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May 19, 2013
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    • (May 18) Today's Top Headlines - Pennsylvania woman tries to poison families with burritos

      Police say an eastern Pennsylvania woman tried to poison her husband and daughter with burritos laced with prescription medicine.

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      One of only a couple gastropubs on the Northwest side of Tucson, The Parish, has made its mark by serving a variety of southern dishes, beers …

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      On May 16, 2013 at 11:14 p.m., officers from the Marana Police Department responded to a residence located in the 8900 block of N. Palm Brook …

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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 155 for battery. Subscribe to this search

  1. article Backyard oasis planning made easy

    Thursday, May 16, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - Hooray for a holiday. You’ve got the day off, you’ve sent out the backyard barbecue invite and all your nearest and dearest are coming over to eat, drink and be merry.

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  2. article Smoking causes house fire on La Cholla, resident dies from smoke

    Tuesday, May 14, 2013 10:51 am

    Northwest Fire District firefighters responded to 2002 W. Gardner Lane at 0100 after 9-1-1 calls were received reporting a mobile home on fire. Deputies from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department on patrol in the area arrived just before fire crews and attempted to make entry into the mobile home to check for the victim, but were driven back by the heavy smoke and fire.

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  3. article Creative Ways to Keep Kids Learning this Summer

    Sunday, May 12, 2013 10:00 pm

    (StatePoint) For families, summertime is all about active fun -- from vacations to ballgames, and fireworks to poolside picnics. But being on-the-go can mean lots of downtime in transit and waiting for activities to start.

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  4. article Helping Your Car Keep Cool In Warmer Weather

    Thursday, May 9, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Whether it’s a vacation road trip or your daily commute to work, when the temperatures climb higher on the outside, things are also heating up under the hood of your car.

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  5. Helping Your Car Keep Cool In Warmer Weather

    Hot summer temperatures can be hard on your battery so its important to check for corrosion. (NAPS)

  6. article Affordable Home Improvements to Boost Your Home’s Value

    Wednesday, May 8, 2013 10:00 pm

    (StatePoint) In addition to filling practical needs, home improvement projects often can increase the value of a home with minimal investment. Some projects add more value than others, however.

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  7. article Five things to do before sending your child to camp wearing hearing aids

    Sunday, May 5, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - Summer is approaching and many parents will be sending their children off to camp. If your child wears hearing aids and is set to attend a summer camp for kids of all abilities, here are five things you can do to help your child get the most from his or her summer camp experience:

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  8. article Trending and Techy Gift Ideas for Mom This Mother's Day

    Friday, May 3, 2013 1:19 pm

    (NewsUSA) - With over 80 million moms to shop for, Mother's Day is second only to Christmas when it comes to gift giving. So, besides giving a bouquet of flowers and box of chocolates this year, try getting mom the trending gifts and tech gadgets she'll love.

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  9. article A small investment returns a safer and healthier home

    Thursday, April 25, 2013 10:00 am

    (BPT) - Warm weather is here, which means many homeowners are beginning new DIY projects. Have you included home safety on your list?

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  10. article Your Key To A Long-Lasting Car

    Thursday, April 25, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Basic car care is the key to a long-lasting vehicle, and to improving its safety and dependability.

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  11. article Aiding Communication--Baby Boomers' Key To A Healthy Marriage

    Thursday, April 25, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)What did you say? Can you repeat that, please? Hearing loss makes communication a challenge, which unfortunately may put relationshipsin particular, a marriagein peril. Feelings of anger, frustration and resentment are often experienced by those suffering from hearing loss, as well as by spouses who are constantly barraged with having to repeat themselves or talk louder.

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  12. article What's Up UA? - Better Batteries From Waste Sulfur

    Thursday, April 18, 2013 10:13 am

    A new chemical process can transform waste sulfur into a lightweight plastic that may improve batteries for electric cars, reports a University of Arizona-led team. The new plastic has other potential uses, including optical uses.

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  13. article Make Your Water Work Harder This Year

    Thursday, April 18, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Many homeowners looking to maximize the efficiency of their outdoor water use turn to drip irrigation systems as a solution for keeping weeds, diseases, garden pests, scorching heat and high water bills at bay. Drip irrigation systems are easily set up by even a novice gardener and will deliver an immediate water savings as they place the exact amount of water slowly and evenly at the plant’s roots—where it’s needed most.

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  14. article Tips and tools to prepare for power outages

    Tuesday, April 16, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - Storms have been packing big punches in recent years. While the debate about the cause might rage on, so do the natural elements that wreak havoc on private homes and public infrastructure. As has been seen in recent years, the aging of the American power grid has resulted in extended power outages – and that increasingly seems that this will be the new norm. However, going without power for long periods of time is non-negotiable for many Americans.

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  15. article A tech refresh: Top reasons to buy a new PC

    Sunday, April 14, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - At 4 years old, your child is probably adorable. But your 4-year-old PC – not so much. More than 300 million computers around the world are more than 4 years old, including one-third of American PCs, according to research by Intel. Sixty-five percent of those are bulky desktops that are so far behind in terms of technology, they might as well be wooden abacuses.

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  16. article Distracted Driving Awareness Month aims to limit the distractions of technology in the 21st century

    Thursday, April 11, 2013 10:00 pm

    Talking or texting on a cellphone while driving is taboo almost everywhere across the country. Thirty-nine states now ban texting while driving and 10 states prohibit any use of a cellphone without a hands-free device.

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  17. article Easy solutions to backyard problems so gardeners can focus on fun

    Wednesday, April 10, 2013 10:00 pm

    (BPT) - For time-stretched gardeners who prefer to enjoy their backyards rather than work in them, several new products make outdoor living easier. Each offers a thoughtful solution to a common outdoor living problem, providing time-saving help to gardeners, gadget geeks and all who love to focus on fun outdoors. 

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  18. article Hardin Brothers Automotive

    Wednesday, April 10, 2013 4:00 am

    Hardin Brothers Automotive is your summer heat specialist. Temperatures of 100+ are especially hard on batteries, belts, and seals. Cooling systems leak, air conditioners need re-charging, and just when your air conditioner doesn't work, your window regulator decides to die too.

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  19. article Pet News - Anticipating Household Dangers Can Save Your Pet's Life

    Friday, March 29, 2013 2:17 pm

    Household pets are adorably curious, but they can’t read labels or plant their own gardens.

  20. article 3 Ways to Spring Clean Your Tech

    Thursday, March 28, 2013 8:23 am

    (NewsUSA) - Spring cleaning is the excuse many people need to kick things into high gear -- whether it's cleaning out the garage or changing home filters to get rid of winter dust. Digital spring cleaning may not be on the list, yet.

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  21. article Everything Gets Old--Even Your Shocks

    Thursday, March 21, 2013 4:44 am

    (NAPSI)—Look around your home and you’ll probably see a few important items you are planning to replace—a tattered chair, those old running shoes, the living room wallpaper.

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  22. article Anticipating Household Dangers Can Save Your Pet's Life

    Tuesday, March 19, 2013 10:00 pm

    (StatePoint) Household pets are adorably curious, but they can’t read labels or plant their own gardens.

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  23. article PC shopping? Finding a device for your lifestyle is easy

    Tuesday, March 19, 2013 10:00 pm

    Not unlike a car or home, a computer purchase is an incredibly personal decision. A shopper in the market for a new computer is after a product that will not simply perform basic functions but also support his or her lifestyle by making every day easier. The computer shopper’s decision must factor in price and availability, but also the critical details that will make a new PC or tablet a perfect fit for their way of life, including how powerful and mobile it is and the physical form the device takes.

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  24. article What's Up UA? - A Telescope at the Bottom of the World

    Saturday, March 16, 2013 10:35 am

    The brilliantly colored, sweeping nebulae featured on magazine covers and posters lining museum exhibits are the birthplaces and cradles of the stars in our galaxy.

    Out of the blackness of space and swirling gasses and debris, these nebulae take form, coalescing into columns and structures that remind us of Earthly shapes: here a horsehead, there a dragon.

    But how do so-called star-forming nebulae themselves form? It's is a question little understood and much debated by astronomers, and it's the topic of resaerch by the University of Arizona's Craig Kulesa and Chris Walker.

    Their quest takes them to one of the most remote and coldest locations on Earth: a barren snow-covered plateau 600 miles from the nearest human settlement, where a little telescope on a tabletop in an Antarctic ice field on the Southern end of the Earth may give them the answer.

    "We see all these clouds of dust and gas, but no one's ever seen one form. They're just there. Where did they come from? And what happens to them?" Kulesa asked. "Every star in the sky, including our sun, was formed in these clouds."

    Stars spend their lives fusing light elements such as hydrogen into heavier elements such as helium, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen – elements needed for life. At the end of their lives, stars return much of that enriched material back into interstellar space, where it eventually becomes new clouds and fuels the next generation of stars.

    Star-forming nebulae such as Orion and Horsehead contain mostly molecular hydrogen, which is very difficult to observe in cold interstellar clouds.

    "We want to actually see the clouds in the process of being formed. We want to see their building blocks," Kulesa said. "So instead of looking at carbon in molecular form, we're going to build radio receivers that will show us carbon in its atomic and ionized forms."

    Carbon atoms and ions that have not yet bound to any other atoms to form molecules, such as carbon monoxide, likely represent the early stages before formation of a dark nebular cloud, Kulesa said.

    "In order to look at atomic and ionized carbon, we have to build radio receivers that work at very, very high frequencies, terahertz frequencies," Kulesa said. "This light is basically 1,000 times higher frequency than your mobile phone, but 1,000 times lower frequency than the light you see with your eyes."

    Kulesa's tiny telescope is the first ever with radio receivers tuned to such a high frequency that they are able to detect atomic and ionized carbon in space, sited at a unique place on Earth where these observations can be done routinely.

    "No one could see this until now," Kulesa said. "It turns out that even a telescope the size of a table can do stuff no one's ever done before."

    With a touch of irony, Kulesa and his teammates dubbed their telescope, which functions at -40 degrees Fahrenheit and colder, HEAT: the High-Elevation-Antarctic-Terahertz telescope. The tabletop scope sits on a platform, shielded from the elements by a large blue cover that looks rather like a mailbox.

    "The telescope looks like the farthest outreach of the U.S. postal service," Kulesa joked, gazing fondly upon a photo of the observatory setup. "We visit it once a year. We're out in the deep field for a week getting it ready to go for another year, and when we wave goodbye, no human will see it again until the next year. It has to run all by itself."

    This is a much easier problem to address, thanks to an international collaboration with researchers Michael Ashley and John Storey at the University of New South Wales in Australia, who designed and constructed the Plateau Observatory, or PLATO, which provides HEAT with power and communications.

    "It's a very green experiment," Kulesa said. "Right now, we're operating totally off of solar power." The entire HEAT telescope, including a cryocooler that chills the terahertz detectors to a scant 50 degrees above absolute zero, sips only 160 watts of power.

    With batteries charged by solar panels in summer, diesel generators in winter, and using satellite modems for communications controlled by a computer using the same type of processor as an iPhone, the telescope must operate in frozen solitude for an entire year, despite winter temperatures that will fall below -100 degrees Fahrenheit.

    "Choosing embedded mobile phone technology for computers turned out to be the right thing because it takes less power; it's a lot simpler, smaller and lighter," Kulesa said. "It's exactly what you need to be able to run an experiment like this."

    Kulesa and his team communicate with the telescope remotely via satellite, sending it new orders and instructions throughout the year, and downloading new data. They also keep a watchful eye on their experiment through a webcam, which sends image updates from roughly 9,000 miles away roughly every hour.

    Why Antarctica, though?

    Even the smallest amount of water vapor in Earth's atmosphere absorbs terahertz-frequency light from space before it reaches a telescope on Earth. 

    "If you take all the water molecules above your head and distill them into a liquid ocean, how deep would that ocean be?" Kulesa asked. From Tucson, Kulesa said, it's about 5-10 millimeters deep in winter and up to 40 millimeters deep during monsoon season in summer. At the telescope site in Antarctica, a place called Ridge A, atmospheric water vapor is frequently one-tenth of a millimeter or less.

    "The summit of the Antarctic plateau is essentially a desert like Arizona, but much colder, higher and drier. The exceptional dryness allows us to perform difficult observations routinely that can't be done anywhere else on Earth."

    Once a year, the team visits the telescope to replace parts and make adjustments or repairs. Working in -40 degree Fahrenheit summer weather at a pressure altitude of 15,000 feet is not exactly a walk in the park, Kulesa said.

    "No matter how you try to avoid it, sometimes you have to work on something that has small parts, but at the same time, you're also wearing giant insulated gloves," Kulesa said. "So you have to alternate working on something for about 15 seconds with gloves off, then put the gloves back on and try to warm up," he said. At Ridge A, a laptop computer typically stops working within 10 minutes of being exposed to the elements.

    Despite the difficulties of experimental setup, Kulesa said: "The Ridge A site was selected from satellite measurements that said it would be essentially the best place to put an astronomical observatory on the entire planet. And it appears to be holding true: It's the driest, coldest and one of the highest and calmest places on Earth. It's about as close to space-like conditions as you can get and still have your feet on the ground."

    Close to space is what you need if you're trying to understand the origins of the interstellar machinery that makes the elements of the universe.

    "This life cycle of matter in our galaxy is really our own story," Kulesa said. Stars make all the elements we are made out of, he said: "This cycle sculpts every star, every galaxy in the universe, and we owe our human existence to it. So it's worth trying to figure out how it works."

     

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  25. article Recharging Your Batteries: How to Stay Powered Up

    Thursday, March 14, 2013 5:38 am

    (NewsUSA) - Who hasn't experienced that moment of panic when your smartphone is about to die just when you need it most? Without our tech gadgets -- and that includes everything from iPods to gaming devices to the latest tablets -- most of us feel absolutely lost.

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Sunshine School in Oro Valley read more

Sunshine School 9000 N. Oracle Road Tucson, AZ 85704, Suite 204 (520)742-6874 www.sunshineschooltucson.org/

Sunshine School in Oro Valley

Sunshine School 9000 N. Oracle Road Tucson, AZ 85704, Suite 204 (520)742-6874 www.sunshineschoolt...

Northwest Chatter

  • Oro Valley Town Talk: The Oro Valley Aquatic Center: Another success story

    Greg Caton Special to The Explorer

    • icon Updated: May 15
  • Guest Column: Be realistic in crediting schools like BASIS

    Dave Safier Special to The Explorer

    • icon posted: May 15
  • Respect your servers

    Thelma Grimes, The Explorer

    • icon posted: May 15
  • Sports Perspective: A heated affair

    Harrison Avigdor Explorer intern

    • icon posted: May 15

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Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera read more

Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera. A stroller carrying a 14-month-old girl rolled off a slanted train station platform and fell onto the tracks Wednesday, but the girl's mother leaped onto the tracks to rescue her with the help other passengers, transit officials said."What it looks like to us is that the mother became distracted by something, didn't apply the brake on the stroller and the stroller was able to move off the platform and onto the tracks," said Scott Sauer, director of system safety for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority. The accident happened Wednesday afternoon at the 56th Street station of the Market-Frankford Line in west Philadelphia. The platform at the station is slanted slightly for drainage purposes, Sauer said.Surveillance video shows a woman on the eastbound platform with the girl in a jogging stroller, which slowly rolls forward and topples over onto the tracks about 5 feet below. What initially appears to be the girl flying out of the stroller apparently was just a towel or a bag. The stroller comes to rest on the outer rail, which carries no charge. The woman is seen jumping down and lifting the girl to a man waiting on the platform. Other passengers ran to help, and one used an emergency call box to alert SEPTA police, who held an incoming train at the preceding stop.The infant was taken to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for treatment of a cut on her forehead. Sauer said during a news conference that watching the video was "gut-wrenching.""With the stroller moving at such a slow rate of speed, you know, you want to call out to someone, `Hey, the stroller's moving! Somebody grab the stroller,'" Sauer said. He said the line is one of SEPTA's busiest, with trains running every six to 10 minutes. SEPTA police said no charges will be filed but the accident serves as a reminder for other riders to lock stroller brakes when waiting on platforms.

Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera

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