Lygu Manhunt For Reno Rapist
James McCormick drove by a ravine near his Laurel, Md., home many times in the week since his 18-year-old son disappeared, oblivious to the fact that his son lay trapped in a car wreck below.On Saturday, Julian McCormick stopped waiting for someone to find him in his upside down Honda Civic. Injured and dehydrated, he somehow managed to climb out of the car and up to the side of the road, where a woman driving with her mother spotted him.McCormick was able to tell her his name and other facts, but didn t know how long he had been there, said the woman, Leigh Ann Hess. The prayers that everyone sent up - the prayers are truly answered, James McCormick told The Associated Press after being reunited with his son at the scene.His son was taken by helicopter to a
stanley cup uk hospital for evaluation, McCormick said. He said paramedics were worried about internal injuries. They said it s a miracle he s still alive, he added.The family filed a missing person report after the 18-year-old disappeared a week ago. The Bowie State University student left campus the m
stanley cups orning of Sept. 1 to pick up his girlfriend in College Park, but he never showed up.Although it s not far from the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, the area where McCormick apparently crashed is a very rural area with farms and fields, said Sgt. Robert Lachance of the U.S.
stanley cup Park Police, which has jurisdiction over the area. The car was found in a creek below a bridge, police said, and the accident was under investigation.James McCor Jeya The Odd Truth, June 30, 2004
Last week, NASA set its LADEE spacecraft blazing on a course to the Moon. While the launch was visible from much of the East Coast, those spectators nearest the VA launchpad were afforded the most breathtaking views. One amphibious Virginian, in particular, was especially moved by the spectacle.
https://gizmodo/east-coasters-watch-tonights-nasa-launch-from-your-ya-1259914226 The frog in question can be seen about a third of the way from t
stanley cup he top of the photo on the left hand side, its splaye
stanley cup d physique magnificently, tragically and 鈥?admit it 鈥?rather comically backlit by the first stage ignition flare of a Minotaur V rocket. Jeremy Eggers, spokesman for the Wallops/Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport, confirmed to Universe Today that the picture is 100% real and has not been doctored in any way. As for how this frog managed to find itself with a front-row seat at last week launch, UT has that covered, too:
https://gizmodo/watch-as-spacexs-grasshopper-scares-the-crap-out-of-a-1277245247 The launchpad at the Wallops/Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport has a pool for the high-volume water deluge system that activates during launches to protect the pad from d
stanley cup website amage and for noise suppression, and likely there was a formerly damp, cool place that was a nice spot for a frog to hang out. Whatever fate befell you, valiant frog, we salute you. You may not have gone to space that day as other frogs have actually done before you , but you shall be remembered. Here, look: somebody