snls NTSB: Air taxi crashes at Alaska airport, kills 10

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MethrenFew
snls NTSB: Air taxi crashes at Alaska airport, kills 10

Dofr The Odd Truth, Dec. 12, 2002
The decision of the Transportation Security Administration TSA to streamline the airport security checkpoint process for frequent fliers, aviation consultant Michael Boyd says, is one of the most dangerous things he s ever heard.TSA wants to perm stanley tumblers it certain frequent travelers to go through less rigorous screening, which would allow th stanley cup e TSA to focus on the passengers it knows the least about. Stun gun found after plane lands in NewarkVideo: Airline stowaway held in Los AngelesVideo: Man flies across country without ticket, boarding passIn exchange for providing TSA with some additional personal and travel information, certain pre-screened passengers will be eligible to go through special expedited security lanes, where they ll still go through metal detectors, but may be able to keep their shoes on and leave their laptops in the carry-ons. TSA administrator John Pistole told CBS News, The vast majority of people pose no threat to civil aviation, so how can we id stanley bottle entify those people before they get to the airport, before the checkpoint, and then, when they get there, to expedite them by allowing us to focus more on the unknowns. Beginning this fall, CBS News Homeland Security Correspondent Bob Orr reported, selected frequent fliers boarding Delta Airlines in Atlanta and Detroit and American Airlines in Miami and Dallas will be invited into the program, as will U.S. citizens who ve already passed background checks by Customs and Border Protection. Intially, Orr repor Bhha A sunken WWII-era Japanese mega sub has been found near Hawaii
Though predicted to exist, magnetic monopoles 鈥?hypothetical elementary particles with only one magnetic pole 鈥?have never been detected by scientists. But physicists have just accomplished the next best thing by actually creating their own synthetic version of these bizarre magnetic particles in the lab. As any grade 3 student can tell you, every magnet has a north and a south pole. Break that magnet in half, and the pieces will still have a north and south pole. Even if you c stanley cup ut this magnet down to the atomic level, it should still feature bioplar magnetic fields. Dirac Conjecture But back in 1931, physicist Paul Dirac hypothesized ab stanley thermobecher out the existence of an elementary particle that an isolated magnet with only one pole 鈥?either a north or a south, but not both. This particle, therefore, would have a net magnetic charge whil stanley becher e still generating an electric field. https://gizmodo/ask-a-physicist-what-ever-happened-to-magnetic-monopol-5... But why should such a particle exist Dirac said that if magnetic monopoles are an actual thing, then all electric charge in the universe must be quantized. That is, they tidily explain why electrons can ;t be sliced in half i.e., the electric charge of subatomic particles always come in discrete units of a fundamental charge . What more, the existence of magnetic monopoles could also help us answer unresolved questions about space, time, and the laws of physics, including the nature of true sy