Bawt Mexican Pot Gangs Pollute National Parks
Everyone was ready to crown the new king at the U.S Open.What they got was a familiar finish.First came Phil Mickelson, sending the New York gallery into hysteria with an improbable charge, only to muff a chance to win his second major with a three-putt from 5 feet to make double bogey on the 71st hole.Then came Retief Goosen, unflappable as ever, closing with six consecutive one-putt greens to validate himself as one tough customer no matter how tough the conditions.Wi
stanley website th steely nerves and great escapes, Goosen survived Shinnecock Hills on Sunday to capture his second U.S. Open in four years, closing with a 1-over 71 for a two-shot victory. I knew that these last two holes were going to be the key holes, Goosen said. I made a good putt on 16 to get even with him, and then he made a mistake. I was, as they say, lucky to hang on. Goosen was more than lucky. He avoided the undertow of the highest final-round scoring at the U.S. Open in 32 years and overcame thunderous cheers from a crowd that tried to will Lefty to the second leg of the Grand Slam with the kind of support that Arnold Palmer used to get in the majors.But after taking his first lead with a 6-foot birdie on the par-5 16th mdash; his third birdie in
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stanley cup mdash; Mickelson hit into the left bunker on the par-3 17th and blasted out 5 feet above the hole.Behind him in the final group, Goosen holed a 12-foot birdie on the 16th to tie for the lead. When Goosen stepped to the 17th tee, glaring Ryrq Don t worry, buddy. I got you covered with my giant robot vision.
Most of us have heard of the famous double-slit experiment. Usually it played out in a lab in seconds. But there one version, dreamt up by physicist John Archibald Wheeler, that can be played out over much of the galaxy, over millions of years. His thought experiment suggests that we could retroactively determine the fate of ancient photons. The Double-Slit and the Delayed Choice The Dou
stanley thermos mug ble-Slit experiment makes an appearance in every high school physics classroom, and for good reason. It gives students their first taste of the truly wild although many people have explanations for it. Whatever the explanation, the results show us that the world is a stranger place than we have thus far assumed it to be. A light source, a barrier, and a back wall are all set up. In the barrier are two slits. When a photon comes from the light source, it can pass through the slits. From past experience we know what wi
stanley cup ll happen when a succession of single photons hit the back wall. A pretty little wave pattern will emerge, as if the photons were going through both slits and interfering with themselves the way a wave would. But the photons can ;t go through both slits. To check which one they go through, we put detectors in both slits. When we let a photon throug
stanley cup h, we note with smug pleasure that it goes through the left slit. The next goes through the left again, the next through the right, and so on, until we get around a fifty-fifty split between left