Fall fashion is always a fun time to mix and match different styles in your closet. One trend that is sweeping social media is pairing a maxi dress or skirt, with a sleek boot. Dresses can be worn throughout different seasons and pairing them with winter essentials such as an ankle or knee-high booth calls for a glossy lewk. From cowboy boots and patterned dresses to evening gowns and white boots, there is not a shortage of options with this fun trend this season. Before the weather gets too chilly, we gathered up some photos of some of our favorite street style influencers rocking this buzzy style. Check it out below.
Fall fashion is always a fun time to mix and match different styles in your closet. One trend that is sweeping social media is pairing a maxi dress or skirt, with a sleek boot. Dresses can be worn throughout different seasons and pairing them with winter essentials such as an ankle or knee-high booth calls for a glossy lewk. From cowboy boots and patterned dresses to evening gowns and white boots, there is not a shortage of options with this fun trend this season. Before the weather gets too chilly, we gathered up some photos of some of our favorite street style influencers rocking this buzzy style. Check it out below.
This marks my second NOC Theatre review since Hannah and the Dread Gazebo performed at the Fountain Theatre a few months back and it was here that my key interest in doing so was a commitment/announcement of sorts. For as much as I can, my focus will be to review plays & musicals with the […]
NASA aims to send astronauts to the moon’s surface within the next five years. In order to make lunar exploration possible, NASA will require a robust fleet of lunar landers and other vehicles. A new visualization of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket may help accelerate the design process for moon-bound spacecraft.
NASA aerospace engineer Nettie Roozeboom came up with an idea that could significantly speed up the design of rockets, moon landers, and other spacecraft that will support lunar exploration. By connecting two NASA facilities, one for advanced aeronautics testing and the other for analysis, in real time, her proposal could speed up design tasks.
In September, Roozeboom tested her concept with SLS at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California. SLS will ferry the Orion spacecraft to the Gateway in lunar orbit. The SLS team had to test the design of the rocket’s nose and ensure it could safely do the job for flights that will be used to bring goods to the moon.
Roozeboom’s job is not an easy one: She has to measure shaking caused by quickly changing pressure from the air a vehicle is moving through, as it travels through the atmosphere to get to space. These measurements indicate how designers should build their spacecraft to withstand the shaking present in real flights. While Roozeboom’s team conducts wind-tunnel tests, high-speed cameras snap the changing glow of an advanced paint that reveals pressure changes during the rocket’s simulated climb.
Aerospace engineer Nettie Roozeboom discusses preliminary data flowing in from a wind tunnel test of the SLS rocket. (Photo Credit: NASA / Advanced Supercomputing Division / Dominic Hart)
The demonstration, which was named after the game “Red Rover,” transferred as much as 400 terabytes of data from the wind tunnel to a supercomputer. From there, supercomputing experts took the wind tunnel experts’ uncanny software and optimized it for real-time visualization, according to NASA.
A model of the SLS rocket covered in a thin coat of pink at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California. (Photo Credit: NASA / Ames Research Center / Dominic Hart)
The result was a colorful sight: NASA’s supercomputer sifted through incoming data and quickly revealed a visualization of the results. The SLS design team observed this exchange on a 1/4 billion-pixel hyperwall, and immediately corresponded with experts at Ames to adjust test conditions and data collection.
“This could be a tremendous benefit for programs early in the design cycle,” said Thomas Steva, an aerodynamics engineer on the SLS team at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. “That’s a time where high-fidelity data is typically sparse.”
But a new report from The Shade Room, estimates that the date might be even sooner. While Harris has already been away from his family for four years, TSR reports that he could be coming home by the end of this month or the next.
Sources state that Mendeecees is expected to be released in November but no later than December 15.
Harris was sentenced to eight years in prison after he pled guilty to drug trafficking charges in 2015. If he were released next year, he would have served over half of his sentence. Now, with the new release date, he’ll be right before the halfway mark.
As we reported earlier, Mendeecees confessed to transporting cocaine and heroin from New York City to Rochester, NY.
Harris appealed the decision but the sentence stood. At the end of the trial, he had already served 15 months in jail before he was granted bail.
Since he’s been in prison Harris has completed a substance abuse program, has taken courses on how to parent from prison, money management, health and nutrition and public speaking. Gossip in the Cityreported that Harris’ completion of the substance abuse program reduced his sentence by a year.
We know he’s looking forward to coming home.
In response to The Shade Room’s story, Yandy Smith, Mendeecees’ wife and mother of two of his children, commented with several heart emojis.