The far side of the moon has a certain mystique about it. It’s eternally out of view, never facing the Earth—which has earned it a misleading nickname, “the dark side,” as if sunlight never reaches its surface (it does). It’s the section of the moon we’ll never see for ourselves, not unless we hop on a spaceship and fly over there.
But the really mysterious parts of the moon aren’t on the far side. They’re at the poles, where the sun always hovers near the horizon. The lighting conditions create special circumstances: Hundreds of craters at the north and south poles never, ever receive direct sunlight, and so never feel the warmth of our star. They are, in astronomy parlance, permanently shadowed regions, and they’ve been that way, dark and frigid, for as long as billions of years. Astronauts have experienced the powdery surface of the moon up close, and space probes have mapped nearly every bit of the terrain from above—but none have peered into the depths of those pitch-black craters. With the right tools, astronomers hope, they’ll be able to peek inside and find something spectacular: water.
— The Most Mysterious Part of the Moon Isn’t Where You Think
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And this story desperately needs context. Without it, we can miss important details, believe information when we should be skeptical, and see things that aren’t really there
There’s no way around the fact that, in popular usage, the term UFO—unidentified flying object—is synonymous with alien spaceships and has been for decades. The assumption that UFOs could represent something truly otherworldly is right there in the language that people use to scrutinize alleged footage; they “debunk” initial sightings, suggesting that, before close examination, they could be the real deal. (The government has tried to tiptoe away from the grabbiest version of UFO discourse, preferring to use the term UAP instead, which somehow sounds even more mysterious.)
But the reality is that unidentified flying objects, or unidentified aerial phenomena, are just that, and there’s no reason to assume, right away, that they’re something all that interesting. In the same way that astronomers must run through a checklist of possible explanations for a strange new phenomenon in space before considering the extraterrestrial option, aviation experts have a number of more mundane culprits at their disposal: drones, experimental aircraft, weather events, birds, balloons—even the planet Venus, appearing extra bright and ethereal through the haze of our planet’s atmosphere. The alternatives to aliens are certainly more boring, but the alternatives are out there, and they always have been. The report at the center of the previous UFO hearing, in the late 1960s, found that the lights observed over a military base were birds and weather conditions.
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Goats have their own mysteries. They sneeze when they’re spooked or frustrated.
Marina Koren
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As NASA faced a mission price tag and timeline for the Mars Sample Return mission that the administrator called “unacceptable,” the agency is turning to both its various centers around the country and to the private sector to find workable solutions. Administrator Bill Nelson said MSR remains one of NASA’s highest priorities and he said he was optimistic about what may come their way. This news came the same week that NASA gave the green light to the Dragonfly mission. The $3.35 billion undertaking will send a robotic rotorcraft to explore Saturn’s moon, Titan, starting in 2034. These are just some of the topics touched on in this week’s News from the Press Site. Spaceflight Now’s Will Robinson-Smith is joined by Marina Koren, staff writer for The Atlantic, and Jack Kuhr, research editor for Payload Space. Marina Koren, The Atlantic: Totality Is Worth It https://www.theatlantic.com/science/a… Apollo’s Sequel Will Be a Gold Rush https://www.theatlantic.com/science/a… The Most Powerful Rocket in History Had a Good Morning https://www.theatlantic.com/science/a… Jack Kuhr, Payload Space: BryceTech Highlights Continued Smallsat Strength in a New Report https://payloadspace.com/brycetech-hi… The FAA Says No Reentry License, No Launch https://payloadspace.com/the-faa-says… Payload Research: Detailing Launch Startup Funding https://payloadspace.com/payload-rese…
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The Most Overhyped Space Movie
2001: A Space Odyssey is prescient, beautiful, and entirely unsatisfactory.By Marina Koren December 1, 2022
As the outer-space correspondent at The Atlantic, I spend a lot of time looking beyond Earth’s atmosphere. I’ve watched footage of a helicopter flying on Mars. I’ve watched a livestream of NASA smashing a spacecraft into an asteroid on purpose. I’ve seen people blast off on rockets with my own eyes. But I have never seen 2001: A Space Odyssey.
This is an enormous oversight, apparently. The 1968 film is considered one of the greatest in history and its director, Stanley Kubrick, a cinematic genius. And, obviously, it’s about space. Surely a space reporter should see it—and surely a reporter should take notes.
What follows is my real-time reaction to watching 2001 on a recent evening, edited for length and clarity. Even though the movie has been out for 54 years, I feel a duty to warn you that there are major spoilers ahead. (If you’re suddenly compelled to watch 2001 first, you can rent it for $3.99 on YouTube.)
The movie kicks off with orchestral music that you’ve probably heard whether or not you’ve seen 2001, a heart-thumping and foreboding melody, with that dramatic bum … bum … BA-BUM. (It’s “Also Sprach Zarathustra,” by the German composer Richard Strauss.) The sun rises over a flat, grassy plain. We slink from shot to shot of the landscape. Some people had warned me that 2001 is pretty slow-moving, but it is slooow-moooving. We’re a few minutes in when my partner, sitting next to me on the couch, asks if we can watch this at 2x speed.
Here come some primates. Well, a bunch of actors dressed up in furry costumes and prosthetics. Another group of apes arrives, apparently eager to take over our protagonists’ watering hole. There’s a lot of hooting and bouncing around until the rival troop leaves. Later, the animals huddle together in a cave to sleep. As we move through these vignettes of ape life, I’m half-expecting David Attenborough to chime in.
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Elon Musk Is Spiraling
One Elon is a visionary; the other is a troll. The more he tweets, the harder it gets to tell them apart.
Marina Koren, The Atlantic
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Sun Shot: On August 12, 2018 NASA launched the Parker Solar Probe, which will eventually be the first spacecraft to dip into the Sun’s corona as part of a study solar wind and “space weather.” You might think the heat shielding would be the most challenging technical problem, but it turns out, it’s also incredibly difficult to get a spacecraft to the center of the solar system.
“I’m always amused when someone says, ‘Shoot X or so-and-so into the sun,’” says Rand Simberg, a space consultant and an engineer. “Because they have no idea how hard that is to do.”
– Marina Koren in The Atlantic
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The Long Goodbye to Saturn’s Rings
By Marina Koren
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[...]
Platek says that yawning is contagious in about 60 to 70 percent of people—that is, if people see photos or footage of or read about yawning, the majority will spontaneously do the same. He has found that this phenomenon occurs most often in individuals who score high on measures of empathic understanding. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans, he found that areas of the brain activated during contagious yawning, the posterior cingulate and precuneus, are involved in processing the our own and others’ emotions. “My capacity to put myself in your shoes and understand your situation is a predictor for my susceptibility to contagiously yawn,” he says.
Smithsonian Magazine | Marina Koren
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Take Me Out - Broadway - March 26, 2003
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Daniel Sunjata (Darren Lemming), Neal Huff (Kippy Sunderstorm), Denis O'Hare (Mason Marzac), Frederick Weller (Shane Mungitt), Kevin T Carroll (Davey Battle), David Eigenberg (Toddy Koovitz)
NOTES: Digital; excellent picture and sound, nice closeups
Tanz der Vampire - Vienna - October 4, 1997 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Steve Barton (Graf von Krolock), Cornelia Zenz (Sarah Chagal), Aris Sas (Alfred), Gernot Kranner (Professor Abronsius), Eva Maria Marold (Magda), James Sbano (Yone Chagal), Anne Welte (Rebecca Chagal), Nik Breidenbach (Herbert von Krolock), Torsten Flach (Koukol)
NOTES: There are English subtitles available for this video in .sub/idx format.
Tarzan - Broadway - March 30, 2006 (Preview) (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD)
CAST: Josh Strickland (Tarzan), Jenn Gambatese (Jane Porter), Merle Dandridge (Kala), Shuler Hensley (Kerchak), Chester Gregory (Terk), Tim Jerome (Professor Porter), Donne Keshawarz (Mr. Clayton), Daniel Manche (Young Tarzan)
NOTES: Filmed during previews, the show is a little dark at times, but a great Dvd. Crystal clear picture and sound. A
Tarzan - Broadway - July 30, 2006 (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Josh Strickland (Tarzan), Jenn Gambatese (Jane Porter), Merle Dandridge (Kala), Horace V Rogers (u/s Kerchak), Chester Gregory (Terk), Tim Jerome (Professor Porter), Donne Keshawarz (Mr. Clayton), Daniel Manche (Young Tarzan), Nick Sanchez (u/s Snipes)
NOTES: Nice filming, not as dark as other Tarzan Dvd. A
Tarzan - Oberhausen - November 21, 2017 (Rumpel's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Anton Zetterholm (Tarzan), Tessa Sunniva van Tol (Jane Porter), Isabel Trinkaus (Kala), Andreas Lichtenberger (Kerchak), Matt Farci (Terk), Japheth Myers (Professor Porter), Rudi Reschke (Mr. Clayton), Simeon Pauls (Young Tarzan)
NOTES: HD capture with great sound and no obstructions. The cast is amazing and the changes in the show, compared to Hamburg and Stuttgart, are suitable and refreshing.
Tarzan - Scheveningen - June 23, 2007 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Ron Link (Tarzan), Chantal Janzen (Jane Porter), Chaira Borderslee (Kala), Jeroen Phaff (Kerchak)
NOTES: No zoom due to directorstape, but soundboard Sound, also some footage from after the show (cleaning etc)
Tarzan - Stuttgart - August 21, 2015
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Gian Marco Schiaretti (Tarzan), Merle Hoch (Jane Porter), Willemijn Verkaik (Kala), Jan Ammann (Kerchak), Massimiliano Pironti (Terk), Maik Lohse (Professor Porter), Léon Roeven (Mr. Clayton), Matthis Lernhardt (Young Tarzan)
NOTES: Willemijn and Massimiliano's first show.
Tarzan - Stuttgart - October 3, 2015
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: John Vooijs (Tarzan), Merle Hoch (Jane Porter), Willemijn Verkaik (Kala), Jan Ammann (Kerchak), Alessio Impedovo (Terk), Maik Lohse (Professor Porter), Léon Roeven (Mr. Clayton), Miguel Strasser (Young Tarzan)
Theory of Relativity - Workshop - April 13, 2013 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Josh Blackstock, Joanna Fraser, Curtis Brown, Jade Repeta, Jenny Weisz, Adrian Zeyl, Dana Jean Phoenix, Carter Easler, Trevor Patt, Beth Robertson, Andrew Perry, Charles Douglas, Natasha Kozak, Katie Kerr, Josh LeClair, Emma Pedersen
They're Playing Our Song - Los Angeles - October 2, 2010
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Jason Alexander (Vernon Gersch), Stephanie J Block (Sonia Walsk)
Thoroughly Modern Millie - Broadway - April 13, 2002 (Preview)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Sutton Foster (Millie Dillmount), Gavin Creel (Jimmy Smith), Marc Kudisch (Mr. Trevor Graydon), Harriet Harris (Mrs. Meers), Sheryl Lee Ralph (Muzzy Van Hossmere), Angela Christian (Miss Dorothy Brown), Ken Leung (Ching Ho), Francis Jue (Bun Foo), Anne L Nathan (Miss Flannery)
NOTES: Shot from the second row with lots of close-ups. Very clear and steady video with very good sound.
The Three Musketeers (Raby, Leigh, Stiles) - North Shore Music Theatre - August 20, 2007 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Aaron Tveit (D'Artagnan), Allison Blackwell (Landlady of the Inn), Anne Tolpegin (Dona Estefania), Heather Koren (Queen Anne), Holly Davis (Cecile), Jeff Edgerton (Bonacieux), Jimmy Smagula (Porthos), John Schiappa (Athos), Kevyn Morrow (Aramis), Kingsley Leggs (Treville), Mark Aldrich (King Louis), Matt Stokes (Cardinal Richelieu), Mick Bleyer (Rochefort), Nick Dalton (Duke of Buckingham), Steven Booth (Planchet), Kate Baldwin (Milady)
NOTES: No audience, proshot from the dress rehearsal. Nicely filmed from the North Shore Music Theatre.
tick, tick... BOOM! - Korea - 2002
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Joey McIntyre (Jon), Jerry Dixon (Michael), Natascia Diaz (Susan)
NOTES: Features 20 minute Joey McIntyre concert after the show
tick, tick... BOOM! - Off-Broadway - May 31, 2001
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Raúl Esparza (Jon), Jerry Dixon (Michael), Amy Spanger (Susan)
tick, tick... BOOM! - Off-Broadway - September 18, 2001
FORMAT: MKV (HD)
CAST: Raúl Esparza (Jon), Jerry Dixon (Michael), Amy Spanger (Susan)
tick, tick... BOOM! - Workshop/Concert - November 25, 1991 (Highlights)
FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD)
CAST: Jonathan Larson (Jon)
NOTES: 4 songs. The original Tick Tick Boom before it was adapted into a 3 person show.
Tina - The Tina Turner Musical - West End - September, 2019 (hitmewithyourbethshot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Aisha Jawando (alt Tina Turner), Ashley Zhangazha (Ike Turner), Angela Marie Hurst (u/s Zelma Bullock), Edward Bourne (Erwin Bach), Oscar Batterham (Roger Davies), Irene Myrtle Forrester (Gran Georgeanna), Jammy Kasongo (Richard Bullock/Raymond Hill), Cameron Bernard Jones (Craig Hill)
Titanic - Australia - November 30, 2006 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (SD)
CAST: Hayden Tee (Thomas Andrews), Nick Tate (Captain E. J. Smith), Brendan Higgins (J. Bruce Ismay), Alexander Lewis (Frederick Barrett), Matthew Willis (Harold Bride, Radioman), David Goddard (Henry Etches, 1st Class Steward), Ana Marina (Caroline Neville), Katrina Retallick (Alice Bean), Robert Gard (Isidor Strauss), Joan Carden (Ida Strauss), Belinda Wollaston (Kate McGowen), Cameron Mannix (Bandmaster Wallace Hartley)
NOTES: Single camera proshot with soundboard audio. Sometimes listed as 2005, but the production ran from October - December 2006.
Titanic - Bad Hersfeld, Germany - August, 2017 (Rumpel's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: David Arnsperger (Thomas Andrews), Alen Hodzovic (Captain E. J. Smith), Veronika Hörmann (Alice Bean), Stefan Grego Schmitz (Edgar Bean), Gabriela Ryffel (Kate McGowen), Anja Backus (Kate Murphy), Christine Rothacker (Kate Mullins)
Titanic - Broadway - 1997 (Highlights) (Press Reel's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Michael Cerveris (Thomas Andrews), John Cunningham (Captain E. J. Smith), David Garrison (J. Bruce Ismay), Brian d'Arcy James (Frederick Barrett), Martin Moran (Harold Bride, Radioman), David Elder (Frederick Fleet), Don Stephenson (Charles Clarke), Judy Blazer (Caroline Neville), Victoria Clark (Alice Bean), Bill Buell (Edgar Bean), Theresa McCarthy (Kate Murphy), Erin Hill (Kate Mullins)
Titanic - Broadway - November 12, 1997
FORMAT: MKV (HD)
CAST: Michael Cerveris (Thomas Andrews), John Cunningham (Captain E. J. Smith), David Garrison (J. Bruce Ismay), Brian d'Arcy James (Frederick Barrett), Judy Blazer (Caroline Neville), Bill Buell (Edgar Bean), Larry Keith (Isidor Strauss), Jody Gelb (Eleanor Widener)
NOTES: Camcorder video, mostly wide shot with a few zooms. The only known video of this production.
Titanic - First National Tour - September 2, 2000
FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD)
CAST: Kevin Gray (Thomas Andrews), William Parry (Captain E. J. Smith), Adam Heller (J. Bruce Ismay), Marcus Chait (Frederick Barrett), Dale Sandish (Harold Bride, Radioman), Timothy J Alex (Frederick Fleet), Christianne Tisdale (Caroline Neville), Liz McConahay (Alice Bean), David Beditz (Edgar Bean), S Marc Jordan (Isidor Strauss), Taina Elg (Ida Strauss), Richard Roland (Jim Farrell), Melissa Bell Chait (Kate McGowen), Kate Suber (Kate Murphy), Jodi Jinks (Kate Mullins), Raymond Sage (3rd Officer Herbert J. Pitman)
Titanic - Redondo Beach - March 20, 2001 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Richard Kline (Captain Smith), Eve Cohen (Kate McGowen), Wendi Bergamini (Kate Murphy), Moriah Angeline (Kate Mullins), John Bisom (Jim Farrell), Tracy Perry (Lightoller), Mark Capri (Mr Ismay), Jamie Snyder (Pittman), Elizabeth Loyacano (Caroline Neville), Tony Adelman (Thomas Andrews), Lois Bourgon (Ida Strauss), Bob Lauder Jr. (Isidor Strauss), Kevin Earley (Stoker Frederic Barrett), Richard Israel (Harold Bride), Paul Greene (Charles Clarke), Gibby Brand (Henry Etches),Danny Michaels (Murdoch), Kent Melwig (Frederick Fleet), Douglas Carfrae (Mr Astor), Jill Simonian (Madeleine Astor)
Titanic - The Netherlands - 2001
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Tony Neef (Thomas Andrews), Bert Simhoffer (Captain E. J. Smith), Hugo Haenen (J. Bruce Ismay), Danny de Munk (Frederick Barrett), Dick Cohen (Harold Bride, Radioman), Jon van Eerd (Henry Etches, 1st Class Steward), Annick Boer (Alice Bean), Céline Purcell (Kate McGowen)
Titanic - West Palm Beach - February, 2019 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Christopher Pappas (Thomas Andrews), Colton McDonald (Captain E. J. Smith), Kyler O’Brien (J. Bruce Ismay), Chris Santiago (Harold Bride, Radioman), Olivia Henley (Alice Bean), Finnigan Anthony (Edgar Bean), Alli Graves (Kate McGowen), Jonathan Allen (1st Officer William Murdoch), Ethan Spell (2nd Officer Charles Lightoller)
NOTES: running time 2'23; complete multicam proshot of West Palm Beach's King's Academy 2019 production.
[title of show] - Broadway - July 5, 2008 (Preview)
FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD)
CAST: Heidi Blickenstaff (Heidi), Hunter Bell (Hunter), Jeff Bowen (Jeff), Larry Pressgrove (Larry), Susan Blackwell (Susan)
[title of show] - Broadway - July 6, 2008 (Preview) (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Heidi Blickenstaff (Heidi), Hunter Bell (Hunter), Jeff Bowen (Jeff), Larry Pressgrove (Larry), Susan Blackwell (Susan)
NOTES: Cute little show about making it to Broadway. Heidi was my favorite part of the show. There were some very funny parts to the show, especially if you are a theater buff. There are about 10 mins of total blackouts, which is mostly a chunk in within the first 13 minutes. Depsite that, a nice capture and the audience was very into the show. A-
To Kill a Mockingbird - Broadway - July, 2019 (Hollis Mizner's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Jeff Daniels (Atticus Finch), Celia Keenan-Bolger (Scout), Will Pullen (Jem), Manoel Felciano (Horace Gilmer), LaTonya Richardson Jackson (Calpurnia), Aubie Merrylees (u/s Dill), Dakin Matthews (Judge Taylor), Gbenga Akinnagbe (Tom Robinson), Frederick Weller (Bob Ewell), Danny Wolohan (Boo Radley), Erin Wilhelmi (Mayella), Neal Huff (Link Deas), Liv Roth (Miss Stephanie), Phyllis Somerville (Ms. Dubose)
NOTES: Very shaky video, never really settles down. Filmed nearly entirely through close-ups, which means a fair bit of the action is missed.
Tootsie - Broadway - December, 2019 (theaterfan64's master)
FORMAT: MOV (HD)
CAST: Santino Fontana (Michael Dorsey/Dorothy Michaels), Lilli Cooper (Julie Nichols), Andy Grotelueschen (Jeff Slater), Sarah Stiles (Sandy Lester), John Behlmann (Max Van Horn), Julie Halston (Rita Marshall), Reg Rogers (Ron Carlisle), Michael McGrath (Stan Fields), Britney Coleman
NOTES: Full stage shot of the show during it’s run on Broadway. There is washout, as it’s a full stage shot, but it is very very watchable. About 8 minutes is missing right before the Act 1 finale.
Tootsie - Pre-Broadway / Chicago - September 11, 2018 (Preview) (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Santino Fontana (Michael Dorsey/Dorothy Michaels), Lilli Cooper (Julie Nichols), Andy Grotelueschen (Jeff Slater), Sarah Stiles (Sandy Lester), John Behlmann (Max Van Horn), Julie Halston (Rita Marshall), Reg Rogers (Ron Carlisle), Michael McGrath (Stan Fields), Anthony Wayne, Britney Coleman, Diana Vaden, Drew King, Harris Milgrim, James Moye, Jeff Kready, John Arthur Greene, Katerina Papacostas, Leslie Donna Flesner, Paula Leggett Chase, Shina Ann Morris
NOTES: Excellent HD capture of the first PreBroadway preview performance. This is a fun show with terrific performances based on the 1982 movie. Santino gives a wonderful performance and earning early Tony buzz for Best Actor! A+
Translations - National Theatre - July 31, 2018 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Colin Morgan (Owen), Seamus O'Hara (Manus), Ciarán Hinds (Hugh), Dermot Crowley (Jimmy Jack Cassie), Adetomiwa Edun (Lieutenant Yolland), Rufus Wright (Captain Lancey), Michelle Fox (Sarah), Judith Roddy (Maire), Laurence Kinlan (Doalty), Aoife Duffin (Bridget)
Travelling Light - National Theatre, London - February 9, 2012 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MKV (HD)|Subtitles
CAST: Tom Allwinton, Norma Atallah, Roy Baron
NOTES: National Theatre Live 9th February 2012 mkv, 5.46GB Hardcoded English subtitles
Treasure Island - National Theatre - January 22, 2015 (Pro-Shot's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Arthur Darvill (Long John Silver), Patsy Ferran (Jim Hawkins), Oliver Birch (George Badger), Raj Bajaj (Job Anderson)
Tuck Everlasting - Broadway - April 4, 2016 (Preview) (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD)
CAST: Sarah Charles Lewis (Winnie Foster), Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Jesse Tuck), Carolee Carmello (Mae Tuck), Michael Park (Angus Tuck), Robert Lenzi (Miles Tuck), Terrence Mann (Man in Yellow Suit), Michael Wartella (Hugo), Fred Applegate (Constable Joe), Pippa Pearthree (Nana), Valerie Wright (Mother)
NOTES: Excellent capture of the Broadway transfer from Atlanta. Many changes and direction from the out of town tryout. A
Tuck Everlasting - Broadway - April 4, 2016 (Preview) (NYCG8R's master)
FORMAT: DVD ISO (SD)
CAST: Sarah Charles Lewis (Winnie Foster), Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Jesse Tuck), Carolee Carmello (Mae Tuck), Michael Park (Angus Tuck), Robert Lenzi (Miles Tuck), Terrence Mann (Man in Yellow Suit), Michael Wartella (Hugo), Fred Applegate (Constable Joe), Pippa Pearthree (Nana), Valerie Wright (Mother)
NOTES: A more rare recording of the same performance as a more common capture. Single Disc
Tuck Everlasting - Pre-Broadway / Atlanta - February 5, 2015 (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: MP4 (HD)
CAST: Sarah Charles Lewis (Winnie Foster), Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Jesse Tuck), Carolee Carmello (Mae Tuck), Michael Park (Angus Tuck), Robert Lenzi (Miles Tuck), Terrence Mann (Man in Yellow Suit), Michael Wartella (Hugo), Fred Applegate (Constable Joe), Pippa Pearthree (Nana), Valerie Wright (Mother)
NOTES: Beautiful HD capture of the PreBroadway tryout in Atlanta. This was Carolee's final performance due to leaving for Finding Neverland. Wonderful show, performances and music! A+
Tuck Everlasting - Pre-Broadway / Atlanta - February 6, 2015 (SunsetBlvd79's master)
FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD)
CAST: Sarah Charles Lewis (Winnie Foster), Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Jesse Tuck), Beth Leavel (Mae Tuck), Michael Park (Angus Tuck), Robert Lenzi (Miles Tuck), Terrence Mann (Man in Yellow Suit), Michael Wartella (Hugo), Fred Applegate (Constable Joe), Pippa Pearthree (Nana), Valerie Wright (Mother)
NOTES: Beautiful capture of the Pre-Broadway tryout in Atlanta. This was Beth Leavel's first performance taking over for Carolee in the final few weeks of the run. Great performances and music! A+
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Marina Koren for The Atlantic:
The very first time NASA put a robot on Mars, it was looking for one thing: life.
When scientists examined the mission's early findings, they sent for champagne. They were convinced they'd discovered proof, quietly metabolizing, in the soil. But the data turned out to be muddled, and one experiment designed to detect organic molecules found none, not even simple ones that astronauts had found on the moon.
Nearly half a century after that mission, its latest successor, a rover called Perseverance, left Earth this morning to scour Mars's surface for signs of alien microbes.
This time we're gonna find them, and bring them back, and cause a bad sci-fi movie
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Europa is enveloped in a thick coat of water ice. (Some other moons in our solar system have ice made of methane and nitrogen—the cosmos is a weird place.) The criss-crossing lines visible in the new pictures are actually cracks and fissures in that frozen exterior. Scientists suspect that they’re caused by the stretching and squashing that Europa experiences as it orbits giant Jupiter. The moon’s terrain is sprinkled with chemical compounds such as sodium chloride and magnesium sulfate—more commonly known to Earthlings as table salt and Epsom salt—and they could indicate briny waters below.
Scientists got their best evidence that a Europan ocean might exist two decades ago, when that earlier NASA spacecraft detected a magnetic connection between Europa and Jupiter that could easily be explained by the presence of a salty, global sea. This deep into the solar system, Europa’s underground ocean wouldn’t feel the warmth of the sun; it would stay liquid because of Jupiter’s gravitational tugging. In recent years, telescopes have detected signs of plumes of water vapor spewing out of the cracks and into space. Scientists believe that Europa’s ocean could be as old as the moon itself, about 4 billion years or so, which would give life plenty of time and a stable environment in which to evolve, Phillips said.
The data suggest that Europa has a rocky mantle—the layer between the moon’s crust and core—and when rock and water come together, magical things can happen: Chemical interactions between them are known to produce hydrogen-rich materials for tiny creatures to metabolize. “On our own planet, hydrothermal systems at the seafloor provide energy for communities of microorganisms,” Samantha Trumbo, a planetary scientist at Cornell who studies icy ocean worlds like Europa, told me.
The upcoming NASA mission, named Clipper—a nod to the speedy, lightweight vessels favored by 19th-century merchants—will study nearly every bit of the Europan surface. If it gets lucky, the spacecraft could fly through some plume particles, take a sip, and analyze the contents. Alyssa Rhoden, a planetary geophysicist at the Southwest Research Institute who studies Europa, is most excited about a Clipper instrument designed to detect warmer-than-usual spots on the moon’s surface. “When you look at Europa’s surface, you can see a lot of pits where the surface seems to have dropped down a little bit, places where the surface has been disrupted,” Rhoden told me. “We think that that’s happening from heating coming from below.” That signature could simply indicate the presence of melted bits of ice near the frigid crust—or it could mean a roiling sea has floated toward the surface, perhaps bringing any tiny inhabitants with it.
The Clipper mission is not meant to find definitive proof that life exists on Europa, only explore whether the moon has the right conditions and chemistry to make life possible. Evidence of life will require more missions, guided by Clipper’s data, that could land on the Europan surface and drill into the ice. NASA is also searching for life elsewhere in the solar system, notably on Mars, where a rover is collecting samples from a dried-up river delta. But Europa is a more tantalizing target, and so are the other ocean moons sprinkled across the solar system, such as Enceladus and Titan, which orbit Saturn, and Triton, around Neptune. The Mars mission is designed to search for signs of fossilized life that existed several billion years ago, when water once flowed on the planet. “It’s quite possible that Mars could have had life in the past, in a warmer-weather era, and it’s possible that there are subsurface pockets on Mars that could have remnants of this living biosphere,” Phillips said. “But on somewhere like Europa, life could exist there now.”
And what might humanity, by way of carefully engineered machines, find on Europa, once we’ve figured out which melty bits to inspect? “I would love for there to be Europan whales swimming around in that ocean,” Phillips said with a laugh. But alien life, if it exists, is likely to be small and simple. Energy sources are limited in the Europan depths, and scientists don’t think the environment can support the development of more complex organisms, Phillips said. Still, even the discovery of a single microbe would mark an explosive event in human history. It would mean that life had managed to spring up in two different places around the same star—in a universe absolutely brimming with stars. If it happened more than once here, in our own solar system, it’s likely happened elsewhere in the cosmos, around someone else’s sun. This is why scientists are so eager to catch a glimpse of Europa, and prepare as much as they can for the exploration to come. “We all want it to be water,” Rhoden said. “We all want it to be a cool plumbing system in the shell with lots of activity, and someday we’ll get down there and find little Europan sea urchins clinging to the bottom of the ice.”
— There’s Hope for Life on Europa, a Distant Moon
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EU Code Week 2019 at Primary school ”Josip Kozarac” in Soljani, Croatia
By Marina and Adrijana, Code Week Teachers in Croatia
The students from grades 1 to 8 of our Primary school ”Josip Kozarac” in Soljani (Croatia) participated in EU Code Week 2019 with 13 different online and offline activities organized by their computer science teacher Marina Blaževac and English teacher Adrijana Roždijevac. The school joined Code Week 4 All Challenge with its own code (cw19-AqkVi) which included 12 different activities and workshops (2 other Croatian schools from Vukovar and Gunja also joined us), as well as with the code originating from Portugal (cw19-kOREN). Lower-primary classes (grades 1 to 4) participated in various unplugged activities, while upper-primary classes (grades 5 to 8) participated mostly in online activities, as well as in some offline activities.
The 1st-graders had a lot of fun with their first coding experience by playing an unplugged TPR activity Colour Code Hunt in order to learn names of colours in English. The students had to code their way across the grid on the floor to reach the colour they chose by listening to the teacher’s instructions (left, right, up and down). As they got familiar with the English
expressions, the students themselves gave instructions to other students and created their own codes. The game was and absolute hit at school because, even though it was meant for 1stgraders only, the students from all grades ended up playing it.
Apart from taking part in Colour Code Hunt, the students from grades 2 and 3 also discovered coding with Pixel art and activity ”Let’s code a boat!”. During this unplugged activity students had to use the given code to draw and colour a boat on the grid paper. Additionally, the 3rd-graders also created traditional Slavonian towel by colouring the pixels.
The 4th-graders also took part in an unplugged activity but they used coding to solve math problems (addition and subtraction) to reveal hidden images of different emoji.
The students from grades 5 were introduced to binary code alphabet in order to write their names in code by colouring in the boxes in the provided grid. During another activity they worked with binary images where they had to figure out how to encode provided images into binary in such a way that another team can use the code to figure out what images they
selected. The 5th-graders also learned how to program micro:bits to show icons, numbers and text on the screen, as well as different animations in Minecraft. Paying Tetris was also a fun experience for them.
Our 6th-grade students used Quiver 3D Augmented Reality colouring application for printing, colouring and watching their drawings of different countries and flags in 3D on their mobile phones. They used this opportunity to connect this activity to their eTwinning project called ”The Travelling Mascot” by drawing the flags of the partner countries involved in the project. Watching different animals move and make sounds in 3D was also an interesting experience for them. Another activity was ”Happy maps” where the students had a simple task of getting the "flurb" to the fruit across the given map by using the arrows provided. The students practiced writing precise instructions as they work to translate instructions into the symbols provided which help them gain experience reading and writing in shorthand code. Their final activity was programming the mBots to follow the given map and do different actions such as change the colour of their lights and stop at the certain spot by c oding in mBlock.
The 7th-grade students played Minecraft and in that way learned about programming and coding. They build different worlds in Minecraft using MakeCode application and programming their characters to do different actions.
The students from grade 8 took on Tetris Challenge and played Tetris which helped them with their concentration and logical thinking, as well as combinatorics.
The students from English Club (grades 6 to 8) also participated in EU Code Week by coding with Scratch and creating animated e-postcards from Croatia. Here are some of the e-card they created: Makarska https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/337395069 and Osijek’s cathedral
https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/337395989.
Our students had so much fun participating in EU Code Week and realizing how easy coding can be and that everyone can do it. We are looking forward to the next year’s EU Code Week and new coding activities.
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Sewing Circle Participants
Sewing Circle Participants
Thank you to everyone who participated in sewing the rhinoceros! We could never have finished it without you. You are forever in our hearts.
Deanna Cruise back
Juliana Pennington shoulder
Yue Yang Caigla Zou back
Yuen (Jessica) Chen back
Kelly White shoulder
Athena Johns leg
Antoinette Barton head
Erica Lipshultz rump
Marc Fletcher back left foot
Siobhan Cassidy front right leg
Elisa Li head
Harry Yu head
Beth Thomas snout
Erica Barajas forehead
Vivian Romney shoulder
Zoe Walker head
Amy Khalmann rear flank
Alina Hayes feet
Janice Wood rear flank
Barb Bakun head
Andi Wong rear flank
Sarah Stein back, thigh
Chloe Marrinstein head, foot, outline, da booty
Sadie Marrinstein thigh
Amanda H. Johnson head, foot, outline
Kaila Wood head, foot, outline
Leah Johnson head, foot, outline
Ani Mukerji back leg
Inka Mukerji back leg
Winnie Ding rear flank
Jennifer White back feet
August White back feet
Neve Schmitt head
Michelle Schmitt head
Sigrid foot
Leah Anderson foot
Mary Kenny rump
Isle Oritt rump
Olga back leg
Dustin rhinobum!
Linnea Furlog head
Pam Deluco rear leg, haunch, elbow, letters
Jeff Thomas back
Bryan Barkley rear
Mary Wheeler back top flank
Teri Gardiner tail hair, rump, belly, ridge of back
Robin Hill rump
Darcy Padilla stomach
Emily Clark-Krasner rear
Yuen Chen leg
Jodi Connelly back
Noah Greene belly
Ryan Meyer belly and back
Arielle Rebek belly
Muzi LaRowe eyes
T. Blackmon bottom
Bettina Pauley tail
Allyson Feeney rump
Mark Baugh-Sasaki back foot
Dox Lorax haunch
Kelli Rae rump
Cesar Rubio unknown
Ho Yan Nip unknown
Frank Merritt all over, circles, edges, hindquarters, shoulder, rump, dark purple bottom edge of shoulder armor, behind the ear
Kim Miskowicz rump, right foot, rear/rump
Julia Langer buttocks
Jonathan Coignard buttocks
Suzanne Gore haunch
Kelly Wang from hip to buttock
Steve Rasmussen rear leg
Bob Rocco rump
Odysseus Wolken upper rump
Juliette Langley lower rump
Fehim Haelzic crown/forehead
Leyla Haelzic crown/forehead
Tanja Gels head
Lisa Ekstrom from right leg, forehead
Eva Walker front leg
Sara Wright eye
Karrie Hovey shoulder
M. Dym a wrinkle on the head
Amy M. Ho front foot, forehead
Dave Lyons just below eye
Mel Day forehead
Heather Peters ear
Helen Hiebert butt
Alyssa Casey neck, horn
Vanessa Gingold rump
Mary V. Marsh front right toe, ear
Antonio Guerra letra C
Jenny Phillips hands
Ingrid Rojas Contreras hoof
Maia Wachtel lines on the back
Roli Douglas the top line
Noga Wizansky rump
Suzanne Forester border line
Cindy Steiler face
Alexa Boromo behind
Amber Hoy back
Melody Dalton back
Cheyenne Dalton rear feet
Elizabeth Boyne ear
Teddy Midler front foot
Drew Cameron face
Cathy DeForest front left hoof
Leah Korican face
Mayumi Hamanaka r - text
Dana Zed shoulder
Erin Sheanin knee
Alisha Funkhouser front foot
Debbie Walker unknown
Nancy Marriner tail
Summer Om face
Eraden Wordal Chesh face
Isle Oritt knee
Mary Grace Tate toe
Sophia Auen face
April Marriner tail
Charlotte Semmes snout
Andre Chevonier foot
Jane Cassidy foot
Kellen Rhoda foot
Meiasha Gray border
Samantha Bankston back foot
Winship Varnes hindquarters
Miranda McFarland belly
Susan Paigen nose
Kevin Holmes ear
Jackie Wallowheng plants
Beta Heist Morello edge
Elaine Todd nose and edge near nose
Lori Chambers back foot
Mickie McCormic foot scales
Jeremy Logan ear hair
Brook Craddock mythical horn!
Morning Hullinger toe jam back foot, shoulder flank, final inner
C.C. Chaya scales
Lolli Jacobsen back
Sarah Crews rump
Connie Burket ears
Debbie Divine rear leg
Martha Rhea hindquarters
Donna Sandberg along the top of the back shoulder and letter H
Pam Morgan back
Ruth Cathcard Rake front leg and letter R
Gretchen Boyum front leg, front foot
Rachel Butler front leg
Lucy Butler front leg
Bill North butt, ground, back right foot
Caroline Stoll head
April Engstrom back right leg/hip
Connie Wilson close to face
Gloria Gonzalez hind foot
Judy Nease chin
Alleigh Weems horn
Lyndsi Weems back foot
Karla Prickett rump
Jennifer Baker back
Kent Manske spots
Susan Tuoley back foot and butt
Susan Paigen nose
Christina Steinbrecher pfrandt (lower leg)
Yeqi Song legs
Yuan Luo legs
Jenny Chin (Kuan-Jen) legs
Jingying Liang back leg
Jianguyin Reng back leg
Beth Abdallah back flank
Rebecca Redman back leg
Michael Seidel kidney lining
Rita Hsing head
Sandy Lee back
Chelsea Herman back
Marie Kidd right front foot
David Kidd right front foot
Amy Whitcomb rump
Bob Carpenter nose
Barbara Carpenter nose
Cynthia Beecher ear
Leteb Beecher ear
Susan Sweet ear
CK Itamura hamhock
Dionne Thornton front left foot, butt edge
Robert Wuilfe da booty
Gina Ching front foot
Jordan Juel front foot
Anne Ingraham front foot
Michelle Waters butt
Elizabeth Addison foot
Lydia Nakashima Dagarod shoulder
Linda Joy Kettwinkel snout
Peggy George butt
Maryly Snow scales
Zelisa back end
Scott Partch back end
Chin Cox head
Hada Marshall Booth head
Eduardo Arenas leg
Luna Gomez head
Sauita Patel gog (back)
Brian Lease back leg
Islonia Hasbrim frente
Guadalupe Portillo espalda
Queen Krubally back
Bridget McCraken back
Margaret Coston back
Kathleen Murphy belly
Julie Grigoryan ear
Joyce Subel border
Yatit Maidorh head
Omer head
Alon head
Rooek head
Eli head
Posja Mahushwai neckline
Talia nose
Ella ear
Jonathan nose
Nancy Brunn back
Sabina Brunn ears
Judith Fast back
Lindsey Stoll hoof
Emily Marks head
Victor Vargas chin
Britt-Marie Alon horn
Al Bloch horn
Alyssa Flores horn
John Hoffmeyer border
Madison Cockrum head
Anthony Murillo border
Sheri Simons front legs
Emily Matherson face
Hana Jones hoof (back foot)
Angela Kirchebel bottom left corner border,
small area of right foot, scales
Adele Etcheverry Sheets upper border rear and rear of Rhino
Leslie Jurado back leg, hoof scales
Jaime Muñoz shoulder
Aiden Ginn back leg
Sheecid Lopez border and back leg
Sophy Hock shoulder
Nancy Scott Patton rump
Hana Beaty shoulder, back leg
Eric D’Alessandro lower jaw
Betsy Copeland leg and hoof
Kylie McCloskey horn
Dellanira Carrillo butt
Jose Llamos hoof (back foot)
Timothy Clancy forehead
Kobley Benjamin Mona shoulder
Alicia Ramirez foot
Kim Green upper thigh/butt
Francesca Figone left back
Josette Stokes shoulder
Mercedes Yatta foot
Luis Medina booty
Shane Geoge face (under eye)
Ellen Baird foot
Daria Booth shoulder
Adria Davis backside
Johnny Bruno back foot
Brianna Warren leg
Adrienne Glatz forehead
Mallory Frucha bum
Kelly Weber front and back legs
Carissa Duggan booty
Jasmin Gonzalez foot
Francis Newsom rear end
Shari Maxson Hopper shoulder
Veronica Brenck butt
Marie Fox rump, front foot, back foot
Chloe Taylor root
Marissa Winslow rump/tail
Shai Porath head
Linda Bea Miller tummy
Tom Seoul rump
Kathleen Ritchie unknown
Sue Bottom front leg
Lisa Chu forehead
Anne Ingraham hind foot
Chris Voisard rump
Jane McLaughlin front foot
Malinda Thompson rear leg
Mallory Nomura Saul tusk and back
Judy Shintani tummy and rump
Kevin Austin top of nose, bottom of horn
Claudia Molley top of head, behind ear
Kate Oltmann butt
Amanda Bosma wrinkle on face
Xittaly Vasquez back leg
Emily Murray torso wrinkle
Julia Albo border
Miriam Hassman neck/face
Ryan Patton back left leg
Alexa Weber chin and left front leg
Jiovanny Soto forehead
Jenny Harp lower back
Steven Garen nose/head
Tallulah Terryl leg
Johanna Arnold back
Sean Olson muzzle
Emma Spertus back
Chris Challans loin, belly
Susan Kanowith-Klein rump
Christina Aumann eyelashes and forehead
Ruth Souza misc dorsal area
Phuong Pham booty
Laurie Crogan shoulder-scales
Lorna Turner armpit
Eva Hausam chin wavy lines
David Reiman shoulder
Lanqin Wang forehead
Camryn Travis belly
Jennifer Munnings eye/cheek
Brooke Sommers belly
Katie Gallagher ribs
Sariah Gonzalez forehead
Anthony Isenhour shoulder
Berenika Boberska the bottom!
Taylor Hoogsteden hip
Carmina Ellison sideburns
Nicole McHale shoulder blade
Preeva Tramiel back leg
Jessica Bernhardt front leg
Milldrid Thompson ear
Sharon Robinson front leg
Timiza Wagner back leg
Bobbie Jeffery rear of body
Joanne Landers ear
Sylvia Stanger front leg
Paula Landers back leg
Charlotte Jacobs front leg
Mavis Brown front shoulder
Cheryl Batrato haunch
Kathy Goldmaker shoulder
Liz Matthews back leg above the foot
Sailee Pawar back leg
Andrea Fleiner belly
Marina Taniform leg
Andres Taniform leg
Rose Nguyen ribs
Marco Chavez ribs
Lily May Larson cheek
Rachel Williamson back leg
Cheryl Zuur above the eye
Kathy Willis hindquarters
Martha White hindquarter
Artemis Koren head
Anika Sykora tummy
Irene Floyd hindquarter
Ming Zhou head
Max Koren front leg
Dinah Irino ear
Maya leg
Morgan Carter head
Ava Kasim the hinney
Isabella Anderson back
Ian Kussi-Gillu shoulder
Viyada Satyapan upper front back
Mahvash Salehpour back hip
Christina Bayley back foot
Pam Schwartz left leg
Lynn Koolish back leg
Sandra Duncan front hoof
Emily Rosenberg right leg
Gina Dixon back leg
Tamara Sommerfield neck
Diana R. Reton rear leg
Candace Kling shoulder
Cindy Jacomette head
Nicki Hitz Edison front leg
Toru Sueto front left leg
Jeanne Sueto under eye, along lower jaw
Linda Goss rear hip
Kim Meuli Brown back ribs
Michael Chin chin
Kasla Melton right back leg (pierna derecha)
Vanessa Herrera right back thing
Wendy Brown back leg
Jack Fleig front leg
Amanda Fleig front leg
Shobitha belly
Sasha back
Marilyn rear haunch
Caden Jo Hartdegen head/neck
Yolanda Araujo unknown
Meredith Payn unknown
Tiffany Hartdeger unknown
Richard cheek
Hanna Peacock shoulder
Juan Manuel Gutierrez rear hip
Paola Valencia head
Jesus Castillo head
Diego Barregan shoulder
Hernandez Irvin belly
Cindy Simmons cheek
Ginna Sierra upper leg
Carole Walters-Cook face
Angela Etsey back leg and thigh
Victor Navarro IV V neck
Elizabeth Finkler ear
Jennifer Lu lower tummy
Kylee Dougherty neck
Jada Wong stomach
Kerwin Azores back knee
Hugo Jimenez head
Becca Wong neck
Breanna Estrada unknown
Candaces Perrault shoulder
Kevin Liu belly and front of leg plates
Michael Huang Mil back leg
Natalie Diazza chin hairs
Eliza Villa dorsal neck
Steve Dellicalpini in that neck tho!
Michelle van Eyken right flank
Leslie McLaughlin shoulder circles
Angela Acosta front leg
Allison Acosta front shoulder circle
Rebecca Bui upper back leg
Barbara Post back foot
Irene Caravajal back leg
Gabrielle Koizumi neck
Clayton Bavor front leg
Ava Eui front leg
Judy Diamond upper shoulder
Mhanna Kutras front leg
Liam neck
Leona neck
Leana Olliffe stomach
Patti Samuelson right leg
A. Manley neck plates
Donna King right shoulder
Becky Leech right hindquarters
Raymond Mueller front left leg
Timmy shoulder
Asher Fleig front leg
Julia back leg
Nicole B chest
L. Hum hind leg
Alice Schwegman shoulder
Gail Blackmarr unknown
Christina Truong neck
June Dao scale
Ellie Reese a rear leg
Susan L. Goranson left rear leg
Marci Ariagno breast shield
Maya unknown
Diane Mestu head
Claudia Havah back leg
Mickey Guffin right upper hind leg
Annalise Sailen unknown
Jennifer Schaeffer front right leg
Mia rear leg
Joe Ranish right shoulder
Ann Ranish rear leg
Anthony left leg
Leslie Nobler neck
Anne Trickey back leg
Maris Kaplan neck fold and front shoulder
Paula Bohan neck fold
James Brooks neck
Amanda Briggs back right foot
Andrew Briggs back right foot
Miriam Briggs back right foot
Willow Yamaden cheek
Sarah Bartman neck
Bridget McMahon flank
Amy Brown jowl
Vanessa Dion Fletcher jowl
Denera Gains unknown
Justin Gains unknown
Kurt Salinas stomach/inner thigh
Randall Harrison upper mid bicep
Ivy Moya back foot
Pam Lonero breast plate
Molly Olsen Roush shoulder/neck area
Brook Olsen Roush shoulder/neck area
Susie Miller Roush shoulder/neck area
Reyhon Ertekin unknown
Torres Leck shoulder
Anna Banancks shoulder
Emily van Engel front leg
Silvia Eckert cheek
Davis Watson breastplate
Debachree Ghosh breastplate
Jessica Jane Jennings cheek
Kimberly Ann Piper shoulder
Alisa Murray cheek
Jennifer Hill breastplate
Susan Ady cheek
Chris Washburn neck
Janet Ady flank
Louise Horkey border
Nupur Kamat front shoulder
Tamela Holmes ear
Tameyah Holmes cheek
Ruth Tabancay upper leg
Teddy Midler shoulder
Jerry Majors Patterson cheek area
Susan Afell eye area
Elaine Todd neck
Senator Jordan cheek
Meadow unknown
Lori Chambers neck
Josephine Tumova neck
Fynn Tuma chest
Diana Dominguez chest
Jason Godeke neck
Cristina Mathews belly and front right leg
Jody Alexander neck, chest
Elaine Todd belly circles
Raquel Marquez belly
Josslyn Robles chest
Rhea Rynearson shoulder
Valerie Frey shoulder
Aidan Parker shoulder, right shoulder
A. Parker right shoulder
Seraphine Ries belly
Lid. C. belly
Jamelie whiskers
Carolyn Schneider upper shoulder
Josh Morsell lower front shoulder
Lia V. Wilson middle breast
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