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Added on the 07/11/2018 15:37:49 - Copyright : Wochit
Charlize Theron says Seth Rogen took her "under his wing" when they worked together on new romantic comedy movie 'Long Shot'.
Les hommes du détachement spécial de lanciers sont prêts à revenir à la base après une journée passée à escorter les camions irakiens dans Sadr City. Mais le peloton reçoit l'ordre d'effectuer une ronde supplémentaire près de la mosquée, où des échauffourées ont été signalées dans la journée.
In cinemas from May 20 - Subscribe for more: http://bit.ly/20thCenturyUK In DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: THE LONG HAUL, based on the record-breaking book ...
Emergency service workers continued to inspect the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) train that derailed at Brooklyn's Atlantic Terminal on Wednesday morning, injuring 103. The train was traveling at around 15 miles per hour and was carrying 650 people on board when it slammed through a metal bumper designed to keep it on the tracks. Glass from the windows shattered and passengers were thrown around. Emergency services blocked roads around the station before quickly evacuating the passengers and rushing the injured to hospital. None of the injuries were deemed life threatening. The underlying cause of the incident remains unconfirmed, however, authorities suspect human error as the leading reason behind the crash. Investigators were called in after all passengers were evacuated and began to inspect the derailed train, which is the second major accident in the metropolitan to occur in the past 5 months. A major derailment occurred in September 2016 when a New Jersey commuter train derailed at the Hoboken station, injuring 114 and killing one. Authorities interviewed the engineer, conductor, and brakeman and tested all the staff for alcohol and drugs. The LIRR is the United States largest commuter rail system, running 24 hours a day, every day of the year and carrying around 330,000 passengers daily.
Thousands of workers at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi are still working to contain the damage, five years after the country's worst nuclear disaster. Natasha Howitt reports.
Thousands of workers at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi are still working to contain the damage, five years after the country's worst nuclear disaster. Natasha Howitt reports.