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keptical about the handling of the accident and the investigation.The Cabinet statement cited "serious design flaws and major safety risks" and what it said were a string of errors in equipment procurement and management. It also criticized the Railways Ministry's rescue efforts.The report affirmed earlier government statements that a lightning strike caused one bullet train to stall and then a sensor failure and missteps by train controllers allowed a second train to keep moving on the same track and slam into it.Those singled out for blame included former Minister of Railways Liu Zhijun, a bullet train booster who was detained in February amid a graft investigation. Also criticized was the general manager of the company that manufactured the signal, who died of a heart attack while talking to investigators in August.The decision to assign blame to one figure who already has been jailed and another who is dead, along with mid-level managers who have been fired,
ators also say the Argentine government should cover the costs."It would be a good move if the State opens a clinic in one of the city's public hospitals to attend to women with these implants, analyze each case and later extract them at no cost," Deputy Daniel Amoroso said in a statement. He said about 28,000 women get breast implants each year in Argentina.In both Argentina and Brazil, government officials also asked doctors to notify federal agencies of any patient complaints.It would be premature to have women remove the implants if they're not having any problems, said the president of Brazil's Plastic Surgeons Association, Jose Horacio Aboudib."I'd remove them from any patient that wants to, but I don't see the need for everyone to go into surgery," he said.Aboudib added that the Brazil surgeons' association in January will create a national registry of breast implants, where doctors would enter information about the patient, the date of the operation, a
single-word-title" journals such as Nature, Science and Cell, to the myriad minor, esoteric ones.Yet as astronomer Carl Sagan once said, "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." Below are five science results retracted in 2011, pulled permanently off the books in part for falling far short of meeting the Sagan standard.#5: Los Angeles marijuana dispensaries lead to drop in crime.Keep smoking. The RAND Corporation retracted its own report in October after realizing its sloppy data collection.Crime data compiled from neighborhoods with these highly contentious medical marijuana dispensaries supposedly revealed slightly lower crime rates. The authors attributed this decline not to marijuana itself but rather the presence of security cameras and guards in and around the dispensaries, having a positive effect on the neighborhood. [The History of 8 Hallucinogens]The L.A. city attorney's office was incensed with the report, having argued the opposite that
A Florida man accused of hacking into a range of celebrities' email accounts -- including those of Scarlett Johansson, Christina Aguilera and Mila Kunis -- and spreading racy images online is set to appear in court Tuesday.Christoper Chaney is expected at a Los Angeles courtroom where he will be tried on 26 charges including identity theft, unauthorized computer access and wiretapping, KTLA-TV reported.Chaney, 35, pleaded not guilty to the charges during a court hearing on Nov. 1, three weeks after he was detained following an 11-month investigation -- dubbed "Operation Hackerazzi" -- by agencies including the FBI.He was allowed to remain free but his bail was increased from $10,000 -- set when he initially appeared in court in Florida -- to $110,000.Chaney faces more than 120 years in prison if convicted of all 26 counts before the court.Private cell phone pictures Johansson allegedly took of herself surfaced on the internet in September.One photo showed the ac
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