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fefd Afghans Chant Death to Danish, Dutch in Protest
« le: Décembre 22, 2024, 10:12:52 am »
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 A man who fatally shot a teenage neighbor because he walked on the man s carefully tended lawn has been sentenced to life in prison.Charles Martin, 67, must serve 18 years before he can be considered for parole, Clermont County Common Pleas Judge William Walker ordered, adding that he would urge that Martin never be considered for parole.The man was convicted last month of murder in the March 2006 shotgun killing of 15-year-old Larry Mugrage Jr., a high school freshma stanley cup n.Martin told the court he was sorry the shooting occurred but said the teen knew how much Martin cared for his lawn and provoked him. He stepped on it and he walked 40 feet through it,  Martin said.  I cared about it. I cut it every five days.         Prosecutors said Martin had confronted the teen earlier i stanley website n the day when he walked into Martin s yard on his way to a friend s house, then loaded his .410-gauge shotgun and waited more than three hours for him to return.When the boy stepped on the lawn again, Martin fired at him twice, according to testimony. He then called 911, telling a dispatcher:  I just killed a kid. Martin was tried on aggravated murder but convicted of murder, a lesser count, because jurors because could not agree the killing was planned.      ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5          display: none;             inline-recirc-item--id-93e85102-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d,  right-rail-recirc-item--id-93e85 stanley cup 102-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c619f5c3d         display: none;             inline- Kams Gmail Is Down, Everybody Freak Out (Update: Okay We   re Cool)
 https://youtube/watch v=KSoigRHHNLM     Here   something to make your Monday a lot more interesting. Back in 2010, NPR decided to include Ray Bradbury   intense story The Veldt in its Selected Shorts series. And they chose none other than Stephen Colbert, the comedian and late-night host, to read it. Listen for yourself. This great find comes via OpenCulture, which also explains why The Veldt is such a great story: The story first appeared, according to the web s stanley cup ite of public radio station WNYC, in a 1950 Saturday Evening Post with  the title The World the Children Made, ; which is a good description of  what goes on in this e stanley thermos erie tale.  It imagines the model home ; of the  future, including a programmable nursery that becomes the site of a  power struggle. [Fellow speculative writer Neil] Gaiman says that  Bradbury   tale raises complex questions: Are our children our own , ;  and What does technology do to them   8230; Given how much progress our pursuit of total automation and virtual  stimulation  and our parallel desire to escape those conditions  has  made in the past 64 years, The Ve stanley botella ldt has grown only more relevant.  Pair it with There Will Come Soft Rains,  Bradbury   other famously read-aloudable story of the home of the 1950  future, for a richly funny and troubling double-feature of the mind. Listen to the whole thi