Hour in key west. Now as far as rain goes. Not much to talk about that. A few showers over the Atlantic Ocean and thats about it, but why are we seeing those showers where they are . Well, due to that frontal boundary. Very weak though. Now what this will help as allow for the sunshine behind the front to return as High Pressure builds in across the sunshine state. So remember how it was very cloudy yesterday. Totally different later on today. We will see lots of sunshine. Still that slight shower chance for the rest of the morning until the front passes. Neki. Thnks a lot, jennifer. 2016 and the road pooh people call Super Saturday. When it was all said and done Bernie Sanders and ted cruz gained ground on the front runner. Ted cruz started off the night with a big win in kansas the vote in the caucus. Similar story in maine where cruz take the caucus takingg almost half the vote. In kentucky, trumpon with a narrow margin, 36 of the vote with cruzs 32 . Trump walked away in louisiana.
A number of the Sydney Theatre Company's luvvies took a recent curtain call draped in kaffiyehs, presumably to support Hamas and spray contempt at the Zionist Entity. A subscribers' backlash led to instructions they must never do so again, which marks a definite change from 2008. That was when Daniel Keene's The Serpent's Teeth also stumbled onto Middle East turf and the only complaints concerned a memorably stupid production
“The parade broke all records. Christchurch City Council organisers estimated it attracted a crowd of more than 100,000, outstripping the 1995 America’s Cup crowd of 60,000. “The large silver cup rode on the leading vehicle, under the watchful eye of minder Steve Lancaster. With him was captain Todd Blackadder, seeming not to notice placards exhorting him to stand for mayor.” Crean wrote that it took the parade more than an hour to inch its way through the central city, as players and team management shook hands with as many supporters as possible. “Stan Goston, 67, had travelled by rail and ferry from Palmerston North to take his four-year-old nephew, Tim Maddock, to the parade. He left 30 years ago but still supports Canterbury.