The search for MH370 resumes – The news about the US Mudslide gets worse and worse as recovery crews reveal the extent of the tragedy – And we’ll tell you where you are not allowed to eat Bats – And everyone loves Baby Gorillas in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

With better weather in the Indian Ocean west of Perth, the search for any sign of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is back in gear.  AMSA says four aircraft are flying over the search area, and three more are on the way to join the search.  They might already be there by the time you’re reading this.  The HMS Success and Chinese icebreaker Xue Long are there as well.  The Americans have pre-positioned a special “black box detector” to seek the flight data recorders should a debris field be located.  A lot of assets, but no sign of the missing plane and its 239 passengers and crew.

The death toll from a massive mudslide in America’s Pacific Northwest is now 16 lives lost.  And the possible location of eight more victims in the mountain town 80-kilometers north of Seattle, Washington could raise it to at least 24.  Authorities are working with a list of 176 people unaccounted for, although many names are believed to be duplicates.  Still, rescuers admit there could still be scores of people under the muck.

Canada has ruled out Ebola in the case of a man who fell ill after coming home from Western Africa, where an Ebola outbreak has killed more than 60 people.  The man showed signs of the deadly hemorrhagic fever, but the tests came back negative for the Ebola virus, the Marburg virus, Lassa fever, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever, and Rift Valley fever.  He’s still in isolation in hospital in Saskatoon. 

West African health officials are getting international help to try to contain the Ebola outbreak that killed 62 people in Guinea.  Patients with symptoms have been reported across the border in Sierra Leone and Liberia as well.  Guinea Health Minister says it appears bats are the “main agents” for spreading the virus – And so Guinea has banned the sale and consumption of bats to prevent the spread of the deadly virus.

North Korea fired two more missiles into the Sea of Japan, apparently in protest of US President Barack Obama successfully getting South Korea’s President and Japan’s Prime Minister to sit down for their first face-to-face talks, this happening on the sidelines of the nuclear weapons conference at The Hague.  Obama pledged America’s “unwavering commitment” to Tokyo and Seoul in the face of North Korea's nuclear program.  Earlier, a Japanese government official said the launches will not affect planned talks between Tokyo and Pyongyang this month over North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.

Japan’s Cherry Blossom season:  It’s ON!!  For the next week or so, workers will be cutting out of work early and heading to the parks for company parties beneath the Sakura.  TV weather forecasters will have Cherry Blossum maps.  Photos will be taken.  Booze will flow.  People will wear bunny ears.  Neckties will be used as headbands, as corporate party animals will do.  And they’ll post the evidence on YouTube, because everyone is doing it.  Then it’s back to normal.

El Salvador electoral court is rejecting an appeal by the right-wing Arena party against the results of the presidential election held on 9 March.  Former Marxist guerilla Salvador Sanchez Ceren won that contest by a slim 0.22 percent margin.  However, Arena still has one more appeal left at the Supreme Court, which could order another recount.

Air pollution kills about 7 million people worldwide every year.  A new report from the UN World Health Organization says more than half of the fatalities due to fumes from indoor stoves.  The agency says air pollution is the cause of about one in eight deaths and has now become the single biggest environmental health risk.

The Baby Gorilla delivered by caesarian section at the San Diego Zoo in California has been reunited with Mum.