Physicist Warns U.S. Should Be Worried Like Bat Out of Hell About Chinese Rocket Debris Set to Crash Into Earth
On 5/7/21 at 10:13 AM EDT
A theoretical physicist said Friday the United States should be very concerned about a 23-ton piece of debris from a Chinese rocket that s expected to crash back to Earth sometime this weekend.
Michio Kaku, a professor at the City College of New York, said during an appearance on CNN s
New Day program that the country should be worried like a bat out of hell about the rocket stage s impending reentry into the atmosphere. This 20-ton rocket, the Chinese Long March 5B rocket, is tumbling out of control, and it could hit anywhere as far north as New York City or as far south as New Zealand, Kaku said.
Structural Racism Tied to Psychosis Risk in Black People medscape.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from medscape.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The West Harlem Art Fund Presents WE ARE IN REACH on Governors Island
The exhibition includes Descension and Genesis , series, Strangest of Fruits, and more.by BWW News Desk
The West Harlem Art Fund will present their new exhibition WE ARE IN REACH on Governors Island in the historic district of Nolan Park. The show is open now through June 25, 2021 for the public. According to Savona Bailey-McClain, Executive Director of the West Harlem Art Fund, The past year allowed the world to reconnect to family, heritage, language and tradition in new ways and to appreciate those times even more. And as we look at human existence, it all began in Africa. WE ARE IN REACH looks at how those of African descent honor memory, philosophy and tradition.
MRC towns to weigh in as sale proceeds
HAMPDEN If all goes as planned, employees could start returning to work at the shuttered waste processing facility in Hampden as soon as Monday, June 14, said Robert Van Naarden, CEO of Delta Thermo Energy (DTE), at an online meeting of the Municipal Review Committee (MRC) on April 28.
Van Naarden said he hopes to have the plant accepting full loads of waste and recycling from all 115 member towns within nine months after the company closes on the deal. It is expected to close in early June.
“We have done a significant amount of due diligence on the facility,” said Van Naarden, “to understand what we were buying … I think we have a very good understanding.”
Lawmakers are putting in for police body cams, road repairs, community upgrades – and requests for funds ranging from a yoga program in New Jersey and a science center in Florida, now that a prohibition on earmark requests has ended.
House Republicans ended earmarks in 2011 following a series of scandals, but voted to bring them back in March, and the House majority voted to reinstate them.
Under new reforms meant to stem abuses, the House Appropriations Committee publicly lists members individual requests. More than 300 lawmakers have submitted proposals – although some critics of the practice have held back.
Congressional earmarks are back now that the whole House and the House GOP Conference pushed through changes. Lawmaker requests are now posted publicly on the Appropriations Committee web site