Monthly Archives: March 2022

Ferris hockey coach happy with team’s progress this season – The Pioneer

Posted: March 18, 2022 at 8:09 pm

BIG RAPIDS The CCHA title game is this weekend with Bemidji at Minnesota State while Ferris State hockey coach Bob Daniels will be working at home in preparation of the 2022-23 season with hopes of getting Bulldog hockey back into title contention.

The Bulldogs made some strides this year with an 11-24-1 record, which was improved from a 1-23 mark in the previous seasons COVID restriction year. The Bulldogs also were very close in other games considering they lost four straight late in the season to Michigan Tech, all in overtime. Both 3-2 playoff losses to the third-place Huskies were in overtime earlier this month.

Coach Bob Daniels ended his 30th season as Ferris skipper with a certain amount of satisfaction and high hopes for 2022-23. Ferris was seventh in the new eight-team CCHA.

Looking at the Michigan Tech series which ended the season, obviously the results I wasnt happy with, Daniels said. I was very proud of the guys performance. Obviously, we played two very good games which went into overtime and could have gone either way.

We came a long way from early in the season. We started stringing some wins together in the second half. All in all, I was happy coming out of that series with our effort and performance.

The season has ended and the 2022-23 campaign resumes in early October. But this doesnt mean there isnt enough to do.

We start (on Wednesday) the off-season conditioning program thats very important to the team, and moving forward, Daniels said. Were still figuring out whos coming back and whos not. Some guys have extra years were keeping an eye on recruiting as well. Well have some high school advanced camps well be running.

Well have a pretty full plate. Theres a little bit of fund-raising and golf outings. Theres plenty to keep us busy.

Daniels said there are four players who can take an extra COVID year but is waiting to get final determinations. The announcement of new recruits is close.

We probably have eight commitments, he said. Some of them well push off until the following year and some well bring in this year. Right now we have a couple of defensemen and five forwards.

Daniels is confident the program will take another step next season.

I like where were at and I like the players who are returning, he said. Our young kids performed well in the playoffs. We got goals from the young kids in big games. We return a real solid nucleus of pretty darn good players.

See the original post:

Ferris hockey coach happy with team's progress this season - The Pioneer

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on Ferris hockey coach happy with team’s progress this season – The Pioneer

Freddie Freeman Rumors: Dodgers ‘Making Progress’ On Multi-Year Contract With 1B – Bleacher Report

Posted: at 8:09 pm

The Los Angeles Dodgers are reportedly closing in on one of the best free agents available on the entire market.

Jon Morosi of MLB Network reported the National League West team is "making progress on a multiyear deal" with first baseman Freddie Freeman that could guarantee him approximately $150 million.

This comes after his time with the Atlanta Braves appeared to come to an end this offseason.

Freeman wrote a lengthy message on hisInstagrampage discussing what an "honor" it was to be with the organization for the last 15 years and expressing his thanks and love for the franchise and its fans.

Atlanta's loss will seemingly become Los Angeles' gain, which is troubling news for the rest of the National League West.

Freeman's resume includes the 2021 World Series title, a National League MVP, three Silver Slugger awards, a Gold Glove and five All-Star selections. He is 32 years old but showed no signs of slowing down last year while slashing .300/.393/.503 with 31 home runs and 83 RBI.

Last season was the fourth year in a row he finished in the top 10 of NL MVP voting and the sixth time he earned such a distinction in his career.

The slugger is a model of on-field consistency and will make a loaded Dodgers team all the more dangerous.

Los Angeles has made the playoffs nine years in a row with appearances in three of the last five World Series. Even without Freeman, it is a threat to once again reach the Fall Classic with a lineup that figures to include Mookie Betts, Trea Turner, Justin Turner and Max Muncy.

That group is even scarier should Freeman land in L.A.

Read the rest here:

Freddie Freeman Rumors: Dodgers 'Making Progress' On Multi-Year Contract With 1B - Bleacher Report

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on Freddie Freeman Rumors: Dodgers ‘Making Progress’ On Multi-Year Contract With 1B – Bleacher Report

Happy St. Patrick’s Day! Progress on a Kubalk Trade, Can We Interest You Some Defenseman? And Other Blackhawks Bullets – bleachernation.com

Posted: at 8:09 pm

Happy St. Patricks Day! The Blackhawks are off tonight, but weve got March Madness and White Sox-Cubs Cactus League action to look forward to today. As a Southside Irish kid, St. Patricks Day was always an important day growing up. While I live in the suburbs these days, I keep the tradition alive and celebrate the day with my family and children every year, so Ive got a little extra pep in my step this morning.

Who remembers the St. Patricks Day Massacre at the old Chicago Stadium?

On St. Paddys Day 1991, the Blackhawks played host to the hated St. Louis Blues (not much has changed when it comes to the way the two teams and fanbases feel about each other) with both teams battling for the top spot in the old Norris Division. After meeting in the Stanley Cup Playoffs the previous three years, the rivalry had plenty of wind in its sails on this day, and boy did it ever come to a head.

This game would end up seeing 12 players ejected and three players suspended in the aftermath, with the two teams racking up a whopping 278 penalty minutes with brawls breaking out in the first and second periods. As you saw in the teaser above, one of the most memorable scenes was Dave Manson calling out Scott Stevens to center ice where they slugged it out with Manson getting the best of Stevens, who left the ice with a nice cut around his eye. You can watch more in the video here!The Blackhawks would win the Presidents Trophy as the leagues best regular-season team and lose the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs to the Minnesota North Stars.

So, lets talk about today; more particularly, lets talk about Dominik Kubalk. Ben Pope of the Chicago Sun-Times reported that the Blackhawks are making progress on a trade of Dominik Kubalk, with Anaheim and Edmonton being the frontrunners for the 26-year-old wingers services. However, last night, Ryan Rishaug of TSN reported that his sense of the situation has the Oilers out on Kubalk and more focused on acquiring some blue line help.

Having teams bidding against each other would be the only way I can see the Blackhawks getting a mid-rounder back for Kubalk, so Rishaugs report that Edmonton is out isnt great news. Its seemed for a while now that Anaheim is a likely landing spot for Kubalk, but we shall see in the next few days if anything comes to fruition there. Its worth noting that Ben Pope has double-down on Edmontons interest this morning and added Winnipeg as a team that he hears is in the mix in the Kubalk discussions.

Kubalk burst onto the scene with the Blackhawks during the 2019-20 season, when he racked up 46 points (30 goals, 16 assists) as a rookie in the COVID-19 shortened season. But now, just two years after the pandemic halted Kubalks breakout rookie season, hes a frequent healthy scratch who is seemingly destined for a new home. Even when hes in the lineup, ice time has been sparse for the 26-year-old winger who skated just 8:46 in Chicagos overtime loss to the Boston Bruins on Tuesday night.

Staying on the Blackhawks trade front (because what else is there to talk about these days?), can we interest you in some defenseman? The defenseman market is heating up with just four days to go before the trade deadline, and the Blackhawks have a few blue line players that should be on the block.

Calvin de Haan is the prototype that teams look for when searching for blue line help at the deadline. A veteran defender on an expiring contract and still playing at a level that can help a team push for a Stanley Cup is what de Haan could provide one of these teams looking for help. David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period named the Maple Leafs, Hurricanes, Blues, Rangers, and Bruins as teams looking for the services of players like Calvin de Haan.

Of course, if de Haan isnt your flavor, Im sure that Kyle Davidson will be willing to part with pretty much any of their blue-liners not named Connor Murphy if the price is right, so, hey, come on down and do some shopping!

Hey, a Leper-Hog!

Scott Powers discusses the tough decisions that Kyle Davidson will have to make if hes genuinely going to rebuild this franchise from the ground up:

The Bulls need some good news these days. This is good news!

Baseball is back !

Thats it for today, enjoy your day and irinn go Brch!

More here:

Happy St. Patrick's Day! Progress on a Kubalk Trade, Can We Interest You Some Defenseman? And Other Blackhawks Bullets - bleachernation.com

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on Happy St. Patrick’s Day! Progress on a Kubalk Trade, Can We Interest You Some Defenseman? And Other Blackhawks Bullets – bleachernation.com

Construction Crews Making Progress On Projects Along The Arkansas River – news9.com KWTV

Posted: at 8:09 pm

Construction crews are working hard on the Zink dam and Coffer dam on the Arkansas River in front of Tulsa's Gathering Place. Crews say the next steps will be to start demolition on the old pedestrian bridge and existing dam.

Brooke Caviness is the lead engineer of stormwater design and said once the dam is complete the water will be about 10 feet deep for Zink lake that will run from Gathering Place to Highway 244.

Caviness said demolition will begin on the 21st of March.

Just like we did on this side where they start all the concrete work, a lot of concrete work. And then theyll come in with the new gates and put them in. At the same time theyre going to be working on the bank on the east side as well as the flume. There is a lot of rock work and concrete work that goes involved in that," said Caviness.

According to Caviness, the timeline for completion is still set for July 2023.

More:

Construction Crews Making Progress On Projects Along The Arkansas River - news9.com KWTV

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on Construction Crews Making Progress On Projects Along The Arkansas River – news9.com KWTV

GameStop Is Making Progress In Its NFT Marketplace – The Dales Report

Posted: at 8:09 pm

GameStop might not have a bright future in terms of selling tangible video games yet the company is finding other ways to drive revenue. In particular, GameStops leadership is capitalizing on the soaring popularity of NFTs. GameStop is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with the symbol of GME.

Even if you arent interested in GameStop shares as a speculative bet on video game sales, you should pay attention to the companys progress in the context of NFT investing. Heres why.

GameStop is making headway in creating its own NFT marketplace. If everything goes as planned, the video game retailer will soon provide NFT fans with a virtual space to buy, sell and trade NFTs. A GameStop representative recently stated the company is poised to launch an NFT marketplace by the midway point of the year. The hope is that those interested in NFTs will be able to buy, sell and trade NFTs on GameStops virtual marketplace as early as July.

Though GameStops brass has held its metaphorical cards close to its vest in regard to its venture into the NFT waters, the company has revealed it has brought on dozens of new employees experienced in e-commerce, the blockchain and additional tech related to NFTs. GameStop officially announced plans for its NFT marketplace last February.

GameStops personnel is working with Immutable X, a group of gaming specialists located in Australia, to launch its new NFT marketplace. The tandem announced an NFT gaming fund with a value of $100 million.

The corporate partnership is likely to succeed as they have gone to great lengths to facilitate NFT transactions without gas fees. Add in the act that Immutable X is providing GameStop with $150 million worth of IMX tokens to hit milestones and there is even more reason to be bullish about the partnership.

It isnt often that rumors swirling around a video game company prove legitimate. Rewind back to 2021 and Reddit message board posters had pinpointed a site stating GameStop was adding engineers to create an NFT platform based on Ethereum. That platform will see the light of day as early as this summer.

Though the NFT community is largely bullish on GameStops plan to expand into the NFT space, one of the companys former board members, Reggie Fils-Aime, insists the company is lacking a coherent overarching strategy. Furthermore, it is also worth noting Reddit users who insisted they were employees of the gaming retailer posted on the GameStop subreddit earlier this year to criticize the companys NFT plans.

GameStop reported a quarterly loss earlier this month, meaning the company is struggling to compete with those who have ventured to the digital sales realm. The companys stock has turned into a popular meme stock simply because its offerings are tailored to individuals who use the internet at a high frequency.

Even if traditional video game cartridges and discs are completely phased out of existence in favor of digital downloads, GameStop has the potential to survive and possibly even thrive. The companys accessories are as popular as ever. If GameStop hits a homerun with its NFT platform, it might have staying power.

Read more here:

GameStop Is Making Progress In Its NFT Marketplace - The Dales Report

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on GameStop Is Making Progress In Its NFT Marketplace – The Dales Report

Local ICU doctor discusses pain and progress in the pandemic – WDSU New Orleans

Posted: at 8:09 pm

LCMC Health is marking the two-year anniversary of identifying its first COVID-19 patient. University Medical Center, which is a part of the health system, would soon become a Ground Zero of sorts, in the city's fight against coronavirus.Dr. Jeffrey Elder told WDSU that in late March 2020, LCMC hospitals treated a total of 500 COVID-19 patients at one time. On Monday, that number dropped to just a dozen. "While this isn't over, we can live our lives," Elder said. "We can protect our most vulnerable population and we can do the things we want to do while living with this virus long-term."Elder said the city has not seen a dramatic increase in the number of people testing positive for COVID-19 after celebrating Mardi Gras two weeks ago."Hopefully, those (increases) get lower, have a shorter duration, are more spread out over time and this really does become an endemic virus," Elder said.He cautioned that Louisiana is not there yet, warning that the state needs to boost vaccination rates to avoid another surge in cases.Dr. David Janz runs the Intensive Care Unit at UMC. He told WDSU that the pandemic tested his team like never before."Unprecedented is probably the only word I can use to describe the feeling," Janz said. "The rate at which patients were coming in, how quickly they were coming in, how sick they were, it was just overwhelming. If we hadn't spent weeks to months anticipating this and planning for it, I could easily imagine that it would have been much more chaotic than it was."Janz said that planning helped save lives."We've had some of the best ICU outcomes with COVID patients of a lot of hospitals around the country," Janz said.

LCMC Health is marking the two-year anniversary of identifying its first COVID-19 patient. University Medical Center, which is a part of the health system, would soon become a Ground Zero of sorts, in the city's fight against coronavirus.

Dr. Jeffrey Elder told WDSU that in late March 2020, LCMC hospitals treated a total of 500 COVID-19 patients at one time. On Monday, that number dropped to just a dozen.

"While this isn't over, we can live our lives," Elder said. "We can protect our most vulnerable population and we can do the things we want to do while living with this virus long-term."

Elder said the city has not seen a dramatic increase in the number of people testing positive for COVID-19 after celebrating Mardi Gras two weeks ago.

"Hopefully, those (increases) get lower, have a shorter duration, are more spread out over time and this really does become an endemic virus," Elder said.

He cautioned that Louisiana is not there yet, warning that the state needs to boost vaccination rates to avoid another surge in cases.

Dr. David Janz runs the Intensive Care Unit at UMC. He told WDSU that the pandemic tested his team like never before.

"Unprecedented is probably the only word I can use to describe the feeling," Janz said. "The rate at which patients were coming in, how quickly they were coming in, how sick they were, it was just overwhelming. If we hadn't spent weeks to months anticipating this and planning for it, I could easily imagine that it would have been much more chaotic than it was."

Janz said that planning helped save lives.

"We've had some of the best ICU outcomes with COVID patients of a lot of hospitals around the country," Janz said.

Go here to read the rest:

Local ICU doctor discusses pain and progress in the pandemic - WDSU New Orleans

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on Local ICU doctor discusses pain and progress in the pandemic – WDSU New Orleans

Browns wide receiver room is a work in progress that wont be built in a day and more Monday free agency take – cleveland.com

Posted: at 8:09 pm

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- A Football Insider subscriber asked on Monday if the Browns got better by gaining Amari Cooper and losing Jarvis Landry. My answer was, essentially, we should be framing the discussion around the receiver room by taking a longer view. (Or, at least, I should have answered that way.)

Lets do this in pieces, some we know and some we dont.

First, the Browns needed to add a player like Cooper, regardless of Landrys status. Cooper is a legitimate No. 2 receiver at worst -- and potentially a No. 1 -- with 4.4 speed. Hes a sound route runner and gives the Browns a player they simply didnt have a year ago after Odell Beckham Jr. forced his way out.

They did it by essentially giving up a fifth-round pick -- they also swapped sixth-round picks with Dallas -- an even smarter move in light of Christian Kirk signing with Jacksonville for $18 million per year.

So, yes, the move to acquire Cooper was both smart and made the Browns better.

Now the Landry decision.

When the Browns officially released Landry, they announced it with the type of language usually reserved for a player who spent a Hall-of-Fame career with a team. For someone who was only here for four seasons, he earned it.

Landry was an important acquisition who helped signal the Browns wanted to start winning. Landry is just a football player and its what the Browns needed. He was durable, a willing blocker, a usually sure-handed pass catcher and did pretty well when asked to throw the ball. His versatility unlocked parts of the Browns offense other players couldnt.

He also would have cost the team a cap hit not palatable for a roster with looming extensions and holes to fill.

Are the Browns better without Landry? No. But ...

The Browns wide receiver room is far from complete. It currently stands at six players if you include Demetric Felton, which you should. Cooper will make it seven. JaMarcus Bradley, Ryan Switzer and Rashard Higgins, make up three of those seven. Higgins time might have finally run out here, too, and Bradley and Switzer are bubble players.

The core group is essentially Cooper, Donovan Peoples-Jones and Anthony Schwartz.

Nothing has ruled out selecting a receiver at No. 13 overall. If not there, they can find quality in the second round in a deep receiver class to add a fourth to the core.

The tiers of the free agent receiver market will begin to take shape as well. The Browns can find value in an inflating market perhaps in players like Will Fuller or DJ Chark, to get their core to five, which is a logical number for a team with so much invested in its tight ends and running game.

The early days of free agency make patience difficult when it isnt your team in the headlines, but the Browns are in the process of remaking a wide receiver room that, this time a year ago, had $30 million tied up in two players no longer here.

Once the picture is complete, they should be in a better position longterm.

Betting on upside

Taven Bryan has the athleticism to help the Browns defensive line.AP

Last year, when the Browns signed Takk McKinley, they bet on a player GM Andrew Berry did work on during the 2017 draft process. They brought McKinley, the former Falcons first-round pick, into their system, put him in an ideal role as their third edge rusher and he played well before tearing his Achilles, using his speed to complement Myles Garrett and Jadeveon Clowney.

Taven Bryan could be a similar gamble on upside, an affordable defensive tackle contract for a former first-round pick.

Bryan has intriguing athletic traits, comparing favorably with current Browns defensive end Porter Gustin, a strong athlete in his own right, according to mockdraftable.com, a website that compares testing numbers.

Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb on Twitter) compiles a Relative Athletic Score (RAS) for prospects and Bryan did particularly well in this formula, rating 11th out of 1,096 defensive tackles from 1987 to 2018.

Dont read into this as anything more than it is -- hes really athletic. Thats what the Browns are betting on with this signing, turning his athleticism into a productive defensive tackle.

Mitch on the move

Mitch Trubisky will see his hometown Browns a bit more often this season.cleveland.com

Did a year behind the scenes in Buffalo with Brian Daboll, Ken Dorsey and Josh Allen offer some clarity for Mitch Trubisky? The Steelers will find out.

Pittsburgh is an interesting fit for the Northeast Ohio native who didnt pan out in Chicago. Trubiskys best season with the Bears featured a run game led by Jordan Howard and Tarik Cohen, who ended up as the Bears second-leading receiver with 725 yards. Trubisky was the third-leading rusher with 421 yards.

Can he manage an offense with a high usage running back who is effective in the passing game and intriguing weapons? Can offensive coordinator Matt Canada utilize his mobility as a weapon? Can Trubisky keep the seat warm for whoever is next?

Those are the things the Steelers are likely looking for from the former No. 2 overall pick.

-

Get the latest Browns merchandise: Heres where you can order Cleveland Browns gear online, including jerseys, T-shirts, hoodies, hats and much more.

More Browns coverage

Browns release Jarvis Landry, their five-time Pro Bowl receiver, in wake of Amari Cooper trade

Will Amari Cooper be the latest Browns player to wear Bernie Kosars 19?

NFL free agency 2022: The best players left and whos been signed

Vikings extend Kirk Cousins through 2023 season, taking him off market as potential Browns quarterback option

Amari Cooper is the best route-runner in the NFL -- here are 3 ways he does it: Film Review

Browns are still exploring a trade for Deshaun Watson, and will have to offer multiple first-round picks, Baker Mayfield and maybe other players

2022 Free Agency Tracker: Latest news from around the NFL

What the Amari Cooper trade means for Baker Mayfield, Jarvis Landry, Garrett Wilson and more: Orange and Brown Talk

Browns free agency primer

Coopers new Browns reality and what the numbers say about it

Berry seizes on Cooper opportunity while keeping draft capital

Berry did his job, now Stefanski and Mayfield must do the same: Lesmerises

Browns make a wise, bold move Pluto

3 ways the trade boosts Browns flexibility: Bastock

What the Cooper trade means: Podcast

What theyre saying about the trade on social media

Excerpt from:

Browns wide receiver room is a work in progress that wont be built in a day and more Monday free agency take - cleveland.com

Posted in Progress | Comments Off on Browns wide receiver room is a work in progress that wont be built in a day and more Monday free agency take – cleveland.com

In Houston, Artist Clarissa Tossin Ponders the Colonial Implications of the 21st-Century Space Race – ARTnews

Posted: at 8:07 pm

Los Angelesbased artist Clarissa Tossin has created work in various modes from post-apocalyptic sculpture to installations comprising of woven textiles. For her current exhibition at the Moody Center for the Arts at Rice University in Houston, she presents The 8th Continent (2021), situated in Brochstein Pavilion on Rices campus as part of the Moody Centers Off the Wall series. The work is a wide-spanning triptych depicting three images taken by NASA of the moons ice deposits, which could potentially be mined and later produced as rocket fuel. With the warmth of woven, glittering metallic thread, The 8th Continent feels at once enveloping and eerily clinical with its scientific images rendered on a digital loom.

Born in Porto Alegre, Brazil, before moving to L.A. in 2006 to complete an MFA at the California Institute of the Arts, Tossin has previously spent an extended time in Houston, when she was a fellow at the Core Residency Program, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, between 2010 and 2012. Her work has also appeared in major exhibitions like the 2018 Gwangju Biennale and Pacha, Llaqta, Wasichay: Indigenous Space, Modern Architecture, New Art at the Whitney Museum in New York, also in 2018.

In addition to her Moody Center show, which runs through August 27, Tossin was recently the subject of a solo show at her L.A. gallery Commonwealth & Council earlier this year, where she showed Disorientation Towards Collapse, and will have a solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver that opens in June. A 2019 sound piece by her, You Got to Make Your Own Worlds (for when Siri is long gone), was also included in a group exhibition Kissing Through a Curtain, which opened in 2020 and closed earlier this year at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.

For her current show in Texas, Tossin is thinking about the relationship between space entrepreneurship and exploration: Im curious to see how land use and territory play out in the 21st-century space race, and whether the abuses of land and people that have marked our time on Earth get perpetuated as we move out into the solar system. To learn more about her Moody Center exhibition and her other recent projects, ARTnews interviewed Tossin by email.

ARTnews: How did your interest in moon exploration/exploitation begin?

Clarissa Tossin: Ive been using NASA images of Mars and the Moon in my weavings and collages for the past few years, as a counterpoint to devastating scenes of environmental collapse. Im interested in how the narrative around 21st-century space exploration is being put forth as a solution to the challenges facing humanity due to climate change. It seems quite absurd to me, and I really hope to be proven wrong.

I recently began researching Moon-based mining because I wanted to know what resources there were considered worth extracting. Initially, I thought that rare Earth elements must be the Moons gold since theyre so important in making high-tech electronic equipment. But in conversations with Dr. David Alexander, director of the Rice Space Institute, and Dr. David A. Kring, principal scientist at the Universities Space Research Associations Lunar and Planetary Institute, who both generously offered me guidance during my research, I learned its really the Moons water ice that holds the greatest mining potential, as its crucial for producing hydrogen rocket fuel for NASAs Artemis program.

Its poetic and disturbing that our presence on the Moon will begin with water (ice deposits) and sunlight (harvested by solar arrays to power the machinery necessary for extraction)the same two elements that fostered biological life on Earth, billions of years ago. Whats about to happen on the Moon will most likely begin to push humanity toward a different kind of life beyond Earth.

For those of us less familiar with this part of space history, could you give us a brief background of the Moon Agreement and how the U.S. created a loophole around it?

The Moon Agreement was adopted by the U.N. in 1979, expanding on the 1967 U.N. Outer Space Treaty that created a basic framework of space law, banning nuclear weapons in space, reserving the Moon and other celestial bodies to peaceful uses, and making space a kind of international demilitarized zone for free exploration and use by all nations. The Moon Treaty further declares the Moon the common heritage of mankind (which is a source of ongoing disagreement) and stipulates that an international regime should govern any resource extraction or mining. The U.N. held a series of conferences to try and settle on an appropriate regime of law, but failed to get anywhere, and the Treaty was never ratified by any of the major players in space flight, like the U.S., Russia, and China.

Fast forward to 2015, the U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act, signed into law by President Obama, effectively legalized space mining by American private enterprise, allowing companies to own mining rights and profit from sale of resources produced on asteroids and other off-world bodies like the Moon, Mars, and beyond. Many other nations have followed suit. In 2020, President Trump went a step further by signing an executive order, Encouraging International Support for the Recovery and Use of Space Resources, formally recognizing the rights of American private interests to claim resources in space, thus ending the decades-long debate that began with the signing of the Outer Space Treaty. It establishes Americans right to engage in commercial exploration, recovery, and use of resources in outer space, consistent with applicable lawand directly refutes the Moon Treaty in declaring that the United States does not view space as a global commons.

Do you believe the human impulse to explore is also inextricably linked to the desire to have and ownor control?

History as a patriarchal narrative written by the winner has taught us that this might be the case, but Im interested in alternative narratives that question those assumptions about human nature, for instance, the book The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity by anthropologist David Graeber and archeologist David Wengrow. The authors show how history becomes a far more interesting place once we learn to throw off our conceptual shackles and perceive whats really there. They challenge our most fundamental assumptions about social evolution and reveal new possibilities for human emancipation with startling implications for how we make sense of human history today, including the origins of farming, property, cities, democracy, slavery, and civilization itself.

I have a related question in regards to a quote from the exhibitions wall text: By focusing on the eminent extraction of resources on the Moon,The 8th Continentrecalls the tension between environmental preservation and industrial exploitation of Earths diminishing resources, and considers how frontier mythologies rationalize discovery and the subsequent stages of development and extraction. Do you believe the U.S.s notion of unfettered optimism toward progress is inextricably linked to colonial conquest? Especially as someone who isnt originally from the U.S.: do you see an America that is forever entangled in its own mythology?

Every empire uses mythologies and values systems to sustain and justify the control it exerts over others, over its own people, and so on. The colonial project goes beyond issues of border and territory; just think about how our minds are colonized, trained to think along certain lines and not others. But going back to the issue of resources, if you believe that expansion is a given and progress will always bring benefits to people, then we might one day have to extract beyond the solar system!

In my sound piece, You Got to Make Your Own Worlds (for when Siri is long gone), which was recently on view at Mass MOCA, I selected excerpts of [historical] interviews with sci-fi author Octavia E. Butler and put them in conversation with Apple Inc.s iOS virtual assistant, Siri. Heres an excerpt from that constructed conversation, a quote by Butler: I think that the one thing we can be sure of is that we wont have, you know, straight line prophecy coming true that whatever technological things were doing now will just do more of that and better. I think well get surprises. Its dangerous to assume that we can actually see the future by only looking at the advancements weve made so far. Its very interesting to see how some of Butlers statements about the future and the faith in progress reflect our present.

Youve expressed interest in Butlers writing in past work. Does your interest in Butler also relate in any way to The 8th Continent? If so, how?

Octavia Butler sparked my interest in science fiction, as well as space exploration and some of the current science associated with it. The 8th Continent doesnt draw directly from any of her novels, but it certainly comes from a familiar place of interrogating scientific propositions from a humanistic perspective. Im curious to see how land use and territory play out in the 21st-century space race, and whether the abuses of land and people that have marked our time on Earth get perpetuated as we move out into the solar system.

The wall text also seems to delineate a connection between exploration and exploitation via colonization. However, I suspect there are implicit nods toward other forms of colonization at play in this work. Could you speak to that?

The work also operates at a metaphorical level, where the conquest of new territory reflects colonial historiesespecially when the land in question is considered desert, or wilderness, or empty, hence there for the taking. Certainly, this has been the premise behind the swindling of vast territories from Indigenous communities, who have occupied and used their traditional lands in very different ways from those favored by their conquerors.

As space exploration becomes a more privatized entrepreneurial endeavor in the 21st century, I wonder what will become of these celestial bodies and their relationship with geopolitical power plays on Earth. Will they become repositories of resources that benefit the few, yet rely on public money for their exploration? Moreover, if the end goal is profit, whats to safeguard different forms of lifeperhaps far beyond any understanding of life on Earththat we may well encounter out there? And then theres the military angle, space treaties notwithstanding, of defending territorial claims, and the potential for space wars that comes with that.

Could you explain the impetus to connect the technological advancements of NASA with medieval and Renaissance tapestries in The 8th Continent? Why, for you, was this the most salient way to symbolize anexertion of power?

Theres something very luxurious in tapestries made with metallic thread (or the gilt-metal-wrapped silk that was used back then). Its almost decadent. Their production was painstaking, with high-quality tapestries requiring a group of very skilled weavers laboring, sometimes for years, to achieve the desired outcome. It seemed interesting and provocative to render these NASA images of the Moon with such intricacy, at this specific moment in space history, when the Artemis program is being outlined in stages, to unfold in the decades to come. My upcoming solo exhibition at MCA Denver opening in June 2022 engages further with Moon exploration.

You talk about tapestries being symbolic of the wealth and power of the medieval era as well as the Renaissance. Would it be fair to also find a link in this work to the Arts and Crafts Movement of the late 19th century and its emergent feminism? If so, how does it change or add to the idea of conquest in this piece?

In fact, I was not thinking about Arts and Crafts Movement, though I can understand the desire to associate textile artworks such as these with the feminist art canon. But these jacquard weavings were made with a digital loom, so to me this work speaks more to digital translation in its materiality than to craft and the handmade. Though I must say that when I weave with strips of Amazon cardboard delivery boxes and satellite photographs, I do use my own hands, and work within a different scale of time and intimacy with the materials.

Can you talk about those works more?

In my solo exhibition at Commonwealth and Council, Disorientation Towards Collapse, I had a new series of weavings titled Future Geographies which combines strips of broken-down Amazon delivery boxes with NASA satellite images depicting Shackleton Crater, the proposed site of the first US lunar ice mining facility; Jezero Crater on Mars, later dubbed Octavia E. Butler Landing, where NASAs Perseverance rover set down in February 2021; and the Hyades, one of the best studied star clusters, 153 light years distant. Another weaving, in Disorientation Towards Collapse, is made entirely from cut up Amazon boxes, highlighting their pervasive materialitycardboard covered with Amazons ubiquitous arrow logo, a banal index of circulation and consumption in the global economy. The slow, laborious process of flattening the boxes, cutting them into strips, and weaving them together stands in contrast to accelerating cycles of mass extraction/production/consumption and waste on which our lives presently depend. A disposable container transformed into a contemplative experience signals a broader invitation to stop, look, and reflect.

The work in the Moody Center show feels texturally gratifying in terms of its excruciating level of detail, the iridescent thread, and the material warmth emanating from the woven tapestry. Yet, these high-resolution, scientific images also register as clinical, icy, and even evasive. Could you talk more about this seductive push/pull technique going on in the work and how it relates to the subject matter at hand?

I wanted to stay true to the digital realm, treating outer space images for what they are: more a matter of selective mapping and coding than anything like photography in the traditional sense, the straightforward record of a landscape. Images of planets and moons taken from satellites and rovers are far less straightforward than meets the eye. Every image must be processed, manipulated, and interpretedand this is after a team of scientists has haggled over what they should even be imaging, to begin with. Janet Vertesis book Seeing Like a Rover has been illuminating, and a great source of inspiration in this regard. She unpacks the role of digital processing in uncovering scientific truths, where images craft consensus and team members develop an uncanny intimacy with the sensory apparatus of a robot, millions of miles away.

Could you elaborate more on the use of a digital loom?

Using a digital loom to output the images into the weave of the tapestries seemed to go with these processes, which inherently complicate the relationship between reality and photographyits documentary capabilities and relationship with the human eye. I think its interesting to think about the visualization of space landscapes as something created by scientists through technological imaging processes that go beyond human sight. Think about how Google Earth allows us to surveil the surface of the Moon and Mars from a detached robotic perspective, and how more and more, these landscapes are getting incorporated into the visuality of our world.

Could you talk a little bit more about your recent show at Commonwealth and Council? In what ways does that show parallel or intersect with this work?

In Disorientation Towards Collapse, I further engage with the global environmental catastrophe, and the key role humans and corporations have played in accelerating the disaster. Im also looking at the paradigm shift from environmental conservation to industrial exploitation against a backdrop of Earths dwindling resources, and how frontier mythologies really pave the way, charting the relentless course that leads from discovery and development to extraction, over and over again, starting just beyond whatever frontier we just used up. Of course, the privatization of space exploration in the 21st century is gearing up for the next cycle. I want to show how this flourishing new industry is predicated on the same bad logic of over-extraction that has brought our planet to the brink of ecological collapse.

See the original post:
In Houston, Artist Clarissa Tossin Ponders the Colonial Implications of the 21st-Century Space Race - ARTnews

Posted in Moon Colonization | Comments Off on In Houston, Artist Clarissa Tossin Ponders the Colonial Implications of the 21st-Century Space Race – ARTnews

Elon Musk: Manned Mission to Mars is Just a Few Years Away – Greek Reporter

Posted: at 8:07 pm

Elon Musk believes that a manned mission to Mars could happen in just a few years. Credit: NASA/JPL/CalTech

Elon Musk stated that a manned mission to Mars could happen as early as 2029 on Wednesday when asked on Twitter.

A twitter user posted a picture comparing an image from the Moon landing, along with 1969, the year the historic event took place, and an image depicting a potential Mars landing with the text 20_ _? The user wrote Whats your guess? and tagged Musk in the tweet.

Responding to the question, Musk replied simply 2029.

The SpaceX and Tesla CEO Musk has long advocated for the colonization of Mars as a solution to many of the Earths problems, particularly climate change, and has made landing on the planet one of his biggest goals.

While speaking at the International Astronautical Congress in Guadalajara, Mexico in 2016, Musk asserted that traveling to and even building a city in Mars is something we can do in our lifetimes.

Musk has even claimed that a Mars colony will be established as early as five years from now, with ten years being a worst-case scenario.

The billionaire has gone on to state that he believes that establishing a city of roughly a million inhabitants on the planet is possible by 2050.

While many scientists disagree with Musks timeline, they still believe that colonization of the planet could be on the horizon.

Professor Serkan Saydam, who works at the School of Mineral Energy Resources Engineering at UNSW Sydney, says that a colony on the Red Planet is in fact possible within the next three decadesas long as autonomous forms of mining are commercially viable.

For its part, NASA is interested in investigating the possibility of establishing a colony on Mars.

A statement from NASA released in August of 2021 clearly indicates that they are interested in cultivating readiness for the possibility that humans will be on Mars in the near future:

As NASA ventures farther into the cosmos, the astronaut experience will change. In preparation for the real-life challenges of future missions to Mars, NASA will study how highly motivated individuals respond under the rigor of a long-duration, ground-based simulation.

The simulated mission will have four crew members live in a small 3D printed module that simulates the real-world environment of a Mars living space, challenging the crew members to deal with resource limitations, equipment failure, communication delays, and other environmental stressors.

Interest in surveying and studying Mars with the goal of someday landing on the Red Plant has been widespread in recent years.

Europe and Russia had planned to send rovers to the planet later this year, but the war in Ukraine led to the cancellation of the mission, called ExoMars. The ExoMars mission was aimed at discovering any signs of life on Mars.

NASA is also working on a Mars Ascent Vehicle which will be used to launch samples from the surface of the planet back to Earth.

The Mars Ascent Vehicle, known as the MAV, is a small rocket that will launch sediment, rock, and atmospheric samples, becoming the first rocket launched from another planet back to Earth.

Link:
Elon Musk: Manned Mission to Mars is Just a Few Years Away - Greek Reporter

Posted in Moon Colonization | Comments Off on Elon Musk: Manned Mission to Mars is Just a Few Years Away – Greek Reporter

Columbia School of the Arts to Present SHE WALKS THE AIR IX – Broadway World

Posted: at 8:07 pm

Columbia University School of the Arts will present Chaesong Kim's (Columbia MFA Directing Candidate 2022) production of She Walks the Air IX.

Inspired by a line out from Ota Shogo's seminal work, The Water Station, She Walks the Air IX finally lands in its ninth iteration after morphing through multiple iterations with over 40 collaborators at institutions across the country. A rejection of Shogo's hypererotization of the female body and refusal to acknowledge colonization, She Walks the Air IX harnesses the breathtaking beauty of the non-western canon in an ensemble ritual that invites its participants to imagine walking in the air, like walking on the road, but also walking the air, like walking a dog.

Anthony Sertel Dean, Anuka Sethi, Ari LaMora, Ariel Urim Chung, Begum "Begsy" Inal, Chaesong Kim, Noa Toledano, Sarazina Stein, and Willow Green

Producers Zhiwei Ma and Yining (Vivian) Cao, Production Stage Manager Emma Hughes, Assistant Stage Manager Jonah Yoder, Company Manager Gabriel Szajnert, Interactive Experience Designers Andrew Agress, Kanika Vaish and Phoebe Brooks, Scenic Designer Hsin-Ho Yang, Costume Designer Karen Boyer, Lighting Designer Christopher Wong, Sound Designer Anthony Sertel Dean, Props Designer Begum "Begsy" Inal and Hyoju Cheon, Projection Designer Vivienne Shaw, Somatic Advisor Fana Fraser.

Darby Davis, Divyamaan Sahoo, Ellen Oliver, Eva Wang, Fiona Gorry-Hines, Julie Moon, Liz Peterson, Siting Yang, Sophie Kovel, Victoria Awkwards, e??e??e??, e??i??i-?, e??i??e??, e??i??i??, e??i??e??, e??i??, i?oei??i??, i?oei??i??, e-?i??

Chaesong Kim's Directing Thesis will be presented at Lenfest Center for the Arts.

Thursday, March 24 at 8pmFriday, March 25 at 8pmSaturday, March 26 2pmSaturday, March 26 at 8pmSunday, March 27 at 2pmClick here for tickets.

e??i??i?? / Chaesong Kim (she/they) was born and raised by two social activists who were a part of the student-led democratic revolution and labor rights movement in South Korea. Often subconsciously, they were fueled by a kind rage towards hierarchy, oppressive system and colonization. Recently, they have been recontextualizing such dissatisfaction as love - taking care, taking time, noticing, and holding space. They deeply identify with the inheritance of "in-between" spaces, and celebrate transcendence through an embodied communal practice. Most recently their work has been a part of Seoul Dance Center's CO-Choreo LAB, EstroGenius Festival, Ping Chong + Company's Nocturne in 2020, and La MaMa E.T.C. They have also performed in Okwui Okpokwasili's Sitting on a Man's Head, and Samita Sinha's Infinity Folds at Danspace, and Claire Chase's Density 2036 with Constellation Chor at The Kitchen.

More:
Columbia School of the Arts to Present SHE WALKS THE AIR IX - Broadway World

Posted in Moon Colonization | Comments Off on Columbia School of the Arts to Present SHE WALKS THE AIR IX – Broadway World