Recent Event Highlights: Dumping NASA's New Ares I Rocket Would Cost Billions, Columbia shuttle alien downed?, 91 Columbia River · USA, ION Sports Business Report | Columbia, "Pew Report on Muslims in America," American Morning (CNN, May 23, 2007), WCBS-2 Report - Who Is Kirsten Gillibrand?, and 118 more...
Created by dipity on Dec 30, 2008
Last updated: 09/25/09 at 04:21 PM
Sourcefire VRT Vulnerability Report This month's report covers three of the Microsoft Tuesday advisories, Snort 2.8.5 RC, Byakugan, DHCLIENT and BIND 9. Sourcefire VRT: Matt Watchinski - Senior Director Lurene Grenier - Analyst Team Lead Brian Caswell - Tools Team Lead Nigel Houghton...
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...of loss of mission and loss of crew probabilities" for upgraded Delta 4 Heavy rockets, the report said. Previous NASA studies indicate Ares I would be twice as safe. Columbia investigators said NASA should give "overriding priority to crew safety, rather than...
Source Info
Space.com
Related Topics
http://www.space.com/news/090812-ares1-rocket-questions.html
An examination of claims that Columbia was brought down by aliens or super lightning Further videos- www.chrisvalentines.com Official Report- www.nasa.gov
Wehave selected 100 unique places on Earth that are projected to undergo profound changes within the next few generations. We based our selection of the 100 places on the 4th Assessment Report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Simply by drawing attention to the beauty of these places, 100 Places to Remember Before they Disappear creates an argument to preserve them. The 100 Places we have chosen to highlight, and the people who live in them, are in serious danger ...
Coverage by ION Sports' Heather Hennessy Executive Producer: Dave Behar
On Wednesday, May 23, 2007, "American Morning" anchor John Roberts talked with Zaheer Ali (Graduate Student, Columbia University), along with Yasmin Hamidi (Network of Arab-American Professionals) and Haroon Moghul (Graduate Student, Columbia University), about the May 22, 2007 Pew Report on Muslims in America.
WCBS-2 report on Kirsten Gillibrand's appointment to fill Senator Hillary Clinton's seat in New York. The report is from Gillibrand's hometown of Hudson in Columbia County, New York. Report features comments by Cyndy Hall - Columbia County Democrats 1st Vice Chair, Eileen Halloran - Hudson City Treasurer and Rosann Aulino - Democratic State Delegate 108th District and others. Tony Aiello - Reporter
WABC report on Kirsten Gillibrand's appointment to fill Senator Hillary Clinton's seat in New York. The report is from Gillibrand's hometown of Hudson NY. Report features comments by Supervisor Doug McGivney (D-Kinderhook), Cyndy Hall - Columbia County Democrats 1st Vice Chair, Rosann Aulino - Democratic State Delegate 108th District and others. Marcus Solis - Reporter
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...required the ASAP to submit an annual report to the NASA administrator and Congress. This annual report examines NASA's compliance with the recommendations of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board, as well as NASA's management and culture related to safety....
Source Info
NASA
http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2009/apr/HQ_M09-061_ASAP_Annual_Report.html
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...issuing a bulletin on an unverified report that a ring had been stolen from the remains of astronaut killed during the 2003 Columbia shuttle tragedy. "A new Inspector General will find an organization with extraordinarily talented employees dedicated to rooting...
Source Info
Space.com
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/spaceheadlines/~3/KmqHCdqDxB8/090403-nasa-inspectorgeneral-resigns.html
Happy April Fools Day everyone! This video is about Kelly Rowland leaving Columbia Records as a solo artist. She's still on the label (as well as Music World) as a member of Destiny's Child. Also, my birthday is TOMORROW (APRIL 2ND)! So send me some B-Day love. THE DOC REPORT: http://thedocreport.blogspot.com DOC's MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/doc10 DOC's Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mrdoc
I just want to know, what business is it of their's to know whether or not a person is a member of a militia? They need to mind their own business, or some day, they will find out the hard way who is, and who is not, a member of a militia. Let's say that a person has twenty plus guns and 7000 rounds of center-fire ammo, so what. Who cares? Why does the government need to know about it? You can only push the free people of this country so far until there is a backlash of some sort. I would ...
Be Veg. Go Green. Save the Planet.(吃素、環保、救地球)for more details, Please visit www.SupremeMasterTV.com
Columbia College student Geena Sondy talks to the Chronicle about her struggles living in the 18 E. Congress dorm.
............................................. .......What's That.................. WASHINGTON A new satellite to track the chief culprit in global warming crashed into the ocean near Antarctica after launch Tuesday, dealing a major setback to NASA's already weak network for monitoring Earth and its environment from above. The $280 million mission was designed to answer one of the biggest question marks of global warming: What happens to the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide spewed by the burning of coal, oil and natural gas? How much of it is sucked up and stored by plants, soil and oceans and how much is left to trap heat on Earth, worsening global warming? "It's definitely a setback. We were already well behind," said Neal Lane, science adviser during former President Bill Clinton's administration. "The program was weak and now it's really weak." For about a decade, scientists have complained of a decline in the study of Earth from space. NASA spent more money looking at other planets than it did at Earth in 2007. That same year, the National Academy of Sciences warned that NASA's study of Earth "is at great risk" with fewer missions than before and aging satellites. "We have a very weakened Earth observing system just at a time where we need every bit of data that we could possibly get," said Elisabeth Holland, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. She said NASA has fallen behind Europe in environmental satellites. Japan successfully launched a carbon dioxide tracking satellite just last month. The NASA satellite — called the Orbiting Carbon Observatory — was going to explain Earth's capture of carbon dioxide, which now appears to be slowing and could accelerate global warming, said Holland, who helped write the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report. Minutes after launch Tuesday in California, the satellite fell back to Earth near Antarctica not far from where environment ministers and scientists met Monday to talk about climate change. NASA officials said a protective cover on the satellite didn't release and fall away, and the extra weight meant the satellite couldn't reach orbit. "This was going to be one of the few bright spots in the Earth observing system for the last five years," Holland said. The future was starting to look better for the scientists who had felt ignored. Last year, NASA talked about being "greener" and gave initial approval to six new Earth observing missions. This month, the Obama administration put $400 million in the stimulus program for NASA science, and NASA's science chief Ed Weiler said "it was all going to Earth sciences." "It's very unfortunate that it happened just at this time when we trying to get Earth observations back on track," said Ruth DeFries, a Columbia University professor who was part of the National Academy study team. Until Japan's launch, scientists have depended on land-based stations to monitor carbon dioxide at low altitudes. The Japanese probe uses a different technique to measure carbon dioxide and does so from a different orbit compared to NASA's satellite. Tuesday's failure put on hold the launch of another NASA satellite, Glory, which will look at solar radiation and airborne particles that reflect and trap sunlight. That satellite will launch on the same kind of rocket, the Taurus XL. NASA needs to figure out what went wrong before Glory is launched, Weiler said. It was the first major NASA mission launch failure since September 2001. An earlier version of the Taurus rocket, made by Orbital Sciences of Dulles, Va., failed and an environmental satellite was lost. But the Taurus rocket has a long history of success and has never had this type of cover problem before, said John Brunschwyler, project manager for Orbital Sciences. But now NASA is facing a big question: Should it build a duplicate of the dead satellite? Researchers on the satellite team are pushing NASA to do that, said Graeme Stephens, a Colorado State University professor who worked on the project. The project was nine years in the making, and the mission was supposed to last two years. A duplicate would be significantly cheaper than $280 million to build and launch because lots of early work doesn't have to be repeated, Weiler said. And it could be built relatively quickly. But one of the missions that NASA was considering speeding up with the new stimulus money was a more sophisticated and costly follow-up to the failed satellite. It makes more sense to go ahead with that project, said Berrien Moore III, who headed the National Academy study and is executive director of Climate Central, a Princeton, N.J. climate change think-tank.
RAMS Hosted their annual events in order to raise money and awareness about MS here in Columbia.
SEC football show
Leading economic expert Jim Rogers traveled to 150 countries over 150,000 miles in three years - follow his adventures here on FentonReport. In this video Jim and Paige visit the Colombian Emerald Trade Center in Columbia. Copyright Jim Rogers - provided as a special contribution to The Fenton Report. http://www.fentonreport.com
The incidences of suicides of U.S. Army recruiters has reached the highest level ever, forcing officials to mandate that soldiers take prevention training. Dean Martin reports from Columbia, S.C.
The incidences of suicides of U.S. Army recruiters has reached the highest level ever, forcing officials to mandate that soldiers take prevention training. Dean Martin reports from Columbia, S.C.
I Weather Report hanno realizzato alcune tra le musiche più belle del ventesimo secolo, qualcosa di veramente speciale che spesso amiamo condividere e riascoltare. E' quel mix di suoni elettronici ed acustici coinvolgenti, ancora freschi, come li abbiamo ascoltati decenni fa. Nel 1970, Zawinul, Shorter, Vitous e Mouzon si unirono per dar vita ad un gruppo che avrebbe sconvolto il mondo del jazz. Con alle spalle un retroterra jazzistico impressionante - avevano suonato con Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley, Art Blakey, Herbie Mann e Roy Ayers tra gli altri - i quattro musicisti intrapresero la loro avventura con l'album di debutto per la Columbia nel 1971. Questo progetto musicale avrebbe avuto ripercussioni nel mondo del jazz, del rock, della world music per i successivi 35 anni. Il primo line-up dei Weather Report si riunì presso i Columbia Studios di New York nel Febbraio 1971 per le session, prodotte da Zawinul (come sarebbe successo per ogni album successivo) da cui scaturì il primo album eponimo. Proprio da questo album, "Weather Report", è tratto il brano "Waterfall". In "Waterfall" suonano: Joe Zawinul = pianoforte acustico e elettrico Wayne Shorter = sassofono tenore e soprano Miroslav Vitous = contrabbasso e basso elettrico Alphonse Mouzon = batteria e voce Airto Moreira = percussioni
http://www.blogtv.com/People/iamcchan Story originates from http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/02/01/michael.phelps.marijuana/ RALEIGH, North Carolina (Reuters) Record-breaking Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps could face criminal charges following the publication of a photograph purportedly showing him smoking marijuana, The State newspaper of Columbia, South Carolina reported Tuesday. A South Carolina law enforcement official said he would charge Phelps if he could prove the U.S. Olympian smoked marijuana in his county. "This case is no different than any other case," Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott told The State. Lott's comments come after a British newspaper published a photograph purportedly showing Phelps smoking marijuana at a party being held by students at the University of South Carolina in Columbia in November. Columbia, the South Carolina state capital, is located in Richland County. "This one might be a lot easier since we have photographs of someone using drugs and a partial confession. It's a relatively easy case once we can determine where the crime occurred." Phelps apologized Sunday after publication of the photograph by the News of the World, calling his behavior "inappropriate." Both the University of South Carolina and Columbia police departments have said they would not pursue charges against Phelps, The State said. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said it accepted his apology and U.S. officials said the news was disappointing but stressed that smoking marijuana out of competition was not an anti-doping matter. Possession of marijuana is a misdemeanor in South Carolina, punishable by up to 30 days in jail or a $570 fine, plus court costs, The State reported.
January 16th, 2009
About 10 am and still slightly snowing. http:\\www.debbysdare.blogspot.com
Bailey Bailey's adventure in snow. http://debbysdares.blogspot.com/
Report 1: 7:10 am and the snow is falling.
David Goodman of Macdonald Commercial Real Estate Services addresses Mayor Robertson, City Planners and Council Members on the proposed motion that calls on the province to amend the Residential Tenancy Act to require landlords to allow tenants evicted for the purpose of renovations to reoccupy their units once renovations are completed at the same rent as they were paying prior to the renovation. But, between the lines, this is a recipe for fostering slums. The new bylaw would ask building owners, who already operate on tight margins, to subsidize tenants by making new investments that are guaranteed to show no return. In fact, if it passes it will merely ensure the existing stock is left to deteriorate with nothing ever fixed up unless or until a suite becomes vacant.
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...Council on Integrity and Efficiency said that Cobb had abused his authority, and did not seem adequately independent from NASA. The report cited one case surrounding whether to publicize the theft of a ring from the remains of the space shuttle Columbia. ...
Source Info
RedOrbit
http://www.redorbit.com/news/space/1620935/gao_report_finds_nasa_inspector_general_underperforming/index.html?source=r_space
Excerpt
...a ring from the remains of the space shuttle Columbia. Congressional leaders, who said Cobb was too subservient to the NASA administrator, had called for his resignation, which went unheeded. Renee Juhans, spokeswoman for the NASA inspector general office,...
Source Info
Taiwan News
http://www.taiwannews.com.tw/etn/news_content.php?id=834256&lang=eng_news&cate_img=logo_world&cate_rss=WORLD_eng
Excerpt
...a ring from the remains of the space shuttle Columbia. Congressional leaders, who said Cobb was too subservient to the NASA administrator, had called for his resignation, which went unheeded. Renee Juhans, spokeswoman for the NASA inspector general office,...
Source Info
The News Review
http://www.nrtoday.com/article/20090109/NEWS/901099868/-1/rss04
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...a ring from the remains of the space shuttle Columbia. Congressional leaders, who said Cobb was too subservient to the NASA administrator, had called for his resignation, which went unheeded. Renee Juhans, spokeswoman for the NASA inspector general office,...
Source Info
OregonNews.com
http://www.nrtoday.com/article/20090109/NEWS/901099868/-1/rss07
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...a ring from the remains of the space shuttle Columbia. Congressional leaders, who said Cobb was too subservient to the NASA administrator, had called for his resignation, which went unheeded. Renee Juhans, spokeswoman for the NASA inspector general office,...
Source Info
OregonNews.com
http://www.nrtoday.com/article/20090109/NEWS/901099868/-1/rss02
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...remains of the shuttle NASA has issued a report on survivability during the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, entitled "Columbia Crew Survival Investigation Report". Although the report finds the accident was impossible to survive, it still faulted a number...
Source Info
Wikinews
Related Topics
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/NASA_issues_survivability_report_on_Columbia_crash?curid=118781
This week in space: Phoenix Lives, Columbia Accident Report, International Year of Astronomy, Ice on the Moon Visit Dave Mosher's Space Disco blog at http://blogs.discovery.com/space_disco/disco_space_preview And don't miss Discovery Channel's space site, Discovery Space, at http://space.discovery.com
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...has released details of the deadly space shuttle Columbia accident in 2003 and completed a report on what went wrong and how similar accidents can be prevented. NASA said Tuesday that it had finished a comprehensive study of crew safety equipment and procedures...
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Information Week
http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=e314337286ddbd13a78add9baa8ae93e
Visit site http://www.suriavideo.com A nice little weather report from the year 2015. But what's with the pink walrus?
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...from violent gyrations that knocked them about the ship. In short, Columbia's astronauts were quickly doomed. A new NASA report released Tuesday details the chaotic final minutes of Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point of the...
Source Info
Times of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Health__Science/Science/NASA_report_details_final_minutes_of_Columbia/rssarticleshow/3922009.cms
MSNBC Space STS-107 2008-12-30 NASA: Columbia crew suffered 'lethal trauma' A new report on the 2003 Columbia tragedy says that many of the capsule's safety measures were not designed to cope with the catastrophe. *** Source http://msnbc.com
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...to regain control of their craft before it broke apart in 2003, but there was no chance of surviving the accident, says a Nasa report. From the crew’s perspective, the shift from what appeared to be a normal descent on February 1, 2003, into disaster happened...
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Irish Examiner
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ieworld/~3/499842394/
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...was no way the crew of the space shuttle Columbia could have survived the loss of their craft, but a Nasa report aimed at making future accidents more survivable has revealed that the seven-strong crew's safety harnesses and helmets failed during their final...
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The Independent
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/shuttle-crews-last-moments-revealed-1220055.html
NASA releases the results of its investigation and recommendations for future safety following Space Shuttle Columbia's disaster that took the lives of seven astronauts, reports Hari Sreenivasan.
NASA releases the results of its investigation and recommendations for future safety following Space Shuttle Columbia's disaster that took the lives of seven astronauts, reports Hari Sreenivasan.
Instances of '11' and/or Multiples of '11' Number '33' -- We see two instances of the number '33' in this event. 1. Location over Dallas. As we have already noted, Dallas is located on the 33rd Parallel 2. Columbia was planned to touch down at Runway #33 at the Kennedy Space Center. Runways are numbered by the way they are layed out in degrees so this runway is at 330 degrees and therefore built at an angle that would give it the number 33. Number '22' 1. Columbia was 22 years old -- ["NASA begins grim hunt for answers after shuttle disintegrates over Texas", MSNBC News, http://www.msnbc.com/news/857733.asp] 2. The Space Shuttle Program was 22 years old -- [Ibid.] 3. The Israeli pilot, Ilan Ramon, was one of the fighter pilots who successfully destroyed the Iraqi nuclear reactor 22 years ago! ["Israeli astronaut bombed Iraqi nuclear reactor", WorldNetDaily, 2/1/03, http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=30821] Number '11' 1. This mission was number '113' -- [MSNBC, Ibid.] This number gives an '11' 2. President Bush ordered the flag to fly at half-staff at 11:00am, EST 3. "Columbia, the oldest orbiter in the Shuttle fleet, is named after the Boston, Massachusetts based sloop captained by American Robert Gray. On May 11, 1792, Gray and his crew maneuvered the Columbia past the dangerous sandbar at the mouth of a river extending more than 1,000 miles through what is today south-eastern British Columbia, Canada, and the Washington-Oregon border." [http://science.ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/resources/orbiters/columbia.html]
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...be dead from violent gyrations that knocked them about the ship. In short, Columbia’s astronauts were quickly doomed. A new NASA report released yesterday details the chaotic final minutes of Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point...
Source Info
Worcester Telegram & Gazette
http://www.telegram.com/article/20081231/NEWS/812310375/1052/RSS01&source=rss
Excerpt
...from violent gyrations that knocked them about the ship. In short, Columbia's astronauts were quickly doomed. A new NASA report released yesterday details the chaotic final minutes of Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point of...
Source Info
New York Newsday
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nynewsday/news/nationworld/nation/~3/Ciwme4RA8Z4/ny-usshut315982553dec31,0,48395.story
Excerpt
...from violent gyrations that knocked them about the ship. In short, Columbia's astronauts were quickly doomed. A new NASA report released yesterday details the chaotic final minutes of Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point of...
Source Info
New York Newsday
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nynewsday/news/nationworld/world/~3/Ciwme4RA8Z4/ny-usshut315982553dec31,0,48395.story
A new NASA report says that the seat restraints, suits and helmets of the doomed crew of the space shuttle Columbia didn't work well, leading to 'lethal trauma' as the out-of-control ship broke apart, killing all seven astronauts. (Dec. 30)
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...pressure didn’t kill them immediately, they would be dead from violent gyrations that knocked them about the ship. A new NASA report released Tuesday details the chaotic final minutes of Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point of...
Source Info
Lawrence Journal World
http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2008/dec/31/new-nasa-report-details-final-minutes-columbia/
Excerpt
...of pressure didn’t kill them immediately, they would die from violent gyrations that knocked them about the ship. A new NASA report released Tuesday details the chaotic final minutes of Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point of...
Source Info
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
http://www.star-telegram.com/238/story/1117559.html
Last Light Bar Report on the Columbia River Bar during a 2kt ebb. Main Channel was 12-14ft and 16-18ft on the series with breaks all the way across.

