Ïîäðîáíàÿ èíôîðìàöèÿ: | Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down
Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Photo: BPI
Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Photo: Google Maps
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Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Photo: Google Maps
Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Photo: Google Maps
Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Photo: Google Maps
Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down Photo: Google Maps
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Photo: Google Maps Image 1 of / 28 Caption Close Aircraft noise to stop fast food restaurant from closing down 1 / 28 Back to Gallery
The U. S. military is trying to stop a fast food restaurant from closing its doors with a $200, 000 lawsuit, after reports of loud noise from a nearby home caused a family to close their door to the dining establishment last month.
Military police officers and air traffic controllers from around the area were called to a home on Oct. 6 to investigate a noise complaint by Michael and Carolyn LaMair, who live in the town of Greenville, Va. , according to a federal complaint against the LaMair's.
The LaMair's said a neighbor reported that loud noise was coming from inside the home when she went out to take a shower after closing her kitchen door, the complaint reads.
She heard muffled sounds from a refrigerator in the living room and saw what appeared to be flying objects that were "like a cloud, " she said.
The couple also complained about noises coming from another apartment building in the area, which she said "is constantly ringing. "
Officers eventually knocked and asked the couple what was the problem, and they told them a construction worker from their neighbor had brought a large box of construction materials near the LaMair's home, according to the lawsuit.
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Sandilands suspended again over magda jibe
RUGBY star and Queensland Reds defender Russell Packwood has been suspended for one match after hitting up the club's medical room to complain about an article in the Sunday Mail that quoted him as saying he was considering retirement.
The article in the Sunday Telegraph quotes Packwood as saying he was considering retirement while saying he wanted his own club to be the priority of his off-field ambition.
But the 30-year-old said he would continue to play "for the club", despite the article's story claiming he was close to dropping the Reds in favour of returning to the Wallabies.
The former Canberra Raiders and Newcastle Knights representative is understood to have asked for the article's contents to be corrected when he met senior doctors at the club at its training base in the Australian Outback last week.
In a statement released on Friday, the Queensland Rugby Football Union said Packwood and three team members were suspended for the remainder of the club season for "misappropriation of information in a newspaper article".
"We are shocked by the actions of Russell Packwood and the team at the Sun, but in the face of this and other incidents that have occurred, we have suspended our first-choice representative, Daniel Folau, " said Queensland Rugby Football Union chief executive Michael Smith.
"Daniel and his team were suspended in view of the incidents they admitted as detailed in their statement and the fact they have no intention of sitting down or addressing any issue with Rugby Union, the Wallabies or our other stakeholders.
"At the end of the day, it is a club decision that is based on its integrity. "
Smith said there was an internal investigation ongoing and had "no further comment to make" regarding Packwood's appeal before the disciplinary panel.
Packwood was suspended with immediate effect from Saturday night's match against the Blues at Suncorp Stadium, with Packwood's representative, Dan Fitch, also suspended from the competition while appeal against the suspension is considered.
"Russell and his staff have acknowledged we are concerned and we are continuing to work with them, " Smith said.
"The media outlets involved are not welcome in our club and, in fact, will always be judged by us. "
Queensland Rugby Football Union president Matt Cecchin issued a statement on Friday saying he was "disappointed with the actions of the Queensland Rugby Football Union".
"My thoughts are with all our staff, players and players' families as we continue to rebuild our team, prepare for the season ahead and, of course, rebuild the Wallabies for 2016, " Cecchin said.
"It is very unfortunate that our club has come to this difficult decision following the publication of an article about a future decisio |