Wednesday 29 October 2008

Nation of the shit from camel turned around


Nation of the shit from camel turned around: Insisting in killing the Nat West bastard is old your tricks. Even for my “old schizophrenia”. The annoying me putting de bolina serrada um tipo the type of Mendelson, selling his profile at Zulu/Zebra. ‘Planted’ like a bastard, at the Tesco to represent not land, not North but virtual fight of ongoing piggy faces from Brussels and Strasburg with me and with the inevitable MACD of money. In prick similarity with that from nation of the shit from camel turned around commissar in Geronimos many years ago to explain ongoing piggy faces from Brussels and Strasburg. Energia Europeia de dois cavalos?

Geração de Maradona encara novo desafio
Ter, 28 Out, 11h05  A escolha inusitada de Diego Maradona para treinar a seleção principal da Argentina apresenta a mais um jogador de ponta nos anos 80 e 90 o desafio de repetir, no banco, a carreira bem-sucedida nos gramados. Dunga, Klinsmann, Rijkaard, Van Basten, Simeone e Guardiola estão por aí, com resultados variados.

Qantas jumbo 'flying blind'

October 29, 2008, 5:30 pm  1). A Qantas jet has been forced to use an Air New Zealand plane as a flying 'guide dog', after its weather radar failed over the Pacific Ocean. The Boeing 747 landed in Sydney from Los Angeles today. Flight QF12 with 280 passengers on board was three hours into the flight when the weather antenna developed a fault. The pilots still had their navigation systems and air traffic control to stay on track but were unaware of weather patterns up ahead. They made contact with the Air New Zealand plane, 35km away and on the same route, and used it as a guide to make a diversion to Auckland. Some Qantas passengers had a clear view of the other plane out the window. "The pilot said we were flying blind across the Pacific," one passenger told 7News. A spare part was waiting in Auckland and the plane landed in Sydney four hours late. 2). Also today a Qantas 767 bound for Sydney was forced to turn back to Melbourne with landing gear problems. These incidents are the latest in a string of recent problems for the airline. Last week a Qantas flight between Brisbane and Adelaide landed without using air brakes because of a problem with the wing flaps. This follows the mid-air plunge of a Qantas Airbus A330 over Western Australia and a 747 that was forced to land after an oxygen tank exploded during a flight, ripping a hole in the fuselage.

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