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Bird flu fiction and facts


Fiction 1: We're all going to die.
Fiction 2. Quarantine outbreak areas to contain the disease.


Fact 1. Flu viruses mutate.
Fact 2. Flu and cold viruses are transmitted mainly by touch. (Some recent
Fact 3. The public health system in the US has become inadequate to deal with a flu pandemic.

Ankara Steps Up Efforts to Control Avian Flu

January 11, 2006 · Turkey's government has ordered the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of domestic birds in an effort to control an outbreak of avian flu. The virus has killed three people and infected at least 15.

U.N. agencies say Turkey is taking adequate measures, but warns neighboring countries to be on alert.

 

Tsunami Facts and Fiction

Common Myths About Tsunamis

Fiction: Tsunamis are giant walls of water.

Facts: Tsunamis normally have the appearance of a fast-rising and fast-receding flood. They can be similar to a tide cycle occurring over 10 to 60 minutes instead of 12 hours. Occasionally, tsunamis can form walls of water, known as tsunami bores, when the waves are high enough and the shoreline configuration is appropriate.

Fiction: A tsunami is a single wave.

Facts: A tsunami is a series of waves. Often the initial wave is not the largest. The largest wave may occur several hours after the initial activity starts at a coastal location. There may also be more than one series of tsunami waves if a very large earthquake triggers local landslides. In 1964, the town of Seward, Alaska, was devastated first by local tsunamis caused by submarine landslides resulting from the earthquake and then by the earthquake’s main tsunami. The local tsunamis began even as people were still experiencing the shaking. The main tsunami, triggered at the site of the earthquake, did not arrive for several hours.

Fiction: Boats should move to the protection of a bay or harbor during a tsunami.

Facts: Tsunamis are often most destructive in bays and harbors, not just because of the waves but because of the violent currents they generate in local waterways. Tsunamis are least destructive in deep, open ocean waters.

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The Queen's speech at the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Uganda

23 November 2007

 

President Museveni, Prime Minister Gonzi, Secretary-General, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Thank you for your kind words of welcome.  I am delighted to be joining you here in Kampala and to see for myself a Commonwealth in such good health.  This is the last such occasion to profit from the leadership of Don McKinnon as Commonwealth Secretary-General.  He has brought energy and passion to the stewardship of the Commonwealth through the first years of a new century.  His determination to preserve and promote the relevance of the Commonwealth in the service of its two billion people has been truly outstanding.  Secretary-General, we owe you a very substantial debt and will miss you greatly.

When I first addressed a meeting of Heads of Government of the Commonwealth thirty years ago, Papua New Guinea and the Seychelles were welcomed as its 32nd and 33rd members.  Since then, our association has continued to attract new members while addressing the great preoccupations and concerns of our times.

Uganda's rich history is longer. Humankind has been present here as far back as our archaeology and history will allow us to go. And just as the people and ideas that originated in this part of Africa spread out to other parts of the globe, so too the wider world has come to touch the lives of Ugandans. This week, it comes here to Kampala in the form of the Commonwealth.

The theme chosen for this CHOGM, 'Transforming Societies', conveys a clear commitment to change for the better.  No single society has achieved perfection, and there is no single recipe for success.  No-one could expect that.  But we do know that giving people the greatest possible voice in the way they are governed, and the greatest possible access to education, are two of the most important ingredients.


Our Commonwealth theme over the whole of this year is 'Respecting Difference, Promoting Understanding'.  Recognising that each one of us is made up of layer upon layer of identity and that each of our unique personalities has ties to culture, religion, community, country and beyond, is the essence of open and tolerant communities.  I hope that, in your discussion about transforming societies, you will consider this abiding principle: that we should treat those around us as we would wish to be treated ourselves.

That is the case for governments, as for communities, as for us all individually.  Moreover, the importance we all attach to dialogue; to hearing the voices of governments but also many of the other voices in society; to respect for fundamental human rights. These qualities still place the Commonwealth in a strong position to lead.

I am especially pleased that, this year, fresh attention is being turned to young people, who make up nearly half of the Commonwealth's population. The conclusions drawn from the Youth Forum earlier this week show an almost limitless optimism and enthusiasm. This is an energy that should be tapped more fully. Young people can and should play a part in the many global challenges that cannot be resolved by older generations alone, whether in the Commonwealth as a whole or in each of its member countries.


President Museveni, you will be familiar with the Ugandan proverb which says, 'Those who walk together warn each other.'  In its sense of unity giving strength, this could just as easily be a Commonwealth proverb as a Ugandan one. Over the next two days, I wish you and your fellow leaders well in continuing the Commonwealth tradition of strength in our diversity as well as strength in our unity.

New leadership at number 10 Downing Street in London

Brown appoints new Cabinet team

Cabinet at a glance

 

 

Suspects ID'd in Plane Terror Plot

Cricket World Cup 2007 match scores  ><>Cricket World Cup 2007 in Antigua ><>

Click here for  FIFA World Cup Soccer 2006

World Cup Soccer Facts

Former Trinidad & Tobago Prime Minister sentenced to jail  

 

Lara back as West Indies captain 

 

JAMAICA PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION RACE 2006

2006 Canadian Election Results
CANADA'S NEW GOVERNMENT - SPEECH FROM THE THRONE - TURNING A NEW LEAF

·                      Contact Your Government

·                      Contact Your MP

 

Martin Luther King Biography

MLK Photo Gallery

I Have A Dream - The Speech
Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech

Rescuers To the rescue
Emergency personnel rescue residents from submerged houses in New Orleans on Monday August 29.
Photograph: James Nielsen: Getty/AFP

In pictures: Hurricane Katrina

Hurricane KATRINA News and Bulletins

SOME OF MISS UNIVERSE CONTESTANTS 2007

Miss Antigua & Barbuda  Miss Australia
  Miss Barbados
  Miss Brazil
 Miss Canada
 

Antigua     Australia         Barbados            Brazil       Canada 

                                         

Miss Ecuador
  Miss Hungary
  Miss India
  Miss Jamaica
 Miss Mexico

      Ecuador         Hungary       India    Jamaica   Mexico         

Miss Russia
  Miss St. Lucia
  Miss Tanzania
 
Miss USA
 Miss US Virgin Islands
 

   Russia             St. Lucia                Tanzania             USA         USVI     


Miss Universe Link
Search news for "Miss Universe"


   

An 18-year-old from Puerto Rico who hopes to someday star in U.S. and Latin American films was crowned Sunday night as Miss Universe 2006.

Zuleyka Rivera Mendoza shared a nervous emotional hug with first runner-up, Kurara Chibana of Japan, moments before the winner was announced, then clasped her hands to her mouth in amazement as her name was called. She beamed as the crown was placed on her head.

"I always had faith and confidence in myself, but I never knew I was going to win," Rivera, speaking in Spanish from the stage, said in her first remarks as Miss Universe.

The winner, who is from coastal town of Salinas, said she would continue the pageant's mission of promoting awareness and education about AIDS and HIV.

"I want to tell those people there's always problems in life, but there's always possibilities to improve things," she said.

Miss USA Tara Conner was the contest's fourth runner-up. Also finishing in the top five were second runner-up Lauriane Gillieron of Switzerland and third runner-up Lourdes Arevalos of Paraguay.

In her pageant biography, Rivera explained what made her different from the other contestants.

"Physically, I have been told by modeling agencies and friends that I represent the consummate Latino look," she said. "Everything in my face expresses our heritage, our music and the wonderful mixes of races that we are."