Do you know where have good monster headpone?

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monster headphonesPresident Barack Obama toured a devastated neighborhood in Joplin, Mo., and offered consolation to survivors, promising sustained federal assistance to help the city rebuild after the deadliest tornado recorded in six decades. Officials say at least 142 people were killed in the city of about 35,000, and dozens more remain listed as missing. The Joplin tornado is one of more

 

monster beatsthan 1,300 such storms recorded so far this year, according to the National Weather Service. The previous yearly record was 1,817 tornadoes in 2004. The weather service has officially linked 512 deaths this year to tornadoes, making it the deadliest year since 1953.Obama Speaks at Memorial ServiceView Slideshow Eric Thayer/Reuters People attended a memorial service in Joplin, Mo., Sunday.More photos and interactive graphics The president flew over the miles of demolished landscape before landing in Joplin. He met with Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon before setting off on a walking tour of a neighborhood where there are block upon block of crushed

 

beats by dr drehomes, trees stripped of branches and fields of debris. Mr. Obama stopped to speak to people picking through the wreckage, many apparently out-of-towners who came to Joplin to help family members affected by the disaster. "This is not just your tragedy. It is a national tragedy and there will be a national response," Mr. Obama said.More         Tornado Deaths in 2011 Mr. Obama sounded a similar message at a memorial service in Joplin later Sunday afternoon. "Your country will be there with you every step of the way. We're not going anywhere," the president said to cheers.The president made a similar trip to Tuscaloosa, Ala., in April following another outbreak of tornados in Alabama and other parts of the U.S. South. Mr. Obama was in Europe when the Joplin tornado struck last Sunday. He told the more than 2,000

 

monster headphonespeople gathered for the memorial service that the city had shown the world how to pull together in tragedy. He told stories of heroic acts by residents who saved lives of others as the tornado bore down, even at the cost of their own lives. Seven more are confirmed dead in Joplin, Missouri raising the death toll from a powerful tornado to 139, ahead of U.S. President Obama's visit. Video courtesy Reuters.U.S. officials are trying to speed up assistance in the wake of the spate of flooding and tornado disasters this spring. Mr. Obama said Craig Fugate, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, has "probably been the busiest man in the federal government over this last bit of months." On Tuesday, a key House committee approved $1 billion in funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. FEMA currently has about $2.4 billion remaining in its disaster-relief account, but an official at the agency said it was too early to gauge the final costs stemming from historic flooding in the Mississippi basin and tornadoes.

Par lakeni le lundi 30 mai 2011

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