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Thursday, March 1, 2012
Massive storm system weakens after 12 deaths
Weary residents may get some good news Thursday as the monster storm system that already battered many Midwestern states and caused a dozen deaths is expected to weaken.
The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center downgraded its outlook for severe weather from moderate to slight over the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic. It said there was only a 5% probability of tornadoes through Thursday morning.
The death toll from the enormous storm system that plowed through the Midwest and spawned more tornadoes as it moved east was at 12 late Wednesday, authorities said.
Hardest hit was Harrisburg, Illinois, a town that was thrashed by a pre-dawn EF4 killer tornado that packed 170 mph winds. Six people were killed in the southern Illinois city, many were injured or left with harrowing stories like Justin Hicks.When we woke up half the roof was coming off the house," said Hicks. "We managed to get the small children in the closet, and about the time the small children were in the closet my wife and I noticed the walls separating from the house."
Hicks' home was destroyed but he says it could have been much worse"We're very lucky to be alive," he said. " It happened so fast. I woke up to a chaos, and I'm sure a lot of people woke up to chaos. I wasn't expecting it to be that bad."
The dead included four women and two men. The tornado had a preliminary rating of EF4, the second most powerful on the rating scale, according to the National Weather Service.
The twister appeared to have been on the ground for several miles, said Mayor Eric Gregg. The path of destruction was about three or four football fields wide, he said.
This Just In: Harrisburg's path of destruction
The scene in the southern part of Harrisburg, was one of debris and collapsed houses. Commercial and residential buildings were crushed. A tractor-trailer could be seen laying on its side, off the highway.
"When the sirens were going on this morning ... it was eerily quiet. I had a gut feeling something was wrong," Gregg told reporters.
"We will rebuild this city. This will make us stronger," Gregg said.
There were no reports Wednesday evening of anyone missing, the mayor said.
Harrisburg resident Caleb Cattivera said he rushed to his workplace early Wednesday only to find it gone. "I know a lot of people who live back near there."
Resident Les Winkeler said, "You just hoped your house didn't come down around you."According to the sheriff's office, some 100 people were injured and between 250 and 300 houses were damaged or destroyed.
Among the structures hit was the Harrisburg Medical Center. CEO Vince Ashley said the tornado took out 80 feet of exterior wall, exposing patient rooms, and a significant portion of the roof.
A smaller tornado caused significant damage in the music resort city of Branson, Missouri.
Nearly 200 people were hurt across the region, officials said.
Two twisters were reported Wednesday night near Hodgenville, Kentucky. Winds in excess of 100 mph were reported in northwestern Alabama.
Tourist town of Branson, Missouri, hit
At least six counties in Kentucky suffered storm damage. A shaken and bruised Steven Vaught of Greenville, Kentucky, recounted how he and his two dogs tumbled when his trailer rolled several times down the hill. They all survived.
"It's a joy to be here. I don't know how I'm here," Vaught told CNN Nashville affiliate WSMV. "The good Lord just didn't call me. It wasn't my time."
iReport: Branson Hilton windows blown out
An apparent tornado near Cassville, Missouri, left one person dead, the Barry County Sheriff's Office said. That person was thrown out of a mobile home, the sheriff's office said.
One death each has been reported in Buffalo and Puxico, Missouri officials said.
"I woke up this morning and looked outside and saw houses were destroyed," said Steven Scharmanzer in Branson. "I've never seen anything like this in the 20 years I've lived here."
Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, who declared a state of emergency, said the damage there was in at least the tens of millions, but there were no reported deaths. "We are confident that Branson will be back bigger and better than ever," Nixon said.
An EF2 tornado smashed at least seven miles of the city's commercial strip, leaving 33 people hurt, most with minor to moderate injuries.
The city's convention center and an attached Hilton were damaged, as was a portion of Branson Landing, a large shopping and entertainment complex.
City Administrator Dean Kruithof said about five or six of the city's roughly 40 theaters were damaged.
"We have so many people who want crews in here to clean up, who want to start rebuilding," Kruithof said.
There were also three deaths Wednesday evening in Tennessee, authorities said.
Source CNN
Monday, February 27, 2012
Bomb explosion outside NOC office kills 3, injures 6
Three persons have been killed and six others injured in a bomb
explosion in front of the Nepal Oil Corporation office at Babarmahal in
the capital on Monday afternoon
Krishna Bahadur Tamang, apparently in his mid-thirties, of Baireni-9, Dhading was killed on the spot in the blast, SP Rajendra Shrestha, chief of Kathmandu police, said. The identities of the other two--one of whom also was killed on the spot and the other who died in Bir Hospital during treatment--are yet to be established, according to the police officer.
Among the injured were Som Bahadur Tamang of Bara, Raghunath Khadka of Bhaktapur, Lal Bahadur Tamang, of Dhading, Bishnu Pulara, an NOC employee, of Dhangadi, Basu Shrestha of Luvu, Lalitpur and Man Bahadur Kunwar and Bhim Bahadur Kunwar of Achham. All the injured are undergoing treatment at Bir Hospital.
Speaking to the media, Deputy Prime Minister and Home Minister Bijay Kumar Gachchhadar, who visited the explosion site, said preliminary investigation suggested the involvement of Samyukta Jatiya Morcha, an armed outfit, in the blast that happened at around 1pm.
Kathmandu police chief Shrestha, however, declined to name any particular group behind the broad daylight explosion carried out in the capital´s one of the sensitive areas, only some 200 meters south of the country´s administrative hub Singha Durbar, poising grave question to the city´s security arrangement.
"We have identified who are behind the explosion. We will soon track them down and make arrests, " the police officer said. Security personnel have currently cordoned off the incident site.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai has talked to chiefs of security agencies with regard to the incident and instructed them for improved security situation in the country. Likewise, a meeting of security chiefs, following the incident, is underway in Singha Durbar.
Source myrepublica
Krishna Bahadur Tamang, apparently in his mid-thirties, of Baireni-9, Dhading was killed on the spot in the blast, SP Rajendra Shrestha, chief of Kathmandu police, said. The identities of the other two--one of whom also was killed on the spot and the other who died in Bir Hospital during treatment--are yet to be established, according to the police officer.
Among the injured were Som Bahadur Tamang of Bara, Raghunath Khadka of Bhaktapur, Lal Bahadur Tamang, of Dhading, Bishnu Pulara, an NOC employee, of Dhangadi, Basu Shrestha of Luvu, Lalitpur and Man Bahadur Kunwar and Bhim Bahadur Kunwar of Achham. All the injured are undergoing treatment at Bir Hospital.
Speaking to the media, Deputy Prime Minister and Home Minister Bijay Kumar Gachchhadar, who visited the explosion site, said preliminary investigation suggested the involvement of Samyukta Jatiya Morcha, an armed outfit, in the blast that happened at around 1pm.
Kathmandu police chief Shrestha, however, declined to name any particular group behind the broad daylight explosion carried out in the capital´s one of the sensitive areas, only some 200 meters south of the country´s administrative hub Singha Durbar, poising grave question to the city´s security arrangement.
"We have identified who are behind the explosion. We will soon track them down and make arrests, " the police officer said. Security personnel have currently cordoned off the incident site.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai has talked to chiefs of security agencies with regard to the incident and instructed them for improved security situation in the country. Likewise, a meeting of security chiefs, following the incident, is underway in Singha Durbar.
Source myrepublica
Saturday, February 25, 2012
5.9 earthquake strikes southern Taiwan, causes minor damage
A 5.9-magnitude earthquake struck southern Taiwan on Sunday morning, the U.S. Geological Survey said. There were reports of minor property damage but no immediate reports of injuries, The Associated Press said.
The quake was centered in a mountainous area about 19 miles from the coastal city of Pingtung, at a depth of 13.9 miles.
Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau said the quake struck at 10:35 a.m. (6:35 p.m. ET) Sunday and put the magnitude at 6.1. Taiwan television showed pictures of minor damage in the Pingtung area.
TV reports said high-speed rail service had been temporarily suspended out of the southern city of Kaohsiung, north of Pingtung.
Earthquakes frequently rattle Taiwan, but most are minor and cause little or no damage. However, a magnitude-7.6 earthquake in central Taiwan in 1999 killed more than 2,300 people.
Source Msnbc
Does White House deserve credit for increase in domestic oil production?
The president and the White House haven't been shy about claiming credit for doing everything possible to keep gasoline prices low.
As White House spokesman Jay Carney said this week "Oil and gas production in the United States has risen every year since the president's been in office. Oil production is now higher than it's been in eight years.
Industry analysts say production is rising -- not because of President Obama, but in spite of him.
"Today on federal land, the area where the president has control, production in the Gulf of Mexico is down 30 percent. Lease sales in Rocky Mountains on federal lands are down 70 percent," Jack Gerard, head of the American Petroleum Institute said.
He says the president has put 85 percent of the outer continental shelf off limits and overall, is only making 3 percent of the areas under his control available for development.
Numbers from think tanks and the federal Energy Information Administration confirm those numbers.
Nevertheless, steadily rising gas prices are a political liability. That's why the president now takes credit for the results of policies he ran against in 2008. One ad lambasted McCain by tying him to the Bush energy policies, saying "McCain and Bush support a drilling plan that won't produce a drop of oil for seven years."
The president initially wanted to drive up oil prices to make renewable energy more attractive.
His cap and trade plan was too harsh even for Democratic allies and failed. Nevertheless, Obama still seems to deny that drilling would reduce prices.
"You know there are no quick fixes to this problem, and you know we can't just drill our way to lower gas prices," he said at a speech in Florida this week.
Exploration and development do take years. But analysts argue the administration can't now take credit for decisions about drilling made years ago by President Bush and his predecessors.
"That production is a direct result of leases issued before this administration and as result of development on private and state lands," Gerard said.
On private lands, oil production is booming. In North Dakota, the oil and gas are on private or state land and beyond the president's control.
The state has gone from producing a small amount of oil to some 450,000 barrels a day.
Unemployment is 3.3 percent, the lowest in the country. And the state has a budget surplus in the billions.
Gerard thinks North Dakota isn't the only place. He says if the President would unleash the energy industry, the US and Canada have so much oil and gas that, along with renewables, we could become energy independent.
"We could be energy self sufficient right here in North America in 12 years, but that takes political courage," he said.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and others are now talking about releasing oil from the strategic petroleum reserve.
Gerard says it at least shows the administration recognizes that supply affects prices. But he argues we have a bigger reserve right under our feet-- if we'd only develop it.
Source Fox News
Nelson Mandela Hospitalized Over Stomach Ailment
Nelson Mandela, the first president of a democratic, multiracial South Africa, was hospitalized on Saturday to address a longstanding abdominal complaint, the office of South Africa’s current president, Jacob Zuma, announced.
“Madiba has had a long-standing abdominal complaint and doctors feel it needs proper specialist medical attention,” the statement said, using Mr. Mandela’s honorific clan name.
Mr. Mandela, who battled apartheid and spent 27 years imprisoned by the white minority government, is 93 years old, and has been in virtual seclusion for the last several years. His health is closely watched; a hospitalization in January 2011 set off a panic across South Africa.
For years, rumors have swirled about Mr. Mandela’s health. His public appearances have become less and less frequent. He last appeared in July 2010 at the closing ceremony of the World Cup soccer tournament.
Mr. Mandela was released from prison at age 71 in 1990 as South Africa’s policy of white supremacy was imploding; he was elected four years later as the first president of a reforming nation.
Source New York Times
Nelson Mandela hospitalized
Former South African President Nelson Mandela has been hospitalized with a stomach ailment, according to a government statement issued Saturday about the 93-year-old anti-apartheid icon.
President Jacob Zuma asked that Mandela's privacy be respected, and did not say at which hospital Mandela was being treated.
The hospitalization was due to a "long-standing abdominal complaint" that doctors feel "needs proper specialist medical attention, according to a statement on Zuma's website.
Mac Maharaj, Zuma's spokesman, said he could not elaborate but that he would be issuing regular updates.
Mandela became South Africa's first black president in 1994 after spending 27 years in prison for his fight against racist apartheid rule, and was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts.
His public appearances have become increasingly rare, and he was hospitalized last year for a few days with an acute respiratory infection.
Source CBS
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