Yahoo! News: Iraq
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- White House Calls CNN 'Fake News' After Outlet Mixed Up 2 Indian-Americans
- New York Bomber Sought An ISIS-Inspired Attack With Failed Device, Investigators Say
- Famous China rooftopper 'confirmed dead' after fall from skyscraper
- Judge Warns Paul Manafort About Ghostwriting Op-Eds And Talking To The Media
- Seven of the Best Cheap Mid-Engine Sports Cars
- Kelsey Grammer says he forgives sister’s rapist and killer but he does not deserve freedom
- Israel, Turkey leaders trade insults over US Jerusalem decision
- California's Thomas Fire Now Ranks Among Largest In State History
- Star U.S. Diplomat Quits With Fiery Letter To Rex Tillerson
- Serial Killer Taunts Police In New Letter, Claims There Are More Victims
- Russia’s Su-57 Stealth Fighter Is Destined to Fail
- AP: Rohingya methodically raped by Myanmar's armed forces
- Racial dispute at beloved bakery roils liberal college town
- Oxford Researchers Make Startling Discovery About Ancient St. Nicholas Relic
- Los Angeles subway work uncovers array of Ice Age fossils
- Nobel Peace Prize winners warn nuclear war is 'a tantrum away'
- Dying polar bear roams iceless land for food in 'soul-crushing' video
- Fox News Anchor Fumbles With Facts During Segment On 'Fake News'
- Inside The Voucher Schools That Teach L. Ron Hubbard, But Say They’re Not Scientologist
- Battle for Moscow: How Russia Stopped Nazi Germany's Military
- Syrian army and Iranian-backed militias push towards Idlib province
- What Is Eggnog Made Out Of, Anyway?
- California fires: more mass evacuations as Thomas Fire rages on
- US wants world to isolate North Korea, so what's that mean?
- 17 Twists On Shepherd's Pie Your Winter Dinner Rotation Is Missing
- China, Taiwan spar over Chinese diplomat's invasion threat
- US man on the run after escaping notorious Bali prison
- Vladimir Putin announces Russian withdrawal from Syria during visit to airbase
- How Long Can You Keep Meat In The Freezer?
- Thousands of Saakashvili supporters stage protest against Ukraine president
- The Army's Has Over 100,000 'New' M4A1 Rifles - Here's What They Can Do
- The fight for the Dream Act is reaching its peak – but time is running out
- Suspect Arrested in Shooting of Nick and Drew Lachey's Bar Manager
- Watch a Barn-Find Tucker Lay Numbers on a Dyno
- 17 Game-Changing Guinness Recipes
- Paris threatens Airbnb with court case
- Charlie Sheen Sues National Enquirer Over Corey Haim Rape Allegation
- The Latest: Official: Bombing suspect came to US 7 years ago
- Why is America Addicted to Foreign Interventions?
- Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Girlfriend Lauren Hashian Are Expecting a Baby Girl!
- 5 Retirement Fees You Should Never Pay
- Court reverses itself and restores woman's murder conviction
- Uranium Company Urged Trump To Carve Up Bears Ears, Then He Did
- Starbucks Christmas Tree Frappuccino tastes like sugar and regret (but I took many photos)
- EU's big five criticise US tax plans, seek 'compromise'
- New York surgeon who treated Bono found dead in Park Avenue apartment in suspected suicide
White House Calls CNN 'Fake News' After Outlet Mixed Up 2 Indian-Americans Posted: 11 Dec 2017 12:58 PM PST |
New York Bomber Sought An ISIS-Inspired Attack With Failed Device, Investigators Say Posted: 11 Dec 2017 04:48 AM PST |
Famous China rooftopper 'confirmed dead' after fall from skyscraper Posted: 11 Dec 2017 04:27 AM PST A famous Chinese 'rooftopper' fell to his death from a skyscraper in a daring £11,000 challenge as he sought to use his fame to help lift his family out of poverty, media reported. Wu Yongning, aged 26, fell from the summit of the 62-storey Huayuan Hua Centre in the central city of Changsha, apparently as he attempted to scoop 100,000 yuan (£11,200) for a clip promoting an unnamed sponsor, reports say. The former movie stuntman had one million followers on the Chinese Internet and was well known for fearlessly scaling towering skyscrapers without any safety equipment. More than 300 videos of him tip-toeing on scaffolding or doing pull-ups as he hung from the side of huge buildings were widely shared by his fans. However, his account on Sina Weibo, China's version of Twitter, went silent around a month ago after he purportedly attempted the Changsha skyscraper. The former movie stuntman had one million followers on the Chinese Internet and was well known for fearlessly scaling towering skyscrapers without any safety equipment And last Friday his girlfriend wrote online: "Today is December 8th. It makes me think of November 8th, the day you left us and left this world." The Changsha Evening News said Mr Wu was seeking to make money for his poverty-striken family and pay medical costs for his mother, who suffers from a mental condition. Local officials said authorities would support his family following the accident. Police confirmed that Mr Wu died when he fell from the Huayuan Hua Centre on November 8, reports said. His family were quoted in a news portal run by Beijing News that he was due to receive a huge cash payout for a two minute clip on a Changsha skyscraper on the same date. Additional reporting by Christine Wei |
Judge Warns Paul Manafort About Ghostwriting Op-Eds And Talking To The Media Posted: 11 Dec 2017 11:22 AM PST |
Seven of the Best Cheap Mid-Engine Sports Cars Posted: 11 Dec 2017 08:08 AM PST |
Kelsey Grammer says he forgives sister’s rapist and killer but he does not deserve freedom Posted: 10 Dec 2017 07:00 AM PST Kelsey Grammer has spoken about his grief following his sister's murder in 1975. Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, the Frasier actor said he has forgiven the man who sexually assaulted and killed his sister. Karen Grammer was abducted, raped and murdered at the age of 18 by Freddie Glenn and accomplice Michael Corbett on 1 July 1975. |
Israel, Turkey leaders trade insults over US Jerusalem decision Posted: 10 Dec 2017 01:19 PM PST Relations between Israel and Turkey took a bitter turn Sunday as their leaders traded accusations of involvement in terrorism, days after the US recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he would fight against the controversial declaration, describing Israel as a "terrorist state" that kills children, in a speech in Istanbul. Hours later Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hit back, calling his counterpart a leader who bombs Kurdish villagers and supports terrorists, during an official visit to Paris. |
California's Thomas Fire Now Ranks Among Largest In State History Posted: 10 Dec 2017 12:33 PM PST |
Star U.S. Diplomat Quits With Fiery Letter To Rex Tillerson Posted: 10 Dec 2017 07:26 AM PST |
Serial Killer Taunts Police In New Letter, Claims There Are More Victims Posted: 11 Dec 2017 01:04 AM PST |
Russia’s Su-57 Stealth Fighter Is Destined to Fail Posted: 11 Dec 2017 04:29 AM PST |
AP: Rohingya methodically raped by Myanmar's armed forces Posted: 11 Dec 2017 02:24 PM PST |
Racial dispute at beloved bakery roils liberal college town Posted: 11 Dec 2017 06:32 AM PST |
Oxford Researchers Make Startling Discovery About Ancient St. Nicholas Relic Posted: 11 Dec 2017 11:35 AM PST A post shared by Dr Georges Kazan (@drgeorgeskazan) on Dec 5, 2017 at 4:56pm PST Researchers at Oxford University have used modern scientific technology to test a religious relic believed to belong to St. Nicholas, the fourth-century Christian bishop whose generosity inspired the legend of Santa Claus. |
Los Angeles subway work uncovers array of Ice Age fossils Posted: 11 Dec 2017 12:15 PM PST |
Nobel Peace Prize winners warn nuclear war is 'a tantrum away' Posted: 10 Dec 2017 09:29 AM PST Mankind's destruction caused by a nuclear war is just one "impulsive tantrum away", the winners of the Nobel Peace Prize, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), warned on Sunday as the United States and North Korea exchange threats over the nation's nuclear tests. "Will it be the end of nuclear weapons, or will it be the end of us?" ICAN head Beatrice Fihn said in a speech after receiving the peace prize on behalf of the anti-nuclear group. |
Dying polar bear roams iceless land for food in 'soul-crushing' video Posted: 11 Dec 2017 10:47 AM PST Heartbreaking footage of a starving polar bear desperately searching for food on iceless land highlights the "real face of climate change", conservationists say. Photojournalist Paul Nicklen said his team were moved to tears as they captured the struggling animal's battle to stay alive on Canada's Baffin Island last summer. The "soul-crushing" scene, captured by marine conservationists SeaLegacy, shows the emaciated bear searching an abandoned Inuit camp for sustenance. "My entire SeaLegacy team was pushing through their tears and emotions while documenting this dying polar bear," explained Mr Nicklen. "It's a soul-crushing scene that still haunts me, but I know we need to share both the beautiful and the heartbreaking if we are going to break down the walls of apathy. This is what starvation looks like. The muscles atrophy. No energy. It's a slow, painful death. Polar bears are listed as vulnerable due to a "loss of sea ice habitat from climate change" Credit: AP "When scientists say polar bears will be extinct in the next 100 years, I think of the global population of 25,000 bears dying in this manner. There is no band aid solution. There was no saving this individual bear. People think that we can put platforms in the ocean or we can feed the odd starving bear. "The simple truth is this - if the Earth continues to warm, we will lose bears and entire polar ecosystems. This large male bear was not old, and he certainly died within hours or days of this moment. But there are solutions. We must reduce our carbon footprint, eat the right food, stop cutting down our forests, and begin putting the Earth-our home-first." His colleague Cristina Mittermeier said it was "one of the hardest shoots we have ever had to do". "Through tears, we were able to capture this footage with the hope of awakening people to the realities of a climate change future," she said. Polar bears are the poster child for climate change Credit: AP SeaLegacy said though it couldn't say with 100 per cent certainty what had caused the bear to starve to death, the group added: "We do know that he didn't have any visible wounds and that he was not an old bear. "Many of you have asked whether we could have saved this individual bear, but the hard truth is that he was on his last legs and his muscles had atrophied beyond repair. It would also have been illegal to feed him, to approach him, or to do anything to ease his pain." The group warned an increasing number of polar bears are likely to die in this way "as a result of our warming climate". "As global temperatures rise, the amount of multi-year sea ice in the Arctic shrinks. Polar bears depend on that ice to travel large distances and to hunt for their food. Without sea ice this will become a common scene across the Arctic," they said. The World Wildlife Fund says polar bears are vulnerable due to a "loss of sea ice habitat from climate change". A study published last year by University of Washington researchers found that polar bears across the Arctic are facing a shorter sea ice season, a surface they depend on for hunting, travelling and breeding. |
Fox News Anchor Fumbles With Facts During Segment On 'Fake News' Posted: 10 Dec 2017 04:13 PM PST |
Inside The Voucher Schools That Teach L. Ron Hubbard, But Say They’re Not Scientologist Posted: 11 Dec 2017 03:02 AM PST |
Battle for Moscow: How Russia Stopped Nazi Germany's Military Posted: 11 Dec 2017 11:33 AM PST Would the capture of Moscow have altered the outcome of World War II? Moscow was more than the administrative capital of the Soviet Union: it was also a vital rail hub and production center. There was also the symbolic value: totalitarian dictators, like Hitler and Stalin, crafted images of themselves as all-knowing leaders of their nations. |
Syrian army and Iranian-backed militias push towards Idlib province Posted: 10 Dec 2017 04:11 PM PST By Suleiman Al-Khalidi AMMAN (Reuters) - The Syrian army and Iranian-backed militias backed by Russian air power stepped up a military campaign against rebels in eastern Hama province in a push towards the rebel stronghold of Idlib province in northwestern Syria, rebels and witnesses said. The Islamist Hayat Tahrir al Sham and some Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebel faction in control of these areas said they were sending reinforcements to seize back a string of villages in the northeastern Hama countryside, near the town of Rihjan, that the army had earlier announced were captured in heavy fighting. |
What Is Eggnog Made Out Of, Anyway? Posted: 11 Dec 2017 06:52 AM PST |
California fires: more mass evacuations as Thomas Fire rages on Posted: 10 Dec 2017 10:22 AM PST As of Sunday morning, the Thomas Fire had blackened some 173,000 acres across Santa Barbara County and Ventura County, incinerating more than 750 structures and endangering another 15,000. If you are ordered to evacuate, leave immediately," an alert from the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office said. Power company Southern California Edison estimated that the Thomas Fire had deprived nearly 90,000 customers of power. |
US wants world to isolate North Korea, so what's that mean? Posted: 09 Dec 2017 05:34 PM PST WASHINGTON (AP) — When President Donald Trump's U.N. ambassador recently urged the world to sever diplomatic ties with North Korea, she was sketchy on the details: Should all embassies close? How about those providing the U.S. intelligence from the largely inscrutable country? And what of Sweden, which helps with imprisoned Americans? |
17 Twists On Shepherd's Pie Your Winter Dinner Rotation Is Missing Posted: 11 Dec 2017 10:22 AM PST |
China, Taiwan spar over Chinese diplomat's invasion threat Posted: 11 Dec 2017 05:44 AM PST |
US man on the run after escaping notorious Bali prison Posted: 10 Dec 2017 11:07 PM PST A US man convicted on drugs charges escaped Bali's notorious Kerobokan jail in an early Monday morning jailbreak with another American prisoner who was caught almost immediately, an official said. The pair made a break from the Indonesian resort island's main prison by cutting a hole in the roof with a hacksaw, authorities said. Foreigners are regularly arrested for drugs offences on Bali. |
Vladimir Putin announces Russian withdrawal from Syria during visit to airbase Posted: 11 Dec 2017 05:08 AM PST Vladimir Putin has said Russia will withdraw the bulk of its forces from Syria following the "successful intervention" in the conflict there. The announcement comes after the defence ministry said last week that Russia had "completely liberated" Syria from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil), despite reports that the terrorist group still controls some remote territory there. Speaking to soldiers at Russia's Khmeimim airbase during his first trip to Syria, where he was welcomed by Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, Mr Putin said he was ordering the defence minister and head of the general staff to begin withdrawing Russian forces to their home bases. "In two-and-a-half years, Russia's military along with the Syrian army have defeated the most battle-worthy gang of international terrorists," Mr Putin said. "In connection with this, I've made the decision that a significant part of the Russian military contingent located in the Syrian Arab Republic will return home to Russia." VIDEO: Putin visits Russian troops at Syria's #Khmeimim Airbase https://t.co/yX35LANrqSpic.twitter.com/DVXZdl5kHS— RT (@RT_com) 11 December 2017 Moscow will continue to operate the Khmeimim airbase as well as its naval base in Tartus and will crush any further terrorist activities in Syria, he said. "If the terrorists raise their head again, we will hit them with such strikes as they have never seen," Mr Putin said. "We will never forget the casualties and losses that we suffered in the fight with terrorism here in Syria as well as at home in Russia." Vladimir Putin with Bashar al-Assad during his visit at Hmeymim base Credit: Kremlin Press Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images The president told his troops they were "returning with victory" to their homeland and loved ones. Mr Putin's triumphant visit to Syria comes days after he said he would run for re-election in March, a vote that is expected to keep him in power until 2024, nearly as long as Joseph Stalin. He is expected to make Russia's more aggressive foreign policy and defiance of the West a centerpiece of his campaign. Assad welcomes Putin The leaders embrace on the tarmac Mr Putin also met with president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in Egypt on Monday and was traveling on to Turkey to speak with president Recep Tayyip Erdogan as part of a strengthening of ties and the two countries. During the sit-down, Mr al-Sisi called for the Syria de-escalation zones established by Iran, Russia and Turkey to be expanded. Mr Putin said Russia was ready to resume flights to Egypt, which were suspended after the bombing of a Russian airliner on Halloween 2015. Russia has also been drafting an agreement to deploy warplanes to Egypt, further increasing its presence in the Middle East. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Russian and Turkish leaders would discuss a political solution to the Syrian war. Mr Putin has met Mr Erdogan, who he once denounced as a backstabber after Turkey shot down a Russian plane in 2015, four times in the past two months. Vladimir Putin, left, and Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, arrive for their talks in Cairo Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP Russia's casualties have been mounting in Syria as its ground presence grew from advisers and military contractors to include special forces this fall, although the exact number of deaths remains secret. In September, Russia's top military adviser was killed by a mortar strike, and two Russians who were reportedly working for a Russian private contractor were captured by Isil and executed in September. Read more | Escape from Isil Mr Putin announced an air campaign in September 2015 to support his ally, an intervention that has turned the tide of the war and positioned Russia as one of the most influential voices in talks to deterine Syria's future. Russia, Turkey and Iran have been holding rival negotiations to the Western-backed talks in Geneva. Al-Assad visited Sochi last month, hugging his Russian counterpart and thanking him for "Russia's efforts to save our country". Mr Putin returned the gesture and hugged al-Assad when he disembarked his presidential plane in Syria on Monday. |
How Long Can You Keep Meat In The Freezer? Posted: 11 Dec 2017 10:22 AM PST |
Thousands of Saakashvili supporters stage protest against Ukraine president Posted: 10 Dec 2017 07:53 AM PST Several thousand people marched through central Kiev on Sunday to protest against the detention of Ukrainian opposition figure Mikheil Saakashvili and call for the impeachment of President Petro Poroshenko. Saakashvili, president of his native Georgia for nine years until 2013, moved to Ukraine after a popular uprising there and served under Poroshenko as a regional governor from 2015-2016, before falling out with the Ukrainian leader. |
The Army's Has Over 100,000 'New' M4A1 Rifles - Here's What They Can Do Posted: 10 Dec 2017 05:10 AM PST To date, the Army has completed more than 117,000 M4A1 upgrades on the way to the eventual transformation of more than 480,000 M4 rifles. As a result, it is entirely conceivable that the Army will explore new requirements and technologies for the M4A1 as time goes on. The service's so-called M4 Product Improvement Program, or PIP, is a far-reaching initiative to upgrade the Army's entire current inventory of M4 rifles into higher-tech, durable and more lethal M4A1 weapons, Army spokesman Pete Rowland, spokesman for PM Soldier Weapons, told Scout Warrior in an interview. |
The fight for the Dream Act is reaching its peak – but time is running out Posted: 10 Dec 2017 11:00 PM PST Osmar Abad Cruz likes to say his mom is the "original Dreamer". Nearly 25 years later, Abad Cruz, now 29, is living the life his mother wanted him to have. This was possible in large part thanks to an Obama-era program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or Daca, which shielded nearly 800,000 young immigrants brought to the US as children from the threat of deportation. |
Suspect Arrested in Shooting of Nick and Drew Lachey's Bar Manager Posted: 11 Dec 2017 07:41 AM PST |
Watch a Barn-Find Tucker Lay Numbers on a Dyno Posted: 11 Dec 2017 09:09 AM PST |
17 Game-Changing Guinness Recipes Posted: 11 Dec 2017 10:12 AM PST |
Paris threatens Airbnb with court case Posted: 10 Dec 2017 04:46 PM PST The city of Paris on Monday threatened to take Airbnb to court if it does not delist hundreds of apartments whose owners have failed to register with the French capital's authorities. Mayor Anne Hidalgo's deputy in charge of housing, Ian Brossat, told AFP the city had written to five holiday rental sites -- Airbnb, HomeAway, Paris Attitude, Sejourning and Windu -- to demand they remove properties whose owners have defied the city's new registration requirements. Paris -- the world's third-most visited city, according to a Mastercard ranking -- is one of Airbnb's top markets, with some 65,000 homes listed. |
Charlie Sheen Sues National Enquirer Over Corey Haim Rape Allegation Posted: 10 Dec 2017 02:35 AM PST |
The Latest: Official: Bombing suspect came to US 7 years ago Posted: 11 Dec 2017 10:05 AM PST |
Why is America Addicted to Foreign Interventions? Posted: 10 Dec 2017 06:26 PM PST The United States engaged in forty-six military interventions from 1948–1991, from 1992–2017 that number increased fourfold to 188. At a time when the United States is preparing to increase Pentagon spending and escalate troop deployments overseas, an analysis of U.S. military interventions since the country's founding highlights two important and related dynamics. Second, U.S. military interventions since WWII have only rarely achieved their intended political objectives. |
Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Girlfriend Lauren Hashian Are Expecting a Baby Girl! Posted: 11 Dec 2017 04:15 PM PST |
5 Retirement Fees You Should Never Pay Posted: 11 Dec 2017 06:00 AM PST |
Court reverses itself and restores woman's murder conviction Posted: 11 Dec 2017 10:01 AM PST |
Uranium Company Urged Trump To Carve Up Bears Ears, Then He Did Posted: 10 Dec 2017 09:50 PM PST |
Starbucks Christmas Tree Frappuccino tastes like sugar and regret (but I took many photos) Posted: 10 Dec 2017 08:16 AM PST Nothing says Christmas like a cold cup of sugar. At least that's what I kept telling myself as I took a sip, and another one of the Christmas Tree Frappuccino. It's Starbucks' latest concoction that has people running out to corporate coffee shops, where they spend $5 and most likely take a bunch of smartphone photos to later post on social media. Like this: I have amended this pic.twitter.com/d46gbs1dyQ — Kerry Flynn �� (@kerrymflynn) December 10, 2017 Like any good business reporter, I jumped on the trend Sunday. After my editor shared a piece by The Denver Post reviewing the drink and some tweets of people's reactions, I asked if I could go get one and try it myself. Because that, my friends, is reporting. My @Starbucks Christmas tree Frappuccino doesn't look nearly as pretty as the one in the picture. pic.twitter.com/el2ql89VKf — ⚜️susan⚜️ (@NotYourFlyGurl) December 7, 2017 Well, I've been wanting to get one ever since my sister shared the Starbucks ad in our family group Thursday morning. Three hours later, my mom shared a picture of hers. Her review: "It is delicious." Her favorite part was the candied cranberry topping. Image: screenshot Image: screenshot I had participated in two of the previous limited-edition Starbucks drinks. The Unicorn Frappuccino, a trend debut, was actually not too bad in my biased opinion. Though I think I was on an emotional high because I drank them with Chloe the Mini Frenchie (RIP). important coffee meeting with @kerrymflynn who you would share a unicorn frappuccino with? ��☕️ A post shared by Chloe The Mini Frenchie (@chloetheminifrenchie) on Apr 19, 2017 at 5:53pm PDT The Zombie Frappuccino was strange, but I was also in the middle of emceeing an event in Columbus, Ohio. I definitely couldn't let this one escape me. And so that's how I ended up drinking 420 calories on a Sunday morning. Fortunately, I live four blocks from a Starbucks, so it wasn't too burdensome to put on a jacket and walk out in the cold weather for a frozen beverage. The most embarrassing part was probably ordering when I asked for a "Christmas Tree Frappuccino" and the barista replied, "What?" So then I had to repeat myself over a cringeworthy order while the person in front of me just sipped her cup of hot coffee. I waited to take a sip until I could take photos. Because, of course, that's exactly what Starbucks wants us all to do. All of our tweets are free ads. Actually, they're not just free. We're not getting paid. We're paying them. Starbucks is making money having us all make ads for them. It's brilliant, and I'm happy to be part of it. This looks absolutely horrible pic.twitter.com/VLzIWKzbQU — Kerry Flynn �� (@kerrymflynn) December 10, 2017 Look I'm an ad for @Starbucks (also my hand is so cold and I may die) pic.twitter.com/foM1Z6KUMp — Kerry Flynn �� (@kerrymflynn) December 10, 2017 I got home and looked at the drink on my counter. The Matcha whipped cream had melted to half its height from before. I finally noticed that there was no candied cranberry topping. But I regretfully took a sip. And oh man, it was not good. Thin Mints are great (Disclosure: I'm a Girl Scout). Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream is awesome. The Starbucks Christmas Tree Frappuccino is not either of those things. Every sip of this beverage is an overload of sugar. I'd rather crush up a bunch of Thin Mints and mix them with some ice and milk in a blender than continue sipping this. I'm not going to tell you not to get a Christmas Tree Frappuccino because you can probably make your own decisions. But this is not good and you can spend $5 on something else. If you need the picture, go to Starbucks and just wait for someone else to order one. But be good to yourself, and don't drink it. Honestly I don't know how I'm still doing this pic.twitter.com/V6MYMQTgcM — Kerry Flynn �� (@kerrymflynn) December 10, 2017 Please. WATCH: This mini elliptical is a spin class under your desk |
EU's big five criticise US tax plans, seek 'compromise' Posted: 11 Dec 2017 02:07 PM PST The finance ministers of the European Union's five biggest economies wrote to their American counterpart Monday to voice concerns over a US tax overhaul, saying Washington should adhere to "international obligations to which it has signed up". The letter, signed by the British, French, German, Italian and Spanish finance ministers, warned that "certain less conventional international tax provisions could contravene" tax treaties and could have "a major distortive impact on international trade". US Republicans in the House and Senate are working to come up with a final unified version of the reform that President Donald Trump can sign before the end of the year. |
New York surgeon who treated Bono found dead in Park Avenue apartment in suspected suicide Posted: 11 Dec 2017 08:56 AM PST A top US surgeon is said to have been found dead with a knife in his torso in his New York flat on Sunday in a suspected suicide. Dr Dean Lorich, 54, worked as Bono's Orthopaedic trauma surgeon after the U2 frontman fell off his bike in 2014 and required extensive reconstructive surgery. Dr Lorich, the father of three daughters, was the associate director of the Orthopedic Trauma Service at the Hospital for Special Surgery and a professor at Weill Cornell Medical College. |
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