A drunk was talked out of jumping and just as they brought out a fire truck to lower him down he
slipped and slammed into the firetruck and face-planted on the ground. Good thing the firetruck broke his fall!
This is an unusual paragraph. I’m curious how quickly you can find out what is so unusual about it? It looks so plain you would think nothing was wrong with it! In fact, nothing is wrong with it! It is unusual though. Study it, and think about it, but you still may not find anything odd. But if you work at it a bit, you might find out! Try to do so without any coaching!
This is some crazy shit here. I can’t really figure out what “it’s” supposed to be and can see how it may be faked but I want to believe it’s real. Anybody that speaks whatever language that it please decipher and post a comment.
Actually looks like a man dressed as a woman dressed as a cat but I don’t know.
By KAREN MATTHEWS, Associated Press Writer A construction worker’s bid to curse the New York Yankees by planting a Boston Red Sox jersey in their new stadium was foiled Sunday when the home team removed the offending shirt from its burial spot.
After locating the shirt in a service corridor behind what will be a restaurant in the new Yankee Stadium, construction workers jackhammered through the concrete Sunday and pulled it out.
The team said it learned that a Sox-rooting construction worker had buried a shirt in the new Bronx stadium, which will open next year across the street from the current ballpark, from a report in the New York Post on Friday.
Yankees President Randy Levine said team officials at first considered leaving the shirt where it was.
“The first thought was, you know, it’s never a good thing to be buried in cement when you’re in New York,” Levine said. “But then we decided, why reward somebody who had really bad motives and was trying to do a really bad thing?”
On Saturday, construction workers who remembered the employee, Gino Castignoli, phoned in tips about the shirt’s location. (more…)
This panorama mosaic, taken by the Surface Stereo Imager on board NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander, documents the passage of the midnight sun over several days. The foreground and sky images were taken on Sol 54, or the 54th Martian day of the mission (July 20, 2008) Read More