Hey, kids, wouldnât
Boaty McBoatface and
Bryan Ferry be great names? No? Ugh, kids today!) Or maybe, once again, nothing will happen.
But here are five reasons why Frog Ferry just might get past the hot tub musing/barstool brainstorm stage and take form.
1. Traffic keeps getting worse, and transit is slow. A 2006 ferry feasibility study concluded a commuter service was too expensive to pursue at the time, but that it could be viable in the future if certain things happened. The first such condition: âdegradation of vehicular travel time on roadways parallel to the river that give a water-born transit a distinct travel time advantage.â If the vehicle in question is a bus, the travel timeâs never been that great. The trip between the heart of St. Johns and downtown Portland takes an advertised 30 minutes on TriMet s infrequent 16, but it s a lot longer if there s a freight train crossing on NW Naito or a backup on the St. Johns Bridge ramp. The 44 takes, well
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Cheboygan Daily Tribune
BLACK LAKE Seven anglers were lucky enough to land a lake sturgeon during the Black Lake Sturgeon Season over the weekend, with the largest fish being a 63 inch, 61 pound female landed by Chris Wilson. The season opened at 8 a.m. and closed at 10:06 a.m., with a total of seven sturgeon harvested, said Brenda Archambo, president of Sturgeon for Tomorrow. All fish looked healthy.
This year, there were 596 anglers who had registered to take part in the sturgeon season on Black Lake, which was the most ever for this fishing season. The online only registration appears to have worked well, said Archambo. As part of the registration process, anglers were required to provide a cell phone number.
Michigan s Black Lake Sturgeon Season lasts 2 hours
BLACK LAKE Seven anglers were lucky enough to land a lake sturgeon during the Black Lake Sturgeon Season over the weekend, with the largest fish being a 63-inch, 61-pound female landed by Chris Wilson. The season opened at 8 a.m. and closed at 10:06 a.m., with a total of seven sturgeon harvested, said Brenda Archambo, president of Sturgeon for Tomorrow. All fish looked healthy.
This year, there were 596 anglers who had registered to take part in the sturgeon season on Black Lake, which was the most ever for this fishing season. The online only registration appears to have worked well, said Archambo. As part of the registration process, anglers were required to provide a cell phone number.
Print
Scientists at Scripps Research in La Jolla have demonstrated a promising new strategy for treating lymphomas, a
group of cancers that begin in infection-fighting cells of the immune system called lymphocytes.
The new approach uses natural cancer-targeting immune cells, known as natural “killer cells,” that have been modified to selectively target lymphoma. As described in the scientists’ study, published in the journal
Angewandte Chemie, the modified natural killer cells brought about a dramatic reduction of lymphoma in a mouse.
“We found a way to achieve selectivity in targeting lymphoma cells, which is an important departure from existing therapies,” said co-senior author Peng Wu, an associate professor in the department of molecular medicine at Scripps Research.