
Trash Panick
Trash Panic (ゴミ箱, Gomibako) is a puzzle video game for the PlayStation 3 developed by SCEJ.It was released in Japan on March 19, 2009 on the PlayStation Network download service, and has been compared to EA's Tetris on the PS3 and its direct successor Puyo Puyo Tetris in terms of gameplay, though the object of the game is to compact items of garbage, not remove rows of blocks.
Allison and Mike Gurley in a photo shot earlier this year, before their trip to Las Vegas. The Gurleys stayed at Mandalay Bay during the Oct. Allison GurleyThere was no theater or nightclub for police to surround, no school or office building to lock down.The attack on Las Vegas unfolded in the open, and there was nothing to contain the panic and confusion.The shooting itself lasted less than 15 minutes.
The ensuing chaos stretched on for hours, swallowing the Strip and the valley beyond.Resorts 3 miles from the scene went on lockdown. McCarran International Airport suspended flight operations. Authorities blocked traffic on two of the state’s busiest stretches of road.The Oct. 1 attack on the Route 91 Harvest country music festival left 58 people dead and wounded an additional 546. Allegiant Air employee Maria Mackert, a mechanic, sits inside Allegiant Air’s maintenance facility at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Monday, Oct. Joel Angel Juarez Las Vegas Review-Journal @jajuarezphotoThen the swarm came.About 300 people fleeing the shooting breached the airport’s security fence, ran onto the tarmac and eventually brought takeoffs and landings to a halt for more than two hours, forcing the diversion of 25 flights into Las Vegas.Some people scaled the fence. Others crawled through holes punctured in the barrier.
The razor wire atop the fence ripped their clothing and left some of them with minor abrasions.About 35 of them ran about a half-mile east across the airfield to Allegiant’s 18,000-square-foot maintenance base, a last remnant of the extinct Terminal 2.“People were crying and freaking out,” Mackert said. “I just kept trying to tell them that they ran to a safe place. They really did not know the danger they were in while running from danger.”One man repeatedly plunked coins into the break-room vending machine to buy chips and snacks.
Pretzels usually saved for airline passengers were handed out along with bottled water, soda and juice.People with ripped clothes draped themselves with blankets. Employees shared cellphone chargers and computers with those wanting to send messages to concerned family members. Others cried while recounting what they saw and heard.“There were people who just wanted a sympathetic ear, and they just wanted somebody to listen,” Mackert said. “That’s what I tried to do.”— Art Marroquin‘It was sheer panic, basically’Ian and Wendy Gomm had come to Las Vegas from Sheffield, England, for 10 days of vacation.They visited Fremont Street, ate good food and, on Oct.
1, hung around the pool at the Luxor, where they stayed.Ian Gomm, 52, said he wasn’t familiar with the Route 91 Harvest festival, but other guests at the pool were clearly excited about it. They played country music and sang and danced along.At about 9 p.m., the Gomms visited the Skyfall Lounge on the 64th floor of the Delano, where they took photos and video of the Strip.They didn’t know anything was wrong until after they took the elevator to the ground floor.They saw a crowd of people running, shouting and screaming about a gunman. Ian Gomm heard banging. Time crisis 4 booting.
He and his wife ran with the group.“It was sheer panic, basically,” he said. “You didn’t know whether you were doing the right thing. You didn’t know whether to run or stay.”They made it back to the Luxor at around 11:15 p.m.
They turned on the TV to watch the news. About an hour later, a voice came over a speaker in their room to announce that the hotel was on lockdown.That Monday, the Strip was somber. Ian Gomm felt upset walking around.
They left for England the next day as scheduled.Back in England, he said he absolutely will return to Las Vegas someday.“You can’t live your life worried,” he said. “I won’t be put off by anything.”— Wade Tyler Millward‘Out-of-their-mind scared’Judith Schulz was working a cash register at the Rebel gas station on Tropicana Avenue and Koval Lane where she is an assistant manager. First, she heard the shots. Then she saw the wave of people. Judith Shulz was working a register at the Rebel gas station on Tropicana Avenue and Koval Lane on Oct. 1 when her store was swarmed with people fleeing from the Route 91 Harvest Festival. Judith Shulz“There was just a swarm of people coming across the street,” she said.
“Running, screaming, bleeding.”She watched them run through traffic and jump the fences of the airport across the street.“My store got bombarded with people,” she said. “They were sitting along the cooler doors, around the chips, the floor, the slot machines.”Schulz said she had 50 or more people inside her store at one point, with dozens more in the parking lot.“Everybody was just, like, out-of-their-mind scared.”— Blake Apgar‘Like walking into the apocalypse’Entrepreneur, actor and TV personality Forbes Riley was attending a private party at the Foundation Room near the top of Mandalay Bay when the shots rang out.The Las Vegas skyline glowed in the background as she took photos with friends. Like many, she thought the first crackle of gunfire was fireworks.She watched the entire shooting unfold below as thousands of concertgoers fled the festival grounds in panic.
Others lay still on the ground.She checked her phone but couldn’t figure out what was going on.Her group was ushered back inside the restaurant, and within minutes someone entered and screamed for everyone to get on the ground face down.“I turned around, and I just see a giant machine gun,” she said.Not knowing it was the police, she bolted back out onto the terrace to hide behind a large flowerpot. Before she could find a better hiding place, a SWAT officer yelled at her to put her hands up.Riley wound up spending 12 hours in the Foundation Room with 50 other people. While they were locked down, they weren’t allowed to even use the restroom without an escort, she said.
She was released from the restaurant at about 9:30 a.m.“I go downstairs with my friend, and there’s nobody in the Mandalay Bay,” she said. “You know, casinos are never quiet. There was not a sound of any machine or anything.”As she walked down the Strip barefoot with her high heels in hand, she noticed the cars were gone too. Patrol car lights were still flashing, but she didn’t hear a sound as she walked hand-in-hand with her friend.“It was like walking into the apocalypse,” she said. “It really was.”— Blake Apgar‘I have to get home to my son’Allison Gurley and her husband, Mike, spent three nights in Las Vegas to celebrate her 46th birthday on Oct. 1.They were in their third-floor room at Mandalay Bay and learned about the shooting from Gurley’s mother in Boston, who called at around 11 p.m.
After seeing it on the news.Gurley hadn’t heard any gunfire. She kept the lights off and avoided the window. Outside she could see helicopters.Her sister texted her reports of multiple shooters. Later, her sister informed her that the shooter was inside Mandalay Bay.Gurley’s calls to the hotel front desk and room service went unanswered. All she got was hold music.“In hindsight, I’m sure everyone went home or was busy helping,” she said. “What was scary was not knowing what was going on.”To stay quiet, she kept the TV off.
She checked Twitter and found tweets about a car bomb at the Luxor. She thought about the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and the 2013 marathon bombing in Boston, where she lived at the time.She asked her husband over and over when it would end. She worried the building would explode. They reviewed the evacuation route. Do they stay? Do they leave?
Do they help?“I have to get home to my son,” she thought.They heard sirens. She got startled by the air conditioning turning on.Around 3:30 a.m. Click to see an interactive of the stories in this article.The mini-vacation was a surprise for the kids. The adults left them notes as clues about where they were going. One read, “Something you see on this trip will be very ‘Bad.’”“I was using the song title as a clue, and now of course it has an entirely different meaning,” Nelson said.The show halted during the “Billie Jean” number. The audience was informed there would be a delay. The show never resumed.“The kids turned around, looking for something happening in the show, because there is a lot of audience participation,” Nelson said.
“But after eight or 10 minutes, people started realizing by looking at their phones that something was really wrong, and there was a shooter upstairs at the hotel.”For many minutes, audience members took cover in the theater’s rows and aisles and awaited directions from hotel security and arriving police officers.At about 1:30 a.m., the first group of audience members was allowed to leave the theater for a shuttle to the Thomas & Mack Center, where those displaced by the incident were being sent. Because of the minors in the group, Nelson’s party was on the first bus out.“The only thing I can compare it to is that final scene in ‘Titanic,’ walking through all of the survivors trying to get to lifeboats,” Nelson said. “People in the lobby were shoulder-to-shoulder, waiting to get out. It was the first time in my life where I felt I could not guarantee my own children’s safety. We were all just in react mode.”— John Katsilometes‘This is my hometown’David Crisler was jolted awake at 12:20 a.m.

الوصفAfter receiving huge critical acclaim in the media and at video game shows around the world, Trash Panic™ is here.It’s time to get your hands dirty and pit your wits against the waste in the crazy puzzle game everyone’s talking about: we supply the trash, you try not to panic!Filled with explosive, cartoony style, Trash Panic™ is a colourful, frenetic and utterly addictive challenge. Who’d have thought waste management could be this much fun?A conveyor belt carries an unstoppable stream of rubbish towards your dustbin – and your job is to make sure all of the junk fits in. As everyday objects – from pencils, teddy bears and dumb-bells to barrels, bikes and bags of potatoes – arrive for disposal, you must think quickly, and tactically drop each item to efficiently compact the bin’s contents and score points.Use heavy items to smash the trash, set fire to waste that will burn; some litter even rots away when it comes into contact with the right substances.Will you dispose of your garbage using ‘Eco’ or ‘Ego’ play? Ecologically-minded Trash Panickers get rid of their garbage by breaking it down or helping it decompose. If you’re more interested in burning everything in sight and detonating exploding items, it’s definitely the Ego route for you.
Either way, just keep your eyes peeled for valuable items that have been thrown away by mistake – let one slip through and you’ll be showered with a punishing rain of penalty trash!Visit eu.playstation.com to find out more about Trash Panic™ and the exciting world of PlayStation®Network.Full Game Support:1-2 Players; 1.2MB minimum save size; HDTV screen resolution: 720p; Network FeaturesTERMS OF SERVICEDownload is subject to the PLAYSTATION®Network Terms of Service/User Agreement and any specific additional conditions applying to this item. If you do not wish to accept these terms, do not download this item. One time fee for use of downloads on up to 2 activated compatible Home Console. systems.
See Terms of Service for further information.Trash Panic (C)2009 Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. Published by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe.