Mvoy Egypt s Al Jamaa al Islamiya Urges Al Qaeda To Open Dialogue With Obama
A Utah man who suffers from cerebral palsy, epilepsy and other disabilities was stopped while riding a motorized bicycle and charged with DUI after admitting he takes medication. As CBS Affiliate KUTV correspondent Chris Jones reports, Mike Tilt was pulled over by Utah Highway Patrol Trooper Lisa Steed on October 28 and asked to take a field sobriety test. Tilt, whose left leg is shorter than his right, told the officer that he would likely fail the test which requires him to put one foot in front of the other , and he did. Tilt told Steed he did not have a driver s license - he d given it up 15 years before due to his seizures. After asking Tilt if he took medication for his epilepsy, she handcuffed him. According to Tilt, when he asked if he were being arrested, Steed replied, Yeah, for DUI. Ironically, Tilt had forgotten
stanley romania to take his medication that night. In defending the trooper s actions, Utah Highway Patrol told KUTV that many people drive under the influence of prescription medications.They also praised Steed, who was named Trooper of the Year in 2007 for her arrests of drivers suspected of being under the influence. Over the past eight she has made nearly 800 DUI arrests, roughly half that in 2009 alone. UHP Captain Bob Anderson told Jones that he w
stanley cupe as confident Steed followed procedure and the law. Jones himself described Steed as absolutely dedicated to getting drunk drivers off the road. Tilt s daughter, Courtney Tilt, told
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Scientists have known for decades that muddy coastal sediments absorb the power of waves as they roll toward beaches. The result is a free service courtesy of soft ocean bottoms that diminishes the sea energy before it reaches the communities living beyond them. Now an engineering team is working to expand the muddy seafloor portfolio of services to include power generation. They are building a carpet system meant to be installed underwater on coastlines that would harvest power from waves. Mud basically moves up and down un
stanley cup der the action of the waves and small-scale motions called turbulence occurs within the mud layer and that converts the wave energy into heat, says Reza Alam, a University of California, Berkeley assistant mechanical engineering professor who is leading the effort. Our idea was to design a carpet that sits on the seafloor and acts like a mud layer to extract energy from ocean waves and convert it into useful energy. Their prototype consists of a rubber sheet topping a grid of hydraulic actuators, cylinders and tubes. Waves cause the sheet to pump the cylinders up and down
stanley thermosflasche , which tra
vaso stanley nsfer hydraulic pressure ashore that is then converted into electricity, says Marcus Lehmann, a doctoral student on Alam team working on the project as part of his degree. So far, they ;ve built a working prototype in their university wave tank and now they ;retrying to crowdsource nearly $10,000 of