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Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- Trump: Arm some teachers to 'fire back if a savage sicko came to a school'
- Autopsy confirms Virginia woman was mauled to death by her own pit bulls
- Parkland Shooting Survivor’s Dad Escaped Earlier Las Vegas Shooting
- New York University issues public apology for 'racially insensitive' meal served during Black History Month
- Republican congresswoman: Many mass murderers are Democrats
- Dad who survived son's murder plot that killed mom, brother wants his life spared
- Pennsylvania GOP Pleads With SCOTUS Again To Let Them Use Gerrymandered Map
- Parkland School Shooting: Tape Delay Blamed for Confusion That Allowed Suspect to Escape
- Hem Is Having a 20% Off Sale and We're Freaking Out
- Shaken but unbowed, Florida survivors recount horrific stories as they lobby for change
- Wife of lawmaker who killed himself loses election bid
- Fourth fortune hunter dies looking for Fenn's Treasure
- At 'listening session' on school shootings, Trump urges giving teachers guns
- What Billy Graham's Death And His Son Franklin's Rise Reveal About America
- Crews to leave Puerto Rico as $750M Fluor contract nears end
- NRA’s Wayne LaPierre: ‘Elites’ don’t care about school safety
- 9 Converted Barn Homes: Beautiful Barn Style Home Inspiration
- Armed deputy at Florida high school resigns after failing to engage shooter
- North Korea cancelled historic meeting with US at last minute, reveals Trump administration
- Report Alleges Rampant Sexual Misconduct At Dallas Mavericks
- Models Carried Their Own Severed Heads At Gucci's Nightmarish Milan Fashion Show
- Donald Trump Jr. Loves India's 'Poorest Of The Poor' Because They Smile
- Parkland School Shooting Survivor David Hogg Responds to Conspiracy Theories: 'I'm Trying to Be an Activist'
- Secular and religious leaders pay tribute to Billy Graham
- These Surprising Countries Now Have the Most Powerful Passport in the World
- Malaysia holds Filipinos seeking to set up extremist cell
- 'Making a Murderer' case may go to Supreme Court: report
- The Latest: Sweden, Kuwait call for UN vote on Syria
- California student arrested with two assault rifles and 90 magazines after security guard overhears shooting threat
- Chloe Kim Poses With Her Adorable Dog On The Cover Of Sports Illustrated
- Ivanka Trump To Lead U.S. Delegation At Olympic Closing Ceremony
- It turns out Neanderthals painted art inside these European caves, not humans
- White powder and 'racist' letter sent to Meghan Markle
- More Cops In Schools Means More Black Kids In The Criminal Justice System
- Japan sees transfer at sea that may violate NKorea sanctions
- Iran teams carry plane crash dead down from mountain
- Democrats want $300 million to fight possible Russia election tampering
- Ex-Arkansas judge sentenced to 5 years in sexual favors case
- 'Walking Dead' Star Admits To That Eye-Opening Mistake
- Tweeters Rip 'Zombie' Donald Trump Over 'Listening Session' Cheat Sheet
- Supreme Court to hear case of worker fees to Big Labor
- 13 Genius Ways To Use Ground Lamb
- Prince William Is Looking for Adventure on a Motorcycle Because Future Kings Can Have Fun Too
Trump: Arm some teachers to 'fire back if a savage sicko came to a school' Posted: 22 Feb 2018 06:01 AM PST |
Autopsy confirms Virginia woman was mauled to death by her own pit bulls Posted: 22 Feb 2018 07:42 AM PST |
Parkland Shooting Survivor’s Dad Escaped Earlier Las Vegas Shooting Posted: 21 Feb 2018 09:33 AM PST |
Posted: 22 Feb 2018 07:40 AM PST New York University has issued a public apology and fired their director of food service after students pointed out the watermelon-flavoured water and collard greens the school was serving during Black History Month were racially insensitive. College of Arts and Science sophomore Nia Harris noticed the offensive meal when she walked into Weinstein Passport Dining Hall - before alerting the deans of the school and NYU's President Hamilton of the insensitive and "stereotypical" meal. "Not only was this racially insensitive, this was just ignorant. |
Republican congresswoman: Many mass murderers are Democrats Posted: 21 Feb 2018 08:17 PM PST |
Dad who survived son's murder plot that killed mom, brother wants his life spared Posted: 22 Feb 2018 05:13 AM PST |
Pennsylvania GOP Pleads With SCOTUS Again To Let Them Use Gerrymandered Map Posted: 21 Feb 2018 05:16 PM PST Pennsylvania Republicans again asked the U.S. Supreme Court to block Pennsylvania's new, court-ordered congressional map on Wednesday, marking the latest in a series of attempts to halt a plan that would make congressional elections more competitive in the state by reducing the impact of gerrymandering. |
Parkland School Shooting: Tape Delay Blamed for Confusion That Allowed Suspect to Escape Posted: 22 Feb 2018 11:17 AM PST |
Hem Is Having a 20% Off Sale and We're Freaking Out Posted: 22 Feb 2018 12:41 PM PST |
Shaken but unbowed, Florida survivors recount horrific stories as they lobby for change Posted: 21 Feb 2018 03:08 PM PST Untold stories from the high school shooting in Florida a week ago came tumbling out, alongside the anger their horrific experiences had fuelled, as students came to their state capital to lobby for change on Wednesday. Lorenzo Prado, 17, wept as he told how he had at first been mistaken for the shooter during the rampage that killed 14 of his fellow students and three teachers, including his sports coach. "The Swat team came in and I thought they were here to rescue me ... but I find I am wrong. |
Wife of lawmaker who killed himself loses election bid Posted: 21 Feb 2018 05:34 AM PST |
Fourth fortune hunter dies looking for Fenn's Treasure Posted: 21 Feb 2018 12:34 PM PST A fourth fortune hunter has died in the pursuit of a treasure chest containing more than $1 million worth of gold coins and jewels which is reputedly hidden somewhere in the Rocky Mountains. Jeff Murphy, 53, perished in June but the details of his death were only revealed eight months later. He was looking for Fenn's Treasure and died after going hiking up a trail within the boundaries of Yellowstone National Park, and falling 500ft down a rocky slope. Fenn's Treasure is said to have been deposited in 2010 by Forrest Fenn, an eccentric, octogenarian millionaire art dealer and former Vietnam fighter pilot. Mr Fenn, who is still alive, has said he set the task of finding it in order to encourage people to "get off the couch" and see nature. According to him the bounty is inside a 22lb Romanesque bronze chest and includes 265 gold coins, diamonds, emeralds and ancient Chinese figurines. He published a 24-line poem which contains the clues to locating it. Jeff Murphy, 53, perished in June but the details of his death were only revealed eight months later. Over the last eight years tens of thousands of people are believed to have searched for the loot, mostly in New Mexico where clues have pointed. However, Mr Murphy, a vice president of the International Housewares Association, had headed for the Wyoming-Montana border area. When he went missing a huge search operation was launched including rescuers on horseback, others with dogs, and a helicopter. Erica Murphy, his widow, said he had first read about Fenn's Treasure in an airplane magazine. He then read Mr Fenn's book The Thrill of the Chase, which contains the full 24-line poem. The poem includes lines like "Begin it where warm waters halt. And take it in the canyon down". Mrs Murphy told the Albuquerque Journal: "It was his pastime. He loved anything that caused him to use his brain, and he loved being out in nature." The death was expected to lead to renewed calls to end the controversial treasure hunt. But Mrs Murphy said she did not blame Mr Fenn, and her husband knew the risks. She said he "would not have wanted to hinder" others from searching. As rescuers looked for her husband Mrs Murphy emailed Mr Fenn to say: "I hope your quest won't be adversely affected by these current events." According to a report by Yellowstone National Park into his death Mr Murphy had also emailed Mr Fenn before setting out. When he went missing Mr Fenn then offered to pay for a helicopter to look for him. Mr Fenn also said he had never been to the area where Mr Murphy was searching, so he was looking in the wrong place. Last summer, fortune hunter Paris Wallace, 52, a pastor from Colorado was found dead north of Santa Fe, New Mexico after trying to traverse a river. Separately, Eric Ashby, 31 died after his raft overturned on the Arkansas River. In 2016, Randy Bilyeu, 54, died on the Rio Grande while looking for the treasure. His former wife Linda Bilyeu has called the hunt "madness". Mr Fenn has previously indicated the treasure is hidden somewhere not hard to reach and that, even at his advanced age, he could himself go back to the spot. Supporters of the treasure hunt have argued that it has achieved its aim of getting Americans into the Great Outdoors, and has led to people meeting spouses and parents bonding with their children. |
At 'listening session' on school shootings, Trump urges giving teachers guns Posted: 21 Feb 2018 03:55 PM PST |
What Billy Graham's Death And His Son Franklin's Rise Reveal About America Posted: 21 Feb 2018 12:46 PM PST |
Crews to leave Puerto Rico as $750M Fluor contract nears end Posted: 21 Feb 2018 03:25 PM PST |
NRA’s Wayne LaPierre: ‘Elites’ don’t care about school safety Posted: 22 Feb 2018 07:54 AM PST On Thursday, Feb. 22, the National Rifle Association's executive vice president and CEO Wayne LaPierre spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference amid the nation's heated debate about gun control following the Parkland, Fla., school shooting. During his speech, LaPierre said "elites" don't care about school safety, and he called for more guns in schools. |
9 Converted Barn Homes: Beautiful Barn Style Home Inspiration Posted: 21 Feb 2018 10:47 AM PST |
Armed deputy at Florida high school resigns after failing to engage shooter Posted: 22 Feb 2018 04:43 PM PST The armed sheriff's deputy assigned to the Florida high school where 17 people were shot and killed has resigned rather than face suspension after an internal investigation showed he failed to enter the school to confront the gunman during the attack, the county sheriff said on Thursday. Deputy Scot Peterson, who was on duty and in uniform as the resource officer posted at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, was the only law enforcement officer present at the campus during the six-minute rampage last Wednesday, Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said. Peterson's actions were caught on video during the massacre, which ranks as the second-deadliest shooting ever at a U.S. public school, carried out by a lone gunman wielding a semiautomatic AR-15-style assault rifle. |
North Korea cancelled historic meeting with US at last minute, reveals Trump administration Posted: 21 Feb 2018 01:19 AM PST North Korea "dangled" a historic meeting with US officials during the Winter Olympics but cancelled at the last minute, the Trump administration has revealed. Ahead of Mike Pence's visit to Pyeongchang, where the Vice President led the US delegation to the opening ceremony, officials said they had requested no meeting with North Korea - but left open the possibility one could occur. Now, more than a week after Mr Pence returned to the US, the State Department says a meeting had been discussed before North Korea "walked away". |
Report Alleges Rampant Sexual Misconduct At Dallas Mavericks Posted: 21 Feb 2018 03:57 AM PST |
Models Carried Their Own Severed Heads At Gucci's Nightmarish Milan Fashion Show Posted: 21 Feb 2018 02:03 PM PST |
Donald Trump Jr. Loves India's 'Poorest Of The Poor' Because They Smile Posted: 21 Feb 2018 04:13 AM PST |
Posted: 21 Feb 2018 11:46 AM PST |
Secular and religious leaders pay tribute to Billy Graham Posted: 21 Feb 2018 11:45 AM PST |
These Surprising Countries Now Have the Most Powerful Passport in the World Posted: 21 Feb 2018 09:53 AM PST |
Malaysia holds Filipinos seeking to set up extremist cell Posted: 21 Feb 2018 12:18 AM PST Ten suspected Islamic militants who were trying to establish a Malaysian cell of a Philippine kidnap-for-ransom group have been arrested in Borneo island, police said Wednesday. The alleged extremists, mostly Filipinos, are also accused of trying to help fighters linked to the Islamic State (IS) group travel to the Philippines to join up with militants there, they said. The southern Philippines has long been a pocket of Islamic militancy in the largely Catholic country. |
'Making a Murderer' case may go to Supreme Court: report Posted: 21 Feb 2018 01:17 PM PST Attorneys for Brendan Dassey, 28, made a similar argument to the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago in December and failed. The judges voted 4-3 to uphold his conviction in the slaying of Teresa Halbach. Dassey confessed when he was 16 of helping his uncle, Steven Avery, rape and kill Halbach, a freelance photographer, in 2005. |
The Latest: Sweden, Kuwait call for UN vote on Syria Posted: 21 Feb 2018 02:30 PM PST |
Posted: 22 Feb 2018 03:31 AM PST |
Chloe Kim Poses With Her Adorable Dog On The Cover Of Sports Illustrated Posted: 21 Feb 2018 06:54 PM PST |
Ivanka Trump To Lead U.S. Delegation At Olympic Closing Ceremony Posted: 22 Feb 2018 04:32 AM PST |
It turns out Neanderthals painted art inside these European caves, not humans Posted: 22 Feb 2018 12:33 PM PST Ancient sketches of Ice Age animals, stenciled hands, and symbols painted on walls inside three Spanish caves were long suspected to have been left by humans. But with enhanced dating techniques, scientists now believe our thick-browed and extinct evolutionary cousins, Neanderthals, were truly responsible for the art. This would mean that we've been giving our hominid ancestors too little credit for their abilities. Researchers found these paintings are at least around 65,000 years old, predating the arrival of humans in Europe by some 20,000 years. Assuming the dating is accurate, then these paintings would be the earliest known cave art in the world. SEE ALSO: The accidental library: Why Elon Musk launched books to space that could last 14 billion years The research, published Thursday in the journal Science, concludes that in the absence of humans, Neanderthals must have created the advanced art, underscoring that these hominids were quite smart — perhaps even matching our own intelligence. "These papers simply confirm what has been evident in other aspects of the archeological record and their biologies, that there are no evident differences between the Neanderthals and modern humans in terms of basic cognition, symbolic behavior, sociality, or communication," said Erik Trinkaus, a biological anthropologist at Washington University in St. Louis who was not involved in the study. Red ochre painting on a La Pasiega cave wall in Spain.Image: P. SauraIn another Spanish cave, detailed in a related study also released Thursday, researchers dated marine shells that had been dyed and then stored in larger shell containers. These artifacts were dyed some 70,0000 years before humans ever stepped foot in the region. Some scientists might disagree that it was Neanderthals who painted such humanistic, advanced art, said Wil Roebroeks, a paleolithic archaeologist at Leiden University who was not involved in the study, in an email. But the evidence in favor of Neanderthal artwork is strong. A replicated drawing of some of the cave art. It's more difficult to see the symbols, animals, and detail on the calcified cave wall, shown in the image above.Image: Breuil et al.The cave painting "dates are solid," said Roebroeks. The researchers dated calcite minerals both below the paint and the calcite that had crusted on top to establish a window in time for when the painting likely was done. Roebroeks noted that the sample and dating work was done "carefully" by experienced archeologists. "Neandertals made 'cave art' — deal with it," he said, using a spelling popular in the scientific literature. The Neanderthals used a red ochre paint on the cave walls, "an activity hitherto thought to be an exclusive 'modern human' phenomenon," noted Roebroeks. In fact, it seems that by the time humans finally arrived in Europe, "indigenous Neandertals had been producing red ochred motifs on cave walls for at least a thousand generations already," he said. This cave art might provide compelling evidence for Neanderthals' advanced intellect, but anthropologists already knew that Neanderthals were culturally advanced, even fashioning their own jewelry. David Frayer, an anthropologist at the University of Kansas, suspects Neanderthals caught eagles and used their sharp talons to make this jewelry. The talons, discovered near a rock shelter in Croatia, had been smoothed out around 130,000 years ago, long before other Neanderthal clans painted the walls of Spanish caves. Three hand stencil drawings in Maltravieso Cave. The hands can be seen in the top left, center (facing down), and center-right of the image.Image: H. ColladoEven having held and inspected these Eagle talons, Frayer, who had no role in either study, finds the cave art impressive. "Yet, even me as a Neanderthal appreciator, would not have predicted they could have done these," he said via email. Of course, once humans arrived in Europe, they too began ornately painting cave walls. Lascaux Cave, in France, is covered in hundreds of detailed animals, including horses, deer, and bulls. But before Neanderthals went extinct — for unknown reasons — they proved their artistic and cultural prowess was similar to ours, even though their skulls were flatter and shaped differently. "This does not mean Neandertals were identical to modern humans, just behaviorally and mentally equivalent," said Trinkaus. "And it should put to rest the paleophrenoloigcal arguments about Neandertal abilities derived from their skulls." WATCH: This beetle "farts" inside a toad's stomach to escape |
White powder and 'racist' letter sent to Meghan Markle Posted: 22 Feb 2018 09:48 AM PST A package containing white powder and an allegedly racist message sent to Prince Harry and his fiancee Meghan Markle is being treated as a hate crime, police said on Thursday. Officers from the Metropolitan Police's counter-terrorism command were called in after the package was received on February 12 at a sorting office in St James's Palace in central London. Contacted by AFP, Prince Harry's press service at Kensington Palace declined to comment on the report. |
More Cops In Schools Means More Black Kids In The Criminal Justice System Posted: 22 Feb 2018 09:19 AM PST |
Japan sees transfer at sea that may violate NKorea sanctions Posted: 20 Feb 2018 07:47 PM PST |
Iran teams carry plane crash dead down from mountain Posted: 21 Feb 2018 05:03 AM PST Emergency teams on Wednesday began recovering bodies from a plane crash in Iran's Zagros mountains but the operation had to be suspended due to bad weather, officials said. Search helicopters located the crash site after a break in the weather on Tuesday at a height of around 4,000 metres (13,000 feet) in the Dena range. Helicopters were unable to land but officials said a recovery operation had begun on Wednesday, with emergency personnel carrying bodies on their backs to a road at the foot of the mountain. |
Democrats want $300 million to fight possible Russia election tampering Posted: 21 Feb 2018 11:45 AM PST By Patricia Zengerle WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Democratic leaders called on Congress on Wednesday to give the Federal Bureau of Investigation $300 million to fight foreign efforts to interfere in congressional and state elections in November, amid growing concerns about potential Russian influence on the polls. Citing warnings from intelligence agencies that Russia is trying to influence the upcoming vote, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer and House of Representatives Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi asked that the additional funds be included in a bill to fund the government which Congress aims to pass by March 23. |
Ex-Arkansas judge sentenced to 5 years in sexual favors case Posted: 21 Feb 2018 04:57 PM PST |
'Walking Dead' Star Admits To That Eye-Opening Mistake Posted: 22 Feb 2018 09:27 AM PST |
Tweeters Rip 'Zombie' Donald Trump Over 'Listening Session' Cheat Sheet Posted: 22 Feb 2018 01:55 AM PST |
Supreme Court to hear case of worker fees to Big Labor Posted: 20 Feb 2018 08:58 PM PST |
13 Genius Ways To Use Ground Lamb Posted: 22 Feb 2018 01:49 PM PST |
Prince William Is Looking for Adventure on a Motorcycle Because Future Kings Can Have Fun Too Posted: 21 Feb 2018 08:36 AM PST |
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