Jailed and Jailers Pitched In Help After Storm

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The New York Times, By Published: November 21, 2012

Inmates at Rikers Island load clothes and linens into a giant industrial washing and drying machine, which was installed in July.

There are plenty of unsung heroes in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, but the story of how those at New York’s least desirable address lent their muscle and might is perhaps among the most compelling.

Record rainfall in season's first big storm

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The Seattle Times - Lynn Thompson, 11/19/12

Colin Diltz - The Seattle Times

The first big storm of the season brought record rainfall, street flooding, high winds in some areas and cautions about crossing Washington's mountain passes. In Oregon, a man from Seattle was killed when a tree fell across his tent.

The season's first severe storm Monday flooded roads and highways, triggered mudslides and killed a Seattle hunter when a tree fell on his tent in heavy winds near the Oregon coast.

To read the rest of this story, visit Seattle Times. 

A Cyclone Named Medusa is Forming in the Mediterranean

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Rain is forecast from Sunday in Liguria, spreading to the rest of the northeast and across the Alps from Monday. Sano' issued a warning though. From mid-week, the weather in Europe will be rocked by an Arctic cold front which will whip up Medusa, the last mediterranean cyclone of the Autumn before the winter weather sets in.

 

More: AGI.it

Massive Pileup on I-10 in Texas; Multiple Fatalities

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Weather.com - AP, 11/22/12

BEAUMONT, Texas -- Two people died and dozens were hurt Thursday when at least 100 vehicles collided in Southeast Texas in a pileup that left trucks twisted on top of each other and authorities rushing to pull survivors from the wreckage.

The collision occurred in extremely foggy conditions at about 8 a.m. Thanksgiving Day on Interstate 10 southwest of Beaumont, a Gulf Coast city about 80 miles east of Houston.

To watch the video and read the rest of this story, visit Weather.com.

I AM DOROTHY SMALL AND MEEK

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November 23, 2012: 2:50 am PST

Back in the days when television was relatively new, we could only watch movies when they were "on." Every year at Thanksgiving "they" would put on the movie "The Wizard of Oz." We really looked forward to seeing that movie each year, although we did not realize at the time that it was a movie about transformation and other worlds. At least it was for me.

I recall so clearly how Dorothy, the little girl from Kansas, was swirled out of the black-and-white greyness of her life in Kansas into the bright colorful world of Oz. How they communicated through a "magic mirror".

My favorite part was near the beginning, when Dorothy's house fell on a "wicked witch" and killed her, and Munchkinland rejoiced with tremendous glee. As Dorothy came out of her house, dazed, dizzy and confused, everyone was singing and cheering and dancing with great joy. The "Good Witch of the North", Glenda, asked Dorothy who she was and how she knew to come and help them escape from their servitude. Then Glenda called, "Come out, come out, wherever you are, and meet the young lady who fell from a star.

She fell very fast, she fell very far, and Kansas she says is the name of the star." Dorothy was a bit confused by this, but being a brave and kind spirit, she was happy that the Munchkins were happy, although she felt a bit weird about having killed someone quite by accident and then being acclaimed as a hero for doing it.

Then she and her little dog, Toto, began their amazing journey, which of course included going to see the Wizard of Oz, to find out how Dorothy could go Home. She had to be quite bold in order to get in to see the Wizard, and then one of my favorite transitions occurred:  He announced himself in a puff of smoke behind a screen, and he said "I am the Wizard, Strong and Mighty," or something like that... and Dorothy actually steps forward and says "I Am Dorothy, Small and Meek."

Newsflash: Time May Not Exist

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      Discover Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future

                         

Science and Technology News, Science Articles | Discover Magazine

By Tim Folger  

 No one keeps track of time better than Ferenc Krausz. In his lab at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, he has clocked the shortest time intervals ever observed. Krausz uses ultraviolet laser pulses to track the absurdly brief quantum leaps of electrons within atoms. The events he probes last for about 100 attoseconds, or 100 quintillionths of a second. For a little perspective, 100 attoseconds is to one second as a second is to 300 million years.

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