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MethrenRaf

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 A French skyscraper climber nicknamed  Spiderman  was arrested Thursday after he scaled The New York Times  52-story midtown tower to draw attention to global warming.Alain Robert unfurled a banner as he climbed that said  Global warming kills more people than a 9/11 every week. Hundreds of people craned their necks to watch his climb up the exterior of the new tower designed by Renzo Piano. Workers cheered from a construction site across the street, and Robert pumped his fist.Police took him into custody at the top. Charges against the 45-year-old Robert were pending, a police spokesman said.Robert s Web site says he has climbed more than 70 skyscrapers around the world. H stanley becher e was arrested in February after climbing a 42-floor building in Sao Paolo, Brazil.        Thursday s stunt was staged at the Times building, just a block south of the busy intersection at Eighth Avenue and 42nd Stree stanley cup t, across the street from the Port Authority bus terminal. The building s facade is covered with slats that Robert climbed like a ladder.Robert said in a news release he was climbing to mark World Environment Day and  to create support for far greater and  stanley cup urgent action from world leaders on global warming. His Web site says he climbs even though he suffers from vertigo and is  60 percent disabled  from previous accidents. It also says he has been jailed many times but it does not matter because he  would rather stay in a prison than in a hospital. One city councilman is hoping that Robert gets  Earc How Bad Is California   s Drought  This Bad
 You ;ve been cutting your cakes wrong, says Math. Here   a better, more mathematically accurate method for slicing up a cake.     In this video from Numberphile, Alex Bellos digs up a more than 100-year-old edition of Nature and reads a letter to the editor from Francis Galton detailing Galton   method for cutting a Christmas cake  though mathematically, birthday cakes and everyday cakes can also be substituted  so as to keep it fresh over days. The traditional method of cutting the cake into wedges Galton regards with particular horror, as likely to result in a dry, disap stanley cup pointing mess. So what does Galton suggest instead  Cutting into chords, then tying the cake   edges together, as you can see demonstrated in the video below. Bellos describes Galton   method as perfect for the mathematical loners who don ;t want to share their cakes. Of course, there   also a pretty good mathematical  and social  ar stanley thermoskannen gument for slicing a cake up in the classic wedge formation, and then just finishing up the cake in one go, too.  Top image: Ro stanley quencher bert W. Howington.                                                        math