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Investments > Australian Investments > Re: If Global W...
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Re: If Global Warming Stopped In 1998 How Come Records are Still Being Broken?

by "0NBZ0" <0NBZ0@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 23, 2008 at 01:22 PM

Global Cooling Hits US With A Vengeance

14 Dec 2007



http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/weather/12/14/winter.storm.ap/index.html



(AP) -- Americans from Oklahoma to New England are bracing for more 
harsh winter weather as a storm system continues to bring waves of 
misery.



The National Weather Service issued winter weather watches for the 
northwest two-thirds of Oklahoma from Friday afternoon through Saturday 
morning.



Between 2 and 6 inches of snow was predicted for parts of Kansas and 
Oklahoma, said meteorologist Ken Harding.



By late Friday afternoon, snow was already falling on the outskirts of 
Oklahoma City.



In Missouri, the National Weather Service said two waves of snow Friday 
night and Saturday could dump up to 7 inches.  Watch what's in store for 
Friday and Saturday »



The second wintry blast could complicate efforts to restore power to the 
more than 280,000 homes and businesses in Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri 
still blacked out after the first storm put a million customers in the 
dark at its height this week.



That storm, which coated much of the Plains in ice before moving dumping 
snow on the Northeast, has killed at least 38 people, mostly in traffic 
accidents. It has been blamed for 23 deaths in Oklahoma alone.



An Xcel Energy serviceman working to restore power in an Oklahoma City 
neighborhood peppered by toppled trees said Friday that he expected the 
new storm to hamper recovery efforts, but not create massive new power 
failures.



"All this kind of work is safety-based, so any time you get another 
weather aspect, then there goes another safety factor," said Scott 
Falkner.



Weather Service meteorologist Pete Snyder agreed with that *****sment.



"For crews that are out there trying to restore power, it'd be more of a 
headache," Snyder said.



The storm also threatened to steal manpower from efforts to clear fallen 
trees. Dan Crossland, a public works official in Tulsa, said almost 
every city crew removing downed tree limbs will be spun off to clear the 
streets when the second storm comes.



"I intend to stay on 12-hour ****fts until every street is clear," 
Crossland said. "These guys are dragging."



The Kansas National Guard continued to deliver generators and supplies 
to communities, knowing more would be needed.



The first storm changed from ice to snow as it blew into the Northeast, 
dumping 2 inches to a foot across the region and catching many 
municipalities by surprise, even after it wreaked havoc to the west. 
See how winter storms form »



Some commuters in Boston spent eight hours driving home Thursday 
evening, and public school buses were still dropping off students at 11 
p.m.



Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick defended the state's storm response 
Friday after meeting with public safety, trans****tation and emergency 
officials.



"People were asked to leave early, and they didn't," Patrick said. "What 
would have helped, I think in this case, would have been a more uniform 
early release."



As the snow fell, traffic on Rhode Island highways backed up past the 
Massachusetts state line, and about 300 vehicles got stuck or collided 
with others.



Providence Mayor David Cicilline ordered an investigation into why 
dozens of school buses got stranded on city streets.



But while the worst was over in the Northeast, at least for now, Plains 
residents continued to cope with maintaining the basics.



Bill Weaver, a Tulsa resident who moved here two years ago to escape 
hurricane-battered New Orleans, waited in his frigid home Friday for the 
electricity to be turned back on, deadpanning: "So, here we are."



He had two gas-log fireplaces going, warming about a third of his home.



"It doesn't keep the showers warm," Weaver said. "It's cold baths." 
E-mail to a friend



Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material 
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


-- 



Warmest Regards

Bonzo


“… researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Solar Research in Germany 
re****t the sun has been burning more brightly over the last 60 years, 
accounting for the 1 degree Celsius increase in Earth's temperature over 
the last 100 years.” 
http://ibdeditorial.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=287279412587175
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
Re: If Global Warming Stopped In 1998 How Come Records are Still
"0NBZ0" <0NB  2008-04-23 13:22:50 
Re: If Global Warming Stopped In 1998 How Come Records are Still
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-04-29 23:03:18 

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tan12V112 Wed Dec 3 23:55:17 CST 2008.