Launch watchers return for 2nd try with patience, umbrellas

Launch watchers return for 2nd try with patience, umbrellas

For many spectators along Florida’s Space Coast, the launch of two astronauts into orbit was a welcome accomplishment

By

MIKE SCHNEIDER Associated Press

May 31, 2020, 12:41 AM

4 min read

TITUSVILLE, Fla. —
For many spectators who filled parks, beaches and roads along Florida’s Space Coast, the launch of two astronauts into orbit Saturday was a welcome accomplishment and a reprieve from the coronavirus pandemic, economic worries and now unrest in the streets.

“With everything that’s going on in this country right now, it’s important that we do things extraordinary in life,” said Neil Wight, a machinist from Buffalo who drove from upstate New York to watch the launch. “We’ve been bombarded with doom and gloom for the last six, eight weeks, whatever it is, and this is awesome.”

Dressed in a white astronaut costume, helmet included, Tampa lawyer Tim Engelbrecht marveled at the sight of the rocket lifting off 15 miles away, from a park in Titusville where he watched with his wife and children.

“It’s nice to come out here and have everybody of every stripe, every interest and every opinion come together for something we can all believe in and get behind,” Engelbrecht said. “To see mankind and humankind take the next step is really kind of encouraging, especially in these tough times.”

Doug Marshburn of Deltona, Florida, shouted out, “USA. USA. We’re back in the race,” as the SpaceX rocket lifted through clouds above Kennedy Space Center.

Around him, spectators screamed, whistled and clapped after shouting out the countdown from the 10-second mark. They lifted cameras and cellphones in the air to record the moment.

“I’m very proud of the United States. We are back in the game. It’s very satisfying,” Marshburn said.

Saturday’s launch was the first of NASA astronauts from Florida since 2011, when the space shuttle program ended, and the first by a private company. Since then, Americans have flown on Russian rockets, the only way to and from the International Space Station.

Many spectators had been there just days earlier on Wednesday for the first launch attempt, which was scrubbed due to the weather.

Because of the pandemic, NASA had tried to discourage people from coming for the launch of astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken and had drastically limited employees and visitors inside Kennedy Space Center.

At Space View Park in Titusville, few spectators wore masks and there wasn’t much social distancing. Instead, there was tailgating, lines for the Italian ice truck and a pizza worker who sold dozens of pizzas from an SUV.

After Wednesday’s scrub, Sarah Bryant, along with her sister, Jen Bryant, and four children between them, decided to rent a RV so they could drive from outside Houston to Florida for the launch. They were on the road for 20 hours, and dealt with a blown tire and a checkpoint at the Florida state line meant to ward off people with coronavirus, before arriving early Saturday.

Sarah Bryant’s 14-year-old son, Brooks, is obsessed with space, and had written out a checklist of all the steps in the launch process.

“We just decided to come and within 24 hours we were on the road,” said Jen Bryant.

Omar Francis, who works at NASA’s Johnson Space Center on the space station program, had driven from Houston with his wife, Charlene, and preschool-aged boys, Miles and Carter, to be at Wednesday”s attempt. They came back Saturday and were rewarded by watching the rocket stream through the air.

“For so long, yes, we hear the astronauts are going to space, but you don’t see them leave or come from here,” Francis said. “Now look at all the people who are here seeing astronauts leave from U.S. soil.”

———

Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter: @MikeSchneiderAP

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Small change: Smaller stocks are making a bigger noise

Small change: Smaller stocks are making a bigger noise

It’s just a small change so far, but smaller stocks may finally be wresting some of investors’ attention away from the huge companies that have so dominated the market for years

By

STAN CHOE AP Business Writer

May 7, 2020, 3:21 PM

4 min read

It’s just a small change so far, but smaller stocks may finally be wresting some of investors’ attention away from the huge companies that have so dominated the market for years.

Even before the coronavirus crisis sent markets spiraling, investors kept piling into bigger companies at the expense of smaller ones, particularly the tech giants that are reshaping economies and how we live our lives.

It made sense because these were companies that could take advantage of their global reach to drive strong growth in a plodding economy. And after the pandemic hit, they were still seen as safer bets than small-cap stocks, which are more likely to be money-losers and to have weaker financial cushions.

But in the last couple weeks, smaller companies like Winnebago, Big Lots and Supercuts-owner Regis have all shot higher more quickly than their bigger rivals. Of course, that’s after they plunged much more sharply in the sell-off that swamped markets earlier this year.

The recent performance has been strong enough to force Wall Street to start debating whether this could be the start of a longer-term trend. Smaller and bigger stocks have taken turns leading the market, typically waiting years before switching places. And investors have been waiting for more companies to join the giants in pushing the market higher, which is seen as a sign of a healthier market.

This most recent bounce for smaller stocks has come as investors swung from panic about the recession sweeping the global economy to optimism that growth could resume later this year as economies reopen. That could mean people RV-ing on a vacation instead of staying at a hotel, shopping for something other than toilet paper at Big Lots and going back to get haircuts at Regis’ stores, while still wearing masks.

As a group, the small stocks in the Russell 2000 leaped 27.4% after hitting a bottom on March 18, through Wednesday. That’s better than the 18.8% gain for the big stocks in the S&P 500 over the same span.

“While small caps lead the market lower, they also lead on the way coming out of the recession,” said Sandy Villere, portfolio manager at Villere & Co. Early last month, he and his team began looking at companies that could benefit as the economy picks up momentum, “things that got left for dead like smaller companies.”

Even after their recent gains, small stocks still look relatively cheap, according to Glenmede. “This portion of the market has been hit hard and probably stands the most to gain in the ensuing recovery,” strategists at Glenmede wrote in a recent report.

Going back to the end of World War II, small-cap stocks have done better than the rest of the market only when U.S. economic growth is above average, according to Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Leuthold Group. Since 1948, small-cap stocks have beaten the rest of the market nearly two-thirds of the time and by 8.5% annually when the economy’s growth has been in the top quarter of its historical readings.

Of course, whether small-cap stocks have indeed turned a corner depends entirely on whether the U.S. economy is indeed about to turn higher, as markets are assuming. Some on Wall Street are still skeptical, given that the economy is likely in the midst of its worst quarterly performance since the Great Depression.

If the downturn lasts, smaller stocks will need to borrow to cover their shoftfalls, and lending markets may not be as kind to them as they are to bigger companies. Nearly a third of companies in the Russell 2000 are losing money, according to strategists at Wells Fargo Investment Institute. With smaller companies likely burning through cash to survive, the strategists recently downgraded their rating for small U.S. stocks from just “unfavorable” to “most unfavorable.”


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Pandemic forces Arctic expedition to take 3-week break

Pandemic forces Arctic expedition to take 3-week break

Organizers of a year-long international Arctic science expedition say they have found a way to keep going despite difficulties caused by the pandemic lockdown

By

FRANK JORDANS Associated Press

April 24, 2020, 1:36 PM

3 min read

BERLIN —
Organizers of a year-long international Arctic science expedition say they have found a way to keep going despite difficulties caused by the pandemic lockdown, but it will require a three-week break in the mission.

Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Ocean Research said Friday that the expedition ship RV Polarstern will leave its position in the high Arctic next month and break through the surrounding sea ice to rendezvous with two German vessels bringing supplies and crew replacements.

The maneuver is necessary because travel restrictions imposed to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus make a planned resupply by air or sea from Norway or Russia impossible.

Expedition leader Markus Rex told The Associated Press that the lockdown could have scuttled the remainder of the mission.

“For a long time it was on a knife edge and there was even a possibility that the expedition might have to be broken off,” he said.

The 140-million-euro ($158 million) expedition set out last September with 100 scientists and crew from 17 nations including the United States, France, China and Britain. Its goal is to study the impact of global warming on the Arctic and improve scientific models used to forecast how the climate will change worldwide.

As temperatures in the Arctic plummeted and the ocean surface froze over last fall, scientists built a research camp on the ice with the Polarstern acting as their base.

Rex said expedition members will have to pause numerous scientific measurements during the three-week supply run, but that this was preferable to abandoning the mission entirely.

“In view of the massive challenge caused by the global pandemic, we’re very glad that we can do this,” he said. If all goes well, the Polarstern will return to its research post and continue the expedition until October as planned.

Two Twin Otter aircraft that came in via Canada were able to land on the ice next to Polarstern Wednesday and pick up seven team members who urgently needed to return home, but the planes were too small to allow for the larger crew rotation and resupply required.

Rex said that new crew members who will arrive by ship to replace those currently on board Polarstern will have to spend 14 days in quarantine in the German port city of Bremerhaven first, to ensure they are coronavirus-free.

Being cut off from the rest of the world on a sea of ice has afforded those currently on the expedition small perks not possible elsewhere right now, said Rex.

“It’s one of the last human communities in the world where a hundred people can have a barbecue together,” he said.

———

Follow AP coverage of the pandemic at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak


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From Russia, with fruit: Arctic mission gets record resupply

From Russia, with fruit: Arctic mission gets record resupply

A Russian icebreaker has made a successful supply run to exchange crew and deliver goods to an international expedition that’s been adrift in the high Arctic for months trying to improve scientific understanding of climate change

By

FRANK JORDANS Associated Press

March 2, 2020, 10:09 PM

3 min read

BERLIN —
A Russian icebreaker has made a successful supply run to exchange crew and deliver goods to an international expedition that’s been adrift in the high Arctic for months trying to improve scientific understanding of climate change.

Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute said Monday that the Kapitan Dranitsyn approached its own icebreaker RV Polarstern on Friday and spent all weekend ferrying people and supplies between the ships by foot and snowmobile.

The institute said the Dranitsyn set a record by going farther north under its own power than any other ship so early in the year.

Two days before the rendezvous, the Polarstern achieved its own record by drifting to within 156 kilometers (97 miles) of the North Pole, the farthest north a ship has ventured during the Arctic winter.

The 140-million euro ($158 million) expedition required the Polarstern anchor to an ice floe last fall and allow the polar drift to carry it to the far north, a region that’s normally inaccessible during the coldest months of the year.

Researchers from 20 countries including the United States, Britain, Russia and China have been using the ship as a base camp to conduct measurements and experiments they hope will boost the scientific models that underpin their understanding of climate change.

Melinda Webster, a sea ice geophysicist at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, who is scheduled to join the expedition in late March, said she plans to measure how the shift from Arctic winter to spring affects the way ice absorbs sunlight. This will help climate scientists understand how much solar energy the planet’s polar caps can reflect, and how this will change as the extent of sea ice coverage in the Arctic diminishes.

“We know that the Arctic is changing dramatically,” said Webster. Keeping up with those changes gives scientists a baseline from which to predict how global warming will affect the rest of the planet, she said.

The latest shift change on Polarstern was a logistical challenge, occurring at a time when the Arctic is still dark for most of the day and the sea ice is at its thickest.

After the Dranitsyn smashed its way through the frozen sea to a rendezvous point a safe 1 kilometers (0.62 miles) from Polarstern, the crews had to use special heated containers to prevent fresh fruit and vegetables from freezing in wind-chill temperatures as low as -58 degrees Celsius (-72.4 Fahrenheit).

The supplies will be welcomed by the roughly 100 people on board the Polarstern, who munched their way through about 8,100 eggs, 1,360 kilograms (3,000 pounds) of potatoes and 86 jars of Nutella during the second leg of the expedition lasting about 10 weeks.

When Webster arrives toward the end of March, the shift change should take place by plane rather than ship, as there will be sufficient light to land on a makeshift airstrip on the ice.

“It will be much faster, hopefully,” said Webster. However, incoming teams now have an additional challenge: making sure they don’t take the new virus currently spreading around the planet to a place that’s been safely insulated from the outbreak so far.

“We have to take additional tests to make sure we’re not taking the virus to the ship,” said Webster. “It’s a big concern for a lot of folks right now.”


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What’s Happening: Olympics may be late, Twitter telecommutes

What’s Happening: Olympics may be late, Twitter telecommutes

G-7 countries say they are ready to take action to cushion the economic impacts of the new coronavirus outbreak, a statement that comes after a few days of wild market swings

March 3, 2020, 2:56 PM

4 min read

BERLIN —
As more countries report cases of the new coronavirus, governments are eyeing measures to cushion the economic impacts and some athletes are urged to keep their distance from fans.

These are some of the latest developments Tuesday:

G-7 EYES ACTION TO COUNTER ECONOMIC FALLOUT

The group of seven major industrial countries says it’s “ready to take actions, including fiscal measures where appropriate” to fight the economic impact from the virus outbreak. The G-7 statement Tuesday comes after world markets saw wild swings in the last few days and the OECD issued a forecast for lower global growth in 2020.

One sector that’s hurting badly is the business of trade shows, which are being canceled across the globe amid concerns that large gatherings of people from all over the world could hasten the spread of the virus.

JAPAN INDICATES SUMMER OLYMPICS COULD BE DELAYED

Japan’s Olympic minister says the country’s contract to hold the Tokyo Games only specifies that the event has to be held during the year 2020. Seiko Hashimoto’s response to a question in the upper house of parliament implies that the Summer Olympics could be held later this year.

But the International Olympic Committee pushed back Tuesday, issuing a statement expressing its “full commitment to the success of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, taking place from July 24 to Aug. 9, 2020.”

TWITTER BACKS WORKING FROM HOME

Twitter is the latest company to advise its staff members to work from home, if possible, to keep themselves and colleagues healthy. The social networking site says it acted “out of an abundance of caution” to reduce the chances of the virus spreading among its workforce. Twitter said that “working from home will be mandatory for employees based in our Hong Kong, Japan, and South Korea offices, due in part to government restrictions.”

AS VIRUS SPREADS, POLLUTION EBBS

As airlines cancel flights and employees work from home, measures to contain the new coronavirus are causing a drop in air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions in some countries. China has closed factories and curtailed travel, resulting in a noticeable reduction in emissions. Researchers at the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air in Helsinki, Finland, say China’s carbon emissions were 25% lower in the four weeks following the end of the Lunar New Year holiday compared with the same time last year. But experts say the experience of the 2008-2009 financial crisis suggests the trend is unlikely to hold.

ANXIETY IN THE ARCTIC

Scientists taking part in a year-long expedition to the high Arctic are taking extra precautions to prevent the new virus from reaching their camp during staff rotations.

Melinda Webster, a University of Alaska sea ice geophysicist, is preparing to join the international research mission aboard German icebreaker RV Polarstern next month. She said incoming participants are getting tested to ensure they aren’t infected before setting off for the Arctic.

“It’s a big concern for a lot of folks right now,” she said.

NO MORE NBA HIGH-FIVES

The NBA is telling players to avoid high-fiving fans and strangers. A league memo obtained by The Associated Press, offered 10 recommendations to players with hopes of decreasing risks of getting the virus, including not taking items such as pens, markers, balls and jerseys from autograph seekers.

FIRST VIRUS CASES IN UKRAINE, GIBRALTAR

Eastern Europe has had comparatively few confirmed virus cases compared with other regions of the world, though it’s unclear why. Now, Ukraine has reported its first. Ukrainian health officials say a man who recently arrived from Italy was diagnosed with COVID-19. The country’s health system has been strained by a drawn-out conflict in the east between Russia-backed separatists and Ukrainian forces.

At the other end of the continent, authorities in Gibraltar reported their first confirmed case. The patient and their partner had recently returned to the tiny overseas British territory of 35,000 from northern Italy, via the southeastern Spanish airport in Malaga. Both are in self-isolation and the partner has not experienced any symptoms, the Gibraltar government said.

———

Daria Litvinova in Moscow contributed to this report.

———

Follow all AP coverage of the virus outbreak at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak


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Source: What’s Happening: Olympics may be late, Twitter telecommutes

A year later, rebuilding fire-ravaged Paradise: Reporter’s Notebook

A year later, rebuilding fire-ravaged Paradise: Reporter’s Notebook


One year after the Camp Fire,the deadliest and most destructive ever in California, swept through Paradise and the surrounding area, the city is more of a massive construction project than a municipality where 26,000 people used to live.

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Only a handful of the 14,000 destroyed homes have been rebuilt. Most properties are concrete foundations. The town’s McDonald’s is still a pile of charred rubble, and, amazingly, still smells a bit like a barbecue.

It’s hard for me to believe that it has been a year. I remember racing up to Paradise on Nov. 8 and witnessing neighborhoods burn to the ground in minutes. Over nearly a decade covering wildfires, it’s the fastest-moving I’ve ever seen.

I’ll never forget the pitch-black sky in the middle of the afternoon. It was terrifying, and, of course, we didn’t yet realize the extent of the devastation.

PHOTO: A year after the Camp Fire, the McDonalds in Paradise, California, is still a charred pile of rubble.ABC News
A year after the Camp Fire, the McDonald’s in Paradise, California, is still a charred pile of rubble.

For residentslike Jaya Mae Gregory, whose home in Magalia was destroyed, the last year has been about surviving. Most residents flooded into nearby communities. Some left the region altogether.

Gregory and her family drove in an RV across 25 states trying to figure out where to live. They ultimately returned to Butte County so their teenage son could complete his senior year at Paradise High School.

“Any time you’re faced with a tragedy, what are your choices? You either get up and move forward or you completely give up,” Gregory told me. “And I think for the town of Paradise, and for all of us who lived here, we couldn’t give up. This is our home.”

Gregory and her husband are still sleeping in the RV while living out of a friend’s home in nearby Durham. Their biggest challenges over the last year, she said, have been figuring out schools, medical care, insurance and where they ultimately want to live in Butte County.

Others are starving for normalcy. An ice rink in north Paradise is now open and has become a place where residents gather to have a little fun and share stories of survival. With 85 killed by the fire, many know someone who did not make it.

PHOTO: Jaya Mae Gregory, whose home in Magalia was destroyed, and her family drove across 25 states in their RV trying to find a place to live.ABC News
Jaya Mae Gregory, whose home in Magalia was destroyed, and her family drove across 25 states in their RV trying to find a place to live.

Brad Weldon, one of the only people to stay in Paradise throughout the entire ordeal, is still living in his home that was spared by the fire. He now has his sister, several friends and a pack of friends’ dogs living with him.

Several months after the fire he said he had 20-plus people and 12 dogs on his property. Sadly, his 90-year-old mother, who survived the fire with him, died earlier this year.

At the same time, Brad met a woman who returned after the fire, and they’re now engaged. He’s planning to throw a massive party on Saturday to celebrate the town’s revitalization.

Overall, the town looks quite different than it did in the days after the fire. It’s depressing to see so many empty lots, so many charred trees.

Some residents still feel a palpable sadness. Others see hope in the ashes.

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Source:A year later, rebuilding fire-ravaged Paradise: Reporter’s Notebook

Tropical Storm Nestor buffets Florida with storm surge, tornadoes

Tropical Storm Nestor buffets Florida with storm surge, tornadoes


Post-tropical storm Nestor made landfall in Florida Saturday, and while it continues to lose steam,heavy rainand gusty winds are expected to impact parts of Southeast U.S.

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Nestor touched down on St. Vincent Island, near Apalachicola, around 2:15 p.m. ET.

The storm is no longer a tropical storm and is now considered a post-tropical low-pressure system. However, the storm will continue to race up the Southeast coast Saturday night into Sunday.

Much of Florida, Georgia and South Carolina can expect heavy rain and high winds Saturday afternoon.

PHOTO: An RV in Polk Country, Florida, sits toppled over by Tropical Storm Nestor, Oct. src8, 20src9.Michael Paluska
An RV in Polk Country, Florida, sits toppled over by Tropical Storm Nestor, Oct. 18, 2019.

A tornado watch for much of Florida was no longer in effect. There were four reported tornadoes in the Tampa Bay metro area overnight.

The Polk County Sheriff’s Office said it had not received any reports of serious injuries related to the tornadoes. However, many residents sustained damage to their homes, some of which were severe, according to the sheriff’s office.

The National Weather Service was surveying the damage from the tornadoes in Polk County and Pinellas County Saturday morning.

PHOTO: NestorABC News
Nestor

On Sunday, Nestor will slide up the East Coast and bring heavy rain to parts of the Mid-Atlantic, including Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. Once again, there will be at least some marginal severe probabilities in parts of Eastern North Carolina.

Nestor will quickly be pushed eastward on Sunday night and Monday, with the majority of the storm heading into the Atlantic. While some showers and gusty winds will be possible, impacts should be kept to a minimum in much of the Northeast.

PHOTO: NestorABC News
Nestor

Attention will immediately turn to a new storm developing in the West, that will race across the country this week, bringing rain and mountain snow to the Pacific Northwest. This is typical for fall, as low-pressure systems begin to trek further and further into the mid-latitudes due to colder air gaining strength in the Arctic.

The storm is also causing gusty winds ahead of the frontal system, which could briefly cause pockets of fire danger from California to the Rocky Mountains.

PHOTO: New stormABC News
New storm

Late Sunday and early Monday, as the storm heads into the Central U.S., it will spark a line of intense storms and heavy rain. There is a chance for some severe weather across Northern Texas, parts of Oklahoma and Arkansas. The threats will be damaging winds, large hail and possible tornadoes.

PHOTO: New stormABC News
New storm

Then on Monday and into early Tuesday, heavy rain and severe storms will move into parts of the southern U.S., especially the Mississippi River Valley. There will be a potential for a few tornadoes in this round of severe weather. This classic fall severe weather set-up looks like it could be the most notable severe weather in the last couple of months.

ABC News’ Ella Torres contributed to this report.

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Going with the floe: Scientists to set up Arctic ice camp

Going with the floe: Scientists to set up Arctic ice camp


Scientists have chosen an ice floe on which to begin setting up a research camp for a year-long international expedition to study the Arctic, Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute said Friday.

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After several days of searching, researchers found a suitable floe measuring about 2.5 kilometers by 3.5 kilometers (1.5 miles by 2.2 miles) in the Arctic Sea north ofRussiathat will serve as a base for the mission, the institute said.

“It may not be the perfect floe, but it’s the best one in this part of the Arctic, and offers better working conditions than we could have expected after a warm Arctic summer,” it quoted mission leader Markus Rex as saying.

Choosing the right floe is crucial to the plan of allowing the expedition vessel RV Polarstern to drift with the current throughout winter, when an icebreaker would not normally be able to penetrate so deeply into the central Arctic.

“We’ll have to wait and see if it’s also stable enough to withstand the autumnal storms that are now brewing,” Rex said, adding that the team is “prepared for all scenarios.”

The 140 million-euro ($158 million) expedition involves hundreds of scientists from 19 countries, including Germany, the United States, Russia, Britain, France and China. Their aim is to collect data from the remote and inhospitable north to improve the scientific models that underpin their understanding of the Arctic and climate change.

———

MOSAiC expedition site: https://follow.mosaic-expedition.org/

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Source:Going with the floe: Scientists to set up Arctic ice camp

Scientists prepare for year-long expedition to Arctic center

Scientists prepare for year-long expedition to Arctic center


An international team of researchers set off Friday on the biggest and most complex expedition ever attempted in the central Arctic, a yearlong journey they hope will sharpen the scientific models that underpin human understanding of climate change.

The 140-million euro ($158 million) expedition into the ice will see 600 scientists from 19 countries, including Germany, the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China, work together in one of the most inhospitable regions of the planet.

“The Arctic is the epicenter of global climate change,” expedition leader Markus Rex of Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Ocean Research said ahead of the launch. “At the same time, the Arctic is the region of the planet where we understand the climate system least.”

Packed full of scientific equipment, the German icebreaker RV Polarstern left the port of Tromsoe in northern Norway accompanied by a Russian vessel, the Akademik Fedorov, to search for a suitably large floe on which to anchor.

As the days get shorter and the sea freezes around the vessel, crews will race to set up research stations on the ice, some many miles away. Then the Polarstern and the network of camps are set to slowly drift toward the North Pole, with rotating teams of dozens of scientists spending two months conducting research on the ice.

Stefanie Arndt, a sea ice physicist who has been preparing for the expedition for nine years, said darkness will be the biggest challenge.

“Everyone worries about the cold but the psychological aspect of not seeing anything and knowing there are polar bears out there is something that shouldn’t be underestimated,” she told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Scientists involved in the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate, or MOSAiC for short, have undergone firearms training. The camp will be also be secured by a perimeter fence and fireworks to scare off prowling predators.

Arndt, who will join the mission in mid-February, said the unique advantage of MOSAiC compared with other expeditions is the fact that researchers will be able to observe processes in the Arctic across an entire seasonal cycle.

“What’s particularly interesting is the transition from winter to spring,” she said, a time when the ice is normally too thick for ships to reach the Central Arctic.

Recording changes in the density, size and type of snow will help scientists better understand the flows of energy in the Arctic.

“For example, how much light the snow reflects back into the atmosphere, how much it absorbs and how much light reaches the upper ocean,” said Arndt. “This has big implications for the ecosystem.”

Energy from light affects algae growth and ocean temperatures, which in turn influence how much sea ice melts from below.

Understanding these and other complex processes occurring in the Arctic is essential for the increasingly sophisticated computer models scientists use to predict weather and climate. Experts believe that any disruption to the Arctic’s delicate cycle of freeze-and-thaw will be felt further south, though it’s still not clear how.

“The Arctic is changing pretty dramatically right now and that’s something we need to get into,” said Matthew Shupe, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Colorado who will take part in the expedition.

Recent changes in the jet stream — a current of air that circles and insulates the Arctic like a giant thermos — have allowed warm, moist winds from low latitudes to move north. At the same time, chilly blasts of Arctic air — the dreaded polar vortices — have brought deep freeze conditions to the continental U.S. and Europe.

“A lot of this right now is a hot topic,” said Shupe.

Concerns about global warming have spread far beyond the scientific community in recent years. The expedition starts on the same day as global climate protests and ahead of a U.N. climate summit in New York next week.

“We want to provide a robust scientific basis for the important political decisions that our societies now have to make to mitigate climate change,” said Rex, the expedition head.

The cooperation between scientists from many different countries stands in contrast to the geostrategic jostling by international powers as the Arctic, with its untapped riches, begins to open up to exploration.

Anja Karliczek, the German minister for science, said that as a major industrial nation Germany needs to shoulder part of the responsibility for tackling climate change, and financing half of the expedition’s costs was in the country’s interests.

Unlike Russia, China and Sweden, which will also be sending icebreakers to supply the expedition, the United States won’t be contributing a vessel.

“A U.S.-flagged ship would have been a nice addition to MOSAiC,” said Shupe. “On the other hand I think that the U.S. is making extraordinary contributions,” he said, citing scientific and financial support from American institutions such as the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and NASA.

———

MOSAiC mission: https://www.mosaic-expedition.org/

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Mining region struggles as it faces loss of biggest employer

Mining region struggles as it faces loss of biggest employer


Times are tough in a rural county in northeast Washington state because one of the region’s biggest employers is shutting down.

The Pend Oreille Mine, just north of Metaline Falls, closed on July 31, at a cost of about 200 family wage jobs in an area of less than 1,000 residents.

It’s another sign of the imbalance of prosperity in Washington state. While the Seattle area gorges on high-paying jobs, many rural counties like Pend Oreille County that depend on natural resource industries — logging, fishing, mining — are suffering.

This divide is part of a national trend. People in urban areas had higher per-capita income, lower poverty rates, lower unemployment rates and higher education levels than people in rural areas in recent years, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Rural areas are also suffering a declining population, while urban areas grow, the USDA said.

Pend Oreille County Commissioner Steve Kiss said the loss of about 200 jobs at the lead and zinc mine hurts. About 40 employees will remain for long-term maintenance.

“The mine was the last operating natural resource-based industry in the northern part of the county, with the exception of two hydroelectric facilities,” Kiss said. “In the past we have lost other mines, sawmills, a cement plant and the railroad that served all these industries.”

Small businesses struggle to survive in the area in the best of times, Kiss said. “Our two grocery stores, a few restaurants and bars and two gas stations/convenience stores will definitely see a reduction in sales,” he said, while local governments will see less tax revenue.

Pend Oreille (Pahn-duh-ray’) County is bordered on the north by Canada and to the east by Idaho. The Selkirk Mountains create a dramatic landscape, blanketed by national forests and a wilderness area.

The human footprint here is light.

Pend Oreille County has just 13,500 residents, and its unemployment rate of 7.2 percent was already more than two full points higher than the statewide average of 4.6 percent in June.

The owners of the Pend Oreille Mine said the closure was prompted by slumping demand for zinc and the prohibitive cost of exploring for new deposits. The Galena and Lucky Friday mines in nearby northern Idaho are the only active large mining operations left in the Inland Northwest, a region that was originally built by a robust mining industry.

Metaline Falls, a town of less than 300 souls, was quiet on a recent Wednesday morning. The tidy downtown contained a restaurant, grocery store, movie theater and numerous closed-up stores.

“This is a mining town,” said Arlie Ward, a resident since 1996. He owns the historic Washington Hotel downtown, which caters to the tourists who increasingly come to the outdoor playground. “It’s a bite for sure. Half the people around here worked there.”

Not all the economic news from the county is bad.

In April, the Kalispel Tribe of Indians opened a new casino near Cusick that is part of a $10 million project that includes an RV park, storage facility, gas station and grocery store. In total, they will create about 80 new jobs.

The formerly-impoverished tribe operates a large off-reservation casino in a suburb of Spokane that has been very successful. Now it is pouring money closer to its reservation.

“We are focusing on economic development,” tribal council member Curt Holmes said.

Bill Bisson, a city councilman in the nearby town of Metaline, said local leaders are working hard to expand the tourism base.

“We’ve got to look for different ways to bring the economy back,” Bisson said.

The mine closure is survivable, he added. “All the people are hardy people. They’ll continue to move forward,” Bisson said.

The prognosis for the mine site is grim, however.

A 2013 study by community leaders looked at what could be done with the 263 acres of surface mine property and 20 industrial buildings. The study found little chance of gaining another large employer.

The mine previously temporarily closed in 2008, but it reopened five years later when zinc prices increased.

Metaline Falls Mayor Tara Leininger, 62, doesn’t expect a similar situation. “We’re looking at losing people,” Leininger said.

Mining companies from across the nation have been recruiting the employees of the Pend Oreille Mine, because underground hard rock mining is a specialized skill.

The mine closure isn’t the only factor in the shrinking population. Leininger said some people with health problems have left to be closer to hospitals. The local clinic just lost its only doctor.

Kiss, the county commissioner, has lived for nearly 60 years in Pend Oreille County.

“I fully understand the resiliency of the people who live here,” Kiss added. “We will survive.”

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Source:Mining region struggles as it faces loss of biggest employer

Scientists to be trapped in ice for year-long Arctic mission

Scientists to be trapped in ice for year-long Arctic mission


Cranes hoist cargo onto the deck, power tools scream out and workers bustle through the maze of passageways inside the German icebreaker RV Polarstern, preparations for a yearlong voyage that organizers say is unprecedented in scale and ambition.

In a couple of months, the hulking ship will set out for the Arctic packed with supplies and scientific equipment for a mission to explore the planet’s frigid far north. The icebreaker will be the base for scientists from 17 nations studying the impact of climate change on the Arctic and how it could affect the rest of the world.

“So far we have always been locked out of that region and we lack even the basic observations of the climate processes in the central Arctic from winter,” said Markus Rex of Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute, who will lead the 140-million euro ($158 million) expedition.

“We are going to change that for the first time,” Rex told The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday aboard the Polarstern at its dock in Bremerhaven, Germany.

Scientists plan to sail the ship into the Arctic Ocean, anchor it to a large piece of sea ice and allow the water to freeze around them, effectively trapping themselves in the vast sheet of white that forms over the North Pole each winter.

As temperatures drop and the days get shorter, they’ll race against time to build temporary winter research camps on the ice, allowing them to perform tests that wouldn’t be possible at other times of the year or by satellite sensing.

“We can do a lot with robotics and other things but in the end the visual, the manual observation and also the measurement, that’s still what we need,” Marcel Nicolaus, a German sea ice physicist who will be part of the international mission, said. “We need to go out, establish that ice camp.”

Dozens of scientists from the United States, China, Russia and other countries will be on board the Polarstern at any one time, rotating every two months as other icebreakers bring fresh supplies and a new batch of eager researchers.

The mission is considered a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for many scientists, even those who are veterans of multiple Arctic expeditions.

It is receiving substantial funding from U.S. institutions such as the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and NASA.

By combining measurements on the ice with data collected from satellites, scientists hope to improve the increasingly sophisticated computer models they use to predict weather and climate.

The interdisciplinary work spans several fields of science, including physics, chemistry and biology. Its overarching purpose – to answer key questions around global warming – means there’s no time for national rivalry, said Rex.

“The different geopolitical interests don’t play a role in our research community,” he said.

The mission’s international collaboration and scope have drawn comparisons with the International Space Station, the most expensive and remote outpost mankind has yet created.

“Actually, we’ll be farther away from civilization because the space station is in an orbit only 400 to 500 kilometers high,” Rex said.

Once the Polarstern is carried into the depth of the Arctic night, far off the coast of northern Greenland, the scientists will be on their own, making any emergency evacuation almost impossible.

“We’ll be isolated,” Rex said. “No other ice breaker can then reach us because the ice will be too thick.”

While the ship has a fully equipped medical station, the aim is to avoid any calamity on board, said Verena Mohaupt, a logistics expert who has spent months preparing safety measures for the mission.

This includes creating a perimeter fence on the ice that will sound a loud alarm if a polar bear approaches. “We’re going to have to experiment and hope it works,” said Mohaupt.

The MOSAiC mission, which stands for Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate, comes about 125 years after Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen first managed to seal his wooden expedition ship, Fram, into the ice during a three-year expedition to the North Pole.

Since then, scientific understanding of the role the Arctic plays in the world’s climate has grown, though so has concern about the changes being observed, such as increasingly early sea ice melts .

Scientists now believe the cold cap that forms each year is key to regulating weather patterns and temperatures across the Northern Hemisphere. Anything that disrupts the Arctic will be felt further south , they say.

Rex cited the polar vortices that blasted cold air as far as Florida last winter and the early summer heat wave in Europe as prime examples of the impact that a change in the Arctic weather system might entail.

“The dramatic warming of the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic,” he said, adding that understanding the processes at play in the far north is crucial if world leaders are to make the right decisions to curb climate change.

“We as scientists, I think, have the obligation to produce the robust scientific basis for political decisions,” Rex said.

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MOSAiC mission website: https://www.awi.de/en/focus/mosaic-expedition.html

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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Source:Scientists to be trapped in ice for year-long Arctic mission

‘The Profit’ loses city vote against his huge US flag

‘The Profit’ loses city vote against his huge US flag


  • Star

FILE - In this undated handout photo provided by Camping World, an American flag blows in the wind at Gander RV, in Statesville, N.C. The North Carolina city has voted against the flying of really big flags, holding its ground against reality TV star

The Associated Press

FILE – In this undated handout photo provided by Camping World, an American flag blows in the wind at Gander RV, in Statesville, N.C. The North Carolina city has voted against the flying of really big flags, holding its ground against reality TV star Marcus Lemonis’ huge Stars and Stripes. News outlets report the Statesville City Council voted down changes to the flag ordinance Monday night, June 17, 2019. That means flags in Statesville must be no larger than 25 feet by 40 feet (7.6 meters by 12 meters). That’s roughly half the size of the American flag that Lemonis has unfurled outside his Gander RV company. (Jennifer Munday/Camping World, AP)

A North Carolina city has voted against the flying of really big flags, holding its ground against a reality TV star’s huge Stars and Stripes.

News outlets report the Statesville City Council voted down changes to the flag ordinance Monday night. That means flags in Statesville must be no larger than 25 feet by 40 feet (7.6 meters by 12 meters). That’s roughly half the size of the American flag that Marcus Lemonis has unfurled outside his Gander RV company.

Statesville has asked a court to order Gander RV to comply or pay a $50 per day fine.

Lemonis runs Camping World and stars on “The Profit” on CNBC. He says the flag is staying. He’s said he’ll go to jail for contempt of court to protect his constitutional rights.

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Source:‘The Profit’ loses city vote against his huge US flag

TV’s ‘The Profit’ to visit store with enormous American flag

TV’s ‘The Profit’ to visit store with enormous American flag


The reality television star who has said he would go to jail before removing a huge American flag from his recreational vehicle store in North Carolina told cheering employees on Thursday that he would not take the banner down “under any circumstance.”

Standing in the parking lot of Gander RV late Thursday afternoon, Marcus Lemonis declared to a group of workers and a gaggle of news media that he was not interested in the city of Statesville’s offer to change a local ordinance regulating banner sizes to allow the giant flag to continue flying. What he wants, he said, is for them to eliminate all size restrictions on the American flag.

“This is about a city and a flag that does not belong to us, it doesn’t belong to you; it belongs to all of us,” said Lemonis, chief executive officer of Camping World, which owns Gander, and star of CNBC’s reality television show “The Profit”.

In announcing his visit to the site, Lemonis had said Wednesday that he wanted to show his support for workers “frustrated by the distraction” of the flag controversy.

Officials from the city about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of Charlotte sued the company earlier this month over the flag, which measures 40 feet by 80 feet (12 meters by 24 meters) and hangs on a 130-foot-high (40-meter-high) flagpole next to I-77. The code limits flags to 25 feet by 40 feet (7.6 meters by 12 meters).

But Lemonis declared on Wednesday that he would go to jail before he’d take the banner down. Not long after that, Statesville Mayor Costi Kutteh issued a statement saying he had asked the city’s planning department to change the dimensions allowed for flags displayed in a highway business zone.

“If passed, this amendment will permit the flag currently displayed … to continue flying,” the release said. Kutteh said the matter should be resolved at the department’s meeting on July 15.

That’s not good enough, Lemonis said Thursday.

“What we’re asking for and what we’re not going to back down on is … for the city to modify the ordinance to eliminate the size of flag regulation and the size of pole regulation unless it interferes with the FAA, it interferes with people’s health, wellness or safety, or it blocks the visibility of a consumer to another person’s business,” he said.

Employees cheered when he once again proclaimed, “The flag is not coming down under any circumstance.”

Lemonis’ attorneys were planning to file a response to the city’s lawsuit. Lemonis said Wednesday that the response would cite First Amendment free-speech protections as well as a North Carolina law that prohibits size restrictions on official governmental flags except when necessary to protect public health, safety and welfare.

Daquane Messier, who’s opening a new hookah lounge in Statesville, said he was rooting for Lemonis “because a win for him” as a business owner “is a win for me.”

“Let them fly the flag,” he said. “It can be a Confederate flag. It can be a neo-Nazi flag for all I care. You fly it. Because everyone has the freedom to express ourselves.”

Treva Miller, who works for a school system near Gander RV, said she doesn’t understand why the flag’s size is such a big deal.

“It’s a flag,” Miller said. “It’s not hurting anyone. It’s not doing any damage. I’m not really sure what the controversy is.”

———

Waggoner reported from Raleigh, North Carolina.

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Follow Martha Waggoner on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mjwaggonernc

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Source:TV’s ‘The Profit’ to visit store with enormous American flag

Galveston leaders earmark funds to develop East End Lagoon

Galveston leaders earmark funds to develop East End Lagoon


City leaders in Galveston have approved funding to develop the East End Lagoon in an effort to attract more visitors to the nature area.

The Galveston County Daily News reported Monday that developing the 684-acre (276.811-hectare) lagoon has been an ongoing project for at least 10 years. The Galveston City Council on Thursday earmarked up to $50,000 annually, for eight years, to help the city’s park board develop the site.

Documents indicate the Galveston Park Board of Trustees plans to start by building an educational pavilion and an observation pier. Later phases include additional walking trails, an RV park and a paid offshore fishing facility.

The board is seeking a $1.4 million federal grant from money being distributed to aid cleanup from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill off Louisiana.

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Source:Galveston leaders earmark funds to develop East End Lagoon

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