Nutrition Update: New product just released Product Name: >Hoodia<
What it does: - Suppress your appetite and feel full and satisfied all day long - Boost your energy levels - Lose excess (w)-(e)-(i)-(g)-(h)-(t) - Boost your metabolism - Burn body (f)-(a)-(t) - Burn calories - Attack obesity This product was just featured on 60 Minutes, and the BBC New report on Sept 12th, 2005 Further Information: http://www.imiebtemt.info Regardless of its strength, Ophelia merits respect, said Larry Jenkins, a worker at the Sportsmans Pier in Atlantic Beach.Nagin said he still needed to confirm a report that the floodwaters will be gone much sooner than first thought, but progress was being made.Earlier, the president observed a moment of silence on the south lawn of the White House for victims of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.Instead, confusion reigned at every level of officialdom, according to dozens of interviews with participants in Louisiana, Mississippi and Washington. "No one had access. . . . No one had communication. . . . Nobody knew where the people were," recalled Secretary of Health and Human Services Mike Leavitt, whose department did not declare the Gulf Coast a public health emergency until two days after the storm.His goal, Allen said, was a "seamless handoff.""What do you mean?" Maestri asked, though he already knew the answer.As the names were read, weeping mourners filed down a ramp to a reflecting memorial pool at the floor of the site, which remains virtually empty four years after the attack killed 2,749 people and tore a hole in the New York skyline. Families filled the water with red, orange and yellow roses, some shaking as they inscribed dedications on the wooden edge of the pool.Compounding the natural catastrophe was a man-made one: the inability of the federal, state and local governments to work together in the face of a disaster long foretold.The U.S. Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no threat of a Pacific-wide tsunami from the quake, which Geoscience Australia said occurred at a depth 60 miles."I always knew that once we got the pumps up, some of our significant pumps going, that we could accelerate the draining process," he said. "The big one is pumping station six, which is our most powerful pump, and I am understanding that that's just about ready to go."Seismically active, Papua New Guinea also lies on the Ring of Fire, a zone of volcanic activity which accounts for 75 percent of the worlds active and dormant volcanoes."We got a lot of good people on the ground here that are with FEMA and with the state agencies," he said. "They wear their badges, and they look good. But unfortunately, we just not have seen all the assets and all the resources that we need in our city."The Army Corps of Engineers Saturday revised its timetable for draining the flood waters from New Orleans, saying the draining should be completed in October, far sooner than previous estimates.By 2 p.m. EDT, Ophelia was centered 260 miles east-southeast of Charleston, S.C., and about 250 miles south of Cape Hatteras with maximum sustained wind at 80 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. It had meandered slightly but essentially was stationary after following a wandering course since it became a tropical storm Wednesday off the coast of Florida."You're taking care of us from heaven but someday we'll be together," Iliani Flores said, choking up and raising her face to the sky in memory of her younger brother, a fire department paramedic.By 2 p.m. EDT, Ophelia was centered 260 miles east-southeast of Charleston, S.C, and about 250 miles south of Cape Hatteras with maximum sustained wind at 80 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. It had meandered slightly but essentially was stationary after following a wandering course since it became a tropical storm Wednesday off the coast of Florida.As the floodwaters recede and the dead are counted, what went wrong during a terrible week that would render a modern American metropolis of nearly half a million people uninhabitable and set off the largest exodus of people since the Civil War, is starting to become clear. Federal, state and local officials failed to heed forecasts of disaster from hurricane experts. Evacuation plans, never practical, were scrapped entirely for New Orleans's poorest and least able. And once floodwaters rose, as had been long predicted, the rescue teams, medical personnel and emergency power necessary to fight back were nowhere to be found.Relatives in the crowd bowed their heads and sobbed as speakers uttered brief, personal messages to the brothers and sisters they lost, many voices breaking in sorrow.Mayor Michael Bloomberg opened with words of condolence for those devastated by Katrina and the terrorist bombings in the London Underground.If it was a Category Four barreling down here, I would get out if I had a chance, Lee said. The structures just cant take that kind of wind. Were cautiously watching (Ophelia). Were not giving up until its north of us.In Louisiana, New York firefighters and police officers helping victims of Katrina held their own 9/11 services. (Full story)Allen said the discussions were "frank and open."Compounding the natural catastrophe was a man-made one: the inability of the federal, state and local governments to work together in the face of a disaster long foretold.