Mpbg Hiking Nepal In Edmund Hillary s Footsteps
CBS News SILVER SPRING, Md. -- Much of the country was still wrapped in an oppressive, dangerous heat wave Thursday.Forecasters said temperatures would reach triple digits or the high nineties from the Plains to the East Coast.Warnings about excessive heat were posted in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Iowa, Wisconsin and Kentucky. Maryland issued a heat advisory for the entire state.And coping with the heat is that much harder if you don t have electricity to run air conditioners.About 250,000 homes and businesses
stanley deutschland on the East Coast were still without power Thursday in the wake of last Friday s brutal storms. Six days later, there are still many
stanley tumblers trees and power lines down across the Washington, D.C. metro area and, in many places, no clean-up crews in sight.For many of the peoples affected, frustration w
stanley cup as at a boil.Storms death toll rises to 26 At some point, there has to be a better system, complained Dexter Walker, of Bethesda, Md. Violent Mid-Atlantic storms 41 photos Dexter, his wife, Melissa Walker and their four children had to flee their home. With a downed tree and tangled power lines in their front yard Wednesday, utility crews still hadn t arrived to repair the damage. They haven t shown up. We haven t gotten a phone call. N Ifkl Watch the first-ever footage of a live 8-foot long oarfish
The 16th through 18th centuries, in addition to their regrettable stances on witch burning and geocentrism, were a stinky time to be alive. People did not bathe due to a popular misconception. What turned it around Another popular misc
stanley vattenflaska onception, a poorly-thought-out experiment, and dead horses. The problem was that the resurgence of the plague, and the emergence of diseases like syphilis, made people think that communal bathing spread disease. They also began to think that bathing at all spread disease. The opening of the pores, doctors concluded, let in unhealthy vapors; a person should shmear their pores shut with their own bodily oils and never allows those protective oils to be washed away. This remained the prevailing wisdom for hundreds of years. Clean people didn ;t wash, they just changed their linen, and kept their pores locked down. It took a lot of social re-engineering to make baths healthful again. Gradually health spas, cold baths to harden children, and soap became more common. At last, in the 1830s, scientists bega
stanley mugg n to reexamine the closed pores are healthy doctrine that had he
stanley thermosflasche ld sway for 300 years, but they did this in the worst way possible. They began by shaving horses. They then covered the horses in pitch. The horses promptly died. When the scientists added glue to the pitch, the horses died even faster. Carbon dioxide, the doctors said, was exhaled partially through the skin, which breathed just like any