Monday, August 22, 2011

Woman killed after walking into propeller

"The woman who died at a Humboldt, Sask., airstrip on Saturday received her fatal injury when she walked into a propeller, the RCMP says.
humboldt, saskatchewan

The accident happened at Humboldt, Sask., 113 kilometres east of Saskatoon.

The accident occurred around 11 a.m. CST, shortly after the small plane the 40-year-old woman had been a passenger in landed.
The woman, who is from the Annaheim area, had emerged from the passenger side of the single-engine Cessna 210 and was walking toward the nose area when it happened, the RCMP said.
The plane wasn't moving, but the propeller was still spinning when she walked into it, police said.
It's believed the woman was trying to take a photo just before she was struck, police said.
Transport Canada is investigating the incident. Police haven't released the name of the woman at the request of family." - CBC

Strauss-Kahn may be cleared of all charges. (Click here).

Winners of "The Glee Project" discuss their future on the show.



"LOS ANGELES, Calif. --
In a surprising twist, “The Glee Project” crowned two winners on Sunday’s finale, Samuel Larsen and Damian McGinty, and the two young stars are thrilled to be appearing in seven upcoming episodes of the FOX series.
“It’s mind blowing stuff!” Damian, 18, who hails from Derry City, Northern Ireland, told Kit Hoover and guest co-host Arsenio Hall on Monday’s Access Hollywood Live.
“You’re born and you have dreams, but they only come true for an incredibly small percentage of people in this world,” he continued.
Dreadlocked rocker Samuel, 19, from Los Angeles, said he once considered lopping off his distinguishing locks.
“I’m so glad I didn’t [cut my hair],” he told Kit and Arsenio.” It’s kind of become a trademark thing.”
As far as heading to the halls of McKinley High, Samuel said he feels ready to appear on the hit FOX series after his time on the Oxygen reality series.
“I think after the boot camp that is ‘The Glee Project,’ I think we’re prepared,” he explained.
“For me it’s been quite an incredible journey,” Damian added. “It’s been a rollercoaster, I’ve had ups and downs… to come out on top along with Samuel, it proves the underdog can come out on top.”
Samuel said he and Damian do not know what roles they’ll be playing, but he’s willing to go wherever showrunner and co-creator Ryan Murphy ask him to go.
“Hey, whatever they throw at me, I’ll do it,” Samuel said.
Fellow finalists Lindsay Pearce and Alex Newell will also appear on two episodes of “Glee’s” upcoming Season 3." - AccessHollywood.com

Jack Layton's last words to Canada/Les derniers mots de Jack Layton pour le Canada

"Dear Friends,

Tens of thousands of Canadians have written to me in recent weeks to wish me well. I want to thank each and every one of you for your thoughtful, inspiring and often beautiful notes, cards and gifts. Your spirit and love have lit up my home, my spirit, and my determination.

Unfortunately my treatment has not worked out as I hoped. So I am giving this letter to my partner Olivia to share with you in the circumstance in which I cannot continue.

I recommend that Hull-Aylmer MP Nycole Turmel continue her work as our interim leader until a permanent successor is elected.

I recommend the party hold a leadership vote as early as possible in the New Year, on approximately the same timelines as in 2003, so that our new leader has ample time to reconsolidate our team, renew our party and our program, and move forward towards the next election.

A few additional thoughts:

To other Canadians who are on journeys to defeat cancer and to live their lives, I say this: please don't be discouraged that my own journey hasn't gone as well as I had hoped. You must not lose your own hope. Treatments and therapies have never been better in the face of this disease. You have every reason to be optimistic, determined, and focused on the future. My only other advice is to cherish every moment with those you love at every stage of your journey, as I have done this summer.

To the members of my party: we've done remarkable things together in the past eight years. It has been a privilege to lead the New Democratic Party and I am most grateful for your confidence, your support, and the endless hours of volunteer commitment you have devoted to our cause. There will be those who will try to persuade you to give up our cause. But that cause is much bigger than any one leader. Answer them by recommitting with energy and determination to our work. Remember our proud history of social justice, universal health care, public pensions and making sure no one is left behind. Let's continue to move forward. Let's demonstrate in everything we do in the four years before us that we are ready to serve our beloved Canada as its next government.

To the members of our parliamentary caucus: I have been privileged to work with each and every one of you. Our caucus meetings were always the highlight of my week. It has been my role to ask a great deal from you. And now I am going to do so again. Canadians will be closely watching you in the months to come. Colleagues, I know you will make the tens of thousands of members of our party proud of you by demonstrating the same seamless teamwork and solidarity that has earned us the confidence of millions of Canadians in the recent election. 

To my fellow Quebecers: On May 2nd, you made an historic decision. You decided that the way to replace Canada's Conservative federal government with something better was by working together in partnership with progressive-minded Canadians across the country. You made the right decision then; it is still the right decision today; and it will be the right decision right through to the next election, when we will succeed, together. You have elected a superb team of New Democrats to Parliament. They are going to be doing remarkable things in the years to come to make this country better for us all.

To young Canadians: All my life I have worked to make things better. Hope and optimism have defined my political career, and I continue to be hopeful and optimistic about Canada. Young people have been a great source of inspiration for me. I have met and talked with so many of you about your dreams, your frustrations, and your ideas for change. More and more, you are engaging in politics because you want to change things for the better. Many of you have placed your trust in our party. As my time in political life draws to a close I want to share with you my belief in your power to change this country and this world. There are great challenges before you, from the overwhelming nature of climate change to the unfairness of an economy that excludes so many from our collective wealth, and the changes necessary to build a more inclusive and generous Canada. I believe in you. Your energy, your vision, your passion for justice are exactly what this country needs today. You need to be at the heart of our economy, our political life, and our plans for the present and the future.

And finally, to all Canadians: Canada is a great country, one of the hopes of the world. We can be a better one - a country of greater equality, justice, and opportunity. We can build a prosperous economy and a society that shares its benefits more fairly. We can look after our seniors. We can offer better futures for our children. We can do our part to save the world's environment. We can restore our good name in the world. We can do all of these things because we finally have a party system at the national level where there are real choices; where your vote matters; where working for change can actually bring about change. In the months and years to come, New Democrats will put a compelling new alternative to you. My colleagues in our party are an impressive, committed team. Give them a careful hearing; consider the alternatives; and consider that we can be a better, fairer, more equal country by working together. Don't let them tell you it can't be done.
My friends, love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we'll change the world.

All my very best,
Jack Layton"


"Chers amis,

Des dizaines de milliers de Canadiens m'ont fait parvenir des mots d'encouragement au cours des dernières semaines. Je tiens à remercier chacun d'entre vous pour vos cartes, vos notes et vos cadeaux si magnifiques, si inspirants, si attentionnés. Vos bons sentiments et votre amour ont éclairé mon foyer et ont renforcé mon courage et ma détermination.

Malheureusement, mes traitements n'ont pas eu les effets escomptés. Je remets donc cette lettre à Olivia afin qu'elle la partage avec vous dans l'éventualité où je ne pourrais continuer. Je recommande que Nycole Turmel, députée de Hull-Aylmer, continue son travail à titre de chef intérimaire jusqu'à ce qu'une ou un successeur(e) soit élu(e).

Je recommande au parti de tenir un vote quant au leadership du parti le plus tôt possible dans la nouvelle année, en s'inspirant de l'échéancier de 2003, afin que notre nouveau ou nouvelle chef ait amplement le temps de reconsolider notre équipe, de renouveler notre parti et notre programme, et puisse aller de l'avant et se préparer pour la prochaine élection.

Quelques mots additionnels :

Aux Canadiens qui se battent contre le cancer pour continuer à profiter pleinement de la vie, je vous dis ceci : ne soyez pas découragés du fait que ma bataille n'ait pas eu le résultat espéré. Ne perdez pas votre propre espoir, car les thérapies et les traitements pour vaincre cette maladie n'ont jamais été aussi évolués. Vous avez raison d'être optimistes, déterminés et convaincus face à la maladie. Mon seul autre conseil est de chérir tous les moments passés auprès de ceux qui vous sont chers, comme j'ai eu la chance de le faire cet été.

Aux membres de mon parti : nous avons obtenu des résultats remarquables en travaillant ensemble au cours des huit dernières années. Ce fut un privilège d'être le chef du Nouveau Parti démocratique et je suis très reconnaissant pour votre confiance, votre appui et vos innombrables heures consacrées à notre cause. Il y a des gens qui vont essayer de vous convaincre d'abandonner notre cause. Mais cette dernière est bien plus grande qu'un chef. Répondez-leur en travaillant encore plus fort, avec une énergie et une détermination sans précédent. Rappelez-vous de notre fière tradition de justice sociale, de soins de santé universels, de régime de pensions publiques, et des efforts que nous faisons pour nous assurer que personne ne soit laissé pour compte. Continuons d'aller de l'avant. Démontrons dans tout ce que nous faisons au cours des quatre prochaines années que nous sommes prêts à servir les Canadiens en formant le prochain gouvernement.

Aux membres de notre caucus : j'ai eu le privilège de travailler avec chacun d'entre vous. Nos rencontres du caucus ont toujours été le moment fort de ma semaine. Cela a été mon rôle d'exiger le plus possible de votre part. Et maintenant je le fais à nouveau. Les Canadiens vous porteront une attention toute spéciale dans les mois à venir. Chers collègues, je sais que vous rendrez les dizaines de milliers de membres du NPD fiers en démontrant la même éthique de travail et la solidarité qui nous ont mérité la confiance de millions de Canadiens lors de la dernière élection.

À mes concitoyens québécois : le 2 mai dernier, vous avez pris une décision historique. Vous avez décidé qu'afin de remplacer le gouvernement fédéral conservateur du Canada par quelque chose de mieux, il fallait travailler ensemble, en collaboration avec les Canadiens progressistes de l'ensemble du pays. Vous avez pris la bonne décision à ce moment-là. C'est encore la bonne décision aujourd'hui et restera la bonne décision au cours des prochaines élections, lorsque nous réussirons, ensemble. Vous avez élu une superbe équipe de députés du NPD qui vous représenteront au Parlement. Ils vont réaliser des choses remarquables dans les années à venir afin de faire du Canada un meilleur pays pour nous tous.

Aux jeunes Canadiens : toute ma vie j'ai travaillé pour améliorer l'état des choses. L'espoir et l'optimisme ont caractérisé ma carrière politique, et je continue à être plein d'espoir et d'optimisme quant à l'avenir du Canada. Les jeunes Canadiens ont été une grande source d'inspiration pour moi. J'ai rencontré plusieurs d'entre vous et discuté avec vous de vos rêves, de vos frustrations, et de vos idées de changement. De plus en plus d'entre vous être impliqués en politique parce que vous voulez changer les choses pour le mieux. Plusieurs d'entre vous avez choisi de faire confiance à notre parti. Alors que ma carrière politique s'achève, j'aimerais vous transmettre toute ma conviction que vous avez le pouvoir de changer ce pays et le monde. Plusieurs défis vous attendent, de l'accablante nature des changements climatiques à l'injustice d'une économie qui laisse tant d'entre vous exclus de la richesse collective, en passant par les changements qui seront nécessaires pour bâtir un Canada plus solidaire et généreux. Votre énergie, votre vision et votre passion pour la justice sont exactement ce dont ce pays à aujourd'hui besoin. Vous devez être au coeur de notre économie, de notre vie politique, et de nos plans pour le présent et pour l'avenir.

Et finalement, j'aimerais rappeler à tous les Canadiens que le Canada est un magnifique pays, un pays qui représente les espoirs du monde entier. Mais nous pouvons bâtir un meilleur pays, un pays où l'égalité, la justice et les opportunités sont plus grandes. Nous pouvons bâtir une économie prospère et partager les avantages de notre société plus équitablement. Nous pouvons prendre mieux soin de nos aînés. Nous pouvons offrir à nos enfants de meilleures perspectives d'avenir. Nous pouvons faire notre part pour sauver l'environnement et la planète. Nous pouvons réhabiliter notre nom aux yeux du monde. Nous pouvons faire tout ça parce que nous avons enfin un système de partis politiques fédéraux qui nous offre de vrais choix; où notre vote compte; où en travaillant pour le changement on peut effectivement provoquer le changement. Dans les mois et les années à venir, le NPD vous proposera une nouvelle et captivante alternative. Mes collègues du parti forment une équipe impressionnante et dévouée. Écoutez-les bien, considérez les alternatives qu'ils proposent, et gardez en tête qu'en travaillant ensemble, nous pouvons avoir un meilleur pays, un pays plus juste et équitable. Ne laissez personne vous dire que ce n'est pas possible.

Mes amis, l'amour est cent fois meilleur que la haine. L'espoir est meilleur que la peur. L'optimisme est meilleur que le désespoir. Alors, aimons, gardons espoir et restons optimistes. Et nous changerons le monde.

Chaleureusement,
Jack Layton"

R.I.P., Jack Layton/Repose en paix, Jack Layton. "Canadian hearts are breaking".

BREAKING NEWS




"NDP Leader Jack Layton died early Monday morning after a struggle with cancer. He was 61 years old. The news comes mere weeks after Layton announced he had been diagnosed with a second form of cancer.

Layton's death is not only heartbreaking in how quickly it came after he announced his illness, but that it came so soon after what could was Layton's greatest political achievement. 

After an entire life spent in politics -- first as an academic, then as a city councillor, then in federal politics – Layton had been riding a wave of popularity ahead of his death. It was his personal popularity that many credit for the NDP's "orange crush" in the 2011 federal election. Buoyed by his party's success, Layton had even put the prime minister's office in his sights for the next election. 

Now, with his death, those dreams come to an end and put the very future of his party into doubt. 

While not everyone agreed with Layton's socialist views, there were few who didn't respect the man's passion and work ethic. The politician who had once been a scrappy city councillor with a brash, sometimes strident style, matured into a federal party leader renowned for his dedication. 

Layton's colleagues say he was a master politician who knew how to both work a crowd and work out compromise within his team. All the while, he seemed to never abandon the causes he held most dear: poverty, the environment, public transit, workers' rights. 

In the 2011 election, voters who had once seemed a little wary of the camera-loving politician appeared to finally connect with Layton, embracing his energy, his no-nonsense approach and his promises to represent the average Canadian in Parliament. 

Many voters, particularly in Quebec, said it was Layton himself that drew them to vote for his party and push the NDP into official Opposition status. 

Layton had likely dreamed of reaching the higher echelons of power his whole life. He had been steeped in politics from an early age, growing up in Hudson, Que., under a father who was a cabinet minister in Brian Mulroney's government and who became the Progressive Conservatives' caucus chairman. 

Layton's grandfather too was a cabinet minister, under Maurice Duplessis' Union Nationale government in Quebec, and his great-great-uncle was one of the Fathers of Confederation. The Layton political legacy continues today, with his son, Mike, now a Toronto city councillor as well. 

Layton became student council leader in high school and was voted by classmates as most likely to become a politician. He went on to study political science at McGill University and received his PhD in Political Science from York University. 

He briefly aligned himself with the Liberals while at McGill but, impressed by Tommy Douglas's opposition to the War Measures Act, he turned to the NDP in 1971. 

Layton married at 19, wedding his high school sweetheart, Sally Halford. They had two children: Mike, the Toronto city councillor; and Sarah, who works for the Stephen Lewis Foundation. 

But his marriage to Sally dissolved in 1983, shortly after Layton decided to leave behind life as a politics professor at Ryerson University (then called Ryerson Polytechnical Institute) and make a run for Toronto city council. 

A few years later, Layton met Olivia Chow, who was then a school board trustee, and married her in 1988. She ran for Toronto city council in 1991, the same year that Layton decided to make a bid for mayor. Layton lost badly to June Rowlands; but Chow won her council seat. 

Many have credited Chow, an ambitious politician in her own right, as being one of Layton's greatest assets, acting as both his closest adviser and his soulmate. Former Toronto city councillor Howard Moscoe told The Canadian Press he always thought of Layton and Chow as a single political-family unit.

"They were so good at playing the council," he said earlier this year. "They were kind of meant for each other." 

Together, Layton and Chow became Toronto's political power couple, fighting for public transit, the homeless and sustainable urban development. As councillors, they were often accused of grandstanding, once wearing black gags to protest being silenced by other Toronto politicians when they attempted to object to a deal with Shell Oil. 

Layton loved to spend time in the outdoors with Chow and cycled to work every day while in Toronto and worked out in the House of Commons gym every week while in Ottawa. NDP MP Pat Martin once said that Layton and Chow even thought of their work as recreation. 

"I've never met anybody so perfectly matched to a life in politics," Martin said of Layton. 

But Layton did have some brushes with controversy. In 1988, he came under fire when it emerged that he and Chow were living in a housing co-operative subsidized by the federal government, despite a combined income of $120,000. Toronto's solicitor cleared the couple of any wrong-doing, and the couple soon left the co-op and bought a house in Toronto's Chinatown. 

In the 2011 election, three days before voting day, it emerged that Layton had also been caught up in a sting on a Toronto massage parlour. Layton insisted he had entered the salon seeking a legitimate shiatsu massage and didn't know the place was used for "illicit purposes." Police chose not to charge him in the sting. 

Despite the scandals and Layton's failed 1991 mayoralty bid, his ambitions didn't falter; they simply shifted. In 1994, he decided to make a run for federal politics, vying for a seat in the riding of Rosedale. Again, he fared badly, finishing fourth. 

He pressed on with his Toronto city council duties, but in another example of his trademark energy, he also took on work as well as the head of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, where he said he broadened his understanding of the priorities of towns outside Toronto. 

Along the way, Layton also penned three books; "Homelessness: the Making and Unmaking of a Crisis" in 2000; "Speaking Out: Ideas That Work for Canadians" in 2004 and "Speaking Out Louder" in 2006. 

He ran again for MP in 1997, this time in the riding of Toronto-Danforth but lost yet again, to longtime incumbent Liberal, Dennis Mills. Layton was finally able to make his move into federal politics in 2003 by taking over as leader of the NDP from outgoing leader Alexa McDonough. He grabbed a seat in Parliament a year later, in the 2004 election. 

In that first federal election campaign in 2004, Layton insisted to reporters without any irony that his aim was to increase the party's standings from 13 seats to 150. The party earned 19 seats. But the NDP was able to win 15 per cent of the popular vote -- its best result in 16 years. 

Layton's flamboyant leadership style seemed to re-energize the party following the staid leaderships of McDonough and Audrey McLaughlin before her. He was constantly in front of the microphone, moving easily between English and French, always ready with the quick sound bites that had made him famous in Toronto.
But Layton stumbled in that first federal campaign when he accused then-Liberal prime minister Paul Martin of being responsible for the deaths of homeless people because he had failed to provide funding for affordable housing. 

He managed to smooth out his edgy persona during the 2006 election campaign and consistently scored well in leadership polls, with voters giving him high marks in the areas of principle, honesty. 

Queen's University political scientist Jonathan Rose told CTV.ca during the 2006 campaign that voters seemed to respond to Layton because of his tireless campaigning and infectious energy. 

"He has all the hallmarks of what we demand from traditional leaders: a clear persona, someone who has a high trust level, and someone who is able to articulate clearly what they believe," Rose said. 

Layton added 10 more seats for his party in the 2006 election, and then again in 2008, when the party's seat count rose to 37. 

Throughout the 2008 election campaign, Layton opened every speech with the eyebrow-raising declaration that he was running to be prime minister. Longtime friend Peter Tabuns said at the time that Layton was never anything if not an optimist. 

"He is one of the most optimistic and hopeful people that I know, and I think that gives him a lot of strength to get through tough times," he told CP. 

Those tough times were soon to come, when Layton was diagnosed in early 2010 with prostate cancer. Layton chose to push through it, taking to the hustings for the 2011 election campaign with the save fervour as ever. He even suggested the illness gave him further motivation. 

"People that go through serious illness – you can either go one way or the other. You can either become despondent about it all. Or it kind of rejuvenates you, makes you focus on what's important," he said in an interview with Metro news. 

The election began as a traditional two-horse race between the Conservatives and the Liberals, but at some point after the leaders' debate, Layton surged. Layton was suddenly no longer the third-place outsider; he was being embraced as the candidate of hope and change for those opposed to the Conservatives. 

Election Day brought what became known as the "orange crush": 31 per cent of the popular vote for the NDP, 59 seats in Quebec, as well as 44 other seats across the country -- the party's best showing ever. 

Former Progressive Conservative prime minister Brian Mulroney told CTV News afterwards that he believed Quebecers embraced Layton because they thought of him as one of their own. 

"He's always referred to here as, ‘Our boy, Jack, a good guy,'" Mulroney said. 

Ahead of the 2011 campaign, many had said that with four elections already behind him, if the NDP didn't make big strides, this would likely be Layton's final federal election. 

In fact, it was Layton's last campaign. But not for the reason that anyone would have ever predicted." - CTV.ca 

This is very sad day in and for Canada. Rest in peace, Jack. We will miss you. 

NDP Leader Jack Layton was a political Moses who never entered Promised Land.

Share your condolences with everyone here.

See Jack's life in pictures.

See more reactions on Layton's death here.

70% of Canadians say Jack changed their views on politics.

"Jack Layton, le chef du NPD, est mort des suites d'un cancer lundi matin. «Nous avons le regret de vous annoncer que l'Honorable Jack Layton, chef du Nouveau Parti démocratique du Canada, est décédé à 4 h 45 ce matin, le lundi 22 août, a écrit son épouse, Olivia Chow, dans un communiqué. Il est décédé paisiblement chez lui, entouré de ses proches. Les détails en lien avec les funérailles de M. Layton vous seront communiqués prochainement.»

Il est décédé l'âge de 61 ans. Jack Layton, personnage charismatique et très respecté dans les milieux politiques, y compris par ses adversaires, a mené une campagne très efficace pour les législatives canadiennes du 2 mai dernier, faisant de son parti la deuxième formation du parlement fédéral d'Ottawa.

En juillet 2011, le politicien sympathique était apparu amaigri et la voix brisée pour annoncer son retrait «temporaire» de la politique, en raison d'une tumeur dont il n'avait pas dévoilé la nature. Il avait cependant précisé qu'il ne s'agissait pas du cancer de la prostate dont il se savait atteint depuis février 2010.

Son départ inattendu avait suscité la consternation non seulement dans les rangs néo-démocrates, mais dans toute la classe politique et parmi la population, qui a donné un appui sans précédent à sa formation lors du scrutin du 2 mai dernier.

Il meurt alors que le NPD détient 103 sièges au Parlement, dont 59 au Québec.

- Avec AFP, PC" - La Presse

Giant 'phoenix' bird rises again

Two possible body shapes for Samrukia nessovi, with a human and 'normal-sized' Mesozoic bird for scale. Samruk was a mythical Kazakh phoenix. Photograph: John Conway
"Fossil remains of a bird from the Late Cretaceous suggest it was up to three metres tall and weighed more than 50kg.

Two slender shafts of bone unearthed in the remote desert of southern Kazakhstan belong to one of the largest birds ever to stalk the Earth.

The fossilised remains form two sides of the lower jaw of a bird – at least as big as an ostrich – that lived alongside dinosaurs in central Asia 100m years ago.

The size of the bones, more than 27cm-long each, point to a bird that stood two to three metres tall, making it the largest bird known from the Late Cretaceous. Many primitive birds alive at the time were closer in size to chickens.

The lack of other remains from the creature has left palaeontologists unable to confirm whether the bird was capable of flight. If it did fly, its wingspan probably topped 4m – wider than that of a large albatross.


The two lengths of bone were uncovered at a site called Shakh-Shakh about 372 miles (600km) east of the Aral Sea during a Soviet-East German expedition in the 1970s. The fossil was reconstructed using plaster, glue and paint, to make it look like a complete jaw, passed through the hands of a German collector, and later went on display in a Belgian museum.

Gareth Dyke, a palaeontologist at University College Dublin, dissolved the plaster and other materials used to reconstruct the fossil with solvents before analysing the bone fragments. Measurements of the remains suggest they belonged to a bird whose skull was 30cm from front to back. The creature, if flightless, almost certainly weighed more than 50kg.

"This is one of the largest birds that's ever been described of any age. We don't have much of it, but we know the lower jaw is at least as big if not bigger than the ostrich lower jaw. At the age it is, it's pretty exciting," Dyke told the Guardian.

"We have always assumed that giant size in birds was something that evolved relatively late in the history of the group, so to find a specimen so early is remarkable. This is a giant of a bird with no teeth from the Late Cretaceous." 

The bird earned its forename from Samruk, the mythological Kazakh phoenix. The latter part of its name honours Lev Nessov, an eccentric Russian palaeontologist who used to take the bus or train from St Petersburg into Central Asia to embark on long hikes into the desert to hunt for fossils. He killed himself in 1995 at the age of 48 after the breakup of the Soviet Union restricted his travels.

Another large bird, named Gargantuavis, that lived in southern France 70m years ago was discovered in the late 1990s. "Samrukia adds another giant bird to the Cretaceous roster. Arguably, in fact, it increases the significance of Gargantuavis, since it shows that it wasn't a one-off," said co-author Darren Naish at Portsmouth University." - Guardian.co.uk



Woman who fell into falls' body found


"Divers searched the water around Niagara Falls on Monday, searching for a Toronto-area woman who is believed to be dead after toppling over a railing and into the water a day before.

Niagara Parks Police said the incident happened at about 8:30 p.m. when two female international students were taking photos on the Canadian side of the falls.

Trouble arose when one of the women, a 19-year-old from Japan, climbed onto the concrete ledge next to Horseshoe Falls to pose for a picture.
Police said the woman was sitting with her legs straddling the barrier. When she attempted to stand up again, she lost her footing and fell into the water below.
Kari Wilson, a visitor from Vancouver, told reporters, "I wish I could have done something." She wiped tears from her eyes as she spoke.
"She had one leg on either side straddling this post, and just very casual. She was just having a conversation with her friend," said Wilson, standing at the site near the falls where the woman fell.
The victim had been sitting casually on a stone part of the fencing and chatting with her friend, she said. "Her purse was sitting right behind her and I thought, 'Well, that's a stupid place to keep your purse,'" Wilson said.
Minutes later, the woman plunged into the Niagara River, about 24 metres upstream from the top of the falls.
The current quickly swept her over the 54-metre-high falls.
Emergency crews, including a provincial police helicopter, spent most of Monday searching for the woman with no success. Police told CTV Toronto that it could be weeks before a body is found.
The Japanese consulate in Toronto has been asked to contact the victim's family in Japan.
Niagara Parks Police Chief Douglas Kane said the woman's fall is a sober reminder that risking one's life for a photograph isn't worth it.
"If you're a young adult and you choose to climb over a restraining barrier, unfortunately there's consequences…in this case they were tragic," he said.
In his 35 years on the job, however, Kane said this is the first time he recalls someone falling.
Police searching for the woman's body Monday found human remains in the swirling waters below the falls, but they turned out to be remains of an unidentified male.
CTV Toronto's Austin Delany said that security images captured at the scene show that the woman was using an umbrella.
"A gust of wind may have played a role," he said.
The incident comes a day after a 27-year-old man survived a fall into the Niagara Gorge, just north of the Rainbow Bridge.
The man fell into the Gorge after trying to get a better view of Niagara Falls with his friends. He suffered a head injury and a serious leg fracture.
Niagara Parks Police said the incident happened at about 8:30 p.m. when two female international students were taking photos on the Canadian side of the falls.
Trouble arose when one of the women, a 19-year-old from Japan, climbed onto the concrete ledge next to Horseshoe Falls to pose for a picture.
Police said the woman was sitting with her legs straddling the barrier. When she attempted to stand up again, she lost her footing and fell into the water below.
Kari Wilson, a visitor from Vancouver, told reporters, "I wish I could have done something." She wiped tears from her eyes as she spoke.
"She had one leg on either side straddling this post, and just very casual. She was just having a conversation with her friend," said Wilson, standing at the site near the falls where the woman fell.
The victim had been sitting casually on a stone part of the fencing and chatting with her friend, she said. "Her purse was sitting right behind her and I thought, 'Well, that's a stupid place to keep your purse,'" Wilson said.
Minutes later, the woman plunged into the Niagara River, about 24 metres upstream from the top of the falls.
The current quickly swept her over the 54-metre-high falls.
Emergency crews, including a provincial police helicopter, spent most of Monday searching for the woman with no success. Police told CTV Toronto that it could be weeks before a body is found.
The Japanese consulate in Toronto has been asked to contact the victim's family in Japan.
Niagara Parks Police Chief Douglas Kane said the woman's fall is a sober reminder that risking one's life for a photograph isn't worth it.
"If you're a young adult and you choose to climb over a restraining barrier, unfortunately there's consequences…in this case they were tragic," he said.
In his 35 years on the job, however, Kane said this is the first time he recalls someone falling.
Police searching for the woman's body Monday found human remains in the swirling waters below the falls, but they turned out to be remains of an unidentified male.
CTV Toronto's Austin Delany said that security images captured at the scene show that the woman was using an umbrella.
"A gust of wind may have played a role," he said.
The incident comes a day after a 27-year-old man survived a fall into the Niagara Gorge, just north of the Rainbow Bridge.
The man fell into the Gorge after trying to get a better view of Niagara Falls with his friends. He suffered a head injury and a serious leg fracture." - CTVToronto.ca

"OTTAWA — US authorities recovered the body of a young Japanese woman who was swept over Niagara Falls this week from the Canadian side, New York state park police said Friday.

"The body of a woman recovered Thursday morning from lower Niagara River has been identified by the Erie Country Medical Examiner's office," a police spokeswoman told AFP.
"It is confirmed that the woman is the one and the same with respect to an incident where a woman was reported falling into the waters of the Horseshoe Falls on the Canadian side of the border on August 14."
Local media identified the woman as Ayano Tokumasu, a 19-year-old Japanese student who had been visiting the falls with a friend. Her body was spotted on Thursday floating near the shore of a popular US tourist attraction by an employee who alerted police.
Tokumasu had lost her footing while climbing onto a railing near the river's edge at about 8:30 pm Sunday (0030 GMT Monday) and was swept over the Horseshoe Falls.
"The subject female was observed climbing over the railing and straddling it while looking out at the falls," Inspector Paul Forcier of the Niagara Parks Police Service said on Monday. "She was holding an umbrella at the time."
"The young woman stood up in what appeared to be an attempt to climb back over when she lost her balance and fell into the waters."
She was presumed drowned.
Canadian and US authorities searched for several hours for her body on Monday, but came up instead with the "unidentified human remains of a male" in the lower Niagara River.
Niagara Parks Police Service said in a statement on Thursday the male has since been identified as a 41-year-old Hamilton, Ontario resident who had previously been reported missing.
His name is being withheld pending notification of next of kin.
"Foul play is not suspected in this occurrence, which is unrelated to the original incident involving the female victim," police said." - AFP