Gondola Micro

Gondola Micro
Z scale MT BN SD40-2 AZL boxcars, gondolas, tankcars and centerflow hoppers

Baggage Car

Baggage Car
Moving B&O baggage car #633

Baggage+Car

Chestnut Ugg Boots sale 165171 (Coin Talk)

Mid back pain is amongst the most prevalent maladies that folks make a
complaint about within this era. Upper back pain is undoubtedly a result of
bad posture, sitting down at your personal computer, in addition to working
out with out stretching as well as not exercising at all, hefty lifting,...

Coin Talk

Utility Truck

Utility Truck
Utility Truck Beds

Utility+Truck

FLEX: Nuclear Industry Disaster Plan Created To Meet NRC Rules (Huffington post)

ATLANTA (AP) — If disaster strikes a nuclear power plant in the U.S., the
utility industry wants the ability to fly in heavy-duty equipment that could
avert a meltdown.

That capability is part of a larger industry plan being developed to meet new
rules that emerged since a 2011 tsunami struck the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear
plant in Japan, flooding its emergency equipment and causing nuclear meltdowns
that sent radiation leaking into the environment. The tsunami exceeded the
worst-case scenario the plant was designed to withstand, and it showed how a
widespread disaster that damages a nuclear plant can complicate emergency
plans.

The effort, called FLEX, is the nuclear industry's method for meeting new U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission rules that will force 65 plants in the U.S. to
get extra emergency equipment on site and store it protectively. As a backup,
the industry is developing regional hubs in Memphis, Tenn., and Phoenix that
could truck or even fly in more equipment to stricken reactors. Industry
leaders say the effort will add another layer of defense in case a Fukushima-
style disaster destroys a nuclear plant's multiple backup systems.

Read More...

More on AP

Huffington post

Cement Truck

Cement Truck
Cement Truck Unloading Cement

Cement+Truck

Police cruiser hit by truck during chase (Atlanta Leader)

SAVANNAH, GA (WTOC) - A Savannah-Chatham Metro Police cruiser was hit by a
cement truck Thursday morning while following a suspect's vehicle. It happened
at Montgomery Cross Road and Waters ...

Atlanta Leader

Scale Wiking

Scale Wiking
Fire Truck - N Scale Wiking.avi

Red Led

Red Led
Chris DeBurgh - Lady In Red

Red+Led

Huskers' Burkhead back at the perfect time (ESPN)

RexWatch 2012 gripped the state of Nebraska for more than a month, as all who
love Big Red focused on one man's tender left knee. TV stations led off...

ESPN

Saw Mill

Saw Mill
Woodland Mills HM126 Portable Sawmill Promotional Video

Saw+Mill

Building a better world (MIT)

MIT senior Arfa Aijazi might say that her path to the Institute started with
the yeast-powered fuel cell she made for a high-school science fair — a
project that led her to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair.
“The fact that I could model a natural phenomenon using things I found around
the house was really exciting” Aijazi says.

Or maybe it started before that, when a routine frog dissection in ninth-grade
biology class took an unexpected turn, and Aijazi found out what a pregnant
frog looks like on the inside. “You don’t always get what you expect,” Aijazi
says. “That uncertainty and sense of discovery with science” fascinated her.

Or perhaps it started years earlier, when Aijazi — now a materials science and
engineering major and an applied international studies minor — peered through
a microscope in her father’s pathology lab and tried on his much-too-large lab
coat.

In any case, when Aijazi was accepted to MIT, in her words: “That was it. I
didn’t need to apply anywhere else.”

**New people and places**

But Aijazi, who hails from northern Virginia, didn’t feel completely at home
right away. Now vice president of MIT’s Muslim Students’ ...

MIT

Cyl Hopper

Cyl Hopper
06.07.11 Weathering a Saskatchewan Cyl. Hopper with Prof. Monotone. Re-Run