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Prince William, Middleton wed in royal fashion
The longtime sweethearts began dating while students at University of St. Andrews in 2002. Their on-again, off-again relationship, cemented by an engagement announcement in November, restored fascination and luster to a British monarchy on levels unmatched since the star-crossed marriage of Prince William’s mother, Lady Diana, to Prince Charles in July 1981.
PHOTOS: The royal wedding in pictures
BLOG: Relive the royal wedding
THE DRESS: Kate’s gown wows
GUEST LIST: A look at who’s who
William, 28, is second in line to the throne. Kate, 29, a commoner, is the daughter of Michael and Carole Middleton, a former British Airways flight supervisor and flight attendant who became self-made millionaires after starting an Internet mail-order business.
William appeared to mouth the words “you’re beautiful” when Kate joined him at the altar. Though the groom seemed composed, the bride tightly gripped her father’s hand before saying her vows, reciting them so softly they were hard to hear. As he slipped the wedding ring onto Kate’s finger, it got hung up for a moment on her finger joint until he finally coaxed it into place. She escaped any such awkwardness: her husband will not wear a wedding ring, standard for male royal family members.
The celebrity-studded event, attended by 1,900, included singer Elton John, soccer star David Beckham and scores of royals and luminaries. A global TV audience was estimated at 2 billion, many who began watching coverage at 4 a.m. ET.
Royal fever was widespread in the USA, where events included live viewing in New York’s Times Square and a celebration party complete with prince and princess attire at Walt Disney World’s Wedding Pavilion.
For months, the media have been filled with royal wedding coverage, building to frenzied coverage over the past week. There was speculation over attendees, wedding cakes, honeymoon locales and the bride’s wedding dress.
For the record: Kate wore a white Sarah Burton creation with a 9-foot train and an ivory veil trimmed with embroidered flowers, held in place by a Cartier Halo tiara borrowed from the queen. The bouquet was shield-shaped with myrtle, lily of the valley, sweet William and hyacinth and made by floral designer Shane Connolly. The tradition of carrying myrtle began with Queen Victoria.
Prince William wore a cap and mounted officer dress uniform, befitting his honorary appointment in the army. He is commissioned in all three armed services and was made honorary colonel of the Irish Guards last year.
As custom, William received a new title before the wedding, when his grandmother Queen Elizabeth II bestowed him as the duke of Cambridge — the highest rank in British peerage. Kate will be known as the duchess of Cambridge. They were also given the Scottish titles of earl and countess of Strathearn.
A testimony to British tradition, the wedding offered many, especially Britons, some respite from hard economic times and a government-imposed austerity plan. There were even betting pools wagering on everything from the color of the queen’s hat to who might cry at the ceremony to potential gaffes.
“I’m not a massive royal family watcher, but it’s been absolutely fascinating, in part because William is very much Diana’s son,” says Nathalie Haxby, communication director for British media agency MEC who watched the event on TV. “But it’s as much about the fairy tale — Kate becoming a princess and ascending to this royal, fairy-tale family.”
Expat Margaret Jones, an executive assistant who has lived in Indiana since 1983, planned to DVR the event. “The pomp and circumstance is a nice positive thing to watch,” she said.
The palace has not disclosed the cost of the wedding, but estimates are in the tens of millions of dollars. The royal family and Middleton’s parents paid for the wedding; British taxpayers picked up the tab for security, about $32 million.
Thousands of people flooded the streets in densely packed London, including many whom camped on the streets for days before the big event. When William and Kate left Westminster Abbey in a horse-drawn carriage bound for Buckingham Palace, they drew huge cheers from flag-waving well-wishers.
About an hour after the ceremony, the couple exchanged two brief kisses before an adoring crowd at Buckingham Palace.
Anne Larsen, 34, flew in from Boulder, Colo., on Thursday. “I was giddy flying in yesterday. I had butterflies in my stomach.”
Larsen had planned to watch the wedding on the Mall but wound up in a restaurant near St. James’s Palace. As she sipped Champagne, Larsen checked her phone. “All my friends are up at home. I’ve had about 25 texts,” she said.
Louise Llewellyn brought daughter Megan, 15, in from Southampton. “We’re royalists,” Louise said. They plotted where to go for the best viewing spot. “We’ve got milk crates with us,” she said, in case they need to step above the crowd.
Jonathan Nosworthy of rural Warwickshire watched with daughters Rebecca, 4, and Ellie, 5. “It’s fun for the little ones to be able to talk about this when they’re 90. Not that anyone can really see anything, anyway,” Nosworthy said. “They’re obsessed with it.”
Eugenia Preoteasa, a Romanian immigrant who works in catering, had her nosed pressed up against the plate-glass window of a restaurant just off Piccadilly. Inside, flat-screen TVs carried images of a beaming Kate inside Westminster Abbey.
“Oh my, oh my, she is just so beautiful,” says Preoteasa of Braila, Romania. “I was waiting and so curious to see about if she would wear her hair down, and she did.”
Preoteasa said Kate reminds her of a daughter studying piano in Birmingham, Ala. “She will certainly be calling me to ask about the details of the day here. And you know what? Her name is Diana,” she says with a smile.
Why not just stay at home in front of her own TV? “No, I had to be out here,” she says, sweeping an arm toward the flag-waving throngs passing by. “This is what it is all about. Everyone celebrating together.” By News
Earth Hour fans ‘disappointed’ to see so many lights still on

Last year, the city’s Earth Hour efforts saved 296 megawatts; in 2009, it was 454 megawatts.
Meanwhile, Nova Scotia Power reported saving 10 megawatts of power, a significant drop from last year’s 18 megawatts.
Utilities in other provinces said it could take them until Monday to calculate the results.
Some experts say Earth Hour is losing steam now that the novelty has worn off.
But Steven Price of the World Wildlife Fund, which runs Earth Hour, said the goal isn’t to boost energy savings during the event.
“What we want is the participation, because it’s an awareness campaign that allows people to take some action” to fight climate change, he said after Saturday’s Earth Hour.
Workers evacuated as radiation levels climb

TEPCO says workers have been evacuated from the reactor’s turbine building.
The workers had been struggling to pump radioactive water out of the plant.
Radiation levels in the sea off the the plant are also on the rise.
The offshore radiation levels have now risen to 1,850 times normal from 1,250 on Saturday, Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said.
Senior agency official Hidehiko Nishiyama says the radiation particles will be dispersed and diluted, posing no threat to marine life or food safety.
Meanwhile, Yukiya Amano, director-general of the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), warned Japan’s nuclear emergency could go on for weeks, if not months.
Air raids force Gadhafi retreat, rebels seize east
AJDABIYA, Libya — Libyan rebels clinched their hold on the east and seized back a key city on Saturday after decisive international airstrikes sent Moammar Gadhafi’s forces into retreat, shedding their uniforms and ammunition as they fled.

Ajdabiya’s initial loss to Gadhafi may have ultimately been what saved the rebels from imminent defeat, propelling the U.S. and its allies to swiftly pull together the air campaign now crippling Gadhafi’s military. Its recapture gives President Barack Obama a tangible victory just as he faces criticism for bringing the United States into yet another war.
In Ajdabiya, drivers honked in celebration and flew the tricolor rebel flag. Others in the city fired guns into the air and danced on burned-out tanks that littered the road.
Their hold on the east secure again, the rebels promised to resume their march westward that had been reversed by Gadhafi’s overwhelming firepower. Rebel fighters already had pushed forward to the outskirts of the oil port of Brega and were hoping to retake the city on Sunday, opposition spokeswoman Iman Bughaigis said, citing rebel military commanders. By News
Libyan rebels regain key city after airstrikes
AJDABIYA, Libya — Libyan rebels regained control of the eastern gateway city of Ajdabiya on Saturday after international airstrikes crippled Moammar Gadhafi’s forces, in the first major turnaround for an uprising that a week ago appeared on the verge of defeat. In a western city the opposition lost to Gadhafi, a resident said security agents had lists of rebel sympathizers and were dragging them from their homes.
Drivers honked in celebration and flew the tricolor rebel flag. Others in the city fired their guns into the air and danced on burned-out tanks that littered the road. Inside a building that had served as makeshift barracks for pro-Gadhafi forces, hastily discarded uniforms were piled on the floor.By News
“Without the planes we couldn’t have done this. Gadhafi’s weapons are at a different level than ours,” said Ahmed Faraj, 38, a rebel fighter from Ajdabiya. “With the help of the planes we are going to push onward to Tripoli, God willing.”
Ajdabiya’s sudden fall to Gadhafi’s troops spurred the swift U.N. resolution authorizing international action in Libya, and its return to rebel hands on Saturday came after a week of airstrikes and missiles against the Libyan leader’s military.
French planes struck Libyan air base overnight
French planes struck Libyan air base overnight Spokesman Thierry Burkhard told a news briefing that around 15 French planes were deployed Wednesday and a dozen overnight, leading to missile strikes on an air base some 155 miles inland from Libya’s Mediterranean coast.
“We are not changing tack, action is continuing,” Burkhard said.
Earlier Thursday, French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe defended the pace of the coalition air operation, which has been spearheaded by France. He said five days was not long enough to achieve its goal of protecting civilians by crushing Gaddafi’s counter-offensive against rebel forces. By News
South Korean island opposes plans to unleash pamphlet-laden balloons against North
A South Korean island that has found itself in the middle of a propaganda war with the North aims to stop anti-Pyongyang activists from launching pamphlet-carrying helium-filled balloons across the border for fear of a backlash.

The decision, reached at a meeting of the heads of 18 districts in Baengnyeong island, came after the communist North issued a fresh warning that it would open fire at places wherever activists released helium-filled balloons carrying leaflets containing news of Arab uprisings and calling for the overthrow of the North’s regime.
10,000 people missing in Japanese port

About 10,000 people are reportedly unaccounted for in the Japanese port town of Minamisanriku in quake-hit Miyagi prefecture.
The news has come from public broadcaster NHK.
The figure is more than half of the population of about 17,000 in the town on the Pacific coast.

Local authorities are trying to find their whereabouts with the help of Self-Defence Forces, NHK said.
Authorities have so far confirmed that about 7500 people were evacuated to 25 shelters after Friday’s quake, but they have been unable to contact the other 10,000, NHK said.By News



