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Woman accused of stabbing man in DanvilleDecember 10,
stanley cup 2019 Tom Kenny, DANVILLE, Ky. WTVQ A Boyle County woman is accused of stabbing a man during a struggle on North Street in Danville, according to police.Investigators say the call came in just after 2:00 p.m. as a stabbing.聽 Officers say when they arrived t
stanley official website hey found 56-year old Larry Bruce, of Danville, stabbed in the stomach.聽 He was rushed to Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center in Danville.聽 His condition wasn ;t released.Police say they found 49-year old Melanie Hamilton, of Danville, walking away from the stabbing scene toward South 2nd Street.聽 She was taken in for questioning and eventually charged with Wanton Endangerment 1st Degree, acc
stanley termoska ording to police.She was taken to the Boyle County Detention Center.Categories: Featured, Local News, NewsTags: Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center, Larry Bruce, Melanie Hamilton, StabbingFacebookPinterestTwitterLinkedin Leave a Reply Cancel reply .clt-73 .thumb-wrap display: block;float: none;.clt-73 .inner-thumb-wrap padding: 56.25% 0 0 0;.content-primary-cat a font-size: 13px; Related Bglf Coroner identifies body found in Lexington home
CNN 鈥?Scientists have revealed what the voice of a mummified Egyptian priest who lived 3,000 years ago would have sounded like by 3-D printing his vocal tract.The team were able to accurately reproduce a single sound, which sounds a bit like a long, exasperated meh without the m. David Howard, one of the academics behind the project, describes it as falling somewhere between the vowels in the English words bed and bad. The sound you hear is the sound of his vocal tract in the position he is lying in the sarcopha
stanley cup gus, said Howard, who is professor of electrical engineering at Royal Holloway, University of London.Howard has already reproduced the vocal tracts of living people, including his own, using this same method and found that the sounds produced were very realistic. However, this is the first time the technique has been applied to human remains. The results were published Thursday in the journal聽Scientific Reports.Sound, not speechThe team chose the mummy of the Egyptian priest Nesyamun from the Leeds City Museum in the UK because the soft tissue in the throat and vocal tract was reasonably intact. Their technique doesnt work on skeletal remains.The team
stanley mugs took the mummy to the Leeds General Infirmary, where it underwent a CT scan in 2016 to gain all the measurements necessary to rep
stanley thermos mug roduce the vocal tract, which curves from your larynx to your lips.Computer software was then used to identify the airway, which was 3-D printed using plastic similar to that used to m