星期四, 4月 14, 2016

MAYOR WALSH'S BUDGET PROPOSAL INVESTS IN SAFE TRAVEL ON CITY OF BOSTON STREETS

MAYOR WALSH'S BUDGET PROPOSAL INVESTS IN SAFE TRAVEL ON CITY OF BOSTON STREETS
$3.1M Investment in Vision Zero, $2M for Traffic Signal Improvements
BOSTON - Thursday, April 14, 2016 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh announced that strong measures aimed at ensuring safe and reliable travel on City of Boston streets will be a key component in his administration's proposed fiscal year 2017 budget that was presented to the Boston City Council yesterday morning. A total of $3.1 million is proposed for Vision Zero in FY17 and $9.3 million over the next three years.  Vision Zero is an international initiative to eliminate traffic fatalities and serious injuries.  The City is also making additional investments in traffic signal and bike infrastructure. The budget calls for $2 million in FY17 for the City's vast traffic signal network to ensure that appropriate maintenance, re-timing and upgrading may be accomplished in the upcoming year. Another $900,000 is allocated to advance the City's strategic bike network.

"It is important that our transportation infrastructure provides the best and safest way for people to travel throughout the City of Boston," said Mayor Walsh. "Ensuring the safety of all of our residents and visitors is a top priority and these investments will help bring us one step closer to achieving Vision Zero and creating safer streets across our city."

"Our streets should be welcoming and beautiful, and getting around our city should be predictable and comfortable," said Chris Osgood, City of Boston Chief of Streets. "That work - and this budget - starts with making our streets safe for everyone, whether you are walking, biking, taking the T or driving."

In the spring of 2015, Mayor Walsh committed to Vision Zero and appointed an inter-agency and inter-disciplinary Task Force that worked to produce an Action Plan by December. The Action Plan summarizes the progress that has been made to date and outlines the steps that will be taken to achieve the City's Vision Zero goals.

The creation of a Rapid Response Team is one action item that has already been implemented.  The Team, made up of Vision Zero Task Force members, now responds to critical and fatal crash locations to analyze the cause of a crash and gain insight to bring about corrective action.  Recent progress also includes the introduction of a Transportation Safety Concerns Map, an online tool that allows visitors to identify locations where they have concerns about traffic safety.

Upcoming plans identified in the Vision Zero Action Plan include:
  • Piloting the Neighborhood Slow Streets Program in Dorchester's Talbot-Norfolk Triangle and the Stonybrook neighborhood in Jamaica Plain; 
  • Advancing legislation to reduce the citywide default speed limit; 
  • Investing in new infrastructure along Massachusetts Ave. and in Codman Square; 
  • Tackling the issues of distracted and impaired driving.
     
The City of Boston has recently been selected as one of 10 U.S. cities to participate in the Vision Zero Focus Cities Program, a new initiative developed by the national Vision Zero Network.  Along with Austin, TX; Washington, DC; New York City, NY; Chicago, IL; Fort Lauderdale, FL; Seattle, WA; Portland, OR; San Francisco, CA; and Los Angeles, CA; Boston was selected in recognition of the City's leadership and innovative work toward achieving Vision Zero goals that will change the way that safe mobility is prioritized.

The $2 million proposed for Traffic Signal Improvements will also work toward the achievement of the City of Boston's safe, reliable and accessible streets priority.  Currently, there are 849 signalized intersections operated by the Boston Transportation Department.  A multitude of traffic signal poles, signal heads and bulbs, pedestrian pushbuttons and embedded sensors is located at each of these intersections.  In addition, cable connects 556 of these intersections to the Traffic Management Center at City Hall providing City of Boston Traffic Engineers with the ability to remotely adjust traffic signal timing at these intersections to accommodate traffic congestion, special events and emergency situations.

"Our traffic signal systems is complex, and frequently updating all of our equipment and keeping it in good working condition at all times is crucial to the effective functioning of our streets," said Boston Transportation Commissioner Gina N. Fiandaca.  "The proposed investment in traffic signals will assist BTD in our efforts to provide a traffic signal system that safely and equitably ushers all users of Boston's streets to their destinations."

Completing a comprehensive retiming of traffic signals at every intersection in the City of Boston at least once every five years is an objective that will benefit from this additional funding.  New traffic signal timings are based on current data gained from traffic studies that count the number of people walking and riding bikes, as well as the number of all types of motor vehicles traveling through an intersection in a given period of time.  Signals are retimed to accurately reflect current activity and travel patterns resulting in signals that minimize stops and delays, decrease fuel consumption and air pollution emissions, and promote safe, efficient and progressive movement through the intersection.

BTD recently completed the retiming of traffic signals at 18 intersections in Dorchester and anticipates the project will reduce total delays by 10-14%, and decrease emission and fuel consumption by 8% at those 18 locations.  Traffic signal retiming projects will also take place in Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, Roslindale and Brighton in the coming months.  In FY15, BTD retimed traffic signals at 115 locations which included, among others, 62 intersections in the Back Bay, as well as signals on Atlantic Avenue, Seaport Boulevard, Kenmore Square, Bennington Street in East Boston, Hyde Park Avenue, and Massachusetts Avenue.

For more information on Vision Zero please visit www.visionzeroboston.org and for more information on the City of Boston's traffic signal system please visit http://www.cityofboston.gov/transportation/TME/

FIVE BOSTON-AREA MEN CHARGED WITH EXTORTION AND GAMBLING

FIVE BOSTON-AREA MEN CHARGED WITH EXTORTION AND GAMBLING

BOSTON – Five men were arrested and charged today in the U.S. District Court in Boston with conducting an illegal gambling business, making extortionate loans and collecting loans by extortionate means. 

Joseph Yerardi, 62, of Newton; Anthony Corso, 51 of Cambridge; Michael Burke, 45, of Winthrop; Robert Conway, 27, of, Lynnfield; and Michael Habicht, 59 of Boston, were indicted on one count of operating an illegal gambling business from March 2015 through April 2016. Yerardi and Corso were also indicted on three counts of conspiracy to make and making extortionate extensions of credit.  In addition, Yerardi, Corso, Burke and Conway were indicted on various counts of conspiring to collect and collecting extensions of credit by extortionate means from six debtors.  The defendants will appear before U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Jennifer C. Boal at 11:30 a.m.

The charge of operating an illegal gambling business provides a sentence of no greater than five years in prison, three years of supervised release and a fine of $250,000.  The extortion charges each provide a sentence of no greater than 20 years in prison, three years of supervised release and a fine of $250,000.  Actual sentences for federal crimes are typically less than the maximum penalties.  Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. 

United States Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz; Harold H. Shaw, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Field Division; and Colonel Richard D. McKeon, Superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police, made the announcement today.  Assistance with the investigation was also provided by the Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation, the Massachusetts Department of Correction, and the Boston, Medford, and Quincy Police Departments.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy E. Moran of Ortiz’s Organized Crime and Gang Unit. 

The details contained in the charging document are allegations.  The defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. 

波士頓新波士頓人辦公室改名移民進步辦公室

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES OFFICE FOR IMMIGRANT ADVANCEMENT AND LAUNCHES IMMIGRANT INFORMATION CORNERS AT ALL BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY LOCATIONS
Efforts Aimed at Advancing the Well-being of the City's Immigrant Residents

BOSTON - Thursday, April 14, 2016 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today announced the strategic rebranding of the Mayor's Office for Immigrant Advancement, formerly known as the Mayor's Office of New Bostonians, to help encompass the evolving needs of Boston's immigrant community. As part of a concerted effort to empower immigrant residents and recognize their contributions to our city, Mayor Walsh also launched Immigrant Information Corners at the Boston Public Library's Central Library in Copley Square and 24 neighborhood branches to provide information about resources and services available to help advance the well-being of the city's immigrant residents.
白宮代表也出席會議。(周菊子攝)

The Mayor's Office for Immigrant Advancement signifies the administration's proactive engagement of the immigrant community by encouraging their active participation in the city's policies and programs. Twenty-seven percent of Boston residents are foreign-born, and nearly half of Boston Public School students have a foreign-born parent.

"In the City of Boston our immigrant population represents a dynamic and growing landscape and it is our hope that with this rebranding effort and the launch of Immigrant Information Corners, we are better able to serve our immigrant residents," said Mayor Walsh. "Immigrants interact with the city's library branches more than any other city agency, which offers us a great opportunity to engage our residents in their neighborhoods. The impact that immigrants have on our city will continue to grow in the years ahead and it is important that we plan for this growth and make sure it reaches everyone."

"While service referrals and cultural celebrations will always be vital functions or our office, we will now focus on bringing important voices into key conversations," said Alejandra St. Guillen, Director of the Mayor's Office for Immigrant Advancement. "This will shape how the City designs and develops policies, convenes diverse external stakeholders for important initiatives, and works collaboratively across departments to improve service delivery."

The launch of the Immigrant Information Corners is the result of a letter of agreement signed by Mayor Walsh and Leon Rodriguez, Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), in June 2015 to promote citizenship in Boston by providing materials on the naturalization process, warning residents about scams, and highlighting the benefits and responsibilities of U.S. citizenship.

The Immigrant Information Corners will also provide information about financial empowerment resources and general public and community services. Some Immigrant Information Corners will feature information sessions, office hours, and workshops. The initiative involves a collaboration between the Mayor's Office for Immigrant Advancement, USCIS, the Boston Public Library, the Mayor's Office of Financial Empowerment and community organizations. Staffing and programming for the Immigrant Information Corners is made possible through the support of Boston Cares, Corporation for National and Community Service, and Citi Community Development.

"Libraries are a very important resource for the whole community, and with new Immigrant Information Corners throughout the city they will play an increasingly significant role, providing critical information on the journey towards becoming a citizen," said David Leonard, Boston Public Library Interim President.

"We are pleased to be part of today's launch of Immigrant Information Corners at the Boston Public Library," said Denis Riordan, USCIS Boston District Director. "Boston's aspiring citizens will now be able to visit their local library branch to find free USCIS citizenship preparation information and materials.  Our nation's libraries play a vital role in serving immigrant communities, and we are proud to join in this announcement during National Library Week. "

Connected to the overall vision for the Mayor's Office for Immigrant Advancement, Mayor Walsh also announced the formation of the City's Task Force on Foreign-Trained Professionals to explore how city government can support residents who have received workforce training or higher education from outside of the United States. Additionally, the Boston Redevelopment Authority published "Imagine All the People" a series of demographic reports based on country or origin for our residents that provides a comprehensive profile of Boston's diverse immigrant communities.

僑務委員會「2016年客家料理研習班」 7/4-15

僑務委員會「2016年客家料理研習班」簡介

研習目的:
為輔助僑胞研習客家料理相關專業知識及實作技術,以培植創業實力及提升經營事業能力,拓展商機,並將客家飲食文化推廣至國際。
研習時間:201674日至715日(週日不上課)
主辦單位:僑務委員會、客家委員會
承辦單位:弘光科技大學
報到地點:弘光科技大學(臺中市沙鹿區臺灣大道六段1018號)
研習對象:20歲至65歲,通曉中文,有意學習客家美食實作相關創業技術之海外僑胞。以海外相關僑營事業從業人員及近兩年未曾參加本會經貿研習班者為優先。
研習課程內容及時數:
實際研習日程計11天,研習總時數至少77小時,包括傳統經典客家美食、現代創意客家料理、醃製類料理及米食類料理等多元客家廚藝實作課程等,並安排實地觀摩參訪臺灣客家特色餐廳暨產業。
費用負擔方式:
(一)     由主辦單位提供研習期間午餐(不含晚餐及710日自由活動日之午、晚餐)、課程教材、師資、場地及材料等學雜費用。
(二)     學員自行負擔部分:
1.         僑居地往返臺灣之機票費、返臺後機場至報到(研習)地點及活動結束後至機場之往返交通費。
2.         研習期間膳宿費及其他個人費用;如需協助住宿安排,可洽由承辦單位弘光科技大學協助代訂「文華道會館」(臺中市西屯區文華路13831號)或「星享道酒店」(臺中市西屯區福興北路18號)。
3.         研習所需書籍及實作制服等費用,學員請委請弘光科技大學統一採購。

報名注意事項:
(一)     報名表件請以電腦繕打或正楷填寫,於簽名處親簽後,送往波士頓華僑文教服務中心報名,未經核轉逕向本會或承辦單位報名者,概不受理。報名表件請向各波士頓華僑文教服務中心索取或逕自本會網站(www.ocac.gov.tw首頁/公告事項/開班)或全球僑商服務網(www.ocbn.org.tw首頁/僑商培訓邀訪/最新預告)下載。
(二)      同一家庭或同公司人員僅限一人報名參加,眷屬不得隨同參加課程
(三)      錄取僑胞於接獲通知並依本會規定向承辦單位完成線上報到後取得參訓資格。
其他
(一)    本研習班課程緊湊,請報名者衡量自身健康及體力狀況,以免研習期間不堪負荷,致影響班級學習。如因而發生意外事故,應自負責任及相關醫療與返回僑居地等相關費用。
(二)    主辦單位於研習期間為參加人員投保新臺幣本會於研習期間為參加人員投保新臺幣二百萬元旅遊平安險或意外險及附加10%之意外醫療險,參加人員如認不足,請自行斟酌額度加保;另參加人員須於行前辦妥個人醫療保險,在臺活動期間如因疾病就醫治療,應自行負擔所有醫療費用。
(三)    為避免浪費培訓資源,本活動學員需全程參訓,未能全程參與者,請勿報名。
(四)    本研習班實作類課程係以葷食為主,各實作菜色材料固定且已於開班前備妥,為免因個人因素提出額外需求而造成其他學員及承辦單位困擾,報名者請慎思個人飲食習慣後再行決定是否報名。

波士頓華僑文教中心 ( Culture Center of TECO in Boston )
許淑芬Amy Huang
90 Lincoln St., Newton, MA 02461
Tel:617-965-8801, Fax:617-965-8815 
https://www.facebook.com/bostonocac

The Cultural Revolution and Cinema: An International Symposium

The Cultural Revolution and Cinema: An International Symposium

Date: 

Saturday, April 16, 2016, 9:30am to 5:30pm

Location: 

S020 | CGIS South | 1730 Cambridge Street | Cambridge, MA
What was cultural about the Cultural Revolution, or was the decade only a cultural desert? Upon the fiftieth anniversary of the Cultural Revolution, this symposium considers the cinematic production and reception, practices and legacies of that tumultuous decade. The mass criticism of several “poisonous weed” films in the mid-1960s helped to launch the Cultural Revolution, and the 1970s saw the expansion of the film exhibition network and radical growth of film audiences. If film was the mass medium that reached the most number of people, were these people simply “brainwashed” by what they saw, or were there more alternative modes of reception? With the censorship and rejection of nearly all films made before 1966, what special film aesthetics and genres emerged in the Cultural Revolution? How did cinema interact with other propaganda media? What was the political role of film production, exhibition, and criticism, especially given the intense involvement of top political leaders? What has been the afterlife of Cultural Revolution cinema, and how are the decade’s films and everyday movie- going remembered today? These questions will be addressed in the three panels—Revolution through Cinema, Revolutionary Aesthetics, and Cinematic Memories—plus a roundtable discussion.
Agenda: 
9:30am -  Welcome and Opening Remarks
David Der-wei WANG, Harvard University

9:40-11:10am Revolution through Cinema
Chair: David Der-wei WANG, Harvard University
Poisonous Weeds and “Correct” Artistic Practices: on Xie Jin's Two Stage Sisters.
Richard PEÑA, Columbia University
The Red Guards as Film Critics
Yomi BRAESTER, University of Washington, Seattle
Friends vs. Enemies: Diplomacy and Documentary Cinema in the Cultural Revolution
Ying QIAN, Columbia University

11:30-12:30 Revolutionary Aesthetics
Chair: Jie LI, Harvard University
 “The Production and Reception of Female Ballet Characters in the Cultural Revolution”
 Laikwan PANG, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Chinese Socialist Formalism and the End(s) of Revolutionary Cinema in the Cultural Revolution
Jason MCGRATH, University of Minnesota

1:30-3:30 Cinematic Memories
Chair: Richard PEÑA, Columbia University
Models on Film: On the Docks and the Geopolitics of Remediation
Laurence CODERRE, University of Michigan
From Paean for “Barefoot doctor” to “Conspiracy Art”: The 1975 Film Chunmiao
Rudolf WAGNER, University of Heidelberg
Why Remember Everyday Movie-Going in Cultural Revolution Shanghai?
Chris BERRY, King’s College London
Rural Movie Projectionists: Maoist Cinema as a Material and Spirit Medium
Jie LI, Harvard University

4:00-5:30 Roundtable Discussion
Chair: Eugene WANG, Harvard University
Carma HINTON, George Mason University
Catherine YEH, Boston University
Yomi BRAESTER, University of Seattle, Washington
Chris BERRY, King’s College London

Sponsored by the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at Harvard, the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, and the CCK Foundation Inter-University Center for Sinology.

Download a compilation of conference abstracts here
This symposium also coincides with a film program at the Harvard Film Archive, Xie Jin, Before and After the Cultural Revolution (April 15-May 1).  Please refer to http://hcl.harvard.edu/hfa/films/2016marmay/xie.html for more details.  

2016金僑獎「世界華影」 總獎金30萬徵件活動全球啟動

2016金僑獎「世界華影」 總獎金30萬徵件活動全球啟動
    中華民國僑務委員會為促進全球華人交流互動及分享僑居生活與感動,自2009年起已連續7年舉辦「金僑獎」活動,在華人世界獲得熱烈迴響;今年以「世界華影」為主題,廣邀海外華人透過照片與短片呈現最感人的故事,架起世界華人溝通橋樑。
   2016金僑獎於4月29日中午12時起至7月29日中午12時止(臺灣時間)全球同步徵件,徵集海外華人在世界各地求學、工作、移民僑居或回臺就學、就業等生活感人的故事,拍攝成照片或短片均可參賽。活動總獎金高達新臺幣30萬元,歡迎全球華人踴躍參與!

    此外,活動針對五大洲前三名上傳作品之參賽者設有「Early Bird」獎;另全球網友設有「投票獎」及「分享獎」等獎項,特別贈送精美禮物。2016金僑獎更新增「僑生佳作獎」,鼓勵僑生踴躍參賽。詳情可上網搜尋「2016金僑獎」或至活動網站:video.ocacmactv.net詢,亦可按讚加入「宏觀數位媒體」Facebook粉絲團,隨時掌握活動最新資訊。
補註:
2016年活動徵件:2016429日中午12時至2016729日中午12(臺灣時間為準)分照片組和短片組。詳細情形請上「金僑獎」網站 http://video.ocacmactv.net/ 或「宏觀數位媒體粉絲團」查詢。



星期三, 4月 13, 2016

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AT THE WHITE HOUSE SCIENCE FAIR

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE WHITE HOUSE SCIENCE FAIR

East Room


3:04 P.M. EDT


THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, hello, hello!  Hey!  (Applause.)  Good to see you.  All right, everybody, have a seat, have a seat.

Well, hello, everybody.  Welcome to the White House.  There are a lot of good things about being President.  I get a chance to travel all across the country and meet people and see all the amazing things that are being done; being Commander-in-Chief of the greatest military the world has ever known and seeing the incredible service of our men and women in uniform -- Air Force One is very cool.  (Laughter.)  I don’t have to take off my shoes before I get on an airplane.  (Laughter.) 

But some of the best moments that I’ve had as President have involved science and our annual Science Fair.  I mean, I have shot a marshmallow out of a cannon directly under Lincoln’s portrait.  I’ve learned about prototypes from six-year-old Girl Scouts who built a page-turning machine out of Legos for people who might be disabled -- there they are.  (Laughter.)  Good to see you guys.  I should add, by the way, that I took a picture with them with one of their tiaras on, which I think is still floating around the Internet.  (Laughter.) 

Most importantly, I’ve just been able to see the unbelievable ingenuity and passion and curiosity and brain power of America’s next generation, and all the cool things that they do.  I’ve also, by the way, had a chance to see an alarming number of robots.  (Laughter.)  None have caused me any harm up until now.  They’ve startled me a little bit.  I understand today that we have a live chicken here, which I’m sure the White House staff is thrilled about.  (Laughter.) 

But this is fun.  More importantly, it speaks to what makes America the greatest country on Earth. 

I want to publicly thank some of the people who helped make today possible –- also because I want you to know who to blame if something explodes.  (Laughter.)  We’ve got some members of Congress in the house who have been highly supportive of all our science and basic research efforts.  We’ve got my science advisor, John Holdren, who is here.  Give John a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  We have my Chief Technology Officer Megan Smith in the house.  (Applause.) 

We have some guests who are really helping to lift up the importance of science, like -- this is not a typical combination -- supermodel and super coder Karlie Kloss is here.  (Applause.)  We’ve got actress and science enthusiast Yara Shahidi.  There she is.  Good to see you.  (Applause.)  We’ve got XKCD comic creator Randall Munroe is here.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  We’re joined by some of the past participants of our Science Fairs, including Elana Simon, who studied her own cancer and started coming up with some cures.  I remember meeting you last year.  How is Harvard going? 

MS. SIMON:  Good.

THE PRESIDENT:  So far, so good?  She was a senior last year, just started.  (Applause.) 

So this is an eclectic and diverse bunch.  But what they all share is this love of science and love of technology, and a belief that our youngest innovators can change the world.

And there’s nothing that makes me more hopeful about the future than seeing young people like the ones who are here -- and they come from all over the country, they come in all shapes and sizes.  All of you are showing the rest of us that it’s never too early in life to make a difference.  You teach us about the power of reason and logic, and trying things and figuring out whether they work, and if they don’t, learning from that and trying something new.  And you remind us that, together, through science, we can tackle some of the biggest challenges that we face.

Whether you’re fighting cancer or combatting climate change, feeding the world, writing code that leads to social change, you are sharing in this essential spirit of discovery that America is built on. 

John Holdren helpfully reminded me that today happens to be the 273rd birthday of Thomas Jefferson.  And Thomas Jefferson was obviously a pretty good writer; the Declaration of Independence turned out pretty well.  (Laughter.)  He was a great political thinker and a great President.  But he was also a scientist.  And that was true of most of our Founders -- they were children of the enlightenment.  They had come of age when all the old dogmas were being challenged.  And they had this incredible faith, this belief in the human mind, and our ability to figure stuff out.

And whether it was Benjamin Franklin or Thomas Jefferson, or all the others who were involved in the founding of our country, one of the essential elements that is embedded in our Constitution and the design of this democracy is this belief that the power of the human brain when applied to the world around us can do amazing, remarkable things.

And it also requires, as we're seeing from these outstanding teams, not just constant inquiry, but also strong teamwork and dogged perseverance.  And by following the trail of your curiosity wherever it takes you, you are continually adding to this body of knowledge that helps make us a more secure, more prosperous, and more hopeful society.  Science has always been the hallmark of American progress.  It’s the key to our economic success.  I can’t think of a more exciting time for American science than right now, because we are busy reigniting that spirit of innovation to meet so many challenges.

Just give you a couple examples.  We’re on the cusp of a new era of medicine that accounts for people’s individual genes.  And I’ve been doing a lot of work with Francis Collins, the head of NIH, around how we take the human genome that we've mapped, in part thanks to the good work of Francis and others, so that we are able to not just cure diseases generally, but figure out what exactly do you in your particular body need in order to keep it running well.

We’re harnessing technology to develop cleaner sources of energy, and save our planet in the process.  We’re unraveling the mysteries of the human brain, unlocking secrets of the universe.  In fact, just last month, Commander Scott Kelly returned from an almost a year-long stay on the International Space Station.  Some of you may have read about that.  He conducted countless experiments, and he also served as an experiment himself.  His identical twin brother, Mark, who is an astronaut, as well -- Mark stayed home during this entire time that Scott was up in the air, and that meant that NASA could study the two of them side by side to gain insights into how a long-term occupation in space changes your body and your operating systems. 

It turned out, initially, it makes you two inches taller.  (Laughter.)  But I saw Mark just two weekends ago; apparently, you shrink back really quickly.  (Laughter.)  It makes your head bigger too.  (Laughter.)  But I don't know how big.

America has also got a selfie-taking rover that’s Instagramming from Mars.  The International Space Station just got its first inflatable habitat for astronauts.  SpaceX, on the commercial, private venture side of space, just landed a returning rocket on a drone ship in the middle of the ocean.  And that's opening up the possibility of reusing our rockets instead of just throwing them away once they have launched. 

So the progress we’re seeing across the board is extraordinary, and it’s just the beginning.  The rest is going to be up to you, the next generation.  Somewhere in your generation, maybe in this room, are pioneers who are going to be the first to set their foot on Mars -- the first humans, anyway.  I don't know about other life forms.  (Laughter.) 

And I know what you’re capable of because I just had a chance to see some of the exhibits, and we had some of the press pool follow.  If you were not blown away from some of the young people that we just had a chance to meet, then you had too big of a lunch and you were falling asleep, because if you were paying attention it was unbelievable. 

We’ve got Maya Varma, who is a senior from San Jose, California.  Where is Maya?  Yay, there’s Maya.  Maya is using a low-cost microcontroller, software freely available on the Internet, and a smartphone, and she designed a tool that allows people with asthma and other lung diseases to diagnose and monitor their own symptoms.  So her goal was to use smartphone technology to make diagnostic tests for all kinds of diseases a lot cheaper.  “My aspiration is not only to create the next big thing in my field one day,” Maya says, “but also to make it accessible to more than a privileged few in the world.”  So give Maya a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

I do have to say -- this is just an aside -- the only problem with the Science Fair is it makes me feel a little inadequate.  (Laughter.)  Because I think back to my high school, and, first of all, I didn't have a field.  Maya talked about her “field.”  I don't know exactly what my field of study was at that time, but it wasn’t that.  (Laughter.) 

We also have nine-year-old Jacob Leggette from Baltimore.  Where is Jacob?  There you go, in the bowtie.  (Applause.)  So Jacob loved programming ever since the age of two, when he nearly wiped clean his grandma’s computer -- (laughter) -- which I’m sure she was thrilled with.  But don’t worry, Jacob fixed it.  Last summer, this young maker wrote to a company that manufactures 3D printers, asked them if he could have one of the 3D printers in exchange for feedback on whether their printers are kid-friendly.  So clearly he’s a good negotiator and business person.  (Laughter.)  And today, Jacob is churning out toys and games for himself and his little sister, and he dreams one day of making artificial organs for people.

I should add, by the way, Jacob, John, had a very good idea, which is that we should have -- in addition to our PCAST, which is my science advisory group, all these scientists and leaders in various fields, we should have a kid’s advisory group that starts explaining to us what’s interesting to them and what’s working, and could help us shape advances in STEM education.  Anyway, that was Jacob’s idea.  So way to go, Jacob.  We're going to follow up on that.  Give Jacob a round of applause.  (Applause.)

We have 16-year-old Anarudh Ganesan.   Where is Anarudh?  There he is, right there.  (Applause.)  So when Anarudh was little, his grandparents walked him 10 miles to a remote clinic in his native India for vaccinations, only to find out that the vaccines had spoiled in the heat.  Though he eventually got the shots that he needed, he thought, well, this is a problem, and wanted to prevent other children from facing the same risk.  So he developed what he calls the VAXXWAGON, and it’s a refrigerator on wheels that transports vaccines to remote destinations.  That's the kind of innovation and compassion that we're seeing from so many of these young people.  So give Anarudh a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

And we have Olivia Hallisey, a high school senior from Greenwich, Connecticut.  Where is Olivia?  There she is.  Hi, Olivia.  Now, think about this -- so Olivia swept the Google Science Fair.  She read about the Ebola epidemic in the news.  She decides, I want to make a faster, less-expensive test for the disease, as opposed to a lot of adults who were just thinking, how do I avoid getting Ebola?  (Laughter.)  She decides, well, I’m going to fix this.  So she wants a faster, less-expensive test.  An old test cost $1,000, took up to 12 hours to conduct.  Using silk as a base instead, Olivia made the test cost $5, without requiring refrigeration, with results that are available in under 30 minutes.  What were you doing in high school?  (Laughter.)  Give Olivia a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

So this is just a small sample of the incredible talent that is on display at this science fair.  And we couldn’t be prouder.  To all the students, to all the young people, we could not be prouder of you.  I want to thank the parents and the teachers and mentors who stood behind these young people, encouraged them to pursue their dreams.  I asked all the young people who I had a chance to meet, how did you get interested in this?  And there were a couple whose parents were in the sciences, but for the majority of them, there was a teacher, a mentor, a program, something that just got them hooked.  And it’s a reminder that science is not something that is out of reach, it’s not just for the few, it’s for the many, as long as it’s something that we're weaving into our curriculum and it’s something that we're valuing as a society.

And so I hope that every company and every college and every community and every parent and every teacher joins us in encouraging this next generation of students to actively engage and pursue science and push the boundaries of what’s possible.  We’ve got to give all of our young people the tools that they need to explore and discover, and to dig their hands in stuff, and experiment, and invent, and uncover something new, and try things, and see hypotheses or experiments fail, and then learn how to extract some knowledge from things that didn't work as well as things that worked.  That's another theme that came out of a lot of the conversations I had with young people. 

And that’s why we’re building on our efforts to bring hands-on computer science learning, for example, to all students.  As I’ve said before, in the new economy, computer science isn’t optional, it’s a basic skill, along with the three Rs.  So we’re issuing new guidance to school districts for how they can better support computer science education.  Oracle will invest in getting 125,000 more students into computer science classes.  Give Oracle a big round of applause for that.  We appreciate that.  (Applause.)

We’ve got more than 500 schools that are committing to expand access to computer science.  And this is just a sample of the things that we've been putting together over the last several years to try to expand opportunity for the kind of brilliant work that's being done by these students.  And we’re seeing entire states take action.  For example, last month, Rhode Island got on a path to bring computer science to every school within two years.

So we’re going to build on this progress.  We want to make sure every single one of our students –- no matter where they’re from, what income their parents bring in, regardless of their backgrounds -- we want to make sure that they’ve got access to hands-on science, technology, engineering, and math education that’s going to set them up for success and keep our nation competitive in the 21st century.

That includes, by the way, working through some of the structural biases that exist in science.  Some of them -- a lot of them are unconscious.  But the fact is, is that we've got to get more of our young women and minorities into science and technology, engineering and math, and computer science.  I’ve been really pleased to see the number of young women who have gotten more and more involved in our science fairs over the course of these last several years.

And as I said to a group that I had a chance to meet with outside, we're not going to succeed if we got half the team on the bench, especially when it’s the smarter half of the team.  (Laughter.)  Our diversity is a strength.  And we've got to leverage all of our talent in order to make ourselves as creative and solve as many problems as we can be.

And one of the things I find so inspiring about these young thinkers and makers is that they look at all these seemingly intractable problems as something that we can solve.  There is a confidence when you are pursuing science.  They don't consider age a barrier.  They don't think, well, that's just the way things are.  They're not afraid to try things and ask tough questions.  And above all, what we’ve seen today is that they feel an obligation to use their gifts to do something not just for themselves but for other people as well. 

Olivia said after she was working on this Ebola diagnostic tool, “My generation has been raised with an awareness that we're part of a global community.  It’s everybody’s responsibility to take a proactive approach and think of solutions.”  She is right.  I want you to call up Congress and tell them your thinking on that.  (Laughter.)  That was just a joke.  (Laughter.)  Maybe not.  (Laughter.)  But it’s all up to us to work together with our youngest talent leading the way.

A century ago, Albert Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves.  This year, a team of scientists finally proved him right.  This was very cool, by the way.  I don't know -- those of you guys who had a chance to read about this -- the way they measured it was the building got a little longer.  The building that -- from which they were measuring this gravitational wave grew, like, a little bit.  (Laughter.)  And then it kind of shrank back, which is really weird and really interesting.  (Laughter.) 

And that’s the thing about science -- you don’t always cross the finish line yourself.  You may have a hypothesis, a theory, and then people build off of it, and it’s like you’re running a race and you’re passing a baton.  Everything that we’re working with today is based on some young person like you 10 years ago, 50 years ago, 100 or 300 years ago, who were asking themselves the same question.  And while even Einstein didn’t see all the fruits of his labor, because he went as far as his curiosity and hard work would take him, generations of scientists continue to build on his progress.

So that’s what we’re going to need from all of you.  We are counting on all of you to help build a brighter future, and for you to use your talents to help your communities and your country and the world.  We will be with you every step of the way.  And I will be keenly following your progress so that when you invent some cancer cure or find some new source of cheap, clean energy, I will take some of the credit.  (Laughter.)  I’ll say, if it hadn’t been for the White House Science Fair, who knows what might have happened -- even though it won’t really be my credit to take.  So I’m just teasing, guys.

Thank you very much, everybody.  Proud of you.  Good job.  (Applause.)