Friday, May 29, 2020

Returning to Space with Spacex, May 30, 2020

Launchthyme
Volume XVIII, Issue XXa: Return to the Final Frontier

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Astronauts Douglas Hurley and Robert Behnken prepare for their historic flight. NASA Photo.

Crewed Flight to the ISS 

NASA’s SpaceX Demo-2 mission will return U.S human spaceflight to the International Space Station from U.S. soil with astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley on an American rocket and spacecraft for the first time since 2011. In March 2020, at a SpaceX processing facility on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, SpaceX successfully completed a fully integrated test of critical crew flight hardware ahead of Crew Dragon’s second demonstration mission to the International Space Station for NASA's Commercial Crew Program; the first flight test with astronauts onboard the spacecraft. Behnken and Hurley participated in the test, which included flight suit leak checks, spacecraft sound verification, display panel and cargo bin inspections, seat hardware rotations, and more. The spacecraft will lift off from Pad 39A on May 30, 2020 at approximately 3:22 EDT. NASA Will Provide Live Coverage [click to watch].

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Tentative Schedule of the Mission

May 29, Friday

10 a.m. - Administrator Countdown Clock Briefing (weather permitting) featuring:
  NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine
  Kennedy Space Center Director Bob Cabana
  NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren
  NASA astronaut Nicole Mann

May 30, Saturday

11 a.m.NASA TV launch coverage begins
3:22 p.m. Liftoff
4:09 p.m. – Crew Dragon phase burn
4:55 p.m. – Far-field manual flight test
TBD p.m. – Astronaut downlink event from Crew Dragon
6:30 p.m. – Postlaunch news conference at Kennedy
  Administrator Bridenstine
  Kathy Lueders, manager, NASA Commercial Crew Program
  SpaceX representative
  Kirk Shireman, manager, International Space Station Program
  NASA Chief Astronaut Pat Forrester
(Editor's note: NASA TV's coverage of the mission will be continuous from 11 a.m. Saturday through the post-arrival news conference on Sunday.)

May 31, Sunday

TBD a.m. – Astronaut downlink event from Crew Dragon
10:29 a.m. – Docking
12:45 p.m. – Hatch Open
1:05 p.m. – Welcome ceremony
3:15 p.m. – Post-arrival news conference at Johnson
  NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine
  Johnson Space Center Director Mark Geyer
  NASA Chief Astronaut Pat Forrester

June 1, Monday

11:15 a.m. – ISS Expedition 63 Crew News Conference with Commander Chris Cassidy and Flight Engineers Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley of NASA
12:55 p.m. – ISS Expedition 63 In-Flight Event with SpaceX Officials and Employees in Hawthorne, California

June 2, Tuesday

9:20 a.m.SpaceX employee event and Class of 2020 Mosaic presentation, with NASA astronauts Chris Cassidy, Bob Behnken, and Doug Hurley

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To celebrate the 2020 graduating classes, SpaceX and NASA put out a call for students to send in their photos to go to space. The student photos will fly aboard SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule on the Demo-2 mission, which will take off for the International Space Station (ISS) on May 30 from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Here is the composite image of the photos.


Live Feed of NASA TV.

America at Her Best, “Tough and Competent”

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The storm cells that caused the scrub of Wednesday's launch are seen in this SpaceX photo.

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Elon Musk wishes the astronauts a safe trip after suit-up on May 27.

Wednesday was a wonderful day for me. I was watching America at her best. As NASA prepared for the first launch of a crewed spacecraft from the cape in 9 years, a storm system bore down on what was otherwise a flawless preflight sequence. Astronauts were in the spacecraft and fueling was underway but a launch would have violated two weather rules with the charged atmosphere and the menacing storms. Interestingly, NASA and SpaceX officials had fielded a question about ‘Launch Fever’ in a press conference the night before. ‘Launch Fever’ or ‘Go Fever’ is actually a serious concern. Apollo 1 had many problems that if called out would have grounded it, but Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee pressed on. There was pressure to keep the program on schedule. As the astronauts tried to work out a problem in the communication system a frayed wife caused a spark in the oxygen pressurized cabin. The resulting fire killed the three astronauts.

That terrible event created a new culture in NASA. Flight Director Gene Kranz made all of his staff write the words “TOUGH and COMPETANT” on their whiteboards. They would never take anything for granted. They would never be afraid to say “STOP!” No doubt, that ethic was in part responsible for Apollo’s great safety record. In a very dangerous environment, NASA learned how to manage risk. The strengths of many talented people were brought together to pull off a mission that required incredible focus and courage. Katherine Johnson and many other great mathematicians wrestled with the equations that would put the astronauts on the correct course. Although it might not have looked it in the 1960s, NASA was already building an organization that would require an incredibly diverse group of people. At MIT, Margaret Hamilton created much of the computer code necessary for the mission. At Langley, Dorothy Vaughn supervised a group of programmers. Mission Control might not have looked very diverse, but the hundreds of thousands of workers who made the missions happen were. It was America at her best.

Wednesday saw an amazing display of that best. Mission Control has evolved and so has NASA’s culture of safety. Elon Musk spoke of the responsibility he felt to the astronauts and their families. SpaceX and NASA are determined to deliver a safe and reliable spacecraft. With the world watching, as the storms came in, they had the courage of their conviction to call off the launch. A NASA administrator remarked: “It is always better to be on the ground wishing you were flying than to be flying wishing you were on the ground.” I thought of Pete Conrad’s Apollo 12. It was launched during a thunderstorm and was struck twice by lightning. The entire flight program dropped out. Houston asked them to try a reset: “SEC to Auxiliary.” Alan Bean knew what that was and successfully reset the spacecraft’s controls. There was still concern that the parachutes could have been damaged. After Apollo 12 flew, storms were considered a reason to scrub a mission. Sadly, the shuttle era saw the tragic loss of Challenger and Columbia. The shuttles had aged and the tile heat shields were problematic.

I wanted to see a launch Wednesday, but am so glad I saw something better!


The astronauts say goodbye to their families on Wednesday.

These Women Put Man on the Moon

Watching those old space shows as a child, it was pretty obvious that you just got into the spacecraft, took off and flew to wherever in the solar system you wanted to go. It looked deceptively simple – and it was! We had no reason to doubt that man had landed on the moon because Buck Rogers had made it look simple. But when President John F. Kennedy gave the imperative to actually put a man on the moon and bring him safely home, it immediately became clear that the problem was not so simple.

In order to go to the moon, you had to take off and steer a course to where the moon would be when you got there. You had to account for parabolic ascent and elliptical orbits. Your travel map existed in the realm of complex geometry and required brilliant mathematicians to chart. Fortunately the NASA Space Task Group at Langley Research Center had just such a group of mathematicians. They were mostly women and quite a few of them were African American! If you have seen the movie Hidden Figures you learned the stories of three of them, but the complex world of spaceflight engineering actually demanded many more. Many of them worked in the West Computing Group at Langley. Here Katherine Johnson and her colleagues mapped the stars for the astronauts. Yes, they literally mapped the heavens, so that the astronauts could navigate by the stars should their machine computers fail them.

This became essential in missions like Apollo 13, where the spacecraft was actually shut down at a time when critical course corrections had to be made. Katherine Johnson was one essential backup person who the navigation controllers in ‘the trench’ at Mission Control called in to calculate the trajectories of the revised mission. This was essential as you had to sling the Command Module and Lunar Module assembly around the moon about 65 miles from the surface. A miscalculation could have sent the spacecraft crashing to the lunar surface or missing the gravitational effect of the moon entirely – hurtling into deep space with no possibility of return.

To me, the complex mapping, verified by many earth orbit tests, is one reason I have little patience for the skeptics who say the lunar landing was somehow ‘faked.’ The careful calculations and critical launch windows only became known because the people who designed the mission really had to do it.

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Some of Langley's first computers. NASA Photo.

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In this 1930's era building, the computers plotted man's path to the moon. NASA Photo.

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Dorothy Vaughn. NASA Photo.

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Katherine Johnson. NASA Photo.

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Margaret Hamilton with the printout of the Apollo AGC Software. NASA.

Margaret Hamilton
Software Engineer

Margaret Hamilton was 33 years old when she worked as director of software engineering at the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory. She and her team defined the design and testing criteria for the software that ran the onboard computer on the Lunar Module and developed the concepts of asynchronous flight software and priority scheduling which saved the Apollo computers from crashing during overloads such as the ones that occurred during the Apollo 11 descent to the moon (the 1201 and 1202 alarms).

The Journey of Apollo Eight

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A particularly beautiful diagram of the journey to the moon.
(NASA)

Oleksandr Ignatyevich Shargei

Ukranian Spaceflight Scientist

On June 21, 1897 the world celebrates the birthday of Yuriy Vasilievich Kondratyuk, the famous Ukrainian author of the “route kondratyuka” which the Apollo spacecraft and Lunar Module took to the moon, creating the concept of Lunar Orbit Rendezvous. His real name is Oleksandr Ignatyevich Shargei. He changed it because of the danger posed by the Soviet Union to upper-class Ukranians. This did not prevent him from becoming one of the most famous inventors in the world.

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Oleksandr Ignatyevich Shargei plotted the course of Lunar Orbit Rendezvous, which was used to put Apollo astronauts on the moon. NASA's John Cornelius Houbolt and Thomas Dolan of Vought Astronautics referred to Sargei's work as they developed the concept for use by the Apollo program.

Tom Dolan and John Houbolt

Thomas Dolan was an American engineer who proposed the first fully developed concept of Lunar orbit rendezvous for the Apollo program while working at Vought Astronautics. Dolan referred to his LOR study concept as Manned Lunar Landing and Return (MALLAR), and it was largely ignored by NASA administrators until Langley engineer John Houbolt began championing the concept in 1961. The proposed idea outlined a smaller spacecraft dedicated only to operate in the vacuum of space. This spacecraft could act as sort of a shuttle between an orbiting "command module" in Lunar orbit and the surface of the Moon. Following this mission profile required the Command/Service Module and Lunar Module to fly all the way to the moon together and undock while in orbit around the moon, at which point the Lunar Module would land on the moon. In order to return, it would lift off again into lunar orbit and perform an orbital rendezvous with the Command/Service Module. The lander's ascent stage would be left behind in orbit, and the crew would return home using the Command/Service Module. This method saved a lot of weight in propellant and spacecraft mass, but did not gain widespread acceptance early on. The risks associated with Lunar orbit rendezvous were initially considered unacceptable by NASA officials. The Gemini missions would later prove that rendezvous and docking was indeed possible in space, paving the way for Dolan's idea to be put into practice. John Cornelius Houbolt was an aerospace engineer credited with leading the team behind the lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR) mission mode, a concept that was used to successfully land humans on the Moon and return them to Earth. This flight path was first endorsed by Wernher von Braun in June 1961 and was chosen for Apollo program in early 1962. The critical decision to use LOR was viewed as vital to ensuring that Man reached the Moon by the end of the decade as proposed by President John F. Kennedy. In the process, LOR saved time and billions of dollars by efficiently using existing rocket technology. (Wikipedia)

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'Earthrise' Photo enhanced by Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Imagery. NASA Photo.

Revisiting 'Earthrise'
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter



“Well Done. Good and Faithful Servant”
Memorial Service for Ravi Zacharias



JoeKing
Tribute to Ravi Zacharias by Atlanta Street Artist Joe King. Ravi was not only a great Christian thinker, he built bridges between cultures, and that included his adopted home town of Atlanta, Georgia. Be a Bridge Builder! Be like Ravi!

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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Returning to Space with SPACEX, May 30, 2020

NewLaunch
Volume XVIII, Issue XX: Return to the Final Frontier

hurleybehnken
Astronauts Douglas Hurley and Robert Behnken prepare for their historic flight. NASA Photo.

Crewed Flight to the ISS 

NASA’s SpaceX Demo-2 mission will return U.S human spaceflight to the International Space Station from U.S. soil with astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley on an American rocket and spacecraft for the first time since 2011. In March 2020, at a SpaceX processing facility on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, SpaceX successfully completed a fully integrated test of critical crew flight hardware ahead of Crew Dragon’s second demonstration mission to the International Space Station for NASA's Commercial Crew Program; the first flight test with astronauts onboard the spacecraft. Behnken and Hurley participated in the test, which included flight suit leak checks, spacecraft sound verification, display panel and cargo bin inspections, seat hardware rotations, and more. The spacecraft will lift off from Pad 39A on May 27, 2020 at approximately 4:33 EDT. NASA Will Provide Live Coverage [click to watch].

Tentative Schedule of the Mission

May 27, Wednesday

12 p.m.
– Live Views of the SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket on Launch Pad 39-A at the Kennedy Space Center for NASA's SpaceX Demo-2 launch to the International Space Station – Kennedy Space Center

12:15 p.m. – Coverage of NASA's SpaceX Demo-2 launch to the International Space Station (Launch scheduled at 4:33 p.m. EDT) – Kennedy Space Center/Hawthorne, California/Johnson Space Center. Launch Scrubbed Due to Bad Weather, Rescheduled Launch Saturday, May 30, 3:22 p. m. EST

6 p.m. – NASA/SpaceX Demo-2 post-launch news conference Editor's note: The live views of the launch pad at 12 p.m. EDT begin continuous coverage on all channels through the Crew Dragon docking to the International Space Station on Thursday, May 28, and subsequent hatch opening and welcoming ceremony.

May 28, Thursday

11:29 a.m.
– Docking of the SpaceX Crew Dragon, with NASA Astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken, to the International Space Station – Hawthorne, California/Johnson Space Center


1:55 p.m. – Opening of the hatch to the SpaceX Crew Dragon and entrance of the DM-2 NASA astronauts into the International Space Station - Hawthorne, California/Johnson Space Center

2:25 p.m. – Welcoming Ceremony for the SpaceX DM-2 NASA astronauts - Hawthorne, California/Johnson Space Center

4 p.m. - SpaceX/Dragon DM-2 Post-Docking Briefing – Johnson Space Center

May 29, Friday

11:05 a.m.
- International Space Station Expedition 63 crew news conference with Commander Chris Cassidy of NASA and astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley of NASA



NASA Video.

Build! Plant! Bless! And Pray!

Now these are the words of the letter that Jeremiah the prophet sent from Jerusalem unto the residue of the elders which were carried away captives, and to the priests, and to the prophets, and to all the people whom Nebuchadnezzar had carried away captive from Jerusalem to Babylon;

After that Jeconiah the king, and the queen, and the eunuchs, the princes of Judah and Jerusalem, and the carpenters, and the smiths, were departed from Jerusalem;)

By the hand of Elasah the son of Shaphan, and Gemariah the son of Hilkiah, (whom Zedekiah king of Judah sent unto Babylon to Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon) saying,

Thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, unto all that are carried away captives, whom I have caused to be carried away from Jerusalem unto Babylon;

Build ye houses, and dwell in them; and plant gardens, and eat the fruit of them;

Take ye wives, and beget sons and daughters; and take wives for your sons, and give your daughters to husbands, that they may bear sons and daughters; that ye may be increased there, and not diminished. And seek the peace of the city whither I have caused you to be carried away captives, and pray unto the Lord for it: for in the peace thereof shall ye have peace.

For thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel; Let not your prophets and your diviners, that be in the midst of you, deceive you, neither hearken to your dreams which ye cause to be dreamed. For they prophesy falsely unto you in my name: I have not sent them, saith the Lord.

For thus saith the Lord, That after seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will visit you, and perform my good word toward you, in causing you to return to this place.

For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.

Then shall ye call upon me, and ye shall go and pray unto me, and I will hearken unto you. And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart.

And I will be found of you, saith the Lord: and I will turn away your captivity, and I will gather you from all the nations, and from all the places whither I have driven you, saith the Lord; and I will bring you again into the place whence I caused you to be carried away captive.” – Jeremiah 29:1-14

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Church of the Good Shepherd designed by T. J. Collins and Sons, Jolivue, Virginia. Photo by Bob Kirchman.

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Temple House of Israel, Staunton, Virginia, designed by Sam Collins of T. J. Collins and Sons. Photo by Bob Kirchman

Did you know that: “Jews make up 0.2 percent of the world population, but 54 percent of the world chess champions.” – David Brooks

I found an interesting article by Rabbi Nathan Lopez Cardozo in Jewish World Review. The Greatest Chess Game on Earth [click to read] shows how the people who followed Jeremiah's advice learned how, not only to survive, but to thrive in exile. After the destruction of the Temple, the development of small fellowships in Synagogues fed the spiritual hunger of those who had been carried away. Central to this community were the Holy Scriptures. Rabbi Lopez gives us a unique perspective on the Scripture. We should not see the constraints of Faith as restrictive. Rather, they are the structural rules which allow us to pursue great works, and in the process bless those around us.

The game of Chess, Cardozo writes, has strict rules. Yet, within these rules there are an unlimited amount of possibilities:

He who knows all the rules is not automatically a good player. What makes him a great player is his ability to use these rules to unleash an outburst of creativity, which resides deep within him and emerges only because of the "unbearable" limitations. He then strikes! One small move forces everything to shift around, creating total upheaval and causing the opponent to panic as he never did before. And all this without ever violating one chess rule. This is mental torture. But it is also the height of beauty. It is the poetry of the game, like a melody is to music. Like one gentle brushstroke of Rembrandt on a colorful canvas, making everything look radically different, or like the genius musician playing her Stradivarius, re-creating the whole of Mozart's Violin Concerto No. 5. It transports the chess player to heaven. His body must be in top form because his playing ability deteriorates when his body does. Body and mind are inseparable. An entire world of feelings, images, ideas, emotions and passions come to the forefront.” – Rabbi Cardozo

Rabbi Cardozo offers deep nourishment for the journey ahead, as well as unique insight into how to live in the light of Holy Scripture. I LOVE the implications of his final thoughts:

Surely chess is just a game, while Halacha, if properly understood and lived, deals with real life, deep religiosity, moral dilemmas, emotions and intuitions far more significant in man's life than a chess game.

But the man who plays chess in real life as suggested by Halacha will realize that if he “plays” well he is on the track to drawing closer and closer to the King, until he is checkmated and, unlike in a chess game, falls into the arms of the King.” – Rabbi Cardozo

ElonDigital
Elon Musk is opening his factory, he's launching his rocket. Be like Elon!
Digital Portrait of Elon Musk, Elon Musk Forum.

On Writing History
[click to read]

Remarks by Vice President Mike Pence

History is written by those who dare to dream big and do the impossible.” – Vice President Mike Pence (read more)

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Thursday, May 21, 2020

Thoughts on Memorial Day, In Flanders Fields

MONUMENT
Volume XVIII, Issue XIV: Those Who Died Defending Liberty

Pacific
The World War II Memorial.

Vietnam Memorial
Vietnam Memorial...

Vietnam Memorial
...and a hero remembered.

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This is the view of Arlington Cemetery from the Old Post Chapel at Ft. Meyer.

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Spring buds in Arlington National Cemetery.

In Flanders Fields

By Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead.
Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

Remembering a Great Mentor
There was a Man who Convinced Me I Could Do This

Building a Railroad
Reconstructing my model of Ellicot's Mills for the B and;O Railroad Museum.

A Milestone Monday Feature

It might be a real good thing to stop inviting politicians, yea public figures in general, to do commencement exercise speeches. Instead, could we hear from those who inspire? If I were a college president I might invite Mike Rowe. There are so many ‘ordinary’ people who inspire greatness. There was one such person in my life and his legacy is worth remembering:

In Chapter 14 of Chuck Balsamo's book Make Me a Legend Pastor Balsamo talks about the importance of finding a good mentor. He brought back some important memories as I recalled the influence of a man named Reggie. Reggie served in the Navy during World War II and achieved the rank of Aviation Machinist's Mate, Second Class. He was a first class mentor.

I met this amazing man because I went to school with his daughter. He was a Chevrolet mechanic and an avid outdoorsman. He introduced me to the wonders of Coastal New Jersey as I happily paddled for hours through marshes and creeks. At about 50 years old, Reggie became an instructor at the vocational technology school. There he discovered his true gifts and passions.

At an age where most men are thinking about taking it easy, Reggie enrolled in Rutgers University and pursued a degree in administration. Education and young people had become his true calling and he graduated from college the same time one of his daughters did.

Days at Reggies place where full ones. He lived in a little postwar bungalo and when his children and their assembled friends were descending on the place around ten in the evening, he'd put on a pot of coffee. It came as no surprise that Reggie enjoyed lively conversation and sometimes these talk sessions would end in the wee hours of the morning. Good coffee, however, always made up for sleep deprivation.

Reggie went on to become a high school principal, but I have to believe that the best classes he ever taught were at his own kitchen table. He noticed that I was a hands-on guy struggling with an academic world. He found information on architectural model making and shared it with me. "You'd be good at this, Bob." Years later I was literally living off of this compliment. My little studio built models for architects, including one famous one. I worked on several models for resort projects in Japan, though I'm not sure how a man who served in the Pacific Theater would feel about that.

No doubt, this man has influenced many young lives in a similar manor. I am priviledged to have known him.

The Sermon on ‘The Mount’



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Monday, May 18, 2020

Creating a Culture of Imagination II, Tomorrow

WestHighSt
Volume XVIII, Issue XIXa: The Things We Cherish

Creating a Culture of Imagination II

What if we forget about the term ‘return to normal’ and instead seek to envision a better world coming out of this time of isolation? Some of us have spent more time with our children and the experience has been wonderful. In our studio we’ve created a vision for a safe and walkable community that could grow in our county. Our church has been most creative in outreach during this time. People with a true view of Heaven always seem to work hardest to do good things in our present life. I first met Liza Peltola when I reworked a large model of the Shenandoah Valley for the Waynesboro Tourist Information Center. She immediately impressed me as a person of creativity and imagination. Since I worked on that model project, Liza has become the director of our church’s children’s ministries. In order to get us all out of our houses she created ‘outreach bingo,’ a game where we all (while observing CDC guidelines) went out into the community. We left loving messages in chalk on friends’ driveways, prayed for local churches, schools and businesses. My wife and I played too and we prayed for a number of places in Stuarts Draft. We prayed for and peered into the window of the Love in the Name of Christ Thrift Store in Stuarts Draft’s Broadmore Plaza. It is closed now but I had fond memories of the nice volunteers who staff it and how they helped me find parts for a Narnia Lamp. Soon they’ll be back in business.

We’ll probably head out to Scotto’s for a nice dinner on our anniversary (forty years this coming Sunday, May 24) and I’ll probably request a seat near Mona Lisa and Leonardo (a mural on their wall). We’ll cherish the things that absence has indeed made grow fonder. Indeed that fondness should guide us as we imagine and craft our future. Sadly, there are also those in our community who miss the respite school and other activities provided from family dysfunction. Yes, isolation has been Hell for some. They need those kind teachers and significant others. Also, there are those who have lost their dream as businesses have closed, never to reopen. My friend Lela works on a suicide hotline in Alaska. She described a recent experience having to talk someone out of it. There is dark despair out there. Those of us who have the hope of Heaven have much to do to beat back the Hell of hopelessness. But I am confident that the creativity of ‘outreach bingo’ can lead us forward as we rebuild our communities in ways that celebrate the things we truly cherish. We can repurpose our dreams, build new opportunities and create safe communities that care for each other. Dream and Do! In the last Star Wars movies, a character named Rose makes a profound statement as the rebellion fights the seemingly overpowering evil. Instead of leaving a friend to seize the opportunity to blow up some First Order weaponry, she rescues him. When he says “why didn’t you leave me and…” she responds: “We won’t win by destroying the things we hate, but by saving the things we love!”

That is exactly what we must do right now.

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Saturday, May 16, 2020

Creating a Culture of Imagination, Edward Jenner

Imagination
Volume XVIII, Issue XIII:

Creating a Culture of Imagination
By Bob Kirchman

In the frantic moments following the September 11, 2001 attacks by airplane on American targets, American airspace was quickly closed. Hundreds of approaching aircraft were suddenly denied the clearance to land. Hundreds of aircraft began turning around at once. Some returned to their point of departure. Others were quickly diverted to Canada.[1.] If you are familiar with the way aircraft are separated in flight, you know that Eastbound planes fly at one altitude, Westbound another. Thus, hundreds of aircraft turning presented the potential for terrible disaster. Pilots are smart. As the planes turned, their pilots also remembered the rule and independently of one another moved to the correct altitude. They also managed to safely queue up and land at airports far too small to normally handle such traffic. Hundreds of pilots turned their planes around and landed them safely in crowded situations. In the aftermath, aviation experts felt they needed to develop a scenario should such an event ever happen again. They ran simulations, wrote procedures and ran the simulations again. They determined that no matter how well they crafted a centralized solution for the problem, they could do no better than what happened with pilots thinking on their own. In fact, the ‘one size fits all’ approach had the distinct possibility for creating more risk.

When it became clear that COVED19 was deadly to nursing home residents, the Shady Oaks assisted-living facility in Bristol, Connecticut chose an innovative approach, choosing to isolate as a facility. They offered bonuses to staff members willing to live on site and isolate with the residents. By isolating the entire group from physical interaction with the outside world, Shady Oaks had no cases among staff or residents. Tyson Belanger, who owns Shady Oaks, credits their success to a decision to pay hefty overtime to the staff who isolated, roughly tripling the facility’s labor costs.[2.] The result – priceless, as residents enjoyed safety and less disruption to their lives. Belanger got a Payroll Protection Plan loan but dug into his personal savings to fund the significant increase in labor costs his plan entailed. The result is far different from the sad situation in New York, where facilities were mandated to take COVID19 patients in by the government.

This morning a friend of mine sent out an article about the Baader-Meinfof Phenomenom. This oft-studied by marketing gurus phenomenom basically states that we can be conditioned in our perception. Buy a red Toyota and guess what car you suddenly notice everywhere. Marketing people will sling phrases like “we’re all in this together” in an attempt to create unity in purpose – or buying habits. Witness the disappointment of a child who wanted a name brand product for his birthday when presented with a knock-off. Those who don’t buy the right sneakers or parrot the popular mantra experience a shaming process. Thus you will find a group of people so conditioned having the same perception in a given situation. Worse, those who do not follow this lockstep thinking become all too often “the enemy.” Now imagine, if you will, our pilots all conditioned in such a manner. Rather than assess their unique situation, they follow the script. “Bank RIGHT…” there is no requirement for critical thinking if you have a script! But the script CANNOT anticipate what the alert mind might apprehend.

In the 1960s, Chris Craft and his Mission Control group created simulations for spaceflight. Their mission was to find out every way a spacecraft could kill an astronaut and simulate it so astronauts would learn how to survive. This methodology kept the astronauts sharp and no doubt led to the incredible success of the moon flights. They even imagined a crippled spacecraft scenario and practiced the LEM ‘lifeboat’ procedure that would later save the crew of Apollo 13. But before the first Apollo mission would fly, there came a tragic awakening. For years, NASA had pumped the spacecraft with pure oxygen without problems. When the much troubleshot Apollo One was being tested on the pad with a pure oxygen atmosphere, disaster struck. A frayed wire under the crew seats sparked and the fire that ensued killed Gus Grissom, Roger Chafee and Ed White. There was thought of abandoning the program. Was spaceflight worth the risk? In a dramatization of the Congressional hearings of the Thompson Commission, Frank Borman is asked by an investigator: “What killed those astronauts?” His response is brilliant: “Lack of Imagination… we imagined every way these men could be killed in space, but we NEVER imagined it would happen on the ground!” Humbled by the disaster, and with a new resolve to be “Tough and Competent” (that’s what Gene Kranz had everyone write on their whiteboards) NASA forged ahead.

As we negotiate our current crisis, it is well to remember the importance of unprejudiced perspective and fresh imaginative thinking. There’s a restaurant owner who hung clear shower curtains between the tables to create isolation. The Inn at Little Washington plans to have mannequins at every other table. I’m not quite sure I’m up for dinner at Madame Tussaud’s but I like their creativity. What MUST be avoided is a hard ‘either/or’ mentality. We need to open up for business. We need to protect our most vulnerable. Indeed, many of us have found ways to have church and work at home by creatively exploiting resources such as ZOOM. We need to continue being creative. We need community. We need wide open spaces. We need to think outside of the box to achieve this in a way that works in OUR particular situation. We need local, close to home thinking and not one-size-fits-all mandates from bureaucrats. We need to carefully examine how we teach our young people. Are we conditioning them to groupthink or are we nurturing their minds for the wonderful opportunities presented by fresh observation and independent thinking!

Edward Jenner, Smallpox
[click to read]

In science credit goes to the man who convinces the world, not the man to whom the idea first occurs.”

Francis Galton

For many centuries, smallpox devastated mankind. In modern times we do not have to worry about it thanks to the remarkable work of Edward Jenner and later developments from his endeavors. With the rapid pace of vaccine development in recent decades, the historic origins of immunization are often forgotten. (read more)

In 1797, Jenner sent a short communication to the Royal Society describing his experiment and observations. However, the paper was rejected. Then in 1798, having added a few more cases to his initial experiment, Jenner privately published a small booklet entitled An Inquiry into the Causes and Effects of the Variolae Vaccinae, a disease discovered in some of the western counties of England, particularly Gloucestershire and Known by the Name of Cow Pox. The Latin word for cow is vacca, and cowpox is vaccinia; Jenner decided to call this new procedure vaccination. The 1798 publication had three parts. In the first part Jenner presented his view regarding the origin of cowpox as a disease of horses transmitted to cows. The theory was discredited during Jenner's lifetime. He then presented the hypothesis that infection with cowpox protects against subsequent infection with smallpox. The second part contained the critical observations relevant to testing the hypothesis. The third part was a lengthy discussion, in part polemical, of the findings and a variety of issues related to smallpox. The publication of the Inquiry was met with a mixed reaction in the medical community.”

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“Edward Jenner Advising a Farmer to Vaccinate His Family.” 
Oil painting by an English painter, ca. 1910.

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Thursday, May 14, 2020

The Bridge Builder Poem, Mohomony Story, Crisis

MohomonyLight
Volume XVIII, Issue XII: Mohomony, the 'Bridge of G-d,' as the Monacans called it is the namesake of Rockbridge County in Virginia.

Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? I will even make a way in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert.” – ISAIAH 43:19

The Bridge Builder
By Will Allen Dromgoole

An old man going a lone highway,
Came, at the evening cold and gray,
To a chasm vast and deep and wide.
Through which was flowing a sullen tide
The old man crossed in the twilight dim,
The sullen stream had no fear for him;
But he turned when safe on the other side
And built a bridge to span the tide.

Old man,” said a fellow pilgrim near,
“You are wasting your strength with building here;
Your journey will end with the ending day,
You never again will pass this way;
You’ve crossed the chasm, deep and wide,
Why build this bridge at evening tide?”

The builder lifted his old gray head;
“Good friend, in the path I have come,” he said,
“There followed after me to-day
A youth whose feet must pass this way.
This chasm that has been as naught to me
To that fair-haired youth may a pitfall be;
He, too, must cross in the twilight dim;
Good friend, I am building this bridge for him!”

Source: Father: An Anthology of Verse (EP Dutton and Company, 1931)



The Bridge of G-d
Unique Natural Formation Saved Early Monacans

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One can almost imagine the battle...

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...raging above this deep chasm.

Amazing Story of Deliverance in Monacan Heritage

Running desperately through the forest, the small band of Monacan men, women and children were vastly outnumbered by their pursuers. Powhatan warriers were overtaking them. Suddenly they came to the edge of a vast chasm! They could see no way to cross it.

They closed their eyes and prayed. Then they looked up and saw the formation we know today as Natural Bridge, one of Virginia's most unique wonders, spanning the chasm. Hurrying their women and children across the stone span, they followed. Then they turned to make their stand. The much larger army was constricted by the narrow bridge and could only attack the Monacans in a much smaller number. The bridge became a great equalizer between the two forces and the Monacans were victorious that day.

Passed from generation to generation, the story of Monacan survival has made Natural Bridge a sacred place to the Monacans. They named it Mohomony, meaning 'Bridge of G-d."

Today a recreated Monacan village stands at the base of the bridge. Because the story predates written accounts, it is easy to dismiss it as legend, yet as we considered it my wife said: "I believe it recounts an actual event." The strategic element inherent in the story (the narrow bridge equalizing the battle) is too much like something another Rockbridge County resident, Thomas Jackson, would want to remember.

Like Homer's accounts of the Trojan War and the Odyssey home, some unknown Monacan warrier seems to have recounted this amazing story, remembering the time when geography aided them in battle. I walked across the bridge on route 11, imagining an epic battle like something out of Tolkien (like Gandalf facing the Balrog)! Young Monacans standing shoulder to shoulder to protect children and wives from an overwhelming enemy, who prevailed that day, passed the story to their children.

It just seemed to me like one of many grand moments in history where the unseen hand of G-d was seen as deliverer.

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Today visitors walk beneath the bridge...

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...but her greatest story may have played out above!

Reopening Alaska
[click to read]

By Lela Markham

Despite the fact that my author friends in England and Canada believe we’re a bunch of idiots for doing so, Alaska’s Gov. Dunleavy has acquiesced to demands that he start reopening the economy. Alaska (population 800,000) has had less than 400 confirmed cases of CVD19, less than 100 hospitalizations and 10 deaths (although 4–5 of them were Alaska residents who were never in Alaska during their illness). All of the 4–5 deaths in the state suffered from comorbidities that might have killed them in the absence of CVD19.

If you had CVD19 and arteriosclerosis and you suffered a stroke and died — which one killed you? The answer to that depends on whether you died in February (before CVD19 officially got to Alaska) or died in March, April or May. But regardless, in Alaska, you have a 0.003% chance of dying of CVD19, even if you catch it. Meanwhile, you have a 30% chance of unemployment and small-business owners have an 80% chance of bankruptcy at this point. We’ve decided to address the bigger risks to our quality of life now that we’re pretty sure everybody won’t die of CVD19. (read more)

Cherry Blossoms

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Cherry Blossoms at the Jefferson memorial. Photos by Bob Kirchman

Mohomony in Afternoon Light
Photos by Bob Kirchman

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Thoughts on the Current Crisis
[click to read]

By Larry P. Arn

First a report about the College. Hillsdale’s campus is quiet, which it ought not to be, but also well. Our students were away for spring break when the coronavirus hit. We spent the week absorbing the news and making plans to bring them back, it being our job to have college. We found that we could not. Much of what I am writing here is shaped by this discovery: we did not have and could not get the tools and knowledge to do our work. And soon enough we were forbidden to do it by general fiat.

Spirits are good here, nonetheless. There have been many inspiring examples of service, good humor, and effort. I just finished a videoconference with the senior class officers to plan Commencement, which will be a grand celebration whether it is in May or later this summer. The seniors will arrive days early, dress up in their finery, and come over in groups for dinner at my house and sing and give toasts. Those are important rituals of friendship, and students have the same attitude as I: they will put up with absence and isolation, but resent it, and they will redouble their efforts to achieve the best things. They are determined to convert this disruption into an opportunity for excellence. (read more)

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Monday, May 11, 2020

All Things Bright and Beautiful, Churchill, Crisis

ChurchillArn
Volume XVIII, Issue XIc:

All Things Bright and Beautiful
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Churchill as Statesman-Artist
By Michael Lucchese

Bright green trees and the cool blues of a stream enliven a painting of medieval wood and stone homes in an idyllic French country town. “His works were stunning, idealistic — the weight and texture of his brush strokes not unlike that of glazed candy — yet they still carried a serious, mature tone,” sophomore Andrea Wallace said. Wallace wasn’t describing Monet or Renoir — she was describing the art of none other than Sir Winston Churchill. (read more)

Thoughts on the Current Crisis
[click to read]

By Larry P. Arn

First a report about the College. Hillsdale’s campus is quiet, which it ought not to be, but also well. Our students were away for spring break when the coronavirus hit. We spent the week absorbing the news and making plans to bring them back, it being our job to have college. We found that we could not. Much of what I am writing here is shaped by this discovery: we did not have and could not get the tools and knowledge to do our work. And soon enough we were forbidden to do it by general fiat.

Spirits are good here, nonetheless. There have been many inspiring examples of service, good humor, and effort. I just finished a videoconference with the senior class officers to plan Commencement, which will be a grand celebration whether it is in May or later this summer. The seniors will arrive days early, dress up in their finery, and come over in groups for dinner at my house and sing and give toasts. Those are important rituals of friendship, and students have the same attitude as I: they will put up with absence and isolation, but resent it, and they will redouble their efforts to achieve the best things. They are determined to convert this disruption into an opportunity for excellence. (read more)

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