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Hurricane Alex: What's in a Name We Ask?

Author: World Market Media
What is in a name?  Well if you live near water these names meant something to you  Betsy, Inez and Beula  in the 60's - Celia, Agnes and Frederic in the 70's - Allen, Gloria and Hugo in the 80's -  Opal, Fran, Andrew in the 90's - Katrina, Rita and Ike in the 2000's. 

This is 2010 and we start a new decade of Hurricanes we are on alert because of the devastation they can bring.  It seems readiness and preparation are buzz words now versus the casual interest the Global economy had regarding Hurricanes before Katrina .  There is BC and an AD in the Hurricane world and it is BK and AK now.  Before Katrina and After Katrina........

(AP) Hurricane Alex flooded roads and forced thousands of people to evacuate fishing villages as it bore down on the northeastern Mexican coast.

Braving horizontal sheets of rain, Mexican marines went door-to-door in the small fishing community of Playa Bagdad, trying to evacuate villagers from rickety wooden shacks.

At least 50 people were easily persuaded to get aboard buses to shelters, but holdouts could be seen peeking through windows. One man rebuffed the navy's offer and quickly shut his plywood door.

"We're worried it's going to come hard," said Macedonia Villegas as she and her son readied their house before leaving with the marines. Surf pounded the nearby shore, and a lagoon swelled behind her home.

Emergency-preparedness workers also planned to evacuate 2,500 people from coastal areas east of Matamoros, said Civil Protection Director Saul Hernandez, who added that he was most concerned about 13,000 families in low-lying areas where there are few public utilities or city services.

The storm was far from the Gulf oil spill, but cleanup vessels were sidelined by the hurricane's ripple effects. Six-foot waves churned up by the hurricane splattered beaches in Louisiana, Alabama and Florida with oil and tar balls.

Alex, which had winds of 85 mph (135 kph), was the first June hurricane in the Atlantic since 1995, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida.

Bands of heavy rains quickly inundated roads in Matamoros, a worrisome sign with Alex expected to dump as much as 12 inches (30 centimeters) of rain in the region, with perhaps 20 inches (50 centimeters) in isolated areas.

The hurricane could become a Category 2 storm with winds of 96 mph (154 kph) before slamming into the coastline Wednesday evening or early Thursday about 100 miles (160 kilometers) south of Matamoros and Brownsville, Texas, the Hurricane Center said. The flat, marshy region is prone to flooding.

Many in the border city braved the growing rains: Commuters struggled to get to work, pedestrians crossed the bridge connecting Matamoros and Brownsville and newspaper hawkers manned the less-flooded intersections.

One flooded stretch of road nearly kept Mari Ponce from getting to her job at the Mundo Shelter, which was preparing for 800 people evacuated from fishing communities along the coast.

"It's not going to hit us (directly), but Matamoros is a place that really floods," she said.

Government workers stuck duct tape in X's across the windows of the immigration office at the main downtown bridge in Matamoros on Tuesday. Trucks cruised slowly down residential streets carrying large jugs of drinking water and cars packed supermarket parking lots.

Texas also watched Alex's outer bands warily. Alex was expected to bring torrential rains to a Rio Grande delta region that is ill suited — economically and geographically — to handle it.

Texas residents had been preparing for the storm for days, readying their homes and businesses and stocking up on household essentials. But concerns eased as the storm headed farther south toward Mexico.

Cameron County Judge Carlos Cascos said Brownsville and surrounding areas had "dodged a potentially violent storm," though flooding was still a worry. At least 70 residents had already taken shelter at a Brownsville high school.

On nearby South Padre Island, the mood was less anxious. Although hotels and restaurants looked deserted compared to the crush of vacationers who normally pack the popular vacation spot in the summer, those who stuck around didn't size up Alex as much of a threat.

One couple renewed their wedding vows on the beach as a few campers reluctantly moved their trailers out of the park hours before a mandatory evacuation deadline.

"It's June. It's too soon for hurricanes," said Gloria Santos, of Edinburgh, after hitching her trailer back to her truck.

Jerry Wilson, 50, also didn't think much of Alex, though he struggled in the fierce gusts to hoist a cloth-tipped pole to clean high-mounted cameras across the island that will let Internet viewers watch Alex's arrival live online.

"We got two generators and lots of guns and ammo, so we're not worried about it," Wilson said.

Oil rigs and platforms in the path of the storm's outer bands were evacuated, and President Barack Obama issued a pre-emptive federal disaster declaration for southern Texas counties late Tuesday.

The three oil rigs and 28 platforms evacuated are not part of the Gulf oil spill response.

In Louisiana, the storm pushed an oil patch toward Grand Isle and uninhabited Elmer's Island, dumping tar balls as big as apples on the beach. Cleanup workers were kept at bay by pouring rain and lightning that zigzagged across the dark sky. Boom lining the beach had been tossed about, and it couldn't be put back in place until the weather cleared.

"The sad thing is that it's been about three weeks since we had any big oil come in here," marine science technician Michael Malone said. "With this weather, we lost all the progress we made."

The National Weather Service said a hurricane warning was in effect Tuesday for Cameron, Willacy and Kenedy counties. The coastal warning covered Baffin Bay and 100 miles south to the mouth of the Rio Grande.

 


Disclosure: no positions

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/day-trading-articles/hurricane-alex-whats-in-a-name-we-ask-2760237.html

About the Author

 

About World Market Media:
WorldMarketMedia.com (The Global Online Investment Community) is a high traffic stock market, news data website providing cutting edge new media products and services to publicly traded companies worldwide. Our Editor's Desk authors insightful real-time coverage on the economy, the capital markets and their listed companies.

Michael & Diandra Douglas: Why Greed, Anger and Revenge Have No Place in Oakland County Divorce Courts

Author: Cameron Goulding

I read in the New York Post online edition that Michael and Diandra Douglas are once again back in a family law court, this time in New York.  This unfortunate couple filed for divorce in California over ten years ago, however, this week, Diandra filed a motion in the New York divorce courts seeking half of Michael's share of the proceeds of his most recent film which is set to release in September.  Ten years later and she still wants half, how can this be?

Legally, it is simple.  Basically, in California (as in Oakland County Michigan, even though we are not a community property state) any income earned through the actions of one spouse during the marriage is considered joint income of the married parties.  In addition, any property rights obtained through the work of either parties during the marriage is considered to be a marital property right.  In the Douglas's case, it appears that Michal Douglas entered into the contract for the movie "Wall street" (a classic) and performed the role of "Gordon Gekko" while he was married to Diandra.  Therefore, she was entitled to fifty percent of the proceeds from that movie.

The judgment of divorce then dictates how parties to a divorce will divide all of the income, assets and property rights earned during the marriage.  This is the tricky part.  Apparently, Diandra's attorneys must have included in the judgment a fifty percent share of Michael's contractual right to any "residuals, merchandising and ancillary rights" to the original movie "Wall Street".  The new movie is a sequel and that's the rub.  The judge in New York must now read the judgment, listen to argument and determine whether Michael and Diandra intended to include a sequel in the list of rights that she obtained to "Wall Street".

There are two lessons to be learned in this sad tale.  First, the importance of a well crafted judgment of divorce that includes all foreseeable possible future issues cannot be underestimated.  It is imperative to have an attorney draft this document in an exhaustive and meticulous manner, because often, as in the Douglas case, when parties continue to antagonize one another after the divorce, the decision will ultimately come down to the wording of the judgment.

The attorneys may have been able to avoid this issue by stating exactly what rights she has and what rights she does not have regarding each of his projects.  For instance, according to the article, the parties argued about "spin-offs"  in court as opposed to "sequels".  If this is true, Michael's attorneys probably should have specifically included language stating that rights to spin-offs are included but sequels are not included.  This open loop allows Diandra to get her foot in the door and proceed with legal argument.  This could be an extremely expensive error for Michael if he indeed did not intend to grant the rights to sequels in the judgment of divorce.

The second issue is that this case has a byline, Michael and Diandra have a son that is now in his twenties.  He is allegedly a drug dealer and has been convicted of drug related offenses.  During the hearings seeking leniency for his son in recent months, Michael could not help himself, he took the opportunity to besmearch his ex-wife, blame her for their son's problems and denigrate her parenting skills in open court.  This is obviously inappropriate testimony at his son's sentencing, however, Diandra made outrageous claims against Michael during the original divorce case which made him out to look like a sexual deviant.  In addition, it appears that she has used the divorce court system in an attempt to punish, humiliate and extort Michael.

The point is that both of these parties started out on the wrong note and carried forward this cacophony together.  They brought their anger and sense of need for vindication into court and used the courts to attempt to punish the other party and release their anger against the other party, which creates a vicious cycle indeed.  Frankly, in most cases most judge (in Oakland County divorce cases at least) do not put much weight on the many wrongs that parties have committed against one another, therefore, all this serves to do is fan the flames of litigation, which in turn prolongs the proceedings and has horribly negative effects on the parties' health, finances, welfare and most importantly, their children.

Perhaps this ten year saga of misery could have been avoided.  Is she had not started out trying to create scandal and misfortune or to punish him in court, or if he had decided not to hold onto his anger as shown by his recent statements at the leniency hearing, maybe they would not be in court in New York now interpreting the technical meaning of terms their attorneys put together for them in California a decade ago.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/law-articles/michael-diandra-douglas-why-greed-anger-and-revenge-have-no-place-in-oakland-county-divorce-courts-3136955.html

About the Author

Cameron Goulding is a North Oakland County Michigan Divorce Lawyer and has been providing the highest level of service to clients in Rochester, Rochester Hills, Bloomfield, Troy, Lake Orion, Oxford, Waterford and the surrounding communities in Genesee and Macomb Counties for over 14 years.  Mr. Goulding graduated from Michigan State University with a B.S. in Economics and Wayne State University Law School with a J.D.  He was one of the first attorneys awarded the Family Law Certificate by the Michigan Institute of Continuing Legal Education.  For more information visit http://www.camerongoulding.com

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