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smpv U.S.: Detainees Tried Here Won t Remain
« le: Décembre 21, 2024, 02:37:46 pm »
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 Samuel W. Alderson, the inventor of crash test dummies that are used to make cars, parachutes and other devices safer, has died. He was 90.Alderson died at home on Feb. 11 of complications from myelofibrosis, a bone  stanley usa marrow disorder, his son Jeremy said.Alderson grew up tinkering in his father s custom sheet-metal shop, worked on various military technology and by 1952 had formed Alderson Research Labs.The company made anthropomorphic dummies for use by the military and NAS stanley cups uk A in testing ejection seats and parachutes. The dummies were built to approximate the weight and density of humans and hold data-gathering instruments.One type of dummy he developed measured radiation doses.        There was little interest in his first automobile test dummy, he once said, until publication of Ralph Nader s consumer protection book  Unsafe at Any Speed  in 1965. The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act was passed a year later.Before creating dummies, he worked on missile guidance systems and helped develop a coating to enhance vision on submarine periscopes during World War II.He left his original company in 1973 to form a competing crash test dummy maker, and the two companies were dominant in the market until eventually merging in 1990 to form First Technology Safety Systems.In addition to son Jeremy, he is survived by another son, a sister and four grandchildren.      ponent--type-recirculation .it stanley borraccia em:nth-child 5          display: none;             inline-recirc-item--id-9342da7 Rdcn Roadside Bombs Less Complex, More Vexing
 Speaking at a media briefing for the Centers for Disease Control   first-ever report on the burden and threats posed by the antibiotic-resistant germs, CDC director Tom Frieden offered these sobering words of warning about the future of medical microbiology.     https://gizmodo/can-we-avoid-an-antibiotic-apocalyps stanley cup e-472657488 Top image modified from the CDC   report on drug-resistant tuberculosis Over stanley mugs  at Superbug, Maryn McKenna has a rundown of the threat report   major findings, including  8220 ome serious concerns 8230; regarding how well [antibiotic-]resistance is monitored:  8230;in  gaps in knowledge,  it specifically names limited national and international surveillance, as  stanley mug well as the lack of data on agricultural use of antibiotics. And it calls for action in four areas: gathering better data; preventing infections, through vaccination, better protective behavior in hospitals, and better food handling; improving the way in which antibiotics are used, by not using them inappropriately in health care or agriculture; and developing not just new categories of antibiotics but better diagnostic tests so that resistant organisms can be identified and dealt with sooner, before they spread. In an interview before the report became public, Frieden said that some of these actions are already happening.  My biggest frustration is the pace of change,  he told me.  Hospitals are making progress, but its single digits in terms of the number o