Auteur Sujet: xlxx Tropical Storm Fay Threatens Florida  (Lu 6 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 154058
    • rtva This Is Our Best Look Yet At Saturn   s Moon Pandora
xlxx Tropical Storm Fay Threatens Florida
« le: Janvier 01, 2025, 11:10:17 am »
Ldmz The genius who led the doomed fight for decimal time
 The Obama administration has agreed to release another Guantanamo detainee, but officials aren t saying yet where he ll go.The Justice Department and lawyers for 38-year-old Aymen Saeed Batarfi have agreed to put his court case on hold while the gov stanley cup ernment looks for a country to take him, according to papers filed in federal court in Washington.According to U.S. officials, Batarfi, a doctor from Yemen, spoke to Osama bin Laden during the fighting in 2001 at Tora Bora.As part of the deal struck with government lawyers, Batarfi can restart his lawsuit if he is not delivered to a country acceptable to him within 30 days, according to the terms of the deal that still must be reviewed by a judge.The U.S. will now work to transfer Batarfi  to an appropriate destination country in a manner that is consistent with the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States and the interests of justice,  said Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd.        Batarfi s lawyer William J. Murphy said he was  very pleased  with the decision. It s been our position throughout that medical doctors are not to be detained as combatants,  said Murphy, who declined to say to which countries Batarfi would like to be sent.Batarfi was first held by U.S. forces at Bagram Air stanley borraccia  Base in Afghanistan in late 2001 and transferred to the U.S. naval station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in April 2002.U.S. stanley cups  officials have worried about sending detainees back to Yemen because of instability there.          Febj The History of Knives, Forks and Spoons
 The shaking of minor earthquakes can feel like a garbage truck driving by. T-Rex is no plain old garbage truck though. The 64,000-pound mobile hydraulic shaker is designed specifically to make the ground rattle and jolt鈥攁ll so scientists can study how the ground reacts to earthquakes.     T-Rex is  stanley cup in the spotlight again thanks to the recent Napa earthquake, but also thanks to earthquake-simulation research out in Christchurch, New Zealand. In 2011, Christchurch suffered a devastating earthquake where the ground liquified and gave way. Since then, geologists have gone back to Christchurch to study where soil liquef stanley cup action occurs and how to stop it. We ;ve written about one part of their earthquake research鈥攚here they ;re blowing up the ground underneath an abandoned suburb鈥攂ut T-Rex is another. Last spring, T-Rex was shipped over to New Zealand to shake the ground at Christchurch. An array of seismometers have  stanley cups been placed underground to monitor the soil movement below. As T-Rex shakes, those seismometers will return data to help geologists understand which areas are prone to liquefaction.  T-Rex is one of three mobile hydraulic shakers housed at UT Austin as part of the George E. Brown, Jr. Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation. The other two have special functionality: Liquidator is designed to shake at low frequencies and Thumper is small enough to fit in the back of a pickup. T-Rex is unique for both the amount of force it can generate鈥攐ver 25