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World Marks One-Year Tsunami Anniversary
By CHRIS BRUMMITT, Associated Press Writer
5 minutes ago

BANDA ACEH, Indonesia - Survivors wept and prayed beside mass graves and at beachside memorials Monday, marking one year since earthquake-churned walls of water crashed ashore in a dozen nations, sweeping away hundreds of thousands of lives and uniting the world in grief and horror.

Mourners filled mosques in Indonesia's shattered Aceh province, the region hit hardest. Candlelight vigils in chilly Sweden remembered citizens lost during sunny holidays. An achingly personal tribute — a bouquet of white roses — stuck in the sand in Thailand.

In a taped message, President Bush recalled "the acts of courage and kindness that made us proud" in the sorrowful days after the disaster. Former President Clinton, the U.N. special envoy for tsunami recovery, promised not to let the world forget its pledges of aid.

Survivors relived the terrible awe they felt when the sea rose as high as 33 feet and surged inland for miles with seemingly unstoppable force, carrying along trees, houses, train cars — and thousands people — in a churning rush.

"I was not afraid at the time," said Muhammad Yani, 35, who scrambled to the second floor of an Aceh mosque and watched a muddy torrent roiling with people and debris. "I was more aware than ever that my soul belonged to Allah."

Like most survivors, Yani's family was devastated. Both his parents and a younger brother were killed.

"It was under the same blue sky, exactly one year ago, that Mother Earth unleashed her most destructive power upon us," Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono told a crowd at a ceremony in Banda Aceh, provincial capital of Aceh province, which had 156,000 dead and missing.

He sounded a tsunami warning siren — part of a system that did not exist last year — at 8:16 a.m., the moment the first wave hit, to herald a minute's silence.

On Dec. 26, 2004, the region's most powerful earthquake in 40 years tore open the sea bed off the Sumatran coast, displacing billions of tons of water and sending waves roaring across the Indian Ocean at jetliner speeds as far away as East Africa.

The impact was staggering. Water swept a passenger train from its tracks in Sri Lanka, killing nearly 2,000 people in a single blow. Entire villages in Indonesia and India disappeared. Lobbies of five-star hotels in Thailand were filled with corpses.

At least 216,000 people were left dead or missing and nearly 2 million lost their homes in a disaster that still rends hearts.

On Monday, about the time the waves hit a year ago, a man sat alone on Patong beach in Thailand weeping quietly as the sea gently lapped before him, belying its earlier fury. A white rose bouquet jutted from the sand nearby. He refused to talk to a reporter.

Nearby, Ulrika Landgren, 37, had come from Malmoe, Sweden, to see where nine of her friends died. "Somehow it's good to see this place," she said, tears leaking from behind her sunglasses.

Indonesia tested its tsunami warning system for the first time Monday. Alarms sounded in the Sumatran town of Padang, 620 miles south of Banda Aceh, sending residents fleeing for higher ground in a simulation.

"We knew it was just a drill," said Candra Yohanes, 55, who was among those who ran. "Still, when I heard the siren, my heart was pounding so hard."

Dozens of powerful aftershocks have rattled the region since last year's magnitude-9 quake, keeping people anxious about the possibility of another tsunami.

Somber ceremonies were held around the world.

In Sri Lanka, President Mahinda Rajapakse met with survivors near the site of the deadly train accident. Butchers hung up their knives to show respect for life, and Buddhist monks chanted prayers through the night.

Thousands of Indians attended an interfaith service at an 18th century church, then marched to a mass burial ground.

Sweden, Germany, Finland and other European countries held memorials to mourn their dead. The tsunami killed more than 2,400 foreigners, many of them European tourists, in Thailand.

Somalis gathered in mosques along the East African nation's coast to commemorate the 289 people who disappeared in the waves and to pray for the tens of thousands still homeless.

"It was so brutal, so quick, and so extensive that we are still struggling to fully comprehend it," U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in a videotaped message played in Banda Aceh.

The tsunami generated one of the most generous outpourings of foreign aid ever known — some $13 billion in pledges. But frustration is growing among the 1.4 million people still living in tents, plywood barracks or with family and friends.

"You want to talk about changes, we've seen nothing," said Baihqi, a 24-year-old Acehnese survivor, waving a hand dismissively at the jumble of scrap iron and plastic sheeting that is all that remains of his neighborhood. "Many promises of aid, but that's all we get — promises."

The anniversary "just means we've existed for one year," he said.

For most, though, it was a day to think about the hellish events of a year ago, about death, about survival.

On Thailand's Patong Beach, Raymond and Sharon Kelly recalled how she escaped because her husband boosted her onto a wall. He was swept away and washed inside a shop, but managed to open a skylight and get on the roof.

"I never thought I would come back. Every day I would cry," she said.

Despite their fears, the couple from Hull, England, came back to remember and to pay respects to those who were lost.

As they talked, a man tapped Sharon on the shoulder and said, "Remember me?"

It was Adolf Ruschitschka, 69, from Ruesselsheim, Germany. The two had been trapped together on a rooftop ringed by the savage, swirling waters.

Shaking with emotion, Sharon embraced him, tears pouring down her face.

___

Associated Press writers Alisa Tang, Meraiah Foley and Sutin Wannabovorn in Thailand, Krishan Francis in Sri Lanka, Ashok Sharma in India, Febby Orida in Indonesia, Tommy Grandell in Sweden contributed to this report.

From: www.my.yahoo.com

http://news.yahoo.com/photos/ss/events/wl/122604indonesiaquake;_ylt=AokLue5QnYOqt3g7MYiDTJz9xg8F;_ylu=X3oDMTA3bGk2OHYzBHNlYwN0bXA- (The Tsunami Slide Show)




Green Day
Every day a Green Day
Day spent with Green Day is tres cool!


PERRY NEWSOME
PLANET REVIEWER


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Bullet in a Bible

Green Day (Geffen Records)
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"Don't wanna be an American idiot!" Those are the world famous words we have heard again and again ever since Green Day came out with their album, American Idiot. Green Day has now come out with what should be the most popular double disc ever, a CD/DVD combo called Bullet in a Bible.

Bullet in a Bible is a live concert recording, taped June 18 and 19, 2005 at the Milton Keynes National Bowl in England. This means when you listen to the CD, you hear the crowd screaming, the people singing, and Billie Joe talking to the 65,000 fans in the audience.

As for the live concert DVD, it's not only the next best thing to actually going to one of their concerts, but in between the rocking songs and wild antics are the three main members, singer/guitarist Billie Joe Armstrong, drummer Tre Cool and bassist Mike Dirnt talking about band stuff, from being on the road 24/7 to getting psyched to "rock 65,000 people" every night.

Whoever came up with the idea for Bullet in a Bible should get a prize. This concert CD/DVD is one of the best things I have ever seen OR heard. You can definitely feel the band's energy on stage. Green Day's songs weren't short of excitement either. They actually sound better when they're played live than when recorded in the studio, probably because you get caught up in the whole concert experience.

Bullet in a Bible is one of the greatest ways to spend time when you should be doing your homework, cleaning your room or doing anything you want to avoid. No one's saying you can't watch it in your spare time, but who really wants to do homework when you could be watching the sweat drip off the trio while they rock with the punk rock-opera-like "Jesus of Suburbia?"

By: Perry Newsome, 11, Grade 6, Etobicoke
From: www.aol.com
King Kong
Movie Review: Mighty King Kong


BARRY GERMANSKY
PLANET REVIEWER


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King Kong

Adrien Brody, Naomi Watts, Jack Black.

Directed by Peter Jackson
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Simply put, director Peter Jackson's first film effort since The Lord of the Rings trilogy is nothing short of amazing. This movie has all the qualities that make a movie great: the acting is top notch, the sets are lush and visually appealing, and standing far above all else are the incredible eye-popping special effects. King Kong has never looked this real.

As for the plot, it is almost as legendary as the big ape himself. Struggling filmmaker Carl Denham (superbly portrayed by Jack Black) decides to head for the mysterious Skull Island to shoot his latest film.

Accompanying Carl is the beautiful actress Ann Darrow (Naomi Watts) and the famous Broadway playwright Jack Driscoll (Adrien Brody).

After a series of electrifying action sequences, Carl and his crew arrive on the island and are attacked by the savage natives. Ann ends up being captured and is offered to King Kong as a sacrifice.

When Kong first gains sight of Ann, he instantly falls in love with her and protects her from the many dangers that lurk within the island's gloomy jungle.

Meanwhile, Jack Driscoll sets out to rescue Ann, and Carl is eager to tag along for he wants to get some spectacular footage of the monstrous ape.

Of course both Carl's team and Kong encounter all sorts of frightening prehistoric creatures who all seem to have one thing in common: a big appetite! I will not reveal any more details, as I would not want to give away the fantastic ending.

King Kong is a real treat of a movie and it is certainly one of the best films that I have seen for a long, long time.

The action is fast paced and there's plenty of it. There was not a single uninteresting moment, and considering the fact that King Kong's runtime is nearly three hours, this is a huge accomplishment for the filmmakers.

Peter Jackson has proven that when it comes to monsters, Kong truly is king!

By: Barry Germansky, 14, Grade 9, Thornhill
From: http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1134990756527&call_pageid=1039604490593&col=1039604489946

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