A garden filled with “oddball” plants will be part of the Nebraska Statewide Arboretum’s Omaha Garden Walk in September.
Small Business Lifestyle
Michigan football is expected to name Alex Orji their starting quarterback ahead of this week’s season college football opener vs Fresno State Saturday night on NBC.
While many influencers and entrepreneurs are making claims that mainstream science hasnt yet backed, the proposition is intriguing: Change your vibe, change your life.
When astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore left Earth for the International Space Station nearly three months ago, they ditched their bags for a key piece of equipment. Helming the inaugural crewed flight test of Boeings Starliner spacecraft, they departed without their own toiletries and other personal comforts, expecting to return to Earth within a week or so.Related video above: NASA report: Boeing must improve substandard workTheyve now been on the space station for more than 11 weeks, however, and NASA announced Saturday that they would remain there through early 2025. Uncertainty around issues with their Starliner capsule has prompted the space agency to tap SpaceX to step in and return the astronauts on a Crew Dragon capsule instead.So what exactly would Williams and Wilmore do for another five or six months in space?Currently, the two are guests. Theyre not part of Expedition 71, the international crew of seven astronauts serving as the space stations official staff. Nevertheless, NASA has said theyve seamlessly integrated with the group, picking up everyday tasks aboard the orbiting laboratory.But now, Williams and Wilmore are expected to transition into full-time expedition crew members joining SpaceXs Crew-9 astronauts, who are slated to launch on their mission as soon as Sept. 24.As part of Crew-9 and the formal expedition, Williams and Wilmore will take up typical crew tasks, such as conducting spacewalks outside the space station, maintaining the orbiting laboratory and carrying out a tight schedule of science experiments.And NASA previously confirmed that the Starliner astronauts are prepared to make such a shift.A couple years ago, we made the decision knowing that this was a test flight to make sure that we had the right resources, supplies and training for the crew, just in case they needed to be on ISS, for whatever reason, for a longer period of time, said Dana Weigel, NASAs manager of the International Space Station Program, during an Aug. 7 briefing.Butch and Suni are fully trained, Weigel added. Theyre capable and current with EVA (spacewalks), with robotics, with all the things we need them to do.Joining Crew-9SpaceXs Crew-9 is a routine trip to the space station to replenish expedition staff. The mission had been slated to fly with four astronauts.Under NASAs new plan, however, two of those astronauts wont make the journey. The Crew Dragon spacecraft will instead launch on its outbound flight with only two people aboard.Ballast, or hunks of metal that serve as deadweight, will fly alongside the two empty seats on Crew-9 to maintain the Crew Dragons center of gravity, the space agency said during an early August news conference when explaining the contingency plan.The two Crew-9 astronauts will then join Williams and Wilmore aboard the space station, and all four would round out the cast of Expedition 72, which will additionally include Russian cosmonauts and is expected to begin in September after a handover period.As is typical for routine missions to the space station, the Crew-9 astronauts will stay on board for roughly five or six months, leaving Williams and Wilmore in space for another half year in addition to the nearly three months theyve already spent in space.Once part of Crew-9, theyll fall into a structured routine, with their days mostly mapped out hour by hour.Olympics in orbitAlready, the astronauts have fallen into some of that day-to-day labor. Recent updates from NASA said Williams and Wilmore have used their time so far for space station upkeep, inspecting hardware, organizing cargo, performing checks on the Starliner, and assisting with science experiments and tech demonstrations.On Friday, for example, Wilmore helped configure a new airlock, built by U.S.-based company Nanoracks, that will serve as a new doorway to help deploy satellites, experiments and other equipment.Williams and Wilmore, however, have also had opportunities to have some fun in microgravity. NASA shared footage of the astronauts on July 26 as they passed around a plastic torch on the space station and mimicked Olympic events. (Working out is a key task for astronauts to avoid losing too much muscle and bone density while in space.)Williams, for the record, has already proven her chops as a standout space athlete.In 2012, during an earlier trip to the space station, she became the first person to finish a triathlon in space. Williams used a stationary bike, simulated swimming with a weightlifting machine and ran on a treadmill while strapped in by a harness so she wouldnt float away.That feat came after she ran along with the Boston Marathon from the space station in 2007.Williams and Wilmore logged a combined total of 500 days in space before launching on the Starliner test flight. Williams even said that she cried after she left the space station following her last mission in 2012, unsure if she would ever return.This flight is a dream for her, one NASA commentator said during a June 5 livestream of the Starliner launch.Extended stays in spaceIts not uncommon for astronauts to unexpectedly extend their stay aboard the space station for days, weeks or even months.NASA astronaut Frank Rubio, for example, was slated to spend about six months aboard the space station for his inaugural trip to low-Earth orbit that kicked off in September 2022. He instead logged 371 days in space following the discovery of a coolant leak coming from his original ride a Russian Soyuz capsule while docked to the orbiting outpost.Rubios yearlong stay ended up setting a U.S. record for the most continuous days spent in orbit.Astronauts also routinely extend their stays on the station for days or weeks at a time for a variety of factors, including poor weather on Earth or other schedule adjustments.Without a suitcaseFlying to the space station without the suitcases they had packed perhaps complicated the comfort of the Starliner astronauts extended stay. NASA opted to take their luggage off the spacecraft to make room for a much-needed pump to fix a malfunctioning toilet aboard the space station.The two astronauts may have finally received a reprieve after a Northrop Grumman cargo resupply mission arrived at the space station earlier this month.We do like to keep our options open, so we do have some items such as clothes some personal food items for (Williams and Wilmore), things like that, said Bill Spetch, NASAs operations integration manager for the International Space Station Program, during a news briefing.And theres no indication that food supplies are dwindling anytime soon. Packed along the Northrop Grumman ships 8,200 pounds of science experiments and cargo was a food haul that included meals and produce such as squash, radishes, carrots, blueberries, oranges, apples and coffee, according to Spetch.Weigel also said Saturday that the space agency tends to keep about four months of food and water reserves on board the space station. And the Northrop Grumman resupply trip helped replenish those reserves, leaving plenty of extra food on board for the space station crew.No one has had to go on a diet or calorie restriction, Weigel said.Still, NASA said it needed to make a quick decision about how Williams and Wilmore would return to Earth because the space stations stores of food and other resources are not unlimited.While theyre up there, we have extra crew, we have extra hands, and they can do a lot more work. But theyre also using up more consumables, more supplies, said Ken Bowersox, NASAs associate administrator for the Space Operations Mission Directorate, earlier this month.We need to bring those folks home and get back to a normal crew size on the ISS, Bowersox said.
The fountain will be closed starting Monday and construction is expected to last into December.
The Lighthouse in North Philadelphia is focusing on recreation over violence for kids ages 7-12 this fall with a soccer program thats as much about character building as it is the sport.
A Montana motorcyclist who was missing for five days after crashing along an Idaho mountain highway survived by drinking creek water until he was found, authorities say.Video above: Gizmo the dog went missing in Las Vegas in 2015. He’s been found alive after 9 yearsZachary Demoss, 24, was badly injured in the crash, but “was tough enough to hold out for five days on that mountain while he’d seen people walking by, trying to holler at them,” family friend Greg Common told Boise television station KTVB. Demoss’ shouting went unanswered until Common caught sight of him while searching five days after the Aug. 11 crash.”It was surreal that we found him,” Common said. “Something just willed me to look right, and there he was, laying right there by the river.”Demoss had been riding his 2000 Kawasaki Vulcan motorcycle along Highway 12 with two other people. After the other travelers saw his motorcycle parked on the side of the highway, they stopped at the next turnout a few miles down the road to wait for him.Demoss never arrived, so his companions went back to check on him, stopping at the trailhead where they had last seen his bike. Neither Demoss nor his motorcycle was there.Aly Phan, one of the motorcycle riders, later wrote on Facebook that Demoss was the most experienced rider in the group. Phan and the other biker decided Demoss hadn’t seen them pass him, and they thought he had likely assumed they were missing and had turned back himself to look for them.”We were low on gas and our back tire was starting to show threads so we couldn’t go further back down the highway to where we came from to search further without getting in a wreck or broke down,” Phan wrote.After waiting for two hours at the trailhead and leaving a large note in the gravel of the pullout, they decided to continue to the group’s next planned stop in Lolo, Montana.They stopped at the first gas station and checked with every person they could, asking if anyone had seen a motorcyclist fitting Demoss’ description. They called his cellphone and checked with other friends and family members, and they had a friend come with a truck so they could begin searching along the pass. They searched until 4 a.m. but found no sign of Demoss.The Idaho County Sheriff’s Office was notified of the missing man on Aug. 12. It used drones and a helicopter to search by air while deputies looked on foot along a 99-mile (160-kilometer) stretch of road. They also checked road condition cameras and worked with Demoss’ cellphone company to see if his phone was connecting to any towers in the region. They made plans to have divers check deep sections of the river where it runs alongside the highway.But after finding no sign of the man over the next few days, the sheriff’s office said it would begin to scale back search efforts.Still, Demoss’ family and friends continued to search on foot, walking for miles while scouring the roadside.On the fifth day of the search, Common spotted him near a campground. Demoss was conscious but badly injured and had been drinking water from a creek to stay alive. Common used an emergency satellite communicator to send an SOS message, and first responders soon arrived to take Demoss by air ambulance to a hospital.Demoss’ mother, Ruth Rickenbacher, called his rescue a miracle in a Facebook post.”He’s ALIVE!!! We were so heartbroken this entire last week as we walked mile by mile until dark only to end the day on defeat,” Rickenbacher wrote. “His dad and I never stopped believing he would be found in any other way than alive. My son is just one of those men that have true grit.”Demoss sustained multiple broken bones, a collapsed lung and several other injuries, Rickenbacher wrote, saying, “It’s like he was shaken like a rag doll.”Recovery will take a while, she said, thanking well-wishers for contributing to a GoFundMe fundraiser to help cover his medical bills.
Guest host: Seth Doane. In our cover story, Jane Pauley talks with some of the inspiring young women participating in Hoosier Girls State, an exercise in democracy for high school students. Also: Anthony Mason sits down with Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood of The Rolling Stones; Seth Doane reports on Opera for Peace, an initiative to help diversify operas performers and audience; Conor Knighton visits Hobart, N.Y., a book village with a plethora of bookstores; Tracy Smith meets a California entrepreneur who pays artisans in Afghanistan to produce beautiful woven rugs to support Afghan families' financial freedom; Faith Salie marks the 150th anniversary of New York Citys 92nd Street Y; Douglas Brinkley notes the threat posed to Walden Pond from nearby development; and David Pogue looks to the future of aviation: electric-powered airplanes.
Nineteen-year-old Brock Johnson of Santa Cruz, California has broken the world record for “bike surfing.”Bike surfing is a popular BMX stunt where a cyclist balances one foot on a bike’s handlebars, and another on the seat. The record for distance traveled while bike surfing was 80 meters. Friday afternoon, Johnson attempted to bike surf 100 meters. Johnson describes himself as a professional stunt rider. He is a member of the Santa Cruz Maniacs bike crew all of whom were positive Johnson would break the record.Phoenix Campbell, a fellow cyclist, tells stories of Johnson bike surfing down “Miramar Death Hill” just six months after attempting the stunt for the first time. The hill is the biggest in Santa Cruz for stunt riding, and Johnson biked and surfed the full length.”I’ve seen him surf on his bike for 20 minutes straight, just pumping around,” Campbell said. “We’ve seen guys who claim to be the best bike surfers out there, and really, none of them compare to the stuff Brock can do on his bike.”Kief Laughron, another friend of the stunt rider, describes him as a “natural.” Johnson shared that he has been comfortable on bikes since he was a young child.”I remember grabbing my bike when I was 3 years old and going and peddling around the block and people would call my mom,” Johnson said. “She’d go, ‘Oh, he’s alright. He knows how to ride that bike.'” Johnson put all of that to the test on Friday as he began sprinting on his bike around the track at Santa Cruz High School. Before members of his bike crew, dozens of high school students and a few passersby, Johnson hopped up onto his handlebars and bike seat as he crossed the 100m dash starting line.With spectators filming, cheering, and even riding right behind him Johnson coasted around the track with ease. He exceeded his 100m goal seamlessly, and in no time, he had surpassed the 200-meter line, too. Having broken the world record, the stunt rider hopped down from his surfing stance and threw his helmet as he roared in celebration.Following the successful world record attempt, Johnson did more bike stunts in the parking lot of the high school as he shared what comes next. Johnson says he must submit his log book for Guinness to complete their official review. The Guinness Book of World Records has many requirements for breaking the official world record for bike surfing. The attempt should take place on a track at a sports facility, two athletic officials need to time everything, a cover letter must be submitted and eyewitnesses have to write statements after the event. Wearing a helmet is also a must. Until the review of these materials is complete, Johnson will be bike surfing Santa Cruz with his crew.
The San Mateo County Transit District is warning of possible service disruptions as early as Monday because of a potential work stoppage.
From New York to Hawaii, people can spot security robots equipped with a suite of sensors patrolling the perimeters of some residential communities and apartment buildings.
All kinds of activities and resources were on offer for kids starting their school year.