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Advocates of tougher seat belt laws give more than a third of the states a below-average grade
stanley mugs for their efforts to protect against highway deaths.The report by the National Safety Council kicks off a nationwide police crackdown on drivers who don t wear seat belts and don t buckle up kids. More than 10,000 U.S. law enforcement agencies will have checkpoints and increased patro
stanley flasche ls beginning Monday and lasting through Memorial Day. Our message is simple 151; we don t want to write tickets, but if necessary, we will, said Col. Anna Amos of the South Carolina Transport Police.The study found that people use belts more often and die in traffic accidents less frequently in the District of Columbia and 17 states that allow officers to stop and ticket unbuckled motorists.Nineteen states got D s and F s in the report. Chuck Hurley, executive director of the Air Bag Seat Belt Safety Campaign, said politicians in those states refuse to pass laws that are proven to save lives. The report graded the states based on a government-approved seat belt use survey, the strength of restraint laws, fatality rate
stanley cup s and participation of law enforcement in the crackdown. The U.S. ranks behind virtually every other developed country when it comes to seat belt use, with deadly consequences, said Alan McMillan, president of the National Safety Council. We know that high-visibility enforcement gets people to buckle up and saves lives. Traffic crashes killed 32,061 Americans in 1999 151 Axpn Chicago Gun Ban on Way Out, But Mayor Won t Quit
Sure, watching Michael Jackson strut his stuff once more is cool, but currently holograms are the preserve of the rich and richer. Fortunately, though, a team at MIT is trying to build a glasses-free 3D projection system that should be affordable e
stanley cup nough to use at home.
https://gizmodo/watch-a-dead-michael-jackson-perform-as-a-hologram-1578352019 The system uses two liquid crystal modulators to project subtly different images鈥攅ight, in their current prototype鈥攚hich means that you see a different perspective on the scene depending on your point of view. To widen the viewing angles, MIT has also built a special screen which uses lenticular lenses鈥攁 kind of matrix of magnifying lenses鈥攖o change the appearance of the images across the field of view. The whole thing is explained really quite well in this video. All of which sounds pretty great鈥攁nd it seems to work, too. While it far from perfect, the current set-up works at 240Hz to provide 3D images with parallax running at 40Hz鈥攑lenty for a regular TV image, if you ;re not too fussy. And, who knows, it might mean that one day you get to have Uncle Ted over for Thanksgiving without hav
vaso stanley ing to smell him. Mercy. [MIT News via Phys.org via Engadget]
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