Ritl It s Thorin vs. Everyone Else in the new Desolation of Smaug trailer
Fewer than 150 families of those killed in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks remained outside the federal compensation fund after a midnight Monday deadline shut the door on any more applications to the unprecedented program.As the deadline passed, officials counted 2,833 applications from the families of those killed, well above the 90 percent inclusion rate that the fund s special master, Kenneth Feinberg, had set as the goal. The official death toll was 2,976 in the terror attacks in New York City, the Pentagon and Pennsylvania.
stanley mug The fund received an additional 3,624 applications from those in
stanley canada jured. The figures mean that almost all of the families made a choice, Feinberg said, as he scribbled the midnight total an easel for reporters. I think the nation wanted this program to work, not only to show the country but the terrorists as well that we are united. To date, the average payout from the fund has been $1.8 million, with the highest award, ab
stanley flasche out $7.9 million, going to one of the badly injured victims who survived. For some, the deadline alone does not end the difficult decision-making. Irene Golinski - whose husband, retired Army Col. Ronald Golinski, was killed in the Pentagon - recently filed with the fund. But, for now, Golinski has also preserved her right to sue. The one good thing about the fund is that everything would be all over: the paperwork, the questions, all of the outside interferences, said Golinski, 53, of Columbia, Md. It is overwhelming. But Golins Jshg Cyborg minds > cyborg bodies
The list of known planets beyond our solar system is ever-growing. To many, this suggests the day when scientists detect signs of extraterrestrial life could soon be at hand. When that day comes, which religions will struggle to reconcile such a discovery with their beliefs 鈥?and which will adapt in stride
https://gizmodo/keplers-latest-exoplanet-hoard-graphed-1534690734 These are the kinds of questions addressed in a new book by Vanderbilt University astronomer David Weintraub, titled Religions and Extraterrestrial Life: How Will We Deal with It How sensible! At Scientific American, Clara Moskowitz has the transcript from a recent interview with Weintraub, in which they discuss the implications of extraterrestrial life on humanity assorted religious sensibilities. Here Weintraub on the difficulties that could be faced by religions that see humans as the sole focus of God attention: The religions that see the world through that viewpoint tend to be some of the Christian evangelicals. The Eastern Orthodox Church, a branch of Catholicism, als
stanley cup o has that view. There are some people who claim that if God had created extraterrestrials, then there clearly would be words in the Old and New testaments, which we would have already found, that would have said explicitly that God created extra
stanley flask terrestrials鈥攁nd since those words don ;t exist, there can ;t be. Well, there nothing in th
stanley us e Old and New testaments that talks about t