Keys The First Six Pages Of The New Batgirl Comic Are Just What We Hoped For
A plane owned by the Hendrick Motorsports organization crashed on its way to a NASCAR race Sunday and all 10 aboard were killed, federal officials said.Eight passengers and two pilots died in the crash, a spokesman with the National Transportation Safety Board said.A spokesman for a funeral home where the bodies were being taken said the dead included four relatives of team owner Rick Hendrick -- his son, twin daughter
stanley cup s and brother.Harry Litten, manager Moody Funeral Service in Stuart, said the state police had given him this list of those on the Beech 200:Ricky Hendrick, Rick Hendrick s son and also a NASCAR driver; John Hendrick, Rick Hendrick s brother and president of the organization; Kimberly and Jennifer Hendrick, Rick Hendrick s twin daughters; Joe Jackson; Jeff Turner; Randy Dorton, the team s chief
stanley website engine builder; Scott Latham, a pilot for NASCAR driver Tony Stewart; and pilots Dick Tracy and Liz Morrison. Keith Holloway, a spokesman for the NTSB, said investigators were on their way to the crash site but could not begin their examination until Monday.A spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administr
stanley cup ation, Arlene Murray, said the plane took off from Concord, N.C., and crashed in the Bull Mountain area about seven miles west of the Martinsville airport at about 12:30 p.m.Virginia State Police Sgt. Michael Bailey said rescue workers could not immediately reach the crash site because of the rough terrain.NASCAR has spoken with Rick Hendrick, NASCAR spokesman Jim Cebk Ikea Must Have Inspired These Build-It-Yourself Action Figures
The famous library at Alexandria wasn ;t burned down with fire 鈥?it was destroyed by government mistreatment and neglect. Will today great digital libraries like the Internet Archive suffer the same fate
https://gizmodo/the-great-library-at-alexand stanley cup ria-was-destroyed-by-budget-1442659066 Photo via Internet Archive Over at Medium, cultural critic Tim Maly has a terrific and thought-provoking essay about the design of contemporary server farms. He contrasts the high-security model of the typical farms used by startups and Google with the model preferred by Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive, which holds among many other things the famous Wayback Machine. Most companies treat their servers like vaults full of gold that must be guarded from looters. But Kahle turned the Archive, and its server farms full of scanned books, digitized films, an
stanley cup d archival snapshots of the Internet, into a public building modeled on a library. It housed in an old church close to San Francisco Ocean Beach, and the server rooms are open to all. Writes Maly: The Internet Archive sanctuary server room is surprisingly quiet. This wasn ;t easy to arrange. Servers need fans to cool them and churches traditionally reflect and amplify sound to make the organ and singing louder. Fans plus echo chamber equals cacophony. So when the Internet Archive moved the servers into the nave, they had to install s
stanley cup pecial sound-proofing on the walls to absorb and dam