Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Posts Tagged ‘Some’

Winter weather to make weekend comeback in some states (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Cold weather, snow, and severe storms were expected over the weekend in several parts of the country, weather forecasters said on Saturday.

A band of snow and cold rain is expected to sweep from Omaha, Nebraska to the District of Columbia, according to AccuWeather.com.

“While the storm will not bring excessive snowfall, it will put down as much as 6 inches of snow along part of this path,” AccuWeather.com senior metrologist Alex Sosnowski said. “Most areas within the west-east band will get 1 to 3 inches of snow.”

The storm is expected to reach Illinois by Saturday evening and Virginia overnight.

The Weather Channel described the weekend weather as being a clash between winter and spring.

Heavy rain and thunderstorms are likely all day Saturday and throughout the night in much of the South, the Weather Channel’s Tim Ballisty said.

The Tennessee River Valley will see the heaviest rain while high winds and large hail will rip through Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia.

The National Weather service has issued flood alerts in those areas.

In the West, heavy snow will continue in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, adding between two and four feet to the one to four feet already on the ground, according to accuweather.com, presenting an avalanche risk.

Heavy rain will pound closer to the Pacific coast from central California to Southern Washington, amounting to between one and three inches.

Combined with what has been heavy rain for March, the rain will likely trigger flash flooding, mudslides and debris flows.

(Reporting by Wendell Marsh; Editing by Jerry Norton)

Yahoo! News: U.S. News

Some ready for another cruise even after Carnival voyage – CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Officials from Panama are investigating the fire on the cruise ship
  • Some passengers said they ate mayonnaise sandwiches
  • U.S. Coast Guard also part of the investigation

San Diego, California (CNN) — Even though they were stuck without air conditioning, hot showers and decent meals, at least four passengers who made it off a crippled Carnival Cruise Lines ship said Friday that they would go on a cruise again.

“I’m so thankful that we’re all alive,” Leticia Lewis said on CNN’s “American Morning.” “I don’t wish this experience on anyone. It wasn’t a wonderful event. But I would take another one.”

Amber Haslerud, another passenger, said her voyage on the ill-fated Carnival Cruise ship was her first cruise, and she would also go on another one.

“I definitely would give it another go and try to get the experience I should have had this time,” said Haslerud. “I deserve it after all that we went through this week.”

Natalie Martinez and Angela Evans said they would also go on another cruise, but they would bring a survival kit with flashlights, chocolate and air freshener.

And “I think we would wait a year,” Martinez added.

The cruise ship lost power earlier this week after a fire started in the engine room of the vessel. Some 3,300 passengers left the ship Thursday after a three-day ordeal.

Some passengers left the boat with horror stories.

“It was absolutely deplorable,” Marquis Horace said. At one point, the ship ran out of food, he said, and “they started making mayo sandwiches.”

Others looked at the incident differently calling it an “adventure.”

“A lot of things went wrong, but it was really fun,” said one young passenger, Ryan Harlan, who was traveling with his parents. “We went to the Kids’ Camp.”

He said the Kids’ Camp was, in fact, his favorite part, because he made some friends.

And the worst part? “Being stranded in the middle of the ocean,” he said.

The National Transportation Safety Board said Thursday it was investigating the incident. But later in the day the safety board said officials from Panama would lead the investigation because that is the country the vessel is flagged under.

The U.S. Coast Guard will also be part of the investigation, the transportation board said.


Nation – Google News

Spam the torpedoes! Carnival Splendor returns home — with some funny twists – Los Angeles Times

Levity was not in short supply as the stranded cruise ship Carnival Splendor arrived in San Diego on Thursday.

Levity was not in short supply as the stranded cruise ship Carnival Splendor arrived in San Diego on Thursday.
(Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)

la-trb-splendor-cruise-reactions-20101111

Some people show great courage in the face of adversity; some just get silly. Here’s what happened when the Carnival Splendor cruise ship finally returned to San Diego on Thursday after being left powerless at sea by an engine fire:

Passenger Donna Hobbs and some fellow strandees put their ordeal into a snappy sea ditty sung to the tune of the “Gilligan’s Island” theme song. Thank goodness someone was laughing. (Click here for the ABC-TV video.)

But maybe those lyrics tell a bigger story. Hobbs sings of “more salad and more fruit, cucumber and cheese sandwiches…”



Really? Word on the sea was that Pop-Tarts and Spam were the plats du jour. But a tweet by Carnival personnel disputed that account: “Despite media reports to the contrary, Carnival Splendor guests were never served SPAM!” Of course, that provoked a slew of comments from Spam lovers everywhere. (Carnival later added that “while some SPAM was delivered, it was never served to guests.”)

That denial didn’t stop vendors from selling T-shirts for $ 20 each to returning passengers imprinted with the phrase: “I survived the 2010 Carnival cruise Spamcation,”  the Associated Press reported.

Spamcation? Let’s hope that doesn’t turn into a travel trend.

Check out the “Carnival Splendor Twitter chatter” to stay on top of news about the returning cruise ship.

hat while some SPAM was delivered, it was never served to guests.

Nation – Google News

Obama returns to Indonesia, and for some that’s all that mattered – Christian Science Monitor

The majority of Indonesians saw the visit by Obama, who many former classmates and friends there knew as ‘Little Barry,’ as worthy of celebration.

Jakarta, Indonesia

The tinkling of a traditional Indonesian gamelan orchestra filled the air as President Obama and around 200 guests sat down to a dinner of his favorite Indonesian dishes – fried rice and meatball soup called bakso. It might sound like a familiar diplomatic dance – meeting and greeting and speechmaking. But with Mr. Obama’s ties to Indonesia, the general feel around the local shops and markets in Jakarta was one of mighty anticipation at what might come out of his long-awaited trip.

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Many observers say Obama’s ties to Indonesia, where he spent four years of his childhood, would usher in a new era of friendship between the two nations. But a decision to cut short his trip due to travel threats posed by an erupting volcano made some doubt the sincerity of the speech he gave Wednesday morning.

“It’s good that now people in the US may know where to locate Indonesia on a map,” says Noor Huda Ismail, director of the Institute for International Peacebuilding. “But that Indonesia will play a heavy role in the world simply because the US president spent four years here, no way.”

Those who saw Obama’s visit as a homecoming didn’t seem to care. They were more interested in hearing memories of his boyhood and making sure he was surrounded by Indonesian hospitality.

Obama lived in Menteng Dalam, a quaint neighborhood that has changed little since the 1960s, even as high-rises have sprung up around it. Away from the wide streets, glitzy shopping malls, and sparking glass office towers of today, city alleyways are still lined with small outdoor markets and street vendors selling bakso.

But, much to Indonesians delight, Obama says he remembers the people the most: “The old men and women who welcomed us with smiles; the children who made a foreigner feel like a neighbor; and the teachers who helped me learn about the wider world.”

Those teachers are now educating a new generation of young Indonesians, some of who were hoping they might get to meet him. At Obama’s former elementary school, children clad in white and maroon uniforms practiced songs they had prepared for the president, and spoke of Obama’s ability to speak Indonesian.

But excitement about Obama’s trip has been tame compared to what it was last March, when he cancelled a planned trip to deal with the fallout of the BP oil spill. Even as the country prepared for his arrival on Tuesday, some Indonesians were skeptical.

While there was much fanfare upon Air Force One’s arrival, a group of young Islamic hard-liners held a long, white banner that read “Obama, the real terrorist.” Others said it was not the right time to visit, since Indonesia is still reeling from a tsunami and volcanic eruption that hit separate parts of the country last week.

Still, the majority of Indonesians saw his visit – however brief – as a worthy of celebration.

The Friends of Obama, an eccentric group of Indonesians and ex-patriots that includes former classmates, neighbors and teachers, and friends of his half-sister, gathered at a Tex-Mex restaurant to share stories about the boy they knew as “little Barry.”

And in the end, perhaps the most important thing to Indonesians was having the world spotlight show a bit of commonality between it and the US.

“We all rely on each other together, like bamboo and the river bank,” Obama said upon receipt of an award for his mother’s work in the country. “We are all stronger and safer when we see our common humanity in each other.”

World – Google News

 

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