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A charitable foundation has distributed thousands of dollars to Washington-area sniper victims, the first money distributed to survivors of the shootings and families of those killed during the spree.But authorities are delaying distributing any cash from the fund set up as a reward for information leading to the capture of the suspects.Checks for $18,571.43 from the Victims Rights Foundation were either hand-delivered or mailed over the weekend to the families of 10 people killed and the four people wounded in the region in September and October, said foundation head Gregory Wims.The foundation raised $260,000 from 2,000 donations. Gifts ranged from a $3.50 money order to $70,000 from an affordable housing charity. Additional money will be raised through Dec. 31.The funds will help families get through the holidays without wondering where the mortgage payments are coming from or where the car payments will come from, said Ellen Alexander, a Montgomery County police official who has worked with the sniper victims. About 15 funds have been established since the sniper attacks, many that specifically help children and other survivors of people who died. The Victims Rights Foundation and an account set up by Montgomery County are among the few that benefit the victims as a group.John Muhammad, 41, and John Lee Malvo, 17, are charged with murder in Maryland an
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Researchers led by Stanford engineer Elliot Hawkes have created a pair of gecko-inspired gloves
stanley cup that enable users up to 200 pounds to scale smooth, vertical panes of glass. As one biomechanical engineer put it: This is a really big deal. Top image via Elliot Hawkes The secret to Hawkes ; team gloves is their efficiency. It turns out that the sticky foot-pads a gecko uses to climb, while perfectly adequate for the gecko, aren ;t nearly as effective as they could be. Because geckos are, well, gecko-sized, they can get away with using only a fraction of their pads ; effective area. A human-sized gecko would not on
stanley quencher ly need to use more of its pads, it would also need to distribute its weight more strategically. What Hawkes and his team demonstrate in this week issue of the Journal of the Royal Society Interface is that gecko-like pads can be scaled up to human-size proportions 鈥?and work! 鈥?provided the human uses as much of the pad surface as he can, and balances his weight just so: This is a really big deal, said Keller Autumn 鈥?a biomechanical engineer at Lewis 038; Clark College who studies gecko adhesion, but was not involved in Hawkes ; project 鈥?told Popular Mechanics ; William Herkewitz, who describes the breakthrough in detail: Hawkes and his colleagues de
stanley termosky veloped a dry-adhesive called PDMS microwedges. Unlike duct tape or super glue, this reptile-inspired adhesive works via clingy hair-like