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vkrv The Biggest Gaming News from Gen Con 2014
« le: Décembre 16, 2024, 03:47:56 am »
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 A feud between two high school students that began off campus culminated at a gym class Monday when one student shot the other twice, then handed the gun to a coach, saying,  It s over now,  authorities said.The victim, a 19-year-old senior, was in critical condition at a hospital, authorities said. The suspected shooter stanley cup , 17-year-old sophomore Corneilous Cheers, was charged with attempted first-degree murder, reckless endangerment and carrying a gun on school property, said police spokeswoman Monique Martin.The teenagers got into a confrontation off campus over the weekend or last week, police said. Investigators were trying to determine whether it was related to gang activity, Martin said.A detention hearing was scheduled for Tuesday in juvenile court for Cheers, who did not yet have a lawyer. Calls to listings for people named Cheers either went unanswered or were answered by people who said they did not know him.The shooting erupted in a morning gym class b stanley romania eing held in the cafeteria at the 1,050-student Mitchell High School. About 75 students were in the class, but no one besides the senior was hurt. The gunman gave no warning, Principal John Ware said.         He walked up to him, shot him, and made a statement to the coach that  it s over now,   Ware said.  He did not run. The school was locked down, and parents were notified by an automated phone alert system, spokeswoman Rita Cooper said. Many parents picked up their children though classes resumed withi stanley website n a few hours.C Oilx Military Aviation In A  Death Spiral
 Youre a high school science teacher and your class is learning about dinosaurs. You cant exactl stanley cup y stanley cup  run to the local dino bone barn and buy some bargain bones for them to see first-hand. But what if you had access to a 3D printer  Enter the American Museum of Natural Historys education department, which is experimenting with scanning and printing bones.     Over the summer, the AMNH hosted a camp called Discovering Dinosaurs, where students were able to put together their own models using 3D-printed parts. And the museum hasn ;t stopped its exploration of 3D printing. Gizmodo recently paid a visit to the AMNH, where we spent a morning with Barry Joseph, the museums Associate Director for Digital Learning, Youth Initiatives. https://gizmodo/amnh-3d-printing-camp-lets-make-some-dinos-868773820 The AMNH is currently gearing up for a new pterosaur exhibit that will open to the pu stanley thermosflasche blic this spring. Pterosaurs are a group of winged reptiles, that are neither birds nor dinosaurs, that flew through our skies some 220 million years ago; they were around for 150 million years before they met extinction.  You probably know them as pterodactyls, although that name is technically incorrect . So whats 3D printing have to do with this  Pterosaur bones don ;t exactly grow on trees. From creatures that could be as small as sparrows and as big as F-16 fighter jets in their time, pterosaur fossils are very rare. Connected by thin membranes, their brittle bones were more ofte