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Mysterious 'Nocturnal Sun' (aka 'Bright Night') Is Finally Explained

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Mysterious 'Nocturnal Sun' (aka 'Bright Night') Is Finally Explained Watch Video"Bright nights.""Nocturnal sun." Whatever they're called, scientists think they've figured out why they happen.

A "bright night" is, well, bright. Reports say these evenings can be as bright as days.

Researchers relied mostly on old reports because the phenomenon is so rare. They estimate a bright night is visible somewhere on Earth about 25 nights a year.

*SEE MORE: The Discovery Of A Flat, Dead Galaxy Is Changing NASA's Outlook*

But there's a good chance you've never seen one because of light pollution.

To catch it you'd have to be in a remote part of the world, on a night without a moon, and with your eyes adjusted to the darkness.

The researchers at York University who conducted this study haven't seen one either, but they did have access to data from a NASA instrument that monitored the atmosphere.

The researchers think bright nights have to do with airglow — a soft light more than 50 miles above Earth's surface.

Here's the science: At the right level in the atmosphere, oxygen atoms are stuck together, but ultraviolet rays from the sun can separate them. At night, those atoms come back together, and release the trapped energy we can see as light.

This alone is usually too faint for us to see on the ground, but airglow travels in waves, which can be moved by storms.

*SEE MORE: Check Out This Impressive Aurora Glowing Over Jupiter*

And researchers think under the right conditions, these waves overlap, which compounds the brightness, making a bright night.

As for seeing one yourself, you'll have to be at the right place at the right time, and a little lucky. But if you ever see a bright night, you'll know what's going on. Reported by Newsy 1 hour ago.

Columbia Helicopters Inc. Announces Departure of CEO

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Steve Bandy to Lead Columbia as President

(PRWEB) June 28, 2017

Aurora, OR: Columbia Helicopters Inc. announced today that Jim Rankin, President and CEO, has resigned, effective June 30. The company has promoted Steve Bandy, Senior Vice President of Operations to President of the Aurora-based, global provider of heavy-lift helicopters services and MRO operator. The company is retiring the CEO position.

Rankin led Columbia during a downturn in the Oil and Gas industry which negatively affected the heavy-lift helicopter industry, as Columbia sought to diversify into broader global markets for aerial lift services, its Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul business, and the company’s continued expansion of its Government Services business.

“We are grateful for the leadership Jim has provided the past two and a half years,” said Columbia Helicopters’ Board Chair Stan Wilson. “While most of our competitors have been significantly impacted by the economic conditions in our industry, we have been able to grow our business while others have struggled.”

"It's been my pleasure working with all of Columbia's employees, the board and the Lematta family,” said Jim Rankin. “This new organizational structure ideally positions Columbia for the foreseeable future, and I know Steve Bandy will do a great job leading the company. I'm excited to watch as Columbia continues its legacy as the premier, heavy-lift helicopter operator in the years ahead."

Columbia Helicopters has exhibited recent successes in expanding its fleet, acquiring several CH47s, and – with the recent award of additional aircraft in Afghanistan – the company is entering a new phase of their strategic plan, one that increases internal demands for execution and operational excellence.

Fulfilling New Leadership Opportunities

Bandy joined Columbia Helicopters in April of 1989 and has since served in a variety of roles across the company, starting as a Pilot and including his most recent role of Senior Vice President of Operations.

“Steve has over 28 years with Columbia, and has done a remarkable job of leading our operational departments including Flight Operations, Maintenance, and the QES group,” continued Chairman Wilson. “We can think of no one with more passion, drive, vision and dedication to our employees than Steve. We are confident with Steve at the helm, we will be able to be strategically positioned to continue to be the leader in our industry while continuing to exceed customer expectations.”

“I am excited to lead this great team as we move forward both operationally and strategically,” said Steve Bandy, President of Columbia Helicopters. “I’m grateful to the ownership, Board, and the Columbia family for their confidence and trust in me.”

About Columbia Helicopters

Columbia Helicopters Inc. was founded in 1957 by Wes Lematta, and is a leading global provider of heavy-lift helicopters services and MRO operator based in Aurora, Oregon, and with operations globally. For more information, visit http://www.colheli.com. Reported by PRWeb 26 minutes ago.

Levi Tillemann, Obama administration alum, set to join crowded race to unseat Mike Coffman

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The Aurora Democrat had been publicly flirting with a run for Congress since mid-May, when he called President Donald Trump and other Republican leaders "a unique and terrible threat to American democracy." Reported by Denver Post 38 minutes ago.

What We Know About The 3 Americans Still Imprisoned In North Korea

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Three Americans remain imprisoned in North Korea after the release of 22-year-old Ohio native Otto Warmbier, who died Monday after returning to the U.S. in a state of “unresponsive wakefulness” last week.

North Korean officials reportedly detained Warmbier in January 2016 at Pyongyang International Airport and sentenced him to 15 years of hard labor for attempting to steal a government banner. 

“We hold North Korea accountable for Otto Warmbier’s unjust imprisonment, and demand the release of three other Americans who have been illegally detained,” U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson wrote in a statement.

North Korea has released few, if any, details about the status of the remaining detainees, all of whom are Korean-American. 

The first prisoner, Kim Dong-chul, worked as a businessman and was detained in 2015, months before Warmbier’s arrest. The other two prisoners ― Kim Hak-song and Tony Kim ― both worked at Pyongyang University of Science and Technology and were detained in April and May this year.

Kim Dong-chulNorth Korean officials allegedly arrested Kim Dong-chul, a businessman, in October 2015 while he was reportedly attempting to receive classified information from a former government agent.

CNN first reported Kim’s imprisonment in January 2016 after North Korean officials granted the network an exclusive interview with him at a hotel in Pyongyang.

In the interview, Kim said he was a 62-year-old naturalized U.S. citizen and had previously lived in Fairfax, Virginia. He said he had been the president of an international trade and hotel services company that operated in Rason, a special economic zone near North Korea’s northern border.

“I’m asking the U.S. or South Korean government to rescue me,” he told CNN.

In March 2016, KCNA reported that Kim had confessed to attempting to steal military secrets under the direction of the U.S. and South Korea. Both countries have denied the accusation.

He was sentenced to 10 years of hard labor in April 2016 for spying.

Tony KimNorth Korean authorities reportedly detained Kim on April 23 at the Pyongyang International Airport as he was attempting to leave the country with his wife.

The 58-year-old was arrested for committing “hostile criminal acts with an aim to subvert” North Korea, according to the state-run news agency KCNA.

Kim was born Kim Sang Dok, but goes by his American name, Tony. He studied at Aurora University in Illinois and the University of California, Riverside, according to his Facebook page.

Prior to his arrest, Kim spent a month teaching accounting at Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, the university’s chancellor, Chan-Mo Park, told The New York Times.

“The cause of his arrest is not known but some officials at PUST told me his arrest was not related to his work at PUST,” Park told Reuters. “He had been involved with some other activities outside PUST such as helping an orphanage.”

Last month, an unidentified PUST official told Reuters that Kim’s wife had returned to the United States, but The New York Times reports that she is still believed to be in North Korea. 

Kim Hak-songKim Hak-song, who also worked at PUST, was detained two weeks after Tony Kim. He was arrested on a China-bound train from Pyongyang and is also being held for committing “hostile acts.” It’s unclear if the two arrests are connected.

Kim reportedly studied at a university in California and became a U.S. citizen in the 2000s before moving back to China, where he was born, 10 years later.

Prior to his arrest, Kim managed the experimental farm at PUST’s college of agriculture and life sciences, Park told Reuters. He was concerned about North Korea’s food shortage and wanted to improve the country’s agricultural economy, CNN reported. 

“North Korea is persecuting their savior, a person who came to help them,” David Lee, one of Kim’s former classmates, told CNN. “This is wrong.”type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related Coverage + articlesList=594834d4e4b0cddbb008ccff

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 1 week ago.

NASA Launches Scientific Rocket

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NASA launched a two-stage Terrier-Improved Malemute sounding rocket early Thursday. The rocket will test a new system to support studies of the aurora and upper levels of the atmosphere. Over ten previous launches were cancelled. (June 29)

 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 22 hours ago.

Photos: Artificial aurora over Hanover from NASA launch

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  Reported by Delawareonline 14 hours ago.

IRS shuts down Boundary Waters canoe outfitter

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A nearly century-old outfitting business in Ely, Minn., has apparently been shut down by the Internal Revenue Service, with government agents seizing the company's inventory of equipment and canoes. The Duluth News Tribune reports on the challenges facing Wilderness Outfitters, which is the target of several federal and state liens for "tens of thousands of dollars." A bank is apparently also after the business: American Bank of the North in Aurora has filed a civil lawsuit, claiming owners of Wilderness… Reported by bizjournals 22 hours ago.

WeedMD a possible acquisition target if it makes further inroads into long term care market

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Broker Eight Capital said yesterday’s announcement of WeedMD Inc’s (CVE:WMD) strategic relationship with Aurora Cannabis was a “win-win” arrangement. The hook-up with one of the world’s leading companies should help drive WeedMD’s near-to-medium term sales, in Eight Capital’s view. Aurora is a licensed producer of medical cannabis in Canada and operates a 55,200 sq ft state-of-the-art production facility in Alberta. READ WeedMD hails new tie up with one of globe's leading cannabis firms “Aurora will have access to WeedMD's quality cannabis product while WMD gains access to patient referrals at no cost. At the same time WMD will be selling a higher volume than if it was just selling to patients on a retail basis, albeit at a slightly lower margin given it is wholesale. Overall this partnership de-risks our estimates by shipping product,” the broker said. Eight Capital rates WeedMD shares a ‘buy’ and has a price target on the stock, which currently trades at 83 cents, of C$2.25. WeedMD expects to benefit from Aurora’s brand recognition, as well as its new partner’s counselling, and marketing nous. WeedMD's focus is on the seniors and long-term care market WeedMD's strategy is to focus on, and ultimately become the number one provider for, the long-term care (LTC) industry and seniors market, Eight Capital reminded its clients in a research note. “WeedMD aims to educate seniors about the benefits of cannabis and expects a high adoption rate in this demographic, which is already showing increased prevalence of cannabis use. Supplying clients in senior living and LTC facilities is a difficult market to penetrate because of the complexity of patient care, but client retention is very strong,” it noted. “Given the sticky nature of distribution in LTC facilities (exclusive contracts to one supplier), and its growing  demographic, we could envisage WeedMD being an M&A target in order to add a recurring revenue stream or another part of the value chain,” Eight Capital speculated.  Reported by Proactive Investors 17 hours ago.

Rep. Mike Coffman to Trump: #StopTheTwitterTantrums

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Coffman, the Republican Congressman representing Aurora, condemned Trump's tweets, saying "the President's tweets are beneath the dignity of his office. It needs to stop." Reported by Denver Post 13 hours ago.

NASA rocket creates colourful artificial clouds

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NASA has successfully launched a sounding rocket that created colourful artificial clouds visible in the US skies. The NASA Terrier-Improved Malemute sounding rocket was successfully launched yesterday, from the US space agency's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia, after being delayed multiple times over the last 30 days.

During the 8-minute flight, 10 canisters about the size of a soft drink can were ejected in space, 9 to 19 kilometres away from the 300-kg main payload. The canisters deployed blue-green and red vapour that formed artificial clouds visible from New York to North Carolina.

During an ionosphere or aurora science mission, these clouds, or vapour tracers, allow scientists on the ground to visually track particle motions in space. The development of the multi-canister ejection system will allow scientists to gather information over a much larger area than previously possible when deploying the tracers just from the main payload. 

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From Print Edition:  Reported by DNA 3 hours ago.

A big question mark is hanging over the hottest trend in investing

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A big question mark is hanging over the hottest trend in investing· *Roboadvisers, which use algorithms to guide investments, have witnessed impressive growth since the financial crisis, but they have yet to live through a market downturn.*

The markets have rallied by a resounding 258% since bottoming out in 2009 in the aftermath of the financial crisis, and they continue to reach new heights.

Concurrently, the hottest trend in wealth management has experienced explosive growth. Automated financial advisers, known as roboadvisers, rely on algorithms, not humans, to guide their investments. Such firms, which emerged after the financial crisis, have seen their assets under management balloon from millions in 2009 to hundreds of billions. Money managed by robos is expected to reach $8 trillion by 2020.

But some Wall Streeters are questioning whether pure roboadvice startups, which have spent the overwhelming majority of their existence in a bull market, could survive a major correction or bear market.

Tobin McDaniel, the president of Schwab Wealth Advisory, raised this very question during a recent conversation with Business Insider. His team rolled out Schwab's two robo offerings, Schwab's Intelligent Portfolios and Schwab Intelligent Advisory, in 2015 and 2017. Schwab, a San Francisco-based brokerage firm with $2.5 trillion in assets under management, was one of the earliest legacy firms to get into robo. But human advisers still manage most of its assets.

McDaniel told Business Insider the early startup players in roboadvice pushed the rest of the industry into robo — but overlooked something important.

"Early roboadvice platforms were all built on the right theories of investing: doing it for long run and diversification," he said. "But they were built by people who didn't seem to consider what a downturn might do."

"Those theories go out the window when you lose 20% of your money," McDaniel added.

McDaniel said firms offering exclusively roboadvice could run into trouble if a major market correction were to occur.

"That's why you've seen a lot of them add more of that human element, because you want to help people feel comfortable so they stay in when the market goes down," McDaniel said. "It's easy to be a pure roboadviser company when you're in an eight-year bull market."

That's not just a hunch, according to McDaniel. He cited a Schwab study showing that 75% of millennials wanted to talk to a human adviser during "complicated" situations.

A note out by a group of analysts at Morgan Stanley, led by Giulia Aurora Miotto, echoes McDaniel's thesis.

"The financial sector consumer often needs some sort of human contact, especially when abrupt market moves lead to unexpected losses," the analysts wrote.

The analysts cited a study finding that investors noted "willingness to take the time to understand needs and goals" and "explain analysis clearly" as two of the paramount qualities in a financial adviser.

Grant Easterbrook is a cofounder of Dream Forward, a startup 401(k) firm based in New Jersey. He told Business Insider that he was well acquainted with the question of whether pure robos could make it during a downturn. It's one he got a lot as a consultant.

"When thinking about this question, one must consider two scenarios: Are we talking about a demon situation akin to 2008, or a 15%, 20% correction?" Easterbrook said.

In the more dire scenario, Easterbrook said, even the big dogs would have to be concerned. In the other scenario, Easterbook doesn't imagine too many folks pulling their money out of pure-play roboadvisers.

"If these firms do a good job with their marketing and customer outreach, then they shouldn't feel the need to pull out," Easterbrook said. "When you look at the average pure-play customer they're much younger and, as a result, are in it for the long haul."

"It's not like they're approaching retirement or having college-tuition payments to make," he added.

Easterbook added, however, that startups could experience issues with an increase in call-center volume.

"But we really won't know the effects of that until it happens," he said.

Betterment's CEO and founder, Jon Stein, doesn't think pure robos have to worry about a correction. Betterment, a firm many consider the poster child of roboadvice, rolled out a suite of hybrid services that pair human help with its computerized financial advice. Nevertheless, Stein said the question of whether pure robo players could weather a financial storm was a "prop" used by mainstream firms in the industry to save their market share.

"If you talk to customers and ask them, 'What do you want from your financial adviser?' they don't say, 'We really want someone who is going to be there for me during a downturn," Stein told Business Insider in a recent interview.

In Stein's view, customers want peace of mind about their money.

"Peace of mind is related to the idea that you can talk to someone, but it is not actually, 'I want someone to hold my hand in a downturn,'" he said."Rather, it is more like, 'I want to know that my financial adviser is on my side.'"

*SEE ALSO: The CEO of an investing startup taking in $12 million a day on the future of finance, millennials, and happiness*

*SEE ALSO: High-net-worth wealth managers can't survive the digital age on just 'their name and wood paneling'*

*SEE ALSO: A 'paradigm shift' is taking place in financial technology*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: JIM ROGERS: I like depressed markets like Russia, China, and Japan Reported by Business Insider 11 hours ago.

A ‘Splendour’ not for beginners at the Aurora

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Normally, when a play is defined by repetition, digression and palaver, the proper response is to head for the hills. The British writer finds an incandescent glow and a thrumming subtext in banalities, which she breaks into fragments and reconstructs into a kind of endlessly expanding spiral, a set of themes and variations, or elaborations. Part of the point of Morgan’s “Splendour,” whose Bay Area premiere opened Thursday, June 29, at Aurora Theatre Company, is that there’s nowhere its four characters can go beyond the Art Deco mansion (the icily handsome set design is by Michael Locher) where Micheleine (Lorri Holt) lives with her husband, a leader in an unnamed country. In the snow outside, the rumbles and rockets of battle draw dangerously close, and anyway, photographer Kathryn (Denmo Ibrahim) and her translator Gilma (Sam Jackson) have a gig to shoot a portrait of Micheleine’s husband. [...] he keeps delaying his arrival, and the outsiders’ presence unsettles the already tizzy-prone hostess, so she calls in her slow but sweet friend Genevieve (Mia Tagano) as reinforcement. With each new go-round, Morgan divulges more and often conflicting information about characters, revealing as prisms women who at first might seem more two-dimensional. Morgan’s tense dialogue lets flaws ripen in a way we don’t often see in female characters in theater. Morgan’s view here is both deep focus and wide-angle, simultaneously considering the levels of consciousness, home and globe. Reported by SFGate 14 hours ago.

A NASA rocket blasted colorful clouds into space — here's what they looked like

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A NASA rocket blasted colorful clouds into space — here's what they looked like· *NASA launched a rocket that created colorful clouds in space on June 29.*
· *Such clouds are being used to probe two big holes in Earth's magnetic shield, called cusps.*
· *NASA Wallops Flight Facility released a time-lapse video of the vapor puffs.*

For the last month, NASA had been waiting for the right moment to launch clouds of red and blue-green vapor out into space.

On June 29, that moment finally came. A NASA sounding rocket launched at 4:25 a.m. EST from the agency’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia, and shot out 10 canisters about the size of a soda can, according to the agency.

The cans deployed blue-green and red vapor, which brightly colored puffs of "tracer vapors" that were seen from New York to North Carolina. These clouds allow scientists on the ground to visually track how and where particles move in space.

Here's what the clouds looked like:  

The rocket was originally supposed to launch on May 31, but poor visibility and bad weather conditions delayed the mission a number of times. These space clouds weren't merely for show, however.

The experiment was one of many missions in an international "Grand Challenge" initiative aimed at helping scientists probe two gaping holes in Earth's protective magnetic shield, called cusps.

The two holes in our invisible shield leak nearly 100 tons of air per day, according to Astronomy Now.

*Probing Earth's leaky atmosphere*

The magnetic bubble that surrounds our planet is vital to life, since it deflects the sun's constant wind of high-energy particles — and protects against the occasional solar storm. Without this invisible force field, Earth may have gone the way of Mars, which lost its magnetic dynamo billions of years ago. That allowed the sun to blow most of the Martian atmosphere into deep space, turning a once wet and potentially habitable world into a dry and nearly airless global desert.

We won't run out of air anytime soon (thankfully, our planet has quadrillions of tons left), but scientists are still struggling to understand how the cusps work. In particular, they want to make them visible — which is where the colored clouds came into play.

Launching tracer vapors such as barium (green), cupric-oxide (blue-green), and strontium (red) into the Earth's ionosphere — where charged air particles and the solar wind interact — helps scientists see how particles move that the region. This data could then help verify and update computer models of the fringes of Earth's atmosphere.

Those models, in turn, may help researchers better understand all sorts of high-altitude phenomena, including auroras, geomagnetic storms — and why a planet like Mars lost all its air while ours has held on to its atmosphere.

*Launching space clouds*

Keith Koehler, a NASA Wallops spokesperson, said that nearly all past tracer-vapor missions, except for a few recent test launches, have spewed the vapors directly out of the rocket body. But that has limited the data that scientists can collect from the ground, since the colored clouds wound up close together and were often hard to distinguish.

The new launch used new method: The rocket shot lightweight aluminum canisters, called ampules, out of its sides. The canisters traveled 6 to 12 miles before they started releasing vapor, which made the constellation of colored clouds easier to distinguish and follow.

The chemical tracer clouds are designed to react to sunlight. The launch therefore happened when it was still dark on the ground but the sun was visible from space to maximize their visibility. 

"These launches have to occur just after sunset or right before sunrise. You need sunlight to hit the vapors and activate them as they're released," Koehler said, adding that these vapors should not be confused with the Aurora Borealis that's typically seen in far northern regions of the world.

"Auroras dance across the sky, and this is not that," he said.

*SEE ALSO: A 100-year solar storm could fry our power grids — these are the places most at risk*

*DON'T MISS: Elon Musk: SpaceX may launch its biggest and most powerful rocket in 3 months*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Antarctica's sky just lit up with electric-blue clouds — here's why Reported by Business Insider 9 hours ago.

Why Are Canadian Marijuana Producers Rushing to Invest in Germany?

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Why are Canadian marijuana companies like Canopy Growth Corp. (TSX:WEED) and Aurora Cannabis Inc. (TSXV:ACB) rushing to invest in Germany? Reported by Motley Fool 13 hours ago.

Jupiter: Atmosphere and aurora in unprecedented detail

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Subaru Telescope images reveal weather in Jupiter's atmosphere in the mid-infrared. High-resolution thermal imaging of Jupiter is providing information that extends and enhances the information that the Juno mission is gathering in its unprecedented mission to probe that planet's interior and deep atmospheric structure together with details of the magnetosphere and its auroral interactions with the planet. Reported by Science Daily 6 hours ago.

3 Things Investors Really Need to Know About Marijuana Stock Aurora Cannabis

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Aurora Cannabis is red-hot. But there's more you need to know about this high-flying marijuana stock. Reported by Motley Fool 13 hours ago.

Adolfson & Peterson Construction Makes ENR’s list of Top 100 Project Delivery Firms

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Adolfson & Peterson Construction (AP) has been named among the top 100 construction management‐at‐risk firms of 2017 by Engineering News‐Record (ENR), a leading publication for the engineering and construction industry.

Minneapolis, MN (PRWEB) July 03, 2017

Adolfson & Peterson Construction (AP) has been named among the top 100 construction management‐at‐risk firms of 2017 by Engineering News‐Record (ENR), a leading publication for the engineering and construction industry. AP comes in at number 55 on the list – a first for the general contractor – with rankings determined by 2016 revenue.

News of AP’s ENR rankings comes during an already accomplished year. The company has recently earned a National Excellence in Construction® Pyramid Award from Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) for The City of Aurora’s Public Safety Training Center, an ENR National Best of the Best Manufacturing Project for the New Belgium Brewing East Coast Brewery, a 1st‐place TEXO Distinguished Building Award for the Midland Medical Office Building/Ambulatory Surgery Center and the Minnesota Construction Association’s Award of Excellence for “New Project Total Value Over $15 Million” for its work on the Minnesota Masonic Heritage Center.

“At AP we strive to pursue and deliver excellence,” said AP’s CEO Jeff Hansen. “Industry recognitions such as this reinforce for us that our commitment to quality for our clients, our staff and our communities is resulting in great things for our company. We will continue that mission and believe we will continue to see these rankings climb in the years to come.”

About AP

Adolfson & Peterson Construction (AP) is a U.S.‐based, privately held builder that is consistently ranked among the top 50 construction managers and general contractors in the nation. Headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the company delivers innovative and collaborative building solutions for clients across the country from its regional offices in Charlotte, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis and Phoenix. Founded in 1946, AP serves clients in the education, healthcare, commercial, municipal, multifamily, hospitality and senior living market sectors. For more information, visit http://www.a-p.com/ or follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. Reported by PRWeb 5 hours ago.

Potential shortfall of recreational weed in Canada creates opportunities

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Canada's nascent cannabis industry is set for a sea change in the  next 12 months as recreational pot becomes legal, but the biggest challenge reportedly will be a lack of product to sell into the  new market. Justin Trudeau's administration is aiming to legalise the stuff within a year ( the state of Nevada in the US has just done so - from July 1). The public may be ready and eager, but  what of the companies and organizations who will provide the backbone and infrastructure for the sector? The idea is that legalizing the recreational side (medical marijuana is already permitted) will remove or shrink the black market, but that goal may not be reached if there is a shortage of legal cannabis. Canada wants its various provinces to set up sale and distribution channels but certain details like taxation are as yet undecided. And we are not talking a small market here.. London broker Canaccord reckons the recreational pot market in Canada could reach C$6bn a year by 2021. It already has 167,754 registered medical pot users as at March this year, and reportedly supply issues are already a problem  for those users, underlining what issues may lie ahead. One firm ahead of the curve already and well placed is Toronto listed WeedMD Inc (CVE:WMD) . The group is a licensed producer of medical cannabis pursuant to the Access to Cannabis for Medical Purposes Regulations (ACMPR) and operates a 26,000 square foot, scalable production facility in Aylmer, Ontario with four acres of property for future use. It recently announced a new tie -up with Aurora - another licensed producer of medical cannabis in Canada, which operates a 55,200 sq ft state-of-the-art production facility in Alberta. In April, the firm said it was also preparing to take full advantage of what is sure to be a large increase in demand for product through new legal channels. “With legalized recreational use just around the corner, the supply opportunity is immense and we have a long-term plan in place to be one of the top-tier players,”  finance chief Keith Merker had said. WeedMD shares are currently changing hands at $0.81 each. Reported by Proactive Investors 10 hours ago.

Fireworks caused house fire over the weekend in Aurora

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An Aurora man shooting fireworks mortars over the weekend caused his house to burn, leading fire officials to warn people of the risks of shooting them. Reported by Denver Post 8 hours ago.

WeedMD in focus as Canada eyes potential shortfall in recreational pot

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Canada's nascent cannabis industry is set for a sea change in the  next 12 months as recreational pot becomes legal, but the biggest challenge reportedly will be a lack of product to sell into the  new market. Justin Trudeau's administration is aiming to legalise the stuff within a year ( the state of Nevada in the US has just done so - from July 1). The public may be ready and eager, but  what of the companies and organizations who will provide the backbone and infrastructure for the sector? The idea is that legalizing the recreational side (medical marijuana is already permitted) will remove or shrink the black market, but that goal may not be reached if there is a shortage of legal cannabis. Various provinces... Canada wants its various provinces to set up sale and distribution channels but certain details like taxation are as yet undecided. And we are not talking a small market here.. London broker Canaccord reckons the recreational pot market in Canada could reach C$6bn a year by 2021. It already has 167,754 registered medical pot users as at March this year, and reportedly supply issues are already a problem  for those users, underlining what issues may lie ahead. WeedMD well placed.. One firm ahead of the curve already and well placed is Toronto listed WeedMD Inc (CVE:WMD) . The group is a licensed producer of medical cannabis pursuant to the Access to Cannabis for Medical Purposes Regulations (ACMPR) and operates a 26,000 square foot, scalable production facility in Aylmer, Ontario with four acres of property for future use. It recently announced a new tie -up with Aurora - another licensed producer of medical cannabis in Canada, which operates a 55,200 sq ft state-of-the-art production facility in Alberta. In April, the firm said it was also preparing to take full advantage of what is sure to be a large increase in demand for product through new legal channels. “With legalized recreational use just around the corner, the supply opportunity is immense and we have a long-term plan in place to be one of the top-tier players,”  finance chief Keith Merker had said. WeedMD shares are currently changing hands at $0.81 each.   Canada is running out of weed https://t.co/a93bM79rek via @nypost #marijuana #cannabis #canada #hightimes — You Can Cannabis (@YCCannabis) 25 June 2017 Reported by Proactive Investors 4 hours ago.
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