<div class=Ash-triggered flight disruptions cost airlines $1.7 billion
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Ash-triggered flight disruptions cost airlines $1.7 billion

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said today that the flight disruptions triggered by the recent eruption of a volcano in Iceland cost the global airline industry a total of $1.7 billion dollars.

For an industry that lost $9.4bn last year and was forecast to lose a further $2.8bn in 2010, this crisis is devastating

According to the IATA, airlines lost a total of $400 million daily for the first three days of the week that European airspace was closed. The closures also impacted an estimated 1.2 million passengers around the world each day, until airspace around Europe began reopening last night. IATA’s chief executive officer, Giovanni Bisignani, said that “[f]or an industry that lost $9.4bn last year and was forecast to lose a further $2.8bn in 2010, this crisis is devastating.” He also claimed that the airline industry would require three years to recover from the effects of the crisis, and called on governments to provide some form of compensation to airlines.

Bisignani also criticized the response of European governments to the ash threat, saying that they had over-reacted and the shutdown of all airspace was excessive. He said that “Airspace was being closed based on theoretical models, not on facts. Test flights by our members showed that the models were wrong. [The crisis] is an extraordinary situation exaggerated by a poor decision-making process by national governments.” Individual airlines also criticized the airspace closures. Micheal O’Leary, CEO of Ryanair, said that “It might have made sense to ground flights for a day or two…But by the time that that cloud has dispersed through 800 or 1,000 nautical miles of air space, a full ban should never have been imposed.”

In defense of the European airspace controller, Eurocontrol, the CEO of the Irish Aviation Authority, Eamonn Brennan, said: “It’s important to realize that we’ve never experienced in Europe something like this before. So it wasn’t just a simple matter of saying: Yes, you could have operated on Saturday or Sunday or Monday. We needed the four days of test flights, the empirical data, to put this together and to understand the levels of ash that engines can absorb.” Additionally, scientists in Switzerland said that studies of ash content in the atmosphere were high enough that the total closure of most European airspace was warranted.

Restrictions over air travel in Europe have been lifted in many parts of the continent today; three-quarters of the scheduled flights were operating, and most of the European airspace having been opened. Only parts of British, French and Irish airspace remain closed, and most of Europe’s major airports are open, although not necessarily operating at full capacity; at London Heathrow Airport, about half the scheduled departing flights were canceled.

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<div class=World’s largest passenger airliner makes first flight
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World’s largest passenger airliner makes first flight

April 27, 2005

The world’s largest passenger aircraft, the Airbus A380, has made its maiden flight after lifting off from Toulouse in France.

The take-off, at 08:30 UTC, was apparently normal and took place exactly on time. The aircraft flew into clear blue skies with a flight crew of six (all wearing parachutes as a safety precaution) and twenty tonnes of test equipment on board.

Around 50,000 people watched the maiden flight, many sitting on grass banks lining the runway. More people watched the flight on a giant screen erected in the centre of Toulouse.

The test flight lasted four hours, with the aircraft flying no higher than 10,000 nor further than 100 miles from Toulouse as it circled the Bay of Biscay.

The A380, known for many years during its development phase as the Airbus A3XX, will be the largest airliner in the world by a substantial margin when it enters service.

The first A380 prototype was unveiled during a lavish ceremony in Toulouse, France, on January 18, 2005. Its manufacturer’s serial number is 001, and it is registered F-WWOW.

The new Airbus will initially be sold in two versions: the A380-800, a full double-decker configuration, able to carry 555 passengers in a three-class configuration or up to 800 passengers in a single-class economy configuration. Range for the A380-800 model is expected to be 8,000 nautical miles (14,800 km). The second model, the A380-800F dedicated freighter, will carry 150 tons of cargo 5,600 miles (10,400 km).

The cost of the project so far is £8.4bn, £1bn over budget. 144 planes have already been ordered. Singapore Airlines, which will be the first company to operate the new air giant, in July 2006, have opened a reservation site for this first regular flight.

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<div class=Salmonella outbreak sickens over one thousand in United States
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Salmonella outbreak sickens over one thousand in United States

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Over 1000 cases of illness have now been identified in a foodborne salmonellosis outbreak that began in mid-April 2008 in the United States.

As of July 8, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported 1013 confirmed infections throughout the United States, along with four cases in Canada. 203 hospitalizations have been linked to the outbreak. It has caused at least one death, and it may have been a contributing factor in another. The pathogen responsible is the rare Saintpaul strain of Salmonella enterica.

Nearly half of the reported illnesses were in Texas and New Mexico. According to unnamed sources close to the investigation, most illness clusters in the outbreak involve Mexican restaurants. Illness clusters in the hard hit state of Illinois were publicly identified by local health departments as involving three Mexican restaurants.

The CDC is in the process of investigating the outbreak and trying to identify the contamination’s point of origin. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) currently suspects that the contaminated food product is an ingredient in fresh salsa, such as fresh jalapeño pepper, fresh serrano pepper, fresh cilantro, or certain types of raw tomato.

Some produce industry insiders doubt that fresh produce is to blame for the outbreak. They point to the absence of Salmonella on all of the tested produce samples to date, as well as divergent results from produce tracebacks. They also say that the extended time frame of new sicknesses makes it unlikely that either raw tomatoes or fresh jalapeños, the government’s two main suspects, could be responsible. Will Steele, President and CEO of Frontera Produce, said that “the outbreak is probably related to processed goods and they’re looking in the wrong closets.”

Steele’s Texas based company has been forced to hold shipments of fresh jalapeño peppers after loads of produce were repeatedly flagged by the FDA for testing. Although independent testing of both loads showed no sign of Salmonella, the peppers are still on hold until the FDA finishes its own testing of the second load flagged on July 1st. “There are still no results,” Steele says. “The salability of that produce in two to three days is gone. We ceased harvesting. There is no sense in bringing in more product and having it rot.”

Steele, like others in the produce industry, believes that the FDA should be focusing on processed produce instead of fresh produce. “Methodology is backward,” he says. “FDA is reaching for answers. You can’t tie jalapeño pepper shipped on June 30 back to April 10.”

Still, the FDA and the CDC consider testing of fresh jalapeños and other fresh produce a high priority. The CDC writes that “the accumulated data from all investigations indicate that jalapeño peppers caused some illnesses.”

The FDA is cautioning that people who would be in the most danger if infected with Salmonella (infants, the elderly, and those with compromised immune systems) should avoid eating the suspected types of produce listed on their website.

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Motivational Story   Your Strength And Weakness

Motivational Story Your Strength And Weakness

Motivational Story – Your Strength and Weakness

by

suhardi

–Success is a state of mind. If you want success, start thinking of yourself as a success (JOYCE BROTHERS)–

Can you imagine what exactly is up with daily motivation? This informative report can give you an insight into everything you’ve ever wanted to know about daily motivation.

If you don’t have accurate details regarding daily motivation, then you might make a bad choice on the subject. Don’t let that happen: keep reading now.

One day in China, there was a young man standing near a very large river. He wanted to cross the river, so he waited for a raft to take him to cross it. A few minutes later, a raft got near to the riverside and the young man got to a fisherman paddling the raft. He said, Would you do me a favor? I want to cross the river, but I can t, and fortunately you come here. Can you bring me over there and I will pay you for that. The fisherman then brought him to the land across.

On the journey at the river, they had conversation. The young man asked, Do you know about computer? That s the most important technology nowadays. And the fisherman replied confusingly, I don t. hearing the answer from the man, the young man stated, If you know nothing about computer, it means that you have spent 2/5 of your own life vainly. The fisherman didn t give comment at all. A moment later, the young man asked the fisherman, Can you speak English fluently or at least you know a little bit about it? And once again, the fisherman answered, I don t. I can speak native language only. Then the young man said proudly, English is spoken throughout the world. If you aren t able to speak English, you have spent 3/5 of your valuable life vainly. The young man kept on asking question to the man, Do you understand about accounting? It s very important to manage our finance. The fisherman answered a little loudly and angrily, I ve never learnt about that, so I do not understand what you mean. And the young man said arrogantly, Hey, man, if you don t learn accounting, you will spend 4/5 of your life vainly. Everybody must know it without exception. The fisherman kept staying calm. He didn t care for his cockiness.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ejV0Yh4_Zc[/youtube]

At the half of the way to the destination across, there was a heavy storm and rain. They both was wet because the raft had no shelter, so the fisherman kept on paddling the raft and the young man began to feel cold. The rain and storm got heavier and suddenly, the raft began to crack and broken. The young man was very frightened because he knew that the raft would be drowned before he reached the land across. Knowing about that, he began to cry a little. Then the fisherman asked him seriously, Can you swim? The young man replied sadly, No. I can t. The fisherman said sadly too, You re unlucky today, young man. I tell you, if you can t swim, it means you have spent 5/5(all) of your life vainly because you ll die today because of your disability to swim. I can t help you more. Then the raft was finally drowned to the bottom of the deep river. The fisherman swam to the land and the young man died because he couldn t swim.

Message for readers:

Every person has his/her own strength or expertise. One s strength is perhaps different from others. We must know that we can t master everything in this world. It s impossible to learn all of the things because it ll make us confuse and it s in vain. It s far better to master one or several things that are considered to be important or necessary for us. Unfortunately, many people like to compare themselves to the strength of everyone. They always underestimate themselves and see their weakness instead of their strength.

Let s take an example. A computer expert compared to a doctor. We can t say that the computer expert is better and greater than doctor or otherwise, because their mastery about everything is far far different. The computer expert is great in computer science and the doctor is expert in medical science. Computer expert isn t greater than the doctor because the computer expert knows nothing about medical things and doctor isn t greater than computer expert because doctor doesn t know everything about computer. So they have their own strength and weakness.

Another example is the young man on the story above. He claimed that he has knowledge about computer, English and accounting. He felt better than the fisherman. But the young man died because he didn t know how to swim. The fisherman who knows none of them–computer, English, accounting–was alive just because he can swim. So don t concentrate our weakness, but just focus on our strength and utilize it so we can go ahead. Perhaps we re good at something, and in the other side we re bad in other things. It s just OK, it s normal for you and everyone because we can t be perfect to know all of the things in this world. We can also improve our weakness if we want it, however.

Remember, just focus on our strength. Don t compare someone s strength to you. Someone perhaps doesn t know what you know quite well. So utilize your strength for your benefits. Don t judge yourself lower and weaker than anyone else. It ll endanger yourself and make you having low self-esteem. Raise your self-esteem by enlisting your strength and always make improvement so you ll be better and stronger than before.

Tips: Take a sheet of paper and write down your strength that others do not have or write it down that you are proud of. The more your strength, the better. Don t waste your time to focus on other people s strength. Put your focus to be the best in your area or your life.

1. ______________________________________________

2. ______________________________________________

3. ______________________________________________

4. ______________________________________________

5. ______________________________________________

I’m wondering if there is really any information about daily motivation that is nonessential? A person can see things from different angles, so something relatively insignificant to one may be crucial to another.

Find more excellent motivational articles and don’t miss information at

Daily Motivation

Article Source:

ArticleRich.com

<div class=Disney animator Ollie Johnston dies at 95
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Disney animator Ollie Johnston dies at 95

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

American animator Ollie Johnston, the last of Disney’s so-called “Nine Old Men”, has died at the age of 95.

Johnston died of natural causes on Monday in Sequim, Washington, according to Walt Disney Studios Vice President Howard E. Green.

Johnston worked on many of the Disney’s classic films, including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), Pinnochio (1940), Fantasia (1940), Bambi (1942), and many others.

Ollie was part of an amazing generation of artists.

Johnston worked extensively with his best friend Frank Thomas, a fellow “old man” who died in 2004. The pair met at Stanford University in the 1930s and worked together until Thomas’ death. They retired from animation in 1978, but remained popular speakers and authors about Disney and animation.

“Ollie was part of an amazing generation of artists, one of the real pioneers of our art, one of the major participants in the blossoming of animation into the art form we know today,” said Roy E. Disney.

Johnston devoted much of his retirement to writing and lecturing, but perhaps even more to model trains, a field in which he became considered one of the world’s foremost experts.

Ollie Johnston’s last film was The Fox and the Hound (1981) on which he worked as a supervisor.

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<div class=Japan fishermen clash with surfers over 2007 dolphin hunt
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Japan fishermen clash with surfers over 2007 dolphin hunt

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Japanese fishermen in Taiji, Japan clashed with surfers from Australia and the United States. The location where dolphins are culled was moved to a secluded cove this year to hide the activity from television crews and protesters.

After successfully defending the hunt, by using boat propellers and boat hooks against the group of surfers, who were joined by actress Hayden Panettiere, the fishermen have started their annual cull.

Whaling in Taiji usually yields 2,000 dolphins per year using the dolphin drive hunting method. The dolphins are diverted from their migration route by banging metal rods. As fear can affect the taste of the meat, after being speared and bludgeoned to death, they are left to hang for a day before being cut up. Television crews and campaigners opposed to the culling were prevented by fishermen and local police from filming these activities.

Although the practice of aquatic mammal hunting is condemned by many groups worldwide as well as within Japan, whaling is seen by those involved as a long-practiced cultural tradition that should be defended. As the demand for whale and dolphin meat for use in sushi has declined, the Government of Japan now has to financially subsidize the industry to support the local economy. Japan argues that whaling is still carried out for scientific reasons, to understand species population numbers. This claim is disputed by the scientific community outside of Japan as well as by environmentalists.

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<div class=First bird flu case reported in North Korea
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First bird flu case reported in North Korea

Monday, March 28, 2005

North Korea’s official news agency, KCNA, reported an outbreak of bird flu in the capital of Pyongyang. KCNA reported three separate outbreaks at poultry farms in the capital, and said hundreds of thousands of chickens have been culled in an attempt to stop the spread of the disease.

Radio Pyongyang said, “countermeasures are underway to prevent an epidemic and stem the spread to other poultry farms”. Experts warned that a bird flu epidemic in North Korea would deprive the population of its main source of protein.

Kim Yong-Taek of the Korea Centre for Disease Control and Prevention said, “Upon its outbreak on those farms the committee lost no time to take emergency measures and meticulously organised veterinary and anti-epizootic work to prevent its spread to other poultry farms.”

According to the state-run media, there have been no human fatalities from this outbreak.

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When To Call On The Professional Foundation Contractors In Pensacola

When To Call On The Professional Foundation Contractors In Pensacola

byAlma Abell

On average, a new home will take approximately five to eight years to settle. This means that all the creaks and cracks that you start to hear when it is quiet or possibly see in the walls above joists are normal but you need to be aware of problems that are not normal with the foundation. What you also need to be aware of is that a simple problem could turn into a worse problem for your foundation when you don’t use Foundation Contractors in Pensacola. You may also be happy to know that not all problems are expensive and may take an easy fix to keep your home structurally sound.

As a homeowner you are probably already well aware of the many facets of your home that require maintaining all year round. Major items such as your heating and cooling systems, roof systems and your foundation need to be checked on a routine basis so as to avoid big problems later on. Specifically, when it comes to your foundation, little problems can be a do-it-yourself project while major issues are only for Foundation Contractors in Pensacola.

The major culprit behind a foundation issue has to do with standing water. If you are noticing problems inside the home such as doors sticking, cracks in your walls or stairs that average more than a 1/4 inch of a hair line fracture need to be addressed. You could easily take care of the aesthetics but you are not handling the underlying issues. If you have a water issue, look around the outside frame of the home and look for puddles that accumulate after a rain.

Check your gutters to make sure they are not clogged and direct all downspouts away from the home. The best recommendation for drains away from the home are french drains and can be installed for a relatively inexpensive amount considering the safety that they will bring to the foundation of the home. Consider this option if you are in fact getting damage to your foundation because of standing water.

Get advice from the professionals if you suspect damage to your foundation. There are company’s such as Ramjacksf.com that offer advice not only on epoxy fixes but also long term solutions such as braces and beams that come in a variety of materials for longer lasting corrections or permanent changes to the foundation.

<div class=Four die in Papua New Guinea plane crash
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Four die in Papua New Guinea plane crash

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Three Australian citizens and a New Zealander died when the chartered light aircraft in which they were travelling crashed on Misima Island off the coast of Papua New Guinea. The plane, a Cessna Citation with five people on board, is said by locals to have overshot the runway in poor weather, before crashing into trees and bursting into flames.

The fifth person, a New Zealander believed to be one of the pilots, is undergoing treatment for heavy bruising. The crash was confirmed by the Australian Foreign Minister, Stephen Smith, who said that officials of the Australian Consulate would be travelling to the crash site on Wednesday. The presence of the 2 New Zealanders on board was confirmed by the New Zealand High Commission in Port Moresby.

Jerome Peniasi, The acting Chief Executive of PNG Ports said the Australians on the plane were working with a company called Australian Reef Pilots near Misima Island. “We are aware of the accident, but we still don’t have much information as communication has been difficult”, he said. The Managing Director of Australian Reef Pilots, Craig Southerwood confirmed that one of the dead was a 61-year old marine pilot working for the agency.

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<div class=UK Wikinews Shorts: July 8, 2013
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UK Wikinews Shorts: July 8, 2013

A compilation of brief news reports for Monday, July 8, 2013.

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