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Syracuse native Jeanette Epps retires from NASA
Syracuse native Jeanette Epps retires from NASA

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Syracuse native Jeanette Epps retires from NASA

HOUSTON, Texas (WSYR-TV) — Jeanette Epps, the Syracuse native who spent 235 days in space in 2024, has retired from NASA, the agency announced Thursday. Epps has spent more time in space than any other African American in history. Epps is an alum of Corcoran High School and Le Moyne College. NewsChannel 9 followed Epps' journey last year as part of Crew-8, which lived on the International Space Station from March to October. Epps has visited both of her alma maters since returning to Earth. In February, she visited a science classroom at Le Moyne College. In April, she hosted a panel at Le Moyne and spoke to a large group of students on the auditorium stage of Corcoran High School. April 8, 2025, was named Jeanette Epps Day in the City of Syracuse and Onondaga County. At the time, Epps didn't rule out a return trip to space. 'I have had the distinct pleasure of following Jeanette's journey here at NASA from the very beginning,' said Steve Koerner, acting director of NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. 'Jeanette's tenacity and dedication to mission excellence is admirable. Her contributions to the advancement of human space exploration will continue to benefit humanity and inspire the next generation of explorers for several years to come.' Before NASA, Epps was a Technical Intelligence Officer at the CIA and worked as a technical specialist for the Ford Motor Company. In 2009, Epps was selected for NASA's 20th astronaut class. 'Ever since Jeanette joined the astronaut corps, she has met every challenge with resilience and determination,' said NASA's chief astronaut, Joe Acaba. 'We will miss her greatly, but I know she's going to continue to do great things.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Mother and daughter walk across Le Moyne College graduation stage together
Mother and daughter walk across Le Moyne College graduation stage together

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Mother and daughter walk across Le Moyne College graduation stage together

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (WSYR) — For the first time in 75 years of commencement ceremonies at Le Moyne College, a mother and daughter received their diplomas together Friday evening. From diaper changes and bottle-feeding to walking across the same stage, Brandi and Victoria Holzhauer decided to take on one of life's milestones side by side. 'I am super proud as a mother to be just sharing this experience with her,' Brandi said. Victoria lovingly looked at her mom and agreed. Instead of swapping notes with her dorm classmates, she would look to her mother for academic support while pursuing her Master's in Education. 'Sometimes we could, kind of, share ideas if we were in a project or a research project or something,' Victoria said. 'Like, 'Oh, I'm doing this.' 'I'm doing that.' Kind of nice that someone was going through the same thing that I was.' The mother-daughter duo made history when they hugged each other and received their diplomas. Brandi Holzhauer, a nursing clinical coordinator at Le Moyne, walked with her daughter and doctoral Ed.D. diploma in hand. As Brandi took her first steps into adulthood, her mother gave her a message to carry. 'Just be yourself,' she said. 'Be your true self, and I know that true self is a kind, caring person, and that will carry you through your career and carry you through your successes, and hopefully, down the road, you'll get your doctoral degree.' Le Moyne's undergraduate commencement ceremony is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. on Sunday at the State Fair Expo Center. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

What does the Department of Education do for college students?
What does the Department of Education do for college students?

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

What does the Department of Education do for college students?

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (WSYR-TV) — The Department of Education manages more than $1.5 trillion in student loan debt for more than 40 million borrowers. Trump wants to dismantle the Education Department. Here's what it does One of the Department of Education's tasks is to oversee the process for students applying for college financial aid. At Le Moyne College, about 95% of students receive some kind of financial aid. 'I say to families financial aid is not a prerequisite to attend. It just is needed by most people, and without that, they would not be able to attend,' Maximo Flint-Morgan, the director of financial aid at Le Moyne College, said. The Department of Education also oversees the Pell Grant. 'The Pell Grant is free dollars for students to help pay for tuition or other related fees. It's only available for need-based students,' Flint-Morgan explained. At Le Moyne, Flint-Morgan said about 35% of students receive the Pell Grant. The Department of Education's money also provides dollars for students through federal work-study. Work-study is like a part-time job for students in financial need. The work-study jobs can include working as a lifeguard, receptionist, or tour guide among other things. Education is often known as the great equalizer. The Department of Education offers a grant for those looking to educate other. 'There's also the federal teach grant, which is exclusively for students who sign up to pursue a degree in teaching and a degree to become teachers in a high-need school district and in a high-need field,' Flint-Morgan said. The Department of Education also issues guidance on how civil rights laws should be applied to students and reviews all federally recognized accrediting agencies that accredit colleges and universities. Why this $500K Rolls-Royce EV feels like pure magic Chipotle adds new protein option More cuts planned at Veterans Affairs Rep. Al Green censured by House President Trump delays some tariffs on Mexico and Canada Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Why People Feel Nostalgic for Terrible Times
Why People Feel Nostalgic for Terrible Times

Yahoo

time19-02-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Why People Feel Nostalgic for Terrible Times

A popular Russian joke goes something like this: What did capitalism accomplish in one year that communism could not do in 70? Make communism look good. As recently as 2015, nearly 70 percent of Russians said the breakup of the U.S.S.R. was a bad thing, and nearly 60 percent said that Stalin played a mostly positive role in history. (More recent polling is less reliable because of Russian President Vladimir Putin's crackdown on political expression.) Many Russians, apparently, are nostalgic for a time of bread lines, shared apartments, and state repression. They aren't the only ones who sometimes feel nostalgic for times that were difficult, unpleasant, or downright bad. Some soldiers returning from war long for the camaraderie and purposefulness of the deployment. Former co-workers gather and laugh about the nightmare boss who used to terrorize them. Some people miss the early, eerie first few months of the pandemic, when time seemed to have stopped. Periodically, social media bubbles over with people reminiscing about 2020's empty streets, state-mandated personal space, and permission to do nothing. Nostalgia for terrible things may sound absurd, but many people experience it, for reasons that speak to the way people make meaning of their lives. The central reason for this phenomenon, according to researchers who study nostalgia, is that humans look to our past selves to make sense of our present. Reflecting on the challenging times we've endured provides significance and edification to a life that can otherwise seem pointlessly difficult. The past was tough, we think, but we survived it, so we must be tough too. To be sure, part of the explanation is that people tend to romanticize the past, remembering it more rosily than it actually was. Thanks to something called the 'fading affect bias,' negative feelings about an event evaporate much more quickly than positive ones. As a difficult experience recedes in time, we start to miss its happier aspects and gloss over the challenges. And nostalgia is usually prompted by a feeling of dissatisfaction with the present, experts say, making the past seem better by comparison. [Read: Why are people nostalgic for early-pandemic life?] But even when people clearly remember the adversity, it frequently doesn't seem so bad in hindsight. When Krystine Batcho, a psychology professor at Le Moyne College, began interviewing people of different generations about their childhood memories, she expected that those who grew up during wartime or the Great Depression would feel less nostalgia for their youth than people who grew up in peaceful or prosperous times. But that's not what she found. Instead, people tended to interweave negative memories with ways they overcame their struggles. One man who survived the Depression, for example, told Batcho that he never had enough to eat as a boy. But then he would remember clever ways he tried to find food, such as picking fruit off of a neighbor's tree, or he would recall getting home from school and walking in the door to the smell of his mother's freshly baked bread—a small luxury he did have. Batcho says this kind of reminiscing can shed some perspective on current problems, making present-day challenges seem 'more possible to overcome and to deal with, and it reminds you to appreciate what you have,' she told me. 'It reminds us that the future is uncertain, but rather than feeling it as really scary, we can think of it as really exciting.' There are few large, robust studies on this topic, but some experimental research has shown that nostalgia provides a feeling of authenticity and a sense of connection between your past and present selves. Because of this, we often get nostalgic for consequential moments in our lives. 'People are nostalgic for things that give their lives meaning or help them feel important,' says Andrew Abeyta, a psychology professor at Rutgers University. Sometimes, these meaningful events can be stressful, or even harrowing. As the Belarusian journalist Svetlana Alexievich writes in her book Secondhand Time, many Russians who grew up in the Soviet era proudly remembered fighting in wars or rebuilding their cities; those who didn't, she writes, 'were bitterly disappointed that the Revolution and Civil War had all happened before our time.' Another survey found that the thing that Russians missed most about the U.S.S.R. was 'a sense of belonging to a great power.' Psychologists define meaning as the feeling that one's life is significant, coherent, and purposeful, says Constantine Sedikides, a psychologist at the University of Southampton, in the U.K. And many times, our actions during a challenging time meet this definition—they are significant, coherent, and purposeful. Turning points in our lives usually provide fodder for nostalgia—and they are rarely drama-free. Reminiscing about a difficult experience reminds you that at least you survived, and that your loved ones came to your aid. 'The fact that those people did those things for you, or were there for you, reassures you that you have your self-worth,' Batcho said. Research by the psychologist Tim Wildschut and his colleagues found that people who wrote about a nostalgic experience went on to feel higher self-esteem than a control group, and they also felt more secure in their relationships. [Read: Nostalgia is a shield against unhappiness] The memories of relationships forged during periods of hardship can cast even extreme experiences in a positive light. In his book Tribe, Sebastian Junger describes a cab driver in Sarajevo speaking proudly of his experience during the country's recent war, when 'he'd been in a special unit that slipped through the enemy lines to help other besieged enclaves.' The war, though horrific, had created 'a social bond that many people sorely miss,' Junger writes. 'Disasters are sometimes remembered more fondly than weddings or tropical vacations.' Nostalgia tells you that your personal history wasn't just scary or tragic; it helped make you who you are. This is perhaps why women who worked from home with kids during the pandemic probably don't wish for a lack of child care, but they aren't shying away from the workforce, either. Or why women who have recently had babies often grab random strangers by the lapels and regale them with their (in many cases brutal) 'birth story.' It's 'a way of working through the negative aspects and coming out the other side eventually,' Batcho said. 'There's a catharsis to that.' Remembering hard times allows you to make sense of your life and take stock of your strengths under fire. You may not wish for the past to return, but neither do you want to forget it. Article originally published at The Atlantic

Why People Feel Nostalgic for Terrible Times
Why People Feel Nostalgic for Terrible Times

Atlantic

time19-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Atlantic

Why People Feel Nostalgic for Terrible Times

A popular Russian joke goes something like this: What did capitalism accomplish in one year that communism could not do in 70? Make communism look good. As recently as 2015, nearly 70 percent of Russians said the breakup of the U.S.S.R. was a bad thing, and nearly 60 percent said that Stalin played a mostly positive role in history. (More recent polling is less reliable because of Russian President Vladimir Putin's crackdown on political expression.) Many Russians, apparently, are nostalgic for a time of bread lines, shared apartments, and state repression. They aren't the only ones who sometimes feel nostalgic for times that were difficult, unpleasant, or downright bad. Some soldiers returning from war long for the camaraderie and purposefulness of the deployment. Former co-workers gather and laugh about the nightmare boss who used to terrorize them. Some people miss the early, eerie first few months of the pandemic, when time seemed to have stopped. Periodically, social media bubbles over with people reminiscing about 2020's empty streets, state-mandated personal space, and permission to do nothing. Nostalgia for terrible things may sound absurd, but many people experience it, for reasons that speak to the way people make meaning of their lives. The central reason for this phenomenon, according to researchers who study nostalgia, is that humans look to our past selves to make sense of our present. Reflecting on the challenging times we've endured provides significance and edification to a life that can otherwise seem pointlessly difficult. The past was tough, we think, but we survived it, so we must be tough too. To be sure, part of the explanation is that people tend to romanticize the past, remembering it more rosily than it actually was. Thanks to something called the 'fading affect bias,' negative feelings about an event evaporate much more quickly than positive ones. As a difficult experience recedes in time, we start to miss its happier aspects and gloss over the challenges. And nostalgia is usually prompted by a feeling of dissatisfaction with the present, experts say, making the past seem better by comparison. But even when people clearly remember the adversity, it frequently doesn't seem so bad in hindsight. When Krystine Batcho, a psychology professor at Le Moyne College, began interviewing people of different generations about their childhood memories, she expected that those who grew up during wartime or the Great Depression would feel less nostalgia for their youth than people who grew up in peaceful or prosperous times. But that's not what she found. Instead, people tended to interweave negative memories with ways they overcame their struggles. One man who survived the Depression, for example, told Batcho that he never had enough to eat as a boy. But then he would remember clever ways he tried to find food, such as picking fruit off of a neighbor's tree, or he would recall getting home from school and walking in the door to the smell of his mother's freshly baked bread—a small luxury he did have. Batcho says this kind of reminiscing can shed some perspective on current problems, making present-day challenges seem 'more possible to overcome and to deal with, and it reminds you to appreciate what you have,' she told me. 'It reminds us that the future is uncertain, but rather than feeling it as really scary, we can think of it as really exciting.' There are few large, robust studies on this topic, but some experimental research has shown that nostalgia provides a feeling of authenticity and a sense of connection between your past and present selves. Because of this, we often get nostalgic for consequential moments in our lives. 'People are nostalgic for things that give their lives meaning or help them feel important,' says Andrew Abeyta, a psychology professor at Rutgers University. Sometimes, these meaningful events can be stressful, or even harrowing. As the Belarusian journalist Svetlana Alexievich writes in her book Secondhand Time, many Russians who grew up in the Soviet era proudly remembered fighting in wars or rebuilding their cities; those who didn't, she writes, 'were bitterly disappointed that the Revolution and Civil War had all happened before our time.' Another survey found that the thing that Russians missed most about the U.S.S.R. was 'a sense of belonging to a great power.' Psychologists define meaning as the feeling that one's life is significant, coherent, and purposeful, says Constantine Sedikides, a psychologist at the University of Southampton, in the U.K. And many times, our actions during a challenging time meet this definition—they are significant, coherent, and purposeful. Turning points in our lives usually provide fodder for nostalgia—and they are rarely drama-free. Reminiscing about a difficult experience reminds you that at least you survived, and that your loved ones came to your aid. 'The fact that those people did those things for you, or were there for you, reassures you that you have your self-worth,' Batcho said. Research by the psychologist Tim Wildschut and his colleagues found that people who wrote about a nostalgic experience went on to feel higher self-esteem than a control group, and they also felt more secure in their relationships. The memories of relationships forged during periods of hardship can cast even extreme experiences in a positive light. In his book Tribe, Sebastian Junger describes a cab driver in Sarajevo speaking proudly of his experience during the country's recent war, when 'he'd been in a special unit that slipped through the enemy lines to help other besieged enclaves.' The war, though horrific, had created 'a social bond that many people sorely miss,' Junger writes. 'Disasters are sometimes remembered more fondly than weddings or tropical vacations.' Nostalgia tells you that your personal history wasn't just scary or tragic; it helped make you who you are. This is perhaps why women who worked from home with kids during the pandemic probably don't wish for a lack of child care, but they aren't shying away from the workforce, either. Or why women who have recently had babies often grab random strangers by the lapels and regale them with their (in many cases brutal) 'birth story.' It's 'a way of working through the negative aspects and coming out the other side eventually,' Batcho said. 'There's a catharsis to that.' Remembering hard times allows you to make sense of your life and take stock of your strengths under fire. You may not wish for the past to return, but neither do you want to forget it.

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