#16 回覆 #14 我不會喔 的帖子
you know me engilsh is goodest in world

no one head me on eng
2013/6/12 04:59 PM
keith_keith

#17 回覆 #1 小浩 的帖子
Actually, your ac is a sub-ac.
So, do I need to ban you?
2013/6/12 05:14 PM
Matthew417

#18
In fact, I'll report to the police if you post these things, in order to let the police enter your home to determine whether you break the law or not. I'm serious! I'm not kidding! I don't mind if you call me a double-faced, an apologist and so on.

Do you know the person involved will be harmed by your joyful act? If the photos are spread, the victim may lose her face - as the photos are quite clear! You of all may be joyful for that, but the victim may hide herself and cry at home. Human is a weak animal. If something happens on that girl, will you be sorry to hear that?

I advise you that you should think twice before you post these things, and don't be influenced by the onlookers. These onlookers won't think for others and just look on the issues, some of them are kid illiterates. I hope you will have an independent determination on this issue, and don't encourage the violence on the Net by doing something to harm both you and others.

[ 本帖最後由 52013146a26skps 於 2013-6-12 05:19 PM 編輯 ]
2013/6/12 05:17 PM
52013146a26skps

#19
High winds, scorching heat and low humidity fueled a wildfire that burned several homes on the edge of Colorado Springs on Tuesday and another blaze forced the evacuation of one of Colorado's top tourist attractions, authorities said.
The blaze near Colorado Springs ignited on Tuesday and ripped through the Black Forest, northeast of the city, said Mike Stearly, spokesman for the Rocky Mountain Area Coordination Center.
The fast-moving blaze reached a residential neighborhood where it torched at least eight homes and an unknown number of outbuildings, El Paso County Sheriff's Office spokesman Lieutenant Jeff Kramer said. He said authorities have no estimate of the size of the fire.
In June 2012, the so-called Waldo Canyon Fire reduced about 350 homes to ash in the Colorado Springs area and led authorities to place more than 30,000 people in the city and surrounding communities under mandatory evacuation orders. It was the most destructive wildfire in Colorado's history.
In neighboring Fremont County, a 300-acre (120-hectare) wildfire broke out on Tuesday and prompted the evacuation of the Royal Gorge Bridge -and- Park, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management said in a statement.
The Royal Gorge span, which is billed as the world's highest suspension bridge, stretches nearly 1,000 feet above the Arkansas River for a quarter-mile and is one of Colorado's most visible tourist destinations. The bridge itself is not threatened by the flames.
The fire started on the south side of the river and later jumped to the north bank, fire managers said. They added that the river is closed to rafting and other recreational activities in the area and nearby residents are under mandatory evacuation orders.
Investigators are seeking the cause of both fires.
In northern Colorado, a lightning-sparked wildfire that erupted on Monday in Rocky Mountain National Park has burned about 100 acres and is spreading.
"It is increasing in size due to winds, low humidity and beetle-killed trees" which are dry, said park spokeswoman Kyle Patterson.
No structures are immediately threatened by that blaze, which is called the Big Meadows Fire, she said.
The National Weather Service said single-digit humidity values and temperatures in the upper 90s Fahrenheit (upper 30s Celsius), combined with wind gusts in excess of 40 miles an hour have created "very high to extreme fire danger" in Colorado for most of the week.

A gigantic line of powerful thunderstorms could affect one in five American on Wednesday as it rumbles from Iowa to Maryland packing hail, lightning and tree-toppling winds.
Meteorologist are warning that the continuous line of storms may even spawn an unusual weather event called a derecho (duh-RAY'-choh), which is a massive storm of strong straight-line winds spanning at least 240 miles. Wednesday's storms are also likely to generate tornadoes and cause power outages that will be followed by oppressive heat, said Bill Bunting, operations chief at the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla.
The risk of severe weather in Chicago, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, is roughly 45 times higher than on a normal June day, Bunting said. Detroit, Baltimore, Washington, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh and Louisville, Ky., have a risk level 15 times more than normal. All told, the area the weather service considers to be under heightened risk of dangerous weather includes 64 million people in 10 states.
"It's a pretty high threat," Bunting said, who also warned that the storms will produce large hail and dangerous lightning. "We don't want to scare people, but we want them to be aware."
Wednesday "might be the worst severe weather outbreak for this part of the country for the year," said Jeff Masters, meteorology director at Weather Underground.
You can have tornadoes and a derecho at the same time, but at any given place Wednesday the straight-line winds are probably more likely.
Last year, a derecho caused at least $1 billion in damage from Chicago to Washington, killing 13 people and leaving more than 4 million people without power, according to the weather service. Winds reached nearly 100 mph in some places and in addition to the 13 people who died from downed trees, another 34 people died from the heat wave that followed in areas without power.
Derechoes, with winds of at least 58 mph, occur about once a year in the Midwest. Rarer than tornadoes but with weaker winds, derechoes produce damage over a much wider area.
Wednesday's storm probably won't be as powerful as 2012's historic one, but it is expected to cause widespread problems, Bunting said.
The storms are the type that will move so fast that "by the time you see the dark sky and distant thunder you may have only minutes to get to safe shelter," Bunting said.
The storms will start late morning or early afternoon in eastern Iowa, hit Chicago by early afternoon and move east at about 40 mph, Bunting said. If the storm remains intact after crossing the Appalachian Mountains, which would be rare for a derecho, it should hit the Washington area by late afternoon or early evening, he said.
For Washington, Philadelphia and parts of the Mid-Atlantic the big storm risk continues and even increases a bit Thursday, according to the weather service.

Authorities took a boat onto Lake Mead on Tuesday to gather water samples they hope could shed light on mysterious brown foam found floating on the lake's surface over the weekend.
Park officials urged people to avoid the Overton Arm, a northern extension of Lake Mead, after several dozen carp were found dead and the foam was seen extending about eight miles from near the mouth of the Virgin River to Echo Bay.
The Southern Nevada Water Authority is monitoring water quality at two intakes and so far hasn't found anything problematic, according to spokesman Bronson Mack. Typically, pollutants are diluted in the reservoir.
"It really is a massive body of water, and that's one benefit from a drinking water perspective," Mack said, noting that water from the Overton Arm typically takes about a month to meander to the intake area.
A park volunteer collected water samples several days ago and they turned up normal, Mack said. But the water agency wants to gather new samples using more precise methods.
High winds and waves prevented crews from collecting water Monday, and the foam wasn't readily visible from the shore.
"We're hoping we can still get samples" of the foam, Mack said.
Lab tests on Tuesday's water collections are expected soon.
Mack said the Nevada Department of Wildlife is handling the investigation into the fish deaths.

A battle over a massive pipeline project to carry billions of gallons of water to Las Vegas from rural counties along the Nevada-Utah line is heading back to court this week.
Senior District Judge Robert Estes will hear oral arguments Thursday and Friday in Ely concerning opponents' challenge of water rights granted to the Southern Nevada Water Authority by Nevada's state engineer, Jason King.
Last year, King granted the water authority permission to pump up to 84,000 acre-feet of groundwater a year from four rural valleys in Lincoln and White Pine counties. An acre-foot is the volume of water needed to cover an acre of land with water 12 inches deep — about 326,000 gallons.
Both sides say they're confident heading into the hearings.
"We are confident that the science, the facts and the law support our case that the state engineer's decisions should be reversed," said attorney Simeon Herskovits, who represents over 350 Nevada and Utah plaintiffs in the hearings. "There isn't the amount of water available to export without devastating effects upon senior water rights holders, the environment and the communities in the region."
Plaintiffs include ranchers, farmers, environmentalists, rural local governments, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Confederated Tribes of the Goshute Nation.
Water authority spokesman J.C. Davis said his agency is confident that Estes will rule in its favor. The water authority serves the desert gambling metropolis that is home to some 2 million people and attracts 40 million visitors annually.
"The process for granting water rights in Nevada is rigorous and has been in place for more than a century and the Nevada state engineer followed that process to the letter here," he told The Ely Times. "We believe the judge's review will verify that the Nevada state engineer acted in accordance with Nevada water law."
Las Vegas officials seek to build the 263-mile pipeline to reduce the city's dependence on the drought-prone Colorado River. The Colorado flows into Lake Mead, southern Nevada's main water source. A study projected moderate to severe water shortages over the next several decades.
Both sides agree Estes' ruling won't be the last word on the pipeline project.
"Unfortunately, continued litigation is almost a foregone conclusion," Davis said. "The fact is, moving through permitting and litigation is far more time-consuming than building the project itself."
In 2009, the same court in Ely overturned the state engineer's ruling awarding the water authority water rights in three of the four valleys, saying the engineer had "abused his discretion" and the groundwater in question was already appropriated.
A previous ruling by the state engineer granting the water authority water rights in Spring Valley was invalidated in 2010 by the Nevada Supreme Court in a separate case brought by the Great Basin Water Network, which is helping to lead the fight against the pipeline project.


以上廢話.....

btw...呢度我真學左好多英文
2013/6/12 05:26 PM
K-ON柴可夫CK!

#20 回覆 #19 K-ON柴可夫CK! 的帖子
diu, too long didn't read
2013/6/12 05:33 PM
keith_keith

#21 回覆 #19 K-ON柴可夫CK! 的帖子
no say chinese la, you up what 7 a
2013/6/12 07:07 PM
米奇wovgha

#22
diu le HKBN, tortoise internet speed in no contiuous contract
2013/6/12 07:10 PM
keith_keith

#23

da u faking idiot murican need translate?
2013/6/12 07:24 PM
on9987

#24 回覆 #23 on9987 的帖子
Lete o, ti epta ennea ?
2013/6/12 07:39 PM
keith_keith

#25 回覆 #24 keith_keith 的帖子
Haha retarded Greek don't understand Russian.
drink some vodka before talk to me
2013/6/12 07:59 PM
on9987

#26


2013/6/12 08:09 PM
keith_keith

#27

僕小浩
2013/6/12 08:43 PM
小浩

#28
2013/6/12 09:21 PM
我不會喔

#29
fils de pute
2013/6/12 09:37 PM
小浩

#30 回覆 #28 我不會喔 的帖子
Cock μητρα σου
2013/6/12 11:07 PM
52013146a26skps

#30 >>下頁

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