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Some days nothing seems to go right. Other days, somebody gives you a giant poster of Frank Sinatra, and the world is your oyster.
The latter happened last month, when Dal Richards’s widow, Muriel Honey, gave me a poster the local big band legend had received when he had a radio show at AM 600. It’s a classic photo of Frank from the cover of his 1959 album Come Dance With Me. Sinatra is winking at the camera, beckoning a lady to come shake a leg with his finger.
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EPFL moves boldly into space with its CHESS satellites
The EPFL Spacecraft Team has set itself the ambitious goal of launching two satellites by 2023. With this bold initiative, this student team hopes to gain further insight into the chemical composition of the outermost layers of our atmosphere.
One out of two CHESS satellites
Designing a satellite and launching it into space is no run-of-the-mill project. Rather, it’s one that forever marks the early careers of the students who take part – just ask the EPFL students who designed the SwissCube, a 1U CubeSat (a small standardized unit measuring 10 cm x 10 cm) launched in 2009. Today, a new group of students, the EPFL Spacecraft Team, is taking on a new challenge. With the support of the EPFL Space Center (eSpace), they are developing a constellation of two satellites, called CHESS, that will be launched in two years. The team is currently seeking additional members and sponsors.