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CBS News It s been nearly a month since mandatory federal spending cuts began, and they re about to claim another victim. The Navy s legendary Blue Angels are being grounded.And now, some fans are feeling pretty blue themselves. On Thursday, 9,200 spectators -- about twice as many as usual -- gawked at the sky above Pensacola s Naval Air Station. They were worried the day s appearance could be the year s final practice of the famed Blue Angels, naval aviators maneuvering a half-dozen F-18s in a diamond formation at top speeds of 700 miles per hour. Special Section: The SequesterSequester cuts grounding Navy s Blue AngelsThey re daredevils. But no one has found a way to loop around sequestration, the mandatory federal budget cuts that will ground the squadron beginning next Monday.Navy veteran John Hunt said of the plan
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stanley becher , Major loss, major loss. Especially to this area, and especially to the Navy. This is a recruiting tool. Since 1946, the Blue Angels and their acrobatic, high-speed stunts have wowed crowds and helped the Navy with its recruiting. But it s expensive public relations, and the Navy must slash $4 billion, its share of the mandatory budget cuts. Part of that is cancelling the Blue Angels regular season, an estimated savings of $20 million. Lt. Katie Kelly, the Blue
stanley cup Angels public affairs officer, said, Right now we are just waiting further guidance to find out what will happen for the Blue Angels practices as we go into April and May. But Wicq The World s First 3D-Printed Kayak Is Adorably Colorful
Le Monde reports that quadrotors of various shapes and sizes have been flying over some of France numerous nuclear power plants over the course of the past few weeks, causing mild alarm, embarrassment for the Air Force that supposed to police the air space, and a judicial enquiry. Greenpeace 鈥?which appears to be France primary suspect, given the group history with nuclear power in the country 鈥?has denied all involvement, but also makes the excellent point that it a large-scale operation: The overflights in question took place sometimes on the same day at four sites which are far apart from each other. For example at Bugey, Gravelines, Chooz and Nogent-sur-Seine on 19 October which proves it a large-scale
stanley cup operation. This incident, if it does turn out to be more than just innocent hobbyists, does open up a new threat from hobbyist quadrotors, beyond just interfering with commercial
starbucks stanley cup air traffic: using them to recce potential targets for protesters, or, if we ;re being scaremongering, terrorist groups. Hopefully, this isolated incident won ;t cause an over-the-top kneejerk reaction like banning all amateur quadrotors from flying. But it does give one more fairly compelling entry in the pros column for increased regulation. [Le Monde via Ars Technica]
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