Jon Stewart on the recent corruption case in NJ:
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Hey, C’Mon That’s Not … Why Would You …Whoa! | ||||
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Jon Stewart on the recent corruption case in NJ:
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Hey, C’Mon That’s Not … Why Would You …Whoa! | ||||
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Just a heads up, I’m putting a conscious effort into updating my book blog, books to the sky, with some regularity this summer, so that’s where a lot of my blogging energy is going, which is why I am posting here less. So go add that blog to your RSS reader. The special bonus is that I’ve got some friends helping me recap some old favorite books (we’ve tackled everything from Christopher Pike to Laurell K. Hamilton to the bags full of category romances a friend gave me).
On this day in 1945, a small plane crashed into the Empire State Building. I’ve been fascinated by this story since I first read about it a few years ago, and to me it’s remarkable because of the many odd things that came together: a plane flying low over Manhattan, a building being able to structurally withstand being hit by a plane. Later, the World Trade Center would be designed with the idea that a plane crash was a possibility, although back in the early 70s, I can’t imagine that anyone would have conceived of that plane crash involving a 757.
Anyway, this is maybe the most interesting fact from the post linked to above:
Betty Lou Oliver, on the 80th floor, barely escaped the crash, but when rescuers attempted to lower her out of the building via the elevator, the cables snapped and she and the elevator car plummeted 75 stories (over 1,000 feet). She survived.
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