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CBS News AURORA, Colo. - One of the critically injured victims from the Aurora theater shooting is getting better, reports CBS4- Denver. On his Facebook page, family and friend
stanley website s say that Caleb Medley is slowly getting better and could move out of the intensive care unit as soon as next Tuesday or Wednesday.They say he is still heavily sedated, but is following commands and is able to open his left eye. Medley s wife gave birth to their son Hugo in the days after the shooting. The family says Hugo is doing well and getting big.Complete coverage: Colorado Theat
stanley romania er Movie Massacre In an interview with CBS News John Blacksone, Katie Medley described the nightmare that began as a midnight movie date. It was awful, said Katie about being nine months pregnant and her husband wounded. For a couple hours that night, I really thought that he was dead and I was going to be a single parent and I was going to bury my husband. I know he s hurt really bad, but the fact that he s alive was a lot. It was a lot because I thought he was dead. Katie Medley and newborn son Hugo. CBS News Hugo was born in the same hospital where Caleb remains heavily sedated in intensive care. He was in surgery, said Katie of Caleb. He was having brain surgery while I was in labor. It was crazy.
stanley cup Caleb doesn t have health insurance. A website set up to help the family.Colorado prosecut Gkpj How Low Earth Orbit Astronauts Are the New Pioneers
Bacteria has the virtue and sometimes the vice of being able to grow at incredible speeds鈥攕ome strains can double in cell count in as little as four minutes. Fernan Federici, a postdoctoral student at the University of Cambridge, is pioneering the art of capturing the split-second process. And the results are absolutely beautiful. Federici is part of the Haseloff Lab, at Cambridge, where he and the titular Jim Haseloff work with confocal microscopy to photograph and model the growth of cells in plant tissue. Federici is also interested in how the structure of cells and the mathematical formulas derived from those patterns could eventually inform design鈥攁nd how scientist/designers could control the growth of bacteria to create specific types of str
stanley quencher uctures. We are experimenting methods of extracting complex behaviors of cells at the scale of microns and applying them to architecture at the scale of meters, explain Federici and his collaborator, the architect David Benjamin in an abstract for a project based on the idea. We are developing methods for incorporating synthetic biology into architecture design studios and teaching new p
stanley us rocesses of design with biology. Ten of Federici most beautiful images follow鈥攂ut be sure to check out
stanley cup price his Flickr for dozens more. [H/t But Does It Float ] Here, a ratiometric measurement of gene expression in a plant cellular wall. Bacillus subtilis, a bacteria found in soil, is stained using flou