Daily Archives: July 4, 2017

Getting Along on Purpose: Berkeley CoHousing Neighbors Share their Wisdom – kpfa 94.1fm

Posted: July 4, 2017 at 8:34 am


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Getting Along on Purpose: Berkeley CoHousing Neighbors Share their Wisdom
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Betsy and Lloyd share tips and skills gained from years of living in and studying intentional communities, to help you imagine how to get along on purpose with others who value the safety and richness that comes from healthy relationship with the ...

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Community Through Culture: The Black Arts Festival shares the African American experience with all – REVUE

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A July celebration of African American art and culture in Kalamazoo's LaCrone Park is part of an ongoing mission to expose West Michigan residents to a culture rich in diversity.

The 31st annual Kalamazoo Black Arts Festival kicks off on July 13 and continues through July 16 at LaCrone Park in the citys Northside neighborhood. Yolonda Lavender, executive director of the Black Arts & Cultural Center, said the festival is the only one of its kind in West Michigan.

Theres no other Kalamazoo festival that reflects black arts and culture and the African American experience, Lavender said. We have a responsibility to make sure that the citizens of Kalamazoo have this exposure.

The festivals opening day, Youth Day, will take place at Bible Baptist Church and feature food and activities from other cultures. Lavender said members of a youth committee each year decide on a theme and develop ways to highlight that theme. This year its Unity Through Culture, with events focusing on the African American and Hispanic communities.

Different cultures will be represented at different stations with activities like coloring or arts and crafts, Lavender said. This theme was intentionally chosen because of where we are as a nation. Theres so much division, especially in terms of race relations.

Sometimes people think that only black people are allowed to come and experience the festival. We want to expose this to diverse groups in the community. We want people to realize that no matter who they are, they can benefit from all cultures.

Opening day will be capped with a performance of the play In the Blood, featuring members of the BACCs Face Off Theatre Company. The play, a 2000 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, tells the story of Hester La Negrita she has five children, each from different and notably absent fathers. The family of six live in destitute poverty beneath a bridge, where Hester tries to learn how to read and goes hungry so that her children can eat.

Hester seizes the opportunity to receive help from her childrens fathers, with hopes that one may help them. The play moves to other characters stories, such as a doctor and her friend, who is involved with Hesters predicament.

Lavender said In the Blood will be staged at the Epic Theatre in downtown Kalamazoo and will have a second performance on July 14. Face Off formed as a vehicle for showcasing black actors and issues of importance to the African American community. Without it, Lavender said people would not have opportunities to be exposed to different types of theater.

Our theater company pushes the envelope with the productions they choose, she said. Every production is followed by a talk back.

However, these talk backs were going on well before the Face Off launch. In 1973, the BACC began theater showings designed to get the conversation started about issues of race and equality. One of the earliest showings dealt with the Watts riots.

We are intentional about the film viewing we choose and the opportunities to talk about it after, Lavender said. There arent too many other spaces where you can come and talk about stuff thats hard to talk about. At the BACC youre in a safe place no matter color you are or how you identify.

Its therapeutic for everybody. Theres no progress or upward movement if we dont talk.

The selection of LaCrone as the backdrop for the bulk of the festival was an intentional move on the part of festival organizers to bring the event geographically closer to the people served by the BACC. Up until 2014, the event had been held in Bronson Park, and Lavender said during the early 1990s it was the largest African American festival outside of Chicago.

Were right in a neighborhood where people can be on their lawns, walk or ride their bike. We can engage directly with the community, Lavender said.

More than 1,500 people are expected to attend the festival, which will feature dance and music performances, childrens activities, African American clothing and artwork for sale, and barbecue and soul food.

The goal for the BACC is to showcase black arts and culture, and the festival is the primary way for us to do that, Lavender said. If we were not to exist, there would be a tremendous void.

Black Arts Festival Kalamazoo July 13-16, free blackartskalamazoo.org, (269) 349-1035

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Inside the startup that wants to mine asteroids and transform space travel forever – Wired.co.uk

Posted: at 8:33 am

On May 25, 2008, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter satellite transmitted a grainy image back to Earth. It showed two white dots - the Phoenix Mars lander and its parachute - descending against the backdrop of the planet's vast Heimdal impact crater. Chris Lewicki, the Phoenix mission's manager, hadn't seen the lander since its launch on August 3, 2007, on board the Delta II rocket that carried it into space. The Phoenix landed 20km from the huge crater, kick-starting its search for microbial-friendly habitats on Mars.

For Nasa, this was the beginning of another successful mission, but to Lewicki, things began to feel repetitive. He had first become obsessed with space at the age of 11, when he saw images of Nasa's Voyager mission, the space probe that captured images of the Solar System's outer planets. He studied Aerospace Engineering at the University of Arizona and, in 1999, joined Nasa, where he rose through the ranks. In 2003, at the age of 29, he oversaw the landing of the Spirit and the Opportunity Mars Rovers.

Those missions were the fulfilment of his childhood dream. Now, with the Phoenix - his third mission to Mars - he began to feel restless. "A lot of my friends were working on the next big robot project, Curiosity," he says. "But that felt like the easy thing to do." So he started casting around for a new job.

That's when he received a call from an old friend, Peter Diamandis, a man best known for creating the XPRIZE Foundation, a $10 million (7.7m) award for the development of the first reusable space rocket. Lewicki had met him at an international astronomy organisation called Students for the Exploration and Development of Space, set up by Diamandis in 1980 to promote interest in space exploration. Lewicki had built its website, helped set up its offices and even written letters to Congress. "We'd been in and out of each other's spheres since then," he explains.

During that phone call, Diamandis told Lewicki about his new startup. It had an ambitious goal: to mine asteroids for their natural resources. Diamandis was looking for a CEO. Was he interested? "I just told him he was fucking crazy," says Lewicki.

In the days after that conversation, however, the more he thought about it, the less crazy Diamandis's project seemed to be.

John Keatley

For one, the concept of asteroid mining made sense - in theory. There are more than a million asteroids orbiting our Sun, ranging from a few centimetres to hundreds of kilometres in diameter. Most are lumps of inert rock and dirt. Some, however, are ancient proto-planetary cores stripped of their outer layers during the violent tumult of our Solar System's youth. These are made of pure metal, usually nickel, iron and platinum. "Having an abundant source of platinum group metals from space can transform the way our world works," Lewicki says. "Much as we transformed our relationship with metals when we figured out how to extract aluminium from the Earth's crust."

Furthermore, Lewicki had worked on Nasa's Near Shoemaker, the first space mission to touch down on an asteroid, the Eros, so he had first-hand knowledge of the procedure. "We've sent people and robots to the Moon so it's a place that we understand and feel close to," he says, "But there are also 15,000 near-Earth asteroids which have orbits that come close to us. In the past 20 years, we've found about 5,000 of those that, from an engineering standpoint, are easier to get to than landing on the Moon."

And, of course, Peter Diamandis's ideas had paid off before, as one of the pioneers behind such companies as Blue Origin, Scaled Composites and Elon Musk's SpaceX. "I had been at Nasa for ten years," Lewicki says, "and began to realise there was more I could do to move space exploration forward in the private sector."

So when Lewicki became CEO of Planetary Resources - the world's first asteroid-mining startup - in 2009, he was no longer of the opinion that this was a pipe dream. He was just surprised no one had thought about it before.

John Keatley

At 22:22.00 on October 28, 2014, Chris Lewicki stood in the observation bay at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island, Virginia, to watch the launch of the first test spacecraft built by Planetary Resources.

Weighing just 4kg, the Arkyd-3 only had prototype communications and control systems, but no sensors. It was but a tiny piece among a 2,300kg payload of supplies for the International Space Station (ISS) and would place Planetary Resources among that rarefied subset of startups that have actually sent a satellite into space.

At exactly 22:22.38, the gently billowing steam of condensing fuel surrounding the Antares 130 launch vehicle erupted in a burst of fierce yellow light and dark smoke. Half a second later the launch tower fell away and, perched atop a column of crackling white fire, the 300-tonne rocket rose up into the night.

Fifteen seconds after the launch and scarcely 60 metres above the Atlantic Ocean, however, the main engine exploded. As quickly as it rose, and with twice the pyrotechnics, the rocket plummeted to Earth, taking Planetary Resource's first satellite with it.

"As far as fireworks go it was beautiful," Lewicki recalls. "As far as getting a spacecraft into space, not that good." The loss of Arkyd-3, Lewicki claims, while disappointing, really wasn't that big of a setback. "Part of our philosophy is that the satellite should be somewhat disposable."

Within a few weeks after Arkyd-3's fiery demise, Planetary Resources were able to assemble its replacement and, a few months later, attach it to a follow-up ride to the space station.

John Keatley

This decision to favour multiple "good enough" systems over expensive ones is a result of Lewicki's frustrations at Nasa.

An attachment to already proven technology lead to the Phoenix lander launching with an obsolete 20 year-old computer chip.

"The standard practice has been that a spacecraft has one computer, which does everything, and if something goes wrong, you fall out of the sky," Lewicki says. "This breeds a philosophy that failure's not an option, so success gets really expensive and extremely time consuming."

Planetary Resources' next batch of satellites, the Arkyd-6, will distribute tasks among 17 smaller computers per satellite, so if one fails, it doesn't take the others down. This approach will also be applied to its first prospector spacecraft,the Arkyd-200, which it expects to launch in 2025. "We often over-predict what will happen in a year's time, but we almost always under-predict what will happen in ten years," he says.

The biggest challenge Planetary Resources faces to launch a space mining industry, Lewicki argues, is not technical, but political. In November 2015, the US Congress signed a raft of legislation called the Space Act that guarantees the property rights of private companies over the resources they mine in space. When the Space Act was passed, Lewicki was ecstatic.

Internationally, however, the reaction was much less positive. (The only exception was Luxembourg, which passed similar legislation last year). During the 55th session of the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space in April 2016, various member states voiced opposition to the US law.

"We're hardwired to think in terms of scarcity and competition," Lewicki says. "But in space these limits don't apply. Exploiting them gives us the opportunity to think about how much more there is to develop and share. There are resources there beyond our comprehension."

Lewicki feels that there's reason for optimism. This February, Etienne Schneider, the deputy prime minister of The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, announced plans to invest 171 million into space resource startups, 21 million of which went to Planetary Resources. This comes in addition to more than 18 million in publicly announced prior investments from, among others, Google founder Larry Page and chairman Eric Schmidt, alongside Virgin CEO and founder Richard Branson. "The change has been profound," he says. When we started, if you brought up asteroid mining, you'd get sniggers. But now people are beginning to realise that this is available in our lifetime."

John Keatley

The home of Planetary Resources is a nondescript building located in an industrial unit just outside Redmond, Washington State. One hundred metres away is the headquarters of Elon Musk's SpaceX.

Chris Lewicki wears his thick, brown hair swept to the side and has a quick, boyish smile. He's dressed in a blue-checked shirt and jeans and has a way of condensing highly technical topics into seemingly straightforward explanations that make you feel like maybe you too could understand rocket science.

As we sit in the company's boardroom, Chris Voorhees, Planetary Resources COO and a former Nasa graduate, enters the room, hefting a large laptop-sized chunk of shiny, jagged rock.

"This is around 90 per cent refinery-grade iron, mixed with cobalt and nickel," Voorhees says. "You melt it, and you get steel."

What he's holding is a meteorite, one of the tens of thousands of shattered asteroid fragments that come hurtling down to Earth, bringing clues about the riches beyond our atmosphere.

"There's more platinum in this meteorite, by percentage, than the most productive mines in the world," Voorhees continues. "Miners on Earth have to expend enormous energy and create huge amounts of waste to extract and refine this much metal. But this came from something several kilometres across and that was the same purity of metal all the way through."

Through observational data collected by Nasa and other space agencies, Planetary Resources has been building a shortlist of the asteroids that are large enough to explore, small enough to easily land on and take off from and near enough in orbit from Earth to allow for transit times of less than a year or two.

There is, however, only so much you can tell about an asteroid from so far away in Earth orbit. In 2010, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's unmanned spacecraft, Hayabusa, returned a few milligrams of grains from the surface of the Itokawa asteroid. A follow-up mission is currently on route to the asteroid Ryugu, with arrival scheduled for July 2018.

Of most interest to Lewicki and Voorhees however, is OSIRIS-REx, a current Nasa mission, on target to meet Bennu, a 492-metre-diameter, near-Earth asteroid made of porous carbon, by 2018, and return with approximately 60g of sample material.

"All of our telescopic data currently indicates that Bennu is rich in carbon and water," explains the project's principal investigator, University of Arizona professor Dante Lauretta, who also sits on Planetary Resources' scientific advisory team. "OSIRIS-REx is a pathfinder for exploring asteroids."

To decide where to create the first space- resource extraction site, however, Planetary Resources will need to send its own spacecraft out into the Solar System for a closer look.

Visible through the window of the boardroom are two solar-panel-plated cereal-box-sized units sitting on a clean room table. These are the Arkyd-6 satellites, the company's first space prospectors that will be instrumented with a mid-wavelength infrared sensor, and placed into low-Earth orbit later this year on one of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rockets.

In addition to infrared sensors, these miniature space telescopes will also carry hyper-spectral imaging sensors capable of analysing light from 40 points across the light spectrum. "By analysing the particular spectral fingerprint the reflected light that an object leaves on these two sensors, we can get a good idea of what it is made of," explains Lewicki.

Once they do know, Planetary Resources will then send small spacecrafts to inspect potential asteroid targets up close. A mock-up of one, the Arkyd-200, sits in the corner of the boardroom. It possesses a doughnut-shaped propellant tank no more than a metre wide. Small enough for several of the spacecrafts to hitch a ride into space orbit alongside a larger main payload, they are designed to move through low gravity under their own propulsion to reach the intended target asteroid.

John Keatley

In July 2015, around 90 million tonnes of solid platinum hurtled within 2.4 million kilometres of Earth - a distance 30 times closer than Venus. That 452 metre-long asteroid UW-158 is just one of many that contain vast resources of platinum-group metals. These are the sorts of precious metals that Lewicki expects to find and mine. His focus, however, remains on discovering the most precious substance of all: water.

Water, while abundant on Earth, is extremely rare in space. And that makes it very valuable. "We currently pay $50 million a tonne just to get it out of Earth's gravity and up to the ISS," Lewicki says. "But there are plenty of asteroids that have it stored under very low gravity already." This water won't be used solely for life support, but also as rocket fuel. "We can convert it into liquid oxygen and hydrogen," Lewicki says. "These are the same ingredients that fuelled all 135 Nasa space-shuttle missions."

To understand the difference the ability to refuel in space could make, consider that spacecraft currently need around ten tonnes of fuel for every tonne of mass that you want to transport.

Current launch systems partially mitigate this through multi-stage design, jettisoning the weight of spent fuel tanks to fall back down into the ocean part way through. Still, once you take into account other factors, such as air resistance, just to escape the Earth's gravity you're looking at a rocket that's 90 per cent pure propellant. For every tonne of additional propellant required for an onward Martian transfer, you would have needed a further ten just to carry that up from the Earth's surface.

Now imagine you didn't have to carry that fuel up with you. Imagine, orbiting around the edges of Earth's gravity well, the Solar System's first space service-station, supplied by asteroids. Somewhere to refuel your engines and refill your water tanks, before setting off on the next mission stage.

"It blows the mind how much this changes things," Lewicki says. "If you could take the amount of energy you had in that rocket to get out to space and refill it again, you could get to Pluto."

Exactly how this water will be extracted is still a work in progress. An early concept design involves a robotic spacecraft that will fully enclose the asteroid, heat the water, then allow it to condense against the outer walls of this container, before releasing the asteroid again and transporting the water to a refuelling station in Earth orbit.

The key resources needed for this are already provided by the environment of space, Voorhees points out. "You have energy from the Sun to heat the water, which will volatilise easily in a vacuum," he says. "Then deep space, which is cold in a way we can't even relate to, will help condense it back again."

John Keatley

And this, for Lewicki, is how humanity will move from throwing robotic probes out over the top of Earth's gravity well for a peek at the Solar System, to climbing up and exploring it ourselves.

"We're already seeing this, as SpaceX and Blue Origin have been getting better at the practice of returning a used rocket," he says. "Asteroids are the most accessible form of resources that will allow us to extend this further into space, to stretch our legs, to set up infrastructure on the way to Mars, and then on Mars itself. Infrastructure that doesn't require 100 per cent of its resupply from Earth. This is how colonisation takes off."

That means not only having the capacity to refuel in space, but actually build up there, too. It's in this environment, rather than on Earth, where those orbiting lumps of pure metal will have the greatest role to play.

"At the moment, most of the engineering and design that goes into a spacecraft is for the first nine minutes of its life," Lewicki says. "It's got to fit into the tiny capsule in the top of its launch vehicle; it has to survive the vibration and acceleration of the rocket ride; and, even when it's just sitting here in our offices, it's got to be able to hold its own weight in Earth's gravity. But if I build it in space, I don't have to care about any of that stuff."

Planetary Resources have already been practising. In the hallway outside their offices Lewicki opens a large padded box and pulls out a palm-sized object. "Don't drop this," he says, handing me a surprisingly heavy moonlander-like complex of delicate struts.

It may be small and merely decorative in function, but this is the first object to be 3D-printed directly from the powder of a pulverised asteroid chunk.

"Now imagine what this could look like printed in space," Lewicki says. "You can make things infinitely large - or light, dainty structures that never have to survive the very violent passage out of the Earth's gravity. This is going to create things that look like something from science fiction, because they have an entirely different set of constraints than engineers have today."

Lewicki continues. "On Earth, to add the 100th storey to a skyscraper you have to take into account how the 99 stories below are going to support it. Space is different. You can just add another level, and another, and another, and keep doing that forever. There's no limit."

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Ascension Islanders left stranded after RAF halts flights – BBC News – BBC News

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Ascension Islanders left stranded after RAF halts flights - BBC News
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Ascension Island, home to around 800 people, is even more cut off than it used to be after weekly flights linking the island to the UK were stopped - due to a ...

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Integrating disciplines ‘key to dealing with digital revolution’ – Times Higher Education (THE)

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Universities must embrace crossdisciplinary education and research in order to deal with the megatrends of the fourth industrial revolution, according to the president of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

Speaking at theTimesHigherEducationResearch Excellence Summit in Tacihung, Taiwan, Sung-Chul Shin said that these challenges were particularly pressing in South Korea, which he described as being at a stall point where it can either continue developing as an advanced nation or get stuck with a stagnant economy.

The fourth industrial revolution, also known as the digital revolution, is predicted to change the way we live, work and relate to each other. It represents the integration of technology between the physical, digital and biological worlds.

Professor Shin said that there are three megatrends that will drive the fourth industrial revolution: hyperconnectivity, which is the integration of the physical and digital fields; superintelligence, which will draw on artificial intelligence and computer science; and the convergence of science and technology.

Universities should play a central role in developing the fourth industrial revolution, he said.

In meeting the challenges posed by the digital revolution, universities will need to bring research across various disciplines together, in order to achieve better results than when professors work in a single specialism, Professor Shin said. Research involving the areas of artificial intelligence, brain research, data science and computer science will be key, he added.

International collaboration was also vital, he continued, pointing out that Korea only invests a fraction of its research budget in brain science research when comparedwith the US and Japan. We cannot compete so we have to collaborate, Professor Shin said.

Concerning all megatrends, university reform is urgent, he added.

Professor Shin argued that students will need an education in the humanities and social sciences in addition to strong training in basic science and engineering, in order to improve their creative talents.

Team-based learning and the flipped classroom is very important to fostering these skills in the next generation, he told the conference.

South Koreas major research and development policies for the future include expanding investment and improving the efficiency of research by streamlining the planning, management and evaluation of research projects, the conference heard. The government is also developing a series of strategic research priorities.

As the Korean government adopts the fourth industrial revolution, KAIST will play a pivotal role, Professor Shin said.Korea is near a stall point, it is either destined to solidify its place as an advanced nation or be caught in the middle-income trap with a stagnant economy.

holly.else@timeshighereducation.com

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Travel: Cape Canaveral offers strange mix of space exploration and natural beauty – The Delaware County Daily Times

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Elon Musk brings new meaning to the word irrepressible.

In early March, the SpaceX founder and CEO stunned the spaceflight community by announcing the first joy ride into space. In 2018 he plans to launch one of his rockets to transport not astronauts, but two wealthy private citizens around the moon. The pair have already put down a significant deposit for the 300,000 mile trip that will take a week. This will be the first private company to take civilians beyond lower Earth orbit.

When Musk dreamed up the idea for his commercial space exploration company 15 years ago his core principle was to recycle reusable rockets, a strategy that would dramatically reduce the cost of space travel and make it more available for commercial audiences.

Musks dream turned into reality with a launch of a flight-proven rocket in late March. He did it again on June 23 with the blast off of a two-stage, 23-story tall Falcon 9 rocket from Complex 39a at NASAs Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral. The booster rocket transported an 8,000 pound satellite to orbit where it will provide will provide television and data-communications services to Bulgaria, the Balkans and other parts of Europe.

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About eight minutes later the first stage rocket touched down intact with fold out legs on the drone ship Of Course I Still Love You stationed 200 miles off the coast of Cape Canaveral. SpaceX now has 12 booster landings under its belt. The Falcon 9 rocket bolstered Musks mission to slash the cost of spaceflight through the use of reusable rockets and hardware. The 45-year old billionaire believes SpaceX can revolutionize travel in the solar system and take humans to establish a city on Mars.

If youre traveling to Florida this summer, consider a side trip to Cape Canaveral on the central coast. SpaceX is expected to launch five more rockets during July and August, while United Launch Alliance, a partnership between Boeing and Lockheed Martin, is due to launch another two.

Watching a rocket launch from a few miles away provides a unique perspective on the technology and power required to send spacecraft into Earths orbit. There is nothing quite like it. With more launches happening now than ever before, now is the time to witness the wondrous show.

The closest public launch viewing is from Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Special launch viewing areas are made available to visitors. Get there early. Traffic can be hectic on launch days. Arrive when the gates open if youre planning to see a morning launch. Give yourself plenty of time to get to your destination and expect long lines at the gate and in parking areas. For details on purchasing tickets check http://www.kennedyspacecenter.com.

There are also prime viewing areas outside of the complex including the shores of the Indian River, the Exploration Tower, the Canaveral National Seashore, the Cocoa Beach Pier or any of the beaches south of Port Canaveral. When planning to visit a rocket launch, its important to remember that dates are rarely finalized until a few weeks to a few months before each launch. And planned launches can be scrubbed or delayed due to weather or technical issues, even down to seconds before launch. So its important to make flexible plans and prepare to stay for a few days if youre determined to catch the launch despite delays.

Check Space Flight Now (www.spaceflightnow.com/launch-schedule) for up-to-date information, and keep an eye on NASA, SpaceX and ULA Twitter feeds for additional updates. Another good resource is the local newspaper, Florida Today, (www.floridatoday.com) that streams rocket launches starting 30 minutes before the lift off.

Kennedy Space Center is home to the coolest space attractions on the planet. When you enter the gates, head over to the Rocket Garden that features eight authentic rockets from the past, including a Mercury-Atlas rocket similar to the one used to launch John Glenn into space in 1962. Dont miss the guided bus tour. You will experience parts of the space program not otherwise open to the public. You will travel past the massive Vehicle Assembly Building (the worlds largest building) where NASA is currently constructing a rocket that will eventually take astronauts to Mars.

At the $100 million Space Shuttle Atlantis exhibit, a giant screen shows an IMAX 3D film on the origin and history of the space shuttle program that went to space and back 33 times. The video is accompanied by a soaring soundtrack. One of the most complicated and sophisticated pieces of equipment ever built, the shuttle was launched like a rocket, flew in orbit like a spacecraft, and landed on a runway like a glider.

When the video is over, the wall behind the front screen opens and you come face-to-face with Atlantis herself. A magical touch. Visitors experience a display as only spacewalking astronauts have seen her before the Atlantis is rotated 43.21 degrees with payload doors open and its robotic arm extended, as if it had just undocked from the International Space Station (ISS).

There are more than 60 interactive exhibits and high-tech simulators that bring to life the complex systems and components behind this incredible feat of engineering. The shuttle fleet was the main method of transporting and building the ISS and other space wonders including the legendary Hubble Telescope. Interactive kiosks explain each section of the spacecraft. Kids and adults alike rush to climb into replicas of the pilots seat where youre at the yoke ready to land Atlantis.

Virtually within the shadow of the historic rocket towers, prehistoric sea turtles carry out their renewal-of-life rituals. The surrounding beaches are the birthing place for hundreds of loggerhead, green and leatherback turtles that lumber ashore during the night, dig nests with their flippers and deposit 60 to 100, ping-pong ball size eggs that hatch in the late summer and early fall.

Established in 1962 and operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge provides a protected habitat for migratory birds and endangered and threatened species. Home to more than a dozen pairs of bald eagles, they perch atop high towers, trees or utility poles and build nests more than six feet in diameter. There are more than 15 varieties of endangered wildlife near the Kennedy Space Center, including West Indian manatees that swim in the surrounding waterways.

Also near the space center is Canaveral National Seashore, created by Congress in 1975. With 24 miles of beach, it has the longest section of undeveloped beach along Floridas eastern coastline home to 1,045 species of plants and 310 species of birds. Endangered species include sea turtle, manatee, Southern bald eagle, wood stork, peregrine falcon, eastern indigo snake, and Florida scrub jay. With beaches from south of New Smyrna Beach to Titusville, Canaveral National Seashoreis one of the last of the Florida wildernesses.

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Travel: Cape Canaveral offers strange mix of space exploration and natural beauty - The Delaware County Daily Times

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Baltimore nanotech firm Pixelligent looks to raise $3.5 million in new funding – Baltimore Business Journal

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Baltimore Business Journal
Baltimore nanotech firm Pixelligent looks to raise $3.5 million in new funding
Baltimore Business Journal
Baltimore-based Pixelligent Technologies is looking to raise $3.5 million in debt funding, after closing a $10.4 million equity round late last year, according to a recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Pixelligent, which uses ...

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Baltimore nanotech firm Pixelligent looks to raise $3.5 million in new funding - Baltimore Business Journal

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NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) Moving 6.75% in Session – Stock Talker

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Shares ofNanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) is moving on volatility today6.75% or 0.0017 rom the open.TheOTC listed companysaw a recent bid of0.0269 on53399 volume.

When dealing with the equity markets, investors are often tasked with trying to find stocks that are bound for glory. Every investor dreams of finding those stocks that were overlooked but are poised to pick up momentum. New investors are often instructed to set goals before starting to invest. Creating attainable, realistic goals can be a good starting point before digging into the investment trenches. After setting up goals considering financial status, objectives, timeframes and risk appetite, the next step may involve creating an actionable plan. Once the plan is in place, it may be extremely important to routinely monitor the performance of the portfolio. There are often many well crafted investment plans that for whatever reason dont seem to be working out properly. Being able to evaluate and adjust the plan based on market activity may end up being the difference between a winning or losing portfolio. Being able to adapt to the fast paced and often times tumultuous market landscape can be a gigantic benefit for long-term portfolio health.

Deep diving into thetechnical levels forNanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK), we note that the equitycurrently has a 14-day Commodity Channel Index (CCI) of -18.73. Active investors may choose to use this technical indicator as a stock evaluation tool. Used as a coincident indicator, the CCI reading above +100 would reflect strong price action which may signal an uptrend. On the flip side, a reading below -100 may signal a downtrend reflecting weak price action. Using the CCI as a leading indicator, technical analysts may use a +100 reading as an overbought signal and a -100 reading as an oversold indicator, suggesting a trend reversal.

NanoTech Entertainment Incs Williams Percent Range or 14 day Williams %R currently sits at -31.00. The Williams %R oscillates in a range from 0 to -100. A reading between 0 and -20 would point to an overbought situation. A reading from -80 to -100 would signal an oversold situation. The Williams %R was developed by Larry Williams. This is a momentum indicator that is the inverse of the Fast Stochastic Oscillator.

Currently, the 14-day ADX for NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) is sitting at 32.31. Generally speaking, an ADX value from 0-25 would indicate an absent or weak trend. A value of 25-50 would support a strong trend. A value of 50-75 would identify a very strong trend, and a value of 75-100 would lead to an extremely strong trend. ADX is used to gauge trend strength but not trend direction. Traders often add the Plus Directional Indicator (+DI) and Minus Directional Indicator (-DI) to identify the direction of a trend.

The RSI, or Relative Strength Index, is a widely used technical momentum indicator that compares price movement over time. The RSI was created by J. Welles Wilder who was striving to measure whether or not a stock was overbought or oversold. The RSI may be useful for spotting abnormal price activity and volatility. The RSI oscillates on a scale from 0 to 100. The normal reading of a stock will fall in the range of 30 to 70. A reading over 70 would indicate that the stock is overbought, and possibly overvalued. A reading under 30 may indicate that the stock is oversold, and possibly undervalued. After a recent check, the 14-day RSIforNanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) is currently at 45.07, the 7-day stands at 53.79, and the 3-day is sitting at 74.20.

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NanoTech Entertainment Inc (NTEK) Moving 6.75% in Session - Stock Talker

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Kim Jong-un grins at brutal takedown of ‘South Korean missile’ as China expose WW3 fears – Express.co.uk

Posted: at 8:29 am

The tyrant can be seen grinning as paratroopers descend onto the site of the drill before blowing up a mocked-up south Korean missile system.

And a commentator on the state-spread video can be heard claiming the Hermit Kingdoms armed forces will be able to wipe out the daylight robbery U.S. imperialist and its subordinate [South Korea] without a trace, NK news has confirmed.

The drill, released as part of an hour-long propaganda video by the North, will serve as a challenge to the South after the Western allied nation tested a ballistic missile to stand up to Kim Jong-uns military advances.

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The nations presidential office said in a statement last week that South Korea had successfully test-fired a type of Hyunmoo-2 ballistic missile.

Defence officials believe the missile may have travelled up to 497 miles (800 kilometres) the maximum ballistic missile range allowed under a deal with the US before it hit a designated test target.

South Korean military revealed it had already tested the missile four times and said it will be ready to use after two more launches.

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1st Infantry Division of the US Army shows soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment and 2nd Battalion and 34th Armor Regiment

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The nations president, Moon Jae-in, said: I am a believer in dialogue, but I also know that dialogue is possible when we have a strong national defence.

A policy of embracing North Korea is possible when we have a defence capability that surpasses that of North Korea.

It comes as Chinas ambassador to the UN warns tensions on the Korean peninsula could spiral out of control unless both the North and the South agree to settle their conflict through negotiations.

Ambassador Liu Jieyi said: "Currently tensions are high and we certainly would like to see a de-escalation.

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US and Japanese flags are visible on the USS Carl Vinson and USS Ronald Reagan

"If tension only goes up ... then sooner or later it will get out of control and the consequences would be disastrous."

The call for peace talks between the two Koreas has been backed by both Chinese officials and South Koreas new president Moon Jae-in, turning away from the foreign policy of US President Donald Trump who has called on the world to exert maximum pressure on the Kim regime.

Calling for peace talks, the ambassador added: "We cannot afford to wait for too long without dialogue taking place."

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Kim Jong-un grins at brutal takedown of 'South Korean missile' as China expose WW3 fears - Express.co.uk

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Psychedelics Could Help Asia’s Mental Health Care, But Stigma Remains Roadblock – TheFix.com

Posted: at 8:28 am

Research has shown that some psychedelics can help treat certain mental health conditions, but stigma is stopping the drugs from doing any good for mental health care in Asia.

Despite research showing that psilocybin and MDMA can alleviate PTSD, clinical depression, substance addiction and end-of-life anxiety, the social stigma around illegal drugs is simply too strong for even researchers to look into the drugs as treatments.

"In Asia, the stigma against psychedelics is so strong that few, if any, researchers have asked for government permission to explore their therapeutic potential," says Brad Burge of MAPS, a US-based nonprofit that advocates for MDMA research in psychotherapy.

However, Forbes reports that some experts warn against what they believe is fighting fire with fire.

"There is little to no evidence that those substances in particular would be more effective than more traditional psychopharmacology, and they come with significant risk," said Brian Russman, deputy clinical director of The Cabin Chiang Mai, a Thailand drug rehab center. "As there is no money in experimental or hallucinogenic drugs and it would be fairly unpopular from a political or public standpoint, I can't see those type of drugs gaining much traction."

But places like South Korea, home to the second-highest suicide rate in the world, needs new solutions soon. China, Japan and South Korea regularly rank poorly in global wellbeing and happiness indexes.

Psilocybin has been shown to alleviate symptoms of major depression, particularly relief from cancer-related depression and existential anxiety. The drug is also being explored as a possible treatment for alcohol addiction.

Studies on MDMA suggest that it can help treat patients disturbed by severe trauma or PTSD, including military veterans and victims of sexual assault. New experimental studies are underway to examine if MDMA can improve the lives of autistic adults suffering from social anxiety.

The stigma of these drugs prevent any bold researchers in Asia from carrying out studies on a large scale, which disallows the studies from meeting clinical standards. This perpetuates these drugs public perception as illegal vices rather than legitimate treatment tools. While using narcotics to treat the mentally vulnerable is risky, advocates say that earnest efforts must be made to support mental health care in Asia.

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Psychedelics Could Help Asia's Mental Health Care, But Stigma Remains Roadblock - TheFix.com

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