Stadium. The 20th floor suite sleeps four and offers 340sqm of space, packed with a large dining room, a full kitchen and marble bathroom with a monsoon shower and oversized Jacuzzi bath.

Book it: In August rooms cost from 182 per night.

After its rooms were refurbished in October, Rarotongas Little Polynesian Resort received a further boost in January when it joined Small Luxury Hotels of the World (SLH).

SLH vice president of sales EMEA, Carsten Lima, rates the resorts location on the shores of Titikaveka Beach as one of the most beautiful beaches in Rarotonga.

He adds: Its perfect for clients who like watersports such as stand-up paddleboarding, kayaking and canoeing, which are offered to guests free of charge. The hotel is ideal for clients who want a tranquil or romantic getaway as it ensures absolute privacy and has a no-child policy.

He recommends booking one of the 10 traditional bungalows, known as ares. Guests can overlook the lagoon from their king-sized bed under towering vaulted ceilings before stepping into a private walled courtyard to enjoy an outdoor shower.

Book it: Prices start at 605 per are per night, on a B&B basis.

Travel 2s Oceania assistant product manager, Rachel McMurdo, has a top tip for those seeking the latest in Fijian luxury: The hottest property in Fiji at the moment is the Fiji Marriott Resort Momi Bay, a new five-star hotel on the mainland with a beach lagoon in the centre of the resort. It features overwater villas and suites which are the first of their kind in Viti Levu the largest island in Fiji.

The property opened in April and offers 136 deluxe rooms and 114 bure villas, all with a private balcony or terrace overlooking the pool, ocean or lagoon.

Book it: Travel 2 offers three nights B&B at the Fiji Marriott Resort Momi Bay in a deluxe lagoon view room and six nights room-only in a beachfront bure at the Tokoriki Island Resort from 2,439pp. Includes flights and transfers, departing June 5 and June 24, 2017.

For small groups or families, suggest one of the 25 two or three-bedroom waterfront villas at the Taumeasina Island Resort. When it opened last July, it became Samoas only island resort, situated just outside Apia and linked to the mainland by a causeway. The villas are surrounded by tropical greenery, with private balconies overlooking the lagoon and Upolu mountains. There are also 80 oceanview rooms.

The Samoa Tourism Authoritys chief executive, Sonja Hunter, describes the resort as absolutely stunning, adding: The design has been sensitive to the environment and reflects the Samoan culture in details throughout the property.

In the centre of Apia, Aggie Greys Hotel reopened in August as the Sheraton Samoa Aggie Greys Hotel and Bungalows. The property has retained much of its colonial style but the 175 rooms, suites and bungalows have all been renovated.

Book it: Prices at the Taumeasina Island Resort start at 130 for an oceanview room on a B&B basis during the low season (October 1, 2017 to March 31,2018).

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The Case of The Terrorist Robert Doggart and Holy Islamberg – MuslimMatters

Posted: at 7:45 am

After years of troubling news, Tahirah H. Clark, 44, a mother of 5 children, and an attorney received some of the good variety on February 16, 2017. The man who had threatened to take his assault rifle, with 500 rounds of ammunition, light-armor piercing, and a machete to burn down the kitchen, the mosque and school, in her community in 2015, Robert Doggart, was found guilty on all charges. His sentencingis taking place now, with two counts being dismissed against him.

The court determines there was not enough evidence for the jury to have found beyond a reasonable doubt [Doggart] made threats on those dates for the purpose of effecting a change or achieving a goal through intimidation, Collier wrote in an opinion, released today.

Holy Islamberg and several other villages around the country are formed by a group of African-American Muslims from New York City, The Muslims of America (TMOA), who are followers of Mubarik Ali Shah Gilani. Upon his guidance, they left the fitnah (trials) of cities and started living together in rural communities dedicating their lives to their faith. Membership is not open due to security reasons, especially after the Doggart case.

We will be cruel to them, Doggart said of the people of Islamberg in a call to the FBI, And we will burn down their buildings And if it gets down to the machete, we will cut them to shreds.

Clark represents the community as the victim in the trial.

Doggart is an ordained Christian minister, has a PhD and had once run for Congress in his home state of Tennessee. According to the criminal complaint, Doggart had been associated with private militia groups in the US. He was convinced that the group were planning an attack on American soil. TMOA was targeted by right wing blogs since 9/11, as a terrorist training ground.

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Its kind of perplexing to us, said local Police Chief Craig Dumont on New Yorks AM 970. All this recent media attention in regard to potential terrorist training camps and things that are going on there. We dont see it. We just dont find any of that to be valid at this time. There are no active threats that we are aware of at this time.

According to the criminal complaint, Doggart said in a Facebook post that the village must be utterly destroyed in order to get the attention of the American people.

Clark recalls the horror that the community felt when they received the call from the FBI, that they were targets of a planned terror attack. They galvanized to advocate for themselves. In a statement, Muhammad Matthew Gardner, the public relations director for TMOA said, Doggart is an example of the results of unchecked and rampant Islamophobia which has spread lies for years about our peaceful community. This man plotted mercilessly to kill us, kill our children and blow up our mosque and our school.

They took a symbolic picture of the children in the community holding a banner asking, Why do you want to kill us, Robert Doggart?

They canceled the summer program that takes place every year, where youth compete in cooking competitions and women hold fashion shows.

And they prayed. They gathered in the masajid in every TMOA village and made special duas to thank Allah that the attack did not take place.

Then they filed a civil lawsuit with Attorney Tahirah Amatul-Wadud and Clark as counsels. The suit was stayed; but now that the verdict is in, Tahiratain (the two Tahirahs) are readying to for trial. The civil complaint charges Doggart with violation of 18 U.S. Code 248, the FACE Act, which prohibits anyone, who by force or threat of force, or by physical obstruction intentionally injures, intimidates or interferes with or attempts to injure, intimidate or interfere with any person lawfully exercising or seeking to exercise the First Amendment right of religious freedom at a place of religious worship.

If we truly want our country to be safe, we must work to change this double standard by changing the law.

Doggart escaped terrorism charges because federal laws focus almost entirely on foreign terrorists. This was a big blow to the community. He meets the qualifications of domestic terrorism, said attorneys Amatul-Wadud and Clark. It is time to look closely at the law that allowed Robert Doggart to escape terrorism charges. There is a double standard that allows right-wing extremists to commit acts of terror, while avoiding prosecution in the same way as a Muslim who commits equal or lesser offenses, reads a statement by the community. If we truly want our country to be safe, we must work to change this double standard by changing the law.

Attorneys Amatul-Wadud and Clark plan to lobby Congress so that there are not two sets of rules when prosecuting extremists who terrorize American citizens.

In May last year, the village was told that hundreds of bikers from The American Bikers United Against Jihads Ride for National Security would ride through their rural roads.

Five bikers came.

300 neighbors showed up with flags and sign that read, Stop harassing our Muslim neighbors.

Clarks was one of the first families who settled in Islamberg in the early 80s, near Hancock, NY. She was homeschooled amongst the creeks, the hills and the rugged roads. She attended Binghamton University and Albany Law School, 25 miles from the hamlet of Islamberg. In 1993 she married one of the fellow members of Muslims of America, as is the custom of their community and they live around the corner from the village. The villages maintain connections and the community has grown as many people get married to members from Virginia, Georgia, or Tennessee. Others take their shahadah and chose to become part of the community.

Islamberg is the best place on Earth to raise my children, she says. Its lovely. She describes an area that is clean, safe, and the community can practice their religion and live their life the way they want. It is an intentional community striving to live together. You dont have to worry about [the children] being exposed to the [corruption] of the city, she says. She spent her early childhood in Brooklyn and tells tales of smelling marijuana and other jarring incidents.

Each unincorporated village is run by trustees- each location has a group of local individuals who run the place administratively. We do have town councils, elected by people in the community; they deal with basic things such as keeping the masjid clean, the bills are paid, and the roads are plowed. like a homeowners association, she explains. The group is often attacked for ruling according to an alternative rule of law. Clark calls this an Islamophobic creeping shariah tactic. You must have some form of order, she adds.

Clark calls the February verdict a blessing from Allah, as they were not expecting him to be convicted a white man in a predominately white county. May the sentencing be just as fair.

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Reused Dragon cargo capsule launched on journey to space station – Spaceflight Now

Posted: at 7:45 am

Credit: SpaceX

A refurbished robotic Dragon spaceship rocketed into orbit from Florida on Saturday aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 launcher, hauling nearly 6,000 pounds of crew provisions and biological, astrophysics and space technology experiments on a two-day trip to the International Space Station.

The unpiloted capsule soared into a late afternoon sky from launch pad 39A at NASAs Kennedy Space Center at 5:07:38 p.m. EDT (2107:38 GMT) Saturday, two days later than planned after a thunderstorm prevented liftoff Thursday.

Nine Merlin 1D engines, generating a combined 1.7 million pounds of thrust, powered the 213-foot-tall (65-meter) Falcon 9 rocket through a high-altitude cloud deck as the launcher arced to the northeast, aligning with the space stations orbital track.

It was the 100th launch from historic pad 39A, the previous home to Saturn 5 moon rockets and space shuttles. SpaceX began launch operations there in February, and has now flown six rockets from the seaside launch complex.

The Falcon 9s first stage engines shut down and deployed the rockets second stage more than 40 miles (65 kilometers) over the Atlantic Ocean, then the booster activated nitrogen cold gas thrusters to flip around and fly tail first.

While the upper stage accelerated into orbit, three of the Merlins first stage engines ignited to begin maneuvers to return the first stage to Landing Zone 1, and two more braking burns slowed the 156-foot-tall (47-meter) for a smooth vertical touchdown around 9 miles (14 kilometers) from where the mission started.

The landing marked the fifth time SpaceX has returned a rocket booster to Cape Canaveral all successful. The commercial launch company has recovered 11 rockets in 16 tries overall, a figure that includes landings at sea.

SpaceX aims to reuse the first stages, an initiative the company says will slash launch costs. The rocket that launched on the space station resupply run Saturday was entirely new, but the primary structure of the gumdrop-shaped Dragon cargo capsule on top previously flew on a 34-day orbital mission in September and October 2014, another first for SpaceX.

Engineers examined and stripped the spacecrafts structure after it splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Oct. 25, 2014, following a visit to the space station, but the majority of the Dragon cargo capsule is the original article, according to Hans Koenigsmann, SpaceXs director of flight reliability.

He said engineers compared the structural loads and shaking components inside the Dragon capsule experienced on its 2014 flight with their design limits.

That tells us how much life the component has, and we make sure that the component has enough life for the next round, Koenigsmann said. There is a statistical variation, so you have to make a worst-case assumption, basically, to be on the safe side.

SpaceX goes through a similar review of parts on Falcon 9 boosters before clearing them for a re-flight, he said.

Kirk Shireman, NASAs program manager for the International Space Station, said before Saturdays launch that the space agency expects to approve SpaceX plans to re-fly more Dragon capsules and Falcon 9 boosters on future cargo missions to the orbiting research outpost.

SpaceX has two multibillion-dollar contracts with NASA to ferry equipment to and from the space station. The terms of the deal call for at least 26 missions, and 10 of those are in the books, including a failed cargo launch in 2015.

NASA has also contracted with SpaceX to develop a Crew Dragon vehicle capable to ferrying astronauts to and from the space station beginning as soon as next year.

Officials said SpaceXs next cargo mission to the station, scheduled for launch some time in August, will employ a newly-manufactured Dragon capsule.

We share the results with NASA, and review them together, and we conclude that we can either fly a component, or in some cases, we have to make a swap with a new component, Koenigsmann said, adding that such occurrences were very few.

According to Koenigsmann, SpaceX technicians replaced several items that were exposed to salt water after splashdown, such as batteries and the capsules heat shield. But the hull, thrusters, harnessing, propellant tanks, and some avionics boxes are original, he said.

I can tell you the majority of this Dragon has been in space before, Koenigsmann said.

Officials did not say if NASA was compensated for its approval of SpaceXs plans to launch a refurbished Dragon capsule to approach the space station.

Without specifying details, Shireman said the agreement is part of a normal back-and-forth between the government and the commercial operator, in which one party barters with the other.

The Dragon spacecraft is on a two-day voyage to the space station, where it is scheduled to arrive at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT) Monday, when astronauts Peggy Whitson and Jack Fischer will grapple the approaching capsule with the stations Canadian-built robotic arm.

The space station is in excellent shape, ready to receive Dragon, said Ven Feng, manager of the space station transportation integration office at NASAs Johnson Space Center in Houston.

The robot arm will move the Dragon supply ship to a berthing port on the stations Harmony module, where it is scheduled to stay for nearly one month.

The station crew, reduced to three after the landing of a Russian cosmonaut and French astronaut Friday, will unpack 3,761 pounds (1,665 kilograms) of equipment and experiments loaded inside the Dragon capsules previously-flown pressurized module.

Some food and provisions for the stations crew are strapped inside the Dragon freighter, but research investigations take up the bulk of the ships volume.

Really, the utility of this SpaceX mission is science, Feng said. We have literally tons and tons of science going up on this mission.

Three payloads stowed inside the Dragons external rear trunk will be be removed robotically.

One of the unpressurized experiments, NASAs Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer, will study the super-dense leftovers from violent supernova explosions. Made of 56 individual X-ray telescopes, the NICER instrument will observe neutron stars, the collapsed city-sized remnants of stars that have used up all of their nuclear fuel.

Scientists compare the density of a neutron star to cramming the mass Mount Everest into a sugar cube. One teaspoon of neutron star matter would weight a billion tons on Earth, according to NASA.

Developed by NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Naval Research Laboratory, the neutron star observer will spend 18 months detecting X-ray signals coming from deep space.

Neutron stars are fantastical stars that are extraordinary in many ways, said Zaven Arzoumanian, NICERs deputy principal investigator and science lead at Goddard. They are the densest objects in the universe, they are the fastest-spinning objects known, they are the most strongly magnetic objects known.

The NICER science team wants to know the structure and composition of neutron stars, which are so extreme that normal atoms are pulverized, freeing subatomic particles like neutrons, protons and electrons.

As soon as you go below the surface of a neutron star, the pressures and densities rise extremely rapidly, and soon youre in an environment that you cant produce in any lab on Earth, said Slavko Bogdanov, a research scientist at Columbia University who leads the NICER light curve modeling group.

Unlike black holes, which develop from explosions of stars more than 20 times the mass of the sun, neutron stars can be directly observed.

They emit light all across the spectrum, from radio waves to visible light up to X-rays and gamma rays, primarily in narrow beams from their magnetic poles, Arzoumanian said. Just like the Earth, the magnetic poles on a neutron star are not necessarily aligned with the spin of the star, so you can get narrow beams that sweep as the star spins, just like a lighthouse.

And if we happen to be in the path of the sweep we see a flash everytime one of these beams go by and the stars from a distance appear to be pulsing, so theyre called pulsars, Arzoumanian said.

Scientists will also demonstrate the potential of using the timing of pulses from neutron stars for deep space navigation.

Were going to look at a subset of pulsars in the sky called millisecond pulsars, said Keith Gendreau, NICERs principal investigator at Goddard. In some of these millisecond pulsars, the pulses that we see are so regular that they remind us of atomic clocks.

Atomic clocks are the basis of the Global Positioning System satellites, according to Gendreau.

Another payload bolted inside the Dragon spacecrafts trunk is a mounting platform for multiple Earth-imaging instruments, such as high-resolution digital cameras and hyperspectral imagers.

Developed commercially by Teledyne Brown, the MUSES device to be attached outside the space station is designed to accommodate several Earth-observing cameras by providing the individual instruments with pointing, power and data relay connections.

The third unpressurized experiment on Saturdays launch is the Roll-Out Solar Array, or ROSA, made by Deployable Space Systems of Santa Barbara, California.

The U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory funded the solar array test flight, which is intended to test the structures ability to extend and retract, check its resilience to vibrations and other forces, measure its thermal gradients, and verify it can generate electricity.

The new solar array design, which unfolds like a party favor, could be used on future commercial satellites.

The array launched rolled up in a spool, but the experiment will be pulled from Dragons trunk around nine days after launch by the station robotic arm. While remaining in the arms grasp, the solar array will extend to a length of about 15 feet (5 meters) and remain unfurled for around a week.

ROSA is important to the space industry, said Jeremy Banik, the ROSA demonstrations principal investigator from the Air Force Research Laboratory. All spacecraft need power, and tradiational solar panels are made with square, flat plates that accordian fold with mechanical hinges.

The problem is, these panels tend to be heavy and bulky, and we just cant make them any bigger than what we do today. ROSA solves this problem by shrinking mass by 20 percent and stowed volume by a factor of four over these rigid panels, Banik said.

Once the week-long test is finished, the experiment will be returned to the Dragons trunk for disposal.

Live animals were also aboard Saturdays launch, including 40 mice inside specially-designed transporters for an investigation into a treatment that could combat bone loss in astronauts on long-duration space missions and osteoporosis in patients on the ground.

Once the mice arrive at the space station, astronauts will treat the rodents with NELL-1, a therapeutic treatment designed to promote bone growth, according to Chia Soo, the chief scientist for the experiment and a professor of plastic, reconstructive and orthopaedic surgery at UCLA.

Men and women past the age of 50, on the average, lose about a half-percent of bone mass per year, Soo said. But in microgravity conditions, the astronaut, on average, loses anywhere from 1 to 2 percent of bone mass per month.

She added that bone loss in astronauts has tremendous implications for humans with respect to long-term space travel or space habitation in microgravity because we end up progressively losing bone mass.

Twenty of the mice will return to Earth alive with the SpaceX Dragon supply ship in early July, the first time the commercial spacecraft has landed with live animals on-board. The 20 mice that come back alive will go to UCLAs laboratories for additional research and treatment.

The other 20 mice will remain on the space station for more observation and comparative studies with the mice on Earth. All of the animals will eventually be euthanized.

If successful, this will have tremendous implications for patients on Earth because if you look at statistics approximately one in every two to three females over the age of 50, or one in every four to five males over the age of 50, will have an osteoporosis-related fracture, Soo said.

We are hoping this study will give us some insights on how NELL-1 can work under these extreme conditions and if it can work for treating microgravity-related bone loss, which is a very accelerated, severe form of bone loss, then perhaps it can (be used) for patients one day on Earth who have bone loss due to trauma or due to aging or disease, Soo said.

A swarm of fruit flies launched to the space station to examine how prolonged spaceflight affects their heart function.

The hearts of the insects beat at about same rate as the human heart, making it a useful analog, scientists said.

Researchers are sending between 4,000 and 6,000 fruit fly eggs to the space station, where they will hatch before coming back to Earth aboard the Dragon spacecraft.

We would like to understand the role of microgravity on astronaut heart function in order to try to prevent long-term effects when they are in space for long periods and after they come back, said Karen Ocorr, a co-investigator on the fruit fly experiment from the Sanford Burnham Research Institute.

But there are real-world implications as well for people who are spending long periods of time in bedrest or immobilized, Ocorr said. We expect that what we find in our studies on the ISS will have implications for maintaining cardiac function in those sorts of situations.

Saturdays successful launch clears the way for four more SpaceX missions over the next month.

Next on the companys jam-packed manifest is BulgariaSat 1, Bulgarias first communications satellite, scheduled for liftoff from the Kennedy Space Center on June 15.

BulgariaSat 1s launch window June 15 opens at 2:10 p.m. EDT (1810 GMT) and extends two hours.

Koenigsmann told reporters he did not expect BulgariaSat 1s mid-June launch to be delayed after the two-day slip in the cargo missions blastoff this weekend. BulgariaSat 1, which is already being prepared for launch in a processing facility at Cape Canaveral, will launch on a previously-flown Falcon 9 booster.

SpaceX plans its fourth launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on June 25 with the second batch of 10 small new-generation satellites for Iridiums orbiting voice and data relay network.

The Intelsat 35e high-throughput communications satellite will follow no earlier than July 1 from SpaceXs Florida launch base.

The SpaceX launch teams have conducted three launches in the last 34 days, with three more planned in the next four weeks.

Ground crews, engineers and managers are learning to deal with this operation better and better every time, Koenigsmann said after Saturdays launch. The situation that we launch from both coasts is something that is somewhat new for us.

Weve had this with a little bit of separation in the past, and weve set up the teams to be able to cope with that, and have the ability to launch from both sites within a short period of time, he said.

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Is this massive airplane the future of space travel? One billionaire thinks so. – SOFREP (press release) (subscription)

Posted: at 7:45 am

By Alex Hollings 06.04.2017#Featured Email Share Tweet

The first time I ever saw a C-130 in person was as it came crashing down on a small air strip near Palm Springs, California in what was, at the time, the most brutal landing I had ever seen. I had been in the Fleet Marine Force for only a few weeks, and my wife and I had only just arrived in Twentynine Palms when I got scooped up as part of a security detail for the funeral of President Gerald Ford. It was a trip I wasnt able to warn her I was being taken on, and that would leave my new wife alone throughout New Years in a state she had never even visited before.

Despite the concerns I had about my wife not knowing where I was (I didnt have a cell phone at the time because I was poor and it was a long time ago), all of my trepidation vanished as I watched the biggest airplane I thought Id ever seen belly flop onto the tarmac. Id find out later that it was full of military personnel from various branches coming in for the funeral, and what I thought was a crash was actually Marine pilots making sure their passengers knew how tough Marines and their birds can be but even that early revelation into our relationship with other services was drowned out in my mind by the sheer scale of the aircraft. With its 133-foot wingspan, the C-130 is a big, bad plane, deserving of every bit of my awe, and its because of my memories of that flight line detail all those years ago that Im able to grasp the scale of a new aircraft that was unveiled on Wednesday, the Stratolaunch.

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Filed Under: Featured, North America News, World News Tagged With: aircraft, C-130, Headline, Launch, orbit, Paul Allen, space, SpaceX, Stratolaunch

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Alex Hollings Alex Hollings served as an active duty Marine for six and a half years before being medically retired. A college rugby player, Marine Corps football player, and avid shooter, he has competed in multiple mixed martial arts tournaments, raced exotic cars across the country and wrestled alligators in pursuit of a story to tell. His novel, "A Secondhand Hero" is currently seeking publication.

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Approaching the World of Collaboration Singularity – CommsTrader

Posted: at 7:44 am

Originally a concept that was conceived by David Tucker, and Richard Platt on a napkin in 1993, the first IP PBX in the world changed the IP network platform. Soon, convergence emerged as a crucial trend, as connecting people through real-time voice became essential for many businesses. As convergence became more popular, companies like Cisco responded accordingly, integrating voicemail, call centre solutions, IM, conferencing, video, and more into a singular platform for enterprise communication.

One of the key elements of Ciscos success has been the use of a teeming system of collaboration solutions and developers. Rich APIs for call management, automation, interoperability, and compliance mean in-house developers and ISVs can mainline business intelligence straight to the communications infrastructure, connecting the IoT, processes, systems, and people.

During its most recent attempt to bring the business world into its network, Cisco Spark has taken the IP collaboration stack out of the server and into the cloud, bringing together consistent chat, WebEx video conferencing, screen sharing, HD video and voice, and a range of unique hardware endpoints into a unique user experience. Cisco Sparks end-to-end encryption solution blurs the lines between WAN and LAN with UC infrastructure interoperability, adaptive bandwidth usage, and reliability-at-scale solutions.

Perhaps two of the most innovative solutions for developers and end-users have been the launch of the Cisco Spark video SDK, and the Cisco Spark Board room-conferencing system. Bringing in fantastic reviews in the world of business equipment, Ciscos Spark Board has changed the environment for many enterprises, as a hugely capable solution for UC.

Using the Cisco Spark Board, customers can connect to the Spark cloud effortless by simply plugging into their network. They then have access to the complete enterprise conference room, with stunning touchscreen collaboration and video conferencing that connects seamlessly to both PC and mobile devices.

Additionally, the Cisco SparkVideo SDK complements the Cisco Spark ability to offer omnipresent video collaboration, giving developers more power to embed their Spark collaboration needs into existing applications. The Spark SDK currently supports Swift/Ios browser apps through WebRTC and JavaScript, but Android will follow soon. The system offers self-contained widgets and frameworks that let coders transform mobile apps and web pages into high-performance, secure tools for collaboration.

When you combine Ciscos existing messaging APIs to Spark to these new solutions, business IM can begin to encounter all the possibilities of chatbots that can be linked to automation and IT systems, delivering a fully pervasive cloud collaboration solution for any agile enterprise.

In a world thats increasingly focused on bringing all of its solutions for unified communications into the same space, Ciscos latest developments, including the acquisition of the MindMeld AI company, shows its devotion to collaboration singularity. Although there are few details on what the future might look like for Cisco, the term cognitive collaboration has been mentioned. Its thrilling to think about convergence, integration, and networks will continue to transform communications in businesses all over again.

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Class 1A all-state baseball, softball: Ascension Catholic, Catholic-Pointe Coupee, False River make their mark on teams – The Advocate

Posted: at 7:40 am

Playing on a team that wins a state title can help a player attain postseason honors. No titles in either Class 1A or Division IV proved to be no problem for players from Ascension Catholic, Catholic-Pointe Coupee and False River Academy.

The three metro area schools placed players on the Louisiana Sports Writers Associations Class 1A All-State baseball and softball teams.

Ascension Catholic, a Division IV semifinalist in baseball and a quarterfinalist in softball, put four players on the LSWA squads. Division IV Catholic-PC has two players on the softball squad, while FRA has one softball player

LaSalles Keeley Parham and Ascension Episcopals Jeffrey Elkins lead the 1A squads. Parham was voted the Outstanding Player for softball after hitting .500 with 41 RBIs. She also had a 10-4 mark in the circle for the 1A champions. Elkins, a University of Louisiana at Lafayette signee, led AES to the Division IV title with a .626 batting average with 11 home runs and was voted the Outstanding Player for baseball.

LaSalles Michael Duke (baseball) and Derek White (softball) received the Coach of the Year honors after leading their teams to 1A titles.

Ascension Catholic senior baseball standouts who are also LSU-Eunice signees, Landon Clifton (10-4, 1.95) and Nick Bellina (.420, 39 RBIs), are part of the LSWA baseball squad. The Bulldogs Ceily Grisaffe (.417, 19 RBIs) and Isabelle Abadie (.373, 20 RBIs) made the softball squad.

Sisters Ryann and Blaire Bizette represent Catholic-PC on the softball squad. Ryann Bizette, a Northwestern State signee, was 15-7 with a 1.59 ERA, while Blaire Bizette batted .487 with 18 RBIs. False Rivers Sarah Allen (.397, nine homers, 27 RBIs) completes the list of BR area players on the squads selected by a panel of sportswriters from across the state.

BASEBALL

Pos. Player School Class Avg.

P Tyler Alexander Oberlin Sr. 10-5

P Blake Hidalgo Central Catholic Sr. 8-1

P Landon Clifton Ascension Catholic Sr. 10-4

P Sean Michael Bradley Ascension Episcopal Sr. 8-2

C Avery Reed LaSalle Jr. .520

IF Hunter Sims LaSalle So. .467

IF McCade LeBlanc Houma Christian Jr. .465

IF Kade Pousson Grand Lake Sr. .471

IF Nick Bellina Ascension Catholic Sr. .420

OF Jace Moss Cedar Creek Jr. .461

OF Caleb Seitz Covenant Christian Sr. 391

OF Jeffrey Elkins Ascension Episcopal Sr. .636

UTL Kohl Milligan Oak Grove Sr. .479

UTL Gregory Leger Central Catholic Sr. .427

UTL Sam Philley Oak Grove Sr. .460

UTL Kade Delcambre Grand Lake Jr. 9-3

UTL Eli Stringer LaSalle Jr. 5-2

OUTSTANDING PLAYER:Jeffrey Elkins Ascension Episcopal

COACH OF THE YEAR:Michael Duke, LaSalle

Honorable mention:Christian McClendon, Oberlin; Blane Durio, Oberlin; Austin Champagne, Covenant Christian Academy; Drake Angeron, Central Catholic; Zach White, St. Marys; Zach Parks, Delhi Charter; Weston Swanner, St. Frederick; Brock Theriot, Houma Christian; Dylan Trahan, Houma Christian; Logan Arceneaux, Covenant Christian; Ry Clark, Oak Grove; Thomas Garber, Central Catholic; Christian Maldanado, Oberlin; Kellon McCleon, Oberlin; Jaylan Jefferson, Varnado; Derrian OCon, Montgomery; Elijah Ward, Delhi Charter; Jeff Polk, St. Frederick; Mitchel Lemoine, Central Catholic; Drew Young, Grand Lake; Bryce Fontenot, Grand Lake; Alex Guillory, Grand Lake; Mason Zeringue, Ascension Catholic; Logan Graves, Montgomery; Blade Beaubouef, LaSalle; Austin Pennington, Delhi Charter; Mason Kilgore, Convenant Christian; Mason Baker, Catholic-PC; Dylan Hurst, St. John.

SOFTBALL

Pos. Player School Class Avg.

P Carlee Carter Montgomery So. 17-9

P Taylor Snow LaSalle Fr. 16-2

P Mary Terrel Cedar Creek Sr. 17-8

P Ryann Bizette Catholic-PC Sr. 15-7

C Blaire Bizette Catholic-PC 8th .487

IF Maria Bienvenu St. Marys Fr. .404

IF Carlee Newton Oak Grove So. .351

IF Isabelle Abadie Ascension Catholic .373

IF Hallie Autin Central Catholic Sr. .545

OF Ali Long LaSalle Jr. .472

OF Katelin Cooper Cedar Creek Jr. .440

OF Jayden Stephenson Oak Grove Sr. .425

UTL Keely Parham LaSalle Jr. .500

UTL Sarah Allen False River Jr. .397

UTL Anna Larr Roberson Cedar Creek So. .418

UTL Lexi DeBarge South Cameron Sr. 15-6

UTL Ceily Grisaffe Ascension Catholic So. .417

OUTSTANDING PLAYER: Keeley Parkham, LaSalle

COACH OF THE YEAR: DEREK WHITE,LaSalle

Honorable mention: Kelsie Travis, Oak Grove; Katlynn Beebe, Northwood-Lena; Alison Fontenot, Oberlin; Kelsey Ardoin, Oberlin; Amber Sullivan, Oak Grove; Faith Pierce, Houma Christian; Jaycee Carter, Montgomery; Ragan Hale, St. Marys; Kinsley Long, LaSalle; Abbie Clendening, East Beauregard; Taylor Abshire, Vermilion Catholic; Ainsley Mallet, Vermilion Catholic; Harley Stoufflet, Covenant Christian Academy.

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Class 1A all-state baseball, softball: Ascension Catholic, Catholic-Pointe Coupee, False River make their mark on teams - The Advocate

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What 3D-printed rocket engines mean for space exploration – MyGaming

Posted: at 7:39 am

The rocket that blasted into space from New Zealand on May 25 was special. Not only was it the first to launch from a private site, it was also the first to be powered by an engine made almost entirely using 3D printing.

This might not make it the first 3D-printed rocket in space that some headlines described it as, but it does highlight how seriously this manufacturing technique is being taken by the space industry.

Members of the team behind the Electron rocket at US company RocketLab say the engine was printed in 24 hours and provides efficiency and performance benefits over other systems.

Theres not yet much information out there regarding the exact details of the 3D-printed components. But its likely many of them have been designed to minimise weight while maintaining their structural performance, while other components may have been optimised to provide efficient fluid flow.

These advantages reducing weight and the potential for complex new designs are a large part of why 3D printing is expected to find some of its most significant applications in space exploration, with dramatic effect.

One thing the set of technologies known as additive manufacturing or 3D printing does really well is to produce highly complicated shapes. For example, lattice structures produced in exactly the right way so that they weigh less but are just as strong as similar solid components.

This creates the opportunity to produce optimised, lightweight parts that were previously impossible to manufacture economically or efficiently with more traditional techniques.

Boeings microlattice is an example of taking this to the extreme, supposedly producing mechanically sound structures that are 99.9% air. Not all 3D printing processes can achieve this, but even weight savings of a few percent in aircraft and spacecraft can lead to major benefits through the use of less fuel.

3D printing tends to work best for the production of relatively small, intricate parts rather than large, simple structures, where the higher material and processing costs would outweigh any advantage.

For example, a redesigned nozzle can enhance fuel mixing within an engine, leading to better efficiency. Increasing the surface area of a heat shield by using a patterned rather than a flat surface can mean heat is transferred away more efficiently, reducing the chances of overheating.

The techniques can also reduce the amount of material wasted in manufacturing, important because space components tend to be made from highly expensive and often rare materials. 3D printing can also produce whole systems in one go rather than from lots of assembled parts.

For example, NASA used it to reduce the components in one of its rocket injectors from 115 to just two. Plus, 3D printers can easily make small numbers of a part as the space industry often needs without first creating expensive manufacturing tools.

3D printers are also likely to find a use in space itself, where its difficult to keep large numbers of spare parts and hard to send out for replacements when youre thousands of kilometres from Earth. Theres now a 3D printer on the International Space Station so, if something breaks, engineers can send up a design for a replacement and the astronauts can print it out.

The current printer only deals with plastic so its more likely to be used for making tools or one-off replacements for low-performance parts such as door handles.

But once 3D printers can more easily use other materials, were likely to see an increase in their uses. One day, people in space could produce their own food items and even biological materials. Recycling facilities could also enable broken parts to be reused to make the replacements.

Looking even further ahead, 3D printers could prove useful in building colonies. Places like the moon dont have much in the way of traditional building materials, but the European Space Agency has proven solar energy can power the production of bricks of lunar dust, which would be a good start.

Researchers are now looking at how to use 3D printing to take this idea further and develop complete printed buildings on the moon.

To make many of these applications a reality, well need to research more advanced materials and processes that can manufacture components to withstand the extremely harsh conditions of space.

Engineers also need to work on developing optimised designs and find ways of testing 3D printed parts to prove theyre safe. And then theres the irritating issue of gravity, or rather the lack of it.

Many current processes use powders or liquids as their raw materials so were likely to need some clever tricks in order to make these function safely in a low or microgravity environment.

Some of these barriers may even require entirely new materials and techniques. But as research goes on, 3D printing is likely to be used more and more in space, even if a fully printed space vehicle isnt going to launch any time soon. The sky is no longer the limit.

Candice Majewski, Lecturer, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Sheffield

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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