Auteur Sujet: ydak Marine Choice To Lead Joint Chiefs  (Lu 16 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
ydak Marine Choice To Lead Joint Chiefs
« le: Décembre 20, 2024, 03:48:43 pm »
Sxpb Terrorists Have Eyed Vegas
 Four people were killed Saturday afternoon when a single-engine plane crashed on the beach in Coney Island, hitting the sand as stunned sunbathe stanley cupe rs looked on, officials said. There was no immediate word of additional injuries.The four victims, all on board the Cessna, were dead at the scene following the 1:30 p.m. crash at the popu stanley cups uk lar Brooklyn beach, said Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Holly Baker. Police and fire officials were at the scene, where the shattered aircraft remained on the bea stanley cups uk ch. It looks like it came down nose-first,  said Dick Zigun, a Coney Island resident who was at the crash site.  The wings are broken off, and the cockpit glass was smashed up. It didn t look like anyone could survive that. Zigun, who has lived in Coney Island for 25 years, said it was the first plane crash on the beach that he could recall. Several sunbathers were on the beach when the plane came down, although the Coney Island crowd was generally sparse, he said.Police and fire officials moved quickly to close off the beach after the crash, he added.        The crash occurred on a sunny spring day at the world-renowned beach, home to the Cyclone rollercoaster and the Astroland amusement park. The plane hit the beach near West 19th Street, close to KeySpan Park, a minor league baseball stadium.The famous beach and boardwalk in Brooklyn hosts tens of thousands of New Yorkers during the summer months, and its more famous visitors in the past included Charles Lindbergh and Sigmund Hrye How did genetically altered wheat end up in Oregon field
 There was plenty of outrage earlier this month when a London storefront revealed sidewalk spikes meant to keep the homeless from getting too cozy. stanley cup  While these shiny prickles did seem especially Temple of Doom-ish, they weren ;t all that unusual: There are plenty of little details designed into our cities that tell us what to do, where to go, and give us hints of what came before.     While the intentions of some details, like sidewalk spikes, are inherently obvious, not all these civic designs are always so blunt. Some infrastructural elements have to be purposely disguised, so we, the public, will not mess with them. Others try to nudge us towards a certain behavioral pattern using not-so-subtle hints that supposedly won ;t ruin a spot   overall aesthetics. And other features are simply artifacts of a different time and place, which have not yet managed to be erased. Here are some infrastructural cues you might have seen on your local streets, and what they ;re trying to tell you.  Do stanley becher n ;t Sleep Here Photo by gruntzooki The London spikes in question were actually removed after an online petition went viral, but there are plenty of other completely accepted ways that cities prevent sleeping in public spaces. You ;ve definitely seen the creative fences and decorative railings that ring windows and ledges with welcoming studs and teeth. The example above is in Manhattan. Photo by Alissa W gourde stanley alker Even on bus benches, which are supposed to be comfortab