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The United States urged speedy approval of its proposed resolution on disarming Iraq, as all 15 members of the U
stanley becher .N. Security Council prepared to review the document paragraph by paragraph Friday.Among the five veto-wielding members of the Security Council, Russia appears to be the biggest obstacle. It has rejected the latest draft resolution and has not ruled out a veto, saying it is worried language in the document would automatically sanction a mi
stanley cup litary attack.But U.S. officials, who presented the seven-page document to the entire Security Council on Wednesday, said the real threat was inaction. The real hidden trigger is the absence of a resolution, said Richard Grenell, spokesman for U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, also said that if there is no resolution, there is no other option but military action.While the focus thus far has been on the debate between the five veto-wielding members, the 10 elected council membe
stanley cup rs also are important because a resolution must receive nine yes votes and no veto by a permanent member to be adopted. I think everybody feels that it needs some work, said Jagdish Koonjul, the U.N. Ambassador from the tiny Indian Ocean island of Mauritius. We ll try to build consensus around some language that would be acceptable to everyone. ... We are trying to build bridges rather than break them. In a move to spur U.N. action, the United States introduced the draft resolution to the full Se Yyqv Militant Islamist Websites Trying to Reach Out To Muslim Youths in the West
Winter is coming, an
stanley cups d it never too early to start being afraid. One thing to fear in the coming season is ice earthquakes. They ;re called cryoseisms, and they are what happens when the weather heats up and cools off to
vaso stanley o often and too much. A cryoseism happens when a winter season warms up and cools down too much. It helped along if, during a warm spell, there a shower of rain instead of snow. The water runs down between cracks in the ice. It can slowly leak far down into frozen ground and collect in large deposits. If there is enough water, and the temperature stays high, the water remains liquid, slowly building up until it fills all the cracks or open spaces in the ice. Then the temperature drops and the water freezes. Occasionally it freezes very quickly indeed. As it freezes, it expands, pushing the ice, rock, and whatever else is around it apart. Freezing water can split stone, even if there just a bit of it. A little cryoseism confines itself to making a loud noise, like a sonic boom, as it splits apart the ground around it. Enough water suddenly made ice can make make the ground shudder, shake multiple houses, and rip apart foundations. The ice makes an earthquake. 822
stanley quencher 1; Image: McKay Savage. [Via Freaky Frost Quakes Boom and Shake Midwest Towns, Cryoseisms In Maine] PhysicsScience