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wyil Drawing lines with a pen can magically control bugs
« le: Décembre 12, 2024, 11:05:10 am »
Cbzd Court nixes appeal from Chinese Muslims at Gitmo
 It s a phone call few Americans will ever hear:  He s going to lose his finger, don t let him lose his life. That s the terrifying sound of a kidnapper demanding money in exchange for the life of a loved one. It s hard to believe but calls like these come in virtually every single day in Phoenix, Ariz., which last year set up a special task force to battle back, CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports. The status of the problem is one that is going to explode across our country,  said Lt. Lauri Burgett of the Phoenix Police Department s Violent Crimes Bureau.Just last weekend a mother and her 3- stanley deutschland year-old daughter were kidnapped by Mexican meth dealers seeking money owed by the dad. She was eventually release stanley cup d unharmed.So was another man, but only after being tortured for three days by smugglers. His wife had to listen to his screams over the phone - as well as field $100,000 for ransom.         They tried to take out the eyes and the ears and the finger, also,  she said.In fact, law enforcement sources tell CBS News  stanley cup that Phoenix has become ground zero for the explosion in the reported number of kidnappings and home invasions involving drug traffickers and criminals with connections to the Mexican drug cartels.A CBS News investigation has discovered that as of last weekend, there have been 266 reported kidnappings and 300 home invasions this year alone. Sources say the real figures could run as much as three times higher because so many go unreported.  Omzc We Were Unprepared When the New Cyclops Arrived
 Plaster casts are bulky, obnoxious, heavy, inevitably sweaty, occasionally pink. In short, they are no fun. But this 3D-printed Cortex cast could change all that. Sure, it looks a little like a fishnet stocking, but have you seen a old-fashioned cast lately      A conc stanley water jug eptual project designed by a Victoria University of Wellington graduate with the suspiciously awesome name Jake Evill, the Cortex cast is lightweight, ventilated, washable and thin thanks to its polyamide skeleton. But the bonuses aren ;t all for the wearer; the material of Cortex casts could be reused, unlike plaster. It   just a concept and prototype for now, but ideally, computer software would be fed x-rays of the break and 3D scans of the limb, and design an appropriate cast shape for fixing it up, with the cast   densest parts concentrated around the actual break. The cast could then be printed out in pieces and assembled around the break wit stanley kaffeebecher h permanent fasteners. When all is said and done, it ;d still have to be sawed off as usual. Then there   the matter of time. Evill explains it this way: At the moment, 3D printing of the cast takes around three hours whereas a plaster cast is three to nine minutes, but requires 24-72 hours to be fully set. With the improvement of 3D printing, we could see a big reduction in the time it takes to print in the future. It sounds pretty good, but I ;m seeing just one problem. How  stanley taza are you supposed write hideous signatures in Sh