Skygazers catch flight for prime view of total solar eclipse ADVERTISING Skygazers catch flight for prime view of total solar eclipse ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Skygazers from around the U.S. caught a flight from Alaska to Hawaii for prime viewing
Skygazers catch flight for prime view of total solar eclipse
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Skygazers from around the U.S. caught a flight from Alaska to Hawaii for prime viewing of a total solar eclipse that unfolded over parts of Indonesia and the Indian and Pacific oceans.
A dozen eclipse enthusiasts were among the 181 passengers on the plane Tuesday that departed Anchorage for Honolulu. The rare event occurs when the moon is close enough to Earth to completely block out the sun.
Joe Rao, an associate astronomer at the American Museum of Natural History’s Hayden Planetarium in New York, called Alaska Airlines last fall, explaining that the flight would be in the right place for the eclipse. The route was expected to encounter the darkest shadow of the moon as it passed over Earth.
Problem was, the plane would be passing by nearly a half-hour too soon.
The airline rescheduled the flight to depart 25 minutes later, and it rendezvoused with the eclipse’s sweet spot nearly 700 miles north of Honolulu. After the schedule tweak, Rao and a dozen other astronomy aficionados booked seats for the big show at 36,000 feet.
Rao, like other self-dubbed “eclipse geeks,” was thrilled about setting out to witness his 11th such spectacle.
“It is an experience,” he said of watching the sun turn into a giant black disk in the sky. “Every fiber of you gets involved in those few moments when the sun is totally eclipsed.”
The eclipse was expected to last just under two minutes in that location. The last total solar eclipse was in March 2015, and the one before that was in 2012.
Craig Small, a semiretired Hayden Planetarium astronomer, was viewing his 31st total eclipse. To mark each viewing, he carried a special eclipse flag made in 1972.
Also on board was Dan McGlaun, who brought 200 pairs of special filter glasses to distribute to other passengers. McGlaun, a project manager who runs eclipse2017.org, was excited about viewing his 12th total eclipse.
“It’s going to be amazing. It always is,” he said before boarding. “It’s a universal reaction when you see an eclipse. You cheer, you scream, you cry.”
Guam officials seek review of birthright citizenship case
HAGATNA, Guam (AP) — Guam officials have filed briefs supporting a petition seeking to have the U.S. Supreme Court review a case challenging how birthright citizenship is applied to American territories.
Guam Delegate Madeleine Bordallo, Vice Speaker Benjamin Cruz and former governors Felix Camacho, Carl Gutierrez and Joseph Ada filed briefs March 2 in support of a petition asking for a review of Tuaua v. United States.
The case was filed in July 2012 and dismissed by federal Judge Richard Leon for the District of Columbia the following year. In 2015, a panel of judges upheld Leon’s dismissal.
The 14th Amendment grants citizenship to anybody born in the U.S., which courts have decided to mean the 50 states and not the territories.
“Birthright citizenship for Americans living in the territories is a right that should be guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, not the U.S. Congress,” Bordallo said. “Our people have one of the highest rates of military service, and we have consistently demonstrated our patriotism and loyalty to the United States. I hope the Supreme Court will affirm our belief that Americans in the territories have the same right to equal citizenship as Americans in the 50 states.”
The petition asking the high court to hear the case was submitted in February on behalf of a group of individuals with U.S. passports who were born in American Samoa and denied recognition as U.S. citizens.
Neil Weare, the plaintiff’s attorney, first announced in December the group’s request for a review of the case. Briefs in support of the petition have also been filed by citizenship scholars, scholars of constitutional law and legal history, civil organizations and retired judges, Weare said in a news release.
“We are hopeful the diverse array of individuals and organizations supporting the case will encourage the Supreme Court to grant review,” Weare said.