How one company uses Styrofoam to tackle natural disasters

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

How one company uses Styrofoam to tackle natural disasters AUSTIN (KXAN) -- Styrofoam is considered poor for the environment for a number of reasons -- including how difficult it is to recycle, the chemicals involved in making it and the potential for animals to consume it. However, one company is using Styrofoam, along with concrete, to 3D print more resilient structures capable of withstanding more destructive weather that are, in some ways, becoming more common due to man-made climate change.KXAN Meteorologist Nick Bannin spoke with the CEO of Vero Building Systems about their building technology that combines Styrofoam with concrete, and how they're limiting Styrofoam waste in the process.KXAN Meteorologist Nick Bannin: Annette, you have technology that combines concrete with Styrofoam to protect infrastructure during natural disasters. How does this work?Annette Rubin, CEO of Vero Building Systems: Yeah, absolutely. So we are a U.S. based manufacturer, we manufacture "SCIP" panels. It's called a Structural Concrete Insulated Panel. The...

Andreas Kluth: Warts and all, international law is still better than no law

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

Andreas Kluth: Warts and all, international law is still better than no law Pundits of all stripes are tearing into one another right now about how to interpret international law. Hamas has indubitably broken it in the worst possible ways. But is Israel doing so as well? As political as it is legal, that controversy raises an older question: What is international law, and does it even exist?There’s no question that Hamas committed heinous war crimes on Oct. 7, when it attacked Israel and sadistically slaughtered about 1,200 people, mostly civilians. It broke additional international laws when it took civilian hostages, and yet more when it started using 2 million Gazan civilians as human shields. All of these acts are illegal in both customary and treaty-based international law.As for Israel, the victim nation, international law expressly gives it the “right to war” (jus ad bellum) in self-defense. But it also governs how it must fight “in war” (jus in bello). Here, the legal reasoning is clear in theory but slippery in practic...

Canadian Pacific Holiday Train returns to Capital Region

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

Canadian Pacific Holiday Train returns to Capital Region ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- All aboard! The Canadian Pacific Holiday Train is returning to the Capital Region on Friday, and making multiple stops into Saturday. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! The first stop is scheduled for 4 p.m. in Menands, followed by Mechanicville and Saratoga Springs by 7:30. The train will make another stop in Fort Edward on Saturday.

5 things to know this Black Friday

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

5 things to know this Black Friday ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Happy Black Friday! We hope everyone had a happy Thanksgiving! According to Meteorologist Jill Szwed, we can expect blustery conditions throughout the day. The Schenectady City Mission hosted hundreds on Thursday for its annual Thanksgiving meal. Volunteers, including Governor Kathy Hochul and Schenectady Mayor Gary McCarthy, assisted with the Turkey Day tradition of giving back. Meanwhile, the Pittsfield Police Department was sent to Thistle & Mirth on West Street for reports of a stabbing Wednesday night. When officers arrived at around 9:40 p.m., they saw evidence of a stabbing but no victim, according to the Pittsfield Police Department. These stories, and more, are covered in your five things to know this Friday. Get the latest news, weather, sports and entertainment delivered right to your inbox! 1. Schenectady City Mission helping those in need, Gov. Hochul serves mealsThe Schenectady City Mission hosted hundreds on Thursday for its annual Than...

St. Louis Lee's Chicken provided fee Thanksgiving meals

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

St. Louis Lee's Chicken provided fee Thanksgiving meals ST. LOUIS -- The Lee’s Chicken location at Natural Bridge and Kingshighway was closed for Thanksgiving, but its employees and staff opened their doors to provide free Thanksgiving meals to those in need. The staff and employees are expressing gratitude by volunteering their time and giving to others, creating a double dose of goodness. Several community members and citizens express gratitude for the selflessness and thoughtfulness of the staff and employees, who ensure that those without a Thanksgiving meal can enjoy one. The Lee’s Chicken staff and employees, through their initiative and actions, showcase that we should all be grateful for everything we have and express our thanks by giving back to others. 

Holy Family girls basketball faces great expectations in quest for eighth state title: “Bring it on”

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

Holy Family girls basketball faces great expectations in quest for eighth state title: “Bring it on” Holy Family basketball players Julia Hodell (1), Jennifer Altshuler (24) and Essence Contreraz (13) during CHSAA winter sports media day at Ball Arena in Denver on Monday, November 13, 2023. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)Great tradition carries the weight of great expectations.The Holy Family Tigers say: “Bring it on.”“Honestly, it’s an honor,” said Essynce Contreraz, the Tigers’ senior point guard.Holy Family is the defending Class 4A girls state champion, having defeated D’Evelyn 49-44 last season to win the school’s seventh state hoops title, but its first since 2014. Coach Ron Rossi had led the team to six 3A state titles before winning his first 4A championship.But a repeat feat won’t be easy. Asked if his Tigers have a target on their backs, Rossi chuckled.“We felt like we were hunted last year, too,” he said. “You just have to have the attitude that when you step on that court you are going to do the best job t...

CSU Rams vs. Hawaii football: How to watch, storylines and staff predictions

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

CSU Rams vs. Hawaii football: How to watch, storylines and staff predictions Colorado State (5-6, 3-4 Mountain West) at Hawaii (4-8, 2-5)When/where: 9 p.m. Saturday/Clarence T.C. Ching ComplexTV/Radio: Spectrum Sports/ESPN Honolulu, 104.3 HD2BetMGM Line: CSU -5.5, 54.5 over/underWeather: Around 80 degrees with slight wind.Five storylinesAlmost bowling: Overheard in the underbelly of Canvas Stadium a few weeks ago: CSU AD Joe Parker, prior to the Rams’ win over San Diego State, remarked to a fellow staffer that, “If we can win these next three games, this season could be special.” He’s right. And now after beating the Aztecs and hanging on to defeat Nevada last week, CSU is one win away from its first bowl game since 2017. Head coach Jay Norvell needs to avoid a letdown in Honolulu, because a postseason berth would be a huge building block.Horton eyes 1K: CSU star wideout Tory Horton’s dealt with multiple injuries this year, including leg/ankle issues and a hip pointer. But that hasn’t stopped him from again being CSU’...

CU Buffs vs. Utah football: How to watch, storylines and staff predictions

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

CU Buffs vs. Utah football: How to watch, storylines and staff predictions Colorado (4-7, 1-7 Pac-12) at Utah (7-4, 4-4)When/where: 1 p.m. Saturday/Rice-Eccles StadiumTV/Radio: Pac-12 Network/850 AM, 94.1 FMBetMGM Line: Utah -21.5, 52.5 over/underWeather: Sunshine with a high of 37 degrees, slight windFive storylinesShedeur’s status: After Shedeur Sanders suffered multiple injuries in last week’s pummeling at Wazzu, one to his hand and another to his ankle, CU’s quarterback had to leave the game. That exposed the Buffs’ lack of depth behind him, as neither Ryan Staub nor Gavin Kuld looked like they had command of the offense. Sanders was sacked four times before he departed in the first half, continuing a season-long trend of the Buffs’ QB getting battered. He’ll be a game-time decision Saturday.A season spiraling: The Buffs’ 3-0 start featuring an upset of TCU on the road and then emotional victories over rivals Nebraska and CSU at home feels like eons ago. Since then, CU’s lone win came against a bad ASU te...

Letters: Invasive weeds crowd out Colorado’s botanical gems

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

Letters: Invasive weeds crowd out Colorado’s botanical gems Invasive weeds crowding out rare gemsRe: “Some might say it’s futile, but pulling thistles sows hope,” Nov. 16 commentary and “Clearing the path of goat heads,” Nov. 18 letter to the editorI was gratified to read the article on the community and personal benefits to pulling musk thistle near Jackson, Wyo., and the subsequent letter from “Goathead Greg,” who endeavors on Denver’s urban trails. My bête noire is not musk thistle, which, as the writer points out, is a pretty noxious weed that attracts butterflies and bees, but rather Russian thistle. It has the Putinesque attributes of being invasive and relentless, contains no beautiful flowers for pollinators, and engulfs our natural areas.If you visit the picnic stop at Vogel Canyon south of La Junta, be prepared to approach your table through a forest of this prickly menace. The valley floor just beyond is so impenetrable that viewing the petroglyphs is almost impossible. Up north, the Arapa...

Opinion: CHIPS Act just the start, U.S. needs to go beyond microchips

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 00:00:10 GMT

Opinion: CHIPS Act just the start, U.S. needs to go beyond microchips Just over one year ago, President Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act, and a new era of American high-tech manufacturing was born.Propelled by a strategic investment of tens of billions of dollars, the United States will construct a new semiconductor ecosystem here in the United States. The goal is twofold: to ensure that the chips that power American life will be there when we need them, and that the United States remains a leader in not only designing but making high-end microchips.The CHIPS bill was a milestone, but the legislation failed to cover printed circuit boards, or PCBs, the complex structures on which chips sit. Often comprising dozens of layers, PCBs connect individual chips and enable larger systems and subsystems. They are essential: without PCBs, microchips would be nothing more than expensive silicon wafers.The United States once boasted a robust PCB capacity that ensured that important systems from defense to mass transit to communications could source U.S.-mad...