2019年3月31日 星期日

Astronaut Kicks Lunar Field Goal


Score three points for NASA. With time running out late in Apollo 15's mission to the Moon in 1971, Astronaut David Scott prepared to split the uprights and bring about yet another dramatic end-of-the-mission victory for NASA. Scott used a special lunar football designed for the rugged games held on the Moon. R1-D1, a predecessor to R2-D2, cheered from the sideline. Happy April Fools' Day from the folks at APOD. In reality, Astronaut Scott placed a drill that measured how temperature changed with lunar depth. The foreground device actually detected high-energy particles that escaped from the Sun. via NASA https://ift.tt/2U9c8Ut

From Rihanna to LeBron James, Musicians and Fans Pay Tribute to Slain Rapper Nipsey Hussle on Social Media

Rapper Nipsey Hussle Shot to Death in Los Angeles

The Great Duke Experiment of 2019 Is Over

“Can We Talk?” How to Survive When Your Boss Utters the Office’s Most Dreaded Phrase.

Jim Carrey and Alessandra Mussolini—Benito Mussolini’s Granddaughter—Are Feuding on Twitter

My Husband Secretly Filmed Me Naked. How Can I Ever Trust Him Again?

White House Insists Trump Is Serious About Closing Border as Some Wonder if It’s Possible

Oregon and the Sabrina Ionescu Show Are Going to the Final Four

Jeff Bezos’ Investigator Says Saudi Arabia Accessed Amazon Chief’s Phone

Donald Trump “Cheats at the Highest Level” in Golf, According to New Book

Elon Musk Releases a Surprise Rap Song About Harambe the Cincinnati Zoo Gorilla

Only 29% of Americans Believe Mueller Cleared Trump of Wrongdoing

Fox News Refers to El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras as “3 Mexican Countries”

Biden on Lucy Flores Accusation: “Not Once—Never—Did I Believe I Acted Inappropriately”

Agnès Varda and JR’s Surprising, Beautiful Friendship

Two Weird Video Games Celebrate the Late-’90s Web

Saturday Night Live Host Sandra Oh Speaks Out Against the Barbaric Scourge of 18th Century Pistol Duels

2019年3月30日 星期六

SNL’s Ego Nwodim Calls Her Credit Card to Report Identity Theft and, Uh, It’s Not Good

SNL Spoofs Space Station EVA Change



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Markarians Chain of Galaxies


Across the heart of the Virgo Cluster of Galaxies lies a striking string of galaxies known as Markarian's Chain. The chain, pictured here, is highlighted on the right with two large but featureless lenticular galaxies, M84 and M86. Prominent to their lower left is a pair of interacting galaxies known as The Eyes. The home Virgo Cluster is the nearest cluster of galaxies, contains over 2000 galaxies, and has a noticeable gravitational pull on the galaxies of the Local Group of Galaxies surrounding our Milky Way Galaxy. The center of the Virgo Cluster is located about 70 million light years away toward the constellation of Virgo. At least seven galaxies in the chain appear to move coherently, although others appear to be superposed by chance. via NASA https://ift.tt/2OAYQtM

Let’s All Marvel at the Incredible Pass that Helped Send Virginia to the Final Four

Meet the Ohio Teenager Who Scandalized the Nation by Wearing Bloomers to Church

Bodycam Video Shows California Rapper Was Asleep Until Moments Before Police Opened Fire

U.S. Cuts Off Federal Aid to El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras

The Secret to Beating Duke in the Tournament, Revealed

Steph Curry and Kevin Durant’s Nemesis Is a Referee

Watch Ocasio-Cortez Slam Audience Member Who Insults Republican: “That’s Unacceptable”

Alyssa Mastromonaco and Peter Grosz on Their Great Bosses


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In this episode, Catie Lazarus talks to President Barack Obama’s former deputy chief of staff of operations Alyssa Mastromonaco as well as comedy writer Peter Grosz.

Podcast production by Cameron Drews. Theme song by Lady Rizo.



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Trump Campaign Is Selling “Pencil-Neck Adam Schiff” T-Shirts

Infowars Host Alex Jones Blames “A Form of Psychosis” for Sandy Hook Truther Claims

Will Kavanaugh Side With Liberals on Gerrymanders?


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Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern unpack the arguments in the North Carolina and Maryland gerrymander cases heard by the Supreme Court this week, and Aaron Belkin of advocacy group Pack the Courts tells us why packing the courts is becoming a serious topic in the Democratic presidential race.

Please let us know what you think of Amicus. Join the discussion of this episode on Facebook. Our email is amicus@slate.com.



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How a Headscarf United One Country—and Divided Another


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A few days after the March 15 New Zealand mosque massacre, Dr. Thaya Ashman heard about a woman who was too afraid to come out in public in her hijab for fear of being targeted. So Ashman had the idea to invite every person in New Zealand to wear a headscarf in public. The result was quite different from what happened in America three years ago, when a woman who tried to make a similar gesture of goodwill toward Muslims incurred the wrath of evangelical Christians on social media. On this episode, Barry revisits that incident in light of the New Zealand massacre and discusses how it helped write the next chapter in a thousand-year-old controversy concerning Christianity, Islam, their shared origins, and the nature of God. We look at whether Christians and Muslims worship the same god, and what it takes to answer that question. Guest voices include Thaya Ashman, Larycia Hawkins, Michael Mangis, Karly Bothman, Paul Griffiths, and Amir Hussain.

For all back episodes from Seasons 1 and 2 of Hi-Phi Nation, visit www.hiphination.org.

Facebook: www.facebook.com/hiphination/
Email: hiphination@slate.com
Twitter: @hiphination



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Help! I’m Thinking of Transitioning, but I Don’t Support All LGBTQ Rights.

Big Bad Pharma Has Settled


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On this week’s episode, Emily Peck, Felix Salmon, and Anna Szymanski discuss Apple’s list of new services, the Purdue Pharma settlement, and Lyft going public.

In the Slate Plus segment: Where have all the suits gone?

Email: slatemoney@slate.com
Twitter: @felixsalmon, @Three_Guineas, @EmilyRPeck

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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2019年3月29日 星期五

3D 67P


Put on your red/cyan glasses and float next to the jagged and double-lobed nucleus of Churyumov-Gerasimenko, also known as Comet 67P. The stereo anaglyph was created by combining two images from the Rosetta spacecraft's narrow angle OSIRIS camera taken on July 25, 2015 from a distance of 184 kilometers. Numerous jets are emanating from the small solar system world's active surface near its closest approach to the Sun. The larger lobe is around 4 kilometers in diameter, joined to a smaller, 2.5 kilometer diameter lobe by a narrow neck. Rosetta's mission to the comet ended in September 2016 when the spacecraft was commanded to a controlled impact with the comet's surface. Keep those 3D glasses on though. You can check out a new catalog of nearly 1400 stereo anaglyphs created from Rosetta image data on this website. via NASA https://ift.tt/2TGcBIE

When Tragedy and Terrorism Strike, People Open Their Doors.

We Are Living in a Golden Age of Arthouse Horse Movies

Mike Lee’s Tauntaun Theatrics in Congress Are an Encouraging Sign for the Climate Debate. Really!

The Angle: How Are Democrats and Pundits Faring in a Post-Mueller World?

Former Nevada Politician Says Joe Biden Smelled Her Hair, Kissed Her Head at 2014 Campaign Event

Why Did Brett Kavanaugh Change His Mind About the Rights of Religious Minorities in the Execution Chamber?

How Our Mathematicians’ Brief Could Help SCOTUS Fix Gerrymandering

We Didn’t Find Collusion This Week but We Did Find Out Why 1980s “Garfield” Phones Keep Washing Up on the Beach in France

A Consumer DNA Testing Company Is Making an Alarming New Marketing Pivot

How Brexit Descended Into Chaos: a Brief Guide for the Perplexed

The U.S. Wants Russian Troops Out of Venezuela. The Russians Aren’t Backing Down.

Apple Families vs. Google Families: Are Our A.I. Devices Creating a Technological Caste System?


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On this episode of Live at Politics and Prose, Amy Webb discusses her book, The Big Nine, at Politics and Prose.

You can watch a playlist of videos from other readings that have featured in this podcast feed.

Email: books@politics-prose.com
Twitter: @PoliticsProse

Podcast production by Tom Warren.



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What Happened to Rachel Maddow?

Will Russia Disconnect From the Internet on April 1?

Billie Eilish’s Debut Announces the Arrival of a New Kind of Teen Pop Star

The Composer Behind Us Explains the Film’s Musical Easter Eggs

How Leaving Neverland Helped Me Understand the Abuse I Endured as a Child

This Footnote to Barr’s Mueller Report Letter Felt Very Random. Perhaps It Wasn’t.

Marvin Gaye’s Lost Album Finds Him at the Peak of His Creativity

Sandy Hook Families Just Proved Congress Lied to Pass One of the NRA’s Favorite Bills

Trump Just Threatened to Close the Southern Border Next Week, Which Is What Fox News Called on Him to Do Last Night

If SCOTUS Refuses to Act on Partisan Gerrymandering, State Supreme Courts Offer a Path to Reform

Don’t Lock Up Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman

This Sort Of Behavior Needs To Stop. Now.



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“No One Like Her”: Filmmakers Pay Tribute to Agnès Varda, Master of the French New Wave

How an Improvised Live Recording Became Stevie Wonder’s First No. 1


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When you think of Stevie Wonder’s legendary career, what chart-toppers come to mind? “Superstition,” right? Maybe “I Wish”? OK, but what about the start of his career, on the Motown of the 1960s? You may not know that Wonder had only one Hot 100 No. 1 in his first decade—as “Little” Stevie Wonder—and it was truly exceptional, as in bizarre: a semi-improvised live recording of a “12-Year-Old Genius” refusing to leave a Chicago stage and say goodnight. Here’s the story of “Fingertips, Part 2,” and the years that launched a true pop icon. Wonder’s imperial run of classic, chart-topping, Grammy-dominating ’70s albums had its seeds in the joyous virtuosity—and fierce independence—on display in his very first hit.

Email: hitparade@slate.com.



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Hubble Spots Flock of Cosmic Ducks


This star-studded image shows us a portion of Messier 11, an open star cluster in the southern constellation of Scutum (the Shield). Messier 11 is also known as the Wild Duck Cluster, as its brightest stars form a “V” shape that somewhat resembles a flock of ducks in flight. via NASA https://ift.tt/2CMbhhy

Trump Claims “I’ve Taken Better Care of Puerto Rico Than Any Man Ever”

Finding Femme: The Quiet Resistance of a Small-Town Stylist for Trans Women and Cross-Dressing Men

Barry’s Second Act Is Already a Reprise

Dear Care and Feeding: What Should We Do About a Neighbor Boy Who Shows Off His Penis?

Think You’re Smarter Than Slate Live’s Executive Producer? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.

The Strange Story of the Most-Shared Story on Facebook in 2019

The Muller Investigation Shows Trump Isn’t Working for Moscow. He’s Working for Any Dictator Who Flatters Him.

Beyond Inbox Zero


Click on the play button to hear this episode, or listen to the show via Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Stitcher, or Google Play.

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In a famous talk at Google, productivity guru Merlin Mann introduced the world to Inbox Zero, his idea of managing the raging river of digital overload. But is such a high standard even possible as the river turns into an onslaught and saps time and mental bandwidth? In this episode, we explore email mindset and how to think about your inbox, and compare Mann’s Inbox Zero approach with writer Amy Westervelt’s Inbox 100,000.

Guests:
Merlin Mann, writer, blogger, podcaster, productivity expert, and inventor of “Inbox Zero” @hotdogsladies
Amy Westervelt, award-winning journalist, podcaster, and author of Forget “Having It All”: How America Messed Up Motherhood—and How to Fix It @amywestervelt

Podcast production by David Schulman.



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A Pilot on Whether He’ll Ever Trust Boeing Again


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After the Ethiopian Airlines crash on March 10—and the Indonesian Airlines crash before that, in October—country after country began grounding the deadly Boeing 737 Air Max fleet, and the U.S. belatedly followed suit. This week, Congress held hearings with Boeing and the FAA, questioning them about how the planes were certified and what went wrong. There were a lot of public apologies and a lot of corporate humility. But questions remain: Who’s to blame for the deadly crashes, whom do we hold accountable, and how do we prevent this from happening again?

Guest: Rob Mark, commercial pilot and publisher of Jetwhine.com.

Tell us what you think by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts or sending an email to whatnext@slate.com.

Follow us on Instagram for updates on the show.

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Anna Martin.



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Slate’s Mistakes for the Week of March 25


In a March 28 Jurisprudence, Jeremy Stahl misstated the timing of California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announcement of a state moratorium on the death penalty. It was earlier this month, not two weeks ago.

In a March 27 Slatest, Joshua Keating misidentified the United Kingdom as Great Britain. Great Britain refers only to the island that includes England, Scotland, and Wales.

In a March 27 Slatest, Ben Mathis-Lilley misspelled Stacey Abrams’ first name.

In a March 26 Brow Beat, Marissa Martinelli misstated the amount of the bond Jussie Smollett forfeited to the city of Chicago. It was $10,000, not $100,000.

In a March 26 Future Tense, Stephen Harrison misstated Rosie Stephenson-Goodknight’s role in Wikipedia’s 2018 Gender Equity Report. She co-facilitated it; she did not compile it.

A March 26 Industry misstated that Rebecca Stack-Martinez is a full-time driver for both Uber and Lyft. She currently only drives for Uber.

In a March 26 Life, Rachelle Hampton misspelled Zackary Drucker’s first name.

Due to an editing error, a March 26 Moneybox misstated that yields on 10-year Treasury bonds had fallen below those of “the-month note.” They fell below those of “the three-month bill.”

In a March 26 Slatest, Molly Olmstead misspelled Erich Ludendorff’s last name.

In a March 26 Working show page, June Thomas misstated the age at which Mary Stevenson made her career switch. She was in her mid-60s when she shifted careers, not in her late 50s.

In a March 24 Slatest, Daniel Politi misidentified Keurig Dr. Pepper as Keurig Green Mountain, the company’s former name.

Slate strives to correct all errors of fact. If you’ve seen an error in our pages, let us know at corrections@slate.com. General comments should be posted in our Comments sections associated with each article.



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2019年3月28日 星期四

New York Suit Alleges Sackler Family Funneled Money From Opioid Company Into Personal Accounts Offshore

An Ode to Ryan Cline’s Catapult-Like Jumper That Saved Purdue’s Bacon

In Broad City’s Series Finale, It’s Us Who Must Move On

Hubble Watches Spun-Up Asteroid Coming Apart


A small asteroid was caught in the process of spinning so fast it’s throwing off material, according to new data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and other observatories. via NASA https://ift.tt/2V6SOni

Resign? The Only Thing Rep. Adam Schiff Dropped Is the Mic.

New York Set to Become Second State to Ban Plastic Bags, While Florida Considers Banning Bans

The Administration Is Handing Its Enemies Tools to Topple Trump the Usual Way

In Christian Circles, the Debate Over Leggings and Female Butts Has Been Raging With Special Urgency

Someone Dumped Me Because I’m a “Bad Kisser.” Can I Really Be That Bad?

Trump Now Wants to Fund the Special Olympics After Three Years of Budget Proposals to Defund It

Everything You Wanted to Know About the Two-Wombed Woman Who Birthed Triplets

No One Asked for the Barr Report. When Do We Get Mueller’s?


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On this week’s Slate Political Gabfest, recorded live at the Lincoln Theatre in D.C., Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz discuss William Barr’s puzzling description of the Mueller report, Emily’s new book Charged, and House Democrats’ legislative agenda, with guest Rep. Lauren Underwood.

Here are some of the links and references from this week’s show:

• The Whistlestop podcast’s four-part series “The Making of the American Presidency

• Peter Baker for the New York Times: “Mueller’s Investigation Erases a Line Drawn After Watergate

Charged: The New Movement to Transform American Prosecution and End Mass Incarceration by Emily Bazelon

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander

• What Next podcast: host Mary Harris interviews Jamelle Bouie, in “How to Watch the Presidential Horse Race Like a Pro

Here are this week’s cocktail chatters:

• Emily: Adam Liptak for the New York Times: “Justices Display Divisions in New Cases on Voting Maps Warped by Politics

• John: Jeff Biggers for Smithsonian Magazine: “The 19th-Century Woman Journalist Who Made Congress Bow Down in Fear

• David: Amy X. Wang for Rolling Stone: “Warner Music Group Signs an Algorithm to a Record Deal

• Listener chatter from Daria Kashian @bossymagoo: Eli Rosenberg for the Washington Post: “A GOP Governor Doesn’t Believe in Chickenpox Vaccines. He Took His Nine Kids to a Pox Party Instead.”

For this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment, Emily, David, and John take questions from the live audience.

Topic ideas for next week? You can tweet suggestions, links, and questions to @SlateGabfest. Tweet us your cocktail chatter using #cocktailchatter or post it to our Facebook page. (Messages may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.)

Become a fan of the Political Gabfest on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @SlateGabfest. The email address for the Political Gabfest is gabfest@slate.com. (Email may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.)

Podcast production by Jocelyn Frank.
Research and show notes by Bridgette Dunlap.



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The Angle: Candidate Pete Is a White Man. Does His Sexuality Set Him Apart?

Tim Burton’s Dumbo Tries to Have Its Disney-Satirizing Cake and Profit Off It Too

Good News! The Saudi Arabia Nuclear Plan Originally Proposed by Michael Flynn and Some Russians Is Alive and Well

Why The Rocky Horror Picture Show Matters


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Our monsters, ourselves: Why creatures repel us, yet attract us. Our latest American Icons segment is about The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Producer June Thomas reports on how the movie became an audience-participation phenomenon—and gave a sense of belonging to some of those moviegoers who were made to feel like outcasts elsewhere. Kurt Andersen talks with author and filmmaker Mallory O’Meara about her new book The Lady From the Black Lagoon: the story of Milicent Patrick, who designed one of Hollywood’s most famous monsters but didn’t get credit for it. And how author Helen Phillips’ life was changed when she read Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis.

Studio 360 plugs:
Please remember to like us on our Facebook page and Twitter. Send your emails to incoming@studio360.org.



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NASA's Moon To Mars Town Hall

Town Hall with NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine

"Headquarters is hosting an agencywide town hall with NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine on Monday, April 1, at 1:30 p.m. EDT. Please join the Administrator for this important discussion on our Moon to Mars plans. All employees, contractors and civil servants, are encouraged to participate in person at Headquarters in the Webb auditorium or at the designated viewing location at their center. The event will air live on NASA Television (public channel), through your center cable or streaming distribution, and on the agency's website at https://www.nasa.gov/nasalive."



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ISPs Were Wrong to Block 8chan After the New Zealand Shooting

My Cats Rub Their Butts on Me While I Sleep. How Do I Stop Them?

My Kid Got Accepted to a Selective School—and I’m Being a Jerk About It


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On this week’s episode: Rebecca, Gabe, and guest host Katherine answer a question from a mother who was surprised by her response when her daughter got into a selective private school, and another from a mother whose boys are so used to playing with each other that they don’t know how to behave on play dates. As usual, we share triumphs and fails and offer up recommendations. Then, on Slate Plus, Gabe talks to Katherine about her new show, The Double Shift, and what she learned about the working lives of mothers in the sex industry.

Recommendations:

Gabe recommends the kids magazine Kazoo.

Rebecca recommends the app Crazy Gears.

Katherine recommends two go-to baby shower presents: the Magic Merlin sleep suit and the book The Fifth Trimester.

Join us on Facebook and email us at momanddad@slate.com to tell us what you thought of today’s show and give us ideas for what we should talk about in future episodes. Got questions that you’d like us to answer? Call and leave us a message at 424-255-7833.

Podcast produced by Jess Jupiter.

Slate has relationships with various online retailers. If you buy something through our links, Slate may earn an affiliate commission. We update links when possible, but note that deals can expire and all prices are subject to change. All prices were up to date at the time of publication.



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DNA Evidence Freed Him From Prison. Florida Is Retrying Him Anyway.

The Pentagon Is Playing a Ludicrous Shell Game to Pay for Trump’s Wall

A Stranded Wow Air Passenger on How She Found Out She’s Stuck in Europe

Full Frontal Resorts to Cute Dogs and Cheesing to Raise Awareness of a Serious Immigration Issue

Is Pete Buttigieg Just Another White Male Candidate, or Does His Gayness Count as Diversity?

How—and Why—Patty Stonesifer Moved From Microsoft to the Gates Foundation

One of Monica Lewinksy’s Most Notorious Interrogators Is About to Get a Seat on the Federal Bench

Stephen Colbert Mocks Mike Lee’s Bizarre Star Wars Presentation

NASA Television to Broadcast Launch, Docking of Space Station Cargo Ship

A Russian Progress cargo ship is scheduled to launch on a three-hour flight to the International Space Station Thursday, April 4.

March 28, 2019
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Budget Airline Wow Air Suddenly Ceases Operations and Cancels Flights, Leaving Passengers Stranded

Is the Tide Finally Turning on the Death Penalty?

Nine Questions You Should Really Ask on College Tours

How an Uproar Over Pope Francis Refusing to Have His Ring Kissed Explains the Catholic Culture Wars

The Act Dramatizes Difficult Truths About America


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Listen to the Waves via Apple PodcastsOvercastSpotifyStitcher, or Google Play.

On this week’s episode of the Waves, Marcia and June are joined by Maya Salam, a gender reporter for the New York Times. Together, they discuss the response to Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand’s Prime Minister, in the wake of the Christchurch massacre. Her leadership is a striking contrast to the likes of President Donald Trump, but it also sets her apart from other women in power. What does the way she’s perceived reveal about our own values? Then, The Act is a new true-crime series based on the viral 2016 BuzzFeed story of Dee Dee and Gypsy Blanchard. Can an overwhelmingly female writers room and cast overcome the queasy, quasi-exploitative premise? And what does the story—in fiction and in life—say about race, class, and health care in America? Finally, a renewed push for accurate, inclusive sex education in schools has been met with protests—and given the Trump administration’s efforts to sabotage these programs, the stakes feel higher than ever. The hosts debate whether schools should be the first port of call for sex ed in the first place and situate these developments in their historical context.

In Slate Plus: Is it sexist to use the term “ragging on”?

Other items discussed on the show:

• “Jacinda Ardern Is Leading by Following No One” by Maya Salam in the New York Times
• “Jacinda Ardern Has Rewritten the Script for How a Nation Grieves After a Terrorist Attack” by Masha Gessen in the New Yorker
• “Why Jacinda Ardern Matters” by Sushil Aaron in the New York Times
Slate Day 2019
The Act starring Patricia Arquette
• “Dee Dee Wanted Her Daughter to Be Sick, Gypsy Wanted Her Mom Murdered” by Michelle Dean in BuzzFeed News
• “Cleanin’ Out My Closet” by Enimen
• “In ‘The Act,’ Real-Life Horror Has an Emotional Logic” by Eleanor Stanford in the New York Times
Sharp Objects starring Amy Adams
I, Tonya starring Margot Robbie
• “Let’s Stop Ignoring the Truths of Puberty. We’re Making It Even More Awkward.” by Maya Salam in the New York Times
• “Compulsory Sex and LGBT+ Education Sparks Religious Backlash in UK” by Rachel Savage in Reuters
• “What Teenagers Are Learning From Online Porn” by Maggie Jones in the New York Times Magazine

Recommendations

Marcia: Ali Liebegott’s The Summer of Dead Birds

Maya: Carmen Maria Machado‘s Her Body and Other Parties

June: Everybody Knows starring Javier Bardem and Penelope Cruz

This podcast was produced by Danielle Hewitt. Our production assistant is Alex Barasch.

Please remember to like our Facebook page. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com. And come to our Slate Plus Anniversary Party on April 3!



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Hubble Watches Spun-Up Asteroid Coming Apart


A small asteroid was caught in the process of spinning so fast it’s throwing off material, according to new data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and other observatories. via NASA https://ift.tt/2FDtGh5

CASIS Announces Its Commercial Business Expansion Plans

Keith's note: CASIS Chief Strategy Officer Richard Leach made a presentation "Forecasting the 2024-2035 Space Based National Laboratory for Life and Physical Sciences Space Research" at the National Academies of Science Committee on Biological and Physical Sciences in Space meeting yesterday. During that presentation he announced that CASIS aka The ISS National Laboratory has expanded their scope of operations. They are now going to expand well beyond the ISS even though their cooperative agreement with NASA prohibits such an expansion.

As previously noted CASIS now uses ISS National Laboratory as their new public name even though they claim that they have not changed their name. I need to refer to this non-profit as "CASIS" since it would be hard to refer to the ISS National Laboratory as both a facility and also as a separate non-profit organization (with the same name) that runs and represents itself to be the ISS National Laboratory. (see CASIS Is Changing Its Name By Pretending That Its Not )

Anyway - at this NAS meeting during "Space Science Week" here in DC, CASIS proclaimed itself to be a "space integrator" and no longer limits its activities to managing the U.S. portion of the ISS i.e. the ISS National Laboratory (per its cooperative agreement with NASA). CASIS will now be supporting a broad range of microgravity platforms including suborbital vehicles, balloons, parabolic flights, drop towers, ground based laboratories and big data platforms. (larger chart image)

How will CASIS do this? That is not clear. Recently I reported that CASIS is working to develop a commercial entity to manage its expanded portfolio of services to be offered in a commercial fashion. When I asked them about this publicly they denied that they were doing this much to the chagrin of CASIS staff, board members, affiliated companies, advisors and stakeholders - and of course, NASA. They have hired a top shelf law firm in Washington DC to help them do this. (see CASIS Continues Its Stealth Commercialization Plans and CASIS Had A Board Meeting Today)

Let's look at what CASIS is legally bound to do - and not do - with the funds that NASA provides: According to NASA Cooperative Agreement NNH11CD70A - as modified 27 January 2015 (see this document, page 27)

"1.1 Introduction

This Cooperative AGreement is awarded pursuant to Section 504 of the NASA Authorization Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-257, found at USC 8354) by NASA to the Center for the Advancement of Science in space ("CASIS"). The parties agree that the principal purpose of this Agreement is to authorize CASIS to serve as the not-for-profit entity for management of the International Space Station ("ISS") National Laboratory ("NL"), per section 504 of the NASA Authorization Act of 2010, to maximize the value of the investment the U.S. government has made int the ISS and demonstrates the scientific and technological productivity of the ISS over the next decade.

1.2.1. CASIS Mission

CASIS will be responsible for maximizing the value of the ISS to the nation by developing and managing a diversified R&D portfolio based on U.S. national needs for basic and applied research and by using the ISS as a venue for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) educational activities.

1.2.2. CCASIS Goals

- stimulate, develop and manage the U.S. national uses of the ISS by other government agencies, academic institutions and private firms.
- Develop tools and techniques to communicate the value of uses of the ISS National Laboratory (IS NL) and increase the retuen on the U.S. investment in the ISS.

1.2.4 Prohibition of Other Activities

CASIS shall engage exclusively in activities relating to the management of the ISS NL and activities that promote its long term research and development mission as required by Section 504 of the NASA Authorization Act of 2010, without any other organizational objectives or responsibilities on behalf of CASIS or any parent organization or other entity."

Note that according to Section 1.2.4. CASIS is specifically prohibited from doing anything other than its stated tasks. These new business activities on non-ISS platforms would seem to be a direct violation of 1.2.4. Moreover since NASA pays 99.9% of the annual operating expenses of CASIS, the creation and operation of this new business entity (not a trial endeavor) is most certainly being organized and operated with the use of personnel paid for with NASA funds - unless CASIS is now truly a business venture and is being paid to do these things on a commercial basis. The IRS should find that to be of interest.

Either way, in so doing, CASIS is openly seeking to compete in the private sector with companies that it is also supposed to be offering ISS National Laboratory access to. Just a quick guess would suggest that CASIS is now going to enter markets where companies such as Nanoracks, Virgin Orbit, Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin, ZeroG and many others already provide commercial services.

I wonder what NASA thinks about all of this. Of course, CASIS has kept NASA completely in the loop on these commercial plans and gave NASA a heads up on their upcoming NAS presentation, right? Stay tuned.

Earlier posts on CASIS and ISS



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Is the Russian Internet a Lost Cause?

“Born This Way” Is the Standard Story for Queer People. But for Many of Us, That Story Is a Lie.

Texting Means Never Having to Say Goodbye

Beresheet Gears up for Lunar Rendezvous

Help! I’m Afraid My Boyfriend Will Dump Me for a Younger Woman When He Gets Successful.

Ask a Teacher: Should My Responsible Daughter Be Expected to Babysit the Difficult Boys in Her Class?

Broad City’s Best Trick Was Letting Its Free-Spirited Characters Get Old

Kavanaugh Is Pissed About Partisan Gerrymandering


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This week, the Supreme Court returned to the subject of partisan gerrymandering. After kicking the can down the road last time, will the court finally decide on the constitutionality of drawing election maps to rig elections? And who’s the surprising justice to watch as oral arguments in cases involving Maryland and North Carolina unfold?

Guest: Mark Joseph Stern, who covers the courts and the law for Slate.

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Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Anna Martin.



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2019年3月27日 星期三

The Gaia Stars of M15


Messier 15 is a 13 billion year old relic of the early formative years of our galaxy, one of about 170 globular star clusters that still roam the halo of the Milky Way. About 200 light-years in diameter, it lies about 35,000 light years away toward the constellation Pegasus. But this realistic looking view of the ancient globular star cluster is not a photograph. Instead it's an animated gif image constructed from remarkably precise individual measurements of star positions, brightness, and color. The astronomically rich data set used was made by the sky-scanning Gaia satellite which also determined parallax distances for 1.3 billion Milky Way stars. In the animated gif, twinkling stars are M15's identified RR Lyrae stars. Plentiful in M15, RR Lyrae stars are evolved pulsating variable stars whose brightness and pulsation period, typically less than a day, are related. via NASA https://ift.tt/2JN6F0A

Joe Cuzzupoli

Joe Cuzzupoli died this past Monday. He was a key manager for Rockwell during the development of the Apollo Command and Service Modules. He held senior positions in a number of aerospace firms, served on the NASA Return to Flight Panel after the Columbia accident, was a member of the NASA Advisory Council, and a member of General Stafford's Safety Panel. More details to follow.

Mr. Joseph W. Cuzzupoli, NASA Return to Flight Panel



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In Boeing, a Lesson: Even When the Stakes Are Highest, Companies Can’t Successfully Regulate Themselves.

The Jane the Virgin Season Premiere Breathes New Life Into the Most Clichéd Soap-Opera Twist

White Supremacist Driver Who Sped Into Charlottesville Protesters Pleads Guilty to 29 Federal Hate Crimes

What A 2020 Lunar Landing Might Actually Be Like



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Mick Mulvaney Has Consolidated His Influence in the White House to Everyone’s Detriment

The Tragedy of Rod Rosenstein

Facing and Erasing White Terrorism


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León Krauze talks to Ishaan Tharoor, foreign affairs and geopolitical reporter for the Washington Post, on the recent white terrorist attack in New Zealand, white nationalism and white supremacy on social media, and what it might look like for President Donald Trump to handle these problems more responsibly.

Follow Trumpcast on Twitter: @realtrumpcast

Podcast production by Melissa Kaplan with help from Iliana Del Rio.



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Are You a Monster if You Slice Your Bagels Like Bread?

Neil Gorsuch’s Bad-Faith Ploy to Save Partisan Gerrymandering and Doom American Democracy

NASAWatch on Deutsche Welle: The New Space Race



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Elizabeth Warren Is Much More Than “Bernie-Light”

The Angle: Robert Mueller Might Not Be a Superhero, and That Is OK

Tim Burton’s Entire Body of Work Only Needs One Honest Trailer

7-Eleven’s Foray Into Wellness-Adjacent Food Won’t Be Convenient for Anyone

Drivers Say Uber and Lyft Are Cutting Their Pay Ahead of the Companies’ Multibillion-Dollar IPOs


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April Glaser and Will Oremus kick off the episode by talking about Apple’s plan to be the ultimate middleman—with new offerings announced this week around streaming video, games, and more. Then April offers an update on congressional efforts to restore net neutrality.

After that, Veena Dubal, a law professor at UC–Hastings, talks about worker strikes at Uber and Lyft, and sheds light on a California case that reclassifies most gig workers as employees rather than of contractors.

Stories discussed on the show:

Slate:Apple Is Reinventing Itself as the Ultimate Middleman

Don’t Close My Tabs:

Will: “We Might Be Reaching ‘Peak Indifference’ on Climate Change,” in Wired

April: “Joe Rogan’s Galaxy Brain,” in Slate

Podcast production by Cameron Drews.

You can follow Will @WillOremus and April @Aprilaser. If you have a question or comment, you can email us at ifthen@slate.com.

If Then is presented by Slate and Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State UniversityNew America, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy, and culture. To read more, follow us on Twitter and sign up for our weekly newsletter.



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Theresa May Offers to Resign in Last-Ditch Effort to Save Her Brexit Deal

OK, Everyone’s More or Less In for 2020. Let’s Just Start the Debates. I Have a Plan.

Science Gear Doesn’t Fit Women on Earth, Either

Today's Budget Hearing

NASA's Budget Request for Fiscal Year 2020
2:30pm
Witness: Jim Bridenstine
Subcommittees: Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies (116th Congress)
Live-stream can be found here: https://youtu.be/Bpkpd8gk1hc



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Can We Please See The NASA Moon Plan?

Remarks by Vice President Pence at the Fifth Meeting of the National Space Council Huntsville, AL

"Just a few moments ago, Buzz Aldrin was reflecting on his time in the Apollo program. He talked about that fabled Apollo 11 mission. He said, in 1962, we had an objective; we had time, but we didn't have a plan. In Space Policy Directive-1, the President directed NASA to create a lunar exploration plan. But as of today, more than 15 months later, we still don't have a plan in place. But Administrator Bridenstine told me, five minutes ago, we now have a plan to return to the moon. (Applause.)"

Keith's note: OK. So NASA has a "plan". A plan usually has words - words that are contained in a document. Plans usually have pictures and diagrams too. A plan cites goals and objectives and the steps that will be taken to meet goals and achieve objectives. There is usually a timeline and a budget associated with such a plan too. So, if NASA now has a plan to go back to the Moon, is NASA going to share that plan with the rest of us?



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What Us Has to Say About the Horror Genre


Listen to Culture Gabfest No. 548 with Willa Paskin, Dana Stevens, and Julia Turner with the audio player below.

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On Slate Plus, the hosts debate why and when (if ever) it’s worth deliberately spoiling a movie for yourself.

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This week, Dana, Julia, and Slate TV critic Willa Paskin discuss Jordan Peele’s Us, its cinematic and allegorical Easter eggs, and what it all means. Next, they take on Shrill, a Hulu series based on Lindy West’s memoir of the same name. West made a name for herself with her irreverent, unapologetic writing, so why is her fictional analog so anodyne? Finally, the critics are joined by Random House copy chief Benjamin Dreyer, the author of Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style, to talk about how Twitter helped him find his voice, the book’s reception so far, and why semicolons are criminally underused.

Links to some of the things we discussed this week:

• “Decoder Ring: Truck Nutz” by Willa Paskin in Slate
• Jordan Peele’s Us
Get Out
• “Spoiler Specials: Us” by K. Austin Collins and Dana Stevens in Slate
• “Us Is More Mysterious Than Get Out—and More Terrifying for It” by Dana Stevens in Slate
Slate Day 2019
Shrill starring Aidy Bryant
• Lindy West’s Shrill
• “Shrill Has Radical Things to Say About Being Fat in America” by Willa Paskin in Slate
• “Hello, I Am Fat” by Lindy West in the Stranger
• “Shrill is Fine” by Andrea Long Chu in Paper View
• Barry Jenkins’ If Beale Street Could Talk
• Benjamin Dreyer’s Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style
• Marjorie E. Skillin and Robert M. Gay’s Words into Type

Endorsements

Julia: Tavi Gevinson’s Instagram

Willa: Tessa Hadley’s Late in the Day

Dana: Summer Brennan’s High Heel

Outro: “Wild Slide” by Jules Gaia

This podcast was produced by Benjamin Frisch. Our production assistant is Alex Barasch.

Feel free to email us at culturefest@slate.com or interact with us at @SlateCultFest on Twitter. You can follow all of Slate’s culture coverage by signing up for our newsletter and liking our Facebook page. And come to our Slate Plus Anniversary Party on April 3rd!



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Barbara Bush Blamed President Trump for Causing Her “Heart Attack”

The Electoral College, the Rules of Impeachment, and the Balance of Powers in Between


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This episode of Whistlestop travels to Dec. 23, 1783, when the commander in chief of the Continental Army sat before the president of the Confederation Congress and prepared to step away from the job.

Whistlestop is Slate’s podcast about presidential history. Hosted by Political Gabfest host John Dickerson, each installment will revisit memorable moments from America’s presidential carnival.

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Podcast production by Jocelyn Frank. Research by Brian Rosenwald and Elizabeth Hinson.



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Joan Stupik, Guidance and Control Engineer


When Joan Stupik was a child, her parents bought her a mini-planetarium that she could use to project the stars on her bedroom ceiling. via NASA https://ift.tt/2FyKdTB

Now Apocalypse Brings TV Into the Pansexual Present. But Creator Gregg Araki’s Films Have Been There for Decades.

Tony Blair on What Politics Can—and Can’t—Do to Beat Populism


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In this episode of the Good Fight, Yascha Mounk talks to Tony Blair, the former British prime minister, about the roots of populism, how to deal with automation, and a progressive economic program for the 21st century.

Email: thegoodfight@newamerica.org
Twitter: @Yascha_Mounk

Podcast production by John T. Williams.



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Pennsylvania Lawmaker Prays for God’s Forgiveness Before First Muslim Woman Sworn In as Representative

Dear Prudence Podcast: Help! I Cheated on My Husband Once Five Years Ago. He Still Won’t Let It Go.

There’s No Such Thing as “Robot-Proofing”

7-Eleven’s Foray Into “Wellness”-Adjacent Food Won’t Be Convenient for Anyone

The Mystery of Jane the Virgin’s Narrator Is No Mystery at All

Dear Care and Feeding: How Do We Explain to Our Daughter That We’re Firing Her Beloved Sitter Because She Drank on the Job?

Interview With an Old Person: Usha Pahwa, Age 86, on Living Through the Partition of India

How Vitamins Went From Medical Marvel to Marketing Scam

Trump’s Efforts to Destroy Obamacare Will Backfire


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The president’s week was off to a great start. Attorney General William Barr’s letter regarding Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation largely exonerated him of any crimes. So why did Trump start talking about health care again? It’s anybody’s guess, but Democrats are ecstatic.

Guest: Dan Diamond, health care reporter at Politico

Tell us what you think by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts or sending an email to whatnext@slate.com.

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2019年3月26日 星期二

National Space Council Action Item Report

Recommendations Approved by the National Space Council to President Trump

"Recommendations on Human Space Exploration

1. Consistent with the overall goals of SPD-1, the United States will seek to land Americans on the Moon's South Pole by 2024, establish a sustainable human presence on the Moon by 2028, and chart a future path for human Mars exploration. NASA's lunar presence will focus on science, resource utilization, and risk reduction for future missions to Mars.
2. NASA will continue to improve its structure and management, and improve cost and schedule performance, to implement SPD-1, seeking legislative authorization as necessary. NASA will create a Moon-to-Mars Mission Directorate and make all necessary efforts to achieve Exploration Mission-1 no later than 2020 and Exploration Mission-2 no later than 2022.
3. NASA will unleash American industry, including public-private partnerships and other mechanisms, to enhance innovation and sustainability of activities from low Earth orbit to the lunar surface and beyond.
4. The United States will engage with and involve current and future international partners to enable a sustainable program of lunar exploration and development.
5. The NASA Administrator will provide an update on the implementation of SPD-1 and these specific items to the Chair at the next meeting of the National Space Council."

President Donald J. Trump Is Boldly Putting Americans Back on the Moon



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Word Clouding Pence Space Speech

https://s3.amazonaws.com/images.spaceref.com/news/2019/pence.word.26march2019.jpg

Remarks by Vice President Pence at the Fifth Meeting of the National Space Council Huntsville, AL

"Well, thank you all. To Governor Ivey, Secretary Ross, Secretary Chao, Secretary Wilson; to NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine; to all the members of the National Space Council and the Users' Advisory Group; to Dr. Deborah Barnhart and the great team here at the Space and Rocket Center; honored guests; and especially to all the dedicated the men and women of the Marshall Space Flight Center: It is great to be back in Rocket City. (Applause.) Thank you for joining us for this fifth meeting of the National Space Council at an enormously important time in American leadership in space."

Larger image



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Southwest Boeing 737 Max Flight Makes Emergency Landing in Orlando Minutes After Takeoff

President Trump is Ready To Use “No Indictment” As Jet Fuel For His Reelection Campaign.

In Defense of Liberal Optimism About Mueller

New York County Takes Extraordinary Action to Combat Measles Outbreak, Bars Unvaccinated Minors From Public Spaces

New York County Takes Extraordinary Action to Combat Measles Outbreak, Bars Unvaccinated Minors From Public Spaces

NASA Is Offered A Chance To Be Relevant Again

NASA Administrator Statement on Return to Moon in Next Five Years

"Among the many topics discussed during our meeting at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, was to accelerate our return to the Moon:

- NASA is charged to get American astronauts to the Moon in the next five years.
- We are tasked with landing on the Moon's South Pole by 2024.
- Stay on schedule for flying Exploration Mission-1 with Orion on the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket next year, and for sending the first crewed mission to the lunar vicinity by 2022.
- NASA will continue to 'use all means necessary' to ensure mission success in moving us forward to the Moon."

Keith's note: OK, so that is sporty to say the least but wait - the commercial EM-1 option is now dead:

"Earlier today I was also at Marshall Space Flight Center for an all-hands to reinforce our commitment to SLS with the workforce. We discussed my recent announcement that NASA would consider all options to fly Orion around the Moon on schedule. I shared the analysis we conducted to asses flying the Orion on different commercial options. While some of these alternative vehicles could work, none was capable of achieving our goals to orbit around the Moon for Exploration Mission-1 within our timeline and on budget. The results of this two-week study reaffirmed our commitment to the SLS. More details will be released in the future."

So ... SLS is the only solution and somehow, HEOMD, MSFC, and Boeing are suddenly going to not only be on time and on budget - but they are going to increase the speed with which they deliver SLS/Orion capabilities without a budget increase. The same people are going to suddenly learn a bunch of new tricks - seemingly over night. Or ... are we going to see a bunch of reassignments and retirement parties? Something has to give. The staus quo is clearly not going to just become efficient over night - and things are going to have to change over night if this challenging new schedule is going to be met

"We will take action in the days and weeks ahead to accomplish these goals. We have laid out a clear plan for NASA's exploration campaign that cuts across three strategic areas: low-Earth orbit, the Moon, and Mars and deeper into space. "I have already directed a new alignment within NASA to ensure we effectively support this effort, which includes establishing a new mission directorate to focus on the formulation and execution of exploration development activities. We are calling it the Moon to Mars Mission Directorate."

OK- so NASA will change the phone book and they have a "plan". Earlier today VP Pence lamented the fact that NASA did not have a plan to go to the Moon after 15 months of National Space Council operations - but that Jim Bridenstine told him today that NASA now has a plan. So ... let's see the plan.

The Vice President certainly laid down the gauntlet to NASA to get off its collective butt and go back to the Moon. Jim Bridenstine happily picked up the gauntlet and accepted that challenge. Now its up to NASA and its contractor workforce to either work with Bridenstine and Pence or, by sitting on their hands, to work against them.

What is at stake? Well ... what do you think will happen when SpaceX and Blue Origin start sending their own missions to the Moon - without NASA?



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NASA Administrator Statement on Return to Moon in Next Five Years

The following is a statement from NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine on Tuesday’s announcement by Vice President Mike Pence, at the fifth meeting of the National Space Council, about putting American astronauts back on the Moon in the next five years:

March 26, 2019
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The Justice Department Discloses That Trump Personally Blocks People on Twitter

Purdue Pharma and Sackler Family Agree to Pay $270 Million in Opioid Settlement

Trans People Exist Everywhere—Except Stock Photography Libraries. But That Just Changed.

The Barr Letter Tells Us One Thing Everyone Should Agree On

The Angle: Should We Start to Worry About a Recession?

New Avengers Poster Reveals That Shuri Is Dead (for a Month)

What We Do in the Shadows’ New Character Saves It From Simply Sucking the Life Out of the Original

Kavanaugh Could Join the Liberal Justices to Rein In Partisan Gerrymandering. Seriously!

White House Tells NASA To Land Humans On The Moon In 5 Years



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Big Aerospace Misses The Point

The Coalition for Deep Space Exploration's Comments on March 26 National Space

"Though we support the focus of this White House on deep space exploration and the sense of urgency instilled by aggressive timelines and goals, we also are cognizant of the resources that will be required to meet these objectives. Bold plans must be matched by bold resources made available in a consistent manner in order to assure successful execution. Similarly, the contracting mechanisms by which spacecraft, facilities, systems and supporting equipment are incorporated into a robust Moon-to-Mars architecture must be applied in a rapid and flexible manner with only the absolute minimum of bureaucratic process and oversight necessary to succeed. This is especially true for technologies that have long been in use but continue to labor under excessive oversight during development - a burden that exacerbates cost, schedule, and program risks."

Keith's note: Based on what was said at the National Space Council today by Vice President Pence, the standard procedure employed by NASA and Big Aerospace is not working and that NASA needs to avail itself of "any means necessary" to land Americans on the Moon by 26 march 2024. Clearly the standard practices employed by the Coalition for Deep Space member companies are not working. If they were then the need for a "course correction" vis-a-vis the architecture for getting humans back to the Mon would not be required. Big Aerospace has not been able to be "bold" for decades.



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NASA Selects Three Additional Informal Learning Institutions to Engage Learners in its Mission

NASA’s Teams Engaging Affiliated Museums and Informal Institutions (TEAM II) has selected three additional informal education organizations to supplement the initial group selected in June 2018.

March 25, 2019
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Whether It’s the Mueller Report or North Korea, Lying Is Trump’s First Reflex

If Democrats Are Abandoning Israel, You Wouldn’t Know It From This Year’s AIPAC

Jimmy Kimmel Says the Mueller Report and Operation Varsity Blues Have Something in Common

“I’m Pretty Sure That I’m Losing Money”: Two Uber and Lyft Drivers on Why They Went on Strike

One of the Most Important Recession Indicators Is Beginning to Flash. Is It Time to Worry Yet?

Charges Against Empire Actor Jussie Smollett Dropped

Go Ahead and Try a Carolina Reaper Hot Sauce—We Dare You

NASAWatch On BBC Regarding All-Woman Spacewalk Issue



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ISS Daily Summary Report – 3/25/2019

Materials Science Laboratory (MSL): The crew opened the Gas Supply Drawer valve on the Material Science Research Rack (MSRR)/MSL which is used for basic materials research in the microgravity environment of the ISS. The MSL can accommodate and support diverse Experiment Modules. In this way, many material types, such as metals, alloys, polymers, semiconductors, ceramics, …

March 26, 2019 at 12:00AM
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Orion Launch Abort System Attitude Control Motor Hot-Fire Test


A static hot-fire test of the Orion spacecraft's Launch Abort System Attitude Control Motor to help qualify the motor for human spaceflight, to help ensure Orion is ready from liftoff to splashdown for missions to the Moon. via NASA https://ift.tt/2Wk4fYE

Mueller Did His Investigation for a World We Don’t Inhabit

Alabama Congressman Quotes Mein Kampf to Criticize Democrats and the Media

How the Sexism of the Past Reinforces Wikipedia’s Gender Gap

Help! My Brother Assaulted Me. My Family Wants Me to Get Over It.

How a Writer Became a Physician


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In a special five-episode miniseason of Working, we talk with people who have had “second acts,” that is people who made a dramatic career pivot at some point in their working lives.

Adriane Fugh-Berman was a writer and reproductive-rights activist when she decided to go to medical school. She is now a professor in the department of pharmacology and physiology at Georgetown University and the director of PharmedOut, a Georgetown University Medical Center project that promotes rational prescribing and researches the effects of pharmaceutical and medical device industry marketing on prescribing behavior and therapeutic choices.

Fugh-Berman talks about how her earliest work in the family restaurant influenced her current career, the importance of good writing, and why she maintains a garden on the Georgetown campus.

You can email us at working@slate.com. Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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