Sunday, February 22, 2004
Something else to worry about...
[See previous]
Dozens burned by lamp
Osama's Navy
More big blackouts likely, experts agree
Spammers exploit high-speed connections, careless users
Great Barrier Reef Faces Major Coral Destruction
Security Efforts Turning Capital Into Armed Camp:
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Dozens burned by lamp
- At least 30 people suffered ultraviolet radiation burns Thursday night while sitting under a defective gymnasium lamp at Dunmore High School.
More than two dozen players and spectators from the Western Wayne girls basketball team and another 12 to 14 from Dunmore High School awoke Friday morning to irritated, sunburned-like skin and, in some cases, corneal damage.
Osama's Navy
- Osama bin Laden has a "terrorist navy" of 15 ships. And Scotland Yard has warned one could sail up the Thames to attack Parliament.
More big blackouts likely, experts agree
- Six months after the nation's worst blackout, experts say the electric grid is still vulnerable to widespread outages because many of the problems that contributed to the massive failure have not been resolved.
Spammers exploit high-speed connections, careless users
- Next time you're looking for a culprit for all that junk mail flooding your inbox, have a glance in the mirror. Spammers are increasingly exploiting home computers with high-speed Internet connections into which they've cleverly burrowed.
Great Barrier Reef Faces Major Coral Destruction
- Australia's Great Barrier Reef will lose most of its coral cover by 2050 and, at worst, the world's largest coral system could collapse by 2100 because of global warming, a study released on Saturday said.
Security Efforts Turning Capital Into Armed Camp:
- "An antiaircraft missile, ready for use, sits atop a federal office building near the White House. Devices that test the air for chemical and biological substances are positioned throughout the city. Subway stations are now equipped with "bomb containment" trash bins. A major highway that runs by the Pentagon is being rerouted several hundred yards away. A security wall is going up around the Washington Monument.
Day by day, the nation's capital is becoming a fortress, turning a city known for graceful beauty into a virtual armed camp. In response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, federal security agents along with their counterparts in the Washington, Maryland and Virginia governments began a huge effort to build permanent safeguards for the capital area's most important buildings and monuments."
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