June 20, 2013

‘The Avengers’ powers to best opening weekend ever

f7efba56a7b480c624b5af1f2e19caba The Avengers powers to best opening weekend ever

( News / ) --- The Avengers are box-office superheroes. The all-star team of super-marketed comic book heroes, including Iron , Thor, The Hulk and Captain America, rampaged to $200.3 million at the box office this weekend, the largest debut of all time.

The Avengers crushed former champ Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, which opened to $169.2 million last year. The Avengers landed in a with Hallows as the biggest IMAX film on record with about $15 million.

MORE: The weekend's top 10
REVIEW: 'Avengers' is marvelous fun
STORY: Iron Man leads core four of 'Avengers'

Tim Briody of Boxofficeprophets.com called the opening "astounding" and chalked it up to a "superhero combo platter."

The Avengers was a hit analysts and marketers saw coming months away, thanks in part to it being a cinematic rarity. Unless you're Alien, Predator or Godzilla, showdowns between Hollywood icons — particularly those still propelling their own franchises — are scarce.

But with a cadre of high-profile crime fighters under its mantle, Marvel Pictures had years to assemble its comic book legion — and promote it. In the 2008 hit Iron Man, eye-patched hero Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) makes a cameo at the end of the film, promising a gathering of justice-seekers.

"We had been building this for years," says Avengers executive producer Jon Favreau, who directed the first Iron Man. "It shows what people can expect from franchises if enough thought goes into it ahead of time. This was no mean feat."

In addition to a $100 million merchandising tie-in for everything from Avengers cologne to bologna, the film had an omnipresent ad blitz in which Disney touted the film as the greatest superhero story ever told.

It may be the most lucrative. Gitesh Pandya of Boxofficeguru.com says that, given the film's worldwide success (it already has made more than $300 million overseas), the movie "will likely surpass $1 billion (worldwide) by the end of its run."

Where The Avengers ultimately stop is anyone's guess, as word of mouth promises to be robust. The movie scored an A+ among moviegoers, according to pollsters CinemaScore.

Ray Subers of Boxofficemojo.com says the grade bodes well for repeat viewing. "It's unlikely that demand is even close to satisfied at this point," he says.

The film laid waste to all other movies this weekend.

The comedy Think Like a Man was second at the box office with $8 million, followed by The Hunger Games with $5.7 million. That film, once the titan of the cineplex, has made $380.7 million since its release March 23.

The romance The Lucky One took fourth place with $5.5 million, followed by the cartoon The Pirates! Band of Misfits with $5.4 million.

Clinton calls on Gadhafi to ‘leave power’

a9497b3810940daa9a42462471029b6a Clinton calls on Gadhafi to leave power

ROME (AP) — Secretary of State said Thursday that ousting Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is the best way to protect Libya's .

"We have made it abundantly clear that the best way to protect civilians is for Gadhafi to cease his ruthless, brutal on civilians from the west to the east, to withdraw from the cities that he is sieging and attacking and to leave power," Clinton said. "This is the outcome we are seeking."

Clinton spoke after holding with Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini ahead of a diplomatic meeting on Libya.

The meeting of the Libyan Contact Group at the Italian Foreign Ministry on Thursday is expected to seek ways to give financial support to the rebels, who have indicated they need $1.5 billion in the coming months.

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PHOTO: Images of rebellion in Libya

The meeting of 22-nations involved in NATO's Libya campaign also includes the , the Arab League, the 's opposition council, and the 's opposition council, Abdel-Jalil, who used to be Gadhafi's justice minister.

Clinton said the meeting will seek "the most effective ways to delivery financial assistance" and other support to the rebels.

"Everyone is always impatient. We expect things to be done immediately in our very fast world," Clinton said.

Clinton said she would be formally presenting the United States' pledge to provide $25 million in surplus, nonlethal goods and commodities to support and protect the rebels.

A Libyan rebel spokesman, Shamam, put the estimated needed by the rebels in coming months at $1.5 billion. This would only be used for medical and food supplies, running hospitals and electricity, Shamam said in Rome.

The rebels also want to press their case for better weapons and equipment, Shamam suggested, saying Wednesday in Rome that they are "hungry for basic arms."

The Royal Wedding: Crowds cheer newly-wed couple

fed949e38ca54396a2ed68cd3855bb90 The Royal Wedding: Crowds cheer newly wed couple

( Blog/ BBC News Feature ) - Middleton have kissed twice on the balcony of after their wedding service in .

They were cheered by thousands of well-wishers who gathered outside the palace, as RAF planes flew past in honour of the new royal couple.

Some 1,900 guests watched the couple exchange their vows in the abbey, with many millions watching at home.

The bride will now be known as the Duchess of Cambridge.

The Queen is hosting a buffet reception at the palace for 650 guests.

Street parties

The church service ran smoothly but the prince did struggle to place the wedding ring on the duchess's finger.
Kate Middleton in her Alexander McQueen wedding dress outside Westminster Abbey The dress was designed by Sarah Burton

Following a long tradition, the ring has been fashioned from Welsh gold given to Prince William by the Queen.

After the couple said their vows, in which she did not promise to obey William, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Reverend Rowan Williams, declared: "I pronounce that they be and wife together, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."

They spent a private moment together with their families, as they signed the marriage register.

Prince William has been given the title of the Duke of Cambridge by the Queen, and Miss Middleton has become Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge on their marriage.

The duchess, who managed to keep her wedding dress a secret, is wearing an ivory and lace gown by Sarah Burton at Alexander McQueen. The prince is wearing the red tunic of an Irish Guards colonel - his most senior honorary appointment.

Well-known faces spotted at Westminster Abbey included singer-songwriter and his partner David Furnish, former England rugby coach , and former England football captain and his wife Victoria.

Timetable (BST) on 29 April

* 1015 - The groom and Prince Harry arrived at Westminster Abbey
* 1051 - The bride, and her father, left the Goring Hotel for the abbey
* 1100 - The marriage service began
* 1230 - The bride's carriage procession arrived at Buckingham Palace
* 1325 - The Queen and the bride and groom appeared on the balcony
* 1330 - Fly past by the Royal Air Force and Battle of Britain Memorial Flight

* Follow Peter Hunt on Twitter
* Views on the dress
* Big day for wedding crowds
* Royal wedding: Where were you?

Actor Rowan Atkinson, a close friend of Prince Charles, Prince Harry's friend Chelsy Davy and film director Guy Ritchie were also there.

UK Prime Minister David Cameron and his wife Samantha, Australian prime minister Julia Gillard, former British PM Sir John Major, and Home Secretary Theresa May were among the politicians present.

For those lining the route, large speakers broadcast the wedding service, and it was expected the event was watched by hundreds of millions of people worldwide on .

* According to a lip-reading expert, Prince William told his bride she looked "beautiful" as she joined him at the altar. Tina Lannin, of O'Malley Communications, also said he joked to his father-in-law Michael: "We're supposed to have just a small family affair".
* The busy schedule began when guests start arriving at the Abbey from 0815 BST. Many had been queuing before the Great North Door opened
* A Rolls-Royce picked up Miss Middleton at the Goring Hotel, where the Middleton family were staying, at 1050 BST. Prince William travelled to the Abbey with his brother and best man in a Bentley
* Out of the 1,900 guests at the Abbey, 1,000 were friends and family, who had been given some of the best seats in the house. The others included overseas royals, politicians from home and abroad, personnel and representatives from various faiths and charities
* After the service, the newly-weds travelled in an open-topped carriage for the 15-minute journey from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace, past some of London's most famous landmarks, including the Houses of Parliament, Big Ben and Horse Guards Parade.
* Thousands of street parties are being held around the UK, and big screens have been put up in many towns and cities. The BBC has been bringing viewers and listeners comprehensive coverage across TV, radio and online, both in the UK and around the world
* 5,000 officers were on duty, with more than 900 along the wedding route
* Police swooped on two anti-royal wedding protests as the ceremony got under way. A small group of masked anarchists gathered in Soho Square, central London, while police said 70 protesters were in Red Lion Square, Holborn
* About two square miles of central London have been closed to traffic.

Crowds gather along the Mall to Buckingham Palace where the royal couple are expected to appear for a kiss on the balcony It is not known exactly how many people gathered to watch the royal couple

Royal officials said William and Kate were involved in planning their wedding day, from the music at the ceremony to the flowers and the cake.

Inside Westminster Abbey, an avenue of trees lined the red carpet leading up to the altar.

The bride walked up the aisle to coronation anthem I Was Glad, by Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, from Psalm 122. Her brother James Middleton gave the Lesson, reading Romans 12: 1-2, 9-18.

Classical compositions by Elgar, Britten and Vaughan Williams featured during the ceremony, alongside the hymn Jerusalem and the English melody Greensleeves.

After the canape reception at Buckingham Palace, about 300 close friends and relatives will stay on for a formal black tie dinner and disco in the evening, hosted by Prince Charles.

But the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh will leave for a weekend away after hosting the lunchtime reception and will miss Prince Harry's best man speech and Michael Middleton's father of the bride address.

Prince William and Kate Middleton made their vows to each other during their wedding ceremony at Westminster Abbey

Prince William's choice of a military uniform for his wedding was something of a surprise, royal watchers say. As a search and rescue helicopter pilot in the Royal Air Force, many had predicted he would wear his blue flight lieutenant's uniform.

However, as an honorary colonel of the Irish Guards infantry regiment, he opted to wear the red tunic and forage cap.

Prince Harry is a captain in the Household Cavalry's Blues and Royals regiment and is wearing his uniform, while Prince Charles is in his Royal Navy admiral's outfit.

It stayed dry for the royal couple, though the Met Office said there was a risk of heavy showers developing later on. Temperatures in the capital are expected to reach a high of 19C (66F) in the afternoon.

U.S. starts evacuating Americans out of Japan

920d5554990babff11f4e29f13f9d240 U.S. starts evacuating Americans out of Japan

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States has authorized the first of Americans out of Japan, taking a tougher stand on the deepening nuclear crisis and warning U.S. citizens to defer all non-essential travel to any part of the country as unpredictable weather and risked spreading radioactive contamination.

President Obama placed a telephone call to Prime Minister Naoto Kan on Wednesday to discuss Japan's efforts to recover from last week's and tsunami, and the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Dai-chi plant. Obama promised Kan that the U.S. would offer constant support for its close friend and ally, and "expressed his extraordinary admiration for the character and resolve of the Japanese people," the White House said.

But a hastily organized teleconference late Wednesday with officials from the State and Energy Departments underscored the administration's concerns. The travel warning extends to U.S. citizens already in the country and urges them to consider leaving. The authorized departure offers voluntary evacuation to family members and dependents of U.S. personnel in Tokyo, Yokohama and Nagoya and affects some 600 people.

Senior State Department official Patrick Kennedy said chartered planes will be brought in to help private American citizens wishing to leave. People face less risk in southern Japan, but changing weather and wind conditions could raise elsewhere in the coming days, he said.

Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said it will coordinate departures for eligible Defense Department dependents.

The decision to begin evacuations mirrors moves by countries such as Australia and Germany, who also advised their citizens to consider leaving Tokyo and other earthquake-affected areas. Tokyo, which is about 170 miles from the stricken nuclear complex, has reported slightly elevated radiation levels, though Japanese officials have said the increase was too small to threaten the 39 million people in and around the capital.

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PHOTOS: Earthquake, tsunami hit Japan
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U.S. AID: Financial response to disaster subdued
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NUCLEAR CRISIS: Helicopters drop water on damaged reactor

Anxious to safeguard the U.S. relationship with its closest Asian ally, Obama told Kan Wednesday evening about the steps the U.S. was taking, shortly before the State Department announced the first evacuations.

But the alliance looked likely to be strained, with the U.S. taking more dramatic safety precautions than Japan and issuing dire warnings that contradicted Japan's more upbeat assessments.

Earlier Wednesday, the Obama administration urged the evacuation of Americans from a 50-mile radius of the stricken nuclear plant, raising questions about U.S. confidence in Tokyo's risk assessments. Japan's was urging people within 20 miles to stay indoors if they could not evacuate.

White House spokesman Jay Carney sought to minimize any rift between the two allies, saying U.S. officials were making their recommendations based on their independent analysis of the data coming out of the region following Friday's massive earthquake and tsunami.

"I will not from here judge the Japanese evaluation of the data," Carney told reporters. "This is what we would do if this incident were happening in the United States."

Until Wednesday, the U.S. had advised its citizens to follow the recommendations of the Japanese government. As late as Tuesday, Carney had said those recommendations were "the same that we would take in the situation."

But conditions at the nuclear plant continued to deteriorate, with surging radiation forcing Japan to order workers to temporarily withdraw. Obama met at the White House with Gregory Jaczko, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, who recommended the wider evacuation zone.

During testimony on Capitol Hill Wednesday, Jaczko said anyone who gets close to the plant could face potentially lethal doses of radiation.

"We believe radiation levels are extremely high," he said.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the U.S. had consular personnel in the Miyagi and Ibaraki prefectures and was sending officials out to check on Americans.

"We have consular teams on the ground," Toner said. "Where they can, they are going door to door. They are going to hospitals. They are trying everything in their power to reach out and find American citizens."

The Pentagon said U.S. troops working on relief missions can get closer than 50 miles to the plant with approval. Lapan said the U.S. would review requests from the Japanese for assistance that would require troops to move within that radius, though no approval for such movement had been given since the stricter guidelines were enacted.

The Pentagon said troops are receiving anti-radiation pills before missions to areas where radiation exposure is likely.

"U.S. forces remain in Japan and the U.S. has full capability to fulfill our alliance commitments to defend Japan and maintain peace and in the region," Lapan said.

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EMOTION: Hope in Japan mixes with fear as reality sets in
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RADIATION: Conflicting information hinders U.S. preparations

With the arrival of three more ships to the massive humanitarian mission, there were 17,000 sailors and Marines afloat on 14 vessels in waters off Japan. Several thousand and Air Force service members already stationed at U.S. bases in Japan have also been mobilized for the relief efforts.

Airmen have been flying search and rescue missions and operating Global Hawk drones and U-2 reconnaissance planes to help the Japanese assess damage from the disasters. The operation is fraught with challenges — mainly, figuring out how to continue to provide help amid some low-level releases of radiation from the facility, which officials fear could be facing a meltdown.

Weather also temporarily hampered some relief plans Wednesday. Pilots couldn't fly helicopters off the deck of aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan until late afternoon because of poor visibility. The 7th Fleet said 15 flights with relief supplies were launched from the eight-ship carrier group, about half as many as the 29 flights reported the previous day to deliver food, water, blankets and other supplies.

Several water pumps and hoses were being sent from U.S. bases around Japan to help at Fukushima, where technicians were dousing the overheating with seawater in a frantic effort to cool them. The U.S. had already sent two trucks to the area to be operated by Japanese firefighters, said Cmdr. Leslie Hull-Ryde, a Pentagon spokeswoman.

Workers scramble to cool reactors; official says 2nd blast possible

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* "The situation is under control," a prime minister's office spokesman says
* Official: A blast could occur in the building housing a reactor at the Daiichi plant
* Authorities say there are no indications of dangerously high in the atmosphere
* They have not been able to confirm whether a meltdown has occurred

d6e8933cd8ddab4f46d0677c57fcd682 Workers scramble to cool reactors; official says 2nd blast possible

(CNN) -- Workers continued efforts to cool down fuel rods inside two Sunday as a Japanese government official warned that a could occur at the plant.

The aftermath of the -- from the scores of casualties to the nuclear concerns at the plant in Fukushima prefecture -- marks the "toughest and most difficult crisis for Japan" since the end of World War II, Naoto Kan said Sunday.

Yukio Edano said an explosion could take place in the building housing the No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi plant in northeastern Japan.

"There is a possibility that the third reactor may have hydrogen gas that is accumulating in the reactor (that) may potentially cause an explosion," he said.

An explosion caused by hydrogen buildup Saturday blew the roof off a concrete building housing the plant's No. 1 reactor, but the reactor and its containment system were not damaged in the explosion.

Edano said the No. 3 reactor would also likely withstand a similar blast, noting that workers had already released gas from the building to try to prevent an explosion.

5a424ed6b29ade8f4a4442aae6337963 Workers scramble to cool reactors; official says 2nd blast possible

be2a8da806cc8cceeeee247eb6da8936 Workers scramble to cool reactors; official says 2nd blast possible

Meanwhile, the prime minister ordered a Tokyo power company to conduct a widespread power outage in an effort to preserve energy as workers try to repair power plants damaged in the earthquake, including nuclear facilities.

The Tokyo Electric Power Company has been instructed to conduct three-hour as the country faces a 10 million kilowatt shortage, officials said.

At the nuclear plant, workers have been scrambling to cool off fuel rods at both reactors after a massive earthquake and tsunami disabled their cooling systems. Japanese authorities have said there is a "possibility" that a meltdown has occurred in the reactors.

A meltdown is a catastrophic failure of the reactor core, with a potential for widespread radiation release.

But Japanese officials stressed that there were no indications of dangerously high radiation levels in the atmosphere around the two reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in northeastern Japan. They said they were unable to confirm whether a meltdown had occurred because they cannot get close enough to the reactors' cores.

"We are continuing to monitor the radiation, but it is under control," Edano told reporters.

Later Sunday, a spokesman for Japan's prime minister repeated that assertion and said he would not describe what was occurring in the reactors as a "meltdown."

"The situation is under control. ....We have been succeeding in lowering pressure inside the containment vessel," spokesman Noriyuki Shikata said.

Edano said doctors were examining nine people who tested positive for high radiation levels on their skin and clothing.

Meanwhile, he said authorities were responding under the presumption that meltdowns had taken place in both reactors.

Workers were pumping seawater into the reactors in what one expert described as an "act of desperation" to cool them down.

As official information about the crisis trickled out, scientists and experts around the world weighed in on the situation, offering a wide range of interpretations of the events and their possible consequences.
Explosion at Japanese nuclear plant
Expert: 'This is a serious situation'
Japanese Ambassador denies meltdown
Japan's nuclear worries
Gallery: Massive quake hits Japan
RELATED TOPICS

* Earthquakes
* Geological Survey

Robert Alvarez, senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies and a former senior policy adviser to the U.S. secretary of energy, described the plan to use saltwater as "an act of desperation" by Japanese authorities, who seemed unable to deliver fresh water or plain water to cool the reactor and stabilize it.

If the effort to cool the nuclear fuel inside the reactor fails completely -- a scenario experts who have spoken to CNN say is unlikely -- the resulting release of radiation could cause enormous damage to the plant or release radiation into the atmosphere or water. That could lead to widespread cancer and other health problems, experts say.

Authorities have downplayed such a scenario, insisting the situation appears under control and that radiation levels in the air are not dangerous. Still, as what they described as "a precaution," more than 200,000 people who live within 20 kilometers (12 miles) of the plant have been ordered to leave the area.

"The bottom line is that we just don't know what's going to happen in the next couple of days and, frankly, neither do the people who run the system," added Dr. Ira Helfand, a member of the board of Physicians for Social Responsibility.

What we do know, he added, is that Japan's nuclear facilities are "way out of whack."

While some analysts said Japanese officials had not informed the public quickly enough about the evolving crisis, Jay Lehr, science director at the Heartland Institute in Chicago, said he was "100% confident" that Japan would be able to solve the problems at its nuclear plants.

"Nobody builds better power plants than Japan, because they are the most seismically active country on earth. They are built to withstand this very earthquake," he said.

"I am absolutely, 100% confident that they will be able to solve the existing problem of a meltdown, if it is occurring, that they will be able to totally eliminate the escape of any radiation," he said.

Robert Apthorpe, a nuclear engineer who has been fielding questions about Japan's nuclear plant problems on , said Sunday that time is of the essence.

"We have to watch very carefully the next 24 to 48 hours. ... We're not out of the woods yet," he said.

The problems at the Daiichi plant began Friday, when the 8.9-magnitude quake that struck offshore forced the automatic shutdown of the plant's nuclear reactors and knocked out the main cooling system, according to the country's nuclear agency.

A tsunami resulting from the quake then washed over the site, knocking out backup generators.

The reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi plant are boiling-water reactors. The reactor affected by Saturday's explosion is Fukushima Daiichi 1. It was connected to the grid in November 1970, making it about 40 years old.

The No. 1 unit is the oldest of six reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi site, according to the World Nuclear Association.

Japan is heavily dependent on nuclear power, with 54 plants and another eight slated for construction, said Aileen Mioko Smith of Green Action, an environmental group. All are located in "very seismic" areas, she said.

Authorities have also detected cooling system problems at another nuclear facility in Fukushima Prefecture, the Fukushima Daini plant, but have not expressed any concerns about possible meltdowns there.

Edano said that there have not been any leaks of radioactive material at either of the affected plants. Authorities deliberately have let out radioactive steam in order to alleviate growing pressure inside both of the affected reactors.

6c00ef056f570a2a98b9301004195bd9 Workers scramble to cool reactors; official says 2nd blast possible

Concern about food, fuel in wake of Japan disasters

85fba4ab82329341122df88e0127632b Concern about food, fuel in wake of Japan disasters

Sendai, Japan (CNN) -- Long lines at and gas stations along with continued aftershocks and power outages greeted many in Japan on Sunday morning, nearly two days after the and tsunami that left hundreds dead and missing.

Supplies of food and gas were running out in Sendai, the northern close to the of Friday's quake. Those who survived the earthquake and chose to remain in the city were enduring two-hour waits at the supermarket, according to a CNN iReporter in Sendai with the username joeyjenkins.

"They have waited for I don't even know how long to get gas, as the manually pumps the gas since there is no electricity," joeyjenkins wrote, adding they were without power until early Sunday.

Schools and hospitals and Sendai have been turned into shelters, and volunteers were handing out bottles of water, CNN correspondent Kyung Lah reported from the city.

Fears of power outages in Tokyo, about 200 miles south, sparked a run on , said iReporter Jessica Tekawa, 26.

"I think last night, there must have been something on the news about a power outage," she told CNN, "because when we went, with my friend, we were trying to get flashlights and they were sold out everywhere."

Water, too, was sold out in every store she went to after similar reports of possible water contamination, she said.

Kenneth Cukier, the Japan correspondent for The Economist magazine, said the announced managed power cuts will start Monday in certain regions of the country -- including suburban areas of Tokyo -- to give businesses enough power to operate.

A seemingly endless barrage of aftershocks from Friday's 8.9- was still rattling nerves Sunday. The Geological Survey reported more than 140 such quakes -- magnitude 4.5 and higher, with the strongest coming at a 6.4 -- in, near, or off the east coast of the Japanese island.

There have been "many aftershocks," said Yasue Schumaker, a Sendai native who now lives in Hawaii, but was visiting her mother in a Sendai hospital when the quake struck.

"The day it happened, it was constantly aftershock, and last night was better, but still we are having quite big ones," Schumaker said.

The aftershocks are a "constant reminder of what's happened, and what could happen in the future," Wall Street Journal reporter Yoree Koh told CNN from Tokyo.

Such aftershocks are also producing tremendous anxiety for earthquake survivors, reported CNN's Gary Tuchman, driving from the western coastal city of Shonai to Sendai in the east.

"People are wondering, could there be an aftershock that's greater than the original earthquake?" Tuchman said. "Each time you feel it, there's an element of fear."

The Japanese was working in at least one neighborhood of Sendai on Sunday morning to search for anyone trapped in the rubble. "A few hundred" people were still unaccounted for in one part of town Sunday, Lah reported.

Search-and-rescue helicopters buzzed over Sendai as workers walked through the muddy streets wearing hard hats and carrying shovels. At least one person was winched by chopper from a damaged house.

The city was still littered with debris and standing water from the tsunami. Two to three miles inland, houses were destroyed or simply gone, cars were stacked on top of each other, and brown mud covered the ground, Lah said.

An iReporter with the username xeynon, who described himself as an American living and working in Sendai, said "there are still many friends and acquaintances living along the coast we have not been able to contact."

Schumaker, her voice quivering, said those people should be the priority.

"People who lost their homes, or the people who are still needing help, they are the ones who need help," she said. "We don't have any electric, water, gas, and the city just announced it could take 30 days to get gas set up for everybody. But we definitely need water and food, but please help the people who lost their homes and still ... on top of the buildings asking for help."

Police probing crime link to NYC tour bus crash

HAWTHORNE, New York (AP) — Investigators were trying to determine if led to the high- of a tour bus that overturned on a major highway in New York as it was returning from an overnight casino trip, slamming into a pole that nearly sheared off its roof and killing 14 passengers.

9c5f50724e32ed61bb62d262440d06f9 Police probing crime link to NYC tour bus crash

Police said they were trying to verify the bus driver's assertion that he lost control trying to avoid a swerving tractor-trailer and looking into his activities before the accident. The bus had just reached the of New York City on a journey from the Mohegan Sun casino in Connecticut when the crash occurred.

As many as 20 passengers were treated at hospitals. Eight were in serious condition, according to police. Several were in surgery later in the day.

The crash happened at 5:35 a.m. Saturday, with some of the 31 passengers still asleep. The bus scraped along the guard rail for 300 feet, toppled and crashed into the support pole for a highway sign indicating the exit for the Hutchinson Parkway.

The pole knifed through the bus front to back along the window line, peeling the roof off all the way to the back tires. Most people aboard were hurled to the front of the bus on impact, department chief Edward Kilduff said.

The southbound lanes of the highway were closed for hours while tended to survivors and removed bodies.

The crash was being handled "as if it is a ," Maj. Michael Kopy said at a news conference Saturday night in Hawthorne.

"It will take a long period of time to determine what, if any, may have occurred here," he said.

Kopy said police had received reports from witnesses that the bus driver had been speeding on Interstate 95, where the limit is 55 mph.

He identified the driver as Ophadel Williams, 40, of Brooklyn, New York, whom he said was taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Kopy said blood had been drawn from the driver for analysis and that state police were working with authorities in Connecticut and Mohegan Sun officials to determine what the driver's activities were before the accident.

"At this point it appears that the operator lost control of the vehicle for what is as yet an undetermined reason," Kopy said.

He declined to identify the passengers or to describe their injuries. "The pole did go through the top half of the bus," he said.

Chung Ninh, 59, told The New York Times and NY1 News that he had been asleep in his seat, then suddenly found himself hanging upside-down from his seat belt, surrounded by the dead and screaming. One bled from a severed arm.

Ninh said when he tried to help one bloodied woman, the driver told him to stop, because she was dead. "'Forget this one. Help another one,'" he said the driver told him. He said he and other passengers who were able climbed out through a skylight.

Passenger Jose Hernandez, 49, said he also was asleep at the time of the crash.

"We tried to help people, but there was twisted metal in the way," Hernandez told the Times.

New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said earlier Saturday that police were looking for the tractor-trailer, which did not stop after the crash. He said the truck was in a lane to the bus' left, although it was unclear whether the two vehicles touched.

State police said later they were interviewing the driver of a tractor-trailer that was in the area at the time of the crash. They said the trailer had been located on Long Island and the tractor was found in Westchester County. Both were being inspected in Farmingdale, on Long Island, to determine if they may have clipped the bus.

The bus, a 1999 Prevost, was being inspected at the state police barracks. Video from a camera on the bus had been obtained by authorities but not yet analyzed, Kopy said.

He said investigators were trying to determine the exact speed the bus was traveling before the crash. A device that can record such information, similar to a flight data recorder on an airplane, was expected to be examined overnight.

Limo driver Homer Martinez happened on the scene moments after the wreck and saw other drivers sprinting from their cars to assist the injured.

"People were saying, 'Oh my God. Oh my God,' holding their hands on their heads," Martinez said. "I saw people telling other people not to go there, 'You don't want to see this.'"

Capt. Matthew Galvin of the NYPD's Emergency Service Unit was one of the first rescuers on the scene. He said when officers clambered into the wreckage, they found "bodies everywhere."

"People were moaning and screaming for help," he said. Some of the dead were tangled up with the living.

Though dazed, about seven people were able to walk away from the wreck on their own, he said. Galvin said that in his 22 years on the job, "It's probably the worst accident I've ever seen in terms of the human toll."

The wreck also closed the northbound side of the highway, but those lanes were open again by midmorning.

The National Transportation Safety Board sent a team of investigators.

Christopher Hart, the vice chairman of the NTSB, said the team would be looking at the motor carrier's safety programs, including those involving driver fatigue, as well as highway design and the bus itself. He said that part of the investigation could take several days.

Many of the passengers on the bus were Chinatown residents. They ranged in age from 20 to 50, officials said.

Fifteen were being treated at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. A hospital spokeswoman, Barbara DeIorio, said some injuries were serious but had no immediate information on how many were gravely hurt. Five more were taken to St. Barnabas Hospital, where two were on life support, breathing with the assistance of machines.

"We've had skull fractures, rib fractures ... internal bleeding, we've had lung contusions," said Dr. Ernest Patti, senior attending physician at St. Barnabas.

The bus driver was "awake and conscious," Patti said.

World Wide Travel of Greater New York, the operator of the bus, said it in a statement that the company was "heartbroken" and cooperating with investigators.

"We are a family-owned company and realize words cannot begin to express our sorrow to the families of those who lost their lives or were injured in this tragic accident. Our thoughts and prayers are with them," it said.

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration records listed World Wide Travel as having at least two other accidents in which people were injured in the past 24 months. The agency flagged the company for possible extra scrutiny because of violations involving driver fatigue regulations.

The bus was one of scores that travel daily between Chinatown, in Manhattan, and the Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun casinos in southeastern Connecticut.

Mohegan Sun, in Uncasville, Conn., has estimated a fifth of its business comes from Asian spending and caters to Chinese-American gamblers. Its website has a Chinese-language section offering gaming and bus promotions.

More than 1,700 people are likely dead or missing – Japan

IWAKI, Japan (AP) — An explosion at a nuclear power station Saturday destroyed a building housing the reactor, but a was decreasing despite fears of a meltdown from damage caused a powerful earthquake and tsunami, officials said.

spokesman Yukio Edano said the explosion destroyed the exterior walls of the building where the reactor is placed, but not the actual metal housing enveloping the reactor.

That was welcome news for a country suffering from Friday's double disaster that pulverized the northeastern coast, leaving at least 574 people dead by official count.

The scale of destruction was not yet known, but there were grim signs that the death toll could soar. One report said four whole trains had disappeared Friday and still not been located. Local media reports said at least 1,300 people may have been killed.

Edano said the radiation around the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant had not risen after the blast, but had in fact decreased. He did not say why that was so. The pressure in the reactor was also decreasing after the blast, he said.

The explosion was preceded by puff of white smoke that gathered intensity until it became a huge cloud enveloping the entire facility, located in Fukushima, 20 miles from Iwaki. After the explosion, the walls of the building crumbled, leaving only a skeletal metal frame.

ebf0346711c7d03f0a74f9694e95b3ca More than 1,700 people are likely dead or missing   Japan

Tokyo Power Electric Co., the utility that runs the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, said four workers suffered fractures and bruises and were being treated at a hospital.

"We have confirmed that the walls of this building were what exploded, and it was not the reactor's container that exploded," said Edano.

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COMPLETE COVERAGE: Japan copes with devastation
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PHOTOS: Tsunami hits Japan

The trouble began at the plant's Unit 1 after the massive 8.9-magnitude earthquake and the tsunami it spawned knocked out power there, depriving it of its cooling system.

The concerns about a radiation leak at the overshadowed the massive tragedy laid out along a 1,300-mile stretch of the coastline where scores of villages, towns and cities were battered by the tsunami, packing 23-feet high waves.

It swept inland about six miles in some areas, swallowing boats, homes, cars, trees and everything else.

"The tsunami was unbelievably fast," said Koichi Takairin, a 34-year-old truck driver who was inside his sturdy four-ton rig when the wave hit the port town of Sendai.

"Smaller cars were being swept around me," he said. "All I could do was sit in my truck."

His rig ruined, he joined the steady flow of survivors who walked along the road away from the sea and back into the city on Saturday.

Smashed cars and small airplanes were jumbled up against buildings near the local airport, several miles from the shore. Felled trees and wooden debris lay everywhere as rescue workers coasted on boats through murky waters around flooded structures, nosing their way through a sea of debris.

According to official figures, 586 people are missing and 1,105 injured. In addition, police said between 200 and 300 bodies were found along the coast in Sendai, the biggest city in the area near the quake's .

The true scale of the destruction was still not known more than 24 hours after the quake since washed-out roads and shut airports have hindered access to the area. An untold number of bodies were believed to be buried in the rubble and debris.

Meanwhile, the first wave of rescuers began arriving by boats and helicopters.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan said 50,000 troops joined rescue and recovery efforts, aided by boats and helicopters. Dozens of countries also offered help.

President Barack Obama pledged assistance following what he called a potentially "catastrophic" disaster. He said one aircraft carrier was already in Japan and a second was on its way. Washington has also dispatched urban search and rescue teams, according to Ambassador John Roos.

More than 215,000 people were living in 1,350 temporary shelters in five prefectures, or states, the national police agency said. Since the quake, more than 1 million households have not had water, mostly concentrated in northeast. Some 4 million buildings were without power.

About 24% of electricity in Japan is produced by 55 nuclear power units in 17 plants and some were in trouble after the quake.

Japan declared states of emergency at two power plants after their units lost cooling ability.

Although the played down fears of radiation leak, the Japanese nuclear agency spokesman Shinji Kinjo acknowledged there were still fears of a meltdown.

A "meltdown" is not a technical term. Rather, it is an informal way of referring to a very serious collapse of a power plant's systems and its ability to manage temperatures.

Yaroslov Shtrombakh, a Russian nuclear expert, said a Chernobyl-style meltdown was unlikely.

"It's not a fast reaction like at Chernobyl," he said. "I think that everything will be contained within the grounds, and there will be no big catastrophe."

In 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear reactor exploded and caught , sending a cloud of radiation over much of .

The reactor in trouble has already leaked some radiation: Before the explosion, operators had detected eight times the normal outside the facility and 1,000 times normal inside Unit 1's control room.

Also before the blast, Ryohei Shiomi, a nuclear official, said that each hour the plant was releasing the amount of radiation a person normally absorbs in a year.

An evacuation area around the plant was expanded to a radius of 12 miles from the six miles before. People in the expanded area were advised to leave quickly; 51,000 residents were previously evacuated.

"Everyone wants to get out of the town. But the roads are terrible," said Reiko Takagi, a middle-aged woman, standing outside a taxi company. "It is too dangerous to go anywhere. But we are afraid that winds may change and bring radiation toward us."

The transport ministry said all highways from Tokyo leading to quake-hit areas were closed, except for emergency vehicles. Mobile communications were spotty and calls to the devastated areas were going unanswered.

Local TV stations broadcast footage of people lining up for water and food such as rice balls. In Fukushima, city officials were handing out bottled drinks, snacks and blankets. But there were large areas that were surrounded by water and were unreachable.

One hospital in Miyagi prefecture was seen surrounded by water. The staff had painted an SOS on its rooftop and were waving white flags.

Technologically advanced Japan is well prepared for quakes and its buildings can withstand strong jolts, even a temblor like Friday's, which was the strongest the country has experienced since official records started in the late 1800s. What was beyond human control was the killer tsunami that followed.

Japan's worst previous quake was a magnitude 8.3 temblor in Kanto that killed 143,000 people in 1923, according to the USGS. A magnitude 7.2 quake in Kobe killed 6,400 people in 1995.

Japan lies on the "Ring of Fire" — an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones stretching around the Pacific where about 90% of the world's quakes occur, including the one that triggered the Dec. 26, 2004, Indian Ocean tsunami that killed an estimated 230,000 people in 12 countries. A magnitude-8.8 quake that shook central Chile in February 2010 also generated a tsunami and killed 524 people.

Libyans: Food shortage, more violence by security forces in Tripoli

6189480bd3936a5b3855cc01498b3952 Libyans: Food shortage, more violence by security forces in Tripoli

() - This update is unconfirmed - information is sourced from social media groups.

The burning of the soldiers who did not want to shoot the protesters is unconfirmed yet, you must know that there are other people that would do such thing so that people think it's the president and more people go against him, I cannot say anything about that.

There were always small protesters against him, but now it's bigger.
Yes, Youtube was blocked 1 year ago (or 2 not sure sry) because many were flaming him on the Youtube videos showing him.

Facebook has been blocked 3-4 days ago, I still access it with a private proxy though, and is blocked too.

The internet is slow, and phone connections are hard to reach, but we all got a big bonus We got 10 credits in our phone!

I do not want to go on your radio station or whatever, I might get in trouble. I can get many images and videos (I already have some images like a dead body of a 50 cal sniper bullet shot through his head, I do not want to post it, it's very very strong and ugly).

I was also thinking to make a Libyan Facebook, but that might get me in trouble

UNCONFIRMED NEWS: People say that a meeting will be held, or is being now, that the high ranked government people offered the president the same payment as he is getting now, everything same, offering him FULL security in Libya, and his family, but just to leave his current position as a leader. It is an important meeting, but unconfirmed.

(Reuters) - Libya's Muammar Gaddafi used tanks, helicopters and warplanes to fight a growing revolt, witnesses said on Tuesday, as the veteran leader scoffed at reports he was fleeing after four decades in power.

The U.N. refugee agency urged to Libya's neighbors not to turn back those fleeing the violence, as hundreds of refugees streamed into Egypt on tractors and trucks, describing a wave of killing and banditry unleashed by the revolt.

In the eastern town of Al Bayda, resident Marai Al Mahry told Reuters by telephone that 26 people including his brother Ahmed had been shot dead overnight by Gaddafi loyalists.

"They shoot you just for walking on the street," he said, sobbing uncontrollably as he appealed for help.

Protesters were attacked with tanks and warplanes, he said.

"The only thing we can do now is not give up, no surrender, no going back. We will die anyways, whether we like it or not. It is clear that they don't care whether we live or not. This is genocide," said Mahry, 42.

In Tripoli, residents told Reuters there was no visible security force presence on the streets. The only police present were directing traffic, they said, the day after reports that warplanes had bombed portions of the capital and mercenaries had shot civilians.

Refugees fleeing into Egypt told of a wave of violence and crime.

"Five people died on the street where I live," Mohamed Jalaly, 40, told Reuters at Salum on his way to Cairo from Benghazi. "You leave Benghazi and then you have ... nothing but and youths with weapons," he added. "The way from Benghazi is extremely dangerous," he said.

Libyan guards have withdrawn from their side of the border and Egypt's new military rulers -- who took power following the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak on February11 -- said the main crossing would be kept open round-the-clock to allow the sick and wounded to enter.

Libyan security forces have cracked down fiercely on demonstrators across the country, with fighting spreading to Tripoli after erupting in Libya's oil-producing east last week, in a reaction to decades of repression and following uprisings that have toppled leaders in Tunisia and Egypt.

Human Rights Watch says at least 233 people have been killed and opposition groups put the figure much higher but independent verification is impossible.

The revolt in OPEC member Libya has driven oil prices to a 2 1/2 year high above $108 a barrel.

As the fighting has intensified some supporters have abandoned Gaddafi. Tripoli's envoy to India, Ali al-Essawi, resigned and told Reuters that African mercenaries had been recruited to help put down protests.

"The fall of Gaddafi is the imperative of the people in streets," he said. The also quit and a group of army officers urged soldiers to "join the people." Two pilots flew their warplanes to nearby Malta.

DEFIANCE AND CONDEMNATION
Gaddafi's son Saif on Sunday vowed his father would keep fighting "until the last standing" and the Libyan leader appeared on after days of seclusion to dismiss reports he had fled to the Venezuela of his ally Hugo Chavez.

"I want to show that I'm in Tripoli and not in Venezuela. Do not believe the channels belonging to stray dogs," said Gaddafi, who has ruled Libya with a mixture of populism and tight control since taking power in a military coup in 1969.

World powers have condemned the use of force against protesters, U.N. Ban Ki-moon accusing Libya of firing on civilians from warplanes and helicopters. The Security Council was to discuss Libya at 9 a.m. EST.

Washington and Europe have demanded an end to the violence and Germany's Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said: "A ruling family, threatening its people with civil war, has reached the end of the line."

Demonstrations spread to Tripoli from the second city Benghazi, cradle of the revolt that has engulfed a number of towns and which residents say is now in the hands of protestors.

Residents said anxious shoppers were queuing outside stores to try to stock up on food and drink. Some shops were closed.

In Tripoli, one resident said locals were patrolling their neighborhood at night to protect it from roaming mercenaries, reporting sniper fire and the use of military transport helicopters to ferry security forces about.

"Gaddafi obviously does not have any limits. We knew he was crazy, but it's still a terrible shock to see him turning mercenaries on his own people and just mowing down unarmed demonstrators," he told Lisa Goldman, a Canadian-Israeli journalist based in Tel Aviv.

ENERGY DISRUPTION

Spain's Repsol suspended all operations in Libya and trade sources reported operations at Libyan oil ports had been disrupted due to the unrest. Others said gas supplies from Libya to had slowed since Late Monday but said they had not yet been interrupted.

Shell said it was pulling out its expatriate staff from Libya temporarily and a number of states were seeking to evacuate their nationals.

The upheavals which deposed the presidents of Tunisia and Egypt have shaken the Arab world and inspired protests across the Middle East and North Africa, threatening the of long-entrenched autocratic leaders.

A flamboyant figure with his flowing robes and bevy of female bodyguards, Gaddafi was famously branded a "mad dog" by one U.S. president and has long been accused by the West of links to terrorism and revolutionary movements.

But this changed when Libya renounced its weapons of mass destruction to secure an end to its international isolation and a rapprochement with western governments, keen to tap its oil and gas wealth and lucrative trade and investment deals.

0ddd2c5ccb45847be6b7c8bac9bef84f Libyans: Food shortage, more violence by security forces in Tripoli

(Reporting by Tarek Amara, Christian Lowe, Tarek Amara, Marie-Louise Gumuchian, Souhail Karam; Love, Daren Butler; Henry Foy in New Delhi; Writing by Jon Boyle; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Giles Elgood)

Bullying, Not Cool – The World According to D(

9b618815cf0a4fe05e7bc1db59a3b158 Bullying, Not Cool – The World According to D(

( Blog) – What the hell is up with these kids today, with bullying. I just watched a video of these two girls who they decided to destroy this one girls life all because they didn’t like her. What is going on in their heads?

Do I think they should get felony charges , no! Do I think their parents should be charged , yes. Because a bully learns from what they live.

Looking back to when I was younger, I remember a few bullies and their lives, and its for many reasons this seems to happen, poor or abuse at home, low self esteem, not able to keep up with friends or , sexual abuse, and wanting to be a part of something, and unfortunately when these kids chose the roads to bulling, they see they have gained strength and finally feel they belong somewhere, and inside they know that they now have the control over this that has been ripping them apart for so long.They feel that people will now have to listen and they will be heard because like them they have no choice. Bullies will victimize a person they are jealous of, maybe because their smart or they have a boyfriend/girlfriend. The bully wants or your weak and unfortunately just became their target because your an easy shot. Bullies never someone who could fight back, they will always on a weaker level than themselves.

My problem here is not the bullying but where they got it from to begin with. Children are born in this world innocent, and the old saying you learn from your parents , is a good place to start. Most of these kids come from poor back grounds, or parents who themselves were bullies, who don't take the time to listen to the kids, or show affection, and were abused themselves. Parents are who mold their children, society just steps in to add to the . Bullies like this are not strong, they are weak and need to express themselves in the only way they know how..and to blame them for this just adds more fuel to the . Its the parents who should be called onto the carpets now, they weren't has children and breed a new society of themselves and unfortunately they have more control than ever with the use of the to do more damage than in the past when you only had a play ground. These kids are not happy, but its the only way they feel they can be heard, and like the ones they are bullying at schools or on the , these kids are victims at home.

We live in a society of don't spank , don't tell, because the fear of the end results stops them. Kids are not gonna go to the authorities or parents , because they know that to tell means more abuse if found out, or the media would make it into a three ring circus (which is worst for the victim) and the justice system, well that's a whole different article on how poorly they handle situations as well, and the schools make life the victims prison. So what do you do? Do you stay a victim or do you stand up and do something? Well, you take a stand, a bully will not tolerate being bullied back, see this is where you missed the point, because like you the bully is a victim too. Their fears are so much stronger than yours and being called out makes them weak. They do not want their fears shown, because they lose power. They know now if they don't stand up its over for them or they need to find a way to get themselves out of the situation they put themselves in. Bullies NEVER work alone, their is no power in that,they need a cheering section , this gives them power, they want to be seen and heard.Like the girls and kids who use the internet, to them this is pure power, and destructive, just like their lives.

So what do you do? You take away the power. Schools can be helpful here, its not hard to spot a bully, but instead of enlisting fear to this , try working with him/her , they want and need to be heard, they don't like themselves to begin with and you forcing more restrictions only make them grow stronger, they want to be a part of something , anything where they matter, if the is failing, find out why, is it home, or the inability to learn, do they need help, in dealing with society matters, on how to be a friend and do it in a way that does not make them feel weak, but gives them strength in a positive light, don't forget they already have plenty of negative,which brought them to where they are. Sometimes all they really want to know is that somebody, anybody cares and will listen. Just because they act out in this manner does not mean that is who they really are inside. having kids turn on kids is not the answer , your just creating a more vicious cycle.

The other thing schools really need to start paying attention to is the teachers. Yes, bullying is alive and well in this dept as well and a who bullies a child is more dangerous to that child's life and future than any kids who bully them. I have a friend who is going through this now with her two sons, with a , and it just eludes me how a principal overlooks this .This is something that no parent should tolerate on any level, or school board.

Here's a couple articles I found on this subject, parents need to start addressing this to the schools, when anyone feels their child is being abused . All children have a right to an education and anyone who prevents that needs to be called on the carpet. After all, parents need to remember you hold the purse strings here, and its our tax dollars that are being abused if this continues to happen.

Students who are bullied by teachers typically experience confusion, anger, fear,
self-doubt, and profound concerns about their academic and social competencies. Not
knowing why he or she has been targeted, or what one must do to end the bullying, may
well be among the most personally distressing aspects of being singled out and treated
unfairly. Over time, especially if no one in authority intervenes, the target may come to
blame him or her self for the abuse and thus feel a pervasive sense of helplessness and
worthlessness.

More on this article can be found here

http://www.stopbullyingnow.com/teachers%20who%20bully%20students%20McEvoy.pdf

http://www.webmd.com/parenting/features/teachers-who-bully

Plain and simple, bulling and abuse on any level should not be tolerated. Look at the situations from all sides and than take a stand.

Deb Out.