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Violent spring storms have caused several Midwestern rivers to rise, with more storms in the forecast.The rains also caused flash floods that have been blamed in two deaths in Missouri.Many rivers are at or near their crest after the latest round of spring storms over the weekend. But flood-watchers aren t ready to relax just yet.Heavy rain caused the Mississippi, Missouri, Illinois, Meramec, Grand, Fabius and other rivers to rise. Susie Stoner of the Missouri State Emergency Management Agency warned drivers against trying to make it through roads with water on them. Both deaths in Missouri occurred when motorists drowned after their cars became submerged. Missouri was hardest hit, but other states in the nation s midsection were seeing mostly minor flooding.Along the St. Louis riverfront, sandbags are trying to hold back the rising Mississippi, CBS Affiliate KMOV correspondent Julian Grace reported on The Early Show this morning. Grace said meteorologists are predicting more rain on Thursday, which is bad news for the St. Louis area, where the river could crest at 35.3 feet later this week. Forecasters l
stanley mug ast week expected things to dry out after Monday, but National Weather Service hydrologist Mark Fuchs said the forecast has been revised and rain is expected in parts of the Midwest on and off for the rest of the week. In fact, southern Missouri and Illinois could get up to 3 inches of
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The Millennium Falcon is the king of cool when it comes t
vaso stanley o classic sci-fi spaceships. The vessel is a kitbashed masterpiece and a bold image that screams Star Wars. It also a piece of junk, a bucket of bolts, and constant headache for Han Solo and company, but hey, she got it where it counts. The most famous Falcon sound from the original trilogy is the sci-fi wah-wah when Solo fails to jump to hyperspace. You know, the one that sounds like beeeeew-bew-bew-bew-bew. Posted via YouTube by Eyes on Cinema, this three-minute interview with sound engin
stanley bottles eer Ben Burtt, conducted in 1980, walks through all the disparate noises needed to make that strange mechanical wheeze. In the process, it also shows that sound engineers are woefully under appreciated for their audible efforts. The sound is primarily driven by a the inertia starter of a 1928 biplane and is then textured by a dentist airjet, motors, tank turrets, and some groaning water pipe
stanley website s. Throw ;em all together and there you have it. [Eyes on Cinema via Digg] Star Wars