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Thursday, December 11, 2014

Major storm knocks out power, disrupts flights in California


Major storm knocks out power, disrupts flights in California
The Embarcadero, the city's popular waterfront walkway, was closed due to flooding and some ferries were also canceled, stranding commuters.
SAN FRANCISCO: A major storm pummeled California and the Pacific northwest on Thursday with heavy rain and high winds, killing one man, knocking out power to tens of thousands of homes, disrupting flights and prompting schools to close.

Some 240 departing and incoming commercial flights were canceled at San Francisco International Airport and others were delayed for more than two hours, airport managers said.

San Francisco's famed cable car system was replaced by shuttle buses and a subway station was shut down through the morning rush hour because of a power outage and flooding, and the city's electrified bus system was halted in many areas, transit officials said.

The Embarcadero, the city's popular waterfront walkway, was closed due to flooding and some ferries were also canceled, stranding commuters.

Some streets and major intersections were flooded in the San Francisco area, including the westbound lanes of Interstate 280 in the East Bay suburb of El Cerrito, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Winds howled through Sacramento, the state capital, rattling buildings and whipping through trees before dawn, followed by heavy downpours. The launch of an Atlas V rocket was scrubbed from Vandenberg Air Force Base.

In southern Oregon, a homeless man camping with his 18-year-old son along the Pacific Crest Trail in the Ashland area was killed early on Thursday morning when a tree toppled onto their tent, the Jackson County Sheriff's Office said.

Portland general Electric Co and Pacific Power reported nearly 90,000 customers were without power as a storm system packing wind-gusts of 80 mph (129 kph) was moving through Oregon.

To the north, in Washington state, a commuter train that runs between Seattle and Everett was canceled for two days beginning on Thursday after a mudslide on Wednesday, local transit officials said.

"In certain parts of the West Coast this could be the most significant storm in 10 years," National Weather Service meteorologist Eric Boldt said.

The Weather Service issued flash-flood, heavy-surf and high-wind advisories, warning that torrential rains could lead to mudslides in foothill areas of California scarred by wildfires earlier this year.

The storm was expected to provide only a small measure of relief from California's record, multi-year drought that has forced water managers to sharply reduce irrigation supplies to farmers and prompted drastic conservation measures statewide, weather officials said.

As much as 3 feet (1 metre) of snow is predicted this week for the higher elevations of the Sierra Nevada mountain range. But meteorologists said many months of rainfall would be needed to pull the state out of the drought.

The Shasta Lake area of Northern California received 5 inches (13 cm) of rain overnight, and up to 4 inches (10 cm) were expected in California's Central Valley, the state's agricultural heartland, as well as in Sacramento, the weather service said.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co reported that nearly 227,000 customers lost power during the storm on Thursday morning. Cities in the peninsula area south of San Francisco were hardest hit by outages.

Several Bay Area school districts, including San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley, canceled classes due to the storm.

The storm was expected to move into Southern California in time for the Friday morning commute, in what would be the area's second major storm in a week.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Learning sans Barriers

Learning sans Barriers


Our belief is that it is high time we level the playing field for young people no matter where they happen to live and that information technology is one of the primary tools to make that happen. Our project is Amun Shea, Center for Integrated Development, in El Salvador, a Problem-Based Learning program with the objective of doing away with the barriers that entrap and perpetuate traditional cycles of poverty.Our students have tossed the textbooks aside to work with real-world issues, learn “basic subjects” as only as tools for problem-solving and are overcoming “being poor.” Connecting ideas and sharing solutions with peers around the globe is breaking the ever-repeating dynamic of marginalization and isolation.

Amún Shéa is about Positive Attitude, Capacity Building and the Creation of Opportunity. Join with us in changing the world.                                                                                                                    owaliur

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Phillip Hughes


Phil Hughes's coffin

Phillip Hughes’s coffin at the ceremony in Macksville. Photograph: Brett Hemmings/Getty
Phillip Hughes did not want to play his first game of cricket.
But his older brother Jason’s under-10’s team was short a player, and Phillip, only seven, was shanghai-ed in under veiled threats he would be a “wuss” if he didn’t.
He was sent in at the bottom of the order – for surely the last time – and made 25. A love affair with the game was born.
The improbable, irresistible cricketing career of Phillip Hughes, begun that day, was ended last week.
He was felled by a bouncer on Tuesday while batting in a Sheffield Shield game at the SCG, and never regained consciousness. Hughes was 25 years old, five days short of his 26th birthday. He was 63 not out.
His captain and friend, Michael Clarke, choked back tears as he spoke of a late-night visit this week to the wicket at the SCG, “those same blades of grass” he and Hughes had shared as teammates.
Clarke, alone on this night, looked around the empty stands that once held the crowds that cheered Hughes’s eccentric range of shots.
Clarke stared at the fences once battered by his teammates’ bludgeonings.
“I stood at the wicket, I knelt down to touch the grass, and I could sense he was here with me, telling me ‘we’ve got to dig in, to get through to tea’ … before passing on a useless fact about cows, and then swaggering back to the end, grinning at the bowler and calling me through for a run in a booming voice.”
Michael Clarke at Phil Hughes's funeral
Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke at Phillip Hughes’s funeral. Photograph: Cameron /EPA
While Hughes’s immense cricketing gifts brought him to the nation’s, and the world’s, attention, his funeral heard mostly of his life away from the wicket: the big baby dubbed ‘buffon’ by a grandfather who thought he was chunky; the young boy obsessed with catching a legendary giant fish said to inhabit the Nambucca river; the teenager surprised and disappointed to learn that a school called “Homebush Boys” didn’t have any female students; the aspiring cattleman never happier than at work on the farm

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Major storm knocks out power, disrupts flights in California

The Embarcadero, the city's popular waterfront walkway, was closed due to flooding and some ferries were also canceled, s...