Hpdh All-clear for N.D. town near oil train derailment
LOS ANGELES - Rupert Murdoch jousted with disgruntled shareholders Friday as the 80-year-old chairman and CEO of News Corp. defended his handling of a phone hacking scandal in Britain and deflected any notion that he plans to step down soon.More than 100 protesters gathered outside the 20th Century Fox studio lot where News Corp. held its annual shareholders meeting. Inside, with his sons Lachlan and James seated before him in the front row, Murdoch parried allegations that he had poor oversight of the company, sometimes cutting off speakers to jab in an insult or dispute a fact.Votes from the shareholders were still being counted in the afternoon but the company said a proposal from the Christian Brothers Investment Services to force the company s chairman to be an independent director had failed. Few had held out any hope they could overcome Murdoch s control of 40 percent of voting shares through a family trust, or the 7 percent stake Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal had almost certainly cast in support of him. It was pretty perfunctory, said Rev. Seamu
stanley cup uk s Finn, who attended on behalf of the organization. It was a nice meeting, but it didn t offer much in terms of how they re going to put this behind them. Questions and comments from shareh
stanley flask olders focused on the phone-hacking scandal, which caused the company t
stanley canada his summer to shutter the tabloid News of the World and drop its $12 billion bid for full control of British Sky Broadcasting. Britons and other people worldwide were Wyza Changes in global diet could make famines more likely
The magnificent desolation of the Moon might offer some great views, but otherwise it a lousy place to live. Human explorers would need protection from a constant bombardment of radiation and extreme temperature shifts. A new video shows how we can inexpensively build an ideal shelter with robot
stanley hrnek ic 3D printers. The concept video, produced by the European Space Agency and the London architectural firm Foster + Partners, suggests that the ideal spot for a future base would be the rim of Shackleton Crater at the lunar South Pole. The Moon
stanley cup rotation is such that the Sun only grazes its poles at low angles. As a result, there would be nearly constant light along the crater rim beside regions of permanent shadow. That makes it prime real estate, since the site would allow for plentiful solar power and relief from the hot and cold temperature extremes found across most of the Moon. The construction lander would carry a large cylinder containing an inflatable dome and two mobile, robotic 3D printers. The dome would serve as the foundation for the construction of a hard shell made from lunar regolith, while the cylinder w
gourde stanley ould become the airlock. Not a luxury accommodation, but frontier living has never been easy. 3D printingFuturismScienceSpaceTechnology