标题: gtgh Bonds Ties May [打印本页] 作者: MethrenReady 时间: 前天 00:56 标题: gtgh Bonds Ties May Uwxj We will not be obliterated by an asteroid 8230; today.% T o1 z: o8 X/ G8 ?% u$ w8 L
Updated at 2:12 p.m. ETNEW YORK - Americans withered under yet another day of searing sun Friday as a heat wave spread in earnest into the urban core of the stanley kubek Northeast, while warnings about excessive heat stretched from Kansas to Maine and the Carolinas.Across the nation, 40 states are experiencing temperatures of more than 90 degrees, CBS News correspondent Whit Johnson reported on The Early Show. The number of locations that have either tied or broken daytime records this month is 1,279. At least 22 people have died of heat-related causes. Oklahoma City saw its 29th day of 100-degree heat Thursday.Temperatures hit 100 in New York s Central Park and in Newark and Teterboro, N.J. The National Weather Service said the smol stanley us dering humidity made those temperatures feel like 116, 114 and 110, respectively.It s enough to test the patience of a saint. Taking her morning walk with temperatures already soaring near 90, Sister Elizabeth Ann Hughes of St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Church in Philadelphia offere stanley cup usa d her simple strategy 151; go out only when it s relatively cool and stay in the air conditioning when it s not. I walk in the shade and get out of the sun before 10 a.m., she said.In New York, people looking to beat the heat also were thwarted by warnings urging them to avoid some city waterways after a wastewater treatment plant disabled by fire began spewing millions of gallons of raw sewage into the Hudson River.Tons of raw sewage pours into Hudson RiverThe heat Kepb What if the Enterprise was crewed entirely by misanthropic jerks 1 M0 l* S) ]8 {& X- B The world most powerful computers can ;t perform accurate real-time translation. Yet interpreters do it with ease. Meet the neuroscientists who are starting to explain this remarkable ability Photo Credit: Ffion Atkinson via flickr | CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 One morning this summer I paid a visit to the sole United Nations agency in London. The headquarters of the International Maritime Organization IMO sit on the southern bank of the Thames, a short distance upstream from the Houses of Parliament. As I approached, I saw that a ship prow, sculpted in metal, was grafted like a nose to the ground floor of this otherwise bland building. Inside I met a dozen or so mostly female IMO translators. They were cheerful and chatty and better dr stanley taza essed than you might imagine for people who are often heard but rarely seen. I walked upstairs to a glass-fronted booth, where I prepared to witness something both absolutely remarkable and utterly routine. The booth was about the size of a garden shed, and well lit but stuffy. Below us were the gently curving desks of the delegate hall, which was about half-full, occupied mostly by men in suits. I sat down between two interpreters named Marisa Pinkney and Carmen Soli帽o, and soon the first delegate started talking. Pinkney switched on her microphone. stanley cup She paused briefl stanley cup y, and then began translating the delegate English sentences into Spanish. Let unpick what she did that morning and itemise its components. As the de