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Everything posted by -HuNTeR-

  1. Nickname: Maviea Video author: NADIYA FF Name of the game: GreenaFreeFire Link video: Rate this video 1-10: 7
  2. The Home Village is at the core of Clash of Clans and our goal is to continue to make every facet of Clash as exciting and dynamic as possible. In this update we’ve got some major changes that will impact training your Army and upgrading your Home Village. So let’s dive right in! Zero Cost Training In this update, we’ve removed all Gold, Elixir, and Dark Elixir training costs for Troops, Spells, and Siege Machines. You read that correctly - training your Army will cost ZERO Elixir or Dark Elixir as of this update. We want players to try new strategies and tactics without the worry of spending resources when you’re unsure if that strategy or Army build will even work. In order to allow players to experiment with wild new tactics, removing training costs will grant you greater freedom to try out those zany ideas you’ve been concocting! Army training time and housing space requirements are still present. The Training Boost perk from the Season Challenges will now only affect training time. Players will no longer receive returned resources when donating to a Clanmate. Donation Refunds from Clan perks have been removed. Events will no longer discount training for Troops or Spells. Elixir loot in Legend League has been reduced to match Gold loot. Elixir Cost Changes Due to the increase in available Elixir from the removal of training costs, we’ve made some changes that primarily affect lower Town Hall levels: Starting at Town Hall level 5, Walls will be able to be upgraded with either Gold or Elixir. The Clan Castle now requires Elixir to upgrade at all levels. The amount of Elixir required is the same as the former Gold cost. "Remove All" Function from Army Training No longer will you need to remove units from your Army one at a time! Before, clearing your entire Army was a tedious process of having to manually remove every unit on an individual basis. On your trained Army tab, you’ll see a new trashcan button added next to each category (Troops, Spells, & Siege Machines). Tapping that button will remove every unit that has been trained. Now you can clear out your previous roster and create a whole new one faster than ever
  3. Nick Movie: Hot Skull Time: / Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: / Trailer:
  4. Music Title: Future - WAIT FOR U (Official Music Video) ft. Drake, Tems Signer: Future Release Date: 20h ago Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer: very good singer Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video): -
  5. Fortnite is getting a new weapon presumably with the next update: the Scoped Revolver. Another week, another questionable new item added to Fortnite. We’ve recently seen the addition of Boom Boxes, which have not gone down well at all, and the introduction of planes with Season 7, which have divided opinion since they were introduced. The new Scoped Revolver looks like it will be just as divisive. If you jump into a Fortnite lobby right now, you will be greeted with the following in the news section ‘Six-shot pistol that packs a punch and provides perfect accuracy at range’ What we effectively have here is (what looks like) the Deagle, anyone who even slightly knows how to aim’s favourite weapon, with a scope attached, which doesn’t exactly set the mind racing. Some of the weapons of late have been uninspired, such as the Suppressed Sniper Rifle, and have been slight tweaks based on what we’ve already seen. This Scoped Revolver looks like the replacement for the recently vaulted Six Shooter. We won’t know exactly how good or bad this weapon will be until it’s added, which we also don’t know the exact date of — the driftboard was due to be added at some point (it even has its own Loading Screen) but has not popped up yet after it required some further testing. The 7.20 patch is due out on Tuesday or Wednesday, so we may see something then.
  6. Tony Wittman , a former soldier, held a young woman at gunpoint after losing cat Bailey Scarlett showed up for a late shift at the Melbourne Lost Dogs Home Soldier told Ms Scarlett 'if you do as I say and listen to me I won't shoot you' Wittman told police he had been to both East Timor and Afghanistan twice each A former soldier blamed post-traumatic stress disorder caused in part by two army tours in Afghanistan for holding a woman hostage in an attempt to get his cat back. Armed with an assault weapon and dressed in full military-style clothing, Tony Wittman held the young woman at gunpoint as she showed up for a late-night shift at the Melbourne Lost Dogs Home. Bailey Scarlett initially believed, because of his militaristic appearance, that he was legitimately there and that something had happened in the area. Armed with an assault weapon and dressed in full military-style clothing, Tony Wittman held Bailey Scarlett at gunpoint as she showed up for a late-night shift at the Melbourne Lost Dogs Home Wittman, 45, claimed his unhinged actions were the result of his desperation to get back the cat that had helped him through episodes of post-traumatic stress disorder, itself the result of 16 years in the Australian Army. He claimed to police he had been to East Timor and Afghanistan twice each, and to Aceh after the Boxing Day Tsunami. But Australian Defence Force records show he was a reservist for just two days shy of two years between 1995 and 1997, discharged for failure to provide efficient service. 'You really are the worst kind of evil human that makes the newspaper headlines today,' Ms Scarlett told Wittman on Wednesday. She questioned why he would inflict a diagnosis of PTSD on another person, as he had done to her. 'You came prepared for war, and a war against a totally defenceless animal welfare carer,' she said. 'All of this over something I was not responsible for.' Wittman had made an appointment for January 12 last year to pick up his cat from the home, but decided the night before that he couldn't wait. He went at 8pm, two hours after the home closed to the public. He later went back at 10.30pm as Ms Scarlett arrived for work. Wittman demanded to know where the cats were kept and after Ms Scarlett said she didn't have keys for the cat he demanded she get on her knees. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10541637/Unhinged-soldier-stormed-Melbourne-animal-shelter-looking-cat.html
  7. FRANKFURT -- BMW plans to step up its production of electrified vehicles, CEO Oliver Zipse told a German newspaper. "We already had ambitions growth plans and want to further expand our market position," Zipse said in an interview with the Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper published on Sunday. Between 2021 and 2023, BMW will build 250,000 more electric cars than originally planned," Zipse said. Electrified vehicles will account for about a fifth of BMW's sales by 2023, up from about 8 percent now, he added. Zipse denied that BMW and other German automakers had underestimated electric-car maker Tesla, which is building its first European factory near Berlin. Tesla's growth and market share gains, from a low base, were "an impressive entrepreneurial achievement," Zipse said. Zipse said his "biggest concern" is that Germany's transition to electric cars will be hampered by a lack of charging infrastructure, with Europe's biggest economy expected to have as many as 10 million of the vehicles on the road by 2030. To cope with this amount, 15,000 private and about 1,300 public charging points would have to be put into operation every week starting now, Zipse told the paper. "Unfortunately we are far from that," Zipse said. "Therefore, the next big joint project in Europe must be to expand charging infrastructure." Bloomberg and Reuters contributed to this report
  8. Paris - Five-time Ballon d'Or winner Cristiano Ronaldo will earn €162 million from his contract with Nike, documents in the latest Football Leaks revelation carried by Der Spiegel magazine showed on Friday. His most recent deal, which is to run until 2026, also included a bonus of €4 million for winning the individual award, according to a draft contract. Ronaldo, who joined Juventus in 2018, after trophy-laden spells with Real Madrid and Manchester United, has had a contract with the US clothing giant since 2004 which "guaranteed him a base fee of €3.65 million". "For as long as Ronaldo plays for a Category A club, he was to be paid €16.2 million each year," the German publication said. Nike responded to the reports saying: "We do not comment on athlete contracts." The best-paid German included in the report, Arsenal midfielder Mesut Ozil, earns €1.2 million a year from Adidas. The figure dropped by €800 000 after he retired from international football in
  9. Three scientists who discovered how cells sense and adapt to oxygen levels have won the 2019 Nobel Prize. Sir Peter Ratcliffe, of the University of Oxford and Francis Crick Institute, William Kaelin, of Harvard, and Gregg Semenza, of Johns Hopkins University share the physiology or medicine prize. Their work is leading to new treatments for anaemia and even cancer. The role of oxygen-sensing is also being investigated in diseases from heart failure to chronic lung disease. Sir Peter said: "I'm honoured and delighted at the news. "It's a tribute to the lab, to those who helped me set it up and worked with me on the project over the years, to many others in the field, and not least to my family for their forbearance of all the up and downs." The Swedish Academy, which awards the prize, said: "The fundamental importance of oxygen has been understood for centuries but how cells adapt to changes in levels of oxygen has long been unknown." Oxygen levels vary in the body, particularly: Why does this matter? The oxygen-sensing ability of the body has a role in the immune system and the earliest stages of development inside the womb. If oxygen levels are low, it can trigger the production of red blood cells or the construction of blood vessels to remedy this. More red blood cells mean the body is able to carry more oxygen and is why athletes train at altitude. So, drugs that mimic it may be an effective treatment for anaemia. Tumours, meanwhile, can hijack this process to selfishly create new blood vessels and grow. So, drugs that reverse it may help halt cancer. "The work of these three scientists and their teams has paved the way to a greater understanding of these common, life-threatening conditions and new strategies to treat them," Dr Andrew Murray, from the University of Cambridge, said. "Congratulations to the three new Nobel Laureates. This is richly deserved." How was the discovery made? Levels of hormone erythropoietin (EPO) were shown to rise as those of oxygen fell. And the scientists discovered this was because a cluster of proteins called hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) was changing the behaviour of DNA, the genetic code. Further work showed when oxygen levels were normal, cells constantly produced HIF only for it to be destroyed by another protein, VHL. But when oxygen levels fell, VHL could no longer stick to HIF, leading to the build-up sufficient levels to change the behaviour of DNA
  10. Your Nickname: Maviea Your Age : 20 How you could help us a Devil harmony member ? : "As a Devil Harmony member, My daily posts and I contribute innovative ideas to fuel the project's growth, suggesting features, events, and collaborations that resonate with our audience. How much you rate Devil harmony project from 1 - 10 ? : 10 Other information about your request ?: Yes, Please Give Me Access To Closed The Topic Last request link : First Request
  11. Hi Everybody I'm here to announcement my new server -zombie-»- Palestinezm Waiting for you all, i still search for admins/managers ! Ip:45.146.253.59:27088❣️

  12. Double down with new episodes of THE CUPHEAD SHOW, coming soon to Netflix. Based on the award-winning video game, THE CUPHEAD SHOW! follows the unique misadventures of loveable, impulsive scamp Cuphead and his cautious but easily swayed brother Mugman. SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 222 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries, feature films and mobile games across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. THE CUPHEAD SHOW! New Episodes | Official Teaser | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix
  13. One of the most remarkable things about this Resident Evil 2 remake is that it makes zombies—the slow, shambling, groaning kind—exciting again. The undead in this game are incredible, horrible things: shuffling lumps of bloody meat who batter down doors, tumble through broken windows, and lunge hungrily from the shadows. They're physical and clumsy and an absolute joy to kill—if you have the ammunition to spare. Shoot a leg off and they keep coming, dragging themselves along the floor, reaching at you with pale, clawing hands. Turn a corner, and as your flashlight beam catches their glassy white eyes they screech and trudge towards you, arms outstretched, jaws slung with glistening blood. They don't sprint or explode or sprout thrashing parasites like they do in newer Resident Evil games. They just moan and lurch and grab, and there's something enjoyably back-to-basics about that—a feeling that echoes through every claustrophobic hallway of this confident remake. After the subversive, rule-breaking Resident Evil 7, with its grimy Southern Gothic aesthetic and intimate first-person horror, Resident Evil 2 is a return to a more familiar style of game. It's a remake, but it's never a slave to the source material, adding or cleverly remixing enough elements to make it feel brand new. You can still play as two characters—Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield—and a few fan favourite bosses and locations have been recreated. But even moments of fan service are given some kind of interesting twist or fresh angle, which is, honestly, not what I expected from this remake at all. The grand, imposing Raccoon City Police Department was always a great setting, but the shift to three dimensions makes it magnificent. While the original game relied on fixed camera angles and the distant moan of unseen zombies to build fear, the remake uses light, shadow, and layout to get under your skin. Some parts of the station have been plunged into darkness, forcing you to pick through the gloom with a flashlight. The building itself is a labyrinth of blind corners, shadowy recesses, and warren-like corridors, creating a constant feeling of apprehension and unease. The station is essentially a giant box of puzzles, and an absence of objective markers, beyond a few marked points of interest, means you have to draft a mental map as you play. At first most of the building is locked up tight, or obstacles such as the burning wreck of a crashed helicopter block the way forward. But as you explore you find items that let you delve deeper, and slowly but surely the maze of halls, offices, atriums, and stairwells starts to feel familiar. I also like how dead zombies stay put, even after reloading a save, as I'd often use their corpses as a kind of macabre breadcrumb trail. But navigating the station and deciphering its many riddles and puzzles is only half the battle. The zombies, as much fun as they are to scrap with, can take a hell of a beating. Their health seems to be randomised, meaning that you can empty ten bullets into one and it'll keep crawling after you, while another will be put down permanently by just a few shots. And whichever dice roll governs the chance of an explosive headshot is weirdly stingy. This makes the zombies unpredictable and tenacious, as zombies should rightly be. But it also teaches you a hard lesson that every bullet in this remake is precious, and if you can slip past an enemy rather than killing it, you probably should. Then there's the Tyrant, a hulking great mutant in a trench coat (and a hat, which you can shoot off) for whom gunfire is little more than a minor inconvenience. At certain points in the game this merciless, invincible killing machine will hunt you around the station with grim persistence. You can track his movements by listening to the heavy thud of his footsteps, but other than blinding him with a flashbang, evasion is your only real option. He's also attracted to gunfire, which adds further weight to decisions involving fighting regular zombies. Do you waste ammo and risk alerting the Tyrant? The way he walks slowly towards you, unflinching and emotionless, is genuinely unsettling—especially when he suddenly appears at the end of a long corridor. And he's always lurking near items you need to progress, which is brilliantly cruel. But I would have liked more ways to interact with him, because eventually these run-ins start to feel rather one-note, and the fear can mutate into frustration. Even the ability to throw something to distract him would have made these sections more interesting, but as it stands the concept feels underdeveloped. Similar to Resident Evil 4, the difficulty of the game adapts as you play. How it actually works is obscured, but whatever's going on behind the scenes, the balancing is quite masterful. For the entire nine hours it took me to finish my first run as Leon, I felt constantly on the verge of catastrophic failure. I always had a handful of bullets, little or no health items, and I kept wondering if I'd backed myself into an inescapable rut. But I'd always scrape through, and it's hugely impressive how the game managed to maintain this knife-edge tension from start to finish. The good news is that if you sacrifice ammo to clear an area, it'll stay clear. More zombies can spill through open windows, but you can block these up with wooden boards. This gives you some breathing room, especially when you're being chased by the Tyrant. The last thing you need is zombies clawing at you when you're trying to run to safety. Counter-weapons can also tip the balance. If you have a grenade or a combat knife in your inventory and something grabs you while you're low on health, you'll avoid death: stabbing them with the blade or shoving a grenade in their mouth. So the game isn't completely relentless in its attempts to sabotage you, but for every inch it gives you, it rudely snatches one right back. It's never really that scary, though. Unnerving, tense, and sometimes overwhelmingly stressful, sure, but there's nothing particularly understated or psychological about it. But that was always Resident Evil's thing: zombie dogs crashing loudly through windows rather than the psycho-sexual mind-beasts of Silent Hill. Still, Resident Evil 7 had some effectively surreal, eerie moments, and I would have liked some of that to make its way into this remake. If you can't deal with the stress, there is an 'assisted' difficulty option that adds generous auto-aim and makes a small amount of health regenerate automatically. But, honestly, the game just isn't very exciting when your item box is heaving with an abundance of spare shotgun shells and healing herbs. When you finish your first playthrough, you've really only seen half of what the game has to offer. The second uses the same locations and has many of the same story beats, but the puzzles are different, enemy types and locations are mixed up, and you take a different route through each of the game's three major locations. What I love about this so-called 'B' scenario is how the game uses your knowledge of the setting against you. Walking into the RPD main hall as Claire, a protected haven for Leon, and seeing zombies in there was a fun subversion. It's just a shame the intensity of the Tyrant is amped up to such a preposterous degree. He's constantly looming over your shoulder, which I ultimately found a bit annoying. As a longtime fan of the original Resident Evil 2, I enjoyed the remake's many self-aware attempts to clarify some of the more abstract stuff in the game—such as why a sewer system is powered by plugs shaped like chess pieces, or why a police station would inexplicably theme its keys and locks around playing card suits. There are other cute references to the old games to find as well, but they're pretty subtle and don't feel forced. This could have easily been a game targeted squarely at diehard fans, but if this is your first Resident Evil you could get your head around everything in minutes—another example of how refreshingly simple the remake is. The story is really no more complicated than: zombies everywhere, get to safety. Which makes even the relatively pared-down narrative of Resident Evil 7 seem overly complex. Some of the voice acting and writing are pretty bad, and not 'fun bad' like in the old PlayStation games: just regular bad. The second act, which takes place in a dingy sewer, slows the action down to a crawl. And I was glad when the section where you play as Ada Wong, solving hacking puzzles while the Tyrant stalks you, was over. But otherwise, this is pretty much the ultimate refinement of the classic Resident Evil formula—but with the added intensity of RE4's slick, dynamic over-the-shoulder combat. The result is a game that is comfortably among the best in the series, and a thrilling survival horror experience in its own right. It's not as surprising as RE7, but as an evolution, and a celebration, of vintage Resident Evil, you couldn't ask for much more.
  14. A great effort must be made to invest in energy efficiency, the use of clean energy and the promotion of the circular economy, both in hotel establishments and in destinations At the beginning of the year, the INE reported that the tourism sector, as a result of the pandemic, had lost its weight in GDP to 5.5% in 2020 compared to 12.4% in 2019. This trend has been reversed in the 2021 The fabulous vaccination campaign, the anticovid protocols, the savings stored during the hardest months of the pandemic and the global economic recovery have allowed the sector to recover a good part of its weight in GDP. This trend is expected to continue this year as a more intense arrival of international travelers is added to the recovery of national tourism. If so, it is expected that the tourism sector will represent around 10% of GDP this year, a trend that could be reinforced in 2023. This high weight of tourism in GDP is consubstantial to Spain due to its climatic conditions and its wealth of heritage. But beyond the debate about what should be the optimal size of the tourism sector in the midst of this commitment to the reindustrialization of European economies in order to make it more resistant to external shocks such as the recent pandemic, the reality is that a reconfiguration of the The tourism industry would already make a very important contribution to both the resilience of the sector and the economy in general. A reconfiguration that is already designed by the Government of Spain and that can receive a strong boost from European funds. In essence, the change implies adapting the industry to a new scenario where the motivations of travellers, increasingly aware of the protection of the environment and the fight against climate change, and increasingly eager for tourism experiences and knowledge, must be fully satisfied. Carrying out this adaptation process successfully requires a powerful use of new technologies. In this sense, a great effort must be made to invest in energy efficiency, the use of clean energy and the promotion of the circular economy, both in hotel establishments and in destinations, as well as in the care of nature in our environments. More than an added value to the tourist offer, we are talking about an inexcusable condition: given the growing pressure of demand on natural resources and destinations, and the consequent saturation and environmental degradation of certain spaces, or we face the problem of sustainability with determination or we will put at risk the viability of the tourism model and its contribution to the economic and social development of the country. On the other hand, it is necessary to spread our cultural heritage while always preserving its identity as a differentiating element. To make it attractive, it is necessary to integrate physical and virtual elements with new technologies to strengthen the exhibition discourse and offer higher quality products, tailored to the needs of visitors, so that their experience is as unique and complete as possible. . Obtaining quality data and managing it effectively will be essential to be able to develop these necessary products, above all, to promote rural and inland tourism. If we are successful in this adaptation, we will achieve an industry profile that is more committed to the green transition, more diversified and decentralized. This will not only promote the sustainability of the sector, with spaces less saturated and better distributed throughout the country, but above all, it will improve the quality of the contribution of the tourism sector to the Spanish economy in various ways: making coexistence of the tourism with the citizen; breaking the marked seasonality of the sector; creating new business models and higher quality jobs; and distributing in a fairer and more equitable way the benefits that visitors bring both throughout the territory and throughout the entire network of actors who dedicate their lives to inspiring and working for the high tourism values of the Spain brand. Link: https://elpais.com/economia/2022-02-11/transformar-el-turismo-para-hacer-a-la-economia-mas-resiliente.html
  15. BY JAY REEVES, Associated Press HALEYVILLE, Ala. (AP) — Tending a thrift store that displays a faded Trump flag in a nearly all-white Alabama county with a long history of going against the grain, Dwight Owensby is among the area's many skeptics of the COVID-19 vaccine Owensby, 77, said he doesn't often watch TV news or read the local paper, and he doesn't spend much time talking about the pandemic with others — it's just not a big topic in this rural, heavily forested part of the state. But he suspects the coronavirus pandemic was planned, as a discredited conspiracy theory holds, and he said there's no way he's getting any shot. “If it’s your time to go, you’re going to go. If it ain’t, it ain’t gonna bother you,” Owensby said. He isn’t alone in Winston County, which ranks last in terms of people who have been fully vaccinated in a state that has the country's lowest vaccination rate, according to federal statistics. To many here, the pandemic isn’t much of a concern. Businesses are open and relatively few people wear masks, even though Alabama’s rule requiring them to be worn in public wasn't scheduled to end until Friday. A Union stronghold where some pushed for secession from pro-slavery Alabama during the Civil War, Winston County is a prime example of a problem that health officials say they’ll have to overcome to end the pandemic: Many white conservatives such as Owensby aren’t lining up quickly enough for vaccines. The 25% of Americans who say they probably or definitely won’t get vaccinated tend to be Republican, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, and then-President Donald Trump carried 90% of the vote last year in Winston County, which was his highest margin in Alabama. The county’s po[CENSORED]tion of roughly 23,700 is 96% white, and many work in small manufacturing plants. More than 2,700 people have contracted COVID-19 in Winston County, putting it in the middle of the pack statewide, and 71 have died of the disease. Yet only 7.3% of the county’s residents, or about 1,730 people, had been fully vaccinated as of Thursday. That’s about one-third of the percentage in Alabama’s leading vaccination counties, which tend to be heavily Black and vote Democratic. As Winston County's sheriff and the publisher of the local newspaper, the Northwest Alabamian, which has covered the pandemic and vaccination effort closely, Horace Moore has a unique perspective. Whereas he and many of the paper's workers have gotten shots, Moore doesn't know of a single colleague on the sheriff's office's 33-person staff who has gotten one. “I wish they’d get it, but I’m the only one,” he said. Moore is baffled by the reluctance, which a poll commissioned by the state health agency in March showed isn’t unique to Winston County, which is about 65 miles (105 kilometers) northwest of Birmingham. It found that about half Alabama’s residents were either somewhat or very unwilling to be vaccinated. Skepticism cut across racial and ethnic lines in the poll, but a pattern is obvious: Both large and small, urban and rural, the counties with the state’s lowest immunization rates all have mostly white po[CENSORED]tions, and Trump carried all but one by wide margins in November. By contrast, counties with the highest vaccination rates are more likely to have large Black po[CENSORED]tions that favored Democratic President Joe Biden. The differences may reflect the politicization of the pandemic since its outset, with Trump repeatedly downplaying the virus' threat, at least early on, and Republican-led states pushing more aggressively to lift mask orders and restrictions meant to slow its spread. While state-funded public outreach and National Guard-run vaccine clinics have helped boost immunizations in mostly Black areas of Alabama, officials are trying to figure out how to increase them among rural white people who think shots are more dangerous than COVID-19, which has killed more than half a million Americans. “I would say we are struggling a little bit with how to develop a message to reach that group. It’s not clear what the most effective strategy would be to reach them,” said Dr. Scott Harris, head of the Alabama Department of Public Health. In Winston County — known as the “Free State of Winston” for its anti-Confederate tendencies during the Civil War — some say vaccine supply is more of a problem than vaccine reluctance. Lakeland Community Hospital in Haleyville said it has immunized more than 2,000 people and is awaiting additional doses. “Our only hurdle so far has been vaccine availability,” CEO Ashley Poole said in an email. Down the street from the hospital, a worker at a Walmart store was vaccinating people as quickly as she could on Monday, the first day Alabama expanded eligibility to everyone age 16 or older. Doctors at nearby Family Medical Associates often encourage patients to be vaccinated, but demand isn’t universal, said office manager Vijaya Reddy. “Some people want to take it and some do not,” she said. That description fits Sharon Harris and Kristie Mobley, co-workers at a rural convenience store. Harris already has had both her shots, and she wasn't nervous about getting either. “I was glad to,” she said. Mobley is among the leery, however. Her fiancé has gotten a shot, she’s helped others find vaccination appointments, and she knows people who had to go on ventilators after contracting COVID-19, but Mobley is waiting. She wants to see whether others suffer long-term side effects from vaccines, which officials say are extremely unlikely. “I’m just going to wait and make sure you don’t grow a third eyeball or something,” she said. ___ Associated Press writer Kim Chandler in Montgomery contributed to this report. Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
  16. I got my account back 

  17. Equip a sailor with a breathing apparatus and they can enter flooded sections of the boat to repair the damage, and hopefully salvage at least some of the wet cheese. That pregnant, half-minute pause between launching a torpedo and seeing it connect with its target is as thrilling as always. It’s by far the best bit of any submarine game, as a hush of anticipation descends on the crew – like they’re waiting for the Eurovision results – and the sonar guy gravely counts down the seconds until impact. Then an almighty kabloom, and on the pitch-dark horizon a hot orange fireball illuminates a rising plume of thick smoke. You did it. Hundreds of British sailors are dead and burning, or singed and drowning in the English Channel. That’s one in the eye for Churchill, and one step closer to victory for the Nazis. Or if you’d prefer not to alter the course of history, just do as I did and get jammed sideways in a harbour on your third mission, while attempting an elaborate 47-point turn to extricate yourself from a narrow dock. All that it takes to defeat fascism is for incompetent men to get their dumb submarines stuck in a bit of the scenery for absolutely ages.
  18. Music Title: MORO - TEMA CA - CLIP OFFICIEL [ MAVERICK ] Signer: Moro Release Date: 8 Jan. 2022 Official YouTube Link: Information About the Signer: - Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video): -
  19. The Investigation Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice forwarded copies of the controversial statement by former congresswoman Aida Merlano Rebolledo, convicted of electoral corruption and today a fugitive from justice, to the Attorney General's Office and the Investigation and Accusation Commission of the House of Representatives , so that the investigations that are considered pertinent can be carried out. https://www.eltiempo.com/justicia/cortes/aida-merlano-reacciones-de-duque-santos-uribe-a-compulsa-de-copias-651158
  20. Lion famous for his gnarly face and exceptional mane was celebrated for long reign at top of many prides. It is seldom a death at 14 is celebrated with awe, but for conservationists, the passing of Scarface of natural causes marked a remarkable end for the most famous lion in the world. “With its death, the Mara has lost yet another iconic lion,” said the Nation newspaper, with the Kenyan Wildlife Service reporting he “died in peace without any disturbance from vehicles or hyenas”. Nicknamed because of the scar about his eye, he became sought after by tourists and conservationists, partly because of his gnarly face and exceptional mane but also because of his long reign at the top of many prides. The Scottish wildlife photographer George Logan behind the Born Free Foundation book Pride Before the Fall, described him as the “rockstar of the Mara”. “Lions are lucky to get to 15. For the previous week, we’d been receiving messages, photos and videos from Kenya, showing Scar obviously struggling and nearing the end. “It’s quite rare for a wild lion to die peacefully and of natural causes, but thankfully and fittingly, this is what has happened for Scar. He lived wild and free right to the end, in the land of his birth,” he said. Most male lions last two or three years as the king of the pride and are killed by rivals or become weak from their battle injuries and set upon by hyenas. But not Scarface. “Even near the end, he defied logic by dragging himself 25km back in the direction of his original territory, near to where he was born. We feared the worst when we saw him in close proximity to the Salas males [lions], a trio of the most ferocious young males in the Mara, but they respectfully let him be, even when he defiantly snarled at them,” said Logan. Scarface was the second surviving member of one of four male lions known as “the four musketeers coalition” because of their long domination over a variety of prides. “He had this exceptionally big mane, which apparently makes lions more attractive to females. He was quite unique and stayed at the top so long with this crazy appearance and big personality. I would say he was the most famous lion in the world,” said Logan, who is part of a campaign to protect the remaining lion po[CENSORED]tion which has gone from 100,000 in the 1960s to just 20,000. He says the pandemic and disruption to tourism has devastated funding of conservation efforts with revenue that pays for rangers and anti-poaching patrols completely “eroded”.
  21. The affected person, asymptomatic and who according to Barça has not had contact with the players who will play the Champions League, is one of the nine players who started the preseason today The Football Club Barcelona has reported this Wednesday of the existence of a positive for Covid-19 in the group of nine players who today should start the preseason: the new incorporations (Trincao, Pedri and Matheus Fernandes), in addition to Todibo, Wagué, Aleñá , Rafinha, Miranda and Oriol Busquets, who were returning from their respective assignments. All of them are players who will not be part of the expedition that will head to Lisbon this Thursday, where Barça will face Bayern one day later in the quarterfinals of the Champions League. According to Barcelona, the affected footballer, who underwent PCR tests on Tuesday afternoon and has already been isolated, has not been in contact with the members of the first team that will play the continental competition. The Barça club, in any case, maintains that people who may have had some contact with the positive have already been traced so that they are subjected to PCR tests. The members of the Barcelona A-list squad who will play the final eight of the Champions League will go through a new test, already in Lisbon and before the game against the German champions. To date, and in the face of this ghostly return to the Champions League, only Atlético had to report two positives (Correa and Vrsaljko), who will cause loss in this Wednesday's duel against Atalanta.
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