Thursday, May 28, 2009

Praise Him In Advance - Marvin Sapp

Since praise confuses the enemy, we should be praising Him every day and every hour. And, when we are not praising Him we should be in prayer! Thank God for the blood!

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Obama names US space agency chief

Major-General Charles Bolden (NASA)

Maj-Gen Bolden flew four times on the space shuttle.

President Barack Obama has chosen retired astronaut Charles Bolden to lead NASA, ending months of speculation about the position.


Lori Garver, a former NASA official and space adviser to the Obama campaign, was named as his deputy. Both positions require US Senate confirmation.

If confirmed, Maj-Gen Bolden, 62, would be only the second astronaut to lead NASA during its 50-year history.

Vice-Adm Richard Truly, who ran NASA from 1989-1992, was the first.

"He's a real leader," George Abbey, a former head of NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, and friend of the major-general, told the Associated Press news agency.

"NASA has been looking for a leader like this that they could have confidence in."

Challenges

Maj-Gen Bolden grew up in segregated South Carolina and flew on more than 100 combat sorties in Vietnam.

He joined NASA in 1980 and is a veteran of four space shuttle flights, commanding the mission that launched the Hubble Space Telescope into orbit in 1990.

Maj-Gen Bolden inherits the space agency at a critical time, when it faces significant challenges amid budgetary constraints.

In 2004, President George W Bush instigated ambitious plans to return astronauts to the Moon by 2020, necessitating the replacement of the shuttle by a new space vehicle.

However, the new Ares-Orion vehicle is not expected to be ready until at least 2015.

So for five years after the shuttle's retirement in 2010, American astronauts will be dependent on Russia to fly them into orbit on their space capsule, Soyuz.

The Ares rocket system being developed to loft the shuttle's replacement into orbit has also come under fire. Critics say alternative launchers could be built faster and more cheaply.

In addition, some of NASA's biggest science programs are over-budget.

This month, the White House ordered a sweeping independent review of NASA's manned spaceflight strategy.

Earlier this year, retired Air Force General Scott Gration was said to be favored for the position of NASA administrator. However, his bid reportedly ran into opposition on Capitol Hill.

In April, the previous NASA chief, Dr Michael Griffin, joined the University of Alabama in Huntsville as a professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering.

Thursday, May 7, 2009



Man Charged With Throwing Baby Out of Car Window
By Associated Press May 6, 2009 8:41 am

A 21-year-old man was charged with first-degree murder Tuesday after police said he snatched up his ex-girlfriend’s 3-month-old son during a fight and then threw the baby from his car on an interstate highway.

The child’s lifeless body was found near Interstate 275 north of downtown Tampa early Tuesday. The man, Richard A. McTear Jr., was captured several hours later. Deputies said he is not the child’s father.

The Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office said McTear was arguing with his 17-year-old ex-girlfriend, Jasmine Bedwell, at her apartment when he began beating her and the child. She reported that McTear threw her son, Emanuel Wesley Murray, down on the concrete, then picked him up and fled in his Chevrolet Impala.

Jason Bird, a news photographer for WTVT-TV in Tampa, spotted the baby’s body on his way to work at about 4:30 a.m.

“On the side of the road, I saw something out of the corner of my eye and at first I thought it was a baby doll, and then as I was thinking about it more I thought that was awfully big for a doll,” Bird said in an interview on the station.

He turned around and went back to take another look.

“It was laying there with its eyes open,” he said. “I couldn’t look at it. It freaked me out, but fortunately law enforcement came right away.”

“It’s hard to find words to describe why someone would do this to a poor, defenseless child,” sheriff’s Maj. Harold Winsett told reporters at the scene.

Deputies located McTear’s car at his home. Witnesses told deputies where he could be found, and he was arrested about four hours later after a foot chase.

McTear also was charged with burglary with a battery, felony battery, aggravated child abuse and kidnapping, said sheriff’s spokeswoman Debbie Carter.

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