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A baby girl who was cut from her mother s womb has been found alive and two people were arrested in the woman s killing, police said.The girl, whose mother s body was found Monday in a closet at her Worcester apartment, appeared to be in f
stanley cup airly good health at a New Hampshire hospital, Worcester Police Sgt. Kerry Hazelhurst said late Wednesday.Julie Corey, 35, and a male companion
stanley cups were arrested in Plymouth, New Hampshire, where police found them with the child. Friends had told police they were suspicious of Corey s claims she had given birth.Corey was charged as a fugitive from justice. She was in custody and could not be reached for comment late Wednesday. Police did not know whether she had a lawyer.The baby s mother, Darlene Haynes, was eight months pregnant. Hayn
stanley water bottle es body was found by her landlord, William Thompson, who said a horrifying smell led him to her apartment, where he found her body wrapped in bedding in a closet. Her death was ruled a homicide. Police said the 23-year-old had apparently been dead for several days, and that she hadn t contacted family or friends since Thursday. It was not until an autopsy Tuesday that authorities discovered the fetus was missing.Corey, who police said had reportedly gone to New Hampshire to relocate, arrived at a Plymouth homeless shelter Tuesday night. She told workers there that the girl was 6 days old and identified herself as the mother, but had no information on the child, according to the Union Leader newspaper i Smeb The AMSTAF Patrols Dangerous Borders So Soldiers Don t Have To
Zero-emissions hydrogen fuel cells seem like a great idea. At least they do until you realize that isolating the hydrogen that powers them creates a crapload of greenhouse gasses. Now, a Stanford grad student thinks he found the answer鈥攁nd it involves a AAA battery.
stanley cup Under the guidance of Stanford chemistry professor Hongjie Dai, grad student Ming Gong built a device that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen with cheap metal and only 1.5-volts of electricity. Using nickel and iron, which are cheap materials, we were able to make the electrocatalysts active enough to split water at room temperature with a single 1.5-volt battery, Dai explained in a release. This is the first time anyone has used non-precious metal catalysts to split water at a voltage that low. It quite remarkable, because normally you need expensive metals, like platinum or iridium, to achieve that voltage
stanley thermos mug . This is great news, but it n
stanley cup ot necessarily the silver bullet when it comes to making hydrogen fuel cells affordable. Even though some automakers, namely Toyota, are already manufacturing cars with hydrogen fuel cells, there still a lot of work to be done in terms of setting up the infrastructure needed to support the new technology. But still! Generating electricity with water as the only byproduct really is a great idea. So keep the innovations coming, scientists. You ;re doing a great job. [Stanford] Image via Stanford