• You Will Never Guess What the Stranded Astronauts Got Paid for Their Trouble
    futurism.com
    During their months-long extended stay on the International Space Station, astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore didn't get overtime but they did get a meager $5 per day allowance on top of their salaries.In a statement to theNew York Times, a NASA spokesperson revealed that the stranded pair who just splashed down to Earth on a SpaceX capsule after spending an extra 278 days aboard the ISS than expected due to the malfunctioning of Boeing's cursed Starliner rocket were not eligible for any overtime pay.In fact, astronauts on the ISS don't ever receive overtime, or extra pay on holidays and weekends, as spokesperson Jim Russell of the space agency's Space Operations Mission Directorate told the newspaper."While in space, NASA astronauts are on official travel orders as federal employees," Russell explained. As such, they and seemingly their fellow astronauts receive the same $5 "incidentals" allowance set by the Internal Revenue Service for any travel, regardless of location.To put that figure in perspective: most states (except for New Jersey and Mississippi) pay jurors more than that per day and also, jury duty doesn't take place in the extreme environment of space.Obviously, that extra $5 isn't theonly money that Williams and Wilmore were paid. As theNYT notes, they both make $152,258 per year the standard annual astronaut salary, per NASA, which is just under $22K less than what members of Congress are paid. Plus, as Russell notes, they have all of their lodging, transportation, and meals covered (though the Space Station on which astronauts stay does require them to recycle their own urine and sweat for drinking water.)Still, it seems patently absurd that the pair who expected to spend about a week on the Space Station are only going to get roughly $1,430 for all those extra months orbiting the Earth. Were that a tax return, it would be a pretty good figure but as a per diem in exchange for the "incidental" physical and mental stress they accrue in space, it's pretty crappy.That said, it could be worse. As theNYT expounded, NASA astronaut Clayton Anderson only got $1.20 per day for incidentals during his 152-day stay on the Space Station back in 2007. That meant he only got $172 in total."It IS a government job with government pay," Anderson wrote in a 2022 Facebook post, which the newspaper cited. "But thats okay too, it's a job I did because I dreamed of and loved it, not because of the money I could earn."Wilmore, at least, echoed that sentiment in September when telling reporters via telecast that the ISS is his "happy place.""I love being up here in space," he said. "Its just fun, you know?"More on the Starliner astronauts: Trump Ridiculed for Claiming He Rescued the Stranded AstronautsShare This Article
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  • Elon Musk Says He Has No Idea What He Did to Make Everybody So Mad at Him
    futurism.com
    Before Elon Musk became the unelected czar of government spending, he had it made. His corporate holdings made him richer than anyone else on the planet, he got to date celebrities, and he had so many kids that their exact count was a bit hazy.Today he still has all that stuff, though he now has to suffer the indignity of something that actual elected leaders learn to deal with one day one: negative feedback.Since the tech magnate's star child, Tesla, started going belly up, the billionaire's skin has become thinner than ever, making him prone to wild rants about how mistreated he is on his personal social media platform, X-formerly-Twitter.His latest invective came amidst yet another stock slump for the EV company, as sales woes worsen and protests against Musk in the form of Tesla vandalism become a near-constant phenomenon."My companies make great products that people love and Ive never physically hurt anyone," Musk complained this week, in suspicious detail. "So why the hate and violence against me?"There might be plenty of hate flying around lately as Musk takes an axe to critical social infrastructure, but as far as we're aware, no one has come close to ever physically harming the billionaire crybaby, making part of his rhetorical question tough to answer.Not to worry he immediately did it himself: "Because I am a deadly threat to the woke mind parasite and the humans it controls."As always, Musk reply-guys were quick to jump to their overlord's aid."We didn't hate Hitler because he made a stiff arm salute, we hated him because he murdered millions of people and tried to eradicate an entire race," one posted, referencing the shine Musk's taken to the straight-armed salute made infamous by Adolf Hitler."Exactly," Musk replied.Examining Musk's claim that he's never hurt anyone could take days, so we'll leave it at this: it takes some gall coming from a guy whose fortune comes from brutal resource extraction throughout the world. That's not to mention Starlink's raining satellites, SpaceX's environmental atrocities, or the fact that DOGE funding cuts have already started to kill a lot of the world's most desperate people.For now, it seems Musk must continue to endure the daily horror of the most luxurious life imaginable. You know what they say: it's lonely at the top.Share This Article
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  • Pixar Announces Coco Sequel
    screencrush.com
    As part of the companys annual shareholder meeting, Disney CEO Bob Iger revealed today that Pixar had officially begun development onCoco 2, a sequel to the animation studios popular 2017 film about a young boy who travels to the Land of the Dead and meets his great-great-grandfathers spirit.After the announcement, Pixar and Disney also shared this graphic on social media, confirming that the film has the simple titleCoco 2.READ MORE: The Wildest Pixar Theories That Might Be TrueThe firstCoco, directed by Lee Unkrich and co-directed by Adrian Molina, and featuring the voices of Gael Garcia Bernal, Benjamin Bratt, and Edward James Olmos, grossed more than $810 million worldwide. Disney has previouslyconfirmed they were working on a live stage adaptation of the original film; last summer, they also revealed that they were planning to add aCoco attraction to their Disney California Adventure theme park. The company typically does not do that if they dont see a movie as an ongoing franchise with significant longevity.Pixar typically alternates original concepts with sequels to their popular films. Last year they releasedInside Out 2, which became Pixars highest-grossing movie ever. Before that it had been five years since they had made a sequel 2019sToy Story 4.Their next film, this summersElio, is an original idea, as is 2026sHoppers.But then theyre planningToy Story 5,Incredibles 3, and nowCoco 2.The CocosequelGet our free mobile appEvery Pixar Movie, Ranked From Worst to BestWe ranked every single Pixar feature to date, from Toy Story to today. Which is the best?
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  • Europe is finally getting serious about commercial rockets
    www.technologyreview.com
    Europe is on the cusp of a new dawn in commercial space technology. As global political tensions intensify and relationships with the US become increasingly strained, several European companies are now planning to conduct their own launches in an attempt to reduce the continents reliance on American rockets. In the coming days, Isar Aerospace, a company based in Munich, will try to launch its Spectrum rocket from a site in the frozen reaches of Andya island in Norway. A spaceport has been built there to support small commercial rockets, and Spectrum is the first to make an attempt. Its a big milestone, says Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer and spaceflight expert at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts. Its long past time for Europe to have a proper commercial launch industry. Spectrum stands 28 meters (92 feet) tall, the length of a basketball court. The rocket has two stages, or parts, the first with nine enginespowered by an unusual fuel combination of liquid oxygen and propane not seen on other rockets before, which Isar says results in higher performanceand the second with a single engine to give satellites their final kick into orbit. The ultimate goal for Spectrum is to carry satellites weighing up to 1,000 kilograms (2,200 pounds) to low Earth orbit. On this first launch, however, there are no satellites on board, because success is anything but guaranteed. Its unlikely to make it to orbit, says Malcolm Macdonald, an expert in space technology at Strathclyde University in Scotland. The first launch of any rocket tends not to work. Regardless of whether it succeeds or fails, the launch attempt heralds an important moment as Europe tries to kick-start its own private rocket industry. Two other companiesOrbex of the UK and Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA) of Germanyare expected to make launch attempts later this year. These efforts could give Europe multiple ways to reach space without having to rely on US rockets. Europe has to be prepared for a more uncertain future, says Macdonald. The uncertainty of what will happen over the next four years with the current US administration amplifies the situation for European launch companies. Trailing in the USs wake Europe has for years trailed behind the US in commercial space efforts. The successful launch of SpaceXs first rocket, the Falcon 1, in 2008 began a period of American dominance of the global launch market. In 2024, 145 of 263 global launch attempts were made by US entitiesand SpaceX accounted for 138 of those. SpaceX is the benchmark at the moment, says Jonas Kellner, head of marketing, communications, and political affairs at RFA. Other US companies, like Rocket Lab (which launches from both the US and New Zealand), have also become successful, while commercial rockets are ramping up in China, too. Europe has launched its own government-funded Ariane and Vega rockets for decades from the Guiana Space Centre, a spaceport it operates in French Guiana in South America. Most recently, on March 6, the European Space Agency (ESA) launched its new heavy-lift Ariane 6 rocket from there for the first time. However, the history of rocket launches from Europe itself is much more limited. In 1997 the US defense contractor Northrop Grumman air-launched a Pegasus rocket from a plane that took off from the Canary Islands. In 2023 the US company Virgin Orbit failed to reach orbit with its LauncherOne rocket after a launch attempt from Cornwall in the UK. No vertical orbital rocket launch has ever been attempted from Western Europe. Isar Aerospace is one of a handful of companies hoping to change that with help from agencies like ESA, which has provided funding to rocket launch companies through its Boost program since 2019. In 2024 it awarded 44.22 million ($48 million) to Isar, Orbex, RFA, and the German launch company HyImpulse. The hope is that one or more of the companies will soon begin regular launches from Europe from two potential sites: Isars chosen location in Andya and the SaxaVord Spaceport on the Shetland Islands north of the UK, where RFA and Orbex plan to make their attempts. I expect four or five companies to get to the point of launching, and then over a period of years reliability and launch cadence [or frequency] will determine which one or two of them survives, says McDowell. ISAR AEROSPACE Unique advantages In their initial form these rockets will not rival anything on offer from SpaceX in terms of size and cadence. SpaceX sometimes launches its 70-meter (230-foot) Falcon 9 rocket multiple times per week and is developing its much larger Starship vehicle for missions to the moon and Mars. However, the smaller European rockets can allow companies in Europe to launch satellites to orbit without having to travel all the way across the Atlantic. There is an advantage to having it closer, says Kellner, who says it will take RFA one or two days by sea to get its rockets to SaxaVord, versus one or two weeks to travel across the Atlantic. Launching from Europe is useful, too, for reaching specific orbits. Traditionally, a lot of satellite launches have taken place near the equator, in places such as Cape Canaveral in Florida, to get an extra boost from Earths rotation. Crewed spacecraft have also launched from these locations to reach space stations in equatorial orbit around Earth and the moon. From Europe, though, satellites can launch north over uninhabited stretches of water to reach polar orbit, which can allow imaging satellites to see the entirety of Earth rotate underneath them. Increasingly, says McDowell, companies want to place satellites into sun-synchronous orbit, a type of polar orbit where a satellite orbiting Earth stays in perpetual sunlight. This is useful for solar-powered vehicles. By far the bulk of the commercial market now is sun-synchronous polar orbit, says McDowell. So having a high-latitude launch site that has good transport links with customers in Europe does make a difference. Europes end goal In the longer term, Europes rocket ambitions might grow to vehicles that are more of a match for the Falcon 9 through initiatives like ESAs European Launcher Challenge, which will award contracts later this year. We are hoping to develop [a larger vehicle] in the European Launcher Challenge, says Kellner. Perhaps Europe might even consider launching humans into space one day on larger rockets, says Thilo Kranz, ESAs program manager for commercial space transportation. We are looking into this, he says. If a commercial operator comes forward with a smart way of approaching [crewed] access to space, that would be a favorable development for Europe. A separate ESA project called Themis, meanwhile, is developing technologies to reuse rockets. This was the key innovation of SpaceXs Falcon 9, allowing the company to dramatically drive down launch costs. Some European companies, like MaiaSpace and RFA, are also investigating reusability. The latter is planning to use parachutes to bring the first stage of its rocket back to a landing in the sea, where it can be recovered. As soon as you get up to something like a Falcon 9 competitor, I think its clear now that reusability is crucial, says McDowell. Theyre not going to be economically competitive without reusability. The end goal for Europe is to have a sovereign rocket industry that reduces its reliance on the US. Where we are in the broader geopolitical situation probably makes this a bigger point than it might have been six months ago, says Macdonald. The continent has already shown it can diversify from the US in other ways. Europe now operates its own successful satellite-based alternative to the US Global Positioning System (GPS), called Galileo; it began launching in 2011 and is four times more accurate than its American counterpart. Isar Aerospace, and the companies that follow, might be the first sign that commercial European rockets can break from America in a similar way. We need to secure access to space, says Kranz, and the more options we have in launching into space, the higher the flexibility.
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  • Roundtables: AI Chatbots Have Joined the Chat
    www.technologyreview.com
    Recorded onMarch 20, 2025 AI Chatbots Have Joined the ChatSpeakers: Rachel Courtland, commissioning editor, Rhiannon Williams, news reporter, and Eileen Guo, features & investigations reporter.Chatbots are quickly changing how we connect to each other and ourselves. But are these changes for the better? How should they be monitored and regulated? Hear from MIT Technology Review editor Rachel Courtland in conversation with reporter Rhiannon Williams and senior reporter Eileen Guo as they unpack the landscape around chatbots.Related CoverageThe AI relationship revolution is already hereAn AI chatbot told a user how to kill himselfbut the company doesnt want to censor it
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  • Stempel & Tesar architekti creates bridge-like house on a steep slope in the Czech Republic
    worldarchitecture.org
    Submitted by WA ContentsStempel & Tesar architekti creates bridge-like house on a steep slope in the Czech RepublicCzech Republic Architecture News - Mar 20, 2025 - 17:05 html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"Prague-based architecture firm Stempel & Tesar architekti has designed a bridge-like house on a steep slope in the Czech Republic.As one approaches on the road from Prague, the villa district of ernoice, a stunning collection of distinctive family residences at the northern and western foot of Babka Hill, stands out from its surroundings.Art Nouveau and First Republic villas can be seen in the villa neighborhood, which was established in the early twentieth century. ernoice was once again a favorite location for showpiece residential structures after 1989, and this area was no exception. Villa Sidonius would not be an exception.Situated on the northern, shaded side of the terrain, the villa's steep land is among the highest and steepest in the area. This has a number of benefits, but there are drawbacks and difficulties for the project as well. The stunning view of the Berounka Valley, the Bohemian Karst hills, and the Prague skyline in the distance is without a doubt the site's finest feature.The architects have therefore made an effort to incorporate this perspective from the finest feasible angle into each of the living areas.The northern slope is devoid of sunlight, which for the majority of the day only reaches the property's highest point, which is challenging to access due to the steep slope. As a result, the architects had to decide how to construct the house as high on the property as feasible without sacrificing accessibility.The idea of hanging dwellings served as the foundation for their strategy, which minimizes these drawbacks while addressing these issues and optimizing the property's advantages. The bridge-like structure supported by pillars was the winning design.The structure is oriented to face the southern sun and the best northern views, giving it the appearance of a steel footbridge set on a steep slope.The prefabricated steel structure is composed of an internal constructional infill primarily made of IPE 160 profiles that acts as a load-bearing framework for the windows, roof, and floors, and an external load-bearing section composed of HEB 300 profiles that spans the 18-meter gap between the monolithic reinforced concrete pillars.The structure is a technological, architectural, and structural experiment.The goal of the project was to find solutions that would push the boundaries and test the newest technological products and equipment available, such as Swiss air-lux windows with patented air-assisted seals and a heating and cooling system with heat pumps to ensure a comfortable indoor climate all year round in a house with low heat storage capacity. There was neither the space nor the desire to design a house using traditional methods.An underground tunnel leads from the garage, which also houses a studio and a fitness center, to the structure. After crossing an intermediate halt with access to the service room, the tunnel proceeds to the base of one of the pillars, where an elevator transports occupants to the residential level. A comfortable living room with a kitchen and dining space is the focal point of the house.The south-facing terrace, which links the house to the sunny upper portion of the garden with a swimming pool and the vegetated terrain, is accessible from this point. The "bridge's" jutting sections house two distinct worlds: the primary bedroom with a bathroom and views on one end, and the children's chambers on the other.An innovative solution that complements the building's overall architectural style was the idea of a slate slope with birch trees, which was developed through close collaboration with landscape architect Vladimr Sitta. This collaboration between the landscape designer and architect produced some of the design features, including the pool and other components.The house is the result of a singular creative process that included a huge team of experts in the design and construction of each component of the structure in addition to architects.The home's owner also holds a unique position because of their active participation in the planning and building phases, which had a big impact on the final product.Site planFloor plan and sectionProject factsProject name: Villa SidoniusArchitects: Stempel & Tesar architektiLead architects: Jn Stempel, Jan Jakub TesaLocation: Central Bohemian Region, Czech RepublicCompletion year: 2024Built-up area:330m2 house, 135m2 garageGross floor area: 322m2Landscape architect:Vladimr SittaMain project engineer:Ale HeroldStructural engineers:Valbek [Ji Chodora and Jan Veseck]All images Filip lapal.All drawings Stempel & Tesar architekti.
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  • McDonald's Launching Minecraft Happy Meals, Plus a 'Nether Hot Sauce' For Nuggets
    www.cnet.com
    The promotion is tied in to A Minecraft Movie, and begins April 1.
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  • Two Streamers and $23 Is All You Need to Watch Every Game of March Madness
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    With Paramount Plus and Max, you won't miss a single second of the tournament.
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  • Evangelina Rodrguez Traveled to Paris to Revolutionize Health Care in the Dominican Republic
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 19, 202517 min readEvangelina Rodrguez Traveled to Paris to Revolutionize Health Care in the Dominican RepublicAndrea Nathaly LermaIn the early 1900s, devastated by the death of her mentor, who passed away following childbirth, Andrea Evangelina Rodrguez Perozo decided to devote her life to womens health. It took a decade to raise the money to go to Paris, which was then the mecca of medical training, but she never gave up. At the age of 42, she boarded a steamship to France. Amid the postwar scene of the countrys Rroaring Ttwenties, she studied obstetrics and gynecology with leading specialists and started to absorb modern ideas about public health. Her goal: was to return home and revolutionize health care in the Dominican Republic.LISTEN TO THE PODCASTOn supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.TRANSCRIPTLaura Gmez: San Pedro de Macors, 1921. The marina at the southern Dominican port city is bustling with activity. Fishermen head home for the day after selling their morning catch, while dockworkers load heavy sacks of cane sugar onto cargo ships under the hot sun. Hustling past them, wealthy travelers trailed by their porters line up to board the gangway of a passenger ship bound for New York City. In the midst of it all, a 42-year-old, Afro-Dominican woman quietly waits her turn to board.Few people notice her. Fewer still would guess that she is Dr. Evangelina Rodrguez Perozo, the first Dominican woman to graduate from medical school.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): What she did was really memorable for the time the fact that she was a woman, from a poor background, who was able to study medicine and practice as a doctor.Laura Gmez: Now, carrying nothing but a small, battered suitcase with a few changes of clothes, shes setting sail on a weeks-long journey that will take her north to New York and then across the Atlantic to Paris, France.This is Lost Women of Science. I'm Laura Gmez. This is the second episode of our five-part series on the life of Dr. Evangelina Rodrguez Perozo, the first female doctor from the Dominican Republic.To find out how Evangelina, a poor girl born out of wedlock, went from selling sweets on the streets of San Pedro de Macors to graduating from medical school. Go back and listen to Episode One.Today, our story crosses continents as Evangelina enters a whole new world.Episode Two: A Dominican in Paris.Evangelina's dream of going to Paris was born over a decade before she set foot on the steamship in San Pedro. And it was born from tragedy.In 1907, mid-way through her medical studies, her beloved teacher and mentor, Anacaona Moscoso, died following the birth of her third child. It was a pregnancy her doctor had warned might kill her. But she didnt have the power to keep from getting pregnant again. And her death left Evangelina devastated.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): Shes more like a mom. The mom Evangelina never had. And seeing that person die, the person who had really helped her keep going, the person who always told her, You can do it, you can do it, you can do it... that had to be really hard for her, right?Laura Gmez: This is Mercedes Fernndez, who we heard from in Episode One. She wrote her Ph.D. thesis on Evangelina.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): So, I think that's what convinced her to say, we have to help women. There has to be a way for women to have children and not have to die.Laura Gmez: Mercedes believes that the death of Anacaona affected Evangelina so deeply that she made up her mind to do something. It was too late for Anacaona, but her case wasnt an exception. So many women lost their lives giving birth in those days. The problem was, Evangelinas med school hadnt equipped her to do much about it.There were no up-to-date training facilities at her school the one med school in Santo Domingo. No dissecting room, no chemical laboratory, no pathology department, and no courses in bacteriology. And so, even after shed beat all the odds to get to that school and become a doctor, Evangelina decided she had to keep training.And at that time, the number one place doctors went to specialize and study advanced medical techniques was Paris.But getting to Paris, let alone living and studying there, was incredibly expensive. Evangelina knew that raising money for the trip would take time.So after her graduation, in the early nineteen-teens, she kept the two side jobs shed had throughout her studies. By day, she served as director of the school Anacaona founded, and in the evenings, she taught classes at a school for domestic workers.On top of this, she wanted to begin practicing in her hometown of San Pedro. She figured she could at least treat some patients, while she pulled together the money for her transatlantic voyage.Claudia Scharf (Voiceover): She began to practice timidly, because she was so serious about what she was doing. She had so much respect for the profession that she felt she wasn't quite ready to practice medicine yet.Laura Gmez: This is Claudia Scharf, a pediatrician and medical professor in the Dominican Republic. She says that, unfortunately, when Evangelina tried to begin practicing, she found that many people in San Pedro werent willing to see her.Claudia Scharf (Voiceover): People who were in the middle or upper class rejected her because they thought, how was it possible that she was a doctor being that she was a woman?Laura Gmez: So Evangelina left her job at the night school and moved to a place where she knew people needed her, a rural village outside San Pedro called Ramn Santana. Heres Mercedes Fernndez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): In her letters, when she talks about Ramn Santana, she explains that they have almost no roads, that it's very inaccessible, that many things are lacking. So, my understanding is that it is a place where there are no resources.Laura Gmez: The village was surrounded by sugar cane fields, and most people living there survived on the growth and sale of sugar cane. According to Claudia Scharf, the people in these communities couldn't be too picky about what kind of doctor they saw.Claudia Scharf (Voiceover): The people who worked in the sugar fields, cut the sugar cane, those laborers did not have many resources to go visit prestigious doctors. So it was with these people that Evangelina first began to practice.Laura Gmez: Evangelina set up her practice in a small house next to the stump of a large oak tree. Since the area had no pharmacy, she opened one next door and stocked it with basic medicines. But it seems that Evangelina had too big a heart to be a savvy businesswoman.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): With this idea, she always has of wanting to help, this medicine dispensary never works because she gives everything away.Laura Gmez: Mercedes Fernndez again.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): She has no notion of basic economics. If you give something away, how are you going to pay for what you bought? I mean, you can't, you know?Elizabeth Manley: I think because she was developing this commitment to public health and to addressing the concerns of those that couldn't pay that it's a combination of kind of her principles and the fact that there wasn't a ton of resources there to pay her in the first place.Laura Gmez: Thats Elizabeth Manley. Shes a professor of Caribbean history at Xavier University in Louisiana. She explains that Evangelinas efforts were making a difference in peoples lives, if only in her little pocket of the world.And those efforts went beyond treating patients. She organized sanitation services in the village and encouraged residents to sweep in front of their homes. She did what she could to make up for the absence of government services.At the time, the Dominican Republic was suffering from both political and economic instability. There had been a series of coups since the turn of the century, and the country was steep in debt. The U.S. had tried to mediate to protect its commercial interests in sugar production, but the unrest continued. The successive regimes had little capacity to invest in rural public health.For the time being, Evangelina settled into her quiet new life, away from most of this turmoil. But out in the broader world, more trouble was brewing and her country was about to get sucked in.In 1914, the first World War broke out in Europe, pitting Germany against France, the United Kingdom, Russia, and their allies. Of course, it wasnt the world war yet, and at first, the dangers seemed a world away. But a couple of years later, when the U.S. began planning to enter the war on the side of France and Britain, the political instability inside the Dominican Republic became a real concern. The U.S. was worried that Germany might try to use the Dominican Republic as a military base. So, in 1916, they took the drastic step of invading the island, citing national security interests but they had some other motives too.Robin Derby: One of the most important measures that the U.S. Marines instigated during the occupation was privatizing land.Laura Gmez: This is Robin Derby. She's a professor of Caribbean and modern Latin American history at UCLA.Robin Derby: This is a time, you know, when there were important agribusiness interests, which wanted to expand in, in sugar, and that area becomes a place where a lot of sugar corporations wanted to establish plantations.Laura Gmez: That area was the Eastern Provinces, specifically the area around Ramn Santana, where Evangelina lived. And the ambitions of American agribusiness companies had massive ramifications for the people in Evangelina's community.Robin Derby: There was no private property and land in the Dominican Republic before the U.S. Marines sought to privatize land. So, people had what they called Terrenos Comuneros, which were basically, land was held by shares, collectively among large extended clans, people who, over the course of generations, had seen themselves as having usufruct, as having squatters rights. And I'm sure it was a violent process to evict them.Laura Gmez: And the man spearheading this violent process was named Rafael Leonidas Trujillo. The same Rafael Trujillo who would later seize control of the Dominican Republic and rule as a dictator for over three decades. But in the nineteen-teens, he was a rising young officer in the newly formed Dominican National Guard, stationed in the Eastern Provinces, and under the control of the United States.April Mayes: Rafael Trujillo really comes of age and comes to his moment, being trained by U.S. Marines and the Dominican National Police Force, in the Dominican National Guard, so to speak, and that transforms his life.Laura Gmez: Thats April Mayes, a professor of Afro-Latin American history, who we heard from in Episode One. Heres Robin Derby.Robin Derby: One of his, his moves was ingratiating himself to the United States. He rose up through the Marines, who rather liked him, in part because he learned to cut this profile as a very effective man of action.Laura Gmez: April Mayes.April Mayes: He proved himself to be very willing to, you know, implement cruel and unusual punishments and also go after peasants and revolt against U.S. military occupation.Laura Gmez: There's little by way of actual records documenting Trujillo's actions in Ramn Santana at this time... there's not even a clear understanding of how the people occupying land bought by U.S. sugar corporations were removed. But an oral history gathered by one of Evangelinas biographers describes Trujillo and his men as, quote, "simply killing people, whole families, in order to take their land." To Elizabeth Manley, this comes as no surprise.Elizabeth Manley: There is no doubt in my mind that that man was ruthless from the jump. As soon as he had decided what his aspirations were and what the needs of the U.S. sugar interests were, I have no doubt that he would have been someone's man Friday in terms of protecting those interests.Laura Gmez: According to her biographer Antonio Zaglul, Evangelina witnessed some of these atrocities, and she was horrified. Its not surprising that from this time on, she harbored a deep-felt animosity towards her future ruler ... an animosity that would later cost her dearly.But for the time being, as conflict raged around her, Evangelina kept working at her longtime goal: to save money to go study medicine in Paris.In the end, it took Evangelina a full decade to pull together the funds. Since her medical practice didnt pull in much, she tried branching out. First, she wrote a book titled Granos de Polen, or Pollen Seeds.Part sociological treatise, part advice pamphlet for women, it was published in 1915 and endorsed by many of Evangelina's intellectual friends.But what she perhaps failed to consider was that the majority of Dominicans were illiterate at the time. And it didnt help that Granos de Polen wasnt the easiest read. So, unsurprisingly, despite all the praise it receivedMercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): The book is not as successful as she thought it would be because it's a bit complicated to read.Laura Gmez: Mercedes Fernndez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): So, this quixotic idea she has of publishing a book and making money... doesn't work out for her.Laura Gmez: When the book failed, Evangelina took up public speaking. An article in 1918 in the newspaper, Listn Diario, gave this account:Now Evangelina is going around cities and villages in the interior of the island, preaching the gospel of love, work, ideals, peace, civility, all in order to raise the funds necessary for her move to the heart of the most advanced centers of science.Meanwhile, she also resorted to asking for donations from friends and benefactors, with her mentor Anacaona's widower giving the biggest one. But Evangelinas travel fund still wasnt enough to get her to Paris.Finally, nearly 10 years after graduating from medical school, Evangelina got her big break. Here's April Mayes.April Mayes: The fact that she was connected to Anacaona and then also the ongoing legacy of her connection with the Deligne brothers, she still remained in kind of this orbit of these intellectual cultural groups in San Pedro. And when she asked, will you send me to Paris to study medicine? The city council said, we'll try our best, but yes, we'll do what is necessary. And that's what happened.Laura Gmez: Endowed with a scholarship from the city council of San Pedro de Macors, Evangelina was finally ready to tackle the next chapter of her life. And that's how, in 1921, at the age of 42, Dr. Evangelina Rodriguez stepped onto the steamship for the first part of her journey to Paris. What happened next, after the break.[Mid-roll]Laura Gmez: When Evangelina first set foot in Paris in 1921, she entered a whirlwind. It was just three years after the Allies victory over Germany in the First World War, and Paris was entering a period known as "Les Annes Folles"... the wild years.The economy was booming and the cultural milieu and glittering nightlife attracted writers and artists from around the worldincluding Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dal, Ernest Hemingway, and James Joyce. Performers like Josephine Baker graced cafs and cabarets, inspiring women to crop their hair short and ditch their corsets and long skirts for knee-length flapper dresses. Freedom was the order of the day, as was a certain debauchery...But according to her biographer Antonio Zaglul, Evangelina wasn't one to be swept up in the never-ending party of the Roaring 20s. She was in Paris to study. Heres Mercedes Fernndez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): She's attending class and training at different hospitals and clinics.Laura Gmez: From what we know, she took courses with a famous French pediatrician named Pierre Nobecourt, whose work focused on infant hygiene and nutrition. She also trained in Obstetrics and Gynecology at two different Parisian hospitals.One of those, the Baudelocque Maternit, had earned an excellent reputation for having the lowest infant mortality rates in the country. Its previous director, a French doctor named Adolphe Pinard, was a pioneer of modern perinatal care. Pinard invented devices such as the fetal stethoscope, which let doctors listen to the babys heartbeat. And he established the practice of routine pre- and post-natal exams to monitor the health of expectant mothers and newborns.The contrast could not have been sharper with the Dominican Republic, where a pregnant woman might never see a doctor until the moment she gave birth. Evangelina eagerly took it all in.And at the same time, even as she focused on her specialization, she was also getting a broad view of the world around her. Mercedes Fernndez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): And she's seeing the difference in infrastructure between one country and the other.Laura Gmez: One thing was impossible not to notice: families in France looked really different from the families Evangelina grew up around.For one, they had fewer children: around two per family on average, compared to 5 or more in the DR. But the kids they did have were better cared for, in part thanks to help from the government. For example, a public health program called La Goutte de Lait, or Drop of Milk, distributed free cows milk to infants and their mothers. Social norms also helped promote better hygiene.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): This idea that the sun is therapeutic, that physical exercise is necessary, and also this idea of prophylaxis, of the need to bathe and have good hygiene to avoid getting sick, to maintain health... She is seeing all these things in France.Laura Gmez: But Evangelina didn't just come away from Paris with a new understanding of public health, or sharper medical skills. Heres Elizabeth Manley.Elizabeth Manley: It seems pretty clear that she was also radicalized, in terms of her understanding of the world, of feminism, of the role of public health, of the role of sexual education. Because if you look at what she wrote in Granos de Polen, which was a fairly conservative tract, that she will actually later kind of denounce, her worldview changes while she's there.Laura Gmez: Before Evangelina left for France, the Dominican Republic had seen an uptick in prostitution following the arrival of U.S. Marines. And that had led to the spread of venereal diseases like syphilis. Mercedes Fernndez again.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): She's very concerned, because all these women who are prostitutes are not taking care of themselves. And by not taking care of themselves, they're getting sick and they're spreading venereal diseases to different individuals in the society.Laura Gmez: And in her book Granos de Polen, Evangelina blamed the sex workers for that.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): She attacks prostitutes and sees them as a danger to society. She sees them as a negative force, something that has to be eradicated. When she comes back from France, she no longer feels that way.Laura Gmez: Paris had changed her.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): She sees that prostitutes are human beings who are part of society and as such, they are people who maybe haven't had any other choice in life.Laura Gmez: We don't know exactly what Evangelina saw or experienced in Paris that caused this change of heart. She may have witnessed Frances very different approach to handling prostitution: Brothels were strictly regulated, and sex workers were subjected to mandatory medical exams.Meanwhile, their male clients were educated on the benefits of using condoms to limit the spread of disease... The French army even supplied soldiers with condoms during World War I.Whatever the reason, Evangelinas mind was swimming with new ideas.She was no longer just thinking of healthcare as something that happened behind a doctors door. She was seeing it as something that was woven into society. Into homes and schools, into infrastructure, and yes even into brothels.And she didnt have to wait until she was back home to start spreading these ideas there.Because in 1922, a radical new publication was launched in the Dominican Republic, called Fmina. Mercedes Fernndez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): Fmina was a very, very important magazine because it became a forum for discussing many issues related to Dominican women of the time, and it received correspondence from all over Latin America.Laura Gmez: Fminas founder and editor-in-chief was a woman called Petronila Gmez, a former Normalista teacher, like Evangelina. The two had taught night classes at the same evening school for domestic workers years earlier. And it turns out, Petronila and Evangelina had a lot in common. Heres Elizabeth Manley.Elizabeth Manley: They both came from families of lower economic status, not expected to do much with their lives, and they were both, you know, Afro-Dominican as well, both being kind of distinguished in that way of being educated. So I think they would have found kinship in each other.Laura Gmez: Petronila invited Evangelina to write dispatches from Paris for Fmina. Just a handful of these have survived, and to be honest, Evangelina still wasnt the best writer. Mercedes Fernndez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): I have to say that, when it came to Evangelina Rodriguez's writing... style was never her thing. I think she was a woman of science.Laura Gmez: But in her dispatches, Evangelina enthusiastically described the citys advanced approach to public health. She singled out programs like Drop of Milk, as well as another French public health program that sent poor city kids to visit the countryside for fresh air and sunshine.As far as we can tell from these dispatches, Evangelina was taking in a lot during her time in Paris. But its hard to imagine the daily life of this middle-aged Afro-Dominican woman walking the same streets of Paris as Picasso, James Joyce, and Gertrude Stein. We just dont have that many details. We do know that despite all she was learning, it wasnt the easiest time for her.Reading between the lines of her enthusiastic descriptions of Paris, Mercedes also sensed a sadness and a loneliness coming through in Evangelina's writing.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): She describes an image where she sees a little bird in the sun, and then she has a moment where she admits, Yes, I miss the sun. Yes, I feel lonely. So maybe what shes trying to say in this unveiled confession is that that time in France was a time of learning, yes, but at the same time, it must have been a very lonely time.Laura Gmez: Still, she stayed there for almost four years. Then in 1925, she decided to return home to bring her newfound knowledge back to her home country.U.S. occupation of the island had ended just a year earlier, and the Dominican Republic had a new president, Horacio Vsquez, who promised to usher in a new era of peace and democracy.Back in the DR, many people seemed eager for Evangelina to bring her new knowledge back home: The San Pedro City Council even helped fund her return journey. And none celebrated the news of her return more than her friend, Petronila Gomez.Mercedes Fernndez Asenjo (Voiceover): Immediately, the first one to announce it, the first one to spell it out in capital letters, is Petronila Anglica Gmez, and she hails her as the "woman of science" who is going to return. She really shows a remarkable admiration for Evangelina.Laura Gmez: In 1925, Evangelina once again stepped onto a steamship for the reverse transatlantic journey home, to her sorely missed Caribbean sun. She carried the same battered suitcase with her clothes... but this time, she also brought three trunks full of books.And based on Petronila's celebratory op-ed in Fmina, she had every reason to expect a warm welcome at her return. Here was a highly trained doctor, determined to bring her new skills to improve health and well-being in her home country, and especially to help women.In fact, she was in for a rude awakening That's next week.This episode of Lost Women of Science was produced by Lorena Galliot, with help from associate producer Natalia Snchez Loayza. Samia Bouzid is our senior producer, and our senior managing producer is Deborah Unger.David De Luca was our sound designer and engineer. Lizzie Younan composed all of our music. We had fact-checking help from Desire Ypez.Our co-executive producers are Amy Scharf and Katie Hafner. Thanks to Eowyn Burtner, our program manager, and Jeff DelViscio at our publishing partner, Scientific American. Our intern is Kimberly Mendez.Lost Women of Science is funded in part by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the Anne Wojcicki Foundation. We're distributed by PRX.For show notes and an episode transcript, head to lostwomenofscience.org where you can also support our work by hitting the donate button.Im your host, Laura Gmez. Thanks for listening, and until next week!Host: Laura GmezProducer: Lorena GalliotSenior Producer: Samia BouzidGuestsApril MayesApril Mayes is Associate Dean and Professor of Afro-Latin American history, Pomona College.Mercedes Fernndez AsenjoMercedes Fernndez Asenjo, PhD, is a foreign language educator at The Catholic University of America.Claudia ScharfClaudia Scharf is Director of the School of Medicine, Universidad Nacional Pedro Henrquez Urea.Elizabeth ManleyElizabeth Manley is Chair of the Department of History and a professor of Caribbean history, Xavier University of Louisiana.Lauren (Robin) DerbyLauren (Robin) Derby is Professor and Dr. E. Bradford Burns Chair in Latin American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.Further ReadingDespreciada en la vida y olvidada en la muerte: Biografa de Evangelina Rodrguez, la primera mdica dominicana. Antonio Zaglul. Editora Taller, 1980Motherhood by Choice: Pioneers in Womens Health and Family Planning. Perdita Huston. The Feminist Press at The City University of New York, 1992Granos de polen. Evangelina Rodrguez. 1915The Mulatto Republic: Class, Race, and Dominican National Identity. April J. Mayes. University Press of Florida, 2014
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  • The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered's PC specs and features detailed, as Sony reiterates no PSN account required
    www.eurogamer.net
    The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered's PC specs and features detailed, as Sony reiterates no PSN account requiredPlus new No Return content for all platforms.Image credit: Eurogamer/Sony News by Matt Wales News Reporter Published on March 20, 2025 With The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered now exactly two weeks away from its PC release, Sony has detailed the platform-specific features it's implementing - and in the case of PSN requirements, not implementing. That's alongside word of new content coming to all platforms.As highlighted on the PlayStation Blog, The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered for PC includes all the improvements seen in last year's PS5 version - which Digital Foundry called "accomplished". That's in addition to the newly announced platform-specific stuff, including support for Nvidia DLSS 3 Super Resolution, AMD FSR 3.1 and AMD FSR 4 (including upscaling and frame generation), DirectStorage, and Ultrawide monitors. Unsurprisingly, there's also full gamepad support, and a variety of control customisation options for keyboard and mouse players.Additionally, tweakable settings include VSync and framerate cap options ('uncapped' being one of them), LOD distance range, plus adjustable quality options for textures, volumetrics, shadows, reflections, and ambient occlusion. The PC version also features various graphics settings and presets - as detailed in Sony's system requirements below. Image credit: SonyThe Last of Us Part 2 Remastered launches for PC via Steam and Epic on 3rd April, and Sony reiterates - as previously announced - the mandatory PlayStation Network account requirements that have controversially dogged the company's PC releases over the last year will no longer apply. However, as an incentive to sign in with PSN, players that do so get 50 in-game points to activate bonus features, as well as a new Ellie skin featuring Jordan A. Mun's jacket from Naughty Dog's upcoming Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet.Sony notes the jacket will also be available to PlayStation 5 players as part of Remastered's 2.0 update, which comes to the console alongside the PC release. This also brings new additions to the roguelike No Return mode, including two new characters - The Last of Us Part 1's Bill and Marlene (sporting the Smuggler and Risk-Taker playstyles respectively) - plus four new maps.There's Overlook, set high above Seattle, as well as an abandoned elementary school map, simply titled School. Streets, meanwhile, takes places in the overgrown Seattle neighbourhood of Hillcrest, while Nest is the building teeming with Infected previously explored by Abby. All this, including new Trophies and additional bug fixes, will be available on both platforms.The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered's PC and 2.0 release comes just ahead of The Last of Us TV adaptation's highly anticipated season two. It's comprised of seven episodes and begins on 13th April - and if you'd like a cheeky peek at what's to come, you'll find the latest trailer here.
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