| rzvolzbxgr | Date: Sunday, 12.01.2013, 10:57 PM | Message # 1 |
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| doudoune moncler femmes Here in Britain, I present a daily radio programme on our main news network. On Tuesday we carried President Bush's big speech live from the United Nations. Now, I have a small screen inside the studio which shows sms sent in by listeners which pass comment on what they hear, and the impact of President Bush's words was electric. 'Hypocrite' …. 'get him off' …. 'warmonger'… 'zzzzz' … 'I'm planning to sleep' … and most worrying of all… 'don't you guys worry about ratings any more'? I appealed for many more positive reaction. And then some listeners grudgingly admitted it had become important to hear his words - however only because their attacks on him could possibly be better informed. Only later came more positive comments, that American action in Iraq was correct, that President Bush's speech have been the truth. But there is no doubt that the instinctive reaction of many of our British listeners to George W Bush was certainly one of hostility. I have a feeling until this is based not so much on what he says as the way he says it. It rather reminds me of reaction in Scotland to Margaret Thatcher when she was Prime Minister. They hated her. It wasn't her policies so much. It absolutely was more that she seemed to represent everything that was Middle England. President Bush have enough money to ignore the reactions of the British population. One of the nice aspects of being in his position is he can ignore almost everyone, such as the French and the Germans and the UN. But he cannot ignore his or her own voters. And it was interesting that, while President Bush was speaking, his old buddy and quite a few loyal ally, Tony Blair, was not at his side in New York - he was at a new hospital in south London. This is odd. Commentators here voice it out illustrates that Mr. Blair has concluded that Iraq is a vote loser, that domestic issues are more important, and that the time has come that will put a bit of space between himself and President Bush. Well I suppose the American President is powerful enough to soldier on. But, abroad, his enemies are gathering. And the problem for Mr. Bush is that it's going to be difficult to persuade his voters in the home that he has got it right in Iraq, when in the world he looks so isolated. By Peter Allen vente privee moncler There's that eerie sense of deja-vu, reports CBS News Correspondent Bill Whitaker. However, this time, students are entering Columbine High to retrieve belongings left out in their mad dash from death and see the place once so brimming with adolescent life, now symbolic of young lives lost. For a lot of, the emotions are raw. "I ran out those doors i just walked out of. Those were the doors that we ran out of and that's where my friends were hiding," said Galina Vol, who just graduated from Columbine.The blood was gone, but glass remained about the floors and bullet holes were still in the walls. Students were barred from some areas, such as the library, where gunmen Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed themselves and most of their 13 victims. With the exception of some items that are being held as evidence, belongings left within the library, the halls or the cafeteria were placed in the auditorium to the students to pick up. Items left in lockers were sorted, labeled and left inside the gymnasium.Counselors and clergy members were readily available to help and teachers escorted categories of about 15 students to classrooms to pick up their things.Andrea Morroni, the mother of an Columbine student, said, "It's so still in there. It's not like it used to be, noisy and congested." Her son Dante, 15, added, "It's probably going to be the hardest for the freshmen, because we will need to deal with it, plus we have to rebuild the school."Like most, seniors Casey Stoner hadn't been in the school since the massacre. Her last school memory was of blood and terror. "I believe that there's a part of me and every other student, especially seniors, who feel like in a lot of ways our school has become taken away from us," she said. "And having the ability to go back in the school is much like the first step in reclaiming it."Isaiah Shoels was one of several 15 to die from the shooting spree, almost monthly and a half ago. His sister and brother are a couple of of those who chose not get back to Columbine. "They're scared of that school," said their mother, Vonda. The Shoels family has moved out of town, and they're suing the killers' parents along with the school. Michael Shoels says, "There's no way that we would send my kids in that area period, because there is some hate somewhere still on the market."For others, that's why they had to come back. "I have to, there's no choice inside it for me. That's my school, that is what I have to stand up for," said junior Chris Walters.The Rocky Mountain Columbine is Colorado's state flower. It flourishes this time of year. That's the hope for this school and it is students. Today they found their belongings. The hard part is going to be picking up the pieces of their lives. veste doudoune moncler "The message to President Bush is always that it's okay to say, 'You understand what, on the campaign trail, I said one thing--I said I had been against this, but now I've really gotten knowledge. I've listened to all sides,'" says Reeve, "'and guess what happens? I've changed my mind.'" doudoun moncler pas cher If you didn't care who Del Close was as he was alive, you may find him a little more interesting now that he's dead, reports CBS News Correspondent Maureen Maher.For Three decades, Close was known as the "father of improv," mentoring the likes of John Belushi, Bill Murray, and Mike Myers. But, four months after his death, he will play out a final role; she has bequeathed his skull to the Goodman Theater in Chicago.Recalls Robert Falls, the theater's artistic director, "He said to me one time, 'I'd like to play Yorick.' And that i said, 'Del, Yorick is the skull used in the graveyard scene' [in Hamlet ]. And the man goes, 'That's right.'"Unfortunately, Hamlet isn't around the theater's schedule this year, but that will not stop Close from appearing for the Goodman stage. Falls says he'll almost certainly find a role or a place for the Del Close skull on every set at Goodman Theater."He i would like to keep working and basically have his last laugh about the world," explains Charna Halpern, Close's business partner in ImprovOlympic.His friend Falls says Close will live on as an actor through his skull, "and there will be something kind of wonderful about that."Close directed the next City comedy troupe in Chicago for 12 years, and co-created SCTV. Also, he was a performer with the Compass Players, including Mike Nichols and Elaine May and finally evolved into Second City. Close also worked as acting coach for Saturday Night Live. His film credits range from the Public Eye (1992), Opportunity Knocks (1990), Fat Man and Young boy (1989), The Blob (1988), The Untouchables (1986), Ferris Bueller's Break (1986), Thief (1981), and American Graffiti (1973). moncler marseille They've got a penguin problem at the Bay area Zoo. Specifically, the penguins are swimming in circles. All day long, every day.It's a puzzle perplexing everyone, particularly penguin keeper Jane Tollini, reports CBS News Correspondent John Blackstone."We've lost complete control," said Tollini. "It's a free-for-all in here. My old geezers have swum more over the last three months than they have in five and a half years. They're putting on frequent flyer miles."For some reason the Penguins, who have spent most, if not all their lives in captivity, suddenly have come to believe these are back home in South America and it is time to migrate to Brazil. Everything started in November when six newcomer Magellannic penguins, formerly of Sea World in Aurora, Ohio, were earned. Since then the penguin pool in the San Francisco Zoo has been a daily frenzy of circle swimming by each of the 52 birds at once. The penguins start swimming in circles early in the day and rarely stop until they stagger out of your pool at dusk. The six penguins from Ohio started everything, Tollini said, apparently convincing others to join them for the watery daily circuit. The brand new birds jumped in and commenced swimming. Soon everybody had embarked on a two thousand mile migration. "I can't work out how the Aurora penguins communicated and changed the minds with the other 46," Tollini said. Some penguin experts point out the highly social animals to be open to new ideas fostered by newcomers in the zoo's so-called Penguin Island. "Penguins are extraordinarily social birds," said Christina Slager, associate curator at Monterey Bay Aquarium. She gets studied Magellanics in the wild in Patagonia and Chile. "And they're very, very inquisitive. If you combine those facts and set in a new stimulus, such as the six new penguins, they have to take a look." Aquatic biologist Pam Schaller of the Steinhart Aquarium in Bay area described it in more matter-of-fact terms. "Genetically, they're made to swim," Schaller said. "I'd be amazed if the six had learned to behave not in penguin nature and showed the opposite 46 how to do it - like if your birds were trained to jump via a hoop."Still, the penguins may be swimming for any quite a while. The trip from Argentina to Brazil equals 26 thousand laps of their pool. montre moncler Twenty-one nearly forgotten heroes of Wwii will finally get their due on Wednesday, righting an inaccurate many say was based on race.Seven veterans as well as the families of 14 others will likely be at the White House for the salute to their courage that comes more than a half century late.These servicemen were fighting two wars simultaneously, reports CBS News Correspondent John Roberts.In October of 1944, being a 22-year-old, George Sakato was awarded the distinguished service cross for his actions after a pre-dawn raid in France.Sakato was a an affiliate the most decorated unit inside the militarythe "Go for broke 442"comprised mostly of Japanese-Americans.Fighting to consider control of a strategic hill, Sakato's best friend took a bullet and died in his arms. He dug deep in to a well of anguish and anger to guide a counter-attack. "So I picked up my tommy gun, I laid him down, and I charged the hill, i told everybody to come on, follow me, and now we finally took that hill back," he said.Sakato was recommended for the Medal of Honor, though the commendation was reduced. He says: "We was required to win two warsA war of discrimination as well as the war against the Germans."Hawaii Senator Daniel Inouye was another member of the 442nd who demonstrated extraordinary bravery under fire.Inouye says: "My arm was struck with the elbowand it was just hanging with shreds
. I picked up my tommy gun in my left and started moving forward."Inouye was also suitable for the Medal of Honorbut alternatively received the Distinguished Service Cross. On Wednesday, the federal government will award both men the military's highest honor.For George Sakato, the distinction will always belong to Japanese American comrades who gave their eats these far-away battlefields to prove their mettle as Americans in the home.He says, "They deserve to be researched to. And I want to accept the medal for the children." moncler pour femme Weighing as much as a Volkswagen bug, a weather forecasting satellite that can wrack up millions of space miles over time, shot into space atop a titan rocket Sunday, CBS News Correspondent Jerry Bowen reports. From its 500-mile-high orbit, the Quickscat satellite will circle earth every 100 minutes, gathering data on ocean-surface wind speeds and direction. And also, since two-thirds of weather occurs in the world's oceans, Quickscat should help make forecasting better. "The measurements we have right now originate from buoys that are along the equator and from ships at see," says Jim Graf, the project's director. "This instrument provides uniform measurement with a highly calibrated instrument that may measure the complete earth's surface, essentially, daily." The new satellite, which can see through clouds, will also be capable of provide an even earlier warning on El Nino or La Nina conditions since they develop in the Pacific. That will enable people in affected areas additional time to organize for the storms associated with the weather patterns. And little Quickscat will add to our knowledge of global java prices, according to scientists. "Wind is driving the ocean circulation," Graf says. "Small modifications in the wind can have large changes on a basin or regional scale from the ocean."The first data from your $93 million project will start arriving in Two months, still in time to help monitor what offers to be an active Atlantic hurricane season.
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