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Curiosity Mars Rover Mission: NASA Live Television on UStream

Engadget offers the schedule for NASA’s Mars mission: “NASA TV will be broadcasting the event onUstream, offering commentary from the minds behind the rover, as well as audio from mission control. The Curiosity Cam, which runs from 11:30PM until 2:00AM EST and 3:30AM to 4:30AM EST, will offer commentary from the scientists and engineers behind Curiosity, while a second feed (at NASA JPL Live, which runs from 11:30PM onward) will play audio from mission control. If all goes to plan, NASA will be able to share an image from Curiosity’s navigation cameras, confirming its safe arrival on the Martian surface.”

Live stream videos at Ustream

Daily Bread for 8.5.12

Good morning.

It’s a beautiful Sunday ahead for Whitewater: sunny, with a high of eighty-one, and winds from the northwest at 10 to 15 mph.

I posted earlier (see, Happy Memorial Day 2012) on a film about the Honor Flight program to take veterans to Washington, D.C. for a visit in recognition of their service. The premiere of a film about the program is this Saturday, August 11th at Miller Park. There’s good news about that premiere: it’s sure to be a huge success, with only two-thousand tickets still left:

Stars and Stripes Honor Flight was aiming big with plans for its Field of Honor event on Saturday — meant to bring together thousands of veterans as well as feature the world premiere of the organization’s documentary — but news of the ticket sales are making the event even bigger.

With 30,393 tickets sold as of late Friday afternoon, the event is on par to beat the Guiness Book of World Records for a movie premiere attendance — which is currently at 27,022 for a soccer film in Brazil, according to a press release from the group.

Tickets are available by phone (414-902-4000) or on the Web or visiting brewers.com/fieldofhonor.

On this day in 1963, America, Britain, and the Soviet Union signed a treaty “banning nuclear tests in the atmosphere, outer space and underwater.”

The Wisconsin Historical Society records this day in 1825 as one of peaceful discussion:

1825 – Council Held at Fort Crawford
On this date a great council of Native Americans and white settlers began atPrairie du Chien. For days prior to the event, canoe-loads of attendees converged from all directions and included members of the Sioux, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Chippewa, Ottawa, Potawatomi, Iowa, Sauk, and Fox tribes. The purpose of this gathering was to promote peace among the tribes and to establish boundaries for their territorial claims. [Source: The History of Wisconsin, Vol.I: From Exploration to Statehood, by Alice Smith, p. 122]

Google’s daily puzzle asks about construction safety: “The first U.S. construction site that required workers to wear a particular safety item was the Hoover Dam. What was the safety item and which site was the second to require it?”

Daily Bread for 8.4.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s Saturday will be hot and sunny, with a high of ninety-three (but with a chance of afternoon thundershowers, too).

On this day in 1914, Britain declared war on Germany.

The Wisconsin Historical Society records that on this day in 1862,

War Department Order Prompts Riot
On this date the War Department issued General Order No.99, requesting by draft 300,000 troops to reinforce the Union armies in the Civil War. This action reinforced public sentiment against the draft and prompted the citizens in Port Washington, Ozaukee County to riot in protest.

If you’ve never seen pygmy goats at play, a single mouse-click can change all that:

Google’s daily puzzle asks about history, language, and stamps: “How would you say “postage stamp” in the native language of the woman who first appeared on one in the U.S.?” more >>

Friday Catblogging: 11-Year-Old Cheetah Breaks Land Speed Record

An Olympics-caliber record:

The fastest cheetah on Earth has done it again, breaking her previous world record for the 100-meter dash and setting a new best time of 5.95 seconds.

This feat surpasses the fastest of all human 100-meter sprinters by almost four seconds. Usain Bolt, a Jamaican sprinter now competing at the 2012 London Olympics, holds the human world record at 9.58 seconds in the 100-meter dash.

Via 11-Year-Old Cheetah Breaks Land Speed Record | LiveScience.

Friday Poll: Air conditioning – good or bad?

Slate’s Daniel Engber asks, “Is Air Conditioning Bad for You?” in a story in which he assesses studies for and against air conditioning (and how people’s politics are mixed up with their views on home cooling).

Even in this very hot summer, there are bound to be differences on this question. What do you think: is air conditioning good or bad for people? (That might mean the people in an air-conditioned home, or include all people affected by the energy consumption from home-cooling.) I’ll say it’s an overall good, allowing people to live and work more comfortably in hot climates.

What do you think?


Daily Bread for 8.3.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s end of the week will be sunny and hot, with a high of ninety.

On this day in 1958, the USS Nautilus, America’s first nuclear-powered submarine, completed a voyage beneath the polar ice cap:

 

Google’s daily puzzle asks about the history of mathematics: “Two brilliant 17th-century mathematicians developed the theory of probability, but one man was better at calculus. Which one?”

Then and Now

Consider these remarks, from a Wisconsin politician:

What is it that is swelling the ranks of the dissatisfied? Is it a growing conviction in state after state, that we are fast being dominated by forces that thwart the will of the people and menace representative government?

Do you not know people who feel, as perhaps you also do, this way? Look around at years of Move On, the Tea Party, and Occupy, and see millions who (whatever their differing views) feel similarly disappointed in our politics.

The sentiments I’ve quoted are not new. They’re from progressive Republican Robert M. La Follette, who delivered them on July 4, 1897, in Mineral Point, Wisconsin.

(They’re published in a new book, Uprising, from liberal journalist John Nichols; hat tip to the Marquette Law School Faculty Blog for the reference.)

Why is it, that in our time as in La Follette’s time, people are so terribly disappointed? There are myriad reasons.

Consider, for a moment, just one: that when politics is closed, when government action is hushed and rushed, popular dissatisfaction builds. Officials will cast blame on everyone except themselves, criticizing protesters, diligent reporters, outspoken citizens, community and trade groups, etc.

The more people see of their government, the less they will worry that politics is captive of ‘forces that thwart the will of the people and menace representative government.’

They won’t worry less because they’ll see that government has not been menaced; they’ll worry less because open government will not be vulnerable to being menaced easily, and with impunity.

Posted originally on 8.2.12 at Daily Adams.

Daily Bread for 8.2.12

Good morning.

Whitewater has a twenty percent chance of thunderstorms today, with a high temperature of ninety-one.

At 4 PM today, the Community Development Authority’s Housing Loan Committee meets.  At 6 PM, there will be a meeting of Whitewater’s Landmarks Commission.

On this day in 1923, Pres. Harding died while visiting California; Calvin Coolidge became America’s thirtieth president.

On this day in 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait:

 

On this day in 1832, the end of the Black Hawk War:

1832 – Black Hawk War Ends
On this date the defeat of Black Hawk and his followers at the Battle of Bad Axe, ended the Black Hawk War. Black Hawk led the American troops northward while the rest of the Indians constructed rafts and canoes to facilitate an escape over the Mississippi river. The plan was successful initially but eventually General Atkinson realized the ruse. In the battle, women, children and the elderly hid behind rocks and logs and American soldiers often could not or did not differentiate between warriors and the women and children. Atkinson sent Wabasha and his Sioux warriors, enemies of the Sauk, after the approximately 150 members of the British Band that made it to the Western bank of the Mississippi. The Sauk, “escaped the best they could, and dispersed“, but only 22 women and children were spared. Black Hawk escaped, but the Battle of Bad Axe marked the end of the war. [Source: Along the Black Hawk Trail by William F. Stark, p.142-153]

Via Wisconsin Historical Society.

Google’s daily puzzle asks about a famous bridge: “How much would you have paid to cross the longest suspension bridge in the U.S. when it first opened?”