Monthly Archives: July 2017

Ascension represented at BB Gun Championship – Donaldsonville Chief

Posted: July 11, 2017 at 10:23 pm

Brandie Richardson

Earlier this month, the Ascension Parish 4-H Shooting Team represented the Parish for the first time at the 52nd Daisy National BB Gun Championship Match in Rogers, Ark.

Throughout the three-day event, the seven 4-Hers were tested on their shooting education such as the different types of firearms and fire safety, along with shooting in four positions: prone, kneeling, standing and sitting.

According to Coach Jodi Daigle, the team placed 34th out of over 70 teams, not bad considering it was the team's first time making it to the championship.

"We had a good competition," he said. "They posted in the middle of the pack. It's an overall fun trip, there's a lot of good things that came out of that trip and for it to not be a moral booster, I don't see how it could not be."

Team members included James Daigle, Kinslei Scroggs, Jaxon Swanson, Andrew Poche, Aidan Cole, Grant Marquis and Katie Swanson, who are all part of the Ascension 4-H shooting sports.

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To prevent artificial intelligence from going rogue, here is what Google is doing – Financial Express

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DeepMind and Open AI propose to temper machine learning in development of AI with human mediationtrainers give feedback that is built into the motivator software in a bid to prevent the AI agent from performing an action that is possible, but isnt desirable. (Reuters)

Against the backdrop of warnings about machine superintelligence going rogue, Google is charting a two-way course to prevent this. The companys DeepMind division, in collaboration with Open AI, a research firm, has brought out a paper that talks of human-mediated machine-learning to avoid unpredictable AI behaviour when it learns on its own. Open AI and DeepMind looked at the problem posed by AI software that is guided by reinforcement learning and often doesnt do what is desired/desirable. The reinforcement method involves the AI entity figuring out a task by performing a range of actions and sticking with those that maximise a virtual reward given by another piece of software that works as a mathematical motivator based on an algorithm or a set of algorithms. But designing a mathematical motivator to preclude any action that is undesirable is quite a taskwhen DeepMind pitted two AI entities against each other in a fruit-picking game that allowed them to stun the opponent to pick more fruit for rewards, the entities got increasingly aggressive.

Similarly, Open AIs reinforcement learning agent started going around in circles in a digital boat-racing game to maximise points rather than complete the course. DeepMind and Open AI propose to temper machine learning in development of AI with human mediationtrainers give feedback that is built into the motivator software in a bid to prevent the AI agent from performing an action that is possible, but isnt desirable.

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At the same time, Google has been working on its PAIRPeople plus AI Researchproject that focuses on AI for human use rather than development of AI for AIs sake. This, however, should present a dilemmadeveloping AI for greater and deeper use for humans would mean, at some level, letting AI get smarter as well as intuitive, simulating human intelligence minus its fallibilities. But preventing it from going rogue, as the DeepMind-Open AI paper shows, would mean reining in AIat least, in the short runfrom exploring the full spectrum or intelligent and autonomous functioning.

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Local Volcanic Crater is Test Bed for Future Space Exploration – El Paso Herald-Post (press release) (registration) (blog)

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Residents in West Texas and Southern New Mexico may not be aware of a massive volcanic crater in the area, but Kilbourne Hole is no secret to geologists and NASA researchers from around the nation. The National Natural Landmark is about 30 miles west of the Franklin Mountains and is known as a maar volcano.

About 24,000 years ago, there was lava, magma that came up from deep within the Earth, and it hit shallow groundwater in the aquifer that was here, explained Jose Hurtado, Ph.D., professor of geological sciences. It was a lot wetter back then. That water turned to steam and that steam built up immense pressure, and that pressure was released in a massive explosion that produced Kilbourne Hole. The explosion also threw out pulverized material exposed in layers.

Mother Natures unique imprint in the middle of the desert is what draws Hurtado and other researchers to the massive pit for exploration and research. The location has many rare minerals remaining, including olivine glass granules.

While he usually takes his students on the venture, Hurtado recently guided a group of NASA scientists and engineers, as well as a group of journalists, on a weeklong expedition.

The group is part of theRIS4Eprogram Remote, In Situ, and Synchrotron Studies for Science and Exploration (RIS4E) and was in the area to explore different techniques for merging science and space exploration.

This team brings together a diverse group of scientists and engineers to explore how portable instruments could be used by astronauts in the future, said Jacob Bleacher, research scientist with the NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center. The end goal is for us to find the problems with using the instruments here, in an environment where we can come back and test them again. We would like to make sure that the problems dont come up on Mars or the moon when the astronauts are there.

The fieldwork had been conducted on the big island of Hawaii, but for the next couple of years, it will be at Kilbourne Hole and nearby small shield volcano Aden Crater.

This location is a very important place, Bleacher said. Analogs, or sites that are similar to what we expect to see on other planets, are a very fundamental part of these test runs for humans going somewhere else in the solar system. UTEP is ideally located near the Potrillo volcanic field, which is where Kilbourne Hole is located. This volcanic field as a whole is ideal to look at because most of the other places we are looking at exploring, like the moon and Mars, theyre very volcanic dominated So understanding processes that can be studied firsthand here is very important to us.

NASA Astronaut Barry Butch E. Wilmore, a U.S. Navy captain, knows firsthand how important research and testing are to space missions.

You have to have procedures in place, systems in place, equipment in place ready to go do those things, Wilmore said. You cant just fire that up at the last minute. Even during Apollo it was decades prior that they were doing preparations for what eventually took place on the moon in the late 60s, early 70s, and thats exactly what we are doing now: getting prepared for what could happen decades from now.

To date, Wilmore has logged 178 days in space and has completed four space walks. He completed his first flight as pilot on STS-129, the final space shuttle crew rotation flight to or from the space station; served as flight engineer aboard the International Space Station for Expedition 41 and then as commander of Expedition 42. He was on the ground for the research at Kilbourne Hole.

I think the first time I saw it, I thought about landing and we picked a good spot, just from the visual of it, Wilmore recalled about his first impression of the crater. There are so many different layers. Its very interesting to see places like this and then come in here and assess how it all got here.

According to the Bureau of Land Management, Kilbourne Hole measures 1.7 miles long by well over a mile across, and is hundreds of feet deep. Wilmore and the team used various parts of the crater for testing and simulations. The astronaut said it is important to have a diverse group that includes students.

You dont have a small group of people do great things, it takes a nation, he said. Having these students and some journalists out here its a training ground for them to do what they are passionate about. The thought of space travel has inspired us for generations and it does these young folks as well.

Six of Hurtados students assisted with the NASA project. They helped guide members and observed and aided the geology expert with his assignment of flying a drone to collect data.

I think this is a great opportunity for students to get involved in research like this, make connections and overall get inspired to be part of future exploration, Hurtado said.

It was the fourth visit to Kilbourne Hole for UTEP doctoral candidate in forensic geology Valeria Martinez, but her first time working alongside NASA scientists and an astronaut.

To see the similarities [with Mars and the moon], its what makes every scientist excited, she said. Its not just a hole, its a crater and you can see the science behind it.

While there is no question the quest was exciting, Martinez said fieldwork is critical for students.

You can read about it, you can know it theoretically, but you have to be hands-on and see it for yourself, she said. You need the field geology in order for students to understand what theyre seeing, what theyre reading, so they can connect the dots.

Professor Timothy Glotch, Ph.D., of Stony Brook University leads the RIS4E team with the assistance of Darby Dyer, Ph.D., from Mount Holyoke College. Multiple project collaborators involved come from across the nation with diverse backgrounds and strengths. The program is one of nine nodes of NASAs Solar System Exploration and Research Virtual Institute (SSERVI). Read more aboutSSERVIonline.

Author:Lauren Macias-Cervantes UTEP Communications

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Arizona Challenger Space Center to close in August after building sold, now looking for new home – ABC15 Arizona

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PEORIA, AZ - The Arizona Challenger Space Center in Peoria will close in August after its building was sold, but its operators don't plan on leaving the area.

Executive Director Beverly Swayman confirmed Tuesday that the space center will close on August 5.

The team will then have to clear the 28,000-square-foot building of its flight simulator, artifacts, and displays by September 30, a time-consuming and costly task, she said.

It is not clear who bought the building or how it will be used.

What is clear is that the space center has to find a new home.

Swayman said the space center is currently looking for a new space to move the center's exhibits, but also a space that will allow the center's programs and artifacts to grow.

"It's not just a memorial," she said. "It is a living, breathing entity."

"It isn't about a building. It's what happens inside that building," she added.

She said the space center was going to announce classes and workshops in robotics and coding soon. Those programs have been tabled because of the impending move.

The center's flight simulator alone will take three weeks to pack and move, and another two weeks to reassemble, she said, a cost estimated to be $300,000.

The cost to relocate the entire facility is estimated to be between $500,000 and $1,000,000.

"It's a formidable amount," she said. And not in their budget.

She said the former owner of the building said he would help with relocation costs, but the center will also be asking for the public's help.

The space center has been in talks with many areas, said Swayman, but has primarily spoken with representatives in Glendale, Peoria and Phoenix.

Glendale Mayor Jerry Weiersconfirmed through a spokeswoman that he has had "initial discussions" with a Board member for the space center and "is in support of them coming to Glendale." No specific sites have been identified.

Cathy Carlat, mayor of Peoria, said in a statement that she was "disheartened" about the space center's move and that she "has great respect for Challenger Centers throughout our nation, who bring hands on interest to kids in STEM subjects."

"It's unfortunate that this matter between the private properly owner and the Challenger Space Center has interrupted their mission. It is my hope that they will endeavor to carry on as an exciting space-based learning environment," the statement continued.

A ONE-OF-A-KIND MURAL

Relocating also means that the center's 360-degree mural painted by artist Robert McCall, reportedly his last before his death in 2010, will have to be left behind.

"We wish there was a way to bring the mural with us to our new location, but in consulting with preservation experts, the risk of damage would be too great to try to remove it from the existing building," Swayman said in a news release."We are hopeful that the new owners will appreciate the importance of this work and continue to make it available to the public."

The mural is valued at $500,000, but to Swayman, it is irreplaceable.

The space center,an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution, opened in 2000 and pays tribute to space exploration and the astronauts lost in the 1986 Challenger disaster.

Swayman said the space center is one of four centers that are independently funded and the only one in the state. It is not funded by a university or government program.

It was supported by the Peoria Unified School District, but that funding was pulled in 2005, according to the GlendaleStar.com, who first reported on the center's closure.

MEMBERSHIPS, SCHOOL TRIPS AND CAMPS:

The Space Center said it is working with schools who have already booked field trips to the fall. The options include rescheduling the trip once the center moves or booking an outreach program.

Memberships and complimentary passes will be extended for the timeframe it takes to relocate, according to the release.

Summer Camps, including Cosmic Kids Camp, will still go on as planned.

Stargazing Nights previously scheduled for August and September have been canceled.

EXTENDED HOURS:

The center said it will also extend its hours prior to closing on August 5. The hours will be updated weekly on its website, http://www.azchallenger.org.

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Third Try at a National Space Council – Sky & Telescope

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What is the National Space Council and what will it do for the future of space exploration? A look back through history provides some possible answers.

Vice President Mike Pence speaks inside the Vehicle Assembly Building at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Behind the podium is the Orion spacecraft flown on Exploration Flight test-1 in 2014.

NASA / Kim Shiflett

As President Donald Trump signed the order on June 30th re-activating the National Space Council, he suggested that the council would be a central hub guiding space policy. What are the prospects that, as Vice President Mike Pence recently claimed, With the guidance of the National Space Council, the United States of America will usher in a new era of space leadership that will benefit every facet of our national life? To gain a sense of the councils possible impacts, its useful to see this act in a historical context.

Its important first to understand that the National Space Council itself is just a committee of top-level administration officials. That committee, with Pence as its chair, will include the head of NASA, the Secretaries of State, Defense, Commerce, Transportation, and other cabinet departments, the Director of National Intelligence, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and, from the White House, the National Security Adviser and the Directors of Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). The council will have a full-time staff of unspecified size, headed by an Executive Secretary. It is that individual, and his or her staff associates, who will be the key players in carrying out the ambitious tasks assigned to the council. The council will also have a part-time Users Advisory Group, composed of representatives of industries and other persons involved in aeronautical and space activities.

Given the senior status of its members, and the reality that they have many other things to do besides space policy, the space council is unlikely to meet frequently. When its members do gather, they will discuss and decide on proposals reflecting the work of council staff and resulting from interagency discussions of the diverse policy issues in the space sector.

This is the third time a National Space Council has existed. The first council was created on congressional initiative as part of the 1958 Space Act and existed until President Richard Nixon abolished it in 1973. Fifteen years later, Congress recreated the council, and it was activated in 1989, in the first months of the George H.W. Bush administration. That council was de-activated in January 1993 as part of President Bill Clintons campaign pledge to reduce the size of the White House and Executive Office staff by 25%.

The space council has had some success stories along the way. In 1961 the council organized the consultations that led to President Kennedys decision to go to the Moon, and in 1962 had a major role in shaping the framework for a commercial communications satellite industry. During the Nixon administration, the council had no visible impact on post-Apollo decisions, but in 1989, council staff working with NASA crafted the Space Exploration Initiative announced by President Bush. The council also took the lead in space engagement with Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Those successes, however, were not been enough to establish a space council as an essential element of space policymaking. Eisenhower, whom the Space Act had made the council chair, did not hire a staff and never called a council meeting. President Kennedy revised the legislation to make the vice president the council chair, but after 1961 he often bypassed Vice President Johnson and the space council staff in making his space choices, preferring to depend on his science and national security advisers. After Johnson became president, he gave little attention to space issues and his vice president, Hubert Humphrey, did not make space policy a major focus of attention. By the time Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968, the council was essentially moribund.

The Nixon administration initially hoped to revitalize the space council, hiring Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders as Executive Secretary. Anders was able to carve out a useful lower-level role in post-Apollo decisions, but working through Vice President Spiro Agnew, who had no policy clout, as council chair was too much of a burden, and it was Anders among others who recommended in 1972 that the council be dissolved.

During the 1989-1993 Bush administration, as the council was re-activated, Vice President Dan Quayle took his role as chair seriously and assembled a politically astute, substantively qualified, and activist staff. The incoming Clinton administrations decision to de-activate the space council was more a case of change for changes sake than a negative judgment on the efficacy of the Council mechanism.

A concept image of SLS/Orion on the launch pad. NASA / MSFC

What does this compressed historical review suggest are the prospects for the Trump/Pence National Space Council? First of all, there is a pressing need for coherence in managing the increasing complex U.S. space enterprise. With NASA hoping to resume human travel to distant destinations, with national security dependent on space capabilities, with the space environment increasingly congested, competitive, and contested, and with a multi-faceted U.S. private space sector emerging, coordination becomes imperative. The time is ripe for a well-crafted national space strategy that takes all of these factors into account. The opportunity for the National Space Council to develop that strategy and oversee its implementation is clear.

That will happen only if the new council has the active support of President Trump and becomes a major element of Vice President Pences portfolio. Assembling a highly qualified Space Council staff is of course essential, but that staff can be effective only if it is seen as having White House political support as it attempts to influence agency behavior.

In July 6th remarks at the Kennedy Space Center, Vice President Pence quoted President Trump as saying that the United States was going to be leading in space like weve never led before.Whether this is more than rhetorical boasting is yet to be seen, but if renewed space leadership does become reality, it is likely that the revived National Space Council will be key to that achievement.

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Chicago Astronomer to Create Plan for Human Exploration of Mars – Chicago Tonight | WTTW

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Chicago Tonight | WTTW
Chicago Astronomer to Create Plan for Human Exploration of Mars
Chicago Tonight | WTTW
Using the library's unique collections of materials on domestic and international policies governing space exploration, Walkowicz will create an inclusive framework for human exploration of Mars, according to a press release from the Library of Congress.

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In Beijing, China rolls out the red carpet and a comprehensive space plan – SpaceNews

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Chinese Vice President Li Yuanchao, second from right, attends GLEX 2017. Credit: International Astronautical Federation

This articleoriginally appeared in the June 19, 2017 issue of SpaceNews magazine.

Beijing this month hosted the Global Space Exploration Conference, GLEX 2017, an occasion which China used effectively to declare its goals for space and call for further engagement with the space community.

Hosted by the International Astronautical Federation and Chinese Society of Astronautics , the event was the perfect setting, with around 1,000 participants, including heads of agencies, industry representatives, scientists and policy makers in attendance.

There were no startling new announcements from China, but together the presentations reaffirm what is a comprehensive and cohesive vision for space activities, which have both clear direction and apparent backing at the highest levels of policy making, and display growing confidence and capabilities.

Robotic and human roadmap

Chinas robotic exploration roadmap features the nations first independent interplanetary mission, to Mars in 2020, followed by near-Earth asteroid exploration, a mission to the Jupiter system, a Mars sample return around 2030 and a later mission to seldom-visited Uranus.

Except for Uranus, these missions have either been officially approved, are already being studied or are mentioned in key documents such as the space white paper released in December. But there are new, interesting details.

A presentation on Chinas deep space plans before 2030 by Li Chunlai, deputy chief designer of the Mars 2020 mission, emphasized the Jovian moon Ganymede as a main target for the Jupiter mission, noting its potential habitability, and identifying its ice layer, topography, morphology and structure for examination.

These efforts are joined by a lunar exploration program that will be expanded beyond the Change-5 sample return mission, scheduled for late November, to include at least three further probes likely to focus on the poles and possibly involving in-situ resource utilization objectives.

In human spaceflight, China remains committed to establishing a decade-long permanent presence in low Earth orbit with its Chinese Space Station. Sun Weigang, chief engineer at the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), said launch of the 20-metric-ton Tianhe core module is on track for 2019, once the 5B variant of the new Long March 5 rocket is proven and ready.

Yang Liwei, who in 2003 became Chinas first astronaut to visit space on a Chinese spacecraft, revealed that 10-12 astronauts will be selected soon. Chinas third astronaut class, he said, will include two women and will look beyond just air pilots in order to meet the research requirements of the Chinese Space Station.

After this, China is very much looking to the moon, with Yang stating rather vaguely that it would not be long before a program to land Chinese astronauts or yuhangyuan on the lunar surface receives official approval and funding, though a mission is not expected before 2030.

To this end, China is studying development of a launcher to rival the United States Apollo-era Saturn 5/ Tentatively named Long March 9, it has planned lift capability of 140 tons to LEO. In addition, China is developing two versions of next-generation crewed spacecraft for deep space missions. Guo Linli of the China Academy of Space Technology presented a concept for a lunar base at Sinus Iridium, with analysis of the expected Change-5 samples to aid the next research steps, including generating oxygen from lunar soil.

Shen Lin, deputy chief researcher at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT), revealed that the concept currently being considered for crewed lunar landings involves an Earth-orbit rendezvous following launches of a Long March 9 and a human-rated Long March 5B, before entering lunar transfer orbit.

The reaction to the plans was measured. Theyre clearly progressing in human spaceflight, and are now moving on to the Chinese Space Station, said Kathy Laurini, a NASA senior adviser for exploration and space operations. Looking to beyond-low-Earth-orbit exploration, they also recognize like we do that this is the next step, and its a worthy endeavor due to the benefits it will bring to our citizens.

Calls for cooperation, necessary competition

GLEX 2017 had opened with an address from Chinese Vice-President Li Yuanchao, which included the reading of a congratulatory letter from President Xi Jinping. In a call for international collaboration that would be echoed throughout the event, both from Chinese speakers and agency heads, Xi declared that China is ready to strengthen cooperation with the international community for a better future for all humankind.

Xi has shown his support through speaking to orbiting Chinese crews and promoting the China space dream, a celestial twist on his political vision . However, help is needed from elsewhere.

Cooperation is one way in which China aims to achieve its science and exploration goals, which require serious resources and innovation. Partnerships could help China in reducing overall economic costs for its increasingly broad and diverse programs, also including its Beidou guidance and navigation satellite system, weather satellites and other Earth-observation systems. It also brings political benefits at home and abroad, valuable experience and potentially new technologies that could boost its progress.

The Chinese Space Station is to be opened to payloads and even astronauts from other nations especially developing countries where China tries to position itself as a global leader through an agreement with the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs. Change-4, an unprecedented lander and rover mission to the lunar far side in late 2018, will feature science payloads from Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands and Saudi Arabia.

Chinas partnership with the European Space Agency continues to deepen, with further cooperation on space science and the Change lunar missions, and soon human spaceflight.

Karl Bergquist, ESAs international relations administrator, explained on the sidelines of the GLEX conference that ESA and the China Manned Space Agency are working towards a detailed agreement to fly a European astronaut on the Chinese Space Station once it is completed. China is open to coordinating its lunar ambitions with the Europeans as called for by ESA Director-General Johann-Dietrich Woerners Moon Village concept.

This underlines the major progress that China has made in a relatively short time. While the number and rate of human spaceflight missions has been low, Chinas capabilities have developed rapidly to allow it to position itself as a major space power and leader.

The ultimate objective of Chinas cooperation push is likely to be achieving active partnership with the clear world leader, NASA. However, the issue of technology transfer, either sanctioned or illicit, that could benefit a space program that is closely tied to Chinas military, remains a clear barrier. Since 2011, U.S. law has banned NASA from engaging in bilateral agreements and coordination with its Chinese counterparts.

It was also apparent in Beijing that China understands it needs to compete in some areas.

Senior figures at CALT, the maker of the Long March family of launchers, underlined in a forum on low-cost access to space that it needs to reduce launch costs, referencing the staggering breakthroughs by U.S. private players SpaceX and Blue Origin. In reaction, CALT is researching reusability through the use of parachutes, re-startable engines and space shuttle-like horizontal landings, and examining its design, manufacture, launch site and management costs. These represent major challenges, but do not alter the fundamental plans.

Its nascent space science program has demonstrated cutting edge capabilities, and last week saw the launch of the fourth and final mission of an initial batch, the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope. Development of and studies into the next two rounds of space science projects are already underway. Wu Ji, director of Chinas National Space Science Center in Beijing, stressed that now is the time for China, as a major economy and global power, to contribute to human knowledge.

Steven Eisenhart, senior vice president at the Colorado Springs-based Space Foundation, said China is making steady progress establishing a diverse space program. What were seeing now are plans that were laid out a long time back and are now being executedwith the progress being pretty consistent to what theyve been saying, he said.

While elsewhere debates over the moon and Mars continue, Chinas direction for the next decade and more looks set.

With backing from the political leadership, apparent consensus among the Chinese government, scientific and other space sector actors, the countrys steady yet impressive progress should continue.

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Do Psychedelic Drugs Cause the ‘Prophetic Effect’? – Breaking Israel … – Breaking Israel News

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And Nadav and Avihu, the sons of Aharon, took either of them his censer, and put fire therein, and put incense thereon, and offered strange fire before Hashem, which he commanded them not. Leviticus 10:1 (The Israel Bible)

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In their search for possible benefits of psilocybin Magic Mushrooms, researchers at Johns Hopkins University put out a call for clergy from different faiths to determine if this natural psychedelic can help man connect with God. Rabbis, even those who have benefitted in the past from this experience, are reluctant, highlighting that the true God experience cannot be confined to a laboratory.

After nearly 50 years of a ban on studying psychedelic drugs and marijuana, scientists are beginning to discover that psychoactive substances bear many physiological and psychological benefits for mankind. Two researchers at Johns Hopkins Bayview, Roland Griffiths and Matthew Johnson, have been studying the powerful effects of psilocybin for over a decade. They discovered the natural substance is effective in reducing depression and end-of-life anxiety associated with terminal cancers. Psilocybin was also found to be effective in helping end addiction.

Many of the studys participants reported feelings of unity an interconnectedness of all things sacredness of life, and over 60 percent reported it as the most meaningful experience of their lives. Significantly, those with the most success quitting smoking or resolving symptoms of depression all reported high levels of this mystical aspect. The researchers expanded their study and are now investigating whether psilocybin has another potential use: to deepen the spiritual experience. The experiment involves clergymen ingesting psilocybin in a relaxed and controlled setting and reporting on their experience.

Their call for clergymen received a lukewarm response. Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld, the rabbi of Ohev Shalom Synagogue in Washington DC, was contacted by the researchers. For two reasons, he chose not to participate in the study.

I had concerns about the long term effect of putting those substances into my body, Rabbi Herzfeld told Breaking Israel News. More importantly, I dont need drugs to enhance my spirituality. Psychedelics are a shortcut that doesnt last. The only way to have a meaningful relationship with God is to choose a path in life that brings us closer to Him.

The connection between psilocybin and spirituality has a long history. Psilocybin is a naturally occurring psychedelic compound produced by more than 200 species of mushrooms. Anthropologists believe that its mind-altering effects have been used in a religious context for thousands of years, and it is still being used for this purpose in many South and Central American cultures. Though there is no source for psychedelics being used in Judaism as a means of coming close to God, it is not expressly forbidden.

Rabbi Yom Tov Glaser, a Torah teacher and lecturer, grew up in a secular environment in Hollywood California. Rabbi Glaser acknowledges the benefits of psilocybin, but states that it has no relevance to Judaism.

There is a real spiritual benefit to psilocybin, Rabbi Glaser conceded. God put this in nature to give clarity to spiritual leaders from other cultures.

But Rabbi Glaser emphasized that this is clearly not a spiritual path for Jews.

It is significant that natural psychedelics dont grow in Israel and it is not part of our tradition, he noted. That is because we are a nation of prophets, and the real prophetic experience makes LSD look like kiddie vitamins. Because of that powerful ability, we dont have a need for that immediate personal contact with God like those cultures.

Rabbi Yisroel Finman, an American living in Albania, was a teacher and prayer leader in Rabbi Shlomo Carlebachs synagogue in San Francisco called The House of Love and Prayer. In the 1960s the synagogue was successful at attracting young, non-affiliated Jews with an approach inspired by the American counterculture movement. Rabbi Finman, now 65 years old, stated that using psychedelic drugs, including psilocybin, was once an essential part of his spiritual journey. He considered taking part in the Johns Hopkins study but decided against it.

At this stage in my life, that would be going backwards Rabbi Finman told Breaking Israel News. It would have been a nice mental vacation, but I am at the point in my life when I am looking forward, asking myself what is my tikkun (fixing).

Rabbi Finman also feels that the social environment has changed, making the psychedelic experience less relevant today.

When I began taking LSD in 1965, it was not used as a recreational drug, he explained. Using it as a recreational drug is disrespecting what it is. We used it solely as a spiritual experience, and we were careful in how we approached it. For us, LSD was a teacher and it definitely served that purpose. My awareness of Hashem today is absolutely a result of my experiences with LSD.

I would not encourage other people to use it today even for spiritual purposes, Rabbi Finman said. Incorporating it into everyday ritual cancels its benefits. Taking LSD is like walking around in Gan Eden (Garden of Eden), and when you are in Gan Eden, you arent davening. God wants to hear us pray.

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Shrooms Could Be Legalized Sooner Than You Think – VICE

Posted: at 10:21 pm

It may be legal to experience a spiritual or healing journey on magic mushrooms sooner than you thinkif you live in the right part of America. A group called the Oregon Psilocybin Society is pushing for a 2020 ballot measure that would make the Beaver State the first in the nation to legalize psilocybin, the primary active ingredient in numerous species of psychedelic mushrooms, in a therapeutic setting.

Psilocybin is currently listed on Schedule I under the federal Controlled Substances Act, which means it's supposedly got no medical value and is ripe for abuse. Advocates who say the substance is safe and, in some cases, medically useful hope that in the absence of federal movement, states can start loosening restrictions on their own, just as many have for weed.

Oregon's Psilocybin Society is led by Tom and Sheri Eckert, a husband and wife team who runs a therapy practice in the Portland area. The Eckerts say they believe psilocybin could be beneficial to their own patients, particularly those who have been victims of domestic violence. "Both of us have had interesting psychedelic experiences in the past and saw their power," Tom told me.

"We put the dots together, realized this is relatively safe, certainly when done in the right way and following research protocol," he added. "Seeing the incredible outcomes of research really motivated us."

In recent years, research on psilocybin and other psychedelics has been ramping up, producing results that show potential for treatment of disorders such as depression, anxiety, PTSD, OCD, addiction, and more. Psilocybin in particular has been the subject of a series of studies performed at Johns Hopkins University, the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, and New York University, which have found that it helped reduce anxiety in some individuals facing terminal illness, while increasing feelings of well-being and gratitude.

However, even as attitudes toward pot have continued to warm up, the appetite of the American public for legal psychedelics remains skeptical. A 2016 Vox/Morning Consult poll found only 22 percent of respondents in support of psilocybin decriminalization, with 68 percent opposed. Even fewer thought the substance should be legal for medicinal purposes: just 18 percent. On the other hand, a poll published by YouGov last month found 53 percent of respondents in support of research on potential medical benefits of psychedelics, despite their legal status, with 21 percent opposed. If the substances were proven safe, a whopping 63 percent of respondents said they would personally consider treatment with psilocybin, ketamine, or MDMA, most commonly known as a component in many forms of ecstasy.

The potential for the Oregon psilocybin measure to have a domino effect is real. Voters in California made the state the first to legalize marijuana for medicinal uses via ballot measure, voting yes on Proposition 215 in 1996. Over the ensuing decades, 28 other states plus Washington, DC, authorized medical marijuana either by ballot or legislation, while seven states plus DC have legalized cannabis outright, despite ongoing federal prohibition.

That said, the founders point out there are important differences between the Psilocybin Society's campaign and medical marijuana programsmirroring some of the differences between the two drugs. For one thing, the initiative would not allow for personal possession of psychedelic mushrooms or psilocybinrather, patients could only take it at licensed centers under supervision of a certified facilitator. Facilitators would not necessarily have to be doctors, to avoid conflicts with insurance and nationally recognized accreditation bodies.

And while medical marijuana states usually stipulate a list of conditions that qualify patients for eligibilitycancer, HIV and AIDS, chronic pain, or othersthe psilocybin measure would open the doors of therapy to any adult not contraindicated for safety reasons, without requiring a particular diagnosis. "It's not only amazing for mental health, there's also a lot of potential for self-development and creative work," Tom said. "We're trying to put forth the most reasonable thing we can without undue restrictions."

The Eckerts say they haven't experienced much in the way of blowbackyet. "Hopefully when backlash does come, we can consistently address the subject matter through science and studies to reduce any fear that is there due to stigmatization," Sheri told me.

Concerted opposition is sure to emerge sooner or later. "This type of drug legalization is the snake oil of the 21st century," Scott Chipman, Southern California chair of the group Citizens Against Legalizing Marijuana, wrote in an email to VICE. "The movement to 'medicalize' and 'legalize' 'psychedelic' drugs is just one more attempt to move our society toward legalization of all drugs," he says, calling the industry "a dangerous threat to public health and safety."

"We must use the FDA process to determine what is or is not a medicine and not rely on drug dealers, legislators or even public votes to determine medical efficacy," Chipman added. "We call on all citizens to reject drug legalization in all forms."

Meanwhile, as activists like the Eckerts make their move in Oregon, federal change is looking at least somewhat less implausible than it once did. The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) is in the midst of clinical studies on MDMA-assisted psychotherapy as a tool to combat PTSD, with a goal of obtaining prescription approval by the FDA in 2021.

"We support any efforts that are educating the public about the beneficial uses of psychedelics as long as the conversation is rounded out with discussion of their risks," MAPS communication director Brad Burge said about the proposed Oregon ballot proposal, adding that "we feel clinical trials and a scientific approach is more likely to create wider acceptance."

While the Oregon measure is focused on therapeutic use, some advocates aren't shy about hoping medical acceptance leads to more widespread legalization. "I'm a believer we need to have a larger conversation about drug prohibition in general," said Mitchell Gomez, executive director of DanceSafe, a group that promotes best practices and harm reduction at electronic music festivals. "Medical use is great because it opens the door for those conversations."

"If you're going to look at the relative risks of classic psychedelics versus the relative risks of hundreds of other things society lets people do, the risk is lower than driving a car, skydiving, swimming, cheerleading, horseback riding," Gomez added. "Mushrooms are much safer to hand to strangers than a peanut."

The Eckerts would love to see a loosening of federal restrictions on psilocybin, but for now are happy to serve in the vanguard of a state-by-state effort. Their group is currently laying the groundwork for a signature campaign to qualify for the ballot, working with the Oregon Legislative Counsel to create sound language for the initiative and beginning educational outreach around the state.

"We're convicted about it, willing to take the challenge and stand up for what we think makes good sense and helps people," Tom said, adding that they've had a lot of contacts by people around the state who are interested in the cause. "We're strengthening our networks, doing more events, developing organization and outreach programs such that it will move into campaign apparatus2020 is shaping up to be a very interesting year."

Follow Aaron Kase on Twitter.

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Shrooms Could Be Legalized Sooner Than You Think - VICE

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Married To The Rave 2017 || Maria’s Top Picks – EDM Identity (blog)

Posted: at 10:20 pm

Next month, the grounds of Woodstock Orlando will be transformed into a ravers paradise with some of the best acts in thebass, trance, and tech house realms, providing the beats for a day dubbed Married To The Rave!

Married To The Rave is just one short month away and with such a stacked lineup and three stages to choose from, it may be really difficult to decide which acts to catch! For many, the main stage will be the spot to rage hard as a wild array of the very best in the bass universe will be pumping the heavy beats straight through your brain waves, sending shock waves up your spine. For others, the lounge will be the go-to spot for a taste of house, with artists like Techneeks, From Us To You, and Kapachino leading the way and pumping up some insatiable dance floor vibes. But, for trance fans like yours truly, the patio will be the highlight, as both up and coming superstars and some of the biggest names in the trance industry will brush elbows, poised and ready to take us on a journey of etherealbliss.

Although I will always support and encourage open exploration of artists and genres that you may not be familiar with, deep down within my soul the call of the trance stage will always keep me held hostage in all the right ways.

On Friday, August 19, 2017, you can find me on the patio, with my hands raised to the heavens, getting lost in the sweet sounds of trance. Below you can find my top 5 must see trance artists that I highly encourage you to check out at Married To The Rave! If you spot me in the crowd, I imploreyou to speak up and let me know who you think I should check out at the both the main stage and the lounge, as I am always open to falling head over heels for new artists and sounds outside of mytrance paradise!

Stay tuned for Christopher Riveras top 5 must sees next month and get ready for a day of delectable, unadulteratedraving that will surely be one for the books!

Tickets for Married To The Rave Festival 2017 are on sale now! For event info and tickets, clickhere!

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My first Reliquary experience began in Atlanta at TomorrowWorld 2014 when Chris Orosco aka Reliquary took to the Trance Addict stage to bestow upon the crowd a set that I will never forget. With a brilliant ear for what trance fans crave, Reliquary fast became one of the standout sets among a lineup stacked with trance royalty. Since then, not only have I have become a die-hard fan but also a friend of this insanely talented rising star of the South.

It is vividly clear that Reliquary is a true master behind the decks, delivering dance floor fire both live and on air with his radio shows Pantheon and Where Is The Sunset, but he is also wildly active within the scene as a promoter for Unity Events Atlanta, made up of a group of passionate individuals working hard to give trance a voice in A-Town! If you are looking for trance with true emotion and a set that takes you beyond the far reaches of the heavensthen Reliquary is an artist that you must not miss!

Check out Reliquarys EDM Identity Artist Spotlight righthere!

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Do you love your beats dark and are you obsessed with the techier side of trance? Then look no further than Indecent Noise as he will be coming with some of the hardest trance beats that your ears can handle.

Born Aleksander Stawierej in Poland, Indecent Noise was destined to become a DJ/producer. At the age of 7, he was already falling in love with electronic music and by 2006 he was releasing remixes on Jood Deep and Inaspace. The following year he would sign contracts with Neuroscience Recordings and Kerf Music, and in 2008, winning a remix competition based off of Wildfires set him on the path to stardom.

Producing tracks like Dirty Secret, Aerospark, Glitches, Full Moon Fever, Protos Heis, Hydra, and Strike Force, the talent of this man cannot be denied. Of course, with every successful DJ, comes a successful radio show, and for him, it is none other than his own, Noise Sessions and Mental Asylum Radio, on trance.fm,Totaal fm, Discover Trance Radio and PureSound.fm.

Indecent Noise cordially welcomes you into his Mental Asylum;a world where all bets are off and the beats drive your feet to move in ways you never thought possible. Trance fans who have witnessed this man in action will tell you that with no question, Indecent Noise brings the passion, the intensity, and the energy at every show he is a part of!

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Swindon, UKs own Dan Willis & Jules Moyce are the two brilliant men behind the fan favoriteNeptune Project. Their epic extended sets that have been dubbedthe ultimate journey in trance have helped to secure them as a household name in the trance scene. And when it comes to their studio productions, their unrivaled and next level visionary artistry trumps all others.Throughout the years these boys have developed quite the stunning brand with a sound that tells a unique story, defining the beautiful and multi-dimensional powerhouse that is trance.

Neptune Project boasts multiple releases on major labels likeAnjunabeats, Armada, Vandit, Subculture and Future Sound of Egypt,remixing tracks from some of the best producers to ever walk this earthincludingAbove & Beyond, Paul Van Dyk, Aly & Fila, and Pink Floyd. But, of course, to claim your spot at the top you must have your own record label. For Neptune Project this comes in the form of Mythology, a label that focuses on their own unique productions, delivering trance gems like Temple Of Artemis and Destiny.

Married To The Rave is in for quite the treat when Neptune Project takes to the stage and it goes without saying that a beautiful journey is set to unfold before your very eyes!

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For my next two picks, I had to show some love to a couple ladies that are taking the trance scene by storm, reminding us that this is not just a mans world! First up is Solar Power Sessions very own Suzy Solar, a trance dynamo who has established herself as one of the most sought after acts in the industry since bursting onto the scene back in 1997. In fact, her track Ocean of Love is even featured on Paul Oakenfolds Grammy nominated album Creamfields! Yes, producing incredible trance music runs through this womans blood! Just look at Samurai, her collaboration with Arizona (Thomas Bronzwaer) that has graced dance charts worldwide, including Beatports top 10. This is just one of her many productions that have received support from the worlds top trance DJs, including Armin Van Buurenand Ferry Corsten!

Beyond her presence behind the decks, her company Solar Power Music, Inc throws trance events regularly in Central Florida and beyond. A true pioneer for trance in her hometown, Suzy has played in more than nine countries, both headlining and opening for the biggest names in trance, such as Armin van Buuren, Ferry Corsten, Paul Oakenfold, Above & Beyond, Cosmic Gate, and more. I have had the amazing opportunity to see this woman at work when she opened for Mark Sherry at Bikkuri Lounge for Lost In Trancelation,a monthly trance event held in Orlando, Florida hosted by fellow MTTR artist Robb Blak. I can tell you from experience that Suzy Solar is a divine trance force to be reckoned with!

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Rounding out my top picks I have chosen the ruling trance lady who has sat on the Queens throne since she broke out into the scene back in 2002.With records out on Armin Van Buurens Armada, Paul Van Dyks Vandit and U.S. mega-label Ultra, while holding a coveted residency at the world-famous Avalon Hollywood, its easy to see why Kristina Sky is one of Americas brightest shining Electronic Dance Music stars.

Born and raised in Los Angeles, shes been DJing to thousands of passionate dance music fans since 2002, coast-to-coast in the U.S. and around the world from China to the Philippines, Ecuador to Guatemala and Canada to Costa Rica.Kristina is undoubtedly one of Americas most beloved EDM ambassadors. Her live set recordings, guest mixes, and popular radio show, TRANCELATE, generate tremendous support from her ever-growing fan base, broadcasting worldwide via satellite, FM and the internet.

If we take a look at Kristinas impressive resume it becomes clear that both her DJ sets and original productions run the trance gamutfrom warm and groovy progressive house to emotional, melodic and uplifting trance. My first taste of Kristina Sky in action unveiled itself way back in 2012 when she stunned me with her unmatched trance brilliance during the A State of Trance take over at Electric Daisy Carnival. Immediately I knew that Kristina Sky would forever and always be an indispensablemember of our beloved trance family and have always wanted the chance to see her live once again! I hope you will join me on the dance floor as I am reunited with the sweet sounds of Kristina Sky for the second time!

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Maria first fell in love with electronic music in the early 2000's when she heard a little tune called "Satisfaction" by Benny Benassi. Since then she has dived head first into the scene and become passionate about the trance, techno, and tech house genre's. Festival's like EDC, Dreamstate, and TomorrowWorld hold the key to her soul and dance music will always and forever be a major part of her life.

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Married To The Rave 2017 || Maria's Top Picks - EDM Identity (blog)

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