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By Joseph Ax<br><br>NORRISTOWN, Pa., June 15 (Reuters) - The scene outside the courthouse where 12 jurors are determining Bill Cosby's fate at his sexual assault trial devolved on Thursday into a circus-like atmosphere, complete with dramatic confrontations, marching drummers and a bubble machine.<br><br>Cosby, 79, was inside the courthouse waiting for the jury verdict on charges of drugging and sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, then a college administrator, in 2004.<br><br>The jury told Judge Steven O'Neill earlier in the day it was deadlocked after more than 30 hours of deliberations but he ordered them to continue.<br><br>On the steps of the courthouse, plenty of people had already made up their minds.<br><br>"It went from being a joke to all of this calamity," said a man holding a sign that read "Free Mr. Cosby" who would only give his first name, Garvey. "Everything I heard points to him being innocent."<br><br>The once-beloved comedian has been accused of sexual abuse by approximately 60 women, but only Constand's allegations have led to criminal charges. Cosby has denied all of the claims.<br><br>Several of the women, who have been awaiting a verdict all week, got into arguments with a number of Cosby supporters who appeared at the trial for the first time on Thursday.<br><br>With television cameras capturing every moment, Lili Bernard, who has accused Cosby of raping her while she was a guest star on his 1980s hit TV series "The Cosby Show," read a Bible passage aloud to Cosby defenders before tearfully hugging a friend.<br><br>Jewel Allison, a former model who says Cosby assaulted her in the 1980s, faced off against a woman holding a sign that read "Bill Cosby is innocent" in capital letters. Allison held the woman's hand as she tried to persuade her to change her mind and told the woman she would have had the same opinion if she had never been alone in a room with Cosby.<br><br>Minutes later, the sound of drumming filled the air as a woman carrying a sign reading "Perseverance To All Survivors" pranced down the sidewalk firing a bubble machine. Two men wearing dark plastic masks and carrying drums marched behind her.<br><br>Earlier in the week, the woman had driven a U-Haul truck around the courthouse with a drawing of a middle finger with Cosby's name on it plastered to the outside.<br><br>As the rhythmic drumming continued, Victoria Valentino, a former Playboy bunny from the 1960s who says Cosby assaulted her decades ago, danced to the music on the courthouse steps. (Editing by Scott Malone and Jeffrey Benkoe)<br><br>If you are you looking for more information on jewel star check out our own web site.
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jewel star - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.jewelstar. By Alan Baldwin<br><br>LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - The Formula E electric motor racing series and FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) have agreed to avoid any clashes on next year's calendar, chief executive Alejandro Agag said on Monday.<br><br>Formula E's draft 14-race 2017-18 calendar runs from Dec. 2 to July 29 next year and was published last month.<br><br>Next year's Le Mans 24 Hours, the jewel in the WEC crown with a crowd of around 260,000, has been confirmed for June 16-17 but dates for the remaining rounds of that championship have yet to be announced.<br><br>Some top Formula E and WEC drivers, such as the reigning electric series champion and leader Sebastien Buemi of Switzerland, compete in both championships.<br><br>That has posed a problem this year, with two races in New York on July 15-16 clashing with the Nuerburgring Six Hours. Buemi is set to race for Toyota in Germany, leaving him just two more Formula E races in Canada in which to defend the title.<br><br>"So we managed for next year to avoid any clash with WEC, which is good news," Agag told Reuters.<br><br>"We cannot really try to avoid clashes with Formula One. But as we don´t have common drivers, it´s no problem."<br><br>Formula One's commercial rights holders Liberty Media have already agreed with the governing FIA that their 21 race season will not clash with Le Mans, as it did last year.<br><br>In 2015 there was no overlap and the endurance race at the Sarthe circuit was won by a Porsche crew that included then-Force India Formula One driver Nico Hulkenberg, now with Renault. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris)

Revision as of 11:55, 25 November 2017

jewel star - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.jewelstar. By Alan Baldwin

LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - The Formula E electric motor racing series and FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) have agreed to avoid any clashes on next year's calendar, chief executive Alejandro Agag said on Monday.

Formula E's draft 14-race 2017-18 calendar runs from Dec. 2 to July 29 next year and was published last month.

Next year's Le Mans 24 Hours, the jewel in the WEC crown with a crowd of around 260,000, has been confirmed for June 16-17 but dates for the remaining rounds of that championship have yet to be announced.

Some top Formula E and WEC drivers, such as the reigning electric series champion and leader Sebastien Buemi of Switzerland, compete in both championships.

That has posed a problem this year, with two races in New York on July 15-16 clashing with the Nuerburgring Six Hours. Buemi is set to race for Toyota in Germany, leaving him just two more Formula E races in Canada in which to defend the title.

"So we managed for next year to avoid any clash with WEC, which is good news," Agag told Reuters.

"We cannot really try to avoid clashes with Formula One. But as we don´t have common drivers, it´s no problem."

Formula One's commercial rights holders Liberty Media have already agreed with the governing FIA that their 21 race season will not clash with Le Mans, as it did last year.

In 2015 there was no overlap and the endurance race at the Sarthe circuit was won by a Porsche crew that included then-Force India Formula One driver Nico Hulkenberg, now with Renault. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris)