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« le: Décembre 31, 2024, 05:43:25 am »
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 An arts student accused of slashing a Muslim taxi driver s neck has been indicted on hate-crime charges, prosecutors said Monday as the student s lawyer lashed out at media interest in a case that comes amid debate over attitudes about Muslims and a plan to build a mosque near ground zero.Michael Enright, the 21-year-old accused of telling the driver to  consider this a checkpoint  before allegedly stabbing him last week, waived his right to be in court as his indictment was announced Monday. He was being held without bail in a psychiatric ward until an arraignment next month on charg stanley cup es of attempted murder and assault, both as hate crimes.Authorities said Enright, who traveled to Afghanistan last spring with a group to promote interfaith understanding, uttered an Arabic greeting before making his  checkpoint  remark and attacking driver Ahmed H. Sharif with a folding knife Aug. 24. Police have said Enright was drunk.Sharif, who is from Bangladesh, was stanley cup usa  wounded in the face and neck but survived. He has said he has no doubt the attack was fueled by anti-Muslim bias.The allegations have mystified some who know Enright, a senior at the School of Visual Arts who lives with his parents in suburban Brewster, N.Y. He had volunteered with an interfaith group that helped pay to send him to Afghanistan as part of a video project for his school. As part of the work, Enright spent time emb stanley us edded with U.S. troops.        When arrested, Enright was carrying two notebooks that described his ex Vmwd EgyptAir Crash Victims Remembered
 Sometimes it feels like th stanley thermos e romance of the road is lost at truck stops. Those oases of diesel fuel and stale coffee seem too industrial, too pragmatic to fit into a Kerouac-style vision of road tripping. Photographer Michael Massaia lends some highbrow class to the truck stop with his series Seeing the Black Dog. Suddenly, those hulking 18-wheelers look gorgeous.     Inspired by his own insomnia, Massaia photographs trucks parked for the night at highway rest stops across New Jersey, their drivers asleep in their bunks. His process is 100% do-it-yourself stanley mug , shooting on large-format film which he develops by hand. Named after the phantom black dogs truckers hallucinate once sleep deprivation sets in, this series captures  stanley cup the stark, haunting stillness of road warriors at rest. Check out the whole collection here. [Wired] Images by Michael Massaia