Saturday, February 27, 2010
WATCH LIVE:Tsunami reaches Hawaii; initial waves do not appear to be serious ABC News
Honolulu police officers patrol an empty Ala Moana beach park ...
Reuters
Honolulu police officers patrol an empty Ala Moana beach park Reuters – Honolulu police officers patrol an empty Ala Moana beach park during a tsunami warning for the Hawaiian …
* Hawaii prepares for tsunami Slideshow:Hawaii prepares for tsunami
* Tsunami threatens Hawaii, most of Pacific rim Play Video Video:Tsunami threatens Hawaii, most of Pacific rim AP
* Chile Earthquake Eyewitnesses Speak Play Video Video:Chile Earthquake Eyewitnesses Speak ABC News
1 min ago
HILO, Hawaii – A official at the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center says Hawaii "dodged a bullet" after a major earthquake sent powerful waves roiling around the Pacific.
It still will be about an hour before officials will be willing to give an all-clear in Hawaii, but there were no immediate reports of major damage around the Pacific rim. just tidal surges that reached up to about seven feet in some island chains.
Gerard Fryer, a geophysist for the tsunami center, defended the decision to urge evacuations of coastal areas, saying "better safe than sorry."
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
HONOLULU (AP) — A tsunami triggered by an earthquake in Chile swept ashore in Hawaii on Saturday, but the initial waves did not appear to cause significant damage.
The first waves looked more like an extreme fluctuation in the tide than the giant tsunami that Hawaii and the rest of the Pacific Ocean were bracing for after the magnitude-8.8 quake devastated Chile.
The wave began affecting Hilo Bay on the Big Island just before noon local time. Water began pulling away from shore, exposing reefs and sending dark streaks of muddy, sandy water offshore. Water later washed over Coconut Island, a small park off the coast of Hilo.
The tsunami was causing a series of surges that were about 20 minutes apart, and the waves arrived later and smaller than originally predicted. The highest wave at Hilo measured 5.5 feet high, while Maui saw some as high as 6 feet.
No major damage was immediately reported, but scientists cautioned the waves would continue into the afternoon.
The tsunami raced across the Pacific Ocean in terrifying force after the quake hit Chile hours earlier, giving Hawaii officials had ample time to get people out of the potential disaster area.
Sirens blared in Hawaii to alert residents to the potential waves. As the waves expected arrival drew near, roads into tourist-heavy Waikiki were closed off. Police patrolled main roads, telling tourists to get off the streets.
Authorities even flew overhead in Cessna blaring warnings to people to get out of the potential danger zone, and residents in Honolulu lined up at supermarkets to stock up on food and batteries. Cars lined up 15 long at several gas stations.
The tsunami fear was not unique to Hawaii.
The waves hit California, but barely registered a notice amid stormy weather. No injuries or property damage are reported. Authorities reported unusual tidal surges to the south of Santa Monica, in San Diego.
A tsunami warning — the highest alert level — was in effect for Hawaii, Guam, American Samoa, Samoa and dozens of other Pacific islands. An advisory — the lowest level — includes California, Oregon, Washington state, parts of Alaska, and coastal British Colombia.
The Navy was moving more than a half dozen vessels Saturday to try to avoid damage from the tsunami. A frigate, three destroyers and two smaller vessels were being sent out of Pearl Harbor and a cruiser out of Naval Base San Diego, the Navy said.
In Tonga, where nine people died in a Sept. 29 tsunami, police and defense forces began evacuating tens of thousands of people from low-lying coastal areas as they warned residents that waves about three feet (one meter) high could wash ashore.
"I can hear the church bells ringing to alert the people," National Disaster Office deputy director Mali'u Takai said.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Politics trump policy at health summit
Did you expect anything else?
From its conception, Thursday's health care "summit" was destined to be little more than a stage where Democrats and Republicans would recite their lines and further their political agendas.
Playing their part, Republicans branded Obama as arrogant and overreaching for refusing to drop a health care plan that a majority of voters don't favor. The GOP hopes to kill it.
Obama tried to cast the Republicans as obstructionists. He hopes to ram his proposal past a GOP filibuster.
Measured on that narrow and cynical scale, the summit was a success. Both team scored political points.
But Americans were led to believe that the goal was finding common ground on getting health insurance to tens of millions of Americans who don't have it and containing skyrocketing costs that threaten the nation's fiscal well-being.
"I'd like to make sure that this discussion is actually a discussion and not just us trading talking points," Obama said at the summit's opening, "I hope that this isn't political theater."
By that scale, everybody failed.
Still, that's an account of this day viewed with the lens up close. From a distance, you might focus on the fact that national leaders spent a long day discussing a crucial issue in front of television cameras, where their words could be parsed and recorded. It could be argued that they were working hard at what we pay them to do.
Or was it just a lot of talking past each other?
Obama dominated the conversation, barely contained his impatience with GOP statements and at times mocked them for trotting out visual effects (thick stacks of Democratic health care legislation) and talking points. Republicans complained about the time disparity and lectured the president about his policies.
It was not a conversation, rarely even a debate. It was a series of made-for-TV speeches by public servants who treated each other like stage props.
A few snippets:
_Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., called Obama's plan a nonstarter. "This is a car that can't be recalled and fixed," he said, "and we ought to start over." As Alexander spoke, Obama's body betrayed his frustration: He pursed his lips. He tapped his pen on a pad. Was that a smirk? He cradled and fidgeted with his chin. "Lamar," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said several minutes later, "you're entitled to your opinion but not your own facts."
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Space Junk Mess Getting Messier in Orbit
SPACE.com's Space Insider Columnist
SPACE.com Leonard David
space.com's Space Insider Columnist
space.com – Tue Feb 23, 2:33 pm ET
BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. — The already untidy mass of orbital debris that litters low Earth orbit nearly got nastier last month.
A head-on collision was averted between a spent upper stage from a Chinese rocket and the European Space Agency's (ESA) huge Envisat Earth remote-sensing spacecraft.
Space junk tracking information supplied by the U.S. military, as well as confirming German radar data, showed that the two space objects would speed by each other at a nail-biting distance of roughly 160 feet (50 meters).
ESA's Envisat tips the scales at 8 tons, with China's discarded rocket body weighing some 3.8 tons. A couple of tweaks of maneuvering propellant were used to nudge the large ESA spacecraft to a more comfortable miss distance.
But what if the two objects had tangled?
Such a space collision would have caused mayhem in the heavens, adding clutter to an orbit altitude where there are big problems already, said Heiner Klinkrad, head of the European Space Agency's Space Debris Office in Darmstadt, Germany.
It turns out, Klinkrad told SPACE.com, that 50 percent of all the close conjunctions that Envisat faces are due to the lethal leftovers from China's January 2007 anti-satellite test, as well as chunks of junk resulting from last year's smashup between an active U.S. Iridium satellite and a defunct Russian Cosmos spacecraft.
Klinkrad joined several orbital debris experts that took part in the 33rd Annual Guidance and Control Conference organized by the Rocky Mountain Section of the American Astronautical Society. The five-day meeting began Feb. 5.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
'American Idol' Top 24 Revealed
In a sort of metaphorical act of early-Christmas-present-opening (and as a definite American Idol first), a few of this season's Idol semifinalists were announced Tuesday night as part of a protracted two-night reveal. Seven hopefuls--Michael Lynche, Lee DeWyze, Todrick Hall, Casey James, Aaron Kelly, Didi Benami, and Kaetlyn Epperly--received their good news on night number one, and on Wednesday, 17 more contestants edged closer to their dream of becoming the ninth American Idol.
Below is my breakdown of all 24 semifinalists, along with my thoughts on a couple of the most surprising shutouts.
THE SNUBS
Angela Martin - Sometimes who didn't get through is bigger news than who did, and that certainly is the case with this girl. Many contestants this year have sob stories, but Angela's was by far the sobbiest, which, compounded with her actual legitimate talent, seemed to make her a Season 9 shoo-in. Angela became the ultimate Idol underdog this season when, after her third audition in her final year of eligibility, she made it to Hollywood Week yet again. Angela has a 10-year-old daughter with the developmental disorder Rett Syndrome; she suffered the death of her father in season 7 right before Hollywood Week; and on top of all that, her mother went missing last Christmas. Angela stayed strong and delivered throughout Hollywood Week this season, but apparently it still was not enough. The judges seemed pained when they told her she didn't make it Wednesday, and they encouraged her to keep going. Kara DioGuardi told her: "You're one of the bravest people I have ever met, and I'm going to remember you forever." Too bad the judges didn't remember to put Angela through this time. I personally think they made a major mistake.
Thaddeus Johnson - A Rooooben-esque velvet teddy bear and self-declared mama's boy, Thaddeus was all smiles and giggles throughout Hollywood Week, but when he got rejected on Wednesday, he collapsed into agonized sobs, and it was truly heartbreaking to watch. The judges told him he "did great" and "did nothing wrong," but that feedback only seemed to confuse and upset Thaddeus even more, as in, then WHY wasn't he chosen, if he'd done so well? He sobbed all the way out of Kodak Theatre, with his mother consoling and pep-talking him and hanging on his arm...and his rejection was ultimately almost as sad as Angela's.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Pinoy Big Brother Double Up Big Winner| PBB Double Up Big Winner
- PBB Double Up Big Winner is Melissa "Melai" Cantiveros
- First PBB Double Up Big Winner is Jason Francisco
- Second PBB Double Up Big Winner is Paul Jake Castillo
- Third PBB Double Up Big Winner is Johan Santos
- Fourth PBB Double Up Big Winner is Papa Tibo