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ybtk China Angered Over Pentagon Missile Error
« le: Décembre 14, 2024, 04:16:25 pm »
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 A sheriff s office report released Monday on CD-ROM gives the best pictures yet of the Columbine killers in action, including never-before-released video.It features surveillance video from the cafeteria showing teen-age gunmen Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold calmly and methodically tossing bombs and setting fires, reports CBS News Correspondent Cynthia Bowers.  At one point two students are seen running through the cafeteria for their lives. All this just minutes after the gunmen fired the shots that killed 12 students and one teacher April 20, 1999.  Related StoryRead excerpts from the report.The report, available to the public for $12 over the Internet, also offers a detailed, minute-by-minute account of the killers actions and the police response.A timeline says the rampage began around 11:19. The first 9 stanley cup 11 call came four minutes later. By 11:34, the last of 13 victims had been killed. The killers were chillingly  stanley cup spain efficient -- the entire massacre took less than fifteen minutes. By noon Harris and Klebold had returned to the library, where they killed themselves. But it wasn t until three hours later that the SWAT team made their way to the scene.        The timeline appears to stanley cup website  support the department in disputing claims by victims  families that the officers could have saved lives if they had acted more quickly.   But the report also confirms that teacher Dave Sanders, who died in a science room, and some of the 23 people wounded waited for hours until the SWAT team finished  Vujc California OKs funding for high-speed rail line
 And now you can, too! FYFD explains the physics behind this mesmerizing clip, which comes by way of Kahp-Yang Suh of Seoul National university in South Korea. This high-speed video shows the remarkable resilience of a water droplet upon impact against as a solid surface. The droplet deforms into a pancake-shape, with its center depressing almost flat before rebounding upward. The rest of the drop follows, splitting into several droplets as capillary stanley cup  waves dance across its surface. When one satellite drop almost escapes, the main droplet just barely comes in contact with it, the coalescence enough to tip surface tension into pulling them together instead of breaking them apart. Emphasis added, because it   probably  vaso stanley our favorite part of the whole clip. Here it is animate stanley mug d, so you can watch it over and over and over again.                                                        PhysicsRheologyScience