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Tue Aug 13 09:21:05 UTC 2013


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This handout image provided by the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum 
shows an X-ray of an extravehicular (EV) overshoe that was designed to 
be worn over the Apollo spacesuit boots while an astronaut was walking 
on the Moon and a 1964 A4-H Universal helmet, showing in the 
x-ray ball bearings in the neck ring that allowed the helmet to 
move right and left without restriction.APThe familiar exteriors of astronauts' 
spacesuits often hide all of the ingenuity and mechanics that are built 
inside the suits, which were first imagined as "wearable spacecraft."Now 
a new art exhibit, "Suited for Space," opening Friday at the Smithsonian's 
National Air and Space Museum, highlights the creativity behind the suits 
that allowed humans to explore the moon and aspire to fly farther 
from Earth.X-ray images and photographs show the suits in intricate detail, 
said space history curator Cathleen Lewis. The museum's X-rays are the first 
such images ever created to study, conserve and research the nation's spacesuits.VIDEO: 
Sleeping in a Space Station"You don't realize what a complex machine these 
are," Lewis said. But the X-rays of Alan Shepard's Apollo spacesuit and 
a 1960s prototype "allow visitors to see beyond what is visible to 
the naked eye, through the protective layers of the suit to see 
the substructures that are embedded inside."The exhibition traces the evolution 
of the spacesuit from the early high-altitude test flight suits of the 
1930s 
July 29, 2013: Tourists and locals play on Ko'Olina beach on the 
island of Oahu, Hawaii.ReutersLawmakers in the Aloha State want to wave 
goodbye to their growing homeless population -- by buying them a one-way 
ticket off the island.Hawaii's controversial three-year Return to Home pilot 
program launches later this year and is being billed as a way 
to help the states 17,000 homeless residents, while reducing the financial 
burden the state has in caring for them. Under the plan, the 
state will pay for a one-way plane ticket for any homeless resident 
who can find someone on the mainland to take them in.The program, 
which has a $100,000 annual budget, is the brainchild of state Rep. 
John Mizuno, who had unsuccessfully tried to get a similar plan through 
the past three legislative sessions. This year, the measure was attached 
to a larger spending bill and squeaked through the state legislature.Critics, 
though, say the program is a quick fix and does nothing to 
address the root causes of homelessness.Patricia McManaman, director of 
the Department of Human Services  the agency tasked with implementing the 
program -- told lawmakers she had reservations about the plan to send 
the states homeless away and questioned the programs funding. She also had 
a problem with language in the bill that suggests homeless people are 
in need of sufficient personal hygiene in order to travel  something 
she calls an unnecessary and inappropriate stereotype.But Miz

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