Showing posts with label World News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World News. Show all posts

Monday, 2 May 2011

Osama Bin Laden Died


Americans celebrated early Monday in a show of patriotism against the man who committed his life to attacking U.S. citizens, while those directly affected by Osama bin Laden's terrorist plots quietly reflected on the closure finally gained from his death.
In front of the White House, chants of "U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" filled the night air, and the quickly growing group spontaneously broke into an off-key rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner."
"I was in D.C. during 9/11. It's hard to believe, 10 years later, it's over," said Mason Wright, 33, who recalled his days as a student at American University, watching on TV as a second plane hit the World Trade Center in 2001.
"It's terrible to sit here and celebrate someone's death, but to the thousands of lives that were lost -- it's finally come to an end," he added.
Alan Comar, 29, clutched his girlfriend as he watched hundreds clad in red, white and blue gather in front of the White House.
"There's very few of those got-to-be-there moments," said the Washington resident, who worked as a contractor in Afghanistan. "This is one of them."
Dustin Swensson, who recently served in Iraq, echoed those comments, calling the news "historic."
"It's what the world needed," he said as he celebrated outside the White House gates. "(I'll) always remember where I was when the towers went down and I'm always going to remember where I am now."
The mood was much more somber at the Pentagon memorial a few miles away, where 184 people died when the hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 crashed there on September 11, 2001.
"Everyone was at the White House celebrating and hardly anyone was at the memorial," said Jessica McFarland of Arlington, Virginia. "I felt like this site put things in perspective. The people who died should never be forgotten."
In New York, a cheering crowd gathered at ground zero -- the site where the twin towers of the World Trade Center once stood. Strains of "God Bless America" could be heard intermittently trickling through the crowd.
One former New York firefighter -- forced to retire due to lung ailments suffered as a result of the dust from ground zero -- said he was there to let the 343 firefighters who died in the attacks know "they didn't die in vain."
"It's a war that I feel we just won," he said. "I'm down here to let them know that justice has been served."
Bob Gibson, a retired New York police officer, said the news of bin Laden's death gave him a sense of "closure."
"I never thought this night would come that we would capture or kill bin Laden," he said. "And thank the Lord he has been eliminated."
Private moments of reflection were happening, too, as loved ones of those killed in the September 11 attacks quietly marked bin Laden's death.
Patricia Sliwak-Grinberg said she started to cry when President Barack Obama began to describe the September 11 attacks as he delivered news of bin Laden's death. Her brother, Robert Sliwak, was a Cantor-Fitzgerald employee who died in the World Trade Center.
"I guess I'm happy," she said. "You want to be happy, but it's such a sad reason to be happy. ... You think of all those families and all those people who were sucked into this, when one person could be doing so much evil."
She likened the feeling to "what people feel like when someone has been killed and they finally capture or kill the person who did it."
"It's so odd because everyone puts you in this whole collective group, but you're still just one person who lost a brother," she said.
Carie Lemack, whose mother, Judy, was killed on American Airlines Flight 11 on September 11, expressed "relief."
In an e-mail to CNN, she said: "Cannot express how this feels to my family, but relief is one word. We hope we can now focus on all that that madman took, namely nearly 3,000 + innocent victims, and not on him."
Jim Riches, who lost his firefighter son Jimmy when the World Trade Center's north tower collapsed, said he was gratified when he learned of bin Laden's death.
"(My) son still isn't coming home," he told CNN. "(There's) no closure, but at last, at least some justice for the murder of 3,000 Americans, finally."
Gordon Felt, president of the Families of Flight 93, which crashed in a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, on 9/11, said that while the news could not "ease our pain, or bring back our loved ones, it does bring a measure of comfort that the mastermind of the September 11th tragedy and the face of global terror can no longer spread his evil."
Kevin Pillow, 29, was at the Stagecoach Music Festival in Indio, California, listening to Rascal Flatts play when the news broke. One of the band members mentioned the report about four songs into their set, he said.
"The scene was truly electric," Pillow said. "You could feel the buzz of the moment. Hearing the people erupt when he said it was a life moment."
At the Mets-Phillies baseball game in Philadelphia, people in the stands began chanting, "U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" as news of bin Laden's death spread through the crowd.
Elsewhere, spontaneous celebrations broke out on college campuses across the country.
Students set off fireworks outside a Vanderbilt fraternity house in Nashville, 22-year-old Chris McDonald told CNN's iReport.
"As college students, we were young at the time of the September 11 attacks," he said. "In many cases, (that) was the first moment we ever felt our country's strength and power challenged, so we have grown up with this constantly in our minds."
He described Monday's atmosphere on campus as "pure elation."
At Denison University in Granville, Ohio, Colleen Russo, 21, said she took a break from studying for finals to join fellow classmates packed into the residential quad, singing "Party in the USA" and "God Bless America."
"It was crazy, everyone was so unified and so excited," she told CNN's iReport.
CNN iReporter Chris Lemke, a media studies student at Penn State, also said he chose to forgo studying to participate in the jubilation.
People began to gather on the University Park, Pennsylvania, campus around 11 p.m. Sunday as word spread among late-night studiers by cell phone, he said. Crowds listened to Obama's address from a TV blasting out an apartment window and celebrated for hours afterward.
The moment had a particular resonance for 20-year-old student Kara Bergman, whose birthday is September 11. On the day of the terror attacks nearly 10 years ago, teachers at her school in Vienna, Virginia, told students there would be no recess, and they couldn't watch TV.
"Today, I remember the faces of those students, but right now I see the faces of my fellow classmates, who are putting their lives aside to surpass the vulnerability they felt on September 11, 2001, celebrating and working towards change," she told CNN's iReport.
Steve Rossero, a sophomore at Penn State, said he felt a surge of pride and patriotism as he looked over his balcony and saw masses of students chanting and screaming following Obama's speech.
"Just being American tonight, it's a great feeling."

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Saturday, 30 April 2011

Beatification Of John Paul II


They pray to him for healing, name their children and their schools after him, chant his words for inspiration in their neediest moments.
Six years after his death, Pope John Paul II remains the face of the Catholic Church for many of the world’s estimated 1 .1 billion Catholics. His continued hold on their imaginations will be evident Sunday as hundreds of thousands gather in Rome and millions more in front of televisions to watch the beatification of their hero.
The beatification ceremony — a Mass and day-long prayers beside John Paul’s coffin — is the next-to-last step before being designated a saint, a process that typically takes centuries.
The speed at which John Paul is being elevated is not without critics. On Saturday, victims of clergy sex abuse leafleted outside churches in 62 cities to protest the beatification and to urge Catholics to turn abusers in to the police.
Debate has only begun among historians and church scholars about John Paul’s legacy as a pope, whether he was too lenient on sexually abusive priests and too harsh on dissenters.
But to ordinary Catholics, it was his personal qualities that made him a spiritual superstar. People describe their lives being changed by his holiness, charisma, and a soul that allowed him to forgive his would-be assassin, confront communism and persevere through Parkinson’s disease.
“I don’t know how to explain him, the way he shows love. Something in his eyes goes inside you. I don’t know how to explain it,” Fatima Aybar, 46, a Bethesda home health aide, said as she pressed her palms to her heart.
It was John Paul to whom Aybar appealed to heal her from the lupus that was ravaging her body. And she believes he did. She wept, shuddered and giggled as she recounted the tingle and the warmth that raced through her body after a series of desperate prayers to John Paul — knowing she was healed.
“I kneeled and said, ‘John Paul, thank you, thank you!’ ” said Aybar, who was later declared lupus-free. She has submitted her medical records to the church in the hopes that she could be the second miracle needed to make him a saint.
Some experts think John Paul is being whisked through the saint-making process for one simple reason: his epic popularity.
Pope for more than a quarter-century, the Polish actor, skier and poet was one of the most important religious leaders of the past century. He expanded relations with Jews and Muslims, fought for democracy and globe-trotted hundreds of thousands of miles to put a handsome, vigorous face on a papacy that had largely been cloistered in Italy.
For many, John Paul remains the personification of a church now led by a decidedly less charismatic figure as it wrestles with everything from sex abuse to secularism.
Average Catholics don’t care “how he responded to the ordination of women or this or that about sex abuse,” said R. Scott Appleby, a historian of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame. “Their needs are more basic. People want someone who renews their hope and connects that to their faith in God. And on that level, he succeeded spectacularly. If you lose your big home-run hitter, you want to keep his presence alive, vital and immediate in whatever ways possible.”

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Friday, 29 April 2011

Camilla Parker Bowles


Picking out the perfect outfit for a royal wedding is the ultimate fashion challenge, but The Duchess Cornwall,Camilla Parker Bowles had a fail-safe strategy: go with what you know.
Camilla, stepmom to Prince William (now the Duke of Cambridge), wore a silk dress and coat by Anna Valentine Friday morning -- the same designer she chose for her own wedding to Prince Charles in 2005.

"The  biggest fashion upset was Camilla Parker-Bowles looking fabulous!" Entertainment Tonight fashion expertSteven Cojocaru tells Us Weekly of her champagne silk dress and hand-embroidered blue coat. "She was spot on in terms of looking perfectly day formal. She looked snazzy and dressed-up and dare I say glamorous."
Camilla accessorized with neutral Jimmy Choos and a topper by Philip Treacy, who also created stunning fascinators for Princess Beatrice and Eugenie in addition to several other wedding guests.

Commemorate Will & Kate’s big day with our Us Collectors Edition: Royal Wedding with all the photos, anecdotes and details of the wedding. Available for pre-order now and on sale May 6.

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NASA TV


Today’s space shuttle launch of STS-134, scheduled to be the final launch of space shuttle Endeavour at 3:47 p.m. ET was put on hold and scrubbed for today. NASA cited issues with the shuttle’s APU heaters as the reason for the cancellation of today’s launch.
Coverage of the launch, and now the postponment, can be followed in real time on NASA TV, or on the internet via NASA TV on the NASA.gov web site.
Endeavour was to begin its final journey into space today from the Kennedy Space Center just a little before 4PM local time today. Just before noon time at KSC NASA officials announced that the launch would have to be scrubbed for today.
The shuttle has internal auxiliary power units (APU) which provide back-up internal power to the shuttle and the heaters which are a critical part of the proper operation of the APU were reportedly having technical issues.
During its 2 week mission the Endeavour is scheduled to visit the International Space Station delivering an EXPRESS Logistics Carrier-3 and an Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, as well as some supplies.
The date for the next launch attempt, of what will be the second to the last shuttle mission for NASA, has not yet been announced.

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Sarah Burton Alexander Mcqueen


Sarah Burton
After months of speculation, promising leads and many red herrings, the wedding dress of Prince William's bride Kate Middleton is finally revealed and the designer is favorite Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen.

Befitting Kate's signature elegant, timeless style, the floor-length, ivory and white satin gazar gown features a V-neck, demure, long sleeves, and a full skirt with train measuring 2 meters and 70 cm, and a veil.

The bodice, meanwhile, is made from ivory satin, and draws from Victorian traditions of corsetry and is a hallmark of the late Lee Alexander McQueen's designs.

Sarah Burton has been the bet-makers' favorite for some time and is known for her exceptional tailoring and for the softer, more feminine approach she brings to the late Lee Alexander McQueen's celebrated, avant-garde label.

The beautiful and understated dress is made with hand-cut English lace while French Chantilly lace has been used throughout the bodice and skirt.

According to Clarence House, Kate Middleton was very much involved in the design of the stunning dress, the choice of which will be applauded by fashion journalists across the globe. The brand and the design were also chosen for their mix of traditional elements such as lace and the veil and train, with the modern tailoring for which Burton is known.

Kate, who weds Prince William this hour and henceforth becomes the Duchess of Cambridge, was successful throughout her engagement in keeping the dress a secret right up until she stepped out of the car bringing her to Westminster Abbey this morning, despite intense media speculation and almost every UK bridal wear designer considered.

Burton denied rumors, throwing many off the scent and prompting speculation that it would be designed by one-time McQueen employee Sophie Cranston.

But according to premier bridal wear designer Vera Wang, "It's very much what I expected, not so fashion-forward and won't age in photographs."

Kate's choice likely change Burton's career forever. According to Elizabeth Emanuel, who alongside husband David, designed Princess Diana's meringue dress for her marriage to Prince Charles in 1981, Burton's life will transform overnight.

"David and I at the time had just left college, we'd been out about a year, so when this all happened, it was just something so extraordinary, we were totally unprepared, we had no PR, no nothing and suddenly we were besieged by the media," said Emanuel.

"And it was just something that was incredible for us, it changed out lives, literally," she continued.

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Space Shuttle Launch



The final preparations are underway for the launch of space shuttle Endeavor. NASA reports that all systems are currently a go for the mission, the second to last in NASA’s space shuttle program.
Not only is it a historic flight, heralding the end of the program, but at Endeavor’s command is Mark Kelly, husband to Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. She will be there to watch the launch, along with the first family, and 116 other VIP guests from around the world, one of the largest invite lists for a NASA launch. Thirty-eight members of Congress will also attend, and700,000 spectators are expected to show up in Cape Canaveral to watch the launch.
The shuttle will be transporting “a $2 billion, seven-ton cosmic experiment about 17 years in the making,” writes The Post’s Brian Vastag. The Antimatter hunter “will sniff space for cosmic rays, antimatter, dark matter and other exotic and poorly understood phenomena.”
The Post will be streaming video from Cape Canaveral here at 3 p.m. Check back regularly for updates on the preparations.

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Nicole Seah Rally


Nicole Seah has caught the attention of many in Singapore.
Including retail chain City Chain, which The New Paper learned is hoping to snare her for an endorsement deal.
But, Miss Seah hasn't had time to think about the deal.
It was after all, the biggest day in her political career thus far. It was the first day of her campaign trail.
The New Paper's Bryna Sim followed her yesterday as she met Singaporeans on the MRT, and prepared for her first rally.

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Serangoon Stadium


Worker’s Party


Aljunied GRC
Serangoon Stadium,
33 Yio Chu Kang Road
1900 hours
.
Singapore Democratic Party
Yuhua SMC
Jurong East Stadium, 21 Jurong East St 31
1900 hours
.
Singapore Democratic Alliance
Punggol East SMC
Open field bounded by Sengkang East Ave and Sengkang East Drive
1900 hours
.
Singapore People’s Party
Hong Kah North SMC
Open field bounded by Jurong West Ave 3, Jurong West St 22, 23 and 24, diagonally opposite Blk 276D
1900 hours
.
National Solidarity Party
Radin Mas SMC
Delta Hockey Pitch,
900 Tiong Bahru Road
1900 hours
.
People’s Action Party
Ang Mo Kio GRC
Yio Chu Kang Stadium,
210 Ang Mo Kio Ave 9
1900 hours
Moulmein-Kallang GRC
Open field by Kallang Ave
1900 hours
Pioneer SMC
Jurong West Stadium, 20 Jurong West St 93
1900 hours

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Thursday, 28 April 2011

Morocco Blast


Up to 11 foreigners and three Moroccans have been killed after a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a popular tourist cafe in Marrakech.
The explosion ripped through the Argana Cafe in the city's Jamaa Lafna Square just before midday, killing 14 people in total and injuring up to 80 others.
A Downing Street spokesman confirmed that a consular team has been dispatched to the city following claims that a Briton was among the victims, although the report is still unconfirmed.
The explosion happened after gas canisters were set alight in the cafe, leaving the second floor of the terracotta building destroyed and awnings hanging in the street.
The blast is thought to be Morocco's worst bombing in eight years.
Officials confirmed several casualties from the explosion in the cafe's basement, but would not state specific numbers of those killed.
Witnesses described chaos and panic on the busy square in Marrakech after the explosion destroyed the cafe's entire second floor.
One worker at the cafe claimed that the alleged bomber blew himself up after sitting down inside to order food.
French posting on Twitter also claimed the bomber was dressed in a Real Madrid shirt, with other reports stating a French couple from Marseilles among the fatalities.
Jamaa Lafna Square, also known as Djemaa El Fna square, is a popular tourist destination known for its snake charmers, fire breathers and its old medina.
Moroccan officials confirmed they're investigating one report of the blast being caused by a suicide bomber.
A police spokesperson said: 'We can confirm that there have been reports of one.
'These tactics have been used by terrorists in Morocco in the past.'
Moroccan government spokesman Khalid Naciri said that the 14 dead came from a variety of countries but he did not say which ones.
Naciri told France-24 television: 'We worked for more than an hour, maybe less, on the hypothesis that this could eventually be accidental.
'But initial results of the investigation confirm that we are confronted with a true criminal act.'
Portuguese tourist Alexandre Carvalho, a 34 year-old call-centre worker, said, 'I had just arrived at the square, the area where most cafes are located.
Suddenly I heard this massive explosion, I had my back turned to it, I turned around to see it the explosion had happened on the veranda of a cafe.
'I saw people in a panic running towards the area with fire extinguishers, some people being carried away.
'I believe the injured were mostly tourists, judging by what they were wearing.'
A local police spokesman said: 'The canisters may have been set on fire deliberately and terrorism cannot be ruled out.
'This atrocity is currently being viewed as a criminal act. Evidence is being collected at the scene and survivors interviewed.
'We do not know victims’ nationalities yet, but there are certainly foreigners among them.'
Cafe Argana is mentioned in tourist travel guides as a place where locals rub shoulders with holidaymakers.
The upper terrace is regarded as one of the best places to see the sun set over the city.
Despite being a hugely popular tourist destination, Morocco has a history of Islamic terrorism, with western visitors warned to be on their guard at all times.
Officials did not say if they suspected the involvement of Islamist militants.
The militants' last big attack was a series of suicide bombings in Morocco's commercial capital, Casablanca, in 2003 in which more than 45 people were killed.
The Casablanca stock exchange was down 0.41 percent on news of the explosion in Marrakech. Before reports emerged of the blast it has been trading up 0.13 percent.
Describing this morning’s explosion, eye witness Andy Birnie, from north London, told the Associated Press: 'There was a huge bang, and lots of smoke went up, there was debris raining down from the sky.
‘Hundreds of people were running in panic, some towards the cafe, some away from the square. The whole front of the cafe is blown away.'
Mr Birnie, who was enjoying a honeymoon in Marrakech with his new wife, added: 'It was lunchtime so the square was very busy. We had just walked into the square, but were shielded by some stalls.
'The locals are telling us it was gas bottles exploding.'
A spokesman for Morocco’s Interior Ministry confirmed that the explosion appeared to be a 'criminal act'.
Abdul Dabi, a 32-year-old Moroccan witness, said: 'The explosion was huge – it ripped throughout the square sending debris everywhere.
'A number of us were able to run for cover. I managed to get behind a market stall. The café's entire second floor was destroyed.
'Police arrived very quickly and then there was panic.'
As well as Islamic terrorism, Morocco has also been affected by recent protests connected with the Arab Spring calls for democracy.
Protestors object to the country being run by Hassan VI, accusing him of being an autocratic who uses his army to carry out human rights abuses.
Tourism is one of Morocco's biggest industries, and those who oppose the regime frequently threaten to disrupt it.

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FEMA


Federal officials headed to Alabama Thursday to lend assistance and survey the damage from devastating tornadoes that left at least 131 people dead in the state and between half a million and a million people without power, federal and state officials said.
The death toll was sure to rise, officials said, as emergency personnel continued to search the wreckage covering 16 counties, with major damage in five, including a direct hit in the city of Tuscaloosa. Two-thousand state National Guard troops assisted rescue efforts, supporting local first responders and some help from other states.
Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley said the storms were so large and powerful that there was little anyone could do to prevent the large number of lives lost.
“People were very much aware of what was going on yesterday,” he said in a news briefing Thursday morning. “It’s very difficult to move everyone out when a tornado comes through that’s a mile wide.”
President Barack Obama declared a state of emergency for Alabama Wednesday and the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s regional director was on his way to the state. FEMA Director Craig Fugate said he would visit the state later in the day at the president’s request. “Alabama’s governor is in charge and we are in support,” he said. Mr. Fugate said he wasn’t sure whether the tornado outbreak could be tied to global warming.
“It’s spring,” he said. “People think of Oklahoma as tornado alley, but the Southeast has a history of more powereful tornadoes that stay on the ground longer.” He said this season had drawn comparisons to the so-called super-tornado outbreak of 1974.
Mr. Fugate said a multistate earthquake-preparation drill scheduled for today would continue in states not affected by the tornadoes. The drill, along with the tornadoes striking the South, floods in the Midwest and fires in Texas all highlighted the necessity for FEMA to be prepared for multiple disasters, he said.
Gov. Bentley said he had begun the process for an expedited request to the federal government for help with recovery from the storms. “We’ve got millions of dollars of damage in just a few blocks in Tuscaloosa,” he said.
The governor is a physician who practices at one of the hospitals that was treating storm victims. Members of his family were in the path of destruction but escaped unhurt. “I was concerned about my family, but I’m concerned about everyone’s family,” he said. “It’s very difficult when we hear the mounting numbers” of fatalities.

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Birmingham News


Birmingham
Birmingham, AL (WIAT) Mayor William Bell spoke to CBS 42 after touring the Pratt City/Smithfield area of Birmingham- the area that was hardest hit by the tornado Wednesday. Bell discussed a variety of topics related to the clean up efforts. Here is some of what he discussed:

Scott school will be a staging area where residents can come and get food and water.

FEMA will be in the area tomorrow. Most of the roads in the area are clear, and he expects to have large trucks and equipment in the area soon.

Bell recognizes that while this area was hardest hit that there is significant damage elsewhere in Birmingham. He specifically mentioned East Lake.

For now, Bell suggests donations of items go to Boutwell Auditorium for now. Eventually Scott School will be a place to bring items.

There will be 500 Alabama National Guardsmen in the area, some arriving tonight. They will be used for security and clean up efforts.

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Shuttle Launch


The US space agency, Nasa, is braced for gridlock around the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida on Friday amid expectations that hundreds of thousands of spectators will flock to the area for the final flight of thespace shuttle Endeavour.
Among the spectators will be Gabrielle Giffords, the US congresswomanwho miraculously survived a bullet through the brain when a gunman attacked a meet-and-greet session in Tucson in January, killing six people. She will watch the 8.47pm BST (3.37 ET) launch with President Barack Obama on what will be her first public appearance since the shooting. It is only the second time that a serving president has watched a shuttle launch at Cape Canaveral.
Doctors gave Giffords, the wife of shuttle commander Mark Kelly, the go-ahead to attend the launch, despite having removed a large chunk of her skull to relieve swelling, and an ongoing, intensive rehabilitation programme. After the launch, Giffords will return to Houston to continue her therapy.
The story of Giffords' survival against the odds has been embraced by Americans in the aftermath of the attack by Jared Loughner, who killed her aide, Gabe Zimmerman, federal judge John Roll, and nine-year-old Christina Green.
Giffords was shot through the left side of the brain, an injury that caused severe damage to areas that control language. Her daily routine involves hours of speech therapy and physical rehabilitation.
On Wednesday, followed closely by an aide, she slowly climbed the steps to a plane bound for Cape Canaveral.
Kelly, a US Navy captain and Desert Storm veteran, pulled out of training for the Endeavour mission to be at his wife's bedside, but rejoined the crew a month later as her condition improved. On being told she could attend the launch, Giffords reportedly responded with one word: "awesome".
Kelly told reporters at Kennedy Space Station: "She's been working really hard to make sure that her doctors would permit her to come, and she's more than medically ready to be here and she's excited about making this trip." The mission will be his fourth flight aboard the space shuttle.
Kelly will lead the six-member crew on a two-week mission to the space stationto deliver a seven-tonne instrument called the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer to the International Space Station. The equipment – which cost $2bn and took 15 years to build – will analyse particles in high-energy cosmic rays in the hope they shed light on the nature of dark matter, the invisible substance that clumps around galaxies and makes up a quarter of the known universe.
The instrument will also hunt for heavenly bodies, and even entire galaxies, made of antimatter.
Among Endeavour's other supplies is a platform loaded with spare parts that astronauts can use for basic repairs over the rest of the space station's lifetime.
Yesterday, Nasa forecasters said there was only a 20% chance that poor conditions would delay the launch on Friday. Should bad weather postpone the mission, it may not be rescheduled for two days to give Nasa workers time to get home and rest before returning for a second attempt.
After the final flight of the shuttle Discovery in February, crowds estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands, congested roads and added hours to journey times for Nasa staff.
Endeavour is the fifth and final space shuttle built by Nasa. It was constructed as a replacement for Challenger, which exploded with the loss of its crew soon after take-off in 1986. The last flight of the shuttle, Atlantis, is scheduled for 28 June.

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Tuscaloosa Al


Tuscaloosa
The city of Montgomery continues to pitch in and help storm-damaged areasacross the state with first responders and equipment, specifically in Elmore County and Tuscaloosa.

The city's response from the Department of Public Safety includes a 10-man heavy rescue unit (Rescue 75) being sent to Tuscaloosa, along with 10-12 fire vehicles (including mules) and activation of six DHS-trained police officers ready to help any other areas.

A 10-man HAZMAT unit from the Fire/Rescue Department is also on standby, as are two advanced life support pumpers, one ladder truck, two paramedic units and a command vehicle.

Mayor Todd Strange took a moment early in his weekly briefing to address the relief situation near Montgomery and throughout the state.

"I want to take this opportunity to extend our condolences and offer prayers to those individuals that have been impacted," said Strange, who also noted he had been in touch with the Tuscaloosa and Birmingham mayors. "When I talked to [mayors] Walt Maddox and William Bell, we offered all support we had available."

Strange said the city last night dispatched 15 individuals to Tuscaloosa, who arrived at midnight and immediately went to work helping clearing up a sector.

Strange said the city also dispatched about 16 law enforcement officers to Elmore County, where storms have so far reportedly claimed the lives of six residents.

"Our thoughts and prayers go out to everyone," Strange said. "That is a very tragic situation, and we want to continue to be as helpful and responsive as we can. We stand ready to do that."

Montgomery Department of Public Safety director Chris Murphy said the resources are coordinated through the state Homeland Security office and Alabama Emergency Management Agency.

Murphy complimented the mayor and city council for helping to provide the area with the equipment and training of individuals who are able to aid Montgomery and its sister cities.

He also said the city initially deployed rescue trucks up to the Lake Guntersville area last night before getting the call to go to Elmore County, where he said there are roughly 18 officers right now.

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Weather Philadelphia


It looks as if the Philadelphia area can breathe a huge sigh of relief that a massive storm system that brought devastation to the Deep South might have little impact here.Despite a host of warnings so far, including for tornados, large hail, heavy rains and damaging winds - and more turbulence possible into late afternoon - today's weather in the Philadelphia region should prove to be "not a major event."
So said meteorologist Walter Drag of the National Weather Service about 1:30 this afternoon.
Winds topped 50 miles per hour in Delaware. A tree fell on a schoolbus in South Heidelberg, Berks County. Parts of the Poconos might get two inches of rain or more.
Other scattered pockets of sudden storminess experienced lightning, gustiness and downpours, as a cold front slowly advanced from the south and west.
But Peco was reporting no major outages, Traffic.com was listing only a couple of spots in the city and suburbs with downed wires, and no funnel clouds touched down, despite a warning that kept moving this morning, from Lancaster County to the Easton area to North Jersey.
Observations at airports around the region mentioned mostly light rain and thunder, and delays in and out of Philadelphia International were largely due to problems elsewhere.
The front is related to the massive series of storms that spawned more than 100 tornados that killed more than 240 people in the South, most of them in Alabama and Mississippi.
A severe thunderstorm watch was still in effect till 4 p.m. for Southeastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware, but radar was showing intensity mostly in "little pockets" along the I-95 corridor and east of it in New Jersey, Drag Said.
"The worst will be over by 5," he said.
Then things might clear up quickly, even producing some sunshine late this afternoon or early evening, and ushering in a very promising weekend, he said.

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Alabama News


Stunned residents of the southern university town of Tuscaloosa on Thursday surveyed a shocking landscape of twisted wreckage left by one of the biggest tornadoes ever to hit the state of Alabama.
In scenes reminiscent of the kind of destruction wrought by the recent earthquake and tsunami in Japan, the jumbled rubble of shattered homes and businesses lay entangled with crushed cars, uprooted trees and downed power lines.
At least 37 people were killed in Tuscaloosa, city mayor Walter Maddox said, out of more than 220 who lost their lives when a series of tornadoes and storms ripped from west to east across seven southern states in recent days.
Local residents, though hardened to storms that frequently roar through the humid U.S. south, described as unbelievable the destruction inflicted by the mile-wide twister that struck on Wednesday.
"When I opened my eyes, I had no roof," said Angela Smith, 22, standing in what was her dining room. Her husband Clay Smith had pulled a body from a neighbor's home, she said.
Smith and others told tales of survival, and many people recorded the devastation on cellphones and video cameras.
"I made it. I got in a closet, put a pillow over my face and held on for dear life because it started sucking me up," Smith said.
Tuscaloosa Mayor Walter Maddox told CNN the tornado cut a seven-mile path of devastation through the city of 95,000 inhabitants. It is home to the University of Alabama whose football team, nicknamed the Crimson Tide, is one of the most successful in the country.
"I don't know how anyone survived ... it's an amazing scene, there's parts of the city that I don't recognize," Maddox said in comments to CNN.
Hundreds of people stared awe-struck at wreckage on McFarland Boulevard, a commercial road running through the city. Many students carried what was left of their possessions in bags and suitcases as they walked down city streets.
The tornado, which flipped vehicles and flattened houses, shops and gas stations, could have been the biggest ever to hit Alabama, meteorologist Josh Nagelberg said on the AccuWeather.com website.
SCREAMS FOR HELP
Robert Jackson, 50, a Tuscaloosa carpenter, said he knew it was time to get inside when he saw large sheds from a local Home Depot hardware store fly into the air.
"I felt a real cool breeze and saw debris circling. I ran to the hallway with my wife and children. We felt the tornado shaking the house. I haven't prayed that hard in my whole life," he told Reuters.
He emerged to find his house still standing but his concern quickly turned to his daughter, who worked two blocks away in a Wendy's fast restaurant. She survived by climbing into a freezer, but he was shocked by the scene that greeted him as he went to find her.
"I saw four bodies and a lot of blood. People were running out. Electricity was popping. Gas fires were shooting up in the air. People were trapped in houses and screaming for help but we couldn't get to them," he said.
Large parts of the city were without power and businesses were at a standstill on Thursday,.
The tornado reduced the Quick Pawn shop on 15th Street to rubble no higher than 3 feet (one meter) high, studded with planks of wood and tires.
Assorted items were scattered in the wreckage including a pillow, a shirt, a Pepsi machine and a desk chair, a testament to the tornado's power to rearrange a neighborhood.
"We mostly deal in firearms and jewelry. Our firearms were thrown into the street and the neighborhood and were collected by the police," said owner Tim Evans, 46, adding that there was no looting.

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Huntsville AL


Powerful tornadoes ripped across Northern Alabama Wednesday as part of one of the deadliest tornado outbreaks in recent memory.
As of this morning, according to AL.com, theHuntsville, AL death toll was up to 8, with at least 82 injuries, 7 of which are critical. Wednesday saw another 50 people, many in critical condition, taken to the hospital following the 6 tornadoes that came through.
A "dusk 'til dawn," curfew has been put into effect as a result, according to AL.com.
At a press conference at 8:30 this morning, officials offered advice during the curfew. Largely they stressed the need to conserve fuel, not to flood the 911 number, and to limit hospital visits to the severely injured.
Water conservation is also of the utmost importance.
Below is a video of the Huntsville tornado forming, shot by a nearby resident.

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Wednesday, 27 April 2011

WaterLoo


Prime Minister Stephen Harper was at a Waterloo company on Wednesday talking about supporting small business and repeating warnings about a potential coalition.

Harper and his wife, Laureen, stopped in at Sports Systems Unlimited Corporation, a company that makes aluminum sign boards that are used around ice rinks, in NHL arenas and other hockey venues.

Harper promised a ‘cultural shift' within the government, so that each time a new regulation is applied to business, an existing one must be eliminated.

On the surging popularity of the NDP, especially in Quebec, Harper told voters their choice is a Conservative majority that will focus on the economy or a coalition with an unknown agenda.

"The fact that the NDP may be the leading opposition party, that I think that actually clarifies the choice for Canadians. It makes it very clear the choice is between on the one hand somehow dealing with our economic challenges through vastly higher levels of permanent spending and raising taxes and also a diversion in constitutional negotiations, or focusing on the economy, keeping taxes down and creating jobs."

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Dalai Lama


The newly-elected Tibetan prime minister-in-exile, Lobsang Sangay, Wednesday urged ‘every Tibetan and friends of Tibet’ to join him in their ‘common cause to alleviate the suffering of Tibetans in occupied Tibet and to return the Dalai Lama to his rightful place in the Potala Palace’.
In a message from the US, Sangay, who was once dubbed a ‘terrorist’ by China because of his earlier association with the militant Tibetan Youth Congress, said: ‘Time has come for all Tibetans to take on greater responsibility’.
Taking note of the arrest and killings of the Tibetans allegedly by the Chinese government, he also asserted: ‘We are already facing immense challenges including a critical situation in Ngaba and Amdo with Tibetans being killed and arrested by the Chinese government.’
Making it clear that he would follow the Dalai Lama’s agenda, he said: ‘I view my election as an affirmation of the far-sighted policies of His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, and another important step towards the realisation of his vision of a truly democratic Tibetan society.’
Sangay, a senior fellow of Harvard Law School, has been chosen in the third direct elections for the prime minister that were held March 20.
He will succeed the incumbent, Samdhong Rinpoche, who was chosen twice to the post.
Sangay also asked his supporters to refrain from celebrations.
‘I would also like to appeal to my supporters to refrain from organising celebration parties because the result of this election is not an individual loss or victory, but rather a mandate to shoulder the aspirations of six million Tibetans,’ he said.
Sangay’s five-year stint is expected to be full of challenges, with the Tibetan parliament giving a nod to the transfer of political power from Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, to the newly elected political leader.

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Memphis Weather


Memphis Weather
Violent weather ripped through the South for a second straight day, killing at least eight people from Arkansas to Alabama, damaging homes in a rural Texas community and spreading destruction into Georgia and Tennessee.
The latest round of severe weather Tuesday night and early Wednesday came after a series of powerful storms that had already killed 10 people in Arkansas and one in Mississippi.
In the latest storms, a Louisiana police officer on a camping trip was killed by a tree limb while shielding his daughter from the high winds at a state park in northern Mississippi, Choctaw County, Miss., Coroner Keith Coleman said. The daughter was not hurt.
Also in Mississippi, a man was crushed in his mobile home when a tree fell during the storm and a truck driver died after hitting a downed tree on a state highway.
In Alabama, where the governor declared a state of emergency, one person was killed in the northern part of the state when a tree fell on a car. Two people died in St. Clair County in central Alabama and another in Jackson County in the northeast, though emergency officials did not say how.
The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management confirmed early Wednesday that another person died in a storm in Sharp County. Officials said the person was in a home near Arkansas Highway 230 but didn't know exactly how the person died or whether a tornado had touched down in the area.
In Louisiana, police were investigating if two deaths in Monroe were storm-related. A woman's body was found early Wednesday in a vehicle that had become trapped in a flooded underpass and a man's body was found later on a flooded street.
The latest round of storms moved through as communities in much of the region struggled with flooding and damage from earlier twisters. In Arkansas, a tornado smashed Vilonia, just north of Little Rock, on Monday night, ripping the roof off the grocery store, flattening homes and tossing vehicles into the air. Four people were killed there, and six died in flooding elsewhere in the state. In Mississippi, a three-year-old girl was killed when a storm toppled a tree onto her home.
The destruction continued Wednesday as severe storms in northwest Georgia downed trees, blew out windows in a hospital and tore off part of a school roof. Much of north and central Georgia was bracing for another round of thunderstorms later Wednesday and a tornado watch was issued.
In eastern Tennessee, what appeared to be a tornado struck just outside Chattanooga in Tiftonia, at the base of the tourist peak Lookout Mountain.
Angela Milchack, 29, had just dropped off her son at Lookout Valley Elementary School. Students took cover and none were hurt.
“It just sounded like the wind was blowing really, really hard,” she said.
Tops were snapped off trees and insulation and metal roof panels littered the ground. Police officers walked down the street, spray-painting symbols at houses they had checked for people who might be inside.
The National Weather Service had issued a high-risk warning for severe weather from northeast of Memphis to just northeast of Dallas and covering a large swath of Arkansas. It last issued such a warning on April 16, when dozens of tornadoes hit North Carolina and killed 21 people.
Emergency management officials in Alabama said two suspected tornadoes touched down in Marshall County, about 110 kilometres northeast of Birmingham, causing widespread injuries and damage.
“There are people trapped in mobile homes, in vehicles. We've got trees down all over, power lines down all over. It's all over the county,” said Phil Mayer, working in the county emergency management office.
The weather service didn't immediately confirm twister damage, but forecasters had issued several tornado warnings and said winds blew as hard as 110 kilometres per hour, just short of hurricane force.
High winds also damaged a hangar at the Birmingham airport.
Dozens of tornado warnings were issued in Arkansas throughout the night. Strong winds peeled part of the roof off of a medical building next to a hospital in West Memphis, near the Tennessee border, but no one was inside.
At least one person was injured when a storm slammed through the tiny town of Edom some 120 kilometres east of Dallas late Tuesday, said Fire Chief Eddie Wood. Witnesses described seeing what they thought was a tornado rolling the woman's mobile home with her inside.
A video shot by the Tyler Morning Telegraph showed emergency responders covering the injured woman to shield her from rain and hail. Her mobile home was reduced to a pile of debris in the road.
“We have multiple houses damaged or destroyed,” said Chuck Allen, Van Zandt County emergency management spokesman. He said he would survey the area by helicopter Wednesday to get an accurate count.
Ted Ryan, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Fort Worth, said at least one tornado almost certainly hit between Edom and the town of Van to the north. He said the weather service would send a team to the area Wednesday to assess the damage and determine the strength of the storm.
At daybreak Wednesday, residents on the outskirts of the small, rural community started to clear up the damage from the storm. The area was littered with uprooted trees, some had split in half and others landed on homes.
Rhonda Modesitt, 45, said she and her fifteen-year-old son watched the tornado approach their duplex.
“You could see lumber and stuff swirling in it,” Ms. Modesitt said as she swept up broken glass from patio furniture that was smashed in the storm. “You could hear it coming through and then it got real still.”

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Weather Atlanta


Weather Atlanta
1:35 p.m.: National Weather Service says the next round of severe weather should be approaching the northwest Georgia border around 6 p.m.
1:30 p.m.: Alabama governor declares state of emergency; 4 dead in state.
12:30 p.m.: Atlanta public schools cancel  all after-school athletic events and practices due to threatening weather conditions. All high school baseball games scheduled for Wednesday afternoon will be made up Thursday.
11:00 a.m.: A woman in Moody, Ala., was killed when a tree crashed into her mobile home, officials say.
10:22: Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley preparing state of emergency declaration, officials say.
10:17 a.m.: Windows were blown out at Redmond Regional Medical Center in Rome; hospital operating on emergency generators.
10:15 a.m.: Georgia Power reports 27,000 customers without power, most in the Rome area.
9:53 a.m.: Extensive wind damage reported in Floyd, Gordon, Haralson and Dade counties. Roof was blown off a building in downtown Calhoun, the National Weather Service reported.
9:43 a.m.: Significant damage reported in the Rome area, with trees down on the campuses of Berry College and Shorter College.
9:40 a.m.: Thunderstorm warnings for metro area have expired.
9:30: Tree reported down in Cherokee County, Turner Hill Road at North Arnold Mill Road.
9:15 a.m.: Severe thunderstorm warnings remain in effect for Cobb, Fulton, Clayton, Douglas, Coweta, Cherokee, Paulding, Gilmer, Pickens, Bartow, Gordon, Murray, Polk, Walker and Whitfield counties. The warnings expire at 9:30.
9:10 a.m.: News reports from Alabama report 100 mph winds, power out to more than 260,000 residences.
9:00 a.m.: Tweet from Georgia Power: We're monitoring the weather & will be ready to respond wherever crews are needed. To report an outage, call 888-891-0938.
8:57 a.m.: There are reports of widespread damage from storms in Floyd County, northwest of Atlanta, with many power lines down.

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