Csfj 8220;Black 038; Yellow 8221; Played Over Found Footage of a 1960s Grandpa Party
Maud Farris-Luse, recognized last year by the Guinness World Records book as the world s oldest living person, has died. She was 115.She died Monday from complications of pneumonia at Community Health Center of Branch County in Coldwater, a town south of Grand Rapids in southwestern Michigan. She had been in the hospital since Sunday night, said Kyle Fassett, administrator of the Laurels of Coldwater, the nursing home where Farris-Luse lived.Farris-Luse was 115 years, 56 days old. It was her time, said great-granddaughter Laurie Ferris, 32. She lived a long time and now she s in a better place. She passed away very, very peacefully. Last June, Guinness editors recognized Farris-Luse as the oldest living person whose age could be verified. Though her birth certificate was lost over the years, the editors authenticated her age through other documents, including U.S. Census Bureau records and her 1903 marriage license. Described as a sharp and fiercely independent woman, Farri
stanley cup usa s-Luse lived alone and cared for herself until she broke her hip in a 1991 fall at her house. That is when she moved to the Laurels nursing home. She remained mentally a
stanley bottles lert until about five yea
stanley cup rs ago.By the time of her 115th birthday in January, relatives said she could not see or hear them or understand what was happening, but still seemed to enjoy visitors. She was just a wonderful woman, loved her family, always happy, said Ferris, whose branch of the family prefers that spelling instead of Fa Wlkh FEMA May Use Foreclosed Homes As Shelters
A team of researchers has found inspiration in an unlikely critter: the humble Namib Desert beetle, a south African species that gathers water molecules straig
stanley cup ht from the air. The beetle does this by developing a pattern of water-attracting and repelling molecules on its wings and trapping water molecules in these peaks and troughs. The scientists took a cue from this and created a mat capable of absorbing water molecules from the air with billions of tiny carbon tubes. Here how it came abo
stanley cup ut: The researchers applied two polymer layers鈥攁 water-loving one on top and a water-repel
stanley cup usa ling one on the bottom鈥攖o a 1-centimeter-high forest of thin cylinders of carbon atoms, called carbon nanotubes. Once finished, the top layer draws water molecules into the forest, without any need for an external power source, the team reports online this month in ACS Applied Materials 038; Interfaces. Having been drawn inside the forest, the moisture is contained by the water-repelling bottom and sides of the structure鈥攁lthough some can be lost to evaporation over time. Like a sponge, the forest can simply be squeezed to release the water it has collected, after which the material can be reused. Obviously, the more humid the air, the more water the mat collects. But even in early tests in dry environments, the researchers found that a 8-milligram mat absorbed more than a fourth of its weight in water over 11 hours. It still early days, but imagine the implications. Harvesting w