‘Ice, slush and all kinds of Yuck’: Residents’ Stories from The Storm

‘Ice, Slush and all kinds of Yuck’: Residents’ Stories from the Storm

By Tim Skillern |  The Lookout

Snow covered Norwich, Conn., streets early Saturday morning. (Christa Leigh/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

As snow blankets the northeastern United States, snarls traffic and shoves residents indoors, Yahoo News readers are sharing their storm experiences. Here are dispatches, photos and videos they shared.  (All times on posts are ET.)

SATURDAY

10:15 a.m.

Some homes without power on Long Island

YAPHANK, N.Y.—It’s Saturday on Long Island, and no business is open while city employees are busy clearing snow off the roads. Although I was surprised how quickly snow covered my car on Friday, it is unbelievable today. My car is completely covered in snow. In front of my house, there is nowhere to pass.

Worst of all, I lost power last night. The snowstorm has caused many of my neighbors to stay home. My neighbors usually wake up early in the morning. As I’m writing, it is 9:43 a.m., but I can’t see anyone outside. The temperature is going down, and it is very windy.

— Ismail Kakembo

9:43 a.m.

Blizzard of ’13 lives up to hype

NORWICH, Conn.—This morning we are still experiencing heavy snowfall, though forecasters expect that to taper off around 10 a.m. Norwich has about 23 inches of snow at the moment. Snow banks in our front yard have easily reached waist-high. We had to shovel the snow outside our front door twice in the middle of the night just to prevent us from becoming trapped inside.

A blanket of about three inches of snow covers all the roads to our neighborhood; it’s clear that the plows have not come through for some time. The storm became so bad last night that state and city plow trucks were pulled off the roads; they are now back in action. Not only is traveling impractical, but it’s also impossible. Even so, Gov. Dan Malloy ordered that all roads be closed until further notice to prevent optimistic drivers from getting stuck in the snow.

Though Connecticut Light & Power reports about 36,000 of its customers without power, here in Norwich, the Norwich Public Utilities is only reporting sporadic outages, with about 160 customers out of power. We thankfully experienced no power outages during the storm.

— Christa Leigh

8:19 a.m.


Snow buried a car overnight in Portland, Maine. (Sheryl Westleigh/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

In Portland, Maine, snowed in on Saturday

PORTLAND, Maine—It’s 8 a.m. Saturday, and we’re going absolutely nowhere. Snow is still falling and the plows have yet to be seen on my little street. The snow from Nemo has buried the entire street, and cars are barely visible under the snow drifts. There may be a small car or two that have completely disappeared.

I’ve lived in Maine my whole life, and we’re used to heavy snow; this, however, is one of those storms we will remember digging out from. Light fluffy snow is pretty, but it drifts a lot and with the wind from this storm, it has piled up in front of doors and cars. As soon as you dig out, it starts filling back in. No one here is going anywhere for a while.

— Sheryl Westleigh

FRIDAY

12:06 a.m.

Ten inches, and still falling, near Boston

CHELSEA, Mass.—Snow covers all of my windows. The only sounds my companion and I hear are the wind whipping outside and the occasional rumble of a plow or wail of a fire engine siren. Gov. Deval Patrick ordered all non-emergency vehicles off the road after 4 p.m., the first time that’s happened since the infamous Blizzard of ’78, so the roads are virtually empty. We spotted a swerving SUV attempting to brave the storm this evening, but the storm was clearly winning.


Late Friday snowfall outside Boston. (L. Carter/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

Everything is closed, even the 24-hour McDonald’s just down the street that never closes. There’s nowhere to go, and no logical way to get there, so there’s nothing much to do but wait out the storm. My companion and I — along with most of Chelsea and the surrounding towns, apparently — did all of our grocery shopping Thursday night, so we’re well-stocked with food and making the best of a nice, (mostly) quiet Friday at home.

We’ve been going outside every hour to take pictures and measure accumulation; the snow is falling at about two and a half inches an hour now. The conditions are ghastly, but in a sense they’re also magical. My mother was pregnant with me during the Blizzard of ’78, so this is the first storm of this magnitude I’ve experienced firsthand, and it brings with it a sense of childlike excitement. Even my cat has been peering out the window in wonder, trying to figure out what’s going on.

We’re keeping our fingers crossed that we don’t lose power, and that when we wake up Saturday, my car won’t be completely buried beneath the snow. But whatever the outcome, this blizzard a great excuse to spend a cozy evening with a loved one and appreciate the shelter from the storm.

— L. Carter

11:58 p.m.

Taking the storm seriously in Sandy-weary NYC

BRONX, N.Y.—As winter storm Nemo approached my Bronx home, memories of Sandy were still fresh in New Yorkers’ minds.

We’ve learned to take the weather seriously. After monitoring the weather reports, I made the decision to handle all my business, including grocery shopping, one day before the storm. Snow in NYC not only screws up the roads, it also disrupts train service. And sure enough, service has been disrupted. Commuter rail service on certain MTA lines has been suspended. A video of one metro north train station shows the snow already covering the rails. With snow still falling and predicted to fall Saturday as well, train service near me has been suspended.

— Justin Samuels

9:02 p.m.

Power outages strike Rhode Island

PAWTUCKET, R.I.—This winter storm system is currently hitting the northeast hard. In Rhode Island, we are experiencing wind gusts up to 50 mph. The visibility is very poor and all people have been ordered off the roads. The major highways have been closed to commuters in an effort to keep all non-essential workers off the road. This storm has developed rapidly over the day, starting with a light dusting and light winds to a full-on blizzard. With snow falling at such a fast rate, our area is bracing for more than two feet of accumulation.

The snow is wet and heavy, weighing down the trees in my backyard. Shoveling is difficult due to the strong winds and cold chill. With the accumulations, it seems that shoveling needs to be done every hour or so just to keep up. As of 5 p.m., more than 1,000 people were without power. Within the last couple of hours, this number has jumped to tens of thousands. Although we currently are still with power in Pawtucket, the lights continue to dim on and off and we are prepared in the event we do lose electricity.

— Meagan Coelho

Friday afternoon in West Nyack, N.Y.(SA_Steve /Flickr)

8:45 p.m.

In Stamford, Nemo whimpers on first day

STAMFORD, Conn.—In truth, the snow is indeed still falling and the occasional snowman can be seen (and is being buried ever-deeper), but Winter Storm Nemo, snowpocalypse, Nemogeddon, or whatever it’s being called, has ended its first day with a whimper.

Six inches, no match for my Toro Power Max snow-blower, once sat in my driveway, but now grace my lawn in piles; another layer of snow softens their edges. There’s probably an inch or so that has since fallen, which will be handled in the morning.

The day was largely uneventful. Nothing distinguishes Nemo from a typical heavy snowstorm. The temperature has been a moderately cold 30 degrees, the wind has not been a significant player, and the snow itself has accumulated, but not greatly and only over 12 hours.

— David J. Kozlowski

6:58 p.m.

Visibility lower, snow heavier in southeast Connecticut

NORWICH, Conn.—Connecticut Gov. Dan Malloy issued a travel ban for state highways, but local roads are still accessible. Norwich City Manager Alan Bergren issued a state of emergency for the town as of 4 p.m.

An afternoon trip to our local Stop & Shop found shelves still full with no long lines. The store’s cashiers said they will still be open until midnight tonight. Stop & Shop’s gas station was closed, however, and it was unclear whether it was due to an outage of gas or the snow. Three other gas stations in the Norwich area were still open for business. Roads are still moderately clear with a few snow plows on the road, but it’s become apparent that soon they won’t be able to keep up with the heavy snowfall that we’re currently experiencing. Visibility conditions have also decreased considerably from this morning’s work commute.

— Christa Leigh

(AndrewDallos/Flickr)

5:32 p.m.

Blizzard knocking at the door

BUCKSPORT, Maine—Snow began falling early morning in mid-coastal Maine. The temperatures were frigid outside and down to around 5 degrees. Winds were whipping, and the roads had just started to disappear with a blanket of about two inches of snow on the ground. Our town’s road crew had its plows on and was already out clearing the roads locally. I am sure these few inches that had begun to fall were an instant reminder that the blizzard was just knocking at our door.

We left our house early, so we fared well at the gas pumps with only a few others taking their turn getting gas. We took our gas cans as we would need the gas for the generator if we have power outages. We got enough extra for our snow blower that undoubtedly will get a good workout. We stopped at the grocery store on the way home, so that I could get all the essentials we need, e.g., batteries, water, milk, eggs, coffee, oh—and chocolate! The parking lot was full, and we barely had a place to park—but I got in and out with no major issues with everything I needed to weather the storm.

— Virginia Wright

Long Island resident Eric Holden shot this video on Friday afternoon.

4:53 p.m.

Fun, not fretting, in Maine’s blizzard

READFIELD, Maine—The day before a storm of any size, our area grocery stores and gas stations get overrun with customers. Everyone is trying to not only stock up on food and necessities for the possible three days of not wanting to be on the roads, but also collecting water, batteries and something for heat just in case we spend a week or so without power.

It is like a game to most of us. We all sit around trying to guess as to how many inches of snow we will end up getting and how many days we will go without power if at all. I personally love the feeling of being surrounded by snow and to be able to sit in my living room and just watch the beauty happen around me.

Oh, the work? You want to know about the work side of it? Well, with each storm, there does come a lot of responsibility, but, hey, we are Mainers. We can handle it. Have your shovels handy and your plow on and you will be fine. Make it fun. There is no need to be stressed out.

— Angela Godbout


Roads in upstate New York on Friday. (Ismail Kakembo/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

4:40 p.m.

Bitten by Sandy, taking this storm seriously

STAMFORD, Conn.—Storm-weary residents here, once bitten by Sandy, are preparing for the worst. Store shelves were empty and lines at gas stations resulted in wait times of as long as 30 minutes Thursday night, as residents prepared to be trapped inside their homes. Water, road salt, and shovels were in short supply. Optimistically, plastic sleds were also sold out.

The snow fall is alternating between heavy and light. It seems to fall at inches per hour, only to change to very light flakes. It’s a heavy, wet, sticky snow on the ground, making shoveling a back-breaker. There’s no significant wind to speak of and, thus far, no significant damage, injuries, or power outages reported.

The blizzard will continue throughout the day and into Saturday, with the heaviest snowfall expect in the evening. Connecticut’s Gov. Dan Malloy is declaring a state of emergency with road closures to begin at noon.

We have adequate supplies of staple foods, gas for the snow-blower, and flashlights and batteries. We checked our property for potential problems and found none (fortunately, no trees are within striking distance of our house). The storm is finding us well-prepared, well-stocked, and ready to spend a weekend indoors.

— David J. Kozlowski

3:24 p.m.

Tempers flare, shelves stripped in central Jersey as storm arrives

MONROE TOWNSHIP, N.J.—Starting Thursday, residents here began stocking up on food, batteries, snow shovels, and gasoline. Those lucky enough to have generators don’t want to risk running out of gas, which may be as hard to find after this storm as it was after “Superstorm” Sandy.

Thousands of flights have been canceled at Newark and other New York-area airports. The parking lot at the local Stop & Shop was jammed, as people stripped shelves of milk, bread, and bottled water. Tempers frayed and a horn-blowing contest erupted over a parking space– if the participants had not been senior citizens, fisticuffs would probably have taken place instead.

As of noon, the temperature is hovering around 30 degrees with a steady rain. The rain is expected to change to snow later this afternoon, with an accumulation of six to 12 inches forecast for central Jersey by the time the storm moves out.

— E. Burgin


Temperatures have plummeted in Freedom, Maine, on Friday. (Raiscara Avalon/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

2:19 p.m.

Near whiteout conditions in central New Hampshire

TILTON, N.H.—Weather conditions are worsening rapidly in central New Hampshire, with highway visibility and road navigation a major problem even in the early a.m. commute. Thick cloud cover at this time just added to the low visibility.

The right lane on RT 93 in New Hampshire is relatively clear, as you can see in this video,but passing cars in the left lane make visibility close to zero.

I commuted from Tilton to Plymouth, N.H., at 8 a.m., about 30 miles and although the RT 93 was not slick or slippery, drivers who chose to drive below 50 MPH seemed to compound the problem as other vehicles stacked up behind them, and ultimately passed them, creating a potential sliding and collision hazard.

The snow spray from the passing vehicles produced complete whiteout conditions for the remaining vehicles when cars and trucks passed us.

Franconia Notch is a total whiteout driving situation, as one Thornton driver reported after he turned back from his commute and returned home.

Expect back roads to be even worse than RT 93. Though the plows are out in full force, they cannot keep up with the high rate of snow falling at this time. State troopers can be seen parked along RT 93 and are closely monitoring the situation.

Main streets are already sloppy, and I was sliding down hilly side roads, or unable to drive up steep roads. I saw no accidents during this early morning commute, but I am sure that has changed by the time this is published. It was a very tense drive.

Staying at home is strongly suggested if at all possible.

— J.D. Harvey

Emptying shelves in a supermarket. (AndrewDallos/Flickr)

2:04 p.m.

The Blizzard of 2013, aka the Great Raid on Dunkin Donuts

TORRINGTON, Conn.—I took the day off, as the predicted historic snowstorm approached in Connecticut. I decided to venture out this morning for some breakfast while the roads were still passable. My wife asked me to pick up some donuts while I was out, so I proceeded to the local grocery store where there is a Dunkin’ Donuts.

To my dismay there wasn’t a donut left on the shelf.

I figured I had to go to the main store where I was sure there would be some since it was only 10 a.m.

As I pulled up to the main Dunkin’ Donuts store, I could see through the window that it was going to be slim pickings.

Nothing. Dunkin’ Donuts does not have donuts!

I asked the girl behind the counter why a donut shop doesn’t have donuts at 10 a.m. She told me that people were coming in and buying dozens of donuts at a time. Dozens of donuts? Is this some kind of an emergency staple I don’t know about?

— Richard Farr


Snow dusts the streets in Bucksport, Maine, early Friday morning. (Matthew Johnson/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

1:18 p.m.

Already drawing comparisons to 1978

NEWPORT, R.I.—Here on the coast, we’re preparing for what has the potential to be a storm as severe of the great blizzard of 1978. Almost 35 years ago to the day, that storm left massive amounts of snow on the entire northeastern United States.

Grocery stores and supermarkets were bombarded overnight with people preparing for a long freeze-out this weekend. Lines are winding around gas stations here as the storm approaches. A state of emergency was put in to place at noon, so it would be best to stay off the roads unless there is an emergency.

The state was prepared for this since last night. Classes were canceled at high schools across the state. All RIPTA buses, including the non-medical ride program, were canceled at noon on Friday in anticipation of the coming storm. People who require public transportation can follow them on Facebook and Twitter at @RIPTA_RI to stay up-to-date with when service will be restored. Residents can sign up for news updates, which will update them of service changes.

— Eric Jonathan Martin

 

1:02 p.m.

Storm increasing pace in southern Maine

BUCKSPORT, Maine—Somewhere around 7 a.m., it started to flurry fairly hard, and the storm steadily increased its pace. There is already a few inches of snow as of now (1 p.m.), and this is not even the actual storm. That is supposed to hit sometime early this evening and continue into tomorrow.

There’s a 19-car pile-up on I-295 in southern Maine, and there have been a number of sirens heard locally in town. If you don’t need to go out, I would suggest not, and if you must, please take it slow and do it soon. From what we are being told, the worst is yet to come.

— Matthew Johnson

10:58 a.m.

The flakes are starting to to appear in Rhode Island

NORTH KINGSTOWN, R.I.—The sky looks grey and menacing. I went to the supermarket Thursday morning (along with at least 100 other people who seemed to have the same idea) and made sure I had enough food. The woman in the checkout line before me said the parking lot was in chaos and everybody was acting like the end of the world was coming. I thought it was very funny, and also very accurate. Now I am warm and safe indoors, and there is nothing to do except wait.

There is a feeling of impending doom and my joints ache. I’m not looking forward to this, but I’m as prepared as I can get. I don’t drive due to a medical condition, and ironically I have often found that it is actually faster for me to walk right after a snowstorm, since I can be downtown in 15 minutes.

That advantage goes away after the first day or so because they don’t pay much attention to the pedestrians and the priority, understandably, goes to the motorists. People like me are having to deal with ice, slush, and all kinds of yuck. The plows have to dump the snow somewhere, though, and it is usually right where I need to walk. So I have to either find a way around it, or climb over a slippery hill and hope that I don’t fall on my behind, or worse, fall and land in the road in front of a car.

I’m also hoping the power won’t go off. Or if it does, that it will only be off for a little while. The heat in this apartment is electric, and it will get really cold in here really fast.

— Melanie Gibson

The first of the snowfall in central Connecticut (Christa Leigh/Yahoo! Contributor Network)

Momma’s Source: Yahoo News

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Chris Stevens, U.S. Ambassador to Libya Killed in Rocket Attack

Chris Stevens, U.S. Ambassador to Libya Killed in Rocket Attack, Served As Envoy During Revolution

Chris Stevens, the U.S. ambassador to Libya killed along with three others in a rocket attack outside the American Consulate in Benghazi—ignited by protesters angry over a film they say insults Prophet Muhammad—was “a courageous and exemplary representative of the United States,” President Barack Obama said in his initial statement Wednesday condemning the attack.

Initial reports said the slain embassy staffers—who also include foreign service information management officer Sean Smith—were trying to flee the consulate building when they were fired upon. According to the Associated Press, a Libyan doctor who treated Stevens said the diplomat died of severe asphyxiation from smoke inhalation and that he tried for 90 minutes to revive him.

Stevens, 52, was the first U.S. ambassador killed in the line of duty since 1979, when Adolph Dubs, U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, was gunned down in a kidnapping attempt.

[Also read: President Obama’s statement on attack in Benghazi]

“Throughout the Libyan revolution, [Stevens] selflessly served our country and the Libyan people at our mission in Benghazi,” Obama said. “As ambassador in Tripoli, he has supported Libya’s transition to democracy. His legacy will endure wherever human beings reach for liberty and justice. I am profoundly grateful for his service to my administration, and deeply saddened by this loss.”

Stevens, a California native and U.C.-Berkeley grad, was a 21-year veteran of foreign service, the White House said.

“I had the privilege of swearing in Chris for his post in Libya only a few months ago,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in a separate statement. “He spoke eloquently about his passion for service, for diplomacy and for the Libyan people. This assignment was only the latest in his more than two decades of dedication to advancing closer ties with the people of the Middle East and North Africa.

[Related: ‘Innocence of Muslims’: The film that sparked deadly U.S. Embassy attacks]

“As the conflict in Libya unfolded, Chris was one of the first Americans on the ground in Benghazi,” Clinton continued. “He risked his own life to lend the Libyan people a helping hand to build the foundation for a new, free nation. He spent every day since helping to finish the work that he started. Chris was committed to advancing America’s values and interests, even when that meant putting himself in danger.”

In response to the attack, the United States is “deploying elite Marine counterterrorism teams to Libya,” Foreign Policy reports. The Pentagon is sending Fleet Anti-Terrorism Teams, or FAST teams, a U.S. defense official told the magazine.

“It’s especially tragic because Chris Stevens died in Benghazi because it is a city he fought to save,” Obama said later Wednesday morning in hastily arranged public remarks in the Rose Garden of the White House.

Speaking at an impromptu press conference in Jacksonville, Fla., on Wednesday, Mitt Romney condemned Tuesday’s attacks as “disgusting” and “outrageous,” but he also attacked the Obama administration for standing by a statement issued by the U.S. Embassy in Cairo that he claimed was an “apology” for American values.

[Related: Romney attacks Obama for sending ‘mixed signals’ on Middle East violence]

Late Tuesday, Romney issued a statement saying it was “disgraceful that the Obama administration’s first response was not to condemn attacks on our diplomatic missions but to sympathize with those who waged the attacks.” On Wednesday, he stood by his criticism of the White House.

Here’s Stevens’ bio from the U.S. Embassy website:

Ambassador Chris Stevens considers himself fortunate to participate in this incredible period of change and hope for Libya. As the President’s representative, his job is to develop a strong, mutually beneficial relationship between the United States and Libya. Ambassador Stevens was the American representative to the Transitional National Council in Benghazi during the revolution.

When he’s not meeting with government officials or foreign diplomats, you can find Ambassador Stevens meeting with Libyan academics, business people, and civil society activists, exploring Libya’s rich archaeological sites, and enjoying Libya’s varied cuisine.

After several diplomatic assignments in the Middle East and North Africa, Ambassador Stevens understands and speaks Arabic and French. He likes the Facebook page of the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli and hopes you will, too.

“I had the honor to serve as the U.S. envoy to the Libyan opposition during the revolution,” Stevens said in May in a video introducing himself to the Libyan people as the new U.S. ambassador there. “And I was thrilled to watch the Libyan people stand up and demand their rights.

[Slideshow: Gunmen storm U.S. consulate in Libya]

“Growing up in California I didn’t know much about the Arab world,” Stevens continued. “I traveled to North Africa as a Peace Corps volunteer, worked as an English teacher in a town in the high Atlas mountains in Morocco for two years and quickly grew to love this part of the world.

“We know Libya is still recovering from an intense period of conflict,” he added. “There are many courageous Libyans who wear the scars of that battle.”

 Credit: Dylan Stableford

Momma’s Source: Yahoo News/The Lookout

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120616 [Four] 4 Missing Climbers Presumed Dead After Avalanche

Tragedy seems to be everywhere. Please pray for the families of those assumed deceased.

4 Missing Climbers Presumed Dead After Avalanche

Associated PressBy NIGEL DUARA | Associated Press – 23 mins ago
 
One member of a Japanese climbing team survived and four others are presumed dead after an avalanche swept them off a hill during their descent from Mount McKinley.

U.S. National Park Service officials say five people were traveling as one rope team early Thursday morning as part of a Miyagi Workers Alpine Federation expedition on the Alaska mountain.

Park Service spokeswoman Maureen McLaughlin said Hitoshi Ogi, 69, survived after falling 60 feet into a crevasse. He was able to climb out.

The other four tumbled into the avalanche debris and haven’t been seen since. The climbers are presumed dead by either snow burial or injuries suffered in falls

Snowfall and wind have impeded a search for the missing climbers.

Hitoshi spoke to Park Service employees after the event. He said the climbers were descending the mountain together when the avalanche began, McLaughlin said. They sped up, trying to get down the mountain faster, but the rope connecting them broke when the avalanche struck.

Hitoshi was the lowest person on the rope team. He looked for the other four but couldn’t find them.

“He wasn’t sure of all the events,” McLaughlin said, adding that Hitoshi spoke through a translator and was exhausted.

The four missing climbers include 64-year-old Yoshiaki Kato, 50-year-old Masako Suda, 56-year-old Michiko Suzuki, and 63-year-old Tamao Suzuki.

There was new snow on the route, but the weather on Thursday was calm, McLaughlin said.

“Where the avalanche occurred, the vast majority (of the new snow) was not on the main route,” McLaughlin said. “A small sliver of it was, and that’s what took them.”

McLaughlin called the avalanche, “an unlucky, random event.”

“Avalanches do occur in this vicinity, but it’s not common, she said.

The climbers were attempting the busiest route, West Buttress, during the height of mountaineering season. Climbers attempted the route on 92 percent of attempts on Mount McKinley in 2011.

The Park Service said in a news release that nearly 400 people were on the Alaska mountain on Saturday.

Mount McKinley, also known as Denali, is America’s tallest peak. While not a particularly tall peak by global standards, its latitude makes for far thinner air than is found in mountains closer to the equator. That, combined with the weather and temperatures, makes it a particularly dangerous climb.

Four people died on the mountain in 2009 and again in 2010. At least five people died in 2011 on Mount McKinley.

Follow reporter Nigel Duara on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/nigelduara

Momma’s Source: @yahoonews 
 
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[TRANS] 111223 Jang Geun Suk & JYJ Kim Junsu In A “Miraculous Two-Shot”

[TRANS] 111223 Jang Geun Suk & JYJ Kim Junsu In A “Miraculous Two-Shot”

The “3rd 2011 THE ASIA JEWELRY AWARDS” (Organised by Mucha) was held on 6 December in Seoul, and hallyu star Jang Geun Suk as well as former TVXQ member, the popular JYJ Kim Junsu both appeared on stage.

This year, Jang Geun Suk was awarded the “World Star” award, as the most active star in spreading knowledge about Korea to the world, and Kim Junsu was awarded the “K-Pop Superstar Award.” Both men went on stage at the same time to collect their awards and the image of this moment is truly a miraculous two-shot, not only to the fans of both men, but also to fans of the hallyu wave.

A two-shot of these two men has never been achieved in Japan, but this Jewelry show is expected to be held in Japan next year.

Source : [Josei Jishin via Yahoo News]

Translated & Shared by: dongbangdata.net

Momma’s Source: dongbangdata.net

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7.1 Magnitude Earthquake Is Recorded Off Coast of Alaska

7.1 Magnitude Earthquake Is Recorded Off Coast of Alaska

Published: Friday, September 02, 2011, 7:51 AM
By The Associated Press
The Star-Ledger Continuous News Desk

A pair of women talk to a Newark police officer along Green Street in Newark after a rare earthquake rattled downtown Newark and other parts of New Jersey Tuesday afternoon. (Aristide Economopoulos/The Star-Ledger)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A tsunami warning is in effect for parts of the Aleutian Islands of Alaska after a 7.1-magnitude earthquake was recorded in the ocean.

The USGS says the earthquake struck in the waters at about 6:55 a.m. Eastern time today, and there are no initial reports of injuries or damage.

The tsunami warning is in effect for coastal areas of Alaska from Unimak Pass to Amchitka Pass. The areas are very remote and not heavily populated, according to Jessica Sigala, geophysicist with the USGS in Golden, Colo.

No more details were immediately available.

Related coverage:

• Earthquake rocks New Jersey and New York

• Newark City Hall evacuated, as city feels effect of 5.8 magnitude earthquake in Virginia

(Tsunami alert was canceled)

Momma’s Source; yahoonews

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