Posted by cyrvfbxrvs24 (120.32.70.180) on 21 May 2012 19:30:10 GMT:
In Reply to: Re: Re: Unknown coach veritable COACH, instruct gladstone bag, notecase, free shipping nationwide posted by Proextender penis on 15 May 2012 23:35:08 GMT:
Abercrombie Polo
Twin taxi bombs ripped through the heart of India's financial capital of Bombay yesterday, killing 44 people and raising fears of new bloodletting in the world's most populous democracy. The powerful car bombs - which police blamed on Islamic terrorists - erupted just five minutes apart in a jewelry market and a popular landmark, spewing terror and carnage through the packed streets at lunch hour. "It sounded like blasting through a tunnel, with people and cars flying in all directions," said Tanaji Pawar, a bus driver who was walking near the Gateway of India landmark. Street sweeper Raju Ghosh had just settled down for a tea break when he heard the deafening explosion. "I saw people thrashing around on the road," said Ghosh, 24. "I picked up 12 bodies, with legs, hands and heads blown off. My head was spinning and I was trembling, but I continued carrying the bodies." The street was littered with limbs and torsos, shattered glass and metal - along with dozens of Indian slippers left behind by fleeing crowds. More than 150 people were hospitalized. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombings. Police focused on Islamic extremists, although the victims included many Muslims and Hindus, who are the majority in India. A police official blamed groups fighting Indian rule in the disputed state of Kashmir and pointed an accusatory finger at archenemy Pakistan, saying the attacks were "let loose by the enemy country." But Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman Masood Khan condemned the blasts in the city of 12 million also known to Indians as Mumbai. "Such wanton targeting of civilians should be condemned in the strongest possible terms," Khan said. The timing raised concerns that the blasts were linked to a dispute over a religious site in the northern city of Ayodhya that has been the source of much bloodshed in the past. The bombings came hours after Indian state archeologists told a judge they had discovered the remains of a Hindu temple at the site, which is claimed by both Hindus and Muslims. The bombs were hidden in the trunks of two taxis, police said. One of the bombs exploded at the Gateway of India, a massive arch that's a popular lunchtime eating spot and a venue for outdoor concerts. The other blast tore through a crowded neighborhood of jewelry stores, where many shops are owned by Hindus but where many of the artisans are Muslims. "All kinds of people work here - Hindus, Muslims and Christians," said Ali Asghar, 24. "This is not about religion." But others warned that Muslims would be blamed - and worried about anti-Muslim riots. In a cramped shoe store, Hindu shop owner Tilak Raj mourned the death of his Muslim employee, Abdul Mullah. "He had just left the shop," Raj said, "and was sitting under a tree when the buildings shook." GRAPHIC: MAP
2011 Abercrombie Sale
Subway riders were terrorized in three separate attacks yesterday as thieves preyed on a Catholic priest, pistol-whipped a flight attendant and viciously slashed a teenager. The attacksin Manhattan, Queens and Brooklynbegan with the pre-dawn slashing of a teenager, and ended with the holdup of a priest on his way to celebrate Mass.In the first, a gang of 10 to 15 men slashed the face and neck of 17-year-old Keith Cox as he waited for the Franklin Ave. shuttle in Bedford-Stuyvesant about 3:44 a.m. Police said the gang tried to rob Cox, who was listed in stable condition in Kings County Hospital. There were no arrests. The attack was similar to initiation rituals used by the Bloods, a violent Los Angeles-based street gang that has made inroads in the city. Authorities last week busted 167 of the Bloods in a roundup of the violent gang, whose members join by either slashing someone or submitting to a vicious beating.Police could not confirm whether the Bloods were responsible for the subway assault.In Queens, two robbers attacked two flight attendants heading to John F. Kennedy Airport on the A train about 5:40 a.m. One thief pistol-whipped a 31-year-old attendant from California when she refused to hand over her pocketbook after the train left Rockaway Blvd. She was listed in stable condition at Jamaica Hospital. The thievesone black, one Hispanic and both around 22 years oldfled without taking anything. In Manhattan, a 62-year-old Catholic priest wearing his clerical collar was robbed at knifepoint of $200 as he rode a southbound E train. The priest was on his way to celebrate Mass at the Most Precious Blood church in Chinatown. The priest, who lives in a rectory on W. 25th St., was not hurt in the attack. Police ask anyone with information to call (800) 577-TIPS.
UGG Kenly 渭蟺蠈蟿蔚蟼
ALBANYNew Yorkers from Rego Park to Rochester will decide whether the state should borrow $2.4 billion to fix crumbling schools and build new ones when they step into the voting booth Tuesday. Although Mayor Giuliani, Manhattan Borough President Ruth Messinger, school officials, business groups and others are urging a yes vote on the School Facility Health and Safety Bond Act of 1997, some government watchdogs say it's a rickety deal for school kids and taxpayers alike. The only thing they agree on is that the state's schools are in depressingly bad shape. "There's not a region in this state that doesn't have examples of buildings too old, too decrepit, too inefficient, too hazardous or too technically obsolete that we as New Yorkers shouldn't be ashamed to admit we send our children there," said Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver (D-Manhattan), who pushed the bond act through this year's protracted state budget fight. Too many schools are unequipped to handle modern audiovisual and computer technology, he said, leaving New York students behind in the global competition for jobs. "It's an investment in the future of our children," Silver said. But some critics said it's more likely to be an investment in the reelection of state lawmakers. "It's nothing more than a political slush fund for Shelly Silver and the other politicians," said Nick Paradiso of the anti-tax group CHANGE-NY. The bond act would add to what is already the largest state debt in the nation, Paradiso said, and voters have no assurance that the funds will go to the schools that need it most because the Legislature did not detail a process for divvying up the money. "There will be political fights over who gets the money, but it won't be over who needs it the most," he said. Although there is nothing in writing that guarantees the five boroughs a set share, Silver said the city should expect about 40% of the money, based on the fact that it has about 40% of the state's students. Some argue that this might be used by state or city officials to substitute for money they would have spent anyway. Others say that no matter how much of the money the city gets, it won't won't help ease its overcrowding. "The city's capital strategy is terribly flawed, and this borrowing would just feed right into a flawed strategy that's doomed to fail," said Cynthia Green, vice president of the Citizens Budget Commission. Green said that instead of spending billions to build schools, the city should take the $4.5 billion it has budgeted for school construction during the next five years and use it to renovate existing buildings and make them functional for year-round schooling. To to build enough buildings to keep pace with growing enrollment would take $25 billion, "and that's not going to happen," Green said.
http://www.abercrombiefitchclub.com
http://www.companyservices.ru/user/uazpvucvcw81/
http://1on1outdoors.com/forum/index.php?action=profile;u=208227
http://nguyensonclub.com/member.php?48038-eflraotatc25
http://www.circlebd.net/circlebd1/index.php?action=profile;u=75712