Posts

Showing posts with the label Johns

Book review of Cathrine Mahoney - ex-wife of Andrew Johns - in Australia

Image
A memoir of a ‘middle-aged’ former high-profile NRL WAG has been torn apart in a brutal review by a writer who questions why she married a man ‘with whom she has almost nothing in common’. Currently Between Husbands is a recently released memoir by Cathrine Mahoney, former wife of NRL Immortal Andrew Johns. The former entertainment publicist turned podcast host and self-proclaimed ‘over-sharer’ provides eye-opening insight into the ups and downs of 12 years with one of Australia’s biggest stars, and reveals the secrets of their high-profile split. Released by publishers Simon and Schuster, the memoir was denounced by Italian-Australian writer and singer-songwriter Antonella Gambotto-Burke in a scathing book review published in The Weekend Australian. The UK-based author doesn’t hold back what he thinks about the book which he claims is aimed at a middle-aged audience ‘preferably disgruntled wives ex-wives, and boyfriends who define themselves by their partners’. Former Sony publi

Johns Hopkins APL assembles first global map of lunar hydrogen

Using data collected more than two decades ago, scientists from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, have compiled the first complete map of hydrogen abundance on the Moon’s surface. The map identifies two types of enhanced hydrogen-containing lunar material and corroborates previous ideas about lunar hydrogen and water, including the finding that water likely played a role in the formation and solidification of the Moon’s native ocean-magma. David Lawrence, Patrick Peplowski and Jack Wilson of APL, along with Rick Elphic of NASA’s Ames Research Center, used orbital neutron data from the Lunar Prospector mission to create their map. The probe, deployed by NASA in 1998, orbited the Moon for a year and a half and sent back the first direct evidence of an increase in hydrogen at the lunar poles, before hitting the lunar surface. When a star explodes, it releases cosmic rays, or high-energy protons and neutrons that travel through space at nearly the sp

Andrew Johns: Why NSW will beat Queensland in the Origin decider

Image
For Queensland, central midfielder Daly Cherry-Evans will do 90 percent kick while Ben Hunt will do bit by bit when needed, from a dummy or five-eight, depending on where the coach is Billy Slater decided to play it. Lost monsters Cameron Munster has been sidelined after testing positive for COVID-19 and this is truly a shame for everyone, even NSW. You want to play your opponent at full strength. To place a number on it Queensland will cost 12 to 14 points. In the second game, he tried to score. In the first game, he set up an experiment. Load You can’t stop or you can’t plan what Munster brings. It made a huge hole for Slater to fill now that he was sidelined. Did they go with Hunt, who had started the prostitute, or Tom Dearden who is in the 17 man squad? I’ll start with Hunt in jumper No.6. Dearden is only 49 games in his NRL career. In his mind, Dearden would ask if he was ready to play at this level. Starting him on the bench would be a better option. The key to both is

Johns Hopkins Medical Study: Abnormal Heart Metabolism Could Predict Future Sudden Heart Death

The findings were published June 22 in JCI Insight. “We believe this is the first time that impaired cardiac metabolism in people has been associated with an increased risk of life-threatening arrhythmias or sudden cardiac death,” said study senior author Robert Weiss, MD, professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University School. Medical. “This could open a window for an entirely new approach, a metabolic approach to treat or prevent severe arrhythmias, which are not currently available in cardiology.” Sudden cardiac death accounts for 50% of all cardiovascular deaths in the United States, claiming more than 300,000 American lives each year, according to the American Heart Association. Currently, an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) – a small, battery-powered device that is placed in the chest to detect and stop irregular heart rhythms – is the main way to prevent SCD in high-risk patients. The device continuously monitors the heart rhythm and delivers electric shocks, w