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113
Sep 16, 2023
09/23
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MSNBCW
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there is a brand-new student at the university of utah. by most of the fraternity members, he was living a pretty good life. >> yes he was, 22-year-old duncan martinez once a big time mitosis specht was now a big man on campus. >> he went by the name doofus o'reilly, that is what he liked to tell his friends to call him. he was a center of attraction. >> charming, charismatic, life of the party, doofus, aka duncan, was a long way from that murder in the tunnel. and here he soon caught the eye of sorority sister melissa, the two started dating. >> i hung out at a particular fraternity house and he was pledging the fraternity, so we ought to know each other and he was quick, witty and i liked that. he had a leather jacket, he had a tattoo, he had a bit of the bad boy thing. it was as if guy fieri had rolled into the college with the hair and look, and the big stories. >> melissa said it was like he dropped in from another planet, but he instantly fit in. >> i think people naturally followed him, i think they're very much like tim, do not con
there is a brand-new student at the university of utah. by most of the fraternity members, he was living a pretty good life. >> yes he was, 22-year-old duncan martinez once a big time mitosis specht was now a big man on campus. >> he went by the name doofus o'reilly, that is what he liked to tell his friends to call him. he was a center of attraction. >> charming, charismatic, life of the party, doofus, aka duncan, was a long way from that murder in the tunnel. and here he...
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Sep 24, 2023
09/23
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CSPAN
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eye 27
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there was a radio biologist at the university of utah of actually measured fallout coming from one test in 1962, and did measurements of milk showing the iodine 131 in the milk and said that 55,000 children in my state, that's just my state, would likely get sick. there were other -- i don't know if you heard about the baby tooth study. back in the 1950's will there was a female physician in st. louis worried about the milk. that's absorbed by the bones and keeps radiating. she started collecting baby teeth and they ended up with this 35eu7b, donate your teeth to science, that collected about 350,000 baby teeth, which is lost their teeth, not just her area but elsewhere. there is a study being done right now with a gentleman out of the radiation and public health project, with harvard university to look at the health impacts of those surviving kids because they kept track of every tooth. there's been a lot of studies. there was a study out of princeton just this july it was released that mapped where fallout from the very first test showed it went to 46 states. and i have talked to peop
there was a radio biologist at the university of utah of actually measured fallout coming from one test in 1962, and did measurements of milk showing the iodine 131 in the milk and said that 55,000 children in my state, that's just my state, would likely get sick. there were other -- i don't know if you heard about the baby tooth study. back in the 1950's will there was a female physician in st. louis worried about the milk. that's absorbed by the bones and keeps radiating. she started...
18
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Sep 13, 2023
09/23
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ALJAZ
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eye 18
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he's a professor of atmospheric scientist at the university of utah. the lake has receded, it's has exposed more than 800 square miles of lake bed. and just to put that into perspective, 800 square miles is about the same surface area as the island of maui in hawaii. and this expos lake bed. when the wind, the strong and the lake bed is dry, it listen dust off of this lake bed and pushes it into the surrounding communities . if you breathe that dust over an extended period of time, like decades or longer, then it can lead to increases and different types of cancer, like lung cancer, bladder cancer, cardiovascular, disease, diabetes, and such. so when you start to hear health concerns like that for humans, has that elevated the concern of the health of the lake there and salt lake city? absolutely. you know, i talk about the brian fly and there larva not doing well, and i'm like see the fly, save the flies and, you know, people nod but it, it doesn't really strikes them. but any time you talked about somebody's own health in their community, um it's this
he's a professor of atmospheric scientist at the university of utah. the lake has receded, it's has exposed more than 800 square miles of lake bed. and just to put that into perspective, 800 square miles is about the same surface area as the island of maui in hawaii. and this expos lake bed. when the wind, the strong and the lake bed is dry, it listen dust off of this lake bed and pushes it into the surrounding communities . if you breathe that dust over an extended period of time, like decades...
60
60
Sep 22, 2023
09/23
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CSPAN
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eye 60
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there was a radio biologist at the university of utah of actually measured fallout coming from one testn 1962, and did measurements of milk showing the iodine 131 in the milk and said that 55,000 children in my state, that's just my state, would likely get sick. there were other -- i don't know if you heard about the baby tooth study. back in the 1950's will there was a female physician in st. louis worried about the milk. that's absorbed by the bones and keeps radiating. she started collecting baby teeth and they ended up with this 35eu7b, donate your teeth to science, that collected about 350,000 baby teeth, which is lost their teeth, not just her area but elsewhere. there is a study being done right now with a gentleman out of the radiation and public health project, with harvard university to look at the health impacts of those surviving kids because they kept track of every tooth. there's been a lot of studies. there was a study out of princeton just this july it was released that mapped where fallout from the very first test showed it went to 46 states. and i have talked to people
there was a radio biologist at the university of utah of actually measured fallout coming from one testn 1962, and did measurements of milk showing the iodine 131 in the milk and said that 55,000 children in my state, that's just my state, would likely get sick. there were other -- i don't know if you heard about the baby tooth study. back in the 1950's will there was a female physician in st. louis worried about the milk. that's absorbed by the bones and keeps radiating. she started collecting...
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18
Sep 15, 2023
09/23
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CSPAN2
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eye 18
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in 2022 alone there were over, there were 301 drugs enacted shortages according to the university of utah. for over a decade professions and a medical and regulatory community has sounded the alarm on the underlying economic causes of drug shortages. unforeseen circumstances like a tornado hitting a pharmaceutical warehouse in north carolina, or a manufacturing facility in india shutting down due to public quality concerns get a supply chain out of whack and potentially the shortage of what i regard. to ensure we are prepared to respond appropriate to these issues we must encourage strong investment to ensure that there are multiple means to develop, store and distribute drugs. that's why the energy commerce committee is continuing extensive work to identify the drivers of why cause of the supply chain can be unstable and leaked to the shortages we've seen over the last decade. it is congress alone we an oversight hearing, artest will shortages at a hearing. the chair did a request for proposals all leading to the hearing today on potential solution to spend numerous federal agencies and
in 2022 alone there were over, there were 301 drugs enacted shortages according to the university of utah. for over a decade professions and a medical and regulatory community has sounded the alarm on the underlying economic causes of drug shortages. unforeseen circumstances like a tornado hitting a pharmaceutical warehouse in north carolina, or a manufacturing facility in india shutting down due to public quality concerns get a supply chain out of whack and potentially the shortage of what i...
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Sep 16, 2023
09/23
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CSPAN3
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universities are treating students like their children and through the lowering of academic standards and through positions like chief experience officer which is something that the university of utah is posting for this year, trying to hide what i looked into it. i don't see the difference between that job and a cruise director on the cruise ship. but thenceforth one side of the contradiction with the other side is the also the same time see them as children they require them to be perfected molded adults. you have response teams, speech codes that punish penalize and seek out students if they make the tiniest infraction, the tiniest mistake. the same time you're treating 18-year-olds like children you are also not giving them the room in time for them to grow into adulthood which is what college was supposed to be about, and in that messy state experience was the fun sport i agree with zach the entrance of the general picture overall in higher education what we see is costs are going up while the quality of education freedom to express yourself and intellectual diversity are all going down. in terms of quality of education just for example, if you look at active, but with project
universities are treating students like their children and through the lowering of academic standards and through positions like chief experience officer which is something that the university of utah is posting for this year, trying to hide what i looked into it. i don't see the difference between that job and a cruise director on the cruise ship. but thenceforth one side of the contradiction with the other side is the also the same time see them as children they require them to be perfected...
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60
Sep 15, 2023
09/23
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KPIX
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. >> reporter: last year, we saw university of utah scientist kevin perry measuring arsenic and others in the dust of the dry lakebed, which is the source for dust storms that threaten the health of millions in the salt lake city region. >> you can see this wall of dust, and it reduces the visibility, and people are very concerned about what might be in the dust that they're breathing. >> reporter: the risk of dust storms has not gone away. even with this year's water level rise of about 5 feet. much of the lake bed remains dry. >> we need to gain 11 feet for it to be stable. >> reporter: >> we would be in water now. >> oh, yes. we would be in water. >> so it's not mission accomplished, hang our hat, we're done. it's go to work. really all hands on deck to continue to save that lake. >> reporter: it's a lake that is still challenged, but from brine still challenged, but from brine flies to boaters, is slowly hi. i use febe fade defy plug. and i ususe this. febreze has a microchip to control scent releaease so it smells first-day fresh for 50 days. 50 dayays!? and itits refill remimind
. >> reporter: last year, we saw university of utah scientist kevin perry measuring arsenic and others in the dust of the dry lakebed, which is the source for dust storms that threaten the health of millions in the salt lake city region. >> you can see this wall of dust, and it reduces the visibility, and people are very concerned about what might be in the dust that they're breathing. >> reporter: the risk of dust storms has not gone away. even with this year's water level...
80
80
Sep 13, 2023
09/23
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MSNBCW
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professor of law, the university of utah, and first amendment scholar is back with us.ters. let me start with you on the story. is this a typical investment for the city to have? >> they invest in all sorts of corporations. so that in itself is not unusual. what is unusual is the totality of the legal action pending against fox news right now. you have two other shareholder lawsuits. another defamation suit which we've before that a guy by the name of ray epps has filed because tucker carlson, it smeared him as being the instigator of the january 6th attacks, which was completely false. you have the smartmatic case, and the recently settled dominion lawsuit. so it's really unprecedented to see this type of legal action against a single company like this. especially one as powerful with as much of a place in the political culture that fox news has. and these will drag on for years. i don't know what will happen with the smartmatic case. i wouldn't be surprised if fox files a settlement. it is different than dominion because there's not as much discovery. i'm told the dep
professor of law, the university of utah, and first amendment scholar is back with us.ters. let me start with you on the story. is this a typical investment for the city to have? >> they invest in all sorts of corporations. so that in itself is not unusual. what is unusual is the totality of the legal action pending against fox news right now. you have two other shareholder lawsuits. another defamation suit which we've before that a guy by the name of ray epps has filed because tucker...
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Sep 11, 2023
09/23
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FOXNEWSW
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idaho, utah and arizona spend at least an interesting note spending does not correlate to performance young's universe to quiz is one ofspending states, utah had with the highest scores for acres washington d.c. is one of the highest spenders per student was near the bottom of the list for the same math test scores. all right we went to a deep dive and now on what american voters think about the state of education and who they think has the best plan to solve the toughest issues facing schools today time no education posters fox news contributor kellyanne conway. and celinda lake president of lake research good to see a progress nice to be a thank you. >> we have new polling on the specific issue. we asked not long ago but local public schools. are they teaching too much too little on the very subjects question what it comes to reading and writing was a consensus a majority of people think we are doing too little on that front. too little on good citizenship. too little on math, science, tech. but it came to sexual orientation and gender of the largest group that we were spending too much time on that. anything surpris
idaho, utah and arizona spend at least an interesting note spending does not correlate to performance young's universe to quiz is one ofspending states, utah had with the highest scores for acres washington d.c. is one of the highest spenders per student was near the bottom of the list for the same math test scores. all right we went to a deep dive and now on what american voters think about the state of education and who they think has the best plan to solve the toughest issues facing schools...
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13
Sep 15, 2023
09/23
by
ALJAZ
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eye 13
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loneliness in the us state of utah, julian, hold on stat, professor of psychology and neuroscience and director of the social connection and health lab at brigham young university. in the state of washington, lucy of my, he's weinberg director of the university of washington's international adolescent connection and technology laboratory and in london carry hobson founder and director of the neighborly lab. and since we're talking about human connections today, here is your chance to connect with us. please jump into our youtube chat with your questions and your thoughts. guess thank you so much for joining us for this important discussion. i want to start with you harry. the loneliness we just saw displayed on those social media clips. is that hype is that just something more people are talking about, or is this a real problem? a hi id. um, it's a better face. it's, it's, it's a very real thing. i'm based in london according to size here, about 8 percent of the population is about 700000 people say that that always officer lady. so that's about 700000 people. just an associate. wow. so it's a big real settings to be a lady. next, there's no doubts about that.
loneliness in the us state of utah, julian, hold on stat, professor of psychology and neuroscience and director of the social connection and health lab at brigham young university. in the state of washington, lucy of my, he's weinberg director of the university of washington's international adolescent connection and technology laboratory and in london carry hobson founder and director of the neighborly lab. and since we're talking about human connections today, here is your chance to connect...
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Sep 23, 2023
09/23
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BBCNEWS
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of utah for the capsule's arrival. the bbc�*s sarah campbell spoke with two people involved in the project. richard greenwood is a meteorite researcher at the open universityand planetary laboratory who has been involved in planning the mission. this was an incredibly complex, challenging mission and we've had so many people working to make this happen. the spacecraft launched seven years ago and it's been on itsjourney to asteroid bennu, where we mapped and characterised the asteroid in a lot of detail. we collected the sample in 2020 and now it's been on its way back to earth for the last two plus years. can ijust say, you kind of skirted over. you collected the sample. i mean, it was quite an incredible collection, a collecting of the sample. that's right. it was a very challenging event. well, first of all, asteroid bennu was covered by rocks and boulders, which we were not expecting. so even trying to find that place to sample was a huge challenge for the team. and we had to completely revamp how we approached that. and then the actual collection event itself was touching the surface of the asteroid and blowing nitrogen gas into the surface to direct
of utah for the capsule's arrival. the bbc�*s sarah campbell spoke with two people involved in the project. richard greenwood is a meteorite researcher at the open universityand planetary laboratory who has been involved in planning the mission. this was an incredibly complex, challenging mission and we've had so many people working to make this happen. the spacecraft launched seven years ago and it's been on itsjourney to asteroid bennu, where we mapped and characterised the asteroid in a...
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11
Sep 25, 2023
09/23
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ALJAZ
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of utah. one of the samples is full and a half 1000000000 years old. there's always a contain claims about the origins of also the system. hold on is from washington university in saint louis. he says that studying these asteroids will deepen our understanding of the solar system. no one mission will answer all of these profound questions, including why are we here? how do we get started? i would mention is like a service racks are incredible because they bring back material from the very area in the solar systems history and importantly, material. it has not going to gone any of the later processing that say the rocks on earth. and that means that we can look at what the actual chemical or physical properties of the solar system are like that in the case of the asteroid that will start with the rest when to venue anyways, a carbon rich asteroid. and there's also evidence that at some point earlier in its history, it was a symbol from parts of a larger object through which water actually percolated through. and when you have water and you have carbon imposed contact, you often generate organic, complex carbon based molecules. that's the kind of stuff we thin
of utah. one of the samples is full and a half 1000000000 years old. there's always a contain claims about the origins of also the system. hold on is from washington university in saint louis. he says that studying these asteroids will deepen our understanding of the solar system. no one mission will answer all of these profound questions, including why are we here? how do we get started? i would mention is like a service racks are incredible because they bring back material from the very area...
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108
Sep 22, 2023
09/23
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 108
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of utah desert, ready for the landing. the hope is this mission could answer that most profound question — where did we come from? rebecca morrelle, bbc news, utah. some breaking news on a university to the day across many parts of the uk with sunny spells but showers have gathered towards northern and western areas and we've seen a few rainbows already from our weather watches this morning as the showers pass through. if we look at the satellite image we can see today's weather is linked with a swell of cloud here, sunny spells and showers and saturday is the clear a and this is sunday's weather, a period of wet and windy weather on its way. for the rest of the day, showers continuing towards northern and western areas and those will drift towards the south and east, so all of us at some point this afternoon catching a shower. strong winds in the north—east of scotland, gail sia, and maximum temperature is generally up to 14 or 18 degrees. it will feel quite fresh in the brisk north—westerly wind but through tonight we have a ridge of high pressure moving in and that ridge means that the air is descending in the atmosphere and clears the moisture so the showers disappear, the clo
of utah desert, ready for the landing. the hope is this mission could answer that most profound question — where did we come from? rebecca morrelle, bbc news, utah. some breaking news on a university to the day across many parts of the uk with sunny spells but showers have gathered towards northern and western areas and we've seen a few rainbows already from our weather watches this morning as the showers pass through. if we look at the satellite image we can see today's weather is linked...
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36
Sep 24, 2023
09/23
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BBCNEWS
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university of arizona, thank you for being with us. in the last 15 or 20 minutes, we have seen live shots of the osiris—rex sample return capsule landing in the desert outside utahven years in the making. took off in 2016 and cost over $1 billion and has been to the asteroid bennu, which is taller than the empire state building. it has been collecting, as we heard, 250 grams worth of samples which will be analysed by samples around the world. these are the shots of it landing just over 20 minutes ago, 15, 20 minutes landing just over 20 minutes ago, 15,20 minutes ago mountain time. we have to look very carefully, tiny little speck on the screen just in the cross hairs. as we have heard, very exciting moment, the largest asteroid sample that nasa has ever collective. let's leave that there. home secretary, suella braverman, has ordered a review of armed policing after a large number of metropolitan police officers stepped back from firearms duties. their decision is linked to the case of an armed officer who was charged with the murder of a man. 24—year—old chris kaba was unarmed when he was shot and killed in south london last year. a met police officer appeared
university of arizona, thank you for being with us. in the last 15 or 20 minutes, we have seen live shots of the osiris—rex sample return capsule landing in the desert outside utahven years in the making. took off in 2016 and cost over $1 billion and has been to the asteroid bennu, which is taller than the empire state building. it has been collecting, as we heard, 250 grams worth of samples which will be analysed by samples around the world. these are the shots of it landing just over 20...
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18
Sep 8, 2023
09/23
by
LINKTV
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eye 18
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central database at johns university in utah let them rule ready all put on in life demonstrated that make them took. not a product in incomes. older son and someone will be upset of your six. the long run for most of the hotel is modern on this mission very. little can undo the truckee she can the someone's good. sports car free almost four these were some better condition than the other one by blowing on the beds chest one can tell it's not levels if it is pink fellow. and if you hello the budget. plump enough to travel on. sixteen point nine. i just saw a slight. into things but his cup i'm ready thousands of. from the start of its journey in africa he said. it's just extraordinary because its so tiny on the- only. every individual with a couple for this i'll go to the left. or you can feel it's hot facing this tiny little huts. so the data has been gathered the bags can be released. is the team have rings around a hundred and eight thousand. when they're cool tells what researchers can contact state. the migration can be tracked. i feel like i've learned so much about why this place is so important as a refueling station for those beds which is traveling acros
central database at johns university in utah let them rule ready all put on in life demonstrated that make them took. not a product in incomes. older son and someone will be upset of your six. the long run for most of the hotel is modern on this mission very. little can undo the truckee she can the someone's good. sports car free almost four these were some better condition than the other one by blowing on the beds chest one can tell it's not levels if it is pink fellow. and if you hello the...
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Sep 22, 2023
09/23
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BBCNEWS
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live now to utah, where we can speak to arn—jani polit, who's a senior systems engineer with the university ofnd planetary laboratory — and serves as mission implementation systems engineerfor the 0siris—rex mission. and we can now talk to richard greenwood, a meteorite researcher at the open university, who's involved in the analysis of asteroid samples. so, anjani, it's an extraordinary process, so how did you manage it with mac that's correct, this was an incredibly complex and challenging mission. ~ �* ., ., , incredibly complex and challenging mission. �* ., ., , , mission. we've had so many people workin: to mission. we've had so many people working to make _ mission. we've had so many people working to make this _ mission. we've had so many people working to make this happen. - mission. we've had so many people working to make this happen. the l working to make this happen. the spacecraft launched seven years ago and it's been to itsjourney to asteroid bennu, we collected it in 2020 and now it has been back on its way to earth for 2020. you 2020 and now it has been back on its way to ea
live now to utah, where we can speak to arn—jani polit, who's a senior systems engineer with the university ofnd planetary laboratory — and serves as mission implementation systems engineerfor the 0siris—rex mission. and we can now talk to richard greenwood, a meteorite researcher at the open university, who's involved in the analysis of asteroid samples. so, anjani, it's an extraordinary process, so how did you manage it with mac that's correct, this was an incredibly complex and...
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38
Sep 25, 2023
09/23
by
KPIX
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eye 38
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university's response, you can go to our website, kpix.com. >>> coming up next at 6:00, precious cargo has landed in the utah desert. we'll have your heart is the beat ofu have hearart failure, entrust t your heartrt to e entresto. entresto h helps improrove yoyour heart's's ability to p pump blood d to the bod. don't take entreststo ifif pregnant;t; it c can cause h harm or deah toto an unbornrn baby. dodon't take e entresto wiwh an a ace inhibititor or alisis, oror if you'veve had angioioea with an n ace or arbrb. ththe most sererious side e efs are anangioedema,, low blood d pressure,, kidndney problemems, or h high blood d potassium. ask your d doctor if e entreso is rigight for youou. >>> a nail biting return of a cupful of astroid unfolded over the utah desert today and the skies of san francisco this morning. it was the latest stop for a seven-year mission to try to find out where it all began. first, though, it had to land. what left earth seven years ago in a blazing liftoff came home today after 1 billion miles in space, a half pound sample of an oddball astroid carried back to earth released from the osiris-rex spacecraft was plummeting to e
university's response, you can go to our website, kpix.com. >>> coming up next at 6:00, precious cargo has landed in the utah desert. we'll have your heart is the beat ofu have hearart failure, entrust t your heartrt to e entresto. entresto h helps improrove yoyour heart's's ability to p pump blood d to the bod. don't take entreststo ifif pregnant;t; it c can cause h harm or deah toto an unbornrn baby. dodon't take e entresto wiwh an a ace inhibititor or alisis, oror if you'veve had...
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41
Sep 22, 2023
09/23
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BBCNEWS
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utah. we'rejoined now by dr sarah crowther, a planetary scientist at the university of manchester. lam i amash and grab bit. a _ solar system. what is in this smash and grab bit, a tidy _ solar system. what is in this smash and grab bit, a tidy amount, - solar system. what is in this smash and grab bit, a tidy amount, that i and grab bit, a tidy amount, that you are hoping to see? labile and grab bit, a tidy amount, that you are hoping to see?— you are hoping to see? we think asteroids like _ you are hoping to see? we think asteroids like this _ you are hoping to see? we think asteroids like this could - you are hoping to see? we think asteroids like this could have i asteroids like this could have delivered some of the ingredients that are key to life on earth such as water, organic compounds. by studying asteroids, we can understand more about how life might have developed on earth or even before that how planets formed and evolved. the record here on earth, 4.5 billion years ago, has been wiped out by things like volcanoes and earthquakes. it is retained on asteroid so they are a time ca
utah. we'rejoined now by dr sarah crowther, a planetary scientist at the university of manchester. lam i amash and grab bit. a _ solar system. what is in this smash and grab bit, a tidy _ solar system. what is in this smash and grab bit, a tidy amount, - solar system. what is in this smash and grab bit, a tidy amount, that i and grab bit, a tidy amount, that you are hoping to see? labile and grab bit, a tidy amount, that you are hoping to see?— you are hoping to see? we think asteroids like _...