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Severe Storms Rip Through South, Killing At Least 297 (VIDEO)

PLEASANT GROVE, Ala. (AP) — Firefighters searched one splintered pile after another for survivors Thursday, combing the remains of houses and neighborhoods pulverized by the nation’s deadliest tornado outbreak in almost four decades. At least 297 people were killed across six states – more than two-thirds of them in Alabama, where large cities bore the half-mile-wide scars the twisters left behind. The death toll from Wednesday’s storms seems out of a bygone era, before Doppler radar and pinpoint satellite forecasts were around to warn communities of severe weather. Residents were told the tornadoes were coming up to 24 minutes ahead of time, but they were just too wide, too powerful and too locked onto populated areas to avoid a horrifying body count. (CLICK HERE to see how you can help relief efforts) “These were the most intense super-cell thunderstorms that I think anybody who was out there forecasting has ever seen,” said meteorologist Greg Carbin at the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla. “If you experienced a direct hit from one of these, you’d have to be in a reinforced room, storm shelter or underground” to survive, Carbin said. (CLICK HERE for photos of the aftermath) The storms seemed to hug the interstate highways as they barreled along like runaway trucks, obliterating neighborhoods or even entire towns from Tuscaloosa to Bristol, Va. One family rode out the disaster in the basement of a funeral home, another by huddling in a tanning bed. In Concord, a small town outside Birmingham that was ravaged by a tornado, Randy Guyton’s family got a phone call from a friend warning them to take cover. They rushed to the basement garage, piled into a Honda Ridgeline and listened to the roar as the twister devoured the house in seconds. Afterward, they could see outside through the shards of their home and scrambled out. “The whole house caved in on top of that car,” he said. “Other than my boy screaming to the Lord to save us, being in that car is what saved us.” Son Justin remembers the dingy white cloud moving quickly toward the house. “To me it sounded like destruction,” the 22-year-old said. “It was a mean, mean roar. It was awful.” At least three people died in a Pleasant Grove subdivision southwest of Birmingham, where residents trickled back Thursday to survey the damage. Greg Harrison’s neighborhood was somehow unscathed, but he remains haunted by the wind, thunder and lightning as they built to a crescendo, then suddenly stopped. “Sick is what I feel,” he said. “This is what you see in Oklahoma and Kansas. Not here. Not in the South.” Alabama Emergency Management officials said early Friday that the state had 210 confirmed deaths. There were 33 deaths in Mississippi, 33 in Tennessee, 15 in Georgia, five in Virginia and one in Kentucky. Hundreds if not thousands of people were injured – nearly 800 in Tuscaloosa alone. Some of the worst damage was about 50 miles southwest of Pleasant Grove in Tuscaloosa, a city of more than 83,000 that is home to the University of Alabama. The storms destroyed the city’s emergency management center, so the school’s Bryant-Denny Stadium was turned into a makeshift one. School officials said two students were killed, though they did not say how they died. Finals were canceled and commencement was postponed. Tuscaloosa Mayor Walter Maddox told reporters that police and the National Guard will impose a curfew at 10 p.m. Thursday, and 8 p.m. the next night. Authorities have been searching for survivors so far, but Maddox said they will begin using cadaver dogs on Friday. A tower-mounted news camera in Tuscaloosa captured images of an astonishingly thick, powerful tornado flinging debris as it leveled neighborhoods. That twister and others Wednesday were several times more severe than a typical tornado, which is hundreds of yards wide, has winds around 100 mph and stays on the ground for a few miles, said research meteorologist Harold Brooks at the Storm Prediction Center. “There’s a pretty good chance some of these were a mile wide, on the ground for tens of miles and had wind speeds over 200 mph,” he said. The loss of life is the greatest from an outbreak of U.S. tornadoes since April 1974, when the weather service said 315 people were killed by a storm that swept across 13 Southern and Midwestern states. Brooks said the tornado that struck Tuscaloosa could be an EF5 – the strongest category of tornado, with winds of more than 200 mph – and was at least the second-highest category, an EF4. Search and rescue teams fanned out to dig through the rubble of devastated communities that bore eerie similarities to the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, when town after town lay flattened for nearly 90 miles. In Phil Campbell, a small town of 1,000 in northwest Alabama where 26 people died, the grocery store, gas stations and medical clinic were destroyed by a tornado that Mayor Jerry Mays estimated was a half-mile wide and traveled some 20 miles. “We’ve lost everything. Let’s just say it like it is,” Mays said. “I’m afraid we might have some suicides because of this.” President Barack Obama said he would travel to Alabama on Friday to view storm damage and meet Gov. Robert Bentley and affected families. Late Thursday he signed a disaster declaration for the state to provide federal aid to those who seek it. As many as a million homes and businesses there were without power, and Bentley said 2,000 National Guard troops had been activated to help. The governors of Mississippi and Georgia also issued emergency declarations for parts of their states. “We can’t control when or where a terrible storm may strike, but we can control how we respond to it,” Obama said. “And I want every American who has been affected by this disaster to know that the federal government will do everything we can to help you recover and we will stand with you as you rebuild.” The storm prediction center said it received 164 tornado reports around the region, but some tornadoes were probably reported multiple times and it could take days to get a final count. In fact, Brooks said 50 to 60 reports – from the Mississippi-Alabama line, through Tuscaloosa and Birmingham and into Georgia and southwestern Tennessee – might end up being a single tornado. If that’s true its path would be one of the longest on record for a twister, rivaling a 1925 tornado that raged for 219 miles. Brooks said the weather service was able to provide about 24 minutes’ notice before the twisters hit. “It was a well-forecasted event,” Brooks said. “People were talking about this week being a big week a week ago.” Gov. Bentley said forecasters did a good job alerting people, but there’s only so much they can do to help people prepare. Carbin, the meteorologist, noted that the warning gave residents enough time to hunker down, but not enough for them to safely leave the area. “You’ve got half an hour to evacuate the north side of Tuscaloosa. How do you do that and when do you do that? Knowing there’s a tornado on the ground right now and the conditions in advance of it, you may inadvertently put people in harm’s way,” he said. Officials said at least 13 died in Smithville, Miss., where devastating winds ripped open the police station, post office, city hall and an industrial park with several furniture factories. Pieces of tin were twined high around the legs of a blue water tower, and the Piggly Wiggly grocery store was gutted. “It’s like the town is just gone,” said 24-year-old Jessica Monaghan, wiping away tears as she toted 9-month-old son Slade Scott. The baby’s father, Tupelo firefighter Tyler Scott, was at work when the warning came on the TV. WATCH: “It said be ready in 10 minutes, but about that time, it was there,” Monaghan said. She, Slade and the family’s cat survived by hiding in a closet. At Smithville Cemetery, even the dead were not spared: Tombstones dating to the 1800s, including some of Civil War soldiers, lay broken on the ground. Brothers Kenny and Paul Long dragged their youngest brother’s headstone back to its proper place. Unlike many neighboring towns, Kenny Long said, Smithville had no storm shelter. “You have warnings,” Long said, “but where do you go?” Some fled to the sturdy center section of Smithville Baptist Church. Pastor Wes White said they clung to each other and anything they could reach, a single “mass of humanity” as the building disintegrated around them. The second story is gone, the walls collapsed, but no one there was seriously hurt. The choir robes remained in place, perfectly white. Eight people were killed in Georgia’s Catoosa County, including in Ringgold, where a suspected tornado flattened about a dozen buildings and trapped an unknown number of people. “It happened so fast I couldn’t think at all,” said Tom Rose, an Illinois truck driver whose vehicle was blown off the road at I-75 North in Ringgold, near the Tennessee line. Catoosa County Sheriff Phil Summers said several residential areas had “nothing but foundations left,” and that some people reported missing had yet to be found. A church in Ringgold had its steeple amputated, and its chairs were left twisted and piled in the apartments’ parking lot. Elsewhere in the town, cars and pickup trucks sat askew at odd angles after being tossed like toys. In Trenton, Ga., nearly two dozen people took shelter in an Ace Hardware store, including a couple walking by when an employee emerged and told them to take cover immediately. Lisa Rice, owner of S&L Tans in Trenton, survived by climbing into a tanning bed with her two daughters. Stormy, 19, and Sky, 21. “We got in it and closed it on top of us,” Rice said. “Sky said, `We’re going to die.’ But, I said, `No, just pray. Just pray, just pray, just pray.’” For 30 seconds, wind rushed around the bed and debris flew as wind tore off the roof. “Then it just stopped. It got real quiet. We waited a few minutes and then opened up the bed and we saw daylight,” she said. The badly damaged Moore Funeral Home, meanwhile, sheltered the woman who cleans Larry Moore’s family business. When the first of three storms hit and uprooted trees in her yard, she figured the funeral home would be a safer place for her two children. As shingles began sailing past the window, she headed for the basement. “That’s what saved her, I guess,” Moore said. “It was over in just a matter of seconds. She called 911 and emergency crews had to help her get out.” The storm system spread destruction from Texas to New York, where dozens of roads were flooded or washed out. In a large section of eastern Tennessee, officials were looking for survivors and assessing damage. In hard-hit Apison, an unincorporated community near the Georgia state line where eight people died, about 150 volunteers helped with the search. It was unclear how high the death toll could rise. In Mississippi, Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson and a crew of deputies and inmates searched the rubble, recovering five bodies and marking homes that still had bodies inside with two large orange Xs. “I’ve never seen anything like this,” Johnson said. “This is something that no one can prepare for.” ___ Mohr reported from Phil Campbell, Ala. Associated Press writers Jay Reeves in Tuscaloosa; Phillip Rawls in Montgomery; Vicki Smith in Morgantown, W.Va.; Kristi Eaton in Norman, Okla.; Ray Henry in Ringgold, Ga.; Meg Kinnard in Columbia, S.C.; Michelle Williams in Atlanta; and Bill Poovey in Chattanooga, Tenn., contributed to this report.

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Gaddafi troops captured in Tunisia

Attempt by Libya loyalist soldiers to retake a key crossing from rebel hands leads to border skirmish with Tunisian forces The Libyan civil war has briefly spilled into Tunisia as the west of the country saw heavy fighting on two fronts and Nato reported that Muammar Gaddafi’s forces were laying anti-shipping mines in the sea off Misrata. Loyalist troops made incursions over the border into Tunisia in a battle to retake a key crossing from rebel hands, drawing condemnation from Tunis. Libyan soldiers were captured by Tunisian forces after firing indiscriminately in clashes that lasted about 90 minutes, according to reports. Witnesses said three Tunisians were injured. Any sign of the Libyan conflict stretching into Tunisa would have serious regional implications. “Given the gravity of what has happened … the Tunisian authorities have informed the Libyans of their extreme indignation and demand measures to put an immediate stop to these violations,” the Tunisian foreign ministry said. Rebels later claimed the Wazin-Dehiba crossing was back in their hands. “Gaddafi forces are no longer in Dehiba. They were defeated,” a witness named as Akram told the Associated Press. Control of the crossing has changed several times in the past 10 days. More than 30,000 refugees have flooded across the border since fighting intensified about three weeks ago, and it is a critical supply and escape route for the besieged opposition. The area is dominated by Berbers, who have suffered systematic repression under the Gaddafi regime. Nato said it was mounting air strikes against loyalist targets in two towns in the region, Zintan and Yafrin. It said its aircraft have destroyed a dozen tanks in the area this month. Heavy fighting in Misrata centred on the area around the airport, the last position held by Gaddafi’s forces after being defeated in the city centre. After several days of low-intensity clashes, rebels attacked early in the morning with automatic weapons, rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns. Government troops responded with missiles and tanks, setting fire to a shoe factory and sending a pall of black smoke across the city. “It’s very difficult against tanks,” said Rami Pengharpia, 21, a rebel fighter wounded in the back by shrapnel. “Only Nato can do something against them.” On the western side of Misrata, where rebels have been slowly forcing Gaddafi’s forces back along the road to Tripoli, there was close-quarter fighting near the satellite town on Zawiya al-Majhoub. Tanks fired at rebel positions, and into civilian areas. Mortars were also used. By mid-afternoon at least 15 rebel fighters and civilians had died, according to doctors in Misrata. Several dozen people were injured, including three young siblings, two boys and a girl, hurt by shrapnel after a shell fired by Gaddafi’s forces struck their house. “Gaddafi knows that he cannot win in Misrata as long as Nato is flying above,” said Dr Khalid Abu Falgha. “But he is still trying to kill as many people as he can by shelling indiscriminately.” Gaddafi’s army also continued shelling the port, the city’s lifeline, as Nato said its warships had caught government naval forces trying to lay mines in the harbour. Brigadier Rob Weighill, the British director of Nato’s Libyan operations, said his ships had intercepted small boats laying mines in the harbour, which is the only entry point for food and medical supplies into Misrata. “It again shows [Gaddafi's] complete disregard for international law and his willingness to attack humanitarian delivery efforts,” Weighill said in Naples. Aid agencies have evacuated thousands of civilians and injured people from the port. Rebels have also brought in light weapons from eastern Libya by sea. The leader of the rebellion in Misrata made an urgent plea to the international community for weapons that would allow his fighters not just to defend the besieged city, but to topple Gaddafi. Khalifa al-Zwawi, an appeal court judge who heads Misrata’s transitional council, told the Guardian that rebel forces would eject the last of Gaddafi’s troops from the city very soon. “The most important thing for us now is arms. We need weapons that are suitable to take on Gaddafi. As soon as our freedom fighters reach people in other cities they will join our revolt,” he said. Zwawi said the number of dead in Misrata, excluding Gaddafi’s forces, exceeded 1,000. More than 4,000 have been injured, with hundreds more kidnapped by loyalist troops and taken to other cities. Nato said it has conducted more than 4,200 sorties over Libya since taking control of the international alliance’s military operation. More than 1,700 were air strikes, not all of which identified or struck targets. In addition 19 Nato ships are patrolling the central Mediterranean. Among the targets hit during the aerial onslaught were 220 tanks and armoured personnel carriers, 200 ammunition facilities and 70 surface-to-air missile systems. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Tunisia Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Harriet Sherwood Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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Three anti-wedding activists arrested

Police arrest three anti-royal wedding protesters who had been planning a mock execution of Prince Andrew Three anti-capitalist activists who were planning a mock execution of Prince Andrew with a guillotine to mark the royal wedding have been arrested and detained at Lewisham police station. Officers arrested Professor Chris Knight, a leading member of the G20 Meltdown group, outside his home in Brockley, south east London at around 6.15pm, according to an eyewitness. Also arrested were Knight’s partner Camilla Power and Patrick Macroidan, who was dressed as an executioner, said fellow activist Mike Raddie, of north London, who was with them. The three activists were preparing to drive their theatrical props, including a home-made guillotine and effigies, into central London when three police cars and two police vans drew up near Knight’s home in Brockley, said Raddie. “Chris was arrested first. He lay down on the pavement opposite his house to make the arrest difficult,” said Raddie. “He was pulled up by four police officers and two bundled him into the back of a van. “Camilla was put in the back of one of the police cars. Patrick was dressed up as an executioner when he was arrested.” Raddie said the police also seized a van containing the group’s props, which included a wooden guillotine. “It’s a working guillotine but it doesn’t have a blade – just wood painted silver,” he added. A spokesman for the Metropolitan Police said: “This evening, 28 April, officers arrested three people – two males aged 68 and 45, and a 60-year-old woman – in Wickham Road, SE4 on suspicion of conspiracy to cause public nuisance and breach of the peace. “They are currently in custody at Lewisham police station.” The group has advertised the Zombie Wedding on its website and via Facebook . The event was billed as a “right royal orgy” with “rumpy pumpy and guillotines.” It also states: “PS govt of the DEAD disclaimer: this is a totally non-terrorist event and bears absolutely no resemblance to the Jacobin Terror of 1793-94.” The website said the event would start with a Zombie Wedding Breakfast in Soho Square at around 9.30-10am, after which participants would head to Westminster for mock executions. Knight was sacked by the University of East London in 2009 over claims he incited violence at the G20 protests. Raddie said the event was peaceful and the organisers did not expect to get near Westminster Abbey, where William and Kate are getting married. The plan was to join Republic’s Not the Royal Wedding Street Party in Red Lion Square, Holborn, central London. Also with the protesters at the time of their arrest was a Channel 4 film crew, filming for the Unofficial Royal Wedding , due to air at 7.10pm on Monday. Some of their equipment, which was in the activists’ van, was also confiscated. Royal wedding Protest Monarchy Crime Weddings Police Channel 4 Television industry David Batty guardian.co.uk

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If you currently have a dog, cat, hamster, or bird living in your house, you should stop calling it your “pet” and instead refer to it as a “companion animal,” academics recently suggested. As for yourself, you may legally be the animal’s owner, but you should refer to yourself as…

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Chris Matthews Smears: ‘Haters’ ‘Have a Party to Call All Their Own, the GOP’

MSNBC anchor Chris Matthews on Thursday continued to obsess over his favorite issue, the birthers. He excoriated the Republican Party, smearing that the “haters” now “have a party to call all their own, the GOP.” Painting with a broad brush, Matthews mocked, “How did the right-wing fringe manage to take over the Republican Party?” He later repeated the talking point, wondering, “Coming up, the party with the fringe on top? How did the right-wing fringe get control of a major political party?” Of course, a 2006 Scripps Howard poll found that 50.8 percent of Democrats believed it was “somewhat” or “very” likely that George W. Bush knew in advance of the plot to murder 3000 Americans on 9/11. That would seem to indicate that there are a significant number of “haters” in the Democratic Party.

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Last week I noted how the Washington Post published on page A5 a story about how Obama Treasury officials tried but failed to influence Standard & Poor's credit analysts from downgrading the U.S. government's credit outlook from “stable” to “negative.” Today the Post buried on page A14 a story by staffer Zachary Goldfarb about a House of Representatives investigation into the matter: A House investigative committee is inquiring about discussions held by Treasury Department officials with Standard & Poor’s before the credit rating agency lowered its outlook on the United States last week.

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In Florida, ‘uterus’ is a dirty word

Scores of US state legislators are pushing new anti-abortion laws to roll back Roe v Wade. But the uterati are fighting back In Florida, “uterus” is a dirty word. A member of the state house of representatives drew a reprimand when he complained that while Republicans want to repeal rules and regulations on corporations, they are all hot to impose rules and regulations on individuals. Women, for example. The rightwingers who control both the house and the senate in Florida have introduced 18 bills to restrict abortion . Representative Scott Randolph, a Democrat from Orlando, said that his wife had decided the only way to protect her rights was to, as he put it, “incorporate her uterus”. Maybe then the business sycophants of the Republican party would stop trying to micromanage it with laws circumscribing reproductive freedom. Speaker Dean Cannon said he was shocked – shocked! – at such language on the house floor, deeming it a breach of “decorum”. Stephanie Kunkel, Planned Parenthood’s Florida director, rolled her eyes: “If the speaker can’t bear to hear or say the word ‘uterus’, he shouldn’t be legislating it.” Newspaper columnists amused themselves concocting acceptable euphemisms: Frank Cerabino of the Palm Beach Post suggests “baby garage” . And that’s pretty much how Republicans see women – as a place to park a kid till he’s ready to pop out and go to Sunday School and learn that sex is filthy. Republican-controlled legislatures across the US are hell-bent on stopping women from exercising control over their own bodies. Florida is one of 13 states that would require women to have an ultrasound – which they would have to pay for – before terminating a pregnancy. In Indiana, Texas, Kentucky and four other states, a woman would be forced to look at the foetus. Doctors would have to describe to her, in great detail, the foetus and its physical functions. After all this, she would still have to cool her heels for several days before being permitted to actually have the abortion. Along with the waiting periods, which would seriously harm women in rural states who have to travel long distances to the only clinic or poor women who have to keep taking off work, some states want to allow only up to 20 or 21 weeks, the point at which many anti-choice activists claim foetuses feel pain. The medical evidence for this is highly disputed , but that doesn’t matter: science shouldn’t be allowed to get in the way of ideology. Mississippi, Alaska, Texas and Oklahoma tell women abortion increases their risk of getting breast cancer – even though the National Cancer Institute says that’s not true . Raising the ante, an Indiana legislator insists that women who are victims of rape or incest provide documentation – those chicks could so be lying! – while a Michigan legislator proposes a offering women a photograph of the foetus at least two hours before the abortion. Ohio Republicans want to ban abortions the minute a foetal heartbeat is detected, which could be as early as four or five weeks. In Texas, where they’re trying to restrict RU-486, the “morning after pill”, the legislature also threatened to cut funding for low-income contraception programmes on the logic that birth control among the poor leads to increased abortion rates. That’s bad and stupid, but not as bad and stupid as what’s going on in Louisiana where Representative John LaBruzzo has introduced a bill to outlaw all abortions – no exceptions, even where the life of the mother is at risk – and charge doctors who perform abortions with “foeticide”. On 26 April, Mother Jones reported that LaBruzzo would also like to make criminals of women who have abortions , but that he may remove that provision in his bill, making it easier to pass. LaBruzzo’s law would be, of course, unconstitutional. A lot of these new state laws (and some old ones) are unconstitutional. Women have a right to get an abortion (with some restrictions), and have had that right since 1973 when the US supreme court ruled in Roe v Wade. But unconstitutionality is the point. Anti-choicers no longer want to tinker with a state statute here and there; they want Roe v Wade overturned. They want to return to the bad old days of back streets and coathangers, of the wages of sin and Taliban-style circumscription of female sexuality. John LaBruzzo has admitted that he wants to “immediately go to court”. The plan is for one state of another’s illegal abortion laws to make it to a hearing before the US supreme court where Roe v Wade can be refought and, maybe, come out differently this time. At the moment, there are four solid pro-Roe votes (Kagan, Ginsburg, Breyer and Sotomayor) on the nation’s highest court and four solid antis (Roberts, Alito, Thomas and Scalito). Justice Anthony Kennedy, always the swing vote between the court’s progressive and rightwing blocks, has, up to now, voted to uphold a woman’s right to choose. Nevertheless, some think he might change his mind. Or that he might want to let each individual state decide where it stands on abortion. Or, if a Republican president is elected in 2012, Kennedy may retire from the court, opening up a place for a Roe foe. And you thought the Republicans were only interested in the economy. Outlawing abortion is the long-cherished dream of every evangelical in the US, especially the ones born without ovaries. Back in Florida, the resistance is mobilising: the uterus has its own Facebook page . Susannah Randolph , now famous as the woman who threatened to incorporate her uterus, has suggested starting a political action committee called U-Pac . “Who’s in?” she blogged. “It’s time to bring power back to the uterus.” The sister speaks true. As Gloria Steinem said, so many years ago: “If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament.” Abortion Women United States US politics Republicans Florida US constitution and civil liberties US supreme court Diane Roberts guardian.co.uk

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Perfect coronation chicken

Retro classic or best left in the 50s? This not-so-posh nosh revamp could make a right royal triumph of your wedding supper How the mighty have fallen. From royal favourite to sadly soggy sandwich-filling in a single reign, coronation chicken has experienced a decline in fortunes that would give even Fergie’s accountant cause for concern. But then this 50s favourite has never been quite as posh as it seems. Created by the founder of Le Cordon Bleu cookery school, Rosemary Hume – rather than her better-known business partner, celebrity florist Constance Spry, as is often claimed – poulet reine Elizabeth , as it was originally known, was a deliberate and tactful compromise between the luxurious and the thrifty for a country still under the dreary yoke of postwar rationing. When I used my assembled family as (strangely carnivorous) guinea pigs over the Easter weekend, my father recalled how in his postwar childhood chicken was a Christmas treat and curry nothing but a vaguely bohemian rumour in his part of south London. So he was as surprised as anyone to hear that, according to cultural historian Joe Moran, coronation chicken was “designed as Britain’s first ‘TV dinner’” . Hume knew that anyone who had access to a set would be glued to it all day – hence, to be a success, her dish had to be easy both to prepare in advance and to eat with a fork. So practical was her creation that it proved an instant hit with the fashionable hostesses of the decade: “Not since Escoffier invented peach melba has a dish so fast become so famous,” Prue Leith has observed. It may be more retro than regal these days, but those same qualities make coronation chicken a useful party standby some 60 years on – whether you’re celebrating the royal wedding or International Workers’ Day . The original Rosemary Hume’s original recipe contains a few surprises. For a start, instead of just chucking in any old bit of leftover poultry, I’m instructed to poach a chicken specially with parsley, thyme and bay, plus peppercorns and carrot, and allow it to cool in the liquid before pulling the meat off the bone. The dressing, meanwhile, is more complicated than the modern mess of mayo and curry powder would have one believe. After softening some onion in oil, I stir in curry powder, tomato puree and half a glass each of red wine and water, bringing it all to the boil before seasoning with salt, sugar, pepper and lemon juice and letting the mixture simmer for 10 minutes. Once cooled, I fold it through mayonnaise and add 1 tbsp apricot puree, made from soaked and boiled dried apricots. It’s finished with 2 tbsp whipped cream, and then just enough of this mixture is added to “coat the chicken lightly”. No luridly oozing sandwiches here. It’s paler and pinker than the stuff we’re used to, and unexpectedly delicate in flavour. “I think this would have tasted more exotic in 1953,” my brother suggests, while my sister-in-law thinks the mayonnaise overpowers the spice. I quite like the combination of sweet fruit and tangy lemon juice, but it still lacks oomph to the modern palate. The fancy Telegraph food guru Xanthe Clay has kindly prepared the ground for me on this occasion : in a piece last summer, she came to the conclusion that a “modern and sassy” recipe from reader Simon Scutt was the queen bee’s knees of coronation chicken, though “it takes a bit of effort”, she admits – and the lady’s not kidding. After roasting my chicken with orange, cinnamon and bay leaves, I strip the carcass and use it to make a spicy stock with onion, garlic, white wine, fenugreek, coriander, cumin, curry powder and dried red chilli. While this is reducing, I make a saffron, turmeric, milk, white wine and mango chutney marinade (keeping up?) and stir in fresh coriander, sultanas and chopped dried apricot. After waiting for both to cool, I mix them together and stir them into the chicken, then put it all in the fridge overnight where it sets to a day-glo yellow jelly. Just before serving (phew) I fold through toasted curry powder and ground coriander, creme fraiche and mayonnaise, which dilute the dish to a pleasant sunshine shade – everyone’s very eager to try this one. Some reckon the roasted chicken has a better flavour than the poached stuff, though the latter is undeniably juicier; the sauce has a less enthusiastic reaction – “it’s a bit bland and liquid”, my sister-in-law says, while my brother reckons it’s the buffet equivalent of a chicken korma: “Some people go into restaurants and order it, and they like it – but it’s not exactly exciting.” I’m disappointed that, after all the effort, it’s so underwhelming. Sorry Simon and Xanthe, but no crown for this one. The cheat’s version My previous attempts at coronation chicken have always involved Sunday’s leftovers, so I’m back on familiar ground with Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s recipe for cold cooked chicken. The dressing is simplicity itself: 2 tbsp “good spicy fruit chutney” (I use mango, in keeping with the Anglo-Indian theme), mixed with 1 tbsp “good Madras curry powder” and equal parts Greek yoghurt and mayonnaise and tossed through the meat, which is then left to marinate for a couple of hours and finally garnished with toasted almonds and chopped coriander. The sandy colour looks the part to our modern eyes, and the assertively fruity, spicy flavour wins fans too – everyone loves it, although my mum points out quite rightly that the raw curry powder adds a harsh note to the dressing. The yoghurt stops the mayonnaise from taking over the dish, without imparting the slightly buttery flavour of creme fraiche. A solid, crowd-pleasing recipe for anyone in a hurry – and I love the crunch of the nuts. The healthy take The National Dining Rooms at London’s National Gallery ought to know a thing or two about British cookery, and their recipe intrigues me. Like Hugh’s it uses a mixture of yoghurt and mayonnaise, but adds apricot conserve, fresh ginger and Worcestershire sauce to the curry powder. Other rogue elements include peas, sherry-soaked raisins and fresh parsley and coriander, folded into a rice salad with peppers and spring onions. The peas and raisins remind me forcefully of school curries of the 1980s and I think the jam is too sweet, but I like the tang of the Worcestershire sauce and the lightness of the dressing. For a buffet, it’s more elegant to serve the rice and salad separately too. The maverick Nigella Lawson is not apparently a lady to kowtow to royalty, and her take on the dish – renamed, perhaps wisely, golden jubilee chicken – is characteristically irreverent. (“Believe me,” she insists in her introduction, “no political affiliations are thereby intended”.) I mix cubes of fresh mango with finely chopped spring onion and red chilli, and spritz the whole lot with lime juice before adding chunks of cooked chicken, shredded little-gem lettuce and a handful of chopped coriander. Instead of mayonnaise there are groundnut and sesame oils. It’s fresh and zingy, but this is a dish that curtsies to south-east Asian rather than Anglo-Indian cuisine, and on a practical note I’m not sure how long it would be happy to sit around on the buffet table. Perfect coronation chicken Coronation chicken is a dish begging to be rescued from the retirement home of the chiller cabinet and given the respect it deserves: as Simon Hopkinson tartly observes, “those cowboys who continue to think that bottled curry paste mixed with Hellmann’s is in any way a reasonable substitute here need a good slap with a cold chapatti”. Like the monarchy itself, it’s evolved in the last 60 years. The modern palate demands more spice and a lighter, fresher flavour – and these days, with the kingdom of herb and spices available to us, it’s easy to update Rosemary Hume’s recipe to make a dish fit for a 21st-century queen (and the rest of us too). Serves 6 1 chicken, about 1.5kg 1 cinnamon stick 5 black peppercorns Pinch of saffron 1 tsp salt 4cm piece of fresh ginger Bay leaf 5 tbsp good quality mango chutney (I swear by Geeta’s ) 50g ready-to-eat dried apricots, finely chopped 2 tbsp good curry powder 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce 200ml homemade mayonnaise 200ml Greek yoghurt 50g flaked almonds, toasted Small bunch fresh coriander, chopped Green salad and basmati rice, to serve 1. Put the chicken, breast-side up, in a large pan along with the cinnamon, peppercorns, saffron, salt, the bay leaf and half of the ginger and fill with cold water until only the top of the breast is exposed. Cover with a lid and bring to a simmer, then turn down the heat so only the occasional bubble rises to the surface. Cook gently for about one and a half hours until the juices run clear. Take out of the pan and set aside to cool, then remove the meat in bite-sized pieces while lukewarm. Finely chop the rest of the ginger. 2. Put the mango chutney and apricots into a large bowl. Toast the curry powder in a dry frying pan until fragrant, then add the chopped ginger and stir both into the bowl, followed by the Worcestershire sauce, then the mayonnaise and yoghurt. Season to taste. 3. Once the chicken is cold, fold it through the dressing and refrigerate for at least a couple of hours before folding through most of the coriander and serving topped with the almonds, with a green salad and basmati rice. So – is curried chicken salad a party must-have in your house, or a dish best left in the 1950s? How do you make it or did you last have it in a soggy sandwich? Food & drink Chicken recipes Main course recipes Meat recipes Royal wedding Monarchy Weddings Felicity Cloake guardian.co.uk

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Long Form

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Long Form

President Obama on His Birth Certificate & the Real Issues Facing America Obama Birth Certificate: Day the Earth Stood Still WHITE HOUSE RELEASES OBAMA BIRTH CERTIFICATE White House Releases Obama's Long-form Birth Certificate – Big … The White House released the long form of President Barack Obama’s birth certificate Wednesday in response to questions about whether he was really born in the U.S.. The certificate says Obama was born in Hawaii, which makes him … Patterico's Pontifications » Birthmageddon: the Long Form Birth … UPDATE BY PATTERICO: So the “ long form ” — which supposedly cannot possibly be obtained by the President, because Hawaii supposedly never ever ever ever releases it (at least according to those who have confidently told me this) — has … President Obama Releases Long Form Birth Certificate | TPMDC Hoping to end a long-running “controversy” over whether he was born in the United States, the White House released President Barack Obama’s long-form birth certificate on Wednesday…. Balloon Juice » Not a True Long Form Document I have to say that I’m sort of disappointed that Obama released his “original” long-form birth certificate, which wasn’t necessary since his legal certificate as issued by the state had long been public. Donald Trump is now acting like … Birther Massacre at the Long Form Corral? | Talking Points Memo It’s surreal and weird and faintly ridiculous that it’s come to this. But this morning the White House caught the press corps seriously off guard by handing out copies of the anti-Holy Grail of birtherism, the fabled ‘ long form ‘ birth. mpbullship says: Obama's Long-Form Birth Certificate Released – NYTimes.com http://nyti.ms/i8kTAL

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CBS: Ryan Budget Opponents ‘Poignant’; Touted ‘Nasty’ Tea Parties in 2009

CBS's Early Show on Wednesday played up how opponents of Rep. Paul Ryan's budget plan shouted down GOP representatives at recent town hall meetings, but downplayed them as ” less than friendly ,” and marveled at their apparently ” poignant ” questions. The network also omitted how liberal groups targeted these meetings, and trumpeted the ” nasty national shouting match ” at health care town hall meetings in 2009. News anchor Jeff Glor noted how “House Republicans are back home for the first time since passing an aggressive deficit cutting plan , including the architect of that plan, Congressman Paul Ryan.” Glor used the “less than friendly” label immediately before playing a clip of an unidentified protester shouting, ” Ryan, stop lying! ” outside a town hall meeting held by the Republican in Wisconsin, and another of a woman who directly accused him of ” screwing our generation and the next generation .” The CBS anchor then introduced correspondent Nancy Cordes by asking her, “The exchange we just saw: typical of what you saw yesterday?” Cordes enthusiastically replied, ” Oh, yes, absolutely, Jeff ,” and continued that ” Congressman Ryan heard some poignant questions from constituents about his deficit reduction plan.” The correspondent didn't give an example of such a question during her report, but instead, played a clip from a video posted by Think Progress , the blog of the liberal group Center for American Progress, from a town hall meeting hosted by Florida Republican Dan Webster, where protesters screamed “liar” at the congressman (Think Progress's identifying graphic is clearly visible during the clip; see graphic at right). By contrast, on the August 12, 2009 edition of Early Show, then-host Russ Mitchell highlighted how ” Democratic lawmakers pushing reform are being jeered at testy town hall meetings ” and that the anti-Obamacare protests were proof that the debate over the health care issue was ” turning into a nasty national shouting match .” Politico's Marin Cogan reported on Monday that “liberal groups are amping up their efforts against House Republicans this week, targeting lawmakers in their districts in an effort to make GOP support of Paul Ryan’s budget blueprint a political liability ahead of the 2012 election….This week’s efforts continue a campaign by Democratic groups last week to shift the narrative on the Ryan budget in their favor. Last week, MoveOn encouraged its members to attend town halls and grill lawmakers on Medicare and Medicaid.” Neither Glor nor Cordes mentioned these detail during the report. The full transcript of the report, which began 8 minutes into the 7 am Eastern hour of Wednesday's Early Show: JEFF GLOR: House Republicans are back home for the first time since passing an aggressive deficit cutting plan, including the architect of that plan, Congressman Paul Ryan. In some places, the reception that Ryan got was less than friendly. UNIDENTIFIED PROTESTERS (chanting, from demonstration in Kenosha, Wisconsin): Ryan, stop lying! GLOR: Representative Ryan attended four town hall meetings in Wisconsin yesterday, where he heard from voters about his budget plan, which includes major changes to Medicare. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE 1 (from town hall meeting): You're screwing our generation and the next generation. REPRESENTATIVE PAUL RYAN: So the alternative is this, is a debt crisis? Is that your point? I mean, I can't- are you saying cut spending faster and deeper? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE 1: I'm saying your plan screws the next two generations. GLOR: CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes joins us from Kenosha, Wisconsin this morning. Nancy, good morning to you. The exchange we just saw: typical of what you saw yesterday? NANCY CORDES: Oh, yes, absolutely, Jeff- good morning. We went to all of those town hall meetings. They were packed to the gills, every one of them, and at each one, Congressman Ryan heard some poignant questions from constituents about his deficit reduction plan, and specifically, that part about Medicare, about overhauling Medicare, turning it essentially into a voucher system for future generations, where the government would give them a subsidy, to then go ahead and buy private insurance. And this is something we're hearing about not just in Wisconsin, but at Republican town halls across the country. In fact, take a look at one exchange in Orlando, Florida between a constituent and Congressman Dan Webster, who is a Florida Republican. REPRESENTATIVE DAN WEBSTER (from town hall meeting): Not one senior citizen is harmed by this budget. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 1 (interrupting and shouting): What? You're a liar. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 2: You're a damned liar! GLOR: That was Nancy Cordes in Kenosha, Wisconsin, this morning.

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