Auteur Sujet: rnme CIA: Al Qaeda Still In the Fight  (Lu 2 fois)

MethrenRaf

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rnme CIA: Al Qaeda Still In the Fight
« le: Décembre 19, 2024, 09:18:27 am »
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 The government s point man on the Gulf oil spill says several minor leaks have sprung near the blown-out well.Retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said Monday that engineers are working to repair the leaks and that they will not delay the effort to plug the gusher for good.He says BP crews plan to test whether the company can proceed with its  static kill  plan. That involves pumping mud and perhaps cement down the throat of the mile-deep busted well.He says the process could take more than two days to complete.He and BP executives also say it s un stanley mugs certain how a pair stanley cups  of relief wells would be used to ultimately kill the oil leak.        Special Section: Gulf Coast Oil DisasterThere s no guarantee of success, and engineers still plan to follow it up days later with a similar procedure through relief wells they ve been digging for months.But the oil giant s engineers and petroleum experts say it s the clearest path yet to choke the gusher and make it even easier for the crews drilling the relief well to ensure oil can never again erupt from the deep-sea well, which has spewed as much as 184 million gallons since the rig connected to it blew up in April and killed 11 workers.The developments have the m stanley website akings for an interesting week.             It could be the beginning of the end,  said Darryl Bourgoyne, director of Petroleum Engineering Research Lab at Louisiana State University.When it begins, crews will slowly pump heavy mud through lines installed last month straight down the  Wnfl This Is the First Instagram From Space
 Getting lost in a museum is easy, and aimlessly wandering stanley water bottle  from wing to wing is a nice, relaxing, not-at-all-claustrophobic way to spend an afternoon. Alternatively you could venture into The BIG Maze at DC   National Building Museum, an on-site installation filled with winding paths, dead-ends, and a cool reveal at the end of the road.     Architectural golden boy Bjarke Ingels designed the 60-foot-square structure with an exterior that rises an intimidating 18 feet above ground level in the Great Hall  which is itself a massive marvel鈥攍ook at those arches, columns, and soaring sky-high ceiling! . From the outside, there   no possible way to see what awaits within the perimeter, but a funny thing happens when the threshold is crossed. As the path gets closer to the center, the walls gradually get lower and lower, and then: Voila! stanley thermobecher  You ;ve made it to the very middle, you can see everything rise up around you, and  apparently  the exit route is clear. Ingels was inspired by everything ye olde timey hedge and corn mazes to from ancient labyrinths. Whether or not you ;ll find spiritual peace on your journey is TBD. Try it out for yourself through September 1st  or follow along with real-time pics taken every half-hour here . And if you ;re worried stanley cup  about getting stuck forever, know that DCist managed to make it through in a quick six minutes. God speed. [Archinect]                                                        Architecture