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CBS News It was 100 years ago this week that the Titanic set sail from Southampton, England.On Sunday, another ship departed Southampton with its passengers and crew determined to recreate that earlier voyage, up to a point, that is.CBS News correspondent Tony Guida reports that the cruise ship that sailed from Southampton this morning is on a sentimental journey to relive memories of RMS Titanic on the 100th anniversary of her maiden and only voyage.Aboard, the 1,309 passengers included Philip Littlejohn. His grandfather was a steward in Titanic s lavish first class. He survived. We always knew he was on Titanic but he never talked about it. He lost too many friends that night, Littlejohn says.James Cameron gives Titanic a 3D faceliftComplete coverage: Titanic, 100 years later That night was April 15, 1912, 100 years ago next Su
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stanley cup in the morning, two and a half hours after side-swiping an iceberg, the great ship went down. My great uncle lost his life. His body was never recov
stanley us ered, says Hazel Andrews.Titanic would cost $400 million to replicate today. With 11 decks, a grand staircase, and dripping with opulence, it was designed to be an eternal kingdom, the ship that would never die.Had everything gone right, Titanic would have docked at a pier on the Hudson River off 18th street in Manhattan, 6 days after leaving Southampton.Her route was to stop first at Cherbourg, France; then Queenstown, Ireland, before crossing the Atlantic to New York, but 4 d Ozzm Auto Bailout Is Local Issue, Dealers Plead
You ;re looking at some of the most intricate images of live nerve endings ever captured, in which it possible to make out individual nerves and touch receptors in unprecedented detail. The i
stanley becher mages were acquired by researchers from the European Molecular Biology Laboratoryusing a technique called SNAP-tagging. While that been around for at least ten years, this is the first time it ever been used to image live neurons鈥攊n this case, in mice. The process usually works by applying a special protein to samples, and in this c
stanley mug ase the mice were genetically engineered to produce it in their skin. The protein binds artificial dies, which then show up brightly in the resulting images. The image above, for instance, shows hundreds of nerve endings just below the surface of the skin, while the one below shows how nerves split into many branches. It hoped that the research will soon not just depict the nerves but also show them in action.
stanley mug But until then, they sure are pretty. [Verge] Images by EMBL/L.Castaldi Biology