Monday, November 10, 2008

Robert Henreich - Italian Job stunt lands Mini driver a ban - Daily Telegraph

Italian Job stunt lands Mini driver a ban - Daily Telegraph
Former Harrow pupil Alex Fiallos returned to his halls of residence after a night out and drove his £4,000 car around the grounds at speeds of 30mph. He ended up crashing into the bottom of some steps in a scene reminiscent of the 1969 cult classic

Few options for VFDs - Alexander City Outlook
With the decision from Tallapoosa County voters to vote down local amendment one, which would have provided a framework for volunteer fire department funding, departments are now left with the same few options to pay for their high operational costs

Boomer Volunteer Named NFTE Volunteer of the Year for Greater Los - Earthtimes
LOS ANGELES, CA -- 11/10/08 -- Michael Nicklin , a Los Angeles-based Baby Boomer and self-employed entrepreneur, has been named "Volunteer of the Year" for the greater Los Angeles area by The National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE

Coming home _ finally: Group finds remains of forgotten veterans - Chicago Tribune
RANDOLPH, Vt. (AP) _ In World War II, Samuel Mazur was a tail gunner on a B-17 bomber that flew over Europe. Three decades later, he died of cancer — with no family at his side — at a Veterans Administration hospital in Vermont . His cremated

Volunteer groups plant trees Sunday - Daily Gate City
A stiff, chilly breeze under a cloudy sky and about 35 unplanted trees kept volunteers moving briskly Sunday afternoon at Rand and Kilbourne parks in Keokuk. The group of Keokuk Rotary Club members, Konnections kids, Midwest Academy students, Keokuk

Airsoft games: As real as you want it - St. Petersburg Times
Story Tools Crystal River resident Dave Henman, 43, moves through woods in New Port Richey during an airsoft game. The realistic-looking guns shoot BB pellets. NEW PORT RICHEY — They're shooting at each other. Seriously. They're in head-to-toe

Group finds, buries remains of forgotten veterans - Boston Globe
RANDOLPH, Vt.— In World War II, Samuel Mazur was a tail gunner on a B-17 bomber that flew over Europe. Three decades later, he died of cancer -- with no family at his side -- at a Veterans Administration hospital in Vermont. His cremated remains

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