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IMPERIAL BEACH, Calif. - A shark warning was in effect for a Southern California beach Thursday after a group of surfers spotted a great white just off the coast, CBS affiliate K stanley cups FMB-TV in San Diego reports.The surfers in Imperial Beach saw some dolphins scatter Tuesday morning, and then the shark s dorsal fin appeared, lifeguard Capt. Robert Stabenow said.Photographer Jeff Wallis was taking pictures when he captured the image.City News Ser stanley mug vice says the shark is estimated to be 16 to 18 feet long. Imperial Beach is south of San Diego.An Imperial Beach lifeguard saw the image online Tuesday and alerted his colleagues, who tracked down the photographer and interviewed him. The nonprofit Shark Research Committee and Scripps Institution of Oceanography looked at the picture and confirmed that the fin appeared to be from a great white.Stabenow said great white sightings in the area are very rare. We hope most of the community heeds the warning and stays out of the ocean for the next few days, he said.Stabenow said the number of surfers Thursday morning appeared down slightly, th stanley tumblers ough dozens were bobbing on their boards in the same general area. Unless the shark is seen again, the warning will expire Friday, Stabenow said.Great whites, which can grow up to about 20 feet, mainly subsist on sea lions and other sea mammals. ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5 { display: none; Ficv 24 minutes of Star Wars heroes and villains dancing their Hutts off0 z. e- _6 E% T3 n Y3 J5 v2 C9 j
One of the more interesting aspects of urban life during the bombing raids of World War II was the clever and strategic re-designing of the London streetscape so that residents could live in a state of blackout. By turning off the lights at night, resident stanley cup s could hide the city from aerial view and thus leave Nazi bombers flying around in the darkness, unsure of where to drop their bombs. It was a different form of camouflage, one that hid the city against the surrounding landscape by plunging its streets and buildings into darkness. An obvious problem immediately presents itself here, however, which is that with only very minimal outdoor lighting to guide them, how were cars, pedestrians, trains, and even dogs supposed to navigate the city safely A meticulous and detailed re-painting of everyday objects and landmarks was thus launched, with everything from curbs to clothing getting rhythmic white bands and stripes added to them for easier detection. Here are some photos, all courtesy of the Hulton Archive at Getty Images, showing life in wartime London adapting through the application of black 038; white graphic design and some makeshift interior decoration鈥攕tripes became a kind of enforced stanley cup zeitgeist鈥攁ll to help fool the Nazi bombers buzzing far above. From white bumpers on cars, applied with a quick coat of paint鈥?鈥攖o steps, curbs, and even lampp stanley cup osts, the city became a monochromatic pattern of reflective stripes and checkerboards, stuttering their way from borough to |
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