Saturday, September 14, 2019

Attacks on Saudi Oil Facilities Knock Out Half Kingdom's Supply

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Attacks on Saudi Oil Facilities Knock Out Half Kingdom's Supply

RIYADH/DUBAI/LONDON - Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthi group said it attacked two plants at the heart of Saudi Arabia's oil industry on Saturday, knocking out more than half the kingdom's output, in a move expected to send oil prices soaring and increase tension in the Middle East. 

The attacks will cut the kingdom's output by 5.7 million barrels per day (bpd), according to a statement from state-run oil company Saudi Aramco, or more than 5% of global oil supply. 

The pre-dawn strikes followed earlier cross-border attacks on Saudi oil installations and on oil tankers in Persian Gulf waters, but these were the most brazen yet, temporarily crippling much of the nation's production capacity. Saudi Arabia is the world's biggest exporter, shipping more than 7 million barrels of oil to global destinations every day, and for years has served as the supplier of last resort to markets. 

While the Houthis claimed responsibility for the attack, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo put the blame squarely on Iran, writing on Twitter that there was "no evidence the attacks came from Yemen." 

"Amid all the calls for de-escalation, Iran has now launched an unprecedented attack on the world's energy supply," Pompeo said. 

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during family photo session with other leaders and attendees at the G-20 leaders summit in Osaka, Japan, June 28, 2019.
FILE - U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during a photo session with other leaders and attendees at the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, June 28, 2019.

Saudi de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told U.S. President Donald Trump by telephone that Riyadh had the will and capability "to confront and deal with this terrorist aggression," according to Saudi state news agency SPA. 

The United States condemned the attacks and Trump told the crown prince that Washington was ready to work with the kingdom to guarantee its security, according to the White House. The U.S. Department of Energy also said it was ready to release oil from its strategic petroleum reserve if necessary. Energy Secretary Rick Perry also said his department would work with the International Energy Agency, which coordinates energy policies of industrialized nations, if global action is needed. 

Saudi Arabia, leading a Sunni Muslim coalition that intervened in Yemen in 2015 against the Houthis, has blamed regional rival Shiite Iran for previous attacks, which Tehran denies. Riyadh accuses Iran of arming the Houthis, a charge denied by the group and Tehran. 

Coalition spokesman Col. Turki al-Malki said an investigation had been launched into who planned and executed the strikes. He said the Western-backed alliance would counter threats to global energy security and economic stability. 

Aramco Chief Executive Amin Nasser said there were no casualties from the attacks. 

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said Aramco would have more information within 48 hours, and it would draw down oil in storage to compensate for the loss. Aramco is in the process of planning what is expected to be the world's largest initial public offering. 

Heart of oil market

"Abqaiq is perhaps the most critical facility in the world for oil supply," said Jason Bordoff, who runs the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University and served on the U.S. National Security Council during Barack Obama's presidency. "The risk of tit-for-tat regional escalation that pushes oil prices even higher has just gone up significantly." 

Smoke is seen following a fire at Aramco facility in the eastern city of Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia, September 14, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer
Smoke is seen following a fire at an Aramco facility in the eastern city of Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia, Sept. 14, 2019.

Abqaiq is 60 km (37 miles) southwest of Aramco's Dhahran headquarters. The oil processing plant handles crude from the world's largest conventional oilfield, the supergiant Ghawar, and for export to terminals Ras Tanura — the world's biggest offshore oil loading facility — and Juaymah. It also pumps westward across the kingdom to Red Sea export terminals. 

Two of the sources said Ghawar was flaring gas after the strikes disrupted gas processing facilities. Khurais, 190 km (118 miles) farther southwest, contains the country's second-largest oilfield. 

"These attacks against critical infrastructure endanger civilians, are unacceptable, and sooner or later will result in innocent lives being lost," the U.S. Embassy quoted Ambassador John Abizaid as saying in a Twitter post. 

Andrew Murrison, a British foreign affairs minister, called on the Houthis to stop threatening civilian areas and Saudi commercial infrastructure. 

It was the latest in a series of Houthi missile and drone strikes on Saudi cities that have largely been intercepted but have recently hit targets, including the Shaybah oilfield last month and oil pumping stations in May. Both those attacks caused fires but did not disrupt production. 

"This is a relatively new situation for the Saudis. For the longest time they have never had any real fears that their oil facilities would be struck from the air," Kamran Bokhari, founding director of the Washington-based Center for Global Policy, told Reuters. 

Aramco's CEO said in a statement that the situation had been brought under control. A Reuters witness said the fire in Abqaiq appeared to have been extinguished by early evening. 
 
Escalating tension

Regional tension has escalated after Washington quit an international nuclear deal and extended sanctions on Iran. 

Bodies lie on the ground after being recovered from under the rubble of a Houthi detention center destroyed by Saudi-led airstrikes, in Dhamar province, southwestern Yemen, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2019.
FILE - Bodies lie on the ground after being recovered from under the rubble of a Houthi detention center destroyed by Saudi-led airstrikes, in Dhamar province, southwestern Yemen, Sept. 1, 2019.

The violence is complicating U.N.-led peace efforts to end the Yemen war, which has killed tens of thousands and pushed millions to the brink of famine. The conflict is widely seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran. 

The coalition intervened in Yemen after the internationally recognized government was ousted from power in Sanaa by the Houthis, who say they are fighting a corrupt system. 

The coalition launched airstrikes on Yemen's northern Saada province, a Houthi stronghold, on Saturday, a Reuters witness said. Houthi-run al Masirah TV said a military camp was struck. 

The Houthis' military spokesman, without providing evidence, said drones hit refineries at both Saudi sites, which are more than 1,000 km (621 miles) from the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, and pledged a widening of assaults against Saudi Arabia. 


September 15, 2019 at 08:38AM

Andrew Yang: New 'SNL' cast member Shane Gillis shouldn't lose job over racist remarks

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Andrew Yang: New 'SNL' cast member Shane Gillis shouldn't lose job over racist remarks Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang said Saturday that he does not believe that controversial new "Saturday Night Live" cast member Shane Gillis should lose his job over his use of an anti-Chinese slur, adding that he was "happy to sit down and talk" with the comedian.
September 15, 2019 at 08:00AM

Trump Floats Possible Defense Treaty Days Ahead of Israeli Elections 

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Trump Floats Possible Defense Treaty Days Ahead of Israeli Elections 

U.S. President Donald Trump said Saturday that he had spoken with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about a possible mutual defense treaty between the two nations, a move that could bolster Netanyahu's re-election bid just days before Israelis go to the polls. 

"I had a call today with Prime Minister Netanyahu to discuss the possibility of moving forward with a Mutual Defense Treaty, between the United States and Israel, that would further anchor the tremendous alliance between our two countries," Trump said on Twitter. 

He added that he looked forward to continuing those discussions later this month on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly session in New York. 

Netanyahu thanked Trump, saying in a tweet that Israel "has never had a greater friend in the White House," and adding that he looked forward to meeting at the U.N. "to advance a historic Defense Treaty between the United States and Israel." 

Close race seen

The timing of Trump's tweet, just days before Israel's election on Tuesday, appeared aimed at buttressing Netanyahu's bid to remain in power by showcasing his close ties to Trump. 

Opinion polls predict a close race, five months after an inconclusive election in which Netanyahu declared himself the winner but failed to put together a coalition government. 

Benny Gantz, the leader of Blue and White party, speaks at an event hosted by the Tel Aviv International Salon ahead of general election, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sept. 9, 2019.
FILE - Benny Gantz, the leader of Blue and White party, speaks at an event hosted by the Tel Aviv International Salon ahead of general elections, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sept. 9, 2019.

Netanyahu's Likud party is running neck and neck with the  centrist Blue and White party led by former armed forces chief Benny Gantz, who has focused heavily on looming corruption charges Netanyahu faces. 

In a televised interview with Israel's Channel 12 later Saturday, Netanyahu made a direct appeal to voters based on the treaty. "I'm going to get us a defense pact that will provide us with security for centuries, but for that I need your votes," he said. 

Trump previously bolstered Netanyahu's candidacy when he recognized Israel's claim of sovereignty over the Golan Heights ahead of the elections earlier this year. 

Some Israeli officials have promoted the idea of building on Netanyahu's strong ties to the Trump administration by forging a new defense treaty with the United States, focused especially on guarantees of assistance in any conflict with Iran. 

Trump provided no details, but a mutual defense treaty could obligate the United States to come to Israel's defense if it is attacked. 

Nuclear threats, Iran

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said earlier this month that a pact should apply to "defined issues — nuclear threats and the matter of long-range missiles aimed by Iran at Israel." 

FILE - Israel's acting foreign minister Israel Katz, who also serves as intelligence and transport minister, attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Feb. 24, 2019.
FILE - Israel's acting foreign minister, Israel Katz, attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Feb. 24, 2019.

"We have means of offense and defense, but this would spare us the need to earmark enormous resources on a permanent basis and for the long term in the face of such threats," Katz told Israel's Ynet TV. 

Netanyahu's chief rival Gantz assailed the idea as a "grave mistake," arguing it would strip Israel of military autonomy. 

"This is not what we want," the centrist candidate told a conference in Jerusalem. "We have never asked anyone to get killed for us. We have never asked anyone to fight for us. And we have never asked anyone's permission to defend the State of Israel." 


September 15, 2019 at 05:51AM

Islamic Group to Discuss Netanyahu's West Bank Annexation Plans

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Islamic Group to Discuss Netanyahu's West Bank Annexation Plans

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation will hold an emergency meeting Sunday to discuss Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's intent to annex parts of the West Bank. 
 
The 57-member organization tweeted earlier this week that the meeting would be held "at the request of Saudi Arabia" in Jeddah.
 
On Saturday, Turkey's Foreign Ministry said the OIC would meet to discuss "Netanyahu's statements on the intention to annex Jordan Valley and the illegal settlements in the West Bank by Israel." 

Jordan Valley, northern Dead Sea
 
Netanyahu said Tuesday that he planned to annex part of the occupied West Bank if he won re-election next week, a move that could significantly alter the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 
 
Netanyahu said in a live televised address that he intended to "apply Israeli sovereignty to the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea," a strategically important area, if he won on Sept. 17. 
 
Palestinian Liberation Organization executive committee member Hanan Ashrawi tweeted that annexation would destroy any chance of reaching an Israeli-Palestinian peace accord: 
 
"Netanyahu's cheap pandering to his extremist racist base exposes his real political agenda of superimposing 'greater Israel' on all of historical Palestine & carrying out an ethnic cleansing agenda. All bets are off! Dangerous aggression. Perpetual conflict."  

FILE - Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh gestures as he speaks during a workshop on cooperation between Palestinians and East Asian countries, in Jericho in the Israeli-occupied West Bank July 3, 2019.
FILE - Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh gestures as he speaks during a workshop on cooperation between Palestinians and East Asian countries, in Jericho in the Israeli-occupied West Bank July 3, 2019.

Anticipating Netanyahu's announcement shortly before it was made, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said the Israeli leader was "a prime destroyer of the peace process." 
 
Netanyahu's announcement reaffirmed his pledge to annex all Jewish settlements in the West Bank, but he has said he will not act before publication of a long-awaited U.S. peace proposal and consultations with President Donald Trump. 
 
There has been no comment from the White House, but the Trump administration has been receptive to Israel's annexation of at least portions of the West Bank. 
 
The Jordan Valley is a 2,400-square-kilometer (927-square-mile) area that accounts for nearly 30 percent of the territory in the West Bank, which Israel captured in a 1967 war. The Palestinians covet the valley for the eastern perimeter of a state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. 

Close race
 
Netanyahu is in the midst of a closely contested re-election bid. Voters will go to the polls Tuesday, five months after the country's parliament was dissolved in a vote in which Netanyahu failed to assemble a government. Polls show he is even or slightly behind Benny Gantz, a moderate former army chief of staff. 
 
The prime minister is also facing a series of corruption charges. 
 
More than 400,000 Israelis live in West Bank settlements considered illegal by international law. About 2.7 million Palestinians live in the territory. 


September 15, 2019 at 04:34AM

Trump slams 'NO talent' MSNBC anchor Joy Reid: 'Had a bad reputation'

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Trump slams 'NO talent' MSNBC anchor Joy Reid: 'Had a bad reputation' President Trump ripped into one of his fiercest critics on Saturday, claiming she lacked the talent needed to succeed in media
September 15, 2019 at 03:22AM

Exapophyses

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Exapophyses

Fanboyphilosopher: created page


'''Exapophyses''' (singular: '''Exapophysis''') are bony joints present in the cervicals (neck [[Vertebra|vertebrae]]) of some [[Pterosaur|pterosaurs]]. Exapophyses lie on the centrum, the spool-shaped main body of each vertebra, where they are positioned adjacent to the main articulating surfaces between centra. Exapophyses which are next to the cotyle (concave front end of the centrum) are known as '''preexapophyses''' while those at the condyle (convex rear end) are called '''postexapophyses'''. Exapophyses act as accessory articulations, meaning that they complement the cotyle and condyle, as well as the [[Articular processes|zygapophyses]] (plate-like joints which lie on the neural arch above the centrum). The term was coined by [[Samuel Wendell Williston]] in 1897 during a description of ''[[Pteranodon]]'' (which he called "''Ornithostoma''" at the time).<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> Exapophyses are a defining trait of the pterosaur subgroup [[Eupterodactyloidea]],<ref name="Bennett94">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> although they are also known to occur in some [[Ctenochasmatidae|ctenochasmatids]].<ref name="AJ08">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> [[Rhamphorhynchidae|Rhamphorhynchids]] and potentially other non-[[Pterodactyloidea|pterodactyloid]] pterosaurs have paired, knob-like extensions on the condyle, but these extensions are not distinctly offset and are not considered [[Homology (biology)|homologous]].<ref name="ACX10"></ref>

== References ==


[[Category:Pterosaur anatomy]]

September 15, 2019 at 02:22AM

California winery apologizes after denying wedding venue to same-sex couple, announces policy change

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California winery apologizes after denying wedding venue to same-sex couple, announces policy change After public outcry, the management announced a policy change in that all couples are now welcome to rent out their winery and wedding venue, regardless of gender or sexual orientation.
September 15, 2019 at 01:24AM

Instagram model says body-shaming is an 'everyday' thing: 'It can be exhausting'

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Instagram model says body-shaming is an 'everyday' thing: 'It can be exhausting' Jem Wolfie has millions of followers on social media — but not all of them are always so nice.
September 14, 2019 at 06:00PM

iPhone XRがApple Storeよりも安価に、一部店舗で税込64980円から

iPhone XRがApple Storeよりも安価に、一部店舗で税込64980円から


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iPhone 11」の発表を機にApple Storeで値下がりした「iPhone XR」「iPhone 8」ですが、秋葉原の店頭では両モデルの未使用品セールが始まっています。
September 14, 2019 at 09:05AM

Cardi B, A$AP Rocky, More Support Rihanna's Diamond Ball 

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Cardi B, A$AP Rocky, More Support Rihanna's Diamond Ball 

Like many kids, Rihanna dreamed of someday growing up to be rich, but helping others was at the forefront of her vision. 
 
``It's always been important to me before any success,'' she told The Associated Press on Thursday at her annual Diamond Ball charity gala. ``As a kid, just seeing those commercials on television with the kids in Africa, where it's like, 'It just takes 10 cents or 25 cents to help somebody' — I used to think, `When I grow up, I'm a gonna be rich and I'm going to make a lot of money and I could make a lot of 10 cents and a lot of 25 cents.' '' 
 
She's made a lot more than that as superstar singer and now fashion and beauty mogul, and with her Clara Lionel Foundation has doled out money around the globe to help support education programs, women's health and emergency response organizations for people in need.  

Photo by: John Nacion/STAR MAX/IPx 2019 9/12/19 Cardi B at Rihanna's 5th Annual Diamond Ball at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City.
Cardi B at Rihanna's fifth annual Diamond Ball at Cipriani Wall Street in New York, Sept. 12, 2019.

The foundation, named after Rihanna's grandparents, raised more than $5 million Thursday night. Cardi B and Offset, A$AP Rocky, Karlie Kloss, DJ Khaled, 21 Savage, Pharrell Williams and others came out to support the glittering charity dinner, which even featured an impromptu performance by Rihanna and Williams. 
 
``I'm a fan of her energy. She has a beautiful soul,'' DJ Khaled said before entering the event at Cipriani's in downtown Manhattan with his wife.  ``In my book, she keeps it mad real. It's just a beautiful day, we're putting beautiful energy out there.'' 
 
It was the second all-star event Rihanna staged this week. Khaled, Halsey and more turned out for her New York Fashion Week show on Tuesday, an extravaganza for her lingerie line, Savage X Fenty, that featured musical performances along with a catwalk. 
 
The star wowed on the red carpet dressed in a black velvet turtleneck dress with a flared skirt. 
  
``Just glam. She's so glamorous, she's so gorgeous. Anytime I think of Rihanna, I just think of just glam,'' said rapper Megan Thee Stallion. 
 
Rihanna told the crowd she was ``humbled'' by the support for Clara Lionel, and noted that her grandmother Clara Brathwaite, who died seven years ago, would tell her helping others is ``about the collective joining forces.'' 
 
She told the AP her connection to her grandparents makes the event a sentimental one. 
 
``So these things get really personal, emotional, and I just want to expand this every year to a different cause, because I don't feel like people deserve to be left out. That's really the core of the foundation,'' she said. 
 

2 Chainz attends the 5th annual Diamond Ball benefit gala at Cipriani Wall Street on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019, in New York. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
2 Chainz attends the fifth annual Diamond Ball benefit gala at Cipriani Wall Street, Sept. 12, 2019, in New York.

Inside the event, which started two hours late and was hosted by Seth Meyers, stars mingled in a hall that was decorated with a tropical, colorful motif. A$AP Rocky, recently freed after a legal battle in Sweden that saw him behind bars there for weeks, held court at one table as he chatted with 2 Chainz and others; Cardi B bid a very exact $109,000 for a rare copy of a book on Rihanna, along with a two-thousand pound marble stand designed to hold it. 
 
The night was not without some controversy: One of the honorees, activist and journalist Shaun King, has been accused of mishandling money he claims he's received for various causes he supports. The Clara Lionel Foundation was almost immediately met with backlash after it was announced King would be a Diamond Ball honoree, forcing King to release a 72-page report to try to defend himself against the allegations. 
 
The foundation's executive director, Justine Lucas, stood by the decision to honor King, who has been a supporter of Clara Lionel. ``We decided to honor Shaun King for a reason, and we decided to honor Shaun King for that same reason tonight,'' she said. 

King, who defended himself on Twitter just before the event, did not address the allegations as he accepted his honor, instead imploring the crowd to work harder to fight injustice: ``It's not good enough to have good intentions.'' 

Support for King
 
Cardi B stood up for King just before the event. 
 
``One of the main reasons why it is so important for me to be here is because Rihanna is honoring Shaun King. A lot of people need to follow Shaun King on Instagram. He protests so much for all minorities, he protests so much for the whole entire world,'' said the Grammy-award winning rapper. 
  
Also honored was Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados, where Rihanna was born. Mottley is the first woman to ascend to the position, and Rihanna personally presented her with an award. 
 
Mottley said no matter how global Rihanna is, she always brings Barbados with her. 
  
``Rihanna is one of our citizens of whom we are very, very proud,'' Mottley said. ``When you come from 166 square miles and you can produce people who make a global impact, it gives your heart a certain amount of warmth.'' 


September 14, 2019 at 10:50AM

Purdue Pharma's Sackler family used hidden accounts to transfer $1B: court docs

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Purdue Pharma's Sackler family used hidden accounts to transfer $1B: court docs The Sackler family, which owns Purdue Pharma, used Swiss and other hidden bank accounts to transfer around $1 billion from the company to themselves, the New York attorney general's office claimed Friday.
September 14, 2019 at 10:17AM

Friday, September 13, 2019

US sanctions North Korean hacking groups it says stole millions around the world

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US sanctions North Korean hacking groups it says stole millions around the world The U.S. Treasury on Friday sanctioned three hacking groups it says have links to North Korea's intelligence bureau and have stolen millions from banks and other entities around the world.
September 14, 2019 at 07:18AM

Liberal, Moderate Divide on Display in Democratic Debate

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Liberal, Moderate Divide on Display in Democratic Debate

Joe Biden parried attack after attack from liberal rivals Thursday night on everything from health care to immigration in a debate that showcased profound ideological divides between the Democratic Party's moderate and progressive wings.

The prime-time debate also elevated several struggling candidates, giving them a chance to introduce themselves to millions of Americans who are just beginning to follow the race.

Biden dominated significant parts of the evening, responding strongly when the liberal senators who are his closet rivals — Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — assailed him and his policies.

From left, Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. raise their hands to answer a question Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019, during a Democratic presidential primary…
FILE - From left, Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., participate in the debate at Texas Southern University in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.

Unlike prior debates, where Biden struggled for words and seemed surprised by criticism from fellow Democrats, he largely delivered crisp, aggressive responses. He called Sanders "a socialist," a label that could remind voters of the senator's embrace of democratic socialism. And Biden slapped at Warren's proposed wealth tax.
 
A two-term vice president under Barack Obama, Biden unequivocally defended his former boss, who came under criticism from some candidates for deporting immigrants and not going far enough on health care reform.
 
"I stand with Barack Obama all eight years, good bad and indifferent," Biden declared.
 
His vulnerabilities surfaced, however, in the final minutes of the debate, when he was pressed on a decades-old statement regarding school integration. Biden rambled in talking about his support of teachers, the lack of resources for educators and at one point seemed to encourage parents to play records for their children to expand their vocabulary before segueing into talk of Latin America.

"That's quite a lot," quipped Julian Castro, the former housing secretary who was Biden's frequent foe during the debate.

Targeting Trump

The candidates debated with polls showing a strong majority of voters believe the country is headed in the wrong direction under the first-term Republican president's leadership. But nine months into their nomination fight, divided Democrats have yet to answer fundamental questions about who or what the party stands for beyond simply opposing President Donald Trump.

The party's 2020 class, once featuring two dozen candidates, has essentially been cut in half by party rules requiring higher polling and fundraising standards for debates. Just 10 candidates qualified for Thursday's affair, though more than that have qualified for next month's round.

Senator Kamala Harris gives a thumbs down as she speaks during the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.
FILE - Senator Kamala Harris gives a thumbs down as she speaks during the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.

Those in the second tier, after Biden, Warren and Sanders, are under increasing pressure to break out of the pack. They all assailed Trump.

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker called Trump a racist. Former Texas Rep. Beto O'Rourke called him a white supremacist. And Kamala Harris, a California senator, said Trump's hateful social media messages provided "the ammunition" for recent mass shootings.

"President Trump, you have spent the last two-and-a-half years full time trying to sow hate and division among us, and that's why we've gotten nothing done," Harris charged.

Targeting Obama

In addition to Trump, Biden's rivals also turned against Obama's legacy at times as they sought to undermine the former vice president's experience.
 
Sanders insisted that Biden bears responsibility for millions of Americans going bankrupt under the "Obamacare" health care system. Castro raised questions about the Obama-Biden record on immigration, particularly the number of deportations that took place.

Democratic presidential candidate Julian Castro gives his closing statement during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by ABC at Texas Southern University in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.
Democratic presidential candidate Julian Castro gives his closing statement during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by ABC at Texas Southern University in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.

Castro, a 44-year-old Texan, appeared to touch on concerns about Biden's age when he accused him of forgetting a detail about his own health care plan. At 76, Biden would be the oldest president ever elected to a first term.

"Are you forgetting what you said two minutes ago?" an incredulous Castro asked, challenging Biden on health care. "I can't believe that you said two minutes ago that you have to buy in and now you're forgetting that."

He added: "I'm fulfilling the legacy of Barack Obama and you're not."

The ABC News debate was the first limited to one night after several candidates dropped out and others failed to meet new qualification standards. A handful more candidates qualified for next month's debate, which will again be divided over two nights.

Diversity

As well as policy differences, the Democratic debates have been shaped by broader questions about diversity.
 
In a nod to the diverse coalition they need to defeat Trump, the Democrats held this debate on the campus of historically black Texas Southern University. It unfolded in a rapidly changing state that Democrats hope to eventually bring into their column.

The party cheered when America elected the most diverse congressional class in history in last fall's midterm voting. But some Democrats still fear that anyone other than a white man may struggle in a head-to-head matchup against Trump.
 
Biden was one of four white men onstage.

Gun rights

Along with health care, gun violence emerged as a flashpoint Thursday night in a state shaken by a mass shooting last month that left 22 people dead and two dozen more wounded.

O'Rourke noted that there weren't enough ambulances at times to take all the wounded to the hospital.

"Hell yes, we're gonna take your AR-15, your AK-47," he said as the crowd cheered.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., responds to a question Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019, during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by ABC at Texas Southern University in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
FILE - Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., responds to a question during a Democratic presidential primary debate at Texas Southern University in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar noted that all the candidates on stage favor a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. She favors a voluntary buy-back program on assault weapons, however.

The national economy got surprisingly little attention, though several of the candidates criticized Trump on foreign trade and his trade war with China.

South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg said Trump had said scornfully of his candidacy "he'd like to see me making a deal with Xi Jinping," the Chinese president.

"I'd like to see HIM making a deal with Xi Jinping."

Trump was silent on social media during the event.  But Kayleigh McEnany, his campaign's national press secretary, said in a statement: "Thank you to ABC and the Democrat Party for another infomercial for President Trump!"

Earlier in the day, Trump said he'd likely have to watch a rerun because of travel conflict. He predicted the Democratic nominee would ultimately be Biden, Warren or Sanders.


September 14, 2019 at 02:44AM

Eddie Money, 'Two Tickets to Paradise' Singer, Dies at 70

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Eddie Money, 'Two Tickets to Paradise' Singer, Dies at 70

A publicist for Eddie Money said the rock star has died after he recently announced he had stage 4 esophageal cancer. He was 70.

Cindy Ronzoni provided a statement from the family and said Money died Friday morning in Los Angeles.
 
The husky-voiced, blue-collar performer was known for such hits as "Two Tickets to Paradise" and "Take Me Home Tonight." In 1987, he received a best rock vocal Grammy nomination for "Take Me Home Tonight," which featured a cameo from Ronnie Spector.
 
"It is with heavy hearts that we say goodbye to our loving husband and father," the statement said. "It's so hard to imagine our world without him, however he will live on forever through his music."

He announced his cancer diagnosis via a video last month from his AXS TV reality series "Real Money." In the video, Money says he discovered he had cancer after what he thought was a routine checkup. He said the disease had spread to his liver and lymph nodes.

Money said it hit him "really, really hard."

He had numerous health problems recently, including heart valve surgery earlier this year and pneumonia after the procedure, leading to his cancellation of a planned summer tour.

Early years

A New York City native born Edward Joseph Mahoney, Money grew up in a family of police officers and was training in law enforcement himself before he rebelled and decided he'd rather be a singer.

"I grew up with respect for the idea of preserving law and order, and then all of a sudden cops became pigs and it broke my heart," Money told Rolling Stone in 1978.

FILE - Ronnie Spector performs in New York, June 13, 2012.
FILE - Ronnie Spector performs in New York, June 13, 2012.

"Two Tickets to Paradise" and "Baby Hold On" both reached the top 30 in the late 1970s and his self-titled debut album went platinum. In 1987, he received a best rock vocal Grammy nomination for "Take Me Home Tonight." The song featured a cameo from Ronnie Spector, who reprised one of her signature hits from the 1960s as she crooned "Be my little baby," which she first sang on the Ronettes' "Be My Baby." Money remembered calling Spector, still traumatized from her years with ex-husband-producer Phil Spector, and convincing her to sing on his record.

"I said, 'Ronnie, I got this song that's truly amazing and it's a tribute to you. It would be so great if you came out and did it with me,'" he told hippopress.com in 2015. "When she got there, she didn't even remember it; she had a mental block against [Phil] Spector. But then she came out and did the song."

Money's other hits included "Maybe I'm a Fool," "Walk On Water" and "Think I'm in Love." He had few successes after the 1980s, but he continued to tour and record, and for decades would open the summer concert season at DTE Energy Music Theatre in Clarkston, Michigan. Meanwhile, "Two Tickets to Paradise" became a favorite on classic rock radio stations and was heard everywhere from "The Simpsons" to "The Office." The song was also featured in a Geico commercial, with Money himself appearing in the ad as the hammy owner of a travel agency.

Drugs, marriage, Rolling Stones

FILE - Money and his wife Laurie Harris Money are seen at The Hollywood Walk Of Fame Honors outside the Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, California, Oct. 25, 2016.
FILE - Money and his wife Laurie Harris Money are seen at The Hollywood Walk Of Fame Honors outside the Taglyan Complex in Hollywood, California, Oct. 25, 2016.

For years, he lived too much like a rock star. In 1980, he sustained nerve damage in his legs after overdosing on alcohol and barbiturates, a near-tragedy he wrote about on his hit 1982 album "No Control." He continued to struggle with alcohol addiction before joining a 12-step program in 2001. "I came to the realization that I didn't really need [alcohol] for my quick wit," he told CNN in 2003.

Money did manage the rare rock achievement of a long-term marriage, more than 30 years to Laurie Harris, who would say that at first she confused him with John Mellencamp. The Moneys had five children, Zachary, Jessica, Joseph, Desmond and Julian.

A born troublemaker, he was thrown out of one high school for forging his report card. He later moved to Berkeley, California, changed his name to "Money" and had enough success in the Bay Area clubs, even performing for a time with Janis Joplin's former backing group, to attract the attention of famed rock promoter Bill Graham. Money was signed by Columbia Records and by the end of the decade was a big enough act to open for the Rolling Stones, although the job didn't last as long as expected.

"I had a hit with 'Two Tickets' and everybody loved me; I was getting too many encores," Money told hippopress.com. "We were supposed to have six dates [with the Stones], and we only worked four. The way I see it is this — if you're gonna get fired from a Rolling Stones tour, get fired for being too good."


September 14, 2019 at 02:18AM

Haze

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September 13, 2019 at 03:00PM

Rock legend Eddie Money dead at age 70

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Rock legend Eddie Money dead at age 70
September 13, 2019 at 11:24PM

Bradford, Wakefield and Leeds Railway

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Bradford, Wakefield and Leeds Railway

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The '''Bradford, Wakefield and Leeds Railway''' was an independent railway company that built a line between Wakefield and a junction close to Leeds, in Yorkshire, England. It opened its main line in 1857, and was worked by the [[Great Northern Railway (Great Britain)|Great Northern Railway]]. The line shortened the GNR route to Leeds.

[[File:Bw&amp;lr1857.png|thumb|The Bradford, Wakefield and Leeds Railway system in 1857]]The BW&LR later built a branch line from near Wakefield to Batley, opening in stages to 1863. In that year it changed its name to the '''West Yorkshire Railway''', and planned a branch line from Lofthouse to Methley, forming an eastwards link to other companies' lines. It agreed to make the line jointly with the [[North Eastern Railway (United Kingdom)|North Eastern Railway]] and the [[Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway]], and the branch line became the [[Methley Joint Railway]], opening in 1865. In that year the West Yorkshire Railway (former BW&LR) was absorbed by the Great Northern Railway.

The original main line is part of the present-day electrically operated Doncaster to Leeds main line.

==Origins==
At the conclusion of a Parliamentary struggle, the [[Great Northern Railway (Great Britain)|Great Northern Railway]] was authorised in 1846 to build a railway line from London to [[York]]. York was already reached from London by linked railways in the group controlled by [[George Hudson]], the so-called Railway King. His business methods were tough and effective, but they were also underhand and dishonest, and eventually he was found out and disgraced.

The Great Northern Railway promoters had wanted branches to [[Sheffield]] and [[Leeds]], but these were cut out of the authorisation in Parliament. Leeds was an important commercial centre, and the GNR had to take alternative steps to reach it. For a time the only possibility was over the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway from Askern Junction (north of [[Doncaster]]) to [[Knottingley]] and [[Methley]], and from there over the [[Midland Railway]] to Gelderd Junction, immediately outside the Leeds Central station. GNR trains making that journey finally reached the station by reversing over a short length of the [[Leeds and Thirsk Railway]]. The first GNR trains reached Leeds by this route on 1 October 1849. The Midland Railway was firmly under the control of George Hudson and was therefore hostile to the GNR, but Hudson was at the final stage of his powers and his initial antagonism became ineffective.<ref name = bairstow4>Martin Bairstow, ''The Great Northern Railway in West Yorkshire'', Wyvern Publications, Skipton,1982, ISBN 0 907941 03 6, page 4</ref>

On 1 August, 1854, the [[Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction Railway]] opened its line between Leeds and Bowling, near [[Bradford]]. Great Northern Railway trains ran over it, reaching [[Halifax, West Yorkshire|Halifax]] over the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway. For the first time a direct communication from Halifax to London without break of journey was created. Although the LB&HJR was independent, the beginnings of a Great Northern Railway network in West Yorkshire were visible.<ref name = grinling140>Charles H Grinling, ''History of the Great Northern Railway'', 1845 – 1895, Methuen and Co, London, 1898, page 140</ref>

==Authorisation==
Nevertheless there were still some significant gaps in the railway system, and another independent company, the Bradford, Wakefield and Leeds Railway secured its authorising Act on 10 July 1854. Authorised share capital was £180,000.<ref name = wrott1-97>John Wrottesley, ''The Great Northern Railway: volume I: Origins and Development'', B T Batsford Limited, London, 1979, ISBN 0 7134 1590 8, page 97</ref><ref name = carter257>Ernest F Carter, ''An Historical Geography of the Railways of the British Isles'', Cassell, London, 1959, page 257</ref>

It was to be built from the Wakefield station of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, via Ardsley, to Wortley Junction on the LB&HJR, near Leeds. Wortley Junction was to be formed as a triangular junction, enabling direct running from Wakefield towards Bradford and Halifax.<ref name = grant63>Donald J Grant, ''Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain'', Matador Publishers, Kibworth Beauchamp, 2017, ISBN 978 1785893 537, pages 63 and 64</ref>

The originating point was Ings Road Junction, immediately west of the Wakefield station of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, later [[Wakefield Kirkgate railway station|Wakefield Kirkgate station]]. The line was double track and stations were at Wakefield (Westgate), Lofthouse, and Ardsley. <ref name = wrott1-98>Wrottesley, page 98</ref>

==Opening and train services==
The new line was opened on 5 October 1857,<ref name = carter257/> following a ceremonial opening on 3 October;<ref name = wrott1-98/> it was worked by the Great Northern Railway which already worked the majority of trains on the Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction line.<ref name = grant63/>

GNR trains could already run from the south to Wakefield over the L&YR. The opening of the BW&LR gave the GNR direct access to Leeds without running over the rival Midland Railway, and without the necessity to reverse direction on the approach to Leeds itself. This was a very considerable advantage for the GNR, and from 12 November 1857 the company transferred most of its long-distance trains on to the route.<ref name = wrott1-98/>

==Friction with the GNR; and possible amalgamation==
From November 1857 the GNR complained about poor permanent way conditions between Wakefield and Leeds, and threatened to transfer its traffic back to the Methley route of the Midland Railway. In October the Bradford, Wakefield and Leeds Railway gave notice that from 1 January 1858 it would appoint its own station staff. The GNR abruptly withdrew its engines and coal wagons, in effect ceasing to work the line. The BW&LR hurriedly had to acquire engines and wagons of its own. For a few months it hired wagons from the GNR.

In 1859 there was a proposal that the Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction Railway and the BW&LR should amalgamate, but the idea came to nothing. In fact both lines were dependent on the Great Northern Railway for the majority of their income.

==Branch line to Ossett, and Batley==
The BW&LR obtained an Act on 23 July 1860<ref name = carter257/><ref name = wrott1-100>Wrottesley, pages 100 and 101</ref> for a branch to [[Ossett]]. It was single line, and left the main line at Wrenthorpe [south] junction, just north of Wakefield. It ran as far as Roundwood colliery, carrying mineral traffic from 6 January 1862. Soon after it was extended to a station named "Ossett", in fact at Flushdyke, opening on 7 April 1862, but minerals had been carried between Roundwood Colliery sidings and Wrenthorpe since 6 January.<ref name = wrott1-100/><ref name = bairstow63>Bairstow, page 63</ref>

Captain Rich of the [[Board of Trade]] inspected the new line on 12 March 1864 and found it satisfactory, and the remainder of the line to Ossett was opened for traffic on 2 April 1864. It was a single line, 65 chains long, and there was a viaduct with three brick arches of 30 feet span. A new platform at a higher level was provided at Flushdyke, although to reach it passengers had to cross the rails of the earlier line.<ref name = wrott1-100/><ref name = bairstow63/>

The BW&LR had obtained an Act on 17 May 1861 to further extend the line to [[Batley]], a distance of 3 miles 55 chains. The new line was to make a junction with the LB&HJR line at Batley.<ref group = note>Wrottesley says that the line had its own station at Batley, just south of the junction with the LB&HJR. In fact the Ossett line had its own platforms, forming an extension to the existing station.</ref> The works were considerable, including two tunnels: Chickenley Heath (47 yd) and Shaw Cross (209 yd). The single line route opened on 15 December 1864. The combined branches formed a third route between Wakefield and Bradford.<ref name = bairstow63/><ref name = wrott1-101>Wrottesley, page 101</ref><ref name = carter257/>

==Change of name==
In the 1863 session of Parliament the BW&LR sought powers to change its name to the West Yorkshire Railway, and this was sanctioned by an Act of 21 July 1863.<ref name = wrott1-101/><ref name = carter257/>

==Methley joint line==

Also in the 1863 session of Parliament the BW&LR sought powers for a branch to [[Methley]], and this too was sanctioned by the Act of 21 July 1863, giving running powers over the North Eastern Railway from Methley to [[Castleford]].<ref name = wrott1-101/><ref name = carter257/> The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway and the North Eastern Railway had opposed this line, but they had acquiesced on the promise of its being made joint with them. This was ratified by an Act of 23 June 1864, and the line became known as the Methley joint line, or the Methley Joint Railway.<ref name = carter257/><ref name = wrott1-101/>

The railway diverged from the West Yorkshire Railway at Lofthouse North junction, and joined the North Eastern Railway at Methley Joint Line junction; there was a spur at Methley connecting to the L&YR. The line opened in August 1865 for goods traffic, but passenger working was delayed until 1 June 1869.<ref name = wrott1-102>Wrottesley, page 102</ref><ref name = casserley>H C Casserley, ''Britain's Joint Lines'', Ian Allan, Shepperton, 1968, ISBN 0 7110 0024 7, page 156</ref> The south curve at Lofthouse was brought into use on 1 May 1876.<ref name = wrott2-21+>John Wrottesley, ''The Great Northern Railway: volume II: Expansion and Competition'', B T Batsford Limited, London, 1979, ISBN 0 7134 1592 4, pages 21 and 22</ref>

==Amalgamation with the Great Northern Railway==
The West Yorkshire Railway, together with the Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction Railway, had become dominated by the Great Northern Railway, which operated their trains, and the occasional talk of absorption by the GNR became serious. In the face of strenuous L&YR opposition, the West Yorkshire Railway (former BW&LR) as well as the LB&HJR passed into GNR possession. The GNR took over working of the WYR on 1 January 1865, ratified by an Act of 5 July; the one third share of the Methley Joint line became GNR property from 5 September. The WYR shareholders were guaranteed a minimum dividend of 6%.<ref name = wrott1-103>Wrottesley, page 103</ref><ref name = carter257/>

==West Riding and Grimsby Railway==

On 1 February 1866 the West Riding and Grimsby Railway was opened, jointly owned by the Great Northern Railway and the [[Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway]]. Part of the line formed a direct link between Doncaster and Wakefield, leading on to the former BW&LR line. At last the GNR had a direct route under its own control from Doncaster to Leeds.<ref name = wrott1-160>Wrottesley, volume 1, page 160</ref><ref name = joy220>Joy, page 220</ref>

==Ossett to Batley via Dewsbury==
The West Yorkshire Railway network had become an integral part of the Great Northern Railway system in the area.

[[File:Batley (ex-GN) Station 1771371 6e6129fc.jpg|thumb|Batley LNWR and GN station; the GNR trains used the right-hand island platform.]]The Ossett and Batley line passed Dewsbury by, and the GNR decided to make a new line connecting [[Dewsbury]] into the system. An Act of 24 July 1871 authorised this. Work started on 9 April 1872; the project included doubling the line from Wrenthorpe junction to Ossett; this was completed to Runtlings Lane junction by August 1873. A new north curve was made at Wrenthorpe, opened to goods trains from March 1875 and passenger trains from 1 May 1876. The new line was 2 miles 1 chain in length to a temporary Dewsbury terminus station. Goods traffic to Dewsbury began on 1 May 1874 and passenger trains on 9 September, when a service of 14 each way on weekdays and five each way on Sundays was put on between Wakefield and Dewsbury. On 1 May 1876 six trains each way on weekdays and three on Sundays began between Leeds and Dewsbury via the new Wrenthorpe curve, increased to eight each way on weekdays in June.<ref name = wrott2-20>Wrottesley, volume 2, page 20</ref>

A collapse in the financial markets caused the GNR to defer proceeding to Batley, and the Parliamentary powers to do so lapsed; they were authorised once again by an Act of 12 July 1877.<ref name = joy125>Joy, page 125</ref> An agreement was made with the [[London and North Western Railway]] to rebuild Batley station: the new station had two island platforms, the GNR using the two faces on the east side. A permanent station with an island platform was provided at Dewsbury. The new double-track line was 1 mile 74 chains in length, from a new Dewsbury junction on the Ossett-Dewsbury line, leaving the temporary Dewsbury terminus station at the end of a 31 chain branch, thereafter used only for goods and minerals. General traffic began on the new line on 12 April 1880; most of the trains which had used the old West Yorkshire single line between Ossett and Batley were diverted via Dewsbury. The old line was now referred to as the Chickenley Heath branch.<ref name = wrott2-118>Wrottesley, volume 2, page 118</ref>

A railmotor operated a shuttle service between Ossett and Chickenley Heath, but a parallel tram service killed that off: it closed on 1 July 1909.<ref name = joy90>Joy, page 90</ref><ref name = bairstow64>Bairstow, page 64</ref>

==Headfield spur==
A connecting line was built at Dewsbury from Dewsbury Goods junction (formerly Dewsbury junction) to Headfield junction on the L&YR. There was a fourteen span viaduct in its 49 chain length. Goods traffic began in 1887; the curve was sanctioned by the Board of Trade for passenger operation in October 1887, but no regular service was run until 1893, when a joint GNR/L&YR Leeds-Pudsey-Cleckheaton-Batley-Leeds circular service was introduced.<ref name = wrott2-140>Wrottesley, volume 2, pages 140 and 141</ref><ref name = joy125/>

==Post-nationalisation closures==
The passenger service from Wakefield to Dewsbury (and on to [[Drighlington]]) closed from 8 September 1964. The entire line from [[Adwalton]] through Batley to Wrenthorpe Junctions, near Wakefield, closed on 15 February 1965, except for the section from Roundwood Colliery (near Flushdyke) to Wrenthorpe North Junction, which closed on 31 October 1965.<ref name = bairstow64/>

==Electrification==
In the 1980's a major project of electrification was implemented on the [[East Coast Main Line]] and associated routes. The Doncaster to Leeds line was included, and the first electric train ran from Doncaster to to Leeds in August 1988.<ref name = heath>Don Heath, contribution to ''ECML: Electrification as it used to be'', Rail Engineer (periodical), 27 November 2017</ref>

==Present day==
The original main line of the BW&LR continues in use as part of the trunk electrified Doncaster to Leeds line. The short section between Wakefield Kirkgate and Wakefield Westgate has not been electrified, but carries an approximately hourly passenger servcie between Knottingley and Leeds. The Ossett and Batley line, and the Methley joint line, are closed.

==Location list==
===First main line===

* Wakefield Kirkgate; opened 5 October 1840; still open;
* ''Ings Road Junction'';
* ''Wakefield South Junction'';
* Wakefield Westgate; opened 5 October 1857; relocated north 1 May 1867; still open;
* ''Osset Branch Junction'' or ''Wrenthorpe South Junction'';
* ''Wrenthorpe North Junction'';
* ''Lofthouse South Junction'';
* Lofthouse; opened October 1858; renamed Lofthouse & Outwood 1865; closed 13 June 1960;
* Outwood; opened 12 July 1988; still open;
* ''Lofthouse North Junction'';
* Ardsley; opened 5 October 1857; closed 2 Novemeber 1964.
* ''Ardsley Junction'';
* ''Beeston South Junction'';
* Beeston; opened February 1860; closed 2 March 1953;
* ''Beeston North Junction'';
* ''Wortley South Junction'';
* ''Wortley East Junction'';
* ''Holbeck Junction''.<ref name = cobb>Col M H Cobb, ''The Railways of Great Britain: A Historical Atlas'', Ian Allan Limited, Shepperton, 2002</ref><ref name = quick>Michael Quick, ''Railway Passenger Stations in England, Scotland and Wales: A Chronology'', the Railway and Canal Historical Society, Richmond, Surrey, 2002</ref>

===Ossett and Batley branch===
* ''Ossett Branch Junction'';
* ''Wrenthorpe West Junction'';
* Alverthorpe; opened November 1872; closed 5 April 1954;
* ''Roundwood colliery'';
* Ossett; opened 7 April 1862; renamed Flushdyke 2 April 1864; closed 5 May 1941;
* Ossett; opened 2 April 1864; closed 7 September 1964;
* ''Runtlings Lane Junction'';
* Chickenleyheath; opened 2 July 1877; closed 1 July 1909;
* Batley; opened 1 November 1864; closed 7 September 1964.<ref name = cobb/><ref name = quick/>

===First Dewsbury branch===
* Runtlings Lane Junction;
* Earlsheaton; opened 9 September 1874; closed 8 June 1953;
* ''Dewsbury Junction'';
* Dewsbury; opened 9 September 1874; closed 15 March 1880.<ref name = cobb/><ref name = quick/>

===Dewsbury to Batley===
* Dewsbury Junction;
* Dewsbury Central; opened 15 March 1880; renamed Dewsbury Central 1951; closed 7 September 1964;
* Batley Carr; opened 15 March 1880; closed 6 March 1950;
* Batley.<ref name = cobb/><ref name = quick/>

==Notes==


==References==


[[Category:Railways in Yorkshire]]

September 13, 2019 at 08:50PM

Elizabeth Bowen Thompson

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Elizabeth Bowen Thompson

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[[File:Elizabeth Bowen Thompson.png|thumb|Elizabeth Bowen Thompson]]
'''Elizabeth Bowen Thompson''' (1812/13 – November 1869) was a British missionary in Syria.

Elizabeth Maria Lloyd was born in 1812/13. Her father was Hannibal Evans Lloyd (1770–1847), a [[philologist]] and [[translator]]. Her mother was Lucy Anna Margaretta von Schwartzkopff (1782/3–1855), from [[Hamburg]].<ref name="oxforddnb.com"></ref>

IN our Master's house there are vessels of gold and of silver, of wood and of clay, and some more honored than others. The clay ones are easily molded, but are only for common use; the wooden ones require the knife, but the gold and silver ones need the furnace to refine. Most of us are content with being any sort of vessel in the house, and are unwilling to submit to even the knife, let alone the refining furnace. The absolute surrender of one's life and plans into our Father's hands invariably results in our finding that he has done for us exceeding abundantly above all we had asked or thought.

We stay-at-home Christian women have little idea what the joy must be of looking back upon a life full of work for the Master—work that would not have been done had not our hands taken it up. Of this description were the life and the work of the young widow who is the subject of the present sketch. Frances Havergal's prayer,." Lord, prepare me for whatever thou art preparing for me," seems to have been the habit of soul of this lady from her girlhood, and marvelous were the providences by which she was led.


After her marriage to Dr. Bowen Thompson, who had devoted his talents to the service of the Syrian Mission, the young couple settled at Antioch, in 1847, and both worked earnestly and well.

Mrs. Thompson soon mastered the language, and opened a school for women in her house. This work went on for eighteen months, and then, on leaving for the seat of war in the Crimea, to which Dr. Bowen Thompson seemed irresistibly drawn, the little school was left behind—they thought for a short time, but it proved to be forever.

It seemed a strange step to leave Antioch for the seat of war, but Dr. Thompson had gained much knowledge of Eastern epidemics, and felt eager to place his services at the disposal of the English government. Immediately upon their arrival at Balaklava Dr. Thompson himself was stricken down with the malignant fever which raged among the troops, and in a few days he died of the very epidemic from which he had been so eager to recover others. The poor young widow laid his dust to rest in the foreign land and returned to England to make her home with her sister.

As the physician's widow she entered upon the last term of her education, in God's school, for a work that none could do so well as a widow. The bloody massacre of the Maronites by the Druses of Syria attracted her sympathy. All the males from seven to seventy years of age had been killed. Possessing ample private means, she gave generously for providing stores and clothing, but her own experience of widowhood made her long to be on the spot to try to make known to the widows in Syria the only balm for a broken heart. She lost no time in setting out for Beyrout, where she found crowds of distracted women and girls who had fled from their burning homes after having seen their husbands and brothers hacked to pieces.

Mrs. Thompson at once opened an industrial refuge. The gates were besieged by hundreds clamoring for admission, and saying, "Even if you cannot pay us for our work, let us sit and listen, for our hearts are sad." "At first," said Mrs. Thompson, "my heart almost died within me at the squalor, noise, and misery of these poor people. Ignorance and deeply-cherished revenge chiefly characterized them. When, however, their Christian teachers read to them from the Bible they would sit at their feet and exclaim: 'We never heard such words!' Does it mean for us women?"

Such was their avidity to learn that, although women as well as children had to begin with the alphabet, in a short time they could read the Bible.

Twenty thousand women were crowding the city eager to get work at even road-mending, so absolutely destitute had the cruel massacre left them. Mrs. Thompson had her hands full and her strength taxed to the utmost, yet she found time to visit the sick and dying in the hospitals. Besides all this she opened industrial schools, ragged schools, and evening schools. The magnitude of the work would have overwhelmed a weaker woman and appalled one with less faith. She also found it necessary to open a girls' school for the upper classes, who were willing to pay a good fee for the privilege of having their daughters educated by an English lady rather than by the French nuns.

She could not have set on foot so many branches of work had not her sister and brotherin-law from England joined her. Their home in England having been burned down, they resolved, rather than rebuild, to put their means and their lives to the best interest in work for the good of the Syrian people. A younger sister had already been helping her for some time, so that there were four members of one family all at work in Syria. Why should such an example be so rare?

Next, a laundry was opened, and the schools grew and prospered until Mrs. Thompson was amazed at the magnitude of them. Many villages and important centers applied to have a school opened, and the appeals were mostly responded to. Infant schools, orphanages, Sunday schools, schools for cripples, Moslem boarding schools, and schools for the blind were in fine working order in Beyrout and throughout the Lebanon, supported principally by her sister and herself.

In 1869 Mrs. Bowen Thompson suffered from illness induced by overwork and responsibility, but even in bed she occupied herself with reports and operations of the school work. She said, once, " Notwithstanding my great weakness, I have never one instant lost my peace of mind or the sense of the presence of Jesus."

She returned to England, but before many days the doctor pronounced her case hopeless. This did not disturb her nor stop her planning for her Syrian schools.

She peacefully passed from earth to heaven in November, 1869.<ref name="oxforddnb.com" /> Of the bitter lamentation of the Syrian widows and orphans we need say nothing. Of Mrs. Thompson it may truly be said that she shall be held '' in everlasting remembrance."


==References==


===Attribution===
* }}




[[Category:1810s births]]
[[Category:1869 deaths]]

September 13, 2019 at 08:47PM

Realme XT

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September 13, 2019 at 05:00PM

Top news in India

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September 13, 2019 at 08:00AM

Supriya

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Supriya

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'''Supriya''' is a feminine given name. Notable people with this name include the following

*[[Supriya Aiman]] (born 1991) Indian actress
*[[Supriya Chaudhuri]], Indian scholar
*[[Supriya Devi]] (Supriya Choudhury; 1933 – 2018), Indian actress
*[[Supriya Jatav]] (born 1991), Indian karateka
*[[Supriya Karnik]] (fl. 1994 &ndash; present) Indian actress
*[[Supriya Kumari]] (born 1988), Indian actress
*[[Supriya Lohith]], Indian singer
*[[Supriya Maskey]] (born 2000), Nepalese beauty queen
*[[Supriya Mondal]] (born 1997), Indian swimmer
*[[Supriya Pathak]] (born 1961), Indian actress
*[[Supriya Pathare]] (born 1972), Indian actress
*[[Supriya Pilgaonkar]], known by her screen name Supriya (born 1967), Indian actress
*[[Supriya Routray]] (born 1990), Indian footballer
*[[Supriya Sahu]] (born 1968), Indian bureaucrat
*[[Supriya Shukla]] (born Supriya Raina), Indian actress
*[[Supriya Sule]] (born 1969), Indian politician

==See also==



September 13, 2019 at 01:59PM

Democratic Debates: Comments by Each Candidate

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Democratic Debates: Comments by Each Candidate

The third Democratic presidential candidate debate took place in Houston Thursday. The candidates answered questions on a range of issues, including health care, gun control, immigration and an ongoing U.S.-China trade war.

Here are some comments from each candidate:

Former Vice President Joe Biden, during a discussion of foreign policy, offered that he should not have voted for a bill that launched the 2002 Iraq War, saying, "I should have never voted to give (former President George W.) Bush the authority to go in and do what he said he was going to do. … What I was arguing against in the beginning, once he started to put the troops in, was that in fact we were doing it the wrong way, there was no plan, we should not be engaged, we didn't have the people with us, we didn't have our allies with it."

Senator Cory Booker, during a discussion of America's tit-for-tat tariff war with China, while at the same time fighting over trading rights with European allies, said: "Donald Trump's America First policy is actually an America alone policy. This is a president who has better relations with dictators rather than American allies."

South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg responds to a question Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019, during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by ABC at Texas Southern University in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg responds to a question, Sept. 12, 2019, during a Democratic presidential primary debate at Texas Southern University in Houston.

Mayor Pete Buttigieg, in criticizing President Donald Trump's lack of "strategy," pointed to the president's recent actions at the Group of Seven summit in France. When Trump skipped a climate change discussion, "there was literally an empty chair, where American leadership could have been," Buttigieg said.

Former U.S. Housing and Urban Development Julian Castro, who focused on growing up in a single-parent home in his closing statement, said: "I shouldn't be here on this stage. You know, Castro is my mother's name and was my grandmother's name before her. I grew up in a single-parent household on the west side of San Antonio, going to the public schools."

Senator Kamala Harris, responding to a question about her record as former California attorney general, said: "I'm glad you asked me this question. … Was I able to get enough done? Absolutely not," before describing her record as having been distorted by activists.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., responds to a question Thursday, Sept. 12, 2019, during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by ABC at Texas Southern University in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., responds to a question, Sept. 12, 2019, during a Democratic presidential primary debate at Texas Southern University in Houston.

Senator Amy Klobuchar, in responding to Sanders' health care plan, known as Medicare for All, said, "While Bernie wrote the bill, I read the bill," claiming tens of millions would lose their private health insurance. "I don't think that's a bold idea; I think that's a bad idea."

Former Congressman Beto O'Rourke, who lives in El Paso, Texas, where a mass shooting occurred in August, said during a heated debate about gun control that he supported taking away assault weapons from people. "Hell yes, we're going to take your AR-15, your AK-47. We're not going to allow them to be used against Americans anymore."

Former Rep. Beto O'Rourke delivers his closing statement at the end of the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Texas, U.S. September 12, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Former Rep. Beto O'Rourke delivers his closing statement at the end of the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.

Senator Bernie Sanders, in a pointed debate with Biden over Obama administration trade policies that supported a Trans-Pacific Partnership, said: "The average American today, despite an explosion of technology and worker productivity, is not making a penny more than he or she made 45 years ago. And one of the reasons is that, for decades, we have had disastrous trade policies."

Senator Elizabeth Warren, during a discussion about gun control, said: "The question we need to ask is, when we've got this much support across the country, 90% of Americans want to see us do — I like registration — want to see us do background checks, want to get assault weapons off the streets, why doesn't it happen? And the answer is corruption, pure and simple. We have a Congress that is beholden to the gun industry. And unless we're willing to address that head-on and roll back the filibuster, we're not going to get anything done on guns."

Entrepreneur Andrew Yang reacts at the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.
Entrepreneur Andrew Yang reacts at the 2020 Democratic U.S. presidential debate in Houston, Sept. 12, 2019.

Entrepreneur Andrew Yang announced during the debate that he would give $120,000 to 10 American families, saying, "My campaign will now give a freedom dividend of $1,000 a month for an entire year to 10 American families. Someone watching at home right now. If you believe that you can solve your own problems better than any politician, go to Yang2020.com and tell us how $1,000 a month will help you do just that. This is how we will get our country working for us again, the American people."


September 13, 2019 at 12:36PM

Rachael McKenna

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Rachael McKenna

HenryCrun15: Created article. See Talk page for discussion of notability.




'''Rachael McKenna''' (b. 1954) is a [[photographer]] from [[New Zealand]]. She has published at least 19 books of photographs, primarily of animals and children,<ref name=":0">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> which have sold millions of copies.<ref name=":1">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> Her work has also featured on greeting cards and calendars.<ref name=":1" /> She originally worked under the names , also called '''Rachael Hale'''<ref name=":0" /> and '''Rachael Hale McKenna'''.

McKenna graduated from Auckland University with a diploma of arts, majoring in photography and printmaking.<ref name=":0" /> She has worked around the world, including five years in France and six months in New York,<ref name=":0" /> but now lives in Central Otago.<ref name=":0" />

She is married and has a daughter.<ref name=":0" />



== References ==

September 13, 2019 at 12:22PM

China Releases Award-Winning Photographer Lu Guang Who Documented Nation’s Dark Side

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China Releases Award-Winning Photographer Lu Guang Who Documented Nation's Dark Side

A country boy kneels before the grave of his parents who died of AIDS after becoming infected with the HIV virus because unsafe procedures were used when they sold their blood. Horror colors the eyes of a miner with his face, unprotected by any safety gear, entirely blackened by coal dust. Two men under a yellow sky view a 200-year-old temple surrounded by belching industrial smokestacks. Hours before her death from AIDS, a barely clad woman takes comfort in the arms of her husband, who could not afford to take her to the hospital.

For decades, Chinese independent photojournalist Lu Guang documented China's dark side, covering the discomfiting economic, social and environmental issues long steamrollered by China's race become a world power.

Chinese police detained the award-winning freelancer in early November 2018, according to media reports. His wife, Xu Xiaoli, said Lu, 58, was meeting with local photographers in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, the center of Beijing's crackdown on Uighurs and other Muslim minorities.

Detainment of Uighurs

Once a storied stop on the Silk Road, Xinjiang is now notable for vast re-education camps set up to turn the Uighurs faith in Islam to faith in the Chinese Communist Party. Rights groups say the Chinese government has detained hundreds of thousands of Uighurs and other Muslim minorities without trial.

Facing international condemnation, China announced in July that most of the detainees who were in the "de-radicalization" centers had been released, which was widely doubted.

On Monday, almost a year after Lu's disappearance, Xu posted on Twitter that "Lu has been at home for several months."

Although the couple has lived in New York City since 2005 and are permanent residents in the U.S., home in this case for Lu means China. He is believed to be under surveillance on a residential bail-like release, according to Wen Yunchao, a New York-based former political commentator and family friend. This means Lu could still face charges if, in the eyes of the authorities, he misbehaves. VOA knows Wen as a credible source.

FILE - Visitors walk past the old city district in Kashgar, western China's Xinjiang region, Aug. 31, 2018. Police confirmed that Lu Guang, a prominent Chinese photographer who went missing more than a month ago was arrested, his wife said.
FILE - Visitors walk past the old city district in Kashgar, western China's Xinjiang region, Aug. 31, 2018. Police confirmed that Lu Guang, a prominent Chinese photographer who went missing more than a month ago was arrested, his wife said.

Like Lu's detention, little official is known about his release. VOA contacted the Chinese Embassy in Washington on Wednesday but received no response. According to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), an international press freedom advocacy organization, China has one of the world's worst records for press freedom, and is currently detaining 60 professional and citizen journalists.

In August, before news of Lu's release became public, RSF listed him among the 12 nominees for its 2019 Press Freedom Award, an honor he did not win on Thursday. 

"Many of the nominees face constant threats or have been imprisoned several times for their work, yet these journalists refused to be silenced and continue to raise their voices against the abuse of power, corruption and other crimes," said Christophe Deloire, the RSK secretary-general, in a release.

Robert Pledge, president and editorial director of Contact Press Images met Lu in China about 17 years ago. His agency represents and distributes some of Lu's work. He told VOA that Lu's photographs have a "universal dimension. … Pollution, coal mining, the AIDS issue, the way water is affected by industrialization and all these matters are common to the world in general."

Lu "expresses these concerns and these anxieties that people around the world have," Pledge said. "They are taken in China, but they're not about China in particular. They're about the world we live in today collectively."

Pledge continued, saying, "Governments are never happy anywhere to see images or information that depicts the realities that are painful to look at and that expressed some real concerns about situations that are developing."

Pledge said he feels Lu's photographs were not the cause of his arrest.

Becoming a photographer

Lu took to photography when he first held a camera in 1980. At the time, he was a 21-year-old factory worker in Yongkang, his hometown in Zhejiang province.

Intent on photography career, he opened a portrait studio and started an advertising company before taking classes at the school now known as Fine Arts Academy of Tsinghua University in Beijing between 1993 and 1995.

After studying with some of China's top photojournalists, he turned to documentary photography and began to focus his work on the people rarely seen in China's state-run media.

"He is highly sensitive to the suffering of those who live at the bottom of the society, as well as the various human rights violations that take place in this country," Hu Jia, a prominent social activist and political dissident told VOA.

This undated photos shows retired doctor Gao Yaojie, 74, right, applying medicine to a villager's arm as she helps people from neglected AIDS villages in the central China province of Henan. Huge numbers of villagers contracted AIDS or HIV by selling blood for money while local authorities have tried to keep quiet and have refused any help to the villagers.
This undated photos shows retired doctor Gao Yaojie, 74, right, applying medicine to a villager's arm as she helps people from neglected AIDS villages in the central China province of Henan.

He called Lu "a good friend" and remembered their trips to so-called AIDS villages in China's central Henan province. There, because of unsafe procedures used during a government-sponsored blood drive, many villagers were infected with HIV when they sold blood. In some villages, up to 40 percent of the residents were seropositive, but received no help because China did not officially recognize the existence of AIDS within its borders in an era when it wanted foreign investment.

Lu "is willing to use his wisdom and take the risks to capture them," Hu Jia said.

Lu spent three years visiting more than 100 of these villages, shooting tens of thousands of pictures. Those portraits earned him his first World Press Photo award in 2004.

Many international awards

He went on to win many other international awards with projects on drug addicts, industrial pollution, and coal miners. He is the first photographer from China to be invited to the U.S. by the Department of State on a program for visiting scholars. In 2010, he won a National Geographic Photography Grant.

In 2013, at the Prince Claus Awards ceremony in The Netherlands, Lu explained to the audience why he became a photographer. 

"Since 1980, I realized that I can use my camera to help a lot of people, even solve some problems. I keep on finding those problems and hope to play some roles with my photos."

But in covering controversial issues in China, Lu drew criticism for staging photos he presented as truthful documents of a moment.

In 2008, Lu was disqualified from entering a renowned Chinese photojournalism contest because the judges questioned his journalistic ethics. That same year, the respected Chinese photojournalist He Yanguang, alleged that Lu had admitted paying an addict in order to photograph him using drugs. Lu denied this.

Polluted rivers project

At the time, Lu was involved in a 10-year project on China's polluted rivers. It won him the W. Eugene Smith Grant for Humanistic Photography in 2009 and a National Geographic Photo Grant in 2010.

On Nov. 26, 2018, Xu tweeted that Lu had gone missing during a trip to Xinjiang. She said he had been invited to meet with local photographers in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. He was not planning to photograph the detention camps, she told The New York Times.

"We were all very shocked to hear this," said Wu Yuren, a family friend and artist who moved to New York after angering Beijing with his human-rights activism. "After coming to the U.S., we rarely hear anyone in our close circle just vanished like that."

Xu made multiple attempts to contact the police in her husband's native Zhejiang province. Eventually she learned that Lu had been taken by the Xinjiang guobao, a branch of China's police in charge of state security.

Arrested in Xinjiang

On Dec. 11, Xu received a phone call from local police saying her husband had been arrested in Kashgar, an ancient city in southern Xinjiang predominantly populated by Muslim Uighurs. The police did not provide her with any written record of the arrest or tell her why Lu was arrested, according to Xu's tweet.

Lu's arrest drew international attention. The U.S. State Department's 2018 Human Rights Report mentioned his case. Numerous rights groups called for his release.

"The Chinese government has a long history of taking people whose views it doesn't like, literally off the grid and disappearing them," said Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch.

After the initial tweets, Lu's family maintained silence until Xu tweeted of his release this week. She told VOA the family didn't announce the news of his release when it occurred several months ago because they wanted to live a quiet life.

On Tuesday, Xu, declined VOA's request to interview her husband. In an e-mail sent on his behalf, she wrote, "He is doing very well and is busy with setting up a photography museum. He doesn't want to be bothered. Thank you for your understanding."


September 13, 2019 at 11:16AM

Tropical Storm Warning Issued for Bahamas; 1,300 Still Missing 

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Tropical Storm Warning Issued for Bahamas; 1,300 Still Missing 

A tropical cyclone was forecast to move across the northwestern Bahamas in the coming days, potentially bringing more rain and wind to islands already devastated by Hurricane Dorian, the U.S. National Hurricane Center warned on Thursday. 

The Miami-based hurricane center issued a tropical storm warning for islands including hurricane-hit Abacos and Grand Bahama, saying the system could become a tropical depression or storm before making landfall as early as Friday. 

Hurricane Dorian slammed into the Bahamas on Sept. 1 as a 
Category 5 storm, one of the strongest Atlantic hurricanes on record to hit land, packing top sustained winds of 185 miles per hour (298 km per hour). 

The tropical cyclone was not expected to bring anywhere near that level of devastation, but was capable of winds of 30 miles per hour and 2 to 4 inches of rain through Sunday, according to the hurricane center. 

Aid groups rushed shelter material to residents living in the shells of former homes or whose homes had been stripped of their roofs. 

"We're seeing plastic tarps go out all over the islands, and that's extremely important because now you've got another tropical storm coming," said Ken Isaacs, vice president of programs for U.S. relief organization Samaritan's Purse. 

The prime minister of the Bahamas, Hubert Minnis, on Wednesday said the official death toll was 50 but was expected to rise. 

Former Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham said he believed "hundreds" were dead on Abaco "and significant numbers on Grand Bahama," the Nassau Guardian newspaper reported on Thursday. 

Minnis said there were problems coordinating aid due to the level of devastation and he was trying to remove "bureaucratic roadblocks." 

Hurricane Dorian refugees, many of them from Great Abaco, pass the time at a shelter set up at the Kendal G.L. Isaacs National Gymnasium in Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas, Sept. 10, 2019.
Hurricane Dorian refugees, many of them from Great Abaco, pass the time at a shelter set up at the Kendal G.L. Isaacs National Gymnasium in Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas, Sept. 10, 2019.

Tent cities for newly homeless

With 1,300 people still missing, according to the Bahamian 
government, relief services are focused on search and rescue as well as providing life-sustaining food, water and shelter. 

Officials have erected large tents in Nassau to house those made homeless by Dorian and plan to erect tent cities on Abaco capable of sheltering up to 4,000 people. 

A flood of aid has caused bottlenecks at docks and airports, creating "a lot of delays" in relief supplies, said Nat Abu-Bonsrah of the Adventist Development and Relief Agency, the global humanitarian organization of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. 

Due to a shortage of functioning vehicles and facilities on Grand Bahama, the group turned to church members to lend their cars and kitchens for its program providing hot meals to over 400 people a day in Freeport. 

"We've not been able to reach them as much as we want," he said of efforts to get hundreds of hygiene kits to survivors. 

Groups like Samaritan's Purse, with their own aircraft or logistics chains, said they had not encountered issues with coordination or government red tape. 

"I think we're accomplishing our mission, any roadblocks we have right now are our own," said Dennis Clancey, a field operations manager for relief group Team Rubicon, which has deployed mobile medical units to treat patients.


September 13, 2019 at 10:42AM

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