Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts

Monday, May 31, 2010

Gillette Stadium


Gillette Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium located in Foxborough, Massachusetts, located 21 miles (34 kilometers) southwest of downtown Boston and 20 miles from downtown Providence, Rhode Island. Opened on May 11, 2002 (partial) then the grand opened on September 9, 2002. It is owned and operated both by Kraft Sports Group. The surface made of FieldTurf since 2006 untill present. Gillette Stadium serves as the home stadium and administrative offices for the New England Patriots football team and the New England Revolution soccer team.
Gillette Stadium becomes hot searched place latest days. Gillette Stadium will be upgrading both video boards in the near future. Kraft told The Boston Globe that installation of high-definition video boards in each end zone will be part of the planned improvements. This installation is one of some big plans arranged by the owner Robert Kraft for Gillette Stadium.
The video boards is placed in the two end zone; south-end zone and north-end zone. Overall dimensions of the south end zone scoreboard LED displays are approximately 41.5 feet high by 164 feet wide and weight approximately 83,600 lbs. (41.8 tons). While overall dimensions of the north end zone scoreboard are approximately 45-feet high by 100-feet wide and weight approximately 54,700 lbs. (27.4 tons).

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Tornadoes Strike back: See The Present Advance In Days


Speciallly taken from “Forecasts warned of tornadoes days in advance” by TIM TALLEY and ROXANA HEGEMAN

 SEMINOLE, Okla. — Days before deadly tornadoes raked the Plains, forecasters warned people big storms were on the way and that they would be large and powerful. Scientists even predicted almost to the hour when the twisters might strike.
They were almost right on the money.
Technological advances, particularly the use of supercomputers that can crunch vast amounts of atmospheric data, have given meteorologists powerful new tools to warn of oncoming storms long before they strike.
The line of storms may have spawned as many as 19 tornadoes as it marched through central Kansas and into Oklahoma Monday evening, leveling houses, flipping cars and dropping hail as big as softballs. Two people were killed and dozens more injured.
"What is disheartening is to tell people for a week that something is going to happen, get warnings out and still have people lose their lives," said Dick Elder, chief meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Wichita.
On Tuesday, families picked through broken furniture and dented appliances outside their shattered homes. Garbage trucks scooped up mattresses and other debris.
State officials, meanwhile, revised Monday's death toll from five to two after discovering three critically injured Cleveland County children had survived. A miscommunication occurred when relatives called a hospital to check on the children, who had been transferred, and state officials were later told they had died, said Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management spokeswoman Michelann Ooten.
All three remained in critical condition Tuesday, Ooten said. But their 27-year-old mother was killed, as was a 41-year-old man who died in southeast Oklahoma City.
More storms moved through Oklahoma on Tuesday and tornado watches were in effect for much of the night across a swath of the state and into Kansas.
In the early 1980s, computer models forecast storms two days in advance. But meteorologists still relied heavily on radar and storm spotters to confirm the location, size and strength of tornadoes.
"Comparing 20 years ago to today it is different as daylight and dark," Elder said. "We still use spotters to verify what we are seeing, but our warnings are so much more."
Computer models can now forecast threatening storms a week or more in advance — and do so more accurately than ever.
Supercomputers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Camp Springs, Md., provide information sent to the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., and on to National Weather Service field offices, where warnings are issued for local areas.
"Year after year, the precision and the accuracy of those models increases," said Mike Foster, the meteorologist-in-charge at the National Weather Service office in Norman. "What we have to do is build in the minds of people everywhere that there is accuracy in those, and when they hear something seven days out, there is some meaning behind that."
Despite the advance warning, many people disregarded blaring sirens Monday as three tornado-producing storms bore down on the Oklahoma City area during evening rush hour. Television station video showed motorists clogging roadways as a tornado formed at Norman.
"That looked to me like people cruising down the road there — business as usual," Foster said.
Part of the Oklahoma culture could be to blame. Tornadoes occur frequently here, and with regular TV programming often dumped in favor of storm coverage, forecasters fear people have become desensitized to the seriousness.
"I believe that if we warn too much, the message, even the frenetic message, starts to blend into the white-noise background of life," Foster said.
When a hurricane approaches the coast with several days' notice, residents have plenty of time to evacuate. But it's usually impractical to order large-scale tornado evacuations because twisters occur more frequently, and residents would grow weary of the constant warnings, Foster said.
On Tuesday, Gov. Brad Henry thanked the media for telling Oklahomans the storms were coming but stressed that it was important for people to pay attention.
"If they tell you there's a storm headed your way, you better listen to them and take shelter," Henry said at truck stop along Interstate 40 near. His news conference was interrupted by a telephone call from President Barack Obama, who promised the state's application for federal disaster assistance would be addressed "very swiftly."
Shawna Alvarez, 32, said tornadoes typically follow paths away from Little Axe, where one of her relatives died Monday. "That's why nobody here has shelters. It doesn't happen," Alvarez said.
Misty Vestal, also related to one of the victims, said extended warnings encourage people to take risks they might not have considered when technology was less advanced.
"I think a lot of people think they can beat it home," Vestal said.
But in Wichita, the early warnings a week earlier put the city's school district on heightened alert. Still, it was not until the local tornado warning was issued late Monday afternoon that officials diverted 50 buses full of students to the closest schools with storm shelters.
Wichita schools monitor the weather. All schools have weather radios, and students and teachers practice tornado drills regularly.
With a tornado spotted west of town and headed toward the heart of the city, school authorities recalled buses and activated their computerized notification system for the parents of elementary students.
"We knew about it last week as well. We were monitoring the situation. ... We all know Kansas weather can change," Arensman said.
At Wakita, a little Oklahoma town featured in the movie "Twister" about tornado researchers, the local nursing home stood by to move patients in case a storm approached. When a tornado warning was issued, nurses moved all the patients to a hallway.
Said Elder: "We can have the greatest warnings out with a great deal of lead time, but it all comes down to a person making a decision that they are at risk and getting to a shelter."
 
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Robin Hood Movie Costume


From The Title: “Somerset company dress Russell Crowe in Robin Hood”

  
If you go to watch Russell Crowe in the Hollywood film Robin Hood, look out for something he is wearing made right here in Somerset.
CA Cornish, a leather trimmings company from Street, have made the straps which are tightly wrapped around the Australian actor's arms and legs.
And it's not the first time they've helped to dress him - their handiwork can be seen in the film Gladiator.
Brad Pitt in Troy and Colin Farrell in Alexander also wore their stuff.
The company's first film commission was Gladiator in 2000 which was a big order as it involved dressing 3,000 soldiers.
Since then, they have also provided the leather lacing for the Death Eater costumes in Harry Potter - although as the film is dark, their handiwork can't be seen.
Owner Lynda Cornish said film studios like to use them as their work is discreet.
"The products we make do become part of the film - they don't stick out like a sore thumb. The costume has to be authentic," she said.
"Robin Hood and Russell Crowe may be the hero you all recognise but we're the unsung heroes!"
Since starting in 1976, CA Cornish has supplied leather trimmings to many companies including international fashion businesses such as Barber.
They've even supplied the Queen - "The phone rang and I didn't know who they were and I told them to send a fax - five minutes later and Buckingham Palace was on it and I thought 'whoops'!"
And the recession has had little impact on them, in fact their workload is increasing so keep your eyes peeled for their stuff in the next action film to make it to the big screen.

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