Latest news with #Thornton


San Francisco Chronicle
9 hours ago
- Sport
- San Francisco Chronicle
Kayla Thornton's career-high 29 points power Valkyries past Sky and Angel Reese
With Kayla Thornton at the free-throw line with 47 seconds to play, a soft chant wafted down from the Chase Center crowd. 'MVP. MVP. MVP.' Thornton isn't going to be in MVP consideration, but she could very well be a WNBA All-Star. In the Golden State Valkyries' 83-78 win over the Chicago Sky on Friday night, Thornton broke her career-high in scoring for the third time this season, tallying 29 points in the ugly victory. Over Thornton's last eight games, she is averaging 19.5 points per game and 8.3 rebounds while shooting 45.9% from the floor and 40.4% from 3-point range. She has scored at least 20 points in four of those eight games after doing it six times ever in her previous 309 contests. Thornton leads the Valkyries in points (15.9), rebounds (7.1), field-goals made (5.2), and steals (1.7), all while averaging 30.5 minutes per game. In the franchise's first season, the 10-year veteran has been exactly what the Valkyries need. 'It was not our greatest start, we kind of struggled,' Valkyries head coach Natalie Nakase said. 'We learned on KT, we said 'Hey, just, can we hear your voice a little louder? ' And then boom, she responds, and you saw her out there commanding, but also supporting. Because when we're not playing our best, we need to hear some support. So that's what we lean on KT, we completely rely on KT.' Valkyries 83, Sky 78 Percentages: FG .371, FT .684. 3-Point Goals: 13-33, .394 (Nurse 5-11, Banham 3-6, Atkins 2-6, Reese 1-2, Van Lith 1-2, Allen 1-6). Team Rebounds: 10. Team Turnovers: None. Blocked Shots: 4 (Allen 2, Atkins 2). Turnovers: 11 (Reese 3, Atkins 2, Allen, Banham, Nurse, Onyenwere, Van Lith, Williams). Steals: 7 (Onyenwere 3, Atkins 2, Reese, Williams). Technical Fouls: Nurse, 6:44 second. Percentages: FG .377, FT .690. 3-Point Goals: 11-30, .367 (Thornton 4-7, Martin 3-7, Bibby 2-4, Chen 1-1, Hayes 1-5, Billings 0-1, Burton 0-2, Talbot 0-3). Team Rebounds: 10. Team Turnovers: None. Blocked Shots: 2 (Billings 2). Turnovers: 9 (Thornton 3, Hayes 2, Amihere, Billings, Burton, Chen). Steals: 4 (Billings, Burton, Hayes, Thornton). Technical Fouls: None. A_18,064 (18,064). 'This role might be a little different, but I try to look at it as, I come in and give the most energy I can for my teammates and I just allow the game to come at me,' Thornton said. 'I don't try to go search for shots or anything, but mostly it generates from my defense, and it kind of just flows like that. But I don't do anything out the ordinary of what I haven't been doing for previous teams in New York or Dallas.' Thornton's offensive game has blossomed with the Valkyries. She hasn't averaged double-digit points since 2019 with Dallas when she scored 10.4 per contest. Now at 32 years old, Thornton is scoring the most she ever has while shooting over seven times per game more than a season ago. 'She's a phenomenal basketball player, and you can learn a lot from KT and how she plays,' said second-year guard Kate Martin, who netted 11 points off the bench on Friday. 'I'm just really glad she's getting all the success that she's getting. She deserves it, and I'm thankful that I'm her teammate.' On Friday, the Valkyries struggled to score early, shooting under 35% in every quarter until a 50% final frame. Thornton tallied eight of those points in the fourth, including her fourth 3-pointer with two minutes to go that effectively sealed the contest. She contributed to a 12-0 run over 1:45 that put Golden State ahead for good. She picked up her fifth foul early in the fourth, but Nakase didn't hesitate to keep her in the game. 'I looked at her, and I asked, 'I can trust you, right?'' Nakase said. 'She was like, 'let's go.' She played real smart, real intentional, she wasn't doing too much physicality. I thought she was being more vocal, she was screaming and commanding.' Rookie Kaitlyn Chen scored 10 for the first time in her third WNBA contest. Two starters in Steph Talbot and Veronica Burton combined to go 0-for-11 while the Valkyries' scoring went cold, but 30 bench points and Thornton's monster game were enough for the Valkyries (8-7) to get past the lowly Sky. '(Thornton has) done nothing but grow her game,' said Chicago guard Ariel Atkins, who led the Sky with 20 points. 'She is literally foundational to what that organization is building.' Chicago (4-11) is not usually a 3-point threat, entering Friday with the third-worst shooting percentage from range at 30.4%. However, the Valkyries struggled to contain Chicago shooters early, even without having to account for the paint presence of Kamilla Cardoso, the Suns' inside threat who was absent due to FIBA Women's AmeriCup. The late Valkyries run was sparked by a Martin 3-pointer. Monique Billings stole the ball on the next possession and scored a breakaway layup, then Martin hit another trey. Thornton followed up with a layup and Billings hit a pull-up jumpshot at the free-throw line for a 73-64 lead. Tiffany Hayes knocked down two free throws with 22.1 seconds left to seal it after Angel Reese fouled her while down three points, but with just 14 seconds left on the shot clock for the Valkyries. Reese finished with 17 points and 18 rebounds. Chicago entered Friday with the second-worst defensive rating in the league at 110.3, but the Valkyries struggled throughout the night to establish an offensive rhythm. The Valkyries capitalized on Sky miscues with 16 points off turnovers. It was the kind of game the Valkyries don't win without Thornton. For all the talk of being a team without a star, the veteran forward sure is emerging as the Valkyries go-to scorer, defender and leader. That is, at the very least, team-MVP kind of stuff. 'After the loss against New York, it was kind of personal for me,' Thornton said Wednesday's 81-78 defeat to the defending champions on Wednesday. 'So I just came in and had more oomph. But my teammates, like I play for them, I play for the city, I play for these wonderful fans out there that give us energy. So shout out to them, because they get me going. My teammates get me going. My coaches get me going, and I have the confidence from that.'
Yahoo
a day ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc. Announces Pricing of $2.0 Million Public Offering
THORNTON, Colo., June 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: ASTI) ('Ascent' or the 'Company'), the leading U.S. innovator in the design and manufacture of featherweight, flexible, and durable CIGS thin-film photovoltaic (PV) solutions, today announced the pricing of a public offering of an aggregate of 1,000,000 shares of its common stock (or pre-funded warrants in lieu thereof) and warrants to purchase up to 1,000,000 shares of common stock (the 'Warrants'), at a combined public offering price of $2.00 per share (or per pre-funded warrants in lieu thereof) and accompanying Warrant. The Warrants will have an exercise price of $2.00 per share, will be exercisable immediately upon issuance, and will expire on the five-year anniversary of the initial issuance date. The closing of the offering is expected to occur on or about June 30, 2025, subject to the satisfaction of customary closing conditions. H.C. Wainwright & Co. is acting as the exclusive placement agent for the offering. The aggregate gross proceeds to the Company from the offering are expected to be $2.0 million before deducting the placement agent's fees and other offering expenses payable by the Company. The Company intends to use the net proceeds from this offering for working capital, product development activities, general and administrative expenses and other general corporate purposes. The securities described above are being offered pursuant to a registration statement on Form S-1 (File No. 333-288300), which was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") on June 27, 2025. The offering is being made only by means of a prospectus forming part of the effective registration statement relating to the offering. A preliminary prospectus relating to the offering has been filed with the SEC and is available on the SEC's website at and a final prospectus relating to the offering will be filed with the SEC. Electronic copies of the final prospectus, when available, may be obtained on the SEC's website at and may also be obtained, when available, by contacting H.C. Wainwright & Co., LLC at 430 Park Avenue, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10022, by phone at (212) 856-5711 or e-mail at placements@ This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any of the securities described herein, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or other jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to the registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or other jurisdiction. About Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc. Backed by 40 years of R&D, 15 years of manufacturing experience, numerous awards, and a comprehensive IP and patent portfolio, Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc. is a leading provider of innovative, high-performance, flexible thin-film solar panels for use in environments where mass, performance, reliability, and resilience matter. Ascent's photovoltaic (PV) modules have been deployed on space missions, multiple airborne vehicles, agrivoltaic installations, in industrial/commercial construction as well as an extensive range of consumer goods, revolutionizing the use cases and environments for solar power. Ascent Solar's research and development center and 5-MW nameplate production facility is in Thornton, Colorado. To learn more, visit Forward-Looking Statements Statements in this press release that are not statements of historical or current fact constitute "forward-looking statements" including statements about the completion of the offering, the satisfaction of customary closing conditions related to the offering and the anticipated use of proceeds therefrom. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other unknown factors that could cause the company's actual operating results to be materially different from any historical results or from any future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements, including market and other conditions. We have based these forward-looking statements on our current assumptions, expectations, and projections about future events. In addition to statements that explicitly describe these risks and uncertainties, readers are urged to consider statements that contain terms such as "will," "believes," "belief," "expects," "expect," "intends," "intend," "anticipate," "anticipates," "plans," "plan," to be uncertain and forward-looking. No information in this press release should be construed as any indication whatsoever of our future revenues, stock price, or results of operations. The forward-looking statements contained herein are also subject generally to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission including those discussed under the heading "Risk Factors" in our most recently filed reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q. Media Contact Spencer Herrmann FischTank PR ascent@
Yahoo
a day ago
- Health
- Yahoo
5 Signs You're 'Quiet Cracking' At Work Without Realising It
You might have heard of quiet quitting, taskmasking, and 'conscious unbossing' ― all trends which see workers opt out of added responsibilities, busy work, and unrewarding jobs in the subtlest way they can. But according to Guy Thornton, Founder of human resource company PracticeAptitudeTests, 'quiet cracking' is on the rise, too. The term refers to the sometimes unwitting disconnect from work that happens when employees are stressed and burned out. 'Quiet cracking isn't laziness or a flaw in your work ethic,' Thornton said. 'It's often a sign that your mind and body are trying to cope with something unsustainable.' Here are some signs you might be 'quiet cracking' without even realising it: Always rushing around, but never feel particularly productive? Thornton warns that it could be a red flag. 'This relates to another workplace trend known as fauxductivity, which iswhen you appear productive while feeling unmotivated and disconnected,' he said. 'It's often an early sign of quiet cracking that can happen when you're overwhelmed or unsure what your priorities are any more.' If your inbox is bursting and your Slack notifications have built up, you may be 'quiet cracking' under the pressure of constant communication. 'This doesn't necessarily mean you're lazy or disengaged. Your brain might simply be overloaded,' Thornton advised. Always scrambling to hand in that report at the last minute? It might just feel like your working style, but Thornton says it could also 'be a sign you've mentally checked out. 'Ask yourself, are you struggling with motivation, or is the workload too much?' he continued. 'Quiet cracking often begins when expectations feel unclear or unmanageable.' If the thought of working with others has felt more and more unenjoyable ― maybe leading you to skip meetings, avoid team get-togethers, and crave working alone ― it can show you're disconnecting from your workplace. 'Disengagement can be subtle, and you might not even realise it until someone points it out,' Thornton wrote. A great example is researching endlessly before you actually start your main task, the expert said. 'If it's become your go-to method for delaying the real work, it might be a sign of stress or fear of failure,' he shared. Recognising the condition can make it easier to manage, Thornton stated. Don't wait to seek help if you think something's amiss. 'It's important to talk to people you trust in the workplace and use mental health resources if you start to experience something like this,' he said. 'Even just acknowledging that something is off is an important way to start taking steps in the right direction.' , open Monday to Friday, 9am-6pm on 0300 123 3393. offers a listening service which is open 24 hours a day, on 116 123 (UK and ROI - this number is FREE to call and will not appear on your phone bill). (the Campaign Against Living Miserably) offer a helpline open 5pm-midnight, 365 days a year, on 0800 58 58 58, and a webchat service. is a free support service for people under 25. Call 0808 808 4994 or email help@ offers practical help through its advice line which can be reached on 0808 801 0525 (Monday to Friday 10am-4pm). More info can be found on 'Weeks After Firing Me, My Workplace Asked A Favour. Was My Reaction Unfair?' Suddenly Have More Responsibility At Work? It Might Be A Career Red Flag I Said One Little Word At Work – And Got Fired


Globe and Mail
2 days ago
- Business
- Globe and Mail
Ascent Solar Technologies Enters Collaborative Agreement Notice with NASA to Advance Development of Thin-Film PV Power Beaming Capabilities: Nasdaq: ASTI
$ASTI Thin Film CIGS Solar Tech has Key Applications in Aerospace, Agrivoltaic Installations, Industrial/Commercial Construction and Consumer Goods Provider of Innovative, High-Performance, Flexible Thin-Film Solar Panels for Environments Where Wass, Performance, Reliability and Resilience Matter. Successful Applications in Space Missions, Aircraft, Agrivoltaic Installations, Industrial/Commercial Construction and Consumer Goods. Research and Development Center and 5-MW Nameplate Production Facility Strategically Located in Thornton, Colorado. Multiple Strategic Partners in the Space Market, Including a Major Defense Contractor, Multiple Deployable Technology Companies and a Satellite Company. Ascent Solar Technologies Enters Collaborative Agreement Notice with NASA to Advance Development of Thin-Film PV Power Beaming Capabilities. Record New Efficiency of 15.7% at Production Scale for CIGS Solar Technology. Master Services Agreement to Provide NOVI Space with Rollable PV Array Blankets for Launch in 2026. THORNTON, Colo. - June 26, 2025 - Ascent Solar Technologies (Nasdaq: ASTI) ('Ascent' or the 'Company'), the leading U.S. innovator in the design and manufacture of featherweight, flexible, and durable CIGS thin-film photovoltaic (PV) solutions, announced today that the company is commencing work on a Collaborative Agreement Notice (CAN) with NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) and support from NASA Glenn Research Center (GRC) to efficiently advance capabilities for receiving beamed power using CIGS PV modules. Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: ASTI) is backed by 40 years of R&D, 15 years of manufacturing experience, numerous awards, and a comprehensive IP and patent portfolio. ASTI is a leading provider of innovative, high-performance, flexible thin-film solar panels for use in environments where mass, performance, reliability and resilience matter. ASTI photovoltaic (PV) modules have been deployed on space missions, multiple airborne vehicles, agrivoltaic installations, in industrial/commercial construction as well as an extensive range of consumer goods, revolutionizing the use cases and environments for solar power. The ASTI research and development center and 5-MW nameplate production facility is strategically located in Thornton, Colorado. The CAN program targets rapid iterative development to mature commercial products for enabling mission architectures to include beamed power. The public-private partnership includes Ascent contributing design and prototyping services with NASA providing technical subject matter expertise and test services through combined MSFC & GRC efforts. This 12-month technology maturation will result in commercial products being made available for distributed space power infrastructure, drastically lowering the cost, complexity and risk of NASA missions. Launched in 2023, NASA's Psyche Mission has demonstrated deep space laser communications across 19 million miles of space, validating the efficacy of tight-beaming technologies over vast distances. Bench-testing conducted by NASA MSFC in 2024 demonstrated receiving beamed power using Ascent's commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) products as a preceding validation of the technology prior to the CAN award. The CAN is evaluating the ability of Ascent's CIGS PV modules to generate power while illuminated by energy-dense beams of light, with goals to convert more usable power from the equivalent of tens of Earth's Sun. The ability to remotely receive 10x more power on-demand while using the same PV cells tasked with collecting sunlight can significantly reduce solar array mass and volume required to meet mission power needs. In practice, this suggests that beamed-power architectures can lead to reductions of both spacecraft mass and volume budgets. These size efficiencies will result in agency payloads proportionally increasing relative to the spacecraft as a whole, thus allowing the prioritization of more technology, science and exploration within limited mission budgets. Planetary missions require advanced surface mobility logistics and depend on power generation subsystems that comprise a substantial proportion of the landed downmass. It is here where Ascent technology poses a potential solution for reducing spacecraft power system mass and volume needs, creating a significant impact on the overall mission. The CAN's goals include increasing the array power output while lengthening the operational duty cycles to verify that improvements to this emerging technology can help enable NASA to effectively and efficiently achieve the agency's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) missions, Artemis campaign to the Moon, and planetary science objectives. This includes enabling surviving the lunar night as well as powering remote access to areas of scientific interest such as cold traps and permanently shadowed regions on the Moon (PSRs) where water, the potential key to lunar in-situ resource utilization (ISRU), is believed to be located in high concentrations. Ultimately, this could lead to an order of magnitude reduction in the downmass required to access expensive space exploration and science mission destinations. The going rate for robotic landers on the Moon is between 6 & 7-figures per kilogram delivered to the lunar surface, equating to upwards of tens of millions of potential savings per lander mission. 'This collaboration with NASA further bolsters our longstanding belief that the unique capabilities of thin-film solar technology will play an integral role in overcoming the challenges of reliably converting solar energy and also receive beamed power in a breadth of harsh space environments,' said Paul Warley, CEO of Ascent Solar Technologies. 'Through our work together, we plan to bring an even more capable product line to market that will reduce mission costs and complexities while improving PV efficiency, making our technology a crucial piece of future space missions.' This cross-NASA-center teaming is demonstrative of rallying together with commercial partners to achieve the agency's broader Lunar program goals. Beamed power stands to allow NASA program dollars to accomplish more at a fraction of the cost. With 55 countries having signed the Artemis Accords since 2020, the establishment of critical Lunar infrastructure with less resources required facilitates achieving more together with international partners. Achievement of Record New Efficiency of 15.7% at Production Scale for CIGS Solar Technology On June 9th ASTI announced that its thin-film CIGS technology reached record efficiency at 15.7% (AM0) at production scale. This achievement aligns with the previously announced ASTI 2025 strategy which aimed to continue improving upon its thin-film PV's material quality, technological efficiency and production design optimization to increase the applicability of the technology in the space market. Using the Titan™, a module approximately one square foot in size, ASTI can now produce a formidable 15.7 watts in power per unit. These modules are approximately 0.03mm in thickness and just over eight grams in weight, possess an impressive power density of 1960W/kg before encapsulation. ASTI engineering and production teams have consistently achieved increases in device efficiency and overall performance since September 2023. In the last 18 months, ASTI has reached significant milestones in efficiency testing, with the latest achievement of 15.7% representing a significant increase from Q1 2024: Q3 2023: 11.6 watts Q4 2023: 13.3 watts Q1 2024: 14.0 watts Q2 2025: 15.7 watts (Note: Power generation figures reflect STC conditions and AM0) 'These continued efficiency improvements for our CIGS arrays are the direct result of our U.S.-based manufacturing team's tireless focus on process improvement and advanced device engineering,' said Paul Warley, CEO of ASTI. 'The jump in device efficiency we've experienced over the past two years has dramatically enhanced our technology's readiness for the space market, positioning it as an ideal solar material choice for satellite power systems and other spacecraft.' Master Services Agreement to Provide NOVI Space with Rollable PV Array Blankets for Launch in 2026 On May 27th ASTI announced the signing of a Master Services Agreement with NOVI Space, Inc., a Virginia-based space company that develops and operates AI-powered satellites with their TRL-9 edge computing technology. ASTI has been contracted to provide rollable PV array blankets to NOVI to deliver real-time Earth Observation insights directly from space. NOVI plans to utilize ASTI lightweight, rollable solar technology in their AI edge processing constellation, scheduled for launch in early 2026. As part of the supply agreement, NOVI will provide ASTI with solar array operational performance data from orbit. This allows ASTI to rapidly iterate and validate product enhancements for future missions and continue to build upon years of R&D and specialty engineering for products suitable to thrive in the rigors of space. ASTI has the capabilities to deliver mission-optimized solar array solutions based on CIGS PV products already developed with spaceflight heritage. Its high-maturity CIGS PV products in manufactured in its 5MW production facility in Thornton, CO enables delivery of arrays in just 6-8 weeks, versus market competition that typically struggles to meet aggressive delivery schedules and strives for 9–12-month lead times. Disclosure listed on the CorporateAds website Media Contact Company Name: Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc Contact Person: Paul Warley, President and CEO Email: Send Email Phone: (720) 872-5000 Address: 12300 Grant Street City: Thornton State: Colorado 80241 Country: United States Website:


CBS News
2 days ago
- Health
- CBS News
Colorado man braces for Leadville marathon while battling multiple forms of cancer
One Colorado man is taking his battle against cancer from his hospital bed to a marathon course. He says he's taking his health concerns in stride as he prepares for his next race. With every step he takes, Thornton resident Paul Moritz continues to fuel his passion for running. Thornton resident Paul Moritz trains for the Leadville marathon. CBS "It's your own little world out there. It's nature, it's God. It's whatever you want it to be," said Moritz. "Fifty-mile run, the 15-mile run, the 15-mile bike, the marathon, the heavy half," he said. Those are just a handful of the races he's taken part in since 2015, when his journey with running long distances began. "There are a million excuses for why not to go do something, and you just have to have a good reason to do it," said Moritz. However, Moritz had every reason to take it slow. Less than a year after taking part in the Leadville 100 in 2016, Moritz was diagnosed with stage four kidney cancer. "Countless nights in the hospitals and countless doctors' visits and CT scans," he said. "Took the kidney out, took the rib out, took part of my pancreas, my gallbladder, my spleen." All of those obstacles could not keep him away from hitting the trails. "In 2022, I was lying in the hospital one night, just feeling sorry for myself because I had a huge tumor taken out of my back. So, at 2:30 in the morning, I figured I'd sign up for the Leadville marathon, the 50-mile bike and the 50-mile run just to give me something to train for and something to do," said Moritz. "Keep my mind off of everything else." Paul Moritz CBS "You have to force yourself to be positive, you have to force yourself to get out of bed some mornings," said Moritz. Moritz is now set to embark on his latest race, the Leadville marathon, with a little help from medication to regulate his cancer. This year, though, feels a little extra special, with his two nephews inspired to join the race by his side. "I hate to be the one to blame for their stupidity, but if they want to say that," said Moritz. Even with a new hurdle crossing paths with Moritz's training, he says nothing will stop his momentum on the course of life. "Just recently, this month, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. So, it's just a whole other thing to worry about, or not," said Moritz. "I'm not giving up; there's no reason to quit my life just because of this. I'm trying not to let it define who I am or what I do."