10 Killed In Nashville From Historic Floods

Floods Close 1st To 5th Avenues Downtown; Thousands Evacuated From Homes


Below are the confirmed deaths that have occurred over the last two days in the following counties:
* Davidson County -- 10 water deaths
  • The body of an elderly man was recovered late Monday afternoon in a wooded area behind Kroger on Harding Road near Belle Meade. His 65-year-old wife's body was recovered several hundred yards away. The couple was reportedly driving to church Sunday morning when their car was swept away by flood waters on Harding Road.
  • Metro detectives were investigating Monday evening two additional suspected flood-related deaths. An unidentified man's body was recovered from standing water in the Indian Hills area of Bellevue. An elderly woman’s body was recovered from her River Plantation home.
  • Robert Woods, 74, was swept away Sunday by floodwater in his West Hamilton Avenue yard. His body was recovered Monday.
  • Joshua Lanotroop, 21, was swept away by floodwater Saturday in the area near Bell Road and Blue Hole Road. His body was recovered Sunday near the area.
  • Andrew J. England, 78, and Martha England, 80, are believed to be victims of a flash flood. Their bodies were found Sunday in their Delray Drive home.
  • Joseph Formosa, 88, and Bessie Formosa, 78, tried to drive across the flooded Sawyer Brown Road when their vehicle was swept away. Their bodies were found inside their flipped vehicle in standing water.
  • Two men are missing after three men tied inner tubes together to raft on Mill Creek. The inner tubes separated near the Mill Creek Bridge. A 19-year-old was able to swim ashore, but the other two men are missing.

  • Montgomery County -- 1 water death


    • A woman in her early 60s died Monday night after driving along Palmyra Road in Clarksville. Her car somehow ended up in the rising floodwaters.
  • Williamson County -- 1 water death


  • Stewart County -- 2 water deaths


  • Carroll County -- 1 water death


  • Hickman County -- 1 water death


  • Perry County -- 2 water deaths, father and daughter


  • Hardeman County -- 1 tornado death


  • The Cumberland River crested Monday night and is expected to recede by the end of the week, according to the Nashville mayor's office.The Cumberland flooded quickly after the weekend's storms dumped more than 13 inches of rain in Nashville over two days. That nearly doubled the previous record of 6.68 inches of rain that fell in the wake of Hurricane Fredrick in 1979.About 56 Nashville schools were damaged by either water or wind from the storms.The National Weather Service advised that major flooding is expected to continue along Cumberland River on Monday followed by a gradual decrease in water levels, and that homes in the area should be evacuated.Most of lower Broadway, including First and Second avenues, were closed by floodwater Monday. The Schermerhorn Symphony Center and numerous buildings downtown near the Cumberland River had lower-level flooding.Nashville's country music landmark The Grand Ole Opry House was also flooded.Heartland Christian Towers residents were moved to hotels or picked up by family members. The retirement home is on Fernbrook Lane off McGavock Pike in Nashville.Air 4 flew over a flooded home along Pennington Bend that was engulfed in flames Monday at 10:30 a.m."We are still in rescue mode at this time," said Kim Lawson, deputy chief of the Nashville Fire Department, during a Monday afternoon press conference.More than 7 inches of rain fell on Saturday and 13.53 inches had fallen by 8:30 p.m. Sunday, a new two-day record. Just two days into the month, May 2010 was declared already the wettest May in Nashville's recorded history and the fifth wettest month in city history. Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen called it an "unprecedented rain event."Mayor Karl Dean’s office has asked Nashville residents to conserve water.Parts of MetroCenter and residents and businesses near Mainstream Drive were evacuated.The guests at Opryland Hotel on Sunday were moved to McGavock High School and other hotels. Gaylord Entertainment, the owners of the hotel, confirmed that there was 6 feet of standing water inside the hotel.German tourists Gerdi and Kurt Bauerle, both 70, said resort staff suddenly started rushing people out of the area Sunday night."We had just finished eating and suddenly they said: 'Go! Go! Go!"' said Gerdi Bauerle, who was visiting from Munich. "And we said, 'Wait, we haven't even paid."'Officials in Tennessee said Sunday the flooding is as bad as they've seen since 1975 when water memorably inundated the old Opryland amusement park east of downtown Nashville. Even the state's own emergency operations center wasn't immune. It took up to a foot of water below a false floor, forcing officials to relocate to an auxiliary command center."I've never seen it this high," said emergency official Donnie Smith, who's lived in Nashville 45 years. "I'm sure that it's rained this hard at one time, but never for this much of an extended period."The Cumberland River had already reached record levels since an early 1960s flood control project was put in place.Authorities weren't taking any chances. They evacuated the downtown area and north Nashville where a leaky levee threatened residents and businesses."That is an astonishing amount of rain in a 24- or 36-hour period," Bredesen said Sunday.In Montgomery County, 71 people had been rescued as of 11:30 a.m. Monday. The two neighborhoods that have seen worst damage are North Woodstock and Kingsbury Drive. Those residents went to a shelter at Hilldale Baptist Church on Madison Street.County spokeswoman Elizabeth Black said the water supply is fine but that the county is asking people to limit water use. She also said Monday that there was no imminent concern about the Cheatham Dam, which has been releasing water since the weekend because of overflowing.Hickman County Sheriff Randal Ward said there were more than 200 rescues Monday. Most of the county still has no cell service, power or water. The western part of county, such as the Pleasantville area, was hit the worst, Ward said. The Duck River Bridge in Centerville is still blocked off.Hickman County is asking its residents to boil water before using it because its water system is shut down and the water could be contaminated. The county is working to get money from the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency for its shelters at Fairfield Church of Christ, Centerville Christ and Bon Aqua United Methodist.The Trousdale County Jail was evacuated, and people from that jail were transported to Wilson County.Kentucky Emergency Management officials said two deaths in Barren and Madison counties in central Kentucky were weather-related."This is going to go on for a while," Bredesen said. "It's going to take a while for the water to recede and us to get down into this. It's going to take several days for this to get back to anything near normal."The rain ended Sunday night but there will likely be weeks of cleanup for residents and public works employees alike. Though there was no official estimate, it was clear thousands of homes had been damaged or destroyed by flooding and tornadoes. Thousands of residents were displaced with some going to more than 20 shelters opened around Tennessee.Emily Petro, of the Red Cross in Nashville, said the agency was sheltering about 2,000 people across Tennessee -- about 1,200 of them in Nashville.The Red Cross has asked for people to donate nonperishable items.Hospitals, schools and state buildings also were flooded. Most universities in the Nashville area postponed final exams, though many state workers were expected to return to their jobs, if possible.The state's roads were in bad shape. The three major interstates in the Nashville area were closed over the weekend, though most reopened at the beginning of the week.Bredesen said more than 150 roads were closed in middle Tennessee alone with washouts and bridge damage destruction fairly common. Residents Rescued Sunday Night Lakeshore The Meadows nursing home residents were rescued Sunday evening along Coley Davis Road in west Nashville.Six hundred people had to be rescued from flood waters this weekend in Nashville.Both Lipscomb University and the Bellevue Jewish Community Center were opened to shelter flood victims but were soon at capacity.Bellevue Middle School opened to shelter victims, but they needed more cots, blankets and pillows. People slept in auditorium seats Sunday night.“We ended up having to go upstairs, probably got about 5 feet of water, 4 feet of water in the house,” said a man who was rescued Sunday afternoon by boat from his Bellevue home, where he’s lived for seven years. “And we were upstairs with seven grandchildren, took all our food up there, had lunch, played cards, read books and then came out that same window.”Mount Pleasant, Tenn., city manager Debbie McMullin said a water main broke somewhere in the city Sunday afternoon. Officials started looking for the problem at 4 p.m. but were unable to locate it. Residents are urged to boil water until future notice and conserve.About 12 to 15 inches of rain fell in Rutherford County over two days.LaVergne Mayor Ronnie Erwin took a Sunday morning tour of the most troublesome areas in the city. Several streets remain closed."There are a lot of other areas in bad shape, and we're trying to get people help quickly," said Erwin, who declared the city a disaster area.LaVergne resident James Hathcock saw water rushing toward his house and made a run for it."I had five grandkids here, and all of a sudden, it started coming up high, and I got all the kids, got in the car and got out of here," he said.A woman in Bellevue went into labor but couldn’t get out of her home, so a nearby nurse made her way through the water to get to the woman and safely deliver the baby.Amy Hubbuch, a child birth educator, helped deliver the girl. Baby Claire and the mother, who was due, are doing well."It was a house call. We haven’t done those in a long time," said Hubbuch, who delivered the baby by flashlight since there was no electricity. Click here for a full list of road closures in Nashville.Dean said Nashville has received the most rain Saturday and Sunday since rain amounts have been recorded.During his flood briefing Sunday afternoon, he also said that Frederick Douglass Head Start Center on North Seventh Street in Nashville was submerged in water up to its roof.Police Chief Ronal Serpas said that two police officers had to be rescued Saturday from a tree. A Belle Meade police officer was swept away in his patrol car at Harding Road and Lynnwood Boulevard Sunday, but he was rescued.Multiple major water line breaks Sunday in Brentwood have eliminated all water service to a large area in the southern part of the city. Neighborhoods that were affected included: Brenthaven, Mooreland Estates, Willowick, Brentwood South and Stonehenge subdivisions. Click here to read more of this story.The Metropolitan Transit Authority has suspended all bus service indefinitely because of flooding at its headquarters facility.All barge traffic was closed on the Cumberland River because the CSX drawbridge couldn't function.Emergency officials evacuated some flooded apartments along Murfreesboro Road near Mill Creek in southeast Nashville, forcing 300 residents out. However, many of those residents refused to leave their apartments.Bellevue neighborhoods near Beech Bend Drive and Foot Path Terrace and Bellevue Manor Road near Harpeth Valley Road were engulfed with water Sunday morning.Nashville residents can call 615-862-8574 if they need assistance finding a shelter. This number should be used for nonemergencies; use 911 for emergencies.Click here to find the emergency shelters opened by the American Red Cross in middle Tennessee. Flooding Closes I-24 In Antioch SaturdayInterstate 24 was closed at Bell Road Saturday night because of a massive amount of flooding on the roadway, killing one person.About 70 cars on the interstate were submerged by the floodwaters. A portable school room from nearby Lighthouse Christian school floated down I-24 and was destroyed.

    Rescuers hope for no more victims in floods

    At least 29 people were killed across South by either water or tornadoes

    Image: Flooded Nashville area
    Jeff Gentner / AP
    Flood waters still cover much of Nashville, Tenn., on Tuesday.

    NBC News and news services
    updated 7:45 a.m. ET May 5, 2010
    NASHVILLE, Tenn. - The dark waters of the Cumberland River slowly started to ebb Tuesday as residents who frantically fled the deadly flash floods returned home to find mud-caked floors and soggy furniture. Rescuers prayed they would not find more bodies as the floodwaters receded.
    The river and its tributaries had flooded parts of middle Tennessee after a record-breaking weekend storm dumped more than a foot of rain in two days, rapidly spilling water into homes, roads and some of Music City's best-known attractions.
    At least 29 people were killed in Tennessee, Mississippi and Kentucky by either floodwaters or tornadoes. Water submerged parts the Grand Ole Opry House, considered by many to be the heart of country music, and the nearby Opryland Hotel could be closed for up to six months.

    Country Stars Shine for Flooded Music City

    May 7, 2010 - 1:06 PM | by: Jonathan Serrie
    Some of country music's biggest stars are donating their time, talent and money to help Nashville recover from the flood.
    Taylor Swift pledged $500,000 for flood relief during a telethon last night hosted by Vince Gill on local TV station WSMV. The telethon raised an estimated $1.7 million for the Red Cross, Salvation Army and Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee.
    FOLLOW JONATHAN ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND KYTE.
    During an appearance on FOX News, country music legend George Jones and fellow singer John Rich (seen in the photo above) urged fans to donate $10 to the Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund by texting "REDCROSS" to 90999.
    Benefit concerts and other fundraisers are being scheduled at various locations around the city.
    Yesterday afternoon, the Cumberland River dipped nearly half a foot below flood stage. Conditions are expected to continue improving today, allowing more residents to return to flood-damaged homes.
    But Nashville Metropolitan Government officials are urging residents to use water sparingly when cleaning their houses and belongings in the aftermath of the flood. One of Nashville's two water treatment plants was damaged during the high waters and needs additional repairs and inspections before it goes back online.
    In the meantime, city officials say Nashville needs to cut its normal water usage in half to sustain the system's reduced capacity. Some upscale restaurants have started serving food on paper plates and wine in plastic cups to reduce the amount of water they use for washing dishes.

    Shooting At State St. Old Navy, 2 Dead In Apparent Murder-Suicide

    A shooting happened just half an hour ago at the Loop Old Navy location on N. State and the Sun-Times is reporting one person dead. Twitter user justinmassa took this photo of the chaos outside the store following the shooting. He also told us, "lots of cops, some in riot gear. unclear if whatever happened has ended..."
    The Sun-Times reports: "There are reports of people injured in the basement of the building. A man in a blue jogging suit was reported as attempting to flee the building and police were closing down State Street between Madison and Roosevelt."
    Update: The Tribune is now reporting two people were killed. Their report also says that it appears to be murder-suicide: "Sources said a man walked into the store and shot his girlfriend, then turned the gun on himself." The girl was an employee at Old Navy.
    Update: The Sun-Times reports State Street from Madison to Roosevelt is shut down so plan accordingly if you have to head downtown
    More as it develops...

    Man and Girlfriend Dead In Chicago Old Navy Shooting

    Source: Man Shot And Killed Woman, Then Himself

    CHICAGO (CBS) ― Police say a man shot and killed his girlfriend, then turned the gun on himself, inside the Old Navy store downtown Chicago.

    A Chicago Police sergeant at the scene confirmed to CBS station WBBM-TV that around 11 a.m., shots were fired at the Old Navy store at 35 N. State St.

    Police sources told WBBM-TV that a man walked into store and shot and killed his girlfriend, before turning the gun on himself and taking his own life. This may have happened in an employee area of the store, the source said.

    The woman who died was an employee of the store, the source said.

    Fire Media Affairs spokesman Richard Rosado said two ambulances were called to the scene, but no transports were made.

    The Cook County Medical Examiner's office could not immediately confirm any information. An office representative said an investigator had not yet arrived at the scene.

    Chicago Police Officer spokesman John Mirabelli says details are sketchy about Friday's shootings but that it appears the deaths were part of a domestic dispute.

    After the shooting, crowds of pedestrians gathered on the sidewalk outside the shuttered store, which is just blocks from Chicago's City Hall. The store's metal security gates had been lowered and yellow police tape blocked off the scene.

    Louise Callagy, a spokeswoman for Old Navy's owner Gap Inc., says the 3-story location has been shut while the retailer works with investigators.

    (© 2010 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)



    What Ever Happened To Amanda Peterson?



    In the summer of 1987, what still stands as the best of the 1980’s high school films was released, CAN’T BUY ME LOVE. Rather than the sort of fairy tale John Hughes films, CAN’T BUY ME LOVE was a very realistic look at 80’s high school life.

    Today, it is best known as the film that GREY’S ANATOMY star Patrick Dempsey starred in, back before he was a heartthrob. But back then, most critics didn’t even pay attention to him in the film. The person that they singled out for praise was his female co-star, an actress by the name of Amanda Peterson.

    By 1987, I was already a big fan of Amanda. Having read an interview with her in Starlog magazine to promote EXPLORERS in 1985, I was instantly a fan. Here was this beautiful actress, who was the same age as me! How cool was that? So, I began to follow her career.

    She began as a child star. She was one of the orphans in the film version of ANNIE. If you watch it today, you can see her very clearly in the “Hard Knock Life” musical number. She even has a solo during “Sandy”.

    She then did a lot of TV work, even playing Ricky’s girlfriend in a first season episode of SILVER SPOONS. She was a regular on a short-lived series called BOONE (which I never saw) and the daughter in the TV film BEST KEPT SECRETS with Patty Duke. The made for TV drama AND THE CHILDREN SHALL LEAD was an excellent story of the Civil Rights movement. It received frequent airings throughout the 80’s.

    Then came EXPLORERS. Directed by Joe Dante, the film today is best known as introducing Ethan Hawke and River Phoenix. Amanda played the female lead.



    Her next credit was one of her very best, the TV mini-series A YEAR IN THE LIFE. Starring Richard Kiley and Eva Marie Saint, the six hour film followed a Seattle family through a year, going through divorce and other family problems. It would go on to win the Emmy for Best Mini-series. Amanda played Sunny Sisk, daughter of a couple going through a divorce. Sarah Jessica Parker, who was closer in her career to SQUARE PEGS than to SEX AND THE CITY was also in the cast.

    CAN’T BUY ME LOVE came out in the summer. Critics loved her performance even if they didn’t care for the film. But for any teen that saw it that summer, it was one of the genres best. Watching it first show of opening day, I felt I was watching a documentary about my high school.



    Here is an interview Amanda gave about the film in 1987.

    Her career at that time was at its peak. She was to follow that up with an even better role, to continue to play Sunny Sisk in the TV series that evolved from A YEAR IN THE LIFE.



    Unfortunately, even though critic’s loved the series, and Amanda ended up on the cover of TV Guide from it, the audiences was not there for it. It was cancelled after one season.

    Then, there was a Roger Corman produced post-apocalyptic Romeo and Juliet film called THE LAWLESS LAND. A 1989 TV movie called LOVE AND BETRAYAL showed her as once again a daughter of a parent going through divorce.

    Also in 1989, she co-starred in what would be her last big theatrical release, LISTEN TO ME. Starring Kirk Cameron and Jamie Gertz, this was an odd, overly earnest film about a college debating team. Amanda played Gertz’s friend and had a too small role.

    She then appeared in a first season episode of DOOGIE HOWSER M.D. playing a blind girl, who falls for Doogie’s friend Vinny (Max Casella) only to break up with him when she regains her eyesight.



    1990 saw her starring in FATAL CHARM. In this direct to cable film (that was credited to the pseudonym Alan Smithee) she begins writing to a serial killer (Christopher Atkins, her co-star in LISTEN TO ME) believing he is innocent. He then breaks out of prison to track her down. While not a great film, it wasn’t as bad as Smithee’s other films.

    In 1991 she starred in another TV movie, HELL HATH NO FURY. Having only seen it once (I don’t know if it was ever shown again), I believe it was another woman in jeopardy film, starring Barbara Eden as Amanda’s mother.

    After CAN’T BUY ME LOVE, the film that Amanda made that turns up on cable the most these days is I POSED FOR PLAYBOY (aka POSING ). This is shown on the Lifetime Movie Channel at least once a month. It tells the story of three women (Amanda, Lynda Carter, Michele Greene), each telling their story of how they posed for Playboy and how it changed their life. Amanda plays a college student, from a rich family, who did it to prove herself to everyone.



    While not a good film, it is almost heartbreaking to watch it today. Amanda gives an amazing performance in it. Much of it is told as she looks into the camera, giving an interview about her character’s life. If you just watch her eyes, the little things she is doing, this is a real actress. She put more into creating this character than the writers did in writing the film.

    In 1992 she appeared as the girlfriend of on of the lead characters in a short lived Hal Linden TV series called JACK’S PLACE. It doesn’t even merit a mention on her IMDB page, but it was a fairly memorable role.

    Her last credit was 1995’s WINDRUNNER, a direct to video family film about a football player who receives coaching from the spirit of Jim Thorpe. Really! Despite being in her early 20’s, Amanda played a high school student once again. And, one of her co-stars, also playing a high schooler was Max Casella of DOOGIE HOWSER.

    WINDRUNNER would be her final acting job.

    So, What Ever Happened To Her?

    After 15 years in the industry, Amanda walked away. Whether by choice, or if the jobs weren’t there, I don’t know. In fact, little is known about Amanda after this point.

    The only known sighting of her was in the late 90’s, there was a big Hollywood autograph convention in Los Angeles and she was one of the stars signing. I didn’t attend, but did see a few autographs turn up on Ebay later on. So, she was there.

    But, there is all sorts of speculation as to what happened to her. Not all of it positive.

    The first story, and the one that I HOPE is the case is that she is happily married, with children, and living in Northern California. A few sites list this as the case.

    But, then there are the other stories.

    There is one Amanda Peterson fan page on the net. In the guest book are pages and pages of people writing about her, and how much they loved her work. Among them are several very sad, and rather disturbing stories about her life.

    The basic storyline is that she returned to her hometown of Greeley Colorado where her father has been a well-known doctor for years. The stories involve all the former child star clichés of drug use, failed relationships, abuse, police involvement, even mental illness. Many of them cite names and dates. But, I don’t know what to believe.

    EDIT 4-5-10 - Someone on the IMDB, who had posted some of these sad stories, as proof posted some current photos of Amanda. You can see them linked from here.

    All I do know is that Amanda was one of the best teen actresses of the 1980’s. Since she is the same age as Gwyneth Paltrow, and Amanda’s career came to an end just as Gwyneth’s was beginning, I always saw Gwyneth as having the career that Amanda should have had.

    It would be fun to see Amanda turn up on an episode of GREY’S ANATOMY. But, that may be too much. Maybe she really did want to give it all up, and walk away from it all. I don’t know.

    I do hope that wherever she is, and whatever her life is like, that she is ok. She was one of my favorite actresses of the 80's.




    Texas Motor Speedway is a complex built around a 1.5 mile oval. The complex also includes a 1/4 mile paved oval, a 4/10-mile clay oval, and a 2.3 mile paved road course. The track is located north of Fort Worth, Texas.
    New: 1997-03-11  Last Updated: 2006-12-25

    Texas Motor Speedway Weather
    For many sports, the weather is neither here nor there. The hot sports for now, the NBA playoffs and the NHL playoffs aren’t too concerned with what the skies hold.  However, if you are headed to watch NASCAR today, the Texas Motor Speedway Weather is high on your list of priorities today. The race has already been postponed to a 3:00 PM EST start this afternoon.

    The Texas Motor Speedway Weather has already been responsible for the cancellation of of the Nationwide Series race and the Sprint Cup Series training runs. The rain can definitely wreak havoc on many sports, but when NASCAR is involved, the problems multiply. Many fans are still heading to the track in hopes of seeing a full race today. The results remain a mystery for now.
    The fans are milling into the speedway all the while watching the Texas Motor Speedway weather at the same time. Those at home are channeling hopping in hopes of managing to catch all their favorite basketball games today and the big NASCAR race. Regardless of your choice of sport, today is a bid day. Get yourself a pizza ordered and the remote in hand so you can keep it all in perspective.

    Texas Motor Speedway Weather – Rain forces very long NASCAR day


    Texas Motor Speedway weather continues to be uncooperative all week however the weather needs to let up for around one day – the main one of the week. Already, NASCAR has had to postpone the Nationwide Series race yesterday, and today’s Sprint Cup race is very much in question. For now, NASCAR is confident that they can get a full race in, or at least get enough in for an official race. But if the Texas Motor Speedway weather is bad today, two races may have to be postponed or abbreviated.


    If all goes well, today will have two races in Texas, thank to the bad weather. Yesterday’s nationwide race, the O’Reilly Auto Parts 300, was postponed – and they had to get creative to reschedule it. So today could be a doubleheader of races, if the Texas Motor Speedway weather improves.

    Texas Motor Speedway 2010 Schedule and Weather Updates



    The upcoming NASCAR Samsung Mobile 500 event of the Texas Motor Speedway 2010 was postponed due to rainy weather recently, but will push through this Sunday April 18 this 3pm, FOX Central time. The Nationwide Series race along with Sprint Cup Series training runs had also been cancelled due to rain. The forecast for Sunday’s NASCAR event also shows rain as a possibility but a lot of people are still hoping for a full race day despite the weather.
    The Samsung Mobile 500 is a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race held at the Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas USA. Even though is advertised as a “500 mile” race, the actual distance is 501 miles (806.3 km). Jeff Burton, was the 2009 Samsung 500 Sprint Cup winner.

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    Indiana unemployment Uplink | Indiana Department of Workforce Development - Today, most internet users search Uplink.in.gov site which offers jobs to getting unemployment insurance services. People also try to get jobs info via www.in.gov/dwd/ and from the Indiana Department of Workforce Development.
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    Apr 18, 2010 – People across the globe are wondering what the Zambelli Seal Show is. It’s actually not easy to explain.

    Zambelli Seal Display is what the site visitors are looking with Zambelli. Right here some news about Joseph Zambelli.

    Joseph Zambelli has Begin to constructed a fusor system. He begins out having a really good image of his system.

    CLICK HERE FOR FULL REPORT:
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    Mark Smith strike a three operate homer with two outs within the 10th to seal the offer. A sell-out crowd of 44,119 was on hand for that 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s debut along with a Zambelli fireworks display. They got a lot more than they bargained for that night, also it was 1 from the uncommon sellouts that really created a Pirate moment for that fans. Apparently, the Zambelli Seal Show is a hot trend that is heating up the search engines. It is reported that this may be something very big that is going to happen very soon. There is a link available that can fully explain in better detail, what the ZambelliSeal Show is.



    Zambelli Seal Show:Zambelli Label Show is an unstoppable trend, we do know exactly what visitors searched with Zambelli. We have just posted some news about Joseph Zambelli. Joseph Zambelli has to start to build a fuser device. It begins with a pretty picture of your device How .. Finally we have reason to search. Mark Smith hit a 3 run homer with 2 outs in 10th to seal the deal. A capacity crowd of 44,119 was on hand for the 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s debut and a Zambelli fireworks show. They have more than they bargained for that night, and was one of the rare sold have actually produced a time for Pirate fans.

    China—The crisis facing Toyota Company Corp. deepened Thursday as the company said its large-scale recall, stemming from a faulty accelerator pedal problem, would spread to Europe and China.
    The geographic reach and size of Toyota's recall has grown dramatically in recent days, raising questions about how many of its vehicles around the world are equipped with the defective accelerator pedal.

    Tannen Maury/European Pressphoto Agency
    A Toyota dealership in Park Ridge, Ill.
    The Japanese auto maker said it will recall an unknown number of vehicles in Europe. But unlike the U.S. market, where production will be halted for at least a week, different parts are already being used in new vehicles in Europe and production will continue as normal, the embattled car maker said.
    In China, one of Toyota's joint ventures will recall 75,552 RAV4 sport-utility vehicles, the country's quality watchdog said.
    "Toyota is making every effort to address this situation for our customers as quickly as possible," the auto maker said in a statement.
    In the U.S., Toyota announced it was expanding a recall announced late last year involving pedals catching on floor mats. That recall originally affected 4.3 million Toyota and Lexus vehicles, making it the company`s biggest recall ever. Toyota added 1.1 million more vehicles to that recall on Wednesday, representing four models.
    The move came as Fitch Ratings, the credit-ratings agency, placed Toyota's A-plus debt rating—two notches below a perfect triple-A rating—on a "negative" ratings watch.
    The recent recalls and sales suspension casts "a negative light on Toyota's reputation for quality," said Jeong Min Pak, senior director in Fitch's Asia-Pacific Corporates team. "This could hamper the company's potential sales and profitability recovery, especially in the U.S. market."
    Standard & Poor's and Moody's, rival ratings agencies which have Toyota rated at double-A and AA1 respectively, said they had no immediate plans to either downgrade Toyota's debt rating or put it under a ratings watch.
    But S&P added in a statement that "the suspension may put downward pressure on Toyota`s earnings, which we believe have entered a recovery phase." Investors seemed to conclude the same. The auto maker's stock price continued to slide Thursday, falling 3.9% in trading on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The company's shares have fallen 15% over the past five trading days, since news of the latest recalls began to spread.
    The markets appear to see Toyota's pain as opportunity for rivals' gain. Nissan Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co.'s shares both closed up nearly 3% on Thursday, outperforming the broader Nikkei 225 benchmark average.
    Even so, Toyota's two biggest Japanese rivals firmly ruled out offering incentives to take advantage of their peer's woes, as they hope to gain sales without calling attention to what could be seen as a broader slip in Japanese quality.
    "We will not undertake any sales activities that expressly target Toyota customers in the U.S.," a Honda spokeswoman said. A Nissan spokesman also said the company wouldn't embark on any specific sales of marketing activities, despite the recall crisis facing Toyota.
    That is a contrast with Ford Motor Co. and General Motor Co., both of which have launched new incentives to snatch some market share back from the world's biggest car maker. Ford said it would offer new customers $1,000 cash to trade-in used or leased vehicles from Toyota, while GM detailed a similar program earlier Wednesday.
    "Toyota is the standard-bearer for Japanese autos. If you are Honda and Nissan, it doesn't help to play it up because people would ask, 'Do all Japanese cars have problems?'" said Chris Richter, autos analyst at CLSA Asia Pacific Markets. "U.S. makers have faced decades of share erosion because of Japanese cars—now they have a chance to say, 'Japanese cars aren't as good, so buy America.'"
    Meanwhile, the recalls slamming Toyota in the U.S. and Europe don't appear likely to spread to its home market. The Japanese transportation ministry isn't yet considering a probe related to Toyota's massive recall in the U.S.
    The ministry believes that the parts that have caused problems in the U.S. are made locally and aren't used in Toyota cars sold in Japan, said an official there, who asked not to be identified. "It is our view that there is no need for a specific action at this point," the official added.
    —Yuka Hayashi contributed to this article.

    When people in Haiti pause from helping the hungry, injured and homeless the near impossible task of stopping their own emotional trauma from the last week's earthquake becomes apparent.

    Florida students create art to help kids cope with the disaster in Haiti.
    "Most people are just in shock and disbelief of what has happened. Most people are still sleeping outside. They are scared to sleep inside the houses," Lisa Betor, who runs a shelter for 70 malnourished children in a village called Cazale outside of Port-au-Prince, wrote in an e-mail to ABCNews.com. "You see a lot of people sleeping during the day as well. Everyone is saying that it's hard to have a peaceful sleep time."
    Dr. Richard Besser, ABC News' Senior Health and Medical Editor who is in Haiti, said he has seen varied reactions in Port-au-Prince.
    "Many who have lost family members and friends sit passively with vacant stares. Other people pray and sing," said Besser. "There is little time to process what has happened or to properly grieve when there is not adequate food, shelter, and water."
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    "I've been looking in the tent cities and hospitals for programs or specialists in mental health but haven't found them. If they are here, they are not in abundance," he said.
    Months may pass before symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) or clinical depression emerge, and months before volunteer counselors can reach those in distress.Yet post-disaster mental health experts say the way the international relief workers handle the situation could support or erode the mental resiliency of the earthquake victims in months to come.
    Dr. Amir A. Afkhami, of the Global Health Division at George Washington University's School of Public Health, said the prevalence of PTSD after a major disaster historically ranged from 1 percent to 11 percent of the population. But rates of clinical depression, crippling anxiety and other issues after a natural disaster might reach up to 30 percent of the population, according to Laura Murray, a clinical psychologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Refugee and Disaster Response.
    With the type of destruction seen in Port-au-Prince, mental health experts wager a large number of people will suffer from debilitating mental health issues afterwards.

    Haitian-born musician Wyclef Jean has come under intense scrutiny over alleged mismanagement of his Yele charity. But the Grammy-award winning star isn't the first to spark a scandal in his quest to do good. The American Red Cross, Salvation Army and United Way, to name a few, have all come under attack in recent years for inappropriate, and in some cases criminal, actions.


    Kelli Grant from SmartMoney shares guidelines on how to avoid fraudulent sites.

    The financial misconduct at Jean's Yele charity has thrown some nasty light on Haiti's relief efforts. Jean has not admitted to wrongdoing, but the group's most recent tax filing shows some financial imprudence.
    Yele, also known as the Wyclef Jean Foundation, raised more than $2 million after the earthquake through text messages, after Jean called on fans to donate $5 by texting "Yele" to 501501.
    Most of the criticism against Jean has focused on what's considered dubious spending, and records show that in 2007, the most recent year for which a filing is available, Yele earned $79,126 but spent $569,050. Critics also point to the close connections between Jean's business and charity ventures, pointing out a $250,000 payment made to buy airtime on a Haitian television station owned by the Grammy award- winner and his business partner.
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    "Have we made mistakes? Yes," Jean said at a press conference Monday. "Did I ever use Yele money for personal benefit? Absolutely not."
    Hugh Locke, a spokesman for Yele said the airtime was used to publicize the charity's activities and produce a hip-hop competition for youths from Haitian slums. Buying time from Jean's station was cheaper than going through competitors, he said.
    Experts said Jean's missteps don't amount to a crime but admit that the organization is facing some "administrative challenges."
    "There's no fraud here. You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who cares more about Haiti than Wyclef Jean," said Art Taylor, president and CEO of the Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance. However, Jean could allay donors' concerns by offering more information about how he intends to spend donations. "People are seeing a lot of money coming in, and they're not quite sure how the money is going to be distributed," said Taylor.
    Of course, Yele is just one of many charities helping with the recovery in Haiti, and donors have a wide range of choices. In fact, 29 U.S. nonprofits collected more then $275 million in donations in the first week following the earthquake, outpacing support following the Asian tsunamis of 2004, according to the Chronicle of Philanthropy.


    Angry mob set ablaze vehicles to protest bomb blast that ripped through Karachi’s main religious procession, killing at least 20 people.

    Geo TV reports this morning that angry mob has burnt down Light House building situated at the MA Jinnah Road, Karachi's main corridor to business center. Another TV reports showed several burnt down vehicles parked around the city court.

    People are stranded in the building, which was set on fire. There are also reports of unrest at different parts of the city.
    Meanwhile, provincial Home Minister Dr Zulfikar Mirza early morningTuesday said yesterday's bomb blasts was aimed at triggering ethnic strife in the city but people foiled this conspiracy.
    Addressing a press conference Tuesday morning (it is early Tuesday morning in Karachi), the minister said that the blasts were carried out by helmet wearing terrorists riding on three motorcycles.
    The Sindh Home Minister said a team is investigating the cause of the blasts under the supervision of DIG Saud Mirza and four suspects have been apprehended and are being interrogated.
    Home Minister said that so far no police official has been suspended, but in case any evidence of negligence on the part of concerned police officials comes to the fore, action will be taken against them.

    Southern port city of Pakistan, Karachi has a long history of sectarian violence between Shias and Sunnis. There have been numerous attacks on such processions across the country over the last few days.

    On Sunday, eight people were killed when a suicide bomber targeted a Shia march in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

    Interior Minister Rehman Malik blamed Monday's blast on extremists who wanted to destabilise Pakistan. "Whoever has done this, he cannot be a Muslim. He is worse than an infidel," he told reporters.
    Riots erupted in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi yesterday after a suicide bomber attacked a Shia religious procession, killing at least 30 people in the latest sectarian atrocity.
    More than 50,000 Shias, 15 per cent of Pakistan’s population, marched through the city whipping themselves to mark the holy day of Ashura.
    The bomber managed to get into the procession despite the presence of more than 10,000 paramilitary troops. The attacker blew himself up at the front of the procession in the city centre.

    Witnesses and police said that the streets were strewn with body parts. Women and children were among the dead and about 60 people were injured in the attack.

    “The blast was so huge that I felt my hearing had gone but then I started hearing cries of injured people and saw pieces of human flesh and blood on the road,” said Abbas Ali, 35, one of the Shias thrown to the ground. “Some were crying and some were running here and there with panicked faces. My younger brother was with me. I looked for him and was told he was injured and was sent to hospital.”
    The procession, commemorating the death of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson in the 7th century, is held every year on Ashura, the tenth day of the Islamic holy month of Muharram. Shias traditionally wear black, beat their torsos with chains and slice their skin with knives.
    A spokesman for the paramilitary Rangers said that one of their members was killed when he tried to stop the bomber. “Our soldier Abdul Razzaq spotted the suicide bomber and jumped on him. Both fell to the road after which the bomber exploded,” Major Muhammad Aurangzeb said.
    “If Razzaq had not captured the bomber, he could have caused more casualties,” Major Aurangzeb said, adding that the soldier was killed in the blast.
    Police later found the body of the suicide bomber on the third floor of a nearby office building, where it had crashed through a window. About 35lb (16kg) of high explosives were used, a bomb disposal officer said. The Karachi police chief, Waseem Ahmad, said that the force was investigating the possibility that a second suicide bomber was involved in the attack. Mourners set fire to dozens of vehicles and buildings and clashed with police. Gunfire was heard as riots spread into the outskirts of Karachi.
    Mustafa Kamal, the Mayor of Karachi, said that the attack was an attempt to disturb the peace in the country’s commercial and financial hub. No one claimed responsibility but police suspected Islamic militants.
    Yusuf Raza Gilani, the Pakistani Prime Minister, condemned the bombing and appealed for calm. It was the third attack on Ashura commemorations in the country this week. Seven people were killed in a suicide bombing in Kashmir on Sunday and 17 wounded in Karachi on the same day.

    Yesterday’s attack was the deadliest in Karachi since a suicide bomber targeted the homecoming of the former Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated two months later. At least 139 people were killed in the assassination attempt in October 2007.