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/ 4:15 p.m. CT (2100 GMT)
Canada's new astronauts: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Saturday (July 1) revealed his country's two new astronauts at a celebration of Canada's 150th anniversary. Test pilot Joshua Kutryk and engineer Jenni Sidey comprise their nation's fourth astronaut group since 1983 and bring Canada's total number of candidates to 14. Kutryk and Sidey will join NASA's 22nd class of astronauts for two years of basic training beginning on Aug. 21.
/ 4:00 p.m. CT (2100 GMT)
LEGO LUT: Valerie Roche, the co-creator of the LEGO NASA Apollo Saturn V rocket, has partnered with Emmanuel Urquieta to design the ultimate accessory: the Launch Umbilical Tower (LUT). Now accepting votes on LEGO Ideas, the LUT needs 10,000 supporters before the Danish toy company will consider it for commercial production.
/ 12:00 a.m. CT (0500 GMT)
Astronaut seeks adventures: After flying to space on five missions and summiting Mount Everest on his second try, astronaut-explorer Scott Parazynski is sharing his adventures in a new memoir. To promote "The Sky Below," Parazynski has launched a photo contest, inviting followers to share images of their #MostEpicAdventure on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. In return, Parazynski will award the winner with memorabilia from his space adventures.
/ 12:00 a.m. CT (1700 GMT)
Arrive, prospect, return A private company plans to return a few pounds of moon rock to Earth by 2020 for science and for sale. Moon Express, which became the first company to gain permission from the U.S. government to land a robotic spacecraft on the moon a year ago, revealed its family of MX probes on Wednesday (July 12), as well as announced three missions to establish the first commercial permanent robotic outpost at the moon's south pole.
/ 8:05 a.m. CT (1305 GMT)
Space Camp lands NASA 945: A veteran of five space shuttle landings, astronaut Robert "Hoot" Gibson logged "a couple of thousand flights" on NASA 945, learning and practicing how to touch down from orbit. Gibson helped to dedicate the exhibit of the Shuttle Training Aircraft (STA) at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, home to U.S. Space Camp, on Thursday (July 13).
/ 12:00 a.m. CT (0500 GMT)
Sotheby's returns to space: Other than the (record setting) auction of a Russian capsule in 2011, Sotheby's has not focused on space artifacts since a pair of Soviet space sales in 1993 and 1996. That changes this week with Sotheby's Space Exploration auction in New York. The 173 lot sale includes the flown Apollo 13 flight plan, an oversize Lunar Orbiter print and a moon dust stained Apollo 11 lunar sample return bag, which is expected to sell for millions.
/ 7:20 a.m. CT (1220 GMT)
Mission Control needs your help: Marking 48 years since the first moon landing, Space Center Houston on Thursday (Jul 20) kicked off a crowdfunding campaign to continue and expand the restoration of NASA's Apollo-era Mission Control. In return for your donations on Kickstarter, supporters can receive a specially-designed mission patch, autographed collectibles or even an invitation to tour inside Mission Control with Apollo 11 flight director Gene Kranz.
/ 5:45 p.m. CT (2245 GMT)
Sotheby's in space: Sotheby's on Thursday (Jul 20) offered 173 space history artifacts at its first auction focused on U.S. spaceflights. Among the top performing lots: $125,000 for an original illustration of Mars architecture by space artist Chesley Bonestell; $275,000 for the flight plan flown on Apollo 13; and $1.8 million for a lunar sample bag used to hold the first moon rocks collected on Apollo 11.
/ 12:00 a.m. CT (0500 GMT)
Donatello for deep space: A multi-purpose logistics module built to launch cargo aboard the space shuttles to the International Space Station is being repurposed as a prototype of a deep space habitat. The Donatello module, one of three MPLMs built and the only one not to fly, will be refurbished by Lockheed Martin over 18 months to become a test and training mockup under a partnership with NASA.
/ 12:15 a.m. CT (0515 GMT)
For the cure, from orbit: In October, as part of Breast Cancer Awareness month, Made in Space will 3D print a pink ribbon onboard the International Space Station that on its return to Earth will be auctioned to benefit Susan G Komen. Inspired by its sponsorship of race car driver Pippa Mann, who uses her own position to support the foundation and its research efforts, Made in Space will launch a NASA approved pink filament to accomplish the special print.
/ 1:15 p.m. CT (1815 GMT)
'The Right Stuff,' the TV series: Nearly four decades since it was released (and 34 years after it was made into a movie), Tom Wolfe's "The Right Stuff" is now being developed as a television series by Leonardo DiCaprio and his Appian Way Productions for National Geographic. Each season of the scripted series will feature a mission, starting with the early space race through to the moon landings.
/ 11:10 a.m. CT (1600 GMT)
Soyuz MS-05 to space station: Three crew members for the International Space Station launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Friday (July 28). Cosmonaut Sergey Ryazanskiy, Randy Bresnik of NASA and Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli of the European Space Agency lifted off onboard Russia's Soyuz MS-05 spacecraft to spend five months as Expedition 52/53 crew members.
/ 2:55 p.m. CT (1955 GMT)
Lunar module stolen from Armstrong: An 18 karat gold lunar module replica presented to Apollo 11 moonwalker Neil Armstrong has been reported stolen from the Armstrong Air & Space Museum in Wapakoneta, Ohio. The model, which was one of three crafted by Cartier and gifted to the Apollo 11 astronauts by a French newspaper in Paris in October 1969, was discovered missing from the museum by the local police just before midnight Friday (July 28).
/ 12:15 a.m. CT (0515 GMT)
Apollo light relit: The portable torch used to light astronauts' ways aboard NASA's Apollo spacecraft is shining anew as a crowdfunded replica. Barbolight has reproduced the brass ACR penlight that was launched to the moon and carried on early space shuttle missions, and outfitted it with a more efficient LED emitter. The flashlight is available for 99 euros ($113 US) on Kickstarter through Aug. 12.
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