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  • NASA’s Webb Scratches Beyond Surface of Cat’s Paw for 3rd Anniversary

    NASA’s Webb Scratches Beyond Surface of Cat’s Paw for 3rd Anniversary

    It’s the cat’s meow! To celebrate its third year of revealing stunning scenes of the cosmos in infrared light, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has “clawed” back the thick, dusty layers of a section within the Cat’s Paw Nebula (NGC 6334). Focusing Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) on a single “toe bean” within this active star-forming region revealed a subset of mini toe beans, which appear to contain young stars shaping the surrounding gas and dust.

    Webb’s look at this particular area of the Cat’s Paw Nebula just scratches the surface of the telescope’s three years of groundbreaking science.

    “Three years into its mission, Webb continues to deliver on its design – revealing previously hidden aspects of the universe, from the star formation process to some of the earliest galaxies,” said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, acting director of the Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “As it repeatedly breaks its own records, Webb is also uncovering unknowns for new generations of flagship missions to tackle. Whether it’s following up on the mysteries of dark matter with NASA’s nearly complete Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, or narrowing our search for life to Earth-like planets with the Habitable Worlds Observatory, the questions Webb has raised are just as exciting as the answers it’s giving us.”

    The progression from a large molecular cloud to massive stars entails multiple steps, some of which are still not well understood by astronomers. Located approximately 4,000 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius, the Cat’s Paw Nebula offers scientists the opportunity to study the turbulent cloud-to-star process in great detail. Webb’s observation of the nebula in near-infrared light builds upon previous studies by NASA’s Hubble and retired Spitzer Space Telescope in visible- and infrared-light, respectively.

    With its sharp resolution, Webb shows never-before-seen structural details and features: Massive young stars are carving away at nearby gas and dust, while their bright starlight is producing a bright nebulous glow represented in blue. It’s a temporary scene where the disruptive young stars, with their relatively short lives and luminosity, have a brief but important role in the region’s larger story. As a consequence of these massive stars’ lively behavior, the local star formation process will eventually come to a stop.

    Start with the toe bean at top center, which is nicknamed the “Opera House” for its circular, tiered-like structure. The primary drivers for the area’s cloudy blue glow are most likely toward its bottom: either the light from the bright yellowish stars or from a nearby source still hidden behind the dense, dark brown dust.

    Just below the orange-brown tiers of dust is a bright yellow star with diffraction spikes. While this massive star has carved away at its immediate surroundings, it has been unable to push the gas and dust away to greater distances, creating a compact shell of surrounding material.

    Look closely to notice small patches, like the tuning fork-shaped area to the Opera House’s immediate left, that contain fewer stars. These seemingly vacant zones indicate the presence of dense foreground filaments of dust that are home to still-forming stars and block the light of stars in the background.

    Toward the image’s center are small, fiery red clumps scattered amongst the brown dust. These glowing red sources mark regions where massive star formation is underway, albeit in an obscured manner.

    Some massive blue-white stars, like the one in the lower left toe bean, seem to be more sharply resolved than others. This is because any intervening material between the star and the telescope has been dissipated by stellar radiation.

    Near the bottom of that toe bean are small, dense filaments of dust. These tiny clumps of dust have managed to remain despite the intense radiation, suggesting that they are dense enough to form protostars. A small section of yellow at the right notes the location of a still-enshrouded massive star that has managed to shine through intervening material.

    Across this entire scene are many small yellow stars with diffraction spikes. Bright blue-white stars are in the foreground of this Webb image, but some may be a part of the more expansive Cat’s Paw Nebula area.

    One eye-catching aspect of this Webb image is the bright, red-orange oval at top right. Its low count of background stars implies it is a dense area just beginning its star-formation process. A couple of visible and still-veiled stars are scattered throughout this region, which are contributing to the illumination of the material in the middle. Some still-enveloped stars leave hints of their presence, like a bow shock at the bottom left, which indicates an energetic ejection of gas and dust from a bright source.

    Further explore this subset of toe beans by embarking on a narrated tour or getting closer to the image. We also invite you to reminisce about Webb’s three years of science observations.

    This visualization explores a subset of toe bean-reminiscent structures within a section of the Cat’s Paw Nebula, a massive, local star-forming region located approximately 4,000 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius.

    This image by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope in near-infrared light was released in honor of the telescope’s third science operations anniversary. Since it began science operations in July 2022, Webb’s observations of our universe have wowed scientists and the public alike.

    Glide into the lower left toe bean, moving past many small yellow stars along the way, where filaments of gas and dust frame the cavernous area. The region’s nebulous glow, represented in blue, is from the bright light of massive young stars.

    Float toward the top toe bean, which is nicknamed the “Opera House” for its circular, tiered-like structure. As you move, you’ll pass plumes of orange-brown dust that vary in density and small, fiery red clumps where star formation is occurring, albeit in an obscured manner.

    Credits: Producers: Greg Bacon (STScI), Frank Summers (STScI); Image Processing: Joe DePasquale (STScI); Music: Joe DePasquale (STScI); Designers: Ralf Crawford (STScI), Leah Hustak (STScI), Christian Nieves (STScI), Alyssa Pagan (STScI); Images: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; ESO/VISTA.

    This zoom-in video shows the location of the Cat’s Paw Nebula on the sky. It begins with a ground-based photo by the late astrophotographer Akira Fujii, then shows views from the Digitized Sky Survey. The video then hones in on a select portion of the sky to reveal a European Southern Observatory image of the Cat’s Paw Nebula in visible light. The video continues to zoom in on a section of the Cat’s Paw, which gradually transitions to the stunning image captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope in near-infrared light.
     
    Credits: Video: NASA, ESA, CSA, Danielle Kirshenblat (STScI); Acknowledgement: Akira Fujii, DSS, VISTA.

    The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).

    To learn more about Webb, visit:

    https://science.nasa.gov/webb

    Downloads

    Click any image to open a larger version.

    View/Download all image products at all resolutions for this article from the Space Telescope Science Institute.

    Laura Betz – laura.e.betz@nasa.gov
    NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

    Abigail Major – amajor@stsci.edu
    Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.

    Hannah Braun – hbraun@stsci.edu
    Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.

    View other images of the Cat’s Paw Nebula

    Animation Video: “How Dense Pillars Form in Molecular Clouds”

    Explore a larger view of the Cat’s Paw Nebula: ViewSpace Video

    Read more: Webb Star Formation Discoveries

    More Webb News

    More Webb Images

    Webb Science Themes

    Webb Mission Page

    What is the Webb Telescope?

    SpacePlace for Kids

    En Español

    Este artículo en español

    Ciencia de la NASA

    NASA en español 

    Space Place para niños

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  • Landmark edition: FIBA Women’s EuroBasket 2025 sets records on and off the court

    Landmark edition: FIBA Women’s EuroBasket 2025 sets records on and off the court

    The official Women’s EuroBasket app

    MUNICH (Germany) – FIBA Women’s EuroBasket 2025 set out to be amazing but by the time it concluded on June 29 in Greece, the birthplace of sports myths, it had gone one step farther, scaling the heights of the Acropolis.

    The 40th edition marked the first time that Europe’s flagship national team competition was hosted in four different countries, with Bologna, Italy; Brno, Czechia; Hamburg, Germany; and Piraeus, Greece hosting one group each and the Greek port city also providing the stage for the Final Phase.

    It was only appropriate that Emma Meesseman secured a place on the Mount Olympus of competition history by becoming the first ever two-time TISSOT MVP after leading the Belgian Cats to their back-to-back trophy conquest.

    Belgium has joined the elite company of Spain and the Soviet Union as the only countries to win the coveted silverware twice in a row.

    Related Articles

    The Queen of Hoops: Emma Meesseman’s full FIBA trophy cabinet

    The accomplishment of the Belgian superstar on the court was the punctuation point of a vast array of records for the 2025 edition, also in the stands and in the digital realm.

    Fans in the arenas shattered every previous record of the 21st century, starting with the highest single-game attendance as 10,503 spectators packed the iconic Peace and Friendship Stadium in Piraeus at the Group Phase contest between hosts Greece and Türkiye.

    Related Articles

    Record 21st century crowd set at FIBA Women’s EuroBasket in Greece

    Meanwhile the 8,860 spectators at the game between Greece and France marked the second-highest single-game attendance this century, and the big Final between Belgium and France attracted the biggest crowd for a title clash this century, with 7,827 spectators.

    It comes as little surprise then that the 40th edition also averaged the highest attendance since the turn of the century, with 2,579 spectators.

    The fact the competition was on a record-breaking track started becoming evident already since the start of the cycle, which started with the Qualifiers.

    Cumulative video views across the competition’s official channels, for the tournament and Qualifiers combined, ballooned to 210 million views from 43 million for the 2023 edition. Engagement grew to 15 million from 7 million, while impressions more than doubled to 968 millions from 415 million.

    As these figures suggest, subscription to the Women’s EuroBasket social media accounts soared, with its official platforms gaining over 85,000 new followers.

    The official website of the competition recorded 1.4 million sessions, up from 1.1 million two years earlier, while pageviews grew a whopping 88 percent, to 6.2 million views. The editorial segment in particular grew to 480,000 pageviews, from 280,000 for Women’s EuroBasket 2023.

    Linked to the website records was a huge increase for the official mobile app of the competition, which saw downloads more than double to 25,000, from 14,000 in 2023.

    FIBA

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  • NASA’s Roman Space Telescope Team Installs Observatory’s Solar Panels

    NASA’s Roman Space Telescope Team Installs Observatory’s Solar Panels

    On June 14 and 16, technicians installed solar panels onto NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, one of the final steps in assembling the observatory. Collectively called the Solar Array Sun Shield, these panels will power and shade the observatory, enabling all the mission’s observations and helping keep the instruments cool.

    “At this point, the observatory is about 90% complete,” said Jack Marshall, the Solar Array Sun Shield lead at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “We just need to join two large assemblies, and then we’ll run the whole Roman observatory through a series of tests. We’re currently on track for launch several months earlier than the promised date of no later than May 2027.” The team is working toward launch as early as fall 2026.

    The Solar Array Sun Shield is made up of six panels, each covered in solar cells. The two central panels will remain fixed to the outer barrel assembly (the observatory’s outer shell) while the other four will deploy once Roman is in space, swinging up to align with the center panels.

    The panels will spend the entirety of the mission facing the Sun to provide a steady supply of power to the observatory’s electronics. This orientation will also shade much of the observatory and help keep the instruments cool, which is critical for an infrared observatory. Since infrared light is detectable as heat, excess warmth from the spacecraft’s own components would saturate the detectors and effectively blind the telescope.

    “Now that the panels have been installed, the outer portion of the Roman observatory is complete,” said Goddard’s Aaron Vigil, a mechanical engineer working on the array. Next, technicians will test deploy the solar panels and the observatory’s “visor” (the deployable aperture cover). The team is also testing the core portion of the observatory, assessing the electronics and conducting a thermal vacuum test to ensure the system operates as planned in the harsh space environment.

    This will keep the project on track to connect Roman’s inner and outer segments in November, resulting in a whole observatory by the end of the year that can then undergo pre-launch tests.

    To virtually tour an interactive version of the telescope, visit: https://roman.gsfc.nasa.gov/interactive/

    Download high-resolution video and images from NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio

    The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is managed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, with participation by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California; Caltech/IPAC in Pasadena, California; the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore; and a science team comprising scientists from various research institutions. The primary industrial partners are BAE Systems Inc. in Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in Rochester, New York; and Teledyne Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks, California.

    By Ashley Balzer
    NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

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  • NASA’s Webb Scratches Beyond Surface of Cat’s Paw for 3rd Anniversary

    NASA’s Webb Scratches Beyond Surface of Cat’s Paw for 3rd Anniversary

    It’s the cat’s meow! To celebrate its third year of revealing stunning scenes of the cosmos in infrared light, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has “clawed” back the thick, dusty layers of a section within the Cat’s Paw Nebula (NGC 6334). Focusing Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) on a single “toe bean” within this active star-forming region revealed a subset of mini toe beans, which appear to contain young stars shaping the surrounding gas and dust.

    Webb’s look at this particular area of the Cat’s Paw Nebula just scratches the surface of the telescope’s three years of groundbreaking science.

    “Three years into its mission, Webb continues to deliver on its design – revealing previously hidden aspects of the universe, from the star formation process to some of the earliest galaxies,” said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, acting director of the Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “As it repeatedly breaks its own records, Webb is also uncovering unknowns for new generations of flagship missions to tackle. Whether it’s following up on the mysteries of dark matter with NASA’s nearly complete Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, or narrowing our search for life to Earth-like planets with the Habitable Worlds Observatory, the questions Webb has raised are just as exciting as the answers it’s giving us.” 

    Star Formation Flex

    The progression from a large molecular cloud to massive stars entails multiple steps, some of which are still not well understood by astronomers. Located approximately 4,000 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius, the Cat’s Paw Nebula offers scientists the opportunity to study the turbulent cloud-to-star process in great detail. Webb’s observation of the nebula in near-infrared light builds upon previous studies by NASA’s Hubble and retired Spitzer Space Telescope in visible- and infrared-light, respectively.

    With its sharp resolution, Webb shows never-before-seen structural details and features: Massive young stars are carving away at nearby gas and dust, while their bright starlight is producing a bright nebulous glow represented in blue. It’s a temporary scene where the disruptive young stars, with their relatively short lives and luminosity, have a brief but important role in the region’s larger story. As a consequence of these massive stars’ lively behavior, the local star formation process will eventually come to a stop.

    Opera House’s Intricate Structure

    Start with the toe bean at top center, which is nicknamed the “Opera House” for its circular, tiered-like structure. The primary drivers for the area’s cloudy blue glow are most likely toward its bottom: either the light from the bright yellowish stars or from a nearby source still hidden behind the dense, dark brown dust. 

    Just below the orange-brown tiers of dust is a bright yellow star with diffraction spikes. While this massive star has carved away at its immediate surroundings, it has been unable to push the gas and dust away to greater distances, creating a compact shell of surrounding material.

    Look closely to notice small patches, like the tuning fork-shaped area to the Opera House’s immediate left, that contain fewer stars. These seemingly vacant zones indicate the presence of dense foreground filaments of dust that are home to still-forming stars and block the light of stars in the background.

    Spotlight on Stars

    Toward the image’s center are small, fiery red clumps scattered amongst the brown dust. These glowing red sources mark regions where massive star formation is underway, albeit in an obscured manner. 

    Some massive blue-white stars, like the one in the lower left toe bean, seem to be more sharply resolved than others. This is because any intervening material between the star and the telescope has been dissipated by stellar radiation.

    Near the bottom of that toe bean are small, dense filaments of dust. These tiny clumps of dust have managed to remain despite the intense radiation, suggesting that they are dense enough to form protostars. A small section of yellow at the right notes the location of a still-enshrouded massive star that has managed to shine through intervening material.

    Across this entire scene are many small yellow stars with diffraction spikes. Bright blue-white stars are in the foreground of this Webb image, but some may be a part of the more expansive Cat’s Paw Nebula area.

    One eye-catching aspect of this Webb image is the bright, red-orange oval at top right. Its low count of background stars implies it is a dense area just beginning its star-formation process. A couple of visible and still-veiled stars are scattered throughout this region, which are contributing to the illumination of the material in the middle. Some still-enveloped stars leave hints of their presence, like a bow shock at the bottom left, which indicates an energetic ejection of gas and dust from a bright source.

    Further explore this subset of toe beans by embarking on a narrated tour or getting closer to the image. We also invite you to reminisce about Webb’s three years of science observations.

    The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).

    To learn more about Webb, visit:

    https://science.nasa.gov/webb

    Continue Reading

  • US TV schedule | The 153rd Open

    US TV schedule | The 153rd Open

    And this year, a unique ‘Multiview’ offering will simultaneously showcase two Featured Groups and the Par-3 Channel to elevate your viewing experience of golf’s original major.

    The 153rd Open US TV schedule (all times EDT – all times subject to change):

    Monday 14 July

    04:00 – 07:00: HSBC Live at The Range (Golf Channel)
    07:00 – 09:00: 5 Clubs with Gary Williams (Golf Channel)
    09:00 – 14:00: Live from The Open (Golf Channel)
    19:00 – 23:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Tuesday 15 July

    04:00 – 07:00: HSBC Live at The Range (Golf Channel)
    07:00 – 08:00: Highlights of The 148th Open at Royal Portrush (Golf Channel)
    08:00 – 13:00: Live from The Open (Golf Channel)
    13:00 – 18:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    19:00 – 01:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Wednesday 16 July

    02:00 – 04:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    04:00 – 07:00: HSBC Live at The Range (Golf Channel)
    07:00 – 08:00: This is Open Country (Golf Channel)
    08:00 – 18:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    18:30 – 19:30: ‘Underdogs’ – The Untold Story of The 138th Open
    19:30 – 01:30: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Thursday 17 July

    01:30 – 04:00: The 153rd Open First Round LIVE (Peacock)
    03:00 – 15:00: Par-3 Channel LIVE (Peacock)
    04:00 – 15:30: The 153rd Open First Round LIVE (NBC)
    04:03 – 09:03: Featured Group 1 LIVE (Peacock)
    04:47 – 09:47: Featured Group 2 LIVE (Peacock)
    08:00 – 13:00: The 153rd Open ‘All Access’ (Peacock)
    09:48 – 14:48: Featured Group 3 LIVE (Peacock)
    09:59 – 14:59: Featured Group 4 LIVE (Peacock)
    15:30 – 18:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    21:00 – 01:30: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Friday 18 July

    01:30 – 04:00: The 153rd Open Second Round LIVE (Peacock)
    03:00 – 15:00: Par-3 Channel LIVE (Peacock)
    04:00 – 15:30: The 153rd Open Day Two LIVE (NBC)
    04:03 – 09:03: Featured Group 1 LIVE (Peacock)
    04:47 – 09:47: Featured Group 2 LIVE (Peacock)
    08:00 – 13:00: The 153rd Open ‘All Access’ (Peacock)
    09:48 – 14:48: Featured Group 3 LIVE (Peacock)
    09:59 – 14:59: Featured Group 4 LIVE (Peacock)
    15:30 – 18:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    23:00 – 05:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Saturday 19 July

    05:00 – 07:00: The 153rd Open Third Round LIVE (NBC)
    05:09 – 10:09: Featured Group 1 LIVE (Peacock)
    06:25 – 11:25: Featured Group 2 LIVE (Peacock)
    06:30 – 14:30: Par-3 Channel LIVE (Peacock)
    07:00 – 15:00: The 153rd Open Third Round – Sky Show (Peacock)
    07:00 – 15:00: The 153rd Open Third Round LIVE (NBC)
    08:25 – 13:25: Featured Group 3 LIVE (Peacock)
    08:45 – 13:45: Featured Group 4 LIVE (Peacock)
    15:00 – 17:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    17:00 – 18:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    23:00 – 02:00: The 153rd Open Third Round (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Sunday 20 July

    02:00 – 04:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    03:15 – 08:15: Featured Group 1 LIVE (Peacock)
    04:00 – 07:00: The 153rd Open Final Round LIVE (NBC)
    05:30 – 10:30: Featured Group 2 LIVE
    06:30 – 14:30: Par-3 Channel LIVE (Peacock)
    07:00 – 14:00: The 153rd Open Final Round LIVE (NBC)
    07:00 – 14:00: The 153rd Open Final Round – Sky Show (Peacock)
    07:35 – 12:35: Featured Group 3 LIVE (Peacock)
    07:45 – 12:45: Featured Group 4 LIVE (Peacock)
    14:00 – 16:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    16:00 – 18:00: Live from The Open (repeat) (Golf Channel)
    21:00 – 03:00: The 153rd Open Final Round (repeat) (Golf Channel)

    Monday 21 July

    20:00 – 02:00: The 153rd Open Final Round (repeat) (Golf Channel)

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  • Olympic Snowboard Big Air 101: Rules, scoring and event format explained

    Olympic Snowboard Big Air 101: Rules, scoring and event format explained

    What are the differences between big air and slopestyle snowboarding?


    A typical slopestyle course features three rail sections and three jump sections. Take one of those jump sections, make it larger, and you basically have big air.

    Aside from that, the biggest difference is in the competition format. Slopestyle forces riders to put together one well-rounded run, while big air only requires riders to land one trick at a time but still emphasizes consistency and variety due to its best-two-of-three format.

    The skills used for slopestyle and big air largely are transferrable, so athletes who qualify will compete in both at the Winter Olympics. However, there are many athletes who specialize in one more so than the other.

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  • Olympic Snowboard Cross 101: Rules, race format and how it works

    Olympic Snowboard Cross 101: Rules, race format and how it works

    How do the elimination heats work for Olympic snowboard cross?


    In the elimination rounds, competitors are divided into heats. Each heat has up to four racers, and riders are divided up so that higher seeds are not able to meet until later rounds.

    Eliminations start with the Round of 32, with the top-two racers from each heat advancing to the quarterfinals. The top-two riders from each quarterfinal heat advance to the semifinals, and the top riders from each semifinal heat advance to the final, which determines first through fourth place. The other semifinalists who finish third and fourth are relegated to the small final to determine fifth through eighth place.

    If two or more racers appear to cross the finish line at the same time, the official results are determined after examining the photo finish to see the first part of each rider’s body or snowboard that crossed the finish line.

    In a case where more than one competitor does not complete the course nor cross the finish line, the rankings in that heat are based on the location where the competitors have completed the course. Whichever athlete passed more gates further down the course is ranked higher.

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  • Team MRF Tyres remains on course for an ERC hat-trick

    Team MRF Tyres remains on course for an ERC hat-trick

    With three rounds remaining, Team MRF Tyres leads TRT Rally Team by 54 points followed by M-Sport Ford World Rally Team, Kowax DST Racing and J2X Rally Team.

    Team MRF Tyres had been ahead by 65 points prior to Rally di Roma Capitale. However, by scoring 24 points to the 13 recorded by Team MRF Tyres on the Italian asphalt event, TRT Rally Team was able to trim the deficit.

    TRT Rally Team has edged closer to Team MRF Tyres in the standings

    © ERC

    While MRF Tyres Dealer Team remains in sixth position, Proformance Service Kft – Team Staff House has moved into the top 10 in seventh with F.P.F. Sport also climbing into the leading 10 positions in eighth place.

    Borsod Talent Motorsport Egyesület and Pécsi Sport Nonprofit ZRT PSN ZRT complete the current top 10.

    Team MRF Tyres won the FIA European Rally Championship for Teams in 2022 and 2023. BRC Racing Team secured the coveted award in 2024.

    Barum Czech Rally Zlín hosts round six of the eight-event ERC season from 15 – 17 August.

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  • SEC Investor Advocate to Examine Risks of China-Based VIEs

    In a report to Congress, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) Office of the Investor Advocate (OIAD) said that it will study investor protection issues related to China-based variable interest entities (VIEs) in light of the increasing exposure of U.S. investors to these companies.

    This is one of several objectives for the OIAD in fiscal 2026, which starts on October 1, 2025.

    “In doing so, the Investor Advocate will endeavor to elevate concerns regarding China-based VIEs to the attention of the Commission and relevant SEC staff,” according to the report, issued on June 25.

    Companies in certain sectors in China are not allowed to have foreign ownership and cannot directly list on exchanges outside of China. Thus, many China-based operating companies are structured as VIEs to raise funds on such exchanges.

    Typically, a China-based operating company sets up an offshore shell company to sell stock to the public. That shell company, which has service contracts with the operating company, issues the shares on a foreign exchange like the New York Stock Exchange.

    The shell company has no equity ownership in the operating company, but the shell company can consolidate the operating company into its financial statements for accounting purposes. This arrangement exposes U.S. investors to the Chinese operating company through a series of service contracts.

    “The emergence and proliferation of these U.S.-listed companies implicate a range of investor protection issues, including concerns over the reliability of their financial reporting, the quality of their disclosures, the enforceability of their contractual arrangements, limitations on shareholder rights, and the extent of intervention or control by the PRC [People’s Republic of China] government over the Chinese operating companies,” the report said.

    This is not the first time that commission officials have sounded the alarm on Chinese companies in recent years.

    The SEC during Gary Gensler’s tenure warned investors about Chinese companies.

    In December 2021 the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance (CorpFin) posted a sample staff comment letter to China-based companies listed on U.S. exchanges, asking them to provide better disclosures because of heightened risks associated with investing in such companies.

    CorpFin “believes that more prominent, specific, and tailored disclosure about these risks, and companies’ use of the variable interest entity (VIE) structure specifically, is warranted to provide investors with the information they need to make informed investment decisions and for companies to comply with their disclosure obligations under the federal securities laws,” according to the introduction to the Sample Letter to China-Based Companies.

    Then in July 2023 CorpFin posted another staff sample letter to better help companies based in China disclose pertinent information about their operations in filings with the commission.

    The sample letter focused on, among other areas, more specific and prominent disclosure about material risks related to the role of the Chinese government in the companies’ operations and disclosures related to material impacts of certain laws.

    Other Objectives for Fiscal 2026

    Besides China-based VIEs, the investor advocate has several other objectives for fiscal 2026 as follows:

    • Enhancing the Accessibility of Disclosures for Investors – this is aimed at enhancing accessibility for retail investors, such as making information more user-friendly and comprehensible.
    • Disclosure and Investor Testing – this is also intended for retail investors.
    • Private Market Investments in Retirement Accounts – OIAD will explore some of the issues surrounding the inclusion of alternative investments in retirement plans and their implications for retail investors.
    • Evaluating the Potential Impact of Self-Regulatory Organization (SRO) Rule Proposals on Investors—SROs are national stock exchanges, broker-dealers, and clearing agencies.
    • Crypto Task Force Requests for Information – The task force is seeking comment on various issues related to crypto, including staking and custody as well as whether a particular crypto asset is a security. OIAD is encouraging investors to send comment letters to the task force, and the office will also consider insights that investors shared with the task force.

     

    This article originally appeared in the July 10, 2025, edition of Accounting & Compliance Alert, available on Checkpoint.

    Take your tax and accounting research to the next level with Checkpoint Edge and CoCounsel. Get instant access to AI-assisted research, expert-approved answers, and cutting-edge tools like Advisory Maps and State Charts. Try it today and transform the way you work! Subscribe now and discover a smarter way to find answers.

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  • RP1 Plus Nivolumab Shows Durable Response in Advanced Melanoma – Inside Precision Medicine

    1. RP1 Plus Nivolumab Shows Durable Response in Advanced Melanoma  Inside Precision Medicine
    2. Cancer-fighting herpes virus shown to be an effective treatment for some advanced melanoma  Keck Medicine of USC
    3. Herpes virus could soon be approved to treat severe skin cancer  New Scientist
    4. Modified Herpes Virus Found to Shrink Deadly Skin Cancers in Clinical Trial  ScienceAlert
    5. Herpes virus could be a new way to treat skin cancer  Mezha.Media

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