GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) — Officials say a U.S. team is expected soon in the South American nation of Guyana to probe the crash of a Boeing 737 jetliner that all 163 people aboard survived.
Authorities so far have given little idea about the cause of Saturday's crash. The Caribbean Airlines plane ran off the end of a runway at Guyana's main airport and broke in two. About 30 people had to be treated at a local hospital, including the pilot.
The airline is largely owned by the government of Trinidad and Tobago and its prime minister has visited the crash site. Kamla Persad-Bissessar says she is worried that the accident will hurt tourism to the Caribbean, a region that depends heavily on the industry. [Reply]
I haven't seen a beatdown like this since I watched a guy kick some 90 y/o's ass. The old guy touched this other guy with his left hand, and left this brown hand-print on the dude's shirt. It smelled like ass, and everybody thought the dude was homeless because he was wearing shit-smeared clothes.
The guy demanded $20 from the old guy for dry cleaning. The old man threw his shoe at the guy, and the guy pulled the towel off the old man's head and snapped him with it.
I was going to come to the old dude's defense, but I was too busy posting in Frankie's stupid thread. [Reply]