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Lotus-Inspired Radford Type 62-2 Revealed, Tesla Cybertruck Delayed Until 2022, And Where Did The NSX Go Wrong: Your Morning Brief

Lotus-Inspired Radford Type 62-2 Revealed, Tesla Cybertruck Delayed Until 2022, And Where Did The NSX Go Wrong: Your Morning Brief
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Vandalism to road signs an accident waiting to happen

“After each weekend we are finding road signs that have been deliberately rammed and broken. It’s mindless vandalism – the signs are there to warn of speed, or corners and of hazards and their removal poses a real road safety risk.’’ He had recently driven on the Wreys Bush-Mossburn Road and saw four signs knocked over in a two-kilometre stretch. “As a tight-fisted farmer and councillor who is trying to keep rates down it is incredibly frustrating.’’ He urged residents to take care on the roads, and to report any suspicious behaviour to police. Robyn Edie/Stuff Road signs are being vandalised in northern Southland and Southland District councillor John Douglas is concerned someone will be killed.

Can they bring it home? Why the redemptive message of Les Miserables is the perfect last-ditch choice for Invercargill Musical Theatre

Michael Fallow13:07, Jul 09 2021 Robyn Edie/Stuff “You in the barricades, listen to this! No one is coming to help you to fight . . . .’’ The chilling words from an unseen National Guardsman taunt the terribly outnumbered and outgunned student revolutionaries in the musical Les Miserables . The words have echoed through countless Invercargill rehearsals in recent months, each time drawing the defiant response: Damn their warnings, damn their lies They will see the people rise Ah. Now about that . These are lines that take on an extra resonance for the local company staging one of the world’s most beloved, certainly emotional, musicals.

Potentially explosive substance was in Catlins museum for decades

Museum vice-president Janette Buckingham said the discovery had come as a shock. “It is quite surreal because none of us had any idea. “Even looking up our records would not have told us.” She had been told the acid was a potential hazard “but there is nothing to say it was going to blow up in our faces’’. June Leith, a volunteer at the museum for eight years, said she would have dusted the acid container during the years. “It is a bit scary after hearing what it was.” Southland District Council publications specialist Chris Chilton said that for the past several years staff had been checking inventory at museums to look for items that could potentially become unstable overtime.

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