It’s no bigger than your hand, but a Panasonic robot is ready to take on a supersized task: The Evolta, which has already clambered up the walls of the Grand Canyon, will soon take on one of the hardest triathlon courses on the planet. Hawaii’s Ironman Triathlon “is very tough…
Continue reading …Ever noticed how the trip home from your destination always seems shorter than the trip there? The standard explanation is that on the way back, you’re familiar with the route. But scientists in the Netherlands are contesting that view, offering a different explanation centered on expectations, MSNBC reports. On the…
Continue reading …College sports uniforms are getting seriously funky as outfitters such as Nike and Under Armor shell out big money to schools only too happy to take it, report the New York Times and Washington Post in similar stories on the trend. Both see the University of Maryland (with 32 possible…
Continue reading …Divers working to free four trapped miners in the Swansea Valley have been forced to return above ground, after being thwarted by murky water Divers who entered a flooded mine to help free four trapped miners have been forced to return above ground, rescuers said. Specialist divers went into the Gleision Colliery near Cilybebyll, Pontardawe in the Swansea Valley, where the men have been trapped since yesterday morning, but had to abandon their efforts after about 30 metres. But rescuers remain optimistic about the welfare of the miners, named by South Wales Police as Phillip Hill, 45, from Neath, Charles Bresnan, 62, David Powell, 50, and Garry Jenkins, 39, all from the Swansea Valley. Gary Evans of the South and Mid Wales Cave Rescue Team said: “We brought in some divers to see whether it was possible to go through and speed things up. “They went into the water to see whether any progress could be made that way, and they went about 20 to 30 metres, but they weren’t able to go any further.” Rescuers had hoped the divers could assess the situation before all the water had been pumped out, but debris had made the water murky, he explained. He confirmed there was still no contact with any of the men but said they remained “very hopeful”. It is believed the miners, trapped 295ft (90m) underground, would have fled to an air pocket to await rescue. Police said emergency services were continuing a “multi-agency rescue operation”, while the men’s families were being supported by family liaison officers. Fresh rescue teams were brought in this morning to relieve crews which had worked strenuously for at least 12 hours straight. An expert listening device, which can detect movement deep underground, is the among the specialist equipment that has been drafted in as part of the efforts. A fifth miner was last night critically ill in hospital after escaping as flood water engulfed the drift mine yesterday. Two other men who were with him escaped largely unharmed and are aiding the rescue operation. The alarm was raised at the pit at around 9.20am yesterday. A retaining wall holding back a body of water underground failed, flooding a tunnel that the seven men were in. Chris Margetts, from South Wales Fire and Rescue Service, said: “What we have determined is the miners are located approximately 90 metres underground. “They are down a 250 metre main route into the mine… There are numerous little tunnels and old workings which all potentially have air pockets in. “They are experienced miners, they know the layout of the mine, they would know where to go in this situation.” He said they were pumping it out and, once they were in a position to search off the main shaft, they would then systematically look through the smaller tunnels and shafts. “The conditions down there are favourable, it’s not raining, there’s water at the bottom but the air supply is good.” He added that rescuers were very “hopeful and optimistic” that the miners could be freed successfully. He said they were constantly monitoring the quality of the air, but could not communicate with the trapped men. An emergency centre has been set up within the community hall in the nearby village of Rhos to cater for the families of the miners. The Red Cross delivered a haul of blankets and pillows to the centre last night. Neath MP and former Labour cabinet minister Peter Hain said he had spoken with family members, many of whom were in tears. He said he had been assured that everything possible was being done to free the trapped men and vowed resources needed would be brought in to help the rescue efforts. “Nothing is more important than the lives of these men,” he said. He added that he had been given regular updates on the situation himself by the on-scene police commander and rescue crews. “They tried initially to get into the tunnel that the men use to go in and out of the mine but it was blocked with water,” he said. “They have subsequently tried the mine’s air tunnel but there was insufficient oxygen so now they are pumping oxygen in and water out.” Parish priest Martin Perry hailed the spirit of the community and said there was a “real sense of hope” that the miners could be rescued. He told Sky News: “People here are very resilient. On the one hand they are very realistic about the dangerous situation the folk are in, but they have a real sense of hope that things can turn out positively.” Wales guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The federal Food and Drug Administration and a leading doctor are disputing suggestions by television show host Dr. Mehmet Oz that trace amounts of arsenic in many apple juice products pose a health concern. Oz said on his show Wednesday that testing by a New Jersey lab has found what he implied are troubling levels of arsenic in many juices. However, the FDA says the lab methods were not appropriate and that its own tests show much lower arsenic levels. The agency warned “The Dr. Oz. Show” producers in advance that their testing was misleading. Dr. Richard Besser, a pediatrician and former acting head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also scolded Oz Thursday on ABC’s “Good Morning America” show for scaring consumers with what Besser called an “extremely irresponsible” report, like “yelling `Fire!’ in a movie theater.” The issue: arsenic is naturally present in water, air, food, and soil in organic and inorganic forms, according to the FDA. “Organic arsenic is essentially harmless,” the agency says, and it passes through the body quickly. Inorganic arsenic is the type found in pesticides, and consuming it at high levels or over a long period can cause concern. The testing “The Dr. Oz Show” did was for total arsenic, and the FDA even disputes those levels. The agency’s own tests found lower total arsenic from one of the same juice batches the show’s lab tested. “There is no evidence of any public health risk from drinking these juices. And FDA has been testing them for years,” the statement says. Note to consumers: They are talking about organic and inorganic arsenic – not organic versus non-organic fruits and vegetables. An independent lab agreed with the FDA’s contention that the form of arsenic matters. “A lot of things can have organically bound arsenic like kelp, but most of those flow right through you” and don’t accumulate, said William Obermeyer, a former FDA chemist who cofounded ConsumerLab.com. It is a company that tests dietary supplements and publishes ratings for subscribers, much as Consumer Reports does with household goods. Tim Sullivan, a spokesman for Oz’s show, sent an email saying: “We don’t think the show is irresponsible. We think the public has a right to know what’s in their foods.” Sullivan said Oz does not agree that organic arsenic is as safe as authorities believe, and that the show will do further tests to distinguish organic from inorganic arsenic in juice samples. “The position of the show is that the total arsenic needs to be lower,” he said. “We did the tests. We stand by the results and we think the standards should be different.” Watch Oz on “Today”: Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Continue reading …Joe McGinniss’s new book, The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin, hits bookstores next week, but its controversial claims about the former Alaska governor are already making waves. In the book, McGinniss writes that Palin had a one-night stand in 1987 with future NBA basketball player Glen Rice nine months before she married her husband Todd. He quotes a friend who said Palin “had a fetish for black guys for a while.” “She was a gorgeous woman. Super nice. I was blown away by her,” Rice tells McGinniss in the book, NBC reports. “Afterward, she was a big crush that I had.” McGinniss’s book also alleges that Palin had an extramarital affair with her husband’s business partner, Brad Hanson, in the mid-1990s, and snorted cocaine off a 55-gallon oil drum while snowboarding. “An utter fraud. An absolute and utter fraud,” McGinniss calls Palin in an interview about the book with NBC. “At best, she’s a hypocrite,” McGinniss tells NBC’s Savannah Guthrie. “At worst, she’s a vindictive hypocrite.” WATCH: McGinniss famously moved into a house next door to Palin’s Wasilla, Alaska home to write his book — prompting the Palins to accuse him of stalking them. They built a high fence along their property to protect their privacy. In response to McGinniss’s book, Todd Palin gave a statement to NBC saying that McGinniss “spent the last year interviewing marginal figures with an axe to grind in order to churn out a hit piece to satisfy his own creepy obsession with my wife.” “I’d ask the fathers and husbands of America to consider our privacy when one summer day I found this guy on the deck of the rental property, just 18 feet away next door to us, staring like a creep at my wife while she mowed the lawn in her shorts,” Palin said. McGinniss says that anything he learned about Palin by living next door did not make it into the book, but he does become a character in the story himself. The New York Times writes in its review: Soon Mr. McGinniss is settling in to enjoy the fuss his mere presence has created. “Normally, for a news story to continue beyond the first 24-hour news cycle, something newsworthy must occur,” he writes loftily, but “The Rogue” is filled with proof to the contrary. What was his hate mail like? He quotes it. What did Glenn Beck call him? That’s here too. Who took umbrage at this venom and chose to help him? One man offered him a hideout, despite Mr. McGinniss’s slight skepticism about his motives. “But you don’t know me,” Mr. McGinniss protested. McGinniss’s book is scheduled to hit bookstores on Tuesday, Sept. 20.
Continue reading …[1] Don’t let the cheery title fool you: Oranges & Sunshine actually tells a harrowing tale that’s all the more distubring for being true. In the first feature by director Jim Loach (son of The Wind That Shakes the Barley helmer Ken Loach), a social worker named Margaret Humphreys (Emily Watson) encounters a woman seeking answers about her past. As Humphreys digs deeper, she uncovers a massive conspiracy… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 15/09/2011 18:17 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Fighters loyal to the interim National Transitional Council (NTC) have reached the outskirts of
Continue reading …We just learned of NASA’s end-of-decade plans to rocket astronauts into deep space for exploratory missions to Mars and beyond. Now, we’re getting a peek at the Purdue University-designed lander tech that’ll plant our space fleet’s feet firmly on terra incognita. What originally started as a senior research project for grad students Thomas Feldman and Andrew Rettenmaier, has now blossomed into a joint research endeavor for the federal space agency’s Project Morpheus — a think tank for trips to heretofore unexplored celestial bodies. The in-development propulsion tech, now undergoing testing at the university’s Maurice J. Zucrow Laboratories, is required to “meet stringent design and performance” standards, but most importantly, needs to lift the fuel-depleted lander post-descent. You’d think scientific work of this magnitude would come with a hefty paycheck, but the student team behind it all’s just doing it for the hands-on knowledge. Sure beats your summer internship at that magazine, huh? Purdue University grad students give NASA lander tech a boost, do it for the experience originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Sep 2011 23:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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