Monday, March 15, 2010

IN 15 YEARS BY CLIFTON RESONNO

In fifteen year in I will have to go to college first for 2 years. Then when l get out of college will move to California to go to police academy. Hopefully l will l be a police officer and be on the swat team. About two years after l becomes a police officer hopefully l can become a detective.
I will have three kids name Clifton, cj, zack. I want to have a five story house with ten room five bathroom four kitchen. Start my own clothing line it’s going to be call S.B. It going take a long time to start my clothing line but l thinks l can do it.
I am going to have four houses in different local. I what to have one in my home town St.Louis. One were my grandparent live at Batesville. One in were my dad lives at Jefferson City. One in Colorado for I can go snowboarding.
Become a millionaire because of my clothing line. Get a jetpack for l can fly around town. Get a airplane for l can travel to my houses. Open a restaurant called cliffs places and open a club called spectro.
Save money for my kids when l dies for they can go to college. Go skydiving and go base jumping with all my friends. Hopefully l will stay in contact with all my friends. And that what l hope happens in fifteen years the end.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

European Storm

Workers in dinghies cruised flooded streets on France's Atlantic coast Monday, searching for people still trapped in their homes by storms that smashed through concrete sea walls and killed at least 62 people across Western Europe. Destroying homes and leaving 1 million households without electricity. It also battered Belgium, Portugal, Spain and parts of Germany and snarled train and air travel throughout the continent.Floodwaters also submerged streets in L'Ile de Re, a chic resort island of colorful ports, charming cottages and bike paths. Broken-off concrete blocks from a shattered sea wall lay strewn about one of the island's beaches.President Nicolas Sarkozy toured the worst-hit areas Monday, the coastal regions of Vendee and Charente-Maritime, and pledged euro3 million ($4 million) in emergency aid.

Global Warming

Short-term weather events and long-range climate change are not the same thing, of course, but it’s hard to separate them in the public’s mind.But it’s even harder these days to convincingly argue that climate change is a reality.IPCC under the gun“The IPCC clearly has suffered a loss in public confidence,” Stanford University climate scientist Chris Field, who chairs one of the IPCC’s four main research groups, told the Associated Press on Saturday. “And one of the things that I think the world deserves is a clear understanding of what aspects the IPCC does well and what aspects of the IPCC can be improved.”Meanwhile, action in Congress on climate change has essentially stalled. The cap-and-trade approach approved by the US House of Representatives is likely to be jettisoned, reports the Washington Post, as key senators look for a new way to tackle carbon emissions.The heavy snowfalls this month have been used as fodder for ridicule by those who argue that global warming is a myth, yet scientists have long pointed out that warmer global temperatures have been increasing the rate of evaporation from the oceans, putting significantly more moisture into the atmosphere – thus causing heavier downfalls of both rain and snow in particular regions, including the Northeastern United States. Just as it’s important not to miss the forest for the trees, neither should we miss the climate for the snowstorm.

Earthquake

The 40 retirees enjoying summer vacation at a seaside campground nestled under pine trees knew they had to move fast after Chile's powerful earthquake struck.They didn't make it. The tsunami came in three waves, surging 200 meters yards into this Pacific Ocean resort town and dragging away the bus they'd piled into, hoping to get to high ground.Chile's death toll reached 723, and most died in the wine-growing Maule region that includes Pelluhue.Survivors here found about 20 bodies, and an estimated 300 homes were destroyed.Destruction is widespread and food scarce all along the coast — in towns like Talca and Cauquenes, Curico and San Javier. In Curanipe, the local church served as a morgue. In Cauquenes, people quickly buried their dead because the funeral home had no electricity.