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Chile Copiapo (CNN)--
On Tuesday night, 33 workers trapped in a Chilean mine received a rare treat: they watched their national football team play against Ukraine through a small projector connected to a safety room via a fiber optic cable. Chile lost, 2-1.
But still, this is a shift as miners try to distract while rescuers continue to drill down to save them on 34 days of their ordeal.
Ximena Matas, a spokesman for Chile's mining ministry, told reporters on Wednesday that the rig used in the so-called Rescue Plan a had traveled 28 metres (about 31 yards)
The total distance of the Earth since Tuesday is 141 (154 yards).
Plan B drill fell 145 (158 yards)
More, 268 (293 yards)
She said that the equipment for the C-planned exercise will begin to arrive on Wednesday night.
Officials said Plan A could take four months to reach these people.
The operation of Plan B can be completed within two months, while the option of Plan C--
This is probably the fastest--
Authorities say action may not take place until the end of September.
The workers were trapped in a room 2,300 feet deep in the mine.
When rescuers first found them, the men told officials that they shared a can of peaches and a small amount of tuna and mackerel fish hidden in their residence, living for more than 17 days.
As of last week, their food included ham and turkey bread, wine biscuits, stroganoff of pasta primavera, peaches in juice, nutritional supplements, caramel bread, chicken in sauce
On Tuesday, a team of NASA experts met with Chilean officials to discuss the final mining of miners and their lives. Dr.
Michael Duncan, deputy chief medical officer at Johnson Space Center, said Chileans believed the miner's evacuation was the end of the rescue operation.
Americans believe that given the delicate recovery and reconstruction
The integration of miners, the actual rescue is only a step in the long process.
For example, have their re-
He said, introduce their families and society, and the pressure they will feel from others and the media.
He added that they will have to deal with a certain degree of celebrity status as they survived the mine.
NASA psychologist Al Holland is also a member of NASA. S.
The delegation said the miners were shaking their spirits . .
In fact, before they were found in the mine, they had organized themselves into groups and established a hierarchy between themselves, which was good for their mental health --being, he said.
The Netherlands said he shared ideas with the Chilean about the importance of sleep and wake-up cycles, and for that he created a systematic way of lighting positioning.
Chile's health minister Jaeme Manalich told CNN that miners were assigned underground tasks.
These people are divided into groups to manage the tubes that carry supplies of their lifeblood.
He said one miner was responsible for setting a schedule for them to eat and sleep, and another was responsible for nutrition and medical needs.
CNN's Patrick Oppmann at Copiapo contributed to the report.