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yktp Amnesty International Slams U.S.
« le: Décembre 15, 2024, 07:42:49 am »
Muyt Explosion sparks 3-alarm fire in St. Louis
 A jury has awarded $15.6 million to a man whose image was used for years without stanley cup  his permission on Taster s Choice coffee labels.Russell Christoff, a former model from Northern California, posed for a two-hour Nestle photo shoot in 1986 but figured it was a bust mdash;- until he stumbled across his likeness on a coffee jar while shopping at a drug store in 2002. There was a jar with my picture on it,  he told The Early Show co-anchor Julie Chen Tuesday,  and I was just a bit surprised. After the shock, which lasted, you know, a few seconds, I picked it up and I walked up and I showed the jar to a woman that works there and I said,  Look.  And she said,  Wow! That s you!  And I said,  Thank you. I will take this jar!   A legal dispute with Nestle USA ensued, durin stanley uk g which Christoff, 58, declined the company s $100,000 settlement offer, and Nestle USA turned down his offer to settle for $8.5 million. I never gave my consent,  he said to Chen.  We had a contract that spelled out the terms of the agreement, but there was just no follow-up on it.         I filed it away, and the contract sat there for 18, 19 years and -- I save things, which I guess is obvious. And no. They never had the permission. Last week, a Los Angeles County Superior Court jury ordered Nestle USA to pay Christoff $15.6 million for using his stanley uk  likeness without his permission and profiting from it. The award includes 5 percent of the Glendale-based company s profit from Taster s Choice sales from 1997 to 2003.Du Garx Scientists Simulate Boston Subway Terror Attack
 With the Atlantic hurricane season about to kick into gear, plenty are wondering how this year   crop of storms with disarmingly mundane names will compare to last year   nightmarish season. This map goes even further, showing the past 170 hurricane seasons. It   beautiful and  botella stanley humbling, all at once.     The Visualization Lab at the National Ocea stanley website nic and Atmospheric Administration posted this new map on Friday, charting 11,967 tropical cyclones that have occurred on Earth since the NOAA began keeping a record in 1842. Back then, data collection was far less reliable, coming from ships and lighthouses all over the world rather than satellites. So this map is likely missing hundreds of hurricanes that were never noticed  or reported . Geostationary satellites, such as NOAAs GOES, revolutionized the ability of meteorologists to track cyclones, the map-makers explain. Not a single storm is missed as these eyes in the sky provide consistent scans of the globe every few minutes. Overlaid on a dark background, you can clearly see patterns emerge from the morass of white lines. For example, the white streak on the Atlantic seaboard shows how frequently the Outer Banks and New England get battered by storms careening over from Africa   warm waters: But for a t stanley thermoskannen ruly sobering comparison, check out the other side of the world鈥攚here cyclone season never ends: It   a beautiful visualization, but nonetheless, let   all cross our f