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 TUPELO, Miss. Ricin has been found in a business once used by the man charged in the case of letters laced with the deadly poison being sent to President Barack Obama, according to a court document made public Tuesday that also said the substance was found on items the suspect dumped in a public trash bin.James Everett Dutschke, 41, was arrested Saturday by FBI agents at his home in Tupelo, Miss., and is being held without bond pending a preliminary and detention hearing Thursday in U.S. District Court in Oxford.The affidavit said that on April 22, Dutschke removed several items from his former martial arts studio in Tupelo, including a dust mask, which tested positive for ricin.James Everett Dutschke, Miss. man, arrested in ricin-laced letters case, FBI says James Everett Dutschke, suspect in ricin letters case, makes appearance in federal courtMiss. man charged in ricin-letters caseTrace amounts  stanley cup usa also were found in the studio, and Dutsch stanley tumbler ke bought caster beans on the Internet, the document said.The affidavit had been sealed since it was filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Oxford, Miss.Dutschke is charged with making and producing ricin as part of investigation into poison- stanley cups uk laced letters sent to Obama, U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker and a Mississippi judge.        The FBI searched his home, vehicles and former studio last week, after dropping charges against an Elvis impersonator who says he had feuded with Dutschke in the past.Annette Dobbs, who owns the shopping center where the s Hjdb Tight Security For Texas Execution
 A group of mechanical engineers at Columbia University have produced the world   tiniest FM ra stanley tazas dio transmitter. At its heart is a micrometer-sized oscillator powered by one-atom-thick graphene. But more than serving as a lilliputian proof of concept for tiny broadcasting equipment, this could help revolutionize smartphones and other gadgets.     The research, published this week in Nature Nanotechnology, centers on a tiny oscillator that uses graphene in the place of traditional quartz crystals; this enables a level of miniaturization that would be impossible with conventional materials. The prototype device broadcast at 100MHz 鈥?that   100.0 on your FM dial 鈥?and they even used it to transmit music from an iPhone to a regular old-fashioned radio. While the world   smallest radio station sounds cool on its own, the possibility of a functional nano-sized electromechanical system could revolutionize wireless communications. Current radio signal generators have proven difficult to miniaturize, and their space and power demands are a huge headache for designers trying to slim down devices. Plus, graphene   stretchable, resilient, and highly conductive nature makes for a transmitter that can be tuned over a wider range of frequencies, meaning one nan stanley mugs o-transmitter could replace multiple conventional components. The research team   next step is to integrate the graphene-based device into a silicon  stanley cup chip, making it possible to tuck a transmitter onto the d