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nqmg Oil Spill Investigators Focus on Communication
« le: Décembre 14, 2024, 10:26:19 am »
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  CBS/AP  BOSTON - A gay couple from Massachusetts is claiming that Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester refused to sell them a former Catholic retreat center because church officials were concerned they would hos stanley kubek t gay weddings at the mansion.James Fairbanks, 59, and Alain Beret, 57, filed suit in Worcester Superior Court for loss of civil rights and dignity and for emot stanley cup website ional distress on Monday.The married couple from Sutton planned to buy Oakhurst, a former Catholic retreat center in Northbridge, and restore it as a place they could live and host a special events business. Oakhurst was also previously used as a  House of Affirmation,  a treatment center for priests with psychological problems, CBS station WBZ-TV in Boston reported. But the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester ended negotiations in June, and the couple alleged they learned why in an email they inadvertently received in which diocesan Chancellor Thomas Sullivan cited concern  about the potentiality of gay marriages there.  If you want from your pulpit to tell your congregants that you are against gay marriage, you have that right. But you don t have the right to chase me down the street with that,  Beret told CBS radio station WBZ 1030 in Boston.        The couple s attorney, Sergio Carvajal, said it s obvious his clients were discriminated against be stanley cup spain cause they re gay. It is wrong and it is illegal,  he said.But James G. Reardon Jr., an attorney for the diocese, said the diocese stopped negotiations over concerns Btgq Ex-WorldCom CEO Guilty Of Fraud
 The 129-year-old Washington Monument is enshrouded in scaffolding this month, as workers repair the structural cracks caused by a 2011 earthquake. But the scaffolds are giving scientists the chance to carry out other work, too: Like measuring the exact height of the aging monument.     https://gizmodo/the-architectural-trickery-used-to-disguise-d-c-monume-1461018350 Back when it opened in 1884, the Washington Monument stoo stanley thermobecher d exactly 555 feet, 5 and 1/8th inches. Today, scientists are trying to figure out whether it   sinking. The agency in charge of the project is the National Geodetic Survey, whose employees deal with locating and mapping America. According to NPR, along with more conventional GPS and laser scanning devices the GDS is installing a special sensor installed at the tip of the monument to complete a full survey. We got in touch with the GDS to find out more鈥攁nd we were able to get our hands on the following remarkable photos of the project. For example, here   a shot of one of the first Geodetic Surveys placing a theodolite on the tip of the monument, on November 19, 1934: Today, the GDS uses a more advanced adapter that includes a GPS beacon and other sensors. Here   its designer, Don Breidenbach, maki stanley tazas ng a final adjustment to its placement at the pyramidion: Here   the adaptor being built in the GDS shop: Here   the pyramidion itself. Acc stanley taza ording to the GDS, the original inscriptions are on all four faces of the piece, though a