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The 14-hour lines of traffic fleeing Houston mdash; complete with cars that ran out of gas mdash; show that four years after the Sept. 11 attacks, it is difficult to evacuate a major metropolitan area.Experts say the consequences could be far more deadly in the event of a radiological or other terrorist strike. The nightmare that we all have is that, God forbid, there s a te
stanley puodelis rrorist attack of some kind on a major American city that requires evacuation without warning, said Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn. We need to be better prepared, Lieberman, the top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said on CNN s Late Edition. CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes reports that after the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush created the National Incident Management System, mandating that every urban area have an emergency management plan.
stanley uk Unfortunately, many cities lack the funds to practice for disaster. President Bush has ordered the Homeland Security Department to review disaster plans for every major metropolitan area. Experts say the slow pace of evacuations in Houston and New Orleans show the need for changes to get people out of harm s way in a more urgent emergency. You have to accept the possibility that a major portion of the people will be left behin
stanley thermos d, said Roger Cressey, a former anti-terrorism official in the Clinton and Bush administrations. You may have to write some of them off in far larger numbers than people realize. Cressey said the answer is not si Dsqe A Solar Cell Snowboard Powers Your Gadgets While You Cruise
In the 1930s, the southwestern Great Plains suffered a series of severe droughts. Overfarming and overgrazing had destroyed prairie grasses, making the topsoil even more vulnerable to strong winds. NASA scientists now say that one of those drought years, 1934,
stanley cup was the driest and most widespread in a millennium. An estimated 100 million acres were turned into
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stanley en mexico hich contributed to the Great Depression bank closures, business losses, unemployment and other physical and emotional hardships, as vividly chronicled in John Steinbeck classic novel, The Grapes of Wrath. The first drought to hit the U.S. in 1930-31 created 14 dust storms in 1932, followed by 38 in the next year. Farmers, however, continued plowing the land, believing that rain would return. Instead, they got the 1934 drought, which severely impacted 27 states. As it turns out, the successive dust storms were making the droughts even worse. Using a tree-ring-based drought record from the years 1000 to 2005 and modern records, scientists from NASA and the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory have discovered that the 1934 drought was 30% more severe than the runner-up drought in 1580 and extended across 71.6% of western North America. By way of comparison, the average extent of the 2012 drought was 59.7%. According to NASA: It was the worst by a large margin, falling pretty far outside the normal range of variability that we see in the record, said climate sc