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CBS News The U.S. Army staff sergeant being investigated in the massacre of 16 Afghan civilians was flown out of Afghanistan today.A military spokesman said the U.S. does not have an appropriate detention facility in that country. It s not known where he was taken.Defense Secretary Leon Panetta flew to Afghanistan Wednesday, and there was a securit
stanley flask y breach. An Afghan stole a NATO truck and crashed it on a runway at a British airfield, just as Panetta was landing. The Pentagon said it does not believe Panetta was being targeted.Suspect in Afghan massacre flown out of countryObama vows to keep Afghan withdrawal timetable intactG.I. s plea: Give troops with PTSD more helpPanetta spoke to soldiers at Camp Leatherneck. On the agenda were the massacre of 16 innocent Afghans last weekend, the mistaken burning of the Koran by U.S. troops, and the death of 6 Americans in the riots that followed. Each of these incidents is deeply troubling, and we have to learn the lessons from each of those incidents so that we do everything possible to make sure they don t happen again, Panetta said.Later he spoke with CBS News correspondent Chip Reid about his visit and what he hopes to learn from the recent incidents. The Pentagon want
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stanley quencher her the Afghan rampage shooter was on the edge, what kind of group counseling he received, really try to understand the kind of stress our troops go through. Reid: Do you think there will be specific changes in procedures as a result of this Dgxg Microsoft Has Six Original TV Series in Production
As this new simp
stanley bottles lified simulation illustrates, Ebola may kill more than other diseases, but it spreads much slower. The simulation, which appears at the Washington Post, shows how quickly 10 diseases, ranked from most to least fatal, cou
stanley botella ld spread from one person to 100 unvaccinated people. Ebola, with a death rate of 70% is clearly the deadliest, with Smallpox 30% , Measles 25% and SARS 11% right behind. But the rates of spread are dramatically different. Take the flu, for example. The simulation hit 100 infections after only 12 days. For Ebola, it took 71 days to reach 100. Indeed, diseases require a certain amount of time to pass from one infected person to the next group of people, which is called a generation. So, if Ebola were as easy to catch as chicken pox, then thousands of people would have been sickened by the fourth generation. Washington Post Interestingly, the simulation never looks the same way twice. The Washington Post explains: Disease estimations rarely have precise, neat numbers. One outbreak may spread more quickly or kill a higher percentage of people than another. So our models run different scenarios based on ranges provided to us by mathematical epidemiologist Gerardo Chowell of Arizona State University. Each sample of 100 starts with a Patient 0, the first person to get sick. After that, each simulation may differ in the number of days before the next group of peo
stanley botella ple becomes ill, the number of people in that grou