page 8 He also recommended police pursue a case against Zim- merman for manslaughter. An arrest warrant and all charges against Zimmerman were turned down by the state attorney’s office, citing that they did not have enough evidence. Another variable in this case is video surveil- lance footage of Zimmerman at the Sanford police station that night approximately an hour after the incident. Zim- merman claims, as do the police reports, that he was beaten and bloodied in the nose and back of the head, but in this footage appears to be a very clean and uninjured looking man. He did receive some medical attention and was cleaned up at the scene, but there are no clear signs of swelling, injury, or blood on his clothing. Richard Kurtz, the funeral home director who prepared Martin’s body, said that it was his professional opinion that Martin could not have been involved in a very vio- lent altercation. According to Kurtz, his fists showed no signs of punching, and his body showed no signs of struggle. He stated that while there was clearly an entrance wound, he could not make out an exit wound. If Trayvon Martin was shot at such close range, it is likely the bullet would have gone the entire way through his body. Another cause for concern on the 911 calls from that night. Zimmerman claims the calls from help were from him, as do at least one eye- witness and the police re- ports. However, Martin’s mother claims she recognizes the voice yelling for help as that of her son. Tom Owen, a forensic expert contacted by the Orlando Sentinel to ana- lyze these tapes, claims using voice identifying technology that he “can say with reason- able scientific certainty that it’s not Zimmerman.” After public outcry and a long series of protests across the country demand- ing the arrest of George Zim- merman, the Department of Justice is now involved in the case, reinvestigating the inci- dent. MICHAEL PERSCH Star Wars, Star Trek, and even Austin Powers all play with the idea of lasers - machines that can shoot beams of light that can de- stroy anything with extreme precision. This idea has wake of World War II with the dawn of the Nuclear Age, but prospects of lasers have grown far beyond weapons, and in one in- stance, are even working right along the work of the nuclear field. . On March 15, 2012 the United States, in the lat- est steps of a fifty year plus project, fired its newest laser beam in California. The la- ser broke all current records as it reached its peak of a 2.03 megajoule shot. One megajoule is equal to 1 mil- of gravity. The shot was rec- orded at the United States’ Nation Ignition Facility (NIF) at the Lawrence Liv- ermore National Lab. How- ever, the goal of this facility is not to develop a weapon. The final goal of this project is to create small star. The - idea began roughly fifty years ago, after the United States created an arsenal of weapons working of the principles of nuclear fission (breaking atoms apart). We.then slowly im- plemented this idea into our current nuclear energy pro- grams. This method howev- er offers huge risks such as meltdowns, radiation leaks, and large amounts of nuclear waste — examples include the Three Mile Island melt- down and last year’s nuclear measurement used to meas- ure energy. For comparison, the standard example of a single joule is the energy required to lift an average sized apple one meter straight up against the force NIF 1s working on the opposite end of this idea; they hope to use nuclear fu- sion (bonding atoms) as a form of creating energy, much like the sun does. The facility will use small amounts of deuterium and tritium in a fuel capsule. They must also replicate the conditions of this reaction by generating temperatures in the tens of millions of de- grees, and pressures billions of times greater than those from Earth’s atmosphere. While this process may sound huge and bom- bastic, the entire facility it- self is actually what the la- sers are built into. The target chamber is only about 30 feet in diameter, and the fuel cell being shot is the size of a pea. Finally, after decades of work and dozens of trials, all that the laser needs to do with fire for only ten bil- lionths of a second. The hopes of this experiment would be to suc- cessfully create a man-made star in a controlled environ- ment which we could study. The process is expected to use the energy of “500 mil- lion million 100 watt light bulbs”, according to NIF website. They believe the end result could potentially release enough energy to help break the United States’ dependency on foreign oil. Mon - Thu: 5-9pm Fri: 5-10pm Sat: Noon-10:00 pm 1 717.655.6007 Buy Sell Trade Video Games, Consoles, Movies, Co-Editor: John Shaffer Staff Writers: