Current News (part 2)

Amos Stevens

New Member
USS Arizona Memorial center slowly sinking

USS Arizona Memorial Center Slowly Sinking




By JAYMES SONG, Associated Press Writer

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii - The USS Arizona Memorial's visitors center was designed to accommodate 750,000 people a year when it was built in 1980, but today it's jammed with crowds more than twice that big — and it's literally bursting at the seams.





Portions of the shoreside building and plaza commemorating the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor have settled as much as 30 inches and are still slowly sinking, and the concrete structure is cracking.


"Our office space is crammed, our visitor space is crammed, capacity is a significant issue on all fronts," said Douglas Lentz, the National Park Service superintendent in charge of the visitors center. "Then you've got the structural integrity of the building."


Crowds at the memorial have grown over the years as interest in Pearl Harbor has increased, fueled in part by Hollywood's sustained interest in World War II, including a blockbuster movie about the attack. The shock of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001 drew comparisons to Pearl Harbor and sparked interest among a new generation.


A total of 2,390 people were killed in the Dec. 7, 1941, surprise attack that drew the United States into World War II.


The Pearl Harbor Memorial Fund is working to raise $34 million to replace the visitors center, the starting point for ferry rides across the harbor to the white memorial that straddles the sunken Arizona, which still contains the remains of 1,177 sailors.


The group — whose honorary chairmen include actor Tom Hanks and Sens. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii and John McCain, R-Ariz. — wants to raise enough money to break ground for a new center in three to five years. Mathew Sgan, the fund senior vice president, said the group is very pleased with its progress and is soliciting corporate donations.


The one-story, open-air visitors center building was constructed on fill material that was dredged from Pearl Harbor decades earlier and was expected to settle 18 inches. Its architects even designed in the ability to raise the building using concrete shims.


But it already has been raised four times, causing cracks in the concrete walls that have exposed steel reinforcing rods to moisture.


Last year, engineers gave the building a life expectancy of just five to 10 more years.


Lentz said a new center will be built with lighter materials atop pilings that go deep into the ground to prevent sinking. There is also an option of building it on a floating foundation.


The current museum has 2,500 square feet of space with barely enough room for crowds of visitors to squeeze between the displays, which include a Japanese torpedo recovered from the harbor and a detailed model of the Japanese aircraft carrier from which attack planes were launched.


Preliminary plans for the new center call for 24,000 square feet of space, with more restrooms and a 5,400-square-foot museum to display more artifacts.


As aging Pearl Harbor survivors die, their families often donate historic artifacts and pictures to the museum, but the donations end up in storage because they can't fit in the museum, Sgan said.


"We could never display everything, but if we had a better facility we could display more and we could also rotate things in," Sgan said.


During the peak summer months, the center averages 4,500 visitors daily. Some of them have to wait for two hours to watch a 30-minute film — which includes U.S. and Japanese footage of the attack — and to be ferried out to the monument at the submerged battleship, which still leaks droplets of oil from its tanks.


The National Park Service estimated the memorial will attract 1.6 million visitors this year, up from 1.5 million in 2003.





Rep. Neil Abercrombie (news, bio, voting record), D-Hawaii, said he will push to make funding the project a "major focus" of the House Committee on Resources.

"When this was first put together, nobody had any idea that there was going to be this kind of ongoing response decade after decade," Abercrombie said. "Not only were the intentions good at the beginning, but I think the planning for it was as much as was able to be conceived at the time."

___

On the Net:

USS Arizona Memorial: http://www.nps.gov/usar

Pearl Harbor Memorial: http://www.pearlharbormemorial.com


Copyright © 2004 The Associated Press.
 

Amos Stevens

New Member
Marine sacrifices finger to save wedding ring

Marine sacrifices finger to save wedding ring
Sunday, December 12, 2004 Posted: 9:57 AM EST (1457 GMT)



VICTORVILLE, California (AP) -- When Marine Lance Cpl. David Battle learned he'd either have to sacrifice his ring finger or the wedding band he wore, he told doctors at a field hospital in Iraq to cut off the finger.

The 19-year-old suffered a mangled left hand and serious wounds to his legs in a November 13 fire fight in Falluja. Battle, who is recovering at his parents' home in this desert city 130 kilometers (80 miles) northeast of Los Angeles, came under attack as he and fellow Marines entered a building. Eleven other Marines were wounded.

Doctors were preparing to cut off Battle's ring to save as much of his finger as they could.

"But that would mean destroying my wedding ring," he said. "My wife is the strongest woman I know. She's basically running two people's lives since I've been gone. I don't think I could ever repay her or show her how grateful ... how much I love my wife, my soul mate."

With his approval, doctors severed his finger, but somehow in the chaos that followed, they lost his ring.

Although Battle was disappointed, his wife, Devon, said she was honored.

"I can't believe he did that," she said. "At first I was mad when he told me, but then I realized how lucky I am to have him in my life."

The couple, who met in the eighth grade, were married in June, just two weeks before Battle left for Iraq. He hopes to eventually return to the Marines, and to replace his wedding ring, but that will have to wait until he recovers.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press.
 

ORANGATUANG

Wildfire
Adelaide Rapist Caught In Hollywood....

Well my day just seems to get better and better..not.just saw on my local news that an rapist from my city has been caught in hollywood..he was doing bits and pieces in low grade movies (more then likely blue movies)...the story is he raped an couple of girls here then he skipped his court date and just dissapeared ...they caught the prick and he is being brought back here early next year...here iam trying my hardest to get steven to come and film in my neck of the woods and some f********d stuffs it up...you asked is Heather pissed off yes iam...so that idea is out the window probally thinks more less of us aussies then he already did now....
 

bbryant

Banned
Bush #43 named Time "Person of the Year"

Spokes person said for "literally sticking to his guns" and for convincing the
majority of the American public to vote him in for four more years.
 

Jalu

Steve's Destiny
Artificial Life

'Artificial life' comes step closer

By Roland Pease
BBC radio science unit



The vesicles pushed out a green fluorescent protein
Researchers at Rockefeller University in the US have made the first tentative steps towards creating a form of artificial life.

Their creations, small synthetic vesicles that can process (express) genes, resemble a crude kind of biological cell.

The parts for their "vesicle bioreactors", as they call them, all come from diverse realms of life.

The soft cell walls are made of fat molecules taken from egg white. The cell contents are an extract of the common gut bug E. coli, stripped of all its genetic material.

This essence of life contains ready-made much of the biological machinery needed to make proteins; the researchers also added an enzyme from a virus to allow the vesicle to translate DNA code.

When they added genes, the cell fluid started to make proteins, just like a normal cell would.

Jelly fish

A gene for green fluorescent protein taken from a species of jellyfish was the first they tried. The glow from the protein showed that the genes were being transcribed.

With a second gene, from the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus, the researchers got their cells to make small pores in their walls.


Some bacteria can survive with just a few hundred genes
These let nutrients in from the surrounding "soup", so that the cells could function, in some instances, for several days.

Albert Libchaber, who heads the project, stresses that these bioreactors are not alive - they're performing simple chemical reactions that can also happen in cell-free biological fluids.

But the research is one strand in a new field called synthetic biology, where the aim is to re-design entire organisms, or recreate them from scratch.

The bio-entrepreneur Craig Venter, who headed the commercial venture to decode the human genome, is currently trying to strip a bacterium down to the minimum set of genes needed for survival.

Synthetic virus

Two years ago, another team showed that polio viruses could assemble themselves from off-the-shelf chemical components mixed in a test-tube.

And several chemists are exploring the kinds of chemical reactions that may have preceded life.

Albert Libchaber's hope is to build up towards a minimal synthetic organism, with a designed cell wall, and a mixture of gene circuits that would let it maintain itself like a living cell.

As these constructs become more lifelike, the rest of us will have to start rethinking the nature of life.

"This is rather philosophical," says Dr Libchaber.

"For me, life is just like a machine - a machine with a computer program. There's no more to it than that. But not everyone shares this point of view," he told the BBC.

He also stresses that there is no danger in the experiments. Not only are his cells artificial, they can function only in the nutrient medium he supplies them.

He said: "If you take our system out of its environment, it just doesn't function."

Details of Libchaber's work with Vincent Noireaux have been published by the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4104483.stm
 

Amos Stevens

New Member
I don't think a guy from your country would keep him from visiting Australia Heather...if he judged by criminal activities-he wouldnt' go anywhere :)
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
We're not even close to making a successful clone...

The problem when it comes to cloning lies in the final and most important stage - the cell differentiation. You can create many identical cells but if they don't start specializing an organism won't form. The living organism is like a puzzle. If you don't have all the pieces in the right place (and functioning), you won't get the desired product. The DNA of the cell may start making proteins, but if those proteins have no place to go, they as good as denatured.

Interesting article, Jalu, and it's a step, but it's a baby step towards the inevitable goal (or so the geneticists think ... and then BAM! and such projects may come to be rendered illegal as the laws change due to politics).
 
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