Mcva NYPD releases video, sketch in firebomb probe
PATCHOGUE, N.Y. A dozen years ago, a 10-year-old girl wrote a message on a scrap of paper, placed it in a ginger-ale bottle and launched it into the waters off Long Island. Now, that bottle has been discovered amid a beach strewn with debris from Superstorm Sandy.The girl who cast that bottle into the bay is dead, but her message has been passed along to her grieving mother. Mimi Fery poses for a photograph, July 9, 2013, in New York. AP Photo/Frank Franklin II I was just sobbing
stanley cups when I heard they had found it, Mimi Fery said of the workers in the Long Island village of Patchogue, who not only found the
stanley flasche message in the bottle, but called the woman and arranged for its ultimate return. These are very, very kind people. This weekend, Fery will return to the seaside village about 60 miles east of Manhattan where she will again thank the workers and attend a ceremony where a small plaque will be dedicated as a remembrance to Sidonie, village officials said. The 18-year-old died in a 2010 fall from a cliff in Switzerland.Fery described her only child as a creative youngster, who was always writing poetry. She knew instantly when told what the message contained that it had been written by Sidonie because it was a quote from Bill and Ted s Excellent Adventure, the girl s favorite film. Fery also takes a second meaning from the message, one not to wor
stanley uk ry about Sidonie, Yfuc Real Estate Experts Value Goku s House At Way Over 9,000
The Flare Pan is a saucepan
stanley flask designed by University of Oxford engineer Thomas Povey that borrows design aspects from jet and rocket engines to burn hotter and more quickly than a conventional pan would over the same flame. It also looks pretty space age-y, which we can obviously get behind.
https://youtube/watch v=lKvbVJasGXc The story goes that Povey, who designs cooling systems for jet engines, was on a mountaineering trip, stru
stanley hrnek ggling to get a pot of water to boil at altitude, when the idea for the Flare pan came to him. He and his students tinkered with the design for three years before settling on the product you see in the video above: a cast aluminum saucepan with a series of tapered fins encircling its perimeter. With a conventional pan, explains Povey, the flame from a stove rises up around the pan and a lot of that heat is dissipated into the environment. With a Flare Pan, the fins capture a lot of heat that would otherwise be wasted. According to Povey, the pans use about a third the gas and cooks roughly 30% faster than comparable, standard cookware. That means they ;re cheaper and quicker to use than conventional pans, a fact that has garnered Povey pots a 2014 Hawley Award from the Worshipful Company of Engineers for the most outstanding engineering innovation that delivers demonstrable benefit to the environment.
stanley cup usa We can ;t help but wonder if Povey idea for the Flare Pan came to him while usin