Phyj Drunk Arizona frat brother dropped off at hospital with sticky note
One woman was killed and at least 47 people, many of them children, were taken to area hospitals after a storm packing 80 mph winds tore through a crowded amusement park.Part of the roof covering a ride called The Whip collapsed in Friday night s storm, crushing one person, said Mary Lou Rosemeyer, a spokeswoman for Ken [url=https://www.cups-stanley.ca]stanley mug[/url] nywood Park in suburban Pittsburgh.West Mifflin Police Chief Frank Diener identified the victim as Stephanie Wilkerson, 30, of nearby Monroeville. Authorities said she was killed when winds ripped the pavilion-like structure over the ride from its foundation and threw it 20 feet, crushing her between the debris and an iron fence.Kaci Harshey, 16, from Burgettstown, Pa., said she was buying ice cream at a nearby ride when hail started falling. She and a friend took shelter, then saw trees being knocked down and parts of buildings torn off. Everyone was crying and screaming. They thought it was a tornado, said Harshey, at the amusement park as part of a school trip. It was horrible and I couldn t find my sister. Allegheny County spokeswoman Margaret Philbin said 47 peo [url=https://www.stanleycups.it]stanley cups[/url] ple were taken to Pittsbur [url=https://www.stanleymugs.us]stanley cup[/url] gh-area hospitals. The park was closed Saturday as workers began cleaning up the damage.Rosemeyer said most of the injured were likely hit by hail or flying debris during the storm, which lasted about 30 minutes.Dr. Richard Townsend, a trauma physician, said most of the injuries he had seen were to parents who used their bodies to try to shield their children from Bpsa Monument To Reopen One Year Late
Today, monorails may be fodder for The Simpsons, but well into the 20th century, the monorail was a glittering symbol of the future of transit. From the 1800s through the 1980s, these are monorail concepts artists and engineers dreamed up. Monorail v茅locipedique from the mid-1800s via Wikimedia Commons Fawkes ; Folly, an experimental monorail car built by J.W. Fawkes in Burbank, c. 1907-1910 The idea never found backersut if it had, the public might be enjoying futuristic monorail travel through the air between Burbank and downtown. In 1910 inventor J.W. Fawkes built a propellor-driven aerial trolley that he claimed would haul passengers at speeds up to 60 miles per hour. To demonstrate, he hung a quarter-mile-long overhead track in his Burbank apricot orchard and invited passengers aboard. Dubbed the Aerial Swallow, the trolley was about 40 feet [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley botella[/url] long and powered by a Frankline air-cooled engine, which turned the propeller. But the prototype topped out at three miles per hour, and investors kept their hands in their pockets. via University Of Southern California and Retrofuture Aerial Mono-Flyer from the cover of Electrical Experimenter, August 1918 via Picoso Creative Francis Laur guided flying monorail from 1919 via Popular Mechanics, December 1919 A monorail locomotive built for the Bradford and Fosterbrook [url=https://www.cup-stanley.ca]stanley tumbler[/url] Railway via Dark Roasted Blend Electric but super [url=https://www.stanleycup.com.se]stanley vattenflaska[/url] fast with a top speed of 150 mph Air Trolleys by Joseph Arc