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The Aurora Borealis Like You've Never Seen It

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station recently captured mind-blowing images of the Northern Lights




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One of Alaska's Most Famous Volcanoes May Be Waking Up

It has been over 32 years since Mt. Spurr last erupted, but the Alaskan volcano near Anchorage is showing signs of reawakening.




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We Barely Caught a Break From Record-Setting Heat Last Month. Meanwhile, a U.N. Report Pleads, "No More Hot Air, Please!"

Despite a sliver of good news in the latest monthly climate analyses, global heating continues — and the world is far from taming it.




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If You're Still Unsure Who to Vote For, These Two Simple Charts Could Help You Decide

Worried about the economy, but climate change isn't high on your list of concerns? Keep reading...




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Why Aggression Is a Common Symptom For Those With Dementia or Alzheimer's

Learn what causes aggression for those living with dementia and find gentle ways to comfort your loved one during challenging times.




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Coin Master Free Spins & Coins Links

Find all the latest Coin Master free spins right here! We update daily, so be sure to check in daily!




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The "Synergistic Core" of the Human Brain?

Are synergistic interactions the fundamental drivers of complex cognition?




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On "Pivotal Mental States"

A new theory of profound psychological change.




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Christmas, Death and Surgeons' Birthdays

Should a paper on deaths following surgery have been published as a Christmas special?




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The Ethics of "Human Brain Surrogates"

The ethical questions raised by emerging neuro-technologies




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Brain Stimulation's Complex Emotional Effects

Mapping the emotional responses to deep brain stimulation




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Citizen Science for Women's History Month and Other March Events

Celebrate astronomer Maria Mitchell, observe World Water Day and prepare for Citizen Science Month




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ChatGPT Has Changed The Way Scientists Write Scientific Papers. Here's How

A study of 14 million research papers reveals a sudden and dramatic change that occurred soon after ChatGPT appeared.




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Will Phones Let You Smell What's On The Other End Of The Call One Day?

Phones that transmit odors seem like a great idea, but careful what you wish for!




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¿Qué es la Eclíptica?

La eclíptica, dicho de manera simple, es el plano de la órbita de la Tierra alrededor del Sol.

The post ¿Qué es la Eclíptica? appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



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Cómos y Porqués De Los Eclipses Solares

Conviértase en un experto en eclipses para familiares y amigos en un par de minutos

The post Cómos y Porqués De Los Eclipses Solares appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Observar el Cielo
  • The 2017 Total Solar Eclipse
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  • solar eclipse 2024


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See the Photos that Won the Royal Observatory Greenwich's Astronomy Photographer of the Year Awards

The Royal Observatory Greenwich has announced the winners of the 16th annual Astronomy Photographer of the Year contest.

The post See the Photos that Won the Royal Observatory Greenwich's Astronomy Photographer of the Year Awards appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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The faded sun : Shon'jir

Location: Special Collections Hevelin Collection- PS3553.H4715S46 1978




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Allah's automata : artifacts of the Arab-Islamic Renaissance (800-1200)

Location: Main Library- TJ114.A65 2015




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"All this for a Joint" : Tunisia's Repressive Drug Law and a Roadmap for Its Reform

Location: Law Electronic Resource- 




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Harvest Moon Takes a Quick Dip in Earth's Shadow for a Partial Lunar Eclipse

September's partial lunar eclipse will be the first and only time the Moon ducks into Earth's umbral shadow in 2024. The Moon also occults Saturn and hides members of the Pleiades this month.

The post Harvest Moon Takes a Quick Dip in Earth's Shadow for a Partial Lunar Eclipse appeared first on Sky & Telescope.




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See Mutual Events, Close Approaches of Saturn's Moons

As Saturn's rings narrow, now's the time for its moons to shine.

The post See Mutual Events, Close Approaches of Saturn's Moons appeared first on Sky & Telescope.




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This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 6 – 15

The Moon starts the week low in twilight with Venus and Spica, then steps eastward past Antares and the Sagittarius Teapot. Meanwhile, the recurrent nova in Corona Borealis is still keeping us waiting.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 6 – 15 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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  • This Week's Sky At a Glance
  • This week's sky at a glance

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This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 13 – 22

The Moon occults Saturn before dawn on Tuesday morning, then the Moon skims the edge of Earth's shadow for a partial lunar eclipse that evening. Meanwhile, Jupiter and Mars shine in fine view late at night.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 13 – 22 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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  • This week's sky at a glance

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This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 20 – 29

In this dark-of-the-Moon week, the Cygnus Milky Way crosses the zenith, and Arcturus, Capella, and Fomalhaut come to a certain balance.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 20 – 29 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 27 – October 6

On these moonless evenings, Cassiopeia shows some of its inner workings. The Circlet of Pisces offers a very red star next to a little-known cross. From Vega, Lyra points away from the head of Draco.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, September 27 – October 6 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 4 – 13

The waxing crescent Moon passes Venus, then Antares, in the western twilight. Several days later, Comet Tsuchinshan starts stealing the twilight show for everyone in the world's north temperate latitudes!

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 4 – 13 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



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This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 11 – 20

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS enters its week of glory for those of us in the Northern Hemisphere. Don't let any clear twilight slip by!

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 11 – 20 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



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This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 18 – 27

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS fades and shrinks as it rises high into a darker sky. Venus passes Antares. The waning Moon passes the Pleiades, Jupiter, and Mars. Arcturus becomes the Ghost of Summer Suns.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 18 – 27 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



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This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 25 – November 3

Fading Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS poses high in a moonless sky for its fans with binoculars and telescopes, even as we wave farewell for at least a hundred thousand years, maybe forever. Meanwhile four brighter, more permanent members of the solar system await attention.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, October 25 – November 3 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



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November Podcast: Cassiopeia & Company

November’s night skies feature a cluster of prominent constellations led by a celestial queen. Our guided audio tour tells you how to identify them, along with tips for spotting all five bright planets and three meteor showers.

The post November Podcast: Cassiopeia & Company appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



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This Week's Sky at a Glance, November 1 – 10

The thin crescent Moon pairs beautifully with Venus low in Monday's twilight. And be on the lookout for any Taurid fireballs this week!

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, November 1 – 10 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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  • This week's sky at a glance

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A Radio Burst from a Giant "Dead" Galaxy

Exotic magnetars make brief, powerful flashes of radio waves — but a new discovery suggests there may be more than one way to make a magnetar.

The post A Radio Burst from a Giant "Dead" Galaxy appeared first on Sky & Telescope.




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This Week's Sky at a Glance, November 8 – 17

The stars betray that we've tipped from the season of warm evenings to the cold (or at least crisp). And the Moon this week skims Saturn, then the Pleiades.

The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, November 8 – 17 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.



  • Astronomy & Observing News
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  • This week's sky at a glance

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U.S. House committee proposes "automatic" sign-up for military draft

Yesterday, during markup of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2025, the U.S. House Armed Services Committee approved an amendment to the NDAA that would automatically register all draft-aged male U.S. residents with the Selective Service System for a possible military draft, based on information from other Federal databases.

This system of automatic draft registration would replace the system in effect since 1980 in which young men can decide for themselves whether or not to sign up for the draft -- and so many choose not to register that the Selective Service database would be useless for an actual draft.




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A war draft today can't work. Let us count the ways.

[Originally published by Responsible Statecraft, the journal of the Quincy Institute]

Two proposals that would radically alter the current system for registering Americans for a future draft were introduced recently in Congress without any hearings or debate.

They raise practical issues about whether any draft today would even be possible.

As part of this year’s National Defense Authorization Act, the House voted this month to make registration with the Selective Service System of all draft-eligible men ages 18-26 “automatic.” In addition, the version of the NDAA on its way to the Senate floor would expand draft registration to include young women now, too.

Debate about the draft has typically been framed around whether the U.S. “needs'' a draft. Debate about women and the draft has been framed around whether women “should” be required to register. But the bigger question we face is three fold: will women sign up voluntarily (if in fact registration is not “automatic”), is “automatic” registration based on other databases feasible, and can registration or a draft – for men and/or women -- even be enforced.

When I was invited to testify before the National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service (NCMNPS) in 2019, I told them that “any proposal that includes a compulsory element is a naïve fantasy unless it includes a credible enforcement plan and budget.... Women will be more likely to resist being forced into the military than men have been, and more people will support them in their resistance.”




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Senate joins House in proposal for "automatic" draft registration

Contrary to earlier reports, the U.S. Senate has joined the House of Representatives in moving toward a foolhardy attempt to 'automatically' register all draft-eligible U.S. citizens and residents for a possible military draft, by extracting and aggregating information obtained from other Federal agencies.

The proposal for "automatic" draft registration is among several previously-undisclosed provisions related to Selective Service in the newly-release version of the National Defense [sic] Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2025 approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) and to be considered by the full Senate.

The 1,197-page SASC proposal for this year's NDAA was approved by the committee in closed session last month, and only a summary was released. At the time, a spokesperson for the SASC told me that if "automatic" Selective Service registration had been included in the bill, it would have been included in the summary. That proves to have been incorrect: The proposal for "automatic" draft registration was included in the SASC version of the bill, but not in the summary.




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"Realists" think we need to prepare for a draft so we can win a war with China.

[First published on Antiwar.com]

Fantasies underlying push for conscription are delusional and dangerous.

Doubling down on their recent war-game exercises and report on the (un)readiness of the U.S. to activate a military draft, Taren Sylvester and Katherine Kuzminski of the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) have a new article in War on the Rocks, “Preparing for the Possibility of a Draft Without Panic,” laying out why they think the U.S. needs to prepare for a draft in order to be able to win an all-out war with China over Taiwan.

CNAS and War on the Rocks like to describe themselves as “realists”. But their arguments for stepped-up planning and preparation for a draft are strikingly unrealistic, in at least four respects:




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Colorito : la technique des peintres ve´nitiens a` la Renaissance /

Library - Art Library, Location - OSIZ, Call number - FOLIO ND621.V5 H63 2015




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Percursos e olhares : uma introduç àrte em Moçbique.

Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - N7397.6.M6 P47 2011




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Km 100 : produccio´n visual de los noventa en Matanzas /

Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - N6604.M37 G67 2015




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It's all absolutely fine : life is complicated so I've drawn it instead /

Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - RC455 .E45 2017




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Renaissance & Reformation : German art in the age of Du¨rer and Cranach.

Library - Art Library, Location - OSIZ, Call number - FOLIO N6865 .R46 2016




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La piu` nobil parte : l'architettura delle cupole a Roma, 1580-1670 /

Library - Art Library, Location - OSIZ, Call number - FOLIO NA2890 .V55 2008




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Bauhausvortra¨ge : Gastredner am Weimarer Bauhaus 1919-1925 /

Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - N332.G33 B4337 2017




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The color line : les artistes africains-ame´ricains et la se´gre´gation 1865-2016 /

Library - Art Library, Location - OSIZ, Call number - FOLIO N6538.N5 C654 2016




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In progress : see inside a lettering artist's sketchbook and process, from pencil to vector /

Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - NK3631.H57 A35 2015




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Kai Althoff : and then leave me to the common swifts = und dann u¨berlaß mich den Mauerseglern /

Library - Art Library, Location - LIB, Call number - N6888.A56 A4 2016