Mlet Blind Girl Falls To Her Death
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. A U.S. Marine has pleaded guilty to the bulk of the charges against him for urinating on the bodies of dead Taliban fighters in Afghanistan and then posing for photos with the corpses.Staff Sgt. Edward W. Deptola was accused of the desecration of remains and posing for unofficial photographs with human casualties. He was also accused of failing to properly supervise junior Marines and not reporting the misconduct.Deptola pleaded guilty to multiple charges Wednesday under a plea agr
stanley italia eement reached with military prosecutors.At the hearing, Deptola admitted that he failed to properly supervise his Marines and did nothing to stop them from taking pictures of the dead. He also admitted intentionally urinating on the corpses. Deptola and another Marine based at Camp LeJeune, N.C., were charged last year after video surfaced showing four Marines in full combat gear urinating on the bodies of three dead Afghans in July 2011. In the video, one of the Marines looked down at the bodies and quipped, Have a good day, buddy. As CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reported after the video s disclosure last January,
stanley cups the Marines in the video were members of a 1,000-man battalion that had completed a combat tour in Afghanistan and returned to Camp Lejuene, where they apparently
stanley termoska started showing the video around as a war trophy. Staff Sgt. Joseph W. Chamblin pleaded guilty to similar charges last month. Chamblin was sentenced to 30 days confinement, re Ekye It s what all the cyborgs are wearing this season
In the mid-1970s, Americans were reeling from the energy crisis. The environment was in terrible shape and oil shock was disrupting the economy. So the U.S. Department of Energy developed a new tool to help kids learn about energy use. It was called the Energy-Environment Simulator and it was more fun than a barrel o
stanley cup f crude. Or not. The blog Root Simple has posted a modern photo of the simulator. The author claims to have picked it up at a San Diego thrift store in the 1990s. The toy and I guess I use that term liberally was a noble attempt to get kids engaged in long-term thinking about how we use energy. But boy does it look boring as hell. From the March 4, 1978 edition of the Spectator in Terre Haute, Indiana: With flashing LED displays, the device demonstrates how supply, dem
stanley canada and and the environment are intertwined. A clock operating at 100 years per second governs the computer as it projects far into the future. As boring as it was, it had quite a shelf life in the American public s
stanley cup chool system. I ;ve found references to the thing being used in the classroom as late as 1996. And I ;m sure there could be some schools that still use it today. Did you ever come face to face with the thing Was it as achingly boring as it looks Images: Modern photo of the Energy Environment Simulator from Root Simple; Anderson College newspaper photo from the December 17, 1977 Anderson Daily Bulletin Energ