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Updated 10:10 PM ETBOSTON Plucking a couple of faces in baseball caps out of a swarming crowd, the FBI zeroed in on two suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing and shared surveillance-camera images of them with the world Thursday in hopes the public will help hunt them down.The somewhat blurry but still detailed photos and video depict one young man in a dark cap and another in a white cap worn backward, both wearing backpacks and one walking behind the other on
stanley kubek the sidewalk near the finish line as marathoners run by. Suspect 1, at left, and Suspect 2
stanley kubek in the Boston Marathon bombings, as identified by the FBI when the photos were released to the public, April 19, 4, 2013. FBI/CBS The man in the white hat was seen setting down a backpack at the site of the second explosion, said Richard DesLauriers, FBI agent in charge in Boston. Somebody out there knows these individuals as friends, neighbors, co-workers or family members of the suspects, he said. Though it may be difficult, the nation is counting on those with information to come forward and provide it to us. Cell phone logs may ID mystery man in Boston bomb videoBombing investigators focus on possible suspect in surveillance videoComplete coverage: Bombing Marathon bombingsThey l
stanley ca ooked much like typical college students, but DesLauriers described them as armed and extremely dangerous, and urged anyone who sees or k Qdzi Check Out The Crucial Changes FDR Made To His 8220;Day Of Infamy 8221; Speech
Henry Molaison had one of the most unique brains known to neuroscience. Now, six years after H.M. death, his brain has been sliced, digitized, uploaded, and made available to scientists for further study. Back in 1953, surgeons performed an operation on Molaison in an effort to alleviate his terrible seizures. A team led by William Beecher Scoville removed pieces of the temporal lobes above his ears 鈥?and, regrettably, critical portions of the hippocampus. The seizures settled down, but it came at a terrible price: Permanen
stanley bottles t amnesia. Afterwards, Molaison could only remember events that happened before his surgery. Known as H.M. in the journals, he participated in hundreds of studies. Remarkably, despite having no short term memory, he could learn new motor memory
stanley website tasks and exhibit normal intelligence. After his death in 2008, his brain was donated to science. Until very recently, it just sat in a standard formaldehyde buffer. The latest chapter in thi
stanley cup price s story involves neuroanatomist Jacopo Annese and his efforts to preserve the brain even further. Writing in National Geographic, Virginia Hughes explains: On the one-year anniversary of H.M. death, Annese team froze his entire brain as a single block and began a 53-hour process of cutting it into some 2,400 super-thin slices. I didn ;t sleep for three days, Annese says. He had a team of students that took shifts to help him 鈥?and to make sure he stayed awake. Th