Oh hello, it's you guys again.
How much time do you spend here?
Oh hello, it's you guys again.
How much time do you spend here?
If this place payed minimum wage I'd be rich.
>Heavy spray day
>suspend operations and empty the underground tanks at its Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility
minimum corrective action
>Great video if somepne can post it
PUCKER UP
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968) - The Child Catcher Scene
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Geragos#Notable_clients
https://www.youtube.com/user/jussiesmollett
https://www.cultfoodscience.com/
The Future of Food Has Arrived
CULT Food Science is an innovative investment platform advancing the future of food. The first-of-its-kind in North America, CULT aims to provide unprecedented exposure to the most innovative start-up, private or early stage lab grown food companies around the world.
https://twitter.com/CULTFoodScience
https://www.instagram.com/cultfoodscience/
oh yeah some Russian heavy lift failed second of five burns, might deorbit
something there to watch
For its third test flight, the Angara A5 vehicle lifted off from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern Russia on December 27, again carrying a dummy payload. The core stage and boosters performed nominally, as did a second stage. After the Persei upper stage and its mass simulator deployed, its RD-0124 engine performed a nominal initial burn. But a second burn to put the payload into a higher, stable orbit failed.
Dmitriy Rogozin congratulated the military on the successful launch of the new booster, noting that we are still waiting for the Persei upper stage to work. They're still waiting. The Persei upper stage, of course, was never going to relight.
This Persei stage, tracked as IPM 3/Persey, is now well below 200 km and will likely make an uncontrolled re-entry into Earth's atmosphere on Wednesday.
https://www.n2yo.com/?s=50505
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/dec/22/coronavirus-us-children-lost-caregiver-covid
‘Their whole sky has fallen’: more than 167,000 US children have lost a caregiver to Covid
Death toll underscores daunting task facing schools as they help students recover not just academically, but also emotionally
Melanie Keaton, 9, used to spend hours playing with her grandfather. Having tea time together from her miniature toy set. Taking trips to the zoo. Zigzagging their characters across the board of Candy Land.
When he fell ill from the coronavirus in April 2020 and went to the hospital during New York City’s deadly first wave, the young girl, then just 7, turned to her mother.
“He’ll be OK, right?” she asked.
Her mother, Melissa Keaton, days later had to tell her daughter that their beloved “Papa,” who was 61, wasn’t coming back to the Flatbush apartment he had shared with them and where he had helped care for his granddaughter.
“My father was in the hospital,” Keaton told The 74. “We never heard from him. We were never able to see him or speak to him. Once he passed, [Melanie] didn’t get to see that visual, final goodbye.”
The young Brooklynite is one of more than 167,000 children who are believed to have lost parents or caregivers to Covid during the pandemic – roughly one in every 450 young people in the US under age 18.
The count updates the October estimate that 140,000 minors had lost caregiving adults to the virus, and is four times more than a springtime tally that found nearly 40,000 children had experienced such loss. In a 9 December report titled Hidden Pain, researchers from the COVID Collaborative and Social Policy Analytics published the new total, which they derived by combining coronavirus death numbers with household-level data from the 2019 American Community Survey.
The death toll further underscores the daunting task facing schools as they seek to help students recover not just academically, but also emotionally, from a pandemic that has already stretched 22 months and claimed more than 800,000 American lives. It’s an issue of such elevated concern that Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, on 7 December, used a rare public address to warn Americans of the pandemic’s “devastating” effects on youth mental health. An accompanying 53-page report calls out the particular difficulties experienced by young people who have lost parents or caregivers to the virus.