Bebq Moussaoui Faces Death Penalty
Updated at 4:20 p.m. ETHIALE
stanley cup AH, Fla. A man set fire to his South Florida apartment, killed six people, and held another two hostage at gunpoint before a SWAT team stormed the complex and fatally shot him Saturday, according to police and witness accounts. I m heartbroken, Mayor Carlos Hernandez told reporters during a Saturday afternoon news conference.
stanley tumbler It s an extremely sad day in Hialeah. The ordeal lasted eight hours, with Pedro Vargas running through the building, firing at random and eluding officers for part of it, police said.Vargas, 43, set a combustible liquid on fire on Friday evening to start the blaze, police spokesman Carl Zogby said. The building manager and his wife noticed smoke and ran to the apartment. Vargas came out and shot several times, killing both of them, according to the police account.Shamira Pisciotti told CBS Miami station WFOR-TV the property managers were her parents, 68-year-old Samira and 78-year-old Italo Pisciotti. I heard about 15 to 20 shots, and so I went outside, and my neighbors were screaming that my parents have been shot, Pisciotti said.Vargas then went to his fourth-story balcony and fired 10 to 20 shots in the street, killing a man who was parking a car outside, Zogby said. Then, Vargas went down to the third floor, kicked the
stanley cup door in on another apartment and killed a man, his wife and their teen daughter.Zogby said Vargas then ran through the building, firing at random, in a very irrational fashion. He kept Eycm This Utility Truck Can Exterminate a Pothole Every 120 Seconds
Ants are incredible little creatures, known especially for their complex societies and teamwork, but we ;ve never quite seen them work together like this. In this video, the speed of the internet meets the deliberateness of the scientific enterprise and reveals the limitations of each. Earlier this week, a viral video on the site LiveLeak revealed an unexpected sort of teamwork among ants. In or
stanley taza der to haul their millipede prey back to the nest, a group of ants formed a daisy chain, with each ant biting onto the rear of the ant in front of it. When ant expert Alex Wild came across the video, he did what any good scientist would do: turn to
stanley becher the literature to see if the curious behavior had ever been documented. It hadn ;t: 8230;the clip appears to show an Asian Leptogenys daisy-chaining their bodies in parallel lines to haul away a large millipede. I have spent the morning searching the technical literature for mention of this unusual behavior, and am coming up empty. Some Leptogenys species, including L. diminuta, L. nitida, and L. processionalis, are known to forage in groups and transport prey cooperatively source, source . What is meant by cooperative is often vague. For more, see this excellent recent review of cooperative transport by Helen McCreery . Yet I didn ;t find any explicit description of workers linking up, mandible to
stanley cup abdomen, to pull together. What Wild did find, however, was another video of a similar be