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It is Immortal Gran Prix. The actual tv show version of it.

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Q: What was the old anime show on Cartoon Network that was about a girl that stowed away on a ship to go to these intergalactic races and she ended up piloting the ship not IGPX?
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How many life boat in Titanic?

Without a doubt, 712 people were rescued the night Titanic sank, but there is still, a century later, some debate about whose lifeboat was which. Researchers like Don Lynch and Peter Engberg have done much research and continue to finalize the tally...but it's near complete.


Why electronics are bad for you?

Kids should not bring in electronics to school unless they are instructed to do so by their teacher or another member of staff, for a number of reasons. 1. Primarily, personal property can be easily lost or stolen. 2. Should that happen, the student would be very disappointed and the school would not be able to help. 3. Students bring personal property on school premises at their own risk, and should be aware that their items have the potential to be lost or stolen. 4. Second, electronic devices disrupt the learning process if they are used within school hours. 5. For these reasons, electronic devices should not be brought to school, or if necessary, should be off and stowed away until after school hours. 6. They are the primary carrier of viruses and malware. 7. They don't always care about security. 8. They'll even use your email as a keychain for keeping track of their email passwords. 9. They don't always read everything that's displayed on the screen. 10. Unless regular breaks are taken and careful attention is paid to one's posture, RSI can result from prolonged use of the computer. 11. Kids are not burning off any of these calories while they are plopped in front of the television. 12. Due to the ease of access to the internet kids now expect immediate responses and rely on the internet to give them all of the answers. 13. Computer addiction can have a variety of negative effects on a person. The most immediate are social. The user withdraws from friends and family as he spends more and more time on the computer. 14. Relationships begin to wither as the user stops attending social gatherings, skips meetings with friends and avoids family members to get more computer time. 15. Users may become irritable when away from the computer, causing further social harm. 16. Computers and other related technologies have become an enormous part of our daily lives. 17. Loud music damages their hearing plus interferes with their studies, allows them a means of cheating, causes disruptions in class, and many other ways. 18. They are unhealthy and some violent. 19. Kids are saying rude things to their parents and there it was thought back to that game they were playing. 20. The whole point of going to school is to learn, not listen to music while texting your friend across the room. 21. It is easy and it does not take a lot of thinking because when you are chatting or texting with someone most of the kids use short term words to make it faster to talk. 22. If say, an armed man enters the school, obviously phone calls to parents would be left right and center, and if so calls are being made at the same time, the network system thing would just get screwed up because it's so busy! 23. If that happens, parents can't do anything if they're at work, that's why we have police. 24. IT in general - that's computers, servers and so forth - were calculated to be causing about 2% of global carbon dioxide emissions.


What are astronaut's seats made out of?

Using state-of-the-art analysis techniques, a team of NASA and Lockheed engineers from the Johnson Space Center (JSC) designed a seat that met the most stringent requirements demanded of the new seats by the Shuttle program. Materials considered for the Orbiter's seats must be as light-weight as possible, and have to withstand over 3 Gs worth of pressure multiplied by the maximum weight of the astronauts; about 600 pounds or 275 kg of force. The seats have removable seat cushions and mounting provisions for biomedical monitoring as well as emergency equipment, and communications connections to the crew altitude protection system. They also accommodate stowage of in-flight equipment. The pilot's and commander's seats can be adjusted up, down, forward, and back. The total travel distance for the Z and X axes is 10 and 5 inches, respectively. Seat movement for each axis is provided by a single ac motor. If the seat motors fail, the seat can be adjusted manually. However, manual seat adjustment can only take place on orbit and is accomplished with a special seat adjustment tool provided in the in-flight maintenance tool kit. The backs of all of the seats could easily tilt forward or backward, with controls to manually lock and unlock the tilt. The seats have two shoulder harnesses and a lap belt for restraints. The shoulder harnesses have an inertia reel lock/unlock feature. The unlocked position allows the shoulder harness to move. Upon reaching orbit, the mission and payload specialists' collapsible seats are removed and stowed in the mid-deck throughout the entire mission. No tools are required since the legs of each seat have quick-disconnect fittings. Each seat is 25.5 inches long, 15.5 inches wide and 11 inches high when folded for stowage. Depending on the mission requirements, bunk sleep stations and a galley can be installed in the middeck. In addition, three or four seats of the same type as the mission specialists' seats on the flight deck can be installed in the middeck. Three seats over the normal three could be installed in the middeck for rescue missions if the bunk sleep stations were removed.


What happened to the Titanic lifeboats?

You mean the ones that weren't there? I believe the story was that they, the builders where so positive the boat was unsinkable that they only put the barest minimum on board. Not nearly enough to cover the amount of people on the ship. Sad, so sad.Most of them were salvaged by the rescue vessel RMS Carpathia when she rescued the survivors, all except three of the rigid ones (two of which were half-sunken anyway) and the collapsible Englehardt ones, which were set adrift and presumably eventually sank. The salvaged boats were stowed on the Carpathia's foredeck and taken to New York, where they were unloaded and moored at the White Star Line's docking pier.Their subsequent fate is not known, although some survivors reported seeing workmen busily removing their number plates and hurriedly sanding the name Titanic from their hulls. However, it is presumed that they were freighted back to England and put back into service on other White Star liners, including possibly the Britannic which was built two years later and herself sunk by an enemy submarine in 1916, whilst serving as a hospital ship during WW1.Over the ensuing decades, they may well have been transferred from vessel to vessel, and were the same type as dozens more used by the White Star Line, so it wouldn't have been long before it would have become impossible to tell if a lifeboat was ex-Titanic or not. However, they were of wooden construction, and would have eventually suffered the ravages of time after being exposed to the ravages of salt spray and sea winds whilst hanging from the davits of a succession of liners, so they may well have ended up being broken up for scrap, probably some time in the late 1930s. However, some may well have been auctioned off to private owners, who may have converted them to fishing boats, inshore yachts or motorised leisure cruisers.It's very unlikely that any survive now, but it's not entirely impossible that there may be a converted former Titaniclifeboat somewhere in the world- but if there is, nobody would know that it was!The number plate from Boat no.12 was salvaged by a stoker and presented in a frame to the Countess of Rothes, whose courage and care for her fellow survivors impressed him- they remained in correspondence until her death.


How many people can the titanic lifeboats hold?

Titanics lifeboats were estimated to carry as many as 70 people but the last one, lifeboats D fully had about 75 after taking off passengers from overturned lifeboat B.The Titanic had three types of lifeboats, the standard lifeboat had 14 of these with a capacity of 68, but I would imagine more were able to fit into them when the Titanic was sinking.The second type of lifeboat was the "emergency cutters" which were used for events such as a man overboard. The Titanic had 2 of these with the capacity of 40 people each.The third and final lifeboat was the "Englehardt Collapsible Life Boat". These were canvas sided boats that could be folded up and stored against the walls of the Titanic, there were 4 of these on board with a capacity of 48.Between 40 and 65 persons - dependant upon boat typeThe Titanic was provided with 20 boats; all situated on the boat deck.Fourteen of these boats were lifeboats, hung inboard on davits (7 on port side, 7 on starboard side). These boats were designed to carry 65 persons each.Two were emergency boats, also hanging in davits, situated outboard, both port and starboard. They were designed to carry 40 persons each.The remaining four boats were of the collapsible variety, known as Englehardt. Two of these were stowed on the boat deck and two were on the roof of the officers' quarters, and were designed to carry 47 persons each.The total boat accommodation was 1178 persons.Source: The British Report into the wreck of the Titanic (1912).Main lifeboats had a capacity of 65 people and collapsible lifeboats had a capacity of 40 people.The lifeboats comprised 16 wooden lifeboats with a capacity of 65 persons each and four collapsible lifeboats with a capacity of 47 persons each.They say up to 65 men.there was 44 people approximately, some of them holding on to the sides. in all the life boats, there was 706 survivors.the weight of 70 men and 65 peopleThe 16 full sized lifeboats could hold 65 people and the collapsible lifeboats could hold 40 people.30 to 36Titanic carried 16 full size lifeboats that could hold 65 people on each boat. There were 4 collapsible life boats that could hold 47 people each. A total of 1228 people could have survived with the 20 lifeboats titanic carried. Given the possibility of squeezing extra people in without capsizing, a possible number could have been 1300.With today's fat people though, less would have been saved.Well, according to the Titanic movie, about 21 or 22 passengers could fit on the lifeboats. Then again, people rowed back to the scene to try to find passengers that were still alive.